Thursday, October 28, 2021

101. Classical Music: 16. Niccolò Paganini, ACJ Music Academy


















 

How are you?

This week's lecture is “Niccolò Paganini”, the 16th topic of Classical Music, which is a summary of the contents of 101. Classical Music: 16. Niccolò Paganini introduced on September 2nd, 2017.

Niccolò Paganini was an Italian violinist and composer who was born on October 27, 1782 and died on May 27, 1840.


Portrait of Niccolò Paganini, Andrea Cefaly














Born the third of the six children of Antonio and Teresa Paganini in Genoa, the capital of the Republic of Genoa at the time, he began learning the mandolin from his father at the age of five and moved to the violin at the age of seven. 


Location of Genoa















Although he studied under various local violinists, including Giovanni Servetto and Giacomo Costa, his musical talents soon surpassed their abilities, after which Paganini and his father traveled to Parma to receive further instruction from Alessandro Rolla. However, after listening to Paganini's playing, Rolla immediately introduced him to his teacher, Ferdinando Paer, and later, his teacher, Gasparo Ghiretti.


Alessandro Rolla












Ferdinando Paër















In 1801, Paganini was appointed first violinist of the Republic of Lucca, but he still earned most of his income from freelancing.

Annexed by Napoleon of France in 1805, Lucca was ruled by Napoleon's sister, Elisa Baciocchi, and Paganini became a violinist for the Baciocchi court, while giving private lessons to Elisa's husband, Felice. In 1807, Baciocchi became the Grand Duchess of Tuscany and her court was moved to Florence, but Paganini left Baciocchi in 1809.


Elisa Bonaparte Baciocchi















For the next few years, Paganini performed in the areas surrounding Parma and Genoa, becoming very popular with the local audiences, but still remained unknown in the rest of Europe. In 1813, with the great success of the concert at La Scala in Milan, he began to attract the attention of many prominent musicians across Europe.


La Scala












In 1835, Paganini returned to Parma at the request of Napoleon's second wife, Archduchess Marie Louise of Austria, and was in charge of reorganizing her court orchestra, but due to the conflicts with the players and the court, his visions were never completed.


Marie Louise, Duchess of Parma














In 1836, Paganini returned to Paris to establish a casino, but his failure led him to financial bankruptcy and eventually forced him to auction his personal belongings, including his musical instruments. At Christmas of 1838, he left Paris for Marseille and, after a brief stay, and travelled to Nice, where his health deteriorated. In May 1840, the Bishop of Nice sent Paganini a local parish priest to perform the last rites, but Paganini rejected the rites because he thought it was premature. 


Bulletin advertising a performance of
Paganini (1831)

















However, just a week later, he died from internal hemorrhaging, and because of this and rumors of dealings with the devil, the Church refused his body a Catholic burial in Genoa. Then, it took four years to move his body from Nice to Genoa, but his body was still left unburied. Finally, in 1876, his body was buried in a cemetery in Parma, and in 1896 it was moved again to a new cemetery in Parma.


Tomb of Paganini, Parma, Italy












He was the most famous violin virtuoso of his time and made a great contribution to the establishment of modern violin technique. His “24 Caprices for Solo Violin Op. 1” are his most famous works and have inspired many prominent composers.


Bust of Niccolò Paganini, David d'Angers























Thank you.


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Sunday, October 24, 2021

Interesting Art Stories: 63. The Potato Eaters, Vincent van Gogh, ACJ Art Academy


 












 

How are you?

Currently, I am introducing the stories about various artists and their paintings with the title Interesting Art Stories.

The 63rd story is The Potato Eaters by Vincent van Gogh.

"The Potato Eaters" is an oil painting by Dutch artist Vincent van Gogh in 1885.


Self-Portrait, Vincent van Gogh (1889)














During March and early April 1885, van Gogh sketched studies for the painting, and corresponded with his younger brother Theo. He finished most of the work on the painting from 13 April to early May, although he made minor changes at the end of the same year.

Van Gogh, who was trying to represent peasants as they really were in the painting, deliberately chose coarse and ugly models to portray the peasants in a natural and unspoiled way.

Shortly after painting it, his friend Anthon van Rappard criticized the painting, and the incident was a blow to Van Gogh's confidence as an emerging artist. However, in a letter to his sister Willemina in Paris two years after the painting, he still considered it as his most successful painting.


Anthon van Rappard
















Wilhemina Van Gogh
















Van Gogh is known to have admired the Belgian painter Charles de Groux, and especially his painting “The blessing before supper”. De Groux' work depicts a peasant family praying for God's grace before supper, closely linked to Christian representations of the Last Supper. 


The Blessing before supper, Charles de Groux (1861)









Van Gogh's "The Potato Eaters" was inspired by this painting of de Groux, and several versions of "The Potato Eaters" are as follows.


Study for The Potato Eaters











Study for The Potato Eaters, Private collection (1885)













Second Study for The Potato Eaters, Kröller-Müller Museum,
 Otterlo (1885)












Van Gogh made a lithograph of the painting before embarking on the painting proper, and in a letter to his friend, he wrote that he made the lithograph from memory in a day.


The Potato Eaters, Lithography, Vincent van Gogh,
Rijksmuseum, Amsterdam (April 1885)














Van Gogh is known by many as a Post-Impressionist, but his actual artistic roots are much closer to artists of the Hague School such as Anton Mauve and Jozef Israëls.

Before van Gogh painted "The Potato Eaters," Israëls had already treated the same subject in his "A Peasant Family at the Table," and when referring to a letter to Theo on March 11, 1882, van Gogh, who saw this painting, seems that he was inspired to draw his own version of the painting.


A Peasant family at the table, Jozef Israëls (1882)












The painting is now in the Van Gogh Museum in Amsterdam and considered one of Van Gogh's masterpieces. The original oil sketch for the painting is in the Kröller-Müller Museum in Otterlo, Netherlands, and lithographs of the image are in collections including the Museum of Modern Art in New York City.


Van Gogh Museum










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Friday, October 22, 2021

The Stories about Music Films: 52. The Sound of Music (1965)




















 

Basic Info











Title: The Sound of Music

Genre: Romance/Musical/Drama

Country: United States

Language: English

Running time: 174 minutes

Release date: March 2, 1965 (United States)


Staff











Director: Robert Wise

Producer: Robert Wise

Screenplay by: Ernest Lehman

Music: Richard Rodgers, Oscar Hammerstein II

Cinematography: Ted D. McCord

Edited by: William H. Reynolds


Cast










Julie Andrews as Maria von Trapp

Christopher Plummer as Captain von Trapp

Richard Haydn as Max Detweiler

Peggy Wood as the Mother Abbess

Charmian Carr as Liesl von Trapp

Eleanor Parker as Baroness Elsa von Schraeder


Summary











"The Sound of Music" is a 1965 American musical drama film produced and directed by Robert Wise, starring Julie Andrews and Christopher Plummer. The film is an adaptation of the 1959 stage musical of the same name, composed by Richard Rodgers with lyrics by Oscar Hammerstein II

Based on Maria von Trapp’s 1949 memoir, the film is about the story of a young Austrian postulant living in Salzburg, Austria, in 1938 who is sent to a retired naval officer and widower's villa to become a governess for his seven children. After bringing love and music into the life of the family, she marries the officer and, together with the children, finds a way to survive the loss of their homeland to the Nazis.

The filming took place in Los Angeles and Salzburg from March to September 1964, and was released in the United States on March 2, 1965. Although initial critical response to the film was mixed, it was a commercial success and became the highest-grossing film of 1965.

The film won five Academy Awards and two Golden Globe Awards. In 1998, the American Film Institute ranked it as the 55th greatest American movie of all time, and the fourth greatest movie musical. 

In 2001, the United States Library of Congress selected the film for preservation in the National Film Registry as a film of "culturally, historically, or aesthetically significant".


Movie Review











Lovely”

Rich and gooey, sticky and sugary sweet, but unavoidable”

The sound of heavenly music”

One of cinema's most enduring family classics”

One of the best musicals ever made”

An excellent musical”

A timeless Classic”

Legend”

One of the greatest movies of all time”

The sound of greatness”

Hollywood's last great musical”

A timeless classic”

Lovely sound”

A cultural icon”


Interesting stories about the film










1. Julie Andrews sang "Supercalifragilisticexpialidocious" to the children in the cast to entertain them between shooting. Because “Mary Poppins (1964)” had not yet been released, they thought she made the song for them.


Mary Poppins (1964)

















2. In "I Have Confidence", Maria fell while running down the courtyard towards the Von Trapp house, but it was an accident. However, producer and director Robert Wise liked it so much that he kept it in the film.


Julie Andrews















3. The film is based on Maria von Trapp's 1949 memoir, "The Story of the Von Trapp Family Singers".


Maria von Trapp














4. The song "Edelweiss" was made for this film and is little known in Austria. It was the last song of Oscar Hammerstein II before his death on August 23, 1960.


Oscar Hammerstein II













5. The famous puppet sequence in "The Lonely Goatherd" was produced and performed by the leading puppeteers of the day, Bil Baird and Cora Baird.


Bil and Cora Baird














6. This film is credited as the movie that saved Twentieth Century Fox after the box office failure of "Cleopatra (1963)".


Cleopatra (1963)
















7. The film's status as the most successful musical film was surpassed 13 years later by "Grease (1978)" in actual box office, but it remained the most successful film musical when adjusted for inflation.


Grease (1978)

























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75th Live Broadcast of “Pops Lounge” in TBN Ulsan Traffic Broadcasting Network (November 7, 2023)

  How are you? I had 75th live broadcast of “Pops Lounge” today in TBN Ulsan Traffic Broadcasting Network ’s “Studio1041” .  Today&#...