Friday, December 31, 2010

A Hardy New Year

New Year's Eve
Thomas Hardy
1906

"I have finished another year," said God,
"In grey, green, white, and brown;
I have strewn the leaf upon the sod,
Sealed up the worm within the clod,
And let the last sun down."

"And what's the good of it?" I said.
"What reasons made you call
From formless void this earth we tread,
When nine-and-ninety can be read
Why nought should be at all?

"Yea, Sire; why shaped you us, 'who in
This tabernacle groan' -
If ever a joy be found herein,
Such joy no man had wished to win
If he had never known!"

Then he: "My labours--logicless -
You may explain; not I:
Sense-sealed I have wrought, without a guess
That I evolved a Consciousness
To ask for reasons why.

"Strange that ephemeral creatures who
By my own ordering are,
Should see the shortness of my view,
Use ethic tests I never knew,
Or made provision for!"

He sank to raptness as of yore,
And opening New Year's Day
Wove it by rote as theretofore,
And went on working evermore
In his unweeting way.

Saturday, December 25, 2010

Grace Has Appeared

"For the grace of God has appeared,bringing salvation to all men"

-- Titus 2:11
New American Standard Bible


Merry Christmas one and all.

Wednesday, December 08, 2010

To Ride the Danube Waves

For the next two weeks, I will be on Christmas holiday with good company to cruise on the wintry Danube River from Austria to Germany. At ports of call we will sample the food and spirit now swirling and permeating all the Christmas Markets along the river banks.


The MP3 below expired on 01-02-2011.
Click here to play the current selection.


Arthur Fiedler and the Boston Pops
- Waves of the Danube (Ivanovici)

Saturday, December 04, 2010

Alex North Unchained

Alex North
Oscar awarded motion picture composer
(4 December, 1910 – 8 September, 1991)

The MP3 below expired on 12-08-2010.
Click here to play the current selection.


Nashville Superpickers (1994)
- Unchained Melody (North)

Thursday, November 25, 2010

Enriched for All Liberality

On this Thanksgiving Day, 2010, a reading of these verses is selected from
2 Corinthians 9:11-12 (New American Standard Bible):

10 Now He who supplies seed to the sower and bread for food will supply and multiply your seed for sowing and increase the harvest of your righteousness;

11 you will be enriched in everything for all liberality, which through us is producing thanksgiving to God.

12 For the ministry of this service is not only fully supplying the needs of the saints, but is also overflowing through many thanksgivings to God.

Tuesday, November 23, 2010

TSA Pat-down Equals Political Correctness

The liberal administration sowed political correctness and we the people reaped.

The Obama, Pelosi, and Reid, Napolitano et al will never be subjected to the TSA goons doing pat-downs (read: sexual assaults) at the airports. These elitists have their military planes and other transportation modes paid by us, the government sanctioned assaulted victims (i.e. American taxpayers). In fact, Senator Claire McCaskill (D) of Missouri refers to the groping of the a person's private parts as "love pats". I like to see a YouTube of McCaskill reaction when she receives her love pats at the St. Louis International Airport.

The issue I have with TSA pat-downs is it epitomizes the warped liberal mindset of playing fair. This means Americans or westerners such as blond-haired toddlers, nuns, grandmas, and medically handicapped are being groped at the airports. By so doing, it is not to offend the Muslims in particular. Never mind that on and post 9/11, everyone in the world knows it is the terrorists of the Islamic faith who have killed Americans and fanatically wanting to destroy the western culture. It is what it is. Period.

Yet, according to these what-is-best-for-our-safety liberals, by singling out any persons by creed and ethnicity for potential terrroist activities (i.e. Muslims only) is profiling. And that is not fair and it is verboten. Why, a white three-year-old boy, an airline pilot, or a bladder cancer patient, they could be terrorists (as well). We should appreciate the TSA for doing such a thankless job in keeping us safe from all terrorists, even at our expense as its employers.

What is happening now with TSA is analogous to Obamacare. It's big government ramming through the socialistic fairness doctrine. It is now washing over and drowning our American exceptionalism.

The aim of Obama and his ilk is control. Never mind the hypocrisy there is never equity in the fairness doctrine, nor in its theorized effectiveness. The only thing certain of it is whatever "fairness" these elitists promulgates, tax and spending go up, private sector, jobs, service quality and quantity go down.

For those who voted for change in the 2008 presidential election, you got it. In fact, we all got it for at least two more years. Big Brother Obama will continue his assault to strangle the American citizens of their wealth, health, and freedom.

Happy airport groping!

Thursday, November 11, 2010

At Home with Layne Tom






While at Huntington Beach, CA, in mid-October, we fans went to Layne Tom's (aka Charlie Chan, Jr.) for a visit.

Wednesday, November 10, 2010

Billy May's Birthday Anniversary

Billy May
American-born composer, arranger, and trumpeter
(10 November 1916 - 22 January 2004)

The MP3 below expired on 12-04-2010.
Click here to play the current selection.


Billy May and His Orchestra (2000)
with Dan Grissom, vocal
- Charmaine (Pollack and Rapee)

Monday, November 08, 2010

Love Autumnal

It's autumn here in the northern hemisphere. Enjoy Oliver Jenkin's poem 'Love Autumnal' to the setting of this Chopin piece.

Evgeny Kissin (age 12), piano
Chopin Piano Concerto No. 1, Op. 11, 2nd Movement
(Frédéric Chopin)
Click here to view this L'Envoi YouTube.


Love Autumnal (1922)
Oliver Jenkins

My love will come in autumn-time
When leaves go spinning to the ground
And wistful stars in heaven chime
With the leaves’ sound.

Then, we shall walk through dusty lanes
And pause beneath low-hanging boughs,
And there, while soft-hued beauty reigns
We’ll make our vows.

Let others seek in spring for sighs
When love flames forth from every seed;
But love that blooms when nature dies
Is love indeed!

Wednesday, October 27, 2010

Patience, It is Your Move

Dear D_H_:

Admittedly, this game is a constructive medium for both fun and learning. It is gratifying, certainly, if one achieves a higher scoring than the other player. Your being an uninspiring WWF opponent, however, has never entered my mind. So perish the negative vibes.

Our playing WWF is a facet of fellowship, although virtually. Winning or losing is not the essence. For me, this activity is a little something I do gladly in bringing some relaxation, and hopefully, some assuagement to your present out of joint family life. Years from now, both of us could regale at some gathering (together maybe?) the tale of our playing WWF.

Cervantes once said, "Patience, and shuffle the cards." I say, "Patience, it is your move."

*grin*

Wednesday, September 22, 2010

Harvest Moon Autumn Equinox 2010

Harvest Moon and Jupiter
Autumn Equinox
22 September 2010, 2134 Hours PDT.


My Love Will Come in Autumn Time

Today, 22 September, 2010, is the last day of summer for the northern hemisphere.


Love Autumnal (1922)
Oliver Jenkins

My love will come in autumn-time
When leaves go spinning to the ground
And wistful stars in heaven chime
With the leaves’ sound.

Then, we shall walk through dusty lanes
And pause beneath low-hanging boughs,
And there, while soft-hued beauty reigns
We’ll make our vows.

Let others seek in spring for sighs
When love flames forth from every seed;
But love that blooms when nature dies
Is love indeed!


"Love Autumnal" and Chopin:
Chopin Piano Concerto No. 1, Op. 11, 2nd Movement
(Frédéric Chopin)
Click here to view this L'Envoi YouTube.

Tuesday, September 14, 2010

They Call the Wind Maria

Harve Presnell
Stage-Screen Actor and Singer (baritone)
(14 September 1933 - 1 July 2009)

The MP3 below expired on 11-10-2010.
Click here to play the current selection.


Harve Presnell & Chorus (1969)
- They Call the Wind Maria
(Lerner & Loewe)


They Call the Wind Maria
Film: "Paint Your Wagon" (1969)
Lyrics: Alan Jay Lerner
Music: Frederick Loewe
Sung by Harve Presnell & The Chorus


Maria
Maria
They call the wind Maria

Away out here they got a name
For rain and wind and fire
The rain is Tess, the fire Joe
And they call the wind Maria

Maria blows the stars around
And sends the clouds a-flyin’
Maria makes the mountains sound
Like folks were up there dying

Maria
Maria
They call the wind Maria

Before I knew Maria’s name
And heard her wail and whinin’
I had a girl and she had me
And the sun was always shinin’

But then one day I left my girl
I left her far behind me
And now I’m lost, so golden lost
Not even God can find me

Maria
Maria
They call the wind Maria

Out here they got a name for rain
For wind and fire only
But when you’re lost and all alone
There ain’t no word but lonely

And I’m a-lost and lonely man
Without a star to guide me
Maria blow my love to me
I need my girl beside me

Maria
Maria
They call the wind Maria

Maria
Maria
Blow my love to me

Monday, September 13, 2010

Clara Schumann's Birthday Anniversary

Today, 13 September, is Clara Schumann's birthday anniversary.
Mrs. S wrote this piano piece when she was about 24 years old.
What were you doing when you were at age 24?
Oh, sorry. I didn't know you are only 21.
Never mind.

Clara Schumann
(Mrs. Robert Schumann)
Renown Romantic era composer and pianist
(13 September 1819 – 20 May 1896)

Jozef de Beenhouwer, piano (2001)
Impromptu in E Major c.1843
(Clara Schumann)
Click here to view this L'Envoi YouTube.

Monday, September 06, 2010

Stephen Hawking's Leaky Design

Wisdom lies only in truth -- Goethe

Stephen Hawking, the cosmologist and former Lucasian Professor of Mathematics at Cambridge University, has a new book out. It's called the The Grand Design.

Accordingly, Hawking theorizes gravity is the only unifying force - his god - which gives us the Big Bang and the consequential universe. He writes, "Because there is a law such as gravity, the universe can and will create itself from nothing." He is making a grand personal conjecture no different than that of the primordial soup theory. It is not an established scientific fact what he says here.

I have just two unlearned questions for Dr. Hawking: How do these laws of physics come into being?

And, can you say, or rather, demonstratively disprove the Julie Andrews axiom, "Nothing came from nothing. Nothing ever could."* with a replicable experiment?

He writes elsewhere in his new book, "The fact that we human beings – who are ourselves mere collections of fundamental particles of nature – have been able to come this close to an understanding of the laws governing us and our universe is a great triumph." His unabashed glorification of humanism.

Stephen Hawking is Carl Sagan 2.0. As in the case of Sagan, Hawking is blurring science and his brand of scientific atheism. Both authors commingled haughty personal believes and science, with emphasis and conviction on the former.

Nothing like including a "there is no God" thematic argument to sell a book. Nonetheless, the Grand Design is leaky. So we must leave it to its sinking, as all vanities will.

*My 2005 post on Carl Sagan:   Julie Andrews Was Right


------------------
Job 38 (New American Standard Bible):

Verse 4:
4 Where were you when I laid the foundation of the earth?
Tell Me, if you have understanding,

Verses 32-36:
32"Can you lead forth a constellation in its season,
And guide the Bear with her satellites?
33"Do you know the ordinances of the heavens,
Or fix their rule over the earth?
34"Can you lift up your voice to the clouds,
So that an abundance of water will cover you?
35"Can you send forth lightnings that they may go
And say to you, 'Here we are'?
36"Who has put wisdom in the innermost being
Or given understanding to the mind?


Saturday, September 04, 2010

Losing Arizona

The warning signs posted along I-8 are only 30 miles from Phoenix, AZ. This is the area where a deputy sheriff was shot and killed by illegal aliens in April 2010.

To the Obama camp, murdered American citizens - law enforcement officers, ranchers, and law abiding citizens are no big deal. No bowels of compassion there. They could care less about these murders committed by Mexican nationals on American soil. But when it comes to Hispanic illegal aliens ("illegal immigrants" is an oxymoron), Obama condemns the state of Arizona for human rights violations and sues its governor. What this President doing to Arizona is a deliberate perversion of the U.S. Constitution which he has sworn to uphold.

What tragic irony. The socialist Obama administration - Obama himself being a Contitutional Law lecturer (not professor)- would not accept that the power of the federal government are granted by the states, not vise versa.

Homeland Security under Obama is a national disgrace. Why not have Obama and his cabinet drive through this strip of I-8, unescorted?

Nightmare on Obamacare Street


Our Health Care Nightmare Journey Begins
This is a U.S. House of Representatives Document
It is not a joke.


There are bad Republicans but no good Democrats in governance.

Vote in November 2 to delouse the socialistic Democratic controlled Congress. Help put a majority of conservatives (not patrician Republicans nor RINO) in both chambers to veto Obamacare, save our country from liberalism, save Arizona, and above all, save the dismantling of our Constitution.

Thursday, August 26, 2010

A Sleep Lagoon and You

Eric Coates
English composer of Light Music
(27 August 1886 – 21 December 1957)

The MP3 below expired on 09-14-2010.
Click here to play the current selection.


The Norman Luboff Choir (1993)
- Sleepy Lagoon


(By the) Sleepy Lagoon (1930)
Words: Jack Lawrence
Music: Eric Coates

The Norman Luboff Choir (1993)

The sleepy lagoon, a tropical moon and two on an island
The sleepy lagoon and two hearts in tune in some lullabyland
The fireflies' gleam reflects in the stream
They sparkle and shimmer
A star from on high falls out of the sky
And slowly grows dimmer

The leaves from the trees all dance in the breeze
And float on the ripples
We're deep in a spell as nightingales tell
Of roses and dew

The memory of this moment of love
Will haunt me forever
A tropical moon, a sleepy lagoon
And you

[Orchestral Bridge]

The memory of this moment of love
Will haunt me forever
A tropical moon, a sleepy lagoon
And you

Saturday, August 21, 2010

A Goodly Heritage

The lines are fallen unto me
In places large and fair
A goodly heritage is mine
Marked out with gracious care

-- Dick L. Van Helsems, 1953
'O God, Preserve Me', stanza 5
after Psalm 16, verse 6

Friday, August 20, 2010

Boogie Me Will, Bill

William "Count" Basie
American-born jazz pianist, composer, and band leader
(21 August, 1904 - 26 April, 1984)

The MP3 below expired on 08-26-2010.
Click here to play the current selection.


Billy May and His Orchestra (2001)
- Basie Boogie (Basie)

Tuesday, August 17, 2010

Love Binding Eternal

I read on 19 July the following entry of George MacDonald's "The Diary of an Old Soul":

Thou far!--that word the holy truth doth blur.
Doth the great ocean from the small fish run
When it sleeps fast in its low weedy bower?
Is the sun far from any smallest flower,
That lives by his dear presence every hour?
Are they not one in oneness without stir--
The flower the flower because the sun the sun?

Today, nearly a month later, I distilled from these evocative verses into the essence of a Haiku:

God's love far yet near
Lilacs bloomed when light ascribed
Sun and life embraced


For the LORD GOD is a sun and shield: The LORD gives grace and glory; No good thing does He withhold from those who walk uprightly.
-- Psalm 84:10-12 NASB


Now Laughing Friends Deride

Otto Harbach
American-born Songwriter's Hall of Fame Member
(18 August, 1873 - 24 January, 1963)

The MP3 below expired on 08-20-2010.
Click here to play the current selection.


Dame Kiri Te Kanawa, soprano (1993)
- Smoke Gets in Your Eyes (Harbach & Kern)







Smoke Gets in Your Eye
Words: Otto Harbach
Music: Jerome Kern
In the 1933 Broadway musical "Roberta", starring Bob Hope and Faye Templeton

Artist: Dame Kiri Te Kanawa, soprano (1993)

They asked me how I knew
My true love was true.
I, of course, replied,
"Something here inside
Cannot be denied".

They said, "Someday you'll find
All who love are blind,
When your heart's on fire,
You must realize
Smoke gets in your eyes".

So I chaffed them
And I gaily laughed
To think they could doubt my love
Yet today
My love has flown away
I am without my love.

Now laughing friends deride
Tears I cannot hide.
So I smile and say,
"When a lovely flame dies,
Smoke gets in your eyes".

[Orchestral Interlude]

I am without my love.
Now laughing friends deride
Tears I cannot hide.
So I smile and say,
"When a lovely flame dies,
Smoke gets in your eyes".

Saturday, August 14, 2010

That Is the Question


To do or not to do.

This is a very good app for the stated functionality for keeping track of to-do stuff. If you decide to try it, don't get too deep into the Appigo's free lite version of Todo Lite, though. It is limited to under a dozen or so of tasks. You won't be warned when the limits are reached. When the sample records are reach, that's it. Further, if you should decide to buy the full-featured version and sync (transfer) the free version's database over to it, don't bother. The sync utilities from the lite to the paid version are more trouble than they're worth. Buy the full-featured version $4.99 (USD) from the iTunes Store and start from there.

I use this app to keep track of the to do lists by dates and priorities:
1. Recurring household chores
2. Recurring services rendered
3. Recurring sundries to shop and at which stores or online for best price
4. Episodic tasks
5. Medical & Dental appointments
6. Daily and recurring nutritional supplemental intake reminders

All of these things I can set with alerts and notifications. This is the app I use everyday.

Moonlight in Her Eyes

Lee Adams
American-born Tony Award lyricist
14 August 1924 -    

See a recently featured YouTube link, "Once Upon a Time", with lyrics by Lee Adams.

Peter Duchin, piano (1973)
Once Upon a Time (Adams & Strouse)
Click here to view this L'Envoi YouTube.

A Gallimaufry of Gambols


"He that will give good words to thee will flatter beneath abhorring."
--Shakespeare, 'Coriolanus', Act 1 Scene 1.

Not in this case, Will. My friend sports a very congenial disposition of all the Words with Friends games she's played me. Albeit She has yet to win her first game.

This is a game similar played in the manner of correspondent chess. One need not be attentive or sedentary in his own surroundings waiting for the opponent's next move. He could also play other opponents on the WWF app. The moves on the board(s) are transmitted via either a Wi-Fi or a 3G connection. This game is designed for the iPod, iPhone, or iPad only.

It's more fun and tactically appealing to me by plotting and anticipating the placement of the letter tiles on just one game board. A linear thinking mind like mine would not do well playing multiple boards. I get confused with memorizing on which set of tiles (with replacements) to play on which board. It's too stressful and less fun.

The free game is full-featured but laced with annoying advertising pop-ups. After playing a few games using the free version, I bought the ad free edition for $2.99 (USD).

I like this game. The only frustration is the game server does crash more than once in a blue moo. I always happens during a game. The impersonal and rude excuses received from the server are to the effect "Repairing..." and or "Updating..." the game in progress. No warning given and no consent are solicited from the player. It just does and wipes out the game. The most recent episode happened when I was just one tile placement away in winning the game. Alas, a bloody shame of not having another notch scored (pun) on the virtual game board, so to speak.

Angry Birds Anonymous?


Angry Birds is the only paid game (only $0.99 USD!) I have installed on my iPod Touch 3G. I like it for its simple yet elegant play design. It has many thematic levels. The play concept and tactics do not vary at each level, however.

This game is easy on the mind and body (for some). No strain or stress of which to speak, mostly, (for some). It is a mobile device game well suited for the casual gamer during long waits at the airport or some other public queues (for some).

Playing Angry Birds is fun, and yet it is insidiously addictive. The latter is not at all a good thing if one is mired in this altered reality of living the life.

As I see it, the birds and the pigs in this app aren't going anywhere. They neither age nor die of starvation when being ignored. They are programmed to stay in character today, tomorrow, and the day after. Thus being obsessed with playing this game continually isn't worth the time.

Time does not stand still. It is not a game, nor can it be paused or rewound for a replay. Each of us has our own one-way hourglass allotted with varied amount of sand. For most, we choose how to expend this precious and physically irredeemable commodity for life's priorities. Playing Angry Birds is not essential for the pursuit of happiness.

So then, why irrationally or compulsively throwing away precious time to challenge a game, notwithstanding its enormous popularity. Moreover, why compound the time spent playing the game with the risk of stepping into the abyss of despair and destruction. i.e. Depression, anxiety, sleep and nutritional deprivations, social paranoia, and carpal tunnel syndrome. All these potential and real ailments for the sake of winning some virtual golden eggs? The cost doesn't even come close in justifying the ephemeral benefit.

We are already a society staked with many tents of self-helps. Let's hope an anonymous mutual support society or such is not ever needed to free one from a possible Angry Birds addiction.


Monday, August 09, 2010

Music to Rug By

Q: Where do you go to buy a Persian rug?
A: In a Persian market.

A lame trivial, yet the "In a Persian Market" music is great!

Albert William Ketèlbey
English composer, conductor, and pianist
(9 August 1875 - 26 November 1959)

The MP3 below expired on 08-17-2010.
Click here to play the current selection.


Larry Clinton and His Orchestra (1939)
- In a Persian Market (Ketèlbey)

Sunday, August 08, 2010

The Beauty of the Law That Holds Us Here

Today is Sara Teasdale's birthday anniversary.

"In the south-west a planet shone serenely..."

Sara Teasdale
American-born poet
(8 August, 1884 – 29 January, 1933)

EVENING
(Nahant)

There was an evening when the sky was clear,

Ineffably translucent in its blue;

The tide was falling, and the sea withdrew
In hushed and happy music from the sheer
Shadowy granite of the cliffs; and fear

Of what life may be, and what death can do,

Fell from us like steel armor, and we knew
The beauty of the Law that holds us here.

It was as though we saw the Secret Will,
It was as though we floated and were free;
In the south-west a planet shone serenely,
And the high moon, most reticent and queenly,
Seeing the earth had darkened and grown still,
Misted with light the meadows of the sea.

Saturday, August 07, 2010

I Would See that Smile You're Smiling Now

8 August, is Victor Young's birthday anniversary. He won the Oscar, posthumously, for Best Music in 1957 . Among Young's many other music are: Stella by Starlight (1953) and Three Coins in the Fountain (1954).

Victor Young
American-born msucian, arranger, and composer
(8 Aug 1899 - 10 Nov 1956)

The McGuire Sister (1957)
Around the World (in 80 Days)
(Young & Washington)
Click here to view this L'Envoi YouTube.

Wednesday, August 04, 2010

Tuesday, August 03, 2010

iOS4 Won't Stream MP3 on Apple Mobile Devices

If you have updated your iPhone 3G or the iPod Touch 2G/3G to iOS4, your device would most likely not be able to play the music on this blog. Either device would blame the server for being improperly configured. Notwithstanding the RSS feed is valid per server configuration. So then, to listen to the music link offered on this blog, you need to access it using a pre-iOS4 Apple mobile device, or play from a desktop/laptop browser.

Apple is morphing into Microsoft.

Wednesday, July 28, 2010

Peter Duchin's Birthday

Peter Duchin
(son of Eddy Duchin)
pianist and band Leader
28 July, 1937 -

I have created a YouTube of Peter Duchin playing a Broadway tune of very long ago, "Once Upon a Time", from the 1962 musical, "All American."

Peter Duchin, piano (1973)
Once Upon a Time (Strouse)
Click here to view this L'Envoi YouTube.

Wednesday, July 21, 2010

Once Upon a Time Graduation Speech

An excerpt from the "Commemoration Ode," delivered at Harvard University on 21 July, 1865 by James Russell Lowell.

"O Beautiful! my Country! ours once more!
...
What were our lives without thee?
What all our lives to save thee?
We reck not what we gave thee;
We will not dare to doubt thee,
But ask whatever else, and we will dare!"

Friday, July 16, 2010

Tuesday, July 13, 2010

A Golden Exodus

Ernest Gold
Austrian-born composer and arranger
Oscar winner for Best Music 'Exodus' (1960)
(13 July 1921 - 17 March 1999)

The MP3 below expired on 07-16-2010.
Click here to play the current selection.


Martin Boettcher and his orchestra (2005)
- Exodus (Gold)

Some Virginia Trip Photos



  Virginia Tech, Blacksburg, VA






Stone Bridges, tradmark of Blue Ridge Parkway











National D-Day Memorial, Bedford, VA












Lee Chapel, Washington & Lee University, Lexington, VA














Natural Bridge, Natural Bridge, VA

Friday, July 09, 2010

Harlem Nocturne

Earle Hagen
Movie and television composer and arranger
Best known for his instrumental classic 'Harlem Nocturne'
(9 July 1919 — 26 May 2008)

The MP3 below expired on 07-13-2010.
Click here to play the current selection.


Max Greger, tenor sax (1992)
- Harlem Nocturne (Hagen)





Thursday, July 08, 2010

Colleen Dhas

Percy Grainger
Australian-born composer
(8 July 1882 – 20 February 1961)

Today, 8 July, is Australian-born composer Percy Grainger's birthday anniversary. It's very likely you have heard of the tune 'Danny Boy'. Grainger arranged it. Yes. That he did. Its original title is 'Irish Tune from County Derry.' For today, I have created a YouTube using another one of his Irish tunes.

Geoffrey Simon & The Melbourne Symphony Orchestra (1990)
Colleen Dhas (Grainger)
Click here to view this L'Envoi YouTube.


This video is embedded with the 1990 world premiere recording of Grainger's 'Colleen Dhas.' The pastoral setting of this work is agreeable to that of an Irish countryside.

Saturday, July 03, 2010

An Americana on Amercia's Birthday

Stephen Foster
Foremost 19th century American songsmith
(4 July, 1826 – 13 January, 1864)

The MP3 below expired on 07-09-2010.
Click here to play the current selection.


Robert White, tenor (1976)
- Beautiful Dreamer (Foster)



Beautiful Dreamer (1862)

Beautiful dreamer, wake unto me
Starlight and dewdrops are waiting for thee
Sounds of the rude world heard in the day
Lull'd by the moonlight have all pass'd away
Beautiful dreamer, queen of my song
List while I woo thee with soft melody
Gone are the cares of life's busy throng
Beautiful dreamer, awake unto me
Beautiful dreamer, awake unto me

Beautiful dreamer, out on the sea
Mermaids are chanting the wild lorelie
Over the streamlet vapors are borne
Waiting to fade at the bright coming morn
Beautiful dreamer, beam on my heart
E'en as the morn on the streamlet and sea
Then will all clouds of sorrow depart
Beautiful dreamer, awake unto me
Beautiful dreamer, awake unto me

Wednesday, June 16, 2010

Charles Gounod Birthday Anniversary

Charles Gounod
French-born Romantic period music and opera composer
(17 June, 1818 – 18 October, 1893)

The MP3 below expired on 06-21-2010.
Click here to play the current selection.


Sharon Bezaly, flute (2002)
- Concertino for Flute
and Chamber Orchestra (Gounod)






Tuesday, June 15, 2010

Edvard Grieg's Birthday Anniversary

Edvard Grieg
Norwegian pianist, late Romantic period composer
(15 June, 1843 - 4 September, 1907)

The MP3 below expired on 06-16-2010.
Click here to play the current selection.


The Pete Smith Orchestra (1969)
- In the Hall of the Mountain King (after Grieg)

Sunday, June 13, 2010

Softly, as in a Morning Sunrise

Sunrise, Mesa Verde NP, AZ


Stanley Black
English pianist, composer,
arranger, and conductor
(14 June, 1913 - 27 November, 2002)

The MP3 below expired on 06-15-2010.
Click here to play the current selection.


Stanley Black, piano (1959)
- Softly, as in a Morning Sunrise (Romberg)

Wednesday, June 09, 2010

I Am All Right with Porter

Cole Porter
Renown American pop composer and lyricist
(9 June, 1891 - 15 October, 1964)

The MP3 below expired on 06-13-2010.
Click here to play the current selection.


Ralph Sharon Trio (1990)
- It's All Right with Me (Porter)

Sunday, June 06, 2010

D-Day, June 6, 1944

Pointe du Hoc, Omaha Beach, Normandy

"Good Luck! And Let us all beseech the blessing of Almighty God
upon this great and noble undertaking."
-- Dwight D. Eisenhower
Order of the Day, June 4, 1944

The Spartacus Onedin Line

    Ballet Spartacus (Khachaturian)

Aram Khachaturian
Armenian composer
(6 June, 1903 – 1 May, 1978)

The MP3 below expired on 06-09-2010.
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Ronnie Aldrich twin-piano (2004)
- Adagio of Spartacus and Phrygia
(The 'Spartacus' Ballet Orchestration)
or as
The Theme from 'The Onedin Line'

Sunday, May 30, 2010

Friday, May 21, 2010

The Bridal Chorus ala Jazzbo

Richard Wagner
German composer primarily known for his operas
(22 May, 1813 - 13 February, 1883)

The MP3 below expired on 05-30-2010.
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Al "Jazzbo" Collins (1960)
- The Bridal Chorus (after Wagner)

Wednesday, May 12, 2010

Thaïs in Deep Thought

Jules Massenet
French-born neo-classical and opera composer
(12 May, 1842 - 13 August, 1912)

The MP3 below expired on 01-15-2010.
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- Méditation from 'Thaïs' (Messenet)

Le vrai est trop simple , il faut y arriver toujours par le compliqué
-- George Sand

Monday, May 10, 2010

A Max Steiner's Place

Was Tara still standing?
Or was Tara also gone with the wind which had swept through Georgia?

- Margaret Mitchell, 'Gone with the Wind', Chapter 24


Max Steiner
(10 May, 1888 - 28 December, 1971)
Austrian-born American movie scores composer
best known music includes
Tara's Theme from Gone with the Wind (1939)
and
Theme from A Summer Place (1959).

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Ron Goodwin and his orchestra (1996)
- Tara's Theme
from 'Gone with the Wind' (Steiner)

Thursday, May 06, 2010

Will It Always Live On?

Note: Besides Tchaikovsky, tomorrow, 7 May, is also Johannes Brahms birthday anniversary (7 May, 1833 - 3 April, 1897). He was the very last of the Romantic Era composer. Only a Tchaikovsky piece is posted this time.

Peter Ilyich Tchaikovsky
Russian-born Romantic Era composer
(7 May, 1840 - 6 November, 1893)

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Tony Martin (1941)
- Tonight We Love
(after Tchaikovsky Piano Concerto No. 1 B Flat Minor)

Tonight We Love
Freddy Martin, vocals (1941)
Words: Bobby Worth
Music Adaptation: Ray Austin and Freddy Martin
- from Tchaikovsky's Piano Concerto No. 1 in B-Flat Minor, Op. 23

Tonight we love
While the moon beams down in dream light
Tonight we touch the stars
Love is ours

Night winds that sigh embrace the sky
Tonight we love in the glow
That gleams so softly

I know this wasn't meant to borrow
But tomorrow will it be gone
Or will it always live on
Tonight we love

[Interlude]

Tonight we love in the glow
That gleams so softly

I know this wasn't meant to borrow
But tomorrow will it be gone
Or will it always live on
Tonight we love

Wednesday, May 05, 2010

Poet of the Piano Birthday Anniversary

Carmen Cavallaro
pianist, and orchestra conductor
"Poet of the Piano"
(6 May, 1913 - 12 October, 1989)

The MP3 below expired on 05-06-2010.
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Carmen Cavallaro, piano (1996 compilation)
- Love is a Many-Splendored Thing (Fain)






Monday, May 03, 2010

Can't Take My Eyes Off You, My Gentle Joy



Titania, having had her eyes anointed with Oberon's love potion, fell in love with Bottom the weaver, whose head had been converted into that of an ass by the playful Puck.

"Come, sit thee down upon this flow'ry bed,
While I thy amiable cheeks do coy,
And stick musk-roses in thy sleek smooth head,
And kiss thy fair large ears, my gentle joy."
-- A Midsummer Night's Dream, Act 4 Scene 1

Frankie Valli
American-born pop vocalist
3 May, 1934 -

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Frankie Valli (1967)
- Can't Take My Eyes Off You
(Crewe and Gaudio)

Sunday, May 02, 2010

Who Knows Where or When



Lorenz Hart
American-born lyricist
(2 May, 1895 - 22 November, 1943)

The MP3 below expired on 05-03-2010.
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Maragaret Whiting (1995 compilation)
- Where or When (Rodgers and Hart)

Saturday, May 01, 2010

Her Spring Longing in May

Spring Longing
Emma Lazarus
(22 July, 1849 – 19 November, 1887)


What art thou doing here, O Imagination? Go
away I entreat thee by the gods, as thou didst
come, for I want thee not. But thou art come
according to thy old fashion. I am not angry
with thee--only go away.
--Marcus Antoninus

Lilac hazes veil the skies.
Languid sighs
Breathes the mild, caressing air.
Pink as coral's branching sprays,
Orchard ways
With the blossomed peach are fair.

Sunshine, cordial as a kiss,
Poureth bliss
In this craving soul of mine,
And my heart her flower-cup
Lifteth up,
Thirsting for the draught divine.

Swift the liquid golden flame
Through my frame
Sets my throbbing veins afire.
Bright, alluring dreams arise,
Brim mine eyes
With the tears of strong desire.

All familiar scenes anear
Disappear--
Homestead, orchard, field, and wold.
Moorish spires and turrets fair
Cleave the air,
Arabesqued on skies of gold.

Low, my spirit, this May morn,
Outward borne,
Over seas hath taken wing:
Where the mediaeval town,
Like a crown,
Wears the garland of the Spring.

Light and sound and odors sweet
Fill the street;
Gypsy girls are selling flowers.
Lean hidalgos turn aside,
Amorous-eyed,
'Neath the grim cathedral towers.

Oh, to be in Spain to-day,
Where the May
Recks no whit of good or evil,
Love and only love breathes she!
Oh, to be
Midst the olive-rows of Seville!

Or on such a day to glide
With the tide
Of the berylline lagoon,
Through the streets that mirror heaven,
Crystal paven,
In the warm Venetian noon.

At the prow the gondolier
May not hear,
May not see our furtive kiss;
But he lends with cadenced strain
The refrain
To our ripe and silent bliss.

Golden shadows, silver light,
Burnish bright
Air and water, domes and skies;
As in some ambrosial dream,
On the stream
Floats our bark in magic wise.

Oh, to float day long just so!
Naught to know
Of the trouble, toil, and fret!
This is love, and this is May:
Yesterday
And to-morrow to forget!

Whither hast thou, Fancy free,
Guided me,
Wild Bohemian sister dear?
All thy gypsy soul is stirred
Since yon bird
Warbled that the Spring was here.

Tempt no more! I may not follow,
Like the swallow,
Gayly on the track of Spring.
Bounden by an iron fate,
I must wait,
Dream and wonder, yearn and sing.

A Nice May Beginning

It is a beautiful first day of May.
Sunny and clear
77 °F/25 °C.
Breeze 2.0 m/hr; 3.2 km/hr.

Thursday, April 29, 2010

Sunrise, Sunset


Sheldon Harnick
American-born film-stage lyricst
30 April, 1924 -

The MP3 below expired on 04-30-2010.
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London Festival Chorus (1999)
- Sunrise, Sunset
(Bock and Harnick)


Sunrise, Sunset
from 'Fiddler on the Roof' (1971)

Music: Jerry Bock
Words: Sheldon Harnick

London Festival Chorus (1999)
Non-film version

Is this the little girl I carried?
Is this the little boy at play?

I don't remember growing older
When did they?

When did she get to be a beauty?
When did he grow to be so tall?

Wasn't it yesterday
When they were small?

Sunrise, sunset
Sunrise, sunset
Swiftly flow the days
Seedlings turn overnight to sunflowers
Blossoming even as we gaze

Sunrise, sunset
Sunrise, sunset
Swiftly fly the years
One season following another
Laden with happiness and tears

Now is the little boy a bridegroom
Now is the little girl a bride

Under the canopy I see them
Side by side

Place the gold ring around her finger
Share the sweet wine and break the glass

Soon the full circle will have come to pass

Sunrise, sunset
Sunrise, sunset
Swiftly flow the days
Seedlings turn overnight to sunflowers
Blossoming even as we gaze

Sunrise, sunset
Sunrise, sunset
Swiftly fly the years
One season following another
Laden with happiness and tears

Tuesday, April 27, 2010

You Want How Many Oranges?

Sergei Prokofiev
Russian neo-classical
ballet and opera composer
(27 April, 1891 - 5 March, 1953)

The MP3 below expired on 04-29-2010.
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Nadja Salerno-Sonnenberg, violin (1992)
- March from 'The Love of Three Oranges'
Suite for Orchestra, Op. 33 (Prokofiev)




Saturday, April 24, 2010

The Bostic Sleep

Earl Bostic
Alto saxist; Rhythm and Blues band leader
(25 April, 1913 - 28 October, 1968)

The MP3 below expired on 04-27-2010.
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Earl Bostic, alto sax (1951)
- Sleep

Thursday, April 22, 2010

A Menuhin and Grappelli Violin Duet

Yehudi Menuhin
American-born violin virtuoso
and classical music conductor
(22 April, 1916 - 12 March, 1999)

The MP3 below expired on 04-24-2010.
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Yehudi Menuhin, violin
& Stephane Grappelli, jazz violin (1998)
- Cheek to Cheek (Berlin)

Since there are two violins in this piece, it's not possible to tell who is who if one is not familiar with either world-class musician.

Menuhin is the "higher voice". He starts and ends the piece with a classical flair. Grappelli trips along foot-loosely as the "lower voice" partner.

Wednesday, April 21, 2010

Sometimes an April day...

...will suddenly bring showers.

We have had light to moderate April showers the past two days. The weather got me thinking doing a YouTube video on an oldie movie tune - "April Love". So I did.

April Love is the Pat Boone's song which he sang in the movie. I added the lyrics for the sing-along to this song-story I made for YouTube.


Pat Boone (1957)
April Love (Fain and Webster)
Click here to view this YouTube.

My other YouTube music video links are posted on the sidebar.

Sunday, April 18, 2010

Mottola Shines

Tony Mottola
American-born guitarist and composer
(18 April, 1918 - 10 August, 2004)

The MP3 below expired on 04-22-2010.
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Tony Mottola, jazz guitar (1967)
- Sunny (Hebb)







Sunday, April 11, 2010

What Romantic Fools We Mortals Be

Helen Forrest
Big Band vocalist
(12 April, 1918 – 11 July, 1999)

The MP3 below expired on 04-12-2010.
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Benny Goodman Orchestra with
Helen Forrest (1941)
- Perfida (Dominquez)








Perfidia
Composer: Alberto Dominguez, 1939

Orchestra: Benny Goodman, 1941
Vocals: Helen Forrest, 1941

To you
My heart cries out perfidia
For I found you the love of my life
In somebody else’s arm

Your eyes
Are echoing perfidia
Forgetful of our promise of love
You're sharing another’s charm

With a sad lament my dreams have faded like a broken melody
While the gods of love look down and laugh at what romantic fools we mortals be

And now
I know my love was not for you
And so I take it back with a sigh
Perfidious one
Goodbye

Friday, April 09, 2010

The Art of Art

Art Van Damme
American-born jazz accordionist
(9 April, 1920 - 15 February, 2010)

The MP3 below expired on 04-11-2010.
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Art Van Damme, jazz accordion (1995)
Cheeck to Cheek (Berlin)






Wednesday, April 07, 2010

Heinz Provost's Intermezzo

Percy Faith
Orchestra leader, pianist, and arranger
(7 April, 1908 - 9 February, 1976)

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Percy Faith and His Orchestra (1959)
Intermezzo (Provost)

Somewhere a Hill Blossoms in Green and Gold


In 1966, lyricist Paul Francis Webster added the words to Maurice Jarre's Oscar winning score Somewhere My Love (Lara's Theme), first introduced in the 1965 film, "Dr. Zhivago." The Ray Conniff Singers debuted this song on 18 June 1966. It was #9 on the Hot 100 Chart.

The words to this song are captioned on my YouTube.


The Ray Conniff Singers (1966)
Somewhere My Love (Lara's Theme) Video
Click here to view this L'Envoi YouTube.

Sunday, April 04, 2010

Knee Deep in Flowers We'll Stray


The MP3 below expired on 04-07-2010.
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The McGuire Sisters (1956)
Tip-toe Thru the Tulips with Me
(Dubin and Burke)

Allelujah, He is Risen!

Sin's bonds severed we're delivered;
Christ has bruised the serpent's head;
Death no longer is the stronger
Hell itself is captive led,
Christ has risen from death's prison;
O'er the tomb He light has shed.

Praise the Savior
Third Stanza
Koralbok, 1697

Saturday, April 03, 2010

The Sea is a Shepherdess

Bobby Darin recorded his signature hit, "Beyond the Sea", on Christmas Eve 1959. Other than the borrowed tune and the word "sea", there is no resemblance between Charles Trenet's "La Mer" and Darin's recording. The poetry of "La Mer" is lost in "Beyond the Sea."

Here it is, sung in French by Dalida, with my English captions.


Dalida (1986)
La mer (Trenet) Video
Click here to view this L'Envoi YouTube.

Friday, April 02, 2010

Tetelestai

The most important word the world needs to know.  It is from the Bible:


John 19:30 "It is finished!"
Greek:τετέλεσται
Transliteration: "tetelestai"
Definition: to bring to an end, complete, fulfill


Man of Sorrows
Words & Music: Phillip P. Bliss, 1875

1. Man of Sorrows! What a name
For the Son of God, Who came
Ruined sinners to reclaim.
[Chorus]

Chorus:
Hallelujah! What a Savior!
Hallelujah! What a Savior!

2. Bearing shame and scoffing rude,
In my place condemned He stood;
Sealed my pardon with His blood.
[Chorus]

3. Guilty, vile, and helpless we;
Spotless Lamb of God was He;
Full atonement! Can it be?
[Chorus]

4. Lifted up was He to die;
"It is finished!" was His cry;
Now in heaven exalted high.
[Chorus]

5. When He comes, our glorious King,
All His ransomed home to bring,
Then anew His song we’ll sing:
[Chorus]

Tuesday, March 30, 2010

Monday, March 29, 2010

Vangelis Birthday Anniversary

Evangelos "Vangelis" Papathanassiou
Greek Composer
Academy Award Best Music, Orginal Score
1982: Chariots of Fire

29 March, 1943  -

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Don Persival, vocals (1982)
- One More Kiss Dear (Vangelis and Skellem)





One More Kiss Dear

Film: Blade Runner (1982)
Composer: Vangelis
Words: Peter Skellern
Vocals: Don Percival

One more kiss, dear
One more sigh
Only this, dear
It's goodbye
For our love is such pain
And such pleasure
That I'll treasure till I die

So for now, dear
Au revoir, my belle
But I vow dear
Not farewell
For in time we may
Have though love's glory
Our love story to tell

Just as every autumn
Leaves fall from the tree
Tumble to the ground and die
So in was springtime
Like sweet memories
They will return as will I

Like the sun, dear
Upon high
We'll return, dear
To the sky
And we'll banish
The pain and the sorrow
Until tomorrow goodbye

Recitative:
[One more kiss, dear
One more sigh
Only this, dear
Is goodbye
For our love is such passion
Such pleasure
I will treasure until I die]

Like the sun, dear
Upon high
We'll return, dear
To the sky
And we'll banish
The pain and the sorrow
Until tomorrow goodbye

Sunday, March 28, 2010

Palm Sunday 2010: Thou Who Dist Love Me

Palm Sunday
Title: "He treadeth the winepress of the fierceness and wrath of Almighty God"
- Christina Rossetti

I lift mine eyes, and see
Thee, tender Lord, in pain upon the tree,
Athirst for my sake and athirst for me.
"Yea, look upon Me there,
Compassed with thorns and bleeding everywhere,
For thy sake bearing all, and glad to bear."
I lift my heart to pray:
Thou Who didst love me all that darkened day,
Wilt Thou not love me to the end alway?
"Yea, thee My wandering sheep,
Yea, thee My scarlet sinner slow to weep,
Come to Me, I will love thee and will keep."
Yet am I racked with fear:
Behold the unending outer darkness drear,
Behold the gulf unbridgeable and near!
"Nay, fix thy heart, thine eyes,
Thy hope upon My boundless sacrifice:
Will I lose lightly one so dear-bought prize?"
Ah, Lord; it is not Thou,
Thou that wilt fail; yet woe is me, for how
Shall I endure who half am failing now?
"Nay, weld thy resolute will
To Mine: glance not aside for good or ill:
I love thee; trust Me still and love Me still."
Yet Thou Thyself hast said,
When Thou shalt sift the living from the dead
Some must depart shamed and uncomforted.
"Judge not before that day:
Trust Me with all thy heart, even tho' I slay:
Trust Me in love, trust on, love on, and pray.

Saturday, March 27, 2010

Doris à la Jane

Jay Livingston
American-born Academy Awards Music Composer
1956: Que Sera Sera
(28 March, 1915 - 17 October, 2001)

The MP3 below expired on 03-29-2010.
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Jane Seidel (2001)
Que Sera Sera (Livingston and Evans)

Sunday, March 21, 2010

The Obama Care Vote in Congress Today

"For well forewarned, and not suddenly or secretly shall you be entangled in the inextricable net of calamity by reason of your folly."

Prometheus Bound, 1071 -- Aeschylus

Saturday, March 20, 2010

Thanks, Johann

Johann Sebastian Bach
Father of Music
(21 March, 1685 - 28 July, 1750)
325 birthday anniversary

The MP3 below expired on 03-22-2010.
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Rudi Moosmeier, jazz piano (2006)
Minuet in G Major (JS Bach)

In Spring...

It's 20 March, 2010. The first day of spring in the Northern Hemisphere.

an old man's fancy...

... tumbles fondly over the ever youthful verses of Tennyson:

"In the Spring a livelier iris changes on the burnish’d dove;
In the Spring a young man’s fancy lightly turns to thoughts of love.

Then her cheek was pale and thinner than should be for one so young,
And her eyes on all my motions with a mute observance hung."

Locksley Hall -- Alfred Lord Tennyson (1809–1892)


... and he pertly grins as he looks on not at his newspaper.

Friday, March 19, 2010

Rapture in Nature's Kiss

Sighs were meant for an hour like this
When joy is keen as a thrust of pain.
Do you wonder the poet’s heart should miss
This touch of rapture in Nature’s kiss
And dream of Asolo ever again?

--excerpt from "Browning at Asolo"
Robert Underwood Johnson (1853-1937)


Eliane Elias
Brazilian jazz pianist, composer, etc.,
19 March, 1960 –    

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Eliane Elias, jazz piano (2002)
Kissed by Nature (Elias)

Wednesday, March 17, 2010

Chanson hindoue

Nikolai Rimsky-Korsakov
Russian Neo-classical Composer
(18 March, 1844 - 21 June, 1908)

The MP3 below expired on 03-19-2010.
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Fritz Kreisler, violin
- Chanson hindoue for violin and piano
(Rimsky-Korsakov, Kreisler arr., 1919)

A Single Combat Fame Speaks Clear

I surprised myself to have written two book reviews in as many months.

The review is titled: "A Single Combat Fame Speaks Clear"
My nom de plume is: Gussie Fink-Nottle.

You may also read the review on the Amazon link:

A Single Combat Fame Speaks Clear

If you like, you may comment here on this blog or at the Amazon site.

“Dim is the rumour of a common fight,
When host meets host, and many names are sunk;
But of a single combat Fame speaks clear.”

— Matthew Arnold "Sohrab and Rustum" (1853)

The ski resort town Cortina d'Ampezzo is nestled in the Ampezzo valley of northeastern Italy, bordering Austria. The region's scenic Dolomite alps and valley have played host to a number of motion pictures. Classic adventure films such as The Pink Panther (1963), For Your Eyes Only (1981), and the Cliffhanger (1993) were filmed in the area. Cortina was also the site for the 1956 Winter Olympics.

During World War II, Cortina was a vital German army headquarter in northern Italy. It served as the communications and transportation synapse between Italy and Germany. To the west of this alpine village, the Brenner Pass had been the principal artery linking Italy and Austria during the conflict. Even to this day, it is still the lowest and easiest of the alpine routes to travel between the two countries. Its strategic importance dates back to the Roman empire.

One month before the Allied invasion of Sicily in July 1943, the objective of The Brenner Assignment was for small teams of OSS (Office of Strategic Services) operatives, with the aid of local partisans, to disrupt and destroy the road network in the Cortina area feeding into the Brenner Pass. The principals of this true story centered about the Captains Stephen Hall and Howard Chappell.

Hall parachuted into northern Italy in August 1943, a month after the invasion of Sicily. Chappell's charge was to linked up with Hall and provided the latter with a radio operator. Chappell arrived at the Dolomites, the day after Christmas in 1943. By then, it had been three months since the Allied had successfully invaded and secured southern Italy. Consequently, the Allied and Italy declared armistice on 8 September, 1943. With Italy out of the war, the Germans fought on but slowly retreated northward to the Brenner Pass. And the SS were closing in on Hall and Chappell.

Yet, the fate of war barred the meeting of these two brothers-in-arms. Each relied on their skills and endurance to complete the objective charged. An excerpt from the book illustrates what these OSS operatives endured while fighting behind enemy line. In this narrative, the determination of an already ill and frostbitten Captain Hall heads toward the Cortina railroad station:

"An hour after dawn on January 26, Hall pushed off from his safe house in the tiny Dolomite town of Andrich...Hall's journey took him through seventeen miles of some of the most formidable terrain on earth. The miles are not a true measure of the journey, which only takes more than half an hour by car. On skis, the trip moves over mountains, down gullies, and into canyons. Hall's journey would take at least two days."

It's been said the world knows nothing of its greatest men. Books like The Brenner Assignment are answering such challenge and disproving its proposition. Wartime heroic exploits of men like Hall and Chappell are being revealed. There are those like Sartre, however, in their own state of existential existence, reason that wartime heroism is "a false experience". A Kant philodoxer, Sartre is in this instance. Heroism feels and never reasons, says Emerson, and therefore is always right. He further makes the point the things the hero does is the highest deed, and is not open to the censure of philosophers or divines.

Odd and quaint as it may seem, there is an old legal document which brings to bear on the illustrious character and splendid achievements of Captains Hall and Chappell:

"The difference between the difficult and the impossible is as follows: the difficult is troublesome to procure, but though troublesome it is still procured; whereas the impossible is a thing which it is impossible for a person to procure, because it is not natural for anybody to get it at all."
-- Ancient Laws of Ireland: Uraicect becc and Certain Other Selected Law Tract, Vol.5, 1901, page 223.


When viewed in totality of the separately pledged labor of Hall and Chappell, they had, indeed, procured the difficult and the impossible in the Brenner assignment.

With diagrams and pictures, this is an easy and captivating book to read. Notwithstanding, the author should have included a discussion on the Allied invasion of Italy in the prologue. The Baby Boomers and the generations which follow could stand to learn more about World War II. In addition, a brief mentioned of dates and events of the invasion for each chapter heading would have helped. Having this information, the reader would have a better grasp of the dates mentioned the Hall and Chappell narratives, relative to the overall chronology of the invasion.

Tuesday, March 16, 2010

I Wanna Be an Artist

Nancy Pelosi, Speaker of the House, said on 12 March, 2010, if Obama Care is passed, artists can quit their day jobs and not have to worry about health insurance. "Think of an economy where people could be an artist or a photographer or, eh, a writer without worrying about keeping their day job in order to have health insurance..."

I have a better idea, Mrs. Pelosi. Why don't the Democrats add a rider to the yet-to-seen health care bill, say, a minimum of $120,000 with COLA per year for all citizens and illegals. What's a few more trillions added here and there to the national debt? Think of the benefits.

No one is going to be on welfare, and everyone will have guaranteed income with health insurance from cradle to grave. Best of all, no one will have to work to earn a living anymore. Okay, the Treasury has to work 24/7. We need them to print more money. And of course, all state and federal agenices must continue to operate in a work-free society for the good of the people and the country.

Most important, the Democrats could well be running the three branches of the government as the Fourth Reich, for a thousand-year at least. Don't you think this is a better plan than just Obama care, Mrs. Pelosi?

I've always wanted to paint like Monet and take pictures throught the viewfinder of Ansel Adams. Obama Care and a life stipend would help me realize my dream as Claude Adams. I could hardly wait.

Monday, March 15, 2010

Apple Blossom Time (Very Soon)

Harry James
Renown trumpeter and Big Band leader
(15 March, 1916 – 5 July, 1983)

The MP3 below expired on 03-17-2010.
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Harry James and Helen Forrest (v)
in a 1942 radio broadcast
Apple Blossom Time
(Tilzer and Fleeson, 1920)

Saturday, March 13, 2010

The Renown Bizet Has His Day

Les Brown, Sr.
Big Band Leader and Composer
(14 March, 1912 - 4 January, 2001)

The MP3 below expired on 03-15-2010.
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Les Brown and His Band of Renown (1959)
- Bizet Has His Day
(after Bizet; Arr. Homer; 1944)

A trivia question: Which Bizet composition inspired this Big Band arrangement?

The Dumbing Down of White Males in America

Have you ever noticed in TV commercials, if there are black and white male actors involved in the script, it is invariably the white guy who asks the unintelligent question, or acts like a dolt. Conversely, it is the black boss, physician, or sport celeb who has his act (pun) together. He imparts the sound advice to the less informed, self-doubting, or klutzy white counterpart.

The Michael Jordans in TV ads are always the superior decision makers than the bumbling and fumbling Charlie Sheens.

Thursday, March 11, 2010

Libertango Friday

Astor Piazzolla
Argentine Tango composer
(11 March, 1921 – 4 July, 1992)

The MP3 below expired on 03-13-2010.
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Caribbean Jazz Project (1999)
Libertango (Piazzola)

Tuesday, March 09, 2010

How Deep is Deep Purple?

Dusk at Lake Yellowstone,Yellowstone NP, WY

I wrote a philosophy paper once in college on Bertrand Russell's Universals. Bertrand universals are words like "east", "far", "white" and so forth. Thus, London is east of Edinburgh. And the wall color is white. My discourse was on how "east" was east? And how "white" was white? Totally useless stuff.

The prof wrote a note on my paper and said, if I went and see him and discussed some more on Russell, he would see to it that I'd receive the highest grade allowed for his class. I never did see him. I just didn't want anything more to do with Bertie.

So, how "deep" is Deep Purple? Do you care? I certainly don't. This tune is par excellence, however. March 10 is Peter De Rose's birthday anniversary. Here then, is a gypsy guitar instrumental of Deep Purple. This is really "deep" stuff, as Bertie might say.

Peter De Rose
American-born pop music composer
(10 March, 1900 - 24 April, 1953)

The MP3 below expired on 03-11-2010.
Click here to play current selection.


Angelo Debarre et al (1989)
Deep Purple (De Rose)

Monday, March 08, 2010

Twittering for Life or Death

Like a swallow, like a crane, so I twitter;
I moan like a dove;
My eyes look wistfully to the heights;
O Lord, I am oppressed, be my security.

-- Isaiah 38:14, The New American Standard Bible

Twitter in the preceding translation of the biblical Hebrew text is אצפצף; with its primitive root as צָפַף (tsaphaph:tsaw-faf'). The English translation can be that of: to chirp, peep-chirped, twitter, or whisper.

In this Isaiah 38:14 passage, the healed King Hezekiah recounted his anguish and distress sounds as birds would. Even capable of flying, the birds still could not ascend or escape to a place for safety and security. This pleading prayer is similar to that in Psalm 119:122-123.

The only other instance in the Bible where אצפצף is found, again, in the Book of Isaiah, Chapter 8. Here, the prophet Isaiah admonished the idolatrous Israelites for seeking the peace and security from the dead rather than the living God. Isaiah 8:19 reads as follows:

When they say to you,
"Consult the mediums and the spiritists who whisper and mutter,"
should not a people consult their God?
Should they consult the dead on behalf of the living?

-- Isaiah 8:19, The New American Standard Bible

Twittering has to do with our choice of spiritual affinity. There are only two choices. One is for us to come before God in supplication for forgiveness, mercy, and renewal (Titus 3:5). Or, we in strident self reliance (Deuteronomy 9:24), turn our back to the Sun of Righteousness (Malachi 4:2), and walk with the shadow of destruction ever before us.

Do you twitter? If you do, what kind?

Sunday, March 07, 2010

Unfriend?

When I typed the title word for this post on the Blogger application, the spelling checker immediately flagged me. I did not correct it, or add it to my on-line dictionary. Accordingly, this word "unfriend" was named as the New Oxford American Dictionary (NOAD) word of the year in 2009. An associated word also registered acceptance in the dictionary was "defriend".

These words have lex-appeal in this intensely charged techno-social networking age. It is now understood, though grammatically incorrect, for someone to say, "I have unfriended President Obama" from the Facebook. You say President Obama only does Twitter? No problem. You could just "tweetup" the prez in you Blackberry or iPhone. If you don't agree with his health care plan or tax and spend socialist policies, you can't "untweep" or "unfollow" him just yet in Twitter. These words, you see, are not sanctioned by NOAD. I should think they will be by the end of the year. (Surely, you may say these words or make up you own. I am just being sarcastic.)

For the New Oxford American Dictonary to bestow its blessings on the life-style words, as though it owns them, is a shrew business ploy. Notwithstanding the detractors and supporter of this tactic, Oxford University is latching on to its brand name recognition and holding an edge over the competitors. It is much like what Forbes does each year by scoring America's Most Livable Cities. What sells matters.

Thus the butchering of the English tongue continues in the twenty-first century.

Saturday, March 06, 2010

A Graffiti Bolero

Joseph Maurice Ravel
French Neo-classical composer
(7 March, 1875 – 28 December, 1937)

The MP3 below expired on 03-09-2010.
Click here for current selection.


The Planets (2002)
Bolero Fantasy (after Ravel)

Thursday, March 04, 2010

Brazilian Bach Pieces No. 5

Antônio Parreiras - Fantasia (1909)

Today's post is a little something about Brazilian arts, but with a twist. We have art within art in both the painting (above) and music (below).

In Parreiras' painting "Fantasia", he paints an artist painting vases. Quick. How many vases are in the painting? If you would only look at the vases...*grin*

As for our birthday guest, Heitor Villa-Lobos, he loves the works of JS Bach. In his Bachianas brasileiras (Brazilian Bach Pieces), Villa-Lobos insinuates Bach's artistry into his own distinctive compositions.

It gives me pleasure to post one of Villa-Lobos most recognized and popular Brazialian Bach Pieces for your listening enjoyment. Click on the link below to listen to this piece.

Heitor Villa-Lobos
Brazilian-born composer
(5 March, 1887 - 17 November 1959)

The MP3 below expired on 03-06-2010.
Click here for current selection.


Werner Muller and His Orchestra (1971)
Bachianas brasileiras No. 5 (Villa-Lobos)

A Neither Here Nor There Video

I made this video for the birthday anniversaries of G.F. Handel and Richard Lewis. The former's birthday was on 23 February, and the latter is on 10 May. It's a case of either a too late or too early tribute for the artists.
Follow the libretto on the screen and sing along in English. The music and words are very beautiful. Enjoy.

Click on the following YouTube link to view the video:


Richard Lewis, Tenor
"Where'er You Walk"
(Air from Handel's Semele)
Click here to view this L'Envoi YouTube.