Thesis: To consider what the chance intersection of ideal beauty and intellectual confusion would mean in determining the fate of Earth. Phase 1: While touring San Francisco, I stayed at the Sir Francis Drake. The bartenders were adequate. Phase 2: I began a blog. I learned romance might exist, but depends upon whether a man and a woman can tread the maze individually and reach its center at the exact same instant in time. Phase 3: The center comes and goes as if it were a mirage.
Sunday, July 12, 2009
Music & the magic it envelopes
Put on the costume & no one sleeps
If you had been in Florence, Italy, in May of 1971, you would have had the opportunity to hear this voice and this tenor aria in person. Well, I was not there, either, but I heard recordings of this voice singing one song or another two or three or four times a week for a few years when I was a teenager.
There have been a few times when I have mentioned that I had a step-father who had lived on Long Island in New York for a decade and, when he returned to his hometown in Minnesota, brought with him an acquired love of opera, Broadway musicals and classical music in general. When he and my mother married, I became the beneficiary of hearing these forms of music. As you might imagine, few, if any, of my small town contemporaries were exposed to these types of music.
My step-father's favorite singer was Richard Tucker, an American who reportedly was more Italian in voice, demeanor and talent than any native-born Italian of his time. So, for the fun of it, here is an audio of Tucker singing "Vesti la Giubba" from Leoncavallo's "Pagliacci." This excerpt is from a live, May 1971, performance at Florence's May Festival. Riccardo Muti is conducting the orchestra. I picked this one to offer a taste of Tucker because everyone knows Florence is a mystical city, and because no one knows where he might find himself next May.
Following next is a clip of Tucker performing the sensually beautiful aria, "Nessum Dorma," from Puccini's "Turandot." The clip is from an "ancient" Ed Sullivan Show recorded in 1961. Too bad they did not permit Tucker to carry on the final note another five or six seconds. By the way, Turandot is one young lady a young man definitely does not want to lose his head over. Rock on, baby, and roll away ....
Song No. 1 -- Richard Tucker Vesti la guibba = Put on the costume Florence, Italy 1971
Song No. 2 -- Richard Tucker Nessum dorma = No one sleeps Ed Sullivan Show 1961
Will the real Fram please stand up
Just to make certain no one walks away from here thinking Fram is flipping his cookies (well, actually, he might be), here is a taste of the music more likely to be identified with him. David Coverdale is a fairly typical, fairly average (I think) singer who generally is identified with the bands Deep Purple or Whitesnake. Jimmy Page might be typical, but is hardly average. His name will forever be linked to the band Led Zeppelin, and he is among the premier guitar players of his era.
Coverdale and Page tied in together for a while in the 1990s. This is an amateur video from a performance in 1993 in Japan. Page is playing his "famous" two-neck, Gibson guitar for this piece, which is, "Take Me for a Little While." Too, bad the video is not better quality, but, alas, nothing is perfect.
David Coverdale & Jimmy Page Take Me for a Little While Osaka, Japan 1993
Hi Fram :D Thanks for introducing me to Richard Tucker! I do love opera myself...I think it is an acquired taste. Once you start listening to it often it becomes magical and you fall in love...at least for me that is how it went with opera...LOL I especially like the first video...so pretty :D I like the music things you have been doing over here....it's fun :D Hope you had a Fun Day Today! xox
A man must be very careful after putting in one post such a words as Florence, Italy, opera, Osaka, Japan, while he know I could read it and hear this music, especially when he is so handsome, as I can see here, and especially when he usually know, what he is talking about. Just remember I have worned you. Wonderful surprise, thank you Fram the Wolf! :-) Have a beautiful Sunday. Bye, bye.
Gee, Fram - I would hate to think how much catch up time I would need to devote to reading your blogs if you had not decided to take a break over the summer! Tee Hee... I get lost in your blogs reading, listening and thinking and then responding... so when presented with 4 blogs to absorb - I am overwhelmed. Suffice to say that I look forward to your blogs and glad you are still finding time to do 2 or 3 a week, even if I have not the time to respond to each in my usual verbose fashion.
Thanks for the opera today - I had wondered but not doubted that you are about more than just rock and roll. I have only attended one Opera - Cosi Fan Tutti, which I enjoyed, (though distainful of the theme) but my date (who had the seasons tickets) fell asleep for the middle of the 3 hours. I decided I like Opera but agreed with my date - one or two hours is sufficient and one or two songs is all the better.
Jimmy Page and Led Zeppelin - remind me of my teenage years. Thanks for bringing back memories of my youth and sharing this video with us!
Now on to your other posts for more tidbits for the ears!
Yes, Kelly, I recall that you attended an opera in Los Angeles not too long ago, and anyone who, like you, is a season ticket holder must enjoy the opera immensely.
My step-father thought Richard Tucker to be the absolute best ever. He had seen him perform several times when he lived on Long Island, on Broadway as well as in operas. I wish I would have seen Tucker, too.
Thank you, for complementing my rambling music style.
Well, I had not thought of Japan in this mix, but when I think of Florence and Italy, Magdalena is the first person who enters my mind.
We wolves are clever creatures, and enjoy the company of beautiful young ladies, so we will post whatever it takes to attract their attention so they will read our words, look at our photographs and listen to our music.
Thank you, for your visit and for your warning. Possibly, our paths will intersect at a May Festival sometime.
Actually, you have attended one more opera than I have, Peggy. I would like to see an opera at some point, but basically I enjoy individual songs or scenes, and am not certain I would have the patience to sit though an entire performance. Maybe it is best to say I enjoy operatic voices singing a variety of music.
Some of my posts have required a considerable amount of time to put together, which is what I wanted to get away from, but this form is fast and simple. Pick out a song or two for a particular reason and write a couple of paragraphs to accompany them. A post is ready in no time at all. But, the lapses between them will vary more in weeks a head.
Was this Coverdale's way of repaying Jimmy for ripping off 'Black Dog' for his 'Still of the Night'? I always liked Coverdale and to me he is just above an average singer, although well below Ian Gillan, the Purple's 'official' lead singer. Good piece.
I love arias, not operas. Went to one opera once in Cuba with my wife and we both walked out after the first act. But I love arias, maybe because just like your step-father, my father use dto play them at home.
Many thanks for such a fantastic post. The music was good.
You appear to be better versed in the exploits of Coverdale vs. Page than am I, CiL, but they seemed to work well together for the short time they collaborated.
I agree with you regarding Coverdale and Gillan, although I think Gillan might be heading downhill more quickly than is Coverdale in terms of the current state of their respective careers.
Yes, exactly, regarding the arias. I guess that is the way to put it. The moments are greater than the whole, for some of us, at least.
Bachelor of Arts with a double major in English (= literature) and history (= reality). Master of Arts in literature. Once upon a time, U.S. Marine Corps = Semper Fidelis. These things pretty much explain everything there is to know about me.
Other than that, ask, if you actually are curious .... I like to drift where the current takes me within this endless sea of blogs, read what others write in their blogs, observe, learn, question and, hopefully, understand, while offering a few comments of my own along the way .... by the way, the photo of me actually is me .... was me .... will be me .... hmmmm ....
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Romance, from Fram
I discovered Romance might yet exist, but it depends upon whether a man and a woman can tread the maze, individually, and reach its center at the same moment in time.
The Actual Instant of Love, from Fram
I am a jealous guy, of the sort John Lennon sang about. Any man who says he is not a jealous guy either has no genuine depth of feelings for the woman he is saying it about or is a liar. I can remember very distinctly, for example, when my feelings for my wife vanished. It happened in an instant. When love vanished, so did jealousy.
Actual love happens in an instant, I believe, although it does not always seem to be that way. I am not talking about "love at first sight," but, rather, "love at first instant." This means two people might have known each other for weeks, even for years, before the "instant" occurs. It comes with a single sentence spoken by one, or a single action taken by one, that strikes the other like lightning.
Affection grows; love is born. Love also disappears in an instant, I believe, although it does not always seem to happen that way. Incidental to my point, I do not believe in "love at first sight." That is no more than simple, physical or emotional attraction, which is the cause of countless and never-ending problems.
Happiness is momentary, from Fram
When I was age eighteen, a wise, old man of twenty-six told me that happiness is a momentary thing. It might last for minutes or days or weeks or, sometimes, even for a few years. But, like life itself, happiness is a transitory thing and, like fate, it is capricious. At some point along the road, I came to realize this wise, old man had been right.
The Three Sorts of Friends ....
Though friendships differ endless in degree, The sorts, methinks, may be reduced to three. Acquaintance many, and Conquaintance few; But for Inquaintance I know only two -- The friend I've mourned with, and the maid I woo!
Samuel Taylor Coleridge poet & philosopher Fragment 10: "The Three Sorts of Friends"
Time retains ....
Time retains its sacred right to meddle in each earthly affair. Still, time's unbounded power that makes a mountain crumble, moves seas, rotates a star, won't be enough to tear lovers apart: they are too naked, too embraced, too much like timid sparrows.
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Yesterday is History ....
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Never the answers
The most interesting thing in the world is another human being who wonders, suffers and raises the questions that have bothered him to the last day of his life, knowing he will never get the answers.
Will Durant historian, philosopher, teacher
The equality of man
Those who hammer their guns into plows will plow for those who do not.
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I am free, no matter what rules surround me. If I find them tolerable, I tolerate them; if I find them too obnoxious, I break them. I am free because I know that I alone am morally responsible for everything I do. Robert Heinlein science fiction writer philosopher
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Have gun .... will travel
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Time & again ....
Time .... he's waiting in the wings .... he speaks of senseless things .... but, if you could heal a broken heart, wouldn't time be out to charm you?
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8 comments:
Hi Fram :D Thanks for introducing me to Richard Tucker! I do love opera myself...I think it is an acquired taste. Once you start listening to it often it becomes magical and you fall in love...at least for me that is how it went with opera...LOL
I especially like the first video...so pretty :D
I like the music things you have been doing over here....it's fun :D
Hope you had a Fun Day Today!
xox
A man must be very careful after putting in one post such a words as Florence, Italy, opera, Osaka, Japan, while he know I could read it and hear this music, especially when he is so handsome, as I can see here, and especially when he usually know, what he is talking about. Just remember I have worned you. Wonderful surprise, thank you Fram the Wolf! :-) Have a beautiful Sunday. Bye, bye.
Gee, Fram - I would hate to think how much catch up time I would need to devote to reading your blogs if you had not decided to take a break over the summer! Tee Hee... I get lost in your blogs reading, listening and thinking and then responding... so when presented with 4 blogs to absorb - I am overwhelmed. Suffice to say that I look forward to your blogs and glad you are still finding time to do 2 or 3 a week, even if I have not the time to respond to each in my usual verbose fashion.
Thanks for the opera today - I had wondered but not doubted that you are about more than just rock and roll. I have only attended one Opera - Cosi Fan Tutti, which I enjoyed, (though distainful of the theme) but my date (who had the seasons tickets) fell asleep for the middle of the 3 hours. I decided I like Opera but agreed with my date - one or two hours is sufficient and one or two songs is all the better.
Jimmy Page and Led Zeppelin - remind me of my teenage years. Thanks for bringing back memories of my youth and sharing this video with us!
Now on to your other posts for more tidbits for the ears!
Yes, Kelly, I recall that you attended an opera in Los Angeles not too long ago, and anyone who, like you, is a season ticket holder must enjoy the opera immensely.
My step-father thought Richard Tucker to be the absolute best ever. He had seen him perform several times when he lived on Long Island, on Broadway as well as in operas. I wish I would have seen Tucker, too.
Thank you, for complementing my rambling music style.
Well, I had not thought of Japan in this mix, but when I think of Florence and Italy, Magdalena is the first person who enters my mind.
We wolves are clever creatures, and enjoy the company of beautiful young ladies, so we will post whatever it takes to attract their attention so they will read our words, look at our photographs and listen to our music.
Thank you, for your visit and for your warning. Possibly, our paths will intersect at a May Festival sometime.
Actually, you have attended one more opera than I have, Peggy. I would like to see an opera at some point, but basically I enjoy individual songs or scenes, and am not certain I would have the patience to sit though an entire performance. Maybe it is best to say I enjoy operatic voices singing a variety of music.
Some of my posts have required a considerable amount of time to put together, which is what I wanted to get away from, but this form is fast and simple. Pick out a song or two for a particular reason and write a couple of paragraphs to accompany them. A post is ready in no time at all. But, the lapses between them will vary more in weeks a head.
Was this Coverdale's way of repaying Jimmy for ripping off 'Black Dog' for his 'Still of the Night'? I always liked Coverdale and to me he is just above an average singer, although well below Ian Gillan, the Purple's 'official' lead singer. Good piece.
I love arias, not operas. Went to one opera once in Cuba with my wife and we both walked out after the first act. But I love arias, maybe because just like your step-father, my father use dto play them at home.
Many thanks for such a fantastic post. The music was good.
Greetings from London.
You appear to be better versed in the exploits of Coverdale vs. Page than am I, CiL, but they seemed to work well together for the short time they collaborated.
I agree with you regarding Coverdale and Gillan, although I think Gillan might be heading downhill more quickly than is Coverdale in terms of the current state of their respective careers.
Yes, exactly, regarding the arias. I guess that is the way to put it. The moments are greater than the whole, for some of us, at least.
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