The texts below are
taken and "recycled" from the LennyCavallaro.blogspot.com
site. They are presented in
reverse chronological order, also as originally posted.
On July 14, 2012,
titled, "Updates on Music":
I now have a nice
website, LennyCavallaroMusic.com, which includes links to my father's music. I
still hope to get more of these compositions -- his and mine -- recorded and
transcribed to legible musical notation (i. e., Finale or Sibelius software).
That, however, is another project.
I applied for
KickStarter funding -- a mere $1,400 to cover the costs of getting my father's
Scherzo-Tarantella and string quartet copied onto Finale. However, I shall apparently
not generate anywhere near enough, and the project will have to be put aside
for a while longer.
In August, 2011, I
completed some very successful recordings. These included my violin sonata,
performed with Sarah Darling, the oboe sonata, with Audrey Markowitz, a number
of my father's songs, with Paul Halverson, and some solo work. The violin
sonata is available on my website. Although not altogether happy with the
finished products -- the piano went out of tune fairly early on! -- I can state
these are by far the best to date.
I had a rather
good recital in June, 2011, featuring the Goldberg Variations; a rather
mediocre and disappointing recital in April, 2012, featuring my own audacious
interpretation of the first movement of Beethoven's Op. 106 sonata
("Hammerclavier").
On the
compositional front, I have set both Shakespeare's "Sonnet 73" and
Frost's "Stopping by Woods" to music.
I find it more
difficult (i. e., more physically painful) to put in long hours at the piano,
so I am uncertain about future performances.
*****
A post way back on
January 14, 2011, discussed the following:
Last summer, I
recorded my father's "Mazurka for Flute and Piano," along with
arrangements of his song, "Far Away," for both flute and piano as
well as oboe and piano. The results were gratifying.
During the same
session, we recorded two of my "Songs Without Words for Flute and
Piano," and the slow movement of a projected oboe concerto (with piano
reduction). These, too, came quite well.
*****
An announcement on
September 4, 2009, read as follows:
Alfonso Cavallaro
ORIGINAL COMPOSITIONS, Volume One has been completed!
The first CD is
"in the can," simply awaiting the pressing of the actual disks. It
will include the two organ works, the orchestral piece, my transcription of a
song, and all the chamber music recorded last month (including four works for
violin and piano). A striking picture of my father, photographed in the 1930's,
will be included!
*****
On June 8, 2009, a
song was "born" (after a fashion):
I have recently
completed my setting of "Heartbreak Hill," by Celia Laighton Thaxter,
for soprano and voice. A preliminary read-through proved most gratifying, and I
look forward to the formal debut of the work on August 5th at the Ipswich
Performing Arts Center.
2009 marks the
375th anniversary of Ipswich; the town was settled in 1634. Thaxter's title
alludes to the location known today as "Castle Hill," site of the
Crane mansion. The poetry is by no means remarkable, but it does appear to lend
itself to some nice harmonies! I hope that the music will prove a worthy effort
for the town's 375th, and should certainly like to provide another composition
for the 400th!!
*****
One of the
lengthiest, most interesting posts came on March 1, 2009:
Dan Shaw wrote a
piece entitled, "Call Her Style Concert-Cozy," in today's New York
Times. I love the idea of "In-Home" concerts, and I also wonder
whether a small circuit of such events can be established. As correctly noted,
below, these aristocratic salons hosted many of the 19th century's giants (e.
g., Chopin and Liszt)!
<< NINA
KUZMA-SAPIEJEWSKA does not call the main room in her two-bedroom apartment the
living room. “This is the salon,” she said in her sturdy Polish accent.
Ms.
Kuzma-Sapiejewska gives piano lessons in her prewar apartment in Larchmont,
N.Y., and in the past, also gave a lot of house concerts. “I wanted my children
to experience what I’d read about in books on Chopin and Liszt, who would play
almost every day in someone else’s salon,” she said wistfully. “They would
visit different aristocrats’ houses. Chopin’s music was not composed for large
halls of 3,000 people. I thought I could give my children a taste of what it
was like, even in my more modest circumstances.”
Her goal is to
keep classical music alive from the bottom up. “I want people to gather
together, whether in a hut or a grange hall, to hear Chopin,” she said. “It
doesn’t even have to be piano. It can be the guitar or the tuba. The important
thing is for people to be together.” >>
Indeed -- at a
time when we face economic collapse, what could be more appropriate than
classical music "from the bottom up"?
*****
The debut of my
reconstructed Haydn received mention on January 25, 2009:
I was most
fortunate that I was given the January 25th date, since heavy snowfall obliged
the Salem Philharmonic to cancel the preceding two Sundays. The collaboration
with Alan Hawryluk was, once again, very successful. Alan suggested using the
entire string section, rather than a diminished 7-piece set as I had originally
planned. Given the power of the nine-foot piano, this was a good
recommendation. Alan also took somewhat slower tempi, and given the climate --
the room was really not adequately heated, and all the musicians suffered from
cold fingers! -- this, too, was an excellent idea.
From all we could
tell, the concerto "worked" in its expanded form. I look forward to
hearing the CD of the performance. I am also toying with the idea of writing an
orchestral reduction and trying to get the concerto published as a work for high
school ensembles. We shall see.
*****
I had discussed
the Haydn -- and what I did with it -- more extensively on December 6, 2008:
Among Haydn's
immense body of compositions are a number of concerti for various solo
instruments. Some are full-sized works, while others have received such
designations as "toy concerto" or "concertino."
Some years ago, I
discovered a "toy concerto" for keyboard (Klavier) in C Major. It was
scored for first and second violins and cello, and the solo part sometimes
served as continuo. I decided to expand the piece to a full complement of
strings. This objective was relatively easy to achieve; I merely doubled the
cello part with a double bass, and then added a viola part, carefully enriching
harmonies if possible or else doubling some other part judiciously. I then set
about examining the full score, and decided to change a few of the harmonies --
although, lest the purists grow apoplectic, the alterations to the original
were relatively few and relatively minor.
The final touch
involved the interpolation of a cadenza in the first movement. In the classical
period, the cadenza comes after the recapitulation, as the tutti (orchestra)
draws to a I-6/4 harmony. Alas, Haydn was not thinking in these terms, but I
did find a I-6/4 in the development, just before the recapitulation. I decided
to exploit this opportunity, added a "ritardando" to the preceding
measures, and wrote in a "fermata" at the cadenza chord. After the
"hold," I obliterated the remainder of that measure, so that the soloist
(here, pianist) can play, and interpolated a cute little cadenza which draws
from three of Haydn's thematic ideas.
*****
Many other blogs,
including those dealing with music, have been summarily deleted. I shall certainly hope to keep more
dynamic blogs -- on both literary and musical topics -- hereafter!
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