The Lighter Classics in Music by David Ewen

1878. He came from a distinguished musical family. His uncles were Sam

525 words  |  Chapter 23

Franko and Nahan Franko, both prominent in New York as conductors, violinists, and pioneers in the presentation of free concerts. Goldman attended the National Conservatory in New York, specializing in the cornet. After completing his training with Jules Levey, he served for ten years as solo cornetist of the Metropolitan Opera orchestra. In 1911 he organized his first band. Seven years later he founded the famous Goldman Band which from then on gave free concerts in New York and Brooklyn public parks, and elsewhere on tour. Under his direction it became one of the outstanding musical organizations of its kind in the country, presenting a remarkable repertory of popular music, light classics, and band transcriptions of symphonic and operatic compositions. Goldman conducted his band until his death, which took place in New York on February 21, 1956. He was succeeded by his son, Richard Franko Goldman, who for many years had served as his father’s assistant. For his concerts Goldman wrote over a hundred marches which have won him recognition as John Philip Sousa’s successor. The best of the Goldman marches won immediate success for their robust tunes and vigorous beat. These include: “Central Park,” “Children’s March,” “On the Campus,” “On the Farm,” and “On the Mall.” The “Children’s March,” is actually an adaptation for band of several children’s tunes including “Three Blind Mice,” “Jingle Bells,” and “Here We Go Round the Mulberry Bush,” presented in march time. Karl Goldmark Karl Goldmark was born in Keszthely, Hungary, on May 18, 1830, the son of a cantor. Demonstrating unusual talent on the violin, he was sent to Vienna in 1844. There he studied with Leopold Jansa, then attended the Vienna Conservatory. His musical education was brought to an abrupt halt by the revolution of 1848. For many years after that, Goldmark earned his living by teaching music, playing in theater orchestras, and writing criticisms. He first came to the fore as a composer with a concert of his works in Vienna on March 20, 1857. Success followed eight years later with the première of his concert overture, _Sakuntala_. From then on, Goldmark occupied an esteemed position in Viennese music by virtue of many distinguished works that included the opera _The Queen of Sheba_, the _Rustic Wedding Symphony_, and various shorter works for orchestra, as well as numerous compositions for chorus, the piano, and chamber-music groups. He died in Vienna on January 2, 1915. Throughout his life he remained true to the Germanic-Romantic tradition on which he was nurtured. His writing was always vital with emotion, at times to the point of being sensual; it overflowed with luxurious melody and harmony. Most of the works by which he is remembered, while of the serious concert-hall variety, are light classics because of their charm and grace and pleasing melodic content. The _Bacchanale_ for orchestra is in Goldmark’s identifiable sensual style. This is an episode from his most famous opera, _The Queen of Sheba_ (_Die Koenigin von Saba_), libretto by Solomon Herman Mosenthal based on the Old Testament story of the love of the Queen of Sheba for Assad. The opera was successfully introduced in Vienna on March 10,

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1. Chapter 1 2. introduction, random phrases bring up the image of various attitudes and 3. 1884. He acquired his musical training in Prague and with Felix Mottl in 4. Introduction there appear fragments of the first dance; these same 5. 1894. He began his music study in Kansas City: piano with his mother; 6. 1803. As a young man he was sent to Paris to study medicine, but music 7. 1918. Early music study took place with private piano teachers, and 8. 1833. He was trained in the sciences, having attended the Academy of 9. introduction or coda, originated as a piece for piano duet: the 10. 1886. While attending the Royal Academy of Music in London, where he 11. 1899. He made his stage debut in 1911 in a fairy play, and for the next 12. 1884. In the compositions written in Rome under the provisions of the 13. 1836. After attending the Paris Conservatory from 1848 on, he became an 14. 1873. The plot revolves around a peasant boy whom a Marquis is trying to 15. episode depicts a pair of lovers in a secluded corner; the principal 16. 1931. He died in Worcester, England, on February 23, 1934. 17. 1902. The opening brisk, restless music is recalled after a full 18. 1916. He was graduated with honors from the National Conservatory in his 19. 1865. As a boy he studied music privately while attending a technical 20. 1612. During the struggle between Russia and Poland, Romanov becomes the 21. introduction, a vigorous Mazurka melody unfolds. This leads to a second 22. 1870. A prodigy pianist, he attended the Berlin High School for Music, 23. 1878. He came from a distinguished musical family. His uncles were Sam 24. 1875. The _Bacchanale_ takes place at the beginning of Act 3 in which a 25. 1872. After studying music with private teachers in New York, he 26. introduction, the cellos and violas in unison offer the strains of 27. 1734. After receiving some music instruction in his native town, he came 28. 1755. The general belief is that it was used by a certain Richard 29. introduction in which a stately idea is offered by the woodwind. In the 30. 1882. After receiving some piano instruction from his mother he was sent 31. introduction. The second, “The Cowherd’s Tune,” begins with a slow, 32. 1930. It is not quite clear who actually wrote this song. It was 33. 1832. Hérold died of consumption in Paris on January 19, 1833 before 34. 1854. He attended the Cologne Conservatory where his teachers included 35. episode in which is described the descent of the fairies who provide a 36. 1859. He was graduated from the St. Petersburg Conservatory in 1882 37. 1885. Precocious in music he completed a piano sonata when he was only 38. introduction and the coda came the succession of lilting, lovable, 39. 1895. The son of a choirmaster, he himself was a boy chorister, at the 40. 1809. His grandfather was the famous philosopher, Moses Mendelssohn; his 41. 1756. The son of Leopold, Kapellmeister at the court of the Salzburg 42. 1858. While studying medicine, he attended the Berlin High School for 43. 1920. Ochs died in Berlin on February 6, 1929. 44. 1834. For nine years he attended the Milan Conservatory where he wrote 45. 1916. He continued to develop his own personality, formulating his 46. 1900. It was a blood and thunder drama set in Rome at the turn of the 47. 1873. He attended the St. Petersburg Conservatory for three years, and 48. 1909. He also distinguished himself as a conductor, first at the Bolshoi 49. introduction are amplified and developed. A brilliant coda leads to the 50. 1829. He studied the piano with Alexandre Villoing after which, in 1839 51. episode now appears in woodwind and violins after which the folk song 52. 1897. In 1897 Sousa was a tourist in Italy when he heard the news that 53. 1899. A century was coming to an end, and with it an entire epoch. This 54. 1898. Between 1876 and 1881 he was principal of, and professor of 55. 1889. After the operatic pretension of the _Yeomen of the Guard_ which 56. 1887. Because the Murgatroyd family has persecuted witches, an evil 57. introduction after which comes the brisk melody for woodwind followed by 58. introduction—with forceful chords in full orchestra—leads to a beautiful 59. introduction. The second aria is Philine’s polonaise, “_Je suis 60. 1843. “The Flying Dutchman” is a ship on which the Dutchman must sail 61. 1896. After completing his music study at the Prague Conservatory, and 62. 1872. After attending the Royal College of Music, he studied composition 63. episode. A third popular orchestral excerpt from this opera is the 64. 1809. Little is known of his career beyond the fact that his music 65. 1901. Zeller died in Baden near Vienna on August 17, 1898.

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