Friday, March 31, 2006

Musicians Incognito

Did you know that former FED Chairman Alan Greenspan (b. 1926) in1943 enrolled in the Juilliard School to study the clarinet and that he dropped out the next year to join Henry Jerome and His Orchestra, a travelling swing band? That former British Prime Minister Edward Heath (1916-2005) was an organ major at Oxford University? That U.S. Secretary of State Condoleeza Rice (b. 1954) first studied to be a concert pianist?

Condoleeza Rice the Musician

Did you know that Secretary of State Condoleeza Rice is a musician? During a radio interview January 2, 2005 on Mad About Music with Gilbert Kaplan, Rice expressed her views about music and her tastes in musical style. Condi Rice was a piano prodigy at three and a concerto competition winner at age 15. Kaplan explained that her name is “a variation of con dolcezza which means, of course, ‘with sweetness,’ a direction of how to play the music.” She started piano lessons at three with her grandmother and by ten, she went to the Birmingham Southern Conservatory of Music – “the first black student to go to that newly-integrated conservatory in Birmingham,” said Rice. Her family moved to Denver and she won a young artists' competition playing the Mozart D Minor Piano Concerto. At 15, she entered the University of Denver as a music major. Rice explained, “I planned a career as a concert pianist but I realized in my sophomore year that I was pretty good, but not great.” Her two favorite operas are both Mussorgsky: Khovanschina and Boris Godunov. She said, “I’m quite a fan of Prokofiev and of some Shostakovich.” Rice admitted, “I've always been much more attracted to Brahms, to Schumann, to a certain extent to Schubert. I don't particularly like programmatic music and Liszt . . . has never been particularly interesting to me.” Though obviously accomplished, she says about ability: “I'm one of those people now if you put it in front of me, I can read it. But if you ask me to play it by ear or with improvisation, I have much harder time. . .” With her busy life as Secretary of State, Rice says she has little time to practice. “I now play almost exclusively chamber music and I have to be selective,” said she. Her favorite symphony is the Beethoven Seventh. (Source: Transcript at http://www.wnyc.org/shows/mam/episodes/2005/01/02 )

Biographical notes: Rice was born November 14, 1954 in Birmingham, Alabama. She earned her bachelor’s degree in political science, cum laude and Phi Beta Kappa, from the University of Denver in 1974; her master’s from the University of Notre Dame in 1975; and her Ph.D. from the Graduate School of International Studies at the University of Denver in 1981.

Thursday, March 02, 2006

Vaughn Williams on Bellini

"Personally," says John Klein, "I have never been able to understand the violent prejudice against [Vincenzo] Bellini in English musical circles; it was glaringly revealed in [Ralph] Vaughn Williams's strange outburst on the historic occasion of the successful revival of Norma at Covent Garden in 1952. 'We have only two opera houses here,' he exclaimed, 'but in the centenary year of [Charles Villiers] Stanford's birth, when they might have given us an opportunity of hearing such splendid works as Shamus O'Brien or Much Ado, they chose to shake the dead bones of Norma.'" (Source: John Klein's review of Bellini by Leslie Orrey (London:1969) in Music and Letters, Vol. 50, No. 4, October 1969, p. 491)