Celebrity Series History

More curiosities from the archives

OK, so this is too old to be actual Celebrity Series history, but it's too fun to pass up. I came across this advertisement in an Aaron Richmond Presents program book for a Symphony Hall concert by the Russian Symphonic Choir from January 1926. The Abdon Laus listed in the ad was the first bassoonist and saxophone soloist for the Boston Symphony Orchestra (Ye Olde Town Orchestra). There is some speculation that Laus was the bassoonist at the premiere of Stravinsky's The Rite of Spring with the Ballets Russes in 1913. Cool, but who knew there was once a Boston Saxophone Orchestra? 50 saxophones?? A joyful noise, no doubt.

SaxSymphony

Odd little artifact

It looks odd, like a bit of programmers code or something, but it's a summary of the Beaux Arts Trio's performance history with the Celebrity Series of Boston. Just felt like sharing.

Beaux Arts Trio of New York 1/31/1971
Beaux Arts Trio 10/16/1988
Beaux Arts Trio 11/3/1989
Beaux Arts Trio 2/15/1991
Beaux Arts Trio 10/3/1993
Beaux Arts Trio 12/12/1993
Beaux Arts Trio 5/1/1994               
Beaux Arts Trio 10/21/1994    
Beaux Arts Trio 10/20/1996    
Beaux Arts Trio 3/31/1996
Beaux Arts Trio 2/22/1998
Beaux Arts Trio 4/11/1999
Beaux Arts Trio 10/12/2000
Beaux Arts Trio 3/18/2000
Beaux Arts Trio 3/16/2002
Beaux Arts Trio 3/20/2004
Beaux Arts Trio 4/2/2005

Oh, yes, they will be in Boston on the Celebrity Series for the last time tonight at 8:00pm.

Benny Goodman, Bela Bartok and the Celebrity Series

Szigetibartokgoodman
(left to right) Josef Szigeti, Bela Bartok and Benny Goodman recording Bartok's "Contrasts" in 1940

Ever since I first heard of it, I've been curious about our presentation of Benny Goodman with Bela Bartok, Ditto Pasztory (Mrs. Bartok) and the great violinist Josef Szigeti at Jordan Hall back in 1941. The other day, I got a glimpse of the review of the concert that ran in the February 5, 1941 Boston Globe, and it's kind of a hoot. Here are some snippets:

"Benny Goodman went classical at Jordan Hall last night. He played the clarinet, but he did not have an orchestra with a strong 'powerhouse' behind him, and instead of swing, the program was a chaste list of 'serious' pieces. The concert was in the Chamber Music Series of Aaron Richmond, and presented, in addition to Mr. Goodman, Bela Bartok, Hungarian pianist and composer; his wife Ditta Pasztory, pianist; and Josef Szigeti, violinist.

For his first appearance in Boston as a classical musician, Mr. Goodman played Debussy's Rhapsody for clarinet and piano, partnered by Mr. Bartok, and joined him and Mr. Szigeti in Mr. Bartok's 'Contrasts.' When the 'King of Swing' shuffled amiably upon the stage, midway of the program, he was faced not with a crowd of stamping, whistling hep cats, but the dinner coats and evening gowns of a Bostonian audience trained to sit up attentively during a Mozart Sonata and who know better than to applaud between the movements."

I thought all of our concerts were filled with whistling hep cats... But my favorite line of the review is this:

"Yet there may have been a few youngsters in the crowd to whom the word jive means a good deal more than allegro molto does."

Count me among them. "Jive" is my middle name, hep cat.

Then there was this oddly menacing sentence in closing:

"Each of the other artists was cordially received."

Edison on Jazz and the inner ear

Trolling the archives yesterday here the Celebrity Series, I came across this little tidbit (or is it a snippet? a snidbit?):

"Thomas A. Edison recently answered the question, 'Why does the average popular melody have so short a period of popularity?' in these words: 'I believe the mechanism of the inner ear may have something to do with it. The so-called 'Rods of Corti' are located there - approximately 3,000 small stiff rods, massed together like the hairs on a brush. Each hair is supposed to be tuned to a definite note in the musical scale. When the note is sounded, the hair vibrates, transmitting the sound through the nerves to the brain. The too constant operation of any group of these hairs undoubtedly leads to irritation - possibly to an actual swelling at the base of the hairs. It is the theory of many scientists that this may be one of the underlying causes for the rapid way we tire of popular hits, with their endless pounding on simple sets of chords.'"

-as quoted in Variations, Opus 4, by Aaron Richmond, published by Concert Direction: Aaron Richmond, January 1928

This seems to have been submitted for reader's consideration, not to imply agreement. I wonder what Edison would have thought of John Coltrane? In any case, the same page also features this quote from Frederick Stock:

"The music of the eighteenth century addressed the head; that of the nineteenth, the heart; and this of the twentieth appeals to the feet."

For what its worth, I knew the "Rods of Corti," Roddie Shelton and Rodney Corner, and can attest they had nothing whatever to do with music, popular or otherwise, though Roddie could always whistle through his nose...

Walter Pierce on Luciano Pavarotti

Remembering Luciano

A great deal is being written about the death of Luciano Pavarotti. What strikes me about many of the obituaries and tributes is the number of negative characteristics cited by the writers. It seems that for every triumph, there is a caveat. The glorious Italianate voice that could ‘bing’ nine high C’s in a row, is diluted by the artist’s so-called ‘laziness’ to grow his repertory–relying primarily on a series of known roles and past triumphs.

What I recall as the lucky host of a dozen or so Pavarotti appearances in the Celebrity Series is the beauty of tone, the sheer satisfaction of pleasing an audience, a distinctive sound that was ‘unmistakable.’  God did indeed ‘kiss his tonsils’ to quote an Italian opera-saying.

He was the embodiment of our ‘Golden Age of Singing.’ For years, I read of a bygone golden age of singing that may never be duplicated.  Would we ever hear the qualities of a Caruso, Gigli, Schipa, Gobbi, Flagstad?  I say we have been living in a golden age of singing equal to any bygone era. Think of Tebaldi, Sutherland, Callas, Leontyne Price, Renee Fleming, Domingo, Tucker, Corelli, and of course, Pavarotti.

The ‘ditzers’ scoff at the out-size bulk, but it carried an outsize personality within it. If you happened to see the ‘Maestro’ on the street, would you mistake him for someone else—the flamboyant costume of scarves and voluminous shirts, the distinctive fedora, the theatrical mustache and beard, and that smile–oh, that smile–of a man in love with life, relishing his gift, because indeed it is a gift.

Yes, there was much to criticize. The recital programs were limited, often repeated.  There were the familiar Tosti songs–but oh, how sublimely they were rendered. The arias were often familiar from the last program–from “Boheme,” “Tosca,” and of course, what became his signature aria, ‘Nessun dorma.’ But would you say, “Please Luciano, not one more ‘Nessun dorma.’”

I first heard Luciano singing in “La Boheme,” at the Hynes Auditorium during a matinee of a Metropolitan Opera tour performance. We booked him in recital a few years later, the first of many glorious Symphony Hall recitals, many with the incomparable John Wustman at the keyboard – just the two of them on a bare Symphony Hall stage enchanting a rapt capacity audience.

I remember a phone call from Pavarotti’s manager, Herbert Breslin, during a Met Opera contretemps that cancelled several New York performances including one by Luciano. Could we present Luciano in recital with but a few days’ notice? The reply was a cautious yes; not surprisingly, the concert was completely sold out in twenty-four hours following several announcements on the radio. That concert took place at the Opera House. In subsequent years, there were concerts with orchestra presented at the Wang Center. Once, the building was shutdown for emergency roof repairs three days before a scheduled concert; we moved it to the Hynes Auditorium to accommodate the 4000 ticket holders, exchanging the tickets on the fly.

Following a great deal of preparation, the hall was ready, the audience in place, the orchestra prepared to take the stage-but where is the maestro, asked the conductor? For all our preparation, we forgot to pick up Luciano at the Ritz Carlton where he sat in the lobby waiting for his ride to the auditorium. I raced over in my car and delivered one sizable tenor for his concert appearance.

Luciano did return to Symphony Hall for concerts in later years. But following the famous ‘Three Tenors Concert,’ we saw little of him for a few years; that is, until we were asked to manage a concert appearance at the Boston Garden–not the ideal place for a song recital, but tell that to ten thousand delighted fans who came to bask in the sunshine of that glorious voice.

There was one last Symphony Hall concert in his declining years. The bloom was off the voice, the maestro’s legs and hips–weary of carrying his enormous bulk, prevented him from striding off the stage between groups of songs. He retired behind a curtain on stage that allowed him to rest and sit down between numbers. Despite his physical setbacks, he was still able to thrill an audience and send people home with happy memories.

Our association with Luciano ended finally with that concert. His further decline in ability and health is more than amply documented.

I remember the glory, the sunny Italianate voice, ‘unmistakable,’ and perhaps never to be duplicated.  There will be new tenors labeled as the ‘next Pavarotti,’ but there will only be one Luciano, currently appearing before an enthralled audience of gods high atop Mt. Olympus.

-Walter Pierce

Walter Pierce joined The Celebrity Series of Boston in 1956. He retired as Executive Director in 1996.

Luciano Pavarotti's last Celebrity Series recital

Waltmartlucpavsmall

(left to right) Former Celebrity Series Executive Director, Walter Pierce; Luciano Pavarotti and current Celebrity Series of Boston President and Executive Director, Martha Jones, backstage after his final Boston recital, Boston's Symphony Hall, April 5, 2000. Photo by Brian Snyder for the Celebrity Series.

*****************************************************

Luciano Pavarotti, tenor
Leone Magiera, piano
Symphony Hall, April 5, 2000

Giovanni Battista Bononcini
“Per la gloria d’adorarvi” from Griselda

Ludwig van Beethoven
In questa tomba oscura

Alessandro Scarlatti
Già il sole dal Gange

Vincenzo Bellini
Dolente immagine di Fille mia
Malinconia, Ninfa gentile
Vanne, o rosa fortunata
Bella Nice, che d’amore
Ma rendi pur contento

Giacomo Puccini
“Recondita armonia” from Tosca
“E lucevan le stelle” from Tosca

Francesco Paolo Tosti
Serenata
Non t’amo più
Luna d’estate
Malia

Gaetano Donizetti
“Una furtiva lagrima” from L’elisir d’amore

Francesco Paolo Tosti
Chanson de l’adieu
L’ultima canzone
‘A vucchella
L’alba separa dalla luce l’ombra

*****************************************************
Richard Dyer, reviewing for The Boston Globe, said of the evening:

"You've got to love Pavarotti because he is a survivor, still going in one of the biggest careers in the history of opera. One of the most remarkable things about him is that he could make it a lot easier on himself than he ever has...He could have filled the FleetCenter, sung for 25 minutes around a bunch of overtures and flute solos and laughed all the way to the bank. But it was in Symphony Hall that Pavarotti made his Boston debut, more than 25 years ago, and he wanted to sing there again...Older listeners could repeatedly fasten onto a note or a phrase, remember, and play a game - if Pavarotti can still sound the way he did 30 years ago, then we are still ourselves, and the way we used to be, too, way back then. That's why you've got to love the man."

Blogging since the Roosevelt Administration

In celebration of this blog's birthday, I have dug into our archives for a shot of me approaching a monitor displaying a typepad login for the very first time. The photo below of yours truly dates from 1938, the year in which the Celebrity Series of Boston was founded, and the year this blog got underway. I thought you might get a kick out of my obvious trepidation at this new technological marvel. The blogosphere sure has changed a lot in the last 69 years.

Jack193872_2 

Update: Now that I'm more alert I can tell you straight up that this blog turned two years old yesterday. Cue the balloons...

A Celebrity Series Home Companion

Good radio is good radio (someone said once, perhaps while drunk), but great radio deserves a rebroadcast. A Prairie Home Companion is giving a second life to an April 2005 broadcast from New York's Town Hall this weekend (WGBH 89.7 FM: July 14, 6pm & July 15 at 12pm). The reason why this bears mentioning, naturally, is that the broadcast features several Celebrity Series alumni, veterans of no less than 12 individual Series performances, when you add them all up. Garrison Keillor, the host, made his Series debut in February of this year, where he knocked 'em dead at Symphony Hall then calmly returned to his hotel room to write his column (I still can't get over that: workday over? go to your other job). ON this weekend's broadcast, soprano Renee Fleming ('99, '01, '05) will look back at her high school musical debut in The Sound of Music and pianist Andre Watts ('70, '72, '85, '86, '87, '95, '98, '04) will play Ravel.

A few memories from the past season

Bingo1_2
Clint Maedgen and Bingo!

The Celebrity Series 2006-2007 season is behind us. But before the 2007-2008 season gets going, I want share a few of my favorite memories from the season's performances while I still remember them:

Clint Maedgen and Bingo alarming Symphony Hall staff by scampering around with their guerilla vaudeville side-show in and on a suitcase . . . Vladimir Ashkenazy coming offstage at the NHK Symphony concert and saying to no one in particular, "La Mer, it's a MIRACLE!" . . . New York Times columnist Frank Rich chatting backstage with his one-time undergraduate English professor, Richard Dyer (also known in these parts as the former classical music critic of The Boston Globe). We tapped Mr. Dyer to introduce Rich (God, we're good!) . . . and Rich later signing copies of  The Greatest Story Ever Sold at John Hancock Hall while his son, Simon (the one with the two-book deal while still an undergrad), waited quietly nearby looking no older than twelve . . . violinist Anne-Sophie Mutter scrunching up her face with disdain when a patron at her CD signing asked her to autograph a violin she had brought, "No, I can't do THAT" . . . Angelika Kirchschlager giggling right before going onstage at Jordan Hall after confessing that she just wanted "some chocolate right now" . . . vocalist Dee Dee Bridgewater ooh-ing and aah-ing (before signing) my well worn copy of Suite for Pops by the Thad Jones Mel Lewis Big Band which she recorded with the band at age 19 . . . Complexions Contemporary Ballet utterly FILLING UP the stage at the Tsai Center for the Performing Arts . . . the amazing Garrison Keillor coming to Symphony Hall coatless in 20 degree weather, doing 90 solo minutes with no intermission and no notes, standing in the hallway outside the stage door until the last well-wisher left, then heading to his hotel to write his newspaper column . . . though she eventually canceled in Boston, Dawn Upshaw's game attempt to keep as many dates as possible on her tour after battling cancer . . . conductor Riccardo Chailly, clearly thrilled to have his job, giving a lengthy lecture on the history of the Leipzig Gewandhaus Orchestra to Arthur Nikisch's grand nephew, who lives here in Boston . . . Barbara Cook's gorgeous singing and utterly natural onstage banter . . . Wynton Marsalis' always amazing Symphony Hall encore. This year's edition: a blues with a piano and bass...an exhausted Daniel Bernard Roumain (DBR) remarking to his bandmates as they headed out on the town, "Wow, you guys are party animals" . . . larger than life personality, Karita Mattila, telling well-wishers about the clothes and costume jewelry her mother wore on the farm - she managed to be hilarious, respectful and completely complimentary at the same time . . . Bobby McFerrin's doubletake and laughter as he came offstage and glanced at Symphony Hall's backstage clock (yes, Bobby, you were singing that long, not that we're complaining) . . .

I invite any of you to submit your own memories from the Celebrity Series of 06-07 . . .

Anna Russell, singer and comedian, 1911-2006

Arussell
Anna Russell, soprano, comedienne, author, died at age 94 yesterday in Rosedale, New South Wales, Australia. Ms. Russell toured widely and recorded her better known segments, including her 30-minute version of Wagner’s “Ring” and “How to Write Your Own Gilbert and Sullivan Opera.” She appeared first on  BBC radio as a folksinger and also appeared on television's The Ed Sullivan Show. Ms. Russell authored several books, including The Power of Being a Positive Stinker (1955) and the Anna Russell Songbook (1958).

Richard Dyer, reviewing for the Boston Globe, wrote of Ms. Russell's last appearance in Boston, (for the Celebrity Series), in 1985:

The lady knows her music; her parodies are dead-on (the French art song - "I don't want to make love this afternoon; I want to eat"). She knows every absurdity of platform demeanor, from the diseuse's affected delivery of mute "e" to the tuning difficulties and sweeping arms of the player of the Celtic harp. She knows the formulas of Gilbert & Sullivan as well as they did, and she is hilariously alert to the faulty prose logic of Wagner's epic poem. She has no use for the real pretentiousness that surrounds phony art, and respect for what is good and true. And she knows a lot of things about people - her simplest remarks can boomerang ("Things would be so different, if they were not what they are").

Anna Russell made four appearances for the Celebrity Series between 1978 and 1985.

Obituary from ABC Southeast NSW

The Anna Russell Shrine

Anna Russell's wikipedia entry

Anna Russell's Internet Movie Database page

Anna Russell's bio from Comedy College

UPDATE:

from Monotonous Forest

from The Standing Room

from The Boston Globe

A word about outside links

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