Mostrando postagens com marcador Music. Mostrar todas as postagens
Mostrando postagens com marcador Music. Mostrar todas as postagens

quarta-feira, 5 de outubro de 2011

Aaron Copland, 1900- 1990: His Music Taught America About Itself


Aaron Copland, 1900- 1990: His Music Taught America About Itself

Source: www.manythings.org/voa/people




I'm Steve Ember. And I'm Barbara Klein with PEOPLE IN AMERICA in VOA Special English.
Today we tell about Aaron Copland, one of America's best modern music composers.
Aaron Copland wrote many kinds of music. He wrote music for the orchestra, piano, and voice. He wrote music for plays, movies and dance. Copland also was a conductor, pianist, speaker, teacher and author.
Music critics say Copland taught Americans about themselves through his music. He used parts of many old traditional American folk songs in his work. He was influenced to do this after studying music in France. He said that composers there had a very French way of writing music. He said Americans had nothing like that in this country. So he decided to compose music that was truly American.
Aaron Copland was born in nineteen hundred in Brooklyn, New York. He was the youngest of five children. His parents had come to the United States from eastern Europe. They owned a store in Brooklyn. Aaron began playing the piano when he was a young child. He wrote his first song for his mother when he was eight years old. His dreams of becoming a composer began when he was young.
When he was sixteen, he urged his parents to let him study composing with Rubin Goldmark. Goldmark had taught the composer George Gershwin.
When he was in his early twenties, Copland went to Paris where he studied music with Nadia Boulanger. She was one of the most important music teachers of the time. He returned to New York in nineteen twenty-four.
The famous conductor of the Boston Symphony Orchestra, Serge Koussevitzky, learned about Copland's music. Koussevitzky led the orchestra for the first performance of Copland's early work, "Music for the Theater," in nineteen twenty-five. Koussevitzky also conducted Copland's "Concerto for Piano and Orchestra" in nineteen twenty-seven. This work was unusual because Copland used ideas from jazz music in his concerto.
Copland later wrote the music for two ballets about the American West. One was about the life of a famous gunfighter called Billy the Kid. Copland used music from American cowboy songs in this work. This piece from "Billy the Kid: Ballet Suite" is called "Street in a Frontier Town."
In nineteen forty-two, the conductor Andre Kostelanetz asked Copland to write music about a great American, Abraham Lincoln. Copland wrote "Lincoln Portrait" to honor America's sixteenth president. Copland's music included parts of American folk songs and songs popular during the American Civil War. He added words from President Lincoln's speeches and letters.
"Lincoln Portrait" has been performed many times in America. Many famous people have done the speaking part. Eleanor Roosevelt, the wife of President Franklin Roosevelt, was one of them. Here, actor James Earl Jones performs in Copland's "Lincoln Portrait."
Also in nineteen forty-two, the music director of the Cincinnati Symphony Orchestra asked eighteen composers to write music expressing love for America. For the competition, Copland composed "Fanfare for the Common Man." This music is played in America during many national events, including some presidential inaugurations.
Experts say "Fanfare for the Common Man" was an example of Copland's change in direction during the nineteen forties. He began writing music that was more easily understood and more popular. Copland wrote about this in nineteen forty-one in his book, "Our New Music." He wrote that a whole new public for music had developed as a result of the popularity of the radio and record player. He said that there was no reason to continue writing music as if these devices did not exist. So he decided to write music in a simpler way.
Copland spread his ideas about music in other ways. He taught at the New School for Social Research in New York City and at Harvard University in Cambridge, Massachusetts. One of the many awards he received was the Pulitzer Prize. He won it in nineteen forty-five for his famous music for a ballet called "Appalachian Spring." It is one of his most popular works. The last part of the ballet is based on a traditional song, "A Gift to be Simple."
Copland also wrote music for several major motion pictures. He won an Academy Award in nineteen fifty for composing the music for the film, "The Heiress." Then, he began experimenting with what is called a twelve-tone system of composing. His music no longer was as easy to understand, or as popular.
Copland stopped composing at the end of the nineteen sixties. Yet he continued to be active as a conductor and speaker. In nineteen eighty-two, Queens College of the City University of New York established the Aaron Copland School of Music.
Copland was a strong supporter of liberal ideas. In the early nineteen fifties, he and other famous writers, actors and intellectuals were accused of supporting communism. Public opinion changed, though. In nineteen sixty-four, President Lyndon Johnson presented him with the Presidential Medal of Freedom. It is America's highest award to civilians. Aaron Copland died in nineteen ninety at the age of ninety. But his music lives on.
This Special English program was written by Shelley Gollust. It was produced by Lawan Davis. I'm Steve Ember. And I'm Barbara Klein. Join us again next week for anotherPEOPLE IN AMERICA program in VOA Special English.

sábado, 20 de agosto de 2011

THE RETURN OF VINYL


Language level: B1 LOWER INTERMEDIATE


 source of the picture topnews.in
The return of vinyl

Life isn’t easy for the music industry these days. Illegal downloads on the internet have destroyed CD sales and artist now depend primarily on concert tours for their income.

Yet there is one piece of good news: according to official figures from the International Federation of the Phonographic Industry, there is a significant increase in sales of vinyl records.

The “death of vinyl” was announced when CDs came along in the early 1980s. Yet “the vinyl revival” began a few years ago. The trend is believed to have originated with teenagers in New York. They followed in the footstep of dance DJs who preferred its warmer and richer sound. This also led to a boom in new generation turntables.

In 2009 the United States saw a vinyl sales increase of one million records. Today US vinyl sales were almost three million that year. In reality this accounted for less than one per cent  of total music purchases, but it was still good news for the music industry.

In the same year 223.000 vinyl records were sold in the UK. To get an idea, the figure for 2001 was 180.000: the figure for 1979, vinyl’s peak year, was 89 million! Experts say that the 2009 figure could be higher because official statistics do not include sales from smaller records shops and albums sold at concerts.

The positive trend is also confirmed by the fact that major retailer HMV has increased its vinyl “floor space” by 50 per cent over the past two years.

As NIGEL House of Rough Trade explains, young listeners are attracted to vinyl because they love its tactile quality and because it represents a badge of honour, the ultimate proof of loyalty to their favourite artist. It shows that they are serious about music.”

INTERVIEW (audio available)
Standard: British accent
Speaker: Justin Ratcliffe
Language level: C1 ADVANCED.

ROUGH AND READY

With the advent of the CD, or “Compact Disc,” in 1980s, experts said that the “vinyl” gramophone record would die. And then, with the advent of the digital download, the “death of the CD” was also announced. And yet it is difficult to make predictions: today vinyl is enjoying a revival. Last year in the United States more than 2.8 million vinyl records were sold. It was the best result in 20 years, even if it is still a fraction of total music sales.

To find out more, we went to Rough Trade, Britain’s largest independent record shop. Nigel House is co-owner of “Rough Trade East” in London’s Brick Lane. He talked about the vinyl revival, as music played in the background.

Nigel House

(Standard British accent)

No, I think it’s a worldwide phenomenon. I think in America maybe CD sales are going down, but vinyl sales and download sales are going up, so sometimes like…there was an album out by Vampire Weekend last year and I think sometimes like 30 per cent of the sales were download and another 20 per cent were vinyl. And there’s a group called Fucked Up. Who (are) from America, and 50 per cent of their sales where from vinyl.

PERSONALITY

We then asked Nigel House about the reasons for the revival.

Nigel House

Well, I think it’s the complete antithesis of a download because, with a download, it’s great for some things, for a pop single or something, it’s great: click, buy, you’ve got it there and then, but the whole experience of going out and buying something going into a record shop and buying a record, it’s something that’ll live with you forever. I also think that when you get home and you put them on you shelves, or put them on the floor or whatever, when people come round to see you, or to come round for dinner or whatever, it’s part of your personality, it’s part of what you’re about is, you know, in your music collection, or your book collection. Now, that’s why I think there’s always going to be a room for physical product in this world of book and music.

And some musical genres are particular suited to vinyl:

Nigel House

I mean, some music just sounds better on vinyl! Reggae: you cannot listen to reggae on CD or download, you need those crackles, you need that feel of a Studio One record that is thick; thick vinyl, crackles all the way through, but it’s got that feel, you can almost be there in Jamaica!

THE “PUNK” ATTITUDE

Nigel House says that the American rock duo The White Stripes played an important role in the vinyl revival:

The White Stripes had a lot to do with it, they kind of got back to basics. I suppose, with their style or music and they did a lot of singles that were very collectible and they also did a free single with the New Musical Express this was about three - or four years ago – and  that really kick-started the 7-inch market.

People want to do vinyl, groups want to do vinyl because it’s more authentic. I suppose, it’s less “corporate,” and it’s a bit more punk rock, I suppose. It doesn’t have to be punk rock music, but it’s got more attitude. Doing a vinyl pressing, it’s just a bit more “anti-corporate,” I suppose.