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Composing 20th Century Some of the best known 20th century composers of “classical” music were Schoenberg, Stravinsky, Rachmaninov and Otto Klemperer; all four lived Los Angeles after fleeing from the second world war in Europe. Schoenberg and Stravinsky wrote music for films. Homegrown composers often combined orchestral music with popular music. Stylistic distinctions were overcome by creative innovators such as Copeland, Ellington, Gershwin, Bernstein and a host of jazz musicians who emerged as virtuoso performers and creative composers. Musical ideas converged in the US to produce rapidly evolving and eclectic styles. As recorded popular music emerged, song writers and arrangers became the new composers who dominated radio play. Composers in the Europe of old were immersed in music from their early childhood. They followed forms that were fashionable and influenced each other. JS Bach, the great master was influenced by Handel and Vivaldi. Mozart expressed musical ideas from Bach, Handel, Haydn and many other composers at work in Europe. Beethoven studied with Haydn and was inspired by Mozart. Händel was born in 1685, the same year as JS Bach and Domenico Scarlatti. Bach eventually complimented Handel and his music saying that Handel was "the only person I would wish to be, were I not Bach." Mozart admired Bach's genius. Beethoven said that JS Bach was "the master of us all". Each musical "genius" added his own innovations so that the ideas that drove musical composition progressed, despite the resistance of patrons and audiences. There has always been a battle between audiences who want more of the same and composers who were innovative. Many creative composers suffered repeated rejection and penury. Composers in the 20th century were often employed to write Broadway musicals and film scores. One of my favorites is Ennio Morricone who is credited with more than 400 movies scores. My favorite is the soundtrack to the movie, Mission. In response to questions about his prolific productivity, he stated: “Compared to classical composers like Bach, Frescobaldi, Palestrina or Mozart, I would define myself as unemployed.” Jon Pareles described Marioconne in the New York Times January 28, 2007: “Maestro Morricone’s parlor, in a palazzo with a view of the Campidoglio hill in the center of Rome, is a Baroque room so large that the grand piano is almost lost amid the lavishly ornamented chairs, couches and tables. He composes not at the piano or on a computer but at an imposing desk in his writing studio. On a coffee table supported by a realistic rhinoceros is a neat stack of score paper with all the parts for an orchestra written in pencil. His extensive background in classical music can be heard in his swelling love themes and in his meticulous orchestrations, which can suggest the stateliness of the 18th century or the eerie dissonances of the 20th. Unlike younger film composers who create their music as studio recordings rather than manuscripts, or who hand off their themes for others to arrange, Mr. Morricone writes full scores and conducts them himself. Morricone grew up playing trumpet like his father, who worked in jazz bands and opera orchestras; sometimes Ennio substituted for him at gigs., Mr. Morricone was also arranging and sometimes writing pop songs. He experimented constantly with timbre, using surf-rock guitar or jew’s harp, panpipes or synthesizer, wordless voices or exotic percussion. For the beginning of “Once Upon a Time in the West,” he persuaded the director not to use conventional instruments, just amplified ambient sounds, from the creak of a swinging sign to the screech of an arriving train.” Like Morricone, I played the trumpet and have eclectic musical interests and delight in playing with sounds of all kinds. I feel free to combine musical styles and invent new ones. Morricone stated: ” I have studied the expressive methods of the entire history of musical composition. At times I turn more toward light music, at times I turn more toward serious music. I mingle things, and sometimes I turn into a chameleon. We are living in a modern world, and in contemporary music the central fact is contamination, not the contamination of disease but the contamination of musical styles. If you find this in me, that is good." Welcome to Persona Digital Online. Here you can download eBooks, digital documents, tutorials music and multimedia. We send digital documents all over the world. Payment is made through Pay Pal, either by credit card or member's account. Some electronic documents are free to download; others provide low cost access to valuable books, tutorials, audio and educational resources. Create a Persona account, add your selections to your shopping cart, checkout and start downloading. It's easy, fast and safe. Your email is your user ID. Persona Digital Online originates in Sechelt, British Columbia, Canada. Persona Digital Books A series of books present important topics in psychology, neuroscience and philosophy in a condensed format. These are for the reader who wants a salient review of the most essential topics. Printed book orders are submitted to Alpha Online, a companion website with separate accounts. Physical shipments are limited to destinations in Canada, and the USA. |
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