It was a fine day.
Then the wind started blowing.
Then the wind was white.
.
The online
version of
the New Pals
Club Magazine.
As good as it
gets without ads!
The piece of music that did more than any other to make me a Classical Head instead of a Rock Head (though I play both as well as I can) was Rhapsody in Blue, and the performance that put it in my heart was Gershwin's own expressive piano roll.
Fifty, fifty-one years
ago, I came across a set of LPs that Dad had of reproducing roll
performances by Gershwin, Ravel, Prokofieff, and other legends of the
keyboard. Gershwin's roll represented the composer's choices for tempo
and other things, as well as his phenomenal skill.
Somewhat
impressively, he sat down and overdubbed part of the roll, covering the
thickest parts of the score, matching the tempos and keeping the live
feeling. As a bonus, it has sections that aren't included in the solo
piano score published by Warners. I was to learn why later.
I
can tell you now, though. Everybody loved this piece, but they also
felt like it could be cut at will without losing anything. Leonard
Bernstein, in a tribute that feels patronizing, says it's just wonderful
how we can cut this and that from it, and it's still enough, right?
And
cut they do, possibly because Gershwin was eager enough to get the
piece recorded that he agreed to set it down on a single disk, even if
that meant cutting between a third and a half out and joining the bits
with fillers that I hope came from the composer, at least.
For
reasons of time (Whiteman had announced a concert piece premiere that
Gershwin hadn't agreed to), Whiteman had the composer provide a
two-piano (partial) sketch that Ferde Grofe would then orchestrate for
the concert. This worked out, and Whiteman decided that, therefore...
...he,
Paul Whiteman, was henceforward entitled to have his guy touch up and
abridge every concert work Gershwin wrote, but that's another story, and
he seems to have cut it out after a while, but not until making an
'alternate' Concerto in F at two thirds the length.
Anyway, I
started 'working' on the piece while still in high school, and have
subjected any number of ears to the work in progress over the years. As
my technique has improved, I am finally where I can believe I'll be able
to overcome all the wrong stuff I taught myself...
...and be
able to simply sit down and play the whole thing when I want to hear it.
Last night, I traversed the score of the familiar blue-cover version
published by Warner, reaching the end without disaster. And PARTS OF IT
WERE GOOD. I plan to improve what I can do. Here's hope.