To mark his one hundredth Dabble, Mahlerman selects four pieces to provide unexpected pleasure... Glancing languidly at the post-scorecard the other day, I noticed that this would be my one-hundredth essay for Lazy Sunday*, and armed with that uninteresting fact I determined to give myself a treat and, instead of casting ... Read More...
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Mahlerman takes us back to the sound of the Baroque... When the Renaissance Period in music, which began in the early 1400's, rolled over into the Baroque two hundred years later, the difference between what a composer wrote down, and what a performer played, started to emerge into the sort of ... Read More...
From his base in Andalucia (aka Eastenders-on-Sea), Mahlerman's thoughts turn to birdsong and its influence on great music... Close to where I live in London, the gentrification of the old East End continues apace, and if Doug and Dinsdale Piranha were spreading their reign of terror today, they would discover that ... Read More...
From the brothels of Hamburg to a place amongst the musical Gods, Mahlerman tells the story of Johannes Brahms... In 1854 the now-obscure composer Peter Cornelius coined the phrase The Three B's by way of describing, for him, the so-called 'Holy Trinity' of composers comprising J S Bach, Beethoven and Hector ... Read More...
This week Mahlerman introduces one of Poland's most original composers - now rarely performed, but capable of near-genius... Most of the composers we have run a slide-rule over in these pages have, with a few exceptions, come from modest, even impoverished backgrounds. The great good fortune of Karol Szymanowski was that ... Read More...
Today Mahlerman looks at composers who also painted, or painters who also composed... The overlap and admixture of musical composition and painting was not something I had even considered until, quite recently, I heard a piece of music (thank you Radio 3) by the Lithuanian composer and painter Mikalojus Ciurlionis - ... Read More...
This week Mahlerman considers musicology, and the difference between knowledge of music, and mere knowledge about music... Most Dabblers will know that when a sociologist goes to a strip-club, he watches the audience. Similarly, as the great Lancastrian Sir Thomas Beecham reminded us, a musicologist can write music but he can't ... Read More...
What is it about Hungary that it has thrown-up an almost constant stream of great musicians and composers over the last two hundred years? Mahlerman investigates... Is there something in the water in Hungary? About the same size as Portugal, and with roughly the same population (10m), it was a real struggle ... Read More...
Mahlerman is back - and this time he's celebrating the neurotic genius of Dmitri Shostakovich... In the late 1950's, when I first came upon the music of Dmitri Shostakovich, he was a shadowy figure about whom very little was known - and although he had completed ten symphonies, a clutch of ... Read More...
Mahlerman celebrates one of the most important years in musical history, when three great composers entered the world... In this post we looked at 1934 and discovered that within a few short months of each other, three great British composers slipped off the coil; a bad year by any measure. Today we journey ... Read More...