Moonbiter wrote:Last night I went to the Opera with my wife and some friends to see the light opera "La clemenza di Tito" by Mozart. It was a galla performance, the final one after a one year run to celebrate the Mozart jubilee. The setting was perfect for a New Years eve; the champagne was both cold and free, and there was a nice chamber orchestra playing in the foyer. The performance was nice. Some singers were great, others were quite mediocre, but all in all it came out on top, with lots of gags and a definite festive spirit.
Moonbiter, are you sure it was La clemenza di Tito, and not, say, Die Entfuhrung aus dem Serail? Because La clamenza isn't exactly light opera, but
opera seria, a largescale, very serious composition focusing on nobility and "noble" emotions, with a specific technical plan. I don't mean to sound critical. It just seems odd to hear it described as a light opera.
You're a lot like my dad Fable.
Should I be pleased, or hire a hit man?
Ok, here is something even he can't answer. As far as jazzy influences in classical music go, is there anything that predates the work of Scott Joplin? I had to convert an old Treemonisha record to CD a while back, great stuff. Really hard to find nowadays.
Joplin may or may not have invented ragtime, which uses some elements of jazz but not others. However, he was the popularizer of ragtime, the first one to get it published. Ragtime enjoyed a remarkable craze among white as well as black audiences for a decade. Joplin was certainly one of the greatest ragtime composers. Unfortunately, the second flurry of interest in ragtime, which started in the late 1960s, also subsided about 10-15 years later. Like the first, it generated honest enthusiasm from musiclovers, but also a lot of gushing from vapid crossover types who simply flit from one new fad to the next. As soon as minimalist music came along with the likes of Terry Riley and Philip Glass, ragtime was deserted once more. The record labels followed suit for the most part, which is why it's so difficult to find good ragtime CDs.
While it's certain that elements of jazz existed at least in black New Orleans music during the latter part of the 19th century, nothing was transcribed to sheet music at the time. Nor was the phonograph put into commercial use until the mid-1890s, and at the time it was only a curiosity. The composer/academician Gunther Schuller in his book Early Jazz claimed you could find wildly elaborate counterpoint and syncopation in African drumming, but I think this is wishful thinking on his part. As a famous jazz drummer once said after coming back from an African tour, "I heard those guys playing their drums all over the place, and they didn't know crap about jazz!" Or words to that effect.
The earliest jazz recordings may be those made by Lieutenant James Europe, who led an all-black dance band that went overseas in WWI. Europe's arrangements sound stiff, except for one chorus on one record where the sophsitication suddenly vanishes less than a minute before the end and the whole affair becomes both far more primitive and looser. It's been speculated that Europe's publisher told him they had more space to fill on the 3 1/2 minute sides, and he accidentally committed to record the first orchestral improvization of jazz, as a result.