Showing posts with label WQXR. Show all posts
Showing posts with label WQXR. Show all posts

Thursday, November 10, 2011

Thank You Boris

Look at everything as though you were seeing it either for the first or last time.

Betty Smith
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Hello Lily
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Okay, I'm going to brag. Oh, there are a lot of things I can tell you about myself that I am ashamed of, but today I'm going to brag.

When I was a teenager living in New York City and being a classical music lover I would sometimes buy cheap tickets to the New York Philharmonic concerts. The conductor of the orchestra in those days was Dimitri Mitropoulos (1886 - 1960).

There was a little known, avant garde, American composer named Boris Blacker (1903 - 1975). One of his pieces is entitled Variations for Orchestra on a theme of Paganini. One day the Philharmonic played the American premiere of that piece. I listened. It was the only time I ever heard that piece. Until....

About 25 years later I was working part time for WQXR, a classical music radio station in New York. In the announcers' and engineers' lounge there was a speaker playing whatever was on the air. I walked in one day to work a shift on the station and I recognized the piece that was playing. I said, out loud "That's the Boris Blacker Paganini Variations."
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I will never forget the looks on the faces of the guys in the room. It turned out that the piece had just been recorded for the first time and had never before been played on the air at any other radio station. How did I know?

I told them about hearing it in concert with the Philharmonic when I was a kid and that I remembered it. They were stunned.

I don't know quite why it is but if I see a film or hear a piece of music I will recognize it years later even if I just see a scene from the film or hear a snatch of the music.

I wish I was that way with a lot of other things, like people's names, for example.

DB - Vagabond Journeys
Never Give Up
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AUTUMN QUESTION

What event over the past year changed your life, a lot or a little?

Autumn is moving along.
Only 5 answers so far.

dbdacoba@aol.com

I eagerly await your answers.
DB
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Saturday, January 8, 2011

The Day I Owned Times Square

These vagabond shoes
They are longing to stray
Right through the very heart of it,
New York, New York.

Fred Ebb, John Kander
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Anyone who spends any time in New York City has New York stories. Adventures automatically occur in that remarkable, aggravating and rewarding place where anything can happen. This is one of my many stories and it's true, with no embellishments, I promise.

If you have ever been in Times Square then you know how big it is. It is actually two squares: Duffy Square on the north end and Times Square on the south, which are connected Two large boulevards, Broadway and Seventh Avenue proceed southward through it and cross each other. There are five cross streets, one of them going in two directions. It's huge.

If you've ever been in Times Square then you know how busy it is. Theatres, office buildings, hotels, bars and restaurants, shops, side walk vendors, busses, trucks, taxis, cars, bicycles, horses and everywhere there are people going here, going thee or standing around gawking, twenty four hours a day. It is truly a place that never sleeps.

I had a job as a relief announcer for WQXR, which was the New York Times radio station. That meant that I was on call, sometimes on short notice, to fill in when one of the other announcers couldn't be there.

One Sunday morning I got a phone call at 4 a.m. from the morning announcer telling me he couldn't make it in to work, he lived in New Jersey, could I take the shift for him. In those days the station did not go all night, so someone had to be there to do the sign on and the morning programs beginning at 6. So I got up, had some coffee and something to eat and left my apartment building at 5. I lived on 56th Street and 6th Avenue. As soon as I walked out the front door I could see why he couldn't get to work. There had been a major, MAJOR snow storm, one of the worst, the city was covered with snow.

I walked down 6th Avenue, crossed over to 7th and entered Times Square at the northeast corner. My destination was at the southwest corner, 43rd Street. I was amazed to see there was no traffic, and there hadn't been any for quite a while. There were no tire tracks or footprints in the snow. It was deep, over my ankles, but I trudged diagonally right across Times Square, something one could never do at any other time, brazenly walking down the avenues and the streets. In all that vast area I was the only creature moving. Even the ubiquitous pigeons were tucked in somewhere.

In the 5 to 10 minutes it took me to walk to work I was the only business man, the only proprietor, the only tourist, the only resident, the only citizen, completely alone and by myself in the center of what is the busiest place in America. And these "vagabond shoes" were straying through "the very heart of it."

It was a strange, surreal, Fellini-esque, Doctor Zhivago type adventure. I felt like an explorer. I felt like I should stick a flag in the snow and claim it for myself. I owned it. I owned Times Square.

DB - The Vagabond
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Weekend Puzzle

Here are 12 names. Which one does not belong on the list. It's easy.

Neville Chamberlain
Winston Churchill
Charles de Gaulle
Dwight Eisenhower
Adolph Hitler
Bernard Montgomery
Benito Mussolini
Erwin Rommel
Theodore Roosevelt
Joseph Stalin
Harry Truman
Georgi Zhukhov

Good luck
DB
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