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George Gershwin

George Gershwin. Music 1010 By Melanie Jenkins. Background. Born: September 29, 1898 Parents: Rose and Morris Gershwin Religion: Jewish Hobbies: Roller Skating Played Hooky from School Petty Thief. The Beginning. Heard student playing violin Interest in music began

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George Gershwin

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  1. George Gershwin Music 1010 By Melanie Jenkins

  2. Background • Born: September 29, 1898 • Parents: Rose and Morris Gershwin • Religion: Jewish • Hobbies: Roller Skating • Played Hooky from School • Petty Thief

  3. The Beginning • Heard student playing violin • Interest in music began • Learned to play piano in secret • Parents bought piano for his brother Ira • Lessons with Charles Hambitzer who praised him

  4. Jobs • Dropped out of school at 15 • Jerome H. Remick & Company – salesman • Tin Pan Alley – 3 years • Highly Skilled Composer • “When You Want ‘Em, You Can’t Get ‘Em” • “Swanee” – First real fame

  5. Rhapsody in Blue • Paul Whiteman asked him to write a jazz number • Concert “An Experiment in Modern Music” • Declined because he was busy with other work • Newspaper announced he was writing for it • 3 weeks to put it together Rhapsody in Blue

  6. Cont. • Riding on a train • Jazz music didn’t have to be in strict time • Worked straight through for 3 weeks • Brother Ira suggested a melody George had played • Ira came up with the name

  7. Cont. • George played piano part at the concert • Improvised where not finished • Clarinetist turned opening into glissando, George liked it • 5 curtain calls

  8. Listening Guide • “Rhapsody in Blue (LP Version), The Piano Rolls” • 0:00 – Long piano trill, ascending in a glissando, main theme, slow, mezzo forte. Binary, quadruple meter • 0:26 – A short second theme is introduced (B), alternates between themes A and B, alternating piano/forte • 1:10 – Build up to a crescendo, descends, then slows to a moderate pace, soft (piano)

  9. Listening Guide • 1:34 – Theme A, variation, loud and soft alternating, fast to slow • 2:09 – Theme B, quadruple complex meter, soft to forte • 2:39 – Return to Theme A, fast, mezzo forte • 3:08 – Variation on Theme B, quick and hurried, fast, medium loud. • 3:30 – Theme A, fast, then slow, reverts to loud and fast, slows down.

  10. Listening Guide • 4:14 – Theme B variation, quick, and softer. The tempo slows, notes ascend . Slower, notes continue to climb. • 5:21 –Theme B, much slower , piano, speeding up • 5:58 – Key change, alternates between fast and slow • 6:36 – Slower, soft (p), swings. • 6:50 – Theme A variation, complex meter. • 7:50 – Glissando, tempo slows ,Theme B, speeds up.

  11. Listening Guide • 8:29 – Rhythm swing, then returns to the original rhythm. Tempo increases, forte • 9:03 – Quick glissando up and down, and back up, inverted arch. • 9:20 – Theme A, slow and low. Thoughtful. • 10:04 – The music ascends • 10:40 – Theme B, another variation. • 10:56 – Still Theme B, alternating slow and fast, soft and loud • 11:36 – Complicated series of quick notes, impression of raindrops. Increasing intensity, lower notes in the left hand, climbing higher.

  12. Listening Guide • 12:28 – Glissando racing up the piano keys, louder • 12:32 – Variation on Theme A. Very fast tempo, ascending. • 13:03 – Theme B, ascends, faster. 2 more glissandos, then slows. • 13:28 – Theme B starts swinging, rocking back and forth. • 13:56 – Theme A returns, very slow tempo, continues until the end.

  13. Gershwin Brothers • Close to brother Ira • Never more than a house away • 1924 – working together; Ira the lyricist • Broadway musicals

  14. Compositions • Fascinating Rhythm • Oh, Lady Be Good • The Man I Love • Someone to Watch Over Me • They Can’t Take That Away From Me • Strike Up the Band • Let’s Call the Whole Thing Off • An American in Paris • Embraceable You

  15. Awards • Pulitzer • “Of Thee I Sing”

  16. Influences • Claude Debussy • Piotr Tchaikovsky • Igor Stravinsky • Maurice Ravel – wanted to meet Gershwin • Gershwin asked Ravel to teach him • Ravel: “It is better to be a first-rate Gershwin than a second-rate Ravel”.

  17. Opera • Read book “Porgy” • Teamed with author DuBose Hayward • Seven years later wrote “Porgy and Bess” • Folk Opera • One of the most important American compositions of century

  18. Illness • 1937 – Severe headaches and strange smells • Thought to be due to stress • Friends and family thought it was an act • Headaches progressed, trouble chewing • Problems playing his own music • Coma – Cedars of Lebanon, brain tumor • Died July 11, 1937

  19. Future Works Planned • String Quartet • Ballet • 2nd Opera

  20. Bibliography • http://www.findfast.org/composers/facts-about-gershwin.htm • http://www.pbs.org/wnet/americanmasters/episodes/george-gershwin/about-the-composer/65/ • www.gershwin.com • http://www.allmusic.com/artist/george-gershwin-mn0000197918 • http://www.artsalive.ca/en/mus/greatcomposers/gershwin.html • http://www.classical.net/music/comp.lst/articles/gershwin/biography.php • http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0006097/ • http://www.biography.com/people/george-gershwin-9309643 • George Gershwin: An Intimate Portrait, by Walter Rimler • Gershwin: His Life and Music, by Charles Schwartz, (1979) • Various images from the Internet, Google, and clip art

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