And so I come to Waldo de los Rios’ “Mozart 40” with some
ambivalence. I have no deep attachments
to Mozart, as such; but I imagine that he means as much as Satie or Mussorgsky do
to me, and I can only wonder what those people would make of this. A symphony reduced to a nice melody in a
light pop format? This must smack them
as a kind of Muzakization of Mozart, a simplified version for those who like
him well enough but don’t have the time to actually listen to the real
thing. Well, I can hear them say, maybe
this might lead them to the real thing, or maybe it will just become background
music on sports shows on tv. The
patisserie delicateness of the melody – it floats like a feather in the breeze
– gets an acoustic guitar and drums added on, just to make foot tapping easier,
I suppose.
De los Rios wanted to bring this (perceived) old music up to
date, which I guess is admirable enough, but something about it makes me
uneasy. Something as inherently pleasant
and undemanding as the Mozart’s 40 lends itself to pop
treatment, but apart from hapless visions of canapé hell at dinner parties
where de los Rios’ album Symphonies for the 70s was most surely played, I don’t
really know anyone who would actually want to hear this on anything like a
daily basis. Mozart doesn’t really need
to be updated; the surge of popularity he got with Amadeus (an admirable movie,
if not really that accurate) didn’t suddenly see people running off to buy
this; they wanted the real thing, because they had an emotional attachment to
it – understood what Mozart’s life was like – and responded. Walter Murphy’s “A Fifth of Beethoven” (1976)
was also a one-off hit, a novelty, the sort of thing that was done because it
could be done, as much as anything else; and I’m afraid that is where “Mozart
40” also belongs. It’s modern, it’s
ingenious, it brings Mozart into the same chart as (amongst others) Frank
Sinatra, the Delfonics, Deep Purple and T.Rex; what he would have made of this
I will leave to your imagination.
For a moment in the spring of ’71 a song based on a symphony
made it to #2 in the NME; de los Rios gained fame outside of his native
Argentina**, and continued on for a few more years before succumbing to
depression in ’77. He was a composer of
original works as well, it should be noted; but this was his biggest hit. Like so many things in the 70s, it’s an
update that must have sounded hip at the time, but the novelty and hipness wore
off as the decades have progressed. Like
the previous song it was far more successful in the UK than in the US, which
points to something – I’m not sure what- in the differences between the two
nations***. In the US I imagine folks
would have prided themselves on liking the original version, thank you very
much; in the UK it was a pleasant change, a nice arrangement to listen to while
driving or cooking, adding a touch of class to the proceedings.
As an American I have to side with the former opinion – yes it
is earnest and “classicist” but as nice and at-the-time cool as this is, I can’t
like it as much as I like the original, and if de los Rios ever did anything
based on works I know and love well, I don’t want to hear them. This may sound harsh, but when Rush Limbaugh
is the only one to champion your work in the US (he featured this on his show
in 2010 and it had a brief surge in popularity) it makes me wonder if this
version – or any of his other works - was ever necessary at all. A cover of a previous hit song is one thing,
but trying to update something that doesn’t need to be updated is bound to be a
folly; pleasant enough to some, but not to others.
Next up: the roots of
rock, explained.
*Mainly due to the excellent movie Thirty-Two Short Films
About Glenn Gould, and its equally great soundtrack, which I would heartily
encourage you to listen to if you haven’t already. As for early 70s composers, this is when Steve Reich and Philip Glass begin to get some attention.
**I should add that fellow Argentinian Gato Barbieri was
finishing up his contribution to Escalator Over The Hill at this time and was
about to start composing the music to Last Tango In Paris. De los Rios also did scores for movies, but
mostly did this neo-classical work.
***The two singles charts are growing further and further
apart; by the time glam truly hits it big, they will have almost nothing in
common at all.
1 comment:
I'm starting to think I need to initiate a "Eurovision watch". Apologies for the repetitive nature of it all, but this has always struck me as an odd place for the man himself to turn up, even allowing for the kitsch factor of the grand old contest...
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Qj_gHTw7V6Q
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