Simon Emmett/Courtesy of the Artist
Over the last few years, HAUSER has become one of the world's most popular classical performers. His shows are spectacles that thrill thousands of fans for up to three hours. With dozens of musicians on stage, the Croation cellist covers well-known orchestral themes as well as new arrangements of modern hits.
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January 1, 2020 marks 95 years since George Gershwin composed "Rhapsody in Blue."

In accordance with general U.S. copyright law, the composition will enter public domain, available for all individuals who wish to use the song in their own creative works. "The goal of copyright is to promote creativity," writes Balfour Smith, program coordinator of Duke's Center for the Study of the Public Domain. "Copyright law gives authors important rights that encourage creativity and distribution. But it also ensures that those rights last for a limited time, so that when they expire, works can go into the public domain, where future authors can legally build upon their inspirations."

Except if you're a rapper. If you're a rapper, then the Gershwin family wants you to keep your hands off "Rhapsody in Blue."

With hundreds of books, films, novels, songs, and visual art entering the public domain on January 1, we're forced to remember that the legacy of some of those artists (partly defined by their surviving family members) are in great discordance with today's political culture. Namely, Gershwin's jazz masterpiece, which debuted at a New York concert in 1924, was apparently fit to be used in (alleged sexual abuser) Woody Allen's Manhattan and even United Airlines' safety instruction videos, but the Gershwin family originally wanted to extend their copyright ownership for another 20 years in order to (aside from receive millions in royalties) maintain creative control.

Gerswin's nephew told The New York Times, "We've always licensed [Gershwin's opera] 'Porgy and Bess' for stage performances only with a black cast and chorus. That could be debased. Or someone could turn 'Porgy and Bess' into rap music."

Aside from the cultural elitism behind that statement, it's historically nonsensical. As Smith recounts on his blog, it's obvious to anyone at all familiar with jazz that the genre largely draws from the same history as rap music: "The work of the Gershwin brothers drew on African-American musical traditions. What could be more appropriate?" In fact, "Rhapsody in Blue" draws from blues, jazz, and ragtime, as well as Jewish musical history and European impressionism. Smith points out another sharp response: "When [someone] laments that George Gershwin's 'Rhapsody in Blue' will soon 'fall into the public domain,' he makes the public domain sound like a dark abyss where songs go, never to be heard again. In fact, when a work enters the public domain it means the public can afford to use it freely, to give it new currency… [public domain works] are an essential part of every artist's sustenance, of every person's sustenance."

Gate-keeping art is just a holdover from the inherently unequal and exploitative power structures that have always defined popular culture.

Describing "Rhapsody in Blue," George Gershwin said, "I heard it as a sort of musical kaleidoscope of America, of our vast melting pot, of our unduplicated national pep, of our blues, our metropolitan madness." Gershwin aimed to capture the disparate musical traditions found all over America as a celebrity of diversity. He talked about his music having a "spirit" and a "soul," and his aim, always, was to invigorate people with its energy. "I'd like my compositions to be so vital that I'd be required by law to dispense sedatives with each score sold," he once said.

As of January 1, 2020, at least his family's prejudice can't stop anyone who wants to share that soul from doing so.

Rhapsody In Blue: Gershwinwww.youtube.com

MUSIC

Let Leslie Odom Jr.'s Silky Vocals Ease All the Pain In Your Soul

The sonic equivalent of a hot toddy on a cold night.

Leslie Odom Jr.: NPR Music Tiny Desk Concert

Leslie Odom Jr. has released a new album, entitled simply Mr, and it's, well, soothing.

whyy.org

While some music is great for diving into the darkness so you can come out stronger (cough, FKA twigs' latest album), some music is useful for replacing all the aches in your heart with elegant jazz, dreamy violins, and of course, Leslie Odom Jr.'s voice.

If we're talking voices, Odom Jr. has the voice. It's the vocal equivalent of a hot toddy on a cold night, an advil in the thick of a migraine, a sip of warm but not hot honey-ginger tea. It's just rough enough to sound real, and thank god for that little rasp, otherwise it would be almost incomprehensibly smooth. He's riffing magnificently and shifting from falsetto to sultry low notes with impressive ease.

Mr finds the former Hamilton star adding modern inflections to classics such as Nina Simone's Feeling Good, using that song's triumphant chord progression to fuel the energy of his song "Standards," which is all about having high standards.

Wait for Itwww.youtube.com

Though not ostensibly a Christmas album, Mr still feels like Christmas—it's got all the bells and whistles, and you can imagine it playing in a department store during the Christmas sale rush, but in the best way possible. That's not to say it's not great party music: It would also be perfect to play during a Christmas party.

Odom Jr. can't quite shake his theatre kid roots, and it shows, as the album has an element of flashy performativity to it. That doesn't hurt the quality of the music. If anything, it's refreshing in an era obsessed with radical authenticity and glitchy sonic experimentation. Though not averse to drawing from a wide range of styles, Odom Jr. makes it all sound classic and refined, resulting in a cohesive, beautiful, and deeply, deeply soothing work of art.

Some of the songs are quite poignant, while others turn political, but ultimately, it's the perfect album to listen to if you're trying to stop racing endlessly through the hamster wheel and just take a minute to rest. On "Cold," he's literally inviting you in from the cold and promising to keep you safe, so take note. Here's some advice: Tonight, shut off Twitter, curl up with a cup of echinacea tea, and let Leslie Odom Jr. sing you to sleep. Sleep for twelve hours, wake up with your winter cold gone and a newfound excitement for the holiday season running through your currently cold, dead veins, and give thanks for Mr and all the pristine sounds that Leslie Odom Jr's voice box is capable of creating.

MUSIC

One of the Most Streamed Artists in the World is a Classical Composer

Ludovico Einaudi came to the attention of a wider audience in 2015, when he was featured in a Greenpeace climate change video playing piano on an ice berg.

Rare is the artist trafficking in modern classical music who breaks through to the mainstream music listener. Ludovico Einaudi is one of them.

And there's a good reason: Einaudi's music is, by-and-large, plangent and soothing - something to throw on in the background (think the Amelie soundtrack, but less dynamic). Unlike much classical music of the modern era (that is, from the early 20th Century onward), Einaudi's music is consonant rather than dissonant, rhythmically accessible rather than metrically disruptive. An example of this aesthetic is the piece that, because of a film collaboration with Greenpeace, broke him through to a wider audience. The video featured the 60-something silver fox plunking out a mournful dirge (entitled "Eulogy for the Arctic") atop a small iceberg drifting past a crumbling northern glacier - the most calming climate change PSA ever made, essentially.

Ludovico Einaudi - "Elegy for the Arctic" - Official Live (Greenpeace)www.youtube.com

That was in 2015. Now, Einaudi is back with a larger scale project called Seven Days Walking, a series of seven albums to be released over the course of as many months, after which they will be available in their entirety as a boxed set. Per the composer, the episodes were inspired by walks he took through the Alps in the winter of 2018; each piece was designed to evoke the surrounding environment, not unlike Ludwig Van Beethoven's "Pastoral" symphony.

So far, Seven Days Walking has been a notable success, by both classical music standards and those of the music industry in general. Day One, made available on March 19, placed 31st on the UK Albums Chart and was streamed over 2 million times before the day of its release was over. Next up will be, naturally, Day Two, set for release on April 19. However, a single for this second installment, entitled "Birdsong," is already out (you can find it on Spotify). For more information regarding the composer (whose oeuvre includes many film scores) go to his website.

Seven Days Walking (Day 2)


Matt Fink lives and works in Brooklyn. Go to organgrind.com for more of his work.


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