Around the World in 80 Minutes

On Demand May 29 – June 29, 2021

It is often said the music is the universal language. While it is true that music is common to the entire gamut of cultural activity throughout the world, a single language can hardly be deemed to be universal, because music “speaks” in a nearly infinite number of dialects. It is probably wiser to acknowledge a multiplicity of music. Those people who grow up used to Euro-American music, for example, may find the music of African, Indian, or Asian cultures alien to their ears. This is not to exclude the possibility of liking, or even loving, such music. But this feeling doesn’t necessarily translate into an understanding of its meaning or syntax.

This “mixtape” program by the Winston-Salem Symphony doesn’t extend into what we would deem exotic music, but it does offer examples of music of a specific national character (Vaughan Williams, Brahms, Grainger, Falla), a cross-over of styles (the “Classical” Shostakovich writing in a jazz idiom, Ellington, the jazz great, adapting the harmonic vocabulary of Debussy), and a smattering of popular tunes (Rodgers and Irving Gordon, for example). The program also crosses boundaries of concert and theatrical music, creating a rich mixture that reflects just how integrated musical idioms are continuing to evolve in our own time. In short, “Around the World in 80 Minutes” is a kind of international smorgasbord of music that is bound to please everyone’s taste.

Program Note ©2021 David B. Levy

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