calimac: (Haydn)
calimac ([personal profile] calimac) wrote2005-11-01 02:10 pm

in Burlingame, on Sunday

[livejournal.com profile] athenais and I attended a chamber music concert I was reviewing. Then we sat around in a diner and talked about Rome. You won't get a good chiliburger in Rome. The gelato, however ...

Meanwhile, Jon Carroll talks about restaurant background music. He writes:
The idea of music as background is, all by itself, kind of odd. Someone labors on a lovely duet for cello and piano for six months, and then it is played almost exclusively when people are putting fish in their mouths. It's like, the composer could have at least doubled his output if he'd known about the fish.
Actually, he did know about the fish and he did double his output. How do you think Mozart wrote so much? Any work of his to which the word "Serenade" is attached - and that includes the exquisite Eine kleine Nachtmusik - was written in the full knowledge that it would be played to audiences studiously ignoring it while they ate dinner or were otherwise occupied.

[identity profile] fr-john.livejournal.com 2005-11-01 10:39 pm (UTC)(link)
I seem to recall that people complained when Wagner had the lights turned down in the concert-hall. They said they couldn't see their friends and hold conversations.

[identity profile] kalimac.livejournal.com 2005-11-01 10:45 pm (UTC)(link)
Oh, well, opera - before baseball games were invented, that's how people treated opera performances. You packed a picnic lunch, chatted with your friends, cheered and booed the action. The purpose of the opera overture was as a way for management to spend five minutes saying, "Hey guys, the show's about to start, if anybody cares to pay attention."