Posts Tagged ‘irving berlin’

White Christmas: The Life and Music of Irving Berlin

Friday, December 12th, 2008

In 1948Irving Berlin started making music long before he learned to play an instrument. Before rising to the heights of superstardom, Irving (then Israel Beilin) was just another son of an immigrant in the United States. Through stubborn determination to express his music, Irving eventually taught himself to play the piano and became one of the most prolific composers in music history.

Irving’s parents were poor, and after his father died, he found himself eking a living as a singing waiter in New York. He was already using music as a medium of expression, but it was when he was asked to write something catchy for a local business that he found his true passion. He also found himself with a new name - a misprint read “Berlin” instead of “Beilin” on the sheet music, and so he became I. Berlin.

Coming up with the music was easy enough, but arranging it professionally was a challenge. In the early days when he worked alone, he employed outside help to arrange his musical ideas. His work as a lyricist proved successful and soon he was composing songs for modest stage productions.

It was a decent step up from warbling for cafe patrons, but his life changed in 1911 when his song “Alexander’s Rag-time Band” hit the big time. It was an ode to the explosion of jazz in the early twentieth century.

After Alexander’s Rag-time Band, Berlin was catapulted into the limelight as a songwriting star. He turned his attention to writing songs for full length musicals, and during a stint with the American army in World War One, he penned what became one of the most stirring American anthems in the country’s history. “God Bless America” is Berlin’s most popular and widely-known song, second only to the American National Anthem in popularity.

Although he wrote music for many plays, his best known composition was Annie Get Your Gun.  He also had great success in films. White Christmas was sung by Bing Crosby in a movie called Holiday Inn, and the response was tremendous. The song won Berlin an Oscar, and he was the first and only winner to ever find his own name in the envelope.

Berlin was also a keen businessman. He built his own Broadway theater called the Music Box. He also established the American Society of Composer, Authors and Publishers (ASCAP) for creative minds in the industry. He also donated a great deal of his earnings to charity, most of it towards organizations assisting the army. President Eisenhower (for whom Berlin wrote the presidential candidacy song “I Like Ike”) awarded him a Congressional Medal in 1955 for God Bless America.

Although Berlin enjoyed international success for his work, his personal life was sometimes fraught with tragedy. His first wife died only five months after they were married. Expressing his grief in his own way, he wrote “When I Lost You” as a tribute to her. Later he remarried a young socialite named Ellin Mackay. Her father condemned the union and disinherited her from his mining fortune. Berlin fathered three daughters with Ellin. The youngest son died as a baby.

One of the most repeated quotes about Irving Berlin was first uttered by his composer friend Jerome Kern. He stated, “Irving Berlin has no place in American music. He is American music.” Despite having foreign roots, Berlin was fiercely patriotic. He loved America and thought of it as his own country.

Irving Berlin was 101 when he died in 1989.

It’s Never Been Easier To Learn & Play A Huge Variety Of Popular Piano Music!

Wednesday, July 9th, 2008

Piano music & piano sheet music

How many songs do you know on the piano? Would you like to have a larger repertoire at your command? How about entertaining friends and acquaintances at a party with a staggering knowledge of popular songs? From Chopin to Gershwin, from Thelonius Monk to Tori Amos, piano music in a variety of popular styles is increasingly available in music stores and online outlets.

For the beginning piano student, the variety of popular piano music is staggering. A simple search will place the sheet music for “Pomp and Circumstance” and Mahler’s funereal variations on Frere Jacques in his Symphony No. 1 in D Major directly on your computer monitor. Download the pieces, print them out and practice until you’ve mastered them. Soon you will be an expert at many diverse kinds of piano music.

Whether you invest time in learning every note and trill involved in a piece or you’re simply looking for a chord progression for accompaniment purposes, sheet music is likely available. Mesmerize onlookers with your knowledge of the entire Beatles catalog! Serenade sweethearts with a flawless take on Irving Berlin’s “Blue Skies.” Why stick to practicing dull scales over and over when friends will be more impressed with a hot rendition of “My Heart Will Go On?”

Jokes aside, the ease of obtaining popular piano music is making an extensive knowledge of entire song catalogs a breeze. The fake arrangement, which is a piece of sheet music outlining the basic chord progressions and melodies in a song, is invaluable to those wanting to play piano with modern ensembles. This kind of arrangement enables the pianist to know what is coming at him. It gives him the basic melodic theme with which to improvise, play behind another instrument or just play straight from the paper.

Perhaps a more thoroughly written piece is what you’re after. Don’t want the fake arrangement of Beethoven’s “Moonlight Sonata?” Piano music for popular pieces such as Claude Debussy’s “Clare de Lune” and Frederic Chopin’s Prelude in C Minor is a handy tool for the beginning pianist or the tutor to have on hand. The longevity and popularity of pieces such as these makes them fun to learn for any pianist, great or small.

So your skills on the instrument aren’t up to par with the virtuosos? Is that any reason to not enjoy a relaxing stay at the piano bench with the ivories at your fingertips? No, it’s not. Piano music doesn’t have to be difficult to be enjoyed. It shouldn’t always require a degree in music theory and performance. There are multitudes of pieces in the lexicon of popular piano music that are stunningly beautiful, yet don’t require years of rigorous practice. Elton John, one of the greatest pop composers in modern music, has songs that come in easy piano translations. Feel free to find a nice version of one of his songs, or perhaps a standard like “Singin’ in the Rain.” Plink out the melody, find the bass line and play until your heart’s content.

Piano music is one of the most enduring forms of art and entertainment in the world. With the instrument’s multiple octaves and singular ability to produce melody, harmony and underlying chord progressions, the piano is a timeless wonder. So invite some friends over, find some great sheet music and have a sing along to some of your favorite songs.