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Month: December 2010 (Page 2 of 2)

Behind the Camera for Porter’s Last Musical

Among the Merritt Room’s holdings are several continuity scripts for classic musicals, including one for Les Girls (1957) Cole Porter’s last major work (apart from a children’s television production of “Aladdin”) before his retirement in 1958. In tandem with the DVD, it offers a unique look over the shoulder of director George Cukor (legendary for his skill with “women’s pictures”) as he assembles a movie.

It seems at first ironic that this film is billed as “Cole Porter’s Les Girls“, when Porter himself admitted the Les Girls songs were not up to his usual standard*. Suffering from the cumulative effects of a host of physical ailments and a series of heavy personal losses, Porter had been unable to summon up the sparkle and gleam of the previous year’s “High Society” score. Yet the picture itself, helmed and staffed by some of the most elegant minds in the business and starring Gene Kelly and three beautiful lead actresses (including the blazingly talented Kay Kendall), is redolent of the world of accessible sophistication conjured up by a good Porter song.

Color consultant George Hoyningen-Huene (the man behind the haunting deep blues in Cukor’s “A Star is Born”) fills the frame with glowing blacks and startling pinks and rigs up a feathery collage for the credit sequence (note how he handles the transition between the credit for Porter’s music and that of Adolph Deutsch, who adapted and conducted it); John Patrick’s screenplay offers a clever, Rashomon-like plot (Taina Elg and Kendall play former showgirls with Kelly’s troupe, one of whom sues the other over an allegedly libelous memoir) and some wicked one-liners, and Jack Cole choreographs some lively dances (performed in clothes by Orry-Kelly).  Robert Surtees’ cinematography makes the most of the multiple points of view and flashbacks upon flashbacks.

Even tired Porter is still Porter. Les Girls is set mostly in Paris, in the backstage world of crowded dressing rooms, tiny, shared flats, cheap restaurants and third-class train carriages. In the musical numbers, this tawdry milieu suddenly becomes the scene for dazzling light romance. It’s not a bad last look at the man whose music and lyrics could confer instant urbanity on anyone who sang or played them.

– Sarah Barton

*Eells, George. The Life That Late He Led: a Biography of Cole Porter. Putnam, New York, 1967. p.307

Restructured and Renewed: Online Resources for Music Scholars

Screenshot, Online Resources for Music Scholars
Online Resources for Music Scholars

We are delighted to announce a major revision to the Music Library’s largest and oldest research guide, Online Resources for Music Scholars.

Online Resources for Music Scholars provides a basis for beginning electronic research on a wide variety of topics in music, including historical musicology, ethnomusicology, music theory, composition, and performance practice. It collects links to archival collections, online scores and sound recordings; article indexes, discographies and bibliographies; scholarly societies; musical reference works; and a miscellany of useful websites.

This redesign moves the guide from a flat, hierarchical listing of links to a tagged, searchable database. Every link is annotated and assigned tags indicating both the subject (e.g. ethnomusicology, manuscripts, Aaron Copland, popular music) and resource type (e.g. digital score, discography, image collection, streaming audio). The new version reflects that different people organize information in different ways: one person may want to see a list of sites with online scores; another may want to see everything related to Bach; another may want links to sites about music theory; another may be looking for sites devoted to music in Africa. We hope the guide’s renaissance makes it a better, easier to use resource for researchers with varied goals and levels of musical experience.

Screenshot, Tag Cloud, Online Resources for Music Scholars
Tag Cloud, Online Resources for Music Scholars

Online Resources for Music Scholars has been online since (at least) the mid-1990s: our oldest archived version dates to 1999. Site statistics regularly place various sections in the top 10-20 most frequently-used research guides on the Harvard College Library website. When it was created, it was reasonable for one library to attempt to describe the entire universe of scholarly resources in music on one webpage, and to do so in a hierarchical, rigidly organized way that replicated the experience of browsing a physical bookshelf.

The internet doesn’t work like that anymore.

With the proliferation of digital collections, online multimedia, and web resources of all kinds, one eresource quite commonly includes many kinds of information: digitized scores, recordings, correspondence, and images; reference sources like thematic catalogs; performance histories and biographical information; bibliographies, discographies, and library catalogs. The website of the Arnold Schönberg Center, for example, is not just a source for information about the world’s premier Schoenberg archive; it also includes hundreds of manuscript facsimiles, streaming recordings, and other research materials.

We recognize that Online Resources for Music Scholars is a work in progress, and we very much appreciate your comments and suggestions.

– Kerry Masteller

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