(For information regarding my Shakespeare Lectures: georgewalllectures@gmail.com)
Friday, December 10, 2010
The musician I was referring to at the end of yesterday's post is Duke Ellington, whose career provides a parallel with Shakespeare's in a couple of important ways. The first is that Ellington kept a big band together for over fifty years, which is an incredible achievement by itself, but he resembles Shakespeare in that his primary reason for doing it was to make it possible for him to hear his compositions immediately and as he intended them. Shakespeare was involved with theatrical troupes for the entire twenty years of his writing career, and it's clear that every word in the plays was written with them in mind. The second is that each wrote with not only the audience in mind, but also their own performers. Whereas Ellington used to ask his musicians if they all liked their parts after they'd played a new piece, it's not hard to imagine Shakespeare doing the same with his actors. And of course, both wrote to feature and/or challenge specific individual performers. I'm convinced that it's largely because of these factors that each of these artists is now considered simply a genre of their own, with only their last names needed for identification.
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