Gregory and Sonja Alper are friends of ours that live a couple of streets away from us in the Marquez Knolls section of Pacific Palisades. Gregory is a jazz musician who has also run the Gregory Alper Music School here for local music students for several years.
Recently, Gregory teamed up with First Hand Remasters to re-release his 1978 jazz album "Fat Doggie". The project took him to the famed Abbey Road Studios in London, England to oversee the remastering process and now the album has been released on CD. Several of the artists from that album went on to play with other top bands including Stan Getz and Spirogyra.
Gregory is also a seasoned photographer and currently has two projects of note underway. The first is a new book entitled "Palisades Panoramas: Photographic Adventures by Gregory Alper". The panoramas were shot around Pacfic Palisades using a normal (non-wide-angle) lens and were stiched together to create the wide angle panoramic views. Four of these spendid panoramas are presented below.
Gregory's second project is an exhibition of his photographic works from the book at Cafe Vida on Antioch street in Pacific Palisades.
Both Gregory's CD and book are available at Village Books on Swarthmore.
Westside Coastline

Westside Coastline
Showing posts with label Music. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Music. Show all posts
Monday, March 21, 2011
Gregory Alper: Multi-talented Artist
Monday, October 11, 2010
Dissonance Among the Exiles
This excellent story from Anthony Mostrom at the LA Times about the expats from Nazi Germany in 1933 and how many of Germany's creative geniuses wound up living in Pacific Palisades and socializing with each other at a palatial villa known as Miramar.
October 10, 2010
"I have made a discovery," the composer Arnold Schoenberg said in 1921, "which will ensure the supremacy of German music for the next one hundred years!" These ecstatic words ushered in the birth of the Austrian's radically innovative 12-tone method of composition and unleashed a near-century's worth of dissonance and atonality in avant-garde classical music. But if Expressionism in music was considered disturbing and "decadent" by many in Weimar Germany, Schoenberg was just one of many cultural avant-gardists who were marked for harassment, imprisonment or even death once Adolf Hitler and the National Socialists rose to power.
When that day arrived Jan. 30, 1933, the exodus of German (and later, Austrian) musicians, painters, writers and scientists started out as a trickle and by the late 1930s had become a flood tide.
California soon gained a bumper crop of geniuses. One of the first to arrive in Los Angeles along with Schoenberg was Erich Wolfgang Korngold, a Jewish Viennese composer of lush, traditionally flavored music who arrived here in 1934 to write film scores for Warner Bros. Otto Klemperer, the towering conductor of the Berlin Philharmonic at the Kroll Opera House, gave up his initial naivete about "the new Germany" and accepted a post as conductor of the Los Angeles Philharmonic in 1933. And some of the most famous German writers of the 20th century — Bertolt Brecht, Lion Feuchtwanger and the 1929 Nobel Prize winner for literature, Thomas Mann — all would call Los Angeles home for the duration of World War II.
Feuchtwanger had seen the coming danger earlier than most. In 1930 he wrote "Erfolg" (Success), a work that many consider to be the first anti-Hitler novel. His best-selling historical novel, "Jud Suess," an unflattering portrait of an 18th century Jewish financier named Josef Suess Oppenheimer, could have made him a hero to the Nazis, but they hated him anyway because he was Jewish. Later, the Nazis produced a vicious film portrayal of "Suess" without mentioning Feuchtwanger's novel at all.
After arriving in L.A. in 1940, the Feuchtwangers learned of a palatial three-story house, then standing vacant, on Paseo Miramar in Pacific Palisades.
Originally christened "Miramar" when it was built by The Times in 1928 as a "demonstration house" to attract interest in Palisades development, the house was in serious disrepair. The Feuchtwangers got it for a song, $9,000, and proceeded to fill several rooms with books. Mann moved to the Palisades a year later.
According to Imogen von Tannenberg, who today oversees the artist-in-residence program for European artists at the former Feuchtwanger estate (now known as Villa Aurora), not all of the exiles in Los Angeles got on well with each other.
Story continues here: http://www.latimes.com/news/local/la-me-1010-then-20101010,0,4600988.story
That is it for this post and as always, if I can be of any assistance to you or any of your friends, family or colleagues with any of your real estate needs (residential, commercial or otherwise) or if I can help find a real estate professional for you to work with in your local community, please let me know. It would be my pleasure to help.
Some of Germany's and Austria's most creative minds fled the Nazis and settled in Los Angeles. They would gather at a Pacific Palisades villa, but not all was harmonious.
By Anthony MostromOctober 10, 2010
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Originally known as Miramar and now dubbed Villa Aurora, this Pacific Palisades estate was a gathering place for German and Austrian expatriates during World War II. It was owned by author Lion Feuchtwanger and frequented by some of Europe's greatest artists, musicians and thinkers. (Annie Wells, Los Angeles Times / March 15, 2005) |
When that day arrived Jan. 30, 1933, the exodus of German (and later, Austrian) musicians, painters, writers and scientists started out as a trickle and by the late 1930s had become a flood tide.
California soon gained a bumper crop of geniuses. One of the first to arrive in Los Angeles along with Schoenberg was Erich Wolfgang Korngold, a Jewish Viennese composer of lush, traditionally flavored music who arrived here in 1934 to write film scores for Warner Bros. Otto Klemperer, the towering conductor of the Berlin Philharmonic at the Kroll Opera House, gave up his initial naivete about "the new Germany" and accepted a post as conductor of the Los Angeles Philharmonic in 1933. And some of the most famous German writers of the 20th century — Bertolt Brecht, Lion Feuchtwanger and the 1929 Nobel Prize winner for literature, Thomas Mann — all would call Los Angeles home for the duration of World War II.
Feuchtwanger had seen the coming danger earlier than most. In 1930 he wrote "Erfolg" (Success), a work that many consider to be the first anti-Hitler novel. His best-selling historical novel, "Jud Suess," an unflattering portrait of an 18th century Jewish financier named Josef Suess Oppenheimer, could have made him a hero to the Nazis, but they hated him anyway because he was Jewish. Later, the Nazis produced a vicious film portrayal of "Suess" without mentioning Feuchtwanger's novel at all.
After arriving in L.A. in 1940, the Feuchtwangers learned of a palatial three-story house, then standing vacant, on Paseo Miramar in Pacific Palisades.
Originally christened "Miramar" when it was built by The Times in 1928 as a "demonstration house" to attract interest in Palisades development, the house was in serious disrepair. The Feuchtwangers got it for a song, $9,000, and proceeded to fill several rooms with books. Mann moved to the Palisades a year later.
According to Imogen von Tannenberg, who today oversees the artist-in-residence program for European artists at the former Feuchtwanger estate (now known as Villa Aurora), not all of the exiles in Los Angeles got on well with each other.
Story continues here: http://www.latimes.com/news/local/la-me-1010-then-20101010,0,4600988.story
That is it for this post and as always, if I can be of any assistance to you or any of your friends, family or colleagues with any of your real estate needs (residential, commercial or otherwise) or if I can help find a real estate professional for you to work with in your local community, please let me know. It would be my pleasure to help.
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