• About Jeff von der Schmidt, the Hà Nội New Music Ensemble & LA International New Music Festival

Sound Travels with Jeff von der Schmidt

~ A blog about new music, travel and food

Sound Travels with Jeff von der Schmidt

Category Archives: Food

The Autumn Gold of Vienna

12 Friday Sep 2014

Posted by Jeff von der Schmidt in Austria, Food, Uncategorized, Vienna

≈ 1 Comment

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Arnold Schoenberg, Cafe Demel, Cafe Landtmann, E. Randol Schoenberg, Gustav Klimt, Hollywood Exiles, Leonard Bernstein, Roland Berger, Solti Ring Cycle, The Seccession Building, The Woman in Gold, Vienna, Vienna Philharmonic

The Seccession in Vienna.

The Seccession in Vienna.

To the Time, Its Art. To the Art, Its Freedom.

My home of Hollywood was the exiled haven of a legendary list of emigres, my mom serving many of them at 20th Century Fox or Chasen’s. Older teachers and colleagues spoke rapturously of working with Otto Klemperer and Bruno Walter when they were with the Los Angeles Philharmonic or Columbia Symphony. That meant discovering Mahler would not be far away. Lotte Lehmann was at the Music Academy in Santa Barbara. Erich Wolfgang Korngold invents the film score here, his violinist granddaughter Katie living down the street from our house in Eagle Rock. Alma Mahler lives with Franz Werfel in Beverly Hills. Schoenberg is friends with Charlie Chaplin and the Marx Brothers and his entire family are now great friends. And a very young Zubin Mehta was leading the Los Angeles Philharmonic, recording Schoenberg, Stravinsky, Varese and William Kraft, so the name Hans Swarowsky was in the air.

Haydn, Mozart, Beethoven (I could stop right there but it wouldn’t be honest) Schubert, Brahms, the Strauss Family, Bruckner, Wolf, Mahler, Schoenberg, Berg, Webern. The strongest list of local composers on Planet Earth. The Viennese feel they own this music so in September of 1977 I set out to find out their secrets.

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The Old Inn on the Green: Colonial Cuisine in New England

14 Saturday Jun 2014

Posted by Jeff von der Schmidt in Composers, Contemporary Music, Food, John Cage, Southwest Chamber Music, Travel, Uncategorized, Vietnam

≈ 1 Comment

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Ascending Dragon, Barry Lyndon, Berkshires, Herman Melville, James Fenimore Cooper, Nathaniel Hawthorne, Nejaimes Liquor Store, New England, New Marlborough, Oliver Knussen, Song Hong Ensemble, Stanley Kubrick, The Last of the Mohicans, The Old Inn on the Green, Vu Nhat Tan

 

Twilight fog in New England.

Twilight fog in New England at The Old Inn on the Green in New Marlborough.

There is an unescapable magic in the New England countryside of the Berkshire Hills in Western Massachusetts. The legendary fall foliage, the evanescent green of spring, the fireflies of summer, the winter white snow fall.

And this post is a story for my many curious and interested readers in over 80 countries around the globe. America is a complicated country, with huge frustrations, a complicated historical legacy concocted from British, French and Spanish colonial interests, and often maddening contradictions. There’s nothing like a good meal and a good book to help you start to understand a people and their country.

Do yourself a favor and make a reservation at The Old Inn on the Green.

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The Magical Central Coast Roads of California

19 Monday May 2014

Posted by Jeff von der Schmidt in California wine, Food, LA International New Music Festival, Travel, Uncategorized

≈ 1 Comment

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Baileyana Winery, Brown Butter Co., Cambria, Cayucos, Chamisal Vineyards, Edna Valley Wines, Elliott Carter, Frankie & Lola's, Linn's of Cambria, Moonstone Beach, Morro Bay, San Luis Obispo County

Vineyard Dr. in the Central Coast area of Paso Robles.

Vineyard Dr. in the Central Coast area of Paso Robles.

My last post ended in Los Alamos, enjoying the gregarious wines and conversations of Stephan Bedford of Bedford Winery. But the road beckons us forward.

As you proceed north on Highway 101 take a detour which took us far to long to discover. Exit at the charming city of Arroyo Grande, locate Orcutt Road and get ready for a trip in the Edna Valley. It might be a little slower, but after all California has to deliver on its stereotypical laid back image from time to time. You’ve entered San Luis Obispo County, SLO County, pun unavoidable…

Got vineyards?

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The Magical California Roads of Santa Barbara Wine Country

13 Tuesday May 2014

Posted by Jeff von der Schmidt in California wine, Food, LA International New Music Festival, Los Angeles, Southwest Chamber Music, Travel, Uncategorized

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Au Bon Climat, Bedford Winery, Brophy's in Santa Barbara, Cambria, Carharrt Winery, Foxen Canyon Road, Foxen Winery, Julia Child, Longoria Winery, Los Alamos, Los Angeles, Los Olivos, Michael Jackson, Moonstone Beach, Panino's, Qupe Winery, Ronald Reagan, Santa Barbara, Santa Maria BBQ

Santa Barbara from Stearn's Wharf.

Santa Barbara from Stearn’s Wharf.

I’ve never met a big city that doesn’t have a great reason for being built. Though the old adage for success in business – “location, location, location” – always plays a role in any city’s importance, the urban density, its excitement and endless opportunity, are only one part of a larger picture.

Los Angeles has a big personality profile. And there are two LA’s. One is the City and the other is the County. The County is vast and makes everyone and everyplace for miles around lay claim to being LA. Los Angeles (the City) is Hollywood, no doubt about it, but it’s also the important port of San Pedro, it’s Abbot Kinney’s Venice Beach, it’s LAX Airport, the major hub between Asia and Latin America, it’s still Vin Scully of the LA Dodgers, it’s Disney Hall and the Hollywood Bowl.

But what is the most exciting part of living here is that when all of LA’s environs are  taken together (aka the County), you’re living in the second capitol cities of numerous countries around the globe. China, Taiwan, Thailand, Vietnam (though that is shifting to Louisiana a little), Cambodia, the Philippines, South Korea (Koreatown is in the middle of LA the City), Mexico, Guatemala, Brazil, El Salvador, Peru, Armenia, Lebanon, Iran (their nickname for LA is Tehrangeles) and I’ll bet there’s more.

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The Magical California Roads of Paso Robles Wine Country

09 Friday May 2014

Posted by Jeff von der Schmidt in California wine, Contemporary Music, Food, LA International New Music Festival, Southwest Chamber Music, Travel, Uncategorized

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California, Dunning Vineyards, Halter Ranch, Jack Creek Winery, Oso Libre Winery, Paso Robles Wine Country, Vineyard Dr.

Wine country road in Paso Robles.

Wine country road in Paso Robles.

If you’ve been following my posts, you know that we’ve enjoyed a tremendous visit in Los Angeles from the Song Hong Ensemble of Hanoi. There’s nothing like seeing where you live through the eyes off friends who come to visit from a far off land.

Curiosity. It’s the one trait that makes a big difference to me and I wish more people understood its rewards. To eat something you’ve never tried. To try to learn a foreign language. To read a map of a strange place and know that in reading that map you are no longer lost, anywhere in the world. To cook a meal you’ve never thought possible. To listen to music out of your comfort zone.

And when in Paso Robles, to take the roads less traveled and find a good bottle of wine.

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Hanoi in Hollywood 4: Venice Beach

06 Tuesday May 2014

Posted by Jeff von der Schmidt in Composers, Contemporary Music, Food, LA International New Music Festival, Los Angeles, Music, Southwest Chamber Music, Travel, Uncategorized, Vietnam

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Abbot Kinney, Black Angels, Charlie Chaplin, Collis P. Huntington, Doge's Palace, Fig Tree Cafe, Indigenous, LA International New Music Festival, Los Angeles, Santa Monica Pier, Song Hong Ensemble of Hanoi, Venice Beach

Venice Beach Easter with Jan Karlin & Do Huong Tra My.

Venice Beach with Jan Karlin & Do Huong Tra My.

Timing is everything.

Mae West was right. You only live once, but if you do it right, once should be enough.

So after hard work, it’s time to enjoy life on a holiday. It was Easter Sunday in LA, and my friends from Hanoi had naturally not had a lot of time to see things. And it’s important to see what any city has that is only found in that city. One of those unique places for Los Angeles is what I call The End of the Western World.

The Venice Beach Walkway. In all its bizarre glory…….

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Hanoi in Hollywood 2

29 Tuesday Apr 2014

Posted by Jeff von der Schmidt in Food, LA International New Music Festival, Los Angeles, Southwest Chamber Music, Travel, Uncategorized, Vietnam

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Cafecito Organico, Cong Caphe, Drake Farms, Hanoi, Hollywood Farmers Market, La Golondrina Restaurant, Los Angeles, Peter Drucker, Phillip King, Rancho La Vina Walnuts, Song Hong Ensemble of Hanoi, Underwood Farms

Got romanesco? Phan Thi To Trinh and Quynh Trang Phamat at Underwood Farms at the Hollywood Farmers Market.

Got Romanesco? Phan Thi To Trinh and Quynh Trang Pham admiring produce at Underwood Farms at the Hollywood Farmers Market.

My Aunt Lorraine lived to be 100. My father never lost a word until the day he died, which was at 95. My mom didn’t like getting older so after her 90th birthday she quipped on her deathbed “Somebody’s gotta go first!”

Their secret to longevity?

There was no secret except that they grew up on family farms in Minnesota (mom) or Kansas (dad). They never saw a can or box or package needing a label listing chemical ingredients until the Great Depression morphed into World War II. Cutting off the head of a chicken for Sunday dinner, butchering pigs and cows in a freezing December, ice fishing, soup from garden cabbage and pole beans and apple cider from trees and water from a well was their supermarket.

No wonder my mother loved Beethoven’s Pastoral Symphony!

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Hanoi in Hollywood!

25 Friday Apr 2014

Posted by Jeff von der Schmidt in Contemporary Music, Food, LA International New Music Festival, Music, Southwest Chamber Music, Travel, Uncategorized, Vietnam

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Arnold Schoenberg, Ascending Dragon, E. Randol Schoenberg, Hanoi, Helen Mirren, Hollywood Farmers Market, Los Angeles, Pasadena, Pie 'N Burger, Ryan Reynolds, Song Hong Ensemble of Hanoi, The Woman in Gold, Ton That Tiet, Venice Beach Walkway, Vu Nhat Tan

Song Hong Ensemble violinists Son and To Trinh at the Hollywood Farmers Market.

Song Hong Ensemble violinists Phan Thi To Trinh and Pham Truong Son at the Hollywood Farmers Market.

I began blogging about my LA International New Music Festival on September 17, 2013. What jumpstarted my story telling was a return trip to Vietnam, my fifth, to reconnect with old friends in Hanoi and see what new developments were underway in their one-of-a-one city, a fascinating burg if there ever was one.

My blog is now read in 78 countries with 3600 readers, so a short recapitulation is in order. My attraction for Vietnam is guided by two of the most important people in my life, my trusted acupuncturist Loi Trinh Le and my mother Louise. You can read about Trinh (her English name) in my second post from September. And that September 17th date when I started my blog?

That auspicious date would be my mother’s birthday. She’s brought me plenty of good luck hovering like an angel over all of my work in Vietnam. And mom would be thrilled about the recent visit to LA from our friends in Hanoi, the Song Hong Ensemble!

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Who Needs Paris? The Restaurants and Bars of San Francisco

08 Tuesday Apr 2014

Posted by Jeff von der Schmidt in Food, John Cage, LA International New Music Festival, San Francisco, Southwest Chamber Music, Travel, Uncategorized

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Burma Star, Cafe Jaqueline, Cafe Tosca, Caffe Trieste, Finnegans Wake, Francis Ford Coppola, Kent Nagano, Marlon Brando, Mission District, Molinari's, North Beach, San Francisco, Tadich Grill, The Godfather, Tommaso's, Vesuvio Bar, Women's Building on 18th St

At home in San Francisco.

A nice first course in San Francisco’s Mission District.

I’ve been pulled back in my memory to my Aunt Lorraine today. With the news of the passing of Mickey Rooney, I’ve day dreamed of old stories she told me of her waitress years in Hollywood. She’d worked at Armstrong Schroeder’s on Wilshire Boulevard. It was THE all night haunt of Golden Era Hollywood.

She enjoyed telling me that Mickey and Judy Garland would flip an order of mashed potatoes onto the ceiling using long teaspoons at 3 AM. But she loved him as a customer and he was a generous tipper (yes, Jack Benny was cheap).

So I’ve been dreaming of restaurant memories with her and my parents. Which brings me to the Old School places of San Francisco.

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Spring in Napa Valley: Olives, Wine, Rauschenberg & Wisteria

26 Wednesday Mar 2014

Posted by Jeff von der Schmidt in Food, LA International New Music Festival, Southwest Chamber Music, Travel, Uncategorized

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

Anselm Kiefer, California, Heitz Cellars, Hess Collection, Honig Winery, Napa Valley, Paso Robles, Robert Rauschenberg, San Francisco, St. Helena Olive Oil Co., Wisteria

The Napa Valley.

The Napa Valley.

California anchors the world. As the home of two of the most important developments of the 20th century – film and technology – discovering the Golden State is important for everybody.

Anchoring California is a natural landscape of ocean to desert to mountain ranges. And vineyards. In 1973 Chateau Montelena in Napa Valley put California on the international wine map when even the French agreed the wine was great (though a blind tasting didn’t hurt). I’d not been here for over 20 years and was overdue for another visit.

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