Category: Daily Dispatch

  • Radio Reunion Remembering Teri Noel Towe

    Radio Reunion Remembering Teri Noel Towe

    The other night, I was reading a tribute to conductor Sir Neville Marriner in April’s Gramophone magazine, and who should be mentioned, but my former radio colleague, Teri Noel Towe. I snapped a photo of it, but then I figured the article would also be posted online.

    Teri got my foot in the door at WPRB at a time when WWFM was weathering another one of its financial shortfalls. I served first as Teri’s summer substitute, and then I was granted a regular weekly shift. When WWFM’s finances improved to the point that they could bring back their local hosts, I held on at WPRB. By then, I was also on WRTI in Philadelphia – three stations at once, in addition to my weekly music column in the Trenton Times. That would be the peak of my little vagrant empire. I remained at WPRB for three years, before I foolishly reined it in and put all my eggs back into the WWFM basket. Of course, when COVID hit, I was out of a job. Silly me, I believed what I was told, and I thought it would be only temporary.

    Teri lives in New York, so we haven’t seen one another much, although occasionally we would bat it back and forth by email. Sometimes I would catch one of his WKCR Bach radio broadcasts online. We had an unexpected reunion at McCarter Theatre in 2019 (pictured), when we both showed up to hear Jordi Savall.

    Hope you are well, Teri! I’ll keep watching for you in Princeton.

    America’s Oldest College DJ – Teri Noel Towe


    Sir Neville Marinner at 100

    https://www.gramophone.co.uk/features/article/sir-neville-marriner-at-100-a-beacon-of-excellence

    Teri from the WKCR archive

    https://www.cc-seas.columbia.edu/wkcr/archives/Classical%20Archive/artist/Teri%20Noel%20Towe

    Further podcasts

    https://www.ffrcc.org/weekly-broadcast

  • Earth Day Classical Music Playlist

    Earth Day Classical Music Playlist

    I’ve done a number of Earth Day shows over the years. Here’s a playlist from April 22, 2019. I’m adding audio links so that the musical experience can be reconstructed. Enjoy the music and, if you can think of a way to do it, kindly persuade your neighbors that just because something has metal or plastic in it doesn’t necessarily mean it’s recyclable. That includes lasagna foil, candy bar wrappers, and frozen food packaging! Or if you can’t think of a nice way to do it, just grab a Hefty bag and take an hour to pick up some trash. Then you won’t have to deal with anybody. You might think it won’t mean anything in the scheme of things, but it will make your environment more pleasant to live in. Also, I think you’ll find other people really do appreciate it. And you’ll feel good about it. If you’re in a wooded area, just watch out for ticks!

    4:00 pm 04/22/2019 Classical Music with Ross Amico

    IN NATURE’S REALM OVERTURE
    COMPOSER: Antonín Dvořák
    ENSEMBLES: Ulster Orchestra
    CONDUCTOR: Vernon Handley

    4:15 pm 04/22/2019 Classical Music with Ross Amico

    IN THE FOREST
    COMPOSER: Mikolajus Ciurlionis
    ENSEMBLES: Slovak Philharmonic Orchestra
    CONDUCTOR: Juozas Domarkas

    4:34 pm 04/22/2019 Classical Music with Ross Amico

    GARBAGE CONCERTO
    COMPOSER: Jan Järvlepp
    ENSEMBLES: Kroumata Percussion Ensemble; Singapore Symphony Orchestra
    CONDUCTOR: Lan Shui

    [Incorporates percussion instruments fashioned out of recyclable material]

    Tracks 1-3

    5:05 pm 04/22/2019 Classical Music with Ross Amico

    THEME FOR EARTH DAY
    COMPOSER: Patrick Williams
    ENSEMBLES: Boston Pops Orchestra
    CONDUCTOR: John Williams

    5:10 pm 04/22/2019 Classical Music with Ross Amico

    WALDSZENEN (FOREST SCENES)
    COMPOSER: Robert Schumann
    SOLOIST: Clara Haskil, piano
    ALBUM: Clara Haskil: Philips Recordings 1951-1960

    5:34 pm 04/22/2019 Classical Music with Ross Amico

    AZUL
    COMPOSER: Osvaldo Golijov
    ENSEMBLES: The Knights
    SOLOIST: Yo-Yo Ma, cello; Michael Ward-Bergeman, hyper-accordion; Jamie Haddad & Cyro Baptista, percussion

    [Inspired by view of the Earth from the International Space Station]

    Tracks 3-6

    6:06 pm 04/22/2019 Classical Music with Ross Amico

    FAREWELL TO STROMNESS
    COMPOSER: Sir Peter Maxwell Davies
    SOLOIST: Sir Peter Maxwell Davies, piano
    ALBUM: A Celebration of Scotland

    [Protest against proposed uranium mine in Orkney Islands]

    Only the first of these two pieces

    6:13 pm 04/22/2019 Classical Music with Ross Amico

    SYMPHONY NO. 63 “LOON LAKE”
    COMPOSER: Alan Hovhaness
    ENSEMBLES: Royal Scottish National Orchestra
    CONDUCTOR: Stewart Robertson

    [Commissioned in part by the Loon Preservation Committee]

    6:40 pm 04/22/2019 Classical Music with Ross Amico

    EARTH CRY
    COMPOSER: Peter Sculthorpe
    ENSEMBLES: New Zealand Symphony Orchestra
    SOLOIST: William Barton, didgeridoo

    6:55 pm 04/22/2019 Classical Music with Ross Amico

    FOR THE BEAUTY OF THE EARTH
    COMPOSER: John Rutter
    ENSEMBLES: Cambridge Singers; City of London Sinfonia
    CONDUCTOR: John Rutter

  • Excalibur A Bloody Brilliant Review

    Excalibur A Bloody Brilliant Review

    I remember when “Excalibur” opened in April 1981. I was 14 years-old, a sensitive kid, and its R-rating made me nervous that there might be arm-loppings.

    There were arm-loppings. And violent death. And gore.

    But the tension only enhanced the film’s gravitas, with its weighty armor and weighty themes, and its brooding Wagnerian soundtrack was promptly assimilated into the underscore of my tragic-heroic teens. I would get up in the middle of the night if I saw the movie was going to be shown on HBO and greet the new day with grim determination.

    It is with the weight of the world upon me that I will rouse myself from my torpor for yet another year of Roy’s Tie-Dye Sci-Fi Corner. At long last, Roy (from the French “Roi,” for “King,” not incidentally) has granted me my request to discuss this extraordinarily rich film.

    Director John Boorman took his share of liberties with the discursive source material, conflating elements mostly from Sir Thomas Malory’s medieval epic “Le Morte d’Arthur” (“The Death of Arthur”), but to this day, no film better captures the true spirit of the Arthurian legends. Boorman blends mystery and mysticism as seductively as the dragon’s breath that accompanies the Charm of Making.

    And what a cast! For a time, every time I rewatched “Excalibur,” somebody else got famous: Patrick Stewart, Gabriel Byrne, Liam Neeson, and Ciaran Hinds join Nigel Terry, Helen Mirren, and a scene-stealing Nicol Williamson (who eschews Merlin’s pointy hat for a glimmering skull-cap).

    I always think of “Excalibur” this time of year, with the blossoms falling from the trees, because of the memorable sequence, in which a wasting Arthur is revived (“The king and the land are one!”) and once more he leads his knights into battle.

    A relic from the days when men were men, devouring game with their hands, growling like animals at even the most unthreatening of challenges, and never pausing to remove their armor while in the act of love, “Excalibur” is both hilarious, in a Monty Python sort of way, and very, very grave. This is King Arthur for people who roll their eyes at “Camelot” and “The Sword in the Stone.”

    I hope you’ll join us for our Fifth Season opener – a ponderous discussion of “Excalibur” – on the next “Roy’s Tie-Dye Sci-Fi Corner.” Arm-loppings will abound in the comments section as I swill Guinness from my grail, when we livestream on Facebook, YouTube, etc., this Sunday evening at 7:00 EDT!

    https://www.facebook.com/roystiedyescificorner

  • Remembering Sir Andrew Davis: Champion of English Music

    Remembering Sir Andrew Davis: Champion of English Music

    It is with sadness that I learn of the death of Sir Andrew Davis.

    Although Davis had a vast repertoire spanning all eras, he was always a great champion of English music, including the works of Ralph Vaughan Williams. At the time of his death, he was, in fact, president of the Ralph Vaughan Williams Society.

    I was lucky enough to have seen him in concert several times. Most memorably, he introduced and oversaw Olivier Messiaen’s reckless epic erotic mindblower, the “Turangalîla Symphony,” in Philadelphia. (What could be more erotic than the ondes Martenot?)

    On a later visit, he brought more heavy-breathing – this time literally, as there is actual breathing in the score – in the form of Sir Michael Tippet’s Symphony No. 4.

    Both works are rarely done – “Turangalîla,” a 20th century classic, because of its scale, and the Tippett, well, because it’s Tippett. (“Turangalîla” is programmed from time to time, but I never would have guessed that I would hear the Tippett a second time, years later, performed by the New Jersey Symphony!)

    Over the course of his career, Davis served as principal conductor of the Toronto Symphony Orchestra (1975-1988), the Melbourne Symphony Orchestra (2013-2019), and Lyric Opera Chicago (2002-2021), and chief conductor of the BBC Symphony Orchestra (1989-2000) and the Glyndebourne Festival Opera (1988-2000). He was a regular presence at the BBC Proms.

    He conducted Vaughan Williams’ Fifth Symphony in Baltimore last year, but sadly I was already overbooked that weekend (with, among other things, another performance of Vaughan Williams’ Fifth Symphony!).

    Davis died yesterday in Chicago at the age of 80. He had been living with leukemia. His wife, American soprano Gianni Rolandi, predeceased him in 2021.

    R.I.P.


    Vaughan Williams, Symphony No. 5

    Elgar, “The Dream of Gerontius”

    Walton, “Belshazzar’s Feast”

    From Messiaen’s “Turangalîla Symphony,” “Joy of the Blood of the Stars”

    Andrew Davis interviewed


    PHOTO: At the Last Night of the Proms in 2000

  • Macbeth, Emperor Jones & Lost Music

    Macbeth, Emperor Jones & Lost Music

    This week on “The Lost Chord,” I indulge my inner English major with a program inspired by two plays that explore the relationship of power and corruption – Shakespeare’s “Macbeth” and Eugene O’Neill’s “The Emperor Jones.”

    The impulse grew out of my recollection of the rarely-heard ballet by Heitor Villa-Lobos, which originally aired on television in 1957. However, since the score was never published, it was believed lost for decades until rediscovered by the conductor Jan Wagner (who is Venezuelan, despite his Teutonic name). Wagner will conduct the Odense Symphony Orchestra, a Nordic band, in a surprisingly idiomatic performance.

    Also on the program will be a half-remembered relic of American musical history, an aria from Louis Gruenberg’s opera, “The Emperor Jones,” sung by baritone Lawrence Tibbett, recorded in 1933.

    “The Emperor Jones,” written in 1920, could be a potentially sensitive subject in a more politically correct era. No doubt about it, O’Neill’s tragedy is a product of its time, with plenty of minstrel show dialect, and the uncomfortable use of the N-word.

    Already in 1924, Sidney Gilpin, the actor who created Brutus Jones, hedged at playing the character in its first revival, unless O’Neill first changed what he perceived as some of the more offensive passages. O’Neill stood his ground, and Gilpin’s replacement, Paul Robeson, went on to international stardom.

    It’s easy to write-off “The Emperor Jones” as an embarrassing relic. Yet there have been some high-profile stagings over the past few years which demonstrate that the play still has much to tell us.

    Jones is a former railroad porter and convict, who kills a guard in his escape from prison, and through bluff and bravado establishes himself as emperor of a Caribbean island. He maintains his power through cruelty and exploitation. However, he overplays his hand, and the situation quickly erodes. As his subjects rise up against him, Jones retreats into the jungle and descends into primal fear, haunted by images of his victims.

    The play not only parallels some of the themes of “Macbeth,” it also demonstrates the fragility of human reason; how easily under the influence of adrenaline, brought on by raw terror, man is undone by the animal impulses of fight or flight; the psychological impact of guilt; and an insight into tyranny which was remarkably prescient given that fascism would soon overtake Europe.

    I don’t know why it never occurred to me before to juxtapose the two plays, but a quick Google search reveals that I am not the first, so there goes my dream of an honorary doctorate.

    Also on the show will be selections from rarely-heard incidental music written for two productions of “Macbeth,” by William Walton (for John Gielgud) and Sir Arthur Sullivan (for Henry Irving), respectively.

    Power corrupts, on “Power Plays,” on “The Lost Chord,” now in syndication on KWAX, the radio station of the University of Oregon!


    Remember, KWAX is on the West Coast, so there’s a three-hour difference for those of you listening in the East. Here are the respective air-times for all three of my recorded shows (with East Coast conversions in parentheses):

    PICTURE PERFECT, the movie music show – Friday on KWAX at 5:00 PM PACIFIC TIME (8:00 PM EASTERN)

    SWEETNESS AND LIGHT, the light music program – ALL NEW! – Saturday on KWAX at 8:00 AM PACIFIC TIME (11:00 AM EASTERN)

    THE LOST CHORD, unusual and neglected rep – Saturday on KWAX at 4:00 PM PACIFIC TIME (7:00 PM EASTERN)

    Stream all three, at the times indicated, by following the link!

    https://kwax.uoregon.edu/


    PHOTOS: Gielgud as Macbeth (left) and Tibbett as Brutus Jones

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