Today marks the 100th anniversary of the birth of American composer Lee Hoiby. Hoiby, a disciple of Gian Carlo Menotti, wrote a lot of vocal music and received particular acclaim for his operas. However, I first discovered him through an old recording of his Piano Concerto on the CRI label.
Hoiby, born in Madison in 1926, studied at the University of Wisconsin with Gunnar Johansen and Egon Petri. (His early ambition had been to become a concert pianist.) Then he struck out for California, where he studied at Mills College with Darius Milhaud. In San Francisco, he worked with a number of musicians whose thinking was decidedly outside-the-box, including Rudolf Kolisch, brother-in-law of Arnold Schoenberg, and Harry Partch.
It’s interesting, therefore, that his own music would wind up being so traditional. Chalk it up to further studies with Menotti at the Curtis Institute of Music in Philadelphia. It was Menotti who introduced Hoiby to opera, instilling in him a life-long love of the human voice. Hoiby was employed as an assistant on the Broadway debut productions of Menotti’s “The Consul” and “The Saint of Bleecker Street” (the latter of which earned his teacher a Pulitzer Prize). Menotti would produce Hoiby’s first opera, “The Scarf” (1958). Eight more would follow. The most highly-regarded of these is perhaps his Tennessee Williams adaptation, “Summer and Smoke” (1971).
Hoiby also had a powerful champion in Leontyne Price, who introduced many of his best-known arias and songs. He claimed Franz Schubert as an important influence. “What I learned from Schubert came from a long, deep and loving exposure to his songs. A lot happens on a subconscious level, so it’s hard to verbalize, but what I think his songs taught me have to do primarily with the line, the phrasing, the tessitura, the accentuations of speech, the careful consideration of vowels, the breathing required, and an extremely economical use of accompaniment material, often the same figure going through the whole song.”
I first encountered Hoiby’s opera – or perhaps monodrama – “Bon Appetit!” about five years ago, when it was streamed by Opera Philadelphia, with Jamie Barton as Julia Child. The work, Straussian (late Straussian) in its intimacy and word-painting, is through-sung, with a libretto essentially compiled from two transcripts of Child’s popular public television program, “The French Chef.” Most of it is lifted from an episode devoted to the creation of L’Éminence Brune, a classic French chocolate cake.
First performed at the Kennedy Center by Jean Stapleton with Hoiby at the keyboard in 1989, this is a work that seems to have really gained traction since the pandemic, since it requires a lone singer (no need for social distancing), often supported by a pianist (inexpensive). I was delighted to have been able to catch it live when it was performed at the Trenton State Museum in 2024, with mezzo-soprano Christine Meadows and the Philadelphia Virtuosi Chamber Orchestra, in a version for ten players, which I didn’t even know existed, enjoyment of the piece unquestionably enhanced by the additional musical colors.
Wholly by coincidence, not long after watching the Barton stream, I revisited a DVD I own of a production of “The Taming of the Shrew” that was staged by the American Conservatory Theater of San Francisco in 1976. Lo and behold, the incidental music is by Lee Hoiby!
The production is robust, Rabelaisian (influenced by commedia dell’arte, actually), and it moves like lightning. Come to think of it, it would be an appropriately festive viewing choice for Carnival. I guarantee it will charm your pantaloons off. And it is introduced by the late Hal Holbrook (with cigarette, no less).
Furthermore, it features Marc Singer as Petruchio, in a performance of astounding physicality. Indeed, it’s a wonder that any of the actors have enough breath to speak their lines. Singer went on to notoriety in the 1980s, when he seemingly singlehandedly sustained cable television through incessant repeats of his breakout feature, “The Beastmaster.”
Watch “The Taming of the Shrew” here, and see if you don’t owe me a debt of thanks. And note Hoiby’s contribution.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZMdXHoZD6Ag
Leontyne Price sings “Winter Song” (1950)
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=McTpedYH15U
Schubert Variations (1981)
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=X6K7IKG7oqs
Hoiby’s Piano Concerto (1957)
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jI_eCWlZ6_o&list=OLAK5uy_kddqucIKS2L3_HC4-JHoduWLauok6SEjM&index=5
Christine Meadows performs “Bon Appetit!”
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cTMg-mlzhRE
The primary episode of “The French Chef” adapted by Hoiby
https://www.facebook.com/watch/?v=1316700049262748
Audio of Jean Stapleton performance at the Kennedy Center
https://soundcloud.com/astrodreamer/bonappetit-jean-stapleton-composer-lee-hoiby
All roads lead to Lee Hoiby! Happy centenary!
Category: Daily Dispatch
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100 Years of Lee Hoiby
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Real Presidents Don’t Lie (Compulsively)
My heart’s not really in Presidents Day this year. Draw your own conclusions. I started typing something up this morning, but as I warmed to the topic, it grew and grew, and then I didn’t have time to come back to it and wrangle it into shape. It’s a shame, because the material is time sensitive. Maybe I’ll rework it for the Fourth of July, when hardly anyone will see it. In the meantime, here’s a comic featuring antifa George Washington, making America great.
Also, to keep it musical, I’ll include a link to Virgil Thomson’s ballet, “Parson Weems and the Cherry Tree,” a Bicentennial commission which, for some reason, is not to be found on the internet in its orchestral guise. Who knew that my recording would turn out to be such a collector’s item? Here, the work is posted in a transcription for piano. If you’re interested, it plays continuously over twelve tracks.
Looking for Lincoln? Search for my post for February 12, Honest Abe’s birthday.
Neither of these guys could tell a lie. Remind you of anyone we know? Me neither. Happy Presidents Day. -

“Big Five” Orchestra Quotes Classic Ross Amico
It’s that time of year when performing arts organizations are announcing their 2026-27 seasons. I was tipped off that the Philadelphia Orchestra posted their subscription info the other week, which I glanced through, just to see if there were any big surprises or must-see orchestral juggernauts among the well-tended warhorses. For one thing, I noted that Emanuel Ax will be bringing John Williams’ Piano Concerto, which I’ll be hearing with the New York Philharmonic in a couple of weeks. I also saw Mahler’s 7th Symphony will be back. And why not? Of Mahler’s nine numbered, completed symphonies, it’s not exactly overperformed. However, I did just hear it in Philly a year or two ago. I didn’t read any of the descriptions for any of the works, so it brought a chuckle when a few days later Kenneth Hutchins pointed out that I am actually quoted in the copy used to promote the Mahler!
Always happy to help out a Big Five orchestra…
You’ll find the complete Philadelphia Orchestra 2026-27 season here:
https://philorch.ensembleartsphilly.org/tickets-and-events/events?Title=2026-27 -

Louisiana Purchases on “The Lost Chord”
It’s Mardi Gras season! This week on “The Lost Chord,” we’ll adorn ourselves in purple, gold, and green, and carve ourselves some King Cake, as we listen to music from and about New Orleans.
Henry F. Gilbert, a slightly older contemporary of Charles Ives, and a composer of the New England School, was concerned with introducing folk song and the vernacular to the concert hall. His interest in the music of African Americans, then considered controversial, is reflected in works like “The Dance in Place Congo,” from 1908, a programmatic piece on Creole themes, suggestive of Sunday afternoon festivities of off-duty New Orleans slaves gathered in Congo Square.
We’ll also hear a piece by Chicago area composer Edward Joseph Collins, actually titled “Mardi Gras,” from 1923. Collins described the work as “boisterous and bizarre by turns,” evocative of the spirit of Carnival, with its enormous masks and clowns on stilts, colored streamers, confetti, lurid lights, fantastic floats and grotesque costumes.
Three Creole Romantics will offer some insiders’ views, as we hear works by Edmond Dédé, Charles Lucièn Lambert, and Louis Moreau Gottschalk, all figures born in New Orleans.
Laissez les bons temps rouler! I hope you’ll join me for “Louisiana Purchases,” on “The Lost Chord,” now in syndication on KWAX Classical Oregon!
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Clip and save the start times for all three of my recorded shows:
PICTURE PERFECT, the movie music show – Friday at 8:00 PM EST/5:00 PM PST
SWEETNESS AND LIGHT, the light music program – Saturday at 11:00 AM EST/8:00 AM PST
THE LOST CHORD, unusual and neglected rep – Saturday at 7:00 PM EST/4:00 PM PST
Stream them, wherever you are, at the link!
https://kwax.uoregon.edu -

Musical Confections for Valentine’s Day on “Sweetness and Light”
This morning on KWAX, it’s flowers and chocolate for breakfast. I’ll do my best to indulge your sweet tooth and lend a serotonin boost with a special Valentine’s Day sampler.
Luxuriate with an assortment of decadent Fritz Kreisler violin bonbons, a suite from Lord Berners’ ballet “Cupid and Psyche,” Victor Herbert’s orchestration of Franz Liszt’s “Liebestraum,” Henry Mancini’s arrangement of Nino Rota’s “Love Theme from Romeo and Juliet,” and some romantic reveries by Gilbert & Sillivan, Charles Ancliffe, and Leonard Bernstein.
Better limber up those lips. It will be an hour of musical confections for Valentine’s Day on “Sweetness and Light,” this Saturday morning at 11:00 EST/8:00 PST. Hear it exclusively on KWAX Classical Oregon!
Stream it, wherever you are, at the link:
https://kwax.uoregon.edu/
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