Tag: Beethoven

  • Marlboro’s Haunting Chamber Music Classics

    Marlboro’s Haunting Chamber Music Classics

    For obvious reason, the ghost story is inextricably linked in many people’s thoughts with Hallowe’en. But there was a time when reading and sharing eldritch tales were common pastimes even at Christmas. I suppose it makes sense that during a time of year when there is less light, the skies are bleak, and the landscapes withered – a time when people are essentially housebound and comparatively isolated – the mind would be most susceptible to chilling thoughts of something sinister underlying a gust of wind or a creak on the cellar stairs.

    I thought it rather appropriate, then, to revisit a couple of chamber music classics with a supernatural bent on this week’s “Music from Marlboro.”

    French composer André Caplet was winner of the esteemed Prix de Rome in 1901, placing ahead of Maurice Ravel. He played percussion with the Colonne Orchestra and trained as a conductor under Arthur Nikisch. From 1910 to 1914, he served as director of the Boston Opera. While serving in the First World War, he was engulfed in poisonous gas, which resulted in the pleurisy that plagued him for the remainder of his short life. Caplet died in 1925, at the age of 44.

    As the Prix de Rome would suggest, Caplet composed music of considerable merit. Nonetheless, he was fated to be remembered for his work as an orchestrator for Claude Debussy. Debussy’s “Children’s Corner,” “The Martyrdom of Saint Sebastian,” “La Boiîte à joujoux,” and “Clair de lune” would all be draped in Caplet’s finery.

    Of Caplet’s original music, only his “Conte fantastique” (“Fantastic Tale”), after Edgar Allan Poe’s “The Masque of the Red Death,” retains a foothold on the repertoire. Composed in 1908 for harp and string orchestra, it was arranged for harp and string quartet in 1922. The work crackles with atmosphere, invention and suspense. In fact, the program is brought so vividly to life that one can’t help but think that Caplet would have made an excellent film composer. Savor the chill as Prince Prospero’s decadent revels are curtailed by the implacable chimes of midnight!

    The Marlboro performance, which dates from 2009, features Sivan Magen, harp; Liana Gourdjia and Bella Hristova, violins; Sally Chisolm, viola; and Paul Wiancko, cello. As an added bonus, the music will be prefaced by a reading from Poe’s creepy classic.

    Fifteen years after the death of Beethoven, the composer’s star pupil, Carl Czerny, noted that the slow movement of his Piano Trio in D, Op. 70, No.1, reminded him of the ghost of Hamlet’s father. Czerny may not have been all that far off the mark.

    Actually, at the time of the work’s composition, in 1808, Beethoven had been kicking around the idea for opera on the subject of Macbeth. The words “Macbett” and “Ende” appear near sketches for the Largo. It’s been speculated that the music may have been a working out of ideas for a proposed scene featuring the three witches. The ominous mood is heightened by eerie and mournful touches, sudden pauses and outbursts, and the use of a ghostly tremolo. The operatic project collapsed when Beethoven’s librettist, Heinrich Joseph von Collin (to whom Beethoven had dedicated the “Coriolan Overture”), begged off of the project, thinking it was too dark.

    We’ll hear Marlboro musicians Dénes Várjon, piano; Michelle Ross, violin; and Brook Speltz, cello, captured on tour in Washington, D.C., in 2015. You can learn more about this season’s tours (the next two are coming up in March) by visiting marlboromusic.org.

    Turning up your radio has been proven to drown out bumps in the night. Join me for “haunting” performances from the legendary Marlboro Music Festival, this Wednesday evening at 6:00 EST, on WWFM – The Classical Network and wwfm.org.

    Marlboro School of Music and Festival: Official Page

  • St. Stephen’s Day Suk Beethoven on The Classical Network

    St. Stephen’s Day Suk Beethoven on The Classical Network

    December 26. St. Stephen’s Day. The day King Wenceslas “looked out” and trudged through snow and wind and gathering darkness to bring flesh, wine and fuel to one of his needy subjects.

    This afternoon on The Classical Network, we’ll salute the good king, whose legendary deeds were immortalized in the famous Christmas carol, with Josef Suk’s “Meditation on the Old Czech Hymn, ‘St. Wenceslaus.’” We’ll also acknowledge the Irish St. Stephen’s tradition of “hunting the wren.”

    As stomachs and ear drums continue to be wassailed and assailed during this perhaps too merry season, we’ll also have plenty of music about banqueting and toys.

    This week’s “Music from Marlboro” (6:00 EST) will feature evergreen works by Beethoven and Wagner.

    It shouldn’t require the patience of a saint to enjoy the music, from 4 to 7 p.m. EST, on WWFM – The Classical Network and wwfm.org.

  • Beethoven Bash Success Thanks to WWFM Listeners

    Beethoven Bash Success Thanks to WWFM Listeners

    You know how it is, I hope. Personal and holiday obligations have a way of burning through dates on an Advent calendar.

    Nearly two days after the fact, I wanted to take a break from attempted Christmas shopping in order to thank those of you who supported The Classical Network during our annual Beethoven Bash. Thanks to you, and listeners just like you, we were able to reach our fundraising goal of $8,000 before the end of the day on Friday.

    I hope you will take especial pleasure in the music this time of year, knowing that you did your part to make it possible. Personally, I always take extra care when putting together my playlists in the days leading up to Christmas. Enjoy holiday favorites, both jolly and meditative, during the course of my air shifts in the coming afternoons (4:00-7:00 pm M, W, F, and 12:00-4:00 p.m. Tues.). It is my gift to you, brought to you courtesy of the generous support of WWFM listener-members.

    What’s that, you say? Didn’t have a chance to pledge? Still looking for a gift for that certain music-lover? We’ve still got some of those 12-CD box sets of Beethoven’s orchestral works, all eager for a last-minute ride in Santa’s sleigh, for your donation of $120. You’ll find it, and a list of other options, by clicking on our “Thank You Gift” drop-box here:

    https://wwwfm.secureallegiance.com/wwfm/WebModule/Donate.aspx?P=DEFAULT&PAGETYPE=PLG&CHECK=vOU2bz5JCWmgCDbf53nm9ezWDeZ%2beA1M

    Happy birthday, Beethoven! Thanks again, all the warmth and good cheer of the season, and best wishes for a new year of great music from WWFM – The Classical Network and wwfm.org.

  • Beethoven Birthday Bash Great Music Gift

    Beethoven Birthday Bash Great Music Gift

    Whether or not Beethoven bothered to hang a Christmas stocking, he certainly brought Joy to the world through the gift of great music.

    We here at The Classical Network salute the King of Composers on this Friday with one example after another of his stunning invention and humanity, as we mark the Master’s birthday. (He was born on December 16, 1770.) That’s right – it’s our annual Beethoven Bash!

    How much is Beethoven’s music worth to you? In this season of giving, consider supporting The Classical Network as our community’s most accessible conduit to the composer’s genius. We in turn pledge to continue to honor the inspiring legacy of Beethoven and his brethren, as we have done for over three and a half decades.

    This time around, we are offering a special thank you gift for your donation of $120: a particularly attractive 12-CD box set of the composer’s major orchestral works – the symphonies, the concertos, and the overtures – in performances drawn from the Naxos catalogue. It’s a great beginner’s set, attractively packaged. It would make a perfect gift for anyone just getting interested in classical music, or perhaps even the Beethoven completist in your life.

    However, quantities are limited! These boxes flew out of our studios when we first offered them in the fall, but we were able to track down the last available copies from a warehouse overseas. These are expected to be equally in demand, especially so during the holidays. If you would like one in time for Christmas, you’ll have to act fast. Although we have no control over delivery once the package is shipped, we pledge to get your Beethoven box out the door and into the hands of a delivery service ASAP.

    Join us today from 9 AM to 6 PM EST in celebrating Ludwig Van with your gift of membership at 1-888-232-1212 or wwfm.org. Because of listeners just like you, we have been able to share 36 years of some of the greatest music ever written.

    All of us at WWFM – The Classical Network wish you the happiest of holidays and thank you for your continued generosity.

  • Licorice Sticks Beethoven Dutilleux at Marlboro

    Licorice Sticks Beethoven Dutilleux at Marlboro

    I hope you’re in the mood for some licorice stick. On this week’s “Music from Marlboro,” our program will be bookended by two works for clarinet trio.

    For Darius Milhaud, as a member of that loose collective known as “Les six,” tomfoolery and high-spirits were a matter of course. Milhaud’s Suite for Violin, Clarinet and Piano, composed in 1936, revisits material from incidental music written for Jean Anouilh’s play “Le Voyageur sans bagages” (“The Traveler without Luggage”). The play deals with an amnesiac World War I soldier attempting to reestablish his identity. Milhaud might seem like an unlikely source for such a serious subject – but then the drama turns out to be a comedy!

    The piece falls into four movements: “Ouverture;” “Divertissement;” “Jeu” (literally “Game”); and “Introduction et Final.” We’ll hear it performed at the 1971 Marlboro Music Festival by violinist Marilyn Dubow, clarinetist Richard Stoltzman, and pianist David Effron.

    All things considered, Beethoven tended to be a little more severe than Milhaud. If there is play in his music, it is the play of a cat, pursuing a musical idea relentlessly, batting it around, adopting an air of calm, and then tearing off its appendages and hammering it through the floorboards.

    Even if that is not your idea of a good time, there is plenty to smile about in his Trio in B-flat, Op. 11. Sometimes identified by the nickname “Gassenhauer,” the work borrows a theme for its third movement set of variations from the drama giocoso (literally, drama with jokes) “L’amor marinaro ossia il corsaro” by Joseph Weigl. Weigl, by the way, was Haydn’s godson.

    “Gassenhauser” denotes a certain kind of popular music, a tune picked up by your average man in the street, and sung or whistled oblivious to its origins. The melody was so well-known, in fact, that it was also treated by Johann Nepomuk Hummel and Niccolo Paganini, among others.

    You’ll sometimes hear the trio performed with a violin in place of the clarinet – the cello is also sometimes swapped out for a bassoon – but for our purposes this evening we’ll go with the distinctive timbres of the sanctioned version for clarinet trio. Again, Richard Stoltzman will be the clarinetist, alongside cellist Alain Meunier, and pianist (and Marlboro co-founder) Rudolf Serkin.

    In between, we’ll experience something completely different. Henri Dutilleux meticulously crafted his seven-movement string quartet, “Ainsi la nuit” (Thus the Night), between 1973 and 1976, after intensive studies of the works of Beethoven, Bartok, and Webern, and a series of preliminary sketches he called “Nights.” All the hard work certainly paid off – the quartet was embraced as a modern masterpiece – though, to my ears, I’ve yet to find any humor in it.

    We’ll hear a performance from Marlboro in 2001. Joseph Lin and Harumi Rhodes will be the violinists, Richard O’Neill the violist, and Marcy Rosen the cellist.

    It’s said that licorice is very good for the digestion. You’ll find plenty to chew on, on this week’s “Music from Marlboro. Join me this Wednesday evening at 6:00 EDT, on WWFM – The Classical Network and wwfm.org.

    Marlboro School of Music and Festival: Official Page

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