Tag: Brahms

  • Leon Fleisher at 92 A Brahms Birthday Tribute

    Leon Fleisher at 92 A Brahms Birthday Tribute

    Happy birthday, Leon Fleisher, a great artist and a lovely person, here playing a selection from Brahms’ First Piano Concerto – at the behest of Yo-Yo Ma, no less (follow the link below). Fleisher’s recordings of the Brahms concertos, set down with George Szell and the Cleveland Orchestra, over half a century earlier, remain benchmarks.

    Focal dystonia curtailed Fleisher’s career as a pianist not long after. But like a plant trimmed back that soon develops fresh tendrils, he then flourished as a conductor, as a champion of the left-hand piano repertoire (there’s much more to it than Ravel’s famous concerto), and especially as a teacher. He has taught at Baltimore’s Peabody Institute, among other places, and held master classes, since 1959.

    Thanks in part to Botox injections in his right hand, Fleisher has been able to return to performing two-handed repertoire, to some extent, and has continued to make critically acclaimed recordings. And yes, he also still performs recitals.

    Speaking with me in 2014, he expressed gratitude that things developed as they did. If he could do it all over again, he wouldn’t have it any other way.

    Many happy returns, Leon Fleisher, 92 years-old today!


    Impromptu performance of a passage from Brahms:

    Fleisher, the young lion:

    In 2014, in Brahms’ left-hand arrangement of the Bach Chaconne:

  • Brahms Tchaikovsky Birthday Broadcast Tonight

    Brahms Tchaikovsky Birthday Broadcast Tonight

    Another hour of Brahms and Tchaikovsky ahead, as we soak up your remaining listener requests on their birthdays. We’ve got your back, this Thursday evening at 6:00 EDT, on WWFM – The Classical Network and wwfm.org!

  • Brahms Tchaikovsky Birthday Bash WWFM

    Brahms Tchaikovsky Birthday Bash WWFM

    More of your listener requests coming up, as we continue to celebrate Brahms and Tchaikovsky on their birthdays, today at 4 & 6 p.m. EDT, on WWFM – The Classical Network and wwfm.org.

  • Brahms & Tchaikovsky Anniversary On Air Today

    Brahms & Tchaikovsky Anniversary On Air Today

    They were like the Felix and Oscar of Romantic music – the high-strung, fastidious Tchaikovsky, and the acerbic, unkempt Brahms. May 7th marks the anniversary of the births of these twin titans of hirsute Romanticism.

    The Classical Network will honor both artists with three hours of their music, lovingly assembled by David Osenberg from YOUR requests. These selections, submitted last week, will air today at 12:00, 4:00 & 6:00 p.m. EDT.

    I always find it oddly endearing that Brahms and Tchaikovsky were able to look past their personal aversions to one another’s music to actually grow to appreciate their individual qualities as people. There’s a lesson to be learned from that, I think.

    Initially, Tchaikovsky might have been right at home posting in a YouTube comments section, confiding to his diary, “I have played over the music of that scoundrel Brahms. What a giftless bastard!”

    For his part, Brahms indelicately drifted off to sleep during a rehearsal of Tchaikovsky’s Fifth Symphony – unfortunately, while in the presence of the composer.

    According to the pianist Zygmunt Stojowski, “Tchaikovsky’s comment to me was that he would have been deeply hurt had he not, himself, frankly hated the Brahms symphonies.”

    The two composers met unexpectedly in Leipzig in 1888. They must have been as surprised as anyone to find themselves actually delighting in one another’s company.

    “I’ve been on the booze with Brahms,” Tchaikovsky wrote. “He is tremendously nice – not at all proud as I’d expected but remarkably straightforward and entirely without arrogance. He has a very cheerful disposition, and I must say that the hours I spent in his company have left me with nothing but pleasant memories.”

    The following year, the two met again in Hamburg. That’s when Brahms slept through the Fifth Symphony. Tchaikovsky bore it lightly and was convivial throughout the meal they shared afterward. Although Brahms was harsh in his assessment of the last movement of the symphony and Tchaikovsky confessed an overall aversion to Brahms’ style, the evening was full of good cheer and ended with Tchaikovsky inviting Brahms to visit him in Russia.

    How large a role alcohol may have played in the two men’s warmth for one another we can only guess. It was not just anyone who could be Brahms’ drinking buddy.

    Regardless of their mutual affection, the two never could reconcile themselves to one another’s music. When asked what he thought of a piano trio Brahms had been rehearsing (the Trio in C minor), Tchaikovsky was polite but frank: “Don’t be angry with me, my dear friend, but I did not like it.”

    Tune in today to enjoy music by both Brahms and Tchaikovsky, culled from listener-requests, at 12, 3 & 6 p.m., on WWFM – The Classical Network. And while you’re doing so, please consider supporting us during these difficult times, at wwfm.org. Thank you!

  • Brahms Tchaikovsky Birthday Celebration on WWFM

    Brahms Tchaikovsky Birthday Celebration on WWFM

    It just works out that way sometimes. Two titans at the top of their respective fields born on the same day. Think Rachmaninoff and Busoni (April 1). Or Kreisler and Heifetz (February 2).

    On Thursday, May 7, The Classical Network will honor the dual birthdays of Johannes Brahms (born in 1833) and Peter Ilych Tchaikovsky (born in 1840), by assembling special request hours in their honor.

    Have a favorite piece of music by either of these composers? Want to hear a cherished performance? Submit your requests ASAP on the WWFM Facebook page or by email at info@wwfm.org. This will give us time to hunt down the music and put it into production. The earlier you file your request, the greater the likelihood that we’ll be able to get it on air.

    Also, we hope that you will renew your membership, perhaps become a member for the very first time, or make an extra gift. Any of these options would assist us greatly during this rocky time.

    https://wwwfm.secureallegiance.com/wwfm/WebModule/Donate.aspx?P=DEFAULT&PAGETYPE=PLG&CHECK=vOU2bz5JCWmgCDbf53nm9ezWDeZ%2BeA1M&fbclid=IwAR3YfrpOmdmpCYBl7RQFPQbKf0amDTTbEJxc_7tnPOUbdoKr7cDIsBN731s

    Celebrate Brahms. Revel in Tchaikovsky. And thank you for your support of WWFM – The Classical Network and wwfm.org.


    Brahms & Tchaik: We few, we happy few, we bearded brothers…

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