Tag: Brahms

  • Brahms Beats Tchaikovsky in Birthday Battle

    Brahms Beats Tchaikovsky in Birthday Battle

    AAAANNNNNNNND the winner is… Johannes Brahms!

    In our annual contest between the two Romantic titans who share May 7 as a birthday (born seven years apart), Brahms is the victor with more listener votes.

    Thank all of you who participated in our one-day salute to Brahms and Tchaikovsky. We still have a few dollars to go to meet our goal of $7000, but we’ll be here for the next little while to take any remaining calls of support at 1-888-232-1212. Remember, if you have a hard time getting through, you can also donate this evening at your leisure at wwfm.org.

    Don’t be sour, Peter Ilych. You won last year. Better luck next time. In the end, it’s really classical music on the radio that wins. Happy birthday to you both! And thank you to our listener-members for coming through, yet again, for WWFM – The Classical Network.


    PHOTO: Tchaikovsky enjoying a consolation smoke

  • Donate Now West Point Artillery Salutes Composers

    Donate Now West Point Artillery Salutes Composers

    Come on, folks! Help us out, won’t you? Coming up in just a few minutes, it’s a whole lot of artillery, courtesy of the U.S. Military Academy at West Point. Make a donation now in honor of Tchaikovsky or Brahms, on their birthdays, at 1-888-232-1212 or wwfm.org. Here’s hoping the music lights your fuse, at WWFM – The Classical Network.

  • Brahms Tchaikovsky Birthday Broadcast

    Brahms Tchaikovsky Birthday Broadcast

    Going on the air with the Princeton University Chapel Choir and Orchestra performing Brahms’ “Ein Deutsches Requiem” at noon. It’s all Brahms and Tchaikovsky through 7:00 EDT, as we celebrate both composers’ birthdays by raising funds to ensure a future of great classical music on the radio. Call us now at 1-888-232-1212, or donate online at wwfm.org. Thank you for your support of WWFM – The Classical Network!

  • Brahms vs. Tchaikovsky: A Classical Clash of Titans

    Brahms vs. Tchaikovsky: A Classical Clash of Titans

    This is a contest not just between two titanic composers, but a veritable struggle between the gods.

    Of the two mighty artists who were born on this date, Johannes Brahms (b. 1833), the great classicist among Romantics, was wreathed by the laurels of Apollo’s ordered rationality, and Peter Ilych Tchaikovsky (b. 1840), ever heart-on-the-sleeve, was fueled by the wine of Dionysus’ emotional truth.

    We pit these musical champions against one another in the arena of public opinion today on The Classical Network, as we humbly submit to the stern judgment of our listeners. And of course, we’re hoping to raise a little money in the process.

    Which of these composer rates higher in your estimation?

    So as to maintain balance and not to incur the wrath of any higher powers (since, historically, the gods have been poor losers), we are looking to divide the spoils. In our quest to attain a single-day goal of $7000, for this May 7, we are asking you to contribute, in whatever amount, toward $3500 for EITHER composer.

    Subjectivity is akin to voting with the heart, which should appeal very much to Dionysus, yet balance will be achieved, which, as day follows night, would surely earn the approval of Apollo. After all, both composers have earned a place in the pantheon.

    A highlight of today’s broadcast will be a special Noontime Concert, in which Brahms’ “Ein Deutsches Requiem” will be presented in its entirety, in a performance by the Princeton University Chapel Choir and Orchestra, under the direction of Penna Rose.

    The concert, which took place last month, was dedicated to the memory of Professor Henry Stainken Horn, Princeton Professor of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology from 1966 to 2019. Professor Horn was a member of the Chapel Choir from 1990 until his passing.

    In line with our Classical argument, the performance will be prefaced by a reading from Tennyson’s “Ulysses,” by Christopher Parton, a graduate student from Princeton’s music department. Professor Horn himself read the poem to introduce last year’s Milbank Memorial Concert.

    Apollonian Brahms or Dionysian Tchaikovsky? If you simply cannot decide, why not hedge your bets and leave a little offering for both? Call us at 1-888-232-1212, or contribute online at wwfm.org (click on “donate”). Then join us for TEN HOURS of Brahms and Tchaikovsky, today from 9 a.m. to 7 p.m. EDT. Thank you for your support of WWFM – The Classical Network!


    PHOTOS: Apollo and Dionysus and Brahms and Tchaikovsky – game on!

  • Unrequited Love Music from Marlboro Festival

    Unrequited Love Music from Marlboro Festival

    Few torments are as unshakeable as that of unrequited love. Yet sublimated passion has led to more than its share of artistic masterpieces. In advance of Valentine’s Day, we’ll enjoy the fruits of others’ longing, on this week’s “Music for Marlboro.”

    It’s been speculated that Johannes Brahms’ “Liebeslieder Waltzes” was the product of his frustrated affection for Julie Schumann, the daughter of Robert and Clara Schumann. The dance-like settings for four voices and piano four-hands are based on love songs from Georg Friedrich Daumer’s collection “Polydora.”

    We’ll hear them performed at the 1971 Marlboro Music Festival by soprano Kathryn Bouleyn, mezzo-soprano Mary Burgess, tenor Seth McCoy, and baritone John Magnuson, with Rudolf Serkin and Luis Batlle at the keyboard.

    The remarkably prolific Indian summer of Czech master Leoš Janáček can attributed in part to the sublimated passion he felt for Kamila Stösslová. Stösslová was a married woman some 38 years the composer’s junior.

    Janacek’s String Quartet No. 2, written in 1928, when he was about 74 years-old, was inspired by their long and intimate – though unconsummated – relationship, which is detailed in their more than 700 letters. The work has been described as a “manifesto on love.”

    We’ll hear Janáček’s “Intimate Letters,” performed at Marlboro in 2002 by violinists Nicholas Kendall and Hiroko Yajima, violist Richard O’Neill, and cellist Alexis Pia Gerlach.

    Great composers’ romantic frustrations are our gain, on “Music from Marlboro,” this Wednesday evening at 6:00 EST.

    I’ll be in a little earlier, to woo you with some recorded serenades and hopefully convince you to show your support for great music with a financial contribution at 1-888-232-1212 or wwfm.org.

    All told, I’ll be donning Cupid’s wings from 4 to 7 p.m. EST, on WWFM – The Classical Network and wwfm.org.

    Marlboro School of Music and Festival: Official Page

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