Tag: Cello Concerto

  • Dvořák with Sinfonietta Nova

    Dvořák with Sinfonietta Nova

    There are seven weeks until the next Sinfonietta Nova concert, an all-Dvořák program, which will feature the Cello Concerto in B Minor and the Symphony No. 7. The season’s theme is “The Magnificent Seventh.” Each Sinfonietta Nova concert has included at least one seventh symphony, so far by Haydn, Beethoven, Prokofiev, William Boyce and Niels Wilhelm Gade.

    Since I’ve been providing the program notes for some of the concerts, I was asked by the group’s music director, Gail Lee, if I would come up with seven fun facts about Dvořák that might be featured on the orchestra’s Facebook page in the weeks leading up to the concert. The first was posted today. You’ll find it by following the link, Sinfonietta Nova.

    Sinfonietta Nova performs at Prince of Peace Lutheran Church in Princeton Junction. The Dvořák concert, the orchestra’s season finale, will take place on May 9 at 7:30 p.m. This year’s Sinfonietta Nova Youth Concerto Competition winner, Chase Park, will be the soloist in the Cello Concerto.

    More information at http://www.sinfoniettanova.org.

  • Russian Cello Masters Davidoff & Weinberg

    Russian Cello Masters Davidoff & Weinberg

    Cello, da!

    This Sunday night on “The Lost Chord,” we’ll hear two works for cello and orchestra, written by composers of Eastern European origin, both of whom attained fame in Russia.

    Carl Davidoff (sometimes spelled Karl Davydov) was born in Latvia in 1838. He became head of the St. Petersburg Conservatory, where Tchaikovsky was a colleague. Tchaikovsky dubbed him “The Tsar of the Cello.” Davidoff wrote four cello concertos, all of which have been recorded on the CPO label. We’ll be listening to the first of these, performed by Wen-Sinn Wang.

    Mieczyslaw Weinberg (also known as Moisei Vainberg) was of Polish-Jewish origin. Despite having suffered the loss of much of his family in the Holocaust and being singled out for persecution in the Soviet Union under Stalin, Weinberg was a dizzyingly productive composer. He wrote 22 symphonies, 7 operas, and an enormous amount of chamber and instrumental music, including 17 string quartets, 8 violin sonatas, 6 cello sonatas, and 6 piano sonatas, to say nothing of dozens of film scores. Yet Weinberg’s achievements were eclipsed by those of Shostakovich and Prokofiev.

    Shostakovich took a special interest in the younger composer, frequently interceding on his behalf, and promoting him as “one of the most outstanding composers of the present day.”

    We’ll hear Weinberg’s Cello Concerto of 1948, performed by the work’s dedicatee, Mstislav Rostropovich.

    Join me for “A Russian Cellobration,” tonight at 10 ET, with a repeat Friday morning at 3, or listen to it later as a webcast, at http://wwfm.org.

    PHOTO: Slava rocks the cello

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