Tag: Chamber Music

  • Marlboro Music Festival Spotlight on Exploring Music

    Marlboro Music Festival Spotlight on Exploring Music

    It’s an embarrassment of riches for chamber music enthusiasts on this week’s Exploring Music with Bill McGlaughlin, as the focus will be on the legendary Marlboro Music Festival.

    Marlboro Music was established by Rudolf Serkin, Adolf Busch, Marcel Moyse and friends in Marlboro, VT, in 1951. From the start, Marlboro has offered a unique environment for the study and performance of the chamber music repertoire, with ideas and insights passed between veteran and up-and-coming musicians performing side by side in a relaxed atmosphere far removed from the pressures of daily life.

    Marlboro has benefited from the indispensible mentorship of such luminaries as Pablo Casals, Felix Galimir, Mieczyslaw Horszowski, and Sándor Végh, among others, who have helped foster then-promising musicians such as Yo-Yo Ma, Paula Robison, Richard Stoltzman, and all four members of the Guarneri Quartet (well, five, if you count Peter Wiley). The tradition continues, and Marlboro musicians now fill out many of the world’s great chamber music and orchestral ensembles.

    Bill McGlaughlin will celebrate this famed chamber music retreat in five installments, this Monday through Friday at 7:00 p.m. EDT, on WWFM – The Classical Network and wwfm.org.

    In the meantime, check out all this invaluable interview material with many Marlboro stalwarts, including its current directors, Mitsuko Uchida and Jonathan Biss:

    https://exploringmusic.wfmt.com/discussion/

    Enjoy a Marlboro double-whammy this Wednesday, as I’ll present “Music from Marlboro,” as always, at 6 p.m., followed by Bill’s third installment.

    Marlboro School of Music and Festival: Official Page

  • Winds of Marlboro Music Danzi & Beethoven

    Winds of Marlboro Music Danzi & Beethoven

    It’s a high wind alert on the next “Music from Marlboro.” Tune in for an hour of chamber music colored by winds.

    Like many of his contemporaries, Franz Danzi had decidedly mixed feelings about the music of Beethoven. Beethoven may have only been six years Danzi’s junior, but he was a volatile force that felt no compunction about blowing over the fence posts of tradition.

    Danzi, on the other hand, was a devout classicist. As a young musician in the famed Mannheim Orchestra, he was deeply impressed by a visit from Mozart, whose own music remained his ideal.

    In addition to being a composer himself, Danzi was also a fine cellist (his father was the principal at Mannheim) and a reliable conductor. Danzi composed steadily, producing concertos, chamber music, and no less than 17 works for the stage. Much of his output has fallen into comparative neglect, with the notable exception of his woodwind quintets.

    Be that as it may, it is Danzi’s Bassoon Quartet in B-flat major, Op. 40, No. 3, that we’ll hear. It was performed at the 1975 Marlboro Music Festival by bassoonist Milan Turkovic, violinist Young Uck Kim, violist Philipp Naegele, and cellist Alain Meunier.

    Danzi’s reservations about him aside, it’s clear from Beethoven’s Quintet for Piano and Winds, Op. 16, that he too was an admirer of Mozart. The work is evidently modeled on Mozart’s earlier piece for the same instrumental combination. It’s even written in the same key (E-flat). In fact, I venture to guess, there’s little in the quintet, written when Beethoven was in his mid-20s, that would have made even Danzi squeamish.

    We’ll hear it performed by pianist – and Marlboro cofounder – Rudolf Serkin, oboist Rudolf Vrbsky, clarinetist Richard Stoltzman, hornist Robert Routch, and bassoonist Alexander Heller, in a recording made in 1974.

    Everyone knows it’s windy. Catch your breath for the next “Music from Marlboro,” this Wednesday evening at 6:00 EDT, on WWFM – The Classical Network and wwfm.org.

    Marlboro School of Music and Festival: Official Page

  • 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

  • Sibelius & Schubert Marlboro Chamber Music

    Sibelius & Schubert Marlboro Chamber Music

    Save me, Sibelius! I can’t take it any longer.

    We’ll attempt to beat the heat with the one and only chamber work from the great Finnish master’s maturity – the String Quartet in D minor. It’s subtitle, “Voces Intimae,” suggests a looking inward. That’s fine with me. There’s no sun inside.

    The piece was composed in 1909, between the Third and Fourth Symphonies. Sibelius wrote to his wife, Aino, “It turned out as something wonderful. The kind of thing that brings a smile to your lips at the hour of death. I will say no more.” Ah, sweet nothings.

    We’ll hear it performed at the 2005 Marlboro Music Festival, by Dan Zhu and Sarah Kapustin, violins; Samuel Rhodes, viola; and Amir Eldan, cello.

    Then we’ll enjoy another presentiment of death – Franz Schubert’s Introduction and Variations on his lied, “Trock’ne Blumen” (“Withered Flowers”), from the song cycle “Die schöne Müllerin.” Paula Robison will be the flutist and Marlboro co-founder Rudolf Serkin the pianist, in a recording from 1968.

    Nothing refreshes on a hot day like cold wind from the grave, on this week’s “Music from Marlboro” – chamber music performances from the legendary Marlboro Music Festival – this Wednesday evening at 6:00 EDT, on WWFM – The Classical Network and wwfm.org.

    Marlboro School of Music and Festival: Official Page

  • Jonathan Biss to Lead Marlboro Music

    Jonathan Biss to Lead Marlboro Music

    In foreign lands, cries of “Bis!” at the end of a concert signify an audience’s desire to hear more. It is a happy coincidence, then, that at the Marlboro Music School and Festival, Biss happens to be the surname of its incoming co-artistic director.

    Earlier this week, it was announced that the pianist Jonathan Biss will join Mitsuko Uchida as co-director of the celebrated chamber music retreat, which is situated in Vermont’s Green Mountains. Uchida has served in a leadership capacity at Marlboro for over 20 years. For the past five of these, she has been the festival’s sole artistic director. Prior to that, she was assisted in the festival’s direction by Richard Goode (1994-2013) and Andras Schiff (1994-1999).

    Biss first attended the Marlboro Music Festival in 1997. He was invited to return as a senior artist in 2006 – in classic Marlboro fashion, giving back to new generations of young musicians the kind of mentorship and comradery he himself experienced there.

    Biss, who is on the faculty of the Curtis Institute of Music in Philadelphia, is acclaimed not only as a performer and recording artist, but also as a teacher and a writer, wholly comfortable exploring unique opportunities of the digital age, offering online lectures and publishing a bestselling eBook, “Beethoven’s Shadow.”

    We’ll celebrate Biss’ appointment on this week’s “Music from Marlboro,” with a performance of Franz Schubert’s Piano Trio No. 1 in B-flat major, D. 898. Biss will be joined by violinist David Bowlin and cellist Marcy Rosen, from the 2008 Marlboro Music Festival.

    Then we’ll hear Marlboro legends, soprano Benita Valente, clarinetist Harold Wright, and pianist Rudolf Serkin, in Schubert’s “The Shepherd on the Rock.” The three set down a classic recording of the work in 1960; we’ll hear a live performance, captured at Marlboro nine years later.

    The Marlboro Music School and Festival was co-founded in 1951 by Serkin, Adolf Busch, and Marcel Moyse. Serkin served as Marlboro’s first artistic director until his death in 1991.

    Today happens to be the anniversary of Busch’s birth. Tune in this afternoon, between 4 and 6 p.m., prior to today’s “Music from Marlboro” broadcast, for a little bonus, in the form of one of Busch’s own compositions.

    “Music from Marlboro” begins at 6:00 EDT, on WWFM – The Classical Network and wwfm.org.

    Marlboro School of Music and Festival: Official Page


    PHOTO: Uchida (left), with Marlboro’s incoming co-artistic director

Tag Cloud

Aaron Copland (92) Beethoven (95) Composer (114) Film Music (120) Film Score (143) Film Scores (255) Halloween (94) John Williams (185) KWAX (229) Leonard Bernstein (100) Marlboro Music Festival (125) Movie Music (135) Opera (198) Philadelphia Orchestra (88) Picture Perfect (174) Princeton Symphony Orchestra (106) Radio (87) Ralph Vaughan Williams (85) Ross Amico (244) Roy's Tie-Dye Sci-Fi Corner (290) The Classical Network (101) The Lost Chord (268) Vaughan Williams (103) WPRB (396) WWFM (881)

DON’T MISS A BEAT

Receive a weekly digest every Sunday at noon by signing up here


RECENT POSTS