In the bath, are you more Glenn Ford or Alban Berg?
Tag: Composer
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Celebrating Leonard Bernstein at 100
Get ready to cozy up to Bernstein.
On this, the eve of the centennial of the birth of American music’s greatest polymath, The Classical Network will pull out all the stops, as WWFM hosts share representative performances from the conductor-composer-pianist-teacher’s extensive recorded legacy, alongside a number of his original compositions.
Here are just a few of today’s featured highlights:
Alice Weiss (9:00 a.m. – 12:00 p.m.) – Carl Goldmark’s “Rustic Wedding” Symphony
Carl Hemmingsen (12:00 – 3:00 p.m.) – Carl Nielsen’s Symphony No. 5
Carl Hemmingsen & Ross Amico (3:00 – 3:45 p.m.) – Charles Ives’ Symphony No. 2
Rachel Katz (3:45 – 4:00 p.m.) – A selection of Bernstein’s settings of Jewish texts and prayers, including “Yigdal”
Ross Amico (4:00 – 7:00 p.m.) – Works by Camille Saint-Saëns, Roy Harris, Robert Schumann, Gustav Mahler, Franz Joseph Haydn, and Bernstein himself. “Picture Perfect” (6 p.m.) will include selections from the rediscovered audio for Bernstein’s only orginal film score, “On the Waterfront.”
Bill McGlaughlin (7:00 p.m.) – “Exploring Music” concludes its week-long salute to Bernstein with selections from “Mass.”
Rob Kapilow (8:00 p.m.) – “What Makes It Great” will focus on the genius of Bernstein the songwriter.
Our centennial salute will continue on Saturday, with Bill Jerome (8:00 a.m.-12:00 p.m.) and David Osenberg (1:00 p.m. – 5:00 p.m.). Among David’s featured highlights will be recorded excerpts from Bernstein’s legendary Harvard lectures.
You’ll likely encounter even more Bernstein throughout the weekend, including the second half of a two-part tribute to the composer’s theater music on “The Dress Circle” with Ted Otten and Michael Kownacky (Sunday at 7 p.m.). If you missed Part One, you can enjoy it as a webcast, along with Jed Distler’s survey of Bernstein’s recordings as pianist, which aired this past Tuesday on “Between the Keys.” Both programs may be heard by following the link:
http://www.wwfm.org/term/webcasts
Also, it’s not too late for you to leave your Leonard Bernstein impressions and anecdotes on our Facebook page, at WWFM – The Classical Network, or by emailing us at info@wwfm.org (put “Bernstein” in the subject line). We’d love to share your experiences on the air. Help lend a personal touch to our celebration of Leonard Bernstein at 100.
You’ll find more details about our special programming by visiting our website at wwfm.org. While you’re there, consider supporting us. Without you, few of these treasures would be heard outside of our individual listening rooms. Thank you, as always, for doing your part to sustain classical music on the air, 24/7!
Happy Birthday, Leonard Bernstein!
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Bernstein at 100: Celebrating a Musical Superstar
The classical music world has got a fever, and the only prescription is more Bernstein.
With the centennial of the composer-conductor-pianist-teacher’s birth coming up on Saturday, Lenny Mania is about to achieve critical overload. Bernstein has been everywhere for the past year, and the remembrances and celebrations look as if they will continue through at least the end of next season, with concert schedules ripe with representative works.
All the fuss is justifiable, of course. After all, there was no more influential figure in American music, and I would be hard pressed to think of any other conductor who achieved his level of glamour and universal recognition. Lenny was that rare bird in classical music – he was a superstar.
In common with musical organizations all over the world, The Classical Network can’t very well let this milestone pass without a good party. In particular, all this week, many of our syndicated programs and locally produced shows have been trumpeting this outrageously talented figure.
The birthday blow-out will climax with two days of Bernstein’s recordings and compositions, and perhaps even a sample or two of his spoken observations on music. After all, Bernstein was unusually articulate on the subject. I hope you’ll join us in celebrating Lenny on The Classical Network, as the bulk of our programming this Friday and Saturday will be made up of playlists lovingly curated by WWFM on-air hosts.
How about you? Do you have a Bernstein story you’d like to share? The Classical Network is giving you two options through which to do so. You can either post your story on the station Facebook page at WWFM – The Classical Network or email it to info@wwfm.org, identifying it in the subject line simply with the name “Bernstein.”
We’ll select from these on Friday and Saturday and share them with our audience in between some of Lenny’s classic recordings. It can be a personal anecdote, or it can be a broader observation. How has Leonard Bernstein touched your life?
From a personal standpoint, I am curious to hear about your own favorite recordings. I’ll be sharing some of mine on the air tomorrow afternoon. What are some of yours? I’d be happy to chat with you about it in the comments section below. If you want any of your comments shared on the air, be sure to send them to WWFM. Otherwise, what happens on Classic Ross Amico stays on Classic Ross Amico.
Then tune in on Friday and Saturday as we light 100 candles for Leonard Bernstein, on WWFM – The Classical Network and wwfm.org.
Photo courtesy of The Leonard Bernstein Office, Inc.
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John Williams Turns 86 Happy Birthday Maestro
Happy birthday, John Williams, 86 years-old today.
Here’s a clip of Williams conducting at a recording session for “Star Wars: The Last Jedi” in December of 2016. Note the the opening crawl on the monitor in front of the podium.
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Percy Grainger: Eccentric Genius Revealed
In the course of working so much with Australian music over the past week, I happened to come across some interesting photos of Percy Grainger. Grainger, in addition to being an extraordinary pianist, was a visionary composer, whose music has frequently been undersold. He’s remembered largely as a collector and arranger of folk songs, especially those from the British Isles (“Country Gardens,” “Shepherd’s Hey,” “Molly on the Shore,” “Irish Tune from County Derry,” etc.).
But it’s clear he was not afraid to think outside the box, either in his life or in his music. Even in these overexposed sweetmeats, which he arranged multiple times, he plays with rhythm and harmony, and in the case of “Shepherd’s Hey,” completely alters the original mood. Some of his orchestrations can only be described as “out there.” Part of the reason so little of his music is known is that he’ll decide to drop in a bass concertina or a detuned guitar for a piece that lasts only a couple of minutes.
In life, of course, he was a force of nature. A physical fitness nut, he would throw a ball over the top of a house and run around the other side in time to catch it. He preferred to jog from engagement to engagement, sometimes with his favorite piano bench in a wheel barrow. It was not uncommon for him to take the concert stage with a running leap.
He also had his dark or queasy side. He was unusually close to his mother (who didn’t touch him until he was five years-old, for fear that she would pass on her syphilis). He held contradictory views about the superiority of the Anglo-Saxon race (he married a “Nordic princess” before a crowd of 20,000 at the Hollywood Bowl), yet was enthralled by music of non-Western cultures and loved jazz (he was a friend of Duke Ellington). He endowed a museum in his birthplace of Melbourne with his collection of whips, bloodied clothes, and even his own skeleton. (As far as I know, the latter was not accepted.)
Later in life, while living in White Plains, NY, he devoted himself to the construction of machines that would help him realize his dream of what he termed “Free Music,” a music liberated from what he saw as the “goose-stepping” rigidity of Western tradition. These cumbersome beasts were, in some respects, precursors of the modern synthesizer.
Clearly so much can be written about this eccentric and his freewheeling genius, but for today my purpose is to share with you something new to me. On top of everything else, Grainger designed what he called “toweling outfits.” Here’s a link to some photos, with the composer’s own comments at the bottom of the page.
http://collectedphotographs.blogspot.com/2012/04/percy-grainger-towel-clothes-and.html
More about Grainger’s Free Music Machine here:
The ‘Free Music Machine’. Percy Grainger & Burnett Cross, USA/Australia , 1948
The multifaceted Percy Grainger
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