Tag: David Lang

  • Little Match Girl Passion Uplifts Suffering

    Little Match Girl Passion Uplifts Suffering

    At this most festive time of the year, it’s important to remember those who are less fortunate than ourselves.

    At the heart of today’s Noontime Concert on The Classical Network will be a contemporary meditation on Hans Christian Andersen’s keeping-it-real holiday parable, “The Little Match Girl.”

    You’ll recall that, in Andersen’s story, a little girl attempts to support her family and appease an abusive father by selling matches on the street. Failing to elicit any interest from the passersby, she warms herself by depleting her wares and finds delirious escape in comforting visions – a warm stove, a holiday feast, a happy family, and a Christmas tree. The matches run out, and she is found the next morning, frozen to death. It is revealed to the reader that she is happy at last with her grandmother in heaven.

    Composer David Lang – now artist-in-residence at Princeton’s Institute for Advanced Study – takes “The Little Match Girl” and reimagines it in the manner of a Bach Passion, drawing parallels between the Crucifixion and the death of a poor girl. The word “passion,” after all, is from the Latin, for “suffering.”

    “There is no Bach in my piece and there is no Jesus,” writes Lang, “rather the suffering of the little girl has been substituted for Jesus, (I hope) elevating her suffering to a higher plane.”

    “The Little Match Girl Passion” was awarded the Pulitzer Prize for Music in 2008.

    We’ll hear it performed this afternoon by The Thirteen, under the direction of Matthew Robertson. The balance of the program will be made up of carols and Christmas music from across the centuries.

    The Thirteen’s next concerts will take place this weekend in Alexandria, VA, Washington, DC, and Bethesda, MD. The program will include Philadelphia composer Kile Smith’s “The Consolation of Apollo,” which juxtaposes the words of Apollo 8 astronauts, spoken on Christmas Eve 1968, with the writings of Roman philosopher Boethius, for a fantastical take on the Christmas story. Find out more by visiting the choir’s website, thethirteenchoir.org.

    Following today’s Noontime Concert, stick around for further musical reflections on winter and the Christmas holiday. We’ll do our best to warm hands, heart and spirit, from 12 to 4 p.m. EST on WWFM – The Classical Network and wwfm.org.

  • Singularity Quartet Plays Memory on Classical Network

    Singularity Quartet Plays Memory on Classical Network

    As I type here, with strings tied around every finger, I’m lucky if I can remember what day it is. But the Singularity Quartet, with youth on its side, has managed to put together an entire program constructed on the theme of memory. Join me for today’s Noontime Concert on The Classical Network for four pieces performed by this remarkable saxophone ensemble.

    The program will open with a setting by the quartet’s Scotty Philips of Josquin de Pres’ 16th century chanson, “Mille Regretz.” Philadelphia composer David Ludwig’s “Josquin Microludes” weaves fragments of the material into his own original composition, which he likens to “channel surfing,” as recognizable snippets of Josquin emerge throughout the work’s five movements.

    Pulitzer Prize winner David Lang’s “revolutionary etudes” references Frederic Chopin’s famous etude. The three-movement piece grew out of the composer’s fascination with Chopin’s ability to “make a ridiculously fast and vaguely minor scale last forever.” Lang is the current artist-in-residence at Princeton’s Institute for Advanced Study.

    Finally, Dutch composer Tristan Keuris’ “Music for Saxophones” conjures a memory of significance for Singularity Quartet alto saxophonist Cole Belt, since encountering this piece in his years as an undergraduate contributed significantly to his decision to take up the instrument.

    The original concert took place on December 4 at the Institute for Advanced Study’s Wolfensohn Hall, as part of the Princeton Symphony Orchestra’s chamber music series.

    Singularity Quartet will do the heavy lifting. All you need to remember is to tune in today at 12:00 EST, to WWFM – The Classical Network or wwfm.org.


    PLEASE NOTE: The members of Singularity, Saxophone Quartet – (left to right) Thomas Giles, Bryan McNamara, Scotty Philips, and Cole Belt – will appear as guests of my colleague, David Osenberg, on this week’s “Cadenza,” which will be broadcast on Thursday at 10 p.m.

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