Tag: Election Day

  • Ives Quartet No 2: An American Argument

    Ives Quartet No 2: An American Argument

    Lou Harrison called it “the finest piece of American chamber music yet… Music of this kind happens only every fifty years or a century, so rich in faith and so full of a sense of completion.”

    Charles Ives’ String Quartet No. 2 (composed between 1907 and 1913) is a programmatic work. The composer envisions his musicians as four people who “converse, discuss, argue (in re ‘Politick’), fight, shake hands, shut up – then walk up the mountain side to view the firmament.” What could be more American than that?

    On this Election Day, it is my hope that the majority of Americans will be big enough to emulate those enshrined in this quartet. We’re all different, we all have our own opinions, and our own philosophies, but we are all peers under the heavens.

    We’re also flawed, but we do have the capability to reach down inside to get in touch with our best selves. It’s not about getting over on those you don’t agree with. State your piece, in peace, cast your vote, but coexist and respect your neighbors and family. It’s time for us to be better than our leaders.

    That’s all I’ve got to say. Though I am thinking of my grandfather, who once remarked, on an Election Day morning of my childhood, “Well… I’m on my way to vote the bastards out!”

    Screwing the plywood over my computer screen now. Good luck, and God bless.

    Ives’ String Quartet No. 2

    A little more about it
    http://www.musicweb-international.com/ives/wk_string_quartet_2.htm

  • Election Day Music on The Classical Network

    Election Day Music on The Classical Network

    Election Day. I found these Uncle Sam clothespins for you to wear in the voting booth. Just like Grandma used to make.

    Once you’ve completed your civic duty, I hope you’ll join me on The Classical Network for today’s Noontime Concert, a recital with commentary by harpsichordist Dylan Sauerwald. Sauerwald will present “Clashing Influences: Vienna in the Late 17th Century,” with works by Johann Caspar Kerll and Georg Muffat. The program, part of the free midday concert series presented by Gotham Early Music Scene (or GEMS), was recorded at Saint Bartholomew’s Church, 50th Street and Park Avenue, in New York City. The concerts are held every Thursday at 1:15 p.m. This 45-minute broadcast recital will commence this afternoon at 12.

    Interestingly, the music was written at a time when Columbia (then Columbina) was but a glint in Samuel Sewall’s eye. Sewall, of Salem witch trials notoriety, was the creator of one of the most enduring symbols of our future republic.

    Later in the afternoon, I’ll be joined by Eric Houghton and Ruth Ochs of the Westminster Conservatory of Music. Houghton’s “Pioneer Songs” will be performed at Patriots Theater at the War Memorial in Trenton this Saturday at 7:30 p.m. The cycle of fifteen symphonic songs, for vocal soloists, choir, and narrator, celebrates the first successful passage of wagon trains to California in the 1840s. Ochs will conduct the performance, which will feature the Westminster Community Orchestra, the Westminster Community Chorus, and the Glassbrook Vocal Ensemble. Our interview will take place at 3 p.m.

    Along the way, we’ll also hear Roy Harris’ Symphony No. 9, dedicated to the city of Philadelphia. Harris was himself a product of the prairies. He was born in a log cabin in Lincoln County, OK, on Lincoln’s birthday, February 12, 1898. Though he was celebrated in the 1930s and ‘40s as one of our great American symphonists, by 1962, the year of his Ninth Symphony, his reputation had plummeted. Harris’ music is a fascinating blend of the old and new. I always think of him as an American Sibelius. His symphonies are tied closely to the land and to the American character of his prime – confident, morally certain, and totally devoid of irony. Each movement of the Ninth sports an epigraph from the U.S. Constitution; the last is lent further gravitas through the inclusion of subtitles drawn from Whitman.

    I can’t promise it will be an all-American afternoon, but I can guarantee that we’ll be united in music, today from 12 to 4 p.m. EST, on WWFM – The Classical Network and wwfm.org.

  • Election Day Music Escape American Composers

    Election Day Music Escape American Composers

    It’s Election Day – AT LAST???

    In 24 hours, it will all be over, except for the lawsuits, the counter-lawsuits, and the recounts.

    Join me in rising above the the anxiety with an afternoon of inspirational music. We’ll begin with a concert featuring PUBLIQuartet, captured live during last season’s Downtown Concert Series in Freehold, NJ. The program will include music by Britten, Debussy, Piazzolla, and Villa-Lobos, alongside works by contemporary American composers, such as Pulitzer Prize winner Caroline Shaw.

    PUBLIQuartet reinvigorates the classical chamber repertoire with plenty of sass and panache. The ensemble caught the attention of The Late Show with Stephen Colbert. Colbert invited them to perform an improvised soundtrack to a live stream of the final presidential debate in real time on the show’s Facebook page.

    The Downtown Concert Series’ next concert will feature the Mobius Trio, which will appear at historic St. Peter’s Church in Freehold on Saturday at 7:30 p.m.

    Following today’s broadcast of PUBLIQuartet, I hope you’ll stick around for more American music. Aaron Copland will make a statement with his “Statements for Orchestra,” from 1934. Peter Boyer will remind us of the American Dream, with “Ellis Island: The Dream of America,” a work that employs the actual words of immigrants who came to this country in search of a better life. Peter Schickele will stir the musical melting pot with his String Quartet No. 1 “American Dreams,” from 1983, a piece reflective of Appalachian fiddle music, fox trots, waltzes, blues, bop, and even birdsong. And if you don’t like the way the returns are going, you can always contemplate foreign real estate with Michael Torke’s “An American Abroad,” from 2002.

    Why worry? It won’t change anything. So why not make us your stress-free zone? Relax, recharge, and rejoice in the American experience, from 12 to 4:00 p.m. EST. It will be the second leg of a marathon of American music, from 9 a.m. to 8 p.m., on WWFM – The Classical Network and at wwfm.org.

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