Tag: Ellen Taaffe Zwilich

  • Ellen Zwilich at 85 A Musical Trailblazer

    Ellen Zwilich at 85 A Musical Trailblazer

    Ellen Taaffe Zwilich was born on this date in 1939. Today is her 85th birthday.

    Zwilich made history when she became the first female recipient of the Pulitzer Prize for Music, in 1983, for her Symphony No. 1.

    Seven years later, she made history for a second time for being perhaps the only living classical music composer – and to my knowledge the only woman composer – to be referenced in Charles Schulz’s beloved comic strip “Peanuts.”

    In the first of three panels, Peppermint Patty and Marcie are shown attending a concert. Marcie, holding a program, says to Patty, half-asleep, that the next piece will be a Concerto for Flute and Orchestra. In the second panel, she notes, “It was composed by Ellen Zwilich who, incidentally, just happens to be a woman!” Patty springs awake, and in the last panel, she’s standing on her chair. As Marcie slumps into her seat in evident embarrassment, Patty cries, “GOOD GOING, ELLEN!” (The original strip is posted in the comments section below.)

    Turnabout is fair play, and in 1996, Zwilich composed a concertino of sorts, for piano and orchestra, titled “Peanuts Gallery.” The work includes movements inspired by Schroeder, Linus, Snoopy, Charlie Brown, Lucy, and Peppermint Patty and Marcie. It was given its premiere on a Carnegie Hall children’s concert, by the pianist Albert Kim and the Orpheus Chamber Orchestra.

    The piece was recorded for the Naxos label, with pianist Jeffrey Biegel and the Florida State University Symphony Orchestra. The movements are posted individually on YouTube. I have it cued up so that you can let them all play through, continuously, here:

    As an alternative, here’s the entire work, performed without break, with actors and dancers, in a reduction for two pianos:

    “Peanuts Gallery” became the subject of a prize-winning PBS documentary. A second Zwilich documentary was produced to trace the development of her “Gardens” Symphony:

    https://www.pbs.org/video/the-gardens-birth-of-a-symphony-xfgoh6/?fbclid=IwZXh0bgNhZW0CMTAAAR1PIQ2uldOCQe3tzTRrFXVXRQNPLdRIcakR-YIN9orK2ZUuCxPR8UvmUcQ_aem_ARDIAOPDG6wZNz9bA8o_1b1jOUcK6PdB4IWFCnYTfaUCPR2PzA8ttiqL27nmr2_-zmiBpgPg0rIbA4x4dtxIGksG

    Birthdays are a time for celebration. Go ahead and go (Pea)nuts for Ellen Taaffe Zwilich.


    “Celebration”

    The Pulitzer-winning Symphony No. 1 (in three movements)

    Peppermint Patty’s revelation: the Concerto for Flute and Orchestra

  • Beethoven with Peanuts Schroeder’s Tribute

    Beethoven with Peanuts Schroeder’s Tribute

    On the eve of the 250th anniversary of Beethoven’s birth (observed), celebrate Ludwig Van with Peanuts:

    Schroeder plays the “Pathétique” Sonata:

    Schroeder plays the “Moonlight” Sonata:

    Lucy resents Schroeder’s white privilege:

    Direct all mail to 1770 James Street (Schroeder’s address – 1770 is the year of Beethoven’s birth). Charles Schulz made Schroeder a musician when he decided to work his daughter’s toy piano into the strip. The first piece he ever had Schroeder play was not by Beethoven, but rather Rachmaninoff’s Prelude in G minor. Schulz himself preferred Brahms, but he said he thought “Beethoven” sounded funnier.

    BONUS! “Schroeder’s Beethoven Fantasy,” the first movement of Ellen Taaffe Zwilich’s “Peanuts Gallery”:

  • Doriot Anthony Dwyer, Pioneering Flutist, Dies at 98

    Doriot Anthony Dwyer, Pioneering Flutist, Dies at 98

    Flutist Doriot Anthony Dwyer has died. Dwyer served as principal flute of the Boston Symphony Orchestra from 1952 to 1990. She was one of the first women to win a principal chair in a major U.S. orchestra.*

    Understandably, this was a very big deal. Back in the day, Boston didn’t even have a separate dressing room for women. Early notices were all about her gender and good looks, but soon it was her playing that was receiving raves. She won over players, audiences, and critics alike.

    To mark her retirement, the orchestra commissioned for her a flute concerto from Ellen Taaffe Zwilich. Zwilich was the first female recipient of the Pulitzer Prize for Music (in 1983!).

    Prior to her tenure in Boston, she was second flute with the National Symphony Orchestra and Los Angeles Philharmonic, and served as principal flute at the Hollywood Bowl. Early in her career, she also played with Frank Sinatra and the Ballets Russes.

    Dwyer died on Saturday at the age of 98.


    • Dwyer was preceded by, at the very least, Florence Wightman (principal harp, Cleveland Orchestra, 1929-30), Alice Chalifoux (principal harp, Cleveland Orchestra, 1931-74), Edna Philips (principal harp, Philadelphia Orchestra, 1930-41 and 1942-46), and Helen Kotas (principal horn, Chicago Symphony, 1941-48).

    An interview with Doriot Anthony Dwyer, in three parts:



    Dwyer with Leonard Bernstein conducting “Prelude to the Afternoon of a Faun”

    Debussy Sonata for Flute, Viola and Harp:

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9frKtO0nRn8

    Prokofiev Flute Sonata:

    Ellen Taffe Zwilich Flute Concerto:

    Charles Munch bringing Dwyer forth for a solo bow (at the very end of the video)

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hrMnUUWTBd4


    PHOTO: Doriot Anthony Dwyer, with harpist Olivia Luetcke and cellist Winifred Winograd (courtesy of the Boston Symphony Orchestra)

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