Tag: Enescu

  • Enescu Bartók Unity at Marlboro

    Enescu Bartók Unity at Marlboro

    Romania and Hungary share a common border, if an uneasy history. They also happen to share two of the 20th century’s most talented composers, both of them born in 1881. On this week’s “Music from Marlboro,” as always, we look past nationalistic concerns to seek unity in music.

    George Enescu (1881-1955) was arguably Romania’s greatest musical export, a child prodigy who excelled also as a violinist, a pianist, a conductor, and a teacher. At the age of seven, he became the youngest student ever to be admitted to the Vienna Conservatory. He graduated before his 13th birthday. From there, he went to Paris and embarked on a charmed career with too many highlights to detail here. Pablo Casals, who was affiliated with the Marlboro Music Festival for the last 13 years of his life, described him as “the greatest musical phenomenon since Mozart.”

    Enescu’s Violin Sonata No. 2 in F minor (1899), was completed during his final year at the Paris Conservatory. He had already composed an ambitious, thirty-minute “Romanian Poem” (1898), when just 16, and wasn’t far from achieving world fame with his “Romanian Rhapsody No. 1” (1901). Enescu later claimed that the sonata, along with his Octet for Strings, marked the point where he felt he had truly become himself.

    We’ll hear it performed at the 1974 Marlboro Music Festival, by violinist Pina Carmirelli and pianist Alan Weiss.

    Hungarian composer Béla Bartók (1881-1945) was also a gifted pianist and a pioneering ethnomusicologist, who did much to deepen musical understanding through his documentary journeys and insights into the cultures of Eastern Europe and North Africa – including the region of Transylvania, which was to become the source of such complicated feelings between Hungary and Romania.

    He also happened to be one of the most innovative musical thinkers of his time, beating an alternative route to modernism through the assimilation of folk music into a highly personal idiom that owes little to either Stravinsky or Schoenberg.

    Bartók’s “Divertimento for String Orchestra” (1939) is a fascinating chimera – it takes its name from an 18th century form (appropriate for its neo-classical ambitions), shares qualities with the Baroque concerto grosso (with a small group of soloists at times contrasting with the greater body of the orchestra), and yet remains distinctly of its time. Even here, the composer’s love of folk music is evident.

    The “Divertimento” was Bartók’s final composition before fleeing Nazi Europe for the United States. He wrote the work in only fifteen days, while staying at the Swiss chalet of conductor Paul Sacher, who had commissioned the piece. Though it was composed very quickly, as befits a divertimento – which traditionally, in the 18th century, was regarded as “entertainment” music – Bartók left meticulous instructions for its performance.

    We’ll hear it played by a collection of Marlboro string players, conducted by Sándor Végh, in 1974. Végh, born in Transylvania, was one of the great chamber musicians. He participated in the first Hungarian performance of Bartók’s String Quartet No. 5.

    That’s music by Enescu and Bartók on the next “Music for Marlboro,” this Wednesday evening at 6:00 EST, on WWFM – The Classical Network and wwfm.org.

    Marlboro School of Music and Festival: Official Page


    Sándor Végh promoting unity on this week’s “Music for Marlboro”

  • Enescu Schwarz & Dvořák on WWFM

    Enescu Schwarz & Dvořák on WWFM

    Kick off your weekend with Romanian music, as we mark the anniversary of the birth of composer George Enescu. You can also expect a fair amount of American music, as we celebrate the birthday today of conductor Gerard Schwarz. Tune in also to hear Antonin Dvořák’s “Czech Suite.” You can Czech it out from 4 to 7 p.m. EDT, on WWFM – The Classical Network and at wwfm.org.


    PHOTOS: Conductor Gerard Schwarz and Romanian master George Enescu

  • Philadelphia Orchestra on WRTI Today

    Philadelphia Orchestra on WRTI Today

    Tune in this afternoon to WRTI for the first of my Philadelphia Orchestra interviews. As part of the intermission features on this week’s concert broadcast, conductor-in-residence Cristian Măcelaru, born in Romania, will talk about his great composer-compatriots George Ensecu and György Ligeti.

    Ligeti, born in Transylvania, will be represented by his rarely-heard “Concert românesc” (hear Măcelaru talk about the interesting use of the horns in the piece). Măcelaru concludes the concert with a roof-raising performance of Enescu’s “Romanian Rhapsody No. 1.” He comments that it has always been his dream to perform the work with The Philadelphia Orchestra.

    Sarah Chang will be the soloist in Dvořák’s Violin Concerto. The program will also include Beethoven’s Symphony No. 1.

    The broadcast begins at 1 ET. Listen in the Philadelphia area at 90.1 FM, search for additional frequencies at wrti.org, or avail yourself of the station’s internet streaming.

    Other commitments this afternoon? Listen to the interview (already posted) here:

    http://wrti.org/post/philadelphia-orchestra-concert-wrti-sarah-chang-soloist-sunday-july-5-1-pm

    Also on the website: Susan Lewis’ interview with Sarah Chang. Gregg Whiteside is the producer and host of the Philadelphia Orchestra broadcasts.

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