Tag: Frederick Shepherd Converse

  • Labor Day Road Trip American Music

    Labor Day Road Trip American Music

    Labor Day weekend. Summer’s last hurrah.

    It may be the first weekend of September, but there’s still time for one more summer road trip.

    This Sunday night on “The Lost Chord,” it’s an hour of quintessentially American music about travel by car.

    Frederick Shepherd Converse’s “Flivver Ten Million” traces the Ford Motor Company’s affordable assembly line automobile, from its creation in a Detroit factory to the manifest destiny of America’s roadways.

    John Adams’ “Road Movies” has nothing at all to do with Bob Hope and Bing Crosby, alas. What it is, however, is a violin sonata written firmly within the American tradition, with a special affinity at its core with Aaron Copland’s Violin Sonata.

    Virgil Thomson’s “Filling Station,” written for Leon Kirstein’s Ballet Caravan, may have the distinction of being the only ballet set at a gas station. The work’s success gave Copland the confidence to follow through on another Caravan commission, which resulted in “Billy the Kid.”

    Finally, we’ll hear one of Michael Daughtery’s most performed works, the exuberant “Route 66,” inspired by the storied “Main Street of America.”

    Put the pedal to the metal. American composers hit the road for Labor Day, on “The Last Roads of Summer,” this Sunday night at 10:00 EDT, on WWFM – The Classical Network and wwfm.org.

  • Summer Road Trip Music Labor Day Special

    Summer Road Trip Music Labor Day Special

    It may be the First of September, but there’s still time for one last summer road trip.

    This Sunday night on “The Lost Chord,” it’s an hour of quintessentially American music about travel by car.

    Frederick Shepherd Converse’s “Flivver Ten Million” traces the Ford Motor Company’s affordable assembly line automobile, from its creation in a Detroit factory to the manifest destiny of America’s roadways.

    John Adams’ “Road Movies” has nothing at all to do with Bob Hope and Bing Crosby, alas. What it is, however, is a violin sonata written firmly within the American tradition, with a special affinity at its core with Aaron Copland’s Violin Sonata.

    Virgil Thomson’s “Filling Station,” written for Leon Kirstein’s Ballet Caravan, may have the distinction of being the only ballet set at a gas station. The work’s success gave Copland the confidence to follow through on another Caravan commission, which resulted in “Billy the Kid.”

    Finally, we’ll hear one of Michael Daughtery’s most performed works, the exuberant “Route 66,” inspired by the storied “Main Street of America.”

    Put the pedal to the metal. American composers hit the road for Labor Day, on “The Last Roads of Summer,” this Sunday night at 10:00 EDT, on WWFM – The Classical Network and wwfm.org.

  • Walt Whitman’s Musical Legacy on WWFM

    Walt Whitman’s Musical Legacy on WWFM

    Walt Whitman was born in Huntingdon, NY, on Long Island, on May 31, 1819. He died in Camden, NJ, on March 26, 1892.

    We’ll celebrate the 200th anniversary of the birth of this most influential of American poets all month long, Sunday nights on “The Lost Chord,” with music inspired by his verse, including choral works, orchestral pieces, and songs, from an array of international composers.

    Tune in this week for an all-American program, featuring selections by Roy Harris, Frederick Shepherd Converse, and Pulitzer Prize-winner George Walker.

    Harris, who lived from 1898 to 1979, was one of our great symphonists. His Symphony No. 3 enjoyed particular acclaim. He certainly had the makings of a Man of Destiny – born in log cabin on Lincoln’s birthday, in Lincoln County, Oklahoma.

    We’ll enjoy his 1959 setting of “Give Me the Splendid Silent Sun,” for baritone and orchestra. The poem first appeared in Whitman’s “Drum-Taps,” in 1865. Whitman had returned to Brooklyn, on the verge of mental collapse, following his experiences working in army hospitals in the field for three years during the Civil War.

    Then we’ll turn to a work by George Walker, who lived from 1922 to 2018. Walker was the first African-American recipient of the Pulitzer Prize for Music – as recently as 1996 – for his work, “Lilacs,” for soprano and orchestra.

    “Lilacs” falls into four sections, utilizing the first three and 13th stanzas from Walt Whitman’s “When Lilacs Last in the Dooryard Bloom’d,” a poignant meditation on the assassination of Abraham Lincoln.

    Finally, we’ll bask in a romantic effusion of Frederick Shepherd Converse. Converse lived from 1871 to 1940, the only composer tonight whose life actually overlapped with that of Whitman.

    Converse was born in Newton, Massachusetts. He studied composition with George Whitefield Chadwick, and in Munich with Josef Rheinberger. His opera, “The Pipe of Desire,” was the first by an American to be performed at New York’s Metropolitan Opera, in 1905.

    From 1904, we’ll hear his orchestral fantasy, “The Mystic Trumpeter.” The literary program, taken from “Leaves of Grass,” was manipulated by the composer to suit his own structural needs. The work’s five sections – “Mystery and Peace;” “Love;” “War and Struggle;” “Humiliation;” and “Joy” – are played without pause.

    Sing the body electric, as we honor Walt Whitman, Sunday nights in May at 10:00 EDT. That’s “Songs of Democracy,” on WWFM – The Classical Network and wwfm.org.


    PHOTOS: Uncle Walt with (top to bottom) Roy Harris, George Walker, and Frederick Shepherd Converse

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