Tag: Grand Harmonie

  • Stokowski & Mozart on The Classical Network

    Stokowski & Mozart on The Classical Network

    Get ready to get Stoked!

    Today is the birthday of Leopold Stokowski (1882-1977), legendary music director of the Philadelphia Orchestra and the Houston Symphony, chief conductor of the NBC Symphony/the Symphony of the Air, chief guest conductor of the New York Philharmonic, and founder of the All-American Youth Orchestra, the New York City Symphony Orchestra, and the American Symphony Orchestra.

    A consummate showman, Stokowski was often dismissed as a charlatan. He could resort to a magic trunk full of tricks, ostentatiously tossing away sheet music to demonstrate that he didn’t need to conduct from a score, eschewing a baton to accentuate his expressive hand movements, and employing dramatic lighting effects to cast long shadows while he was on the podium.

    His theatricality may have raised a few eyebrows, and there is no doubt that his popularity was envied. But Stokowski might be said to have laughed all the way to the bank. How many conductors were well enough known by the general public to have been parodied by Bugs Bunny or to have enjoyed an onscreen handshake with Mickey Mouse?

    Say what you want about his sense of style, the man certainly knew his way around an orchestra, and he wasn’t afraid to try something new to achieve unique sonorities. He was also fascinated by recorded sound and remained at the cutting edge of developing technology, often pushing the frontier himself, throughout his long career. In addition, he gave the world and U.S. premieres of dozens of works that have gone on to become imperishable classics.

    This Tuesday afternoon on The Classical Network, following our Noontime Concert and until 4 p.m., we’ll enjoy a representative cross-section of recordings Stokowski made both in the studio and from live concert performances, including his own arrangement of Mussorgsky’s “Pictures at an Exhibition.”

    At 12:00, we’ll have the perfect counterbalance to Stokowski’s excess: a Harvard performance, captured in June of 2014, of Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart’s opera, “Il re pastore” (The Shepherd King). The period instrument ensemble Grand Harmonie will present this 1775 “serenata,” a setting of a libretto by Metastasio, which in turn was based on Tasso’s 1573 play, “Aminta.” The opera explores the conflict of the demands of love versus the demands of kingship. Mozart was 19 at the time of the work’s composition. In retrospect, some of the elements could be said to look ahead to “Idomeneo” and “La clemenza di Tito.”

    Grand Harmonie will take part in a recreation of the musical world of Philadelphia in 1776 with a concert at the Powel House, 244 S. 3rd St., in Philly, on Thursday at 7:30 p.m. Also participating in this all-Mozart affair will be The Franklin Quartet and mezzo-soprano Julia Mintzer.

    Other concerts of interest include Harvard performances of Haydn’s “The Creation” with the Harvard University Choir, on April 29, and Mendelssohn’s Symphony No. 2, “Lobegesang,” with the Harvard-Radcliffe Chorus, on May 5.

    Grand Harmonie will collaborate with On Site Opera for a production of Mozart’s “La finta giardiniera” (The Secret Gardener) at West Side Community Garden, 123 West 89th St., in New York City, May 11-13. For more information, visit the ensemble’s website at http://www.grandharmonie.org.

    It’s all Wolfgang and Leopold this afternoon, from noon to 4 EDT, on WWFM – The Classical Network and wwfm.org.

  • Beethoven’s Fidelio US Premiere Moved Due to Snow

    Beethoven’s Fidelio US Premiere Moved Due to Snow

    At the heart of Beethoven’s opera “Fidelio” is the struggle against tyranny and the triumph of liberty and justice. However, lofty ideals mean little in the face of an impending blizzard.

    With the threat of perhaps a foot and a half of snow falling over the weekend, the period instrument orchestra Grand Harmonie made a prudent decision late last night to move their Saturday performance to this evening. So the U.S. premiere of “Fidelio” on authentic instruments will take place TONIGHT at 7:30 p.m. at Princeton University’s Richardson Auditorium.

    One additional tidbit which may be of interest – the performance will be streamed live over YouTube. You can enjoy it in real time here:

    Everything else remains as stated in my article in today’s Trenton Times:

    http://www.nj.com/times-entertainment/index.ssf/2016/01/classical_music_grand_harmonie.html

    More about Grand Harmonie at http://www.grandharmonie.org/.


    “…the
    Rain is no respecter of persons
    the snow doesn’t give a soft white
    damn Whom it touches”

    e.e. cummings

  • Arctic Symphony Beethoven on WPRB

    Arctic Symphony Beethoven on WPRB

    On a morning devoted to wintry topics, we’re currently listening to George Lloyd’s epic Symphony No. 4, subtitled the “Arctic.” Lloyd wrote the piece while recovering from injuries sustained in naval combat during World War II, when his ship was torpedoed, killing 17 of his crewmates and nearly drowning him in machine oil. Lloyd couldn’t speak afterward for nearly a year. The symphony reflects none of the horrors of war, but rather, as Lloyd put it, “a world of darkness, storms, strange colors, and a far away peacefulness.”

    A little after 9:00, I will be joined by Jing Jing Luo, composer-in-residence with the Princeton Symphony Orchestra. Luo’s “Tsao Shu” (“Grass Scripts”), inspired by her fascination with Chinese calligraphy, will be performed by the PSO at Richardson Auditorium on January 31 at 4 p.m., on a program which will also feature works by Mozart, Kodaly and Osvaldo Golijov. (Dawn Upshaw will be the soloist in Golijov’s “Three Songs.”)

    Later on, around 10:00, representatives of the orchestra Grand Harmonie will pay a visit, to talk about the U.S. authentic instrument premiere of Beethoven’s “Fidelio,” which the group will present, in a semi-staged performance at Richardson, this Saturday at 7:30 p.m.

    Before the morning is out, we’ll hear either the Symphony No. 7, the “Sinfonia Antartica,” by Ralph Vaughan Williams, or selections from the film score that inspired it, RVW’s music for “Scott of the Antarctic.”

    One way or another, the snow’s a-comin’, this morning until 11 ET, here on WPRB 103.3 FM and at wprb.com.

  • Winter Music Inspiration on WPRB

    Winter Music Inspiration on WPRB

    If, as Edison said, genius is one percent inspiration and ninety-nine percent perspiration, where does that leave room for stimulation? I’ll let you know when I get to the bottom of my double-bagged, 20-ounce tea. The Bumble – well, The Bumble is as The Bumble does.

    The snow begins tomorrow night in the Philadelphia-Trenton-Princeton area, and we’re back up to projected accumulations of at least a foot. Thankfully my new boots are in the mail, and I’ve got plenty of bread and milk.

    While the rest of you are standing in line at the grocery store, I’ll be at WPRB this morning, setting the tone for the impending snowpocalypse, with music of a decidedly wintry nature. As time allows, we’ll take trips to the North Pole, with George Lloyd’s epic Symphony No. 4 – the “Arctic” symphony – and to the South – with Ralph Vaughan Williams’ Symphony No. 7, the “Sinfonia Antarctica.” (If we run short, we may have to resort to selections from RVW’s film score to “Scott of the Antarctic,” which was the symphony’s source.)

    Representatives of the Princeton Symphony Orchestra, including composer-in-residence Jing Jing Luo, will drop by at around 9:00 to talk about their upcoming concert at Richardson Auditorium, on January 31 at 4 p.m. Luo’s work, “Tsao Shu” (“Grass Scripts”), was inspired by her fascination with Chinese calligraphy. Also on the PSO program will be music by Mozart and Kodaly.

    Then at around 10:00, we’ll enjoy a chat with visitors from the orchestra Grand Harmonie. Grand Harmonie will present the U.S. authentic instrument premiere of Beethoven’s “Fidelio,” in a semi-staged performance, at Richardson this Saturday at 7:30 p.m.

    We’ll also feature Dawn Upshaw’s Grammy Award-winning recording of Maria Schneider’s “Winter Morning Walks.” Upshaw will perform three songs by Osvaldo Golijov on the upcoming concert of the Princeton Symphony.

    Get ready to scrape your windshields, from 6 to 11 ET on WPRB 103.3 FM and at wprb.com. We’ll be Bumbling through another shift, on Classic Ross Amico.

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