Tag: Halloween

  • Spooky Halloween Music on WWFM

    Spooky Halloween Music on WWFM

    Now is the time to brush the cobwebs from the old chest in the attic, pry open the sarcophagus in the dank crypt of imagination, and reanimate the undead music of Hallowe’ens past. For the next three days, I’ll be spiking my playlists with selections of a decidedly spooky nature – alongside a few birthday celebrations and the usual station business. The sense of menace will culminate in a Hallowe’en blow-out on October 31, including an especially creepy “Music from Marlboro.”

    I have no idea what my colleagues have planned for the next few days, but here are the hours during which you are guaranteed to encounter at least a few musical chills (all times Eastern Daylight).

    Today: 3 to 7 p.m.
    Tomorrow: 1 to 4 p.m.
    Wednesday: 4 to 7 p.m.

    Please note: I will be on one hour earlier than usual today, providing an extra opportunity to throw a sheet over my head and cry boo!

    Don’t try buying me off with McDonald’s gift certificates. I only accept dimes, beginning this afternoon at 3:00 EDT, on WWFM – The Classical Network and wwfm.org.

  • American Gothic Halloween Music

    American Gothic Halloween Music

    Ask for me tomorrow, and you shall find me a grave man!

    This Sunday night on “The Lost Chord,” with Hallowe’en lurking like a mad clown astride a vampiric spider around a Caligari corner, we’ll seek our thrills under the comparatively safe conditions of three American experiments in controlled terror.

    Wander the creepy cornfields of the overactive imagination with music by George Crumb (“A Haunted Landscape”), Morton Gould (“Jekyll and Hyde Variations”), and Dominick Argento (“Le Tombeau d’Edgar Poe”).

    Crumb, who was born on October 24, 1929, makes his home outside Philadelphia. Argento, who hails from York, PA, was born on October 27, 1927. Gould, born and bred in Queens, died in 1996 at the age of 82. All three composers were honored with the Pulitzer Prize for Music.

    Walk softly around these spine-tingling exercises in American Gothic. Join me, if you dare, for “Grave Endeavors,” this Sunday night at 10:00 EDT, on WWFM – The Classical Network and wwfm.org.

  • Happy Birthday Charles Ives A Musical Celebration

    Happy Birthday Charles Ives A Musical Celebration

    Happy birthday, Charles Ives!


    Ives’ “Hallowe’en” for string quartet and piano (though I miss the big drum):

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NVnU4t5hMI4

    Leonard Bernstein on the Symphony No. 2:

    My preferred recording of the symphony, so beautiful (though not always entirely accurate, in regard to Ives’ intentions), with Bernstein and the New York Philharmonic in 1960.

    The Yale-Princeton Football Game:

    Ives sings!

  • Vaughan Williams Birthday WWFM

    Vaughan Williams Birthday WWFM

    If you like cats, you’d better like Vaughan Williams, and if you like Vaughan Williams, you’d better tune in today between 4 and 6 p.m. EDT, as I’ll be celebrating his birthday, on WWFM – The Classical Network and wwfm.org.

    ** Coming up at 6 p.m.: Spooky comedies for Hallowe’en on “Picture Perfect!” **

  • Spooky Comedy Film Scores for Halloween

    Spooky Comedy Film Scores for Halloween

    Spooky comedies. A seeming oxymoron. Perhaps in an attempt to subvert our fears, or to generate laughter from tension, filmmakers have frequently juxtaposed humor with the supernatural – or at any rate death.

    This week on “Picture Perfect,” we’ll conjure some Hallowe’en spirit with music from four macabre comedies.

    Frank Capra’s screen adaptation of “Arsenic and Old Lace” (1944) was actually shot in 1941, but it could not be released until after the hit stage play, by Joseph Kesselring, had concluded its Broadway run.

    The film starred Cary Grant, Priscilla Lane, Raymond Massey, Peter Lorre, Jack Carson, and Capra favorites James Gleason and Edward Everett Horton.

    Two seemingly innocuous spinster aunts poison lonely old men and have them buried in their basement, by a family member who believes that he’s Teddy Roosevelt. (He thinks that he’s digging the Panama Canal.) Massey and Lorre play a murderer on the lam and his plastic surgeon, respectively, who hole up in the house, unaware that Massey’s body count pales next to that of his unwitting hosts.

    The score, by Max Steiner, is as manic as Grant’s performance – perhaps a mite overdone, with its breakneck allusions to familiar melodies – but it bears the same distinctive gloss as other Steiner classics like “Gone With the Wind” and “Casablanca.”

    Composer Bernard Herrmann will always be most closely associated with the films of Alfred Hitchcock. In particular, his music for the shower scene in “Psycho” has entered the popular consciousness as few other film scores have. Hitchcock and Herrmann collaborated on nine films in all. The first of these was a black comedy called “The Trouble with Harry” (1955), a droll farce about a corpse that materializes in a New England community and can’t seem to stay buried.

    Don Knotts and a haunted house – that’s the high concept behind “The Ghost and Mr. Chicken” (1966). How could it possibly miss? Knotts’ elastic-faced terror finds a goofy foil in Vic Mizzy’s score. Mizzy also wrote music for “The Addams Family.”

    Finally, in a kind of twist on “Topper,” Alec Baldwin and Geena Davis play a recently-deceased couple who try to scare off the inhabitants of their former home, in “Beetlejuice” (1988). In desperation, they enlist the services of a manic “bio-exorcist” (a loosy-goosy Michael Keaton) and things get seriously antic.

    The music is by Danny Elfman, as always a fan of Nino Rota, although he also pays homage to the Stravinsky of “The Soldier’s Tale” and frequently alludes to Raymond Scott. There’s even a touch of Bernard Herrmann in one of the tracks, as Elfman evokes the skeleton fight from “The Seventh Voyage of Sinbad.”

    I hope you’ll join me for a mishmash of horror and humor this week, on “Picture Perfect,” music for the movies, this Friday evening at 6:00 EDT, on WWFM – The Classical Network and wwfm.org.

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Aaron Copland (92) Beethoven (95) Composer (114) Film Music (123) Film Score (143) Film Scores (255) Halloween (94) John Williams (187) KWAX (229) Leonard Bernstein (101) Marlboro Music Festival (125) Movie Music (138) Opera (202) Philadelphia Orchestra (89) Picture Perfect (174) Princeton Symphony Orchestra (106) Radio (87) Ralph Vaughan Williams (85) Ross Amico (244) Roy's Tie-Dye Sci-Fi Corner (290) The Classical Network (101) The Lost Chord (268) Vaughan Williams (103) WPRB (396) WWFM (881)

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