Tag: Halloween

  • October Fantasy with Classical Music’s Dukas

    October Fantasy with Classical Music’s Dukas

    Classical music lends itself well to fantasy. And fantasy lends itself very well to October, the month of Halloween.

    Take the case of Paul Dukas, born on this date in 1865. Dukas composed an opera about Bluebeard and his sixth wife, and a so-called dance poem, “La Péri,” about a fatal encounter with a Persian fairy.

    But far and away his most famous work is “The Sorcerer’s Apprentice,” after Goethe, who based it on an ancient tale. It was that old wizard, Walt Disney, who did more for the piece than anyone else.

    The music is fantastic in more ways than one. Happy birthday, Paul Dukas!


    “La Péri”

    A production of “Ariane et Barbe-Bleue” from Lyon Opera

    https://www.arte.tv/en/videos/102815-000-A/dukas-ariane-et-barbe-bleue/

    The world’s most beloved vermin as “The Sorcerer’s Apprentice”

    https://video.disney.com/watch/sorcerer-s-apprentice-fantasia-4ea9ebc01a74ea59a5867853?fbclid=IwAR1YWAfXrDpearLdzRlxlpKC1Phe9aCh8D-Mxcz0sPkMP4rKPyEr2bTG_zs

  • Savoring Autumn Stop Wishing Summer Away

    Savoring Autumn Stop Wishing Summer Away

    It’s totally irrational of me, I know, and something I have to work on, but every summer I keep my head down, seclude myself, and rail against the sun, heat, and humidity – all the while, a prayer in my heart for the first day of autumn. Blame it on my 32 years in Philadelphia.

    But now that I’m out of the kiln, in the open air, with plenty of greenery, I really need to stop that, because I’m essentially wishing away huge swaths of my life. Also, because of the ingrained negativity, I find I have to work extra hard to throw on the air brakes come September, so that I can slow down, finally, and savor every facet of the ever-changing season. Because if I don’t, I’ll wind up sliding right into Christmas. And I certainly don’t want to miss Halloween.

    Autumn arrives this afternoon at 3:20 EDT. Join me in pausing to take a breath and appreciating the shifting light, the emerging colors, and the falling leaves. These are harbingers of good things – the pleasures of baked goods, homemade soups, moody skies, and woodland strolls; of carved pumpkins and black-and-white horror movies, used book sales, sweaters, Brahms, and cozy cups of tea.

    Soon enough, the obligations of Thanksgiving and “the holidays” will be upon us. For now, savor September and October. It’s a vibrant time, as nature lives in defiance of decay – the grass finds a little extra something in its stores of green, apples swell, and birds and beasts forage, bask, and play.

    But it’s also a reflective one, as a gentle melancholy pervades the softening light. Memories grow thick. Nostalgia stirs in fallen leaves. Reminders all that we are mortal, and time is on the wing.

    Whoever eats the most pie wins.

  • Spooky Movie Soundtracks for Halloween

    Spooky Movie Soundtracks for Halloween

    This week on “Picture Perfect,” for Halloween, keep your spirits up – quite literally – with selections from cinematic ghost stories.

    Ray Milland and Ruth Hussey play a London music critic and his sister, respectively, who purchase a desolate house along the Cornish coast, in “The Uninvited” (1944). There, they encounter chilling spectral manifestations and a kind of possession, in which the daughter of the former inhabitants struggles against self-destructive impulses.

    Milland provides so much levity at times that it seems almost as if he’s in another picture, but the moody atmosphere, eerie special effects, and expert pacing deliver. Also, the film features Cornelia Otis Skinner as the malevolent director of a sanatorium, whose character provides an interesting subtext.
    It remains one of the best haunted house films ever made. Victor Young’s score yielded the popular standard, “Stella by Starlight.”

    Michael Keaton is given license to run amok in fright makeup, in Tim Burton’s haunted house comedy “Beetlejuice” (1988), a film that also stars Alec Baldwin and Geena Davis. Danny Elfman’s score betrays the usual Nino Rota influence, in this case tempered by a little Stravinskyian fiddle music and some clarinet licks straight out of Raymond Scott. (Think “Powerhouse.”)

    “Poltergeist” (1982) is, at times, more of a rollercoaster ride than a haunted house film, in the classic sense. Still, despite an over-reliance on special effects, it manages to achieve one or two moments of classic Spielbergian awe. It was Steven Spielberg’s first project as a producer, and released only a week before his masterpiece, “E.T. The Extra-Terrestrial.” Jerry Goldsmith wrote the music, and I think we can all agree, there’s nothing creepier than laughing children.

    Though “Poltergeist” turned out to be one of the highest-grossing films of 1982, its profits were dwarfed by those of a ghostly comedy from two years later. “Ghostbusters” (1984) was like a license to print money. Bill Murray, Dan Aykroyd, and Harold Ramis play a trio of parapsychologists who don jumpsuits and use high-tech vacuum cleaners to rid New York City of supernatural threats. The team’s off-beat chemistry does much to contribute to the film’s genial goofiness.

    Everyone remembers the pop song (“Who you gonna call?”), but few remember Elmer Bernstein’s orchestral underscore. At this stage of his career, Bernstein – who wrote music for such classics as “The Ten Commandments,” “The Magnificent Seven,” and “To Kill a Mockingbird” – had become associated with comedy, thanks to the success of films like “Animal House,” “Airplane,” and “Stripes.” The score to “Ghostbusters” is notable for its use of the ondes Martenot, an electronic keyboard instrument that sounds an awful lot like the theremin, and also the Yamaha D-X7 synthesizer.
    The bridge is out… you’ll have to spend the night. Steel your nerves for music from cinematic ghost stories, this Saturday evening at 6:00 EDT, on WWFM – The Classical Network and wwfm.org!


    Trick or treat! And THANK YOU to everyone who contributed to WWFM’s fall membership campaign. It’s because of listeners like you that The Classical Network is able to bring you homegrown specialty shows like “Picture Perfect.” If you haven’t had a chance to contribute and have been meaning to do so, you can still make your donation online at wwfm.org. Thanks again, and happy Halloween!

    https://wwwfm.secureallegiance.com/wwfm/WebModule/Donate.aspx?P=DEFAULT&PAGETYPE=PLG&CHECK=vOU2bz5JCWmgCDbf53nm9ezWDeZ%2beA1M

  • Spooky Halloween Music WWFM Fall Fundraiser Ends

    Spooky Halloween Music WWFM Fall Fundraiser Ends

    It’s heeeere… the final day of our fall fundraiser. Make your donation to WWFM now, because tomorrow it will be a ghost town!

    This week on “Picture Perfect,” we’re all about hauntings and specters for Halloween. Join me, if you dare, for otherworldly music from “The Uninvited” (Victor Young), “Beetlejuice” (Danny Elfman), “Poltergeist” (Jerry Goldsmith), and “Ghostbusters” (Elmer Bernstein). We’ll keep our spirits high, this Saturday evening at 7:00 EDT.

    In the meantime, who you gonna call? Us, I hope, at 1-888-232-1212, or contribute online at wwfm.org.

    Thank you for your support of WWFM – The Classical Network! Without you, we wouldn’t stand a ghost of a chance.

  • Halloween Music from France on The Lost Chord

    Halloween Music from France on The Lost Chord

    Ah! ce que j’entends, serait-ce la bise nocturne qui glapit, ou le pendu qui pousse un soupir sur la fourche patibulaire?

    This Sunday night on “The Lost Chord,” we’ll have three works suitable for Halloween, all of them by French composers.

    Sir John Gielgud will join pianist Gina Bachauer for recitations of weird and sinister poems by Aloysius Bertrand, to preface the three movements of Maurice Ravel’s “Gaspard de la Nuit” (Gaspard of the Night).

    Claude Debussy was enthralled by the writings of Edgar Allan Poe, which he knew through translations by Charles Baudelaire. At the time of his death, he left incomplete sketches for two operas after Poe stories – “The Fall of the House of Usher” and “The Devil in the Belfry.” We’ll hear fragments of the former, conducted by Georges Prêtre.

    Finally, we’ll listen to the third of the “Etudes in Minor Keys,” subtitled “Scherzo Diabolico,” by Charles-Valentin Alkan. Alkan, a sometimes neighbor of Chopin and Georges Sand, shared a home with his illegitimate son, two apes and a hundred cockatoos. Franz Liszt is alleged to have commented, “Alkan had the finest technique I had ever known, but preferred the life of a recluse.”

    Best known is the story surrounding the circumstances of his death: while reaching for a copy of the Talmud, situated on a high shelf of a heavy bookcase, the case let go and crushed Alkan beneath it. It’s been suggested that the composer actually collapsed while in the kitchen – but when the legend becomes fact, print the legend.

    I hope you’ll join me for “Jacques o’ Lanterns” – lurid music by French composers for Halloween – this Sunday night at 10:00 EDT, on WWFM – The Classical Network and wwfm.org.


    While I have your attention: WWFM is in the midst of its fall fundraiser. If you’re “hanging around” on a Sunday evening, enjoying “The Lost Chord” or any of our other specialty programs, remember you can support them at any time by making a donation at wwfm.org. Your contribution in any amount would be greatly appreciated. It’s because of adventurous and generous listeners just like you that we’re able to continue with our ongoing mission to discover “The Lost Chord.” Thank you for your support!

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