Tag: Irish Music

  • St Patrick’s Day Classical Music Mixtape

    St Patrick’s Day Classical Music Mixtape

    ST. PATRICK’S MIXTAPE

    It pains me not to be there with you all today. I love programming for holidays, and St. Patrick’s Day is one of my favorites. Undoubtedly, I’ll be spinning wall-to-wall St. Patrick’s music at home. As a way of sharing some of it with you, here are some links to just a few of my favorites. You may be puzzled by the inclusion of composers like Handel, Beethoven, and Frank Martin, but everyone’s Irish on St. Patrick’s Day! A hoist of my Irish coffee to you!


    Sir Charles Villiers Stanford, “Irish Rhapsody No. 5”

    Sir Hamilton Harty, “Three Miniatures for Oboe and Piano”

    Edward Joseph Collins, Irish Rhapsody “Hibernia”
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XykGEnuhiwc

    Beethoven, “Irish Folk Songs’ (with Robert White, Ani Kafavian, Yo-Yo Ma, and Samuel Sanders):

    I. “The Pulse of an Irishman”

    II. “The Kiss, Dear Maid, Thy Lip Has Left”
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HWhGmLXcHa8

    III. “Come Draw We Round the Cheerful Ring”

    Frank Martin, “Piano Trio on Irish Folk Tunes” (Martin was Swiss)

    Sir Arthur Sullivan, “Irish Symphony”
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UzGMyQugBo8

    Sir Arnold Bax, “The Garden of Fand”

    Samuel Barber, “Reincarnations” (on texts by James Stephens)

    Ben Johnston, String Quartet No. 10 (a microtonal piece that teases a tune that – spoiler altert – blossoms into “Danny Boy!”)

    Henry Cowell, “Two Bits for Flute and Piano”:

    I. A Tuneful Bit: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4bswlYBNt20

    II. A Blarneying Bit: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=o-Sp6UVY3qA

    Ina Boyle, Symphony No. 1 “Glencree” (a pupil of Vaughan Williams)
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JR3MF7wkBlI

    Joan Trimble, “Suite for Strings”

    John McCormack sings:

    I. “The Garden Where the Praties Grow”

    II. “She Moved Thro’ the Fair”

    III. “Off to Philadelphia”
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PVsFOtYmXFg

    George Frideric Handel (arr. De Dannan), “The Arrival of the Queen of Sheba in Galway Bay”
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MB8NhXtgG_A


    Hard to stop there, but I’ll want to get this posted. Sláinte!

    WWFM – The Classical Network

  • Lost Chord Webcast Faith and Begorrah

    Lost Chord Webcast Faith and Begorrah

    Faith and Begorrah! “The Lost Chord” has been posted as a webcast!

    https://www.wwfm.org/post/lost-chord-march-15-sharing-green

  • Irish Music on The Lost Chord Pre-St. Patrick’s

    Irish Music on The Lost Chord Pre-St. Patrick’s

    Don’t let the Italian surname fool you; my mother’s people came from Ireland. My own sensibilities tend more toward the Northern climes than to the Mediterranean. And I could be quite happy on a steady diet of praties and Guinness.

    This Sunday night on “The Lost Chord,” green is the new black. I hope you’ll join me, if only virtually, in anticipating St. Patrick’s Day, with music from, and in celebration of, the Emerald Isle. We’ll hear works by Irish composers John Larchet, Philip Hammond, Howard Ferguson, and A.J. Potter, and works on Celtic themes by Percy Grainger, Sir Arnold Bax, and John Foulds.

    That’s “The Sharing of the Green.” It will be all Guinness and no Corona, this Sunday night at 10:00 EDT, on WWFM – The Classical Network and wwfm.org.

  • Irish Music on WWFM

    Irish Music on WWFM

    Oh! The praties they grow small over here…

    Chicago composer Edward Joseph Collins remembers the land of his forebears with three meditations on the Irish folk song for St. Patrick’s Day. “Irish Ties Are Smiling,” this Sunday night at 10:00 EDT, on WWFM – The Classical Network and wwfm.org.

  • Edward Collins Irish Music Sunday

    Edward Collins Irish Music Sunday

    This Sunday night on “The Lost Chord,” it’s the sharing of the green.

    Edward Joseph Collins (1886-1951) was born to Irish-American parents in Joliet, Illinois. Though he studied abroad with Max Bruch and Engelbert Humperdinck, it was in Chicago that he made his career. Nearly a generation older than Copland and Gershwin, he too found inspiration in African-American spirituals, cowboy songs, and jazz.

    Collins’ relationship to the Irish was a complex one. Nonetheless, he couldn’t escape the pull of his heritage and its music. Tune in to hear three of his Irish meditations this week. “Irish Ties Are Smiling,” this Sunday night at 10:00 EDT, on WWFM – The Classical Network and wwfm.org.

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