Tag: Johann Sebastian Bach

  • Support Bach on WWFM

    Support Bach on WWFM

    A good record store is hard to find these days, but Bach is yours at the touch of a button or the click of a mouse. Please support us in our quest for the “Bach 500.” We’re looking for your donation – in any amount – right now. Once we reach 500 listener contributions, we’ll be able to unlock the Bach Pot to the tune of $14,000 and bask in the glorious music of Johann Sebastian Bach, unencumbered by fundraising, for the rest of the day. Click on “donate” at wwfm.org, or call us at 1-888-232-1212. Thank you for your generous support of WWFM – The Classical Network. With your help, we’ll be Bach!

  • Bach Birthday & Marlboro’s Music

    Bach Birthday & Marlboro’s Music

    The Eve of Bach is upon us.

    Tomorrow will mark the 334th anniversary of Johann Sebastian Bach’s birth. I’m sure you are aware by now that The Classical Network is in the final hours of its Bach 500 campaign. Every March, we ask that 500 generous listeners step up and support the music by making a donation to the station IN ANY AMOUNT. Once we hit those 500 contributions, we stop asking and throw open the floodgates, filling the airwaves with undiluted Bach all day on March 21st. If we don’t hit that goal, we have to keep asking. The champagne goes flat and the ice cream cake melts.

    So I’m asking one final time: if you haven’t contributed yet, or if you haven’t given in a while, or if your St. Patrick’s Day peregrinations have left you with a pot of gold, please do whatever you can. YOU set the amount. You won’t catch us sneering at an Andrew Jackson or two. But the truth is, anything counts toward the 500. Once we hit 500 donations, we can collect over $14,000 in challenge money from our Bach Pot, and then the Bacchanal can begin in earnest. Please call us during business hours at 1-888-232-1212, or contribute anytime at wwfm.org (click on “Donate”).

    To prime the pump, on this week’s “Music from Marlboro,” I’ll be presenting an hour of fabulous Bach recordings from the archive of the legendary music school and festival.

    Forget the period instrument movement. Scholarship has its place, but these artists believed unwaveringly in the transcendent quality of Bach’s music and its ability to communicate across the ages.

    These are Old School performances. You’ll hear pianos all over the place. Marlboro co-founder Rudolf Serkin will offer a sensitive interpretation of 14 canons on the aria ground from the “Goldberg Variations,” in a performance recorded at Marlboro in 1976.

    Then the venerable Mieczyslaw Horszowski will join a Marlboro orchestra led by Felix Galimir for Bach’s Keyboard Concerto No. 7 in G minor, BWV 1058. The performance was captured in 1982, when the pianist was 90 years-old. Horszowski, who gave his first public performance in 1901(!), died in 1993, just shy of his 101st birthday. No doubt his extraordinary longevity can be attributed in part to his healthy and sustained immersion in music such as this.

    And of course, we can’t have an hour of Marlboro Bach performances without hearing from Pablo Casals. The legendary cellist was affiliated with the Marlboro Music Festival for the last 13 years of his life, from 1960 to 1973. His loving, humanistic interpretations of Bach’s orchestral works form a remarkable capstone to an extraordinary career.

    Don’t let the “festival orchestra” appellation deceive you. These are no ragtag assemblages of itinerant performers. The ensembles are made up of world-class artists and stars-of-tomorrow, many of whom maintained their relationships with Marlboro for years.

    You don’t have to break the bank for Bach, but your contribution in any amount will make a difference. Call now at 1-888-232-1212 or click on “Donate” at wwfm.org. Then kick back and enjoy an hour of magical Bach performances on the next “Music from Marlboro,” this Wednesday evening at 6:00 EDT, on WWFM – The Classical Network and wwfm.org.

    Marlboro School of Music and Festival: Official Page


    Bach with Marlboro advocates (top to bottom) Pablo Casals, Mieczyslaw Horszowski & Felix Galimir, and Rudolf Serkin.

  • Tempesta di Mare Philadelphia Baroque Concert

    Tempesta di Mare Philadelphia Baroque Concert

    Tempesta in morning, sailor’s warning; Tempesta at noon, music’s boon.

    On today’s Noontime Concert, Tempesta di Mare – Philadelphia Baroque Orchestra will present a program titled “Fantaisie – Character, Allegory and Imagination.”

    Composers will include Johann Sigismund Kusser, George Frideric Handel, François Couperin, and Georg Philipp Telemann.

    The program will open with a grasshopper, and end with – the Eagles. If that piques your curiosity, I hope you will tune in and see what these bestial bookends are all about.

    Tempesta di Mare takes its name from a concerto by Antonio Vivaldi, which translates as “Storm at Sea.” The group has made 10 stunning recordings of mostly underexposed repertoire for the Chandos label. In particular, it has done much to restore the reputation of Johann Friedrich Fasch.

    To learn more about the ensemble and its upcoming concerts in Philadelphia and Chestnut Hill, this Saturday and Sunday – which will include Bach’s Concerto for 2 Violins and yet another Fasch discovery – visit Tempesta’s website at tempestadimare.org.

    Following today’s concert broadcast, we’ll mark Women’s History Month with an afternoon of music by female composers, beginning with Philadelphia-based Pulitzer Prize winner Jennifer Higdon. We’ll trip back and forth across the centuries for worthwhile contributions from undervalued musicians of earlier times to works by more widely acknowledged – and even celebrated – artists of the present.

    Speaking of Bach: there are only two days left until our Bach birthday bash. Help cancel fundraising on Thursday by becoming one of the “Bach 500” today. 500 listener contributions IN ANY AMOUNT will ensure that we can pull out all the stops to celebrate Bach’s genius as he deserves – with just his music, no fundraising! But in order to make that a reality, 500 noble folk need to step up and toss some bills into the kitty. Please join us today in helping to make this Elysian ideal a reality by visiting wwfm.org and clicking on “Donate.”

    Then join me for an example of the kind of programming generous listeners just like you have made possible for the past 37 years, today from 12 to 4 p.m. EDT, on WWFM – The Classical Network and wwfm.org.

    Thank you for doing your part to help keep great music on the radio!

  • Bach’s Birthday: Celebrate with WWFM and the Bach 500

    Bach’s Birthday: Celebrate with WWFM and the Bach 500

    That time Bach met Frederick the Great – what a ball they had.

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

    Only five days left until March 21st – Bach’s birthday! We at WWFM – The Classical Network would love to celebrate by sharing Bach’s music on that day, all day. But in order for us to do so, we need 500 altruistic music lovers to help make it happen.

    Every March, we pitch the “Bach 500.” We request that 500 listeners step up and make a contribution IN ANY AMOUNT. When we reach that goal of 500 contributions, we immediately shut our pie holes and start spinning the platters like nobody’s business. No more talk of filthy lucre. Only pure enjoyment of some of the most transcendent music ever written.

    In order to make this paradisal vision a reality, we need to have those 500 contributions in hand by March 21st. So if you’ve received a renewal notice in the mail, get your check in that return envelope and send it back to us ASAP! We’d like it to count toward this important goal.

    Of course, you can contribute ANYTIME over the weekend at our website, wwfm.org. Click on “Donate.” You can also monitor our progress there by watching the mercury rise in the giant thermometer on the right side of the page. We’ve got a fever, and the only prescription is Bach!

    Thank you in advance for your generosity, and here’s hoping that Thursday is a day of music, and not some bastardized version of a celebration interrupted by tiresome fundraising . Bach deserves more than that, and so do you!


    Note to self: don’t use words like “pie hole” and “bastardized” in front of the king

  • Cello Baroque on The Classical Network

    Cello Baroque on The Classical Network

    Hello, cello!

    Today’s Noontime Concert on The Classical Network will be a Baroque recital for solo cello, presented by Loretta O’Sullivan.

    On the program will be music by Johann Sebastian Bach – his Suite No. 3 in C major, BWV 1009 – and a Passacaglia by Heinrich Biber. These are the bricks of an edifice held together by grout in the form of four caprices by Giuseppe Maria Dall’Abaco, according to Sullivan, “…each with its own color, texture and mood.”

    The program was presented on November 20, 2017 at St. Bartholomew’s Church, 50th Street and Park Avenue, in Midtown Manhattan, where free lunchtime concerts are held every Thursday at 1:15 p.m. The 2017-2018 schedule has run its course, but concerts will resume in the fall.

    Today’s broadcast is made possible in part by Gotham Early Music Scene, or GEMS. GEMS is a non-profit corporation that supports and promotes artists and organizations in New York City devoted to early music – music of the Middle Ages, Renaissance, Baroque, and early Classical periods. For more information and updates to GEMS’ events calendar, look online at gemsny.org.

    Then stick around as we celebrate the birthdays of musicologist and composer Sir Donald Francis Tovey, composers Wojciech Kilar and Peter Schickele – with an appearance by Schickele’s alter ego, P.D.Q. Bach – and sopranos Eleanor Steber and Dawn Upshaw.

    I’ll provide the music; you provide the ice cream cake, this afternoon from 12 to 4 p.m. EDT, on WWFM – The Classical Network and wwfm.org.

Tag Cloud

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)

DON’T MISS A BEAT

Receive a weekly digest every Sunday at noon by signing up here


RECENT POSTS