Tag: Klezmer

  • Kilar’s Exodus Passover and a Klezmer Motif

    Kilar’s Exodus Passover and a Klezmer Motif

    Chag Sameach! Passover begins at sunset.

    Wojciech Kilar (1932-2013) is probably best-known in this country for his film scores. He composed music for well over 100 movies, gaining a toehold in international cinema fairly late in his career. American audiences may recognize his work for “Bram Stoker’s Dracula” (1992), “The Portrait of a Lady,” (1996), and “The Pianist” (2002).

    But in his native Poland, he was also a major concert composer, of the same generation as Krzysztof Penderecki and Henryk Górecki. My own first exposure to Kilar was on a concert of the Philadelphia Orchestra, given back in 1987, when Witold Rowicki conducted a fascinating work titled “Krzesany” (1974), a symphonic poem evocative of a Polish mountain dance that employs aleatoric elements.

    In 1979-81, Kilar composed “Exodus,” a 23-minute crescendo, after the manner of Ravel’s “Boléro,” only crowned by the entrance of a chorus, which sings “Domine ecce venit populus tuus” (“Lord, behold, your people come”), in a spirit of mounting exultation.

    Though it is by no means film music, its genesis was in Kilar’s research in writing music for Peter Lilienthal’s film, “David” (1979). The composer stumbled across a klezmer motif in a Jewish songbook, and it basically took him over. He dedicated the finished piece to Krzysztof Zanussi, another filmmaker.

    Interestingly, Kilar’s “Exodus” did enjoy a brief vogue in the movies, in trailers, such as the one for “Schindler’s List.”

    You can view a live performance of it here:

    Be sure to stick around for a golf clap from the clergy at the end (except for the guy at the far end of the pew, who seems to have genuinely enjoyed it).


    Marc Chagall, “The Train Crossed the Red Sea” from “Exodus” (1966)

  • Hanukkah Music Lost Chord Festival of Lights

    Hanukkah Music Lost Chord Festival of Lights

    Hanukkah begins at sunset. Kick off the Festival of Lights with a little musical sustenance, in this archived episode of “The Lost Chord,” originally broadcast last December.

    The program begins with David Ludwig’s “Hanukkah Cantata.” Ludwig, who studied with Richard Danielpour, Jennifer Higdon, and Ned Rorem at the Curtis Institute of Music, and John Corigliano at Juilliard, is the nephew of pianist Peter Serkin, the grandson of Rudolf Serkin, and the great-grandson of Adolf Busch. That’s quite a pedigree! The text of his cantata, compiled by Cantor Dan Sklar, is sung in English and Hebrew. The work falls into eight movements, wholly befitting for this eight-day celebration.

    That’s followed by Ludwig Altman’s “Theme and Variations on ‘Ma’oz Tzur,’” the Hanukkah melody also known as “Rock of Ages.” Altman was born in what was once Breslau, Germany (now Wroclaw, Poland). He studied at the University of Breslau, and then at Berlin’s State Academy for Sacred Music. The rise of the National Socialist Party meant that he was restricted to employment in Jewish organizations.

    In 1936, he emigrated to the United States, settling in San Francisco, where he became organist and choral director at Congregation Emanu-El. For over three decades, he was also organist of the San Francisco Symphony. Altman’s variations on a Hanukkah theme are performed by another composer of note, Barbara Harbach, at the console.

    The hour concludes with “A Klezmer Nutcracker” – with apologies to Peter Ilych Tchaikovsky – in a lively recording made by the Boston-based ensemble Shirim. Kazatsky ‘til you dropsky!

    It’s a “sound” foundation for eight days of fried food, sugar, and cheese. Click the link for “Latke Tonic,” music of substance for Hanukkah.

    https://www.wwfm.org/post/lost-chord-december-22-latke-tonic

    Then tune in to “The Lost Chord” this Sunday night at 10:00 EST for more, including Ofer Ben-Amots’ Klezmer Concerto, on “Pieces of Eight.”

    There’s oil to burn, on WWFM – The Classical Network and wwfm.org.

  • PSO Concert Explores Heritage and Identity

    PSO Concert Explores Heritage and Identity

    Four composers featured on the next concert of the Princeton Symphony Orchestra have traveled far, both geographically and genealogically, yet all manage to retain a strong sense of heritage at their core.

    Celebrated clarinetist David Krakauer will join the PSO and its music director, Rossen Milanov, for a program of music rooted in explorations of personal and cultural identity. The program, “Un/Restrained,” will take place at Princeton University’s Richardson Auditorium this Sunday afternoon at 4:00.

    On the concert will be klezmer-infused works by Krakauer, Osvaldo Golijov and Wlad Marhulets – composer. Saad Haddad, Composer will use live processing of acoustic instruments to suggest the microtonal music of his Arabic past.

    Rounding off the afternoon will be Rudolf Barshai’s arrangement of Dmitri Shostakovich’s String Quartet No. 8 into a Chamber Symphony. Shostakovich’s quartet is deeply personal – intense, harried, neurotic, enigmatic, visceral, and unforgettable. It’s also full of veiled self-references, including allusions to his other works, among them a piano trio that quotes a Jewish folk song.

    Read more about this fascinating program in my article in today’s Trenton Times.

    http://www.nj.com/times-entertainment/index.ssf/2017/01/classical_music_david_krakauer.html

  • Days of Awe Music Klezmer on WPRB

    Days of Awe Music Klezmer on WPRB

    Still haven’t had enough? There’s more music on Jewish themes in the 10:00 hour ET, as we continue with our observance of the Days of Awe, with the “Klezmer Rondos” by Paul Schoenfield and a set of dances from “Heritage: Civilization and the Jews” by John Duffy. Get ready to cut a rug – or at least some challah – at WPRB 103.3 FM or online at wprb.com.

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