Tag: La Gioconda

  • Ponchielli Dance of the Hours & Allan Sherman

    Ponchielli Dance of the Hours & Allan Sherman

    Hello Muddah, Hello Fadduh…

    Today is the birthday of Amilcare Ponchielli. It’s possible you may not know his name, but you certainly know his music, thanks to Allan Sherman and Walt Disney.

    Of his ten operas, only “La Gioconda” (1876) maintains a toehold in the repertoire. It’s certainly not for want of trying. Ponchielli swung for the fences, with a large orchestra in the pit and impeccable orchestration. He influenced composers of the rising generation, including Giacomo Puccini, Pietro Mascagni, and Umberto Giordano. But nothing outside of “Gioconda” has really stuck.

    Fortunately, the opera has its share of memorable moments, including the contralto aria “Voce de donna o d’angelo” (a.k.a. the Rosary song), the tenor romanza “Cielo e mar,” a duet for tenor and baritone, “Enzo Grimaldo, Principe di Santafior,” and the soprano aria “Suicidio!”

    However, far and way the most famous music is the ballet from Act III, known as “Dance of the Hours.” The opera is a tragedy (drawn from Victor Hugo), but it’s impossible now to take any of it seriously, since one can’t help but think of ostriches, elephants, alligators, and hippopotami.

    Hey, there’s no such thing as bad publicity. Happy birthday, Amilcare Ponchielli!


    Dance of the Hours

    Pavarotti sings “Cielo e mar”

    Callas sings “Suicidio!”

    The charming Quartet for Winds with Piano Accompaniment

    Muti conducts an orchestral work, “Elegia”

    “Hello Muddah, Hello Fadduh”

    Disney’s “Fantasia” (excerpt)

  • Ponchielli Perlman and Rediscovered Mozart

    Ponchielli Perlman and Rediscovered Mozart

    Hello Muddah, Hello Fadduh…

    Today is the birthday of Amilcare Ponchielli. It’s possible you may not know his name, but you certainly know his music, thanks to Allan Sherman and Walt Disney.

    Join me this afternoon at 4:00 sharp for his most famous piece, “The Dance of the Hours” from the opera “La Gioconda.” We’ll also have a chance to hear his charming Quartet for Winds with Piano.

    Then in the 5:00 hour, among our featured works, we’ll have the so-called “Odense” Symphony, which generated a lot of buzz in the 1980s, when the rediscovered piece (uncovered in Odense, Denmark) was thought to be the creation of one Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart.

    We’ll also celebrate the birthday today of Itzhak Perlman. At some point during the late afternoon, I would like to play his recording of Karl Goldmark’s Violin Concerto in A Minor. I don’t think it has been heard on the station for a little while. We’ll also enjoy a Brahms violin sonata in the 6:00 hour.

    But it will be a riot of ostriches, elephants, gators, and hippopotami to begin, as I’ll be doing the heavy lifting from 4 to 7 p.m. EDT, on WWFM – The Classical Network and at wwfm.org.

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