Tag: Lucia di Lammermoor

  • Donizetti Birthday Opera Swordfight!

    Donizetti Birthday Opera Swordfight!

    More swordfights in opera, please!

    On Gaetano Donizetti’s 225th birthday, here’s Mario Filippeschi as Edgardo in “Lucia di Lammermoor,” taking on multiple opponents with ease. He even pushes over a candelabra.

    It all starts with “Chi mi frena”:

    The film adaptation was made in 1946. On this particular print (likely transferred from video), the soundtrack is a little out of alignment. A minor distraction. Why is it not available on DVD?

    Put this guy in a room with Errol Flynn and Stewart Granger!

    Here’s the complete film, a little darker, but not as fuzzy. The clip above starts around 1 hour and 1 minute in.

    There are no subtitles, unfortunately. But isn’t it about time you brushed up on your Italian, anyway?

    Buon compleanno, Donizetti!

  • Fascism, Film Scores & “Lucia” Highlights

    Fascism, Film Scores & “Lucia” Highlights

    An Italian Jewish composer who fled fascism in Europe. A conductor who refused to apologize for his “robust leadership style,” and instead opted to resign from the Swedish Royal Opera. Both wound up in the United States.

    Mario Castelnuovo-Tedesco settled in Hollywood, where he continued to compose concert music for Andres Segovia and Jascha Heiftez and embarked on a side career of writing scores for films like “And Then There Were None” (1945) and “The Loves of Carmen” (1948).

    Sixten Ehrling took over the reins of the Detroit Symphony Orchestra from departing principal conductor Paul Paray. He also taught at the Juilliard School, where his pupils included Myung-Whun Chung, JoAnn Falletta, and Andrew Litton.

    I hope you’ll join me this afternoon, as we celebrate the birthdays of Castelnuovo-Tedesco and Ehrling, alongside that of American pianist Garrick Ohlsson.

    At 5:00, I’ll be joined by Jerry Kalstein and Dora Schnur of Boheme Opera NJ, who will tell us a bit about the company’s upcoming production of “Lucia di Lammermoor.” “Lucia” will be performed at The College of New Jersey’s TCNJ-Kendall Hall on Friday at 8 p.m. and Sunday at 3 p.m. To bookend our conversation, we’ll enjoy a couple selections from Donizetti’s opera, including the famous Act II sextet.

    Round out your workday and enliven your afternoon commute with great music from a variety of sources, from 4 to 7 p.m. EDT on WWFM – The Classical Network and wwfm.org.


    Act I “Lucia” finale: Chi mi fren-etic

  • Haydn Anniversary Celebration on WPRB

    Haydn Anniversary Celebration on WPRB

    Tomorrow morning, on the eve of the anniversary of the birth of Franz Joseph Haydn (on March 31, 1732), we’ll anticipate the great day with music inspired by Haydn, music by Haydn’s colleagues, and rarely-heard works by Haydn himself.

    Other composers will include Johannes Brahms, Norman Dello Joio, Marcel Grandjany, Roman Hoffstetter, Anton Kraft, Andre Previn, Maurice Ravel, Johann Peter Salomon, Alfred Schnittke, Ananda Sukarlan, and Joseph Weigl, Haydn’s godson. We’ll even have a piano concerto by Haydn Wood, who was named for Haydn by his music-mad parents, though they pronounced it “Hayden.”

    At 10:00, I’ll be joined by members of Boheme Opera NJ, who will talk a little bit about the company’s upcoming production of “Lucia di Lammermoor,” which will be performed at The College of New Jersey’s TCNJ-Kendall Hall on April 7 at 8 p.m. and April 9 at 3 p.m., so we might just hear a selection or two by Donizetti, as well.

    Otherwise, it will be a prolonged game of Haydn seek, tomorrow morning from 6 to 11 EDT, on WPRB 103.3 FM and wprb.com. Join me for a full morning of hidden Haydn, on Classic Ross Amico.

  • Opera Swordfights Edgardo vs Many

    Opera Swordfights Edgardo vs Many

    More swordfights in opera, please!

    Here’s Mario Filippeschi as Edgardo in “Lucia di Lammermoor,” taking on multiple opponents with ease. He even pushes over a candelabra.

    It all starts with “Chi mi frena”:

    The film adaptation was made in 1946. On this particular print (likely transferred from video), the soundtrack is a little out of alignment. A minor distraction. Why is this not available on DVD?

    Put this guy in a room with Errol Flynn and Stewart Granger!

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