Tag: Marlboro Music

  • Vivaldi Bach & More Classical Music Today

    Vivaldi Bach & More Classical Music Today

    It’s Antonio Vivaldi’s birthday! I hope you’ll join me today in celebrating “The Red Priest,” alongside Bernard Haitink, Carlos Surinach, and Alexander Goedicke.

    We’ll also enjoy chamber music by Felix Mendelssohn and Leoš Janáček, on this week’s “Music from Marlboro” tonight at 6.

    Of course, we’re celebrating Bach all month long. Tune in this afternoon to hear Bach’s reimagining of a Vivaldi concerto, and some of his own music transcribed most ingeniously by Johannes Brahms.

    Have you become one of the Bach 500 yet? Call us now, and help us cancel fundraising on March 21st, Bach’s birthday. The number is 1-888-232-1212. Or join us online at wwfm.org. 500 donations in any amount will result in our being able to listen to just Bach’s music on his birthday.

    Do it now! Then enjoy the programming you’ve made possible, from 4 to 7 p.m. EST. Thank you for your support of WWFM – The Classical Network and wwfm.org.

  • Marlboro Music Change Beethoven Tchaikovsky Sextets

    Marlboro Music Change Beethoven Tchaikovsky Sextets

    MAY I HAVE YOUR ATTENTION, PLEASE!

    Last minute programming change for this week’s “Music from Marlboro:”

    Due to circumstances beyond our control, we will not be able to bring you Brahms’ Piano Quintet in F minor, as previously announced. In its place, we’ll lose ourselves in wild abandon over Beethoven’s Sextet for Winds in E-flat major, Op. 71, and Tchaikovsky’s Sextet for Strings in D minor, “Souvenir de Florence.”

    I hope you’ll join me for the joy of sextets 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

  • Marlboro Music Winds & Composer Birthdays

    This week on “Music from Marlboro,” we’re gone with the winds – woodwind instruments, that is. Tune in at 6 p.m. EDT for the Bassoon Quartet, Op. 40, No. 3, by Franz Danzi and the Quintet for Piano and Winds by Beethoven.

    For the remainder of the late afternoon, we’ll celebrate the birthdays today of composers Elisabetta Brusa, Mario Castelnuovo-Tedesco, Reginald De Koven, and Grigoras Dinicu, conductor Sixten Ehrling, and pianist Garrick Ohlsson.

    Hang on tight, from 4 to 7 p.m. EDT, on WWFM – The Classical Network and wwfm.org.

  • Debussy’s Enduring Quartet Music from Marlboro

    Debussy’s Enduring Quartet Music from Marlboro

    Claude Debussy may have died 100 years ago (March 28, 1918), but his music hasn’t aged a bit. On this week’s “Music from Marlboro,” we celebrate Debussy’s birthday (August 22, 1862) – a more festive occasion, I think – with a performance of his String Quartet in G minor.

    Debussy’s quartet, composed in 1893, was very much of its time, but also ahead of its time. Its flights of fancy and free association mirror currents in contemporaneous French painting and poetry; but when it comes to change, music often has a tendency to be “la plus que lente.”

    Debussy’s bold rejection of German academicism likely caused more than a few whiskers to bristle. Ernest Chausson, its dedicatee, had personal reservations about the piece, and the premiere, given by the Ysaÿe Quartet, received mixed reviews. Poetry and sensuality dominate, with a kind of cyclic structure, reliant on a recurring motto, declared at the very outset, standing in for the rules of classical harmony. Wrote the composer, “Any sounds, in any combination, and in any succession, are henceforth free to be used in a musical continuity.”

    Debussy disliked the term “Impressionism,” by the way. Quel dommage!

    We’ll hear Debussy’s one-and-only quartet, performed by Marlboro musicians – violinists Joseph Lin and Judy Kang, violist Richard O’Neill, and cellist David Soyer – on tour at the Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum in Boston in 2002. For a complete schedule of this year’s tours, including stops in New York and Philadelphia, look online at marlboromusic.org.

    Maurice Ravel’s Piano Trio will be included on a Marlboro tour in March, alongside music by Haydn and Kodály. That’s a long time to wait, n’est-ce pas, so let’s give it a listen this evening, shall we?

    Ravel, who also composed a single string quartet, very much under the influence of Debussy, finally sat down to write his Piano Trio over the summer of 1914. By that point, it had already been gestating for at least six years. Progress was slow, but when war was declared in August, Ravel put on a burst of speed so that he could do his patriotic duty and enlist in the French army. He was rejected from the infantry and the air force on account of his diminutive size and precarious health, but he learned to drive a truck and cared for the wounded at Verdun and the Western Front.

    From 2016 Marlboro Music Festival, we’ll hear a performance with pianist Bruno Canino, violinist Robyn Bollinger, and cellist Jonah Ellsworth.

    I’m hoping to leave some good Impressions, on the next “Music from Marlboro,” this Wednesday evening at 6:00 EDT.

    Tune in a little early, beginning at 4 p.m., to enjoy more Debussy – alongside representative selections by fellow birthday celebrants Pierre Danican Philidor, Sir Alexander Mackenzie, and Karlheinz Stockhausen (gussied up somewhat by Pulitzer Prize winner Caroline Shaw) – on WWFM – The Classical Network and wwfm.org.

    Marlboro School of Music and Festival: Official Page


    PHOTO: Debussy at “La mer”

  • Marlboro Music: Schumann & Brazilian Composers

    Marlboro Music: Schumann & Brazilian Composers

    This week’s “Music from Marlboro” serves up a Robert Schumann sandwich on Brazilian bread. The hour will open with “Five Songs for Voice and Bassoon” by Francisco Mignone, and conclude with the String Quartet No. 6 by Heitor Villa-Lobos. In between will be the “Andante and Variations” by Schumann, scored for the rather peculiar combination of two pianos, two cellos and horn. The husband and wife team of Claude Frank and Lilian Kallir perform.

    I hope you’ll join me for more selections from the Marlboro Music archive, this Wednesday evening at 6:00 EDT, on WWFM – The Classical Network and wwfm.org.


    Marlboro School of Music and Festival: Official Page

    PHOTO: Schumann pianists Claude Frank and Lilian Kallir, married at Marlboro in 1959 (with pianist Eugene Istomin, their best man, standing left)

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