Tag: New England Conservatory

  • Yunchan Lim Prodigy Turns 20!

    Yunchan Lim Prodigy Turns 20!

    Yunchan Lim is 20 today. 20! Two years ago, Lim became the youngest person ever to win the Van Cliburn International Piano Competition, at the age of 18. Most recent information indicates that he is currently a student at the New England Conservatory of Music, but he’s already playing recitals at Carnegie Hall and appearing as soloist with the world’s great orchestras. He’s not old enough to legally take a drink, but he can play Liszt’s “Transcendental Etudes” like nobody else.

    His Cliburn final round performance of the Rachmaninoff Piano Concerto No. 3 has been viewed on YouTube over 14 million times.

    But nobody cares about classical music, right?

    Happy birthday, Yunchan Lim!

  • Gunther Schuller A Third Stream Pioneer

    Gunther Schuller A Third Stream Pioneer

    He was a composer, a performer, a conductor, an educator, and an administrator. At 15, he played French horn professionally with the American Ballet Theatre. The next year, he became principal horn of the Cincinnati Symphony. Then he joined the Metropolitan Orchestra, where he played for well over a decade.

    In the ‘60s and ‘70s, he was president of the New England Conservatory. He was also involved with Tanglewood, the summer home of the Boston Symphony, for over 20 years, serving as its artistic director from 1970 to 1984.

    He was awarded the Pulitzer Prize for Music in 1994.

    In addition, he cofounded the Modern Jazz Society. He recorded with Miles Davis. He edited and gave the premiere of Charles Mingus’ final work. He wrote two major books on the history of jazz. To describe what he saw as “a new genre of music, located about halfway between classical music and jazz,” he coined the term “Third Stream.”

    An American polymath, he was clearly a man who just loved music.

    This Sunday night on “The Lost Chord,” we honor Gunther Schuller, who died on June 21, at the age of 89.

    We’ll hear his Bassoon Concerto from 1982. The work, more of a five-movement suite, manages to synthesize atonality, lyricism, blues and Baroque, with some sly quotations from “The Magic Flute,” “The Rite of Spring” and “Peter and the Wolf” along the way.

    Schuller also loved the music of Scott Joplin and did much to contribute to the Joplin revival of the 1970s. He founded the New England Ragtime Ensemble, with which he recorded some bestselling albums of Joplin rags. We’ll hear highlights from Joplin’s opera , “Treemonisha,” which Schuller orchestrated for a revival at Houston Grand Opera.

    I hope you’ll join me as we salute Third Stream artist Gunther Schuller, on “A Midsummer Night’s Stream,” tonight at 10 ET, with a repeat Wednesday evening at 6; or that you’ll listen to it later as a webcast at http://www.wwfm.org.

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