Tag: Picture Perfect

  • WWFM Webcasts Silk Road & Didjeridoo Now Online

    WWFM Webcasts Silk Road & Didjeridoo Now Online

    Crouching Tiger, Hidden Webcast.

    Last weekend’s specialty shows have now been posted. These include “Silk Road Adventures” (on “Picture Perfect”) and “Didya Hear the One About the Didjeridoo” (on “The Lost Chord”).

    Apologies for the delay. After my resolution to have both shows up on the station website (wwfm.org) by Monday mid-afternoon, with all the Mozart membership business earlier in the week, it completely escaped my mind.

    Here again are the links:

    https://www.wwfm.org/programs/picture-perfect-ross-amico

    https://www.wwfm.org/programs/lost-chord-ross-amico

    Select the show of your choice and click on the “Listen” button.

  • Lost Chord & Picture Perfect Archives Updated

    Lost Chord & Picture Perfect Archives Updated

    I am happy to announce, on the heels of having caught up yesterday on my “Picture Perfect” webcasts, I have now uploaded all my past-due programs of “The Lost Chord.”

    Everything should be up to date, on the station website, and ready for your listening pleasure.

    You can scroll through the offerings after you follow the link below. Look for the “Listen” button once you click on an individual show.

    Going forward, both of my recorded programs, “Picture Perfect” and “The Lost Chord,” should be uploaded on Monday afternoon, probably around 3 p.m., following their weekend broadcast.

    Please let me know if you encounter any difficulties. Again, thank you for your patience. I was lost, but now I am found!

    https://www.wwfm.org/programs/lost-chord-ross-amico

    I have also located the audio for the October 11th “Picture Perfect,” focusing on the films of Brian De Palma. So that’s been uploaded too, to the “Picture Perfect” archive.

    https://www.wwfm.org/programs/picture-perfect-ross-amico

  • Picture Perfect Webcasts Now Online!

    Picture Perfect Webcasts Now Online!

    I spent my afternoon air shift, when not on microphone, uploading all my past-due “Picture Perfect” webcasts – going all the way back to the spring! Clearly, I have been less than perfect about following through.

    At any rate, they should all be up there now, on the station website, available for your listening edification. All except the Brian De Palma show that aired on October 11. I still have to locate the audio for that one… Also, last year’s Oscar party, a three-hour extravaganza, broadcast on February 22, was done live. There is no recording.

    You can scroll through everything when you follow the link below. You’ll find the “Listen” button when you click on the individual shows.

    Please let me know if you encounter any difficulties. Thank you for your patience, my long-suffering fans and fellow admirers of film music! I hope to get the past-due files for “The Lost Chord” up tomorrow.

    https://www.wwfm.org/programs/picture-perfect-ross-amico

  • Hitchcock’s Harpsichords Crime Scores

    Hitchcock’s Harpsichords Crime Scores

    In trying to convey the tone he was looking for in his latest motion picture, director Alfred Hitchcock stated drolly to his composer, “Mr. Williams, murder can be fun.” With this in mind, John Williams, who had just won an Academy Award for his music to “Jaws,” turned to the harpsichord.

    Because of its use in mysteries and thrillers, the harpsichord – in context, a fusty-sounding instrument – had taken on a certain mischievous quality.

    This week on “Picture Perfect,” we’ll hear selections from “Family Plot” (1976), a neglected score from the dawn of Williams’ widespread popularity, alongside Ron Goodwin’s music for “Murder She Said” (1961), the first of Margaret Rutherford’s Miss Marple films; John Addison’s “Sleuth” (1972), an adaptation of Anthony Shaffer’s play, with Sir Laurence Olivier and Michael Caine engaged in a perilous battle of wits; and André Previn’s “Dead Ringer” (1964), starring a post-“Baby Jane” Bette Davis as dysfunctional twins whose fraught relationship leads to murder.

    The order has been placed for ham on wry. Join me for an hour of wicked fun with arch harpsichords, on “Picture Perfect” – music for the movies – this Friday evening at 6:00 EST, on WWFM – The Classical Network and wwfm.org.

  • WWFM Gratitude Gala: A Haunting & Future Support

    WWFM Gratitude Gala: A Haunting & Future Support

    For anyone who missed it, here I am, haunting the bar at last night’s WWFM Gratitude Gala – to my knowledge, the only documented proof of my attendance. (That’s coffee in the cup, by the way.)

    If you are a supporter of the station, thank you. I met some very nice people and made a few contacts that may allow me to produce further installments of “Picture Perfect.”

    If you think it’s not in your budget to contribute enough to make a difference as an underwriter, we are now offering the option of supporting our specialty shows as part of a consortium. That means the station will act as matchmaker, pooling donations from multiple sources in order to fund individual programs.

    If that sounds like something you would like to do, to spruce up and ensure the future of your favorite shows, contact the station at 609-587-8989, during business hours – be sure to specify “Picture Perfect” or “The Lost Chord,” if that is your intention – or private message me here.

    It was great fun to jawbone with George Marriner Maull, of the Discovery Orchestra and “Inside Music,” and Joseph Horowitz and Angel-Gil Ordóñez, of the PostClassical Ensemble. It was also good to reconnect with some of the other hosts I myself seldom see.

    Of course, nothing eclipses a nice compliment, of which I gratefully received several. I am always deeply appreciative, humbled even, by sincere praise from obviously engaged listeners. Last night, one of them even sang the theme from John Williams’ “Dracula” for me. That’s NOT one of his better-known scores. Thanks to all those who attended.


    PHOTO: Classic Ross Amico, all blurred-out like Sasquatch

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Aaron Copland (92) Beethoven (95) Composer (114) Film Music (123) Film Score (143) Film Scores (255) Halloween (94) John Williams (187) KWAX (229) Leonard Bernstein (101) Marlboro Music Festival (125) Movie Music (138) Opera (202) Philadelphia Orchestra (89) Picture Perfect (174) Princeton Symphony Orchestra (106) Radio (87) Ralph Vaughan Williams (85) Ross Amico (244) Roy's Tie-Dye Sci-Fi Corner (290) The Classical Network (101) The Lost Chord (268) Vaughan Williams (103) WPRB (396) WWFM (881)

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