Tag: Presidential Music

  • Presidential Music for Presidents Day

    Presidential Music for Presidents Day

    Hail to the Chiefs!

    I hope you’ll join me today on The Classical Network for my annual trip to the Hall of Presidents. We’ll hear works inspired by Thomas Jefferson, Chester A. Arthur, Theodore Roosevelt, John F. Kennedy, Richard Nixon, and of course Washington and Lincoln.

    This year, there will be a few new additions to the assembly of animatronic executives.

    Abraham Lincoln inspired more music than can be crammed down a stovepipe hat. Though I already devoted an afternoon to our 16th president on his actual birthday (February 12), I’ve since unearthed a major work I haven’t played before: “Letters from Lincoln,” by Michael Daugherty. As the title suggests, Daugherty builds his character portrait of the Illinois Rail-Splitter using the president’s own words. We’ll hear it sung by Thomas Hampson.

    Composer Victoria Bond has written four “portraits of presidential character.” “Soul of a Nation” was released last year on an Albany Records compact disc. Each of the orchestral pieces that make up the album includes parts for narrator and instrumental soloist. The title track incorporates a violin for Thomas Jefferson, “The Indispensible Man” a clarinet for Franklin Delano Roosevelt, “The Crowded Hours” a trumpet for Theodore Roosevelt, and “Pater Patriae” a flute for George Washington. I’ll select one of these for airplay this afternoon.

    Once again, we’ll celebrate Washington (born February 22) with Virgil Thomson’s naïf ballet “Parson Weems and the Cherry Tree,” a Bicentennial commission, George Antheil’s rousing concert overture, “McKonkey’s Ferry (Washington at Trenton),” and John Lampkin’s “George Washington Slept Here.”

    To commemorate an American president closer to our own time, Peter Lieberson composed his “Remembering JFK” for the 50th anniversary of the Kennedy inauguration. The moving narration, compiled from the president’s own words will be delivered by Richard Dreyfuss. Where have all the statesmen gone?

    And to get us ready for The Princeton Festival’s production of John Adams’ “Nixon in China” in June, we’ll listen to “The Chairman Dances.”

    As an added curiosity, Chester A. Arthur disliked “Hail to the Chief” so intensely that he asked John Philip Sousa to write a replacement anthem. We’ll find time for that too.

    There won’t be any junk mail for you to sift through, and you can’t go to the bank. You might as well get those white sales out of the way early. You’ll want to be back in time to settle in for music inspired by the presidents for #PresidentsDay, from 4 to 7 p.m. EST, on WWFM – The Classical Network and wwfm.org.

  • Lincoln & Washington: Presidential Music on WPRB

    Lincoln & Washington: Presidential Music on WPRB

    “You cannot escape the responsibility of tomorrow by evading it today.”

    Taking to heart the wisdom of Abraham Lincoln, I’ll attempt to break with tradition by actually planning in advance my radio show for tomorrow on WPRB.

    February 12 is Lincoln’s birthday. We will honor our 16th president and look ahead to the three-day weekend with music inspired by Lincoln and also George Washington (whose birthday is February 22), for whom, after all, the holiday, known in the colloquial as Presidents Day, was coined.

    A conflict arises in that while combing my collection I’ve also come across a number of interesting pieces written for other presidents, such as JFK, Nixon, Franklin Delano Roosevelt, and Chester A. Arthur. Do I include them, or do I follow a strict Lincoln-Washington regimen? Decisions, decisions. A house divided against itself cannot plan!

    If it comes down to an Iowa-style coin toss, one thing is certain: you can still count on plenty of presidential music, with works like George Antheil’s “McKonkey’s Ferry (Washington in Trenton),” Roy Harris’ Symphony No. 6 “Gettysburg,” Virgil Thomson’s “Parson Weems and the Cherry Tree,” John Lampkin’s “George Washington Slept Here,” Paul Turok’s “Lincoln and Liberty,” and selections from John Williams’ score for the Steven Spielberg film, “Lincoln.”

    We’ll be doing our best to get you in the mood for the white sales, tomorrow morning from 6 to 11 ET, on WPRB 103.3 FM and at wprb.com. You can fool all of the people some of the time, and some of the people all of time, but you cannot fool all of the people all of the time, on Classic Ross Amico.


    To tide you over, here are a couple of links to extremely rare symphonies inspired by Lincoln, neither of which, to my knowledge, has ever received a commercial recording:

    Daniel Gregory Mason’ Symphony No. 3 “Lincoln” (1936)

    Jaromir Weinberger’s “Lincoln Symphony” (1941)

    Yes, that’s the same Weinberger who composed “Schwanda the Bagpiper!”

    #AbrahamLincoln

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