I hope you’re enjoying the show this morning. At 9:00, we’ll have a special visitor. Benedikt von Schroder will drop by to fill us in on upcoming events at The Princeton Festival, which runs through June 25. Then it’s back to spinning records until 11:00, as we continue with Vinyl Week, on WPRB 103.3 FM and wprb.com.
Tag: Princeton Festival
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Rare Vinyl Finds on WPRB This Week
I’ve been lifting heavy boxes and inhaling lungs full of dust mites so you don’t have to. Join me tomorrow morning on WPRB, when I’ll be making my contribution to Vinyl Week, with a full morning played from honest-to-goodness, old-fashioned records.
I’ve been digging deep this time, and I’ve accumulated a stack of Howard Hanson’s Mercury recordings that never made it to compact disc. I’ve also struck a rich vein of Louisville First Edition Records. There will be music by Mexican microtonalist Julian Carrillo, almost entirely absent from the current catalogue. Also Richard Mohaupt, whose recordings are wholly out-of-print. I have to play some Max Butting, just because I’ve got so much of it. Again, amazingly, there’s only a single disc of his works still in print. In addition, I’ve got a symphony by Romanian composer Sigismond Toduta, issued on authentic Romanian vinyl.
We’ll hear Norman Dello Joio’s “New York Profiles,” released on a 10-inch red vinyl LP (because I’ve never programmed anything from 10-inch red vinyl). Somehow, I came into the possession of one of Marc-André Hamelin’s records – not one of his recordings mind you, but an LP formerly in his collection – of Hans Werner Henze’s “Muses of Sicily.” If it was rejected by Hamelin (whose taste I respect immensely), then it’s good enough for me! I’ll be giving it a spin tomorrow.
Many of these records were distributed solely overseas, with liner notes in Czech, German, Portuguese, Romanian, Swedish, and Cyrillic. This ought to be interesting.
I’m particularly excited for the chance to hear John Addison’s Concerto for Trumpet, Strings and Percussion. Addison is principally remembered as a composer of quirky film scores like those for “Tom Jones” and “Sleuth.” This Louisville record, which I’ve never listened to, looks to be a pristine copy.
On top of all that, I’ll have a couple of special guests into the studio. At 9:00, I’ll be joined by Benedikt von Schroder from The Princeton Festival. He’ll fill us in on the rest of the season, which runs through June 25. Then, at 10:00, soprano Rochelle Ellis will be by to tell us about a performance of Brahms’ “A German Requiem,” which will take place at Princeton University’s Richardson Auditorium on Friday, the centerpiece of Lyn Ransom’s farewell concert after 30 years as artistic director of VOICES Chorale. (Princeton Festival artistic director Richard Tang Yuk will be taking over from her next season.)
I hope you’ll join me for some rare LP discoveries, or perhaps a reunion or two with some long lost friends, this Thursday morning from 6 to 11 EDT, on WPRB 103.3 FM and wprb.com. I’ll be giving you the needle, on Classic Ross Amico.
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Peter Grimes at Princeton Festival
“Write what you know” is the frequently dispensed advice to young writers. It could just as easily apply to composers, especially if the composer happens to be Benjamin Britten.
Britten was born in a Suffolk fishing port in 1913. The sights and sounds of the sea were in his blood. Powerful musical evocations of the sea pervade his opera, “Peter Grimes,” which was given its premiere in 1945.
Additionally, the burden of adhering to his principles as a conscientious objector during the war and a lifelong struggle to remain to true to himself as a homosexual in an intolerant world likely informed his sympathetic portrayal of a tortured outsider hounded by an insular coastal community.
Britten’s emotionally complex masterpiece is this year’s opera offering from The Princeton Festival. Performances will take place at McCarter Theatre Center’s Matthews Theatre on Saturday at 8 p.m., June 23 at 7:30 p.m., and June 26 at 3 p.m.
Discounting the popular (though lighter-weight) collaborations of W.S. Gilbert & Sir Arthur Sullivan, “Peter Grimes” was the most successful opera to emerge from England in the 250 years since the death of Henry Purcell in 1695. “Grimes” is worlds away from “H.M.S. Pinafore.”
Read more about the opera and the Princeton Festival’s exciting new production in my interview with stage director Steven LaCosse in today’s Trenton Times:
http://www.nj.com/times-entertainment/index.ssf/2016/06/classical_music_peter_grimes_a.html
Britten’s masterful “Four Sea Interludes” from “Peter Grimes”:
PHOTO: Britten at Aldeburgh, the Suffolk coastal town where he founded his festival of music and the arts in 1948
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Sea Music on WPRB: Whitman to Peter Grimes
“Behold, the sea itself.
And on its limitless, heaving breast, the ships…”So writes Walt Whitman in his poem “A Song for All Seas, All Ships,” from “Sea Drift,” one of the sections of “Leaves of Grass.” Contrast Whitman’s expansive outlook and largeness of spirit with the cruel insularity of Benjamin Britten’s “Peter Grimes,” and you have a sense of the emotional range of this morning’s playlist on WPRB, as we present five hours of music related to the sea.
“Peter Grimes,” this year’s opera offering from The Princeton Festival, opens Saturday night at 8:00 at McCarter Theatre Center, for a run of three performances. We’ll be joined on-air at 10 a.m. today by stage director Steven LaCosse, who will tell us a little bit about the production, which is being built from the ground up and will be wholly unique to the Princeton Festival. We’ll also listen to some excerpts from the opera.
The rest of the morning will capture the many moods of the sea, with evocative music inspired by “Moby Dick,” the poetry of Whitman, the sea god Neptune, RMS Titanic, mermaids, pirates and sea shanties.
What shall we do with the drunken sailor? Listen in from 6 to 11 EDT on WPRB 103.3 FM and at wprb.com. We’re always full of creative solutions, on Classic Ross Amico.
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