I’ve been trying to finish up production on one of my radio shows today, so I haven’t had time to post about Juneteenth. Not that I feel it’s necessarily my place to do so anyway. Looking over what I posted about it last year, I find my thoughts are pretty much the same. I wish everyone who celebrates the very best, but I don’t want to come across as that silly white man who inadvertently crashes a private party. There are already plenty of other ethnic holidays for white people to behave foolishly. I do, however, feel qualified to offer a few links to music by Black composers, which I do with the best intentions. See the bottom of last year’s post. The quality of the music has not changed. It doesn’t matter what color you are in the creation or acknowledgment of beauty. Beautiful music is a gift to everyone, and gratitude is a beautiful thing. Happy Juneteenth to those who celebrate.
Tag: Radio Show
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Producing a Light Music Radio Show
You might think, bon vivant that I am, that a light music show would be something I can simply toss off, but “Sweetness and Light” is actually the most difficult of my three shows to produce. Even though the repertoire can often be a little on the frivolous side (by design), with so many recordings played in an hour, there are a lot of moving parts.
First, I have to settle on a theme. That’s by far the easiest. Then I have to figure out what to play. Even within a theme, I want to keep it diverse, and I want the pieces to be of different lengths, so that, musically, it’s pleasing to listen to, and I’m not breaking in with chatter every three minutes. It’s possible to play six or seven pieces an hour on a well-constructed show and to plan everything so as to keep the talk fairly unobtrusive. By extension, the musical selections often have to be shuffled until I feel I’ve achieved the optimal sequence. In the end, I always wind up with a lot of extra material, and plenty to reshelve, hopefully to remember for another time.
One of the great frustrations of brainstorming repertoire can be turning things up through searches on the internet, falling in love with a certain performance or a piece of music, and realizing that not only do I not have it in my collection, but discovering that it doesn’t seem to be available anywhere as a digital download. Perhaps it was only ever issued on vinyl, decades ago, in another country. C’est la vie! In the end, I just have to let it go, with a touch of regret and the understanding that my listeners will never know what they missed. But it is none the easier for that!
On the bright side, I sometimes turn up related gems that I had no idea ever existed. Putting together a show about birds and birdsong took me to some pretty stratospheric places. Listen to this 1959 recording of the “Nightingale Waltz” from Carl Zeller’s operetta “Der Vogelhändler” (“The Bird Seller”), with Belgian soprano Lise Rollan – totally new to me, and totally unavailable as a download – and you’ll understand why I fell instantly in love.
It was hard for me to give up the search, but in the end, I had to “settle” for the considerable charms of Elisabeth Schumann.
If you liked that, perhaps you will enjoy this 1938 film, “Nanon,” with “the German Nightingale,” lyric coloratura soprano Erna Sack. Another happy discovery.
Thankfully, a love for music is a lifelong passion that is never truly spent!
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Regal Radio Verdi Delibes & More on KWAX
I don’t know what got into me. I knew it was Presidents Day weekend, and still somehow I went with the autocrats. Must have been a Freudian slip. Whatever the motivation, this week on “Sweetness and Light,” we don’t need ermine or orbs and sceptres to vicariously live like kings.
Not when we can enjoy regal music by Giuseppe Verdi, Léo Delibes, Sir Arthur Bliss, Percy Grainger, Emmanuel Chabrier, Adolphe Adam, and Henry VIII.
This country may have been founded on principles that rejected such things, but heavy is the head that bears the burden of coming up with a good theme.
I spare you the royal pain! Absolute power delights absolutely on “Sweetness and Light,” this Saturday morning at 11:00 EST/8:00 PST, exclusively on KWAX, the radio station of the University of Oregon!
Stream it, wherever you are, at the link:
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Vaughan Williams Birthday Radio Celebration
Ralph Vaughan Williams was born on this date in 1872. Since he happens to be one of my favorite composers, I couldn’t be more delighted that the anniversary happens to coincide with one my radio shows. I hope you’ll join me this morning on “Sweetness and Light” for what I guarantee will be a lovingly-curated Vaughan Williams miscellany.
This will not be the usual collection of greatest hits (although we’ll enjoy one or two of those, as well). Among the rarer works will be the “Bucolic Suite” of 1900, when the composer was still feeling his way toward his mature style; also the “Stratford Suite,” made up of incidental music RVW provided for a number of the Shakespeare plays during the brief period he was music director at Stratford-on-Avon (1912-13). If you’re a Vaughan Williams fanatic, I’m sure you’ll recognize some of the melodies, derived from early music and folk song, many of which the composer employed in other, better-known works. The “Stratford Suite” appears on a new release, “Royal Throne of Kings,” chock-full of Vaughan Williams’ uncollected Shakespeare music, on the Albion Records label, the recording branch of the Ralph Vaughan Williams Society.
Some of the music will be dreamy and luminous and some of it will be boisterous and earthy. You’re always safe with Uncle “Rafe.”
Pour yourself a cuppa and join me for “Sweetness and Light,” this Saturday morning at 11:00 EDT/8:00 PDT, exclusively on KWAX, the radio station of the University of Oregon!
Stream it wherever you are at the link:
PHOTO: Vaughan Williams takes a slug from the mug
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Sweetness and Light Circus Radio Show
This week on “Sweetness and Light,” with summer winding down, we’re off to the circus.
Are there any circuses anymore? Beyond Cirque du Soleil, I mean? Ringling Brothers and Barnum & Bailey Circus gave their farewell tour back in 2017. We’re too enlightened now to tolerate closely caged or potentially abused exotic animals, and quite rightly so.
Still, for those of us of a certain age, there remains a certain nostalgia for the circus, with its parade, and its Big Top, and the noise and color and smells and scary clowns.
I’ll be presenting for your wonderment and enjoyment an electrifying musical menagerie. There will be circus marches galore, a waltz long associated with the trapeze, a suite of character pieces for piano, a selection from an Academy Award winning film, not one, but TWO ballets (one conceived for baby elephants), and a delightful song by Charles Ives. You’ll practically smell the popcorn and cotton candy and hay and elephant droppings!
I can’t say it will be the greatest show on earth, but it’s bound to stir some memories for a bygone era of American tent circus.
Ladies and gentlemen! Boys and girls! Children of all ages! Join me for me in the center ring for “Sweetness and Light.” I’ll be donning the telltale top hat and tailcoat, this Saturday morning at 11:00 EDT/8:00 PDT, exclusively on KWAX, the radio station of the University of Oregon!
Stream it, wherever you are, at the link:
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