Tag: Ross Amico

  • Vaughan Williams Special on WPRB This Week

    Vaughan Williams Special on WPRB This Week

    Get ready for the old switcheroo!

    Tomorrow is Yom Kippur, so Marvin Rosen and I will be switching up on WPRB. For this week only, Classic Ross Amico will be heard on Wednesday, beginning at 6 a.m., and Marvin’s Classical Discoveries will be heard on Thursday, beginning at 5:30.

    I hope you’ll join me tomorrow, as October 12 is the birthday of one of my favorite composers, Ralph Vaughan Williams. The widely held perception of RVW as a large, rumpled, bushy-eyebrowed bear-of-a-man roaming the English countryside in search of folk material will be offset somewhat as we hear some of his lesser-played symphonies, in fabulous, under-the-radar performances.

    Don’t expect the same old, same old. Sure, there will be plenty of the pastoral stuff we all know and love, but I will be more inclined to play the underexposed “Charterhouse Suite” or “Household Music” on Welsh hymn tunes than, say, the “Fantasia on a Theme by Thomas Tallis” or “The Lark Ascending” – lest it be in a moment of weakness, by way of an historic recording, or in honor of the late Sir Neville Marriner, who conducted on one of my favorite Vaughan Williams albums.

    We’ll have a chance to hear Vaughan Williams himself conduct, some archival radio broadcasts, and a rare LP from 1977 that, to my knowledge, has never been reissued in any form. I hope also to touch on some of the composer’s operas and piano music and anything else I can think of that never gets done – whatever I can cram to into five hours, I suppose.

    I’ve been letting my eyebrows grow wild for the occasion. Join me tomorrow morning from 6 to 11 EDT on WPRB 103.3 FM and at wrpb.com. I’ll be wearing my most rumpled jacket, with cowpats on my shoes, on Classic Ross Amico.


    PLEASE NOTE: The WPRB Pledge Drive will commence this Thursday night at 7:00. Please start searching under your seat cushions for change and keep your eyes open for those quarters when you vacuum your car. You’ll want to have $45 in hand, I’m sure, on the morning of October 20, when I’ll be offering dozens of CDs for you to choose from as “thank you” gifts for your pledges of support. Of course, a pledge in any amount will be gratefully accepted – every little bit counts – but wouldn’t you like a nice disc for yourself to commemorate the occasion? I’ll have more on this as the week unfolds. By all means, support your favorite shows in the meantime, but spare a thought for me, won’t you, waiting, all lonely at the finish line, next Thursday. The last thing I want to do is walk home with all these duplicate CDs. Call 609-258-1033 on the morning of October 20, and thank you in advance for your generosity!

  • Vaughan Williams Special on WPRB

    Vaughan Williams Special on WPRB

    It’s still days away at this point, but I wanted to let you know that, because Yom Kippur falls on a Wednesday this year, I will be swapping mornings with Marvin Rosen next week at WPRB 103.3 FM. That means that Classical Discoveries will be heard on Thursday, from 5:30 to 11 a.m. EDT, and that Classic Ross Amico (who needs his beauty sleep) will muddle through on Wednesday from 6 to 11 a.m.

    Since Wednesday happens to be October 12, the birthday of Ralph Vaughan Williams, and since Vaughan Williams happens to be one of my very favorite composers, the morning will be devoted to a good number of RVW gems and rarities from my own extensive collection. These will include historic recordings, some featuring the composer himself, archived radio broadcasts, and at least one LP that was issued in 1977, now long out-of-print, which to my knowledge has never been reissued in any form. If you love Vaughan Williams, have affection for English music, or hunger for curiosities, you will not want to miss this show!

    Of course, I may be tossing in one or two favorites most everyone will recognize, in luminous performances from one of my favorite Vaughan Williams albums, in honor of the late Sir Neville Marriner, who died last week at the age of 92. But most of what you hear will be off the beaten path, of historic interest, or just plain beautiful and underexposed.

    Eight hours after Marvin concludes his special edition of “Classical Discoveries,” WPRB will commence a week-long Autumn Membership Campaign, on Thursday night at 7:00. The station conducts one pledge drive per year, so this will be your only chance to step up and support the music. It’s a little-known fact that WPRB, though housed in the belly of Princeton University’s Bloomberg Hall, receives no funding from the university. The hosts are all volunteers, given just about complete artistic control over their programs, and the playlists are assembled with love, passion and personality.

    If you care about classical music on WPRB, and in particular, if you like what I do on “Classic Ross Amico,” I hope you will consider taking your penny jar down to the financial institution of your choice and then pledging your commitment to thoughtful programming of unusual and neglected repertoire, all presented under the umbrella of vast, unwieldy themes.

    Please call 609-258-1033 on the morning of October 20, between 6 and 11 a.m. to pledge your support of the show. It will be the last day of the drive, so don’t think that your pledge won’t make a difference! I expect it’s going to be a tough row to hoe, since by then everyone will have supported their favorite shows of the previous six days, including “Classical Discoveries” and “Sunday Morning Opera.” So set aside a bone for “Classic Ross Amico,” if you are able. Mentioning that you like what I do when you call in to support somebody else’s show is nice, but in the end, if you really want to send a message to anyone who is not answering the phones, it is the tallies that do the talking.

    Do not think that $10 or $20 is not enough. Every little bit counts. But if you are able to pledge at a level of $45 or over, I will be happy to send you a very nice CD as a token of my thanks. All the CDs I will be offering will be hand-selected by me and sampled during the show on October 20. So you’ll have a chance to listen before you pledge, but please understand that copies will be limited, in some cases to a quantity of one!

    “Classic Ross Amico,” now in its second year, is but a blink in WPRB’s 75-year history. With your support, I’m hoping two years will turn into three, and three into ten. Who knows how far this thing will go. Yours is the juice that can fuel classical music’s heavy Chevy, the wind beneath the wings of “The Lark Ascending.” Thank you for your consideration. I’m sure RVW would concur!

  • Shana Tova Music on WPRB Today

    Shana Tova Music on WPRB Today

    Shana tova!

    This morning on WPRB, we’ll start the day with music evocative of the Jewish High Holidays, including works inspired by the shofar (or ram’s horn, sounded at the opening and close of the season), the Kol Nidre (the solemn prayer sung at the beginning of Yom Kippur services), the synagogue, and Jewish folk traditions.

    Featured composers will include Aaron Minsky, Sergei Prokofiev, Lukas Foss, Ernest Bloch, Maurice Ravel, Matthew H. Fields, Louis Gesensway, Paul Ben-Haim, Max Bruch, Arnold Schoenberg, Emil Nikolaus von Reznicek, Darius Milhaud, David Stock, John McCabe, Herman Berlinski, Paul Schoenfield, and John Duffy.

    Lox to enjoy this morning, from 6 to 11 EDT, on WPRB 103.3 FM and at wprb.com. If you knead anything, just give us a “challah,” on Classic Ross Amico.

  • Autumn Music on WPRB & Bravura’s Season

    Autumn Music on WPRB & Bravura’s Season

    Autumn arrives this morning at 10:21 EDT. But with temperatures on the East Coast in the mid-upper 80s, there will be no hot cider or diving into leaf piles quite yet.

    Instead, I hope you will join me in celebrating ALL of the seasons, with musical journeys around the year by composers of the likes of Morton Gould, Edward German, Lars-Erik Larssson, Albert Roussel, and Gian Francesco Malipiero.

    Speaking of the seasons, Chiu-Tze Lin, music director of the Bravura Philharmonic Orchestra, will drop by around 9:00 to talk about their upcoming season, which will begin at Princeton Alliance Church in Plainsboro on Sunday night. The concert, titled “Heroic Masterworks,” will feature music by Beethoven, Shostakovich, and Tchaikovsky.

    The years will fly by this morning, from 6 to 11 EDT, on WPRB 103.3 FM and at wprb.com. We’re always very well-seasoned, on Classic Ross Amico.

  • Autumn Arrives (Sort Of) on WPRB

    Autumn Arrives (Sort Of) on WPRB

    Autumn begins here on the East Coast at 10:21 tomorrow morning. The only thing is, somebody forgot to tell the weather.

    Since it’s supposed to be in the mid-to-upper 80s until the weekend, and since the leaves have scarcely even started to change, I figured I’d hold off on a no-holds-barred celebration of the season, if you don’t mind, for perhaps a month.

    That said, we can’t just let the equinox squeak by without some notice. Therefore, tomorrow morning on WPRB, I will honor my favorite season surreptitiously, careful also to praise its deserving brothers and sisters.

    To this end, I’ll be playing complete cycles of musical evocations of ALL the seasons – spring, summer, fall, and winter – by composers such as Edward German, Albert Roussel, Gian Francesco Malipiero, Lars-Erik Larsson, and Morton Gould, among others.

    Come prepared with your all-weather gear, from 6 to 11 EDT, to WPRB 103.3 FM and wprb.com. To everything there is a season, on Classic Ross Amico.

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