Tag: Ross Amico

  • Goethe’s Birthday Music Celebration

    Goethe’s Birthday Music Celebration

    Tomorrow marks the birthday anniversary of Johann Wolfgang von Goethe (1749-1832), widely regarded as Germany’s greatest literary figure. Goethe’s significance in German culture cannot be overestimated.

    His novel, “The Sorrows of Young Werther,” virtually initiated the Romantic movement, with its protagonist’s relentless subjectivity and precipitous despair instigating a cult of suicide. His bildungsroman, “Wilhelm Meister’s Apprenticeship,” was praised as one of the greatest novels ever written. And the influence and perpetual reinvention of his dramatic poem “Faust” would appear to be inexhaustible.

    Goethe captivated the imagination of virtually every major German-language composer of the 19th century. We’ll honor him with a full program inspired by his works, including lieder, symphonic poems, symphonies, operas and oratorios.

    So much Romanticism is a presentiment of fall and chill nights passed gazing up at the moon through withered leaves in a Caspar David Friedrich tricorn.

    Join me tomorrow morning at 6 ET for five hours of music inspired by the writings of Goethe, on WPRB 103.3 FM or at wprb.com. You don’t have to sell your soul to experience great music on Classic Ross Amico.

  • Circus Music Radio Show Fun with Ross Amico

    Circus Music Radio Show Fun with Ross Amico

    Why should these morose looking clowns have all the fun?

    Join me for five hours – yes, FIVE HOURS – of musical evocations of the circus, a theme which is not perhaps as one-note as it may read, with works like Lord Berners’ “Luna Park,” Douglas Moore’s “The Pageant of P.T. Barnum,” Walter Piston’s “The Incredible Flutist,” Nino Rota’s “La Strada Ballet,” Erik Satie’s “Parade,” and Rodion Shchedrin’s “Old Russian Circus Music.” Sure, there will be plenty of 4/4 swagger and graceful trapeze waltzes, and also film scores from some classic circus movies. But hopefully you won’t walk away with a sugar headache from too much cotton candy.

    I can’t claim that it will be the Greatest Show on Earth, but I hope you will spend some time with me under the Big Top. I’ll be there from 6 to 11 ET, at WPRB 103.3 FM, or online at wprb.com. It’s all latex and spangles this week, on Classic Ross Amico.

    BTW – I’ve got you coming and going today. Listen to me on your way to work at WPRB, from 6 to 11. Then hear me on your way home on WRTI 90.1 FM (or wrti.org), from 2 to 6. I’ll be launched from a cannon over the lunch hour.

  • Sweetness & Light with Classic Ross Amico

    Sweetness & Light with Classic Ross Amico

    Somewhat slower than the speed of light, Classic Ross Amico descends into the catacombs beneath Bloomberg Hall. Far from the influence of his enemy, the Sun, he takes a page from William Faulkner to salute the “Light in August.” (Although at this hour, I have to say, it’s easier to embrace “As I Lay Dying.”)

    The airwaves will be awash in music about light, color, rainbows and kaleidoscopes, with the possible inclusion of works by George Barati, Sir Arthur Bliss, Sir Edward Elgar, Andrei Eshpai, Jennifer Higdon, Uuno Klami, Morten Lauridsen, Roger Quilter, Einojuhani Rautavaara, Miklós Rózsa, Joseph Schwantner, Christopher Theofanidis, and Michael Torke, among others.

    Sandra Milstein-Pucciatti, cofounder and managing director of Boheme Opera NJ, will drop by around 10:00 to tell us what to expect from a free concert of arias and duets, scheduled to take place tonight at 7 in Joseph Lawrence Park in Bordentown. The program will include selections from opera and musical theater. You can find out more about Boheme Opera at bohemeopera.com.

    The music will be full of sweetness and light this morning, even if your host is not. I hope you’ll join me from 6 to 11 ET, at WPRB 103.3 FM or online at wprb.com. Trip the light fantastic with Classic Ross Amico.

  • Faulkner’s Light in August on WPRB

    Faulkner’s Light in August on WPRB

    “. . . [I]n August in Mississippi there’s a few days somewhere about the middle of the month when suddenly there’s a foretaste of fall, it’s cool, there’s a lambence, a soft, a luminous quality to the light, as though it came not from just today but from back in the old classic times. It might have fauns and satyrs and the gods and – from Greece, from Olympus in it somewhere. It lasts just for a day or two, then it’s gone. . . [T]he title reminded me of that time, of a luminosity older than our Christian civilization.”

    We take a page from William Faulkner, this Thursday morning on WPRB, as we salute the light in August. The airwaves will be awash with music about light, color, rainbows and kaleidoscopes, with the possible inclusion of works by Sir Edward Elgar, Andrei Eshpai, Edward German, Jennifer Higdon, Uuno Klami, Morten Lauridsen, Roger Quilter, Einojuhani Rautavaara, Miklós Rózsa, Joseph Schwantner, Christopher Theofanidis, Michael Torke, and more.

    In addition, I will be joined around 10:00 by Sandra Milstein-Pucciatti, cofounder and managing director of Boheme Opera NJ, who will tell us what to expect from a free concert of arias and duets scheduled to take place tomorrow evening at 7, in Joseph Lawrence Park in Bordentown. The program will include selections from opera and musical theater. For more about Boheme Opera, visit bohemeopera.com.

    I hope you’ll join me, your resident Faulknerian idiot man-child, tomorrow morning from 6 to 11 ET, as we bask in the light in August, at WPRB 103.3 FM or online at wprb.com. Keep it coruscating with Classic Ross Amico.

  • Fairy Tale Music with Ross Amico

    Fairy Tale Music with Ross Amico

    Did you ever have one of those mornings? You dream of being awakened by a kiss, but instead you get a four-legged friend panting (or worse) for his or her breakfast.

    This morning, we turn our backs on reality to immerse ourselves in the fantasy worlds of the Brothers Grimm, Hans Christian Andersen, Charles Perrault, Aesop and others.

    Okay, so maybe sometimes things turn out even worse in fairy tales. But the subjects invariably offer a blank canvas for the imaginative flights of some of the world’s great composers.

    I hope you’ll join me this morning for music by Havergal Brian, Daniel Dorff, Paul Hindemith, Gustav Holst, William Hurlstone, Nikolai Medtner, Robert McBride, Robert Moran, Nikolai Rimsky-Korsakov, Ernst Toch, Siegfried Wagner, Ralph Vaughan Williams, Alexander Zemlinsky, and others of their ilk.

    Musical subjects will include Pinocchio, Snow White, Old King Cole, The Little Mermaid, Three Blind Mice, and Beauty and the Beast.

    It all takes place from 6 to 11 a.m. ET, on WPRB 103.3 FM or at wrpb.com. Keep the ogres at bay – and the earbuds in – with Classic Ross Amico.

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