Tag: Schubert

  • Schubert’s Bittersweet Farewell at Marlboro

    Schubert’s Bittersweet Farewell at Marlboro

    Blissful days, you are eternally past!

    On this week’s “Music from Marlboro,” as this year’s Marlboro Music Festival approaches its final weekend, we’ll partake of an hour of bittersweet musings, courtesy of Franz Schubert. Even at the best of times, Schubert’s emotional equilibrium could be extraordinarily sensitive to change. But the works of his final year seem especially intimate – confessional, even.

    Is the melancholy traveler borne out to sea in “Auf dem Strom” (“On the River”) actually parting from life? The narrator is cut off from all human contact. He is unable to hear songs from the distant shore. His memory of his beloved is intense, even as she grows increasingly distant. The text, by Ludwig Rellstab, was originally intended for Beethoven, but Beethoven died before he could set to work on it.

    We’ll hear a performance of this remarkable art song from the 1960 Marlboro Music Festival, featuring soprano Benita Valente, hornist Myron Bloom, and pianist Rudolf Serkin.

    Faced with his own mortality, Schubert reacted as only Schubert could, by churning out masterpiece after masterpiece: two piano trios, three piano sonatas, the String Quintet in C, the song cycle “Schwanengesang,” and “The Shepherd on the Rock,” alongside assorted smaller works, all within the span of only six months. It’s an extraordinary act of defiance, or perhaps acceptance, of the inevitable.

    The haunting second movement of his Piano Trio No. 2 in E-flat major was written just as he received the news that his illness was beyond cure and that the end was near. The music holds the tragic and the romantic in devastating balance.

    The entire trio will be heard in a recording made in Brattleboro, VT, all the way back at the beginning, on October of 1951, featuring Marlboro cofounders, pianist Rudolf Serkin, violinist Adolf Busch, and cellist Herman Busch.

    By coincidence, tomorrow, August 8, is Adolf Busch’s birthday. What better way to celebrate than to remember him making music with those he loved?

    Both of these works, by the way, were presented on the only public concert devoted exclusively to Schubert’s music during the composer’s lifetime. The concert was held on the first anniversary of Beethoven’s death, March 26, 1828. Schubert himself would be dead only eight months later, at the age of 31.

    For more information on the concluding weekend of this summer’s Marlboro Music Festival, and its three valedictory concerts, visit marlboromusic.org.

    All good things must come to an end, on the next “Music from Marlboro,” this Wednesday evening at 6:00 EDT, on WWFM – The Classical Network and wwfm.org.

    Marlboro School of Music and Festival: Official Page


    PHOTO: Rudi and the Busches

  • Andrew Rudin 80th Birthday Concert on WWFM

    Andrew Rudin 80th Birthday Concert on WWFM

    I suppose it’s no secret – there’s an 80th birthday concert coming up at Bargemusic in Brooklyn tomorrow night – but it sure as hell stunned me to learn that Andrew Rudin is now four score. In addition to being a very fine composer, the evergreen Rudin, of course, was once a regular presence on the airwaves as a music host at WWFM.

    A former student of George Rochberg, Rudin writes uncompromising music of great integrity, yet manages to communicate with the listener without pandering. Nowhere is that more evident than in his attractive Piano Concerto, a recording of which I will include, among my featured works today, between 4 and 6 p.m. EDT, on The Classical Network. If you like Bartók or Ravel, give this one a shot.

    I’ll also mark the birthday anniversaries of Eugen d’Albert, Yefim Bronfman, Jorge Mester, and Victor de Sabata.

    There’s nothing quite like Schubert for a good palate cleanser. Wait a minute, that’s sherbet I’m thinking of. At any rate, come 6:00, enjoy an all-Schubert hour on the next “Music from Marlboro.”

    Among the melancholy masterpieces churned out during Schubert’s remarkably productive final year, the Piano Trio No. 1 in B-flat major, D. 898, actually comes across as comparatively light-hearted.

    We’ll hear it performed at the 2008 Marlboro Music Festival by pianist Jonathan Biss, violinist David Bowlin, and cellist Marcy Rosen. Biss, who is on the faculty of the Curtis Institute of Music in Philadelphia, was recently named co-artistic director (with Mitsuko Uchida) of Marlboro Music.

    Finally, we’ll turn to what may have been the last music Schubert ever wrote. “The Shepherd on the Rock,” D. 965, was completed barely a month before the composer’s death at the age of 31. This multi-sectional “lied” traverses a broad range of emotions, as a shepherd listens to echoes from the valley below, grapples with feelings of loneliness, and finds hope in the prospect of Spring and renewal.

    Marlboro legends, soprano Benita Valente, clarinetist Harold Wright, and pianist Rudolf Serkin, set down a classic recording of the work in 1960. We’ll hear a live performance captured at Marlboro nine years later.

    In all, it will be a playlist in celebration of births and renewals, from 4 to 7 p.m. EDT, on WWFM – The Classical Network and wwfm.org.

    Marlboro School of Music and Festival: Official Page

  • Schubert’s Birthday Music of Joy and Sorrow

    Schubert’s Birthday Music of Joy and Sorrow

    Franz Schubert’s birthday. A day to vacillate between smiles and tears. Is there any other composer whose music so perfectly conveys the delicacy and transience of feelings?

    Listening to Schubert, you can be in one place and suddenly find you’re in another, and you’re not quite sure how you got there. Wisps of cloud emerge, imperceptibly, unfurl like gossamer, veiling the sun. You feel them brush across your heart. The ache! But the sun peers through again, and the heart is warm, if not entirely settled.

    Is it possible to describe the effect of Schubert’s music without going purple?

    The Piano Sonata in B-flat major. The String Quintet in C. The Fantasia in F minor for piano four-hands. The “Unfinished” Symphony. The “Arpeggione” Sonata.

    To define is to limit. It is the language of poetry and yearning.

  • Sibelius & Schubert Marlboro Chamber Music

    Sibelius & Schubert Marlboro Chamber Music

    Save me, Sibelius! I can’t take it any longer.

    We’ll attempt to beat the heat with the one and only chamber work from the great Finnish master’s maturity – the String Quartet in D minor. It’s subtitle, “Voces Intimae,” suggests a looking inward. That’s fine with me. There’s no sun inside.

    The piece was composed in 1909, between the Third and Fourth Symphonies. Sibelius wrote to his wife, Aino, “It turned out as something wonderful. The kind of thing that brings a smile to your lips at the hour of death. I will say no more.” Ah, sweet nothings.

    We’ll hear it performed at the 2005 Marlboro Music Festival, by Dan Zhu and Sarah Kapustin, violins; Samuel Rhodes, viola; and Amir Eldan, cello.

    Then we’ll enjoy another presentiment of death – Franz Schubert’s Introduction and Variations on his lied, “Trock’ne Blumen” (“Withered Flowers”), from the song cycle “Die schöne Müllerin.” Paula Robison will be the flutist and Marlboro co-founder Rudolf Serkin the pianist, in a recording from 1968.

    Nothing refreshes on a hot day like cold wind from the grave, on this week’s “Music from Marlboro” – chamber music performances from the legendary Marlboro Music Festival – this Wednesday evening at 6:00 EDT, on WWFM – The Classical Network and wwfm.org.

    Marlboro School of Music and Festival: Official Page

  • Trio Vitruvi Carnegie Debut & New Album

    Trio Vitruvi Carnegie Debut & New Album

    This is a big week for Trio Vitruvi. The Copenhagen-based ensemble will make its Carnegie Hall debut, in Weill Recital Hall, tomorrow at 7:30 p.m. The program will include piano trios by Schubert, Shostakovich, and Dvořák.

    Then on Friday, Vitruvi’s first album, of Schubert chamber music, will be released on Bridge Records, Inc. The recording features a performance of the rarely-heard Bärenreiter Urtext edition of Schubert’s Piano Trio No. 2 in E-flat major, D. 929, which contains extra music not included in previous editions.

    Join me this afternoon at 4:00 EDT on The Classical Network, as we sample from this impending release; then learn more about the prize-winning trio and its Carnegie appearance through a conversation with Vitruvi pianist Alexander McKenzie. McKenzie, who began his piano studies at the age of six, attended the Danish Academy of Music. He is also one half (with Vitruvi’s Niklas Walentin) of the violin-piano duo Walentin & McKenzie.

    Following our interview, I’ll mark the birthday anniversaries of Leó Weiner (we’ll enjoy his “Hungarian Folk Dance Suite”), Federico Mompou (the “Variations on a Theme by Chopin”), and Henry Mancini (a selection of music from the Pink Panther films).

    All told, we’ll be in the pink, from 4 to 7 p.m. EDT, on WWFM – The Classical Network and wwfm.org.

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