Tag: Stokowski

  • Friday Fun Classical Music Broadcast

    Friday Fun Classical Music Broadcast

    After a long week at the office, what better way to get a jump on the weekend than with a little karaoke? Join me this afternoon at 4:00 EST to hear Leopold Stokowski conduct his own symphonic synthesis from Mussorgsky’s “Boris Godunov.” No one cares if you don’t exactly sound like Chaliapin when you’re stuck in Friday traffic.

    I’ll get you in the mood with the overture “Tsar Boris” by the regrettably short-lived Russian composer Vasily Kalinnikov, whose birthday anniversary it is today – but you’ll want to be there at 4 sharp!

    At 6:00, it’s “Picture Perfect,” music for the movies. It will be a program devoted to “arch harpsichords” in mysteries and thrillers. On this Friday the 13th, why not? I’ll have more about it on my Facebook page later this afternoon.

    Toss some salt over your shoulder, caress a rabbit’s foot (preferably while it’s still on the rabbit), and join me today between 4 and 7:00 EST for plenty of musical good luck, on WWFM – The Classical Network and at wwfm.org.

  • Khachaturian’s Lost “Bell” Symphony on “The Lost Chord”

    Khachaturian’s Lost “Bell” Symphony on “The Lost Chord”

    I don’t know what got into me – maybe I feel beleaguered? – but this Sunday night on “The Lost Chord,” I’ll be presenting Leopold Stokowski’s rarely-heard recording of Aram Khachaturian’s Symphony No. 2, sometimes called “The Bell.”

    Khachaturian wrote the work in 1943, the height of World War II, while he was holed up at a Composers Union retreat with Shostakovich, Prokofiev, Miaskovsky and Gliere. He said of the piece, “The Second Symphony is a requiem of wrath, a requiem of protest against war and violence.”

    The symphony’s nickname alludes to a kind of alarm that opens and closes the work. Overall, the tone is one of resolution in the face of tragedy.

    Stokowski’s recording, long unavailable, was originally issued on United Artists Records in the late 1950s. It reappeared briefly on compact disc, on the EMI label, in 1994, and again in 2009, as part of a 10-disc box set of entrancing Stokowski performances.

    The master tapes have not weathered the years well, alas, so there are moments of distortion, but the power of the piece transcends any technical limitations. There is certainly nothing wanting in the performance.

    To round out the hour, we’ll hear the Russian-born pianist, Nadia Reisenberg, in a selection from her 1947 Carnegie Hall recital, Khachaturian’s most famous piano work, the “Toccata.” Reisenberg studied at Philadelphia’s Curtis Institute of Music under Josef Hoffman.

    Join me for these rare Khachaturian performances, “Khach As Khach Can,” tomorrow night at 10 ET, with a repeat Friday morning at 3. Or listen to the webcast later, at your convenience, at http://www.wwfm.org.

    In the meantime, here’s an even rarer Khachaturian document of the composer singing about the glories of Armenian wine!

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vtKHrg7w3_o

    PHOTO: Troika! (Right to left) Khachaturian with Shostakovich and Prokofiev

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