Tag: Tchaikovsky

  • Liszt and Friends Collaborative Classics

    Liszt and Friends Collaborative Classics

    Sometimes even Romantic geniuses can use an extra hand.

    This Sunday night on “The Lost Chord,” on the eve of the anniversary of the birth of Franz Liszt (born October 22, 1811), we’ll have several works in which Liszt was aided and abetted by his peers.

    While it’s true that, early on, Liszt possessed a degree of insecurity over his ability to orchestrate – after all, he had been largely a “keyboard” composer, enlisting the aid of pupils like Joachim Raff and Franz Doppler during his years as a conductor in Weimar – Liszt quickly mastered the art himself and set about revising every bar of his earlier orchestral compositions, stamping them very much with his own distinctive voice.

    The story behind Liszt’s “Concerto in the Hungarian Style,” however, is quite a different matter.

    German pianist Sophie Menter studied with Liszt in Weimar, from 1869. Her gift was such that Liszt dubbed her “the greatest pianist of her day.” He admired her “singing hand” and called her his “only legitimate daughter as a pianist.” George Bernard Shaw compared her favorably to Paderewski. She was by Liszt’s side in Bayreuth when he died in 1886.

    Menter taught at the St. Petersburg Conservatory between 1883 and 1887. There, she became friendly with Tchaikovsky and convinced him to orchestrate a piano concerto she said she had written to showcase her talents as a performer. Tchaikovsky did so and also dedicated the orchestral score of his own “Concert Fantasy” to her.

    What he didn’t realize – and what is now widely believed (according to Menter, who confided it to a friend and fellow Liszt pupil, Vera Timanoff) – is that the piece was actually written, at least in part, by Liszt himself. Had Tchaikovsky known, he may very well have torn up the manuscript. He had come to loathe Liszt, and was particularly disgusted by Liszt’s transcription of the Polonaise from “Eugene Onegin.” But the truth – if truth it be – didn’t emerge, for nearly a hundred years, and Tchaikovsky conducted the first performance of the work in Odessa in 1893.

    Roll over Beethoven, tell Tchaikovsky the news…

    Alongside this colorful concerto by Menter’s mentor, we’ll also hear “The Black Gondola” (orchestrated by John Adams about a century after Liszt’s death); “Hexameron,” a titanic set of piano variations with contributions from six virtuoso superstars of the 1830s, including Liszt, Carl Czerny, Sigismond Thalberg, and Frederic Chopin; and a selection from the ballet “Apparitions,” engineered in 1936 by Constant Lambert and Gordon Jacob.

    Liszt gets by with a little help from his friends, on “An Assist for Liszt,” this Sunday night at 10:00 EDT, on WWFM – The Classical Network and wwfm.org.

  • Tchaikovsky Wins WWFM Membership Drive

    Tchaikovsky Wins WWFM Membership Drive

    Tchaikovsky shares our elation at having concluded another successful membership drive. The votes were tallied, and Ol’ Peter Ilych pulled ahead of Johannes Brahms to be voted the more popular of today’s two famous birthday celebrants among our listener-members. Thank you to all of you who elected to get in on the fun. There certainly were plenty of tempting thank you gifts to get lost in this time around. If you didn’t have a chance to donate, you may still do so and pick up a special token of our appreciation by visiting wwfm.org. Peter Ilych and we are grateful for your support of WWFM – The Classical Network.

  • Support Classical Music Like Tchaikovsky’s Patron

    Support Classical Music Like Tchaikovsky’s Patron

    Nadezhda von Meck understood the value of patronage. Thanks to her, Peter Ilych Tchaikovsky was able to create 13 years worth of masterpieces, works that have given pleasure and enrichment to audiences, right down to the present day. Now that’s a good investment.

    We can’t all be as generous as Meck. However, it is possible for all of us to get a taste of what it is like to support great music. Feel good about sustaining a proud legacy. Join WWFM – The Classical Network during the final week of its fiscal year. Help us balance our budget, so that we can go on sharing the music of Tchaikovsky, Bach, Mahler, and all the others. Call 1-888-232-1212 or contribute online at wwfm.org.

    Thank you for doing your part to make the world a better place.

  • Tchaikovsky & Brahms Best Frenemies

    Tchaikovsky & Brahms Best Frenemies

    They were totally B.F.F. – Best Frenemies Forever.

    Prior to their unexpected meeting, Tchaikovsky had confided to his diary, “I have played over the music of that scoundrel Brahms. What a giftless bastard!” Brahms reciprocated by falling asleep during Tchaikovsky’s Fifth Symphony, in the presence of the composer.

    Here’s a first-hand account of the introduction of the fastidious Tchaikovsky to the acerbic Brahms, with a special appearance by Edvard Grieg and his wife, Nina – making this almost as incident-packed as the latest installment of “The Avengers.”

    http://www.cmuse.org/tchaikovsky-and-brahms-it-is-fun-to-l…/

    Surprise! They actually delighted in one another’s company. In fact, they liked one another so well, they decided to do it again. However, the two never could reconcile themselves to one another’s music. When asked what he thought of the piano trio Brahms had been rehearsing, Tchaikovsky intimated, “Don’t be angry with me, my dear friend, but I did not like it.”

    Happy birthday, boys.

    Johannes Brahms (1833-1897)

    Peter Ilych Tchaikovsky (1840-1893)

  • Shakespeare Birthday Music on WPRB

    Shakespeare Birthday Music on WPRB

    First comes Groundhog Day, then comes Easter, then comes Shakespeare’s birthday. All that remains is for us to lock up a sacrifice in the Wicker Man on April 30 and Sulis will have been appeased.

    We don’t know when, exactly, the Bard was born, but his baptismal date is April 26, 1564. Since it’s human nature to try to keep things neat, his natal day is generally held to be April 23, the very date of his death in 1616.

    I hope you’ll join me this morning, as we celebrate the Bard, with a full morning of music inspired by his plays. We’ll hear selections from composers who were Shakespeare’s contemporaries, right on down to Paul Moravec’s “Tempest Fantasy,” which was awarded the Pulitzer Prize for Music in 2004.

    Other treats will include a recording of Ralph Vaughan Williams conducting his own “Serenade to Music,” after a text from “The Merchant of Venice,” a reconstructed duet from a projected opera on the subject of “Romeo and Juliet” by Peter Ilych Tchaikovsky, and incidental music for a production of “Antony and Cleopatra” by French composer Florent Schmitt, in an opulent recording conducted by JoAnn Falletta.

    Just some of the ingredients that will go into a secret recipe made public from 6 to 11 a.m. EDT, on WPRB 103.3 FM and wprb.com. We engage in a little Shake and bake, on Classic Ross Amico.


    If music be the food of love, bake on.

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