Tag: Tobias Picker

  • Tobias Picker at 70 A Composer Celebration

    Tobias Picker at 70 A Composer Celebration

    American composer Tobias Picker is 70 today.

    His serene “Old and Lost Rivers” has long been a favorite. Commissioned by the Houston Symphony Orchestra to commemorate the sesquicentenary of Texas, the work was given its first performance in 1986. At the time, Picker was the orchestra’s composer-in-residence. His program note about the piece elucidates the title:

    “Driving east from Houston along Interstate 10, you will come to a high bridge which crosses many winding bayous. These bayous were left behind by the great wanderings, over time, of the Trinity River across the land. When it rains, the bayous fill with water and begin to flow. At other times — when it is dry — they evaporate and turn green in the sun. The two main bayous are called ‘Old River’ and ‘Lost River.’ Where they converge, a sign on the side of the highway reads: ‘Old and Lost Rivers.’”

    The work also exists in a version for solo piano. Enjoy the orchestral version at the link:

    Picker also wrote a piano concerto for the centenary of the Brooklyn Bridge. Here’s the world premiere, from 1983, preceded by news footage, including commentary by the composer, and intercut with celebratory fireworks for the occasion. The audio on the news clip is somewhat muted, compared to the much more immediate performance of the music, so be ready for it!

    Then, tying in with yesterday’s post about the sudden seeming ubiquity of Robert Schumann, it seems only appropriate to include Picker’s “Romances and Interludes.” Schumann composed his “Three Romances,” Op. 94, for oboe and piano, as a Christmas gift for his wife, Clara, in 1849. Picker orchestrated the piece and added his own prelude and connective tissue in 1989.

    He’s also composed seven operas. “Emmeline” was broadcast nationally on PBS in 1996.

    Among his other works in the genre are adaptations of Roald Dahl’s “The Fantastic Mr. Fox,” Stephen King’s “Dolores Claiborne,” and Oliver Sacks’ “Awakenings.”

    Finally, Picker converses with filmmaker H. Paul Moon as part of the series “Capricorn Conversations,” an occasional podcast of interviews with important figures relating to American music that grew out of Moon’s work on his nationally-televised documentary, “Samuel Barber: Absolute Beauty.”

    Happy birthday, Tobias Picker!

  • Labor Day Concert: Music for Workers and Wonders

    Labor Day Concert: Music for Workers and Wonders

    Sorry to be posting so late, but I had some computer woes this morning, so I am racing to ketchup – er, catch up, I mean. Not surprisingly, I am distracted by thoughts of Labor Day.

    Get ready for a real labor of love, as we hear selections about work and the worker, punctuated by music inspired by man-made and natural wonders. On the roster is Tobias Picker’s “Keys to the City” (written to mark the 100th anniversary of the Brooklyn Bridge), John Alden Carpenter’s ballet “Skyscrapers,” Samuel Jones’ Symphony No. 3 (a musical response to Texas’ Palo Duro Canyon), and Jett Hitt, Composer’s “Yellowstone” for violin and orchestra. Hitt, who holds a doctorate in composition, conducts guided horseback tours at the national park!

    In addition, there will be lighter pieces about picnic foods and gazebo dances.

    I hope your Stanley thermos is full of iced coffee. Put away your hard hat and lunch pail and join me for one final helping of baked beans and corn-on-the-cob for Labor Day, this afternoon from 4 to 7 p.m. EDT, on WWFM – The Classical Network and wwfm.org.


    PHOTOS: Bernstein, Gershwin, and Copland wring the last from their summer

  • Labor Day Weekend: American Music on WPRB

    Labor Day Weekend: American Music on WPRB

    As we approach the Labor Day weekend, get ready for a real labor of love, this Thursday morning on WPRB. It will be an all-American program. Man-made and natural wonders will punctuate the show, with works like Tobias Picker’s “Keys to the City” (written to mark the 100th anniversary of the Brooklyn Bridge), Samuel Jones’ Symphony No. 3 (a musical response to Texas’ Palo Duro Canyon), and Joan Tower’s “Made in America.”

    In addition, there will be lighter pieces about picnic foods and gazebo dances. I’ll also play a little musical ketchup – I mean catch-up – as I finally get around to airing at least two works promised on earlier shows that were bumped due to time constraints: Elie Siegmeister’s “Sunday in Brooklyn,” with its celebratory final movement inspired by Coney Island, and Ned Rorem’s Symphony No. 3, in a recording of its world premiere, with Leonard Bernstein and the New York Philharmonic.

    As if all that weren’t enough, we’ll enjoy a recent recording of the Sonata for Piano by Jack Gallagher (composer), newly released by Centaur Records, Inc.

    Put away your hard hat and lunch pail and join me for one final helping of baked beans and corn-on-the-cob, this Thursday morning from 6 to 11 EDT, on WPRB 103.3 FM and wprb.com. Next week it will be back to the mines with you, on Classic Ross Amico.

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