Tag: Vinyl Week

  • Easter Sunday Classical Music on WPRB

    Easter Sunday Classical Music on WPRB

    Tomorrow being the day of chocolate bunnies and Peeps, my colleague Bob Pollack has generously agreed to fill in for me on WPRB. Bob, host of “Morning Classical” (now heard on Monday mornings from 6 to 9), will introduce Mahler’s “Resurrection” Symphony, Bach’s Cantata No. 4 “Christ lag in Totesbanden,” Rachmaninoff’s “Vespers,” and some broader tributes to spring. Remember, it is Vinyl Week on WPRB, so it really depends on what’s on the shelves (Beethoven’s “Spring” Sonata, anyone?).

    Wake up and smell the daffodils, tomorrow morning, Easter Sunday, from 7 to 10 EDT, on WPRB 103.3 FM and wprb.com. Thanks, Bob, for your music of hope and renewal!

  • Vinyl Week on WPRB: Rare Out-of-Print Records

    Vinyl Week on WPRB: Rare Out-of-Print Records

    Playing from vinyl is always a tricky proposition (I already had the needle stick on me once), but I think one well worth the risks. I hope you’ll join me this morning on WPRB, as I share selections from my own extensive record collection as part of WPRB’s Vinyl Week.

    All of the recordings we’ll hear today are either out of print or available only as part of costly reissued collections of a composer’s complete works (Hans Werner Henze on the Deutsche Grammophon label). I’ve gone out of my way to select music that, for the most part, is not available even in alternative, digital recordings. What you hear this morning, you may never hear again. If you’ve heard it before, I trust it hasn’t been for a very long time.

    For me, I get to relive my college radio days, cueing records, potting down and flipping LPs mid-piece, agonizing over timings when none are listed. But it’s worth it to be able to get in touch again with the humanizing effect of snap, crackle and pop. Playing vinyl is as much a tactile experience as it is an aural one. Furthermore, I will be discovering a lot of the music, much of it acquired from my days as an antiquarian book dealer, right along with you, since at the moment I don’t happen to have a functioning turntable at home.

    We’re enjoying music in record time this morning, from 6 to 11 EDT, on WPRB 103.3 FM and wprb.com. I’ll be bringing it old school on Classic Ross Amico.

  • Princeton Festival on WPRB Vinyl Week

    Princeton Festival on WPRB Vinyl Week

    I hope you’re enjoying the show this morning. At 9:00, we’ll have a special visitor. Benedikt von Schroder will drop by to fill us in on upcoming events at The Princeton Festival, which runs through June 25. Then it’s back to spinning records until 11:00, as we continue with Vinyl Week, on WPRB 103.3 FM and wprb.com.

  • Rare Vinyl Finds on WPRB This Week

    Rare Vinyl Finds on WPRB This Week

    I’ve been lifting heavy boxes and inhaling lungs full of dust mites so you don’t have to. Join me tomorrow morning on WPRB, when I’ll be making my contribution to Vinyl Week, with a full morning played from honest-to-goodness, old-fashioned records.

    I’ve been digging deep this time, and I’ve accumulated a stack of Howard Hanson’s Mercury recordings that never made it to compact disc. I’ve also struck a rich vein of Louisville First Edition Records. There will be music by Mexican microtonalist Julian Carrillo, almost entirely absent from the current catalogue. Also Richard Mohaupt, whose recordings are wholly out-of-print. I have to play some Max Butting, just because I’ve got so much of it. Again, amazingly, there’s only a single disc of his works still in print. In addition, I’ve got a symphony by Romanian composer Sigismond Toduta, issued on authentic Romanian vinyl.

    We’ll hear Norman Dello Joio’s “New York Profiles,” released on a 10-inch red vinyl LP (because I’ve never programmed anything from 10-inch red vinyl). Somehow, I came into the possession of one of Marc-André Hamelin’s records – not one of his recordings mind you, but an LP formerly in his collection – of Hans Werner Henze’s “Muses of Sicily.” If it was rejected by Hamelin (whose taste I respect immensely), then it’s good enough for me! I’ll be giving it a spin tomorrow.

    Many of these records were distributed solely overseas, with liner notes in Czech, German, Portuguese, Romanian, Swedish, and Cyrillic. This ought to be interesting.

    I’m particularly excited for the chance to hear John Addison’s Concerto for Trumpet, Strings and Percussion. Addison is principally remembered as a composer of quirky film scores like those for “Tom Jones” and “Sleuth.” This Louisville record, which I’ve never listened to, looks to be a pristine copy.

    On top of all that, I’ll have a couple of special guests into the studio. At 9:00, I’ll be joined by Benedikt von Schroder from The Princeton Festival. He’ll fill us in on the rest of the season, which runs through June 25. Then, at 10:00, soprano Rochelle Ellis will be by to tell us about a performance of Brahms’ “A German Requiem,” which will take place at Princeton University’s Richardson Auditorium on Friday, the centerpiece of Lyn Ransom’s farewell concert after 30 years as artistic director of VOICES Chorale. (Princeton Festival artistic director Richard Tang Yuk will be taking over from her next season.)

    I hope you’ll join me for some rare LP discoveries, or perhaps a reunion or two with some long lost friends, this Thursday morning from 6 to 11 EDT, on WPRB 103.3 FM and wprb.com. I’ll be giving you the needle, on Classic Ross Amico.

  • Vinyl Week on WPRB Rare Classical LPs

    Vinyl Week on WPRB Rare Classical LPs

    Right now we’re listening to Philadelphia composer Paul Nordoff’s “Winter Symphony,” a prized recording on the Louisville Orchestra’s First Edition Records label. Join me later on in the hour as Lee Holdridge does his best Erich Wolfgang Korngold impression, with his Violin Concerto No. 2.

    Ruth Ochs, music director of the Westminster Community Orchestra, will drop by around 9:00 to talk a little bit about the upcoming Westminster Conservatory of Music showcase concert, which will take place on Sunday at 3 p.m. at Princeton University’s Richardson Auditorium. The program will include performances by community ensembles, students and conservatory competition winners. Ochs is also conductor of the Princeton University Sinfonia.

    Yet to come this morning: works by Wallingford Riegger, Carl Ruggles, Earl Kim, Richard Yardumian and Alan Hovhaness – all heard on LP, all otherwise unavailable. Out-of-print recordings for your delectation, as part of WPRB’s Vinyl Week. It’s all vinyl through Sunday, and all Classic Ross Amico through 11 a.m., on WPRB 103.3 FM and at wprb.com.

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