Tag: WFLN

  • Remembering George Crumb American Original

    Remembering George Crumb American Original

    I am very sorry to learn of the passing of George Crumb, a composer I have revered for nearly 40 years, since I first encountered his work for electric string quartet, “Black Angels,” on Philadelphia’s now-defunct classical music station, WFLN. The music scared the hell out of me and completely enthralled me.

    The context was a Friday night radio show, “Music Through the Centuries,” hosted by George Diehl. Diehl was at one time WFLN’s program director. He also provided program notes for the Philadelphia Orchestra. “Music Through the Centuries” was a big influence on my own Sunday night program (on WWFM The Classical Network), “The Lost Chord.”

    What made this particular episode so indelible is that Diehl introduced a recording of Crumb’s otherworldly, often hair-raising quartet – a reaction to the Vietnam War – by deftly placing it in context, illuminating its structure, and supplementing it with recordings of other works referenced within the piece.

    Having cut my teeth on the station’s usual, more traditional fare, my mind was officially blown. It’s not for nothing that William Friedkin incorporated “Black Angels” into “The Exorcist.” I immediately determined to pick up everything I could find on LP, and my enthusiasm continued into the CD era.

    The first time I met Crumb was at a recital at the Curtis Institute of Music in Philadelphia. He was there attending a student recital in the company of Richard Wernick. It just so happened that I lived about a block away, so I was able to dash home and retrieve a CD on Bridge Records that contained works by both composers. Both were on the faculty of the University of Pennsylvania. Both were Pulitzer Prize winners.

    I caught them as they were leaving the building, and Crumb, likely nonplussed by this 20 year-old autograph hound, was kind enough to sign. Wernick, who of course was with him, couldn’t very well say no. I was a little sheepish about it, and probably didn’t say much of worth. At best, I may have provided a source of amusement on their walk back to the car.

    It was another 20 years, then, I think, before I saw him again (although he may have been present when I heard his orchestral work, “A Haunted Landscape,” played by Philadelphia Orchestra in 1989, part of a knockout program also featuring Ravel’s “Le tombeau de Couperin” and Vaughan Williams’ “A London Symphony”). By that time, he had entered his “Grand Old Man of American Music” phase. Furthermore, he was closely affiliated with Orchestra 2001, a contemporary music ensemble founded at Swarthmore College, practically in Crumb’s back yard. Orchestra 2001 gave first performances of many of his later pieces.

    Among these were the seven cycles for voice and percussion that comprise his “American Songbook.” These are highly individual recastings of folk songs and hymns he recollected from his boyhood in West Virginia – especially effective, and affecting, when heard in concert, where the breadth and subtlety of the instrumentation can be fully appreciated.

    His daughter, Broadway actress Ann Crumb, was a frequent soloist. During this time, I got to meet them both and to speak with them under more relaxed circumstances, at cocktail hours and receptions. They were lovely people. George was unfailingly approachable, good-humored, soft-spoken, and surprisingly modest. Ann, who died much too young at 69, was warm and genuine and a real animal lover. She was always bringing home strays, so that the Crumb household was full of dogs (the most notorious being “bad dog” Yoda).

    It is perhaps an overused description, but George Crumb truly was an American original. He produced works with an economy and elegance that seemed to contradict – and yet, somehow, paradoxically, to reinforce – an Ivesian tendency to suggest greater vistas beyond their seemingly modest means. In the process, he anticipated the widespread proliferation of the percussion ensemble, which is now practically analogous to what the string quartet was to the 18th and 19th centuries.

    No matter how “respectable” he’s become, my own reactions will always be colored by that flush of youth, when I first fell under the spell of his eerie and at times horrifying invention.

    George Crumb was the recipient of the Pulitzer Prize for Music in 1968, for “Echoes of Time and the River,” and a Grammy Award for Best Contemporary Composition in 2001, rather appropriately, for “Star-Child.” All or most of his music is available in the “Complete Crumb Edition,” an ongoing project on Bridge Records, Inc.

    The composer died at his home earlier today at the age of 92.

    Thank you, sir, and R.I.P.


    “Black Angels” in concert

    “Black Angels” with score

    “Ancient Voices of Children” in concert

    “Star-Child”

    Crumb talks about “Mundus Canis;” performs “Fritzi” with guitarist David Starobin

    “Yoda” (from “Mundus Canis”)

    From “American Songbook,” sung by Ann Crumb:

    “Shall We Gather at the River”

    “All the Pretty Horses”

    “Poor Wayfaring Stranger”

    “One More River to Cross”

    “Give Me That Old Time Religion”

    Crumb interviewed by Gilbert Kalish

    Crumb at his home in 2020 (with yet more pooches)

  • Remembering Henry Varlack Sleepers Awake

    Remembering Henry Varlack Sleepers Awake

    I mentioned Henry Varlack today in an earlier post. Varlack was host of “Sleepers Awake,” the overnight show on WFLN in Philadelphia.

    He was also probably my favorite radio announcer. I mean, I loved Dave Conant’s resonance, and I enjoyed listening to Bill Shedden, Terry Peyton, and the rest, but there was something about Varlack’s unconventional timbre and the fact that the guy was on from midnight to 6:00 every night that kind of endeared him to me. Many were the times that the side of a record would run out and you could hear the stylus bumping around, wearing a groove at the end. I’d call him up later, and Varlack would apologize, admitting that he was in the bathroom and he’d miscalculated the time. He may even have fallen asleep once or twice.

    Not incidentally, he also happened to play some of my favorite music in those days, and introduced me to a number of pieces I’d never heard: Alan Hovhaness’ “And God Created Great Whales,” Morton Subotnik’s “Silver Apples of the Moon,” and Robert Schumann’s incidental music to “Manfred,” selections from which I’ll be airing tonight at 10:00 EST on “The Lost Chord,” on WWFM – The Classical Network and wwfm.org. Such was Varlack’s influence.

    I’d never met Varlack in person, when he was described to me by a former WFLN engineer as looking like a black Santa Claus. Our paths eventually crossed at a remote broadcast, and finally, after all those late night phone calls, I was able to shake his hand.

    Trying to find a photo of Varlack online is not an easy matter, since those were the days before social media, but I did find this very interesting picture of him singing in a Doo-Wop group called the Blend-Tones! Varlack is the one in the center, with his eyes closed. When he wasn’t spinning the vinyl, Varlack was also a baseball scout for the Chicago White Sox.

    He impressed me as a very interesting man, and a good-natured one, totally without pretense. I still think of him whenever I hear Gabriel Fauré’s “Pavane,” his signature music for “Sleepers Awake.” Varlack died in 2006 at the age of 65.


    Listen to some of the Blend-Tones’ records here:

    http://doo-wop.blogg.org/blend-tones-c26505866

    Gabriel Fauré’s “Pavane:”

  • Remembering Bill Shedden a Radio Voice

    Remembering Bill Shedden a Radio Voice

    So much for news traveling fast.

    Every once in a while, if I think of it, I’ll take to the Google to check up on some of my old radio acquaintances. Over thirty years, I’ve gotten to know a lot of folks and, I don’t have to tell you, the obligations of the present make it very easy to lose touch.

    Well, it must have been a longer gap than usual, because last night, I am sorry to say, I only just learned of the passing of Bill Shedden. 3 ½ years ago, Bill lost control of his SUV, went off a snow-covered road in upstate New York, and struck a tree. According to a news report, he was alert and talkative after the crash, but was taken to the hospital and later died of internal injuries.

    Bill was a radio presence in Eastern Pennsylvania and Central/Southern New Jersey for decades. I got to know him pretty well when we worked together at WWFM – The Classical Network, located in the Trenton-Princeton area. But I felt a special bond with him going to back to his days at WFLN. WFLN, if you don’t know, was Philadelphia’s classical music station for 48 years, until a format change to “popular hits” (as the short-lived WXXM Max 95.7) in 1997. I was but a listener at the time, but I always connected with Bill’s enthusiasm for the music of Ralph Vaughan Williams, and called him occasionally during his WFLN shifts to chat briefly and to thank him for his work.

    By the time WFLN folded, I had been working at WWFM for a few years, so when I heard Bill had applied for an air shift, I put in a good word. It was an honor to finally get to meet him and to actually be able to work with him. Bill was one of the most genial personalities in classical radio. His secret, he professed, was that whenever he spoke on the air, he didn’t speak to everyone, but to one person only, and as if that person were in the room with him.

    In 2001, Bill left to take over the music directorship of WCNY in Syracuse, NY. There, he continued to play plenty of English music, as the station’s weekday morning host. He also produced a program of sacred choral music and co-hosted a Saturday opera show with his wife, Maureen.

    I am happy for his success in Syracuse, where he was evidently – and not surprisingly – much loved by his listeners, but I am sorry that it had to be curtailed so soon. Bill was 62 years-old. R.I.P., my friend.


    Bill’s obituary:
    https://www.tjpfuneralhome.com/obituaries/William-Shedden-Iii/#!/Obituary

    News report of the crash:
    https://cnycentral.com/news/local/liverpool-man-dies-after-driving-into-a-tree

    The demise of WFLN:
    http://www1.udel.edu/nero/Radio/readings/Classical/lastclass.html

    For Bill:

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