Tag: William Scheide

  • Remembering William Scheide Princeton Benefactor

    Remembering William Scheide Princeton Benefactor

    Today would have been the 107th birthday of William H. Scheide.

    By coincidence, I was only just thinking about two concerts given in Princeton by Sir John Eliot Gardiner and his Monteverdi Choir. The first, in 2014, was devoted to Bach and Handel, and the second, in 2015, was a performance of Monteverdi’s “Orfeo.” These were among the most memorable concerts I ever attended. Both were made possible thanks to Scheide’s munificence.

    Scheide, who died in 2014 at the age of 100, was as generous as he was long-lived. He shared his abiding love for music, of course, especially that of Bach, of whom he was a respected interpreter and scholar; but he was also active in social causes, fighting against poverty, disease, hunger, ignorance, and discrimination. He touched many, many lives in the Princeton area and beyond.

    He also happened to enrich Princeton University’s Firestone Memorial Library with a trove of rare books and documents, including a Gutenberg Bible, some Shakespeare first folios, a copy of the Declaration of Independence, and manuscripts by Bach, Beethoven, and Lincoln, among others, the fruits of three generations of Scheide book-collecting.

    I had also, by chance, only just been thinking about a Scheide memorial program, a radio documentary of sorts, that I assembled for broadcast on WWFM – The Classical Network, for which I interviewed a number of his intimates and associates, including conductor Mark Laycock, radio personality Teri Noel Towe, and Bach scholar Christoph Wolff, in addition to Scheide’s widow, Judith. In the end, I had to pull a literal all-nighter in order to get it on the air in time, sounding the best it possibly could, on January 6, 2015, on what would have been Scheide’s 101st birthday.

    The year before, I had interviewed Gardiner, in advance of the first of his Princeton concerts, for an article in The Times of Trenton. Gardiner talked about his relationship with the famous Haussman Bach portrait, which then hung in the Scheide home. I also wrote a little more about Scheide’s relationship with Bach and Bach scholarship and his founding of the Bach Aria Group.

    Two Scheide-sponsored concerts, conducted by Laycock, were also mentioned. In 2013, Laycock conducted the Philadelphia Orchestra, in yet another landmark Scheide-sponsored event – the first time the orchestra had played in Princeton in nearly 50 years. His performance of Beethoven’s Symphony No. 9, with the Wiener KammerOrchester and the Westminster Symphonic Choir, on the occasion of Scheide’s 100th birthday, was broadcast nationally on PBS.

    https://www.nj.com/times-entertainment/2014/06/sir_john_eliot_gardiner_to_con.html

    Thanks for the musical memories, Mr. Scheide, and beyond that, thank you for making the world a better place.


    PHOTO: William Scheide (center) with the Bach Aria Group he founded. Clockwise, from left, Eileen Farrell, Julius Baker, Robert Bloom, Paul Ulanowsky, Jan Peerce, Norman Farrow, Bernard Greenhouse, Maurice Wilk and Carol Smith

  • William Scheide Radio Tribute Princeton

    William Scheide Radio Tribute Princeton

    If you just can’t get enough of William H. Scheide and the Bach Aria Group, tune in tomorrow morning to Princeton’s WPRB 103.3 FM (or listen online at http://www.wprb.com) for a belated birthday salute from Teri Noel Towe. Towe, host of Towe on Thursday, was an intimate friend of Scheide for over 40 years. The two shared the microphone on a number occasions, and Teri will revisit one of those. The program is bound to include some personal reminiscences. You can listen from 6 to 11 a.m. ET.

    Of perhaps related interest, my WWFM tribute, “William H. Scheide: A Job Well-Done” (sporting a title ripped from a Towe quote), which originally aired yesterday (the 101st anniversary of Scheide’s birth), will be rebroadcast Friday evening at 8, at 89.1 FM or online at http://www.wwfm.org. I’ll be tweaking the files between now and then so that the rebroadcast will contain subtle differences, including a couple of alternate music files.

    My thanks to Teri for his suggestions, and to Mark Laycock for sending me audio from the Scheide 100th birthday concert, which took place last year at Richardson Auditorium.

  • Remembering William Scheide Bach Scholar

    Remembering William Scheide Bach Scholar

    Princeton philanthropist, humanitarian and Bach scholar William H. Scheide died on November 14, 2014.

    To mark what would have been Scheide’s 101st birthday today, WWFM commissioned me to put together a two-hour tribute, complete with interviews with those who knew him best, including oboist and recorder virtuoso John Burkhalter, conductor Mark Laycock, pianist and associate director of the Scheide Fund Mariam Nazarian, former Scheide librarian Wlliam Stoneman, WPRB radio personality (with a capital “P”) Teri Noel Towe, Bach scholar Christoph Wolff, and of course his wife, Judith Scheide.

    The program will also feature rare recordings of the Bach Aria Group, an ensemble Scheide founded in 1946 and directed for over 30 years. The Bach Aria Group included as regulars or guests such musical luminaries as Eileen Farrell, Carol Smith, Jan Peerce, Maureen Forrester, Jennie Tourel, Norman Farrow, Marian Anderson, Mack Harrell, William Warfield, Julius Baker, Robert Bloom, Maurice Wilk, Oscar Shumsky, Bernard Greenhouse, Yehudi Wyner, and so many others. Robert Shaw even conducts one of the recordings.

    There’s also an excerpt from a rare radio broadcast which originally aired in 1948, with Scheide explaining the mission of the group, and a private recording of Scheide at the piano, playing Chopin, at the age of 92.

    In addition to his Bach research and rare book collecting, for which he is justly celebrated, Scheide aided not only Princeton University and Westminster Choir College of Rider University, but any number of charitable organizations, to promote education, health, civil rights, relief from poverty and hunger, and the general welfare of mankind.

    The next Scheide benefit concert, with Laycock conducting the English Chamber Orchestra at Philadelphia’s Kimmel Center for the Performing Arts on January 27, will benefit the music and education program, Musicopia.

    The station has been promoting this tribute to an embarrassing degree, so it’s a good thing I finished editing it shortly before 8:00 this morning, after an all-nighter fueled by burritos and Dunkin’ Donuts tea.

    It’s only seconds away. Tune in to http://www.wwfm.org at 12 ET for “William H. Scheide: A Job Well Done.” If you miss it, I’m told it will be posted on the station website. I wouldn’t be in the least bit surprised if it is also rerun at some point. The title is stolen from the eminently quotable Towe.

    The opening is brilliant, if I do say so myself. It may get less so as the two hours grind on. It remains to be heard.

    Priceless photos of the Bach Aria Group here:

    http://www.bach-cantatas.com/Bio/BAG-2.htm

  • William Scheide Memorial & The 10th Day

    William Scheide Memorial & The 10th Day

    THE TENTH DAY OF CHRISTMAS

    Ten lords a-leaping. I wish I could train them to do audio editing, thereby dividing my workload by 11.

    I imagine, though, everything going horribly wrong, leading to some kind of Sorcerer’s Apprentice-style catastrophe, with ten manic lords clicking mice and pushing files around and destroying everything I’ve already worked so hard to accomplish. (Then again, I’ve already got Bill Zagorski for that, so I had better keep one ear open for what’s going on in Production 2.)

    You may as well know, since the promo is already in rotation, I am doggedly at work on producing a memorial program for William H. Scheide, the Princeton philanthropist, humanitarian and Bach scholar, who died in November at the age of 100.

    This Tuesday would have been Scheide’s 101st birthday. The plan is to honor his legacy with a two-hour program, for which I’ll have interviewed eight subjects – all people who knew him very well. These accounts will be interspersed with relevant musical examples, including many rare recordings of the Bach Aria Group, an ensemble Scheide founded and directed for over 30 years.

    The memorial is slated to air Tuesday at noon, on http://www.wwfm.org. Which means I may as well sleep here tonight, since I’ll have to be here all day tomorrow if I’m to have a prayer of getting everything in shape by the end of Monday. I already look like Ben Gunn, and probably smell like him too. Anybody have any cheese?

  • William Scheide Princeton Philanthropist Dies at 100

    William Scheide Princeton Philanthropist Dies at 100

    I learned last night of the death of William Scheide, who passed yesterday morning at the age of 100. Scheide was as generous as he was long-lived. He shared his abiding love for music, of course, especially that of Johann Sebastian Bach, of whom he was a respected interpreter and scholar; but he was also active in social causes, fighting against poverty, disease, hunger, ignorance and discrimination. He touched many, many lives in the Princeton area and beyond.

    This article, which was posted on Planet Princeton yesterday, merely scratches the surface:

    Princeton Philanthropist William H. Scheide Dies at 100

    My sympathy to his family and friends.

    PHOTO: William Scheide (center) with the Bach Aria Group he founded. Clockwise, from left, Eileen Farrell, Julius Baker, Robert Bloom, Paul Ulanowsky, Jan Peerce, Norman Farrow, Bernard Greenhouse, Maurice Wilk and Carol Smith

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