Tag: WPRB

  • WPRB Radio Show Sundays Recall Thursdays

    WPRB Radio Show Sundays Recall Thursdays

    Look to see me no more, Thursday mornings on WPRB. But look here, that you may remember what has transpired between us, Sunday mornings from 7 to 10 EST, on WPRB 103.3 FM and wprb.com.

  • Ross Amico Moves to Sundays on WPRB

    Ross Amico Moves to Sundays on WPRB

    Ask for me tomorrow and you shall find me a grave man.

    Not to put too much of a point on it, but “Classic Ross Amico” will no longer be heard on Thursday mornings on WPRB. Instead, stay sharp for “Mornings on Earth with Elizabeth,” which will take the early Thursday slot, from 6 to 9 EST.

    Cutting to the chase, henceforth Classic Ross Amico will play it to the hilt on Sunday mornings, from 7 to 10 EST. I hope you’ll continue to follow my rugged good looks and rapier wit, on WPRB 103.3 FM and wprb.com.

  • New WPRB Show Sunday Mornings Feedback Wanted

    New WPRB Show Sunday Mornings Feedback Wanted

    Now that I’ve attended to all my end-of-week obligations (and replaced the faulty router I complained about two Saturdays ago), I am again footloose and fancy free in the cyber universe. I just wanted to take a moment to thank all of you who expressed disappointment that my Thursday morning show on WPRB was coming to an end, gratitude for what I managed to achieve there, and anticipation for what may lie in the near future. I intend to respond to all of your comments personally – I was both too busy and too wiped out to do so on Thursday and Friday – so don’t think that I did not appreciate them!

    I want to remind you that the plan is for me to create a new show on WPRB, which will air on Sunday mornings, beginning on February 11 (next week). I am asking you again for your suggestions and your feedback. There are a couple of ideas I would like to bounce off of you, and I’d like to know if they hold any appeal. It took a few weeks, when I first started on Thursdays, to settle into a format, and I expect the same will be the case for Sundays. Nothing is etched in stone!

    One possibility I have been entertaining is to resurrect the dormant tradition of playing a Sunday opera. The strength and also the limitation of my doing so would be that if I were to draw on my personal collection (which is what I always do), the show would definitely be skewed toward unusual and neglected repertoire – which is great if you love English music, Slavic opera, Scandinavian stuff, and forgotten American fare, and horrible if you love Verdi. Also, with opera, if you are in for a penny, you are in for a pound. That means that if you tune in and imagine that you aren’t going to like what I am playing, I’ve lost you for the entire show.

    Another idea is to present a show of light classics. This could involve some degree of music for the stage, including operetta and zarzuela, or selections there from. These would appear in a format that would also allow for a fair amount of British Light Music, light classical, and generally cheery stuff – not “pops” fare, necessarily, but beautiful, tuneful music that has basically dropped off everyone’s radar. I think that could make for a great Sunday morning. But I am also open to other suggestions.

    Of course, I could always just do what I’ve been doing for the past few years, but you’d only get it for three hours (as opposed to five), and I can’t always guarantee that it will be “light.”

    The program would occupy a 7-to-10 slot immediately prior to Jeannie Becker’s “Sunday Jazz.” If I were to tackle a particularly mammoth opera, I could start earlier on a given week, though my preference is to start at 7. Remember, the program will launch next Sunday, so get me your thoughts as soon as you can. Again, thank you for all your words of support, and thank you for following Classic Ross Amico.

  • Composer Deaths A WPRB Farewell

    Composer Deaths A WPRB Farewell

    Jean-Baptiste Lully, also an accomplished dancer, injured his toe while pounding the floor with a heavy stick to mark time; the resultant infection killed him. Anton Webern violated curfew when he snuck out on his porch for a smoke and was shot by an American soldier. Ernest Chausson lost control of his bicycle and fatally slammed into a brick wall. Henry Purcell developed pneumonia after his wife locked him out of the house for coming home late after one too many pub crawls. Charles-Valentin Alkan reached for a copy of the Talmud, located on a high shelf, when the bookcase toppled, crushing him. Edward MacDowell, César Franck, and Maurice Ravel were all hit by cabs. Mieczyslaw Karlowicz was caught in an avalanche. Alexander Scriabin died of a septic carbuncle. Jean-Marie Leclair was found murdered in his room. Alessandro Stradella was set upon by unidentified assassins for being too much of a ladies’ man.

    Face it – there is no good way to go, and it all ends badly.

    This Thursday morning on WPRB, we bid farewell to “Classic Ross Amico” with a full playlist of music by composers who died horribly, either in accidents, through assassinations, from bizarre illnesses, or in otherwise outlandish fashion.

    That said, the plan is not for me to leave WPRB entirely. It’s possible I’ll be taking over Sunday mornings, beginning on February 11, to kickstart an opera show or to inaugurate a program devoted to light music. If either one of these appeal, or if you have any other ideas, feel free to comment below.

    In the meantime, we’ll pay our last respects, this Thursday morning from 6 to 11 EST, on WPRB 103.3 FM and wprb.com. It finally has come down to music by “dead white males,” on Classic Ross Amico.

  • Classic Ross Amico’s Deadly Finale on WPRB

    Classic Ross Amico’s Deadly Finale on WPRB

    This Thursday morning on WPRB will be the series finale of “Classic Ross Amico.” And if I have to go, I’m taking everyone with me. We’ll have a full playlist of music by composers who died horribly, either in accidents, through assassinations, from bizarre illnesses, or in otherwise spectacular fashion.

    Take heart! I won’t be leaving WPRB entirely. Listen for me on Sunday mornings, beginning on February 11, for something entirely fresh. Whether it will be an opera show or a program devoted to light music is still up in the air, so feel free to state your preference by leaving a comment below.

    In the meantime, I hope you’ll join me for the bitter end, this Thursday morning from 6 to 11 EST, on WPRB 103.3 FM and wprb.com. We’ll shudder at spectacular deaths of the (de)composers, on Classic Ross Amico.

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