Tag: WWFM

  • Support Classical Music on WWFM

    Support Classical Music on WWFM

    Raising money for public radio can sometimes seem like pulling teeth. Help us reach our goal of $46,000 by calling 1-888-232-1212, or making your tax-deductable contribution online at wwfm.org. Then stay tuned, between 4 and 7 p.m. EDT, for music by Sir William Walton, Peter Warlock, Ralph Vaughan Williams, Antonio Vivaldi, Giacomo Puccini, Camille Saint-Saëns, Jean-Philippe Rameau, Agustin Lara, Manuel Ponce and more. Four out of five dentists recommend WWFM – The Classical Network and wwfm.org.

  • War of the Worlds & Martian Movie Music

    War of the Worlds & Martian Movie Music

    This week on “Picture Perfect,” with Halloween only days away, my thoughts turn to Grover’s Mill, the community located not far outside of Princeton, NJ, that became the focal point of Orson Welles’ notorious radio adaptation of H.G. Wells’ “The War of the Worlds.”

    On October 30, 1938, Welles’ Mercury Theatre presented the classic’s dramatization after the manner of “breaking news,” with simulated live reports interrupting a program of regularly scheduled dance music. What the alleged reports described was chilling – a Martian invasion of rural America by hostile aliens bearing fiery weapons and poisonous gas. The whole story was authenticated, in real time, by a “Professor Richard Pierson of Princeton Observatory.”

    Those who tuned in late or were only half-listening completely freaked out, and reacted in a manner unimaginable in an era of social media. Panicked mobs choked the streets, phone lines were jammed, and police flooded CBS Studios. Welles had dropped the biggest firecracker right in the middle of a United States already on edge, thanks to widespread access to radio reports of mounting tensions in Europe.

    You might say Welles’ (and Wells’) fame skyrocketed. Orson Welles would match his early notoriety a few years later with his Hollywood debut, as producer, director, co-writer, and star of “Citizen Kane,” which inflamed William Randolph Hearst, while H.G. Wells’ novel has remained his most popular, the work having been adapted to film several times.

    We’ll hear music from the classic 1953 version, produced by George Pal, with music by Leith Stevens; then the Steven Spielberg blockbuster, from 2005 (titled, simply, “War of the Worlds”), with music by John Williams.

    After that, we’ll take it to the Red Planet, when an American astronaut is stranded with his test monkey, in 1964’s “Robinson Crusoe on Mars,” with music by Van Cleave.

    Finally, we’ll turn to Edgar Rice Burroughs’ John Carter. Why Disney dropped “of Mars” from the title – something that would have actually said something about the subject matter – is anybody’s guess. The belated 2012 adaptation came 100 years after the character was introduced. Unfortunately, the intervening decades robbed Burroughs’ creation of much of its freshness, with dozens, if not hundreds, of science fiction novels and movies having plundered the author’s pulp treasure trove. “John Carter” was less striking than it might have been, but the film was certainly not the train wreck the press made it out to be. Michael Giacchino’s score ends the hour on a romantic note, a welcome relief after dodging so many Martian heat rays.

    I hope you’ll join me for an interplanetary exchange program (though, granted, not always a peaceful one), with music from movies about visitors to and from Mars, on “Picture Perfect,” this Friday evening at 6 EDT, on WWFM – The Classical Network and wwfm.org.


    WWFM is the classical music station located closest to the site of Welles’ projected Martian invasion. In the interest of galactic harmony, please support us online or at 1-888-232-1212.

  • Mélomanie Music Mania on The Classical Network

    Mélomanie Music Mania on The Classical Network

    Mélomanie means music mania! It also could be translated, more charitably, as “a love of music.”

    On today’s Noontime Concert on The Classical Network, we’ll enjoy performances by Mélomanie, the Delaware-based ensemble that specializes in provocative pairings of early and contemporary music.

    From the 17th century, we’ll hear from Michel-Richard Delalande (the Chaconne from “Les fontaines de Versailles”); from the 18th century, Johann Christian Shieferdecker (his Musicalisches Concert No. 1 in A minor) and Benoît Guillemant (the Sonata in C major, Op. 3, No. 4, for two bass instruments); and, from closer to our own time, Mark Hagerty (“Ultraviolet,” in its world premiere performance), Matthias Maute (“It’s Summertime: A Trilogy,” after George Gershwin), and Liduino Pitombeira (“Impressões Quixerés” and “The Sound of the Sea,” also receiving its world premiere).

    Mélomanie’s next concert will take place on Sunday at 2 p.m. at The Delaware Contemporary, 200 S. Madison Street, in Wilmington, DE. You can learn more by visiting the ensemble’s website, melomanie.org.

    It may be summertime for Matthias Maute, but, on this good, moody, October day, the rest of the afternoon will be seasoned with more autumnal fare, until 4 p.m. EDT, on WWFM – The Classical Network and wwfm.org.

  • Bach Choir 2017 Season & Thomanerchor Visit

    Bach Choir 2017 Season & Thomanerchor Visit

    Greg Funfgeld, artistic director of The Bach Choir of Bethlehem, dropped by the WWFM studios today to talk about the choir’s 2017-2018 season, including its roster of “Bach at Noon” concerts, the group’s outreach programs and family concerts, and of course the Bach Festival, which was established in 1900.

    On November 11 at 4 p.m., the Bach Choir will host the Thomanerchor Leipzig – Bach’s own choir, which has a tradition that dates all the way back to 1212! – at a gala concert to be held at Central Moravian Church in historic downtown Bethlehem, PA. For more information on all things Bach Choir, visit the group’s website, bach.org.

    And don’t forget to tune in to WWFM – The Classical Network for our Noontime Concert on November 9 to enjoy one of the Bach Choir’s “Bach at Noon” concerts, which took place on September 12.

    Thank you for coming in, Greg Funfgeld!

  • Peter the Great Tsar Undercover Opera Gem

    Peter the Great Tsar Undercover Opera Gem

    Peter the Great goes slumming in the comic opera “Zar und Zimmermann” (Tsar and Carpenter). Apropos of the title, the Russian Tsar goes undercover as a common laborer in a Dutch shipyard in order to learn shipbuilding techniques to fulfill his dream of making Russia a maritime power.

    The opera is one of the most enduring of Albert Lortzing (1801-1951). Lortzing himself sang the role of “the carpenter” during the work’s premiere. We’ll celebrate Lortzing’s birthday today, as well as that of American composer Ned Rorem, from 4 to 7 p.m. EDT, on WWFM – The Classical Network and wwfm.org.


    PHOTO: Monument of Peter the Great building a boat in St. Petersburg

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