Tag: WWFM

  • European Film Music for Summer Vacation Dreams

    European Film Music for Summer Vacation Dreams

    The light is shifting. It’s still summer, but the perceptible creep toward shorter days has begun.

    That said, with nearly three weeks left in August, there’s still time for a quick European vacation. This week on “Picture Perfect,” we’ll glance across the pond for an hour of music from foreign films with summer settings.

    “A Summer Story,” based on a tale of John Galsworthy, tells of young London lawyer and a farm girl who fall profoundly in love at the turn of last century. Georges Delerue provides the poignant score.

    The juxtaposition of “Igmar Bergman” and “comedy” may seem like something of an oxymoron, but the dour Swede’s “Smiles of a Summer Night” proves to be a witty examination of the folly of the human heart. Frequent Bergman collaborator Erik Nordgren wrote the music.

    Director Yves Robert adapted the memoirs of Marcel Pagnol, who spent his childhood summers in the south of France, into two lovely films, “My Father’s Glory” and “My Mother’s Castle.” We’ll hear music composed for both by Vladimir Cosma. Pagnol’s experiences in Provence marked him for life, informing the films and writings of his maturity, including “The Baker’s Wife,” and “Jean de Florette.”

    Finally, we’ll have a generous sampling from one of Ennio Morricone’s most beloved scores, that for “Cinema Paradiso.” “Cinema Paradiso,” set in a post-war Siciy where it always seems to be summer, is a nostalgic paean to the shared experience of film and the significance it holds in our lives. It won a special jury prize at the Cannes Film Festival and was honored with an Academy Award for Best Foreign Film.

    I hope you’ll join me for summer overseas, on “Picture Perfect,” this Friday evening at 6:00 EDT, on WWFM – The Classical Network and wwfm.org.

  • British Light Music Lost Chord WWFM

    British Light Music Lost Chord WWFM

    Trip the light fantastic. This Sunday night on “The Lost Chord,” we take a nostalgic journey with an hour of British Light Music. I hope you’ll join me for vintage recordings, featuring works by Albert Ketèlbey, Samuel Coleridge-Taylor, Sir Edward Elgar, Richard Addinsell, George Scott-Wood, Haydn Wood, Billy Mayerl and Eric Coates. That’s “Distant Light,” this Sunday night at 10:00 EDT, on WWFM – The Classical Network and wwfm.org.

  • Marlboro Music Festival: Tradition and Camaraderie

    Marlboro Music Festival: Tradition and Camaraderie

    Continuity and tradition run deep at Marlboro.

    Above and beyond the love of chamber music, a shared sense of relaxed camaraderie lure musicians and audiences back to this idyllic summer festival year after year.

    Take clarinetist Charles Neidich and pianist Cynthia Raim. Both have been active at the Marlboro Music Festival for decades. Last weekend, Neidich performed music of Elliot Carter and one of his own compositions in the Marlboro College Dining Hall. Raim will perform Claude Debussy’s “En blanc et noir” for two pianos, with Xiaohui Yang, at the college’s Persons Auditorium this Saturday at 8 p.m.

    Both musicians will be featured on our next “Music from Marlboro,” on The Classical Network, in selections drawn from extensive Malboro Music archive. Raim will perform Johannes Brahms’ “Variations on a Theme by Joseph Haydn,” with pianist Stephanie Brown, from a concert given in 1976. Neidich will appear in George Rochberg’s Trio for Clarinet, Horn and Piano, with hornist José Vicente Castelló and pianist Igor Levit, from 2007. The program will also include Franz Joseph Haydn’s String Quartet in B-flat major, Op. 33, No. 4.

    This year’s Marlboro Music Festival will run through August 13. For more information, look online at marlboromusic.org.

    I hope you’ll join me for more inspired music-making from Marlboro Music, on “Music from Marlboro,” this Wednesday evening at 6 EDT, on WWFM – The Classical Network and wwfm.org.


    Marlboro School of Music and Festival: Official Page

    PHOTOS: Charles Neidich and Cynthia Raim

  • Hans Rott: Mahler’s Lost Symphony Pioneer

    Hans Rott: Mahler’s Lost Symphony Pioneer

    He was a brilliant improviser on the organ, Anton Bruckner’s favorite student. Gustav Mahler, his roommate, declared him “the founder of a new symphony.”

    It must have seemed very new at the time. When he submitted the first movement to a composition contest, the jury (with the exception of Bruckner) was beyond dismissive, even condescending, in its remarks. When he showed Johannes Brahms the manuscript, Brahms told him he had no talent and that he should give up composing.

    Hans Rott (1858-1884) lacked Mahler’s resolve, and his productivity was further hampered by encroaching mental illness. In 1880, while traveling, Rott pulled a revolver on a fellow passenger, convinced that Brahms had filled his train with dynamite. He was diagnosed with hallucinatory insanity and persecution mania. He died in an asylum, of tuberculosis, at the age of 25.

    Had fate dealt him a different hand, it’s entirely possible Rott would have developed into a composer as well-known as his contemporaries. It’s obvious from his only symphony, which dates from the final year of his studies, 1878, that Mahler was greatly influenced by his classmate. In fact, it’s startling to find so many “Mahlerian” characteristics already in evidence in this work that predated Mahler’s 1st.

    Hear it this afternoon, on Hans Rott’s birthday. Rott’s symphony will be among my featured works, from noon to 4 p.m. EDT. We’ll also observe the anniversary of the births of composers Benedetto Marcello and Jerome Moross, and conductor William Steinberg, on WWFM – The Classical Network and wwfm.org.


    PHOTOS: Future master of the fin-de-siècle symphony, Gustav Mahler (left), and his roommate, who showed him the way

  • English Conductors on WWFM

    English Conductors on WWFM

    Britannia rules the waves – the airwaves, that is. July 31 marks the anniversaries of the births of English conductors Norman Del Mar and Steuart Bedford. Join me as we celebrate with an abundance of English music today, from 4 to 7 p.m. EDT, on WWFM – The Classical Network and wwfm.org.

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