Tag: WWFM

  • Olympic Music at Picture Perfect WWFM

    Olympic Music at Picture Perfect WWFM

    Citius! Altius! Fortius!

    This week on “Picture Perfect,” to coincide with the Summer Games in Tokyo, we’ll get the blood pumping, with selections from Olympic opening ceremonies and television broadcasts.

    Featured composers with include Leo Arnaud (a Ravel pupil, who worked on “The Wizard of Oz” and went on to write THE classic Olympic theme), Angelo Badalamenti (David Lynch’s composer of choice), Basil Poledouris (composer of “Conan the Barbarian” and “The Hunt for Red October”), and John Williams (‘nuff said).

    In addition, there will be a suite from the Olympic documentary “16 Days of Glory,” by Lee Holdridge (recipient of seven Emmys and a Grammy),

    We’ll be downing our Wheaties and going for the gold, on “Picture Perfect,” this Saturday evening at 6:00 EDT, on WWFM – The Classical Network and wwfm.org!

    FUN FACT: Today is also Arnaud’s birthday!

  • Vacation Music on the Radio This Sunday

    Vacation Music on the Radio This Sunday

    Armchair travelers, rejoice! This Sunday night on “The Lost Chord,” it’s an hour of musical impressions of composers on vacation.

    Tune in for “Postcard Greetings” by Jenö Takács, “Four Breton Sketches” by Anthony Hedges, and “En Vacances” (“On Vacation”) by Deodat de Severac.

    No baggage! No fuss!

    Relax and enjoy the music, on “Leisure Treasures,” this Sunday night at 10:00 EDT, on WWFM – The Classical Network and wwfm.org.

  • Last Chance Year-End Donation for Classical Music

    Last Chance Year-End Donation for Classical Music

    Last chance to make your dollars count toward the end of our fiscal year. Make your contribution before midnight (EDT), as we look forward to another great year of classical music and hopefully more community engagement. This is one “last” we hope will be first on your list. Call now at 1-888-232-1212 or donate online at wwfm.org. Thank you for your continued support of WWFM – The Classical Network!

    https://wwwfm.secureallegiance.com/wwfm/WebModule/Donate.aspx?P=DEFAULT&PAGETYPE=PLG&CHECK=vOU2bz5JCWmgCDbf53nm9ezWDeZ%2beA1M

  • George Walker Pulitzer Winner Remembrance

    George Walker Pulitzer Winner Remembrance

    George Walker would have been 99 years-old today.

    Walker was the first African-American recipient of the Pulitzer Prize for Music – as recently as 1996 – for “Lilacs for Voice and Orchestra.” He was the first black pianist to present a solo recital at New York’s Town Hall (in 1945). He was the first black performer to appear as soloist with the Philadelphia Orchestra (performing Rachmaninoff’s Piano Concerto No. 3). He was the first black musician to graduate from the Curtis Institute of Music (where he studied with Rudolf Serkin and Rosario Scalero).

    Walker died on August 23, 2018, at the age of 96. This Sunday night on “The Lost Chord,” we’ll celebrate this trailblazing artist with a program of four of his original works, including his Piano Sonata No. 2 (with the composer himself at the keyboard), the award-winning “Lilacs” (after poetry of Walt Whitman), “Address for Orchestra” (his first major orchestral work), and “Lyric for Strings” (his most famous music, in its original version for string quartet).

    Born in Washington, D.C., Walker was a longtime resident of Montclair, NJ. His father emigrated from Kingston, Jamaica, to study at Temple University School of Medicine; Walker’s mother supervised his first piano lessons. He was admitted to the Oberlin School of Music at the age of 14. He was then admitted to the Curtis Institute in Philadelphia, and later attended the Eastman School. For two years, he studied in Paris with famed pedagogue Nadia Boulanger.

    Walker’s own academic career included posts with Dillard University in New Orleans, the Dalcroze School of Music, the New School for Social Research, Smith College, the University of Colorado Boulder, Rutgers University (where he served as chairman of the music department), the Peabody Institute of John Hopkins University, and the University of Delaware.

    He was the father of two sons, violinist and composer Gregory T.S. Walker and playwright Ian Walker. His sister was the pianist Frances Walker-Slocum.

    By his own assessment, Walker was a composer more interested in building “elegant structures” than in “creating beauty.” Depending on one’s sensibility, it could be argued that he achieved both.

    I hope you’ll join me in “Perambulating with Walker,” this Sunday night at 10:00 EDT, on WWFM – The Classical Network and wwfm.org.


    A fascinating interview with Walker by Frank J. Oteri, which, among other things, lends an added dimension to Walker’s most frequently performed music (the “Lyric”) and offers insights into his life and musical philosophy. Also, some great photos!

    https://nmbx.newmusicusa.org/george-walker-concise-and-precise/


    Do you enjoy exploring unusual and neglected repertoire like that offered on “The Lost Chord?” Whatever it is you appreciate about WWFM The Classical Network, we hope you will help support it with your contribution today. Make a donation through Wednesday, June 30 (the end of our fiscal year), and help balance our budget, at wwfm.org.

    We couldn’t do it without enthusiastic and committed listeners like you. Thank you for all that you do to keep classical music on the radio!

    https://wwwfm.secureallegiance.com/wwfm/WebModule/Donate.aspx?P=DEFAULT&PAGETYPE=PLG&CHECK=vOU2bz5JCWmgCDbf53nm9ezWDeZ%2beA1M

  • Bulgarian Music This Sunday on WWFM

    Bulgarian Music This Sunday on WWFM

    This Sunday night on “The Lost Chord,” it’s “take 2” for a Bulgarian travelogue, postponed from April because of a technical glitch.

    Despite his Mexican-sounding first name and Swiss birth, Pancho Vladigerov was a seminal figure in Bulgarian music. He was the country’s first major composer to harness Bulgarian folk traditions to classical forms.

    Fairly well known in Central Europe during the 1920s, when he was an associate of the theatrical impresario Max Reinhardt, Vladigerov had many of his works published by Universal Edition and recorded by Deutsche Grammophon. He was a composer of opera, ballet, symphonic music, five piano concertos, two violin concertos, chamber music, songs, choral works, and piano pieces.

    Tonight, we’ll hear a generous selection from Vladigerov’s “Bulgarian Dances” of 1931.

    Also on the program will be American composer Derek Bermel’s affectionate souvenir of his studies in the region, “Thracian Echoes” of 2002. Bermel served as artist-in-residence at Princeton’s Institute for Advanced Study from 2009 to 2013. His “Thracian Echoes” was performed locally by the Princeton Symphony Orchestra in 2011.

    There will be no balking in the Balkans. Skim the cream of Bulgarian music, on “Bulgar Wheat,” this Sunday night at 10:00 EDT, on WWFM – The Classical Network and wwfm.org.

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