Tag: WWFM

  • Brahms Tchaikovsky Birthday Celebration on WWFM

    Brahms Tchaikovsky Birthday Celebration on WWFM

    It just works out that way sometimes. Two titans at the top of their respective fields born on the same day. Think Rachmaninoff and Busoni (April 1). Or Kreisler and Heifetz (February 2).

    On Thursday, May 7, The Classical Network will honor the dual birthdays of Johannes Brahms (born in 1833) and Peter Ilych Tchaikovsky (born in 1840), by assembling special request hours in their honor.

    Have a favorite piece of music by either of these composers? Want to hear a cherished performance? Submit your requests ASAP on the WWFM Facebook page or by email at info@wwfm.org. This will give us time to hunt down the music and put it into production. The earlier you file your request, the greater the likelihood that we’ll be able to get it on air.

    Also, we hope that you will renew your membership, perhaps become a member for the very first time, or make an extra gift. Any of these options would assist us greatly during this rocky time.

    https://wwwfm.secureallegiance.com/wwfm/WebModule/Donate.aspx?P=DEFAULT&PAGETYPE=PLG&CHECK=vOU2bz5JCWmgCDbf53nm9ezWDeZ%2BeA1M&fbclid=IwAR3YfrpOmdmpCYBl7RQFPQbKf0amDTTbEJxc_7tnPOUbdoKr7cDIsBN731s

    Celebrate Brahms. Revel in Tchaikovsky. And thank you for your support of WWFM – The Classical Network and wwfm.org.


    Brahms & Tchaik: We few, we happy few, we bearded brothers…

  • Kurosawa Film Music WWFM Friday

    Kurosawa Film Music WWFM Friday

    Carve out some time for music from the films of Akira Kurosawa, on “Picture Perfect,” this Friday evening at 6:00 EDT, on WWFM – The Classical Network and wwfm.org.

  • Summer Music Festivals COVID-19 Challenges Discussed

    Summer Music Festivals COVID-19 Challenges Discussed

    The Princeton Festival Executive and Artistic Director Richard Tang Yuk will be among the featured guests tonight on “A Tempo,” as host Rachel Katz will take a look at some of the tough decisions and creative solutions being weighed by organizers of this year’s summer music festivals in the face of COVID-19.

    Also commenting will be Opera Steamboat Artistic Director Andres Cladera and Aspen Music Festival and School President and CEO Alan Fletcher.

    “A Tempo” airs tonight at 7 p.m. EDT, on WWFM – The Classical Network and wwfm.org.


    Don’t forget to join Rachel also for “On a Positive Note,” a recently-instituted, daily, six-minute segment that spotlights musicians who are finding ways to share performances and lift spirits during this time of near-global isolation.

    “On a Positive Note” can be heard weekdays at 10 a.m. and 5 p.m. EDT, also on WWFM The Classical Network and wwfm.org.

  • Laurel & Hardy Marlboro Music Comedy

    Laurel & Hardy Marlboro Music Comedy

    Our regular Wednesday feature, “Music from Marlboro,” may be on hiatus from WWFM – The Classical Network, as we all continue to do our part to Flatten the Curve, but here’s a little something hopefully to keep you smiling. Only two genii of silent comedy could send up chamber music performance in pantomime like this. It’s the only time the pair would ever appear together on film.

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aPRW1VQxmTs

    Marlboro School of Music and Festival: Official Page

  • John Foulds Rediscovered

    John Foulds Rediscovered

    Though steeped in the comparatively conservative milieu of the English musical renaissance at the turn of last century, John Foulds possessed a physical, intellectual, spiritual, and creative wanderlust.

    Foulds moved to India in 1935. There, he collected native folk tunes. He became director of European music for All-India Radio in Delhi, created an orchestra from scratch, and labored tirelessly to fulfill his vision of a synthesis between Eastern and Western music. He also composed works for traditional Indian instruments. His efforts on behalf of the radio were so successful that he was asked to open a satellite branch in Calcutta. Unfortunately, he contracted cholera and died within a week of his arrival, at the age of 58.

    Because of the remote location and the fact that a number of the pieces of his maturity have been lost, or the manuscripts extensively compromised, Foulds’ slight reputation has rested for the most part on his “light music.” (especially “Keltic Lament”). But Foulds was definitely ahead of his time, as the gradual rediscovery of his works has revealed, with the composer’s fascination for quarter-tones and, occasionally, a tendency toward an almost proto-minimalism.

    So diverse were Foulds’ output and enthusiasms that it is difficult, if not impossible, to encapsulate the scope of his achievements within a single hour. Nevertheless, this Sunday night on “The Lost Chord,” we will endeavor to do our best, by sharing his light concert overture “April – England,” “Three Mantras” from the abandoned Sanskrit opera, “Avatara,” and selections from “A World Requiem.”

    It’s a Foulds paradise! Join me for “April Foulds,” this Sunday night at 10:00 EDT, on WWFM – The Classical Network and wwfm.org.


    PHOTO: Foulds (right), sitting in on an Indian jam session

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