Tag: WWFM

  • Kurtág and Boccherini: A Marlboro Birthday Bash

    Kurtág and Boccherini: A Marlboro Birthday Bash

    On this week’s “Music from Marlboro,” we’ll have works by birthday celebrants – and strange bedfellows – György Kurtág and Luigi Boccherini.

    Kurtág, the aphoristic Hungarian master, was born on this date in 1929; Boccherini, the “Haydn of the Mediterranean,” lived from 1743 to 1805.

    Kurtág studied at the Franz Liszt Academy in Budapest. It was there that he met his wife and forged a lifelong friendship with György Ligeti. Following the Hungarian uprising of 1956, he spent an extended period in Paris, where he studied with Olivier Messiaen, Darius Milhaud, and Schoenberg pupil Max Deutsch. It was also during this time that he was introduced to the music of Anton Webern and the plays of Samuel Beckett. He returned to Budapest, where eventually he wound up teaching at his alma mater for 26 years.

    It is fortunate that Kurtág has been so long-lived, since it wasn’t until an age when most people contemplate retirement, in his 60s, that his international reputation really began to take off. Gradually, he became regarded as one of the most respected composers of his time.

    Kurtág is a meticulous artist. His works are like finely honed miniatures. But these are not pieces for display in the curio cabinet; rather exquisitely crafted microcosms, notable for their poetry and flashes of expressive intensity.

    “Hommage à Mihály András,” written in 1977 for the 60th birthday of the Hungarian composer, conductor, and cellist, is a set of twelve “microludes.” Each one corresponds to the twelve degrees of the chromatic scale. Collectively, they span no more than ten minutes in length. Individually, they are the distillation of a lifetime’s worth of experience. The work was performed at Marlboro in 1997 by violinists Robert Waters and Catherine Szepes, violist Jessica Troy, and cellist Siegfried Palm.

    Luigi Boccherini composed his music in another world, the court of Madrid, where he was in the employ of the Infante Don Luis, younger brother of the King of Spain. While the Guitar Quintet No. 7 in E minor, G. 451, of 1797, adheres to Classical form, its minor key suggests, at times, an undercurrent of wistfulness that feints toward an emotional preoccupation of a sort that would later come to dominate the Romantic era. We’ll hear a 1974 recording featuring guitarist David Starobin, violinists Pina Carmirelli & Philip Setzer, violist Philipp Naegele, and cellist Peter Wiley.

    This unlikely duo, Boccherini and Kurtág, will be united, paradoxically, in contrasts – Béla Bartók’s “Contrasts.” Though separated by 45 years, Bartók and Kurtág were both born in the Hungarian-speaking Banat region of modern-day Romania.

    “Contrasts,” of 1938, is a raw, fascinating work. Inspired by Hungarian and Romanian dance melodies, the piece was commissioned by Benny Goodman, of all people. This trio – for clarinet, violin, and piano – contains passages of bitonality and frenzied dances for scordatura violin. We’ll hear it performed at the 1998 Marlboro Music Festival by clarinetist Anthony McGill, violinist Catherine Cho, and pianist Pierre-Laurent Aimard.

    There will be ample pálinka to offset the paella, as we celebrate Kurtág and Boccherini on their birthdays, on the next Music from Marlboro, this Wednesday evening at 6:00 EST, on WWFM – The Classical Network and wwfm.org.

    Marlboro School of Music and Festival: Official Page


    Concise, but not curt: happy birthday, György Kurtág

  • Presidents Day Music Potomac WWFM

    Presidents Day Music Potomac WWFM

    I hope you’ll join me in celebrating Presidents Day on this lovely Tuesday afternoon. I’ll been hurling CDs across the Potomac, from 4 to 7 p.m. EST, on WWFM – The Classical Network and wwfm.org.

  • Presidents Day Classical Music Special

    Presidents Day Classical Music Special

    Hail to the Chiefs!

    You’d better sail through those white sales. You’ll want to be near an electronic device at 4:00 today for my annual State of the Union on The Classical Network. I’ll be revving up the musical automatons at the Hall of Presidents for Presidents Day.

    We’ll hear works inspired by Thomas Jefferson, Chester A. Arthur, Theodore Roosevelt, John F. Kennedy, Richard Nixon, and of course George Washington and Abraham Lincoln. Of course, I already played an hour’s worth of music in celebration of Lincoln for his birthday (February 12), but our 16th president inspired more note-spinning than can be crammed into a stovepipe hat.

    If you’re looking to buy a roll of quarters, you may be out of luck, the banks are closed. But Washington will be well represented, in Virgil Thomson’s naïf ballet “Parson Weems and the Cherry Tree” (a Bicentennial commission), George Antheil’s rousing concert overture, “McKonkey’s Ferry (Washington at Trenton),” and John Lampkin’s “George Washington Slept Here.”

    Composer Victoria Bond wrote four portraits of presidential character, for narrator and instrumental soloist. These were released on her album, “Soul of a Nation,” on the Albany Records label. The title track incorporates a violin for Thomas Jefferson, “The Indispensable Man” a clarinet for Franklin Delano Roosevelt, “The Crowded Hours” a trumpet for Theodore Roosevelt, and “Pater Patriae” a flute for George Washington. I’ll select one of these for airplay this afternoon.

    Peter Lieberson’s “Remembering JFK” was composed for the 50th anniversary of the Kennedy inauguration. Its moving narration, compiled from the president’s own words, will be delivered by Richard Dreyfuss. Where have all the statesmen gone?

    And, as an added curiosity, Chester A. Arthur disliked “Hail to the Chief” so intensely that he asked John Philip Sousa to write a replacement anthem. We’ll find time for that, too.

    There may be no mail today, but we’ll sure sift through plenty of junk. I hope you’ll join me in celebrating Presidents Day, from 4 to 7 p.m. EST, on WWFM – The Classical Network and wwfm.org.

  • St Valentine Skull Doomed Love on Classical Network

    St Valentine Skull Doomed Love on Classical Network

    Valentine’s memento mori: My annual posting of the skull of St. Valentine.

    I hope you’ll join me for a paean to doomed love – including music from “Somewhere in Time” (John Barry), “The Ghost and Mrs. Muir” (Bernard Herrmann), “Always” (John Williams), and “Wuthering Heights” (Alfred Newman) – on “Picture Perfect,” this Friday evening at 6:00 EST, on WWFM – The Classical Network and wwfm.org.

  • Roy Harris Gettysburg Symphony on WWFM

    Roy Harris Gettysburg Symphony on WWFM

    Roy Harris (1898-1979) was born in a log cabin, in Lincoln County, OK, on Lincoln’s birthday – albeit 89 years later. If that doesn’t imbue a composer with a sense of destiny, I don’t know what will.

    Harris went on to became one of our great American symphonists. In particular, his Symphony No. 3 of 1939 has been much beloved and frequently performed. Unfortunately, we don’t hear all that much of his music anymore. And that’s a damned shame.

    Join me this afternoon on The Classical Network, as we celebrate these dual birthdays with a recording of Roy Harris’ Symphony No. 6. Subtitled “Gettysburg,” each of the symphony’s four movements bears a superscription taken from Lincoln’s Gettysburg Address:

    I. Awakening (“Fourscore and seven years ago…”);

    II. Conflict (“Now we are engaged in a great civil war…”);

    III. Dedication (“We are met on a great battlefield of that war…”);

    IV. Affirmation (“…that we here highly resolve that these dead shall not have died in vain…).

    Of course, it wouldn’t be right if we didn’t also hear Aaron Copland’s “Lincoln Portrait.” Copland lent Harris a helping hand by putting in a good word for him with his teacher, Nadia Boulanger. The piece is a stirring reminder of a time when America still produced articulate, conscientious, and compassionate statesmen. The great William Warfield will recite Lincoln’s words, from an out-of-print LP on the Mercury label. Warfield always did such a fine job with Copland’s “Old American Songs.”

    At 6:00, it’s another “Music from Marlboro,” chamber music performances of works by Beethoven and Louis Spohr. We’ll see what else we can come up with, along the way.

    You can fool all of the people some of the time and some of the people all of the time, but you cannot fool all of the people all of the time. This man’s legs are long enough to reach the ground, from 4 to 7 p.m. EST, on WWFM – The Classical Network and wwfm.org.

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