Tag: WWFM

  • Giving Tuesday on The Classical Network

    Giving Tuesday on The Classical Network

    It’s December 3, and we’re still feeling the aftershocks of Thanksgiving – and also perhaps the gravitational pull, a little bit, of Christmas.

    It is the season of giving, and on this Giving Tuesday, The Classical Network will salute a number of non-profit organizations that continue to make a difference in our community. WWFM hosts will conduct brief interviews throughout the day, from 10:15 a.m. to 5 p.m., with representatives from the following:

    HomeFront (10:15 a.m.); SAVE, A Friend to Homeless Animals (11 a.m.); Trenton Music Makers (2 p.m.); Womanspace, Inc. (3:30 p.m.); Princeton Senior Resource Center – PSRC (4:15 p.m.); and Trenton Area Soup Kitchen (5 p.m.)

    Tune in to learn more and see how you, too, can lend a helping hand.

    Of course, we’ll also serve up ample helpings of music along the way. Today’s Noontime Concert is a kind of Early Music Advent program. The Salisbury Four will present “The Soft Complaining Flute,” with selections from the 16th and 17th centuries. The program was presented last December, as part of the Midtown Concerts series, hosted by Gotham Early Music Scene, or GEMS, at the chapel of St. Bartholomew’s Church, 325 Park Avenue, in midtown Manhattan. Free concerts are held at St. Bart’s every Thursday at 1:15 p.m.

    GEMS supports artists and organizations in New York City devoted to Early Music. You can learn more and view a complete schedule by visiting the events calendar at gemsny.org.

    Following today’s concert broadcast, and in between interviews, I’ll be peppering my playlist with music of love, thanks, and concern for our fellow human beings, including Michael Abels’ “Global Warming” (the title inevitably suggests climate change, but the music itself celebrates the coming together of the world’s diverse cultures), Beethoven’s String Quartet No. 15 in A minor, Op. 132 (its third movement is inscribed by the composer, “Holy song of thanksgiving of a convalescent to the Deity”), and Aaron Copland’s suite from “The Tender Land” (with its song of thanks, “The Promise of Living”).

    In addition, apropos of our visit from Trenton Music Makers, we’ll hear “The Music Makers” by Sir Edward Elgar.

    You don’t have to give ‘til it hurts. It actually feels pretty good.
    Giving makes the world a better place. Consider offering your time and support to those in our community who make it their mission to help others.

    Music is hope. It’s consolation, and it’s inspiration. It’s the gift that keeps on giving, from 12 to 4 p.m. EST, on WWFM – The Classical Network and wwfm.org.

  • Remembering Jansons & Birthday Composers

    Remembering Jansons & Birthday Composers

    Sir John Barbirolli! Sir Arnold Bax! Harry T. Burleigh! Harriet Cohen! Antonin Dvořák! Robert Kajanus! Jean Sibelius! Johan Svendsen!

    This all-star cast can only be enhanced by Jansons.

    Conductor Mariss Jansons died on Saturday at the age of 76. I hope you’ll join me in celebration of his artistry and that of today’s birthday celebrants.

    Ars longa, vita brevis is our motto, from 4 to 7 p.m. EST, on WWFM – The Classical Network and wwfm.org.

  • Classical Music Marble Cake on WWFM

    Classical Music Marble Cake on WWFM

    As the days grow short and the weather more miserable, revive your spirits with a kind of musical marble cake, this afternoon (if there is an afternoon) on The Classical Network.

    One vein will consist of historic recordings of pianist Harriet Cohen, composer and conductor Robert Kajanus, and baritone Harry T. Burleigh. Another will celebrate conductors Kajanus, Sir John Barbirolli, and Mariss Jansons. (Jansons died on Saturday at the age of 76.) Yet another will explore music from the north, including works by composers Kajanus, Jean Sibelius, and Johan Svendsen.

    The magnetic Cohen captivated seemingly every British composer of her day. In particular, her love affair with Sir Arnold Bax lasted for over 40 years. Bax wrote most of his piano music for her. His most famous work, the symphonic poem “Tintagel,” ostensibly inspired by the ruins of the Arthurian castle overlooking a tempestuous Cornish seascape, is said to enshrine all the passion the two musicians felt for one another during an especially ardent six weeks over which they vacationed there. We’ll hear a classic performance, with Barbirolli presiding.

    In 1936, Bax and Cohen traveled together to Helsinki to meet Sibelius, who also greatly influenced Bax’s music. Jansons will be remembered, in part, through his conducting of Sibelius, over whose idiom he demonstrated particular mastery.

    Sibelius’ earliest champion was Robert Kajanus. Kajanus conducted the first performances of many of the composer’s major works. He also wrote over 200 pieces himself. Of those, we’ll hear “Aino,” after an episode in the Kalevala. In addition, Kajanus will conduct music by his good friend and drinking buddy.

    Harry T. Burleigh’s influence on American music is incalculable. While a student at the National Conservatory of Music in New York, he happened to be overheard by the institute’s director, the newly-installed Antonin Dvořák, while singing African-American spirituals. Dvořák was captivated.

    Burleigh’s significance looms large in Dvořák’s music of his American years. More to the point, it informs the Czech master’s exhortation to composers of the United States to embrace spirituals and music of Native Americans as building blocks for a vibrant new art music, one with a distinctive national character. If Dvořák was the godfather of American music, then surely Burleigh was the great uncle. We’ll hear some of Burleigh’s own works, as well as his own documented performance of “Go Down, Moses.” Of course, we’ll have to include a little Dvořák, too.

    Happy birthday, Sir John Barbirolli, Harry T. Burleigh, Harriet Cohen, and Robert Kajanus, and rest in peace, Mariss Jansons.

    With ingredients like those, no matter how you slice it, you’ll wind up with all the marbles, from 4 to 7 p.m. EST, on WWFM – The Classical Network and wwfm.org.

  • Black Friday Escape Classical Music for the Wild

    Black Friday Escape Classical Music for the Wild

    This week on “Picture Perfect,” for Black Friday, we flee “civilization” for the relative safety of the wilderness.

    We’ll hear music from “Born Free” by John Barry, “Hatari!” by Henry Mancini, National Geographic’s “Grizzly!” by Jerome Moross, and “The Jungle Book,” by Miklós Rózsa.

    I’d rather face Shere Khan than mall traffic. Join me for “The Call of the Wild,” this Friday evening at 6:00 EST, on WWFM – The Classical Network and wwfm.org.

  • Thanksgiving Classical Music WWFM

    Thanksgiving Classical Music WWFM

    It is my hope that you’re just about off the roads by the time I’m on the air this afternoon. But in the event that you are stuck in traffic, there’s no reason you should endure it in silence. Drown out your invective, or that of your loved ones, with three hours of musical reminders of why we should all give thanks.

    If you’re lucky enough already to be home, perhaps you’re trying to get a leg up on tomorrow’s meal – or a drumstick, as the case may be. I’ve got plenty of music for you, too, to set the mood, while you’re in the process of setting the table. If the music makes your preparations that much more pleasurable, you can always send me a piece of pie.

    Either way, I am thankful to have you in the audience. There is no radio without somebody there to appreciate it. If you’ve supported The Classical Network recently with a financial contribution, thank you. If something I’ve played has touched you or caught your interest, thank you for that, as well. It’s important to me that these composers and these recordings endure.

    At 6:00, it’s another “Music from Marlboro.” I’ll supply a little cranberry sauce, with Antonin Dvořák’s “American” String Quintet (not to be confused with his more famous “American” QUARtet), along with some potatoes-and-gravy Vincent Persichetti and Elliot Carter.

    I hope you’ll join me for a late afternoon/early evening full of harvest, hymns and pilgrims, from 4 to 7 p.m. EST. It’s my way of wishing you a happy Thanksgiving, on WWFM – The Classical Network and wwfm.org.

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