Tag: WWFM

  • Support Classical Music WWFM ListentoMarlboro

    Support Classical Music WWFM ListentoMarlboro

    It may be a day early for trick-or-treat, but it’s always a treat to hear from you. Have you taken a moment yet to support The Classical Network? We’re in the midst of our fall membership campaign. That means it’s renewal time. We’re also always happy to welcome new members!

    Our featured highlight on this week’s “Music from Marlboro,” coming your way at 6:00 EDT, will be André Caplet’s “Conte fantastique,” inspired by Edgar Allan Poe’s “The Masque of the Red Death.”

    Prince Prospero may have come to a bad end, but you can help us prosper, by calling us right now at 1-888-232-1212 or joining us online at wwfm.org.

    Thank you for supporting WWFM – The Classical Network!

    Marlboro School of Music and Festival: Official Page

  • Support Classical Music Radio WWFM Donate Now

    Support Classical Music Radio WWFM Donate Now

    It’s the end of October already. Time to fortify ourselves against the harsher months. A simple click of the mouse can help us squirrel away a little something against a snowy day.

    If you love what we do at The Classical Network, and classical music is an indispensable part of your life, please support it by contributing right now at wwfm.org (click on “donate”), or by calling us at 1-888-232-1212.

    We’ll be on the air today and tomorrow, from 9 a.m. to 7 p.m. EDT, to remind you why The Classical Network is your radio station of choice.

    Join me this afternoon, from 4 to 7, to celebrate autumn, to acknowledge the birthdays of Peter Warlock and Frans Brüggen, and to get a jump a Halloween. At 6:00, we’ll have a special performance of André Caplet’s “Conte fantastique,” inspired by Edgar Allan Poe’s “The Masque of the Red Death,” on “Music from Marlboro.”

    Help make this a gathering of gratitude. If you’re nutty for great music, keep us bright-eyed and bushy-tailed, by calling us right now at 1-888-232-1212, or by leaving us a little seed money (bird seed, that is) at wwfm.org.

    With your help, we can make our nut. Thank you for your support of WWFM – The Classical Network.

  • Schoenberg’s “Gurrelieder” A Halloween Ride

    Schoenberg’s “Gurrelieder” A Halloween Ride

    With Halloween only days away, take a wild ride with the undead in Arnold Schoenberg’s opulent masterpiece “Gurrelieder.”

    Jens Peter Jacobsen’s dramatic poem synthesizes Danish legends concerning the illicit love of King Waldemar for a beautiful maiden, Tove, and the vengeance of his wife, Queen Helwig. The King curses God for the loss of his beloved and is condemned to gallop, night after night, alongside a terrifying cohort of gibbering spirits.

    The orchestra is enormous – with 25 woodwinds, 25 brass instruments, four harps, a celesta, and 16 different percussion instruments, including an iron chain – larger even than those of Gustav Mahler. The work sports no less than 35 major leitmotifs, and the length is comparable to Mahler’s Third Symphony.

    Schoenberg conceived of “Gurrelieder” at the age of 26, in advance of Mahler’s Eighth Symphony and “Das Lied von der Erde.” The composer claims to have finished it, at least in short score, in 1901. However, financial need prevented him from completing the orchestration for Parts II & III until after Part I proved to be a mega-hit. It wasn’t until 1911 that “Gurrelieder” reached its final form.

    By then, Schoenberg was over it. Like something a doomed king himself, already he was hurtling into freely atonal territory. Success had come too late for an artist who had suffered a decade’s worth of critical brickbats. He didn’t give a damn, even as Waldemar received one.

    Prior to “Gurrelieder,” on today’s Noontime Concert, we’ll have chamber works by Ottorino Respighi and Ernest Chausson, as performed at the Lake George Music Festival. Enjoy Respighi’s rarely-heard Piano Quintet in F minor and Chausson’s Concert for Violin, Piano and String Quartet.

    Then it’s a tale of love and death – and death and love – in 14th century Denmark. We’ll hear the whole damned thing, between 12 and 4 p.m. EDT, on WWFM – The Classical Network and wwfm.org.

  • Howard Hanson Romantic Composer Remembered

    Howard Hanson Romantic Composer Remembered

    Howard Hanson, you incurable Romantic, you. I wish I really had time to write about you today, on this, your birthday – but I don’t.

    For four decades, you were the director of the Eastman School of Music; you were the recipient of a Pulitzer Prize in 1944 for your Symphony No. 4; and you were the champion of hundreds of American composers as conductor of the Eastman-Rochester Orchestra. Your Symphony No. 2, subtitled “Romantic,” is still one of the most frequently encountered of all American symphonies.

    We’ll enjoy some of your recordings today, and save you a little cake, between 4 and 7 p.m. EDT, on WWFM – The Classical Network and wwfm.org.

  • Leppard Remembered Rorem Celebrated on WWFM

    Leppard Remembered Rorem Celebrated on WWFM

    Coming up, between 4 and 6 p.m., we remember conductor Raymond Leppard (top), who died yesterday at the age of 92, and celebrate composer Ned Rorem, who is 96 years-old today.

    At 6:00, it’s “haunting” music Beethoven and Henri Dutilleux (including Beethoven’s “Ghost” Trio), on “Music from Marlboro.”

    Plenty to raise your spirits, from 4 to 7 p.m. EDT, on WWFM – The Classical Network.

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