Tag: WWFM

  • WWFM Bach 500 Campaign Nears Goal Donate Now

    WWFM Bach 500 Campaign Nears Goal Donate Now

    It’s a time of day when you’re probably thinking more about frittatas than cantatas. But before you head out for lunch, please take just a moment to provide a little nourishment for WWFM.

    We are within the final 200 donations of our Bach 500 campaign. If you have not contributed, or if you are in a position to make an additional gift, your donation now will count toward the 500 we need in order to unlock the scrumptious Bach Pot.

    YOU decide the amount that is right for you. It doesn’t matter how much you give; it just matters that we reach the quota: 500 contributions is the combination that will unlock our Bach Pot, which contains over $14,000. Once that happens, this campaign is at an end, and the Bach jukebox kicks into overdrive for the rest of the afternoon. Click on “donate” at wwfm.org, or call us at 1-888-232-1212.

    You feed the body, and we’ll take care of the spirit – with the assistance of Johann Sebastian Bach, on his birthday. Enjoy a Bach’s lunch on WWFM – The Classical Network and wwfm.org. Thank you for your generous support!

  • Support Bach on WWFM

    Support Bach on WWFM

    A good record store is hard to find these days, but Bach is yours at the touch of a button or the click of a mouse. Please support us in our quest for the “Bach 500.” We’re looking for your donation – in any amount – right now. Once we reach 500 listener contributions, we’ll be able to unlock the Bach Pot to the tune of $14,000 and bask in the glorious music of Johann Sebastian Bach, unencumbered by fundraising, for the rest of the day. Click on “donate” at wwfm.org, or call us at 1-888-232-1212. Thank you for your generous support of WWFM – The Classical Network. With your help, we’ll be Bach!

  • Happy Birthday Bach Donate to Classical Network

    Happy Birthday Bach Donate to Classical Network

    The day is upon us! Happy birthday, Bach!

    Before you attempt a Google search today, you had better resign yourself to a marked dip in productivity. This time-sucking, interactive Google Doodle gives a crash course in music theory and employs “artificial intelligence” to harmonize your own instant masterpiece (which you can then share with your friends).

    Now if only it would do the additional work of transforming my melody into a fugue!

    If you can postpone the instant gratification of A.I. for just a moment, please don’t forget, we at The Classical Network are working hard to wrap up our “Bach 500” campaign.

    As soon as we reach 500 listener contributions – contributions IN ANY AMOUNT, mind you; you set the level – we unlock this year’s Bach Pot, which means over $14,000 in challenge money to the station. Then it’s off to our own little Café Zimmerman, metaphorically speaking, for a celebratory marathon of Bach’s music, free from fundraising interruptions.

    Can you help us get there ASAP? Become one of the 500 now at our website, by clicking on “donate,” at wwfm.org, or call us (after 9 a.m. EDT) at 1-888-232-1212. We are looking forward to making this goal and giving free rein to all the sonatas, concertos, suites, and cantatas we can lay our hands on.

    There was nothing artificial about Bach’s intelligence, or his humanity. Thank you for your continued support of great music on WWFM – The Classical Network and wwfm.org!


    More information on the creation of the Bach Google Doodle here:

    https://www.google.com/doodles/celebrating-johann-sebastian-bach

  • Spring Equinox Purim Bach & More Today!

    Spring Equinox Purim Bach & More Today!

    I hope you’ll join me this afternoon, as we anticipate the arrival of spring (at 5:58 p.m.), the Jewish festival of Purim (at sunset), and the Super Worm Equinox Moon (full at 9:43 p.m.). We’ll also celebrate the birthdays today of pianist Sviatoslav Richter and heldentenor Lauritz Melchior.

    To coincide with the vernal equinox, it will be an all-Bach hour on “Music from Marlboro” at 6 – performances from the legendary Marlboro Music Festival. Don’t forget to join the Bach 500, if you haven’t already. 500 donations IN ANY AMOUNT will allow us to unlock this year’s Bach Pot. It’s worth over $14,000 to us. Call now at 1-888-232-1212 or donate online at wwfm.org.

    Remember, it’s listeners just like you who put the spring in our step, from 4 to 7 p.m. EDT, on WWFM – The Classical Network and wwfm.org.

  • Bach Birthday & Marlboro’s Music

    Bach Birthday & Marlboro’s Music

    The Eve of Bach is upon us.

    Tomorrow will mark the 334th anniversary of Johann Sebastian Bach’s birth. I’m sure you are aware by now that The Classical Network is in the final hours of its Bach 500 campaign. Every March, we ask that 500 generous listeners step up and support the music by making a donation to the station IN ANY AMOUNT. Once we hit those 500 contributions, we stop asking and throw open the floodgates, filling the airwaves with undiluted Bach all day on March 21st. If we don’t hit that goal, we have to keep asking. The champagne goes flat and the ice cream cake melts.

    So I’m asking one final time: if you haven’t contributed yet, or if you haven’t given in a while, or if your St. Patrick’s Day peregrinations have left you with a pot of gold, please do whatever you can. YOU set the amount. You won’t catch us sneering at an Andrew Jackson or two. But the truth is, anything counts toward the 500. Once we hit 500 donations, we can collect over $14,000 in challenge money from our Bach Pot, and then the Bacchanal can begin in earnest. Please call us during business hours at 1-888-232-1212, or contribute anytime at wwfm.org (click on “Donate”).

    To prime the pump, on this week’s “Music from Marlboro,” I’ll be presenting an hour of fabulous Bach recordings from the archive of the legendary music school and festival.

    Forget the period instrument movement. Scholarship has its place, but these artists believed unwaveringly in the transcendent quality of Bach’s music and its ability to communicate across the ages.

    These are Old School performances. You’ll hear pianos all over the place. Marlboro co-founder Rudolf Serkin will offer a sensitive interpretation of 14 canons on the aria ground from the “Goldberg Variations,” in a performance recorded at Marlboro in 1976.

    Then the venerable Mieczyslaw Horszowski will join a Marlboro orchestra led by Felix Galimir for Bach’s Keyboard Concerto No. 7 in G minor, BWV 1058. The performance was captured in 1982, when the pianist was 90 years-old. Horszowski, who gave his first public performance in 1901(!), died in 1993, just shy of his 101st birthday. No doubt his extraordinary longevity can be attributed in part to his healthy and sustained immersion in music such as this.

    And of course, we can’t have an hour of Marlboro Bach performances without hearing from Pablo Casals. The legendary cellist was affiliated with the Marlboro Music Festival for the last 13 years of his life, from 1960 to 1973. His loving, humanistic interpretations of Bach’s orchestral works form a remarkable capstone to an extraordinary career.

    Don’t let the “festival orchestra” appellation deceive you. These are no ragtag assemblages of itinerant performers. The ensembles are made up of world-class artists and stars-of-tomorrow, many of whom maintained their relationships with Marlboro for years.

    You don’t have to break the bank for Bach, but your contribution in any amount will make a difference. Call now at 1-888-232-1212 or click on “Donate” at wwfm.org. Then kick back and enjoy an hour of magical Bach performances on the next “Music from Marlboro,” this Wednesday evening at 6:00 EDT, on WWFM – The Classical Network and wwfm.org.

    Marlboro School of Music and Festival: Official Page


    Bach with Marlboro advocates (top to bottom) Pablo Casals, Mieczyslaw Horszowski & Felix Galimir, and Rudolf Serkin.

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