Tag: WWFM

  • Renaissance Riddles and Musical Games on WWFM

    Renaissance Riddles and Musical Games on WWFM

    Looking for a little diversion?

    On today’s Noontime Concert on The Classical Network, the ensemble Pomerium will present “Musical Games, Puzzles, and Riddles of the Renaissance: A Century of Musical Ingenuity, 1410-1510.” The program was designed to complement an exhibit of Renaissance playing cards mounted at The Met Cloisters in early 2016.

    Pomerium was founded in New York by Alexander Blachly in 1972. The group has fostered the careers of such outstanding early music performers as Julianne Baird, Drew Minter, and members of Anonymous 4.

    This concert was presented at St. Bartholomew’s Church, 50th Street and Park Avenue, in Midtown Manhattan, where free concerts are held every Thursday at 1:15 p.m.

    Its broadcast is made possible in part by Gotham Early Music Scene, or GEMS. GEMS is a non-profit corporation that supports and promotes artists and organizations in New York City devoted to early music – music of the Middle Ages, Renaissance, Baroque, and early Classical periods. For more information and GEMS’ events calendar, look online at gemsny.org.

    Following the Pomerium concert, we’ll continue with an afternoon of musical diversions and cryptograms, shuffling works about games (Stravinsky’s “Jeu de Cartes” – “A Card Game”) with some actual musical puzzles and codes (Elgar’s “Enigma Variations”). Among these will be “32 Cryptograms for Derek Jarman,” a nod to Philadelphia composer Robert Moran, on his birthday.

    Here’s hoping you’re game for an afternoon of great music, from 12 to 4 p.m. EST, on WWFM – The Classical Network and wwfm.org.


    PHOTO: Stravinsky the card sharp

  • Vienna Philharmonic New Year 2019

    Vienna Philharmonic New Year 2019

    2019 can’t be any worse, can it? CAN IT??? Happy New Year.

    If you’re experiencing a Strauss deficiency, “New Year’s Day from Vienna 2019,” with Christian Thielemann leading the Vienna Philharmonic, will commence at 11 a.m. EST, on WWFM – The Classical Network and wwfm.org.

  • New Year’s Eve Music for the Melancholy Soul

    New Year’s Eve Music for the Melancholy Soul

    For anyone sober enough to actually ponder the text, “Auld Lang Syne” must be the most melancholy song on the planet. And for everyone else to be singing it on New Year’s Eve – good Lord, which way is the nearest bridge?

    If New Year’s is not a difficult time for you, take a moment today to count your blessings. For the rest of us, it is my hope that the playlist this afternoon will operate on two levels: not only as a festive celebration of the turn of the year, but also a reminder of the consolation and hope that music can provide.

    I’ll be keeping it light with a potpourri of nimble dances, euphonious British Light Music, and rib-tickling selections from music-oriented comedy albums, with perhaps just a few highlights from the world of operetta, provided that sentiment won’t weigh too heavily on the heart.

    I can’t promise that the New Year holiday will be a happy one, but I will do my best to serve up some great musical hors d’oeuvres. We’ll be laughing on the outside, crying on the inside, this Monday from 4 to 7 p.m. EST, on WWFM – The Classical Network and wwfm.org.


    Remember: Your year-end contribution will still count toward 2018 through 11:59 tonight! If you appreciate all that we do at The Classical Network, and the music is an indispensable part of your life, please consider visiting our website now and clicking on “donate.” Thank you for your continued support of The Classical Network! And for what it’s worth, Happy New Year.

  • Reznicek Beyond Donna Diana A Lost Composer

    Reznicek Beyond Donna Diana A Lost Composer

    It’s always sobering to read back over biographies and histories of composers who have devoted their entire lives to music – and who actually made a pretty good living at it – only to be remembered in the present by but a single work, often a short one, and perhaps not really representative of the whole.

    Such is the case with Emil Nikolaus von Reznicek, author of that sparkling pops favorite, the “Donna Diana Overture” – five minutes of high spirited fun. But what about his five symphonies, his ample orchestral music, the violin concerto, his ballet, his chamber music, and his at least 12 operas?

    Reznicek liked to have fun, all right, though his sense of humor more often than not tipped over into the sardonic. While his works were often favorably received by audiences, those in the musical establishment were frequently offended by the composer’s transparent sarcasm. It’s not for nothing that his Second Symphony was subtitled the “Ironic.”

    Further controversy touched his personal life when he became involved with an unhappily married woman, who divorced her husband and became Reznicek’s second wife. There was a scene in his opera, “Till Eulenspiegel,” that was deemed in some circles anti-Semitic, though he himself was married to a Jew. He was helped in his career by his friend, Richard Strauss, with whom, however, he shared an ambivalent relationship. With the rise of the Nazis, Reznicek determined not to become involved in the Party, yet he remained in Berlin.

    He died there, of typhoid fever, after the city’s infrastructure was destroyed by the Soviets in 1945. His daughter was released by her Soviet captors when it was learned that her father was the composer of the “Donna Diana Overture,” the favorite piece of the Russian commanding officer.

    When thinking about what to program in anticipation of the New Year, my own ambivalence toward the impending celebrations has found a perfect match in Reznicek’s Symphony No. 5, written in 1924, which he subtitled “Dance Symphony.” Everyone dances on New Year’s Eve, right? Well, Reznicek offers up in the work’s four movements a polonaise, a csardas, a ländler, and a tarantella. However, if as you’re merrily tapping your toes something begins to strike you as a little askew, it’s because Reznicek conceived the piece as a “dance of death.” Rachmaninoff would have loved that idea. Whatever it is, it’s a corker.

    In the time remaining, we’ll hear some contemporaneous historic recordings of Reznicek himself conducting, including a vintage performance of his “Donna Diana Overture.” All of these have been issued on cpo.de – classic production osnabrück (or CPO, for short), a German record label that has done much to explore the forgotten byways of classical music, in general, and Reznicek’s output in particular.

    I hope you’ll join me for “Emil With Dancing” (say it aloud to better understand the pun), “The Lost Chord” New Year’s celebration, this Sunday night at 10:00 EST, on WWFM – The Classical Network and wwfm.org.

  • St. Stephen’s Day Suk Beethoven on The Classical Network

    St. Stephen’s Day Suk Beethoven on The Classical Network

    December 26. St. Stephen’s Day. The day King Wenceslas “looked out” and trudged through snow and wind and gathering darkness to bring flesh, wine and fuel to one of his needy subjects.

    This afternoon on The Classical Network, we’ll salute the good king, whose legendary deeds were immortalized in the famous Christmas carol, with Josef Suk’s “Meditation on the Old Czech Hymn, ‘St. Wenceslaus.’” We’ll also acknowledge the Irish St. Stephen’s tradition of “hunting the wren.”

    As stomachs and ear drums continue to be wassailed and assailed during this perhaps too merry season, we’ll also have plenty of music about banqueting and toys.

    This week’s “Music from Marlboro” (6:00 EST) will feature evergreen works by Beethoven and Wagner.

    It shouldn’t require the patience of a saint to enjoy the music, from 4 to 7 p.m. EST, on WWFM – The Classical Network and wwfm.org.

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