Tag: WWFM

  • Yom Kippur Music on WWFM

    Yom Kippur Music on WWFM

    Yom Kippur, the Day of Atonement, begins at sundown. To mark the occasion, the holiest day on the Jewish calendar, I’ll present Jacob Weinberg’s String Quartet, Op. 55, which incorporates melodies for the High Holy Days; Enest Bloch’s moving “Israel Symphony;” Joseph Joachim’s “Hebrew Melodies;” David Stock’s “Yizkor;” and Emil Nikolaus von Reznicek’s “Symphonic Variations on ‘Kol Nidre.’” It all begins at 2 p.m. EDT, on WWFM – The Classical Network and wwfm.org. G’mar Hativa Tova.

  • Griffes Kubla Khan and American Impressionism

    Griffes Kubla Khan and American Impressionism

    “In Xanadu did Kubla Khan
    A stately pleasure-dome decree…”

    Sounds good to me! As I sit here like Sardanapalus luxuriating amidst my musical treasures, I contemplate the short life and creative promise of Charles Tomlinson Griffes.

    Griffes’ was a unique voice in American music. At the beginning of his life, our native composers mostly emulated Mendelssohn, Schumann and Brahms; by the end, they were starting to gravitate toward jazz. By contrast, Griffes, like the painter Mary Cassatt, was attracted to French Impressionism, yet the weird incense of Scriabin also permeates his work.

    He is best known for dreamy meditations like “The White Peacock” and “The Pleasure Dome of Kubla Khan,” after Coleridge.

    Griffes was born in Elmira, NY, on this date in 1884. He died of influenza in 1920, aged only 35 years. Elmira was Mark Twain’s home from 1870. I’ve sometimes wondered if the two ever met. It has been documented that Griffes saw Twain there when moving about the streets. They certainly adhered to very different aesthetics.

    I hope you’ll join me for an opiate dream at the Pleasure-Dome, part of a phantasmagoric mix, between 4 and 7 p.m. EDT, on WWFM – The Classical Network and wwfm.org.


    Delacroix, “The Death of Sardanapalus.” It’s good to be the king.

  • WWFM Classical Today Purcell Comics More

    WWFM Classical Today Purcell Comics More

    Romance comic? Or the Man of Steel’s greatest challenge? Listen in for Henry Purcell and tributes by later composers (along with music by Tor Aulin and Sholom Secunda), between 4 and 7 p.m. EDT on WWFM – The Classical Network and wwfm.org.

  • Celebrating Purcell on The Classical Network

    Celebrating Purcell on The Classical Network

    On this, the birthday of one of England’s great composers, expect to receive a parcel of Purcell from The Classical Network.

    Henry Purcell (1659-1695) was the outstanding composer of Restoration England, some would say of all English history. No native composer came anywhere near his stature until the end of the 19th century and the emergence of figures like Sir Edward Elgar.

    Purcell achieved much in his 36 years. He was at the forefront of the flowering of English music after the Restoration of the monarchy. He served at Westminster Abbey under three kings. Among his other duties, he was an organist. He died at the height of his career, in 1695. Tradition has it that he caught a chill when his wife locked him out in the cold, after one too many late nights lingering at the tavern with his theatrical associates. He now rests in Westminster, near his former instrument.

    Purcell stands apart as the most original thinker among English composers of his era. His music is often playful and sometimes quirky. Sir Peter Maxwell Davies takes that quirkiness and runs with it. His “Fantasia upon a Ground and Two Pavans” incorporates a foxtrot and imitates the effect of a gramophone running down and having to be cranked up again, only to have the stylus get stuck in a groove.

    Michael Nyman’s music for the Peter Greenaway film “The Draughtsman’s Contract” takes Purcell’s “The Fairy Queen” and whips it up into a musical egg cream complete with 1950s-style rock and roll saxophones. Purcell is listed in the film’s credits as “musical consultant.”

    Poul Ruders’ “Concerto in Pieces (Purcell Variations)” was composed in 1995 for the tercentenary of Purcell’s death and the 50th anniversary of Benjamin Britten’s “Variations and Fugue on a Theme of Purcell” – better known as “The Young Person’s Guide to the Orchestra.” I can’t imagine we’ll be able to get through the entire afternoon without hearing Britten’s most frequently performed work. In fact, I’ll be bringing a recording narrated by none other than Sean Connery.

    We’ll also hear a violin concerto by Swedish composer Tor Aulin, born on this date in 1866, and a string quartet by Sholom Secunda.

    Secunda’s quartet is a very happy discovery of music by a composer known mostly for his work in the Yiddish theater. The piece incorporates traditional Jewish melodies that appear to have been selected somewhat arbitrarily. However, some of them do pertain to the High Holy Days. (Shana tova!) If you have a soft spot for the quartets of Dvořák or Borodin, I think you will really enjoy this.

    It will be an afternoon peppered with Purcell, further spiced by a few tributes and tributaries, today from 4 to 7 p.m. EDT, on WWFM – The Classical Network and wwfm.org.

  • Shofar Sounds for Rosh Hashanah on The Lost Chord

    Shofar Sounds for Rosh Hashanah on The Lost Chord

    Shana tova!

    This Sunday night on “The Lost Chord,” to coincide with the start of Rosh Hashanah, the Jewish New Year, we celebrate the High Holidays with several works highlighting the shofar, a ram’s horn blown as a symbolic call to worship during the holiday season.

    We’ll hear “Call of the Shofar,” for trombone quartet, by Matthew H. Fields (including a pre-performance demonstration by the composer); “Shofar Service,” for baritone, trumpets, shofar, and chorus, by Herman Berlinski (from the Milken Archive of Jewish Music Series, on the Naxos label); and “Tekeeyah,” for shofar, trombone, and orchestra, by Meira Warshauer Composer (on a Navona Records/PARMA Recordings release).

    Get ready to party like it’s 5779. Horn in on the High Holidays with music for the shofar – “Have a Blast,” this Sunday night at 10:00 EDT, on WWFM – The Classical Network and wwfm.org.

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