Tag: WWFM

  • Jón Leifs Icelandic Composer Rediscovered

    Jón Leifs Icelandic Composer Rediscovered

    No one scores natural phenomena quite like Jón Leifs.

    Leifs, who was born on a farm in northwestern Iceland, traveled to Germany to study music at the Leipzig Conservatory in 1916. Soon after graduation, he married the pianist Annie Reithof, a decision that necessitated some careful maneuvering in the perilous years to come.

    Leifs remained in Nazi Germany through much of World War II. On the surface, his celebration of Norse heroism should have been just the thing to endear him to the National Socialists. However, two things worked against him: the modernistic language of his music, and the fact that his wife and children were Jewish.

    Performances of Leifs’ music were derided or discouraged. This, apparently, he took in his stride, finding solace in re-reading the Icelandic Sagas and finding strength in the exploits of their heroes. Above all, on account of his family, Leifs tried not to attract a lot of unwanted attention. He was still useful for propaganda purposes in Germany’s relations with Scandinavia.

    Leifs finally managed to obtain permission to leave Germany in 1944, his family temporarily settling in Sweden. He and his wife divorced, and Leifs returned to Iceland. There, he was regarded with suspicion due to his Nazi “associations.”

    Also, much of his music was conceived on such a gargantuan scale, and scored for such outlandish instruments, there was no way they could be practically performed. Therefore much of it went unheard in his lifetime.

    In particular, “Hekla,” his evocation of a volcano in eruption, has been called the loudest piece of classical music ever written, requiring 19 percussionists hammering away at a most unconventional arsenal: anvils, stones, sirens, plate bells, chains, shotguns, cannons, and a large wooden stump. For their own well-being, the performers are instructed to wear earplugs.

    His “Saga Symphony,” inspired by prose accounts of battles, feuds, and power struggles of early Viking settlers, is enlivened by tuned anvils, stones, whip, shields of iron, leather, and wood, great wooden containers (played by large hammers), and six lurs – copies of ancient long horns.

    Leifs’ music can be austere to the Nth degree. The severity of his art is reflective of the unforgiving-yet-sublime Icelandic landscape and the stoicism of the heroes of the sagas. His is a wholly unique voice in 20th century music that deserves to be much better known. `

    Join me this afternoon, as we remember Leifs on the 50th anniversary of his death. I’ll go easy on you by vaulting over the volcanoes and geysers and presenting instead the elemental “Iceland Overture” and the “Variazioni pastorale” – his variations on a theme by Beethoven.

    The Viking longboat will be well-provisioned. Be ready to row, from 4 to 7 p.m. EDT, on WWFM – The Classical Network and wwfm.org.


    PHOTOS: Jón Leifs and Hekla

  • Ricci Centenary Menotti Violin Concerto on WWFM

    Ricci Centenary Menotti Violin Concerto on WWFM

    We mark the centenary of the birth of violinist Ruggiero Ricci (1918-2012) with a recording of Gian Carlo Menotti’s rarely heard Violin Concerto this afternoon in the 3:00 hour. Menotti’s concerto was written for Efrem Zimbalist, then the head of the Curtis Institute Music, and given its first performance by the Philadelphia Orchestra under Eugene Ormandy.

    The piece will cap an afternoon of “New World” treasures, building on Dolce Suono Ensemble’s “Música en tus Manos: The Americas” noontime concert broadcast. Between now and 4 p.m. EDT, stay tuned for Morton Gould’s “Latin American Symphonette,” Leo Brouwer’s Guitar Concerto No. 4 “Concerto de Toronto,” Robert Farnon’s Symphony No. 2 “Ottawa,” and more, on WWFM – The Classical Network and wwfm.org.

  • Americas Music Journey with Dolce Suono

    Americas Music Journey with Dolce Suono

    There’s more to America than just the United States.

    Today’s Noontime Concert on The Classical Network will highlight the Philadelphia-based Dolce Suono Ensemble’s “Música en tus Manos: The Americas” project. “Música en tus Manos” (“Music in Your Hands”) is an outreach initiative that explores the artistic contributions of Spain and the Americas as part of the ensemble’s ongoing engagement with Philadelphia’s Latino community.

    Among the composers represented on today’s broadcast will be Joaquin Turina (Spain), Ernesto Lecuona (Cuba), and Jennifer Higdon, Ned Rorem, and Jelly Roll Morton (U.S.A.). Dolce Suono’s artistic director, flutist Mimi Stillman, will co-host with WWFM’s David Osenberg.

    Then stick around. I’ll be by at 1:35 to bring Canada into the mix with the “Ottawa” Symphony by Robert Farnon, whose birthday it is today. In fact, I think I can pretty much promise you a New World in music until 4 p.m. EDT, on WWFM – The Classical Network and wwfm.org.

  • Leon Fleisher A Living Legend at 90

    Leon Fleisher A Living Legend at 90

    The appellation “Living Legend” has been perhaps too widely applied; but at the age of 90, pianist Leon Fleisher really is one. A former child prodigy, his is a direct line to Beethoven. He studied with Artur Schnabel, who studied with Theodor Leschetizky, who studied with Carl Czerny, who studied with the Master himself.

    When he performed with the New York Philharmonic under Pierre Monteux at the age of 16, Monteux called him “the pianistic find of the century.” Fleisher landed a recording contract with Columbia Records and began laying down benchmark recordings of Beethoven, Brahms, Schumann, Grieg and Rachmaninoff with George Szell and the Cleveland Orchestra.

    Then everything changed.

    Fleisher was diagnosed with focal dystonia in 1964. He gradually lost control of his right hand, and his career as a concert pianist was in jeopardy. His struggle with the affliction led to a period of soul-searching, and it forced him to diversify. He realized, as Schnabel had espoused, that music is music, regardless of the medium.

    Fleisher began channeling his energy into teaching and conducting. He has been a venerable presence at the Peabody Conservatory of Music in Baltimore, the Royal Conservatory of Music in Toronto, and the Curtis Institute of Music in Philadelphia.

    Fortunately, the left-hand piano repertoire is extensive, and Fleisher himself has added considerably to it, through commissioned works from contemporary composers or gifts from friends. His album, “All the Things You Are,” released a few years ago on Bridge Records, Inc., documents some of these. The album became a surprise hit, with The New Yorker’s Alex Ross lauding it as “one of his finest hours on record.”

    Fleisher is an extraordinary artist and individual. Not only has he fought hard to regain control of his right hand – and done so, thanks to experimental treatments with, of all things, Botox – he is quite possibly the most gracious and generous interview subject I’ve ever encountered.

    In honor of his milestone birthday, I’ve posted an unedited conversation we had four years ago for my radio program, “The Lost Chord.” In the version I whittled down for broadcast, selections were interspersed with performances from “All the Things You Are.” I realize there is a lot of extraneous material in the raw audio, but it’s all here for you to skim as you please:

    Then I hope you’ll join me this afternoon for an assortment of Fleisher’s recordings, which will be among the featured offerings from 4 to 7 p.m. EDT, on WWFM – The Classical Network and wwfm.org.

    PLEASE NOTE: Bill McGlaughlin will also be saluting Fleisher on “Exploring Music,” all this week at 7 p.m. I have glanced through the playlists; repertoire will not be duplicated.

    Happy birthday, Leon Fleisher!

  • Kurt Masur Google Doodle Celebrates Conductor

    Kurt Masur Google Doodle Celebrates Conductor

    Well, dog my cats! Kurt Masur gets his own Google doodle, as you will find when doing Google searches today, the 91st anniversary of the conductor’s birth.

    https://www.cnet.com/news/google-doodle-celebrates-renowned-conductor-kurt-masur/

    I’ll be playing some of Masur’s recordings this afternoon, from 4 to 6 p.m. EDT, on WWFM – The Classical Network and wwfm.org.

    Then stay tuned for “Music from Marlboro” at 6!

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