Tag: Yo-Yo Ma

  • André Previn Composer, Pianist, Friend

    André Previn Composer, Pianist, Friend

    Clearly André Previn was a lot of things. And he made them all sound so easy.

    As a composer, Previn frequently wrote at the request of friends, or for friends, performers with whom he had developed lasting relationships. His fluency was such that his music could sometimes come across as almost off-the-cuff.

    This Sunday night on “The Lost Chord,” enjoy a loosey-goosey cello sonata, written in 1993 for Yo-Yo Ma. In the liner notes to this Sony recording, Previn relates that he poured everything into the piano part, on the assumption that it would be played by Ma’s regular recital partner, Emanuel Ax. But then Ma called him to say, with a new work, he always preferred to record, when possible, with the composer on the piano. Previn ruefully observes that it serves him right; also that there’s nothing like rehearsing one’s own music to make one doubt its true worth.

    The only time the recording venue, Tanglewood’s Seiji Ozawa Hall, was free was from 11 p.m. to 8 a.m. Previn relates that he was willing to postpone, but Ma was up for the challenge. At the start, the musicians were buoyed by plenty of nervous energy and optimism, but as the night wore on, the exertion began to wear. As the end of the session approached, Previn says, Ma went into overdrive, and they were able to wrap things up on time. The cellist then drank one more cup of coffee before heading off to a full day of rehearsals and teaching obligations.

    As for Previn, his playing belies any sense of a nine-hour slog. He sounds relaxed and playful, and aspects of his performance remind that he was also an outstanding jazz pianist.

    The second half of the program will be devoted to “Diversions,” a concerto (of sorts) for orchestra, composed in 2000 for the Vienna Philharmonic. Previn was intimately acquainted with the ensemble, having performed and recorded with it for 30 years, and he writes ingratiatingly for its different sections and principals. It may not be the most profound utterance (he was requested by the orchestra to keep it light), but it is well-crafted, direct, and full of character.

    I only regret that there won’t be any room to sample Previn the songwriter and operatic composer. Previn wrote for some of the outstanding voices of our time: Kathleen Battle, Barbara Bonney, Renée Fleming, and Sylvia McNair, among others. We’ll have to save that for another day.

    On more than one occasion, Previn shared his astonishment that anyone would be interested in performing his music. Still, the requests and commissions kept coming. And who was he to say no?

    Previn goes with the flow, on “André the Pliant,” this Sunday night at 10:00 EDT, on WWFM – The Classical Network. Make sure you’ve changed your clocks! But if you find your body is still set to EST, you can always listen to it later as a webcast, at wwfm.org.

  • Marlboro Music B-Flat Bliss Mozart Beethoven

    Marlboro Music B-Flat Bliss Mozart Beethoven

    With heat index values of 105, there is nothing to be done but be flat – or B flat, as the case may be.

    On this week’s “Music from Marlboro,” I’ll make few demands on a sweltering listenership by offering works by Mozart and Beethoven, both in the key of B flat.

    Beethoven’s Piano Trio, Op. 97, known as the “Archduke,” was one of 14 works the composer wrote for his friend and patron Archduke Rudolf of Austria. Rudolf, an amateur pianist, was the youngest child of Holy Roman Emperor Leopold II.

    Beethoven himself appeared at the keyboard at the work’s premiere in 1814. His encroaching deafness so diminished his former prowess as a performer that he retired from concertizing after a repeat performance a few weeks later. The violinist and composer Louis Spohr summed up the discomfort and pity felt by those in attendance, “I am deeply saddened by so hard a fate.”

    The music remains unbowed. Today, the “Archduke” Trio is as noble and inspiring as ever.

    We’ll hear it performed at the 2006 Marlboro Music Festival by pianist Mitsuko Uchida – Marlboro’s sole artistic director since 2013 (next year she’ll be joined by Jonathan Biss) – violinist Soovin Kim, and cellist David Soyer of the legendary Guarneri Quartet.

    The hour will open with a delightful work by Mozart – his Sonata in B-flat for Bassoon and Cello, K. 292. The 1975 performance will feature bassoonist Alexander Heller and a 19 year-old cellist named Yo-Yo Ma.

    The performances are unfailingly at pitch, even when we’re all flat. Join me for music in B flat on this week’s “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

  • Horszowski & Forgotten Italian Gems

    Horszowski & Forgotten Italian Gems

    Okay, I’m kind of excited about this one. Mieczyslaw Horszowski was one of the great poets of the keyboard. He also happens to be one of my favorite pianists.

    On this week’s “Music from Marlboro,” we’ll hear Horzsowski perform music by…

    Chopin? No.

    Schumann? No.

    ILDEBRANDO PIZZETTI. Yes.

    Who the hell is HE?

    Pizzetti was one of the composers of the “generazione dell’Ottanta” (generation of the ‘80s), contemporaries of Ottorino Respighi, all born around 1880. These artists of the post-Puccini generation largely made a name for themselves in the concert halls as opposed to the opera houses. That was a change of pace for Italy.

    Pizzetti was best-known as an associate of Gabrielle d’Annunzio, providing incidental music for a number of d’Annunzio’s plays and setting “Fedra” as an opera. Pizzetti’s Piano Trio in A major, written in 1925, is big music with big things to say. There is plenty of drama, lyricism and warmth throughout the 30-minute piece, which is almost never heard. It was performed at the Marlboro Music Festival in 1968, by Pina Carmirelli, violin; Leslie Parnas, cello; and Mieczyslaw Horszowski, piano.

    Horszowski, who died in 1993, just shy of his 101st birthday, had one of the longest careers of any performing artist. He was a pupil of Theodor Leschetizky, who was a pupil of Carl Czerny, who in turn was a pupil of Beethoven. Horszowski played Beethoven’s Piano Concerto No. 1 in public for the first time in 1901! He joined the faculty of the Curtis Institute of Music in 1942. He remained there for over 50 years, giving his last lesson a week before his death.

    As if the idea of hearing Horszowski in this neglected repertoire isn’t compelling enough, we’ll also have a young Yo-Yo Ma among the personnel – alongside guitarist Javier Calderon, violinist Daniel Phillips, and violist Luigi Alberto Bianchi – in a 1976 performance of Niccolò Paganini’s Quartet No. 15 in A minor for guitar and strings.

    That’s Marlboro, Italian-style, on the next “Music from Marlboro,” this Wednesday evening at 6 EDT, on WWFM – The Classical Network and wwfm.org.

    Marlboro School of Music and Festival: Official Page


    PHOTO: Mieczyslaw Horszowski (center) with Marlboro co-founder Rudolf Serkin and an up-and-coming Ruth Laredo

  • New Classical Music Releases on WPRB

    New Classical Music Releases on WPRB

    What’s new? Why, new releases!

    It’s been too long since I last did one of these shows, which means I’ve got a shelf-full of material from which to choose. Join me tomorrow morning on WPRB to hear Yo-Yo Ma perform the cello concerto, “Azul” (Spanish for “Blue”), by Osvaldo Golijov, with The Knights (orchestra), on Warner Classics & Erato. Watch out for that hyper-accordion!

    Caroline Shaw reaches across the centuries to Dietrich Buxtehude in “To the Hands,” performed by Philadelphia-based The Crossing (choral ensemble), as part of a fascinating concept album on the Innova Recordings label, “Seven Responses,” in which contemporary composers reflect on Buxtehude’s cycle of seven cantatas, “Membra Jesu nostri patientis sanctissima” (“Most Holy Limbs of Our Suffering Jesus”).

    At 9:00, Clipper Erickson, piano, who is on the faculties of both Westminster Conservatory of Music and Boyer College of Music and Dance – Temple University, will drop by the studio to talk about his new release of piano music by Laurie Altman, on Neos (record label). Erickson will be performing music by R. Nathaniel Dett and Modest Mussorgsky in recital at Witherspoon Street Presbyterian Church in Princeton on Saturday at 5 p.m.

    At 10:00 tomorrow, I’ll be joined by composer Zhou Tian, whose “Broken Ink” will be given its US premiere by the Princeton Symphony Orchestra, conducted by Rossen Milanov, at Princeton University’s Richardson Auditorium on Sunday at 4 p.m. Our conversation will be followed by a broadcast of Zhou’s brilliantly orchestrated Concerto for Orchestra, written for the Cincinnati Symphony Orchestra. The recording was issued on the orchestra’s Fanfare Cincinnati label.

    We’ll also hear new recordings of music by John Adams performed by Alarm Will Sound (Cantaloupe Music), Richard Strauss by JoAnn Falletta and the Buffalo Philharmonic Orchestra (Naxos), Schumann by pianist Joyce Yang and the Alexander String Quartet, and John Williams by the FilmHarmonic Brass (Roven Records).

    May the Fourth be with you, this Thursday morning from 6 to 11 EDT, on WPRB 103.3 FM and wprb.com. We find release in recent acquisitions, on Classic Ross Amico.

  • Dutoit Celebrated with Ma & Dragons

    Dutoit Celebrated with Ma & Dragons

    Sacre bleu! Charles Dutoit is 80 years-old!

    Join me this afternoon as we celebrate the Swiss-born conductor by sampling some of his very fine recordings, including music by Ravel and Roussel. We’ll also hear a piano concerto by the German romantic Felix Draeseke, on his birthday anniversary. Yo-Yo Ma turns 61 today; can’t forget him. And we’ll acknowledge Willing Billings, who was a tanner by trade, but became a composer of incendiary anthems during the American Revolution.

    All that, beginning at 4:00 EDT, on WWFM – The Classical Network and at wwfm.org.

    Then stick around for “Picture Perfect” at 6. This week the focus will be on music from movies about dragons. We’ve a fire in our belly today! Watch out for a more complete write-up later on this afternoon.


    PHOTOS (clockwise from left): Dutoit, Billings, Draeseke, and Ma

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