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August 14 - 18, 2000

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Monday, August 14
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Wagner
Portrait of Wagner by Lembach
SYNOPSIS:

Summer festival premieres of "hot" new operas by Saariaho and Wagner . . .



MUSIC PLAYED ON TODAY'S PROGRAM:

Kaija Saariaho (b. 1952): Nocturne
Gidon Kremer, violin
Philips 456 016 (track 2)
&
Richard Wagner (1813-1883): "Magic Fire Music," fr "Die Walküre" (arr. Stokowski)
Houston Symphony; Leopold Stokowski, cond.
Everest 9024 (track 2)



ADDITIONAL ANECDOTES:

Wagner's contemporary critic, Eduard Hanslick, had this to say about the 1876 Bayreuth performance of "Die Walküre" he attended: "The second act is an abyss of boredom. Wotan appears, holds a long conversation with his wife, and then, turning to Brünnhilde, gives an autobiographical lecture covering eight full pages of text. This utterly tuneless, plodding narrative, in slow tempo, engulfs us like an inconsolable broad sea from which only the meager crumbs of a few leitmotives come floating towards us out of the orchestra." Hanslick did, however, like the "Ride of the Valkyries" and the "Magic Fire" music from the concluding third act of the opera, but noted that: "both pieces come towards the end of the opera and are thus heard by an audience exhausted and dulled by what has gone before."



ALSO ON THIS DATE:

Births:
1869 - Finnish composer and conductor Armas Järnefelt, in Vyborg;
1892 - English composer Kaikhosru Sorabji (aka Leon Dudley), in Chingford;
1910 - French composer Pierre Schaeffer, in Nancy (pioneered "musique concrète");

Premieres:
1814 - Rossini: opera, "Il Turco in Italia," at La Scala, Milan;

Other:
1703 - Johann Sebastian Bach becomes organist at the Church of St. Boniface in Arnstadt;



Tuesday, August 15
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SYNOPSIS:

Timely music by Liegti and Beethoven . . .



MUSIC PLAYED ON TODAY'S PROGRAM:

György Ligeti (b. 1923): Poème Symphonique (for 100 Metronomes)
Françoise Terrioux, metronomes
Sony Classical 62310 (track 6)
&
Ludwig van Beethoven (1770-1827): 2nd Mvt, fr Symphony No. 8
Cleveland Orchestra; Rafael Kueblik, cond.
DG 459 463 (CD 1, track 6)



ADDITIONAL ANECDOTES:

The metronome markings Beethoven suggested for his symphonies are a hotly contested issue. Some modern recordings by Roger Norrington and David Zinman have attempted to follow them (more or less) . . . but many conductors dismissed them as based on tempi the deaf Beethoven's heard in his "inner ear" and not on the practical experience of actually hearing how the works might sound in actual performance in halls of differing sizes - acoustical factors that can influence the tempo at which any piece of music can be performed effectively,



ALSO ON THIS DATE:

Births:
1776 - Austrian composer and conductor Ignaz von Seyfried, in Vienna;
1875 - Afro-English composer Samuel Coleridge-Taylor, in London;
1887 - American composer, teacher and writer Marion Bauer, in Walla Walla, Washington;
1890 - French composer Jacques Ibert, in Paris;
1922 - German-born American composer and conductor Lukas Foss, in Berlin (presumed date; Foss says his birth year is not authenticated and he has no birth certificate);

Premieres:
1865 - Liszt: oratorio, "St. Elizabeth," in Pest



Wednesday, August 16
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Michael Daugherty
Credit: John Seyfried / Argo Records
SYNOPSIS:

The King is Dead . . . Long Live the King!



MUSIC PLAYED ON TODAY'S PROGRAM:

Elvis Presley (1935-1977): Love Me Tender (arr. Hayman)
Richard Hayman, harmonica & his Symphony Orchestra
Naxos International 8.990017 (track 8)
&
Michael Daugherty (b. 1954): Dead Elvis
Chuck Ullery, bassoon; London Sinfonietta; David Zinman, cond.
Argo 458 145 (track 1)



ADDITIONAL ANECDOTES:

Michael Daughtery's piece titled "UFO" was written for the virtuoso percussionist Evelyn Glennie. Daughtery said he got the idea for the title from the far-out, "extraterrestrial" look of some of Glennie's percussion instruments.



ALSO ON THIS DATE:

Births:
1795 - German composer Heinrich Marschner, in Zittau, Saxony;
1863 - French composer, conductor and organist Gabriel Pierné, in Metz;
1917 - Panamanian composer Roque Cordero, in Panama;

Premieres:
1876 - Wagner: music drama, "Siegfried," at Bayreuth, Germany;
1932 - Gershwin: "Cuban Overture" (original title, "Rhumba");

Other:
1613 - Claudio Monteverdi becomes Master of Music, Republic of Venice;
1814 - Beethoven finishes composing the Piano Sonata in E Minor, Op. 90;



Thursday, August 17
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SYNOPSIS:

Spectacular music - literally - by Saint-Saëns and John Williams.



MUSIC PLAYED ON TODAY'S PROGRAM:

Camille Saint-Saëns (1835-1921): "Parysatis" Ballet Suite
London Philharmonic; Geoffrey Simon, cond.
Cala 1015 (track 2)
&
John Williams (b. 1932): "Flight to Neverland," fr "Hook"
Boston Pops; John Williams
Sony Classical 68419 (track 4)



ALSO ON THIS DATE:

Births:
1686 - Italian composer Nicola Porpora, in Naples;
1901 - French composer Henri Tomasi, in Marseilles;
1903 - American pianist, composer, writer, WQXR commentator, and teacher Abram Chasins, in New York City;
1943 - English composer Edward Cowie, in Birmingham;

Premieres:
1876 - Wagner: music drama, "Götterdämmerung," in Bayreuth, Germany;
1946 - Honegger: Symphony No. 3, "Liturgical," in Zurich



Friday, August 18
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SYNOPSIS:

A Salieri anniversary . . . and Liebermann's concertos played by the Philadelphia Orchestra at Saratoga Springs



MUSIC PLAYED ON TODAY'S PROGRAM:

Antonio Salieri (1750-1825): "Il Talismano" Overture
Czech-Slovak Radio Symphony; Michael Dittrich, cond.
Marco Polo 8.223381 (track 1)
&
Lowell Liebermann: Flute Concerto, Op. 39
James Galway, fl; London Mozart Players; Lowell Liebermann, cond.
BMG 63235 (track 6)



ADDITIONAL ANECDOTES:

The Emperor Napoleon apparently was a Salieri fan - and a champion of new music. In a letter to his First Chamberlain dated March 2, 1810, he asked that Salieri's opera "The Danaïdes" be included in the works to be presented that year in Paris, alongside works by Gluck, Kreutzer and others. Napoleon asked that Salieri's older opera be presented in the fall, however, and that the more recenly composed operas and ballets be presented earlier in the season. "In general," wrote Napoleon, "my plan is to provide as many novelties as possible during the month of Easter, since there will be a large number of visitors in Paris for the festivities."



ALSO ON THIS DATE:

Births:
1849 - French composer Benjamin Godard, in Paris;

Deaths:
1942 - Czech composer Erwin Schulhoff, in the Nazi concentration camp at Wülzbourg, age 48;

Premieres:
1786 - First performance by the Paris Conservatory Orchestra;
1820 - Schubert: opera, "Die Zauberharfe," in Vienna; the overture is now used as the overture to "Rosamunde";
1938 - Britten: Piano Concerto;