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May 3-9, 2004

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Monday, May 3
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Photo
American composer Henry Cowell (and friend)
SYNOPSIS:
A chamber quintet by Cowell ...

MUSIC PLAYED ON TODAY'S PROGRAM:
Henry Cowell (1897–1965): Quartet for Flute, Oboe, Cello and Harp
Musicians Accord
Mode 72

ADDITIONAL INFORMATION:
On Henry Cowell
An essay on Cowell's legacy

ALSO ON THIS DATE:
Births:
1886—French organist and composer Marcel Dupré, in Rouen;
1920—American composer and jazz pianist John Lewis, in LaGrange, Ill.;

Deaths:
1704—Austrian composer Heinrich Biber, age 59, in Salzburg;

Premieres:
1831 — Hérold: "Zampa," at the Opéra-Comique in Paris;
1893 — Horatio Parker: oratorio "Hora Novissima," in New York City;
1917 — Bloch: "Schlemo" and "Israel" Symphony at Society of the Friends of Music Concert, Artur Bodanzky conducting;
1919 — Debussy: Clarinet Rhapsody (orchestral version), in Paris, with clarinetist Gaston Hamelin, at Pasdeloup Concert;
1929 — Poulenc: "Concert champêtre" for harpsichord and orchestra, at the Salle Pleyel in Paris, by the Paris Symphony with Pierre Monteux conducting and Wanda Landowska the soloist;
1934 — Bernard Rogers: "Three Japanese Dances," in Rochester, N.Y.;
1943 — Cowell: "American Melting Pot" (Set for Chamber Orchestra), at Carnegie Hall in New York, by the Orchestrette of New York, Frédérique Petrides conducting;
1952 — Vaughan Williams: "Romance" for harmonica and orchestra, in New York City;
1958 — Walter Hartley: Concerto for 23 Winds, at the Eastman School in Rochester, N.Y., by the Eastman Wind Ensemble, Frederick Fennell conducting;
1963 — Cowell: Quartet for Flute, Oboe, Cello and Harp, at the University of Miami, by John Bitter (flute), Julien Balogh (oboe), Hermann Busch (cello), and Mary Spalding (Mrs. Fabien) Sevitzky (harp); The work is dedicated to the conductor Fabien Sevitzky "in honor of his many services to American music";
1969 — Shostakovich: Violin Sonata, in Moscow, with David Oistrakh and Sviatoslav Richter;
1989 — James MacMillan: "Visions of a November Spring" for string quartet, at University Concert Hall in Glasgowm Scotland, by the Bingham String Quartet;

Other:
1971—Debut broadcast of National Public Radio's "All Things Considered" with an electronic theme by composer Don Voegeli of the University of Wisconsin (In 1974, Voegeli composed a new electronic ATC theme, the now-familiar signature tune of the program).


Tuesday, May 4
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Photo
Early American flag
SYNOPSIS:
Dvořák salutes the flag ...

MUSIC PLAYED ON TODAY'S PROGRAM:
Antonin Dvořák (1841 - 1904): The American Flag , Op. 102
soloists; choirs; Berlin Radio Symphony; Michael Tilson Thomas, cond.
CBS/Sony 60297

ADDITIONAL INFORMATION:
On Dvořák

ALSO ON THIS DATE:
Births:
1744—Austrian composer of Spanish descent Marianne (Anna Katharina) von Martínez, in Vienna; She studied composition with Haydn, and Haydn and Mozart attended her musical soirées;
1860—Austrian composer Emil Nikolaus Von Reznicek, in Vienna;
1905—Hungarian-born British composer and teacher Mátyás(György) Seiber, in Budapest;

Deaths:
1604—Italian composer and publisher Claudio Merulo, age 71, in Parma;
1955—Rumanian composer Georges Enesco, age 73, late on May 3 or early on May 4, in Paris;

Premieres:
1795 — Haydn: Symphony No. 104, conducted by the composer, at the King's Theater in London; This symphony is sometimes nicknamed the "Salomon" Symphony, although it (along with Haydn's Symphonies 102 and 103) was in fact commissioned for and premiered at Viotti's Opera Concerts, not as part of the earlier series of Haydn concerts arranged by the impresario Salomon;
1895 — Dvorák: cantata "The American Flag," Op. 102, in New York;
1920 — Vaughan Williams : revised version of Symphony No.2 ("A London Symphony") at Queens Hall in London, conducted by Albert Coates; The first version of this symphony had premiered at Queen's Hall in London on March 27, 1914, conducted by Geoffrey Toye; A final (twice revised) version of this symphony was published in 1936;
1924 — Miaskovsky: Symphony No. 6, in Moscow;
1974 — Rautavaara: Flute Concerto, in Stockholm, with flutist Gunilla von Bahr and the Swedish Radio Symphony, Stig Westerberg conducting;
1976 — Bernstein: musical "1700 Pennsylvania Avenue" at the Mark Hellinger Theater in New York City, conducted by Roland Gagnon; A trial run of this show had opened in Philadelphia at the Forrest Theater on February 24, 1976;
1976 — Sondheim: revue "Side by Side by Sondheim" (compiled from various Sondheim musicals by British singer-actor David Kernan and others); This revue opened on Broadway on April 18, 1977;
1989 — Joan Tower: "Island Prelude" for oboe and strings, by soloist Peter Bowman and the St. Louis Symphony, Leonard Slatkin conducting.


Wednesday, May 5
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Photo
Claude Debussy
SYNOPSIS:
Debussy's Violin Sonata ...

MUSIC PLAYED ON TODAY'S PROGRAM:
Claude Debussy (1862–1918): Violin Sonata
Midori, violin; Robert McDonald, piano
Sony 89699

ADDITIONAL INFORMATION:
On Debussy

ALSO ON THIS DATE:
Births:
1819—Polish composer Stanislaw Moniuszko, in Ubiel, province of Minsk, Russia;
1869—German composer and conductor Hans Pfitzner, in Moscow, of German parents; Under the Julian "Old Style" calendar still in use in Russia in that year, this same date would be listed as April 23:

Premieres:
1726 — Handel: opera "Alessandro," in London at King's Theater in the Haymarket, with the Italian soprano Faustina Bordini marking her London debut in a work by Handel (Gregorian date: May 16);
1917 — Debussy: Violin Sonata, in Paris, by violinist Gaston Poulet with the composer at the piano (his last public appearance);
1926 — Copland: Two Pieces ("Nocturne" and "Ukelele Serenade"), in Paris by violinist Samuel Dushkin with the composer at the piano;
1930 — Milhaud: opera "Christophe Colomb" (Christopher Columbus),at the Berlin State Opera;
1941 — Britten: "Paul Bunyan" (text by W.H. Auden) at Columbia University in New York City;
1945 — Barber: "I Hear an Army," "Monks and Raisins," "Nocturne,""Star On This Shing Night," during a CBS radio broadcast, with mezzo Jennie Tourel and the CBS Symphony, composer conducting;
1946 — Douglas Moore: Symphony in A, in Paris;
1977 — George Crumb: oratorio "Star Child," by the New York Philharmonic, Pierre Boulez conducting;
1982 — Ellen Taaffe Zwilich: Symphony No. 1, at Alice Tully Hall in New York, by the American Composers Orchestra, Gunther Schuller conducting; This work won the Pulitzer Prize in 1983;
1987 — John Williams: "A Hymn to New England," by the Boston Pops conducted by the composer (recorded by the Pops and Keith Lockhardt );
1991 — Joan Tower: "Fanfare for the Uncommon Woman" No. 3(dedicated to Frances Richard of ASCAP), at Carnegie Hall, by members of the Empire Brass and the New York Philharmonic, Zubin Mehta conducting;
2000 — Christopher Rouse: "Rapture" for orchestra, by the Pittsburgh Symphony, Mariss Jansons conducting;
2001 — Christopher Rouse: "Rapturedux" cello ensemble, by the Royal Northern College of Music Cellists in Manchester (U.K.);

Other:
1891—Carnegie Hall opens in New York City with a concert that included Beethoven's "Leonore" Overture No. 3 conducted by Walter Damrosch, and Tchaikovsky's "Marche Solennelle" (Coronation March) conducted by its composer.


Thursday, May 6
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Photo
American composer Libby Larsen
SYNOPSIS:
Larsen's "Lyric" Third ...

MUSIC PLAYED ON TODAY'S PROGRAM:
Libby Larsen (b. 1950): Symphony No. 3 (Lyric)
London Symphony; Joel Revzen, cond.
Koch 7370

ADDITIONAL INFORMATION:
On Libby Larsen
Libby Larsen on THE COMPOSERS VOICE

ALSO ON THIS DATE:
Births:
1915—American composer George Perle, in Bayonne, N.J.;
1918—Canadian composer Godfrey Ridout, in Toronto;

Deaths:
1667—(on May 6 or 7) German composer and keyboard player Johann Jakob Froberger, age 50, in Hericourt, nearr Montbeliard , France;

Premieres:
1897 — Leoncavallo: opera "La Boheme" in Venice;
1981 — Rautavaara: Double-bass Concerto ("Angel of Dusk"),in Helsinki, with bassist Olli Kosonen and the Finnish Radio Symphony, Leif Segerstam conducting;
1985 — Ellen Taaffe Zwilich: "Concerto for Trumpet and Five Players," by the Pittsburgh New Music Ensemble;
1992 — Libby Larsen: Symphony No. 3 ("Lyric"), by the Albany Symphony (NY), Joel Revzen conducting;
1999 — Magnus Lindberg: Cello Concerto, by the Orchestre de Paris, with Esa-Pekka Salonen conducting and Anssi Karttunen the soloist;
1999 — Christopher Rouse: "Seeing" (Piano Concerto), at Avery Fisher Hall in New York, by the New York Philharmonic conducted by Leonard Slatkin, with Emanuel Ax the soloist;

Other:
1872—Theodore Thomas conducts the first concert of the Cincinnati Music Festival ("May Festival"); His program includes Beethoven's Fifth, Handel's "Dettingen Te Deum," a Mozart aria, and a chorus from Haydn's "Creation."


Friday, May 7
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Photo
American composer Virgil Thomson
SYNOPSIS:
Thomson's "Mother of Us All" ...

MUSIC PLAYED ON TODAY'S PROGRAM:
Virgil Thomson (1896 - 1989): The Mother of Us All
Santa Fe Opera; Raymond Leppard, cond.
New World 288

ADDITIONAL INFORMATION:
On Virgil Thomson
More on Thomson

ALSO ON THIS DATE:
Births:
1833—German composer Johannes Brahms, in Hamburg;
1840—Russian composer Pyotr Ilyitch Tchaikovsky, in Votkinsk, district of Viatka (Julian date: April 25);
1850—Hungarian conductor Anton Seidl, in Budapest; He was Wagner assistant at the first Bayreuth Festival performances of the "Ring" operas in 1876-79, was engaged to conduct the German repertory at the Metropolitan Opera in 1885, and in 1891 as the permanent conductor of the New York Philharmonic; He conducted the American premieres of Wagner's "Tristan und Isolde" in 1886 and the world premiere of Dvorák's "New World" Symphony in 1893; He died of ptomaine poisoning in 1898;

Deaths:
1793—Italian composer and violinist Pietro Nardini, age 71, in Florence;
1818—Bohemian composer Leopold (Jan Antonín, Ioannes Antonius)Kozeluch (Kotzeluch, Koželuh), age 70, in Vienna;
1825—Italian composer Antonio Salieri, age 74, in Vienna;

Premieres:
1824 — Beethoven: Symphony No. 9 ("Choral") at the Kärntnertor Theater in Vienna, with the deaf composer on stage beating time, but with the performers instructed to follow the cues of Beethoven's assistant conductor, Michael Umlauf;
1888 — Lalo: "Le Roi d'Ys" (The King of Ys) at the Opéra Comique, in Paris;
1926 — Milhaud: opera "Les malheurs d'Orphée" (The Sorrows of Orpheus), in Brussels at the Théatre de la Monnaie;
1944 — Copland: "Our Town" Film Music Suite (revised version), by the Boston Pops conducted by Leonard Bernstein; An earlier version of this suite aired on CBS Radio on June 9, 1940, with the Columbia Broadcasting Symphony conducted by Howard Barlow;
1947 — Virgil Thomson: opera "The Mother of Us All," at Columbia University in New York City;
1985 — David Ward-Steinman: "Chroma" Concerto for multiple keyboards, percussion, and chamber orchestra, in Scottsdale, Ariz., by the Noveau West Chamber Orchestra conducted by Terry Williams, with the composer and Amy-Smith-Davie as keyboard soloists;
1988 — Stockhausen: opera "Montag von Licht" (Monday from Light), in Milan at the Teatro alla Scala;
1988 — Michael Torke: ballet "Black and White," at the New York State Theater, with the NY City Ballet Orchestra, David Alan Miller conducting;
1993 — Harrison Birtwistle: "Five Distances for Five Instruments," in London at the Purcell Room, by the Ensemble InterContemporain;
1998 — Joan Tower: "Tambor," by the Pittsburgh Symphony, Mariss Jansons conducting;
1999 — Robert X. Rodriguez: "Bachanale: Concertino for Orchestra," by the San Antonio Symphony, Wilkins conducting;

Other:
1747—J.S. Bach (age 62) visits King Frederick II of Prussia at his court in Potsdam on May 7-8; Bach improvises on a theme submitted by the King, performing on the King's forte-piano; In September of 1747 Bach publishes a chamber work based on the royal theme entitled "Musical Offering."
1937—The RKO film "Shall We Dance?" is released, with a filmscore by George Gershwin; This film includes the classic Gershwin songs "Beginner's Luck," "Let's Call the Whole Thing Off," "They Can't Take That Away from Me" and an instrumental interlude "Walking the Dog" (released as a solo piano piece under the title "Promenade").


Saturday, May 8
Play today's program

Photo
Ludwig van Beethoven
SYNOPSIS:
Beethoven's Second on first? ...

MUSIC PLAYED ON TODAY'S PROGRAM:
Ludwig van Beethoven (1770–1827): Symphony No. 2
New York Philharmonic; Leonard Bernstein, cond.
Sony 61835

ADDITIONAL INFORMATION:
On Beethoven . . .
. . . and on past American Presidents

ALSO ON THIS DATE:
Births:
1745—Baptismal date of Bohemian violinist and composer Carl Philipp Stamitz, in Mannheim; He was the son of the composer JohannWenzel Anton Stamitz (b. 1717), and the brother of composer Johann Anton Stamitz (b. 1750);
1829—American pianist and composer Louis Moreau Gottschalk, in New Orleans;
1945—American pianist and composer Keith Jarrett, in Allentown, Pa.;

Deaths:
1829—Italian composer and guitar virtuoso Mauro Giuliani, age 47, in Naples;
1944—British composer and women's rights advocate Dame Ethel Smyth, age 86, in Woking;
1960—Swedish composer Hugo Alfvén, age 88, in Falun;

Premieres:
1720 — Handel: opera "Radamisto" (1st version) (Julian date: April 27);
1736 — Handel: anthem "Sing unto God" (Julian date: April 27);
1749 — Handel: "Music for the Royal Fireworks" (Julian date: April 27);
1924 — Honegger: "Pacific 231," in Paris at a Koussevitzky Concert;
1938 — Stravinsky: "Dumbarton Oaks" Concerto, at Dumbarton Oaks, conducted by Nadia Boulanger;
1939 — Persichetti: Piano Sonata No. 1, at Philadelphia Conservatory, composer performing;
1946 — Menotti: "The Medium," at Columbia University in New York City;
1958 — Ligeti: String Quartet No. 1 ("Metamorphoses nocturnes"), in Vienna, by the Ramor Quartet;
1962 — Sondheim: Broadway premiere of musical "A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to the Forum"; Near-disasterous trial run performances in Washington DC and other cities preceded the show's Broadway premiere; This was the first major musical for which Sondheim wrote both the lyrics and the music; It won several Tony Awards in 1962, including "Best Musical";
1965 — Rochberg: "Zodiac" (orchestral version), by Cincinnati Symphony, Max Rudolf conducting;
1970 — Gunther Schuller: children's opera "The Fisherman and His Wife," in Boston;
1973 — Rochberg: "Imago Mundi," by Baltimore Symphony, Sergiu Commisiona conducting;
1979 — Andrew Lloyd-Webber: musical "Evita," in Los Angeles; The musical opened on Broadway on September 25, 1979;
1985 — Frank Zappa: "Time's Beach" for winds, at Alice Tully Hall in New York, by the Aspen Wind Quintet;
1996 — Lowell Liebermann: opera "The Picture of Dorian Gray," at the Monte Carlo Opera, with tenor Jeffrey Lentz in the title role and Steuart Bedford conducting; The American premiere of this opera was staged in Milwaukee, Wis., by the Florentine Opera in Feb. of 1999;
1998 — Saariaho: Cello Octet, at the Beauvais Cello Festival in Beavais, France;

Other:
1747—J.S. Bach performs an organ recital at the Heiligeistkirche in Potsdam;
1821 —Earliest documented American performance Beethoven's Symphony No. 2, in Philadelphia at Washington Hall, by the Musical Fund Society, Charles Hupfeld conducting; The finale only was performed by the Philharmonic Society in New York on December 16, 1824 and repeated at Castle Garden on April 21, 1825; The first complete performance in New York was apparently given on April 22, 1843, at the Apollo Room during the first season of the New York Philharmonic with George Loder conducting;
1874 —American premiere of J.S. Bach's "St. Matthew Passion," at the Music Hall in Boston, by the Handel and Haydn Society, Carl Zerrahn conducting; The performing forces included a chorus of 600, and orchestra of 90, and a 60-voice boy's choir; For this performance, the first 12 numbers of Part II were omitted; The complete Passion was not performed by the Society until 1879; About half of Bach's Passion was given its New York City premiere at St. George's Church on March 17, 1880, by the New York Oratorio Society under Leopold Damrosch; Theodore Thomas conducted the next documented performance in Cincinnati on May 17, 1882, during that city's May Festival;
1945—Aaron Copland's Pulitzer Prize for Music for his "Appalachian Spring" ballet score is announced on V-E Day (the day the Allied Forces won the war in Europe).


Sunday, May 9
Play today's program

Photo
British composer John Tavener
SYNOPSIS:
Tavener's "wake up" call? ...

MUSIC PLAYED ON TODAY'S PROGRAM:
John Tavener (b. 1944): Wake up…and die
Yo Yo Ma, vcl; Baltimore Symphony cellists; David Zinman, cond.
Sony 62821

ADDITIONAL INFORMATION:
On Taverner
More on Tavener

ALSO ON THIS DATE:
Births:
1740—Italian composer Giovanni Paisiello, in Roccaforzata, near Taranto;
1814—German pianist and composer Adolph von Henselt, in Schwabach,Bavaria;

Deaths:
1707—German organist and composer Dietrich Buxtehunde, age c. 70, in Lübeck;
1770—(on May 9 or 10) English composer, conductor and writer on music Charles Avison, age 61, in Newcastle upon Tyne ;
1791—American statesman and songwriter Francis Hopkinson, age 53, in Philadelphia; He was one of the signers of the Declaration of Independence, and dedicated a book of his songs to George Washington;
1799—French composer Claude Balbastre, age c. 72, in Paris;

Premieres:
1812 — Rossini's opera "La Scala di seta" (The Silken Ladder), in Venice;
1868 — Bruckner: Symphony No. 1, in Linz, composer conducting;
1893 — Rachmaninoff: opera "Aleko," in Moscow at the Bolshoi Theater (Julian date: April 27);
1924 — R. Strauss: ballet "Schlagobers" (Whipped Cream), in Vienna;
1940 — The film "Our Town" opens in Hollywood at Grauman's Chinese Theater; The film was based on the play of the same name by Thorton Wilder, and featured a filmscore by Aaron Copland; Copland arranged a suite of music from his filmscore, which premiered on CBS Radio on June 9, 1940; A revised version of the suite was given its first public performance by the Boston Pops conducted by Leonard Bernstein on May 7, 1944;
1981 — Christopher Rouse: "The Infernal Machine" for orchestra (Movement II of Rouse's "Phantasmata"), at the Evian Festival, France, by the University of Michigan Symphony Orchestra, Gustav Meier conducting;
1986 — Ellen Taaffe Zwilich: "Concerto Grosso" (after Handel's Sonata in D), by the Handel Festival Orchestra of Washington, Stephen Simon conducting;
1988 — Bernstein: "Arias and Barcarolles," at Equitable Center Auditorium in New York City, by vocalists Louise Edeiken, JoyceCastle, John Brandstetter, and Mordechai Kaston, with the composer and Michael Tilson Thomas at the piano; An orchestrated version of this work prepared by Bright Sheng premiered on September 22, 1989, at the Tilles Center of Long Island University with the New York Chamber Symphony conducted by Gerard Schwarz and featuring vocalists Susan Graham and Kurt Ollmann;
1990 — John Harbison: "Words from Patterson" (to texts by William Carlos Williams), at the Kennedy Center in Washington, D.C., with baritone William Sharp and the members of the New Jersey Chamber Music Society;
1998 — John Tavener: "Wake Up and Die," for solo cello and orchestral cello section, at the Beauvais Cello Festival in Beavais , France;
1999 — Zwillich: "Upbeat!" by National Symphony, Anthony Aibel conducting;

Other:
1863—American premiere of Berlioz's "Harold in Italy," by the Theodore Thomas Orchestra in New York.