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Archives Find past shows by date:
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May 18-24, 2009
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Monday, May 18
"Big bang" symphony by Hovhaness? ... MUSIC PLAYED ON TODAY'S PROGRAM: Alan Hovhaness (1911 – 2000): Symphony No. 50 (Mount St. Helens) Seattle Symphony; Gerard Schwarz, cond. Delos 3137 ADDITIONAL INFORMATION: On Alan Hovhaness ALSO ON THIS DATE: Births: 1830Austro-Hungarian composer Karl Goldmark, in Keszthely, Hungary; 1901French composer Henri Sauguet, in Bordeaux; Deaths: 1733German composer and organist Georg Böhm, age 71, in Lüneburg; 1909Spanish composer Isaac Albéniz, age 48, in Cambo-les-Bains; 1910French composer and opera singer Pauline Viardot-Garcia, age 88, in Paris; 1911Austrian composer Gustav Mahler, age 50, in Vienna; 1975American composer Leroy Anderson, age 66, in Woodburg, Conn.; Premieres: 1885 Bruckner: String Quintet in F (final version), in Vienna, by the Hellmesberger Quartet with guest violist; 24 years earlier, Joseph Hellmesberger had asked Bruckner to write a quartet for his ensemble; A partial performance of this work (minus the Finale, and with its original Scherzo replaced by an Intermezzo movement) was arranged in Vienna on November 27, 1881, by Bruckner's pupil Franz Schalk; 1887 Chabrier: "Le Roi malgre lui" (The King in Spite of Himself), in Paris at the Opera Comique; 1897 Dukas: tone-poem "The Sorcerer's Apprentice," in Paris, with the composer conducting; 1917 Satie: ballet "Parade," in Paris by the Ballet Russe; 1922 Stravinsky: opera, "Renard," at the Paris Opéra, with Ernest Anseremet conducting; 1939 Douglas Moore: opera "The Devil and Daniel Webster," in New York City; 1940 Luigi Dallapiccola: opera "Volo di Notte" (Night Flight), after the novel by Antoine Saint-Exupéry), in Florence; 1949 Milhaud: "Sabbath Morning Service" at Temple Emanu-El, in San Francisco, composer conducting; 1950 Lukas Foss: opera "The Jumping Frog of Calaveras County" (after the short story by Mark Twain) in Bloomington, Ind.; 1978 Cowell: "Quartet Romantic" for 2 flutes, violin and viola, at Alice Tully Hall in New York City, by Paul Dunkel and Susan Palma (flutes), Ralph Schulte (violin) and John Graham (viola); This music was composed in 1917; 1981 Joan Tower: "Sequoia" in New York, with the American Composers Orchestra conducted by Dennis Russell Davies; 1988 Philip Glass: opera "The Fall of the House of Usher" (after Poe) in Cambridge, Mass., at the American Repertory Theater; 1990 John Harbison: Viola Concerto, in Bridgewater, N.J., with soloist Jaime Laredo and the New Jersey Symphony, Hugh Wolff conducting; 1996 Philip Glass: opera "Les Enfants Terrible" (Children of the Game based on the novel by Jean Cocteau), by the Philip Glass Ensemble at the Theatre Casino in Zug (Switzerland), Karen Kamensek conducting.
Tuesday, May 19
Saint-Saens and "Babe" at the organ ... MUSIC PLAYED ON TODAY'S PROGRAM: Camille Saint-Saëns (1835 – 1921): Symphony No. 3 (Organ) Matthias Eisenberg, organ; Toulouse Capitole Orchestra; Michel Plasson, cond. EMI 56362 ADDITIONAL INFORMATION: On Saint-Saëns as a symphonist ALSO ON THIS DATE: Births: 1616Baptismal date of German composer and organist Johann Jacob Froberger, in Stuttgart; Deaths: 1935American composer Charles Martin Loeffler, age 74, in Medfield, Mass.; 1954American composer and insurance executive Charles Ives, age 79, in New York; Premieres: 1842 Donizetti: opera "Linda di Chamounix," in Vienna; 1886 Saint-Saëns: Symphony No. 3 ("Organ"), in London; 1911 Ravel: "L'Heure espagnole" (Spanish Hour), in Paris at the Opèra Comique; 1915 Stravinsky: Three Pieces for string quartet, in Paris; 1932 Shostakovich: incidental music for Shakespeare's "Hamlet," in Moscow at the Vakhtangov Theater; 1939 Cowell: "Return" for 3 percussionists and wailer, at the Cornish School in Seattle, by John Cage and his Percussion Group; 1942 Cage: music for the radio play "The City Wears a Slouch Hat" (text by poet Kenneth Patchen), broadcast in Chicago; 2000 Robert X. Rodriguez: "The Last Night of Don Juan" for chorus and orchestra, by the San Antonio Symphony and chorus, Wilkins conducting; 2002 William Bolcom: "Seventh Symphony (A Symphonic Concerto)," at Carnegie Hall in New York, by the Metropolitan Opera Orchestra, James Levine conducting. Other: 1886 American premiere of J.S. Bach's Mass in B minor (11 selections), during the May Festival in Cincinnati, conducted by Theodore Thomas; The next documented performance (12 sections) was given in Boston on February 27, 1887, by the Handel and Haydn Society, with Carl Zerrahn conducting a chorus of 432 and an orchestra of 50; In both the 1886 Cincinnati and 1887 Boston performances, the famous 19-century German soprano Lilli Lehmann appeared as one of the soprano soloists; The first complete performance of the work was apparently given either at the Moravian Church in Bethlehem on Mar 17, 1900, by the Bach Choir under J. Fred Wolf, or at Carnegie Hall in new York on April 5, 1900, by the Oratorio Society, Frank Damrosch conducting.
Wednesday, May 20
Beethoven in New York ... MUSIC PLAYED ON TODAY'S PROGRAM: Ludwig van Beethoven (1770 – 1827): Symphony No. 9 (Choral) Berlin Philharmonic; Claudio Abbado, cond. DG 471 491 ADDITIONAL INFORMATION: On George Templeton Strong, Sr. ALSO ON THIS DATE: Births: 1804Russian composer Mikail Glinka ((Gregorian date: June 1); 1943American composer Tison Street, in Boston; Deaths: 1896German pianist and composer, Clara Wieck Schumann, age 76, in Frankfurt; 1995American composer Ulysses Kay, in Englewood, N.J.; Premieres: 1914 Miaskovsky: Symphony No. 1, in Pavlovsk (Julian date: June 2); 1937 John J. Becker: Symphony No. 3 ("Symphonia Brevis"), at the Saint Paul Auditorium by the Twin Cities Civic (Federal Music Project, Minnesota) Orchestra, with the composer conducting; 1948 Milhaud: Symphony No.4, in Paris, composer conducting; 1950 Dallapiccola: opera "Il prigionero" (The Prisoner)(first staged production), in Florence at the Teatro Comunale; The opera has been premiered in a concert performance in Turin on December 1, 1949; 1973 Menotti: Suite for Two Cellos and Piano, in New York, with cellists Gregor Piatigorsky and Leslie Parnas, and pianist Charles Wadsworth; 1974 Panufnik: "Sinfonia Concertante," in London; 1974 Sondheim: incidental music for "The Frogs" (after Aristophanes), at the Yale swimming pool; 1977 Hovhaness: "Rubaiyat" for narrator, accordion, and orchestra, in New York City; 1979 Tobias Picker: "Romance" for violin and piano, at York College, by Linda Quan (violin) and Aleck Karis (piano); 1989 Katherine Hoover: "Quintet Da Pacem," for piano quintet, at Alice Tully Hall in New York, by members of the New Jersey Chamber Music Society; Other: 1846American premiere of Beethoven: Symphony No. 9 ("Choral") by New York Philharmonic Society at New York's Castle Garden, George Loder, Jr. conducting; It appears that the Society tried unsuccessfully to invite Mendelssohn to attend this festival performance, which they organized to raise funds for "the erection of a suitable edifice for musical purposes" in Manhattan; The next documented performance of Beethoven's Ninth outside of New York was given in Boston on February 5, 1853 by the combined forces of the Handel and Haydn Society plus the Germania Society; Other 19 th century regional premieres of Beethoven Ninth occurred in New Haven (Dec. 10, 1870), Columbus (Dec. 13, 1870), Chicago (Dec. 17, 1870), Philadelphia (April 27, 1874), Milwaukee (Oct. 22, 1878), Baltimore (May 3, 1884) and Pittsburgh (May 25, 1889); 1943The U.S. Marine Band performs a special wartime concert on the White House South Lawn for President Roosevelt and Winston Churchill; Despite a steady rain, Roosevelt and Churchill stayed throughout and sang "The Battle Hymn of the Republic" with the band at the conclusion.
Thursday, May 21
Adolphe's "Tyrannosaurus Sue" ... MUSIC PLAYED ON TODAY'S PROGRAM: Bruce Adolphe (b. 1955): Tyrannosaurus Sue "A Cretaceous Concerto" The Chicago Chamber Musicians Pollyrhythm Productions 30001 ADDITIONAL INFORMATION: On Bruce Adolphe On Adolphe's "Tyrannosaurus Sue" ALSO ON THIS DATE: Births: 1904American composer and jazz pianist Thomas "Fats" Waller, in New York City; Deaths: 1895Austrian composer Franz von Suppé, age 76, in Vienna; Premieres: 1739 Rameau: opera-ballet "Les Fêtes d'Hébé," in Paris; 1892 Leoncavallo: opera "Pagliacci," in Milan at Teatro dal Verme, with Arturo Toscanini conducting; 1925 Busoni: "Doctor Faust," posthumously, in Dresden (completed by Philip Jarnach); 1956 Perischetti: Piano Sonata No. 7, at the Philadelphia Conservatory, by pianist Robert Smith; 1962 Stockhausen: "Momente" for soprano, choruses, and instruments, in Cologne; 1980 Jacob Druckman: "Prism" for orchestra, by the Baltimore Symphony, Sergiu Commissiona conducting; 1983 Dave Brubeck: "Pange Lingua" Variations for chorus, jazz quartet, and orchestra, at the Cathedral of the Blessed Sacrament in Sacramento, Calif., with Russell Gloyd conducting; 1987 Harrison Birtwistle: opera "The Mask of Orpheus," at the London Coliseum by the English National Opera, Elgar Howarth and Paul Daniel conducting; 2000 Bruce Adolphe: "Tyrannosaurus Sue (A Cretaceous Concerto)", at the Field Museum in Chicago, by the Chicago Chamber Players.
Friday, May 22
Bright Sheng's "Flute Moon" ... MUSIC PLAYED ON TODAY'S PROGRAM: Bright Sheng (b. 1955): Flute Moon Sharon Bezaly, flute; Singapore Symphony; Lan Shui, cond. BIS 1122 ADDITIONAL INFORMATION: On Bright Sheng ALSO ON THIS DATE: Births: 1813German composer Richard Wagner, in Leipzig; Deaths: 1949German composer Hans Pfitzner, age 80, in Salzburg; Premieres: 1813 Rossini: "L'Italiana in Algeri" (The Italian Woman in Algiers), in Venice at the Teatro San Benedetto; 1836 Mendelssohn: oratorio "Paulus" (St. Paul), at the Lower Rhine Music Festival in Düsseldorf, with the composer conducting; 1874 Verdi: "Requiem Mass," at the Milan Cathedral, with the composer conducting; 1911 Debussy: "Le Martyre de Saint-Sebastien," in Paris at the Théatre du Châtelet, André Caplet conducting; 1924 Stravinsky: Concerto for Piano and Wind Instruments, at the Paris Opéra at a concert conducted by Serge Koussevitzky, with the composer as the piano soloist; 1931 William Grant Still: ballet "Sahdji," by the Eastman Ballet and Rochester Civic Orchestra, Howard Hanson conducting; 1950 R. Strauss: "Four Last Songs" for soprano and orchestra, in London, with the Philharmonia Orchestra conducted by Wilhelm Furtw ä ngle and Kristen Flagstad the vocalsoloist; 1982 Alvin Singleton: "A Yellow Rose Petal" for orchestra, by the Houston Symphony, C. William Harwood conducting; 1990 John Harbison: "Simple Daylight" (to a text by Michael Fried) at the Herbst Theater in San Francisco, by soprano Dawn Upshaw and pianist Alan Feinberg; 1999 Bright Sheng: "Flute Moon," with soloist Aralee Dorough (flute/piccolo) and the Houston Symphony, Christoph Eschenbach conducting; Other: 1723J.S. Bach, the newly appointed cantor of Leipzig's St. Thomas Church, arrives in that city with his family; 1790Possible premiere of Mozart's String Quartets in D (K. 575) and Bb (K. 589) at Mozart's apartment in Vienna, very likely with the composer as violist; 1872On his 59th birthday, Richard Wagner lays the cornerstone of his Festival Theater in Bayreuth, Germany.
Saturday, May 23
Da Ponte (and Mozart) in New York ... MUSIC PLAYED ON TODAY'S PROGRAM: Wolfgang Mozart (1756 – 1791) arr. Triebensee: Don Giovanni Suite Amadeus Ensemble; Julius Rudel, cond. MusicMasters 67118 ADDITIONAL INFORMATION: On Lorenzo da Ponte ALSO ON THIS DATE: Births: 1794Bohemian composer and pianist Ignaz Moscheles, in Prague; 1864Danish composer Louis Glass, in Frederiksberg; 1901English composer Edmund Rubbra, in Northhampton; 1912French composer and pianist Jean Françaix, in Le Mans; The composer himself has written that his family name is pronounced with the final "x" sounded (as in "Aix"-en-Provence), although is commonly pronounced "Français" in both Europe and America; 1934American electronic engineer and inventor, Robert Moog (pronounced: "Mohg"), inventor of the synthesizer bearing his name which was made famous by performers such as Wendy Carlos (of "Switched-On Bach" fame); Premieres: 1736 Handel: opera "Atalanta" (Julian date: May 12); 1814 Beethoven: "Fidelio" Overture, in Vienna, as part of a third and final revision of the opera "Fidelio," at the Kärntnertor Theater; 1876 Brahms: String Quartet No. 3, in Berlin at the home of Clara Schumann by the Joachim Quartet; The work was subsequently performed for a small circle of friends at the Joachim home on June 4 that year, and given its first public performance in Berlin on October 30, 1876, again by the Joachim Quartet; 1883 Tchaikovsky: "Festival Coronation March," in Moscow (Gregorian date June 4); 1926 Miaskovsky: Symphony No. 8, in Moscow; 1937 William Grant Still: "Lenox Avenue" for narrator and orchestra, broadcast over the CBS radio network, with Howard Barlow conducting; 1943 Barber: "Commando March," in Atlantic City, New Jersey, with Army Air Force Technical Training Command Band, composer conducting; 1971 Einem: "Der Besuch der alten Damen" (The Visit of the Old Lady), at the Vienna State Opera; 1971 Sessions: cantata "When Lilacs Last in the Dooryard Bloom'd" (after Walt Whitman), in Berkley, Calif.; 1993 Daniel Pinkham: "Nocturnes" for flute and guitar, at the First and Second Church in Boston, by flutist Fenwick Smith and guitarist John Curtis; Other: 1826American premiere of Mozart's opera "Don Giovanni" at New York City's Park Theater, presented by members of the Garcia family with Lorenzo da Ponte (Mozart's librettist) in the audience.
Sunday, May 24
Elgar's Second ... MUSIC PLAYED ON TODAY'S PROGRAM: Edward Elgar (1857 – 1934): Symphony No. 2 London Symphony; Sir Colin Davis, cond. LSO 18 ADDITIONAL INFORMATION: On Edward Elgar ALSO ON THIS DATE: Births: 1886French conductor and composer conductor Paul Paray, in Le Tréport; 1903Soviet-Armenian composer Aram Khachaturian (Gregorian date: June 6); 1936American composer Harold Budd, in Los Angeles; 1941American singer and songwriter Bob Dylan (born Robert Zimmerman), in Duluth, Minn.; Deaths: 1968American composer Bernard Rogers, age 75, in Rochester, N.Y.; 1974American composer Edward Kennedy "Duke" Ellington, age 75, in New York City; 1996American composer Jacob Druckman, age 67, in New Haven, Conn.; Premieres: 1803 Beethoven: Violin Sonata No. 9 ("Kreutzer Sonata"), in Vienna, with violinist George Bridgetower and Beethoven at the piano; 1810 Beethoven: incidental music for Goethe's play "Egmont," in Vienna at the Hofburg Theater; 1833 Marschner: opera "Hans Heiling," in Berlin at the Königliches Opernhaus; 1899 Massenet: "Cendrillon," in Paris; 1906 Delius: "Sea Drift" (to a text by Walt Whitman, in Essen, Germany; 1911 Elgar: Symphony No. 2, at the London Festival with the Queen's Hall Orchestra conducted by the composer; 1918 Bartók: opera "Bluebeard's Castle," at the Budapest Opera; 1939 Elliott Carter: "Pocahontas" Ballet, at the Martin Beck Theater in New York City , with an orchestra conducted by Fritz Kitzinger; Following Carter's ballet, the New York premiere of Copland's ballet "Billy the Kid" was presented (Copland's ballet had been premiered in Chicago on October 16, 1938); 1948 John Gay: "The Beggar's Opera" arranged by Benjamin Britten, in Cambridge; 1970 Panufnik: "Universal Prayer," at St. John the Divine Cathedral in New York City, Leopold Stokowski conducting. |