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Eric S notapenguin's blog: "musicstuffs"

created on 09/15/2006  |  http://fubar.com/musicstuffs/b1839
ConcertZender (Radio Hilversum Netherlands) has World Music; Rozhlas D-dur (also use the link D-dur English) (Czech Republic; has OGG, WMA and MP3 links) has works by Josef Myslivecek (1737-1781), Jan Dismas Zelenka (1679-1745, spent much of his life in Dresden- an hour-long cantata "The Bronze Serpent", not the trio sonatas that are more often on the radio :) ), Bohuslav Martinu (1890-1959, specifically his first symphony), Mozart, Bach (a cantata) and Liszt (the transcendental etudes). Edit: Not just any Mozart, but a favorite Mozart work of mine :) - the divertimento for string trio in E♭. BBC Radio 3 has about 168 hours' worth of music, much of it classical but not all, on in addition to what's playing now (one needs RealPlayer or the RealAudio plugin to hear it, and the Listen Again page gives access to the archives of the last week's worth of programming.) One can hear five hour-long programs devoted to Mikhail Glinka's music just today for example (the first will be stored until next Monday morning when the first of the next Composer of the Week series, on Buxtehude, will start, the second until Tuesday, etc.) The night-program on BBC (tonight's, broadcasting Saturday May 5 timelocal in the UK) is especially nicely varied in my opinion. It is my favorite station.

Classical internet radio

If you have RealAudio, Windows Media Player, and/or iTunes, you can probably pick one or more of these up, so I thought I'd list these schedules here once instead of in my other journal where I sometimes do a lookahead for, well, scheduling... On Radio Stephansdom (Austrian - http://www.radiostephansdom.at - iTunes or RealAudio), a Tchaikovski program for the next three hours, with six different works. On Bayern4 radio out of Germany (http://www.br-online.de/bayern4/programm/tag/b4_tp20070504.shtml ) - varied night-program for the next few hours, including Dvorak's wind serenade (probably mostly over by now since it's 6:18, so posting this and continuing), a Bruckner motet, a Schumann symphony, and some rarely-heard Schoenberg orchestral songs (even less often heard than other works of his) during the next two hours (before 8pm Eastern time = before 2am Central European Time), and other pieces. A major work for solo piano by Max Reger ( :) ! I like him ;) ) soon after the 8pm/2am mark) in a performance by Marc-André Hamelin. (I heard Hamelin live here at Cornell a year ago. No Reger but some Alkan and other pieces. Really enjoyed that...)
Probably not the first time I've written a blog about this composer, born in England but by his own account- and not just for eccentricity, I would say!, but out of family and other forms of identification also...- Parsi-Sicilian. (1892-1988) (Neither is there much especially 20th-century "British" about his mature music, though it combines a number of other influences fairly smoothly.) Some information about Sorabji in an interesting 2003 article here. Aside from having a Sorabji score in manuscript photocopy I was once asked to make a new edition from (but these years later, have not... erm... well... I've been re-reading a volume "Sorabji: A Critical Celebration", edited by Paul Rapoport and full of letters by, articles and information about, the composer. Great stuff...

YouTube thought

I was avoiding the recordings of John Bell Young playing with the general thought "I've heard of this fellow- so - probably this isn't legally uploaded." A little investigation reveals that yes, he has his own presence on that site, which he uses to offer masterclasses to interested students. Ok, change in plans, will occasionally link to his performances also...

Myaskovsky

http://www.bbc.co.uk/radio3/cotw/pip/idqrg/ It's appropriate that BBC Radio 3's Composer of the Week tribute to Nikolai Myaskovsky and Nikolai Roslavets should conclude have concluded, back on March 30th, with one of Rostropovich's recordings of Myaskovsky's possibly best-known work- his cello concerto in C minor from 1944. I like the coincidence especially since it was hearing this work, and maybe this recording, twice in a two (one?)-year period, once in my first year of college and once when visiting Hampshire College, that got me interested in this composer, this teacher of many, and friend/fellow-student-of-Prokofiev...
Wrote something about Tchaikovsky in my music profile I want to keep while I put something else in ;) I may use this one post, rather than a series of posts from here on, for this porpoise. Too much stuff requiring I come up for air this morning. Edouard Lalo, symphony in G minor, written around 1885-6 (not his violin and orchestra Symphonie Espagnole written for Sarasate). (Apparently he wrote two other orchestra-only symphonies which have not been published; this is news to me. http://goliath.ecnext.com/coms2/summary_0199-453201_ITM ... though it's (Joseph) Guy-Ropartz, fellows, not Guy Roparts- Guy was not the first name of that fellow, whose own music is very interesting and often surprising stuff!) There have been a few recordings of this symphony- many fewer than of the somewhat better known Symphonie Espagnole, maybe a pity since the G minor symphony's scherzo, say, is a delight. (The link goes to a catalog listing but for a different recording than the one I'm listening to on the radio, which is played by the Royal Philhamonic Orchestra, conducted by Yondani Butt. Yes, that is his surname, not a bit of NSFW stuck in there. Recording was released on what was then a label called ASV, Academy Sound and Vision.) adding, from later date: February 28 2007 - Felix Draeseke's first sonata for viola alta and piano (I have what I think is the only recording, played on the usual viola. You can hear the second sonata at the website played on a viola alta- explanation there, with talk, in Real Audio format, and essays too. The music suggests Schubert sometimes, maybe Liszt- Draeseke's mentor- maybe Brahms. As pointed out in the insert notes, maybe Wagner too, in that it will hardly land on a rest point before going somewhere else- the movement is unsettled in many ways, much of his music is, but it is made to work on the right levels, I think (try the second sonata out at least).

The first sonata, in that "fateful" key of C minor, is from 1892, going by memory just at the moment, and the slow movement, in F major, goes at its own pace- not slow not hurried, lyrical-singing (gah I sound like I'm translating German words but somehow those conjoined nouns seem right so often!...) Edit the who-knows- March 16 2007 - symphony no. 4 - written about 1930 - by Sir Arnold Bax, conducted by Vernon Handley and the BBC Philharmonic, from a BBC broadcast of March 14 (the performance was a few years ago I think, and later released on a Chandos Records set of all seven of his symphonies.) Edit the who-knows-plus-one - Music of March 27 2007 - Bax sym 4 again. (Interesting opening, very chromatic but anchored by repeated E-flats... I think Vernon Handley's recent recording may be one of the best and most satisfying of the - well, few there have been of it; including one earlier of his that I haven't heard (on LP only?), one conducted by the late Bryden Thomson (on Chandos like Handley's newer version), and one conducted by David Lloyd-Jones (on Naxos).)

A play excerpt...

The play excerpt relating to music... "That time may cease, and midnight never come" (Marlowe, Doctor Faustus http://www.bartleby.com/19/2/24.html quoted by composer Benjamin Frankel (1906-73) on the first page of his 1969-70 seventh symphony. (Frankel omits the comma :) ) (And a bit of a find I must keep in mind, to stash in a bit, to bookmark, other things... http://en.wikisource.org/wiki/Complete_Encyclopaedia_of_Music note to self: Wikisource, not Wikipedia.)

Library CDs...

So today (after therapy ...) I went to the county library for the first time in a month or so, couldn't find the book or the DVD Mozart and the Whale listed in the catalog, but picked up the following CDs... Johann Wenzel Kalliwoda (Jan Kalivoda) (1801-1866) - symphonies 5 and 7 (out of 7) and overture no. 16. (One of his overtures for orchestra was commissioned to, and inaugurated, the first season at Carnegie Hall of the New York Philharmonic, I think...? Something like that. So, had some recognition in his day. The 5th symphony I have another performance of on CD, I think this recording I borrowed is the third, which for a full-orchestra work by a now-lesser-known composer is not so bad. His concertino for oboe has done better, I seem to recall, but soloists get to push for things ;^) - that helps! Anyhow, it'll be good to hear another performance of the 5th, and the 7th for the first time.) (I started the article on this fellow in the English-language Wikipedia- mostly but not entirely a translation from the one in the German-language, but adding some facts and sources I knew- it does to admit.) 2) Sir Arthur Bliss (1891-1975, from 1953-75 Master of the Queen's Music I think) - British composer. CD with his 2nd string quartet and his quintet for clarinet and strings. (The 2nd is actually his fourth, first two of those four not acknowledged but also being recorded in this series on the Naxos label, I believe- the library already has the CD with one of those unnumbered quartets, I think the other will follow?...) 3) 2-CD set of Mikhail Pletnev playing Scarlatti sonatas. 4) Aulis Sallinen (modern Finnish composer) - horn concerto and symphonies 2 (symphonic dialogue for percussion and orchestra) and 4, which like the Kalivoda, is produced by the enterprising :) cpo label out of Osnabrück, Germany (the house label of www.jpc.de) - I have a number of their CDs. (The Swedish label BIS has recorded most of Sallinen's symphonies already also; I first heard a work of his, his cello concerto (which was on a disc with another recording of the fourth symphony), back in 1989 I think back either on the college radio station or listening longer-distance to WFLN out of Philadelphia, a station that no longer plays classical music but was fantastic in range back when they did...) (Yeah, yeah, that may be related.) 5) piano works by Alexander Scriabin (piano sonatas 2 and 9, preludes (op. 74 from about 1914), the fantasy (about 1900), two poems for piano (op. 32 from 1904), two pieces op. 57 (1908), other works) played by Alexander Melnikov. I've heard a few of these, have some in other performances in my "stash" (sonata 2, the first of the two poems I think), but am not that familiar with a number of the others...
A composer I've been interested in for years will share "Composer of the Week" status from March 26-30 this year on BBC Radio 3 (the CotW program)- see the March 26 schedule for example, and my article about Myaskovsky here too from the mid-1990s originally and updated a little since. Yay!

Gah!!

Goofed. Thought some images were permanently destroyed (I think some may have been, others were temporarily unavailable and flickered on and off.) Won't be in such a hurry to delete them, though I am now more willing to upload whole pages rather than crops as when I began trying out w/music files back in July. (And thanks!!)
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