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John Birge offers classical music that makes life worth living at 6 a.m.
Ward Jacobson hosts Music Through the Night during the week and soaks up as much daylight as
he can on the weekends.
Rex Levang is music director of classical music and owns a seed-art portrait of Mozart.
Gillian Martin is well aware that she mispronounces her name, but it's too late to change it
now. Hear it for yourself weekend mornings at 5.
When John Birge is away, Alison Young wakes you up at dawn on classical MPR. Her highly caffeinated program can be heard regularly on weekend mornings.
Posted at 5:05 PM on November 24, 2009
by Rex Levang
(0 Comments)
The death of H. C. Robbins Landon has just been announced. His name may not be current in every household, but lovers of the Viennese classic composers, especially Haydn, are in his debt for the scholarly work he did. This Telegraph obituary focuses (maybe too much?) on one incident in his career that he no doubt would have liked to forget, but also suggests the range and importance of his work.
Posted at 2:43 PM on November 24, 2009
by Ward Jacobson
(0 Comments)
Okay, it may be a tad early, but I'm guessing some of you might be up late Wednesday (or up early Thursday for that matter!) preparing for Thanksgiving.
This week's Euro Classic (bright and early at 12:05am Thanksgiving day!) features Rachmaninoff's Piano Concerto No. 2 in C minor. The concerto was dedicated to a fellow named Nikolai Dahl, who was experimenting with hypnosis therapy. It was Dahl who helped the composer emerge from depression and a creative funk following the critical rejection of his First Symphony. Rachmaninoff completed the Second Piano Concerto shortly thereafter. Pianist Peter Donohoe joins the Hong Kong Sinfonietta in a concert recorded live in May, 2008.
Saturday night, while you're enjoying yet another turkey sandwich, we'll supply a little french pastry with another Euro Classic - Francis Poulenc's Sept Chansons. I Fagiolini was recorded live last July in a concert from Castle Montabaur in Germany. Be listening around 8:05pm Saturday.
......and good luck in the kitchen this week!
Posted at 12:37 PM on November 23, 2009
by Rex Levang
(0 Comments)
When you go to a concert, do you want to see the musicians comporting themselves in a dignified fashion, with no more bodily motion than the minimum required?
Or should they really get into it?
At least in a teaching situation, Sir Simon Rattle favors the latter option. Read this account of his master class where he tells the young orchestral players, "You cannot sit there like lumps!"
Posted at 9:55 AM on November 23, 2009
by Gillian Martin
(4 Comments)
I was very disappointed to see this comic strip in yesterday's Star Tribune advancing the myth that "only rich people can afford" tickets to the symphony.
(Especially since I had just read this article about ticket scalpers asking over a $1000 a piece for tickets to an upcoming U2 concert a 2007 Hannah Montana concert.)
Tickets to major orchestras (like the New York Philharmonic, the Chicago Symphony or our own Minnesota Orchestra or Saint Paul Chamber Orchestra) are comparable in price, and often cheaper, than tickets to pop/rock acts such as Bon Jovi, U2 or Taylor Swift.
I don't hold comic strip creators to the same professional standards as reporters, of course, but would a little fact-checking be so bad?
Posted at 4:35 PM on November 20, 2009
by Alison Young
(0 Comments)
I looked up "Classic" in the dictionary and it says "serving as a standard of excellence; of recognized value."
In classical music we might add that it's something that endures.
Recently, my colleague Ward Jacobson posted a blog about which living composers would be still be played 50 years from now?
I wonder if games like this were played back in Mozart and Beethoven's day? I'll bet they were because, for the most part, every concert was all new music.
You can "hear the future" tomorrow night at Orchestra Hall when Osmo Vanska and the Minnesota Orchestra present seven emerging composers in their Future Classics concert.
I'll be there hosting, which basically means I get to ask all those questions you've always wanted to ask - what's your piece about? why did you write it? what do you want us to experience? how was writing for the Minn Orch?
Come tomorrow night - or stay tuned the week after Thanksgiving to classical MPR.org when we post the concert on-line.
Posted at 1:14 PM on November 16, 2009
by Gillian Martin
(0 Comments)
The Melbourne Symphony recently parted ways with its Music Director, Oleg Caetani, a year before his contract ran out.
This fact, and the success of a recent guest conductor, has the orchestra's president wondering if they need a single music director at all. Wouldn't a series of specialists be better?
The Saint Paul Chamber Orchestra asked the same questions a few years ago, and came up with an answer that works very well for them.
And by the way, the SPCO welcomes its newest artistic partner later this month.
Posted at 4:34 AM on November 14, 2009
by Ward Jacobson
(9 Comments)
My colleague Julie Amacher shared this entry from Friday's Arts Journal website.
The question? Which 10 living composers will still be played in 50 years' time? The Arts Journal site paired it down to five locks: Birtwistle, Boulez, Rautavaara, Reich and Sondheim. Then came the probables, followed by the possibles.
So what do you think? We'd love to see YOUR top 10.
Posted at 8:52 AM on November 12, 2009
by Alison Young
(0 Comments)
Earlier this fall, Michael Kaiser, the President of the Kennedy Center, made his way to Saint Paul to talk with about 250 arts presenters. Many of those anxiously hung on every word of the Turnaround King's advice for staying in business in this economy.
Michael Kaiser's pep talks come from his own experience on saving organizations on the brink of collapse. But recently in his blog in the Huffington Post, he admitted some groups are just going to fail.
Posted at 2:36 AM on November 11, 2009
by Ward Jacobson
(0 Comments)
Back in Mozart's day, the Divertimento was considered light-hearted, background music. Just don't give it that label today! Tonight's EURO CLASSIC concert on Classical Minnesota Public Radio is a performance of Mozart's Divertimento in E flat, with the Balkan Chamber Academy recorded live in Belgrade last February. Stay up late and join us just after midnight (12:05am, Thursday).
Saturday night, around 8:05, there's another EURO CLASSIC, with the Emerson String Quartet in a performance of Haydn's String Quartet No. 73, recorded live last June in Schwetzingen, Germany.
Posted at 4:49 AM on November 9, 2009
by Gillian Martin
The Honolulu Symphony had struggled financially for the last couple of years. Its musicians have sometimes gone months without paychecks.
Now its board has cancelled the rest of its 2009 concerts and filed for bankruptcy.