Composers Datebook

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Composers Datebook
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258 episodios

  • Composers Datebook

    Schubert's Symphony No. 9

    21/03/2026 | 2 min
    Synopsis

    In 1838, Robert Schumann visited the grave of Franz Schubert in Vienna and paid a courtesy call on Schubert's brother, Ferdinand, who was still alive. Schumann had heard about Ferdinand's closet full of his brother’s manuscripts, and among the dusty music scores that Schumann was shown was one for a big symphony in C Major, unperformed, he was told, because people thought it was too difficult, too bombastic, and far too long.

    Looking at the music, Schumann was stunned, and asked if he could arrange to have the symphony played. “Sure,” said Ferdinand, and Schumann sent the score off to his friend and fellow composer, Felix Mendelssohn, who was the director of the Leipzig Gewandhaus Orchestra. Mendelssohn liked what he saw, and gave the first public performance of Schubert’s big symphony on today’s date in 1839.

    After attending the rehearsal, Schumann wrote to his girlfriend, Clara Wieck, “Today I have been in seventh heaven. If only you had been there! For I cannot describe it to you; all the instruments were like human voices, and immensely full of life and wit … and the length, the divine length, like a four-volume novel … I was utterly happy, with nothing left to wish for except that you were my wife and I could write such symphonies myself!”

    Well, sometimes wishes do come true, and good deeds are rewarded. Schumann did marry Clara, did write symphonies of his own, and did help launch Schubert’s work on its path towards worldwide recognition as a great symphonic masterpiece.

    Music Played in Today's Program

    Franz Schubert (1797-1828): Symphony No. 9; Leipzig Gewandhaus Orchestra; Kurt Masur, conductor; Philips 426 269
  • Composers Datebook

    Handel passes the hat

    20/03/2026 | 2 min
    Synopsis

    Not all composers were nice people, and even some of the more famous ones turn out to have been rather nasty, greedy, vindictive and altogether unpleasant specimens of humanity, despite the enduring beauty of their music.

    But we like to showcase the better side of the species. On today’s date in 1739, for example, George Frederick Handel premiered this music, his Organ Concerto in A Major, as a special, added attraction at a benefit concert in London. It was organized “for the benefit and increase of a fund established for the support of decayed musicians and their families.”

    The previous year Handel had been shocked to learn that the widow and children of one of his favorite performers, oboist John Christian Kitch, were found wandering impoverished on the streets of London. Handel called a meeting of some of his colleagues at the Crown and Anchor Tavern and started a charitable fund, even enlisting the support of rival composers and musicians who heretofore had not been on very good terms with Herr Handel.

    Within a year, a series of benefit concerts were organized to raise money for a continuing fund to assist musicians fallen on hard times, and even Handel’s enemies had to admit the gruff and frequently abrasive German must have had a good heart after all.

    Music Played in Today's Program

    George Frederic Handel (1685-1757): Organ Concerto in A; Peter Hurford, organ; Concertgebouw Chamber Orchestra; Joshua Rifkin, conductor; London 430 569
  • Composers Datebook

    Carpenter perambulates

    19/03/2026 | 2 min
    Synopsis

    It’s time once again for our Composer Quiz: Name a famous American composer who was also a successful businessman. If you answered insurance executive Charles Ives, Jay will show you what's under the box. But if your answer was “John Alden Carpenter,” vice president of George B. Carpenter and Co., supplies and equipment dealer, we'll just pull back the curtain and show you all your prizes!

    John Alden Carpenter was born in 1876 near Chicago, and, after studies out East, entered his father’s business back home, eventually becoming its vice president. Fortunately for the budding composer, the firm was largely run by his brothers, and he had enough free time to devote to his music. On today’s date in 1915, the Chicago Symphony premiered Carpenter’s first big orchestral work, the suite, Adventures in a Perambulator. (You get extra points if you knew a perambulator is a baby buggy.)

    Anyway…

    Carpenter's pram piece was a big success, and he wrote a string of other popular works, including a ballet based on the Krazy Kat comic strip of his day, and Skyscrapers, a jazzy and topical tribute to the transformation of urban America in the 1920s.

    Unlike the unconventional Charles Ives, who toiled away in obscurity, the more conventional Carpenter was famous in his day. Ironically, while Ives’ fame only increased after his death in 1954, when Carpenter died in 1951, his music rapidly fell from fashion.

    Music Played in Today's Program

    John Alden Carpenter (1876-1951): Adventrues in a Perambulator; National Symphony of Ukraine; John McLaughlin Williams, conductor; Naxos 8.559065
  • Composers Datebook

    Rachmaninoff makes the cut

    18/03/2026 | 2 min
    Synopsis

    Russian émigré composer and pianist Sergei Rachmaninoff was himself the soloist on today’s date in 1927 in the first performance of his Piano Concerto No. 4 with the Philadelphia Orchestra, conducted by Leopold Stokowski.

    Rachmaninoff had premiered his Concerto No. 3 in New York in 1909, and he’d been thinking about writing another one for over a decade. In the meantime, his life had been disrupted by both the Russian Revolution and the exhausting business of earning a living as a touring virtuoso pianist. In 1926, he finally felt he could afford to take some time off and put a Piano Concerto No. 4 down on paper.

    In its original form, it turned out to be a much longer work than even Rachmaninoff thought practical. He joked to a friend that its movements would have to be “performed on successive nights, like Wagner’s Ring operas.”

    He made a number of cuts before the Philadelphia premiere, but even so, the new work was not well received, and so he kept cutting. Audiences and critics still remained cool, and Rachmaninoff eventually shelved the work for a time — quite a time. In 1941 he prepared a “final cut” version, which ended up considerably shorter than his other three Piano Concertos, and recorded it with Eugene Ormandy and the Philadelphia Orchestra.

    Music Played in Today's Program

    Sergei Rachmaninoff (1873-1943): Piano Concerto No. 4; Jean-Yves Thibaudet, piano; Cleveland Orchestra; Vladimir Ashkenazy, conductor; London 458 930
  • Composers Datebook

    Moby Crumb?

    17/03/2026 | 2 min
    Synopsis

    On today’s date in 1972, a most unusual chamber work by American composer George Crumb had its premiere at the Library of Congress in Washington, D.C.

    Ideally, and “impractically” according to Crumb, it should have been heard, not in a concert hall in March … but in the open air … heard at a distance across a body of water, on a moonlit evening in August.

    Vox Balaenae, which is Latin for The Voice of the Whale, is scored for three masked musicians, performing on electric flute, electric cello and amplified piano.

    Crumb wrote, “The work was inspired by the singing of the humpback whale, a tape recording of which I had heard two or three years previously. Each of the three performers is required to wear a black half-mask or visor-mask. The masks, by effacing the sense of human projection, are intended to represent, symbolically, the powerful impersonal forces of nature. I have also suggested that the work be performed under deep-blue stage lighting.”

    In the opening of his piece, marked “Vocalise … from the beginning of time,” he quoted, with tongue firmly planted in masked cheek, the famous sunrise theme from Richard Strauss’ Also Sprach Zarathustra, used to great effect in the opening of the Kubrick film 2001: A Space Odyssey.

    Music Played in Today's Program

    George Crumb (b. 1929): Vox Balaenae (Voice of the Whale); Zizi Mueller, flute; Fred Sherry, cello; James Gemmell, piano; New World 357

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Composers Datebook™ is a daily two-minute program designed to inform, engage, and entertain listeners with timely information about composers of the past and present. Each program notes significant or intriguing musical events involving composers of the past and present, with appropriate and accessible music related to each.
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