Saturday, June 29, 2019

BSO/Classical New England — 2019/06/29

No concert, live or prerecorded, this week. WCRB invites us:
Saturday night at 8, join WCRB's Brian McCreath for a look forward to this year's program at the summer home of the Boston Symphony Orchestra.
Saturday, June 29, 2019
8:00 PM
Next week, the Tanglewood Season begins. Friday and Saturday concerts will be broadcast and streamed live, and the Sunday afternoon concerts will be transmitted by "tape delay" on Sunday evenings.

Friday, June 21, 2019

BSO/Classical New England — 2019/06/22

A bit earlier than usual, but Saturday looks busy, so here's the preview.

This week's encore broadcast/stream is the concert of January 12. It's Harbison, Mozart, and Vaughan Williams, in that order. The program detail page (which see for links to the usual background information) puts it thus:
English conductor Sir Andrew Davis and the BSO are joined by Italian pianist Alessio Bax in his BSO debut for one of Mozart's stormiest works, his C minor piano concerto, No. 24, one of the unsurpassed series of concertos from the height of his Vienna popularity. Opening the concert is Pulitzer Prize-winning composer John Harbison's 1986 Symphony No. 2, the four movements of which are called "Dawn," "Daylight," "Dusk," and "Darkness"-keys to its evolving expressive and musical character. This is one of several Harbison works being performed this year to mark the 80th birthday year of a composer closely associated with the BSO. Steeped in the musical tradition of England, Vaughan Williams's Fifth Symphony was composed at the beginning of World War II but maintains an optimistic and affirmative outlook.
(Emphasis added.)

I posted at the time, with links to reviews and a comment that the Harbison may be "challenging."

You can hear it over WCRB Saturday, June 22, and Monday, July 1, at 8:00 p.m.

Saturday, June 15, 2019

BSO/Classical New England — 2019/06/15

This week the encore broadcast is the concert of January 5, 2019. I posted about it at the time. Here's the description from the program detail page:
Returning to Symphony Hall for the first time since her tenure as BSO assistant conductor, Korean-born Shiyeon Sung leads a program juxtaposing music of Fanny Mendelssohn-Hensel and her brother Felix, surely one of the most brilliant sibling pairs in music history. Fanny Mendelssohn-Hensel's Overture in C, her only extant work for orchestra alone (though she wrote several works for chorus with orchestra), is an elegant, ten-minute piece dating from 1830. Begun in the same year, her brother's Piano Concerto No. 1 has a turbulent, Romantic energy; Argentinian pianist Ingrid Fliter is soloist, making her subscription series debut. One of the great 19th-century symphonies, Dvořák's by turns bucolic and thrilling Eighth was composed in 1889 and is arguably his most individual symphony, a departure from the Brahms-influenced Germanic style of his Symphony No. 7
(Some emphasis added.)

The reviews were mixed (see my post for links), but Mendelssohns' and Dvořák's music isn't hard to listen to. This should all be enjoyable.

As always, WCRB presents the concert beginning at 8:00 p.m., Boston Time, this evening and June 24. Enjoy!

Saturday, June 8, 2019

BSO/Classical New England — 2019/06/08

This week's "encore broadcast" is the concert performed on November 17, 2018. I was busy that week and didn't say anything about it. Here's the blurb from the BSO's program detail page:
Swedish trumpeter Håkan Hardenberger, a longtime collaborator of Andris Nelsons, returns to Symphony Hall as soloist in a concerto composed for him, the Viennese composer HK Gruber's Aerial. Featuring piccolo trumpet and cow's horn as well as standard trumpet, the concerto makes full use of Hardenberger's considerable virtuosity and expressive range. Mahler composed his Fifth Symphony in 1901-02. His first completely instrumental symphony since No. 1, it marked a new, highly individual, and influential approach to writing for orchestra that would carry through the remainder of Mahler's symphonies. The Fifth includes the famous and moving Adagietto movement for strings and harp.
(Some emphasis added.)

Again, I'm pressed for time. but here's a link to the Globe's review from last November, and one to the Boston Musical Intelligencer.

Usual time, usual station. Enjoy!