30 episodes

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.

Composers Datebook American Public Media

    • Music

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.

    Thomas Greene Wiggins

    Thomas Greene Wiggins

    Synopsis
    On this date in 1908, Thomas Greene Wiggins died in Hoboken, New Jersey at 59. Known as “Blind Tom Wiggins,” he was one of the most celebrated — and cruelly exploited — Black concert performers of the 19th century. 

    Born enslaved in Georgia in 1849, Wiggins and his parents were offered for sale in an ad reading: “Price: $1,500 without Tom, $1,200 with him.” They were purchased by Georgia anti-abolitionist newspaper editor, James Bethune, who noticed the blind boy’s uncanny ability to mimic the sounds he heard played on the family’s piano.

    At five, Tom was playing original music of his own and was exhibited as a child prodigy by Bethune throughout Georgia. During the Civil War, Tom played only in Southern states, earning his owner more than $100,000 a year. In the Antebellum years, he toured extensively here and abroad.

    In addition to his own compositions, Wiggins played classical selections like Bach and Beethoven. Despite emancipation, Tom, who was perhaps autistic, remained a ward of and virtually indentured to the Bethune family for 38 years. By 1903, he was performing on the vaudeville circuit in New York and New Jersey before suffering fatal stroke in 1908.

    Music Played in Today's Program
    Thomas Greene ‘Blind Tom’ Wiggins (1849-1908): The Battle of Manassas; John Davis, piano; Newport Classics 85660

    • 2 min
    Music for the birds by Dvořák

    Music for the birds by Dvořák

    Synopsis
    There’s a long list of composers ranging from Vivaldi to Messiaen who have incorporated bird song into their musical works. Today we make note of one of them.

    On this date in 1893, great Czech composer Antonín Dvořák was vacationing with his family in Spillville, Iowa, spending the hot summer months with a small Czech community who had settled along the banks of the Turkey River. 

    Dvořák liked to walk along the river listening to the birds, who, he said, helped him come up with musical ideas — ideas he would scribble in pencil on his stiff white shirt cuffs. Dvořák’s son, Otakar, eight years old at the time, reports that on June 12, 1893, a fishing trip along the Turkey River was cut short, much to his annoyance. When Otakar asked why, his father said simply: “My cuff is already full of notes — I’ve got to get home and copy them down.”

    In less than a week, Dvořák finished what would become one of his best-known and best-loved works — a string quartet in F Major nicknamed the American Quartet. The scherzo movement even includes a musical quotation from a particularly persistent American bird whose song Dvořák found a bit distracting.

    Music Played in Today's Program
    Antonín Dvořák (1841-1904): String Quartet (American); Vlach Quartet; Naxos 8.553371

    • 2 min
    Hovhaness and the world's biggest vocal soloist

    Hovhaness and the world's biggest vocal soloist

    Synopsis
    On this date in 1970, the New York Philharmonic, led by Andre Kostelanetz, introduced the world’s largest vocal soloists in the premiere performance of And God Created Great Whales, by American composer Alan Hovhaness.

    The New York Times review found the music accompanying the recorded songs of whales “fairly inconsequential,” but pleasant enough.

    “Faced with such an irresistible soloist, Mr. Hovhaness must have suspected he would be harpooned. But with his customary skill, he put up a battle … conjuring up the sea by unmeasured bowing and overlapping patterns and setting brass and percussion to echoing the real thing,” the review continued.

    Hovhaness died June 21, 2000 at 89, having written over 500 works, including 67 symphonies. He once said, “I’m very happy if somebody else likes [my music], but I don’t mind if anybody doesn’t, and I don’t have any respect for critics.”

    Hovhaness did have his champions, like conductor Leopold Stokowski, who asked for a new symphony in the early 1950s. He said Stokowski asked him to give it a title, since people liked titles, so Hovhaness called the symphony Mysterious Mountain. Stokowski was pleased — and right. Mysterious Mountain went on to become Hovhaness’s best-known work.

    Music Played in Today's Program
    Alan Hovhaness (1911-2000): And God Created Great Whales; Seattle Symphony; Gerard Schwarz, conductor; Delos DE-3157

    • 2 min
    Marsalis and Swing

    Marsalis and Swing

    Synopsis
    Wynton Marsalis says it all began with a dare in the 1990s from German conductor Kurt Masur, then Music Director of the New York Philharmonic.

    “He came to a concert of mine when I was like 28 or 29, and said he wanted me to write for the New York Philharmonic. I started laughing like, man, I have never even written for a big band,” Marsalis said.

    Well, since then, jazz trumpeter Marsalis has written more than one work for a big bands like the New York Philharmonic, and in 2010 that ensemble, along with the Los Angeles Philharmonic, the London Symphony, and the Berlin Philharmonic commissioned his Symphony No. 3 (Swing).

    It was the Berlin Philharmonic who gave the first performance of the work, and on today’s date in 2010, encored their premiere on the internet.

    Marsalis said, “Swing to a jazz musician means coming together, and in this case it’s about two orchestras coming together.” Marsalis included parts for himself and his jazz at Lincoln Center Orchestra in his new score, in contrast — and in harmony — with the forces of a traditional symphony orchestra.

    Music Played in Today's Program
    Wynton Marsalis (b. 1961): Symphony No. 3 (Swing); Jazz at Lincoln Center Orchestra; St. Louis Symphony; David Robertson, conductor; Blue Engine Records BE-0017

    • 2 min
    Franklin's 'Falls Flyer'

    Franklin's 'Falls Flyer'

    Synopsis
    The name Charles A. Lindbergh will forever be associated with two dramatic events: the first, Lindbergh’s historic nonstop solo flight across the Atlantic in the airplane The Spirit of St. Louis; the second, the kidnapping and murder of his infant son.

    On today’s date in the year 2002, marking the centennial of Lindbergh’s birth and the 75th anniversary of his Atlantic crossing, the Opera Theatre of St. Louis premiered the opera Loss of Eden, a musical reflection on Lindbergh’s public triumph and personal tragedy.

    Composer Cary John Franklin reworked themes from his opera into a chamber piece for oboe and guitar, Falls Flyer. The title refers to both Lindbergh, who was born in Little Falls, Minnesota, and to the line of speedboats marketed under that name from the 1930s to the 1950s, whose sleek lines were modeled after the open cockpit of Lindbergh’s first plane.

    Franklin wrote, “Falls Flyer is derived from music that accompanies the major dramatic moments of the opera — the plane departing for Paris, the kidnapping, and the execution of the man convicted of the crime. The more lyrical sections suggest the serenity and solitude found floating through clouds — or drifting on the water.”

    Music Played in Today's Program
    Cary John Franklin (b. 1956): Falls Flyer; Klemp-Kachian Duo; Schubert Club/Ten Thousand Lakes 115

    • 2 min
    Elliott Carter's 'Two Controversies and a Conversation'

    Elliott Carter's 'Two Controversies and a Conversation'

    Synopsis
    American composer Elliott Carter lived to be 103, completing more than 40 works between ages 90 and 100, and 20 more after he turned 100 in 2008.

    On today’s date in 2012, a new chamber work by Carter with an odd title was premiered at a concert in the New York Philharmonic’s CONTACT! Series. Two Controversies and a Conversation showcased the percussive aspects of the piano, highlighting that instrument alongside a solo percussionist. The premiere was an international triple-commission from the New York Philharmonic, the Aldeburgh Festival in England and Radio France. 

    An earlier version of part of the work, titled simply Conversations, had been premiered in the U.K. the previous year. The composer explained the title as follows:

    “How does one converse?” Carter asked. “One person says something and tries to get the other person to respond, or carry on, or contradict a statement. Those conversing are also playing a kind of game with each other. I tried to put all that into my music … after the [Aldeburgh] premiere of Conversations, [British composer] Oliver Knussen suggested I expand this piece. I decided to add two more movements, which became the two Controversies."

    Music Played in Today's Program
    Elliott Carter (1908-2012): Conversation, from Two Controversies and a Conversation; Eric Huebner, piano; Colin Currie, percussion; New York Philharmonic; David Robertson, conductor; NYP 20120112

    • 2 min

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