Discoveries from the Fleisher Collection http://wrti.org en Prokofiev Moves Back to Russia http://wrti.org/post/prokofiev-moves-back-russia <p><strong>On Discoveries from the Fleisher Collection, Saturday, May 4th at 5 pm...</strong><br><br>Sergei Prokofiev lived in Paris in 1936 but longed for Russia. He had never relinquished his Soviet citizenship in the years he was abroad; since 1918 he lived in the U.S., Germany, and France. He toured America, Europe, and the USSR often, playing piano in and conducting his growing repertoire of increasingly popular works.<br> Thu, 02 May 2013 20:10:35 +0000 Kile Smith 5477 at http://wrti.org Prokofiev Moves Back to Russia Edvard Grieg Discovers Norway http://wrti.org/post/edvard-grieg-discovers-norway <p>On <strong>Discoveries from the Fleisher Collection, April 6th at 5 pm</strong>...<br><br>“Edvard Grieg,” they were saying in Germany and in Denmark. It was the name of that young pianist/composer from Norway they were noticing, for he was starting to become somebody. But then something odd happened. He discovered Norway.<br> Thu, 04 Apr 2013 20:09:07 +0000 Kile Smith 5369 at http://wrti.org Edvard Grieg Discovers Norway How Delius Fell in Love with Music in Florida http://wrti.org/post/how-delius-fell-love-music-florida <p><span style="background-color: rgb(255, 255, 255); font-size: 15px; ">On </span><strong style="font-size: 15px; ">Discoveries from the Fleisher Collection, March 9th at 5 pm</strong><span style="background-color: rgb(255, 255, 255); font-size: 15px; ">...The young Englishman watched the cigar smoke dance slowly as it dissipated into the hot, thick air. He was sitting on the porch of a cottage in an orange grove called Solano on a sleepy bank of a river named the St. Johns, a long, lazy waterway born in the southern marshes and in no hurry to creep up eastern Florida to lap, finally, into the Atlantic. St. Augustine was close by to the east, but 1884 St. Augustine was not yet a city, nowhere near a city, hardly a town. In this lonely grove by the river, in the wilderness of the Florida interior, St. Augustine could have been in Yorkshire, the young Englishman’s home, for all that.</span></p><p><span style="font-size: 15px; background-color: rgb(255, 255, 255); ">He lit another cigar. As the smoke melted, barely lifted by the St. Johns breeze, 22-year-old Fritz Delius was happy to be far from St. Augustine, far from Yorkshire, and as far from his father as he could be.</span><br> Fri, 08 Mar 2013 11:38:59 +0000 Kile Smith 5231 at http://wrti.org How Delius Fell in Love with Music in Florida Percy Grainger: Beyond Country Gardens http://wrti.org/post/percy-grainger-beyond-country-gardens <p>If you know Percy Grainger at all, you know <a href="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=e72pG3V3asQ"><em>Country Gardens</em></a>, that simple frolic every beginning pianist, every wind band, every school orchestra has assayed at one time or another. Percy Grainger knew that you would know that, and that’s why Percy Grainger grew to detest <em>Country Gardens</em>.<br> Sat, 02 Feb 2013 16:29:38 +0000 Kile Smith 5065 at http://wrti.org Percy Grainger: Beyond Country Gardens Impressions of Charles Tomlinson Griffes on Discoveries http://wrti.org/post/impressions-charles-tomlinson-griffes-discoveries <p>On <strong>Discoveries from the Fleisher&nbsp;Collection, Jan. 12th at 5 pm</strong>... Impressionism is an imprecise, even controversial term, the first “impressionist” Debussy having none of it. Each of its elements—open form, reliance on tone color over melody, unpredictable harmonies with modal scales—is challengeable, and Debussy’s music is awash with counter-examples. But everyone agrees that impressionism, whatever it is, exists, and that it is French.<br><br>Which is why it is such a surprise that one of the leading impressionist composers lived and died in upstate New York and studied in, of all places, Germany. Sat, 12 Jan 2013 03:40:42 +0000 Kile Smith 4942 at http://wrti.org Impressions of Charles Tomlinson Griffes on Discoveries Who Does Havergal Brian Sound Like? Find Out On Fleisher Discoveries, Dec. 1st at 5 pm http://wrti.org/post/who-does-havergal-brian-sound-find-out-fleisher-discoveries-dec-1st-5-pm <p>Who does this sound like?</p><p>That’s the first question we ask when we hear music new to us. It’s as true with Havergal Brian’s as with anyone else’s—probably more true, since his music is so rarely heard, and consequently so often new.<br><br>If we know anything about him, it’s that his first symphony, the “Gothic,” is called the largest ever written, with brass bands, choirs, harps, drums, and organ along with a gargantuan orchestra. Our knowledge of Havergal Brian usually ends there.<br><br>But he wrote 31 other symphonies, and much more music besides. On top of that, 27 of his symphonies and four of his five operas were composed in the last 25 years of his life, and he lived to be 96. On top of <em>that</em>, for most of his life not one note of his music was performed.<br><br>Why not? Wed, 28 Nov 2012 21:13:57 +0000 Kile Smith 4810 at http://wrti.org Who Does Havergal Brian Sound Like? Find Out On Fleisher Discoveries, Dec. 1st at 5 pm William Grant Still: The Dean of African-American Composers http://wrti.org/post/william-grant-still-dean-african-american-composers <p>We call William Grant Still “The Dean of African-American Composers,” and the description strikes us as quaint. Not wrong, since it’s undeniable that Still was the leading Black American composer of concert music (although he opposed the term Black as one that divided people into false groups).<br> Wed, 31 Oct 2012 20:44:47 +0000 Kile Smith 4646 at http://wrti.org William Grant Still: The Dean of African-American Composers Karol Szymanowski: Discoveries from the Fleisher Collection, Oct. 13th, 5 pm http://wrti.org/post/karol-szymanowski-discoveries-fleisher-collection-oct-13th-5-pm <p>Squeezed between a Russian revolution that destroyed his home, and a world war that destroyed the rest, Karol Szymanowski finally found escape in the art that had so long eluded him.<br> Wed, 10 Oct 2012 16:47:09 +0000 Kile Smith 4497 at http://wrti.org Karol Szymanowski: Discoveries from the Fleisher Collection, Oct. 13th, 5 pm Not What the Composer Had in Mind: Discoveries from the Fleisher Collection, Sept. 1st, 5 pm http://wrti.org/post/not-what-composer-had-mind-discoveries-fleisher-collection-sept-1st-5-pm <p>Music will always challenge our assumptions...if we let it. For a couple of generations now, those who unearthed music from earlier times have wanted to play it the way it sounded in those earlier times. These “authentic” or “historically informed” performances open our ears to new delights hidden in Medieval and Renaissance music. As playing techniques and instruments improved, the movement grew to encompass Baroque and Classical music. Even Romantic and later music has been influenced by the growing research. We can now listen to Brahms symphonies on “original” instruments.</p> Sat, 01 Sep 2012 19:57:00 +0000 Kile Smith 4348 at http://wrti.org Not What the Composer Had in Mind: Discoveries from the Fleisher Collection, Sept. 1st, 5 pm Mostly Ravel on Discoveries from the Fleisher Collection: August 4th, 5 pm http://wrti.org/post/mostly-ravel-discoveries-fleisher-collection-august-4th-5-pm <p>This time, he&rsquo;d show them. The Paris Conservatoire accepted Ravel as a piano student at age 16, and even though he won a piano competition, more than anything he wanted to compose. But the Conservatory was a hard place. He never won the fugue prize, never won the composition prize, never won anything for writing music and they sent him packing. Twice. He studied with the great Gabriel Fauré, in school and out, but he just couldn&rsquo;t make any headway with the ruling musical authorities.</p> Mon, 30 Jul 2012 22:45:21 +0000 Kile Smith 4219 at http://wrti.org Mostly Ravel on Discoveries from the Fleisher Collection: August 4th, 5 pm