12 marzo, 1972

Gustav Mahler: Das Lied von der Erde - A personal introduction by Leonard Bernstein



UNITEL / AMBERSON - 1972 
Humphrey Burton

Artistas:
Leonard Bernstein, Narrator
Christa Ludwig, Contralto
René Kollo, Tenor

Israel Philharmonic, Orchestra
Leonard Bernstein, Conductor

Duración:
42:04

Información sobre grabación
En directo / en estudio:
Live

Ubicación de grabación:
Tel Aviv, Israel

Producido por:
John McClure, Recording Producer
Fritz Buttenstedt, Executive Producer

Formato
AAA PCM Stereo

14 septiembre, 1971

Entrevista a Carlos Chávez


KPFA - 14.09.1971
Charles Amirkhanian

Charles Amirkhanian and George Cleve talk with noted Maestro, Carlos Chávez (Ciudad de México, 1899 - Coyoacán, 1978), just before his appearance as conductor and musical director of the 1971 Cabrillo Music Festival in Aptos California. Chavez talks about his musical careers, as a composer, conductor, and founder of the Mexico City Symphony. He tells about the time he conducted a work by Varese in Mexico in 1924. And he talks about his work as music director of the Cabrillo Music Festival. This program, recorded during a live broadcast on the afternoon of July 29, 1971 at KPFA, also includes recordings of the first movement of H.P. (1927) by Chavez, as well as a 1970 Festival recording of the composers Invención for Piano and Discovery for Orchestra.

21 marzo, 1971

Harry Partch: "Delusion of the fury" (a ritual of dream and delusion)



Harry Partch (Oakland, 1901 - Encinitas, 1974)


"Delusion of the Fury" was his magnum opus; a lifetime of instrument-invention and ideas of ritual theater were poured into this giant work.

18 abril, 1970

Stokowski at 88 - TV Documentary



Tom Slevin, director & producer

To mark Leopold Stokowski's 88th birthday in 1970, a television documentary surveyed his life and career. In this programme, we see him rehearsing his own American Symphony Orchestra; dictating a letter to Andrzej Panufnik regarding the first performance of the composer's 'Universal Prayer'; auditioning a young violinist in his New York apartment; receiving a prestigious Gold Medal award from the American Academy; travelling to England by boat (he never flew) to record Beethoven's 5th Symphony with the London Philharmonic (not the London Symphony as incorrectly stated) for the Decca / London 'Phase-4' label, with producer Tony'D'Amato and chain-smoking engineer Arthur Lilley; watching a baseball game between the New York Philharmonic and American Symphony Orchestra; and being interviewed by Glenn Gould for Canadian radio. 

The narrator mis-pronounces the Maestro's name (it should sound as if spelt "Stokoffski") but otherwise this is a well-produced programme. Remarkably, Stokowski lived to the ripe old age of 95 and was still energetically making records right up until a few weeks before he died in September 1977. 

Incidentally, to set the record straight, he was born Leopold Stokowski on 18 April 1882, son of Kopernik Joseph Boleslaw Stokowski and his wife Annie-Marion, at 13 Upper Marylebone Street (now New Cavendish Street) in London (see his Wiki bio entry). At no stage in his life or career did he ever change his name from or to "Stokes." This was a nonsense dreamt up by his detractors once he'd achieved international fame in the 1930s.

20 marzo, 1970

Mauricio Kagel - Repertoire aus Staatstheater (1967/70)



In einer Fernsehfilmproduktion spielen das Kölner Ensemble für Neue Musik und Mauricio Kagel "Repertoire" aus "Staatstheater" Szenische Komposition von 1967/70.

02 marzo, 1970

Beethoven's Birthday: A Celebration in Vienna with Leonard Bernstein (1970)



CBS / AMBERSON / ORF - 1970 
Humphrey Burton

Celebrating the 200th anniversary of Ludwig van Beethoven's birthday, famed maestro Leonard Bernstein honors the life and work of the German composer in this tribute conducted, performed, written and narrated by Bernstein. The musical portrait features excerpts from Bernstein's performances of Beethoven's work, including the Ninth Symphony's "Ode to Joy," scenes from "Fidelio" and "Piano Concerto No. 1" with the Vienna Philharmonic.

01 febrero, 1970

Stokowski Rehearsing - Barber, Schubert, Rachmaninoff



In February 1968, Leopold Stokowski (Marylebone, 1882 - Hampshire, 1977) and his American Symphony Orchestra gave the opening concert in the new Madison Square Garden building. The programme included Beethoven's 'Leonore' Overture No. 3, Barber's 'Adagio for Strings' and Rachmaninoff's 'Paganini Rhapsody' with Jerome Lowenthal at the piano. Television cameras were on hand for one of the rehearsals and material was provided for two programmes. One consisted of just rehearsal excerpts and the other was a documentary entitled "Stokowski at 88."


25 enero, 1970

Bruno Maderna - interview



01.1970
WEFM, Chicago / George Stone & Alan Stout  

Bruno Maderna (1920 Venice-1973 Darmstadt), Italian-German composer, conductor, teacher; also antifascist Resistenza-hero. One of the most insightful, amiable, stringent, vivid and creative musicians of the last century speaks out and, in spite of being critically ill, in his typical unassuming, humorous way at that.

He adresses his career and beginnings with Malipiero and Scherchen, Virgil Thompson's intervention, orchestras, their conductors, lack of education and their policies, especially vis à vis the new music and rehearsing it, and the innate stupidity of culture industry. The gravity towards Schoenbergianism.

Also included a curious anecdote that he recalls, about Hans Rosbaud concerning the composer Anton Webern... Enjoy.

For WEFM in Chicago, January, 1970. With George Stone & Alan Stout.