Poster Richard Strauss conducting (c. 1900)
Richard Strauss conducting (c. 1900)
By Singleton, Esther, d. 1930, via Wikimedia Commons
Performance Today®

Not your typical overture

Performance Today - October 17, 2024

When Richard Strauss wrote his opera Capriccio in 1942, he didn't do the usual big splashy overture for orchestra. The opera begins with a gentle, reflective piece for only half a dozen string players: two violins, two violas, and two cellos. Tune in today to hear the Sextet for Strings from Richard Strauss’s opera Capriccio.

Episode Playlist

Hour 1

Stewart Goodyear: Improvisations on Themes of Clara Schumann
Stewart Goodyear, piano
Album: Clara, Robert, Johannes: Romance and Counterpoint
Analekta 288845

Robert Schumann: Langsam, from Five Pieces in Folk Style, Op. 102
Zoltan Despond, cello | Vesselin Stanev, piano
Lucerne Festival, St Luke's Church, Lucerne, Switzerland

George Frideric Handel: Sinfonia in B-flat Major, HWV 339: Movement 2
Atlanta Symphony Orchestra | Nathalie Stutzmann, conductor
University of Georgia Performing Arts Center, Hugh Hodgson Concert Hall, UGA Performing Arts Center, Athens, GA

Ludwig van Beethoven: Piano Concerto No. 3 in C minor, Op. 37
Stewart Goodyear, piano | Saint Paul Chamber Orchestra
SPCO, Ordway Concert Hall, Saint Paul, MN

Hour 2

Richard Strauss: Wiegenlied (Lullaby)
Tine Thing Helseth, trumpet | Royal Liverpool Philharmonic Orchestra | Eivind Aadland, conductor
Album: Storyteller
EMI 88328

David Raksin: The Bad and the Beautiful - Suite
London Symphony Orchestra | Sir Antonio Pappano, conductor
Barbican Hall, London, England

Richard Strauss: Sextet for Strings from "Capriccio" Op. 85
Members of the Manhattan Chamber Players: Robin Scott, violin | Brendan Speltz, violins | Kyle Armbrust, viola | Pierre Lapointe, viola | Andrew Janss, cello | Brook Speltz, cello
Syracuse Friends of Chamber Music, H.W. Smith School Auditorium, Syracuse, NY

Michael Haydn: Divertimento in G Major, MH 518
Toby Appel, viola | Susan Cahill, bass | Robert Walters, oboe | Michael Kroth, bassoon | Michael Thornton, horn | Andrew Stump, horn
Colorado College Summer Music Festival, Packard Hall, Colorado Springs, CO

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Latest Performance Today® Episodes

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Latest Performance Today® Episodes

Not your typical overture

Not your typical overture

When Richard Strauss wrote his opera Capriccio in 1942, he didn't do the usual big splashy overture for orchestra. The opera begins with a gentle, reflective piece for only half a dozen string players: two violins, two violas, and two cellos. Tune in today to hear the Sextet for Strings from Richard Strauss’s opera Capriccio.

1:59:00
Grieg's Holberg Suite

Grieg's Holberg Suite

In December 1884, Edvard Grieg premiered a suite of five short celebratory pieces written for his hometown of Bergen, Norway. That suite has become one of his best-known and best-loved works. On today's show, we'll hear Grieg's Holberg Suite from a concert in Skaneateles, New York. 

1:59:00
William Dawson

William Dawson

Two decades after he wrote his Negro Folk Symphony, composer William Dawson traveled to West Africa. Based on what he heard there, he revised his music to convey “...the missing elements that were lost when Africans came into bondage outside their homeland." On today's show, hear Dawson's Negro Folk Symphony played by The Orchestra Now with conductor Leon Botstein.

1:59:00
Juantio Becenti: The Glittering World

Juantio Becenti: The Glittering World

On today's show, we'll hear some fascinating new music by Navajo composer Juantio Becenti. Becenti found a unique parallel between the Navajo creation story and his own musical journey. Join us to hear the ensemble A Far Cry play The Glittering World by Juantio Becenti at a concert in Rockport, Massachusetts.

1:59:00
PT Weekend: Kirill Gerstein

PT Weekend: Kirill Gerstein

Pianist Kirill Gerstein recently released an album called Music in Time of War. The album includes the Etudes Claude Debussy wrote during the First World War and music by composer and musicologist Komitas, who lived through the Armenian Genocide. Fred Child recently spoke with Gerstein about the project and how it reflects on the world. Join us today for a special hour of music and conversation with Kirill Gerstein.

1:59:00
Stewart Goodyear: Callaloo

Stewart Goodyear: Callaloo

When Stewart Goodyear was a child, he spent quite a few summers with his family in Trinidad, where he was immersed in the sounds of calypso. Now, as a pianist and composer, he's combined calypso with classical music. We'll hear that combination on today's show: 'Callaloo' by Stewart Goodyear.

1:59:00
Julio Medaglia

Julio Medaglia

Composer Julio Medaglia was born in Sao Paulo, Brazil, in 1938. He studied conducting in Germany for ten years before returning to Brazil to conduct and compose. For 30 years, he hosted a daily radio show in Sao Paulo that sounded similar to PT, combining concert highlights and contemporary music. On today's show, we'll hear the Imani Winds play Julio Medaglia's 'Belle Epoque en Sud-America,’ including a really fun movement named "Crazy Baby Clarinette!"

1:59:00
Bruce Adolphe and the Piano Puzzler

Bruce Adolphe and the Piano Puzzler

Every week on our Piano Puzzler, composer Bruce Adolphe re-writes a familiar tune in the style of a great composer. One of our listeners calls in, tries to guess the tune and the composer whose style Bruce is mimicking. Tune in and play along with our weekly musical game: the Piano Puzzler.

1:59:00
Kodaly: Dances of Galanta

Kodaly: Dances of Galanta

Hungarian composer Zoltan Kodaly heard Roma bands when he was growing up, and later incorporated some of those tunes into his own music. On today's show, hear Kodaly's Dances of Galanta, from a concert at the Grand Teton Music Festival in Jackson Hole, Wyoming.

1:59:00
Kirill Gerstein: Music in Time of War

Kirill Gerstein: Music in Time of War

Pianist Kirill Gerstein recently released an album called Music in Time of War. The album includes the Etudes Claude Debussy wrote during the First World War and music by composer and musicologist Komitas, who lived through the Armenian Genocide. Fred Child recently spoke with Gerstein about the project and how it reflects on the world. Join us today for a special hour of music and conversation with Kirill Gerstein.

1:59:00
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About Performance Today®

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American Public Media’s Performance Today® is America’s most popular classical music radio program and a winner of the 2014 Gabriel Award for artistic achievement. The show is broadcast on hundreds of public radio stations across the country, including at 1 p.m. central weekdays on Minnesota Public Radio. More information about our stations can be found at APM Distribution.

Performance Today® features live concert recordings that can’t be heard anywhere else, highlights from new album releases, and in-studio performances and interviews. Performance Today® is based at the APM studios in St. Paul, Minnesota, but is frequently on the road, with special programs broadcast from festivals and public radio stations around the country. Also, each Wednesday, composer Bruce Adolphe joins host Fred Child for a classical musical game and listener favorite: the Piano Puzzler.

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