Poster Fred Child
Fred Child
MPR

Performance Today®

with host Fred Child

All Episodes

Happy Thanksgiving

Happy Thanksgiving

On Thanksgiving Day, we'll feature music by great American composers Aaron Copland and Leonard Bernstein. Martin Frost, the virtuoso Swedish clarinetist, plays Copland's jazzy clarinet concerto. We'll hear Bernstein's overture to Candide, from a concert in Luxembourg. And Beethoven's Pastoral Symphony from the Tanglewood Music Festival, about 150 miles west of the site of the very first Thanksgiving feast in 1621.

Remembering Marcel Tyberg

Remembering Marcel Tyberg

No one was able to save composer Marcel Tyberg from a sad death in the Nazi concentration camps in 1944. But a valiant effort over the last 70 years involving one of Tyberg's students, conductor JoAnn Falletta, and the Buffalo Philharmonic, was successful in saving much of his music. JoAnn Falletta joins host Fred Child today to tell the story of Marcel Tyberg and her upcoming trip to Croatia to conduct his Second Symphony in the tiny town where Tyberg composed it.

Celebrating Creativity

Celebrating Creativity

Silicon Valley is a center for technological creativity and musical creativity. In today's show, we'll spend a full hour at one of the great American music festivals, the Music@Menlo Festival in Palo Alto and Menlo Park, California. Everything from early English music to a rollicking hendectet, a piece for 11 players. We'll hear 11 of Menlo's finest in Camille Saint-Saens' (pictured) "Carnival of the Animals."

Composer Chen Yi

Composer Chen Yi

Chen Yi was a classical musician in China at the worst possible time, during the Cultural Revolution, when all Western art was banned. Chinese authorities searched her home, and took away all her family's classical recordings. Chen Yi herself was sent off to a labor camp. She held onto her music in her heart and her memory until the political climate changed. Chen Yi is now a successful composer living in the West. We'll hear one of her works, from a concert in St. Paul.

Eric Whitacre

Eric Whitacre

Choral composer Eric Whitacre says, "I thought I was going to be a pop star. I never in my wildest dreams imagined I'd be a classical composer." Now at age 42, Whitacre has achieved the kind of star status he once dreamed of. But not in the pop world. He's a kind of rock star of contemporary choral composers. He has nearly 100,000 Facebook fans. Has his own choir, the Eric Whitacre Singers. Some young fans have even gotten Eric Whitacre tattoos. In today's show, Whitacre leads a choir of over 100 singers in one of his own works, "Sleep."

Just Like Dancing

Just Like Dancing

British trumpeter Alison Balsom likes to compare trumpet playing with dancing. It's the artistry that really matters. "You need this incredible physical strength," she says. "But you don't bother the audience with it. It's just something that's on the inside." In today's show, Balsom gives an energetic, unbothered performance of the Hummel Trumpet Concerto, from a concert in Lugano, Switzerland.

Weill Hall

Weill Hall

Thirteen years may seem like a long engagement, but who's counting? We're delighted to report that the happy couple is finally in their new home. The Santa Rosa Symphony and Sonoma State University in California agreed to be partners in 1999, building a new concert hall that they would share jointly. This fall, Weill Hall was finally finished, and the orchestra has taken up residence in its new home. We'll hear highlights from a concert just a week after the hall opened, the Santa Rosa Symphony playing music by Mozart and Mahler.

Eric Whitacre

Eric Whitacre

Choral composer Eric Whitacre says, "I thought I was going to be a pop star. I never in my wildest dreams imagined I'd be a classical composer." Now at age 42, Whitacre has achieved the kind of star status he once dreamed of. But not in the pop world. He's a kind of rock star of contemporary choral composers. He has nearly 100,000 Facebook fans. Has his own choir, the Eric Whitacre Singers. Some young fans have even gotten Eric Whitacre tattoos. In today's show, Whitacre leads a choir of over 100 singers in one of his own works, "Sleep."

One Lonely, One Not

One Lonely, One Not

The life of a concert pianist is often lonely and nomadic. Jetting from city to city, never putting down roots in one place for very long. Superstar pianist Martha Argerich combats the loneliness by staging a month-long music festival in Lugano, Switzerland, giving performances with all her closest friends and colleagues. We'll hear her in concert at the Martha Argerich Project in Lugano, playing a Beethoven concerto. And we'll hear a lament for the ultimate lonely nomad, the shepherd. Paula Robison and friends play a flute trio based on a poem called "The Shepherd's Lament."

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