“Years ago a crusty old bachelor of fifty-seven, so deaf that he could no hear his own music played by a full orchestra, yet still able to hear thunder, shook his first at the roaring heavens for the last time, and died as he had lived, challenging God and defying the universe.”
Top 10 List: Music for Mourning
Fritz Kreisler and the Epic Slide
On Feb 2 he would have been 146 years old, the timelessly suave Viennese violinist who epitomized the sound of violin playing a century ago. Who “discovered” previously unknown compositions from Tartini, Couperin, and Pugnani. And who performed the most epic, perfectly crafted slide in recorded history.
Samuel Barber, genius of the lyrical heart
Forty years ago, the soul that represented a summer breeze of lyricism in 20th Century classical music left this world. On January 23, 1981, Samuel Barber died. In a century of fragmented styles – some austere, some pandering, and some destined to be repurposed in horror movie soundtracks – Barber’s style remained solidly in touch with a lyrical core and grounded in the human heart.