by Daniel Hathaway
Tonight at 6:30, Tuesday Musical presents soprano Renée Fleming in “Music and Mind: Harnessing the Arts to Heal and Connect” at the Hudson Library and Historical Society, 96 Library St., Hudson. Click here to register.
Tonight at 7:30, the Helen D. Schubert Concert Series presents the Tallis Scholars, Peter Phillips, director, who are currently singing a 14-concert tour in the U.S. Over five decades, the British ensemble has helped establish sacred vocal music of the Renaissance as one of the great repertoires of Western classical music. The performance at the Cathedral of St. John the Evangelist is free.
TODAY’S ALMANAC:
An interesting coincidence today: Peter Phillips and The Tallis Scholars are in Cleveland for a concert tonight at the Cathedral of St. John the Evangelist on the birthdate in 1941 of British conductor Sir John Eliot Gardiner in Fontmell Magna, Dorset, where he grew up with the famous Elias Gottlob Haussmann portrait of Johann Sebastian Bach hanging on the wall.
Lent to the Gardine
Gardiner went on to study at King’s College, Cambridge, where he began his conducting career with the Monteverdi Vespers in King’s Chapel in 1964, and in subsequent years established the Monteverdi Orchestra, which took up period instruments in 1998, and the Orchestra Révolutionnaire et Romantique, which has specialized in 19th century repertoire.
Author of the well-received book, Bach: Music in the Castle of Heaven, Gardiner spent the entirety of 2000 recording all of the composer’s cantatas on their proper feast days, and as the director of the Leipzig Bach Archive, presided over Bach 333, a complete recording of his works.
Watch the documentaries, Jauchzet, Frohlocket! The Start of John Eliot Gardiner’s Bach Cantata Pilgrimage (1999), and Bach revisited — John Eliot Gardiner in Saxony and Thuringia.
Among these impressive achievements, Gardiner also developed a reputation as an abusive podium figure. Tallis Scholars director Peter Phillips addresses this conductorial issue in his Spectator article, “The Mean Bullying Maestro is Extinct — or Should Be.” Read it here.
On this date in 1961, the U.S. Federal Communications Commission (FCC) put its stamp of approval on FM Stereo Broadcasting, a boon to classical radio like Cleveland’s WCLV (launched by Robert Conrad in the same year), and Kent’s WKSU (re-launched by Kent State University in 1962), both now folded into Ideastream Public Media, the home of Northeast Ohio’s member-supported public broadcasting stations.
And on April 20, 1986, 92-year-old pianist Vladimir Horowitz returned to Moscow after 60 years abroad to give a legendary recital at the Moscow Conservatory. The event was broadcast and preserved in a number of commercial videos and recordings. Watch the Medici-TV version here (track listings and timings in the comments) and fill in blanks in the coverage with these fascinating “discarded crumbs.”
And Horowitz in the News samples the extraordinary coverage the pianist received around the event. “Classical musicians are rarely the topic of reporting on nightly national television newscasts. However, during the last 3½ years of his life, Vladimir Horowitz was so featured at least four times.”





