by Mike Telin

At 6:30 pm, the Canton Symphony Woodwind Quintet will present “Summer Serenade” at Tam O’Shanter Park, Hills & Dales Rd. NW, Canton. The event is free but reservations are required. Click here to RSVP.
At 7:00 pm Semifinal rounds of the Cleveland International Piano Competition get underway in Gartner Auditorium at the Cleveland Museum of Art. Ling Ye (23, China) performs Mozart’s Sonata No. 13 in B-flat, K. 333, Richard Strauss’ “Ramble on Love” from Der Rosenkavalier (arr. Grainger), and Bartók’s Sonata, Sz. 80, and Themes from Mission Impossible (arr. Kurbatov). Honggi Kim (29, South Korea) Plays Schifrin’s Themes from Mission Impossible (arr. Kurbatov) and Chopin’s Twelve Etudes, Op. 25. Ye and Kim (pictured) will join forces for Schubert’s Fantasie in f. Tickets available online. You can attend in person, or watch remotely.
IN THE NEWS:
Tuesday Musical has announced its 2021-22 season which will feature VOCES8 (Oct. 19), Naughton Piano Duo (Nov. 16), The Rodney Marsalis Philadelphia Big Brass (Dec. 7), Violinist Joshua Bell and soprano Larisa Martinez (Feb. 8), Harlem Quartet with pianist Aldo López-Gavilán (March 1), and Nu Deco Ensemble (May 4). Click here for details.
Following the successful debut of its early music variety show, SalonEra, Les Délices has announced details for the twelve episode 2021-22 season line-up. Read the press release here.
TODAY’S ALMANAC:

Born into a musical family in London, Barbirolli began his professional life as a cellist. As a young freelancer, he played in the Queen’s Hall Orchestra and in the pit of the Beecham and Carl Rosa opera companies. Never turning down a gig, Barbirolli played with orchestras in theatres, cinemas, hotels, and dance-halls.
His first conducting experience occurred during WWI while he was serving as a lance-corporal in the Suffolk Regiment. In a 1969 Gramophone interview Barbirolli told Alan Blyth:
…. In our battalion of the Suffolks we had a number of professional musicians. So we formed an orchestra and played in the equivalent of the NAAFI [Navy, Army, and Air Force Institutes] during our spare time. I was the principal cello and we were conducted by the bandmaster, one Lieutenant Bonham. The other boys knew that I was longing to conduct and one day when Bonham fell ill with flu, they thought “old Barby” – as I was known – should have a go. It was really rather romantic — I was scrubbing the floor in the Officers’ Mess when they came and invited me to take over. We did the Light Cavalry overture and Coleridge-Taylor’s Petite Suite de Concert but I can’t say I recall the rest of the programme.
His early conduing gigs included the Guild of Singers and Players Chamber Orchestra which he helped establish in 1924, and was soon invited to lead performances of the British National Opera Company, and made his debut at the Royal Opera House, Covent Garden in 1928. He would go on to be named Arturo Toscanini’s successor as music director of the New York Philharmonic, serving from 1936 to 1943, when he was asked by the Hallé Orchestra in Manchester — which was in danger of becoming extinct — to become its conductor. Barbirolli jumped at the opportunity to help revive the orchestra. He remained there for the rest of his life.
Click here to listen to a 9144 recording of Vaughan Williams’ Symphony No. 5 with the Hallé Orchestra conducted by John Barbirolli.
Another recording Barbirolli is remembered for is the Elgar Cello Concerto with Jacqueline Du Pre and the London Symphony Orchestra. The album also includes the composer’s Sea Pictures with mezzo-soprano Janet Baker. Click here to listen.
We visit our Daily Diary archives to remember Robert Schumann, who died on this day in 1856 at the age of 46 after spending two years in an asylum in Bonn, having been taken there at his own request after he attempted suicide by throwing himself off a bridge into the Rhine River. [Read more…]



IN THE NEWS:

And on July 28, 1951, the film with the most songs of any Disney feature was released — Alice in Wonderland. Though now regarded as a classic, the film was initially met with a lackluster reception, leading Decca Records to decide against releasing a soundtrack album.
CHANTICLEER UPDATE:
INTERESTING READS:
One of the many orchestral conductors to record the music from Parsifal was Serge Koussevitzky (pictured), who was born on this date in 1874. Listen to his Boston Symphony Orchestra recording of the “Prelude” from Act I and “Good Friday Spell” from Act III
Born in Berkeley, CA on this date in 1921, oboist John de Lancie (pictured) is well-known for his 30-year tenure with the Philadelphia Orchestra. However, his path to get there was not without detours — while serving as principal of the Pittsburgh Symphony, he was drafted into the army during World War II.
WEEKEND EVENTS:
Looking for outdoor music? Try Sheryl Modlin’s 12:15 pm concert on the McGaffin Carillon in University Circle (also live streamed), the 2:00 pm Ohio Light Opera performance of Trial by Jury in Wooster, or Canton Symphony musicians’ 6:00-8:30 pm event, Music in the Beech Creek Botanical Garden in Alliance (billed as an “adult evening”).
At 7:00 pm the Cleveland International Piano Competition holds a Watch Party featuring Trivia Night. Yaron Kohlberg and Zsolt Bognár will host and test your knowledge of the piano and music. Teams can be up to six people, so bring your friends (or make new ones) and enjoy great music and a chance to win a Cleveland musical prize package. Music Box Supper Club, 1148 Main Ave., Cleveland. Tickets: $65 includes your first beverage and the Music Box Buffet. Click
On this date in 1796, Cleaveland was established as a settlement by the surveyors of the Connecticut Land Company and named after their leader, General Moses Cleaveland. (Although he supervised the design of what would become our modern downtown, he returned home shortly thereafter and never returned to Ohio.) The name of the settlement was shortened in 1831, allegedly in order to fit on the masthead of The Cleveland Advertiser, and it wasn’t until 1836 that the settlement became incorporated as a city.
EVENTS TODAY:
Violinist Isaac Stern was born on this date in 1920 in Kremenets, Poland (now Ukraine), though he didn’t stay there long — his family moved to San Francisco when he was only 14 months old. After making his public debut at age 15 as a soloist with the San Francisco Symphony, Stern went on to achieve great success in just about every way you can measure.
EVENTS TODAY:
Erie, Pennsylvania’s
2021-2022 SEASON ANNOUNCEMENTS:
On the 173rd anniversary of the Seneca Falls Convention — the first women’s rights convention in the U.S. — we’ll begin by celebrating an underrecognized female American composer and conductor.