Listening Design

Although this Listening Design program is presented without music, Track 3 includes a link to the music that was originally played when the program aired.

Our notes regarding the exact date of this recording are unclear. It was probably recorded in 1960 but may have been as late as 1962.

 Introduction to Arthur Fiedler plus discussion of teenagers and his pops music

Serious music versus Fielder’s pops music:  All music is good except the boring kind.  

Introduction to Le Belle Helene overture by Jacque Offenbach with biographical material provided by Arthur Fiedler

Arthur Fiedler conducting the Boston Pops Orchestra

1962 Interview with composer Benjamin Lees,
 born 1.8.1924, died 5.31.2010

Benjamin Lees

Benjamin Lees

Track 1:   Walter introduces composer Benjamin Lees and asks the question “Why a composer instead of some other occupation?
Track 2:  “Are there schools of composition?” “What about the cult of originality?”
Track 3:  We have far more new music than we ever had before and more orchestras as well. Why isn’t more of this music played?
Track 5: About his Second Symphony with introduction to the recording which features Robert Whitney conducting Louisville Orchestra. (We have substituted a link to the second movement of his Second Symphony under a different conductor.) 
Track 6:Brief discussion of the upcoming world premier of Lees’ Concerto For Orchestra at the Eastman Theater with Robert Whitney conducting followed by “has the domain of the critics stayed the same or has it changed?”
Track 7: “What would you say if a young, talented person came to you and asked, “Mr. Lees, what would you advise me to do?”

Walter Susskind was a Czech born pianist and conductor who, at the age of 26, escaped Germany’s occupation of Czechoslovakia during World War II. To find out how and much more about his interesting life, click on his name.  

Walter Susskind

Walter Susskind

Track 1:    Introduction to Walter Susskind with first question: How do you spend your time when you are not conducting?
Track 5: Discussion of the relationship between the conductor and the first chair in the orchestra. 
Track 9: In your opinion does music become more difficult to conduct when it’s emotional or mathmatical?
Track 10: Did you ever wish to have just one orchestra to work with constantly?  

WHAM Listening Design Special Program

Notice of the upcoming Eastman Philharmonia tour covering the Middle East and Europe which was authorized by the U.S. state department, went out over the Voice of America (VOA) in the form of a conversation between Walter Dixon and Dr. Howard Hanson, Director of the University of Rochester’Eastman School of Music. It aired around September 28, 1961.

Interview with Dr. Howard Hanson for the Voice of America September 28, 1961.

WD To Hanson Page 1

Questions for Dr. Howard Hanson – Page 1

Questions for Dr. Howard Hanson – Page 2

Listening Design Interview with Doctor Howard Hanson, complete with his Symphony #1, Howard Hanson conducting.

Dr. Howard Hanson (1961)

Photograph by Byron Morgan (1961) from Howard Hanson Collection

This interview took place on October 27, 1961.  Because it was shortly before Howard Hanson  began his historic 3 month tour of Europe with the Rochester Philharmonia Orchestra it is included here. Click here for a biography of Doctor Howard Hanson, Director of the Eastman School of Music from 1924 until 1964 and well known composer, educator and conductor.

“Young Howard Hanson.”

Eastman Philharmonia Orchestra

Eastman Philharmonia Orchestra

In 1961 our U.S. State Department backed a program designed to foster international understanding between Europe and the United States including Russia and her satellite nations which comprised the U.S.S.R.

The Eastman Philharmonia orchestra, led by Doctors Howard Hanson and Frederick Fennel, was chosen to perform in several countries including Egypt, Greece, Spain, France, as well as Russia and several nations behind the U.S.S.R.’s Iron Curtain.

Needless to say, it was a heart warming, heart-stopping 3 month tour for the student members of the Orchestra and for their co- conductors, Howard Hanson and Fred Fennel.  

Sixty years later, in January 2022, the city of Rochester  celebrated  the 60th anniversary of that tour with a number of events. On January 24, 2022, the Eastman School of Music published an account of the Russian part of their historic tour.  It reads as follows:

We continue to follow the members of the Eastman Philharmonia on their landmark tour in the late fall and winter of 1961-62. Sixty years ago this week, the 87 members of the Philharmonia were in Moscow, beginning their four-week sojourn in the USSR that would include concerts in Moscow, Odessa, Kiev, Leningrad, and elsewhere. Conductor Howard Hanson had regarded the Philharmonia’s time in Russia as the climax of the tour. He would later write in his Autobiography, “As we toured over Poland, our minds went forward with both anticipation and some trepidation to our coming four weeks in Russia. We realized that this was the crucial test. If we could succeed here, the entire tour would be a triumph. If we failed, then our tour would have been a failure, regardless of our success in the countries which we had previously visited.”

Hanson’s words are somber, indeed. If the mindset that he posited were, indeed, truly shared by all members of the Philharmonia, we can only imagine the sense of responsibility that they felt. They carried a message of peace and good will through music, much as other artists were doing during the Cold War. The geopolitical situation was fraught with tensions: 1961 was the year when President Kennedy had been embarrassed by the Bay of Pigs fiasco, and then had been thoroughly unnerved by General Secretary Krushchev at their Vienna Summit; the Western Allies had all been rattled by the construction, virtually overnight, of the Berlin Wall. There were grave tensions yet to come; the October Missile Crisis was still several months off in the future. Nor was the Space Race yet bringing any sense of unqualified accomplishment to the U.S., for ever since the USSR had launched Sputnik in 1957, the Americans had suffered one setback after another; John Glenn’s successful orbital mission was still several months away in 1962. Indeed, as Americans surveyed the international situation in 1961, there was much to be nervous about, but at the same time, artists and musicians were carrying out their own mission on their own terms, facilitated by such initiatives as the President’s Special International Program for Cultural Presentations, which was the very program that had sent the Eastman Philharmonia abroad.

On January 24th the Philharmonia members flew from Warsaw to Moscow, where they would spend four full days. The time in Moscow was packed with activity. On their first full day in Moscow, U. S. Ambassador Llewellyn E. Thompson hosted the Philharmonia members at a cocktails reception at Spaso House, the official residence of the U. S. Ambassador in Moscow. The reception’s guest list, numbering five pages altogether, included many of the most well-known figures of the Soviet musical establishment, together with a number of American correspondents, staff members of the American embassy, and cultural officers from several other embassies. (Several of the invited correspondents are well remembered today for their exemplary reporting and coverage during the Cold War years. In addition, one of the U. S. Embassy staff members on the list, Mr. Jack Matlock, was later appointed U. S. Ambassador to the USSR (served 1987-91).) The reception was reminiscent of other diplomatic engagements enjoyed by the Philharmonia during the tour, but this one was unquestionably the most high-profile. Following the U. S. Ambassador’s reception, the orchestra members attended a performance of Prokofiev’s opera War and Peace at the Bolshoi Theater.

As recounted by bassoonist Richard Rodean, BM ’62, MM ’64 in his travel journal, five members of the Philharmonia’s woodwinds section had been performing together as a quintet on several occasions throughout the tour. Mr. Rodean recorded in his journal that the five performed the Quintet by August Klughardt (1847-1902) — likely the composer’s opus 79 among his many chamber works — at the Ambassador’s reception, performing on a raised stage “hardly large enough for all of us” before an audience that included “our worst critics—the members of the orchestra.” Which prompts the question: isn’t it always the most difficult thing to perform before one’s own peers?

Over the following days, their sightseeing itinerary took in numerous sites, including Moscow University, the Olympic stadium, the Kremlin and its environs (including its cathedrals and Red Square), and the Exhibition of Achievements and National Economy (abbreviated in Russian as ВДНХ (VDNKh)), a sprawling complex of pavilions housing elaborate displays of scientific and economic achievements. (Personal recommendation: when in Moscow, do not pass up VDNKh, an essential destination in Moscow! For ease of transportation, it has its own Metro stop on the No. 6 line.) In Moscow as elsewhere, Philharmonia members took advantage of shopping opportunities, in particular seeking out music stores for printed music and recordings.

Inevitably, the major business of the time in Moscow was performance. On January 26th, 27th, and 28th the Eastman Philharmonia gave concerts in the Great Hall of Moscow Conservatory. (When translated from the Russian, the Conservatory’s full name is Moscow State Conservatory in the name of P. I. Tchaikovsky.) Composer Peter Ilyich Tchaikovsky had been appointed to the Conservatory’s faculty immediately upon its his founding in 1866; the Conservatory has borne his name since 1940. Today Moscow Conservatory is the second oldest conservatory in Russia, after St. Petersburg Conservatory. It is more than likely that the iconic space of the Conservatory’s Great Hall was beginning to be recognized by the international musical audience after television coverage of such high-publicity events as the 1958 International Tchaikovsky Competition. (Today the Soviet Television channel on YouTube promotes a 1958 film of Van Cliburn performing with the Moscow State Philharmonic under conductor Kirill Kondrashin in the Great Hall after scoring his victory in that competition.)

Besides works by recognized European composers, the three Philharmonia concert programs also featured works by American composers Samuel Barber, William Schuman, and Walter Piston, as well as Hanson’s own Symphony no. 2 (“Romantic”) and his Elegy in Memory of Serge Koussevitzky. In addition, the Philharmonia performed one work by a living Russian composer, the Symphony no. 1 by Dmitri Shostakovich. Each of the three concerts was concluded with the predictable string of encores such as had been obligatory at each of the Philharmonia’s concerts on tour. By the recollections of more than one man who recounted the events later, John Philip Sousa’s Stars and Stripes Forever brought down the house each time it was played.

Peter Ilyich Tchaikovsky

founding in 1866; the Conservatory has borne his name since 1940. Today Moscow Conservatory is the second oldest conservatory in Russia, after St. Petersburg Conservatory. It is more than likely that the iconic space of the Conservatory’s Great Hall was beginning to be recognized by the international musical audience after television coverage of such high-publicity events as the 1958 International Tchaikovsky Competition. (Today the Soviet Television channel on YouTube promotes a 1958 film of Van Cliburn performing with the Moscow State Philharmonic under conductor Kirill Kondrashin in the Great Hall after scoring his victory in that competition.)

Besides works by recognized European composers, the three Philharmonia concert programs also featured works by American composers Samuel Barber, William Schuman, and Walter Piston, as well as Hanson’s own Symphony no. 2 (“Romantic”) and his Elegy in Memory of Serge Koussevitzky. In addition, the Philharmonia performed one work by a living Russian composer, the Symphony no. 1 by Dmitri Shostakovich. Each of the three concerts was concluded with the predictable string of encores such as had been obligatory at each of the Philharmonia’s concerts on tour. By the recollections of more than one man who recounted the events later, John Philip Sousa’s Stars and Stripes Forever brought down the house each time it was played.

Walter’s relationship with Doctor Fred Fennell began in the 1950’s.  They remained close friends throughout Dr. Fennell’s illustrious career.  When Dr. Fennell left Rochester, they shared their news and insights through frequent  correspondence until Walter Dixon passed away on September 5, 2003.

Fred Fennell

Click here for the biography of Frederick Fennell, legendary founder of the Eastman Wind Ensemble and former faculty member at the University of Rochester’s Eastman School of Music.

Walter Dixon was at the airport along with other well wishers, when the philharmonia and conductors departed and when they returned.  Both were tearful events. We are fortunate to have a recording of their arrival at the Niagara Falls Air Force Base upon their return to the United States. Listen now to Walter’s interviews with the awaiting family members, the returning conductors, and the man who arrange the entire tour.

Fred Fennell discussed this historic event in depth with Walter Dixon on a Special Listening Design Program which aired on February 28, 1962; a day Rochester had set aside to honor the Eastman Philharmonia Orchestra and their conductors. 

Eastman Philharmonia Orchestra – Russian Tour Itinerary (1961-62)

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