Ornette Coleman’s The Shape of Jazz to Come
In 2013, the Library of Congress placed 25 new works into its National Recording Registry, a collection of historic music, speeches, and other audio documents that the Library will preserve […]
The Sounds of America: Flaco Jiménez’s Partners album BMPAudio
The Sounds of America: The Harder They Come Soundtrack BMPAudio
Science Of Happiness 76: If You Want to Be More Productive, Cut Yourself Some Slack BMPAudio
Science of Happiness 73: How to Switch Off Your Critics BMPAudio
Science of Happiness 72: How To Reconnect With Your Partner BMPAudio
The Science of Happiness 71: Do You Want To Be More Patient? BMPAudio
Red, White and the Blues BMPAudio
The Science Of Happiness 70: How To Love People You Don’t Like BMPAudio
The Science of Happiness 69: What’s Your “Why” In Life? BMPAudio
The Science of Happiness 68: From Othering to Belonging BMPAudio
The Science of Happiness 67: Taking Small Steps toward Big Goals BMPAudio
1A Memorial Day Special BMPAudio
The Science of Happiness 66: How to Connect When You Must Stay Apart BMPAudio
The Science of Happiness 64: Helping Kids Think About the Good BMPAudio
The Science of Happiness 63: Remembering to Breathe BMPAudio
The Sounds of America: “Hello Muddah, Hello Fadduh” BMPAudio
Leontyne Price’s A Program of Song BMPAudio
Mississippi in the 1920s produced some of our country’s greatest blues artists. It also produced one of our greatest operatic singers, soprano Leontyne Price. The bar she set for singers has remained high. “When I was a student I used to travel on the subway between Queens and Julliard,” remembers Renée Fleming, “literally invoking Heaven to give me her high C. And unfortunately it never worked.”
While Price is associated with the great Verdi roles, her debut recording in 1959 focused on a different vocal tradition, lieder — poems set to music. A Program of Song contains works by Richard Strauss, Gabriel Fauré, Hugo Wolf, and Francis Poulenc. “The art of the song recital has to some degree been marginalized,” Fleming says. “I think that’s a great tragedy. The combination of music and poetry in a concert setting that’s much more intimate than opera, for me, is absolute magic. And she could do both. Very few singers historically have been able to go back and forth.”
Price’s A Program of Song was inducted into the National Recording Registry in 2013.
Voices: Daniel Guss, F. Paul Driscoll, Renée Fleming
Tagged as: Daniel Guss, F. Paul Driscoll, Leontyne Price, Renée Fleming.
BMPAudio December 6, 2013
In 2013, the Library of Congress placed 25 new works into its National Recording Registry, a collection of historic music, speeches, and other audio documents that the Library will preserve […]
Whether a syndicated national radio series, podcast, documentary or audiobook, BMP Audio creates imaginative, sophisticated and effective sound tracks for your ideas. Our fully digital production facilities assure the highest level of audio fidelity. The world’s top broadcast companies know this – and that’s why they choose BMP Audio.