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Dwight’s Journal of Music: Links, Overview, and Commentary

We promised some links to Dwight’s Journal of Music, so here you go:  Read Dwight’s Journal of Music via Archive.org: https://archive.org/details/dwightsjournalm20dwiggoog  You can now indulge in all 41 volumes of the first notable music journal in the United States.  Dwight’s Journal of music started off in Boston during April of 1852 as a weekly periodical, […]

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History of the Claque (Pt. 1): A Look Into Entertainment’s Original Laugh Track

Concert-goers haven’t always erupted in immediate applause at the end of a show. You might be surprised to learn that clapping as we know it — immediate, mandatory applause after a performance — couldn’t be taken for granted prior to the 20th century. That was due in part to the “claque.” Keep reading to learn

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Listen To the Hiroshima Symphony

You can’t truly understand the subject of “Ghosts of Hiroshima,” our podcast episode, without giving a listen to the Hiroshima Symphony. Here is a recording of the Japan Philharmonic performing Masao Ohki’s most famous work, followed by notes from the American Record Guide (as printed on the Naxos website). Listen to the Hiroshima Symphony: Notes

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Listen to the “Santa Claus Symphony” by William Henry Fry (1813-1864)

https://www.youtube.com/embed/dkoDYsrNUyI You already know about the American composer from episode 7 of Backstage Podcast, and you can also listen to Leonora by William Henry Fry on our website (we’ve included some biographical info). Fun Fact: The Santa Claus Symphony was the first orchestral work to use the saxophone. While it only takes 26 minutes to

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