Search

Home > Composers Datebook > The 'Cockaigne' Overture
Podcast: Composers Datebook
Episode:

The 'Cockaigne' Overture

Category: Health
Duration: 00:02:00
Publish Date: 2024-06-20 05:00:00
Description:

Synopsis


On today’s date in 1901, English composer Edward Elgar conducted the first performance of his cheery, upbeat, and slightly rowdy Cockaigne Overture, a commission from the Royal Philharmonic Society dedicated to his many friends in British Orchestras.


Now Cockaigne does not refer to the schedule two narcotic, but rather an old nickname for the City of London, originating in a very old poem about a utopian land where rivers flow with wine and houses are made of cake and barley sugar.


Elgar said he wanted to come up with something “cheerful and London-y, stout and steak … honest, healthy, humorous and strong, but not vulgar."


The new overture proved an instant hit, and critics of the day compared it favorably to the festive prelude to  Act I of  Wagner’s opera Die Meistersinger. Elgar made two recordings of the work, conducting the Royal Albert Hall Orchestra in 1926 and the BBC Symphony in 1933.


By chance during that 1933 recording session, as a backup, some takes were cut simultaneously to two separate wax master recording machines from two separate microphones. This enabled engineers many decades later to blend the two simultaneous “takes” into an “accidental stereo” version of the old mono recording.


Music Played in Today's Program


Edward Elgar (1857-1934): Cockaigne Overture; BBC Symphony; Edward Elgar, conductor; 1933 ‘accidental stereo’; Naxos 8.111022

Total Play: 0

Some more Podcasts by American Public Media

20+ Episodes
Mood Ring    
500+ Episodes
500+ Episodes
The Splendid .. 100+     10+
2K+ Episodes
Marketplace .. 20+     5
2K+ Episodes
Marketplace .. 4     5
100+ Episodes
200+ Episodes
The Hilariou .. 100+     30+
2K+ Episodes