
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


1991 was a big year for American composer John Corigliano. The Metropolitan Opera premiered his opera The Ghosts of Versailles and the 53-year old composer won two Grammys and the Grawemeyer Award for his Symphony No. 1. Corigliano was increasingly recognized as one of the leading American composers of his generation, and was deluged with commissions for new works.
But about 10 years before all that, guitarist Sharon Isbin had asked Corigliano to write a concerto for her, and kept on asking him. On today’s date in 1993, her persistence paid off when, with the St. Paul Chamber Orchestra and conductor Hugh Wolff, she gave the premiere performance of Corigliano’s Troubadours — Variations for Guitar and Orchestra. This piece was inspired by the courtly love tradition of the medieval troubadours, whose songs combined sophisticated word play with simple but elegantly communicative melodies.
“For composers the idea of true simplicity — in contrast to chic simple-mindedness — is mistrusted and scorned,” Corigliano wrote. “But the guitar has a natural innocence about it … So the idea of a guitar concerto was, for me, like a nostalgic return to all the feelings I had when I started composing — before the commissions and deadlines and reviews. A time when discovery and optimistic enthusiasm ruled my senses … Troubadours is a lyrical concerto.”
John Corigliano (b. 1938): Troubadours; Sharon Isbin, guitar; St. Paul Chamber Orchestra; Hugh Wolff, conductor; Virgin 55083
By American Public Media4.7
176176 ratings
1991 was a big year for American composer John Corigliano. The Metropolitan Opera premiered his opera The Ghosts of Versailles and the 53-year old composer won two Grammys and the Grawemeyer Award for his Symphony No. 1. Corigliano was increasingly recognized as one of the leading American composers of his generation, and was deluged with commissions for new works.
But about 10 years before all that, guitarist Sharon Isbin had asked Corigliano to write a concerto for her, and kept on asking him. On today’s date in 1993, her persistence paid off when, with the St. Paul Chamber Orchestra and conductor Hugh Wolff, she gave the premiere performance of Corigliano’s Troubadours — Variations for Guitar and Orchestra. This piece was inspired by the courtly love tradition of the medieval troubadours, whose songs combined sophisticated word play with simple but elegantly communicative melodies.
“For composers the idea of true simplicity — in contrast to chic simple-mindedness — is mistrusted and scorned,” Corigliano wrote. “But the guitar has a natural innocence about it … So the idea of a guitar concerto was, for me, like a nostalgic return to all the feelings I had when I started composing — before the commissions and deadlines and reviews. A time when discovery and optimistic enthusiasm ruled my senses … Troubadours is a lyrical concerto.”
John Corigliano (b. 1938): Troubadours; Sharon Isbin, guitar; St. Paul Chamber Orchestra; Hugh Wolff, conductor; Virgin 55083

6,815 Listeners

38,814 Listeners

8,789 Listeners

9,241 Listeners

5,807 Listeners

930 Listeners

1,389 Listeners

1,290 Listeners

3,150 Listeners

1,977 Listeners

528 Listeners

182 Listeners

13,747 Listeners

3,073 Listeners

246 Listeners

28,187 Listeners

434 Listeners

5,493 Listeners

2,187 Listeners

14,130 Listeners

6,425 Listeners

2,514 Listeners

4,838 Listeners

579 Listeners

255 Listeners