Compact Discoveries®
a series of one-hour radio programs produced, written, hosted, and edited by Fred Flaxman
©2007 by Fred Flaxman
Program 119
"Tantalizing Thuille"
MUSIC: Thuille: excerpt from opening of the Piano Quintet in G Minor, performed by the Falk Quartet [ASV CD DCA 1171, track 5] [under the following]
Ludwig Thuille died of a heart attack when he was only 45, which
explains why you may not have heard of him before. But he wrote some
absolutely gorgeous music in his short life. Stay with me for the next
hour and you’ll hear what I mean. This is Compact Discoveries. I’m your guide, Fred Flaxman, and we’re going to listen to “Tantalizing Thuille.”
MUSIC: fades out
Ludwig Thuille lived from 1861 until 1907. According to the fifth edition of Grove’s Dictionary of Music and Musicians,
he was born in Bozen, which was then in Austria but is now Bolzano and
is now in Italy. Other sources list him as a German composer. One
source, supposedly an expert on the subject, said he was born in the
French part of Switzerland but was moved as an infant to Bozen.
I have been told that Thuille’s last name is French, and most
German-speaking people would recognize it as such and pronounce it in
the French manner, as I am doing. But others would pronounce it in the
German fashion as “Thuill-e.” The name is spelled
T-h-u-i-l-l-e. The final “e” would not be pronounced in French, but would be in German.
As no one I spoke to, even those German-speakers who love classical
music, had ever heard to Thuille, no one could be certain of the
correct pronunciation of his name. Nevertheless, as most of the people
I asked selected “Thuille” as the correct pronunciation,
that’s what I have decided to go with, although it reminds me of
a situation I heard about many years ago when a teacher brought a live
bunny to show her third-grade class. No one knew whether the rabbit was
male or female, so the highly democratic, American class decided to
take a vote on it. The result of the vote, whatever it was, had no
connection to the truth of the matter, and the same may be the case
with the pronunciation of “Thuille.”
In any case, Thuille lost both of his parents when he was very young,
and was sent as a chorister to a Benedictine abbey in Upper Austria,
where he received his elementary education. Later he studied in
Innsbruck, where he met the young Richard Strauss, who became a
lifelong friend. Thuille then moved to Munich where he studied with
Josef Rheinberger and others. Thuille became a professor of music
theory and composition there.
Thuille also became a prolific composer, concentrating on chamber music. He is remembered principally for his Sextet for Piano and Wind Instruments
by those few who remember him at all. It was written between 1886 and
1888, and we’re going to hear this true compact discovery now as
performed by the Appalachian Wind Quintet with Noel Lester at the piano.
MUSIC: Thuille: Sextet for Piano and Wind Instruments, Opus 6, performed by the Appalachian Wind Quintet [Appalachian Wind Quintet recording, tracks 10, 11, 12, 13] [29:48]
Ludwig Thuille’s Sextet for Piano and Wind Instruments, Opus 6.
You heard the Appalachian Wind Quintet with pianist Noel Lester. Do you
agree with me that this piece is a true compact discovery? I hope so!
You are listening to Compact Discoveries. I’m your guide, Fred Flaxman, and this hour is devoted to “Tantalizing Thuille.”
[optional one-minute break not included in total timing]
We have time for one more piece by Thuille: his three-movement Piano Quintet in G Minor. It is performed on an ASV recording by the Falk Quartet with Tomer Lev at the piano.
MUSIC: Thuille: Piano Quintet in G Minor, performed by the Falk Quartet with Tomer Lev, piano [ASV CD DCA 1171, tracks 5, 6 and 7] [23:19]
Ludwig Thuille’s Piano Quintet in G Minor. You heard the Falk Quartet with Tomer Lev at the piano.
That brings to an end this hour of Compact Discoveries, which I called “Tantalizing Thuille.” We heard his Sextet for Piano and Wind Instruments and his Piano Quintet in G Minor.
MUSIC: clip from Thuille: Sextet for Piano and Wind Instruments, Op. 6, performed by the Appalachian Wind Quintet with pianist Noel Lester [under the following]
I’m Fred Flaxman hoping also that you enjoyed these selections
and that you’ll let me hear from you about this or other Compact Discoveries programs. I can be reached through the Compact Discoveries
website: www.compactdiscoveries.com. The website is the place to go for
complete information on these programs, including scripts with
playlists. You’ll also find there lots of Compact Discoveries
articles, a list of public radio stations carrying the program, links
to those stations’ websites, and listener reaction.
I’d like to thank ArkivMusic.com for supplying the recording of Thuille’s Piano Quintet in G Minor, and Noel Lester and the Appalachian Wind Quintet for furnishing their recording of Thuille’s Sextet.
Thanks, as well, to the Austrian and German Embassies and Patrick
Jaeger at the Austrian Cultural Forum, the Goethe Cultural Institute
and the German Information Center, all in Washington, D.C., and Simon
Corley and the French Classical Music List in Paris, for their help in
researching pronunciations.
Compact Discoveries is distributed internationally by the Public Radio Exchange, and Compact Discoveries
programs can be streamed on demand at their website: www.prx.org. This
program was produced in Weaverville, North Carolina. It was made
possible by the financial support of members of public radio station
WXEL-FM, West Palm Beach, Florida.
MUSIC: fades out at 58:00
PROGRAM ENDS AT 58:00