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	<title>So I&#039;ve Heard</title>
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		<title>Alan Rich: June 17, 1924 &#8211; April 23,&#160;2010</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2010/04/alan-rich-june-17-1924-april-23-2010/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2010/04/alan-rich-june-17-1924-april-23-2010/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 28 Apr 2010 18:37:56 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>dlw</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[soiveheard.com]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.soiveheard.com/?p=3127</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Alan Rich died April 23, 2010 of natural causes in his sleep at his home in West Los Angeles.]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Alan Rich died April 23, 2010 of natural causes in his sleep at his home in West Los Angeles.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<slash:comments>6</slash:comments>
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		<title>DUTCH TREAT: SPHERES AND&#160;COOKIES</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2010/02/dutch-treat-spheres-and-cookies/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2010/02/dutch-treat-spheres-and-cookies/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 25 Feb 2010 15:46:04 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[soiveheard.com]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.soiveheard.com/?p=3122</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[So in comes Hercules: not the one of Hollywood’s Reeves boys, not your circus strongman, but a suave Italian baritone, intoning praise for the art of lovemaking, Ars Amatoria well-defined by his own creator, a fellow name of Ovidius Naso, in his masterly Metamorphoses. not many years before. Hercules in Love (“Ercole Amante”)was first seen [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>So in comes Hercules: not the one of Hollywood’s Reeves boys, not your circus strongman, but a suave Italian baritone, intoning praise for the art of lovemaking, <em>Ars Amatoria</em> well-defined by his own creator,  a fellow name of Ovidius Naso, in his masterly <em>Metamorphoses</em>. not many years before. <em>Hercules in Love</em> (“Ercole Amante”)was first seen by a Parisian audience, February 7, 1626, deserves space on opera’s upper shelf. A recreation of that performance,   that preserves the notes and interpretive detail and – even more – honors the <em>spirit</em> of the original masterpiece, awaits your pleasure in  a two-disc package produced by Opus Arte, distributed under the aegis of Naxos, one of the few outfits that still proclaim, (and prove) that a serious-music label can dispense some measure of wonder and surprise. Yes, <em>surprise</em>; this is my first acquisition on the new Blu-Ray technology. What  we have here is a putative re-creation of Francesco Cavalli’s serio-comic opera, captured with astounding clarity as it just possibly took shape at the Théâtre des Machines at the Palais des Tuileries (but this time with an audience of something like 7,000). The program even lists the music composed to accompany the King and his entourage as they mosey to their seats; imagine that happening here: martial, menacing, fearsome music to escort Mark Swed and me to our aisle seats!  The recorded performance happened last January at, as you may have guessed, Het Muziektheater Amsterdam, which has already sent two Monteverdi operas of similar high imagination, <em>Return of Ulysses</em> and <em>The Coronation of Poppea</em>, to our L.A. Opera, both directed by Pierre Audi and both outstanding accomplishments in the treacherous realm of “historically informed” revivals of very old, very great music, restored to brimming life.</p>
<p>Some history: We usually  set a date in 1609, the  year of Monteverdi’s <em>l’Orfeo</em>, as the birth-year of the hybrid “Dramma per musica” that would soon metamorphose into the public entertainment known as Opera. It was Italy (of course) that built the world’s first public opera house, in 1634. The new art nourished a large and often somewhat weird passion for extravagant vocal display. David Alden’s staging creates a splendid, integrated company with, as usual, moments of Aldenesque madcap. They are remarkably proficient in maintaining the sense of direction in this difficult stuff; the opening aria, with the Hercules of Luca Pisaroni, which he delivers while strapping on a set of plastic musculature piece by piece, is nothing you want to try at home. From its time and place we expect a certain departure from reality in the plotting, and Francesco Buti’s libretto, with its plastic-muscle-bound hero in and out of amorous involvement with Venus, Juno and (!) his mother, does not disappoint.</p>
<p>I hope I haven’t overstressed the antiquarian value of this <em>Ercole</em> project and the other few attempts to revive and restore the particular marvels in our musical heritage. The music is, above all, beautiful; there are great scenes that linger in the memory; the emotional power derives from the confluence of the harmonious and the dissonant, as it does in Mozart or in Wagner. You smile at the artificialities; then there comes a scene – a  multitude of characters including parents, offspring and at least one imperial ghost of a nobleman recently deceased,  gathered in a darkened prison cell, imploring the lordly Hercules to spare their lives –( I think I have some of this right). The music turns rich and plangent, as it often does in comparable, confrontational moments in Verdi, and you just look away from the dramatic absurdities and drink in the beauty.  Ivor Bolton is the conductor, leading Concerto Köln, the excellent ensemble of many superb recordings (and which is booked into the Park Plaza Hotel in a not-to-be-missed event on May 3, Vivaldi, Sammartini,and  Brandenburgs), to do his bidding.</p>
<p>SUSAN ON PIANO<br />
Susan Svrcek  is one of the four valuable local citizens who together co-created the &#8220;Piano Spheres.&#8221; Her recital last month at Zipper Hall turned out to be a more-than-anticipated valuable part of this season&#8217;s &#8220;Piano Spheres&#8221; series. I had feared for Susan&#8217;s safety in past appearances, wondering if the goodness in Charlie  Ives&#8217;s &#8220;Concord&#8221; Sonata might end up trampled by the work&#8217;s enclave of ghosts.  No such problem now; the sphere rolled smoothly, and there was a near-perfect matchup between the player and the played: a Schoenberg set thst dounded as if co-written by Brahms &#8212; as was the old boy&#8217;s music back when &#8212; some misty Xenakis that sounded like the same very smart young boy playing with piano colorations and, more delightful than &#8220;Piano Spheres&#8221; concerts ever get to be: a gathering of Messiaen&#8217;s &#8220;Small Bird Sketches.&#8221; each preceded by tape  of that bird in song, as if  a smart listener might fail to note the obvious link between the portraitist and the portrayed.</p>
<p>What I Like about the &#8220;Piano Spheres&#8221; is also what I like about Santa Monica&#8217;s &#8220;Jacaranda&#8221;: a kind of personalized programming so that you leave each event with the sense of having visited some very smart programming that these people &#8212; Patrick and Mark of Jacaranda, Cathy and her accurate pipeline to Leonard, who dreamed up the &#8220;spheres.&#8221;series. All of these concerts are a special kind of memorable: you can&#8217;t get them out of your head. Back in my cerebellum I am still wallowing in the many kinds of warm joyousness handed out when Jacaranda&#8217;s resident quartet, the Denali, took on Dvorak&#8217;s &#8220;American&#8221; String Quartet,&#8221; all those good feelings coming uponon the sweet, elegant and &#8212; for that matter &#8212; Australia&#8217;s Liam Viney&#8217;s <em>Australian playing of Janacek&#8217;s &#8220;Outdoor&#8221; Pieces</em> in a program that you just never wanted to end. I like the way that Los Angeles (and environs) crown their music-making with all this &#8220;lovable&#8221; programming; the success of these good works is so easily measurable by the size of crowds. Don&#8217;t tell me that they&#8217;re only there for the  free cookies.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<slash:comments>3</slash:comments>
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		<item>
		<title>A LITTLE HELP FROM MY&#160;FRIENDS</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2010/02/a-little-help-from-my-friends/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2010/02/a-little-help-from-my-friends/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sun, 07 Feb 2010 00:02:31 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[soiveheard.com]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=3121</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[It might have happened; I mean, I might have rounded off my allotted span without once having heard a concerto for mandolin in a live performance. But I am blessed with friends of sterner stuff who, upon a recent Sunday, did indeed move mountains to ordain my seated presence in the handsome, resonant precincts of [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>It might have happened; I mean, I might have rounded off my allotted span without once having heard a <em>concerto</em> for <em>mandolin</em> in a live performance. But I am blessed with friends of sterner stuff who, upon a recent Sunday, did indeed move mountains to ordain my seated presence in the handsome, resonant precincts of UCLA’s Royce Hall, to share with a full-sized beaming crowd our virginal mandolin-concerto experience. (I must also insert a clarifying note, forthwith, that a mandolin and a virginal, although both strung with resonant and expressive strings, are not the same instrument at all. You could look it up.</p>
<p>Never mind; here’s all you need to know. The mandolin was invented for the Neapolitans, a people famous as noise makers (“Bray of Naples”). Their favored instrument was a satchel of great capacity in which they stored ill-gotten gains, disguised to pass as musical instruments. Lousy spellers, they tried to pass off these bags as “lute” or “loot” or “liuti.” But this caused traffic jams at Customs “fughi per molti voci con confusione generale.”)</p>
<p>The new, exotic instrument has been borne into our midst on the shoulders of a certain  Chris Thile. His qualifications to play among warlike Neapolitans are easily attested; his band has taken the classic name of “Punch, Brothers” as in (deep breath, please) “Punch, Brothers, Punch with Care, Punch in the Presence of the Pass-en-GERR,” immortal in the annals of world-wide battle-cries, (and rather helpful to neophyte train-conductors.)</p>
<p>Young, affable Mr. Thile, as it happens, also composes and plays one helluva Mandolin. From under his flying fingers, enchanted and airborne, emerge swirling clouds of musical tone as of a banjo strummed by angels. His four-movement Concerto bears the subtitle of maximum logic, “to the Stars On Pigs’ Wings.” It draws its inspirations from the breezes that blow  though Locatelli and that gang; <em>autrement dit</em>,  he is one of us, to the manner born. In other words: his Concerto, which had its first-ever hearing at Royce at a exhilarating concert by the Los Angeles Chamber Orchestra (lovable bunch, they) is a small masterwork instantly lovable, out of which he himself did play the veritable Hades.</p>
<p>MY COUNTRY ‘TIS: Aaron Copland’s <em>Appalachian Spring</em> began the program, fluently and hauntingly; it escorts the word “exquisite” into the American dance repertory; when heard in the composer’s setting for thirteen instruments, the pristine setting that enables an orchestra’s solo players to evoke a hearer’s tears of delight &#8212; as did LACO’s oboist Allan Vogel, his windy cohorts David Shostac and Joshua Ranz, the glistening insistence of David Washburn’s trumpet. I love LACO, for all the right reasons – the wind quartet playing a supple as velvet cat-and-mouse in a Mozart exchange with top boss Jeff Kahane, the sturdy but subtle bravado of the almost-folksy dancers in their Appalachian rituals designate LACO as our most nearly supreme ensemble of its kind. The irresistibly evocative solo playing, threaded through their <em>Music for the Theater</em> (highlight among highlights on this notably magical program) remains a happy memory. It’s actually a fascinating piece, for the music and for its historical place: a young composer building his music kingdom from a base in Paris, the most thrilling location for an early-twenties American. I don’t know another piece so energized by its own time and place, discovering – in Jazz – a whole new language to go along with his reborn American conscience. What’s amazing, too, is how much of this wide-eyed enthusiasm of Aaron Copland, circa 1924, achieves this throbbing, thrilling relationship with a Brave New World that he had so recently discovered and made his own.</p>
<p>SMALL CHANGE: A paltry twenty dollars (even less in the discount joints) takes you to a virtual simulacrum of the sound of Disney Hall in full acoustical splendor, and the glorious noise therein of our boy prodigy and the 106 music-makers executing his will under his baton: the inaugural concert under Gustavo Dudamel’s Philharmonic leadership, last October 8, in a Sony DVD. Pandemonia new and old: the mingled haywire of John Adams’s <em>City Noir</em> in its world premiere and Gustav Mahler’s unchallengeable paradigm – the paint still wet – of what every composer’s First Symphony should sound like, what bridges to burn.</p>
<p>SWEDISH MODERN: It was appropriate for Bill Lane, the Philharmonic’s first  horn, to serve as audience greeter for Herbert Blomstedt’s “casual Friday.” Music in the key of  A major – Beethoven’s Seventh, say, or the Mozart 29<sup>th</sup> – exploits the horn’s high E, the gorgeously raucous dominant note of A major; the Beethoven came at the end of the Blomstedt concert, and Bill’s landings on that note were gorgeously , well, <em>raucous</em>.</p>
<p>OTHER NOTES were welcome, too. Blomstedt’s short stint with the San Francisco Symphony didn’t take him all that far, but he did turn in admirable service on behalf of his  fellow Scandinavian Carl Nielsen; beyond that his honest, intelligent work with the “classical” repertory, the marvelous way Haydn  and, yes, Mozart voiced their orchestral forces was the work of a musician responsive and exacting. I Ieft Disney Hall last weekend, loving all over again the marvels those old guys discovered – invented, actually – in music not as well-known as one might think: Haydn’s “Clock” Symphony, for example, with its  splendid and original trickery.</p>
<p>JOYFUL NOISES: The imperial Richard Taruskin prefaces his tight rope act, his largely one-man <em>Oxford Encyclopedia of Western Music</em>, with a quiet gloat over his editorial prerogative, his virtual elimination of mention of Ralph Vaughan Williams, man or music. We are asked to assume that sheer beauty, the power to move grown-ups to delight or tears, no longer figure as criteria in the world of the multi-volume encyclopedia. The splendid centerpiece for our Philharmonic’s short but overpowering “festival” of Vaughan W’s music at year’s end, was the harrowing, subtle magnificence of his Second or “London” Symphony, sheer love music if any ever existed, every accent and color true and infused with genuine love. Bramwell Tovey, whose talents had hitherto been rusticated to Hollywood  Bowl’s modest demands, was the worthy deliverer of love’s sweetest accents.</p>
<p>FURTHERMORE: “It’s amazing, too, how he seems to be playing to the farthest reaches of the hall; he’s really conquering the vast distance.” This, from my seat companion, a cellist, and awestruck by the experience of communing with that other cellist, up on the Disney Hall stage, conquering distances with his great art: Yo-Yo Ma, reaching out with flawless command to the eloquence of his partner Emanuel Ax on piano, with both of them drawn into a closeness with the unspoken subtleties, the mysterious yet radiant music of Robert Schumann which, two weeks later remains in my memory,  warm, supple and tangible. What a wonderful concert! Some composer, has sent word to my mailbox that “music is the world, singing of itself,” and I think I’ll let that stand.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<item>
		<title>THIS&#160;LIFETIME</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2009/12/this-lifetime/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2009/12/this-lifetime/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 07 Dec 2009 00:56:34 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[soiveheard.com]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=3110</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[“There’s strange and wonderful stuff in this lifetime of Lou’s music,” I wrote in 1987, under the spell of the Cabrillo Festival. “Much of it is so damned beautiful, so open-handed and eager to please.” Just arrived from New York, where open-handed newness was the brand of the musical sissy, I found Lou’s big diatonic [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><a href="http://www.amazon.com/Harrison-Piano-Concerto-Violin-Orchestra/dp/B0000030E7%3FSubscriptionId%3DAKIAJ3SUMGRSQYUBSF4Q%26tag%3Dsoivehe-20%26linkCode%3Dxm2%26camp%3D2025%26creative%3D165953%26creativeASIN%3DB0000030E7"><img class="alignleft" src="http://ecx.images-amazon.com/images/I/51r-OiP7vgL._SL160_.jpg" alt="" /></a>“There’s strange and wonderful stuff in this lifetime of Lou’s music,” I wrote in 1987, under the spell of the Cabrillo Festival. “Much of it is so damned beautiful, so open-handed and eager to please.” Just arrived from New York, where open-handed newness was the brand of the musical sissy, I found Lou’s big diatonic C-major symphonies startling at first but for the wrong reasons. I asked him, for a documentary I was producing for KUSC, what were the distinguishing features of a California composer.</p>
<p>“I suppose,” he answered, “ it’s that we’re not afraid of sounding pretty.”</p>
<p><img class="alignleft size-full wp-image-3119" title="Formenti" src="http://soiveheard.com/wp-content/uploads/2009/12/MFormenti_03.jpg" alt="Formenti" width="275" height="218" />Lou’s Piano Concerto, out of which Marino and Gustavo whaled the daylights at Disney Hall last week, is strange, wonderful, spellbinding and gorgeous. It has a feel-good slow movement whose pure and simple…well, prettiness, can wash away all your sins. Its finale, which demands a clobbering from the soloist’s fists and forearms that could be considered pretty only by a demonic chorale. Its tuning is the ancient system of “Just Intonation” that Lou sought to revive (along with Esperanto) that maintains a soft and lovely haze between you and the music. It is a very knowing music; it knows about jazz and ancient dances and also about contemporary licks. Those two guys, Marino and Gustavo at Disney Hall, took full possession.</p>
<p>It’s nine years – amazing! – since Marino Formenti took his place on our horizon. He came here first with the ensemble Klangforum Wien, which had taken charge of the festival “Resistance Fluctuations.” Dorrance Stalvey, who ran the Monday Evening Concerts, spotted the 34-year-old Marino for his solo potential, and booked him for a recital series that took off like Gangbusters; Formenti has been in orbit ever since. He heads now for San Francisco, to play Messaien’s vast devotional exercise Vingt Régards. Lucky San Francisco.</p>
<p>THE BRAHMS RUSH<br />
AIMEZ-VOUS BRAHMS? MOI NON, MAIS…. I am not in the habit of linking the lumpy clods that are the music of Johannes Brahms  to words like “exquisite,” but hear me out this once. Meandering among the clods of of the Second Symphony at Disney Hall last weekend, in a Berlin Philharmonic performance of uncommon elegance and clarity, my attention was engaged by a sudden burst of music truly exquisite. I love it when The soothing theme that begins the first movement returns, miraculously unscathed after surviving some brutalizing during the development section, its wounds now gently swaddled in remembrances of a somewhat useless, lacey countermelody that had first been, found then lost some time before. It’s actually a familiar Brahms trick, turning the dramatic return of a long-awaited main theme into an angelic, rhapsodic; moment; he pulls he same trick in the B-flat Piano Concerto, but never as purely exquisite as in this Second Symphony, where it comes on as sweet release after entrapment in mud. You go around deploring the overcooked-meat-and-potatoes of those four symphonies, with a special cringe at the gray-wool stuffing of the First, but then there is Papa Brahms, his warm hand raised against the chill  that has beset your spinal column that day, and suddenly life isn’t  merely okay…it has become, well, exquisite.</p>
<p>I did find it curious, however, that time and space were granted, on this al-Brahms program, to  Arnold Schoenberg’s orchestration of the Brahms G-minor Piano Quartet &#8212; which contains some quite ugly writing for horns and winds that merely falsify the music’s greatly respectable source – as if the world needed a Brahms Fifth Symphony, or the Mona Lisa that beard.</p>
<p><a href="http://www.amazon.com/Brahms-Complete-Symphonies-Johannes/dp/B002AGIEYG%3FSubscriptionId%3DAKIAJ3SUMGRSQYUBSF4Q%26tag%3Dsoivehe-20%26linkCode%3Dxm2%26camp%3D2025%26creative%3D165953%26creativeASIN%3DB002AGIEYG"><img class="alignleft" src="http://ecx.images-amazon.com/images/I/51EzCvQQFuL._SL160_.jpg" alt="" /></a>Simon Rattle’s Brahms earned him a hero’s cheers, and rightly so. He and his orchestra have grown magnificently. His early days here, as one of two (with Salonen) podium contenders for the L.A. Phil leadership,  revealed a revolutionary podium presence, capable of informing the press (meaning me, in this case) that the Phil’s playing was “simply dreadful”and not yet the all-knowing musician he has become. Now he and Esa-Pekka, and a few others, represent a major force to assure the world that symphonies and their orchestras might, after all, endure.</p>
<p>That was his major accomplishment in his two programs here, demonstrating with his superlative instrument that this ancient, creaking repertory simply requires wonderfully accurate playing to rekindle that old Brahmsian rapture that used to comfort us at our adolescent bedtimes that all this overscored twaddle somehow stood for authentic music. Later in our lives there would be Mozart.</p>
<p>OR, AT LEAST, ROSSINI<br />
<a href="http://www.amazon.com/Rossini-Barbiere-Siviglia-Schwetzingen-Festival/dp/B00009MGK3%3FSubscriptionId%3DAKIAJ3SUMGRSQYUBSF4Q%26tag%3Dsoivehe-20%26linkCode%3Dxm2%26camp%3D2025%26creative%3D165953%26creativeASIN%3DB00009MGK3"><img class="alignleft" src="http://ecx.images-amazon.com/images/I/51r%2B%2BvhTsNL._SL160_.jpg" alt="" /></a>Comes yet another supremely delicious bel-canto comedy from the L.A. Opera’s purveyors of the magic touch, this one the finest of that entire repertory of patter song, giggling ensemble and wonderfully giddy maximum-sense nonsense. There’s something about the magic of this enchanting repertory – a message that has caught hold with this home-town,  unpredictable opera company. This time, under sublime. California-perfect skies, Rossini’s tidy, splendidly crafted comedy The Barber of Seville achieves a kind of perfection, galvanized by Nathan Gunn’s great opening “Largo al factotum” held in thrall from then on by the full, cheering house.</p>
<p>There was perfection in director Emilio Sagi’s staging, superbly balanced to suggest personal values as well as comedic:  the sense of absurdity as well as genuine loss by debuting basso buffo Bruno Pratico as  the thwarted suitor Bartolo, the subtle chicanery in Andrea Silvestrelli’s thunderous yet vulnerable Basilio the sly fixer  – a stupendous re-creation following last season’s hilarious Gianni Schicchi – the marvelous mix of  agile mischief   and genuine passion in the Rosina of Joyce DiDonato in her long-overdue debut. As the questing Almaviva another welcome debutor, Peruvian tenorino Juan Diego Flores delivered a show-stopping performance of the opera’s  killer final  aria “Cessa di piu Resistere” often omitted out of mercy but this time reinstated in full glory.</p>
<p>All told, a superb, superbly comic three hours of opera often dealt with as overripe burlesque, here – in the work of debuting conductor Michele Mariotti and director Emilio Sagi – managed with love, respect and an awareness of its antic wealth.</p>
<p>(Photo of Marino Formenti by Betty Freeman)</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>DUDA, DIDO and the DIATONIC&#160;SCALE</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2009/11/duda-dido-and-the-diatonic-scale/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2009/11/duda-dido-and-the-diatonic-scale/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 23 Nov 2009 23:05:11 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[soiveheard.com]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=3105</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[This message delayed becaause of communications breakdown; thoughts still valid.. Fears and doubts, couched in terms of cynicism and the old fin-de-siècle blues, may truly be set aside after last week’s Philharmonic event at Disney Hall. Our young maestro has earned his spurs not so much with another whoop-de-doo orchestral Saturnalia but with a much-loved, [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<div id="_mcePaste" style="overflow: hidden; position: absolute; left: -10000px; top: 0px; width: 1px; height: 1px;">This message delayed becaause of communications breakdown; thoughts still valid..</div>
<div id="_mcePaste" style="overflow: hidden; position: absolute; left: -10000px; top: 0px; width: 1px; height: 1px;">Fears and doubts, couched in terms of cynicism and the old fin-de-siècle blues, may truly be set aside after last week’s Philharmonic event at Disney Hall. Our young maestro has earned his spurs not so much with another whoop-de-doo orchestral Saturnalia but with a much-loved, subtle masterwork as much known for eliciting tears as cheers. The outburst of silence that Gustavo Dudamel drew from the capacity crowd last Thursday after his performance of Schubert’s “Unfinished” Symphony spoke as eloquently as any juncture loud or soft along this thoroughly satisfactory musician’s mercurial rise to fame. What a great night of music-making!… and what music!</div>
<div id="_mcePaste" style="overflow: hidden; position: absolute; left: -10000px; top: 0px; width: 1px; height: 1px;">What is there about this B-minor half-symphony, this enchanted  relic, that stands it apart from the rest of the world’s trove of abandoned beauty? Its story makes for good p-r: the hand of God signaling “enough” to its suffering composer; Schubert himself realizing that that he had taken musical language past a boundary that noone had previously crossed, realizing (justifiably) that the world wasn’t yet ready for him. The orchestral language – trombones especially – proclaims sonorities that only Richard Wagner, decades later, would attempt. The harmonies – just take the spine-chilling sequence that ends the slow movement in a radiant dark luminescence – still resonate as “typically Schubertian” because nobody has tried them since.</div>
<div id="_mcePaste" style="overflow: hidden; position: absolute; left: -10000px; top: 0px; width: 1px; height: 1px;">The considerable legacy of “unfinished” Schubert forms a tantalizing bundle of scribbled pages, yellowed half-sheets of whole symphonies, separate orchestral movements, along with piano sonatas, chamber works  and songs. When I was a lad  the world acknowledged seven Schubert symphonies; now there are ten, with the newly discovered  “Tenth” looming  large on last week’s Dudamel program. ASIN: B0000027XR It is a three-movement work, broad and oratorical in style. Its manuscript dates from 1828, Schubert’s last year. Its first movement starts with welcoming fanfares, shading off to a second theme nearly as gorgeous as its counterpart in the “Unfinished” (“This is, the Sym-pho-nee” etc.)Its slow movement is a long and haunting nocturne; one recent critic describes it, quite accurately, as a reminiscence of Schubert  being remembered by Gustav Mahler, and that is accurate. The British scholar Brian Newbould has made these fragments into full symphonies, or single symphonic movements, a legacy of genuine Schubertian beauty where none existed before.  Dudamel’s program included two “demummifying” ventures by Italy’s master-meddler Luciano Berio, both quite marvelous: one a, the other Berio’s  “Rendering” of this “Schubert Tenth,” and a gathering with small ensemble of old-timey folksongs – such, for example, as the evergreen “Black, Black, Black” set for solo singer (angelic Dawn Upshaw).</div>
<div id="_mcePaste" style="overflow: hidden; position: absolute; left: -10000px; top: 0px; width: 1px; height: 1px;">The Schubert fragments, the elegant oratory of a genius literally on his deathbed, shade off into cloudy, dreamlike response in Berio’s light-textured counterpoint. Their linkage forces a dialog of styles across a century. Oddly enough, it works; the long Schubertian fagments stop the breath with their dusky beauty, while the Berio ripostes  maintain their own distinctive “commentary.”</div>
<div id="_mcePaste" style="overflow: hidden; position: absolute; left: -10000px; top: 0px; width: 1px; height: 1px;">For the ensuing magical evening of Purcell the walls of Disney Hall seemed to close in and impinge upon our imagination. Four centuries later, the dramatic intensity of Dido and Aeneas is undiminished. The flights of harmonic and melodic daring, the dissonances &#8212; the cross-relations that pit, say, an F-sharp against an F-natural, the sudden wrenching modulation, a jagged melodic line out of nowhere – all these proclaim the lasting power of this amazing-if-arrogant British genius. From Susan Graham’s delivery of Dido’s first words of lamentation – “Ah, Belinda, I am press’d…” to her electrifying final imploring – “Remember me, but Ah! Forget my fate…” that joyous hall seemed sucked dry by tragedy irresistibly delivered, the needle-pricks of the strings of Nichola McGegan’s  Philharmonia Baroque visiting  from Berkeley.</div>
<div id="_mcePaste" style="overflow: hidden; position: absolute; left: -10000px; top: 0px; width: 1px; height: 1px;">Graham, whom I had mostly heard in bel-canto and other Rossinian hi-jinks, delivered haunting, arching vocal lines with a fine command of vocal color, and with the strength to control coloration at an amazing range of vocal strength. I love looking at her tall, commanding good looks, and  I love the broad range of her vocal strengths. We need her here.</div>
<div id="_mcePaste" style="overflow: hidden; position: absolute; left: -10000px; top: 0px; width: 1px; height: 1px;">AND WHILE WE’RE ON THE SUBJECT OF PHENOMENALLY TALENTED RED-HEADS:</div>
<div id="_mcePaste" style="overflow: hidden; position: absolute; left: -10000px; top: 0px; width: 1px; height: 1px;">At long last we’ve had a full-length Piano Spheres recital by LA/’s own Eric Huebner, whose coiffure suggests that his splendid brain-case may be aflame both inside and out. A Juilliard kid &#8211;among other accomplishments, he has made local jaws drop with his Messaien exploits, among others. At Zipper Hall he honored California teachers including Roger Reynolds of UC-San Diego. Dan Rothman of CalArts, Chen Yi and George Tsontakis from all around. I particularly admired the Tsontakis Ghost Variations, a big piano panoramas that sounded notes of grandeur  that awoke comparisons to Lisztian transcendental etudes, before settling back upon a paraphase of a Mozartian concerto finale (the grand and spacious K. 482).</div>
<div id="_mcePaste" style="overflow: hidden; position: absolute; left: -10000px; top: 0px; width: 1px; height: 1px;">I admire this brilliant young musician; he’s on his way. Along with the best of his generation, he fills the space of his “sphere.”</div>
<p>This message delayed because of communications breakdown; thoughts still valid&#8230;</p>
<p>Fears and doubts, couched in terms of cynicism and the old fin-de-siècle blues, may truly be set aside after last week’s Philharmonic event at Disney Hall. Our young maestro has earned his spurs not so much with another whoop-de-doo orchestral Saturnalia but with a much-loved, subtle masterwork as much known for eliciting tears as cheers. The outburst of silence that Gustavo Dudamel drew from the capacity crowd last Thursday after his performance of Schubert’s “Unfinished” Symphony spoke as eloquently as any juncture loud or soft along this thoroughly satisfactory musician’s mercurial rise to fame. What a great night of music-making!… and what music!</p>
<p>What is there about this B-minor half-symphony, this enchanted  relic, that stands it apart from the rest of the world’s trove of abandoned beauty? Its story makes for good p-r: the hand of God signaling “enough” to its suffering composer; Schubert himself realizing that that he had taken musical language past a boundary that noone had previously crossed, realizing (justifiably) that the world wasn’t yet ready for him. The orchestral language – trombones especially – proclaims sonorities that only Richard Wagner, decades later, would attempt. The harmonies – just take the spine-chilling sequence that ends the slow movement in a radiant dark luminescence – still resonate as “typically Schubertian” because nobody has tried them since.</p>
<p><a href="http://www.amazon.com/Schubert-Symphonies-No-8-Unfinished-Great/dp/B0000027XR%3FSubscriptionId%3DAKIAJ3SUMGRSQYUBSF4Q%26tag%3Dsoivehe-20%26linkCode%3Dxm2%26camp%3D2025%26creative%3D165953%26creativeASIN%3DB0000027XR"><img class="alignleft" src="http://ecx.images-amazon.com/images/I/51i3k9OEm5L._SL160_.jpg" alt="" /></a>The considerable legacy of “unfinished” Schubert forms a tantalizing bundle of scribbled pages, yellowed half-sheets of whole symphonies, separate orchestral movements, along with piano sonatas, chamber works  and songs. When I was a lad  the world acknowledged seven Schubert symphonies; now there are ten, with the newly discovered  “Tenth” looming  large on last week’s Dudamel program. It is a three-movement work, broad and oratorical in style. Its manuscript dates from 1828, Schubert’s last year. Its first movement starts with welcoming fanfares, shading off to a second theme nearly as gorgeous as its counterpart in the “Unfinished” (“This is, the Sym-pho-nee” etc.) Its slow movement is a long and haunting nocturne; one recent critic describes it, quite accurately, as a reminiscence of Schubert  being remembered by Gustav Mahler, and that is accurate. The British scholar Brian Newbould has made these fragments into full symphonies, or single symphonic movements, a legacy of genuine Schubertian beauty where none existed before.  Dudamel’s program included two “demummifying” ventures by Italy’s master-meddler Luciano Berio, both quite marvelous: one a, the other Berio’s  “Rendering” of this “Schubert Tenth,” and a gathering with small ensemble of old-timey folksongs – such, for example, as the evergreen “Black, Black, Black” set for solo singer (angelic Dawn Upshaw).</p>
<p>The Schubert fragments, the elegant oratory of a genius literally on his deathbed, shade off into cloudy, dreamlike response in Berio’s light-textured counterpoint. Their linkage forces a dialog of styles across a century. Oddly enough, it works; the long Schubertian fagments stop the breath with their dusky beauty, while the Berio ripostes  maintain their own distinctive “commentary.”</p>
<p>For the ensuing magical evening of Purcell the walls of Disney Hall seemed to close in and impinge upon our imagination. Four centuries later, the dramatic intensity of Dido and Aeneas is undiminished. The flights of harmonic and melodic daring, the dissonances &#8212; the cross-relations that pit, say, an F-sharp against an F-natural, the sudden wrenching modulation, a jagged melodic line out of nowhere – all these proclaim the lasting power of this amazing-if-arrogant British genius. From Susan Graham’s delivery of Dido’s first words of lamentation – “Ah, Belinda, I am press’d…” to her electrifying final imploring – “Remember me, but Ah! Forget my fate…” that joyous hall seemed sucked dry by tragedy irresistibly delivered, the needle-pricks of the strings of Nichola McGegan’s  Philharmonia Baroque visiting  from Berkeley.</p>
<p>Graham, whom I had mostly heard in bel-canto and other Rossinian hi-jinks, delivered haunting, arching vocal lines with a fine command of vocal color, and with the strength to control coloration at an amazing range of vocal strength. I love looking at her tall, commanding good looks, and  I love the broad range of her vocal strengths. We need her here.</p>
<p>AND WHILE WE’RE ON THE SUBJECT OF PHENOMENALLY TALENTED RED-HEADS:<br />
At long last we’ve had a full-length Piano Spheres recital by LA’s own Eric Huebner, whose coiffure suggests that his splendid brain-case may be aflame both inside and out. A Juilliard kid &#8211;among other accomplishments&#8211; he has made local jaws drop with his Messaien exploits, among others. At Zipper Hall he honored California teachers including Roger Reynolds of UC-San Diego. Dan Rothman of CalArts, Chen Yi and George Tsontakis from all around. I particularly admired the Tsontakis Ghost Variations, a big piano panoramas that sounded notes of grandeur  that awoke comparisons to Lisztian transcendental etudes, before settling back upon a paraphase of a Mozartian concerto finale (the grand and spacious K. 482).</p>
<p>I admire this brilliant young musician; he’s on his way. Along with the best of his generation, he fills the space of his “sphere.”</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>THE&#160;INNOVATORS</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2009/10/the-innovators/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2009/10/the-innovators/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Fri, 30 Oct 2009 18:51:48 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[soiveheard.com]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=3099</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[HAYDN THE HEAVEN-SENT This is a major anniversary year &#8212; for Haydn, Mendelssohn, Lincoln, etc. All are  being properly feted, none more lavishly or more deservedly, than Joseph Haydn (born 1809). On my desk sits one of many Haydn celebrations, excellent and lovable: a box containing, 21 Haydn symphonies on 7 CDs. They bear numbers [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<div id="_mcePaste" style="overflow: hidden; position: absolute; left: -10000px; top: 45px; width: 1px; height: 1px;">HAYDN THE HEAVEN-SENT This is a major anniversary year &#8212; for Haydn, Mendelssohn, Lincoln, etc. All are  being properly feted, none more lavishly or more deservedly, than Joseph Haydn (born 1809). On my desk sits one of many Haydn celebrations, excellent and lovable: a box containing, 21 Haydn symphonies on 7 CDs. They bear numbers between 41 and 90 and thus represent a “middle” period, just before that final radiance, the dozen-and-more masterworks from the London years that start with the  “Oxford” Symphony (No. 92) and end with the amazing “London” Symphony (104), whose harmonic adventures had portended a new musical language. The performances are led by Bruno Weil, whom you should also know for  his leadership of the Carmel Bach Festival. His band is the Toronto-based Tafelmusik,  whose crisp, elegant sounds make for some of the most seductive noises on any disc anywhere. I love their vision of the “classical” sound,” crisp. freshly laundered, every color highlighted to evoke your long-held  fantasy of the 18th=- century sound ideal.</div>
<div id="_mcePaste" style="overflow: hidden; position: absolute; left: -10000px; top: 45px; width: 1px; height: 1px;">What treasures! Here is a supremely talented composer at the height of his mastery, well-fed at the Esterhàzy table,  granted  free access to a resident band of the best performers money could buy, empowered to employ that virtuoso band  in  the invention of new kinds of symphonies, to dream up new structural techniques and sonorities  to gain the ear and encouragement of a with-it audience, the kind of crowd we might meet today at, say, the Green Umbrella concerts.. In residence at the Esterházy Palace, or on loan to the assembled connoisseurs at Paris’s Olympic Lodge or at the grand galas bankrolled by the London impresario J. P. Salomon, Haydn flung his marvelously inventive symphonies at an adoring public, with the assurance – seldom granted to any creative artist – that his most daring flights of fancy would be accepted, even admired.</div>
<div id="_mcePaste" style="overflow: hidden; position: absolute; left: -10000px; top: 45px; width: 1px; height: 1px;">I love the mix, of humor and suspense, of the meticulous classical melody and the rudeness of the country dance.  Take, to cite one of many instances) a C-major symphony numbered 90 (in the usual if shakily assembled chronological listing), with its finale a virtual compendium of orchestral tricks. At one point Haydn has his players come to a sudden and prolonged silence  in mid-phrase; a few bars later they resume, but in the “wrong” key, D-flat instead of the expected C.—a small distance on the keyboard but a jolt to the flesh!</div>
<div id="_mcePaste" style="overflow: hidden; position: absolute; left: -10000px; top: 45px; width: 1px; height: 1px;">Listening to Haydn symphonies – in the live performances that Esa-Pekka Salonen  gave us here,whimsical  and  loving,  or in the ASIN: B00008PXA3 grandeur of George Szell’s magisterial readings of the London series,  – becomes a special and cherishable experience The progression of themes, dramatic yet inevitable  as idea begets idea; the play of memory as themes vanish, metamorphose and then stage glorious returns; the notion of symphony as grand design and as battlefield: Haydn’s glory lies in his appeal to our powers of memory and our willingness and our appetite for surprise. His music stands as a grand monument to process, the triumphant kind of process both clear and quirky; where you always know what’s happening…</div>
<div id="_mcePaste" style="overflow: hidden; position: absolute; left: -10000px; top: 45px; width: 1px; height: 1px;">…Or think you do, at any rate. I cling to my memories of a Haydn Symphony course at Harvard, some time around 1942. G. Wallace Woodworth was the spellbinding prof; he also conducted the Glee Club, and “glee” was definitely his word. One thing he most dearly in Haydn was thats gift for surprise. “Woody” – we addressed him in no other way &#8212; would start a movement on the phonograph, and a certain point he’d pick up the tone-arm (remember tone-arms?) and, with a smile roughly the breadth of Boston Harbor, would ask the class to stage  a kind of forum on what we thought was going to happen next. Then he’d drop the needle, and nine times out of ten we had all guessed wrong. The guys would look shame-faced; the girls would giggle, and Woody and Haydn would have made their point. Sixty years later the memory of Woody’s smile still lights up my Haydn experiences..</div>
<div id="_mcePaste" style="overflow: hidden; position: absolute; left: -10000px; top: 45px; width: 1px; height: 1px;">Memorable moments abide. I love the way the Symphony 88, familiar from an old Toscanini recording (humorless and harsh of tone) sends a solo flute in delightful skittering counterpoint across some of its tunes, and encourages the kettledrums to make themselves known where least expected, its humor delightfully seconded by Weil and his superb small orchestra. In the Symphony No. 86, which Bruno Walter once recorded eloquently, a slow movement titled “Capriccio”  honors its title with unexpected, passionate outcries. The 46th Symphony is in the little-used key of B major – five sharps in the key signature! We know that Haydn’s music in keys with complex key-signatures always affects a particular richness in its harmonies, a leaning toward passion and complexity, and this is the case here &#8212; as it is also is in the F-sharp Minor “Farewell” Symphony, one of the few works in this remarkable collection that you may have heard before.</div>
<div id="_mcePaste" style="overflow: hidden; position: absolute; left: -10000px; top: 45px; width: 1px; height: 1px;">A veritable box of trickery, this Haydn trove of  21 separate and distinctive symphonic adventures. Six of them are the symphonies Haydn wrote for the Paris Olympic Lodge.   They are titled and incorporate a certain amount of pictorial cuteness – “The Bear ,” “The Hen,” which might tell us something about the tastes of Parisian sophisticates on the eve of their country’s revolution. Another group of works, symphonies of   have earned the collective title of the “Sturm und Drang” Symphonies a reflection of taste in the time of Schiller and Goethe</div>
<div id="_mcePaste" style="overflow: hidden; position: absolute; left: -10000px; top: 45px; width: 1px; height: 1px;">His musical trickery is are by turns startling and amusing, but these are only flecks on a  surface. Far more important, to these ears anyhow, is the over-all  impression you get from these lovely essays,  or any gathering  of half-hours in Haydn’s blithe company, that here was a composer wise  and daring, supremely fortunate (as few in his profession have been) with employment conditions that included  his total freedom to experiment with the boundaries of accepted musical structure and style, and to push them back as far as his artistic conscience allowed. Not merely the “Father of the Symphony” of the music-appreciation racketeers (to evoke Virgil Thomson’s precious analogy) he was more the unruly big brother, the family black sheep. Beyond this, it also seems to me that the music room at MEsterház could easily have qualified as as The Green Umbrella of its day.</div>
<div id="_mcePaste" style="overflow: hidden; position: absolute; left: -10000px; top: 45px; width: 1px; height: 1px;">MANY ROOMS: Actually, the spirit of newness and the joy of exploration filled many rooms these past few weeks.  Two of our most imaginative,  best-planned, courageous and stimulating concert series – PianoSpheres at Zipper Hall and Jacaranda at Santa Monica’s First Pres &#8212; sprang into action in adjacent weeks, both greeted with enthusiasm and delight by properly capacity crowds, Gloria Cheng,  B0019QEY4W</div>
<div id="_mcePaste" style="overflow: hidden; position: absolute; left: -10000px; top: 45px; width: 1px; height: 1px;">our precious piano pioneer, drew a fine, full house at Zipper, even against the competition of a Murray Perahia recital at Disney across the street. Her concert, the season’s first PianoSpheres enterprise, offered an enticing, imaginative mishmash &#8212; handsomely delivered in the blend of eager artistry and flawless technique  that are Gloria’s glory: a mist-shrouded piano+tape relic by Luigi Nono, an equally enchanting, fogbound essay by Tom Adès, Alfred Schnittke’s sozzled, gesturesome Piano Quintet (with the excellent Calder Quartet in collaboration), Andrew Waggoner’s sleep-inducing modern take on the ancient dance “La Folie” and, best of all to my taste, John Harbison’s set of  “Anagrams” on the name of the PianoSpheres founding saint, Leonard Stein. Shorter in length and perhaps more reticent than anything else on this varied, imaginative program, the Harbison was the work that people seemed most eager to praise,  out on the sidewalk after the concert. And with good reason.</div>
<div id="_mcePaste" style="overflow: hidden; position: absolute; left: -10000px; top: 45px; width: 1px; height: 1px;">JACARANDA BLOSSOMS: In Santa Monica the season began for this most admirable chamber-music series, and I cannot remember (or even want to remember) a better-imagined, better-played program supercharged ßwith the pleasure of discovery that you could somehow feel and share on either side of the stage.</div>
<div id="_mcePaste" style="overflow: hidden; position: absolute; left: -10000px; top: 45px; width: 1px; height: 1px;">Ben Johnston’s Fourth Quartet has been co-opted by Jacaranda’s Denali Quartet; its brash and aggressive harmonies seem to generate hordes of new friends with every playing. (I heard it first at a private concert, with the 85-year composer in pleased attendance, some months ago. The work is a set of free variations on the old Slavey hymn-tune “Amazing Grace”; and Johnston, music’s great renegade, has made free use of the harmonies of old-time organs and fiddles, as if to return to its own nativity. The Denali has made it their own – progressively so; this was my fourth hearing. The partnership of Jacaranda’s programming genius and the young energy of its performing forces has created an inimitable standard in local music-making.</div>
<div id="_mcePaste" style="overflow: hidden; position: absolute; left: -10000px; top: 45px; width: 1px; height: 1px;">“Programming genius?” Saturday’s concert began with Morty Feldman’s Rothko Chapel,SC10622 his evocation of that haunting Texas artwork for small chorus, drums and an ecstatic solo viola, the work of Feldman’s most easy to describe as “beautiful.”. Then came Ben Johnston’s Fourth Quartet, its radiance intensified by the handsome small church that  Jacaranda calls ome. Then – wonder of wonders!!—there came music from that legendary masterwork we all long to have in our midst, Einstein on the Beach: not with Bob Wilson’s magical, madcap sets and staging, but at least with half-an-hour of Philip Glass’s music, B000005J28 enough to intensify our craving for the entire work on a local stage sometime in our lifetime.</div>
<div id="_mcePaste" style="overflow: hidden; position: absolute; left: -10000px; top: 45px; width: 1px; height: 1px;">These were Einstein’s “Knee-Plays,” the interlude pieces that served as flexible joints between episodes. A chorus intoned  quick sequences of numbers, which in the original could be seen dancing on a back screen. A solo voice (KUSC’s Gail Eichenthal) intoned the near-jabberwock of an autistic child (the young Christopher Knowles back then, whom Wilson had adopted and groomed into an artistic career). A violinist (Joel Pargman) delivers roulades and cadenzas, symbolic of Einstein’s violinistic skills. If you have evolved a supicion that this doesn’t make sense, you just haven’t discovered the magnificent rationale of Einstein on the Beach.</div>
<div id="_mcePaste" style="overflow: hidden; position: absolute; left: -10000px; top: 45px; width: 1px; height: 1px;">Even unstaged, undanced and unorchestrated, this Einstein teaser &#8212; led by Grant Gershon  and with the L.A. Children’s Chorus and with Sandra Tsing Loh and Ken Page also among the narrators – makes a convincing case for the whole kaboodle, and sometime soon. So, in fact did this entire superlative concert venture.</div>
<p><img class="alignleft size-full wp-image-3101" title="Haydn" src="http://soiveheard.com/wp-content/uploads/2009/10/Haydn_caricature.jpg" alt="Haydn" width="168" height="223" />HAYDN THE HEAVEN-SENT This is a major anniversary year &#8212; for Haydn, Mendelssohn, Lincoln, etc. All are  being properly feted, none more lavishly or more deservedly, than Joseph Haydn (born 1809). On my desk sits one of many Haydn celebrations, excellent and lovable: a box containing, 21 Haydn symphonies on 7 CDs. They bear numbers between 41 and 90 and thus represent a “middle” period, just before that final radiance, the dozen-and-more masterworks from the London years that start with the  “Oxford” Symphony (No. 92) and end with the amazing “London” Symphony (104), whose harmonic adventures had portended a new musical language. The performances are led by Bruno Weil, whom you should also know for  his leadership of the Carmel Bach Festival. His band is the Toronto-based Tafelmusik,  whose crisp, elegant sounds make for some of the most seductive noises on any disc anywhere. I love their vision of the “classical” sound,” crisp. freshly laundered, every color highlighted to evoke your long-held  fantasy of the 18th=- century sound ideal.</p>
<p>What treasures! Here is a supremely talented composer at the height of his mastery, well-fed at the Esterhàzy table,  granted  free access to a resident band of the best performers money could buy, empowered to employ that virtuoso band  in  the invention of new kinds of symphonies, to dream up new structural techniques and sonorities  to gain the ear and encouragement of a with-it audience, the kind of crowd we might meet today at, say, the Green Umbrella concerts.. In residence at the Esterházy Palace, or on loan to the assembled connoisseurs at Paris’s Olympic Lodge or at the grand galas bankrolled by the London impresario J. P. Salomon, Haydn flung his marvelously inventive symphonies at an adoring public, with the assurance – seldom granted to any creative artist – that his most daring flights of fancy would be accepted, even admired.</p>
<p>I love the mix, of humor and suspense, of the meticulous classical melody and the rudeness of the country dance.  Take, to cite one of many instances) a C-major symphony numbered 90 (in the usual if shakily assembled chronological listing), with its finale a virtual compendium of orchestral tricks. At one point Haydn has his players come to a sudden and prolonged silence  in mid-phrase; a few bars later they resume, but in the “wrong” key, D-flat instead of the expected C.—a small distance on the keyboard but a jolt to the flesh!</p>
<p><a href="http://www.amazon.com/Haydn-Symphonies-Nos-92-94/dp/B00008PXA3%3FSubscriptionId%3DAKIAJ3SUMGRSQYUBSF4Q%26tag%3Dsoivehe-20%26linkCode%3Dxm2%26camp%3D2025%26creative%3D165953%26creativeASIN%3DB00008PXA3"><img class="alignleft" src="http://ecx.images-amazon.com/images/I/219F1W8N6JL._SL160_.jpg" alt="" /></a>Listening to Haydn symphonies – in the live performances that Esa-Pekka Salonen  gave us here,whimsical  and  loving,  or in the grandeur of George Szell’s magisterial readings of the London series,  – becomes a special and cherishable experience The progression of themes, dramatic yet inevitable  as idea begets idea; the play of memory as themes vanish, metamorphose and then stage glorious returns; the notion of symphony as grand design and as battlefield: Haydn’s glory lies in his appeal to our powers of memory and our willingness and our appetite for surprise. His music stands as a grand monument to process, the triumphant kind of process both clear and quirky; where you always know what’s happening…</p>
<p>…Or think you do, at any rate. I cling to my memories of a Haydn Symphony course at Harvard, some time around 1942. G. Wallace Woodworth was the spellbinding prof; he also conducted the Glee Club, and “glee” was definitely his word. One thing he most dearly in Haydn was thats gift for surprise. “Woody” – we addressed him in no other way &#8212; would start a movement on the phonograph, and a certain point he’d pick up the tone-arm (remember tone-arms?) and, with a smile roughly the breadth of Boston Harbor, would ask the class to stage  a kind of forum on what we thought was going to happen next. Then he’d drop the needle, and nine times out of ten we had all guessed wrong. The guys would look shame-faced; the girls would giggle, and Woody and Haydn would have made their point. Sixty years later the memory of Woody’s smile still lights up my Haydn experiences..</p>
<p>Memorable moments abide. I love the way the Symphony 88, familiar from an old Toscanini recording (humorless and harsh of tone) sends a solo flute in delightful skittering counterpoint across some of its tunes, and encourages the kettledrums to make themselves known where least expected, its humor delightfully seconded by Weil and his superb small orchestra. In the Symphony No. 86, which Bruno Walter once recorded eloquently, a slow movement titled “Capriccio”  honors its title with unexpected, passionate outcries. The 46th Symphony is in the little-used key of B major – five sharps in the key signature! We know that Haydn’s music in keys with complex key-signatures always affects a particular richness in its harmonies, a leaning toward passion and complexity, and this is the case here &#8212; as it is also is in the F-sharp Minor “Farewell” Symphony, one of the few works in this remarkable collection that you may have heard before.</p>
<p>A veritable box of trickery, this Haydn trove of  21 separate and distinctive symphonic adventures. Six of them are the symphonies Haydn wrote for the Paris Olympic Lodge.   They are titled and incorporate a certain amount of pictorial cuteness – “The Bear ,” “The Hen,” which might tell us something about the tastes of Parisian sophisticates on the eve of their country’s revolution. Another group of works, symphonies of   have earned the collective title of the “Sturm und Drang” Symphonies a reflection of taste in the time of Schiller and Goethe</p>
<p>His musical trickery is are by turns startling and amusing, but these are only flecks on a  surface. Far more important, to these ears anyhow, is the over-all  impression you get from these lovely essays,  or any gathering  of half-hours in Haydn’s blithe company, that here was a composer wise  and daring, supremely fortunate (as few in his profession have been) with employment conditions that included  his total freedom to experiment with the boundaries of accepted musical structure and style, and to push them back as far as his artistic conscience allowed. Not merely the “Father of the Symphony” of the music-appreciation racketeers (to evoke Virgil Thomson’s precious analogy) he was more the unruly big brother, the family black sheep. Beyond this, it also seems to me that the music room at Mesterház could easily have qualified as as The Green Umbrella of its day.</p>
<p><a href="http://www.amazon.com/Piano-Music-Salonen-Stucky-Lutoslawski/dp/B0019QEY4W%3FSubscriptionId%3DAKIAJ3SUMGRSQYUBSF4Q%26tag%3Dsoivehe-20%26linkCode%3Dxm2%26camp%3D2025%26creative%3D165953%26creativeASIN%3DB0019QEY4W"><img class="alignleft" src="http://ecx.images-amazon.com/images/I/51PPVc2SN6L._SL160_.jpg" alt="" /></a>MANY ROOMS: Actually, the spirit of newness and the joy of exploration filled many rooms these past few weeks.  Two of our most imaginative,  best-planned, courageous and stimulating concert series – PianoSpheres at Zipper Hall and Jacaranda at Santa Monica’s First Pres &#8212; sprang into action in adjacent weeks, both greeted with enthusiasm and delight by properly capacity crowds, Gloria Cheng, our precious piano pioneer, drew a fine, full house at Zipper, even against the competition of a Murray Perahia recital at Disney across the street. Her concert, the season’s first PianoSpheres enterprise, offered an enticing, imaginative mishmash &#8212; handsomely delivered in the blend of eager artistry and flawless technique  that are Gloria’s glory: a mist-shrouded piano+tape relic by Luigi Nono, an equally enchanting, fogbound essay by Tom Adès, Alfred Schnittke’s sozzled, gesturesome Piano Quintet (with the excellent Calder Quartet in collaboration), Andrew Waggoner’s sleep-inducing modern take on the ancient dance “La Folie” and, best of all to my taste, John Harbison’s set of  “Anagrams” on the name of the PianoSpheres founding saint, Leonard Stein. Shorter in length and perhaps more reticent than anything else on this varied, imaginative program, the Harbison was the work that people seemed most eager to praise,  out on the sidewalk after the concert. And with good reason.</p>
<p>JACARANDA BLOSSOMS: In Santa Monica the season began for this most admirable chamber-music series, and I cannot remember (or even want to remember) a better-imagined, better-played program supercharged with the pleasure of discovery that you could somehow feel and share on either side of the stage.</p>
<p><a href="http://www.amazon.com/Ben-Johnston-String-Quartets/dp/B000CSUMYY%3FSubscriptionId%3DAKIAJ3SUMGRSQYUBSF4Q%26tag%3Dsoivehe-20%26linkCode%3Dxm2%26camp%3D2025%26creative%3D165953%26creativeASIN%3DB000CSUMYY"><img class="alignleft" src="http://ecx.images-amazon.com/images/I/51mB1YYsDXL._SL160_.jpg" alt="" /></a>Ben Johnston’s Fourth Quartet has been co-opted by Jacaranda’s Denali Quartet; its brash and aggressive harmonies seem to generate hordes of new friends with every playing. (I heard it first at a private concert, with the 85-year composer in pleased attendance, some months ago. The work is a set of free variations on the old Slavey hymn-tune “Amazing Grace”; and Johnston, music’s great renegade, has made free use of the harmonies of old-time organs and fiddles, as if to return to its own nativity. The Denali has made it their own – progressively so; this was my fourth hearing. The partnership of Jacaranda’s programming genius and the young energy of its performing forces has created an inimitable standard in local music-making.</p>
<p><a href="http://www.amazon.com/Morton-Feldman-Stephan-Christian-Cambridge/dp/B00006JR0C%3FSubscriptionId%3DAKIAJ3SUMGRSQYUBSF4Q%26tag%3Dsoivehe-20%26linkCode%3Dxm2%26camp%3D2025%26creative%3D165953%26creativeASIN%3DB00006JR0C"><img class="alignleft" src="http://ecx.images-amazon.com/images/I/41491RYXRCL._SL160_.jpg" alt="" /></a>“Programming genius?” Saturday’s concert began with Morty Feldman’s <em>Rothko Chapel</em>,his evocation of that haunting Texas artwork for small chorus, drums and an ecstatic solo viola, the work of Feldman’s most easy to describe as “beautiful.”. Then came Ben Johnston’s Fourth Quartet, its radiance intensified by the handsome small church that  Jacaranda calls ome. Then – wonder of wonders!!—there came music from that legendary masterwork we all long to have in our midst, <em>Einstein on the Beach</em>: not with Bob Wilson’s magical, madcap sets and staging, but at least with half-an-hour of Philip Glass’s music, enough to intensify our craving for the entire work on a local stage sometime in our lifetime.</p>
<p><img class="alignleft" src="http://ecx.images-amazon.com/images/I/51qiZwS45jL._SL160_.jpg" alt="" /></p>
<p>These were <em>Einstein’s</em> “Knee-Plays,” the interlude pieces that served as flexible joints between episodes. A chorus intoned  quick sequences of numbers, which in the original could be seen dancing on a back screen. A solo voice (KUSC’s Gail Eichenthal) intoned the near-jabberwock of an autistic child (the young Christopher Knowles back then, whom Wilson had adopted and groomed into an artistic career). A violinist (Joel Pargman) delivers roulades and cadenzas, symbolic of Einstein’s violinistic skills. If you have evolved a supicion that this doesn’t make sense, you just haven’t discovered the magnificent rationale of <em>Einstein on the Beach</em>.</p>
<p>Even unstaged, undanced and unorchestrated, this <em>Einstein</em> teaser &#8212; led by Mark Alan Hilt  and with the L.A. Children’s Chorus and with Sandra Tsing Loh and Ken Page also among the narrators – makes a convincing case for the whole kaboodle, and sometime soon. So, in fact did this entire superlative concert venture.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>GUSTAV, GUSTAVO, BUON&#160;GUSTO</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2009/10/gustav-gustavo-buon-gusto/</link>
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		<pubDate>Fri, 23 Oct 2009 16:10:30 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[soiveheard.com]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=3096</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[ARRIVALS: My favorite Dudamel moment (so far) occurs during his 2007 performance of Bartók’s  Concerto for Orchestra – the performance in  Disney Hall, about two years into his romance with the L.A. Philharmonic and which you now can download via iTunes and buy for not very many bucks. The second movement of that wonderful work [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>ARRIVALS: My favorite Dudamel moment (so far) occurs during his 2007 performance of Bartók’s  <em>Concerto for Orchestra</em> – the performance in  Disney Hall, about two years into his romance with the L.A. Philharmonic and which you now can download via iTunes and buy for not very many bucks. The second movement of that wonderful work is a special delight, a scherzo built out of instruments in pairs exchanging wry jokes with an intervening serious interlude. It’s the music of an elderly but energetic great artist caught in an atypical warm-hearted mood. The young  Gustavo had brought the orchestra into this frame of mind; the music fairly gleams with its quotient of captivating  ironies. The wit content is high, but so is the tenderness, in these eight-or-so minutes of orchestral magic. Beyond all the acclaim for his daredevil orchestral command – vividly demonstrated to a sold-out, justifiably ecstatic Disney audience at his so-called inaugural last Thursday night, the word turned a little faster one night last week, to honor  the occasion of Gustavo Dudamel’s arrival at the Philharmonic podium now officially his.</p>
<p>He confirmed that claim in the grand manner: a challenging contrast of a familiar large-scale work and another work of similar scale, not yet known but equipped with convenient handles: a living (respectably) and well-known composer, with a scenario set on familiar nearby streets. Gustav Mahler and John Adams are not everyone’s inevitable choice as program-mates, yet the pairing carried its own message: our orchestra,  even in these harassing times, is still dedicated to the responsive listeners’ collective intelligence  as well as their tapping toes.  Add to this welcome news the tidings that the new leadership has convincingly demonstrated – on this joyous occasion last week, and on the many of similar promise in the past several years – its capability to maintain, and to strengthen, the promises held forward in the previous weeks.</p>
<p>We  have a marvelous orchestra on our hands, a phenomenal talent on its podium, an audience that, so far at least, simply radiates satisfaction and good will, a quality unique these days in the large concert halls of the world. It is a lovely gesture, and and a not insignificant one, that Gustavo prefers to take his bows in close communion with the orchestra members. “We’re in this together” he seems to say, and there is no better way to shape a great symphony orchestra. Nothing made this any more clear than the concert’s opening: no fanfares, no anthems, no feasting until ‘way later, and a substantial new score by John Adams that, if anything, marks a kind of arrival for the composer as well.</p>
<p><a href="http://www.amazon.com/Naive-Sentimental-Music-John-Adams/dp/B00005UW1A%3FSubscriptionId%3DAKIAJ3SUMGRSQYUBSF4Q%26tag%3Dsoivehe-20%26linkCode%3Dxm2%26camp%3D2025%26creative%3D165953%26creativeASIN%3DB00005UW1A"><img class="alignleft" src="http://ecx.images-amazon.com/images/I/5148axGBg1L._SL160_.jpg" alt="" /></a><em>City Noir</em> taps into Adams’s long-time adoration for California, a passion we Harvard-bred New Englanders are uniquely qualified to share. His California this time is the land of Raymond Chandler detectives played by Bogart, on dark streets made frantic by Barbara Stanwyck sirens. Its colors are slashing reds and purples of a cluster of tenor saxophones, with the doleful bleat of a trumpet solo to beg for our sympathy. This is not, then, the Adams of political or atomic science as a spectator sport, but rather as a master of the symphonic structure: Naïve.</p>
<p style="text-align: left;"><a href="http://www.amazon.com/Adams-Violin-Concerto-Shaker-Loops/dp/B000005J3B%3FSubscriptionId%3DAKIAJ3SUMGRSQYUBSF4Q%26tag%3Dsoivehe-20%26linkCode%3Dxm2%26camp%3D2025%26creative%3D165953%26creativeASIN%3DB000005J3B"><img src="http://ecx.images-amazon.com/images/I/21iRPu%2B-O7L._SL160_.jpg" alt="" /></a><em>Naïve and Sentimental Music</em>, the Violin Concerto and now this. Those enamored by Adams’s stature as the harbinger of “the new accessibility” may be put off now and then by the direct onslaught of a few pages of <em>City Noir</em>; it is a good, deep, tough work, the arrival into unfamiliar territory by its composer, a step ahead for all of us.</p>
<p><a href="http://www.amazon.com/Mahler-Symphony-No-5/dp/B000UNMUFK%3FSubscriptionId%3DAKIAJ3SUMGRSQYUBSF4Q%26tag%3Dsoivehe-20%26linkCode%3Dxm2%26camp%3D2025%26creative%3D165953%26creativeASIN%3DB000UNMUFK"><img class="alignleft" src="http://ecx.images-amazon.com/images/I/51QzQxwh9%2BL._SL160_.jpg" alt="" /></a>Came the Mahler First, and the music for another kind of landscape: vast. serene  and sunlit, then triumphantly aflame. Perhaps there were no real  no surprises in Dudamel’s unfolding of Mahler, this garrulous, eager music, unless you count the remarkable rapport that rendered inconsequential any presumed clash of national spirits – Latino v. Wiener in this case. (And also, perhaps. it’s high time to drop that presumption and accept the splendid compatibility, already clearly apparent, between this omnivorous new  guy in town and the musical world around him?  His radiant Mahler performances hang fiercely aglow in favoring air.. The  First Symphony’sdelicious wit, the irresistible bombast, the hundred-percent-pure brass of the ending – these combined for that enchanted evening of our fervent prayers. Yes, it actually happened. Now comes the hard work &#8212; for the abundantly able musical forces here at hand as their accomplishments light up our landscape.</p>
<p>MY WEEKLY HORROR STORY: Word is in, from exotic Detroit, anent some interesting policy changes at that city’s local Symphony. Seems as how conductor Leonard Slatkin plans a certain amount of rampage. Next season the Beethoven Fifth will be played minus the first five bars (the generative source for the entire symphony, remember?) “Everyone knows how they go,” explains a DSO rep. Another famous opener, the bassoon solo that initiates <em>The Rite of Spring</em> will be replaced by a solo tuba “Bassoonists get plenty of solos. Why not let someone else have at it?” says Detroit’s conductor, our old friend Slatkin. The orchestra will be seated with their backs to the audience. “I feel that listeners are distracted by seeing the faces of the musicians,” says Slatkin. Rachmaninoff’s Second Symphony, which normally meanders through the orchestra for around 70 minutes, will now clock in at twelve. Slatkin: “The piece is long and repetitive. Once you have heard the main themes they are so memorable that they don’t have to be played again.” Mr. Slatkin also spoke recently about producing a Bruckner cycle: the nine symphonies – which normally run over an  hour each &#8211;  plus the two unpublished ones, “ It is my hope,” he said, “to get through all of them in one concert.”</p>
<p><a href="http://www.amazon.com/Schoenberg-Verkl%C3%A4rte-Nacht-Schubert-Quintet/dp/B000003XID%3FSubscriptionId%3DAKIAJ3SUMGRSQYUBSF4Q%26tag%3Dsoivehe-20%26linkCode%3Dxm2%26camp%3D2025%26creative%3D165953%26creativeASIN%3DB000003XID"><img class="alignleft" src="http://ecx.images-amazon.com/images/I/41GKJVJB6RL._SL160_.jpg" alt="" /></a>Maestro Slatkin, may I remind you, is the son of two great Los Angeles musicians, Felix Slatkin and Eleanor Aller, whose Hollywood String Quartet once performed and recorded great, honorable – and uncut – performances. Their  CD of Schubert’s C-major Quintet is what I play for friends to demonstrate honest musicianship. Go figure.</p>
<p>FOR THOSE WHO CAN’T GET ENOUGH OF ME  (Hi, Mom!): Check out <a href="http://www.bluefat.com">www.bluefat.com</a>. Bluefat is John Payne’s arts Website for which I’m doing some music crit. John was my first editor at LA Weekly, and a strong critical voice in areas I cannot pretend to understand. His new site is attractive, and the ediditing is dpot-on.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>BEGINNINGS,&#160;BEGINNERS</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2009/10/beginnings-beginners/</link>
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		<pubDate>Wed, 07 Oct 2009 19:18:15 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[soiveheard.com]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=3091</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[High over Cahuenga Pass, the fireworks spelled out the evening’s message: “Bienvenido Gustavo!” Others in the Philharmonic’s history among our ten previous music directors – Salonen, Previn, Giulini &#8212; had acceded more-or-less quietly to their podiums; not so, our new wonder-kid. The Dudamel era exploded into sight and sound last week in an evening of [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><img class="alignleft size-full wp-image-3092" title="Maestro in action; Dudamel" src="http://soiveheard.com/wp-content/uploads/2009/10/pastedGraphic.jpg" alt="Maestro in action; Dudamel" width="320" height="194" />High over Cahuenga Pass, the fireworks spelled out the evening’s message: “Bienvenido Gustavo!” Others in the Philharmonic’s history among our  ten previous music directors – Salonen, Previn, Giulini &#8212;  had acceded more-or-less quietly to their podiums; not so, our new wonder-kid. The Dudamel era exploded into sight and sound last week in an evening of hoopla at the Hollywood Bowl, with nary a whimper but one helluva bang. Could there be a soul, from the heights of here to the sloughs of Chicago, not touched by the news of Gustavo’s installation, and the bright horizons thereby revealed? The era  had begun with a final sop to the cynics: the young maestro, his famous bouncy curls newly shorn, caged  &#8212; as was the shorn  Samson – obviously minutely programmed   in the lingo of the press-conference routine, reeling off a routine string of answers: “I love music, I love Los Angeles, Beethoven, y’know, I love my Youth Orchestra, y’know”.</p>
<p>At the Bowl the aforementioned YOLA &#8212; the Youth Orchestra of L.A. founded under Philharmonic auspices to replicate the legendary Venezuelan curriculum out of which Dudamel had emerged  &#8212;  led off the Bowl festivities with a chunk of the Beethoven Ninth that sounded like – well, like a newly-founded youth orchestra not yet anchored in the niceties of tuning. But this was only a teaser to the evening’s main music.</p>
<p>A Dudamel Ninth? The doubters might mumble about sending a boy on a man’s errand; they’d be wrong. This was a splendid performance on its way to greatness, its daunting dimensions intelligently managed. The anger of its beginning – the D-minor uprush that both commands and challenges our attention, emerged from Dudamel’s baton, both beautiful and craggy; the scoring for winds, for clarinets and bassoons throughout this astonishing movement, that is the greatest of Beethovenian sounds, was marvelously dispatched as if by an orchestral master who has lived a lifetime with this sublime music, The fury of the Scherzo, the violence of its thrusts from strings and timpani, were properly agonized. Even more beautiful were the quiet sounds, the texture of the achingly lovely slow movement, a nocturnal rapture under the Hollywood sky.  And despite the leveling imposed by the Bowl’s troubled amplification, this performance came across sounding like, well, like Beethoven. So, surprising enough, did the vocal contingent: a picked group from Grant Gershon’s Master Chorale and, among the soloists, a particularly forceful tenor solo by Toby Spence.</p>
<p>A triumphant event in Philharmonic public relations, &#8212; with all 18,000 tickets free for the asking, a crowd reasonably attentive and air traffic only down to a mere two intruders – it came down to a major musical event as well. The acumen of management, in nailing down this phenomenal young musician from the grasp of an avid competition, has now been crowned. Gustavo has been welcomed, and he is, indeed, welcome</p>
<p><strong>LEGACY<br />
</strong>Between Richard’s Wagner’s <em>Ring des Nibelungen</em> and the Beethoven Ninth there are interesting lines of musical correspondence; it is a measure of our musical growth that both towering works dominate  our conversations here in town these days. Just the notion that both artworks begin on their respective stages by emerging  from dark musical cloud-banks to an  ultimate triumph had a major influence on composers throughout the Romanic era; start your tracing with Anton Bruckner, and keep going.</p>
<p>Achim Freyer’s <em>Ring</em> – his rethinking, design and production of Wagner’s immense conception, is now three-quarters complete. <em>Die Götterdämmerung</em> the last of the cycle, rings in in June, 2010, Then the whole kaboodle goes through two complete repeats during that month, while the whole city gorges itself on the schnitzel, strudel and whatever else it takes  to affect a “Ring Festival” and “Deutschland über Alles”outlook to make Achim Freyer and his creativie impulses feel at home.</p>
<p>Never mind the schnitzel (for  now); what Freyer has done for Los Angeles has been to endow the city with an artistic attitude, deriving from a central artwork of world-renowned stature. Freyer’s own work, imposed on Wagner’s cycle, comprises an innovation propelled by an arrogance of creative spirit, such that any serious artist must deem essential to his art. In this <em>Ring</em> sight and sound blend into one further dimension, toward an interlock of the senses. His twins in <em>Die Walküre</em> are defined by costume differences; Wotan derives his authority from an expanded headpiece; Fricka, by a grotesquely expanded right arm; his evil dwarfs {Mime, Alberich} sing through head-covering masks that raise the meaning of ‘grotesque’ several levels. Siegfried’s Fafner, not the usual wind-up toy. Is transformed in Freyer’s vision into a crusty old codger in a bathrobe, his dragon-ness  affirmed by a couple of dorsal fins. The basic Ring stage is a circular, raked structure – “a running track” says Freyer &#8212;  that expands and breaks apart, all symbolically. Much is left for the observer to puzzle out; one curious  device is a huge, illuminated human eye that hangs over the stage and changes color. Wotan had lost an eye in an early battle and now it is back to haunt him</p>
<p>What is in Freyer’s stage is important; what isn’t is no less crucial. His work is deeply involving, and we are left free to imagine along with his own imagination. Sleep through a Wagner drama, as some pride themselves on doing, and you have missed several levels of action, of meaning.</p>
<p>Of vocal stars there is a paucity, alas: no Flagstad or Nilsson, no Melchior; a <em>Siegfried</em> without a Siegfried. . James Conlon’s splendid orchestra urges the action ever forward, but its urging is lost on <em>Siegfried’s</em> lovers, the up-tight, shrill Brünnhilde of Linda Watson, the drab, unmotivated Siegfried of John Treleaven (the woebegone Tristan of a few months ago). Conlon’s pre-performance talks are a further enhancement at all these performances. Among other redeeming graces, I richly admired the dark eloquence of Vitalij Kowaljow’s Wotan in the three music dramas  that are his to ennoble; his long Q&amp;A in <em>Siegfried</em>, with Graham Clark’s delightfully antic Mime, have the best singing in the cycle that I’ve heard so far. Yes, including Plácido’s.</p>
<p>A propos Graham Clark: He is also the Mime (pronounced Mee-meh, by the way), no less delightful. In the Opus Arte DVD of <em>Siegfried</em>, part of a 2004 Ring from Berlin, filmed in Barcelona, directed by Harry Kupfer, conducted by Daniel Barenboim. Treleaven is, once again, the Siegfried, but Deborah Polaski’s Brünnhilde makes partial amends and the Kupfer-Barenboim <em>Ring</em> is wholly girdled  by a ring of truth.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Part&#160;Four</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2009/09/part-four/</link>
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		<pubDate>Wed, 23 Sep 2009 18:31:50 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[soiveheard.com]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[Expectations, about what a symphony by this renowned “holy minimalist” – with a resplendent legacy of choral masterworks  to back up his reputation &#8211; Arvo Pärt’s Fourth Symphony was one of the new works introduced by the Philharmonic earlier this year, honoring Esa-Pekka Salonen’s departure from the podium he had so long ennobled. The Symphony [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><img class="alignleft size-full wp-image-3085" title="Arvo_Part" src="http://soiveheard.com/wp-content/uploads/2009/09/Arvo_Part.jpg" alt="Arvo_Part" width="200" height="250" /><em>Expectations, about what a symphony by this renowned “holy minimalist” – with a resplendent legacy of choral masterworks  to back up his reputation &#8211;</em></p>
<p><a href="http://www.amazon.com/Tabula-Rasa-Arvo-Part/dp/B0000262K7%3FSubscriptionId%3DAKIAJ3SUMGRSQYUBSF4Q%26tag%3Dsoivehe-20%26linkCode%3Dxm2%26camp%3D2025%26creative%3D165953%26creativeASIN%3DB0000262K7"><img class="alignleft" src="http://ecx.images-amazon.com/images/I/61FMPFPEVKL._SL160_.gif" alt="" /></a>Arvo Pärt’s Fourth Symphony was one of the new works introduced by the Philharmonic earlier this year, honoring Esa-Pekka Salonen’s departure from the podium he had so long ennobled. The Symphony had its premiere on January 9. A live recording was made by Deutsche Grammophon, will be released  for download on iTunes October 22 , on disc soon after. A promotional disc is already at hand, and it’s all I’ve been listening to for the past couple of weeks.</p>
<p><a href="http://www.amazon.com/Arvo-Part-Kaljuste-Estonian-Philharmonic/dp/B000024ZDF%3FSubscriptionId%3DAKIAJ3SUMGRSQYUBSF4Q%26tag%3Dsoivehe-20%26linkCode%3Dxm2%26camp%3D2025%26creative%3D165953%26creativeASIN%3DB000024ZDF"><img class="alignleft" src="http://ecx.images-amazon.com/images/I/51Mo9Lc8rWL._SL160_.jpg" alt="" /></a>Expectations, about what a symphony by this renowned “holy minimalist” – with a resplendent legacy of choral masterworks  to back up his reputation &#8211; might sound like, might encompass, do not work very well in this context. True, the work’s scoring <em>looks</em> sparse : strings, with percussion and harp, but that offers no clue to the amazing, resonant sound of the music in actuality. It is 37 minutes long. Most of all, the Symphony is built on melody: long, sinuous lines that twine round one another with mounting  emotional intensity. The work opens like that: a line for the low strings, set off against against a  tortuous and tortured background for high strings that makes it seem as if everything is encased in ice. You find yourself reminded of Sibelius – not the artifice and the posing of the late symphonies, but the remarkable Sibelius Fourth, with its taciturn outlook and its gnarled melodic lines that seem to skulk around one another, its thudding, menacing pizzicatos &#8212; and to form a dark, impenetrable mass of tone.</p>
<p>The ending is even more  astonishing: a terse, grim procession of sound-blocks, reminiscent of the ending of the Sibelius Fifth, but with ill-will standing in for sunshine. The DG recording captures the marvelous sound of our orchestra,  gorgeously resonant in the Disney Hall space, and also the shocked silence of the audience as this powerful new music grumbled  its way to a close.</p>
<p>A symphony by Arvo Pärt ? A <em>fourth</em> symphony at that?  His first three symphonies were journeyman works, short works reflecting he influence of  the raucous side of Soviet orchestration. The new one is a great forward stride, its shimmering sonorities resounding in Disney Hall’s acoustic setting. In form, in sound and in impact it is a great, original conception.</p>
<p>MEANWHILE…The opera season is upon us. <em>Siegfried</em> is in the final rehearsal stage as I write this; <em>L’elisir d’amore</em> proved that, however daring the company’s plans may be, they still have a knack for good old standard  operatic entertainment.</p>
<p>Delicious… James Conlon’s orchestra – the winds, especially – set up a continuous twinkle, flashing a constant gleam across Donizetti’s all-knowing essay on human frailty. The cast, mostly unknown but uniformly excellent, honored Stephen  Lawless’ charming, innocent stage plans. Everybody on both sides of the footlights seemed to be having the best possible good time, myself no exception. A new soprano from Georgia (the country not the state), Nino Machaidze, was the wonderful Adina – the next Netrebko, you might say, standing tall and stately, tossing off the bel canto roulades with an ease just this side of insolence. Giuseppe Filanoti was hardly less good as the lovesick boob Nemorino. (His “Una furtive lagrima,” the aria everybody waits for, was handsomely  delivered.)  As the huckster Dulcamara  Giorgio Caoduro did not quite erase fond memories of Salvatore Baccaloni and his scenery-swallowing vocal tricks, but then, nobody can; Nathan Gunn’s Belcore was vocally okay if a little short of swagger. A minor miracle: an opera of sweet, intimate charm, spread-eagled  across the Chandler Pavilion’s vast stage, carrying the further burden of prestige as the season’s opening-night offering,  and still made to work.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>A SUMMER ON PILLS AND&#160;NEEDLES</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2009/09/a-summer-on-pills-and-needles/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2009/09/a-summer-on-pills-and-needles/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Fri, 11 Sep 2009 03:11:15 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[soiveheard.com]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=3069</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Dateline Cahuenga Pass, August 30. It was good to be back. A series of small strokes had disarranged the components of my skull for most of the summer. I had missed most of the Hollywood Bowl season and, worse, a most interesting Ojai Festival. Now. Back again on on familiar ground I got to greet [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><em> Dateline Cahuenga Pass</em>, August 30. It was good to be back. A series of small strokes had disarranged the components of my skull for most of the summer. I had missed most of the Hollywood Bowl season and, worse, a most interesting Ojai Festival. Now. Back again on on familiar ground I got to greet old friends –the p-r gals at the Philharmonic (their free tickets!! their press passes!!!), all the other good souls that make up the eager, bristling, Los Angeles music consumership. What treasures, our Hollywood Bowl, our Philharmonic, our crowd!</p>
<p><strong>Ask Your Mama</strong> was the Bowl’s seasonal spectacular, the one yearly event planned to fill that geologic  Declivity with some kind of music likely to celebrate its own existence, fortissimo, and  inundate the bowl-shaped premises with senses-wooing sight and sound. The eponymous Mama, who casts her wisdom over an awareness was the reness of why things in the realm of black-on-white are as rotten as they sometimes can get, strides wisely through a slender and lovable  volume of Langston Hughes’   “Moods for Jazz,”: page after page of fleeting compressions of the  black-on-white life-lifestyle, many of them haiku-like in length and impact.  Laura Karpman composed or – let’s say—<em>synthesized</em> the songs; her Dad Harold is family physician of choice  to a broad segment of the local  music-supporting crowd, Her contribution is a credible pastiche of blues-tinted numbers stitched into some kind of song-cycle only distantly related to the better-known efforts of Schumann and Brahms. Each song purports to stand in for an expansion  on the chosen text-fragment of  Langston’s mournful uproar, and allows it to spin free.</p>
<p>A gathering of power vocalists had been enlisted at the Bowl to blow her music into Kingdom Come and it fairly well succeeded; it ends up as a journey through some old-timey jazz attitudes, admirably loud and radiating the comforting assurance that you’ve been there before. I missed, however, the bitterness, the seething and the irony that deservedly bear the name of Langston Hughes. The end product, sure enough, may have was the hoped-for roof-raiser. Or close, at any rate.</p>
<p>Chief among the noisemakers was one of Nature’s authentic phenomena in the sight and sound of Jessye Norman, whom I honored in bygone decades  for her haunting Sieglinde (on RCA’s venerable <em>Ring</em>) and in virtually every nameable corner of the repertory since,  an armamentum audible and physical that engulfs your every sense (including a few you never knew you had). A couple of octaves up from her wonder-work, and worthy to share  the same stage. . the artfully modulated screech of the stardust-encrusted Dnenna Freelon and the no less sizzling Aadre Aziza achieved a mop-up on whatever senses remained untouched. The pure substance of SONG filled the night-time air, song  in its pure if unrefined condition.</p>
<p><strong>And yet . . .</strong><br />
What I also missed was a sense of modulation, of the variety in a musical progression that makes you curious about what comes next. I missed too the seething, the irony that qualify these songs to bear the name of Langston Hughes. I heard instead a couple of hours’ worth of loud songs of a single fashioning, gorgeously, sung within certain cultural boundaries. For all the skill, including  the glistening scoring handily managed by George Manahan leading the Bowl  Band, Ms. Karpman’s Mama seemed bent on answering the same question repeatedly over a lengthy stretch of time. Splendid as was the sensibility of the great opera singer – as Jessye. Norman surely are  and Mss. Aziza and Freelon on their way– I  missed the element crucial to any time-consuming form, any recognizable and credible musical experience: the sense of the right people enlisted to fulfill the most appropriate task in exactly the right place. that, after all, is what words+music aim to accomplish.</p>
<p><strong>THE DON &amp; I:</strong><em><strong><br />
</strong></em><a href="http://www.amazon.com/Mozart-Giovanni-Nikiteanu-Salminen-Harnoncourt/dp/B00008G6EZ%3FSubscriptionId%3DAKIAJ3SUMGRSQYUBSF4Q%26tag%3Dsoivehe-20%26linkCode%3Dxm2%26camp%3D2025%26creative%3D165953%26creativeASIN%3DB00008G6EZ"><img class="alignleft" src="http://ecx.images-amazon.com/images/I/51dp7RSTBeL._SL160_.jpg" alt="" /></a><em>Don Giovanni</em> had been my summer companion during weeks of convalescence; it was valuable exercise explaining to Eva, my home-care nurse, such matters as how an opera plot with such insidious overtones can elicit in such sublime music. I may have created a Mozart convert. (It wouldn’t hurt!)<br />
No fewer than six DVD <em>Don Giovanni’s</em> have arrived here in recent weeks, all of them originally TV broadcasts originating in one or another European house. (The active &#8212; and therefore, precious &#8212; Naxos Company is thewn distributor of most of these.) If you’ve resisted the idea of experiencing  opera via DVD, there’s enough in his pile to challenge that resistence. Now you too can sample this operatic Golden Age that seems to have formed upon Wolfgang’s slender shoulders. Not one challenges the treasurable C D performance infused with the wisdom of Carlo Maria Giulini’s baton. Here’s just the beginnings of a sampling, part of the sustenance I have gleaned over the summer, just from that small pile of Giovannis, Nicolaus  Harnoncourt’s version can offer the wounded passion of Cecilia Bartoli’s Elvira, in a Zurich Opera production led by Nicolaus Harnoncourt, with our own Rodney Gilfry as the slender, insidious Don.</p>
<p><a href="http://www.amazon.com/Wagner-Ring-Nibelungen-Box-Set/dp/B0009BOJSO%3FSubscriptionId%3DAKIAJ3SUMGRSQYUBSF4Q%26tag%3Dsoivehe-20%26linkCode%3Dxm2%26camp%3D2025%26creative%3D165953%26creativeASIN%3DB0009BOJSO"><img class="alignleft" src="http://ecx.images-amazon.com/images/I/518S2TEZ1CL._SL160_.jpg" alt="" /></a>Come to think of it, the summer’s crop of operatic DVDs has greatly reinforced my faith in the home-TV medium as a worthy representative of the operatic experience. I sat quite spellbound at the reality of <em>Die Walkuere</em> in the Barenboim-conducted <em>Ring</em> as it handsomely spread through my sickroom, with a Siegmund hitherto unkown to me, one, Poul Elming, of thrilling vocal beauty and passion.</p>
<p><a href="http://www.amazon.com/Strauss-Rosenkavalier-Adrianne-Pieczonka/dp/B000I2IV0Q%3FSubscriptionId%3DAKIAJ3SUMGRSQYUBSF4Q%26tag%3Dsoivehe-20%26linkCode%3Dxm2%26camp%3D2025%26creative%3D165953%26creativeASIN%3DB000I2IV0Q"><img class="alignleft" src="http://ecx.images-amazon.com/images/I/51qg8g90LZL._SL160_.jpg" alt="" /></a>Under the baton of the great and much-missed Carlos Kleiber there’s a <em>Der Rosenkavalier</em>, its every antic detail lovingly etched. It stands as one Becomes one of my ten-best (or maybe even two-best) opera DVDs ever.  Of the best of all operas there is a new and wonderful  Barenboim  version from Berlin, with Rene Pape’s all-knowing Figaro and the sublime Dorothea Roschmann as his Susanna. Which do I hold among the everbest opera? Surely you don’t need me for <em>that</em>.</p>
<p>A Carlos Kleiber <em>Rosenkavalier</em>; a  Rene Jacobs <em>Figaro</em>; a Barenboim <em>Ring</em>; throw in a loose-jointed Peter Sellars  version of Handel’s <em>Theodora</em> and a Pierre Boulez <em>Pelleas et Melisande</em>; try to sell me  that we’re not in some kind of video-centered operatic “Golden Age.” – I  am delighted to differ.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Who&#039;s Afraid of the Big Bad&#160;Wolpe?</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2009/06/whos-afraid-of-the-big-bad-wolpe/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2009/06/whos-afraid-of-the-big-bad-wolpe/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 08 Jun 2009 04:04:55 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[soiveheard.com]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=3060</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[WHO’S AFRAID OF THE BIG BAD WOLPE? Surely not Eric Huebner! This is what we know about Stefan Wolpe (Born in Berlin to Jewish parents, 1902&#8211; died in New York, 1972) a member of the Bauhaus, he befriended the Dadaist Kurt Schwitters; emigrated to Palestine, 1933; to New York, 1938, supported himself by  teaching harmony [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p style="text-align: center;">WHO’S AFRAID OF THE BIG BAD WOLPE? Surely not Eric Huebner!<br />
This is what we know about Stefan Wolpe (Born in Berlin to Jewish parents, 1902&#8211; died in New York, 1972) a member of the Bauhaus, he befriended the Dadaist Kurt Schwitters; emigrated to Palestine, 1933; to New York, 1938, supported himself by  teaching harmony to jazz musicians; as head of experimental Black Mountain College, in the 1950s,  he rubbed shoulders with musical polemicists Morton Feldman, John Cage and David Tudor. His First Symphony, commissioned for Bernstein’s ill-advised  “avant-garde festival” with the NY Philharmonic in 1963, was curtailed at its premiere because of “extreme difficulty”; his knock-‘em-in-the-aisles <em><a href="http://www.amazon.com/Stefan-Wolpe-Lieder-Battle-Piece/dp/B0016V4HBK%3FSubscriptionId%3D02E5W5871AJF7PMMMS82%26tag%3Dsoivehe-20%26linkCode%3Dxm2%26camp%3D2025%26creative%3D165953%26creativeASIN%3DB0016V4HBK"><img src="http://ecx.images-amazon.com/images/I/51GolgYt3DL._SL160_.jpg" alt="" /></a><a href="http://www.amazon.com/Stefan-Wolpe-Lieder-Battle-Piece/dp/B0016V4HBK%3FSubscriptionId%3D02E5W5871AJF7PMMMS82%26tag%3Dsoivehe-20%26linkCode%3Dxm2%26camp%3D2025%26creative%3D165953%26creativeASIN%3DB0016V4HBK"><img class="aligncenter" src="http://ecx.images-amazon.com/images/I/51GolgYt3DL._SL160_.jpg" alt="" /></a>Battle Piece</em> (“Encouragements for Piano,” ‘Battles, Hopes, Difficulties, New Battles, New Hopes, No Difficulties’) was dedicated to Tudor. Beyond all this, he was one of the 20th Century’s  most potent, unquenchably inventive creative personalities.<br />
That work, the Wolpe <em>Battle Piece</em>,  formed one  bright spot of  a major and stirring weekend musical  event up at Villa Aurora, the haven in the Palisades for exiled German artists, currently maintained by that country’s Consulate General. The program&#8217;s other major work, no less complex and demanding, was the last of Victor Ulllmann’s seven Piano Sonatas, a hugely affirmative outburst built around variations on a short Schoenberg piano piece. Best known for the satirical short opera <em>Der Kaiser von Atlantis</em> (performed in Long Beach last month) composed during his imprisonment at the Teresienstadt camp, Ullmann included in his Sonata the inscription “<em>The right of performance remains with the composer.</em>” Shortly after completing the work, Ullmann was transported to Auschwitz and its gas ovens.<br />
The concert at Villa Aurora was an important event, a gathering of  music created as mortal fears darkened Germany’s skies, valuable and  interesting programming by the Villa’s newly appointed Program Director, Daniel Rothman.  I have never been a strong upholder of Ullmann’s <em>Kaiser</em> , which I hear as excessively contrived Carl Orff, but this Seventh Sonata is something else again, a masterpiece etched in blood. Eric Huebner’s performance – remember his amazing work in Messiaen’s <em>From the Canyons</em> a few months back? – swept through that historic room with its magical seaside vista. As dessert there was also friendlier music: Schoenberg’s Fantasy for Violin and Piano, eloquently delivered, Eric’s astonishing piano command and more of the same from Mark Menzies’ exuberant violin.<br />
SEASONAL  ENDINGS: I’m not quite sure, the significance of guest conductor Christoph Eschenbach’s once-again choice of the Bruckner Seventh Symphony, as the Philharmonic’s seasonal closer-downer, but he did so, once again, as in recent years, and drew  some noble noise from our orchestra’s brass contingent. Even better was that concert’s opening work, one of Mozart’s most congenial “middle” symphonies – No. 34, in C: a joyous essence,  music that simply  trips over itself  in a paroxysm of giggling trills and triplets. More, please!</p>
<p>TRIVIATA: <em>La Traviata</em> was my first-ever full-scale operatic experience: 1941, with Licia Albanese and Jan Peerce, myself enthralled in standing room, with the Met  on tour, in a Boston movie palace. Memory is a fragile substance;  being no ardent admirer of  Mrs. Domingo’s flannelly dramaturgy, I had determined to sit out the L.A. Opera’s current revival of Verdi’s verdant weeper &#8212; until the news began to circulate that,  clunky production and all, the <em>Traviata</em> this time around was the one not to miss. That news was, as they say, spot-on.</p>
<p>Marina Poplavskaya had sung her first-ever Violetta in Amsterdam only last month, and sang it here once more. She is a dreamer’s Violetta. Russian by birth, dark and strong of feature (if blonde in her program-book photo). She commands the role, and the stage, with a voice deep and rich, intense and flawless. She does not mess with her music; there was no show-off, interjected E-flat in her “Sempre libera” to woo the gallery; the heartbreak in her scene with the elder Germont arose from Verdi’s music alone, not from any painted-on theatricals. Grant Gershon was the conductor, a company debut long overdue, a master of the essence of sung opera. From their first music together there was an eloquence, an elegance, an exactitude of accent that you dream about – but seldom get to hear &#8212; in this music. that raises and maintains the emotional temperature and makes you aware of that rare and wonderful emotional richness that defines  Verdi’s greatness when the accents are sure and loving. As the Germonts father and son neither  Andrzei Dobber nor Massimo Giordano sang  their music as the roles deserved. The Alfredo was brave, but not well advised, to attempt the killer cabaletta (”O mio rimorso”) that wiser spirits usually omit. This was a <em>Traviata</em> about an authentic heroine, and about her power to define for an  audience an authentic human tragedy.<br />
SO FAR &#8212; I turn 85 next week &#8212; SO GOOD.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Finishing&#160;Touches</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2009/05/finishing-touches/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2009/05/finishing-touches/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Fri, 29 May 2009 00:54:59 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[soiveheard.com]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=3049</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[There was a moment in Disney Hall last night that I will not soon forget. Christoph Eschenbach was playing Schubert’s last Piano Sonata – the B flat, No. 960 in the Deutsch chronological catalog. The slow movement came to its end, a sequence of harmonic magic that seemed to hold the very expanse of the [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>There was a moment in Disney Hall last night that I will not soon forget. Christoph Eschenbach was playing <a href="http://www.amazon.com/Schubert-Piano-Sonata-960-Klavierst%C3%BCcke/dp/B000009OU3%3FSubscriptionId%3D02E5W5871AJF7PMMMS82%26tag%3Dsoivehe-20%26linkCode%3Dxm2%26camp%3D2025%26creative%3D165953%26creativeASIN%3DB000009OU3"><img src="http://ecx.images-amazon.com/images/I/31K1EHPAAJL._SL160_.jpg" alt="" /></a>Schubert’s last Piano Sonata – the B flat, No. 960 in the Deutsch chronological catalog. The slow movement came to its end, a sequence of harmonic magic that seemed to hold the very expanse of the hall in its grip. The ensuing silence was like a physical presence; it seemed to draw the entire expanse of the Hall and its enthralled listeners into a vacuum. Miraculous music, in  a performance worthy of its  secrets, its mysteries.<br />
The overriding mystery is Schubert himself, in his last year, his body – but not his Muse – in the weakening clutch of the disease, most likely syphilis, that would terminate his lifespan at a tragic 31. And the music of that last year &#8212; the heartbreak in just the opening phrase of the <a href="http://www.amazon.com/Mozart-Sonata-Pianos-Schubert-Fantasia/dp/B0000CF330%3FSubscriptionId%3D02E5W5871AJF7PMMMS82%26tag%3Dsoivehe-20%26linkCode%3Dxm2%26camp%3D2025%26creative%3D165953%26creativeASIN%3DB0000CF330"><img src="http://ecx.images-amazon.com/images/I/51XQ4V6BH0L._SL160_.jpg" alt="" /></a>Fantasy for piano duet, the <a href="http://www.amazon.com/Schubert-String-Quintet-D-956/dp/B000001GFA%3FSubscriptionId%3D02E5W5871AJF7PMMMS82%26tag%3Dsoivehe-20%26linkCode%3Dxm2%26camp%3D2025%26creative%3D165953%26creativeASIN%3DB000001GFA"><img src="http://ecx.images-amazon.com/images/I/51VU-r9VtSL._SL160_.jpg" alt="" /></a>Quintet for strings that gives me shivers just for thinking of it, and this Sonata, whose slow movement stops our breath with its miraculous key-changes like sword-thrusts into darkness:  can we ever fully understand this burst of creative adventure that moved the soul, and the pen, of this tormented, vision-racked genius, so close to the dying of his light. That slow movement may, indeed, hover at the edge of darkness; later in the same Sonata, a final movement comes loaded with marvelous, muscular trickery to send us joyously homeward.<br />
There was more. Virtually on his deathbed, Schubert created the outline of a Symphony in D major, and filled in a fair amount: a bright and joyous first movement, an extraordinary slow movement that seems to look ahead to Mahler, a finale full of contrapuntal trickery. Other hands have brought these sketches to performable estate as a putative “Tenth Symphony,” but even more fascinating is the work of the late great Luciano Berio, who took these sketches under his care and produced an orchestral work of his own, Rendering, which is at once an adoration and a restoration. Schubert’s own music emerges: a beautiful, flowing first-movement melody worthy to companion the analogous moment in the familiar “Unfinished”; the spare, mysterious, cold beauty of the Mahleresque Andante with its warmer  episodes of sheer loveliness; the bright and dazzling joyousness – yes, joyousness – of the finale.<br />
Two CDs on the Tudor label, distributed by Naxos, are called <em><a href="http://www.amazon.com/Schubert-Dialog/dp/B001UL405O%3FSubscriptionId%3D02E5W5871AJF7PMMMS82%26tag%3Dsoivehe-20%26linkCode%3Dxm2%26camp%3D2025%26creative%3D165953%26creativeASIN%3DB001UL405O"><img src="http://ecx.images-amazon.com/images/I/51GLC2sFd-L._SL160_.jpg" alt="" /></a>Schubert-Dialog </em>and <em><a href="http://www.amazon.com/Schubert-Epilog-Luciano-Berio/dp/B001UL4054%3FSubscriptionId%3D02E5W5871AJF7PMMMS82%26tag%3Dsoivehe-20%26linkCode%3Dxm2%26camp%3D2025%26creative%3D165953%26creativeASIN%3DB001UL4054"><img class="alignright" src="http://ecx.images-amazon.com/images/I/612c0O6xXnL._SL160_.jpg" alt="" /></a></em></p>
<p><em>Schubert-Epilog</em>;  on both discs Jonathan Nott, the talented young Brit, conducts the Bamberg Symphony. Both discs contain the work of contemporary composers in deriving new scores from manipulating preexisting Schubert material – highly respectful messing-around, in other words.. On “Dialog” we find Wolfgang Rihm’s Sketches On Schubert,  built out of the piano accompaniments of several Schubert songs, Dieter Schnebel’s orchestration and expansion of the G-major Piano Sonata and Bruno Mantovani’s jazzy treatment of the galloping piano part from &#8220;Der Erlkönig&#8221;. The Berio Rendering shows up on <em>Epilog</em>, along with Hans Werner Henze’s “Erlkönig” joy-ride and Hans Zender’s orchestration of several of Schubert’s short choruses.<br />
And then there’s the matter of opera. Common wisdom carries an inventory of Schubert’s failure in this area: stiff, artificial, slow-moving. Now there’s refutation, again vi<a href="http://www.amazon.com/Schubert-Epilog-Luciano-Berio/dp/B001UL4054%3FSubscriptionId%3D02E5W5871AJF7PMMMS82%26tag%3Dsoivehe-20%26linkCode%3Dxm2%26camp%3D2025%26creative%3D165953%26creativeASIN%3DB001UL4054"></a>a Na<a href="http://www.amazon.com/Schubert-Alfonso-Estrella-Bar/dp/B001NZA0G0%3FSubscriptionId%3D02E5W5871AJF7PMMMS82%26tag%3Dsoivehe-20%26linkCode%3Dxm2%26camp%3D2025%26creative%3D165953%26creativeASIN%3DB001NZA0G0"><img class="alignleft" src="http://ecx.images-amazon.com/images/I/41OmlDaNMEL._SL160_.jpg" alt="" /></a>xos, a DVD of <em>Alfonso und Estrella </em>in a splendid performance, led by Nikolaus Harnoncourt, with a cast that includes familiar names such as Thomas Hampson and Olaf Bar and an unfamiliar name – Luba Orgonasova – as the lovely Estrella, heroine in eighth-century Spain, caught up in a tale of stolen king’s crown, long-lost daughters and traitors forgiven. (Your basic nonsensical Romantic plot in other words). There is gorgeous music here, if not exactly a plea for restoring the opera to the active repertory.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Ever on&#160;Sunday</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2009/05/ever-on-sunday/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2009/05/ever-on-sunday/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 20 May 2009 07:38:06 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[soiveheard.com]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=3045</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[WELCOME: John Adams has been in town these past weeks, as good company as company can get. He came with some of his own music, which was wonderful enough. What’s more, at a Green Umbrella concert, the last of the season, he introduced two new, promising young composers, and surrounded their arrival with an excellent [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p style="text-align: left;">WELCOME: John Adams has been in town these past weeks, as good company as company can get. He came with some of his own music, which was wonderful enough. What’s more, at a Green Umbrella concert, the last of the season, he introduced two new, promising young composers, and surrounded their arrival with an excellent program-book essay on his hopes for music’s future. Next season he will be often at hand, enthroned in the Philharmonic’s newly endowed Creative Chair. His words and his deeds constitute an affirmation that the Philharmonic’s role in the advancement and enrichment of serious music will remain in strong hands.<br />
At the Green Umbrella there was something new by Adams to treasure, namely <em>Son of Chamber Symphony</em> which is, as the name whimsically suggests, a sequel of sorts, composed for the chamber group Alarm Will Sound. The whimsy lies in more than merely the title; this is a work of serious fun; the Mark Morris  choreographed version is aptly titled <em>Joyride</em>. Bits and pieces from previous well-liked Adams works filter through the light-hearted texture. Michele Zukovsky’s solo clarinet gets a particular workout. I loved every note.<br />
Two composers made themselves known and admired under the Umbrella, their combined ages short of Adams’s but scarcely wet behind the ears.  Two pieces by Tiimothy Andres, 24, shared a format: an ongoing musical narrative broken into by planned intrusions. The first, titled <em>How Can I Live in Your World of Ideas?</em> answered that question quite handily with an attractive pitched battle between a solo piano and an intruding percussion group. The second, <em>Nightjar</em>, also honors its namesake, a nocturnal insect given to chirps and pulsations. In between came <em><a href="http://www.amazon.com/Payton-MacDonald-Works-Tabla-Percussion/dp/B000S0GZXS%3FSubscriptionId%3D02E5W5871AJF7PMMMS82%26tag%3Dsoivehe-20%26linkCode%3Dxm2%26camp%3D2025%26creative%3D165953%26creativeASIN%3DB000S0GZXS"><img class="alignright" src="http://ecx.images-amazon.com/images/I/516lXuUCXzL._SL160_.jpg" alt="" /></a>Cowboy Tabla/Cowboy Raga</em> by Payton MacDonald, 35, music also composed for Alarm Will Sound, created through manipulations on an acoustic marimba and also, says the composer, the result of an Idaho-born composer traveling halfway around the world.<br />
I had fallen for  Adams’s <a href="http://www.amazon.com/Flowering-Tree-CD-John-Adams/dp/B0017PCXQ6%3FSubscriptionId%3D02E5W5871AJF7PMMMS82%26tag%3Dsoivehe-20%26linkCode%3Dxm2%26camp%3D2025%26creative%3D165953%26creativeASIN%3DB0017PCXQ6"><img class="alignleft" src="http://ecx.images-amazon.com/images/I/41d1Na3hGZL._SL160_.jpg" alt="" /></a><em>The Flowering Tree</em> in San Francisco, in 2007, and did so again  at the Philharmonic concert a couple of days later.. Peter Sellars’ words &#8212; a haunting, evocative re-working of a heart-rending and -warming  Indonesian legend, of lovers separated and rejoined,  in a fairytale setting exotic and magical &#8212; have drawn from Adams some of his most powerful musical drama, exquisite, stirring, deeply throbbing. There was magic, too, in the Sellars production, capturing even on the defeating, blank surfaces of the Disney stage  something close to the powerful drama of the story itself. Above the stage sat Grant Gershon’s Master Chorale, costumed as a living rainbow, hurling forth their commentary and participation in the drama. The three Indonesian scene-stealers were back with their phenomenal solo danceries; the trio of solo singers: Jessica Rivera, Russell Thomas and Eric Owens, were as splendid as before. Listen for yourself on the indispensable Nonesuch CD.</p>
<p style="text-align: left;">SUNDAY BEST: Juan Bautista Sancho’s dates are roughly the same as Haydn’s. Born on Mallorca, he later set sail for Mexico. After a time of study, he moved northward, landing at Monterey in 1804. There he founded a choir and set about creating a repertory, some of which made for a delightful sampling by the adventurous forces of Martin Haselböck’s Musica Angelica at Santa Monica’s First United Methodist, to start an uncommonly busy Sunday. The music – a motet and two movements of a Mass – was sweet, tuneful, and very much worth exploring. I hope there’s more. The program also included some genuine Haydn, a ravishing concerto for violin, organ and strings and a setting  of <em>Salve, Regina</em>, stern and dramatic. I hope there’s more of that, too.<br />
Eastward, thence, to UCLA’s Royce Hall and the season’s final concert by the L.A. Chamber Orchestra, this one less worth writing home about than most in the series. Somehow, LACO’s record at new-music unearthing or commissioning has never been one of its strong points. This latest venture, a half-hour of drab modernist cliché titled <em>Radiant Mind</em>, supposedly Buddhist-inspired, commissioned by Sound Investment from the prolific American composer Christopher Theofandis is, I regret to report, the latest in a poignant succession of truly uninteresting LACO commissions extending many years back in our time together. Schumann’s Piano Concerto ensued, music I have no difficulty identifying as perfect, even – as in this instance – with those priceless notes sort of hammered into place with the mechanistic acumen of a Jonathan Biss and not much more.<br />
Then Westward once again, to the precincts of the excellent Broad Stage on the Santa Monica College campus. There the visiting maestro <a href="http://www.amazon.com/Igor-Stravinsky-Soldiers-Andre-Gregory/dp/B0001Z9366%3FSubscriptionId%3D02E5W5871AJF7PMMMS82%26tag%3Dsoivehe-20%26linkCode%3Dxm2%26camp%3D2025%26creative%3D165953%26creativeASIN%3DB0001Z9366"><img src="http://ecx.images-amazon.com/images/I/518P8YV46QL._SL160_.jpg" alt="" /></a>Kent Nagano had assembled a truly weird program including something-or-other by Stockhausen for solo bassoon performed by a musician in a trained-bear suit, other music no less fascinating and involving in performance a pair of Inuit throat-singers and, to cap a most diverting day of musical serendipity, a perfectly fine production of Stravinsky’s <em><a href="http://www.amazon.com/Igor-Stravinsky-Soldiers-Geschichte-Sinfonietta/dp/B000009HYG%3FSubscriptionId%3D02E5W5871AJF7PMMMS82%26tag%3Dsoivehe-20%26linkCode%3Dxm2%26camp%3D2025%26creative%3D165953%26creativeASIN%3DB000009HYG"><img alt="" /></a>A Soldier’s Tale,</em> Nagano conducting,  in a staging by Hollywood’s own William Friedkin. That&#8217;s the way it should be.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>As Good as It&#160;Gets</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2009/05/as-good-as-it-gets-2/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2009/05/as-good-as-it-gets-2/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Tue, 12 May 2009 21:10:24 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[soiveheard.com]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=3042</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Any notion of the season winding down –with Esa-Pekka departed and nothing to sing about except another creaky old Traviata across the street – needs a couple of weeks’ postponement, as it happens. Two of our best homegrown series ended their seasons last week in respective blazes of glory, and meanwhile, over at Disney, there [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p style="text-align: left;">
<p style="text-align: left;">
Any notion of the season winding down –with Esa-Pekka departed and nothing to sing about except another creaky old <em>Traviata</em> across the street – needs a couple of weeks’ postponement, as it happens. Two of our best homegrown series ended their seasons last week in respective blazes of glory, and meanwhile, over at Disney, there was someone new on the podium, both adorable and terrific, if you can wrap your imaginations around  that combo.<br />
Mark Robson’s program, to end the high-adventure  Piano Spheres series at Zipper Hall, was the customary Robson caprice: some of this, some of that, and a demand on your own fantasy to figure out how the whole program might come together. I like that about Robson: that he can find his own way to link the earnestness of early-atonal Schoenberg (the Opus 23 Piano Pieces) with the flip arrogance of the purposive emptiness of a Mauricio Kagel show-off number, or yet the emptyheaded note-spinning of yet another Patricio da Silva escapade, no better than his last time in the series. Yet Robson, with his fine sense of  program balance, brought the evening to its senses with a clutch of György Ligeti <a href="http://www.amazon.com/Gy%C3%B6rgy-Ligeti-Etudes-Ricercata-Pierre-Laurent/dp/B0000029P0%3FSubscriptionId%3D02E5W5871AJF7PMMMS82%26tag%3Dsoivehe-20%26linkCode%3Dxm2%26camp%3D2025%26creative%3D165953%26creativeASIN%3DB0000029P0"><img class="alignright" src="http://ecx.images-amazon.com/images/I/514JTV92T2L._SL160_.jpg" alt="" /></a><em>Etudes</em>, that cherishable series of pianistic outlooks that anchor that great composer’s artistic heritage. Small, sweet and charmingly unimportant bits by Morton Feldman and Charles Ives, and the second chance in a week (after last week’s Calder Quartet concert) to sample the work of the sound-and-silence experimentalist Beat Furrer, rounded out a program that must have been an enjoyable pastime for Robson to put together, and turned out that way for me as well.</p>
<p>MOM’S THE WORD: Xian  Zhang, that small fireball of a very big conducting talent, delighted us all at the Bowl back in September, 2006, and returned to the Philharmonic on Mothers’ Day  to reaffirm that delight, indoors at Disney.  Her program was all about bravado: the ingratiating swirl of  Chen Yi’s <em>Momentum</em>, the splendid nose-thumbing all the way through Prokofiev’s Third Piano Concerto, John Adams’s <em>Chairman</em> dancing his galloping gazoo and the amazing, hard-edged, slashing violence of Bartók’s early <em><a href="http://www.amazon.com/B%C3%A9la-Bart%C3%B3k-Miraculous-Percussion-Orchestra/dp/B000001GR9%3FSubscriptionId%3D02E5W5871AJF7PMMMS82%26tag%3Dsoivehe-20%26linkCode%3Dxm2%26camp%3D2025%26creative%3D165953%26creativeASIN%3DB000001GR9"><img class="alignleft" src="http://ecx.images-amazon.com/images/I/51J76NM12CL._SL160_.jpg" alt="" /></a>Miraculous Mandarin</em>. Yefim Bronfman had come along to devour the Prokofiev whole, which he accomplished most heartily, and then dedicated his encore – Chopin’s “Revolutionary” Etude in a fearsome reading – to “all mothers.” A message? Let’s not go there quite yet.</p>
<p>THE SPIRIT TRIUMPHANT: Someday when the ink supply starts running low, and there’s still enough left for one last tabulation, last Saturday’s Jacaranda concert will rank among the best musical events I will ever want to remember. Ever. It’s not just because of the music; there was no Mozart, after all, and  no Schubert. There were a few truly great performers, but the majority were recruits from local schools – well-trained, to be sure, and basically held to their task by the sense of dedication that enveloped the whole undertaking. The concert drew its excellence from a deeper well, from the depth of musical enthusiasm, tempered with imagination and pure love, that have driven Jacaranda’s guiding spirits – the musician Mark Alan Hilt and the man-of-all-the-arts, spirited amateur (in the best sense of that word), Patrick Scott, since the series was dreamed up and brought to a state of improbable   but tangible deliciousness over the past decade or so.<br />
Their work has inspired their community as their community has inspired their work. That was easy  to sense last weekend, in the size of the crowd that  came so close as never mind to filling, not the concerts’ usual small (and lovely) First Presbyterian Church but the far more spacious Barnum Hall, the adequately monstrous assembly hall of Santa Monica High School. Many of Jacaranda’s professional regulars participated: the marvelous <a href="http://www.amazon.com/Arvo-P%C3%A4rt-Berliner-Messe-Magnificat/dp/B0002TXT5M%3FSubscriptionId%3D02E5W5871AJF7PMMMS82%26tag%3Dsoivehe-20%26linkCode%3Dxm2%26camp%3D2025%26creative%3D165953%26creativeASIN%3DB0002TXT5M"><img class="alignright" src="http://ecx.images-amazon.com/images/I/51CS6PTGSGL._SL160_.jpg" alt="" /></a>pianist Gloria Cheng, the Denali String Quartet, the several <em>ad hoc</em> gatherings who regularly play and/or sing under the Jacaranda aegis, and a roof-raising gathering, grateful to eye and ear, it proved to be.  From the racketing pounding upon Heaven’s gates by the winds, brass and percussion of the so-named “Jacaranda Festival Orchestra” let loose on <a href="http://www.amazon.com/Olivier-Messiaen-resurrectionem-mortuorum-Chronochromie/dp/B000001GOV%3FSubscriptionId%3D02E5W5871AJF7PMMMS82%26tag%3Dsoivehe-20%26linkCode%3Dxm2%26camp%3D2025%26creative%3D165953%26creativeASIN%3DB000001GOV"><img class="alignleft" src="http://ecx.images-amazon.com/images/I/41TCB9ENCHL._SL160_.jpg" alt="" /></a>Messiaen’s <em>Expectations of the Resurrection</em>, to the exquisite curlings of silvery choral tone around Arvo Pärt’s <em>Magnificat</em>, to Glorious Gloria’s ascent, girdled by flocks of pianistic birds massed to serenade her at<em> The City on High</em>,  to the much touted finale, the charming, sturdy and expendable piece of national-anthem note-spinning, the long-lost <em>Chant des Déportés</em> that finally brought to earth the two years of “OM Century” with, I must  admit, something of a thud.  Yes, this much awaited pearl of great price, the capstone to the fabulously inventive centenary birthday-party concocted by Jacaranda’s founders, uncorked by a stageful of ardent interpreters numbering  no fewer than185, encored by the acclaim of the stunned multitude, may now be shoved back – one must truly hope &#8211;  into history’s sheltering shrouds for at least another century. Yes, it bore the name of a composer worthy of respect; yes it carried the cachet of a historical event of sorts; yes it enabled its presenters to go romping around proclaiming “premiere” and “first time”; yes it enabled those 185 prideful people – most of them young, all of them beautiful &#8211;  to assemble on that stage and yell and hack their way through its four meager minutes of musical substance. Now we move on.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Kid&#160;Stuff</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2009/05/kid-stuff/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2009/05/kid-stuff/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sat, 02 May 2009 06:27:52 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[soiveheard.com]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=3037</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[THEY’RE STILL OUT THERE The following, which the good people at Jacaranda received recently and have allowed me to send along, might be worthy of comment. At least I hope so. Subject: Pretentious Bullshit I just received your advertising card for The OM Century Final Concert. Lots of &#8220;premiere&#8221; performances.  There&#8217;s a reason they are [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p style="text-align: left;">THEY’RE STILL OUT THERE<br />
The following, which the good people at Jacaranda received recently and have allowed me to send along, might be worthy of comment. At least I hope so.</p>
<p><em>Subject: Pretentious Bullshit<br />
I just received your advertising card for The OM Century Final Concert.<br />
Lots of &#8220;premiere&#8221; performances.  There&#8217;s a reason they are premiere<br />
performances.  No one else was interested.<br />
It&#8217;s simply not true that every generation has its great composers and<br />
artists.  It&#8217;s far more complicated than that.  When was the last great<br />
Greek play written?<br />
Just because someone studied music, understands it, and writes in a form<br />
that seems serious does not mean that their music is worth listening to.<br />
You&#8217;re presenting what is largely crap that will be forgotten real fast<br />
except by those who need some kind of identity which is intertwined with<br />
pretentious bullshit.<br />
And don&#8217;t think that the words &#8220;accessible&#8221; and &#8220;not as accessible&#8221; will<br />
mask what&#8217;s going on.  The music you&#8217;re presenting is as accessible as a<br />
Straus waltz, it&#8217;s just that it&#8217;s not worth listening to.<br />
I&#8217;m sure Swed loves the stuff.  But then for him, anything new equals<br />
good. </em><br />
Comments, please.</p>
<p>KID STUFF: Jacaranda’s very large season’s finale takes place on Saturday, May 9, at Barnum Hall, which is the large auditorium of Santa Monica High School, on 4th Street just south of Pico. Something very big by Messiaen will conclude the two-year celebration of that composer’s centennial.<br />
Something even bigger has occupied several hours of my last couple of days, the DVD on Opus Arte (distributed by Naxos) of Messiaen’s huge opera <em>Saint-François d’Assise.</em> <a name="evtst|a|B001RE9HGQ" href="http://www.amazon.com/Saint-Francois-dAssise-DVD-Video/dp/B001RE9HGQ%3FSubscriptionId%3D02E5W5871AJF7PMMMS82%26tag%3Dsoivehe-20%26linkCode%3Dxm2%26camp%3D2025%26creative%3D165953%26creativeASIN%3DB001RE9HGQ">Saint Francois d&#8217;Assise [DVD Video]</a><a href="http://www.amazon.com/Saint-Francois-dAssise-DVD-Video/dp/B001RE9HGQ%3FSubscriptionId%3D02E5W5871AJF7PMMMS82%26tag%3Dsoivehe-20%26linkCode%3Dxm2%26camp%3D2025%26creative%3D165953%26creativeASIN%3DB001RE9HGQ"><img src="http://ecx.images-amazon.com/images/I/51Wxt0u5HgL._SL160_.jpg" alt="" /></a>The production is from the Netherlands Opera, directed by Pierre Audi, &#8212; whom we know from two sublime Monteverdi productions brought here &#8212; conducted by Ingo Metzmacher: an extraordinary visual experience, a setting for this humanistic document exactly right for its character and for the message it strives to deliver.<br />
There is no stage, in any theatrical sense. We are spectators at the periphery of a huge room, whose floorboards show their roughness. At one side is a lumber pile of discarded crosses in various disrepair; behind, ringed by scaffolding and partly visible, is Metzmacher and the orchestra. The action moves in and around these gatherings, with François, a stern, suffering figure in his rough robe of animal skins. The ecstasy of Messaien’s orchestra – the clatter of percussion and the howl of the Ondes Martenot, seems to pour down upon us. Saint François is Covina’s own Rod Gilfry, <em>Seville</em>’s Barber and <em>A Streetcar</em>’s Stanley, now a solemn and moving singing actor of rich lyricism and dignified bearing.<br />
He cuts a distinguished figure, tall and stern, in a rough robe that sweeps the floor. (All his saintly brothers are similarly robed, but in different strong colors.)   For three hours the stage colors are mostly drab, contrasted only against the lurid yellow as the Leper makes his tortured appearance, to be cured by François’ kiss. An Angel (Camilla Tilling) comes snooping around the precincts, asking rude questions of the Brethren and drawing unsatisfactory answers. The Angel reappears in resplendent get-up, plays a viol solo and causes François to faint.<br />
Still here?<br />
Then comes the miracle. The stage explodes &#8212; and the music too!! – into vivid color. François addresses his worldwide convocation of birds, an enchanted gathering of children, colorfully robed, bare of foot, angelic of mien. They are Birds; armed with colored chalk they scrawl their ornithological names on the broken Crosses. They dance; they leap into François’ arms; the glorious clatter of their music is irresistible. The episode that has been an endless bore in every staged <em>Saint-François</em> I have seen up to now (and even drew boos at the Paris première; don’t tell me, I was there) is now transformed by stage magician  Audi into sheer enchantment.</p>
<p>The juvenile gathering on the cover of the Medici Arts DVD release (also from Naxos) of Janacek’s <em>Cunning Little Vixen</em> is hardly less enchanting These are the kids who play the Vixen’s and the Fox’s scampering offspring at the moment of the opera’s tragic end; some also are used in other animal roles earlier on. We are well supplied with versions of this powerful, moving, irreplaceable opera: a  previous version in Czech with Thomas Allen as the Fo<a href="http://www.amazon.com/Janacek-Cunning-Little-Vixen-Dunbar/dp/B001KF6F9O%3FSubscriptionId%3D02E5W5871AJF7PMMMS82%26tag%3Dsoivehe-20%26linkCode%3Dxm2%26camp%3D2025%26creative%3D165953%26creativeASIN%3DB001KF6F9O"><img src="http://ecx.images-amazon.com/images/I/51F8iW3zw9L._SL160_.jpg" alt="" /></a>rester,  a charming animated English version by Geoff <a href="http://www.amazon.com/Cunning-Little-Vixen-Janacek/dp/B001U1L9O4%3FSubscriptionId%3D02E5W5871AJF7PMMMS82%26tag%3Dsoivehe-20%26linkCode%3Dxm2%26camp%3D2025%26creative%3D165953%26creativeASIN%3DB001U1L9O4"><img class="alignright" src="http://ecx.images-amazon.com/images/I/41AQC9CFF7L._SL160_.jpg" alt="" /></a>Dunbar, conducted by Kent Nagano but somewhat cut, and the creation by East Germany’s Walter Felsenstein, on which our awareness of the opera is mainly based, and which Naxos rescued and issued in an essential seven-disc collection of that legendary director’s work last year.<br />
In this new, exellent version the action occurs, not in the forest of  Janácek’s “merry thing” but in a vast field of sunflowers: almost as good. A railroad track pierces it from right to left: humanity inflicting its misery.  Elena Tsallagova is the chestnut-crowned Vixen, wondrously svelte as she steals the heart of foxy Hannah Esther Minutillo (and us all). Michèle Lagrange is the Forester, somewhat ill-tempered for this wise and all-knowing role. (There was no-one like Rudolf Asmus, who sang it for Felsenstein.) The performance is from the Opéra de Paris; Dennis Russell Davies is the eloquent conductor. A 25-minute video  “bonus” begins with jabberwocky from the ubiquitous Gérard Mortier, but settles down to quite a nice interplay with stage director André Engel and those kids.</p>
<p>THE TIN CUP<br />
This morning I sat in my doctor’s waiting room, a prisoner to Station KUSC during one of the days of its recurrent appeal for funds. The announcer, my good friend Alan Chapman, was talking about “beautiful music” and extolling the role of the station in making that substance generously available. To illustrate his talk he was playing very beautiful pieces:  Liszt’s “Liebestraum,” the “Nimrod” Variation from Elgar’s <em>Enigma</em>, the 18th Variation from Rachmaninoff’s “Paganini” Rhapsody, a mournful moment from Elgar’s Cello Concerto, on and on. He was running these pieces in quick order, seguing from one to the next, never allowing any one to end. All in the name of demonstrating beautiful music or…to my taste, the power of overdoses of beautiful music to drive a listener up the wall.<br />
Some of you have asked about that word “DONATION” to the right of this blog. As with KUSC and KPCC and KCRW, I am attempting to support my work on contributions. Unlike those organizations, at the moment I have no other source of support; as  I noted in a recent report, publications running cultural criticism have been firing their writers right and left these days.<br />
One difference: I can conduct my fund drives without changing the tone of this blog itself. I don’t have to hold readers hostage, as KUSC was doing this morning, or as KPCC was doing for two agonizing weeks last month while the country begged on its knees for news and more news. (Wellll, maybe not the country, but I did.)<br />
David-my-Blogmaster is setting up a Paypal system the workings of which I know now not. Any day, we’ll have that tin cup out on the sidewalk.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Music for&#160;Twelve</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2009/04/music-for-twelve/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2009/04/music-for-twelve/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 27 Apr 2009 04:51:52 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[soiveheard.com]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=3025</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[MUSIC FOR TWELVE: Steve Reich’s Double Sextet began the week by copping the 2009 Music Pulitzer, and began this  next week by proving to a local audience – in a Colburn School Chamber Music Society program at the Zipper Auditorium &#8212; that it deserved the award, every teeming, pulsating note. This is music that sweeps [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p style="text-align: left;">MUSIC FOR TWELVE: Steve Reich’s <em>Double Sextet</em> began the week by copping the 2009 Music Pulitzer, and began this  next week by proving to a local audience – in a Colburn School Chamber Music Society program at the Zipper Auditorium &#8212; that it deserved the award, every teeming, pulsating note. This is music that sweeps you up; its sound spectrum is grand and irresistible. You hear it the way you hear the “Eroica,” as unfolding melodic material pushing forward from idea to idea. It is a different kind of surging music from Steve’s <em>“You Are” Variations</em> (which is also wonderful) and it holds you in a different way from the hypnosis exerted by <em><a href="http://www.amazon.com/Steve-Reich-Music-18-Musicians/dp/B000026258%3FSubscriptionId%3D02E5W5871AJF7PMMMS82%26tag%3Dsoivehe-20%26linkCode%3Dxm2%26camp%3D2025%26creative%3D165953%26creativeASIN%3DB000026258"><img class="alignleft" src="http://ecx.images-amazon.com/images/I/51dI8-t3DnL._SL160_.jpg" alt="" /></a>Music for Eighteen</em>. I love all this music, and I could not choose among a single one of them. I left Zipper Sunday afternoon totally exhilarated. I didn’t want to wait around for the q&amp;a (Steve wasn’t there); I think I would have been jealous to share this truly profound experience.<br />
Sunday’s performance was by eighth blackbird, the performance co-op that has pretty much taken over this year’s Ojai Festval (June 11-14); students from Colburn filled in the other parts – a handsome group, if I may say so. (As with others of Reich’s “double” works, the <em>Sextet</em> can be performed entirely live or half-and-half with a  recording; kindly accept my vote herewith for a live version at Ojai.)<br />
This was the last of an excellent series of Sunday afternoon chamber concerts at Zipper, nicely organized by Colburn, free to the public and mostly jam-packed. In previous weeks we’ve had visits from the fine old Israeli pianist Menahem Pressler, performing Schubert’s “Trout” Quintet (heaven!) with Colburn faculty, and the Calder Quartet in a sublime program of Mozart K 516 and the First “Rasumovsky.” (Life can’t get much better than that!) Today’s program was an Ojai “sneak preview,” with Lucy Shelton and the blackbird in Schoenberg’s <em>Pierrot Lunaire</em> and a kicky new piece by Stephen Hartke that you’ll have to come to Ojai to hear. The Steve Reich <em>Double Sextet</em> plays at Ojai on June 14, leading off a “marathon” concert that brings the Festival to a close.</p>
<p>It has been three years since the misguided management at LACMA dropped any serious involvement with serious music, and it felt strange being back in the Bing Theater last Monday night. Nobody at LACMA seems to promote their few concerts, but the Calder Quartet’s New York management reached out from afar to lure me to an interesting new-music program. The crowd was sparse; you could have played basketball in the empty seats, and a certain Mitch Glickman, listed as “Director of Music Programs,” showed no idea in his intro as to who the Calders were or what the program. Some connection to an Austrian Constructivist exhibition at the museum could be traced in a quartet by the expressionist <a href="http://www.amazon.com/Beat-Furrer-Presto-fuoco-Poemas/dp/B00004RKK9%3FSubscriptionId%3D02E5W5871AJF7PMMMS82%26tag%3Dsoivehe-20%26linkCode%3Dxm2%26camp%3D2025%26creative%3D165953%26creativeASIN%3DB00004RKK9"><img class="alignleft" src="http://ecx.images-amazon.com/images/I/21xnrdEQJCL._SL160_.jpg" alt="" /></a>Beat Furrer, and no excuse need ever be advanced for the Five Movements by Anton Webern (which the Calders performed exquisitely). Music by Ryan Carter and good-ol’-boy Christopher Rouse, filled out the evening, safely and uneventfully.</p>
<p>November 26, 1933: at a concert of the Orchestre Symphonique de Paris, Maurice Abravanel leads a suite of Kurt Weill songs, sung by Madeleine Grey. Suddenly there is a demonstration: “Vive Hitler!!” screams a gathering, led by the composer Florent Schmitt. “Why bring in inferior Jewish composers from Germany, when we have enough of our own?” In fairness to the composer of <em><a href="http://www.amazon.com/Florent-Schmitt-Psaume-trag%C3%A9die-Salom%C3%A9/dp/B000PMGSB8%3FSubscriptionId%3D02E5W5871AJF7PMMMS82%26tag%3Dsoivehe-20%26linkCode%3Dxm2%26camp%3D2025%26creative%3D165953%26creativeASIN%3DB000PMGSB8"></a>La tragédie de Salomé</em>, the work of Florent Schmitt that the excellent Lionel Bringuier led with the Philharmonic last weekend, his political idol was still painting houses when that tone poem saw the light of day. Just thought you might like to know.<br />
The tragedy of this particular Salome, following a poem by Robert d’Humières, befalls only John the Baptist, and not the slithery love-goddess. Herod has him decapitated, whereupon Salomé tosses the head into the sea, whereupon it resurfaces and engages in a “Dance of Fear.” The Schmitt ballet score teems with high-class hootchy-kootch, which apparently caught the ear of Igor Stravinsky for a while. Following the <a href="http://www.amazon.com/Florent-Schmitt-Psaume-trag%C3%A9die-Salom%C3%A9/dp/B000PMGSB8%3FSubscriptionId%3D02E5W5871AJF7PMMMS82%26tag%3Dsoivehe-20%26linkCode%3Dxm2%26camp%3D2025%26creative%3D165953%26creativeASIN%3DB000PMGSB8"><img class="alignleft" src="http://ecx.images-amazon.com/images/I/61T9JA0YznL._SL160_.jpg" alt="" /></a>lurid travelogues of the Lalo <em>Symphonie Espagnole </em>– and the comparable hootchy-kootch of the violin soloist engaged to further the evening’s entertainment – I found Monsieur Schmitt’s music decidedly tame.<br />
The excellent young (23) Bringuier now has the run of the house. His two years as Assistant Conductor (leading to a third as Associate) have been a splendid success, and invitations to further his career have poured in nicely. Credit here befalls Ernest Fleischmann, now incapacitated in a wheelchair but still the vital mind behind the great Los Angeles tradition of discovery and support of conducting talent. In our last conversations, Esa-Pekka took every care to emphasize this important phase in our musical history. So must we all.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>&#8230;and&#160;Farewell</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2009/04/and-farewell/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2009/04/and-farewell/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sat, 18 Apr 2009 02:20:24 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[soiveheard.com]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=1952</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[…AND FAREWELL A melancholy event it surely was, and yet a transforming event, an exhilarating event. At the start there may have been reasons to raise an eyebrow at the choice: our spellbinding, so-easy-to-love Music Director taking his leave with a program of Stravinsky at his most solemn – austere, even – in  a collaboration [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>…AND FAREWELL<br />
A melancholy event it surely was, and yet a transforming event, an exhilarating event. At the start there may have been reasons to raise an eyebrow at the choice: our spellbinding, so-easy-to-love Music Director taking his leave with a program of Stravinsky at his most solemn – austere, even – in  a collaboration with aging <em>Wunderkind</em> Peter Sellars that surely promised tampering, perhaps even a wholesale rewrite. At the end there was cause to marvel; this was one of the great events in Philharmonic annals, an event to think back on, to marvel at, to meditate on matters of new doors opened, to resolve that never in the future must one so blithely prejudge.<br />
Yes, there were some fascinating acts of tampering, mostly on the part of Sellars having come up with some brilliant ways of using the space of Disney Hall. At the start of <em><a href="http://www.amazon.com/Stravinsky-Oedipus-Rex-Salonen-Igor/dp/B0000027U0%3FSubscriptionId%3D02E5W5871AJF7PMMMS82%26tag%3Dsoivehe-20%26linkCode%3Dxm2%26camp%3D2025%26creative%3D165953%26creativeASIN%3DB0000027U0"><img class="alignleft" src="http://ecx.images-amazon.com/images/I/51S87FMY0NL._SL160_.jpg" alt="" /></a>Oedipus Rex</em>, the first of the two works of Igor Stravinsky that made up the program, the oppressed populace of Thebes rushed across the stage, done up in working-class clothes – not motionless in choral-concert costume and formation &#8211;  and hollered their malcontentment at their King Oedipus, cowering behind them on a throne worthy of Ming the Merciless. Throughout the hour-long piece, meant by Stravinsky as a static oratorio, the action circled the space of the great Hall, continually endowing with the spark of life a piece that ordinarily simply stands still – this made possible by the hall’s vivid sightlines as well as by its acoustic clarity. Instead of the usual stand-apart narrator, Sellars had reassigned the spoken text to Oedipus’ daughter Antigone, speaking in English against the Latin of soloists and chorus and moving her down into the action. Her text, too, had undergone some Sellars treatment: not entirely  the sardonic outlook of Stravinsky’s pal Jean Cocteau but a return to some of the darker Sophocles original. Rodrick Dixon was the passionate, moving Oedipus; Viola Davis, the Antigone. Jocasta’s one great tragic aria, the fulcrum of the drama, got the full treatment – and then some – by Anne Sofie von Otter.<br />
The <em>Symphony of Psalms</em><a href="http://www.amazon.com/Stravinsky-Symphony-Psalms-Three-Movements/dp/B0017IYWE4%3FSubscriptionId%3D02E5W5871AJF7PMMMS82%26tag%3Dsoivehe-20%26linkCode%3Dxm2%26camp%3D2025%26creative%3D165953%26creativeASIN%3DB0017IYWE4"><img class="alignright" src="http://ecx.images-amazon.com/images/I/41ykRB9VghL._SL160_.jpg" alt="" /></a> ensued, with the forces of Grant Gershon’s Master Chorale, still in street clothes, ringing the entire inner circumference of Disney Hall. (<em>Nota bene</em>: they were obliged to memorize the entire program.) The works are, of course, separated by two years in Stravinsky’s oeuvre, but not in Sellars’s invention, which has the disgraced and blinded Oedipus of the first drama now seeking solace and restful death at Colonus to the broad strains of Stravinsky’s “Laudate Dominum.”</p>
<p>And so an era ended, with a concert distinguished, marvelously performed, attended by s serious-minded audience that included a contingent of professional observers from beyond the mountains who now know the quality of this place and express it generously. A couple of nights ago I sat though the two hours of KUSC’s documentary on Salonen’s career here; the people at the station asked the right questions and played the right recordings, but most impressive was the talking by Salonen himself, the extraordinary intelligence in his own recognition of where he has come in his years here, and how he got there.  I thought of that special intelligence last night, for example, in the way he declined any ovation after the <em>Oedipus</em>. He and Sellars had evolved a vision that embraced that entire program, and now he was only half-way.</p>
<p>That’s the way I saw it, anyway. There’s more to be said.</p>
<p>NOT WITH A WHIMPER: The Monday Evening Concerts ended what I take to have been a successful season &#8212; their 70th, figuring their start on Peter Yates&#8217; rooftop in 1939. Zipper Hall was, once again, jam-packed with a young and happy crowd, much of it from the Colburn School dorms across the way, and that is a very good thing indeed. Two of this season&#8217;s five concerts were similar in format to the fine old Monday Evening programs: a variorum of brave spirits. Three were given over to single composers, two of whom I could easily live without. (One of them, in fact, I DID live without, having decided some years ago that Charlemagne Palestine and I resided on different planets.) About Galina Ustvolskaya, whose music, shall we call it, took up most of last Monday&#8217;s concert, I can report that the fun factor was high, the music factor less so, and it was great to have Marino Formenti &#8212; a Monday Evening Concerts discovery, after all, in the glory days of Dorrance Stalvey &#8212; back in our midst. Something by Comrade Galina Ustvolskaya involving eight double basses, Marino conducting from the piano, a percussionist hammering on a coffin-sized wooden box and, of course, bearing the title &#8220;Dies Irae&#8221; ended the concert and sent us reeling into the California night; much of the preceding program had been of similar substance, if that&#8217;s the word. I would sincerely hope than Marino Formenti can be lured back to the next round of Monday Evening Concerts, with something more in the way of music in his luggage.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Hail&#160;and&#8230;</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2009/04/hail-and/</link>
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		<pubDate>Mon, 13 Apr 2009 01:42:16 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[soiveheard.com]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=1764</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[There had been a rumor – or perhaps I had mis-heard – that Esa-Pekka Salonen’s Violin Concerto, the parting work of his Los Angeles adventure, might also include a part for a dancer or several. That didn’t happen, or perhaps it did happen well beyond our mundane field of vision. What happened instead was almost [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><a href="http://www.amazon.com/Beethoven-Symphony-No-Ludwig-van/dp/B00000E2LH%3FSubscriptionId%3D02E5W5871AJF7PMMMS82%26tag%3Dsoivehe-20%26linkCode%3Dxm2%26camp%3D2025%26creative%3D165953%26creativeASIN%3DB00000E2LH"><img alt="" /></a></p>
<p>There had been a rumor – or perhaps I had mis-heard – that Esa-Pekka Salonen’s Violin Concerto, the parting work of his Los Angeles adventure, might also include a part for a dancer or several. That didn’t happen, or perhaps it did happen well beyond our mundane field of vision. What happened instead was almost the same: music for instruments alone, but in human form;  its composer says as much. His program note, accompanying this weekend’s premiere, wanders proudly beyond the usual “first theme in the tonic modulating to the dominant” analytical stuff. It forms an eloquent, loving link between his music and the phenomenal soloist, <a href="http://www.amazon.com/Leila-Josefowicz-Beethoven-Salonen-Messiaen/dp/B0007X6T3C%3FSubscriptionId%3D02E5W5871AJF7PMMMS82%26tag%3Dsoivehe-20%26linkCode%3Dxm2%26camp%3D2025%26creative%3D165953%26creativeASIN%3DB0007X6T3C"><img class="alignright" src="http://ecx.images-amazon.com/images/I/61G23GX13EL._SL160_.jpg" alt="" /></a>Leila Josefowicz, whose life blood it shares. There is a  kind of  remarkable humanness, in fact, that  surfaces in the two great concertos of Salonen, beyond any matter of dry-bones musical design: a sense of participation, a relationship of composer and soloist born not only out of admiration for finger dexterity but for their musical souls as well. “She knows no limits,” Salonen writes about Leila  Josefowicz, “she knows no fear, and she was constantly encouraging me to go to places I was not sure I would dare to go.” (My album notes for the recording of the <a href="http://www.amazon.com/Salonen-Helix-Piano-Concerto-Dichotomie/dp/B001IT74YM%3FSubscriptionId%3D02E5W5871AJF7PMMMS82%26tag%3Dsoivehe-20%26linkCode%3Dxm2%26camp%3D2025%26creative%3D165953%26creativeASIN%3DB001IT74YM"><img class="alignleft" src="http://ecx.images-amazon.com/images/I/51zveBXCIgL._SL160_.jpg" alt="" /></a>Piano Concerto were partly based on Esa-Pekka’s similar personal sketches.)<br />
And so, as the great Yefim Bronfman lumbers toward us out of the dark reaches of his Piano Concerto, the elfin Josefowicz forms her enchantment around our awestruck ears to set this new work a-spin. Awestruck, we note: even with its ink barely dry, she had already absorbed the music by memory, and by heart. This is a big, profound work; there hasn’t been anything quite like it in a while; not a handy show-off piece as, say, Penderecki for Isaac Stern, but genuine music involving soloist and orchestra in serious discussion. The writing for violin sweeps across contemporary possibilities, from the opening rumination that seems to search out the stage from a distance, to the last notes that vanish once again into a remote world. On first hearing I am the most  moved by the slow movements: the first (of two), a restless, nocturnal, troubled dream, and the final music, which draws down to a strange, unsettled, final gleam. Salonen’s <em><a href="http://www.amazon.com/Salonen-Variations-Karttunen-L-Sinfonietta/dp/B00005OKTG%3FSubscriptionId%3D02E5W5871AJF7PMMMS82%26tag%3Dsoivehe-20%26linkCode%3Dxm2%26camp%3D2025%26creative%3D165953%26creativeASIN%3DB00005OKTG"><img class="alignright" src="http://ecx.images-amazon.com/images/I/51ir-Y%2BnAbL._SL160_.jpg" alt="" /></a>LA Variations</em>, his coming-of-age proclamation now twelve years old, ended this way: a reaching-out into mysterious endlessness which satisfies yet disturbs. Of the Concerto’s final chord Salonen himself wrote “(It) is a beginning of something new”; as to what that might be, your guess is as good as mine<br />
<em>Clocks and Clouds</em> began the program, György Ligeti’s magical, indeterminate nocturne that Salonen had only conducted here once before (plus once at the Bowl, when it got booed). This is music I adore, with marvelously, precisely trained women’s voices moving microtonally in dream-like, never-never  metaphors through clouds over an ever-ever clock-like backing of winds and percussion. There’s nothing else like it in any music I know. Beethoven’s Fifth ended the program in a grand proclamation. But this is actually music I never felt that Salonen  really got close to. (Is the<a name="evtst|a|B00000E2LH" href="http://www.amazon.com/Beethoven-Symphony-No-Ludwig-van/dp/B00000E2LH%3FSubscriptionId%3D02E5W5871AJF7PMMMS82%26tag%3Dsoivehe-20%26linkCode%3Dxm2%26camp%3D2025%26creative%3D165953%26creativeASIN%3DB00000E2LH"> </a>Giulini/Philharmonic disc still around?)</p>
<p>Earlier in the week there was music by four brand-new composers, chosen by Salonen for Philharmonic commissions for his last Green Umbrella concert – curated by Steven Stucky as his final service as new-music advisor in a term also incomparably valuable. From the – admittedly incomplete – evidence, today’s young (30-ish) composers are expert at drawing unusual sounds from various assemblages of instruments, with such teeth-rattling techniques as drawing a violin bow across the edge of a vibraphone They are less good at judging the substance of a composition against the proper time to call a halt. They do not seem to have located the fun factor in contemporary composition. They might all have profited by attending to the final work on the program, the delightful show-off piece called <em>Floof</em>, by Esa-Pekka himself, music that had showed up at Salonen’s first Green Umbrella concert (4/15/91) and has withstood the passing of the years. Hila Plitmann, that delirious bundle of soprano who also traces the lines so wondrously in Salonen’s <em>Wing on Wing</em>, was on hand this time, too. Yum!</p>
<p style="text-align: left;">LULLABY OF BIRDLAND:  Yum, too – if an overdose of marzipan happens to be your craving – for the L.A. Opera’s latest “Recovered Voices” revival, proving merely that <em><a href="http://www.amazon.com/Braunfels-Vogel-Wodrich-Holzmaier-Zagrosek/dp/B0000042E6%3FSubscriptionId%3D02E5W5871AJF7PMMMS82%26tag%3Dsoivehe-20%26linkCode%3Dxm2%26camp%3D2025%26creative%3D165953%26creativeASIN%3DB0000042E6"><img src="http://ecx.images-amazon.com/images/I/31KX5A4MMXL._SL160_.jpg" alt="" /></a></em>in the case of Walter Braunfels’ <em>Die Vögel</em> recoveries are sometimes best left unrecovered. Braunfels (1882-1954) had a distinguished career in Germany, as composer, pianist and educator, until Hitler, and was restored to favor in 1945. His <em>The Birds</em> dates from 1920; based on the Aristophanes satire. Braunfels later chose to introduce undertones of warning against the rising Nazi menace; the result is a weird conflation of plot elements which the score – a gooey mess of salon sentimentality possibly fished out of Massenet’s wastebasket – does nothing to untangle. There are attractive voices – notably Désirée Rancatore, a sensational coloratura soprano, lost in a dismally soporific Nightingale aria – and James Conlon’s orchestra chugs along expressively. There’s also a very fancy set: clouds and moonscapes and shining stars, the Las Vegas ballroom of your dreams which, come to think of it, a lot of the music goes with very well.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Opera in all&#160;Sizes</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2009/04/opera-in-all-sizes/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2009/04/opera-in-all-sizes/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Tue, 07 Apr 2009 01:23:55 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[soiveheard.com]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=1753</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[The winter storms abate; Wagner’s grandiose music sweeps the stage clean, and our souls as well. The transformation from last month’s deliriously cluttered Rheingold to the spacious, think-for-yourself Die Walküre is as the composer and his music ordained, and the earthlings at the Chandler Pavilion have fulfilled his bidding. There is much in our local [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>The winter storms abate; Wagner’s grandiose music sweeps the stage clean, and our souls as well. The transformation from last month’s deliriously cluttered <em>Rheingold</em> to the spacious, think-for-yourself <em>Die Walküre</em> is as the composer and his music ordained, and the earthlings at the Chandler Pavilion have fulfilled his bidding. There is much in our local <em>Ring</em> that you have to take home and sort out for yourselves, but I found that task stimulating. Several days later, even with the digression of a <em>Rigoletto</em> to help wash things down, I find myself still thrall to this profound and profoundly moving experience.<br />
You start, of course, with the sibling-lovers, their stage costumes half-designed so that they come together, with some help from the lighting guys, as a whole. That our 68-year-old youthful Siegmund is so capable is enough of a miracle, but there is more: Plácido Domingo&#8217;s Siegmund is actually, genuinely good. At the dress-rehearsal three days before, when he could have sung at half-voice just to mark the part, he did no such thing, and it was thrilling both times – even thrilling to watch. Anja Kampe, the Sieglinde, was with him all the way. What I heard at the Saturday opening-night performance was, in fact, a vocal event of genuine high standards: Linda Watson, a truly moving Brünnhilde most of all in her final appeals to the punishment-intent Wotan, Vitalij Kowaljow a Wotan more tender-voiced than thundering perhaps, and eminently believable, Michelle DeYoung a rock-solid bitch of a Fricka. (Let it be noted that Fricka’s Act Two argument, upholding the tenets of marriage along traditional boundaries, earned the audience snickers it deserved.)<br />
Achim Freyer’s stage-painting &#8212; which is what it really is – depicts a rising, hurtling, cresting, falling wave, moving continuously, unstoppable. Nothing interrupts the continuous surge. The silences – Siegmund, breathless, awaits his destiny while Hunding’s drumbeats sound in his body; nature stands suspended as the James Conlon’s fine orchestra maintains its breath and Springtide fills the room &#8211;  pound in our conscience. More than the cluttered <em>Rheingold</em>, this <em>Walkuere</em> builds its superlative suspense out of emptiness.<br />
The signature action, the all-too-famous Ride,  bursts upon us in its renowned absurdity. As if only underline awareness of the music’s silliness, Freyer decks his warrior maidens in ravens’ wings and endows them with gadgetry from trashed bicycle gear and umbrellas (or so it looked; I’ll go back again). It all sounded marvelous. Mythology aside <em>Die Walküre</em> is one of the greatest of Romantic operas, at this moment, at least, it strikes these enchanted ears as Wagner’s best. I’m glad I went.</p>
<p>Oh yes, <em>Rigoletto</em>. That came about because my friends Dick and Harriet drive down regularly to the San Diego Opera’s Sunday matinees, and usually return full of praise, and it occurred that I hadn’t been to an opera there (I think it was Renée Fleming in <em>Russalka</em>)  in far too long. San Diego’s company does a five-opera season; Britten’s <em>Peter Grimes</em> is next, opening on April 18 for five performances.  Anthony Dean Griffey, the excellent Grimes of the recent Met performance and DVD, singe the role again.<br />
There’s one more <em>Rigoletto</em>, this Wednesday April 8. It’s a first-rate performance, sparked by Lado Ataneli in the name role and L’Ubica Vargiconá, the Gilda, both of whom let loose in the “Si, vendetta” duet like nobody’s business. Giuseppe Gipali, the Duke, has a voice with the sweetness of the young Pavarotti, but not quite the strength to hold it on course. The sets, from the New York City Opera, are still bright and meaningful and the sound-effect guys really go at it in the third-act thunderstorm. I’m glad I went.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Those ARE The Days, My&#160;Friends</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2009/03/those-are-the-days-my-friends/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2009/03/those-are-the-days-my-friends/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 30 Mar 2009 03:31:18 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[soiveheard.com]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=1727</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[MUZAK, ANYONE? The latest from embattled Cleveland – where Rodzinski, Szell and Dohnanyi once guided an orchestra to high distinction – is encapsulated in a report from a Plain Dealer article on that orchestra’s current plight and current emergency plans, to wit (italics mine): Concerts projected as “unprofitable” will be dropped from the schedule, as [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>MUZAK, ANYONE? The latest from embattled Cleveland – where Rodzinski, Szell and Dohnanyi once guided an orchestra to high distinction – is encapsulated in a report from a <em>Plain Dealer </em>article on that orchestra’s current plight and current emergency plans, to wit (italics mine): <em>Concerts projected as “unprofitable” will be dropped from the schedule, as will most touring. (The Miami residency, said to be successful, remains unaffected.) Programming will be largely limited to works requiring no extra rehearsal or additional musicians.</em></p>
<p><a href="http://www.amazon.com/Brief-Encounter-Collection-Celia-Johnson/dp/0780023420%3FSubscriptionId%3D02E5W5871AJF7PMMMS82%26tag%3Dsoivehe-20%26linkCode%3Dxm2%26camp%3D2025%26creative%3D165953%26creativeASIN%3D0780023420"><img class="alignleft" src="http://ecx.images-amazon.com/images/I/41sa8KoHAtL._SL160_.jpg" alt="" /></a>REDUNDANCY: David Lean’s <em>Brief Encounter</em> (1945) is a small, quiet masterpiece, a Noël Coward play involving honorable middle-class people pulled back from the brink of consummation by circumstances both wise and frustrating. In the background, Rachmaninoff’s Second Piano Concerto mirrors their story with harrowing accuracy; not a note is wasted. How, you’d rightly wonder, could so perfect a small drama, with its perfect performances by Celia Johnson and Trevor Howard, be further enhanced? Or why?</p>
<p>Enter André Previn, his fingers still bloodied with the shards of his <em>Streetcar Named Desire</em>; his new opera, to a text by John Caird, debuts at the Houston Grand Opera in May. Great wisps of trouble arise from the interview in the new <em>Opera News</em>; Previn and his librettist wonder whether Laura and Alec shouldn’t actually consummate. How can they – Previn and Caird, I mean &#8212; so blatantly miss the essence of Coward’s play, its essential tender frustrations so poignantly underscored by every element in this sublimely intimate, perfect film? (Don&#8217;t bother with the Richard Burton/Sophia Loren remake.)</p>
<p>What’ll you bet for Previn’s next opera? How about an all-singing <em>Citizen Kane</em>? He could call it <em>A Sled Named Rosebud</em>.</p>
<p><a href="http://www.amazon.com/Sento-Amor-David-Daniels/dp/B00002Z792%3FSubscriptionId%3D02E5W5871AJF7PMMMS82%26tag%3Dsoivehe-20%26linkCode%3Dxm2%26camp%3D2025%26creative%3D165953%26creativeASIN%3DB00002Z792"><img class="alignleft" src="http://ecx.images-amazon.com/images/I/41H65EVNX4L._SL160_.jpg" alt="" /></a>VIRTUOSITY: David Daniels really sounded wonderful at Disney last Tuesday: his voice clear, resonant and flexible. At his Handel’s <em>Julius Caesar</em> a few years ago I had reason for concern; now he is the best of our countertenors. From the melting beauties of the <em>Matthew Passion</em>’s “Erbarme dich” to the weird rhythmic manipulations in the Mad Scene from Handel’s <em>Orlando</em> he dominated the stage with performances elegant, powerful and brainy. He sang with Harry Bicket’s London Concert, and that, too, was as fine as it could be. Small Baroque “authentic”ensembles have metamorphosed over the years from the soft, swoony  Italian bands of the Vivaldi craze to the clattery Brits of the ‘60s with the harpsichord drowning out everything – the early days of the London Concert, under Trevor Pinnock, were thus afflicted – to the present, nicely balanced sound of Bicket’s group. He has been here often, and has been a welcome visitor every time.<br />
<a href="http://www.amazon.com/Beethoven-Piano-Sonatas-Vol-VI/dp/B0015YI246%3FSubscriptionId%3D02E5W5871AJF7PMMMS82%26tag%3Dsoivehe-20%26linkCode%3Dxm2%26camp%3D2025%26creative%3D165953%26creativeASIN%3DB0015YI246"><img class="alignleft" src="http://ecx.images-amazon.com/images/I/316gkvyITqL._SL160_.jpg" alt="" /></a>Next night there was András Schiff, continuing his cycle of the complete Beethoven Piano Sonatas to his usual sold-out house – including one sub-moron out front with a flash camera, a potent argument for arming the house staff with shotguns. I am not a Schiff admirer out of hand; in fact his performance of the murderously difficult fugue that ends the “Hammerklavier,” which Schiff took at a pace so deliriously fast that it no longer mattered whether he was landing on the right notes or on any notes, merely angered me and made it impossible to regard his performance as a musical experience. Before that I had heard quite an exhilarating performance of Opus 101, and a beautiful, relaxed saunter through the lovely slow movement of Opus 90. To my taste I found the whole of the monumental “Hammerklavier” poorly comprehended in Schiff’s uneven performance. Could it have been the rogue photographer and his flash? Schiff has reacted poorly to audience misbehavior in the past.</p>
<p>HO-YO-TO-HO!! I am old enough (alas) to remember when recorded Wagner meant mind-boggling and arm-breaking scattershot albums of bits and pieces. the closest to-complete<br />
<em><a href="http://www.amazon.com/Wagner-Die-Walkure-Robert-Gambill/dp/B001E6G14S%3FSubscriptionId%3D02E5W5871AJF7PMMMS82%26tag%3Dsoivehe-20%26linkCode%3Dxm2%26camp%3D2025%26creative%3D165953%26creativeASIN%3DB001E6G14S"></a><a href="http://www.amazon.com/Wagner-Walk%C3%BCre-Acts-Alfred-Jerger/dp/B0000AE7BM%3FSubscriptionId%3D02E5W5871AJF7PMMMS82%26tag%3Dsoivehe-20%26linkCode%3Dxm2%26camp%3D2025%26creative%3D165953%26creativeASIN%3DB0000AE7BM"><img class="alignleft" src="http://ecx.images-amazon.com/images/I/51hxYEiIaSL._SL160_.jpg" alt="" /></a></em><a href="http://www.amazon.com/Wagner-Walk%C3%BCre-Act-Emanuel-List/dp/B000005GMW%3FSubscriptionId%3D02E5W5871AJF7PMMMS82%26tag%3Dsoivehe-20%26linkCode%3Dxm2%26camp%3D2025%26creative%3D165953%26creativeASIN%3DB000005GMW"><img class="alignleft" src="http://ecx.images-amazon.com/images/I/41Y8HVS313L._SL160_.jpg" alt="" /> </a><em>Die Walküre </em>(Victor M-26 &amp;27 for you number freaks) consisted of fourteen 78-rpm discs: two Brünnhildes, two Sieglindes, two Wotans, three conductors, several huge cuts. (Fourteen 78-rpm discs can total, at most, 140 minutes; the Met&#8217;s performance under James Levine runs 244.) The first consistent Wagnerian recording, also <em>Walküre</em>, was the whole of Act One (M-298), recorded in Vienna just before Hitler. It was glorious then; now, on a single CD,  it still is. Lotte Lehmann was the Sieglinde, Lauritz Melchior, the Siegmund; Bruno Walter conducted the Vienna Philharmonic. There hasn’t been a soprano since then who could shade the word “tränen” to draw tears as Lehmann did, as Sieglinde tells of Wotan’s visit to her wedding feast.</p>
<p>The original plan in 1938 was to record a complete Walküre in Vienna, under Walter with the cream of Wagnerian singers of the time. The Hitler Anschluss put a crimp in that plan, with Act One and a few scenes from Act Two in the can. The project was moved to Berlin, under the undistinguished baton of Bruno Seidler-Winkler, with a few splendid singers &#8212; Hans Hotter, Marta Fuchs, the young Margarete Klose as Fricka &#8212; but no Bruno Walter  to trace the lights and shadows of the &#8220;Annunciation of Death.&#8221; Out of the 20 sides of Act Two (Victor M-582) five were led by Walter with the Vienna Philharmonic; the other 15 by Seidler-Winkler, not with the Berlin Phil but with the State Opera house band. Both acts, on two CDs, make up the Naxos set; the EMI disc is of Act One only. Both, furthermore, may be hard to find, although Amazon has this efficient marketing plan though its outreach stores and has never let me down. Nobody bothered to record a complete Act Three until around 1950, when a so-so set with Helen Traubel and Herbert Janssen appeared &#8212; and soon disappeared, unable to hold its own against Wagnerian history, I&#8217;d guess.<br />
<a href="http://www.amazon.com/Wagner-Nibelungen-Pierre-Bayreuth-Complete/dp/B0009F2EPU%3FSubscriptionId%3D02E5W5871AJF7PMMMS82%26tag%3Dsoivehe-20%26linkCode%3Dxm2%26camp%3D2025%26creative%3D165953%26creativeASIN%3DB0009F2EPU"><img class="alignleft" src="http://ecx.images-amazon.com/images/I/51BBQ6KQYHL._SL160_.jpg" alt="" /></a>Now we are awash in Wagner, with George Solti’s epochal audio (which has, above all, the gleam of Birgit Nilsson’s Brünnhilde flashing mightily even through the heartbreak of Hans Hotter’s farewell. Some of the DVDs are visually beautiful: the back-to-nature staging at James Levine’s  Metropolitan Opera, the weird but effective setting amidst plumbing and building construction at the Stuttgart Opera, Pierre Boulez hard at work at a Bayreuth hydroelectric plant but with some rather so-so singers, Daniel Barenboim, also at Bayreuth, compressed into Harry Kupfer’s austere setting.</p>
<p><a href="http://www.amazon.com/Wagner-Nibelungen-Levine-Metropolitan-Complete/dp/B00006L9ZT%3FSubscriptionId%3D02E5W5871AJF7PMMMS82%26tag%3Dsoivehe-20%26linkCode%3Dxm2%26camp%3D2025%26creative%3D165953%26creativeASIN%3DB00006L9ZT"><img class="alignleft" src="http://ecx.images-amazon.com/images/I/418e8h3Io4L._SL160_.jpg" alt="" /></a>We’re in an era of Wagner interestingly staged, nowhere more so than here in Los Angeles with the fascinating symbolism of Achim Freyer’s creations – next week, <em>Walküre</em>, and I hear that the Valkyries ride in on bicycles! Somewhere else in California, I hear that they’re staging the <em>Ring</em> as if in the American Wild West. Frankly, I’d swap just one of those fancy stagings for a night of Lehmann and Melchior as those sonorous siblings.</p>
<p>LET ME BACKTRACK, AT LEAST A FEW INCHES: Actually, the glorious Wagnerian past, whose passing I so ardently mourn, is not  so much dead as simply distant. In the early days of electrical recording the London-based Gramophone Company did busy itself with Wagnerian activity, mostly based at Bayreuth but also in London and Vienna; the Walküre albums I mentioned earlier were one product. There were similar bulky sets of <em>Siegfried, Götterdämmerung</em>, and <em>Tannhauser</em>; Wagner&#8217;s son Siegfried, and even Toscanini, were rumored to take part in preparing some performances. The competing Columbia Gramophone Company had a <em>Tristan</em>. Most of the performances were piecemeal; various conductors and singers contributed various parts of the music dramas and the sound was, of course, what you might expect from primitive technology in the years 1928 thru 1932-or-so.</p>
<p><a href="http://www.amazon.com/Wagner-Siegfried-abridged-Richard/dp/B00004XSJC%3FSubscriptionId%3D02E5W5871AJF7PMMMS82%26tag%3Dsoivehe-20%26linkCode%3Dxm2%26camp%3D2025%26creative%3D165953%26creativeASIN%3DB00004XSJC"><img class="alignleft" src="http://ecx.images-amazon.com/images/I/21TEHAG601L._SL160_.jpg" alt="" /></a>What mattered, however, were the singers, who on the whole came through. Old and faint as these recordings may be, they capture a generation of Wagnerian performers, and Wagnerian performing styles, that form a document beyond price.  On a two-CD Naxos set, the sound restored by the legendary Ward Marston, there is a collection of moments from <em>Siegfried</em> &#8212; formerly Victor M-83, 161 &amp; 167, 20 discs, 152 minutes &#8212; cf the Met&#8217;s &#8220;complete&#8221; 253.  The young Melchior trumpets forth his defiance as he forges the great sword Nothung and later achieves manhood alongside Florence Easton&#8217;s Brünnhilde; their final duet is delivered complete, and Easton&#8217;s &#8220;Heil dir, Sonne&#8221; sends shivers.  Friedrich Schorr is the Wanderer/Wotan; the deep, dark eloquence of his delivery is what people still evoke when this music comes to mind. (I heard him once, from standing room in Boston; some things you don&#8217;t forget.)  On Naxos there is also a Marston-restored <em>Tannhäuser</em>, also from those old Victor albums. I pray that the aforementioned <em>Walküre</em> albums will turn up on CD; their content is priceless,  with Schorr&#8217;s farewell to the Brünnhilde of Frieda Leider. Some of the sides &#8212; ten of the 28 &#8211;  have another legend, the great Albert Coates conducting. Those were the days, my friends.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>DEVASTATION</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2009/03/devastation/</link>
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		<pubDate>Sun, 22 Mar 2009 21:21:50 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[soiveheard.com]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=167</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[The slow movement of Mozart’s G-minor Quintet is as heartbreaking as any music I know. I have written about this music before – a couple of pages in the foreword to my book of this same name repeat an article from New York Magazine in the 1970s, which in turn regurgitates wisdom verbatim from the [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>The slow movement of Mozart’s G-minor Quintet is as heartbreaking as any music I know. I have written about this music before – a couple of pages in the foreword to my book of this same name repeat an article from New York Magazine in the 1970s, which in turn regurgitates wisdom verbatim from the classrooms of David Boyden and Joe Kerman at UC-Berkeley in the 1950s. Hearing it again last Friday, wonderfully played by the Calder Quartet plus Paul Coletti’s second viola at Zipper Hall, I found myself   reacting more strongly than ever before to the G-minor outcry that begins the next movement, the ensuing Arioso – Mozart’s refusal to let go of the agonies he has shared with us over the eight minutes of the previous movement – and I ended the evening aware that my years of adoration of this one Mozart revelation so far have been in no way adequate.</p>
<p>That movement remains unique. Just the subtlety in the range of its tone color makes it so,  in demanding that its five instruments perform muted until that overpowering release, the single high D that proclaims major triumphant over minor. In schoolboy enthusiasm I once proclaimed that D my favorite note in all music, and friends came over and asked me to play it for them – the one note! That’s nonsense, of course; a note is only a note in context. And when Ben Jacobson played it on Friday, because of the way he and his four partners had gotten themselves into the context of that amazing entire work, that stupendous panorama of suffering and irony and, in its final movement, an almost insolent masque of resolution, that high D had once again become, indeed, my favorite of all notes, ever.</p>
<p>The Calders are really good. They play the classical repertory with elegance and respect, patience and genuine wit. Beethoven’s first “Razumovsky” was their other big work on Friday, and this, too, was treated exactly right: a big, loving performance full of the great rhythmic quirks of middle-period Beethoven. Better still, they let the stars come out and shine all over the slow movement. That movement is just the reverse of Mozart’s. Midway, it simply soars, skyward, and the great performances do nothing to control the captivating ecstasy, as this didn’t.</p>
<p>The concert was free, and Zipper Hall filled up quickly with an audience young and attentive. Nobody applauded between movements. Ten-or-so years ago I wrote with concern about the  dying out, or at least the aging out, of the chamber music audience. Now we have the Calder playing classic repertory at the Colburn School and the Denali playing contemporary repertory at Jacaranda, both to big, supportive audiences.</p>
<p>Both quartets, as it happens, played one of the new-music landmark works within the last few days and did so handsomely:  Ben Johnston’s  1984 set of variations on “Amazing Grace” that wanders off into microtones and just intonation and other harmonic and contrapuntal shenanigans. The old boy was in town for a few days, and the Denali played his piece for him at an invitational party. Then, by the time the Calders played it to begin their concert, Ben Johnston himself had already flown off to Germany for some other celebration.</p>
<p>ECSTASY: I spoke of ecstasy back there. Then there is the slow movement of Maurice Ravel’s Piano Concerto: a quietly unfolding lyric line for the piano alone, untroubled, utterly joyous. At a certain point,  as if the most natural thing in the world, a flute joins in, then others. Nothing breaks the quiet, loving…yes, ecstasy. That’s the way Martha Argerich played it last week here. Sure, it was thrilling, the way those iron fingers of hers shot out  and made ice sculptures out of Ravel’s rhythms in the outer movements , but it was that slow movement, where you began by listening and then, without noticing, you found yourself breathing in the rhythm of the music itself. Yannick Nezet-Séguin, Montreal-born, was the excellent conductor, and put over a mostly moving Shostakovich Fifth although I found his tempo changes in the last movement a little off-putting.  I cherish a tape from Kurt Sanderling’s days here as guest conductor; he knew Shostakovich, and he knew what this music was supposed to signify, and his way makes better sense than anyone’s else I know.</p>
<p>This weekend’s Philharmonic conductor, replacing Yuri Temirkanoff, has been  the 31-year-old, obscenely good-looking, circa nine-feet-tall, curly-topped Pablo Heras-Casado, whom I managed to miss at his Green Umbrella debut last December but won’t ever again; he’s terrific. His bio, which has him leading virtually every new-music, experimental-music and youth-oriented organization here and abroad, goes on for days; that document is breath-taking, and so is his work. He leads without baton, but also without the affectation that many hands-only conductors employ; he is eminently watchable. His Mendelssohn “Italian” was crisp, spirited, impulsive; his Mahler Fourth was beautifully balanced. The devastating orchestral climaxes in first and third movements, which can sit at the edge of trashiness in less careful performances, were nicely, intelligently arrived at. Kate Royal sang the childlike Knaben Wunderhorn verses of the final movement very beautifully indeed, not chirpingly as some do but with wonderment and humor as all should. She stood, would you believe, even taller than Señor Heras-Casado; quite the sight.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>MEHTA-PHOBIA</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2009/03/mehta-phobia/</link>
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		<pubDate>Fri, 13 Mar 2009 01:34:26 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[soiveheard.com]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://65.58.242.66/?p=129</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[MEHTA-PHOBIA: Now and then you couldn&#8217;t help but recognize the sound of the Vienna Philharmonic: in the grandiose oratory of the massed brass that brought the first movement of the Bruckner Ninth to its close; to the trio of the scherzo of the Schubert Ninth, when strings and winds conspired&#160; to force open vistas across [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>MEHTA-PHOBIA: Now and then you couldn&rsquo;t help but recognize the sound of the Vienna Philharmonic: in the grandiose oratory of the massed brass that brought the first movement of the Bruckner Ninth to its close; to the trio of the scherzo of the Schubert Ninth, when strings and winds conspired&nbsp; to force open vistas across the Vienna woods, with their ever-so-slightly (&ldquo;gem&uuml;tlich&rdquo;) off-the-beat accents that constitutes the Viennese smile. But the concerts here at Disney were no happy events over all; the programming was ridiculous, and Zubin Mehta was in charge. Program #1 had as its central attraction a set of songs by Joseph Marx. Already in my student years in Vienna &#8212; 1953, say &#8212; he was one of the last of Vienna&rsquo;s surviving dinosaurs, those stirrers of the soup-pots in which bubbled the chromatic dregs of Wagnerism mingled with a thin Brahmsian treacle. Herr Marx would perch in his box at the Musikverein, desperate to be noticed; not many did. Last Tuesday a clutch of his songs were sung just okay by a certain Angela Maria Blasi. Next night there was time put to even poorer use in a different fashion the sweet but fatuous F-minor Piano Concerto of Chopin employed as a wind-up toy for the garish talents of Lang Lang, an unconscionable squandering of arguably the world&rsquo;s finest symphony orchestra as backup for beyond-argument the world&rsquo;s most tragically wasted potential keyboard virtuoso. <br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; I have dealt with the phenomenon of Mehta often enough; I have come no closer than ever to understanding the circumstances that maintain his career. The essence of the basic symphonic repertory continues to elude him: the achievement of the orchestral balance that might clarify the imponderable scoring in a Bruckner symphony; the line of thought in that music that keeps the music moving forward even when dear old Anton finds it necessary to come to a sudden stop. As for the Schubert Ninth, the major work on the second of the two concerts, I only wonder that some members of that splendid orchestra &ndash; whose personnel does, indeed, include a Schubert (Gerald) among its mellifluous violins &ndash; do not rise up in protest against a reading of their musical patrimony so stodgy in rhythm, so crude in its orchestral balance. Ah me, I remember all too well the even sadder night back in 1964, when the younger and wetter-behind-the-ears Zubin brought his ruined Los Angeles Philharmonic to a misbegotten Carnegie Hall debut for which neither it nor he was anywhere near ready &ndash; propelled by the same misguided civic pride that had pushed Mehta into the job &ndash; and wrought the same havoc on the same Schubert Ninth. You could look it up.<br />&nbsp;&nbsp; At least he was young and exotic then, with those flashing Parsi eyes; if he couldn&rsquo;t woo the music, he could the influential ladies out front. Now he fixes the world with an angry glare, and oozes his way toward the podium as if he&rsquo;d just peed in his pants, bearing on his stooped shoulders the remnants of a glory that might have been, but which has been too often wrongly steered. </p>
<p>SATURDAY&rsquo;S treasures made everything seem right again. In the afternoon the L.A. Opera revived its enchanting 2007 staging of Benjamin Britten&rsquo;s <em>Noyes Fludde</em>, again somewhat adrift in the vast and acoustically-troubled space of the downtown Cathedral but redeemed by the shared wonderment of the capacity crowds at the two performances. All hail James Conlon, who shaped the musical forces that included a contingent from his own Opera Orchestra, a larger group from Hamilton High and the Colburn School, and Children&rsquo;s Choruses from all over to sing and to bang on things. All hail Eli Villanueva, under whose direction the Cathedral space was filled with the goofy magic of flying birds on long sticks, an all-but-realistic Ark, and anything else you&rsquo;d need to bring to life the medieval retelling of the legend of Noah and his Flood.<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Britten&rsquo;s special achievement in this work of 1958 has been to create musical drama that is both simple in its appeal to a young audience and completely valid and interesting to listeners of every age. He continued in this vein with his short &ldquo;Church Parables&rdquo; but Noye remains special. Its two adult roles &ndash; Mr. And Mrs. Noah &ndash; demand strong voices; they were sung here by James Johnson and Beth Clayton, both currently involved in the <em>Ring</em>. The piece lasts about an hour, and at the end you feel completely fulfilled.<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; At night there was Jacaranda, also in a church &ndash; Santa Monica&rsquo;s First Pres &#8211;&nbsp; but one of comfortable size (and also pretty close to jam-packed). The Messiaen centennial celebration continues, with its imaginative excursions around the periphery and an occasional peek into the center. This last was fulfilled with a couple of songs, flown in on the wings of Jacquelynne Fontaine, an enchanting soprano new to us&nbsp; and all the more wondrous for that. She then went on to more familiar realm, the Fifth of Heitor Villa-Lobos&rsquo; <em>Bachianas Brasileiras</em>, the one that starts with the haunting cantilena you&rsquo;ll never get out of your head, followed by lesser stuff.<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Other Villa-Lobos had begun the program, the <em>Rudepoema</em> for solo piano, a continuous essay in irrational virtuosic demands, apparently written as a portrait of Artur Rubinstein (in 1927, when he might have come close to mastering it). A slender, cool&nbsp; chap named Danny Holt mastered the daylights out of it at Jacaranda: a phenomenal performance. Rationality was restored at program&rsquo;s end, with the marvelously clear-headed Trio of Maurice Ravel, delivered in like manner&nbsp; by string players&nbsp; Tereza Lucia Stanislav, Cecilia Tsan and pianist Robert Edward Thies. All hail them, too.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>MOSTLY&#160;MENDELSSOHN</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2009/02/mostly-mendelssohn/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2009/02/mostly-mendelssohn/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sun, 01 Mar 2009 01:33:42 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[soiveheard.com]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://65.58.242.66/?p=127</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[SINS OF MY DEJA VU&#8220;Equally rare was the slickly pretentious sonata for violin and cello of Ravel, performed by [Boris] Koutzen and son George with skill and understanding. [signed] A.R.&#8221; New York Sun, February 17, 1948. &#160; Hearing Ravel&#8217;s imaginatively colored Sonata at last week&#8217;s Philharmonic Chamber Music concert, its marvelous string of conversations&#160; on [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>SINS OF MY DEJA VU<br />&ldquo;Equally rare was the slickly pretentious sonata for violin and cello of Ravel, performed by [Boris] Koutzen and son George with skill and understanding. [signed] A.R.&rdquo; <em>New York Sun</em>, February 17, 1948. <br />&nbsp; Hearing Ravel&rsquo;s imaginatively colored Sonata at last week&rsquo;s Philharmonic Chamber Music concert, its marvelous string of conversations&nbsp; on matters sophisticated, sometimes exotic, a faint and not very happy memory&nbsp; came around to ruffle my conscience. Later, at home, I dug through yellowed newsprint and came across the above shameful item, back from my days as stringer for the late Irving Kolodin at the <em>New York Sun</em>, when I was called upon to write about&nbsp; dozens of concerts, hearing a lot of music for the first time, but obsessed with the necessity to express an opinion on every work, familiar or not. I know stringers here in town these days obsessed of the same delusion, and as I have ripened into a deeper understanding&nbsp; of music, so has my passion increased to wring every one of their goddam necks. <br />&nbsp; At Disney the Ravel was played by Philharmonic members Robert Vijay Gupta and Ben Hong with, as I was saying, &ldquo;skill and understanding.&rdquo; It is really a wise and complex work, full of contrapuntal devices and borrowings from other adventurous composers of the time &ndash; Kod&aacute;ly, Bart&oacute;k. (Hear it again next Friday, same performers, at the Culver City Town Hall.) Actually, this was one of the most rewarding of the Philharmonic&rsquo;s chamber concerts; the Brahms <em>Horn Trio</em> ensued, one of that Hamburger&rsquo;s less uningratiating works &ndash; actually bright at times &ndash; and the concluding Mendelssohn Trio was, for once, not the overplayed&nbsp; D-minor but the C minor, positively jaunty by contrast. <br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Camille Avellano, William Lane and Norman Krieger performed the Brahms; Johnny Lee, Brent Samuel and Chris Weldon, the Mendelssohn, &#8212; all Philharmonickers, of course, but their credentials pale to ash beside the blurbs for the Ravel gang. Get a load: Robert Gupta, who joined the Philharmonic two years ago, at 19, studied with Isaac Stern among others, and between practice sessioms took part in research projects&nbsp; in neuro- and neurodegenerative biology. He has worked on spinal chord neuronal regeneration and on the pathology of Parkinson&rsquo;s disease and, if you&rsquo;re ready, has authored&nbsp; an award-winning study&nbsp; on the toxicological effects of platinum nanoparticles on embryonic chickens.<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; And then there&rsquo;s Ben Hong, who rides three sports motorcycles, bicycles, scuba dives, practices martial arts and West African drumming. <br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; And did I tell you about my B.A.? All the way to pre-med, I&rsquo;ll have you know.</p>
<p>FELICITIES: This is a Felix Mendelssohn year (along with Lincoln, Haydn, probably more&hellip;). We&rsquo;ve already gotten&nbsp; <em>Elijah</em> out of the way; let&rsquo;s hope that also absolves us of <em>St. Pau</em>l. There are small Mendelssohn treasures &ndash; orchestrations of some of the piano pieces and a hilarious choral number affixed to the finale of the <em>&ldquo;Scotch&rdquo; Symphony</em> &ndash; in the music Erich Korngold concocted for his filmscore for <em>A Midsummer Night&rsquo;s Dream</em>, now finally out on DVD. Last week James Conlon crossed the street to Disney Hall, to guest-conduct the Philharmonic in all-Mendelssohn, a program if anything too short; I would have wanted more of the miraculous &ldquo;Dream&rdquo; music, but that would have meant bringing in a women&rsquo;s chorus, and the economy, you know&hellip; Anyhow, Conlon is attached to the First Symphony, which the Philharmonic had never before played. (Imagine!) <br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; This Symphony is more than a curio, not quite a masterpiece; it stands honorably beside the boyhood symphonies of Schubert as thoroughly proficient and certainly worth a place in the repertory. It is delightfully easy to fathom what was on its composer&rsquo;s mind: the Mozart 40th and 41st&nbsp; high&nbsp; on the list, with their serious, eager counterpoint and, in the 41st,&nbsp; their bright, brassy perorations. But that clarinet solo in the finale, over string pizzicato (and the way Lorin Levee played it), is pure Mendelssohn-to-be. If anything, the big ideas in all four movements suggest longer structures than the cautious young composer allots us; I had the feeling of 40 minutes of music crammed into twenty-five. <br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Sarah Chang played the inevitable Violin Concerto, but played it better than I had expected from the inevitable Sarah Chang of the recent past. Perhaps she has finally outgrown the inevitable Bruch-at-the-Bowl; from her playing this time I heard simple, beautiful phrasing, a sense of real involvement, even humor, in&nbsp; what is, actually, one of music&rsquo;s most congenial masterpieces.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>The Ring&#160;Resounds</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2009/02/the-ring-resounds/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2009/02/the-ring-resounds/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Tue, 24 Feb 2009 01:33:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[soiveheard.com]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://65.58.242.66/?p=125</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[UP ONE RUNG: Okay, here’s our Ring,  &#8212; or Chapter One, anyhow &#8212; trailing its $-multi-million price tag, its years-long saga of rumor and expectation, raised hopes and dashed.  By now they’ll probably have ironed out the inevitable first-night glitches  in this fearsome mechanism that makes the old Grendel set look like Tiddley-Winks.  At the [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>UP ONE RUNG: Okay, here’s our <em>Ring</em>,  &#8212; or Chapter One, anyhow &#8212; trailing its $-multi-million price tag, its years-long saga of rumor and expectation, raised hopes and dashed.  By now they’ll probably have ironed out the inevitable first-night glitches  in this fearsome mechanism that makes the old <em>Grendel </em>set look like Tiddley-Winks.  At the dress rehearsal they had to stop, because Achim Freyer’s stage machinery wouldn’t  allow  his world to swing open and permit passage to Alberich’s underworld.  Those of us privileged to witness this mini-disaster held our breath on opening night. That time, the world swung open on cue.  So, in Achim Freyer’s hands, does Wagner’s world, the one which begins and ends in the span of eighteen hours of music drama – throbbing, chromatic, heroic, exasperating,  gorgeous, unforgettable.<br />
The <em>Ring</em> is the sacred plaything among operas and opera companies.  On my own shelf there’s a DVD version set in naturalistic scenery, another in an Industrial Revolution setting among  factories, another in the basement of a modern office building – plumbing ‘n’all.  The San Francisco  Opera is running Francesca  Zambello’s madcap  version set in the American Wild West.  There have been Rings with a Freudian spin, or a Marxist. True believers among Wagnerian audiences can always be heard comparing how many <em>Rings</em> they’ve seen. They can usually count at least one <em>Ring</em> per finger.<br />
L.A. Opera’s <em>Ring</em> is  the first ever mounted  here, Its four sectors are being doled out over two seasons; <em>Die Walküre</em>, which has most of the hit tunes, comes in on April 4. Saturday night we got <em>Das Rheingold</em>,   running through March 15, which  is actually a kind of prologue that sets the whole kaboodle in motion. It runs a painless  2-1/2 hours; the other parts run four or five. Plenty happens, though; most important  is that Wotan pulls off the gigantic swindle which, eighteen hours of opera later, will destroy him, the rest of the Gods and all their offspring and start the whole cycle again. (Thus:  “ring.”)<br />
The production – design and  direction both – is the work of Achim Freyer, a German visual genius whose previous work here includes the  spectacular  <em>Damnation of Faust</em>. Not for Freyer this baloney of a transplanted  Ring into the Wild West, or a Freudian rewrite.  An abstractionist in Germany’s opera houses and art galleries, a much-honored painter adept at expressing much with  minimums of light and line, Freyer has created a  Ring that is deeply, intensely – and, for the most part, gorgeously – about itself.<br />
Following Wagner’s practice at his own theater in Bayreuth,  Freyer  covers the orchestra pit, setting the Rhine Maidens afloat in the almost total darkness of the Chandler Pavilion. Beams of light then rake the stage; they form a counterpoint  as the evil Alberich perpetrates his grand theft, and they lead the eye upward to  the Gods’ world, from which Wotan,  in need of closing the escrow on Valhalla, sets out with Loge to secure  some new gold for the deal.  Their visit to Alberich’s den of iniquity occasions one of the few iniquities in the production itself: Rather than the charming ding-a-ding-ding of  Alberich’s vassals pounding on their  anvils, we get a less agreeable amplified thud.<br />
Across vast distances , on a stage with a few acoustic dead spots the vocal forces grapple bravely with Wagner’s not-always-ingratiating  lines: Michelle DeYoung and Vitalij Kowalijow as the squabbling Wotans, Ellie Dehn as the sweet-voiced, put-upon beauty-goddess Freia,  Graham Clark as the blacksmith Mime &#8211;done up on an oversized face mask in an uncanny resemblance to newspaper tycoon Sam Zell – and, an irresistible scene-stealer, Arnold Bezuyen as the master-conniver fire-demigod Loge.<br />
The Wagnerian world, in Freyer’s design, is a stage-filling disc that flickers and oozes and bedazzles. You work your way through a myriad of symbols that are of no time and place, every time and every place – from the mundane carpenter’s ruler with which the Giants measure their pile of gold to the cage that Wotan must wear as a trap for his marital hanky-panky. . In the moment of Donner’s thunderstorm,  the entire great stage shatters and reforms as a billowing blood-red fabric inundation,  out of which the cries of the cheated Rhine Maidens mingle with the heroic forecasts from James Conlon’s eloquent, surging orchestra. All the  while, suspended  overhead  (okay, he’s in a  toy airplane,  so?),  the god Froh traces the rainbow bridge that the Gods will cross to the newly paid-for Valhalla. You gotta be there.</p>
<p>MEANWHILE, BACK ON EARTH: Christian Zacharias’ visits to the Philharmonic are always worthwhile; they usually have him at work both as conductor (always at ground level, without podium) and pianist.  His program began down in depths even undreamed by Wagner, the dreary Second Serenade of Brahms, its inferior tunesmanship  muddied all the more by the lack of violins in the reduced orchestra. Far more interesting was the program’s major novelty, a Sinfonia Concertante by Haydn, a late work dating from the composer’s first time in London, with large orchestra and solos by violin, cello, oboe and bassoon. It’s a really strong work, with “daring” key-changes and a lovely slow-movement melody, a worthy compa nion to the first set of “London” Symphonies that date from the same time,<br />
Schumann’s Piano Concerto, a work I tend to regard as perfect, ended the evening gloriously: tempos somewhat on the brisk side, but every measure a love letter, sealed and delivered.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>NOBODY&#039;S&#160;COUNTING</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2009/02/nobodys-counting/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2009/02/nobodys-counting/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 18 Feb 2009 01:32:08 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[soiveheard.com]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://65.58.242.66/?p=123</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[JUST HOME FROM A DAS RHEINGOLD TECH REHEARSAL. DON’T EVEN THINK ABOUT NOT GOING. AS THE PAPERS FOLD, ONE BY ONE, LA CITYBEAT is a small, free, alternative weekly; run by good guys and willing to allot space now and then to my writing– some of it from this blog, some not,  for at least [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>JUST HOME FROM A <em>DAS RHEINGOLD</em> TECH REHEARSAL. DON’T EVEN THINK ABOUT NOT GOING.</p>
<p>AS THE PAPERS FOLD, ONE BY ONE, <em>LA CITYBEAT</em> is a small, free, alternative weekly; run by good guys and willing to allot space now and then to my writing– some of it from this blog, some not,  for at least pocket money After several decades of seeing myself on newsprint, it’s good to be back.</p>
<p>SOMETHING OLD.. Gradually, the handsome and comfortable Broad Stage, the new concert hall  on the Santa Monica College campus,  takes its place as an important addition to the cultural landscape. Last week saw the beginning of  the L.A. Chamber Orchestra’s “Westside Connections,” the double meaning of which has to do with establishing a toehold in that new territory and also in offering an interesting concert format connecting music and the spoken word. Bravo to both.<br />
At Thursday’s concert  the words were spoken by Dana Gioia – poet, author, until last month head of the National Endowment for the Arts (of doomed memory, I fear). He read, most beautifully, his own poetry and the writings of others: Romantics, Blake and Browning, those guys. (Will anyone ever run out of the wonderment of “fearful symmetry”?) The chamber music, by Mendelssohn and Schumann, tuned perfectly to the mood of the poetry, even the rich <em>chalumeau</em> of Gioia’s reading. One work, a String Quintet in B flat by Mendelssohn, not early but with the same exuberance that we know from his youthful  Octet, was new to me and wonderful. LACO’s Jeff Kahane sat next to me, and we exchanged delighted glances at this discovery</p>
<p>EVEN OLDER…The titles that survive in Henry Purcell’s <em>The Fairy Queen</em> – “Monkeys’ Dance”, “Dance of the Chinese Man” measured against the work itself, a fanciful paraphrase of <em>A Midsummer Night’s Dream </em>from a century later – arouse curiosity; the deep, rich, Baroque beauty of the music, with its courageous range of dissonance, needs no defense. Martin Haselböck and his Musica Angelica gave us the whole magnificent two hours’ worth, Sunday  at Broad, with the Concord Ensemble – an excellent small chorus – and an outstanding gathering of vocal soloists led by the crystalline soprano of Lisa Saffer, the always-solid bass of Michael Dean but also including a newcomer, Catherine Webster, pressed into service on a couple of days’ notice. Unheralded, out of the ensemble, a lithe and witty young tenor  named Pablo Corá also deserved notice.<br />
You all know Purcell’s <em>Dido and Aeneas</em>, and it is a masterpiece no doubt. But there are others, from the short lifetime of this phenomenally talented  Brit with a particular gift toward infusing his music with a powerful theatrical sense. Early in life he absorbed the genius of Monteverdi, and this comes through in all his dramatic works, including <em>Dido</em>. A reasonably well-behaved  <em>Fairy Queen</em> should be within the purview of the Long Beach Opera, monkey dances ‘n’ all.</p>
<p>SOMETHING NEW…Founded in Poland, based in Canada, the Penderecki String Quartet was a frequent visitor to the Monday Evening Concerts during their (sob!) days at LACMA. More’s the pity that their REDCAT concert last Saturday offered only half a program. But that half was mostly George Crumb’s sizzling <em>Black Angels</em>, his Vietnam outcry with gongs, electrified strings, ancient howls – music that has not lost one syllable of its pristine message. I would never want to share a program with <em>Black Angels</em>, and this night at REDCAT wasn’t easy on Veronica Krausas or Arnold Schoenberg, whose music just tagged along (with some nice visuals). Michael Gordon’s <em>Weather</em>, filled the evening’s other half, an unwelcome guest, its raggedy minimalist patterns ground out by a CalArts string ensemble on a flat stage instead of the requisite scaffolding to provide a sense of dimension. It was further flattened by the sad and soggy level of the performance under Mark Menzies.</p>
<p>NEWER YET…The Monday Evening Concerts, aforementioned,  have since their founding (in 1939!) set the worldwide example in maintaining a pace the proper distance ahead of everyone else in musical creativity and consumption. Attempts to clip their wings, as when LACMA kicked them off the premises three years ago, have gone rightly nowhere. I miss their former involvement with West Coast music-making, but their international outlook is brave, and Monday night’s sold-out audience at Zipper Hall crowned the efforts of Justin Urcis and his cohorts.<br />
The music was that of the late Gérard Grisey, spokesman of French <em>spectralisme</em>, on-the-edge experimental stuff, wherein one composes with sounds, not notes, and no longer with sounds but with the differences that separate them; to act on these differences; on their evolution or non-evolution; and the speed of this evolution.<br />
Still here? Monday’s concert involved, first, half an hour of percussion ensemble, ringing the room. Then, a work that began with a solo viola  gradually merging into a small orchestra with, I quote, “three kinds of…growing loudness or tension…analogous to the phases of human respiration…” the whole shebang enduring close to an hour.  Steven Schick’s percussion ensemble, <em>red fish blue fish</em>, banged bravely through the first music; Michel Galante led the Argento Chamber Ensemble, a fearless international ensemble, through the second work, which bore the lovely title <em>Les espaces Acoustiques</em>.<br />
The full house cheered both, to the rafters. Go figure.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>THE SPICE OF&#160;LIFE</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2009/02/the-spice-of-life/</link>
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		<pubDate>Wed, 11 Feb 2009 01:31:24 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[soiveheard.com]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://65.58.242.66/?p=121</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[: Eye surgery in the morning, Figaro after dinner: there’s nothing like a little variety, so they say, to add spice to ones life. The surgery went well; bye-bye cataracts. All else pales before The Marriage of Figaro. Those kids at UCLA really got it right. Peter Kazaras brought the school’s opera program into its [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>: Eye surgery in the morning, <em>Figaro</em> after dinner: there’s nothing like a little variety, so they say, to add spice to ones life. The surgery went well; bye-bye cataracts. All else pales before <em>The Marriage of Figaro</em>. Those kids at UCLA really got it right.<br />
Peter Kazaras brought the school’s opera program into its own  with an astonishing <em>Falstaff</em> a couple of years ago; <em>Figaro</em> was even better. The musical ensemble was a joy to watch (Kazaras’ doing) and to hear (Neal Stulberg’s razor-sharp baton). The look of the stage was mostly make-do, but good of its kind; the most dangerous moments in the action – the deployment of the characters in the final scene, so that the right person gets slapped at the right moment – came off capitally. The two arias usually omitted, for Marcellina and Basilio in the last act, were allotted their proper place this time. It may be out of place for an elderly critic to go gaga over student singers a fourth his age, but there was so much delight in the work of Lauren Michelle, the wonderfully wise and composed Susanna, and Leslie Cook, the airborne Cherubino, that I would risk betraying Dr. Yuri’s eyeball surgery if I let them pass unnoticed. Two performances remain, this Friday and Sunday, crammed into UCLA’s Schoenberg Hall. There are two casts, and Neal Stulberg assures me that the second ensemble is every bit as fine as the group I saw. Since he is, himself, responsible for the magic of this truly splendid event, I tend to believe him. Halos are in order, all around.</p>
<p>AND ONE MORE HALO, please, for Catherine Uniack, who burst into a crowded roomful on Sunday afternoon with the news that Gloria Cheng’s disc had, moments before, pulled down the Grammy that we all knew she greatly deserved – a disc on TelArc full of music by our great friends Esa-Pekka, Steve Stucky and Witold Lutoslawski that Gloria had played last September at her Piano Spheres concert. Cathy is the Executive Director of Piano Spheres, wonderfully devoted and hard-working; the concerts, founded by Leonard Stein, are the background of this Los Angeles  piano movement – are we ready to call it “school?” &#8211;  that gives us this marvelous sense of exploration, that encourages Esa-Pekka to compose for Gloria, Mark Robson to plunge headlong into staggering Messiaen confrontations, Vicki Ray and Susan Svrcek to push back against the barriers of what constitute normal music for their instruments. I mean…I’ll drink in the Andras Schiff Beethoven concerts alongside the next guy, and there’s a great new Murray Perahia disc out on Sony, but this week the halos go to Cathy Uniack…and to Gloria.<br />
…and to Vicki, whose Piano Spheres concert last Tuesday was one of those grand potpourris that she puts together better than anyone. It began with Stravinsky dry and crackly, the Two-Piano Concerto from 1935, when there wasn’t a gram of meat on those bones, but the crackles were now-and-then amusing. Julie Steinberg, San Francisco’s own Vicki Ray, was the second pianist at stage left. Slight, agreeable works by Rand Steiger and Fred Rzewski formed some packing material; John Adams’s <em>Eros Piano</em>, played without its orchestral backing, seemed somewhat trivialized by the loss. At the end came Julia Wolfe’s 1993 <em>my lips from speaking</em>, long and jammed with pretensions, somewhat trivialized by the presence.</p>
<p>JACARANDA CONTINUES its wonderfully inscrutable ways, providing its chosen celebrant with the most sumptuously embroidered birthday box in which to celebrate in absentia. There was no Messiaen on Saturday’s Messiaen celebration,  and none at next month’s; the ecstasy is in the zeroing in, and in the wisdom of Patrick’s devotional program notes – page after page this time, all worthy of publication, and with one special delight: the way the deviations in the spelling of “Franck” versus “Frank” swung back and forth like a censer at St-Sulpice.<br />
I can learn to live with a modicum of Fauré (provided it’s the <em>Requiem</em>), and so much of Saturday’s program tended to enhance awareness <em>au fond</em> of church-pew construction. Then, from the most unexpected source, came the evening’s great Surprise: a Piano Quintet by Louis Vierne, composed in 1918. Here is a piece whose very pedigree inspires fear and loathing: a French organist, thus bearing the stigma of César Franck; blind from birth plus a few other afflictions, father to a family of offspring mostly killed in WWI; struggling to compose this one chamber work with his brother helping to fill in the note-heads on the manuscript paper. And then, voilà!<br />
I am not ready to proclaim this Quintet of Vierne any kind of long-lost masterpiece. Surely the element of surprise has entered into my reaction to the work. I found it a considerably attractive work, the more so in its dark, rich, haunting slow movement and its lively, shapely finale than its somewhat over-eager first part. If I had a recording, which I don’t, I would gladly give it some study. All I know for sure so far is that musicians I have come to trust and admire – Jacaranda’s Denali Quartet plus the pianist Steven Vanhauwaert – have given the work a serious and devoted performance, and that music I had expected to curdle in my eardrums on Saturday night failed to live down to expectations.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Fox&#160;Trot</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2009/02/fox-trot/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2009/02/fox-trot/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 04 Feb 2009 01:30:38 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[soiveheard.com]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://65.58.242.66/?p=119</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[THE REAL THING This was to be my last piece for Bloomberg. Theirs the loss. If you were moved – nay, charmed, delighted, fascinated – by The Cunning Little Vixen at the Long Beach Opera last month, you’ve probably already discovered the excellent versions on DVD – the cute but satisfactory version in animation conducted [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>THE REAL THING<br />
This was to be my last piece for Bloomberg. Theirs the loss.</p>
<p>If you were moved – nay, charmed, delighted, fascinated – by <em>The Cunning Little Vixen </em>at the Long Beach Opera last month, you’ve probably already discovered the excellent versions on DVD – the cute but satisfactory version in animation conducted by Kent Nagano, and the authoritative performance under the Janacek specialist Sir Charles Mackerras. There is one other, however – old, faded but magical. I saw it once on tape in the 1970s, when its creator brought it to a Boston audience at the invitation of Sarah Caldwell – and held us spellbound.  I never hoped to see it again. Now everybody can.</p>
<p>That is the production of Walter Felsenstein, the crown of his leadership of East Berlin’s Komische Oper, 1947-1971, when that company was reconstituted after WWII.  Seven of Felsenstein’s productions were filmed under his supervision, some remodeled from their stage versions, some filmed “straight.” All seven now come on DVD, in a box of twelve discs, marketed at the absurdly low price of $149. None of them represent “authentic” versions of the operas at hand; some are in black&amp;white, only one of the seven (<em>Fidelio</em>)  is sung in its proper language, and that one is drastically cut (for the better). But there is a level of dramatic creativity here that is so fascinating, so worth your study and your ponder, that this handsomely produced Art-Haus box from our friends at Naxos cannot be dismissed. And in the case of the “drastically cut” <em>Fidelio</em>, which is furthermore played in fresh German air rather than on a stodgy stage set, I cannot see anyone going back to all that silly operetta stuff at the beginning of the original score, once we learn the essence of Beethoven’s true drama.</p>
<p>But it is the <em>Vixen</em> that really sells this set. Felsenstein moved his production from the opera house to East German TV studios, where he could have a free hand with the forest insects and animals, and with the yokels of the human story as well. The interaction among the species is simply fabulous in the literal sense; the wooing of the two foxes will take you to within earshot of <em>Tristan</em>. Rudolf Asmus, who sings the Forester, was one of the few notable stars of Felsenstein’s East German company; a few Americans had also slipped through the Curtain and show up in minor roles. Nobody in his company is less than competent; the once-famous Magda Laszlo is <em>Fidelio</em>’s Fidelio,  the voice-over for a handsome lad who actually looks the part.</p>
<p>The value in these performances cuts far deeper than vocal quality. What stands out above all in this Felsenstein repertory is the naturalness in the ensemble action: the way the characters in Mozart’s <em>Figaro</em> really seem to listen to one another; the sly insidiousness as Iago plays upon Otello’s mounting suspicions, the non-stop sequence of action, from soliloquy to rape to murder, in the first breathless moments of <em>Don Giovanni</em>. Two Offenbach operas – <em>Hoffmann</em> and <em>Bluebeard</em> – offer profound insights into the serious nature of human comedy.</p>
<p>These may not be the only DVD productions of these operas you’ll want to own. You may not want a German-sung <em>Figaro</em>, nor a <em>Don Giovanni</em> in black-and-white, as the only versions on your shelves. But there is the surpassing stagecraft at work in every one of these seven operas, and it rises to genius level in the <em>Vixen</em>. Ancient its sight and its sound may be, it is opera like nothing else you’ll ever see.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>TREASURES</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2009/02/treasures/</link>
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		<pubDate>Mon, 02 Feb 2009 01:29:46 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[soiveheard.com]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://65.58.242.66/?p=117</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[TREASURES: When did you last hear the B-minor Rondo Brillante of Schubert? Thursday’s Tetzlaff/Andsnes recital was marvelously played (as expected) and no less brilliantly planned. This Rondo ended it, a big, expansive work from 1826; Schubert had the “Great” C-,major Symphony behind  him, and had learned by then  how to flex his muscles in large [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>TREASURES: When did you last hear the B-minor <em>Rondo Brillante</em> of Schubert? Thursday’s Tetzlaff/Andsnes recital was marvelously played (as expected) and no less brilliantly planned. This <em>Rondo</em> ended it, a big, expansive work from 1826; Schubert had the “Great” C-,major Symphony behind  him, and had learned by then  how to flex his muscles in large instrumental forms. This work, written for a fiery Hungarian violinist, runs on and on, leapfrogging into unexpected key-areas and coming up with bright, nervy melodic gambits. Nine out of ten violinists will downplay Schubert’s music for violin and piano on the strength of a handful of early pieces, while this marvelous late work goes ignored; I don’t remember ever hearing it before in concert; I know a pokey recording from years ago by the Menuhins. This performance was a revelation – but not to the ears of the emissary of the<em> L.A. Times</em>, however, who wrote of this strong, unique work as “salon music.” Have people simply stopped listening?<br />
Also a revelation, for that matter, was the Mozart Sonata that preceded it, a work in F major (K. 377), a key-signature that usually promises gentility and regularity of form. Not this time, however; after quite a predictable sonata-formal first movement Mozart leads the expectations delightfully astray. His slow movement is quite a somber set of variations in the key – D minor – that always stands in for high drama; the finale is a not-very-danceable minuet with some exquisite turns of harmony.<br />
More Janacek; there can never be too much.The Violin Sonata, which began the<br />
concert ,.is an early work, colored by the composer’s nationalist awareness, not yet by the personal emotions that make the later works so fascinating. Next came the Brahms D-minor Sonata, last, most concise and best of his three. It got exactly the right performance: on the somewhat reserved side, aloof from the easy sentiment that can turn the middle movements mushy. (I treasure the old Szigeti/Petri recording; this performance came close.)<br />
This was a great evening: violin and piano without flash or schmaltz; even the encores were unusual; when did you last hear the Sibelius <em>Country Dances</em>? The crowd was of excellent size; the few empty seats were over on the right side.</p>
<p>The weekend’s offerings were mostly a sad affair, saddest of all with the news that Steven Stucky’s services as new-music advisor, or consulting composer – or whatever  the title – are apparently winding down. No orchestra to my knowledge has drawn so richly, so continuously on such valued advice  as the service Stucky has afforded the Philharmonic since coming aboard in 1988. An exceptional composer in his own right, he has guided composers through the process of having their music heard without regard to favoring a particular style or musical language. Just the way he has spoken about new music – all kinds of new music – at the pre-concert events in BP Hall  is been of a quality I have never heard matched at any other orchestra I have visited. In short, he has created both an orchestra and an audience for new music that has been a vital part of this city’s musical growth. He will be irreplaceable.<br />
There was a small, prickly and delightful work by Stucky at this weekend’s concert: <em>Son et Lumière</em>, a charmer, nicely managed by Leonard Slatkin and the orchestra. There wasn’t much else. Tchaikovsky’s <em>R&amp;J</em> sort of flopped along, a gloomy fustian Violin Concerto by Glazunov  sounded the way Hilary Hahn was garbed, and then there was the portentous tosh of a Third Symphony by former Chief Executive Bill Schuman, Don’t get me started.</p>
<p>OBITUARY PAGE: If I were to keep up with deaths or cancellations in the realm of arts criticism I would need to run this column 24/7 which, in my advanced years, might  be difficult. However, you might be interested to learn that, for the second time in a year, I have been ushered into the ranks of the unemployed. <em>Bloomberg News,</em> which scooped me up last April when the <em>LA Weekly</em> was obliged to curtail its culture, has now dropped its freelance arts coverage, for the usual reasons. I asked my editor whether this included John Simon’s theater reviews and was told, “No, his name is on the sides of buses.” If someone has a bus for sale, cheap, I’d like to hear. At least they can’t fire me from “<em>So I’ve Heard.”</em><br />
Watch this space.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Nelson, Jeanette &amp;&#160;MTT</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2009/01/nelson-jeanette-mtt/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2009/01/nelson-jeanette-mtt/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 28 Jan 2009 01:29:01 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[soiveheard.com]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://65.58.242.66/?p=115</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[…so anyhow, the great Trentini comes to town with his dramatic new opera Tsaaritza, hearts aflame in the time of the Tsars, and Nelson and Jeanette, who used to be lovers but who’ve been apart for lo these many years, have now been cast in the leading romantic roles. Comes the big I’ve-always-loved-you-but-now-we-must-part duet at [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>…so anyhow, the great Trentini comes to town with his dramatic new opera <em>Tsaaritza</em>, hearts aflame in the time of the Tsars, and Nelson and Jeanette, who used to be lovers but who’ve been apart for lo these many years, have now been cast in the leading romantic roles. Comes the big I’ve-always-loved-you-but-now-we-must-part duet at the end; they look into each other’s eyes…bingo!!! Trouble is that John Barrymore, who has been Jeanette’s Papa Bear all these years, is in the audience this night, and when he observes this obvious exchange of pheromones on the stage of the opera house he happens – oh, by the way – to own, he smells a very live rat. And so he packs his trusty pistol and goes off to pay Nelson a call. Fade to Jeanette, some 40 years later, still wrapped in memories of <em>Maytime</em>. (That’s the name of the movie,  by the way &#8212; not yet, alas, on DVD.) Oh, I almost forgot. The music for this splendid drama is none other than the last ten-or-so minutes of Tchaikovsky’s Fifth Symphony, that stirring peroration in which the dour little theme that’s been tugging pathetically at our sleeve for the previous 40 minutes finally gets some air into its lungs and makes its presence known in full brass.<br />
I suppose it’s possible to deliver a creditable performance of the Tchaikovsky Fifth without <em>Maytime</em> on your mind, although it’s as valid a point of reference as any. MTT’s performance at Disney on Monday night, with his own San Francisco Symphony, was the full choreographic treatment, genuflections ‘n’ all. Basically this was, as expected, a performance by Michael Tilson Thomas of an MTT performance. The orchestra, at the end of an extended West Coast tour, sounded just okay, a minor rough spot here and there. (I must mind my manners with the SF Symphony. I cut my teeth on this orchestra. My first exercises as a critic were my weekly tirades on KPFA in the ‘50s. That orchestra, of course, is gone, and so are my teeth.). There was more of the same at the start, pure show-off music for brass band by Himself titled <em>Street Song</em>; in between came the last of Prokofiev’s five Piano Concertos, not unattractive but a curious package of mismatched parts with  Garrick Ohlsson as the conquering hero.<br />
A line from Schubert governed my decision concerning tonight’s Brahms First:<br />
“Dort, wo  du nicht bist, dort ist das Glück.”</p>
<p>On Sunday there was ELIJAH, that way station between <em>Messiah</em> and <em>Pinafore. How brightly shines its pious light and please, O Lord, may I </em>never hear it again?! Eric Owens was terrific in the title role; Mary Wilson – beautifully named for the job she had to do – was the most angelic of angels – and that kid, Jeffrey something, did all he could considering that somebody had stolen his microphone. (Is there some law against allowing children actually being heard on large stages? I remember they make a rather nice sound.)<br />
There was no text printed in the program book, and none offered as super-titles; if we have become spoiled by that latter amenity, so  be it, but Elijah unwinds as a fairly long and complicated narrative, more so than <em>Messiah</em>, which nobody would dare deny an audience. A Master Chorale minion, when complained to, came back with the message that “management wanted the audience to enjoy the total experience, “or some such baloney. The least that should have happened under such circumstances should have been to leave the houselights sufficiently lit for us to follow the excellent but extensive essay in the program – not a narrative but at least a guide. I have been angered before at vocal programs in Disney offered with the lights dim or actually off. It’s an insult to singers and listeners; this was one more instance. We can decide our own total experience by sitting with our eyes shut.</p>
<p>ARCHIVALIUM: A couple of weeks ago I made the observation, in deepest friendship, that my esteemed colleague Mark Swed was ”full of old shoes”in his judgment of a certain Beethoven performance – that being about the gentlest comeback that occurred to me at the time. Little did I realize the storm those words would unleash, climaxing with a demand from a distinguished member of the critical press – a former colleague, no less – demanding that I supply him (and by extension, I suppose, my other seven readers) with information as to the brand of shoe!<br />
Now I have no intention of committing so blatant a breach of journalistic probity but I can, in good faith I sincerely believe, reveal the source of the remark, in the hope of (ahem!) enriching the vernacular. When I was, let’s say, six, my parents were wont to hire occasional housemaids from the crop that constantly poured into Boston on the Yarmouth boats; a lively, lusty crop they were. Evelyn was one, and it was she who would often tease me, in our flat on Columbia Street Brookline, with a “Laddie, you’re full of old shoes.”It’s not the sort of thing you forget.<br />
One more thing about Evelyn: she sang. She had a song about “A little rosewood casket,” which I loved. I learned to pick it out on the piano (Kranich &amp; Bach, baby grand). My mother rushed me into the clutches of an elderly family friend, Miss Amolski, who gave me finger exercises but killed any possible love of music. Miss Amolski had another pupil, Robert Rhines. “Why can’t you play as fast as Robert Rhines?” she would cackle. Robert Rhines ended up heading an expedition into the wilds of Scotland, in search of the Loch Ness Monster.<br />
So much for old shoes.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Happiness</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2009/01/happiness/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2009/01/happiness/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 22 Jan 2009 01:28:11 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[soiveheard.com]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://65.58.242.66/?p=113</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[HAPPINESS: It hit me during Wednesday afternoon’s Magic Flute at the Music Center that I had become beset by a wave of unusual happiness. The reason was easily traced: this was, simply, the best performance I had ever heard of Mozart’s wonderfully wise and daffy music – or, let’s say at least, the best performance [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>HAPPINESS: It hit me during Wednesday afternoon’s <em>Magic Flute</em> at the Music Center that I had become beset by a wave of unusual happiness. The reason was easily traced: this was, simply, the best performance I had ever heard of Mozart’s wonderfully wise and daffy music – or, let’s say at least, the best performance I could, or cared to, remember out of probably four or five dozen. Everything was in balance, beginning with Jimmy Conlon’s orchestra, exactly the right size. This was the second cast, and it was over-all excellent: Joseph Kaiser, a fresh-voiced, expressive Tamino, winner of one of Plácido’s Operalalia comps; Erin Wall a lovely Pamina; Albina Shagimuratova a dazzling Queen of the Night with every high F resplendent; Morris Robinson a Sarastro just a shade gruff but moving even so; Markus Werba a scene-stealing Papageno. The old (1993) Gerald Scarfe sets are still hilarious; someone has apparently touched them up somewhat.<br />
I had missed the first-cast performances; the Philharmonic, Jacaranda and other music-makers had created an unusually chaotic (and exciting) January. At this writing there are two first-cast performances left (January 22 and 25) and one with this splendid second cast (January 24). All three performances include Greg Fedderly’s hilarious Monostatos and Matthias Goerne’s expressive stint as the “Speaker,” on whose haunting A-minor recitative the whole plot of the opera turns.<br />
(While I’m on that subject: The Kenneth Branagh <em>Magic Flute</em>, which Mark Swed wrote about several weeks ago and which is available from British dealers but only in PAL format, double-casts the roles of Sarastro and The Speaker with the same singer, the wonderful René Pape. The expressive gain is beyond calculation.)</p>
<p>LOUIS BLOOIE: Andriessen&#8217;s week here was capped at the Green Umbrella with a  super-production of <em>De Stijl</em>,: spellbinding music for swinging brass, electric guitars, grinding rhythms.  The sound itself bounced all over that great space one piano tucked implausibly on one of the audience terraces, Susan Narucki (great, imaginative angel of new music) wandering hither and yon hurling forth gobs of wisdom; supertitles linked the music’s implausibility to the scraps of somebody-or-other&#8217;s text on the principles (!) of visual mathematics; the stage biz carried this further into the spirit of Mondrian; the music attached itself utterly in the cause of a splendid insanity.. Sad, that Louis couldn’t be there; he’d been called home by a death in the family. Performances of <em>De Stijl</em> can’t be all that common, and this one – devised with great skill by the Philharmonic’s marvelous young assistant Lionel Bringuier, left ‘em gasping in the aisles. All Louis  got to hear during the Philharmonic’s great new-music celebration was his new piece <em>The Hague Hacking</em>, bland by comparison, inspired (he insisted) by the Tom ‘n’ Jerry cartoon about the <em>Hungarian Rhapsody</em>.<br />
Otherwise, there wasn’t much under the Umbrella. Stephen Mackey’s <em>Ars Moriendi</em>, played by Philharmonic members, struck me – as it had when the Borromeos played it here eight years ago – as a piece both distasteful and boring. Distasteful, in the matter of drawing descriptive music, complete with titles, from the death of a parent; boring, in the matter of being boring.</p>
<p>LEOS JANACEK had a happy week, and deserved no less. Salonen and the Philharmonic began the last of their January programs here with the <em>Sinfonietta</em>, that grand whoop-de-doo that begins with massed brass spilling out of the balcony, wanders off into a couple of bucolic dance episodes of great charm but no particular consequence, and ends up back with the brass. I love the work, but don’t try to pin me down to explain why. At this concert, with Andriessen’s Hague piece in the middle, the <em>Sinfonietta</em> served as the opener; Salonen’s signature performance of Stravinsky’s <em>Rite of Spring</em> served as the closer. How’s that for a pair of mismatched bookends?<br />
Further down the pike, the Long Beach Opera began to behave like an opera company again with Janacek’s <em>The Cunning Little Vixen</em> that was splendid in the way the Long Beach Opera used to be splendid: ten cents worth of production, a million dollars worth of spirit and imagination. I love the way this warm, wise, immensely human piece has come into its own. Even the legendary East Berlin staging by Walter Felsenstein from the 1950s is now available on DVD, in a box of several of his productions released on Naxos. Andreas Mitisek came to local light conducting quite a different Janacek opera, the harrowing <em>House of the Dead</em>; that work and, now, this <em>Vixen</em>, are his best work at Long Beach; they suggest a direction for a restoration of that company’s importance and distinction. With opera dead or dying in Orange County, and our local company about to immolate itself in a festival of citywide Apfelstrudel, the road is open for Mitisek’s company – with the blessing of founder Michael Milenski from his far-away paradise  on the Midi – to restore former glories.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Commencement</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2009/01/commencement/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2009/01/commencement/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 14 Jan 2009 01:27:22 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[soiveheard.com]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[COMMENCEMENT EXERCISES: Not with a whimper but a bang, the new musical year has begun gloriously. Sunday&#8217;s crowd at Disney greeted Esa-Pekka Salonen&#8217;s onstage arrival as a Second Coming (which, in fact, it nearly was, considering his two months away). Mozart&#8217;s C-minor Wind Serenade had been scheduled to open the concert and I regretted its [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>COMMENCEMENT EXERCISES: Not with a whimper but a bang, the new musical year has begun gloriously. Sunday&rsquo;s crowd at Disney greeted Esa-Pekka Salonen&rsquo;s onstage arrival as a Second Coming (which, in fact, it nearly was, considering his two months away). Mozart&rsquo;s C-minor Wind Serenade had been scheduled to open the concert and I regretted its absence; its rhapsodic slow movement, with the horns, would have been the more fit lead-in to the elegies of Arvo P&auml;rt&rsquo;s new Fourth Symphony. The <em>Impresario</em> Overture, however, caught the festivities attendant on Salonen&rsquo;s return.<br />&nbsp;&nbsp; Imagine, Arvo P&auml;rt seated in our hall! sharing with us the deep, plangent richness of his new work &ndash; titled &ldquo;Los Angeles&rdquo; after other angels than ours. Its musical textures are of angels&rsquo; wings: smooth, delicate, elegant,&nbsp; the beauty that breaks hearts (in music as simple as his <em>Fratres</em> and in the grander, imposing structures like the <em>John-Passion</em> as well).<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Amazing, the texture of the work, from the deep, rich pool of sound &ndash; strings, a magical harp, the most alluring whispers from percussion &#8211;&nbsp; that draws us into its depths at the start. There we stand, at the edge of something dark and beckoning. This is music of enchantment,&nbsp; of entrapment, difficult to associate with the austere minimalist master. This time he has set the trap, and we are his.<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Thirty-seven years separate this new symphony from its predecessor. Number Three is the work of a young modernist&nbsp; embedded in Eastern Europe&rsquo;s hell-raising; Number Four is the journey&rsquo;s end (or beginning) of a mature master at peace with his art. Its sounds &ndash; a string ensemble plus alien sounds profoundly invoked &ndash; are meaningful and richly beautiful. Its moderst scoring and quietude will probably not earn it wide circulation; its presence among us enriches our world. So, in fact, does all its composer&rsquo;s music.<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; My friends Bill and Elaine, who know the inside of my brain better than I do, and shared the derangement of that brain during the Jacaranda Concert the night before, descended upon me at intermission and begged me to leave,&nbsp; to escape the onslaught that hearing the Brahms D-minor Piano Concerto so soon after the Arvo P&auml;rt Symphony would surely wreak upon my troubled cerebellum.&nbsp; I bowed to their superior counsel. I have no doubt whatever that Manny Ax played the bejeesus out of Brahms&rsquo;s tortured. tortuous passages, and offer my congratulations both to those who endured his work, and those who did not. &nbsp;</p>
<p>BIRDS, BELLS, SPELLS, AND MORTY: Jacaranda&rsquo;s program looked daunting on paper,; the music&nbsp; turned out even&nbsp; more in actuality. Its power took flight in the unbridled fantasy of composers fixated upon infinite distances. I am not at all sure about greatness; what delighted me more was the sense of insinuation, of an abiding invitation to inundate oneself in the splashes of color and sound (the one fused to the other). From Tristan Murail, at the program&rsquo;s beginning and end, there was music to tease, to jangle, to smile.&nbsp; From George Benjamin came the sheer nonsense of violas wrapt around one another. Messiaen was celebrated by more of his goddam birds. The playing, too, was goddam exquisite; what a violinist, that Joel Pargman! What a colorist, that Gloria Cheng at the piano! Two singers &ndash; Elissa Johnston whom I&rsquo;d heard before and Timothy Gonzales whom I&rsquo;d hadn&rsquo;t &ndash; made fabulous musical drama of a silly early Messiaen number. The church, Santa Monica&rsquo;s First Pres, was, as usual, jammed; these are just the best programs, ever.<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; The programming genius of Jacaranda was exactly the kind of unpredictable enterprise that Betty Freeman loved to encourage, and her place in the back row at the church ws tragically empty this night, a week after her death. There were so many rumors&nbsp; in the first days after her death last week that everybody got some of the facts wrong, myself included. She did not die in a hospice, but at home, with a few family members. One thing that is pure Betty: Fanny Freeman, her daughter-in-law, wrote to tell me that the last music at her bedside was by Harry Birtwistle. <br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; The second of Morty Feldman&rsquo;s two pieces titled <em>The Viola in My Life </em>was the first of four &ldquo;American Originals&rdquo; at this week&rsquo;s Monday Evening Concert, and by some distance the most enchanting. Kazi Pitelka was the soloist, backed by Xtet, and I wish I had gone home after that. &ldquo;American Original&rdquo; seems to stand for &ldquo;American Long-Windedness,&rdquo; and has ever since the days of Lish McGillicuddy. Alvin Curran&rsquo;s Schtyx came accompanied by the same progam note that you get with the disc, which affords you two copies of somebody&rsquo;s sophomoric essay in pseudo-Joycean navel contemplation (surely not Paul Griffiths, who is otherwise accredited with the notes). Two Fred Rzewski pieces ended it: one blissfully brief, the other &ndash; though encouragingly titled &ldquo;Pocket Symphony&rdquo; &ndash; somewhat overstuffed.</p>
<p>YO-YO: The fortnight that ends for him with the Inaugural and the SuperBowl began somewhat more modestly with Osvaldo Golijov&rsquo;s <em>Azul</em> in its West Coast premiere. (Yo-Yo Ma had already performed the work at Tanglewood.) Slice it as you will, the work is more of the same old Golijov, and that should be enough for anyone. It celebrates its composer&rsquo;s multi-nationality: the Argentina here, the middle-Eastern there, the marvelous sense that blends colors, creates slashes of sound, and lets even the most hearing-deficient of us know that Golijov is a master at synthesizing musical styles, and that the cello &ndash; in the hands of a master of the bow &ndash; is exactly the instrument to do these talents justice.<br />&nbsp;&nbsp; That said, <em>Azul</em> (the title means &ldquo;Blue&rdquo;) reveals no new vistas. It is good, solid, Yo-Yo Ma stuff; it calls upon a couple of extra instruments &ndash; hyper-accordion, stretched-out drums &ndash; a kind of portable Silk Road &ndash; to fill in those exotic sounds. Considering ticket prices at Royce Hall&nbsp; last Sunday, and the size of the crowds pushing their way in, it wouldn&rsquo;t be polite to suggest that both Yo-Yo and Golijov could probably toss this stuff off in their sleep, but honestly&hellip;&rdquo;<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Never mind. When it came to the Beethoven Seventh Symphony, which ended the program, Mark Swed is full of old shoes. That was a truly great performance under Jeff Kahane, with the Los Angeles Chamber Orchestra bright and brassy and Allan Vogel&rsquo;s oboe keen and urgent and one of the best orchestral noises in the land.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>BETTY FREEMAN&#160;(1922-2009)</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2009/01/betty-freeman-1922-2009/</link>
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		<pubDate>Mon, 05 Jan 2009 01:26:32 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[soiveheard.com]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[BETTY: She insisted on facing death alone: no tests, no chemo, no drawn-out bedside ceremonies. Friends had lunched with her on Christmas, and made plans for future get-togethers, and then Betty Freeman retired to a hospice somewhere and died, on Saturday, of pancreatic cancer, at 86, with just a few family members attending. Never mind [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>BETTY: She insisted on facing death alone: no tests, no chemo, no drawn-out bedside ceremonies. Friends had lunched with her on Christmas, and made plans for future get-togethers, and then Betty Freeman retired to a hospice somewhere and died, on Saturday, of pancreatic cancer, at 86, with just a few family members attending.<br />
Never mind that she’d become a pretty difficult old grouch in her last days. She supported a lot of music, a lot of music-making (plus art and other activities). Her choices for whom and what to support became more and more capricious at times. She worshipped complexity and abstruseness, and this led her to adore composers like  HelmutLachenmann and <a href="http://www.bbc.co.uk/radio3/johntusainterview/birtwistle_transcript.shtml" target="_blank">Harry Birtwistle</a> and to fail to grasp the simple surfaces over the profundities in the music of, say, Lou Harrison. Once, at a chamber-music concert at LACMA,  when I had been ravished by a Beethoven slow movement and Betty had informed me that that was “the dullest music I had ever heard” I really lost it and delivered something of a tongue-lashing. We didn’t speak for days afterwards.<br />
One day back in 1982, Betty asked me to help her round up composers, familiar and not-so, to come to her house, talk about their music to an invited audience, have some performances and end with a little food and drink which her husband Franco Assetto, the Italian sculptor and inventor of exotic pasta sauces, would supply. The <em>Salotti </em>– as Franco dubbed these “grand salons” – soon became the Los Angeles Sunday afternoon hot ticket. Our star performers included Pierre Boulez, John Cage, Philip Glass, John Adams…and a lot of young composers as well, at the start of their careers. Betty roamed through the room with her camera; her son Robbie ran the tape recorder. Franco, who had little taste for new music and gran gusto for his pasta sauces, would storm into the room at a certain point to demand an end to the music and a start to the “real”festivities.<br />
But the Salotto proved its real value from the start. One composer I particularly wanted to introduce was Robert Erickson, whose music I had admired from our days together at KPFA. Betty hadn’t heard of Bob, but I brought him up from UC San Diego1, with a few musicians. After the program she agreed to underwrite an entire disc of his music.<br />
That was Betty in her great years. She wrote checks those days, to cover the rent, to pay for new compositions, for whatever life demanded, for some of America’s major innovators: for John Cage and his dancing partner Merce Cunningham, for Lou Harrison, for wherever and whomever the need arose. In earlier years she had studied photography with the great Ansel Adams. Later on she worked on that art,  traveling widely to photograph major composers and performers, setting up exhibitions of her portrait photography, enhancing the impact of the art she serves so well though one further dimension.<br />
Through all the exasperation, Betty was easy to love. I loved the unpredictability; you couldn’t sell her on the late Beethoven Quartets, but when the L.A. Opera came to town with Handel’s <em>Julius Caesar</em> she demanded to attend to all five performances. She let be known her hatred of Esa-Pekka’s new Piano Concerto, yet welcomed Yefim Bronfman to practice the work on her piano, day after day. I doubt if she knew, or cared about, the difrerence.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>DIGRESSION</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2009/01/digression/</link>
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		<pubDate>Sun, 04 Jan 2009 01:25:37 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[soiveheard.com]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[DIGRESSION: Finally, after an unreasonably long delay, Easy Living has turned up on DVD, buried in a massive Universal Studios &#8220;cinema classics&#8221; re-release series but shining brightly. Truly dedicated&#160; movie buffs and professors of film history hold this film in special regard; it is one of a small company of accidentally perfect masterpieces. It is [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>DIGRESSION: Finally, after an unreasonably long delay, <em>Easy Living</em> has turned up on DVD, buried in a massive Universal Studios &ldquo;cinema classics&rdquo; re-release series but shining brightly. Truly dedicated&nbsp; movie buffs and professors of film history hold this film in special regard; it is one of a small company of accidentally perfect masterpieces. It is priced at a paltry $14.85.<br />&nbsp; Preston Sturges wrote the script, some years before he would advance to the stature of writer/director; Mitchell Leisen, one of Hollywood&rsquo;s smarter studio hacks, picked up on the genius quotient in Sturges&rsquo; words, the timing, the great ensemble buildups, the ear. Yes the ear; every one of the great Sturges comedies draws its maximum strength from its magnificent orchestration of the voice of its central character,&nbsp; drawn out to its maximum power of persuasion (Stanwyck in <em>The Lady Eve</em>), frustration (Bracken in <em>Hail the Conquering Hero</em>) and on and on.<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; <em>Easy Living</em> thrives on the sound of Jean Arthur, a sound you can come close to with a piece of tissue paper over a comb. It sings duets with the bass tuba of Edward Arnold. The structural genius of the Sturges script &ndash; every Sturges script, in fact &ndash; is the slow, steady buildup in the action toward utter chaos. Jean Arthur and Ray Milland meet in the Automat; she&rsquo;s broke, but he monkeys with the machinery to provide her with food. Management wises up; all the doors on the Automat cubicles spring open. A bum at the doorway gives the signal: &ldquo;FREE FOOD!!&rdquo;; chaos absolute ensues.almost unbearably hilarious..<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; The film hangs on two of these great energy accumulations. (The second involves the New York Stock Exchange and a couple of English sheepdogs.) Mozart knew how to build his ensembles this way. I have no idea whether Sturges had <em>Figaro</em> or <em>Cos&igrave;</em> in mind, although he did have a pretty good cultural upbringing. But after a joyous reunion with this great comedy &ndash; and frequent revisits to his&nbsp; <em>The Lady Eve</em>, which is chock full of <em>Cosi fan Tutte</em> &#8212; the Mozart connection has been fun to speculate upon. Maybe it&rsquo;s just because there&rsquo;s been so little else to dine upon on the musical platter&nbsp; these holiday weeks.</p>
<p>&nbsp; More music: At the end of Ari Folman&#8217;s <em>Waltz with Bashir</em> the&nbsp; brilliantly conceived animation fades into horrifying realism, news footage of the faces and screams of the newly bereaved, wrapped in the saddest music I know, the slow movement of Schubert&#8217;s A-major Sonata, music of his year of death. At the opposite end of the filmmaker&#8217;s great arrt, it is also close to unbearable.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>FAMILY&#160;AFFAIRS</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2008/12/family-affairs/</link>
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		<pubDate>Mon, 22 Dec 2008 01:24:48 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[soiveheard.com]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://65.58.242.66/?p=105</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[FUTURE SHAPES: Imagine the scene,  in a rehearsal room in a building many miles oceanward from the Dorothy Chandler Pavilion. The stage is a sloping expanse, perhaps 40 feet across, painted white with geometrical patterns. At the front sits Hagen, leader of the Gibichungs; he is masked and costumed to resemble, perhaps, a very large [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>FUTURE SHAPES: Imagine the scene,  in a rehearsal room in a building many miles oceanward from the Dorothy Chandler Pavilion. The stage is a sloping expanse, perhaps 40 feet across, painted white with geometrical patterns. At the front sits Hagen, leader of the Gibichungs; he is masked and costumed to resemble, perhaps, a very large dog, and he is for the most part immobile. Dancers move about the stage, sixteen or so, mostly in black head-to-toe. They carry long rods; they might be fluorescent lights, but I think they stand in for spears. Fronting the stage there is a long table with control equipment: microphones, laptops, cameras, many people calling out staging instructions, one elderly, bearded, smiling man whose manner informs you that he knows more than anyone else about what is going on, because it is his conception.<br />
That is <a title="Achim Freyer" href="http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0294657/" target="_blank">Achim Freyer</a>. In three months the Los Angeles Opera will begin performances of his production of Wagner’s <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Der_Ring_des_Nibelungen" target="_blank"><em>Ring der Nibelung</em></a>, the first time he has undertaken this monumental chunk of Teutonic chutzpah without which no opera company seems able these days to lay claim to fulfillment. Everything I’ve seen of Freyer’s art &#8212; the daring productions of Bach and Berlioz he has done here, an endearing <a href="http://opera.stanford.edu/Weber/Freischutz/main.html" target="_blank"><em>Der Freischütz</em></a> as folk art available on DVD, a trilogy of Philip Glass operas better that those works deserved &#8211;  suggest that he was sent to this planet to create The Ring. How have we deserved the great good fortune that he is doing his first-ever Ring here,, for us? That great good fortune resides in the person of the late<a href="http://www.nytimes.com/2007/03/14/arts/music/14baitzel.html" target="_blank"> Edgar Baitzel</a>, the guiding spirit of the L.A. Opera who stood behind virtually any outstanding project that this company has achieved in recent years that establishes its uniqueness, its bravery. It was Christine Baitzel, by the way, who invited me to witness this rehearsal yesterday, a small episode in the formation of the vast project that – not yet even brick by brick but small clod by clod gradually becoming brick – is now taking shape.<br />
I mentioned the character named Hagen, so you know that this wasn’t even a rehearsal of the first two dramas of The Ring – which are up for performance this coming March and April – but of <em>Die Götterdämmerung</em>, the final work in the cycle, which isn’t due on the boards here until April, 2010. Sure enough, the music resounding through the loudspeakers is from a beloved old recording: Karl Böhm and the Vienna Philharmonic, with Joseph Greindl’s thrilling, hard-edged villainy as Hagen. Freyer came over to greet me; my remembered three words of German from the  Vienna Konservatorium came in handy. He’s anxious for me to realize that none of what I’m seeing – the dancers with their light-sabers, the canine Hagen – has anything to with the final look of the stage at the Dorothy Chandler. They are all to establish proportion. From here the actions will be videotaped, and that video can serve like an artist’s sketchpad.<br />
That is why, even with stand-in performers, Freyer and his staff of interpreters work meticulously to shape the actions. I watched with fascination as a young dancer in the role of the deceived Brünnhilde, dragged onto the stage by Hagen’s men after her forced marriage, must take an agonized fall, and how important it was that this one small action must needs – in Freyer’s over-all plan – be meticulously shaped,  exactly matched to a grander plan. Two hours of this, and the slow-turning wheels of opera-making become a truly impressive force.<br />
I cornered Freyer for a minute or two; I had just acquired the box of  DVDs that Naxos has brought out, seven operatic productions filmed in the 1950s by the great and controversial <a href="http://www.answers.com/topic/walter-felsenstein" target="_blank">Walter Felsenstein</a>, which I’ll get around to writing about one of these weeks. I suspected that Freyer and Felsenstein might represent opposite attitudes toward operatic production, and I think I was right. “We are at opposite ends,” he tells me. “With Felsenstein it is all spectacle, wonderful spectacle to be sure. That ‘<em>Schlaue Fuchslein</em>’ of his – ‘<em>Cunning Little Vixen</em>’ – there is nothing like it. But my opera is all about character, personality. Under my book by Wagner there is always a book by Brecht, and this is my guiding force.”<br />
GRANDMA BESSIE’S BOY: There’s contrast for you, life among the Gibichung family on Wednesday, the Thomaschefskys on Saturday. Every musician’s pen is guided by ancestral genes, Irving Berlin and Gershwin, George M. Cohan’s Yankee Doodle, Cab Calloway. MTT has turned his ancestral Thomaschefskys, who implanted the seeds of theatrical Yiddishkeit into Broadway soil and nurtured the growth of American musical theate, into a wonderful evening’s entertainment – maybe the purest and worthiest of his attainments ever. Four singer-actors carried the entertainment forward, and did so with a purity of manner and freedom from shtik as to make all other period-style imitators – eat yer heart out, Bernadette Peters &#8212; cheap and cornball. The show at Disney was long, and sagged now and then, but the pride and affection was genuine. It left me – and the 2,200 others in Disney that night, I’m willing to bet – with vivid memories of my own grandparents, not showbiz folk but with records up in the attic that I suddenly realize I can remember most vividly. Don’t get me started.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>ONE THING AFTER&#160;ANOTHER2</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2008/12/one-thing-after-another2/</link>
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		<pubDate>Tue, 16 Dec 2008 01:23:20 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[soiveheard.com]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[ONE THING AFTER ANOTHER: The crowd for the Calder Quartet program at Zipper last Friday overpowered the box-office staff, which was unfortunate and should be looked into; otherwise it was an encouraging and blessed event. A lot of it was student freebie, of course, but even the asking price for the paying crowd  – ten [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>ONE THING AFTER ANOTHER: The crowd for the Calder Quartet program at Zipper last Friday overpowered the box-office staff, which was unfortunate and should be looked into; otherwise it was an encouraging and blessed event. A lot of it was student freebie, of course, but even the asking price for the paying crowd  – ten bucks – was just right. The crowd was attentive and appreciative; there was a small ripple of applause, quickly shushed, after the first movement of the Mozart Quartet, but none thereafter. I hate to sound stuffy about applauding between movements, or about observance of repeats in classical sonata-form movements (which the Calders don’t do, alas), but these are details that really do enhance great musical designs. The Calders are a splendid ensemble, and their enlightened attitude at the box-office can restore a great chamber-music culture to this city. It might as well be founded on respect for the product. (I understand that the same program played in Orange County for something like $65 a ticket. That’s their problem.)<br />
It was a superb program. The “dissonance” that gives Mozart’s C-major Quartet its name hung menacingly in Zipper’s acoustic excellence; the slow movement was elegance enow. Thomas Adès Piano Quintet engaged the wonderful wit of its composer, and of Gloria Cheng, who obviously holds it dear. Bartók’s Fifth Quartet, not often enough heard around here since the demise of the Sequoia Quartet of fond memory, zoomed ahead with fine energy, and told its final joke most humorously.</p>
<p>That was Friday. On Saturday there was Jacaranda, still up to its ears in celebrating Olivier Messiaen’s 100th birthday – four days short.  The crowd was small; Mark Robson had, after all, performed the Vingt Régards at a Piano Spheres concert not that long ago,  and that can be measured as a once-in-a-lifetime experience.<br />
I am still not sure where to go from there. There is a way of experiencing this music that transcends familiar pathways; you give yourself to its language with a realization that it cannot lend itself to normal methods of parsing.  It angered me for a time, to be screamed at in an absolutely foreign language. Certain works of Messiaen I still find unbearable; their colors are so bright that they actually hurt my eyes, and I’m looking forward to next week’s cataract surgery for an enhanced acceptance of, say, the “Quartet for the End of Time.”<br />
The piano works project the right colors; Mark Robson sat there, in Santa Monica’s  First Pres, for 2-1/2 hours, pulling down clouds of the deepest purple streaked with bright orange, and that was all pretty wonderful. Happy Birthday, Cher Olivier, and Elliott Carter, too.</p>
<p>Sunday: still in church. The four wonderful women of Anonymous4 disbanded a few years ago, but come together now and then, their precious sense of medieval harmonic authenticity intact and enhanced by their explorations into later authenticities – old-timey American hymnology, for one. Saint James Episcopal Church in downtown L.A. was their “Historic Site”this time, sold out to the rafters, naturally. Their program: English carols as far back as the 14th and 15th centuries, Americana from the 18th and 19th.<br />
It’s no easier to describe what comes across from the singing of this marvelous group than it is anything else in the preceding paragraphs: the harmonies of Messiaen’s visions of the infant Christ, the  radiant little insipid tune that steals into the last measures of Bartók. All this is part of the force that sustains me as I sit here at an absurdly advanced age and try to write about music. If you don’t know the singing of Anonymous4 there are their discs, and I envy you your discovery. There is nothing quite like it.<br />
Start with the disc called “Gloryland.”</p>
<p>The Monday Evening Concerts push on toward 70 years; all praise to Justin Urcis for maintaining a level of imaginative, creative programming that, in one way or another, crowned the efforts that got the concerts off the ground and onto Peter Yates’ roof in 1939. This week’s program revived an element that came into the MEC’s programming during the time of Stravinsky/Robert Craft influence, a cultivation of interest in the avant-garde dabblings of times other than the very latest. Specifically, Monday’s concert was built around a clutch of 14th-century music by Johannes Ciconia, Guillaume de Machaut and other names less familiar. “Ars Nova” – the New Art – was the watchword; harmonies, rhythms and melodic shapes went through some interesting, manneristic permutations.<br />
Monday’s performers, soprano Phoebe Jevtovic Alexander and a couple of string players, didn’t quite seem at home in the 14th century; too  bad the Anonymous weren’t around to show them something about the life force. The program had begun with plenty of  force, but also not much life: something called “Sugar 1” by Michael Maierhof. This called for three of our finest locals &#8211;  cellist Erika Duke-Kirkpatrick, violinist Eric km-Clark and pianist/percussionist Amy Knoles – brutalizing their instruments over a time-span of 15 minutes of which the last 14 made no sense. Later on there was an attractive set by the accordionist Teodoro Anzellotti, ending with the lyric elegance of Luciano Berio’s Sequenza for solo accordion in its Los Angeles premiere, by some distance the evening’s most gratifying music.<br />
Was a ten-minute  work, at evening’s end, adequate salvation for the entire program? Since the composer in question was Luciano Berio, and the work worthy of his pen, the question answers itself.  While we’re on the subject, however,  there is a matter of programming deficiency that I think demands consideration, if the Monday Evening Concerts – rescued as they have been from their near-fatal dismissal by LACMA,  their ill-advised previous sponsors – resume their former importance. It’s the matter of representation of music by local, or West-Coast, or current California composers – not the bygones or the classic guys on the next program, but the composers who are doing things here, now.  Peter Yates used to be good about that, and so did his successors.</p>
<p>Tuesday was Green Umbrella night and, for I think the second time in maybe 20 years, I was in bed by 8:30. These things happen.<br />
Besides, I needed  to be fresh and wide-awake for Vicki. Not that I am in any position to speak with authority on the amazingly enriched art of Vicki Ray and the combinative accomplishments; it just gets to me. What gets to me is the interweave: the insidious inducements of the body-weave and the piano-tone as pitch and rhythm blend  into the “body of your dreams-in-the-sky” or, from years before, the ghostly collage with Shaun Naidoo, the “Best Times Coming” number that knocked me out of my seat years ago at a “PianoSpheres” concert  and dragged me into an awareness of an oncoming century and what its technology might portend. Something about Vicki, her smile, all that hair, and her all-embracing humor that  makes me trust her as she guides me through the technology of where we are today. I sure don’t know most of what happened at that concert of hers on Wednesday night, but I wouldn’t have missed it, even if I had to sleep through the “Green Umbrella” the night before.</p>
<p>RANDOM THOUGHTS AT WEEK’S END: DON ROSENBERG, DOWNGRADED AT THE CLEVELAND PLAIN DEALER FOR HIS CONTINUED NEGATIVSM TOWARD THAT CITY’S ORCHESTRA AND ITS CONDUCTOR, HAS NOW FILED SUIT AGAINST THE PAPER PLUS THE ORCHESTRA’S MANAGEMENT, THEREBY PULLING DOWN WIDESPREAD HUZZAHS FROM THE BELEAGUERED CRITICAL BROTHERHOOD. YES, IT’S BAD NEWS WHEN A PUBLICATION ATTEMPTS TO MANAGE THE CRITICAL VIEWPOINT OF AN EMPLOYED WRITER. (SHALL I TELL YOU SOMEDAY ABOUT THE DAY TIME REWROTE ONE OF MY REVIEWS, TOP TO BOTTOM?) IT’S ALSO BAD NEWS WHEN A CRITIC BECOMES SO BLINKERED INTO AN ATTITUDE THAT HIS ESTIMATIONS BECOME VALUELESS. (SHALL I DIG OUT MY OLD STUFF VS. ENRIQUE JORDÁ IN SAN FRANCISCO? OR BERNHEIMER’S STUFF VS. NEARLY EVERYTHING HERE IN L.A.?) IT WAS SHEER STUPIDITY FOR THE PLAIN DEALER TO KEEP ROSENBERG ON STAFF BUT BAN HIM FROM THE CITY’S ONE WORTHWHILE CULTURAL AMENITY AND – WORSE YET, TO TURN THAT ONE AMENITY OVER TO AN UNWASHED CUB REPORTER. THAT’S THE PAPER TELLING THE WORLD THAT IT DOESN’T KNOW SHIT FROM SHINOLA ABOUT THE CLEVELAND ORCHESTRA AND THAT IS WORTH THE ENTIRE POPULATION OF CLEVELAND BRINGING SUIT AGAINST THE PAPER.<br />
ANYHOW, I THINK CLEVELAND DESERVES A BETTER CONDUCTOR AND A BETTER CRITIC, BUT CLEVELAND BEING CLEVELAND, NEITHER JOB WILL BE EASY TO FILL.<br />
MEANWHILE, WE HAVE BEEN VISITED BY BALTIMORE’S PRIDE,  MARIN ALSOP, THE SNAPPY BLONDE PRODUCT OF THE P-R MACHINE WHO AMASSES BROWNIE POINTS BY PROGRAMMING EASY-TO-LOVE CONTEMPORARY MUSIC AT HER CABRILLO FESTIVAL (CHRISTOPHER ROUSE CONCERTOS FOR ORCHESTRA!! UP THE BAZOOTY!!) AND BECOMES FAMOUS FOR BECOMING FAMOUS FOR DIGGING OUT LENNY’S PATHETIC MASS, AND PERFORMING BRAHMS IN INEXPENSIVE NAXOS ALBUMS SUCH THAT MAKE HER A BRAHMS AUTHORITY JUST FOR THE DOING. EVEN IF I ADMIRED THE AFOREMENTIONED BRAHMS’S FIRST SYMPHONY I WOULD HAVE FOUND SATURDAY NIGHT’S PERFORMANCE ROUGH, COLD AND UNLOVELY. PART MAY HAVE COME FROM RESEATING THE ORCHESTRA – CELLOS DOWN FRONT, AS IN THE OLD DAYS, SO THAT MASSED VIOLINS ON THE LEFT WERE SHRILL AND GROSS. PART MAY HAVE COME FROM A GENERALLY POOR SENSE OF BALANCE. NIKOLAJ ZNAIDER DELIVERED A KNOCKOUT BRAHMS VIOLIN CONCERTO, HOWEVER. HE HAD EVEN MADE ME LIKE THE SIBELIUS, AT THE BOWL A COUPLE OF YEARS AGO. SOME VIOLINIST!</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Gustavo&#039;s&#160;Week</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2008/12/gustavos-week/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2008/12/gustavos-week/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Tue, 09 Dec 2008 01:21:58 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[soiveheard.com]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://65.58.242.66/?p=101</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[GUSTAVO’S WEEK: On Thursday night there was the Strauss Alpen-Symphonie, an hour of orchestral banality as unbearable to the mind and the backside as anything I care to summon up. The work must appeal to Dudamel, for reasons I will not attempt to fathom. On this program it followed the Concerto (K. 488) that offers [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>GUSTAVO’S WEEK: On Thursday night there was the Strauss <em>Alpen-Symphonie,</em> an hour of orchestral banality as unbearable to the mind and the backside as anything I care to summon up. The work must appeal to Dudamel, for reasons I will not attempt to fathom. On this program it followed the Concerto (K. 488) that offers <a href="http://w3.rz-berlin.mpg.de/cmp/mozart.html" target="_blank">Mozart</a>’s exquisite   A-major scoring for winds and horns, and the piano solo in the slow movement that could just break your heart  (but not as rattled out by Rudolf Buchbinder this time around; what has happened to his fine old sensitivity?).</p>
<p>Saturday morning Gustavo met with the first of the youth orchestras that will take shape city-wide, inspired by Venezuela’s <em>El Sistema</em>, the educational system that has given us our Maestro, along  with an annual quarter-million kids who play in orchestras throughout their country. Saturday’s gathering was the EXPO Center Youth Orchestra, the first project of Youth Orchestra LA (YOLA), a partnership of the Philharmonic, the Department of Recreation and Parks, and the Harmony Project that, among other good deeds, provides deserving kids with the instruments they need. EXPO Center, where we met, is the converted 1932 Olympic Swim Stadium. EXPO Center Youth Orchestra’s kids come mainly from within a 5-mile radius of the Center, representing more than 60 public, charter and private schools in South LA. The “System” includes workshops for parents, involving them in the childrens’ musical activities. Instruments are provided free, so long as their “owners” take proper care.</p>
<p>I walked in. An orchestra of 100-or-so were struggling with something vaguely recognizable as the last movement of the Beethoven Fifth, a truncated version and with Beethoven’s orchestration enhanced with xylophone, bass drum, seven or eight trumpets…get the idea?. The kids looked anywhere from six to, maybe 14, and the great sight – one of them, anyhow – was that when Dudamel walked through the ranks to deal one-on-one with, say, an errant trumpet section, it was as another of the group: same height, same boyish smile.</p>
<p>He pleaded with those brass players; they’d been letting the tone droop a the end of a phrase.”I wanted to be a trombone player, but I couldn’t. My arm was too short; I couldn’t manage the…what you call it…the slide.” A little later, struggling with the strings, he has all the players set their instruments down and sing a few minutes of Beethoven’s score. “You see, how beautiful? Now let’s play like that. …”</p>
<p>A half hour after my arrival, the EXPO Center Youth Orchestrs had begun to deliver a recognizable version of somebody-or-other’s rewrite of that Beethoven movement. On his podium, Dudamel looks pleased. “In two years,” he promised, “we’re going to play at the Walt Disney Concert Hall. And it won’t be just this cut-down edition of the Beethoven Fifth Symphony; it’ll be the real thing. “ Somehow, a real thing had already begun to take shape that morning.</p>
<p>JOHN ADAMS: Is there still  anything about John Adams – the composer, that is, family name Adamson, Swedish – that still needs writing down? The critics have surely had their say: Mark Swed here in town, Alex Ross in the eloquent epigram to his important book, myself in (sob!) the Weekly, Thomas May  in his John Adams Reader that wisely collects us and many more. We have lacked only a few words from the object of our affectation himself, and if you know John Adams’s music –  really know it – it may not surprise you to discover that everything up to now is puny indeed beside the guy, and what he has to say about himself.</p>
<p>You want to know what it takes to compose great music, serious music that can reach out and touch people importantly? Read John Adams &#8212; in this wonderful new memoir called Hallelujah Junction: Composing an American Life (Farrar, Straus &amp; Giroux, $26) – in the pages on his activities in the time of 9/11. Conscience stirs him; as it happens, he is in London at the time, preparing a recording of his Death of Klinghoffer, the opera that pits choruses of Jews and terrorists against one another in equal force. The New York Philharmonic wants a piece from him on the tragedy. He is repulsed by the idea, by the media’s almost immediate “kitschification” of the attack. He is moved, finally, by New York itself, by the hand-lettered signs posted around Ground Zero, by the racketing of streets even at 3 a.m., by the “fractals of information” that he can interweave with a text of victims’ names, quietly spoken by a chorus of children. Most of the performing organizations made the automatic move on 9/11, plugging in the great Requiems of Mozart and Brahms. Completed months later,  the intensely human, quiet urgency of Adams’ On the Transmigration of Souls came far closer to the sense of that day. It also earned Adams his first Pulitzer.</p>
<p>“And then I wrote…” Composer-memoirs, no less than prose authors’ memoirs, come a dime-a-dozen. Something about this intense, immensely charming and revealing work of Adams, however, transcends the bunch. The tell-all is positively disarming; show me another composer willing to admit that one of his best orchestral works, the Chamber Symphony is a blend of influences from the same-named music by atonality pioneer Arnold Schoenberg and the cartoon comic <span style="text-decoration: underline;"><em><a target="_blank">Ren and Stimpy</a></em></span> favored by his son Sam. (Show me another composer, for that matter, willing to name his first-born after a beer.)</p>
<p>As memoirs go, <em>Hallelujah Junction</em> follows a circuitous path – like the eponymous dirt road in the High Sierras, where Adams’ maintains his composing retreat.  It starts with a dance-band on a New Hampshire pleasure boat, with Dad on clarinet and young John listening, learning, moving on to music jobs in summer camps, eventually to Harvard. There his life is bracketed by The Beatles, LSD and Pierre Boulez. He learns the rules of strict counterpoint,  discovers John Coltrane  and submits his first composition: <em>The Electric Wake.</em> On graduation his mother presents him with a copy of John Cage’s<em> Silence</em>, a  libertarian manifesto; his response is to climb into his car and head West. Cruising along California hilltops at sunrise, Wagner on the stereo, he has his first epiphany; he begins to know what music is all about. Later, looking down at the Pacific, he will turn a second epiphany (<em>The Dharma at Big Sur</em>) into music to help dedicate Disney Hall.</p>
<p>The first San Francisco years run on familiar tracks: beans and ramen in the Haight-Ashbury, one marriage torpedoed, one small break leading to a bigger one, a brave new conductor at the Symphony (Edo de Waart) willing to take a chance and – kaboom! – <em>Harmonium</em>, a first masterpiece and a big one. The second was the super-gorgeous<em> Grand Pianola</em>, and I was privileged to be in the Lincoln Center audience that erupted in almost-unanimous booing, and to chronicle the event in <em>Newsweek</em> as West Coast music achieving landfall.</p>
<p>Adams achieved security: composer-in-residence at the SF Symphony. He had not composed a note for the human voice when, in 1982,  boy-genius Peter Sellars descends upon him with plans fully drawn for an opera called  <em>Nixon in China</em>, but somehow he draws blood. Everything you wanted to know about Nixon is set forth in Adams’ brilliant character-analysis of the Sellars’ and Alice Goodman’s scenario and libretto.</p>
<p>Came next, however, <em>Klinghoffer,</em> with its good-Jew/bad-Jew censorship controversy that won’t go away so long as producers assume the chutzpah of producing the opera in any form. (The original Sellars staging has been superseded by the interesting Penny Woolcock revision on DVD, which does not, fortunately,  pull the teeth of the drama. ) Adams fairly details the many attempts to kill the work, most of all the jeremiad by musicologist Richard Taruskin that ran in the <em>New York Times</em>, which is answered with equal sting by librettist Goodman (who converted out of Judaism while creating Klinghoffer’s poetry).</p>
<p><em>Doctor Atomic</em> differs in that Adams approached Peter Sellars with the idea, rather than vice versa; the piling-up of controversy, the intensity of positive and negative criticism, remain the same. (Balancing, however, is the sublime <em>A Flowering Tree</em>, composed almost simultaneously, impossible to disparage.) The piece, first of all, rests on a fabulous mingling of poetry: John Donne, the Bhagavad Gita, Muriel Rukeyser, blended into Sellars’s gathering of scientific memoranda, data rescued from trashcans, etc. Again, any doubts about the sureness of Adams’s part in this music are easily dispelled in his own words on the opera’s focal moment. J. Robert Oppenheimer stands alone, his soul lacerated by the words of John Donne, the shadow of The Bomb behind…as John Adams, in the key of D minor, lacerates us all. You don’t need to read music to know how this works; John is there to make it clear.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>The Week That Will&#160;Be</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2008/12/the-week-that-will-be/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2008/12/the-week-that-will-be/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Tue, 02 Dec 2008 01:20:15 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[soiveheard.com]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://65.58.242.66/?p=99</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[THE WEEK THAT WILL BE: So here’s December, when the music lightens up for the holidays, and we get to turn off the brains for a few weeks of jingle-bells, Hah! December 4: Gustavo Dudamel leads the Philharmonic at Disney in Kurtág’s Stele, Mozart’s A-major Piano Concerto (with the heartbreaking slow movement, and with Rudolf [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>THE WEEK THAT WILL BE: So here’s December, when the music lightens up for the holidays, and we get to turn off the brains for a few weeks of jingle-bells, Hah! December 4: Gustavo Dudamel leads the Philharmonic at Disney in Kurtág’s <em>Stele</em>, Mozart’s A-major Piano Concerto (with the heartbreaking slow movement, and with Rudolf Buchbinder, who hasn’t been here in years) and with, oh well, Richard Strauss’s <em>Alpine Symphony</em>. December 5 at Zipper, Gloria Cheng and the Calder Quartet play Tom Adès’ Piano Quintet, among other treasures. Saturday night I must forsake the <em>LA Weekly</em>’s 30th Anniversary Party because Mark Robson is playing all of Olivier Messiaen’s <em>Vingt Regards</em> at Jacaranda at Santa Monica’s First Pres. Sunday, the sublime Anonymous 4 sings as nobody else can, at a Historic Site downtown.  The Monday Evening Concerts resume at Zipper on guess when, with an imaginatively-planned “avant-garde” program of music daring in its time, “its time” ranging from the Middle Ages to approximately yesterday. Tuesday, there’s the Green Umbrella at Disney: Cage, Stockhausen and Ligeti. Too tired for Brahms the following Friday? Don’t blame you!</p>
<p>I seem  to have forgotten to write about the L.A. Opera’s <em>Carmen</em>, Understandable. I don’t think this is a bad opera; some of Bizet’s music greatly illuminates the characters onstage, and I think he hit exactly the right tone for the drab ordinariness of his Micaëla. It needs to be performed as written, however, with spoken recitative &#8212; rather than the hackwork recitatives supplied by others after Bizet’s death – that sets the big musical number in greater relief. But nobody at the Chandler Pavilion – not  the conductor, not the ladies and gentlemen of the first of the two casts – performed with any inkling of how to make this opera glisten with sex appeal; it’s all “ho-hum another night of ‘<em>Carmen</em>.’ Why couldn’t someone have watched Denyse Graves at the Bowl, gee whiz? I’d like to know which misguided optimist in the company decided to schedule this for ten performances rather than the usual seven. On opening night most of the seats were filled at the start; by the last act you could have played basketball in the wide open spaces. There hasn’t been a good new recording or DVD of  <em>Carmen</em> in years. My favorites, both with a young and lively Plácido Domingo, are the 1984 Francesco Rosi movie, with the lithe, insinuating Julia Migenes-Johnson – which does have spoken recits – and the even-older Franco Zeffirelli staging from Vienna on TDK, conducted with great thrust by Carlos Kleiber, with a Carmen, Elena Obraztsova, who might be Mom to all the other aforementioned Carmens here, but who has learned to put those years to good use.</p>
<p>Someday, of course, the inevitable and magnificent idea will descend upon some operatic impresario, that the salvation for <em>Carmen</em>: the totality of the spirit of this potentially great opera for our time and for the years to come, resides in our own Gustavo Dudamel. Not that his music-making among us this past week had anything to do with this particular score. It had, instead, to do with the worn-out journeyman Philharmonickers from Israel, never a first-rate band but especially road-weary at the end of their cross-country tour, saddled with a <em>tsimmis</em> of a hackwork by Leonard Bernstein that employed everything short of vacuum cleaners to celebrate 50 years of second-rate orchestral performance. Four days later, same podium same hall, different orchestra and, you’d swear, different conductor – this was, I swear, the most eloquent, moving, poetically motivated Beethoven “Pastoral” Symphony you could imagine or even dream about. If you weren’t there you just can’t imagine the beauty in the orchestral balance this young genius fashioned, between winds and strings, between low winds and high winds. My, oh my it was beautiful. Just think…this is our Gustavo!!!</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Hallelujah Junction: A Minimalist&#160;Life</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2008/11/hallelujah-junction-a-minimalist-life/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2008/11/hallelujah-junction-a-minimalist-life/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 26 Nov 2008 19:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=688</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Is there anything about the composer John Adams that still needs writing down? The critics have surely had their say: Mark Swed in the Los Angeles Times, Alex Ross in the eloquent epigram to his important book (The Rest Is Noise: Listening to the 20th Century), myself in these (sob!) pages, Thomas May in his [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><strong>Is there anything about</strong> the composer <a href="http://www.earbox.com/">John Adams</a> that still needs writing down? The critics have surely had their say: Mark Swed in the <em>Los Angeles Times</em>, Alex Ross in the eloquent epigram to his important book (<em>The Rest Is Noise: Listening to the 20th Century</em>), myself in these (sob!) pages, Thomas May in his <em>John Adams Reader,</em> which wisely collects us and many more. We have lacked only a few words from the object of our affection himself, and if you know Adams&#8217; music &#8211; <em>really</em> know it &#8211; it may not surprise you to discover that everything written up to now is puny, indeed, besides the guy, and what he has to say about himself.</p>
<p>You want to know what it takes to compose great music, serious music that can reach out and touch people importantly. Read Adams in his wonderful new memoir, <a href="http://us.macmillan.com/hallelujahjunction"><em>Hallelujah Junction: Composing an American Life</em></a>, especially the pages on his activities after 9/11. As it happens, he is in London at the time, preparing a recording of his <em>Death of Klinghoffer</em>, the opera that pits choruses of Jews and terrorists against one another in equal force. The New York Philharmonic wants a piece from him on the tragedy. He is repulsed by the idea, by the media&#8217;s almost immediate &#8220;kitschification&#8221; of the attack. He is moved, finally, by New York itself, by the hand-lettered signs posted around Ground Zero, by the racket in the streets even at 3 a.m., by the &#8220;fractals of information&#8221; that he can interweave with a text of victims&#8217; names, quietly spoken by a chorus of children. Most of the performing organizations made the automatic move on 9/11, plugging in the great requiems of Mozart and Brahms. The intensely human, quiet urgency of Adams&#8217; <em>On the Transmigration of Souls, completed months later,</em> came far closer to the sense of that day. It also earned Adams his first Pulitzer Prize.</p>
<p>Composer-memoirs, no less than prose &#8212;&#8212;&#8211;<br />
AUTHORs&#8217; memoirs, come a dime a dozen. Something about this intense, immensely charming and revealing work of Adams, however, transcends the bunch. Show me another composer willing to admit that one of his best orchestral works, the <em>Chamber Symphony</em>, is a blend of influences by atonality pioneer Arnold Schoenberg and the cartoon comic <em>Ren and Stimpy</em> favored by his son Sam. (Show me another composer, for that matter, willing to name his firstborn after a beer.)</p>
<p><em>Hallelujah Junction</em> follows a circuitous path &#8211; like the eponymous dirt road in the High Sierras, where Adams&#8217; maintains his composing retreat. It starts with a dance-band on a New Hampshire pleasure boat, with Dad on clarinet and young John listening, learning, moving on to music jobs at summer camps, eventually to Harvard. There his life is bracketed by the Beatles, LSD and Pierre Boulez. He learns the rules of strict counterpoint, discovers John Coltrane and submits his first composition, <em>The Electric Wake.</em> On graduating, his mother presents him with a copy of John Cage&#8217;s <em>Silence,</em> a libertarian manifesto; Adams&#8217; response is to climb into his car and head west. Cruising along California hilltops at sunrise, Wagner on the car stereo, he has his first epiphany; he begins to know what music is all about. Later, looking down at the Pacific, he will turn a second epiphany (<em>The Dharma at Big Sur</em>) into music to help dedicate Disney Hall.</p>
<p>The first San Francisco years run on familiar tracks: beans and ramen in the Haight-Ashbury, one marriage torpedoed, one small break leading to a bigger one, a brave new conductor at the symphony (Edo de Waart) willing to take a chance and ndash; kaboom! ndash; <em>Harmonium</em>, a first masterpiece and a big one. The second was the supergorgeous <em>Grand Pianola</em>, and I was privileged to be in the Lincoln Center audience that erupted in almost-unanimous booing, and to chronicle the event in <em>Newsweek</em> as the arrival of West Coast music. </p>
<p>Adams gained security: composer-in-residence at the San Francisco Symphony. He had not composed a note for the human voice when, in 1982, boy-genius Peter Sellars descended upon him with plans fully drawn for an opera called <em>Nixon in China</em>, but somehow he drew blood. Everything you wanted to know about <em>Nixon</em> is set forth in Adams&#8217; brilliant character-analysis of Sellars&#8217; and Alice Goodman&#8217;s scenario and libretto.</p>
<p>Next came, however, <em>Klinghoffer</em>, with its good-Jew/bad-Jew censorship controversy that won&#8217;t go away so long as producers assume the <em>chutzpah</em> of producing the opera in any form. (The original Sellars staging has been superseded by the interesting Penny Woolcock revision on DVD, which does not, fortunately, pull the teeth of the drama.) Adams fairly details the many attempts to kill the work, most of all the jeremiad by musicologist Richard Taruskin, which ran in <em>The New York Times</em>, which is answered with equal sting by librettist Goodman (who converted from Judaism while creating <em>Klinghoffer&#8217;s</em> poetry). </p>
<p><em>Doctor Atomic</em> differs in that Adams approached Sellars with the idea rather than vice versa; the piling-up of controversy, the intensity of positive and negative criticism, remain the same. (Balancing, however, is the sublime <em>A Flowering Tree</em>, composed almost simultaneously, impossible to disparage.) First of all, <em>Doctor Atomic</em> rests on a fabulous mingling of poetry: John Donne, the <em>Bhagavad Gita</em>, Muriel Rukeyser, blended into Sellars&#8217; gathering of scientific memoranda, data rescued from trash cans, etc. Again, any doubts about the sureness of Adams&#8217; part in this music are easily dispelled in his own words on the opera&#8217;s focal moment. J. Robert Oppenheimer stands alone, his soul lacerated by the words of John Donne, the shadow of The Bomb behind, as John Adams lacerates us all in the key of D minor. You don&#8217;t need to read music to know how this works; Adams is there to make it clear. </p>
<p><strong><a href="http://www.amazon.com/Hallelujah-Junction-Composing-American-Life/dp/0374281157">HALLELUJAH JUNCTION: COMPOSING AN AMERICAN LIFE</a> </strong>| By John Adams | Farrar, Straus  Giroux | 352 pages | $26 hardcover</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>STILL AT&#160;IT</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2008/11/still-at-it/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2008/11/still-at-it/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sun, 23 Nov 2008 01:12:57 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[soiveheard.com]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://65.58.242.66/?p=93</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[STILL AT IT: Some of you may wonder whatever happened to Martin Bernheimer or, in general, to the brand of ho-hum, above-it-all discourse he used to dispense, in the guise of music criticism, here at the L.A. Times. Rest assured, Martin is apparently alive and well, and so is his venomous pen. He is currently [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>STILL AT IT: Some of you may wonder whatever happened to Martin Bernheimer or, in general, to the brand of ho-hum, above-it-all discourse he used to dispense, in the guise of music criticism, here at the L.A. Times. Rest assured, Martin is apparently alive and well, and so is his venomous pen. He is currently perched in New York, whence he dispatches his observations on that city’s musical life to the Financial Times of London. Certain key words in his vocabulary – “artsy” above all &#8212; sustain his chosen position, high on some imagined peak, looking down. Here is his utter failure to comprehend <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Peter_Sellars">Peter Sellars</a> ’s brilliant evaluation of Kurtág’s “Kafka Fragments,” – first done in New York before the “Green Umbrella” performance at Disney – and his covering of that failure with his signature snide negativism.</p>
<p><em>“Apparently distrusting both text and score, Sellars illustrated Kafka’s abstractions with mundane domestic rituals accompanied by artsy black-and-white  projections (photography by David Michalek). <a href="http://www.bach-cantatas.com/Bio/Upshaw-Dawn.htm">Dawn Upshaw</a> and Geoff Nutall enacted the bad-boy director’s simplistic manoeuvres with conscientious bravado. They performed brilliantly, bravely, tirelessly. The barefoot soprano, dressed in a floppy flannel shirt and slacks, did a lot of miming and mugging, also ironing, scrubbing, stretching and crouching. The barefoot fiddler, similarly attired, provided earnest shadow-play. Still, the result was distracting at best, pretentious at worst. Sellars managed to reduce Kurtág’s fierce poetry to silly prose.”</em></p>
<p>To me, and to the admirably large audience that showed up in Disney Hall for this spellbinding event, caught the spirit, remained remarkably silent as if participating, this was an affirmation of the genius of Sellars, something I have not always been moved to acknowledge.  It affirmed his unique power, to see deeply into convoluted music and to find its visual counterpart, the core that enables it to reach an audience. Dawn Upshaw’s voice has become almost a part of Peter’s art,  a miraculous counterweight: a sound not entirely pure, maintaining a “human” edge that he and we can hold onto. I listen with delight and awe to a tape of my own personal ”discovery” of Upshaw, a Schubert recital at Symphony Space in 1986, the sound of angels, and trace her growth, the gradual deepening. (And wasn’t that close to the year that the charming, shy Kurtág showed up at Ojai, his first-ever American experience?) The “Fragments” are small points of daily life and, above all, of daily pain, mirrored in the mundane activities on stage, most of all in the rural rag-tag costumes, even made to fit somehow in the citified splendor of Disney. The visual aspects of the performance, the activities on screen and the domestic activities of Mom Dawn down front, I found neither distracting nor pretentious; simply and honestly, they underlined the ordinariness of everything else on that stage and bound them all together, unforgettably.</p>
<p>IN DUTCH: There was to be a three-concert Festival of new music from The Netherlands at REDCAT last weekend. Unfortunately some of the performers were imprisoned at CalArts by smoke that shut down I-5; their concerts will, I presume, be rescheduled. I did hear the final concert, by the E.A.R. Unit, from which I departed in somewhat bedazzled state. Part of that came from attempting to focus on one of the six composers, a certain Richard Ayres, cricket star, who (his bio tells us without cracking a smile) ran away from home, became a cabin boy on a freighter transporting china-clay, whose crew read “Finnegans Wake,” performed John Cage &#8212; and who is now selecting music for a manned journey to Mars. That was about the charm level of the concert: i.e.: high. Louis Andriessen, everybody’s favorite Hollander, contributed music for violin and piano in unison, creating the ringing overtones of the resultant “hyper instrument.” Yannis Kyriakides’ “mnemonist 5” sent the mind a-twirl with projected dancing syllabic permutations NA MA VA SA. The E.A.R. Unit, now 27 years old, has something like 500 world premieres under its collective belts. Of its five members, Amy, Vicki and Erica go all the way back. Where would we be without them?</p>
<p>EVEN SMALL: <a href="http://www.esapekkasalonen.com">Esa-Pekka Salonen</a> calls his new string quartet, his first, “Homunculus,” the small piece that contains all the elements of a large piece. “I was really trying to put my best music into the piece” he told the OC Register’s  <a href="http://artsblog.freedomblogging.com/2008/11/18/its-esa-pekka-on-the-phone/4128">Tim Mangan</a> in a great interview worth the search, and he succeeded. The work missed its OC appearance; a death in the family of a Johannes Quartet member forced a cancellation. A heroic substitute violist, Lesley Robertson of the St. Lawrence Quartet, crammed the part in time for last night’s performance at Royce Hall, where the Johannes shared the program with the Guarneri Quartet in its farewell appearance. Blessings upon her. More on the Guarneri another time. Salonen’s Quartet lasts a tight fifteen minutes. The writing for strings is, for the most part, dense; at the start there is a dark, sweeping outburst of melody. On one hearing I heard this as the most Sibelian of any of his works; I mean this not pejorative, only in the sense of prevailing dark texture. Small, explosive. Incidentally, in the interview Salonen let the cat out of the bag as to his next project listed as TBA, April 9, 2009. A violin concerto, to be danced.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>REFRESHMENT</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2008/11/refreshment/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2008/11/refreshment/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sun, 16 Nov 2008 01:12:11 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[soiveheard.com]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[REFRESHMENT: Hearing Carl Vine’s Piano Sonata once again was a stimulating and refreshing experience. I don’t understand why this marvelous work hasn’t assumed a prominent place in the repertory. Its language is sure and strong; if Elliott Carter is prominent among its forbears, as Vine has said, that is the aspect of Carter’s music I [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>REFRESHMENT: Hearing Carl Vine’s Piano Sonata once again was a stimulating and refreshing experience. I don’t understand why this marvelous work hasn’t assumed a prominent place in the repertory. Its language is sure and strong; if Elliott Carter is prominent among its forbears, as Vine has said, that is the aspect of Carter’s music I most admire: the driving force, the clarity, the gift of expressing so much with such admirable economy. Yes, Carter’s own Sonata, an early work, does accomplish much the same. I heard the Vine sonata first in 1993, when an unknown young Australian named Michael Kieran Harvey pleased and astonished us all and made off with a piano competition, run at Ambassador Auditorium by that brilliant if semi-crackpot pianistic genius Ivo Pogorelich (of “whatever happened to…?” fame). Harvey never went on to an internatiional career; the most operable explanation is that he didn’t want to play all the Chopin and Rachmaninoff that the big-time managers would have wanted. According to Liam Viney, who began his Piano Spheres program the other night with the Vine Sonata – brilliantly – Harvey does have a successful career in Australia. Just check out his website; his list of concert dates and recordings goes on for days! And according to Jim Svejda, who runs something of a one-man Carl Vine fan club on KUSC, Mr. Vine continues to write great music.<br />
Now, to Liam Viney’s “Piano Spheres” concert of Australian music, at Zipper on Tuesday. He is 30, Australian, and has been on the piano faculty at CalArts for the past three years. Inevitably, a program that starts with the Vine Sonata is doomed to slump somewhat downhill thereafter, but there were bright spots. Matthew Hindson’s “Plastic Jubilation” came with a built-in program, something about revenge against some act of music criticism; this was executed with the aid of a click track and some raucous razzberries from a loudspeaker and was okay, I guess, of its kind. There were some small indigenous pieces by Peter Sculthorpe, the sort one expects as a nation’s composer approaches Grand Old Man status, and quite a strong one-movement Sonata by Nigel Westlake, who sounds worth investigating. So, by the way, is Mr. Viney, a terrific young pianist. There was no Times review of this, an important event.<br />
SALVATION THROUGH K. 448There was one of next night’s concert, however, a glamorous, celebrity event of less musical importance. The repertory for two pianos has some attractive works &#8211;  Stravinsky, Rachmaninoff, Bartók (with percussion), Debussy – but nothing to compare in richness and depth with the small-but-select  repertory for four hands at one piano. One work for two pianos by Mozart is the sole exception, and psychiatrists have studied the slow movement of that D-major Sonata (K. 448) as a paradigm of a work that stirs and moves young minds. It is, indeed, special music, and there may be something sublimely recognizable about its opening theme that makes it particularly easy to follow the unfolding of the classical form. I will settle for a hymn of praise for what happens in the last 30 seconds of that slow movement, when Mozart, halfway out the door, turns and flings one more handful of stardust at us all.  Go listen to it; I can’t say more without breaking up. Oh yes, there is one more place where the same thing happens: the “Sextet of Recognition” in the third act of “Figaro,” when Susanna comes around to accepting that matters have resolved themselves for the better and that Figaro is truly hers.<br />
Anyhow, I will go anywhere within reason to hear K. 448 performed, but I wasn’t made to believe that Manny Ax and Fima Bronfman, who drew a full and happy house to Disney last Wednesday, cared more for playing this work than for the big noise of the rest of their program: the Brahms “Haydn” Variations and Rachmaninoff’s “Symphonic Dances” (both works originally composed for two pianos) and Bill Bolcom’s lightweight, charming, half-rag half-olé “Recuerdos,”<br />
FRIDAY NIGHT AT THE PHIL: Tom Adès and Berlioz…no, Tom Adès IS Berlioz. From the arrogance of the lightning-strokes, the thunder-claps, the take-me-as-you-will amorosities in the “Royal Hunt” music from “The Trojans” it seemed a very short leap of cred toward the orchestral slashings, the choral outcries, the brooding cynicism of  “America: a Prophecy.” It was right for Tom, in his endearingly shy and halting way, to explain from the podium that his “America” in this instance referred to the arrogant, threatened Mayans facing their Spanish invaders. His music, nevertheless,  sounded a more universal – let’s even say “contemporary” &#8212; arrogance that caused many timid souls in the audience to depart before his second work on the program, the far gentler,  radiantly beautiful “Tevot.” Theirs the loss.<br />
At 37, Adès stands alone, beyond imitation. Every new work defines him afresh. “Tevot,” a Hebrew word meaning “ark” as in the Noah legend,  the baby Moses and also the cabinet holding the sacred texts, is for Adès a symbol of peace. It is also for him a kind of Second Symphony, after the sensational “Asyla” that really sent him into orbit a mere decade ago. His orchestra is huge, not to batter down walls, but to achieve an exactitude  of rich, varied sound – as Berlioz also knew how to do, even in his youthful, dopey “Francs-juges” Overture. The music of “Tevot” rises out of turmoil, but subsides gradually, over some 15 minutes. Its last sound is an unforgettable almost-silence; it put me in mind of the Mahler Ninth, not for a similarity of actual sound, just for the feeling it created among my ribs.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>After 2010,&#160;What</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2008/11/after-2010-what/</link>
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		<pubDate>Sun, 09 Nov 2008 01:11:37 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[soiveheard.com]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[AFTER 2010, WHAT? “It’s been a momentous week,” noted Mark Swed in yesterday’s “Critic’s Notebook,” and he was, even so, a day early. The worst news of last week, many weeks, was Gérard Mortier’s decision to resign as head of the New York City Opera, over the unwillingness of board members to finance his dreams, [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>AFTER 2010, WHAT? “It’s been a momentous week,” noted Mark Swed in yesterday’s “Critic’s Notebook,” and he was, even so, a day early. The worst news of last week, many weeks, was Gérard Mortier’s decision to resign as head of the New York City Opera, over the unwillingness of board members to finance his dreams, before a note was sung under  his administration. A forward move in operatic administration that could be likened to – what? – to the striding forth of the New York City Opera at its inception, &#8212; had claimed a major leader.<br />
Here at home we are in a momentous dither over the ten weeks of RingFest that will seize our city’s interest in 2010, direct our collective gaze toward a certain mode of artistic expression, adapt our taste buds toward a certain culinary ideal (mostly covered with brown sauce, if memory serves),  fill our ears with massive orchestrations of unresolved dominant thirteenths. I’ve seen it happen. I was in Seattle in 1975,  during early Ringomania. Glynn Ross and his opera company were vesting upon the city not one but two Rings, one sung in English the other not, and United Airlines was sharing in a citywide promotion so vast that everyone you saw on the streets carried a UAL bag decorated with Valhalla images. The performances weren’t much; the sets were make-do, but that was a Ring, by God, and it ran for several years. I went up and wrote that it wasn’t very good, and several shocked local critics c ame to interview me; nobody had ever noticed before. It got Seattle so bored with the whole Ring  idea that when Speight Jenkins took over the company and started producing real opera, including a handsome, naturalistic Ring  set among Northwest-style evergreens, and beautifully performed, the public treats it as an opera, not some kind of shrine.<br />
Anyhow – I’ve wandered – will it somehow occur to somebody here at home that Gérard Mortier would be the right man to lead the Los Aneles Opera, away from four-Puccinis-a-season and toward a contemporary distinctiveness equal to that of the Philharmonic and other arts organizations. The acquisition of Achim Freyer to creat the local Ring  is a great step forward; he is the legacy of the late Edgar Baitzel, who up of the moment of his death served the company nobly as what the Germans call Dramaturg and can take credit for most of the forward movement the company has shown in rrecent years, but Edgard is gone. He brought Achim Freyer here for The Damnation of Faust and (to lesser credit) the staged B-minor Mass. Without a dramaturg of that quality, we get The Fly and reruns of an ancient Carmen production and Marta Domingo’s hapless Traviata.<br />
I am not so foolish as to hope that Mortier would step down the ladder from an executive post to something less with the L.A. Opera. I am suggesting that the L.A. Opera needs his executive service, under whatever title. It also needs a full time artistic administrator, not one who is also the administrator, or the singing star even entrusted with creating new productions with other companies, and is away from this, his own company,  leaving operas for his iwife to direct, usually ineptly, for long periods for  reasons that are various common knowledge. If this requires creating an executive post with a new name, for one position or both, I am naïve enough to think that might not be so diffictult.  Mortier, I might naively add, has supportive friends out here. The last time I looked, he, the great patron Betty Freeman and I were going for a walk..</p>
<p>BEEFCAKE: November’s Disney Hall program book has a new Esa-Pekka picture on the cover, beefcake-of-the month, a reminder that we are wrong to let him get away. Miguel Harth-Bedoya is this week’s conductor; he once was our associate conductor, and we shouldn’t have let him get away, either. A lively, exuberant spirit, friendly to audience, audiences and music, he was all over the place last night.<br />
Who couldn’t love “Appalachian Spring,” music with not one note to prick or irritate? I suppose I could, for just that reason; I long for one of those unresolved thirteenths I was discussing up there. I haven’t looked at the score, but I’ll bet it’s all in  F and G major, and sometimes just reaches out hungrily for a sharp of a flat. Copland’s original score, for only thirteen instruments, goes along better with this mood than the blown-up orchestral version, and I’ll bet it would have sound a whole lot better before the Britten last night. But it is a very pretty score, a smile of an autumn night without an angry thought to stir into its apple-pie mind<br />
Britten’s Violin Concerto…now where did that come from? (I rushed home, and in my bundles of Britten there wasn’t a single copy. I fixed that from Amazon for a mere seven bucks.) It is a very strange piece, by turns emotional and aloof, beautiful turns for the soloist, mere hiccoughs from the orchestra. The first movement is tight, self-contained. The scherzo devolves into a recit, then something else, than it just keeps going; you want to break in and remind them you’re here. Midori played it as if she truly believed it, and I think she does; after her showbiz years she’s become a fascinating musician, wonderful to watch.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Packages</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2008/11/packages/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2008/11/packages/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Tue, 04 Nov 2008 01:11:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[soiveheard.com]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[PACKAGES: Naxos of America has become the most active, and thus the most interesting, source of home media, both compact disc and DVD, as an outlet for a number of associated European labels. That number seems to be growing; it includes a veritable inundation of opera performances from European stages, where videocasting is apparently much [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>PACKAGES: Naxos of America has become the most active, and thus the most interesting, source of home media, both compact disc and DVD, as an outlet for a number of associated European labels. That number seems to be growing; it includes a veritable inundation of opera performances from European stages, where videocasting is apparently much more common than here if not necessarily more proficient. There is also a profusion of musical documentary material, some of which I’ve already written about. It’s difficult to keep up with the flood.<br />
Here is a five-DVD package from Naxos, produced by Medici Arts, of composer-documentaries, priced at a dirt-cheap $49.99. Some of its content – Frank Sheffer’s “Labyrinth of Time,” an Elliott Carter piece that tells us little – has been around for a while. The rest is new to me, and wonderful. Pierre Boulez reconstructs his great work “Sur Incises,” a piece for three interlocked chamber ensembles, in front of a student group and then leads a performance. Olivier Messiaen spends time in the great Utah gorges that inspired his last great work, and discusses with captivating intensity his passion for the smaller creatures of God’s earth. In a series of short musical sketches the quiet joyousness of Arvo Pärt gradually takes shape. Philip Glass natters on and on, just like his music; toward the end of many long minutes, he and Bob Wilson afford us some of the wisdom in their wisest work, “Einstein on the Beach.”<br />
It does not necessarily follow that the voice of composer, author or painter becomes the most expressive medium to convey the essence of an artistic conscience. For all the information we may glean from  awareness that Philip Glass delivers words rapid-fire, as does Steve Reich by the way  &#8212; as does much of their music &#8212; little more is added from awareness that Elliott makes (or used to make) the beds himself in the Carters’ apartment.</p>
<p>TICK TALK: You know, or should know, of Judith Tick as  biographer of the important<br />
composer Ruth Crawford Seeger, creator of a small heritage of important chamber music that good ensembles – the Arditti, Kronos &#8212; know to keep alive. Now she and her assistant editor Paul Beaudoin have created a truly awesome and significant volume with the modest title “Music in the United States” and the immodest ambition of serving as a “documentary companion” to the history of musical activity in this country drawn from actual evidence, from before it existed as a country until pretty much the day before yesterday. The fruit of their labors is large and lavish: 881+xxxviii pages weighing, in paperback, a smidge over five pounds. It’s published by Oxford, a step back from their last Music History fiasco.<br />
What treasures! Our national musical history, in the writings of its perpetrators!. Here is Samuel Sewall’s Diary, he a judge of the Salem witches: “About midnight my dear wife expired, to our great astonishment, especially mine. May the Sovereign Lord pardon my sin…”<br />
At the famous Paris Exposition Universelle in 1889. where Debussy first heard the music of Gamelan, there was also a concert of American music, and here is a certain Brument-Colleville (who didn’t make it to Slonimsky’s “Dictionary of Musical Invective”) on the subject of Edward MacDowell’s Second Piano Concerto, dealing with the anomaly of an American composing classical music: “It is made to disgust you forever with the instrument so dear…One asks oneself is it really a piano playing, and not a mill for grinding out notes. God, it’s annoying!!”<br />
Seventy years ago this week Arturo Toscanini braves the horrors of modern music, offering a broadcast world premiere of Samuel Barber’s “Adagio for Strings,” drawing down a favorable huff from the NYT’s Olin Downes and a storm of correspondence that kept the Times’ columns busy for weeks thereafter.<br />
Here is Morty Feldman, in a book of his correspondence: “Usually my pieces begin maybe on the tenth measure, kind of getting into it…”<br />
Again at the Times, Harold Schonberg, the Chief Critic who once hired me, takes an entire Sunday column to air his profound misunderstanding, couched in basic belligerence, of contemporary cultural trends. “Art is bunk…” this from a  Times critic!<br />
Of what use, you might ask, so ponderous a tome to a fireside reader? I used to think that, about Otto Erich Deutsch’s “documentary” companions to Mozart and Schubert. Then I let myself get hooked, on the newspaper reviews, travel clippings, small bits of info that let me get involved in the musical life of small and large  cities in the lives of these composers and their friends, and whole panoramas opened up. Read the chapters in this book on the olden times; play the two great Angel discs by Anonymous 4 of old-timey American music, and sail away.</p>
<p>SUBLIME INDULGENCE: Sunday provided two concerts: the Schubert C-major Quintet in the afternoon; all six Brandenburg Concerti at night; what unknown Deity have I accidentally appeased lately?  I have known about the Lark Conservatory and the musical activities it sponsors, especially the Dilijan Concert Series. I keep having to tell Movses Pogossian, the series’ artistic director and a terrific local violinist, that his this-and-that concert falls on the wrong date for me. This time the presence of the Schubert Quintet automatically made it the right date. Movses played second violin, with Guiillaume Sutre; Paul Coletti was the violist; Ronald Leonard and Antonio Lysy were the cellists. THEY EVEN  TOOK THE FIRST- MOVEMENT REPEAT, bless them. Their playing of the slow movement had me clinging to my seat. I can’t remember a more beautiful chamber-music performance in this town in a very long time. Nobody from the Times was there. Earlier there was a new work, the Second Quartet by Ruben Albunyan (b. 1939), proficient, predictable in the “Schelomo” vein, ending exactly where it should. The next Dilijan concert, at Zipper, will be on December 21.<br />
A few years ago, when the L.A. Chamber Orchestra played all the Brandenburgs I wrote that hearing them all in one whoop was like having my own box of Godiva chocolates, and the Godiva company sent me a box. Since then I’ve been diagnosed with diabetes, so let me say it’s more like having my own Mercedes. At the risk, however, of sounding a note of ingratitude in advance of delivery, conscience ordains a piece I must speak, a qualm that besets me along with the euphoria that usually accompanies my departure from LACO concerts. It has to do with mismatch: the robust sound of the modern flute against the harpsichord in the Fourth Brandenburg, conflicting with my memory of the exquisite balance in the same work in the recent Musica Angelica concert. I think we are at a new crisis where the halfway measures sort-of worked  because of the excellent musicianship with bands like LACO. After all these years, however, I found myself last night cringing at the sound of LACO’s flutes in Bach. This has nothing to do with David Shostac and Susan Greenberg, whose playing I intensely admire. With the emergence of LACO under Jeff Kahaneas a superlative Mozart and Haydn orchestra, its activities as a Bach orchestra may need some reconsideration. I note with interest that some record company, maybe having exhausted all sensible reissue source materials, is planning a release of the ancient Brandenburg set by the Adolf Busch Chamber Players from the early ‘30s, the first recording in circulation with any pretense toward “authentic” performance. The most “authentic” element in that bulk two-album 78-rpm set was the presence of a high trumpeter in Brandenburg 2; his name was George Eskdale, and he played elegantly and stylishly (not show-offishly as David Washburn did last night and then multiplied the sin in an even-faster encore repeat). Otherwise, Rudolf Serkin played continuo on the piano; the flutes were just flutes, and, in those days – which were also my days – we all thought they sounded simply terrific, authentic, the real thing. Tempora mutantur, et nos in illis, as we used to intone in the corridors of Boston Latin School.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>LEON&#160;ALIVE</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2008/10/leon-alive/</link>
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		<pubDate>Wed, 29 Oct 2008 01:10:22 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[soiveheard.com]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[THE PAST IMPERFECT Who doesn’t remember Leon Levich? If there are three of you in a room, Leon tuned two of your pianos, and hocked you a chainick all afternoon about his own music and why it never gets played. Anyhow, he was at the latest “Chamber Music in Historic Sites” last Sunday, at the [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>THE PAST IMPERFECT<br />
Who doesn’t remember Leon Levich? If there are three of you in a room, Leon tuned two of your pianos, and hocked you a chainick all afternoon about his own music and why it never gets played. Anyhow, he was at the latest “Chamber Music in Historic Sites” last Sunday, at the Wilshire Boulevard Temple, and his music did get played. At 81, he has gone a little cuckoo; he forgets the names of his old pals but remembers vividly his days in prison camp, in Italy during WWII. His music – a slow movement from a String Quartet and a “Phantasy” for flute and string trio, nicely played by Eugenia Zukerman and the Jacques Thibaud Trio – amounted to pleasant nothingness. But there was that  dear old man himself,  bathed in his own beatific smile, with an audience of his contemporaries paying him homage, and I guess that was enough.<br />
The rest of the program was sterner stuff, with one work – Gideon Klein’s String Trio – actually composed in death camp mere weeks before the composer’s murder in the gas ovens. Sixty-four years later we are still confronted with this small repertory of music, including stage works, which demands consideration on humanistic grounds. Everything that I have heard – music by Gideon Klein, Viktor Ullman, Hans Krasa (whose Brundibár was largely completed before camp) and their unfortunate colleagues – is the work of well-trained middle-European practitioners, not yet endowed with an original voice. Kurt Weill, a single instance, rose above them, perhaps Paul Hindemith, the non-Jewish (if that matters). They had the carfare to escape.<br />
LAST WORD: Don’t ask why it should be, but the most beautiful playing, the most deeply felt and most imaginatively set forth on both of Andrås Schiff’s two Beethoven programs here at Disney Hall were the encore pieces, neither of them byBeethoven. First came Bach’s “Italian Concerto,” whose slow-movement melody hung suspended like a perfectly formed cloud, rendering pointless any discussion about the wisdom of Bach on the piano (as Anderszewski’s Bach recital had done once again two days later). Then, a week later, Schiff capped a so-so recital, which included a rather brutalized renditin of the “Appassionata,” with the slow final movement of Schumann’s C-major Fantasia, and led me to believe that that movement might well be the high point in musical Romanticism. (Don’t laugh until you go and play it &#8211;  by Schiff if there’s a recording or by Brendel or Rubinstein &#8212; , and don’t dare breathe through that sublime modulation – you’ll  know which one when you come to it).<br />
ANGELIC<br />
Musica Angelica is now our flagship Baroque orchestra, much strengthened from ensembles claiming that position in the past and firmly in place under Martin Haselböck’s direction. This past weekend’s concert was its first of the season, with a predictable plateful by a couple of Bachs, the inevitable but welcome Vivaldi and Telemann and the impostor Johann Gottlieb Graun. I name him “impostor”; only a few years later than his Baroque program-mates, his music has already begun to slide into patterns that begin to sound clunky against the grace of his programmatic pals. On this weekend’s high-stepping program, he was the one with the club foot<br />
Otherwise there was an interesting if irregular piece by a Bach cousin, Johann Bernard, with tiny movements that began and never really ended. Marion Verbruggen played a sopranino recorder in a Vivaldi concerto, and it sounded as if TinkerBell had come to visit. Later he joined with a more solemn instrument, against Vittorio Ghielmi’s viola da gamba, in a Telemann Double, Concerto. Mr. Ghielmi and Ilie Korol (the orchestra’s concertmaster) joined in the Graun Concerto. At the end another recorder player,  Rohem Gilbert, joined in from the orchestra and everybodu had the grandest of grand old times in Bach’s Fourth Brandenburg Concerto, music that always makes everybody want to join in, You couldn’t ask for a more fun concert than that.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>ANTONY &amp; THE&#160;PIANISTS</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2008/10/antony-the-pianists/</link>
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		<pubDate>Mon, 20 Oct 2008 01:09:26 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[soiveheard.com]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://65.58.242.66/?p=83</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[TOO HOT TO HANDLE? My editors at Bloomberg News had suggested weeks ago that the following item would be worth my attention. I never asked why. I fulfilled my obligation last Tuesday with my usual celerity and dispatch. On Wednesday I was informed that my article – honorable though it was – was “totally off [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>TOO HOT TO HANDLE?<br />
My editors at Bloomberg News had suggested weeks ago that the following item would be worth my attention. I never asked why. I fulfilled my obligation last Tuesday with my usual celerity and dispatch. On Wednesday I was informed that my article – honorable though it was – was “totally off the charts” for Bloomberg’s clients. I could have told them that weeks ago.<br />
Antony and Johnsons Drag Disney Hall Into Pop World<br />
Review by Alan Rich<br />
Oct. 16: First of all, there&#8217;s the voice, and<br />
it&#8217;s a wondrous instrument. It swoops to cavernous depths;<br />
you&#8217;re reminded of Erda, the Earth-Goddess in Wagner&#8217;s &#8220;Ring.&#8221;<br />
It mounts to an ecstatic peak, exulting over &#8220;a beautiful boy&#8221;<br />
in a duet with the shrill woodwinds of the orchestra. This is<br />
the voice of Antony (last name Hegarty, Sussex-born) who<br />
stood before a jam-<br />
packed Disney Hall audience on Tuesday night in Los Angeles,<br />
gowned in floor-length white silk and feathers, and held that<br />
crowd &#8212; gay, straight and teetering &#8212; spellbound. That is what<br />
he and his group have been doing since &#8220;I Am A Bird&#8221; pulled<br />
down their first album prize in 2005.<br />
Explain Antony? Nobody is on solid ground. He is 37, chunky<br />
in a friendly sort of way. As a stage singer, his gesticulations<br />
are, well, grandmotherly. The voice carries it all, and that is,<br />
as we were saying, something phenomenal: an artist&#8217;s palette of<br />
amazing variety. Too much of a good thing? Yes, truth to tell;<br />
midway through Tuesday&#8217;s concert, a certain sameness did settle<br />
in. One longed for the sound of a coloratura soprano, or a basso<br />
profundo.<br />
He has kept interesting company: one lachrymose duet (&#8220;You<br />
Are My Sister&#8221;) with Britain&#8217;s one-time renegade songster Boy<br />
George, a duet with Icelandic pop-genius Bjork. The “Johnsons”<br />
were a small instrumental ensemble (three strings, guitar and<br />
piano); for the current tour they have grown to a 19-piece<br />
orchestra. Elaborate orchestrations, sometimes to excess – string vibrato<br />
conflicting with vocal vibrato &#8211;  were<br />
by the up-and-coming 27-year-old New York composer Nico Muhly,<br />
whose name seems to pop up in every glowing report on the future<br />
of new music.<br />
&#8220;Shake that Devil,&#8217; Antony&#8217;s latest EP, has just been<br />
released on Secretly Canadian records; the next album, &#8220;The<br />
Crying Light,&#8221; is due in January. The current tour plays New<br />
York&#8217;s Apollo Theater tonight and then returns to England, with<br />
dates at London&#8217;s Barbican on October 30 and 31.<br />
(Alan Rich is a critic for Bloomberg News. The opinions<br />
expressed are his own.)<br />
PIANISSIMO<br />
András Schifff is now halfway through his survey of the Beethoven<br />
piano sonatas – at Disney Hall and several other international venues. The<br />
absolute technical sheen of his playing is both thrilling and off-putting. My most vivid pianist memories embrace concerts by  Rachmaninoff, Schnabel, Serkin, Gould, Brendel, and they include smudged notes and blurred phrases by all. (I can show you the note Rachmaninoff missed in the “Appassionata” in Symphony Hall Boston in December, 1940; these things stay with you.)<br />
Listening to Schiff demands a different set of receptors; you wait for the machine to falter, and you know it’s not gonna happen. I am awestruck by the clarity of his playing, the absolute command. I can return  home from his concert with, say, the D-minor fury of Opus 31 No. 2 still rattling my bones, and take down my favorite authors on Beethoven – Tovey, Kerman – and find that, yes, it’s all true.  The Schiff performances itself had presented me with no point of view only the notes flawlessly revealed. The discs – he’s recording the Sonatas on ECM – are like so much software. His observations on the music – published conversations with man-of-all-cultures Martin  Mayer, a perfect foil – are sleek and unchallengeable; theyproceed on from the performances in this airless continuum.<br />
At least you can’t fault Mr. Schiff for generosity; his encore last Wednesday was Bach’s “Italian” Concerto: not just one movement but the entire work; perhaps next Wednesday we’ll get the “Goldberg” Variations. On Saturday night Piotr Anderszewski followed suit;. Beethoven Bagatelles were his lagniappe following his Bach recital: not one, of the Opus 33 set, but the entire kaboodle. This was his first time here in three years: too long away.<br />
It was a fabulous concert. Anderszewski has, indeed, found the way to create airspace around a contemporary piano delivering Bach, both reinventing and preserving the expressive genius within the music and reshaping it for our time. I think I know my Bach, and yet I found myself, at this concert, constantly led toward rediscoveries large and small: the chromatic, sweeping, descending lines in the A-minor Prelude from the “Well-Tempered Clavier” (and the terse, ensuing fugue, on the same subject that also served Handel and Mozart), the assemblage of massive structures that begins the G-minor “English” Suite, the infinite tragedy that this pianist drew by momentarily delaying a single note, the F-sharp leading tone to the Sarabande in that Suite. This concert, like the Schiff, drew a near-capacity crowd to Disney Hall – a large percentage of it, I was happy to note, young.<br />
JACARANDISSIMO<br />
I must try to restrain my use of words like “exhilarating” in dealing with the Jacaranda Concerts but it’s not easy. The series’ fifrh season began last Friday, relocated to the new Broad Stage this once, where the mighty forces of the CalArts Gamelan could fill the stage with Lou Harrison’s music in the first half – in clear and resonant sound, by the way &#8212; and the wondrous machinery of Harry Partch’s inventing could rise up from the orchestra pit to accomplish the same, in hearts and spades, or however the expression goes, in the second.<br />
Lou Harrison told me, at our first meeting in, I think, 1981, that being a composer in California meant that you didn’t have to be afraid of writing pretty. The hour’s worth of his music for solos with gamelan were greatly pretty in the sense of gorgeous, seductive melodic lines propelled by tremendously complex rhythmic impulses. The series climaxed in a breath-stopping sequence: Alyssa Park’s violin, Tim Loo’s cello and Ted Askatz’s small drum  in glorious – yes, exhilarating – argument in Lou’s Double Concerto, against the massed hardware of the Gamelan.<br />
Came intermission, and then the extreme contrast of the John Cage “Quartet in Four Parts” played by Jacaranda’s Denali Quartet, music of intense restraint (the strings playing without vibrato) following  the previous music of intense exuberance.  It was a beautiful performance, I guess; I couldn’t help thinking it was somewhat lost on this occasion. (At the post-concert party the Denali played a quartet by another American pioneer, Ben Johnston, to much greater effect.)<br />
Up from the bowels of Broad came the Harry Partch assemblage: glorious glassware, the towering Bass Marimba, Diamond Marimba, Harmonic Canon, Kithara – all rebuilt from Harry’s original designs by the local hero John Schneider and played upon by latter-day Partch avatars under Schneider’s direction. Talk about exhilaration…what they played was “Castor and Pollux” from the “Plectra and Percussion Dances,” music performed in 1953 and not again until last year. Wow and triple wow!!<br />
Nobody is going to argue for a place for Harry Partch’s music among any kind of masterpiece galaxy. The half-hour of “Castor and Pollux” that sent the Jacaranda crowd home happy consisted of a lot of rhythmic banging, in square, predictable patterns,  on these gorgeously designed sound machines, great fun to watch and to listen to. The music is, of course, tied to these machines. Of melodic shape or design there is none. There doesn’t have to be. Music has its mainstreams of great creators who fashion a repertory of masterpieces and near-masterpieces to fill our concert halls, opera houses and rock palaces. It speaks for music’s power that it can also spawn these other creative spirits, these fashioners of alternative theories (with compositions to back them up). Harry was one of the best.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>End of the&#160;World?</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2008/10/end-of-the-world/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2008/10/end-of-the-world/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 13 Oct 2008 01:08:46 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[soiveheard.com]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://65.58.242.66/?p=81</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[A FURTHER NOTE ON THE UPCOMING WORLD’S END: URBANA, Ohio (AP) &#8212; A defendant had a hard time facing the music Andrew Vactor was facing a $150 fine for playing rap music too loudly on his car stereo in July. But a judge offered to reduce that to $35 if Vactor spent 20 hours listening [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>A FURTHER NOTE ON THE UPCOMING WORLD’S END:<br />
URBANA, Ohio (AP) &#8212; A defendant had a hard time facing the music<br />
Andrew Vactor was facing a $150 fine for playing rap music too loudly on his car stereo in July. But a judge offered to reduce that to $35 if Vactor spent 20 hours listening to classical music by the likes of Bach, Beethoven and Chopin.<br />
Vactor, 24, lasted only about 15 minutes, a probation officer said.<br />
It wasn&#8217;t the music, Vactor said, he just needed to be at practice with the rest of the Urbana University basketball team.<br />
&#8221;I didn&#8217;t have the time to deal with that,&#8221; he said. &#8221;I just decided to pay the fine.&#8221;<br />
Champaign County Municipal Court Judge Susan Fornof-Lippencott says the idea was to force Vactor to listen to something he might not prefer, just as other people had no choice but to listen to his loud rap music.<br />
&#8221;I think a lot of people don&#8217;t like to be forced to listen to music,&#8221; she said.</p>
<p>WEST SIDE STORY<br />
The Eli and Edythe Broad Stage and the Edye Second Space sit in a veritable ocean of parking space, and that is one of many blessings. Saturday night saw the official opening – the Broad Stage for a concert, the Second Space to welcome the freeloaders for a splendid Chinese feed afterwards. The concert was a vocal event: Frederica von Stade and Kristin Clayton with Jake Heggie at the piano in a program that included the local premiere of Heggie’s solo cantata “At the Statue of Venus” and an assortment of songs, arias and duets. Dustin Hoffman, who is on the Broad Stage Advisory Board, served as official greeter. “Broad,” by the way, rhymes with “road.”<br />
The Broad Stage – the hall itself, that is – seats 499 with a single balcony and a few side boxes. There is no center aisle, but the space between rows isn’t as cramped as at Disney. The hall is handsome; the seats are comfortable; the johns are accessible. Everyone was comparing notes with everyone else about acoustics, but there’s nothing to be said as yet on the evidence of a concert with just singers and piano. Kristin Clayton tended to swallow her words in the Heggie piece, but that was no more the fault of acoustics than of poor vocal technique and a clumsy, verbose text often drowned by the piano. I’ll get back to that in a moment.<br />
Much has been made of the fact that the Broad affords a proper concert venue to save us West Side audiences the ardors of the downtown commute on I-10. and that is indeed a boon. (There is also UCLA’s Royce Hall, three times as large and with a charge for parking.) The Broad is the right size and shape to develop as a center for small-audience events: new music, very old music. Next week Jacaranda plays there (on Friday, please note, not the usual Saturday); Musica Angelica, our excellent local early-music band,  plays there the following week. I would guess that both these groups have predominantly West-Side followings; they should feel at home in the new room.<br />
By the same token, Saturday’s concert fell somewhat short of the level I would hope to encounter  in these premises. “Flicka” von Stade is a beloved, veteran opera personality whom I have adored in some instances – Cherubino at the Met, Cherubin in Santa Fe – and deplored in others – Gerolstein at the L.A. Opera. She gives generously of herself, as in a similar program recently for the Long Beach Opera. She has made Jake Heggie something of a house composer far beyond his merits, and has carried his “Dead Man Walking” far on her slender shoulders. But it is sad that she allows a paying audience to witness her vocal decline, and sadder still when she employs her personal prestige to bring this singularly untalented note-spinner to the attention of audiences he does not deserve.  “At the Statue of Venus” is a text by  Terrence McNally, a blind-date number dispatching in far too many words what Barbara Cook did so beautifully in her “Will He Like Me?”number from “She Loves Me.” Ms. Clayton’s credentials are impressive, although rooted in the past; the matter at hand is that the music is dull, was dully sung, and that it was no way to begin life in the new hall.</p>
<p>NICHOLAS WAS RIGHT<br />
It’s common practice to deplore Nicholas Rubinstein for his savage attack on the hapless Tchaikovsky, when the 34-year-old composer played him his First Piano Concerto – in hopes that the older pianist would take the work into the repertory. Sometimes it occurs to me, however, that old Nicholas may have had a point or two – and I say this without for a moment denying that I usually have a wonderful time every time I hear the work, and I had a particularly fine time when Yefim Bronfman played it with Salonen and the Philharmonic at Disney Hall last week. This Concerto, in fact, may well stand as the world’s greatest piece of bad music. REALLY bad, I mean: utterly irrational in organization, painfully distended in melodic shape, illogical on different grounds in each of its three movements.<br />
More to the point, the Concerto tends to improve under mistreatment. This time, for example, I heard no coordination between the clean, rational orchestral playing under Salonen and Bronfman’s brutal  hammering. Not since the classic Horowitz/Toscanini recording have I heard those climactic octaves in the last movement so clobbered out of recognition. Whatever musical beauty abides in this fascinating grotesque of a virtuoso showcase – and I am not prepared to argue, or to care about, the possible presence of such beauty – I heard no such element in Thursday’s performance – the first of four last week. Did it matter? Not for a moment!<br />
Yes, I love this Concerto, for what it is. There are small, thrilling episodes: the final few chords of the slow movement, for example, and those octaves in the finale. Salonen, I am told, had not conducted the music before in his 17 years here in Los Angeles, or anywhere else. Why should he? He and Bronfman were a team made in Heaven – for Salonen’s own Concerto at the end of last season, and now for this.<br />
Stravinsky’s “Firebird” – all of it – ended the program I can live without the first half-hour (of the total 45 minutes), but this time the very opening &#8212; the subliminal, dark groan almost out of hearing range – was something memorable in itself: virtuoso orchestra, virtuoso hall.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>The Grim&#160;Weeper</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2008/10/the-grim-weeper/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2008/10/the-grim-weeper/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 06 Oct 2008 01:08:08 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[soiveheard.com]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://65.58.242.66/?p=79</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[THE GRIM WEEPER Joseph Kerman, whose “Opera as Drama” contains the immortal phrase “’Tosca,’ that shabby little shocker,” comes down somewhat more gentl y on  “Madama Butterfly.”  Taking careful note of the opera’s “coarseness of sensitivity,”he concedes brownie points to the one truly poignant scene, in Act Two, as the Consul Sharpless  vainly attempts to [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>THE GRIM WEEPER<br />
Joseph Kerman, whose “Opera as Drama” contains the immortal phrase “’Tosca,’ that shabby little shocker,” comes down somewhat more gentl y on  “Madama Butterfly.”  Taking careful note of the opera’s “coarseness of sensitivity,”he concedes brownie points to the one truly poignant scene, in Act Two, as the Consul Sharpless  vainly attempts to read  Pinkerton’s letter to Butterfly and thus convince her  that her romantic fantasies  must end. It is, indeed, a beautifully written scene; with Robert Wilson’s staging, all light and shadow and soft whisperings from James Conlon’s orchestra. The action  is confined to minimal gestures and  it works very beautifully at the Dorothy Chandler Pavilion.<br />
This is the third time around for “Butterfly,” in only five seasons; our company’s service to Puccini – at the expense of Verdi, among others – becomes an obsession.  I love Wilson’s staging,  especially when he is actually present at rehearsals  to supervise the infinite subtleties of his lighting plan – as he is this time around, and was not the last time. His staging is all about light: the subtle shifting in background color, the delicate play of light on a character’s outstretched hand. (I’ve watched him rehearse just this kind of effect, sometimes for hours, to get it right.)  One beautiful moment: as Butterfly and her “replacement” Kate meet in the final act, the American woman extends a  hearty handshake,   Butterfly a confused trembling; just that contrast sums up the essence of the tragedy.<br />
The stage is practically empty:  no “fiorito asil” of a honeymoon cottage, no  charming tea  ceremony,  the most basic costumes, Kabuki-inspired.  Wilson’s Butterfly this time is Liping Zhang, who has worked with him before. In sight and sound she is perfect in the role, a voice both sweet and strong, a compelling, handsome presence.. As right as she is in her role, so is her Pinkerton totally wrong: burly, screeching Franco Farina.<br />
Wilson’s one major addition to the opera’s plan of action is the presence of the small boy – named “Trouble” in the libretto,  but left unnamed  here – who frolicks  unknowing  on the stage as his mother’s world collapses.  No such action is called for in the libretto; the child might as well be a load of bread.  But Wilson’s emendation immeasurably strengthens the focus of the drama; the boy who must now endure  the collision,  of East against West in his new American home.  Eleven-year-old  Sean Eaton was the child  on opening night and,  of course, stole the show and the hearts of us all.</p>
<p>Measure by measure, note by note, the new season begins. Saturday night  the old season ended at the Bowl, which drew some fifteen thousand of us, chilled and exasperated after some of the season’s worst traffic, to an evening of  poetry and music inspired y Rumi- – “the Sights and Sounds of Mystic Persia.” (Robert Wilson  was involved in my last encounter with Rumi’s poetry, a multi-media affair at Royce Hall with Philip Glass’s music, “Monsters of Grace,” best forgotten. ) The dancing was marvelous: two different Dervish groups  in their whirling, twirling dance movement  s. There was a remarkable vocalist, Hamid Reza Nourbakhsh. At the end came Yo-Yo Ma and his Silk Road Ensemble, playing a long new piece whose name I didn’t catch, whose  basic harmony seemed to undulate  between two chords (One-to-flat- Two, for you harmony students, or think “Malaguena”) for a very long time. At the side of the stage a calligrapher , OstadYadollah  Kaboli, worked steadily to create an intricate and handsome manuscript, and I have to admit that I found his work the evening’s most transfixing segment. Many years ago, when American graffiti was seeking acceptance as an art form, I saw a dance company – Twyla Tharpe’s,  if memory serves – in a ballet with Beach Boys’ music and some graffiti artists working on a huge scroll behind the dancers  that kept  rising as the artists filled the space. That was my first experience with dancers-plus-calligraphy, and I remember it still.</p>
<p>PianoSpheres clocked in three nights later and, despite the Jewish holiday conflict,  came close to filling Zipper Hall. Most of Gloria Cheng’s program duplicated her recent (and splendid) TelArc disc: Esa-Pekka  Salonen’s “Dichotomie” best of all. This is a dazzling piece; I love the whimsy in Salonen’s own descripton,  that he planned a short encore piece for Gloria, which then got out of hand. It starts off huge and ferocious  (and stunningly scored, as if its creator was some kind of all-knowing piano virtuoso, which we know  he isn’t.) Fifteen-or-so minutes later it has subsided, charmingly. Can you think of a finer  brand-new  large-scale piano work since, perhaps, Carter’s “Night Fantasies”? I can’t.<br />
Witold Lutoslawski’s early Piano Sonata, also on the disc, filled out the first half of the program: interesting in its reflection of the very young composer’s obvious  fixation on Ravel and other French late romantics,  but not much of a piece otherwise.</p>
<p>At Royce Hall just last night the Los Angeles Chamber Orchestra began its (!) 40th season to a large crowd, many of whom stood when Jeff Kahane polled the audience for 40-year subscribers.  Well and good, but LACO’s spirit is youthful and adventurous, and  that spirit also deserves to be matched with some new blood out front. (From the traffic jam of walkers, pushing up the aisle at intermission, you’d almost think you were back on             I-405. ) It was an interesting program: Frank Martin’s big, dryly humorous Concerto for Solo Winds and Orchestra,  Dick Todd in one of the Mozart Horn Concertos and, at the end, Kahane’s surging, vital reading of the Mozart 39th, most elegantly scored of all the Symphonies –- those clarinets!!</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Some&#160;Week!</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2008/09/some-week/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2008/09/some-week/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sat, 27 Sep 2008 01:06:55 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[soiveheard.com]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://65.58.242.66/?p=76</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Some week! The financial leaders in Washington formulate their notion of the end of the world, while the cultural leaders in gray, dismal Cleveland accomplish much the same for theirs. Surely you’ve seen the news. Don Rosenberg, music critic for lo these many years at Cleveland’s leading paper The Plain Dealer, is asked to turn [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Some week!<br />
The financial leaders in Washington formulate their notion of the end of the world, while the cultural leaders in gray, dismal Cleveland accomplish much the same for theirs. Surely you’ve seen the news. Don Rosenberg, music critic for lo these many years at Cleveland’s leading paper The Plain Dealer, is asked to turn in his badge and leave off writing about the one internationally-honored cultural asset that city possesses, its symphony orchestra. The circumstances, though dire, are hardly unique. Every city’s cultural resources, at least in this country, are governed by boards of that city’s most prominent moneybags, who also own businesses that take out the largest ads in that city’s newspapers. An editor’s door, therefore, is always open to visits by members of those boards when some aspect of the cultural events the bankroll do not follow their own definition of the pleasure principle.  It does not necessarily follow that those board members know shit from shinola about whatever artform they serve – an opera company, a symphony orchestra, a museum. At the end of the day, they expect to be pleasured by that artform, not forced to think very hard about its content, and have their egos massaged by the critics of their local press, to whom they look for confirmation.</p>
<p>Don Rosenberg of the Plain Dealer denied them that confirmation, more often than they would have liked. I don’t know him very well, but I’ve read him fairly often on the matter of  the Cleveland Orchestra and its current conductor, Franz Welser-Moest (henceforth: FWM), who currently owns the podium once trod by George Szell, and more recently by Christoph von Dohnanyi, to the orchestra’s greater glory. I love the sight and sound of the orchestra’s Severance Hall; I’ve heard FWM in action there and also here, as guest with our own Philharmonic. Most of the time I’ve been unimpressed, never shocked but never truly moved. His one saving grace is the Cleveland Orchestra’s own pride of place, a tradition that goes back to the George Szell days. There’s a kind of chamber-music thinking that Cleveland players inherit and pass on; I’ve talked to many of them about this. Perhaps it’s their awareness that they’re all the city has.</p>
<p>Anyhow, Don Rosenberg – past president of the Music Critics Association, currently still on its board – may be over-reacting just a tad in his steadfast unwillingness to forgive FWM for not being Szell or Dohnanyi, but he has a point. What’s more he has the education, prestige and experience to deserve the job he has held until now.  The legendary Claudia Cassidy at the Chicago Tribune couldn’t forgive a whole roster of conductors for not being Frederick Stock. Our own Martin Bernheimer could never forgive Los Angeles for not being Vienna. The worst that can happen to a critic under these circumstances is to become predictable, but that doesn’t constitute grounds for firing, or – in Rosenberg’s case – demotion. I must say, the Plain Dealer’s action in this case – keeping Don on staff but blindfolding him to the existence of the Cleveland Orchestra, the one reason for a music critic to function – is shameless to a fault. On the same day that the NYTimes carried the demotion story the Plain Dealer published a blatant, ass-kissing tribute to FWM and the orchestra, by the intern who’s now been handed Rosenberg’s job, a 31-year-old writer of feature stories, Zack Lewis. I don’t envy him, risking being booed by the Severance Hall audience as he takes his aisle seat.</p>
<p>Naturally, there has been an outcry by a lot of what remains of the musical press, here and abroad. Steve Smith’s story in the Baltimore Sun covers it all, and is followed by a long string of reader comments, pro and con, that I find really instructive as to who it is the remaining few of us are really talking to.<br />
<a href="http://weblogs.baltimoresun.com/entertainment/classicalmusic/2008/09/critic_who_dared criticize_cle.html"><a href="http://weblogs.baltimoresun.com/entertainment/classicalmusic/2008/09/critic_who_dared">http://weblogs.baltimoresun.com/entertainment/classicalmusic/2008/09/critic_who_dared</a> criticize_cle.html</a></p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>BRAVE&#160;SOULS</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2008/09/brave-souls/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2008/09/brave-souls/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 24 Sep 2008 23:31:59 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[soiveheard.com]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://65.58.242.66/?p=71</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[BRAVE SOULS: A good-sized crowd showed up at Zipper last Friday and were well rewarded; this was the preview concert of the Carlsbad Festival, which actually ends up in Carlsbad this weekend (Friday and Saturday nights, Sunday afternoon). I like the Festival; the music is interesting and the planning is actually about something: young composers, [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>BRAVE SOULS: A good-sized crowd showed up at Zipper last Friday and were well rewarded; this was the preview concert of the Carlsbad Festival, which actually ends up in Carlsbad this weekend (Friday and Saturday nights, Sunday afternoon). I like the Festival; the music is interesting and the planning is actually about something: young composers, or once-young composers, raising a bit of hell with standard definitions. It’s also a study in chutzpah: Matt McBane, USC grad, decently talented violinist and composer, heads off to New York, organizes a group to play his own music, pushes his way into clubs and arts venues, lands a recording with an upcoming label (New Amsterdam) produces a disc with an irresistibly pretty cover that surely helps get playings (the music is nice, too), comes back to his home town (Carlsbad-by-the-Sea) where his family and all their friends help start a Festival, with his sister handling the p-r even. I went down to the Festival last year, and it was great to see all the Carlsbad townfolks sitting still and admiringly while native-son Matt plied them with some fairly hard-core new music. Maybe that’s what it takes.<br />
   His group is called BUILD, and their disc is on New Amsterdam, a new label. The group has Matt, two other string players, a piano and drums, and I do like their music even if I’m not sure what it is. It’s a kind of indie-rock chamber music, nice open textures, nothing too long, everything nicely shaped, or BUILT if you prefer. The rest of Carlsbad includes the UC-San Diego percussion group, and their program on Saturday night includes John Cage’s madcap “Third Construction” which is one of modern music’s ancestral pieces (and a hoot, besides). Sunday afternoon’s program has John Schneider with the Harry Partch instruments, playing Partch and Lou Harrison. Anybody driving?<br />
   Saturday night here there’s the Rumi concert here to close down the Bowl, with Yo-Yo and the Silk Road people. Next week, all of a sudden, there’s a full plate: Gloria Cheng at Piano Spheres on Tuesday; “Madama Butterfly” (in the Robert Wilson staging, and I understand he’ll actually be here, which makes a difference) on Wednesday; the Philharmonic, with Dawn and Audra (yummm!) on Thursday; LACO on Saturday and Sunday. </p>
<p>   Bob Attiyeh’s Yarlung Records &#8212; which I chastised once after the first release seemed so much a vanity operation, less a valuable addition to the repertory &#8212; continues to build an uneven but interesting repertory, recorded and produced with exceptional care to matters of sound and intelligent packaging. Their catalog includes recitals by a number of Philharmonic members: violinist Martin Chalifour, pianist Joanne Pearce Martin  (both of them involved with mostly familiar repertory) and clarinetist David Howard (whose program ventures further afield).<br />
    Howard’s disc includes the Brahms Clarinet Quintet, from the performance a couple of seasons ago with the Philharmonic’s Lyndon Taylor and Kristine Hedwall, John Hayhurst and Gloria Lum, and it is as moving – chilling, even – as I remembered it at the concert. Galina Ustvolskaya’s Trio for Clarinet, Violin and Piano – with Johnny Lee and Vicki Ray &#8212; is the disk’s other major work: strange, grating, intense music, certainly a major personal document by this reclusive pupil of Shostakovich pupil who died, alone, in 2006.2 Short works, agreeable and inconsequential,  by Steven Stucky and Esa-Pekka fill out the disc, both with Vicki Ray.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>San Francisco&#160;Weekend</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2008/09/san-francisco-weekend/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2008/09/san-francisco-weekend/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 15 Sep 2008 23:31:10 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[soiveheard.com]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://65.58.242.66/?p=69</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[A weekend in San Francisco involved delayed departures with 90-minute sojourns on airport tarmac in both directions, plus another hour on the return end as maintenance personnel were called in to –- honest! – change a light bulb. On the ground in San Francisco the pleasures were many: dinners at Zuni and the Hayes St. [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>A weekend in San Francisco involved delayed departures with 90-minute sojourns on airport tarmac in both directions, plus another hour on the return end as maintenance personnel were called in to –- honest! – change a light bulb. On the ground in San Francisco the pleasures were many: dinners at Zuni and the Hayes St. Grill, Dim Sum at Yank Sing, “Simon Boccanegra” at the San Francisco Opera with Dimitri Hrov&#8212; (you know who I mean) absolutely stunning in the title role.  I was there, however, for “The Bonesetter’s Daughter,” and that’s another story.<br />
    No, it’s the same story, actually, the collapse by the operatic machine, overcoddled and led astray by that segment of the cultural community that has made it its toy, its billboard, its fashion display. There is no matchup between the artform of the Verdi of Friday night’s opera and the gaudy, self-indulgent circus on Saturday that involved a $million-plus worth of a hack composer, a pretty good bunch of ethnic performers on a stage overlarge for their talent, designers ditto, in a production hyped to the bazooty to the point where you couldn’t even get a toehold into the press room at half-time.  I would love to have seen “The Bonesetter’s Daughter” on one of those little Chinese theaters off Grant Avenue that Lou Harrison, John Cage and, occasionally, I used to visit half a century ago, and enjoy the same excellent singers who are now trapped in a fancy new production ten times too big – Qian Yi with her ghostly, silvery, slithery voice most of all – in this grotesque, misshapen entertainment, as ludicrous a step ahead  for the SF Opera as “The Fly” is for ours.<br />
     David Gockley is the company’s general director, after years and years at the Houston Grand Opera. He hired me once to compile a happy book about HGO’s remarkable achievement in commissioning and performing contemporary opera; the occasion was, I think, Opera No. 25, Carlisle Floyd’s “Cold Sassy Tree.” Floyd’s operas figured considerably in that compilation, in fact; he had even moved to Houston from somewhere else, so as to be closer to his operas. I wonder if he’s gonna move to San Francisco.<br />
     The point is, Gockley’s impressive statistics relate to a taste for easy-listening opera; Stewart Wallace, “Bonesetter’s” composer, is already on that list, twice. Gockley has brought Philip Glass’s “Appomattox” to San Francisco, and now this. Not many Gockley operas ever leap out of their original place of performance, by the way, and turn up somewhere else; you can’t really say that he has enhanced the repertory as Mr. Wagner did from Bayreuth, say. <br />
    There has to be greater challenge  to an operatic audience than this weak tea somewhere, either in the form of more challenging production values – and I don’t mean the kind of Eurotrash that locates “The Ring” in a bathroom, as in one set of DVDs I confess to owning – or in seriously challenging  music that can move our operatic expectations forward, as “Simon Boccanegra” moved Verdi’s.  Is it too much to wonder out loud, now that Achim Freyer is at work among us, whether his production of Unsuk Chin’s “Alice in Wonderland” might possibly land somewhere? <br />
    Just wondering.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>The Fly Stinks Up the Chandler; Woody Allen and William Friedkin&#039;s Puccini Fares&#160;Better</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2008/09/the-fly-stinks-up-the-chandler-woody-allen-and-william-friedkins-puccini-fares-better/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2008/09/the-fly-stinks-up-the-chandler-woody-allen-and-william-friedkins-puccini-fares-better/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 10 Sep 2008 22:18:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=687</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[The bad news from Paris, earlier this year, was fair warning; The Fly, which had first taken flight at the Châtelet Opera, is one big turkey. At the press conference in Mrs. Chandler&#8217;s Pavilion, a week or so ago, there was Plácido Domingo burbling about operatic masterpiece, composer Howard Shore affecting pride, director David Cronenberg [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><strong>The bad news from Paris, </strong>earlier this year, was fair warning; <em>The Fly</em>, which had first taken flight at the Châtelet Opera, is one big turkey. At the press conference in Mrs. Chandler&#8217;s Pavilion, a week or so ago,  there was Plácido Domingo burbling about operatic masterpiece, composer Howard Shore affecting pride, director David Cronenberg insisting that the opera had no connection with his 1986 film, and the press allowed onstage, a few at a time, to ooh and aah over Dante Ferretti&#8217;s giant Laundromats, which were supposed to pass for Doctor Brundle&#8217;s Teleporters. All the while, the music from this wretched excuse for an opera played over the speakers: billows of orchestral sound patterns moving up and down with tuneless conversations superimposed.</p>
<p>Why do such things happen? I suppose it goes something like this: Howard Shore writes these splendid movie scores. <em>The Lord of the Rings</em> gets turned into a symphony &#8211; a huge, pompous-ass symphony that doesn&#8217;t for a minute shed its movie-biz identity, but a symphony nevertheless. Shouldn&#8217;t an opera be the next career move? Does it matter that he has no sense at all for a vocal line? How to differentiate between a love theme and an anger theme? Apparently nobody thought to ask. Maestro Domingo, whose last foray into contemporary opera was <em>Nicolas and Alexandra</em>, is again seduced by mediocrity.</p>
<p>For the two and a half hours of <em>The Fly </em>at the Chandler Pavilion, the ear is insulted with words set to music that almost never allows them to take shape. David Henry Hwang (of <em>M. Butterfly</em>) provided the text, which includes a steamy love duet about flesh, flesh and more of same. Sure, the opera has no connection with Cronenberg&#8217;s film. How could it? The basic premise, the bodily disintegration the makeup guys worked so brilliantly upon Jeff Goldblum in the film, is only hinted at in an embarrassing moment, when the opera onstage simply stops, and the supertitles, alone, are left to tell the story. When action returns, there is Doctor Brundle again, bent over and with a cane but still full size. Call this illusion? I call it cop-out.</p>
<p>Canadian bass-baritone Daniel Okulitch does a reasonable job as Doctor Brundle, including a few seconds of creditable Full Monty. He also does a couple of backflips to demonstrate the agilities of the New Flesh (although a double comes on for the sterner stuff). Romanian soprano Ruxandra Donose is the put-upon Veronica, and a couple of minor roles are handled, as well as need be, by Gary Lehman and Beth Clayton. Oh yes, I almost forgot: The opera ends with the message that brave Veronica is pregnant with Brundle&#8217;s child and has refused an abortion despite the possibility of giving birth to a you-know-what. Sequel, anyone? Now that&#8217;s what I&#8217;d call a horror story. </p>
<p>Before any of this, and by far the weekend&#8217;s better-spent time, was the opera&#8217;s excursion onto the triple bill of Puccini one-acters that some put forward as the best of all his music, beautifully planned and led by James Conlon. I cannot argue; <em>Il Tabarro</em>, the first of the set, does indeed have some of his most adventurous music; <em>Gianni Schicchi</em>, the last, is the music I turn to when the old hate-Puccini impulses start to churn. Unfortunately, <em>Suor Angelica</em>, the middle and sad sister of the three, is one of the works that does, indeed, start those impulses. William Friedkin staged the first two in the series; he had also staged <em>Gianni Schicchi</em> in 2002; now it was someone else&#8217;s turn.</p>
<p>All three short works, so different in narrative and tone, have in common the plan of a slow, leisurely start through an extended musical landscape; we know these people before their actions coalesce. <em>Il Tabarro</em> offers a remarkable portrait of a Parisian dockside: the barge of Michele and the gathering onshore. The orchestra projects a broad panorama; wonderful little dabs of color evoke the schemes of Monet and Debussy and remind us of the range of sympathy in Puccini&#8217;s late years, when works like <em>Pierrot Lunaire</em> seized his awareness. Lovely moments occur; an organ grinder&#8217;s instrument honks out a souvenir of <em>La Bohegrave;me</em>. As sunset turns to dusk, Puccini&#8217;s orchestra makes this tangible; it&#8217;s one of opera&#8217;s great moments, and our company does it well. </p>
<p>Mark Delevan is the murderous Michele; Anja Kampe is the wavering wife: a superb and superbly matched couple. Salvatore Licitra is the fly in their ointment, and he gets swatted. He was the tenor who stood in for Pavarotti on the night of the Great Cancellation: an okay tenor with a bit of howl.</p>
<p><em>Suor Angelica</em> is all sweet atmosphere, and it takes patience, as the young nuns and novices bustle over their cabbages and their chores. Sandra Radvanovsky is Angelica, and she is all drama up to that high D (I think it is) at the end of her big death aria. But Conlon has had to dig up a second aria, meant by Puccini to follow the big &#8220;Senza mamma,&#8221; inferior music and, in this context, anticlimactic. It is usually cut, and should be; it prolongs a scene which, considering the brevity of the entire work, was the proper length before.</p>
<p><em>Gianni Schicchi</em> is Woody Allen&#8217;s show, but not entirely. The opening bit is Woody-sophomoric: a screen with funny Italian words &#8211; e.g., &#8220;impetigo&#8221;  just to be Woody-cute. But that is soon lifted, and <em>Gianni Schicchi</em> has resisted worse than that. It&#8217;s a wonderful, boisterous show, staged on a crowded design by Santo Loquasto &#8211; a backyard and tenement of any century, any neighborhood &#8211; that is really part of the fun. The opera is a great boondoggle, a Woody Allen specialty if ever there was. Thomas Allen is the seedy, self-important Schicchi; Laura Tatulescu sings the &#8220;O mio babbino caro&#8221; most seductively; and the show is stolen (literally) by 9-year-old Sage Ryan, who in the brief span of this opera picks every pocket and steals every heart. </p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Swat!</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2008/09/swat/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2008/09/swat/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Tue, 09 Sep 2008 23:30:37 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[soiveheard.com]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://65.58.242.66/?p=67</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[POOR BRUNDLE-FLY The bad news from Paris, earlier this year, was fair warning; The Fly, which had first taken flight at the Châtelet Opera, is     one big turkey. At the press conference in Mrs. Chandler’s Pavilion, a week or so ago,  there was Plácido Domingo burbling about operatic masterpiece, composer Howard Shore affecting pride, [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>POOR BRUNDLE-FLY The bad news from Paris, earlier this year, was fair warning; The Fly, which had first taken flight at the Châtelet Opera, is     one big turkey. At the press conference in Mrs. Chandler’s Pavilion, a week or so ago,  there was Plácido Domingo burbling about operatic masterpiece, composer Howard Shore affecting pride, director David Cronenberg insisting that the opera had no connection with his 1986 film, and the press allowed onstage, a few at a time, to ooh and aah over Dante Ferretti’s giant Laundromats that were supposed to pass for Doctor Brundle’s Teleporters. All the while the music from this wretched excuse for an opera played over the speakers: billows of orchestral sound patterns moving up and down with tuneless conversations superimposed.<br />
       Why do such things happen? I suppose it goes something like this: Howard Shore writes these splendid movie scores.  Lord of the Rings gets turned into a symphony &#8212; a huge, pompous-ass symphony that doesn’t for a minute shed its movie-biz identity, but a symphony nevertheless. . Shouldn’t an opera be the next career move? Does it matter that he has no sense at all for a vocal line? How to differentiate between a love-theme and an anger-theme? Apparently nobody thought to ask. Maestro Domingo, whose last foray into contemporary opera was Nicolas and Alexandra, is once again seduced by mediocrity.<br />
     For the 2-1/2 hours of The Fly at the Chandler Pavilion the ear is insulted with words set to music that almost never allows them to take shape. David Henry Hwang (of M. Butterfly) provided the text, which includes a steamy love duet about flesh, flesh and more of same. Sure, the opera has no connection with Cronenberg’s film. How could it? The basic premise, the bodily disintegration that the makeup guys worked so brilliantly upon Jeff Goldblum in the film, is only hinted at in an embarrassing moment when the opera onstage simply stops, and the supertitles, alone, are left to tell the story. When action returns there is Doctor Brundle again, bent over and with a cane but still full size. Call this illusion? I call it cop-out.<br />
      Canadian bass-baritone David Okulitch does a reasonable job as Doctor Brundle, including a few seconds of creditable Full Monty. He also does a couple of back-flips to demonstrate the agilities of the New Flesh (although a double comes on for the sterner stuff). Rumanian soprano Ruxandra Donose is the put-upon Veronica and a couple of minor roles are handled, as well as need be, by Gary Lehman and Beth Clayton. Oh yes, and I almost forgot; the opera ends with the message that brave Veronica is pregnant with Brundle’s child, and has refused an abortion despite the possibility of giving birth to a you-know what. Sequel, anyone? Now that’s what I’d call a horror story. <br />
   TRIPLE PLOY  Before any of this, and by far the weekend’s better time spent, was the opera’s excursion onto the triple-bill of Puccini one-acters that some put forward as the best of all his music, beautifully planned and led by James Conlon. I cannot argue; Il Tabarro, the first of the set, does indeed have some of his most adventurous music; Gianni Schicchi, the last, is the music I turn to when the old hate-Puccini impulses start to churn. Unfortunately, Suor Angelica, the middle and sad-sister of the three, is one of the works that does, indeed, start those impulses. William Friedkin staged the first two; he had also staged the third, Gianni Schicchi in 2002; now it was someone else’s turn.<br />
      All three short works, so different in narrative and in tone, have in common the plan of a slow, leisurely start through an extended musical landscape; we know these people before their actions coalesce. In Il Tabarro we are offered a remarkable portrait of a Parisian dockside: the barge of Michele and the gathering onshore. The orchestra projects a broad panorama; wonderful little dabs of color evoke the color schemes of Monet and Debussy and remind us of the range of sympathy in Puccini’s late years, when works like Pierrot Lunaire seized his awareness. Lovely moments occur; an organ grinder’s instrument honks out a souvenir of La Bohème.. As sunset turns to dusk, Puccini’s orchestra makes this tangible; it’s one of opera’s great moments, and our company does it well. <br />
    Mark Delavan is the murderous Michele; Anja Kampe is wavering wife: a superb and superbly matched couple. Salvatore Licitra is the fly in their ointment, and he gets swatted. He was the tenor who stood in for Pavarotti on the night of the Great Cancellation: an okay tenor with a bit of howl.<br />
    Suor Angelica is all sweet atmosphere, and it demands our patience as the young nuns and novices bustle over their cabbages and their chores. Sandra Radvanovsky is the Angelica and she is all drama up to that high C at the end of her big death-aria. But Conlon has had to dig up a second aria, meant by Puccini to follow the big “Senza mamma,” inferior music and, in this context, anti-climactic. It is usually cut, and should be; it prolongs a scene which, considering the brevity of the entire work, was the proper length before.<br />
      Gianni Schicchi is Woody Allen’s show, but not entirely. The opening bit is Woody-sophomoric: a screen with funny Italian words – e.g., “impetigo” – just to be Woody-cute. But that is soon lifted, and Gianni Schicchi has resisted worse than that. It’s a wonderful, boisterous show, staged on a crowded design by Santo Loquasto – a backyard and tenement of any century, any neighborhood – that is really part of the fun. The opera is a great, boisterous boondoggle, a Woody Allen specialty if ever there was. Thomas Allen is the seedy, self-important Schicchi; Laura Tatulescu sings the “Babbino caro” most seductively; and the show is stolen (literally) by nine-year-old Sage Ryan, who in the brief span of this opera picks every pocket and steals every heart.</p>
<p>HURRICANE GUSTAV: At 9:35 on Tuesday night Mahler’s Eighth Symphony unleashed its final blast at the Hollywood Bowl. The performance under Esa-Pekka Salonen was wise and uncommonly civilized: nothing much in the way of offstage effects, serious and, I’ll bet, just a shade reluctant. Yes, reluctant; this is, after all, the one and only Mahler symphony that doesn’t contain a single moment of fun. Salonen’s performance, to its credit, employed nowhere near the proverbial “thousand,” and was the better for it. The great final chorus rang out, this once, brave and magnificent. So, among the soloists, did Christine Brewer. Wow.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Different&#160;Training</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2008/09/different-training/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2008/09/different-training/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 03 Sep 2008 23:29:54 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[soiveheard.com]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://65.58.242.66/?p=65</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[THE LEAVING TRAINS OF THE WORLD: It has been a while since we’ve heard anything about the fate of KCSN, the radio outlet of Cal State Northridge once noted for its brave and enterprising programming including an enlightened attitude toward new music beyond that of any other local station. When last heard from KCSN was [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>THE LEAVING TRAINS OF THE WORLD: It has been a while since we’ve heard anything about the fate of KCSN, the radio outlet of Cal State Northridge once noted for its brave and enterprising programming including an enlightened attitude toward new music beyond that of any other local station. When last heard from KCSN was in the process of denuding itself of most of that distinction. Martin Perlich, its adventurous classical-music programmer, has been banished to that limbo currently well-populated with former arts critics and enterprising program directors. Apparently there is still classical music to be heard on KCSN, weekdays 6-6, but without Martin’s imaginative and aggressive programming. Or so you would suspect, from this recent communication from KCSN’s current general manager to whatever remains of a programming staff.  “Leaving Trains,” the hypothetical work referred to in the second paragraph, is of course the familiar atonal tone-poem by, if memory serves, John Quincy Adams. </p>
<p>Greetings ~<br />
 <br />
I have just spoken with the administration regarding several issues, one in particular is<br />
our daily classical programming. Please keep up the great work that we have come to<br />
know and love about your daily presentations. I ask that you now become extra sensitive<br />
when it comes to the more adventurous and contemporary music in our library. I do not<br />
wish to draw a line in the sand and prohibit any one kind of music, but at this juncture I<br />
ask that you program the “minimalists” and  “21st Century” music with less frequency.<br />
 <br />
It is your call, and from what I’ve heard not all new music is “difficult listening”. But please<br />
stay away from the “Leaving Trains” and the “Phrygian Gates” of the world. Dig into the<br />
wealth of Early, Romantic, Classical, and mainstream selections that thrive in our library.<br />
 <br />
If you don’t understand what I am attempting to relay to you then talk to me. My wish is<br />
to have you pull back from the “extreme adventurous” to the “mainstream enjoyable”. And<br />
I trust your judgment completely.<br />
 <br />
With new leadership and change management comes a fresh new direction. Our library is<br />
rather large so please dig in and have fun. And let’s keep the channels of communication open.<br />
I realize that this is a matter of one’s personal opinion so if you have questions or doubts run<br />
them by me.<br />
 <br />
Thanks again for your great work.<br />
 <br />
Fred<br />
 <br />
Frederick D. Johnson<br />
KCSN General Manager</p>
<p>At the Bowl last week Edo de Waart sent in one of his frequent cancellations; instead there was the utterly charming and quite splendid Shi-Yeon Sung who, from the moment of her management of Wagner’s “Meistersinger” Prelude on through a sticky evening gave a splendid account of herself. She is the Boston Symphony’s assistant conductor; one can only hope that this new generation of exceptional young assistants – our own Lionel Bringuier included – will outlast this dangerous trend of orchestral demise that stalks the land. Ms. Song has a handsome stick technique; in a thickish program ending with the Brahms First, and with the usual lack of real rehearsal time, she made the Philharmonic sound bright and chipper. In the middle there was the Schumann Piano Concerto, one of those works I unhesitatingly regard as perfect; So it sounded this night, with the young Sa Chen as soloist, in a collaboration that gave off waves of joyousness.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>September&#160;Song</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2008/08/september-song/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2008/08/september-song/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 25 Aug 2008 23:29:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[soiveheard.com]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[Forty years ago this week. at New York Magazine, Clay Felker  allowed me to get away with an entire music column in  rhyming doggerel. Bob Grossman supplied the artwork,  which I continue to use, in Bob’s color upgrade. He  asked me about the original text, so this is for him.  Rudi and Julius were the [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Forty years ago this week. at New York Magazine, Clay Felker <br />
allowed me to get away with an entire music column in <br />
rhyming doggerel. Bob Grossman supplied the artwork, <br />
which I continue to use, in Bob’s color upgrade. He <br />
asked me about the original text, so this is for him. <br />
Rudi and Julius were the opera honchos in 1968; <br />
Sargeant and Haggin were stuck-in-the-mud critics, <br />
the Bernheimers of their day. That’s Lennie <br />
on my typewriter. </p>
<p>A ho! For September, with anticipation<br />
Of concerts and operas, a season of cheer.<br />
A toast to the autumn with joy and elation<br />
As music resoundeth, piled right up to here.</p>
<p>The critics, all rested, their bon mots are sharp’ning<br />
For Lennie, and Rudi, and Julius, and you,<br />
Dear readers. We listen to all that is happ’ning<br />
And try to relate everything we’ve been through.</p>
<p>For Julius and troupe there’s a birthday to honor,<br />
Of twenty-five years full of struggle and pain.<br />
They’ve got a new “Faust” (man, that opera’s a goner),<br />
At least it’s a way to get out of the rain.</p>
<p>And Beverly Sills will sing Manon to charm us<br />
(The Met’s digging up the same opera, I see.)<br />
And Rudi can rage, throw a tantrum enormous,<br />
But His “Manon” stinks, just between you and me.</p>
<p>Sing ho! Lincoln Center, Bill Schuman and minions,<br />
With four pretty buildings and one on the way.<br />
They lunch all the critics and woo our opinions,<br />
It’s part of a game that we graciously play.</p>
<p>And Lennie is fifty; he’s leaving, he’s tired.<br />
His job’s up for grabs, a most difficult choice.<br />
The applicants, all of them greatly admired,<br />
Will have to excel in both Boulez and Boyce.</p>
<p>The orchestra’s dead, or the orchestra’s dying;<br />
The audience thinks all the moderns are trash.<br />
They may be, but surely a handful are trying,<br />
But they’re not the ones who go home with the cash.</p>
<p>So Ormandy comes and he plays all-Tchaikovsky,<br />
And Leinsdorf shows up with a Schumann or two,<br />
While Babbitt and Cage and that chap Davidowsky<br />
Retreat to the hinterlands, clever but blue.</p>
<p>So ho! Winthrop Sargeant and Haggin and others…<br />
They’re deeply insulted by tones numb’ring twelve.<br />
The music they like was enjoyed by their mothers;<br />
Into anything new they reluctantly delve.</p>
<p>At Carnegie, which I recall from pre-puberty,<br />
The coffee is sour, acoustics are fine.<br />
Fischer-Dieskau  will come with a program all Schuberty;<br />
If you want to buy tickets you’d best get on line.</p>
<p>Upstairs in Recital Hall kids from all  over<br />
Give New York debuts with their eyes full of hope.<br />
A tiny percentage will land in the clover;<br />
The rest will go home to St. Louis and mope.</p>
<p>But let them not stop; they’re the ones that excite us:<br />
The youngsters creative, ambitious and strong.<br />
They bring in the new blood; the pathways they light us<br />
To musical futures, to which they belong.</p>
<p>Then ho! To the future; it’s got to be better!<br />
Without this assurance we couldn’t go on.<br />
Dame Fortune will smile on us; please, someone, let her.<br />
The musical season looks rosy at dawn</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Brundibar&#160;Again</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2008/08/brundibar-again/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2008/08/brundibar-again/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sat, 23 Aug 2008 23:27:32 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[soiveheard.com]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[BRUNDIBAR AGAIN. Five years ago the L.A. Opera’s Opera Camp project staged this endearing small  concentration-camp relic at a church in Santa Monica. Since then the work – by Hans Krasa, to a libretto by Adolf Hoffmeister, has had a career of its own. There’s a picture book by the eminent designer Maurice Sendak, which [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>BRUNDIBAR AGAIN. Five years ago the L.A. Opera’s Opera Camp project staged this endearing small  concentration-camp relic at a church in Santa Monica. Since then the work – by Hans Krasa, to a libretto by Adolf Hoffmeister, has had a career of its own. There’s a picture book by the eminent designer Maurice Sendak, which has also inspired the décor for stage productions. The story, if you can call it that, tells of how the children of the village outshouted the village minstrel (Brundibar by name), so that people threw money at them and made it possible for Little Joe to buy milk for his ailing mother. Okay? There is now a prequel, “Friedl,” centered around  the artist Friedl Dicker-Brandeis, with music by Eli Villanueva. Take a deep breath now, while I sort out  some history, in case you just got here.<br />
   “Brundibar” was composed  and performed in the Jewish quarter of Prague sometime between 1938 and 1941. A copy of the score was smuggled into the concentration camp at Teresienstadt (Terezin), where it was performed frequently by camp children under Krasa’s direction. The Nazis maintained the Terezin camp as something of a showpiece, with a busy performing-arts program and lots of clean toilets to impress the visiting press. There was a famous “Brundibar” performance at the camp before a group of Red Cross inspectors, in June, 1944, which apparently earned the camp a clean bill of health, except that the majority of the “specimen” inmates put up for inspection were among the next trainloads shipped out to the Auschwitz gas ovens immediately after the inspectors departed. <br />
   The role of The Cat at Terezin was taken by a child who survived, and who is now Mrs. Ela Weissberger, who has derived a lovely second existence out of her wretched childhood. At Terezin the young Ela attended classes by Friedl Dicker-Brandeis, Mrs. Weissberger has now made a new life attending performances of “Brundibar” and delivering a delightful post-performance memoir. That’s what she did at Disney Hall’s REDCAT this weekend, as “Brundibar” returned – no Sendak sets, but with stage direction by Eli Villanueva on a make-do set as in 2003, and with James Conlon himself conducting three of the four performances. (Daniel Faltus, who led the fourth, was the conductor in ’03.) For Conlon this revival is, of course, congruent with his ongoing “Recovered Voices” project, to restore the suppressed repertory, worthy or otherwise, of music denied its place under the Nazi shadow. For “Brundibar” the word is, I’m afraid,  “otherwise,” but I would not send back a minute of my Saturday morning spent with these spirited, greatly talented, splendidly directed kids who, I was told, worked up this solid hour of sheer stage exhilaration in something like eleven days’  rehearsals. If this is what “Opera Camp” was been turning out over these past five years I wish they’d keep me better informed. Certainly the repertory of really good operas for and with children – by Britten, for starters – can make this an adjunct of enormous value.</p>
<p>FLASH IN THE PAN: Let me recall a Friday afternoon at Boston’s Symphony Hall, 1942 or thereabouts: an unknown soloist, an unknown concerto: William Kapell playing the  Khatchaturian. Friday-afternoon Boston Symphony audiences were the epitome of restraint: some pitter-pattering applause at the end of a piece; never between movements. Something weird took place that afternoon, however: applause  (horror!) between movements and, would you believe, cheers. Sure enough, that piece had all the right grease, all right. It was – and is – made up entirely of  spare parts: Borodin-plus-hootchy-kootch, good writing for fast moving fingers. The only recording I owned, I think I bought because the names were so right: Moura Lympany, Anatole Fistoulari &#8212; say them aloud, over and over. Sixty years later,  Khatchaturian’s greasy concerto has practically disappeared from the catalogs; a single Russian recording remains.. <br />
    I have the feeling that Jean-Yves Thibaudet, with his built-in magic charm machine, has the chops to stage a comeback for this alluring, brainless showpiece.; it’s quite the match. (Ah, don’t ask why!) He’s been playing it around this summer, and he brought it to the Bowl last week. Why not? It’s exactly tailored to the Thibaudet persona: the mauve jacket with the silky-satin overlay, the gold-and-silver slippers; more solid gold in the hairwash. Thibaudet is our resident playboy; the new “Gramophone” chooses his Ravel over all others, which I find hard to believe until I discover that the obvious alternatives as superb Ravel performers on disc – Uchida, Aimard – do not exist.<br />
   I guess you could call Thibaudet on Khatchaturian a great performance of its kind. Those fingers at work &#8212; on the video screens, it was like  watching some of those old Soviet films the Philharmonic ran a year or so ago of marvelous machinery getting ready for World War II. On the podium was the Philharmoic’s immensely talented assistant conductor Lionel Bringuier, whose role – in this work at least – could be compared to that of a weathervane in a typhoon.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>THREE&#160;DAYS</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2008/08/three-days/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2008/08/three-days/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 14 Aug 2008 23:26:30 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[soiveheard.com]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[IT WAS A FOREGONE CONCLUSION  that Mark. Swed and I would hear entirely different music at the Hollywood Bowl on Tuesday night, under the title of the Philip Glass Violin Concerto; we acknowledged as much in our pre-concert greeting. The important point is that we can remain friends over such matters. My life in this [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>IT WAS A FOREGONE CONCLUSION  that Mark. Swed and I would hear entirely different music at the Hollywood Bowl on Tuesday night, under the title of the Philip Glass Violin Concerto; we acknowledged as much in our pre-concert greeting. The important point is that we can remain friends over such matters. My life in this criticking business has been punctuated by the sneers and snarls of those – you don’t want to know their names –who would ascribe deep motivations of evil intent  to those who seek to tread upon their artistic tastes or express opinions of their own.<br />
   Mark’s encomium in today’s Times has the expected eloquence and dedication; if there are six (or sixty) recordings of Philip’s Violin Concerto I am sure he has heard them all and knows their differences by heart. Since I find sameness of musical discourse one of the work’s major earmarks, I share his awe that Martin Chalifour, the Philharmonic’s noble concertmaster and the soloist the other night, did indeed learn the concerto to play it by heart. <br />
    The Concerto, I will allow, is quite an astonishing work for all its emptiness. It moves forward with a lithe arrogance, offensive in its very assurance. I will grant its slow movement extra points; this is a big and impressive structure whose building blocks are clearly evident – a massive descending four-note figure – and which, of all three movements, seems most nearly the right length for what it has to say. (You see what a fine gentleman I am: I’m allowing for the possibility that the Philip Glass Violin Concerto has something to say.) Leonard Slatkin, who conducted, tied himself in knots trying to describe interesting correspondences between the Concerto and Elgar’s ”Enigma” Variations, which followed. I didn’t even try.<br />
THREE NIGHTS BEFORE, “Les Miserables” had something to say, all right. I’ve seen operas and stage shows at the Bowl, and salivated enviously at the pictures in the Bowl Museum of the great old shows of the past – Max Reinhardt’s “Midsummer Night’s Dream” most of all, which later became a movie (now finally on DVD) with Mickey Rooney as Puck – but last week’s production has to be the best use of that space I’ve yet seen. No, it didn’t match the awesome moment in a real theater of the scene at the Barricades, or Javert’s suicide into the sewer, but it came amazingly close, with live and video joining into valuable theatrical enhancement. The cast was over-all superb; the tiny Gavroche was someone you’d want to spread on a brioche and swallow whole.<br />
  And for what? The music remains a glorious, juicy cheat. Not since Quixote’s “Impossible Dream” have the time-signatures of 6/8 and 9/8 been so blatantly overstressed in a musical score to wrench shivers and tears from an audience. My love-hate affair with “Les Miz” goes far back to the first London run; I can’t shake it. The kids at Hamilton High won me over with their production a few months ago; theirs was a snappier, more light-hearted show. This one had me shivering and in tears. I can’t wait for the next.<br />
NEXT DAY: Santa Barbara beckoned, as it always does this weekend, as the Music Academy of the West ends its summer festival with a staged opera in the creaky old Lobero Theater. Everybody shows up, pushing one another aside to get a hug from Marilyn Horne – who runs the voice program there &#8212; and whoever else of major importance shows up. Bill Bolcom was on hand this time; people said that his opera, “A Wedding,” was better done by the Santa Barbara students than it had by the Chicago Lyric. Could be; it was a bright, bouncy show.<br />
  It’s the Robert Altman comic film: dysfunctional families colliding as they interlock at a wedding. (Wasn’t there a Bollywood movie about this, too?)  Bolcom is splendidly multi-phasic, and he sets up a glorious confusion of musical interweave that bustles and surges and now and then comes to rest with a lovely love song. I don’t see a professional career for his opera; it seems exactly right for talented students to use for great fun, which is what happened in Santa Barbara. Worth the trip.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Conductors A to&#160;Z</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2008/08/conductors-a-to-z/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2008/08/conductors-a-to-z/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 06 Aug 2008 23:25:47 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[soiveheard.com]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://65.58.242.66/?p=55</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[CONDUCTORS A TO Z: It has been a while since I’ve been to the Cabrillo Festival, at least the 17 years of Marin Alsop’s time since this was my first first encounter with her work there. Santa Cruz apparently loves her, a contrast to the protests she ran into at her appointment to the Baltimore [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>CONDUCTORS A TO Z: It has been a while since I’ve been to the Cabrillo Festival, at least the 17 years of Marin Alsop’s time since this was my first first encounter with her work there. Santa Cruz apparently loves her, a contrast to the protests she ran into at her appointment to the Baltimore Symphony. She has built a valuable festival of middle-distance contemporary music; the statistics of world and U.S. premieres are impressive so long as you allow the likes of John Corigliano and Christopher Rouse into the new-music category. Cabrillo began – in a coffee shop called the Sticky Wicket – in 1961, through the efforts of Lou Harrison and the poet Robert Hughes. It maintained an experimental, PacificRim-facing personality as long as Lou was around. It found a larger home at Cabrillo College in ’63; now it uses the basketball arena optimistically called the Civic Auditorium, where open windows supply the only air conditioning. It deserves better. The two nights I was there it drew good crowds; the town surrounded the hall with festive food stands and the like. “Keep Santa Cruz Weird” is a familiar bumper strip, and Cabrillo measured up to the cry. <br />
   Chris Rouse’s music is – well – “modern but likable” as some people like to measure. His “Concerto for Orchestra,” which had its world premiere at Cabrillo, starts off with trumpets aspin (a little like that famous great measure in “Daphnis et Chloe”) and runs a good half-hour through emphatic, correctly dissonant music that leaves your shoelaces tied but lets you know you’ve been Somewhere. This was his eleventh concerto, and Cabrillo has heard them all. Corigliano, another master of the correct gesture, was on hand with “Conjurer,” a concerto for the famous percussionist Evelyn Glennie, something of a drypoint exercise if truth be known. I missed the good old days, with Glennie cavorting at top speed through a vast display of orchestral hardware; this one had her hammering away at one section at a time – woods, metals, skinheads. Perhaps becoming a “Dame” has slowed her down. <br />
   Smaller works filled in the programs: “Darkness Made Visible,” an attractive orchestral interlock of one thing and another by 18-year-old USC student Eric Lindsay; Mason Bates’ “Liquid Interface,” blending a familiar electronic vocabulary into the orchestra; David Sanford’s “Scherzo Grosso,” allowing a workout for show-off cellist Matt Haimovitz.. The festival concludes this Sunday (8/10) with a concert at the Mission San Bautista, a little way up U.S. 101 from Santa Cruz; you can hear four more premieres and see the spot where Kim Novak toppled down in ”Vertigo.”<br />
   At the other end of the alphabet, I’ve always harbored a special liking for Christian Zacharias, India-born, Germany-raised, superb conductor, pianist, chamber musician. Tuesday night he had his first stint at the Hollywood Bowl and, from his disarming short speech, seemed somewhat overwhelmed by the surroundings. Well might he be; a crowd of nearly 11,000 on a Tuesday night, with only himself as soloist, suggests that there’s still hope for us all. Beethoven was the matter at hand, the gentle C-major Piano Concerto, the sublime “Pastoral” Symphony, “Coriolanus.” It was all beautiful, the orchestra in excellent balance, the oboe of Ariana Ghez and the bassoon of Shawn Mouser – the pillars of Beethoven’s scoring in those particular works – in particularly loving balance. For an audience, Zacharias is hard to watch; he does not so much stroke an orchestra as pump it vigorously with both arms; whatever the technique, he achieves results. He has another program tonight, ending with the blithe, unflappable C-major Symphony of Bizet, music not very important perhaps, but perfect.</p>
<p>P.S. The capital of Mongolia is Ulan Bator, not Kuala Lumpur. Even the sun has spots.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Questions and&#160;Answers</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2008/08/questions-and-answers/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2008/08/questions-and-answers/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 04 Aug 2008 23:24:24 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[soiveheard.com]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://65.58.242.66/?p=53</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS FROM TODAY’S MAIL  Q.   Hello Alan, I&#8217;m a freelance writer (and former editor) with Symphony magazine, doing a story about the recent rounds of layoffs and cutbacks of classical music critics and other arts critics at print publications. It&#8217;s a kind of big-picture look at what this means for arts journalism now [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS FROM TODAY’S MAIL<br />
 Q.   Hello Alan,<br />
I&#8217;m a freelance writer (and former editor) with Symphony magazine, doing a story about the recent rounds of layoffs and cutbacks of classical music critics and other arts critics at print publications. It&#8217;s a kind of big-picture look at what this means for arts journalism now and in the future, and what it means for some of the writers involved.<br />
Of course, you have some firsthand experience with the subject, and have launched your own web site/blog as a response.  I&#8217;m curious to hear what you think of launching a blog at this point in your career. How did you get it started and what do you think of the differences, if any in blog postings and commentary. Are you hearing from readers? I know you&#8217;ve been through lots of rounds of staff reductions/dramas at newspapers over the years. That said, are we really seeing the end of music criticism in print, as so many are saying, or is this just another round of media world machinations? How healthy is it for cities to have only one critic, if any at all, devoted to classical music coverage?<br />
 A.    Hi Rebecca. Interesting you should ask.<br />
The situation right now is at its worst. Not only because critics are losing their jobs right and left, but because the field is being pared in so brutal a fashion. It is far worse for a city to end up with one single critic, no matter how competent or how well-positioned, than none; the only way for criticism to work is as a forum of some sort, whether it be four guys on the NYTimes or me versus Mark Swed in L.A.. This network of small dictatorships reduces the field to a lot of interlocking blather. All these blogs right now are a kind of Babel, but the small-talk guys, the guys that used to shoot off in the record stores and now have access to websites, will soon run out of steam, and the few worthwhile websites &#8212; Alex&#8217;s, best of all &#8212; will survive as the new source for musical intelligence. The fact that schools like USC are actually training arts critics these gloomy days is a good sign; there&#8217;s a chance that the art will survive. Just the fact that I maintain my own blog in close contact with a few hundred  readers who respond constantly &#8212; if only to help me with spelling and fact-checking &#8212; tells me that there is a readership for criticism. We will step out over the blabbermouths and, maybe, survive. Alan<br />
 ANOTHER Q    Though it’s six months away, I wanted to personally get in touch about Stephanie Barron’s upcoming German Cold War show. This one promises to be as innovative as her two previous German presentations, at least one of which I know you covered. Please do let me know if I can provide further information or arrange a conversation between you and Stephanie.<br />
Best regards,<br />
Allison<br />
(Press release attached.)<br />
Allison Agsten, Director, Press Relations<br />
LACMA <br />
Los Angeles County Museum of Art<br />
A.  Thanks for this advance information. It would be interesting to learn whether LACMA plans any kind of musical program to correlate to this material; the period did produce some important music. (The name of H. P. Zimmermann, whose &#8220;Soldaten&#8221; was just produced at the Lincoln Center Festival, comes first to mind.) Unfortunately, now that LACMA has self-destructed as a producer of serious musical events I have my doubts. Could you elucidate? Alan<br />
Q.  I&#8217;ve just heard back from our music department. We have programming for<br />
Basquiat, African Art, Hearst, Pompeii, and possibly one other, though<br />
likely not Art of Two Germanys.<br />
Allison Agsten<br />
A.  yes, that figures</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>JandJandJ</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2008/07/jandjandj/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2008/07/jandjandj/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 30 Jul 2008 23:23:42 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[soiveheard.com]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[JAMES: Somebody on the radio recently, I forget who, was talking about James Thurber, to the effect that “nobody reads this great man anymore.” I had this book in my lap, open to page 171:   “The woan, so-called because he woaned, was frequently seen, four or five hundred years ago, in larders and bureau [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>JAMES: Somebody on the radio recently, I forget who, was talking about James Thurber, to the effect that “nobody reads this great man anymore.” I had this book in my lap, open to page 171:<br />
  “The woan, so-called because he woaned, was frequently seen, four or five hundred years ago, in larders and bureau drawers. Many people also saw him in their cups. Scarcely larger than a small blue cream pitcher, the woan had three buttons on the vest of his Sunday suit, and was given to fanning his paws at spindrift. He built his nest of gum wrappers and violin bows, which gave it rougly the shape of a gum-wrapped violin bow. The woan was capable of only one sound, a low, mournful ‘goodle-goodle.’ I miss him.”<br />
JAY: There is a Norm’s at the head of my street; I go there often because it’s close. The food ranges from terrible to blah, but there’s an edible fish dish and a couple of salads I can cope with. I’ve struck up a friendship with one of the waiters. His name is Jay; it’s really Javkhlangere, or something like that, but that’s impossible. He’s from Kuala Lumpur, the capital city of Mongolia. He, his sister and their mother emigrated here five years ago; his sister also works at Norm’s, and I cannot pronounce her name, either. They’re both tall, strikingly handsome, extremely thin, and with a skull configuration – I looked it up – that is distinct to people from that region.<br />
  Anyhow, Jay asked could he come over and have me look at his English writing and I said sure and then I offered to take him to a Hollywood Bowl concert and he said sure. His musical awareness was strictly hip-hop, about which he knew quite a lot; he played me some tapes that ween’t all THAT bad. A few nights ago, I packed a picnic pack including my one Chinese outdoor specialty, Pon-Pon Chicken (which does include some drops of Mongolian Hot Oil). Jay knew something about the Bowl, but when we stepped inside and caught the first view of the expanse he came close to collapse. I’ve escorted many blasé out-of-towners to their first Bowl experience; this was different.<br />
The program that night was the more-or-less complete “Carmen,” Jay’s first encounter with classical music, certainly his  first opera. Total conquest; Bramwell Tovey’s glib plot summary may have done the job for the rest of 9,000-or-so attendees; within Box 1031, mine was the narration that prevailed. At the end – and yes, we stayed to the end – two things: 1)Jay thanked me in a way that sounded as if he really meant it and 2)he began plans to take his girl friend to the Bowl as soon as she returns from Mongolia.<br />
   This, by the way, was a great night as well for Denyce Graves, a long way removed from the spook-infested “Carmen” that first brought her here  in 1992. Those who will proclaim her THE Carmen of our generation will find no argument here; her voice has developed the stride, the insinuation, the rich sexual power inherent in the role; even in the hampered setting on the Bowl stage hers was a Carmen of full drama. Not so Stuart Skelton,  alas, her Don José of the sliding scale, lending new meaning to the four-letter word known as “wimp.” As recompense there was the haunting, immensely touching Micaëla of Jessica Rivera, greatly illuminating what must still be the most useless role in all opera. Tovey’s version bled from many  cuts, some welcome some disgraceful. <br />
JABBERJABBER: There is a kind of writing, engaged in by people elevated to important jobs and  in need of sounding important – I think there’s a Thurber drawing somewhere of that species  &#8211;  that consists of showing up on the job with a large bag of words and not leaving until you’ve used them all. I got the sinking feeling after reading Mr. Schultz’s review of the Mozart concert at the Bowl last week that the Times had hatched a new practitioner of the art, so soon after cutting Mr. Pasles loose. Then I remembered that Mr. Schultz pals around with Mr. M-rm-lst-n, who is a very old practitioner, and that explains everything.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Martha and&#160;Tony</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2008/07/martha-and-tony/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2008/07/martha-and-tony/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 21 Jul 2008 23:23:02 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[soiveheard.com]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://65.58.242.66/?p=49</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[MARTHA: “I hope he likes me,” says Martha Argerich of Robert Schumann, and it makes you think more intensely about both of them: this  elusive musician who moves through our world as though in a world of her own; this musician of the centuries past whose best music always seems to have him talking to [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>MARTHA: “I hope he likes me,” says Martha Argerich of Robert Schumann, and it makes you think more intensely about both of them: this  elusive musician who moves through our world as though in a world of her own; this musician of the centuries past whose best music always seems to have him talking to himself in the way that finally led him to madness. When she plays his music there is, indeed, a closeness; two impenetrable boundaries seem to dissolve, to merge. I  thought of this before; there are a number of EMI discs of  Argerich playing Schumann – solo works or chamber music with friends, taken from live performances – that have that unusual quality of oneness that go beyond any other performances I have heard, and sometimes even make music I had once considered dul come alive.<br />
   What this is all about is another of those documentary DVDs that have come along from the excellent offices of Naxos, Martha Argerich, Evening Talks by Georges Cachot.  Musically the film is a collecion of scraps of Argerich performances, none very long, but all of them interesting enough in their range: Martha at 15 coping with Liszt (in a recording that aroused the wonder of Vladimir Horowitz),; Martha dealing with Chopin in Warsaw in 1965 (where she would later create a stir, resigning from the 1980 Competition jury in protest over the downgrading of Ivo Pogorelic) ; Martha in  2001, gently impatient with the German chamber orchestra coping with her view of the Schumann Concerto. <br />
   The conversations are what holds the film together; they are soft, immensely appealing, not at all the Matha I would have epected from  say, that cannonade of a performance of Prok 3 she gave here last year. Director Gachot is – I assume that’s he – is an attractive interlocutor, and he has put fireball Martha at her ease. More accessible and self-revealing than I would have expected, she talks of her fear of Beethoven; she will never brave the mountain that is the Fourth Concerto, finding satisfaction in the milder-mannered Second.  I like what Alex Ross wrote about her, that “her native language is music.” She sounds like someone I would like to meet. I wouldn’t have thought so before.<br />
TONY: I can’t leave the matter of Tony Palmer with that awful Puccini film I curled my lip at last week; his hourlong documentary of Henryk Górecki’s Third Symphony, The Symphony of Sorrowful Songs has me utterly undone. Yes, I know; Palmer has done everything imaginable to underscore the work’s arrogant appeal to the sentiments. The performance under David Zinman, with Dawn Uoshaw’s heartbreaking intoning of the graffiti texts (tiny, self-contained tragedies from the walls of prison camps, or so it says) runs entirely counter – in tempo, expression and mood – to the composer’s own recorded versions. Everything is wrong, yet everything works: the strange case of a composition with a double life.<br />
   The astute documentarian, Palmer sees to it that none of this matters. Comfortable at his piano, Górecki intones all the proper phrases about oppression and redemption and the life of an illustrious one-composition composer. Palmer has him stumbling along snowy train tracks through the Auschwitz prison yard, and intersperses the playing of David Zinman’s orchestra with the horrors of boneyards and starving children. One shot I cannot forgive: a small African boy, his mouth wreathed in flies; fade to the sequins on Dawn Upshaw’s gown in exactly the same pattern. Enough!</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Local&#160;Voices</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2008/07/local-voices/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2008/07/local-voices/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sat, 12 Jul 2008 23:22:19 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[soiveheard.com]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://65.58.242.66/?p=47</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[They’re still making discs, and probably always will. Here is EMI’s disc of the threee Stravinsky Symphonies done by Simon Rattle and his Berlin Philharmonic people – keen, incisive, aloof music-making, something of the perfect machine. I’m even happier that the small companies persist, that our own Gloria Cheng has made a splendid disc for [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>They’re still making discs, and probably always will. Here is EMI’s disc of the threee Stravinsky Symphonies done by Simon Rattle and his Berlin Philharmonic people – keen, incisive, aloof music-making, something of the perfect machine. I’m even happier that the small companies persist, that our own Gloria Cheng has made a splendid disc for TelArc and that a local composer named Matt McBane – yes, he happens to be a friend, and his Mom grows the best blackberries I’ve ever tasted – has made a disc of his music that I can’t stop listening to, on an even smaller label called New Amsterdam.<br />
   Gloria is a matter of local pride. . If you go to three new-music concerts, she’ll have played at two of them. Instead of disappearing into the New York morass she works hard at creating a Los Angeles awareness; this new disc should help in this regard. Its composers – Witold Lutoslawski in particular, but also Steve Stucky and Esa-Pekka Salonen – were and are transients to some degree, but their music is also locally important. Hearing nearly an hour of  their music, their colors nicely shaped by Cheng who, after all, has lived close to all of it for some time, yo can’t help sensing some kind of common language and, above all, a huge, bursting vitality that says something about Los Angeles music-making, to its greater Gloria. The works by Salonen – Yta II, a show-off piece from 1985 against the Dichotomie of 2000 – encapsulate the emergence of a compositional wisdom.<br />
    Matt McBane got out of USC a couple of years ago and hasn’t stopped. He headed for New York, gathered some players around him – he’s a violinist and the others are also string players or percussionists. They called themselves Build, and the stuff Matt and the others concocted is an attractive meld of – well, I’m not sure; it’s a kind of chamber music, sort of jazzy, and kicky, and one piece on this disk is just simply pretty, what a boy might compose for his Mom just for Reassurance. Matt also runs a festival on the California Coast, in Carlsbad; the ensembles that come include the Calder Quartet and So Percussion, and some of what they performed last summer was this same nondescript, very attractive, and very pleasing to Moms. I’m not a Mom, and I had the feeling at Carlsbad last summer that I was accepting the up-front seduction of this music more easily than I should. And it’s the same with this new disk also called, simply,  “Build.” Sometimes you can’t help yourself.<br />
DOWNLOAD: Go to <a href="http://www.bobedwardsradio.com">www.bobedwardsradio.com</a> and download Bob Edwards’ conversation with Greil Marcus on Bob Dylan’s “Like a Rolling Stone” – the song and Marcus’ book about it.  The broadcast date was July 20, 2005, on XM Radio; it’s still available. . I downloaded it at the time, and return to it often as the most insightful broadcast conversation I have ever heard. I played it again today, for no particular reason.  I only installed XM Satellite Radio (in my car) to listen to Bob Edwards’ interviews.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Remembering&#160;Clay</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2008/07/remembering-clay/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2008/07/remembering-clay/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 03 Jul 2008 23:21:19 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[soiveheard.com]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://65.58.242.66/?p=44</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Survivors: Every account I’ve read of Clay Felker’s passing has one date wrong. New York Magazine began as a Sunday supplement to the Herald Tribune in September, 1963, not 1964. I had an article in the first issue; it was called “This Way to the Abattoir” and it was about how hopeful young performers could [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Survivors: Every account I’ve read of Clay Felker’s passing has one date wrong. New York Magazine began as a Sunday supplement to the Herald Tribune in September, 1963, not 1964. I had an article in the first issue; it was called “This Way to the Abattoir” and it was about how hopeful young performers could get slaughtered by critics, press agents and the realities of the talent market on their way to a career. I could write it again.<br />
James Bellows was the great mind at the Trib in those days, presiding over its glorious final years as the haven of the country’s most imaginative journalism, and its downfall in a land no longer willing to accept that quality . He saw to it that the paper’s masthead of stellar writers – Tom Wolfe, Jimmy Breslin, Walter Kerr on theater, Judith Crist on film and I – were set free to work on this new magazine project;, with Peter Palazzo as designer, Sheldon Zalaznick as editor.  The more familiar names – Milton Glaser’s designs and Clay’s editorial vision – came aboard within a year, but the reports so far have been particularly deficient in not recognizing Bellows, whom I have been privileged to know and work for on both coasts, as the creative force behind New York.<br />
      Something about having worked for Clay Felker creates a binding force; partly it’s the sense of having shared a vision – or several visions, since we all know that the attempt to clone New York as New West was his one great career mistake. Partly it’s just a memory of great partying and great journalism under pressure: Steinem and Sheehy bringing in sandwiches during the Harlem riot reporting. When I get to New York I always summon a gathering of survivors: Debbie Harkins, copy-editrix extraordinaire; Ellen Stern, “Best Bets”;Jack Nessel, managing ed; Tom Bentkowski, art director, bought my house in Grand View-on-Hudson; Shelly Zalaznick; Florence Fletcher, who did the concert llistings; Fred Allen, assistant ed…where are we now? We always talked about Clay; we always will.<br />
Ficchi: The figs are out already, almost a month earlier than usual. Maybe it’s because of it’s being a leap year, maybe it’s because of a new watering system I installed last winter, but there they are: big, luscious, Black Mission beauties, ready to succumb to the depredations of the scrub jays…or mine. To an adoptive Californian, or just a visitor, the fig is the most remarkable of fruits, the one most different from the packaged product back east. Its anatomical resemblance was made much of in the lurid imagination of Ken Russell, in the fig-eating scene of Women in Love but it was, after all, handed to him in the D.H. Lawrence novel. Beyond all that, the fig – fresh-picked, just off the tree, plucked in warm California sunshine – tastes like nothing else on earth. Owning a fig tree bestows a deep sense of pride. I knew owners in New York, where fig trees do not easily surive, who buried their trees up to six feet every winter, just for the ego trip of handing off fresh-picked figs for a few days every summer. They’re all Italians, by the way; that figures. (oops!)<br />
Yecch: Tony Palmer is in town, and I have a date to talk to him on Monday. I liked his nine-hour film on Wagner, especially when he got it down to five. Hail, Bop! is a dazzling John Adams documentary, and he’s here to promote his American pop documentary called All You Need Is Love, 17 hours’worth. But I’ve also been sent a DVD of his Puccini, which he directed from a script by Charles Wood, and I’m not sure I can face him. The film isn’t merely an utter falsehood on a misinterpreted episode in the composer’s life, it is so utterly false as to distort both the episode in the life and the music that came out of it. It revolves around the non-affair between Puccini and a slavey in their household, whom Mrs. Puccini drives to suicide over accusations of hanky-panky with the Mister. (Apparently she was the only gal in all Italy who didn’t.) All of this then boils down to the suicide of Liù in Turandot  which, folks, is why Puccini couldn’t complete the opera, which  he then set aside in guilt-ridden grief two years before his death.. <br />
    Setting aside the historical flimflam, with Mrs. Puccini standing in for Turandot, the town gossips for Ping, Pang &amp; Pong, and the actor Robert Stephens in a Puccini impersonation that I wouldn’t entrust to compose Yes We Have No Bananas, this is a movie that insults every aspect of the musical existence that I hold dear.  Oh yes, there’s a pretty good high-powered rendition of “In questa reggia” by Linda Esther Gray, and the role of the Councilman Ping is sung, according to the back cover, by “Alan Okie.” Alan Opie should sue.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Anna Ruzena&#160;Sprotte</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2008/06/anna-ruzena-sprotte/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2008/06/anna-ruzena-sprotte/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Fri, 27 Jun 2008 23:16:13 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[soiveheard.com]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://65.58.242.66/?p=31</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[TO LAWEEKLY FROM ALAN RICH HOLLYWOOD BOWL FOR BEST OF L.A. 1999 HED: THE DOINGS AT DAISY DELL           They called it Daisy Dell back then, and if anyone wanted to compile a &#8220;best of L.A.&#8221; compendium around, say, 1907, it might very well qualify as the best of all picnic spots, back when the [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<div class="blogRight">TO LAWEEKLY<br />
FROM ALAN RICH<br />
HOLLYWOOD BOWL FOR BEST OF L.A. 1999<br />
HED: THE DOINGS AT DAISY DELL<br />
          They called it Daisy Dell back then, and if anyone wanted to compile a &#8220;best of L.A.&#8221; compendium around, say, 1907, it might very well qualify as the best of all picnic spots, back when the little village of Hollywood numbered somewhere around 5000 residents. You caught the big groaning trolleycar to Highland and Hollywood. You trekked half a mile up Highland, past Camrose and into Cahuenga Pass. You turned left into the lane lined with pepper trees, and onto the slope of a bowl-shaped depression that had probably resulted a few million years ago from a cabal among the many faultlines that honeycomb the area.  You found your spot, spread your blanket, laid out the food and dug in. Follow that route today; in the Hollywood Bowl Museum, right off Peppertree Lane, you&#8217;ll see a photograph of people doing just that, back in 1907.<br />
          The movies came, and Hollywood&#8217;s population added another zero; Daisy Dell metamorphosed into the Hollywood Bowl &#8212; a different kind of Wonderful Place (if still pretty snazzy). In 1919 a man named William Reed, who ran a demolition company nearby, had the idea that this natural dimple in the landscape was suited, in both sight and sound, for some sort of outdoor performances. He salvaged a door from the recent wreckage of a carpet-cleaning plant and plunked it down to serve as an improvised platform, just about where the present stage is located. He trundled in a grand piano, and invited Madame Anna Ruzena Sprotte, a well-known local singer, to try out the acoustics. The result was sensational; according to ecstatic local reports, the warbling of Madame Sprotte, and the softest harmonics from a violin, carried rich and clear to the far end of Daisy Dell and probably halfway up Cahuenga Pass as well.<br />
         (You can&#8217;t, of course, take that story, the most often-retold bit of early Hollywood Bowl lore, at face value. This happened in 1919, when people also thought the tinny woof-woof and tweet-tweet from the acoustic horn on the parlor Victrola came as close to true-to-life as hi-fi could get. If the sounds in that natural proto-Bowl were all that great, you have to ask, why was it necessary later on to build a fancy stage and install today&#8217;s kazillion-dollar sound system &#8211; which on some nights can still remind you of your granny&#8217;s old wind-up?) <br />
          But we&#8217;re getting ahead of ourself.<br />
           The discovery of Daisy Dell&#8217;s acoustics was like finding the gold at Sutter&#8217;s Mill; everybody wanted a piece of the action. Having put on a mammoth outdoor production of Shakespeare&#8217;s &lt;I&gt;Julius Caesar&lt;D&gt; in Beachwood Canyon, a group of actors, musicians and businessfolk had formed the Theater Arts Alliance, and saw the Dell as the ideal spot for a performing-arts center.  On a Sunday in 1921 the Los Angeles Philharmonic &#8211; two years old then, and flourishing &#8211; and the mighty chorus of the Hollywood Community Sing began the tradition of Easter Sunrise Concerts; the Community Sing&#8217;s conductor, Hugo Kirchoffer, is generally credited with coining the name of Hollywood Bowl. One of the Alliance&#8217;s major players &#8212; Christine Stevenson, one of the nut-case Utopians who had begun streaming into Hollywood on the heels of the moviemakers, and who had actually invested in Bowl property &#8211; envisioned an ongoing program of pageants illustrating the world&#8217;s great religions, and presented the group with a million-dollar architect&#8217;s plan which the group rejected forthwith. Thoroughly miffed, Mrs. Stevenson took her money out of the Bowl, bought the property across the street and built the Pilgrimage Theater (now the John Anson Ford), where religious plays were presented sporadically until 1964.<br />
          Downtown, the Philharmonic had outlived its early naysayers and was going strong. Founder William Andrews Clark saw the new outdoor venue as a way to get his orchestra more performing dates, and an alliance was formed. On the open platform that served as Hollywood Bowl&#8217;s first concert stage, the San Francisco Symphony&#8217;s bearded, benevolent Alfred Hertz raised his baton on July 11, 1922, and the trumpet call that ushered in Wagner&#8217;s &lt;I&gt;Rienzi&lt;D&gt; Overture also ushered in the uninterrupted sequence of &#8220;Symphonies Under the Stars&#8221; whose 78th season ended earlier this month. Tickets went for 25 cents. The audience sat on rough benches. In the next few years these benches would rot and sag, and ticket prices would soar to 50 cents. <br />
        Still, on the Bowl&#8217;s best nights, there could be 20,000 music-lovers in those rickety seats, and the crowd got its money&#8217;s worth and then some &#8211; not just the familiar masterworks, but adventurous repertory as well. Hertz himself conducted nearly 100 concerts in the first few years. The young Fritz Reiner conducted Stravinsky; England&#8217;s Sir Henry Wood and Eugene Goossens introduced other contemporary works. Aaron Copland, whose jazzy Piano Concerto had already kicked up one &lt;I&gt;scandale&lt;D&gt; in Boston, faced down a musicians&#8217; revolt here too, when he played the work at the Bowl in the summer of 1928. <br />
          Not only the benches were rickety, of course; the great miracle of Hollywood Bowl&#8217;s first decade was, in fact, the very fact of its survival. The unconventional heiress Aline Barnsdall, who owned the Frank Lloyd Wright house in the park that now bears her name, helped fund the 1923 season and retired the debt on the property. A firebrand by the name of Artie Mason Carter, with no particular fortune of her own, badgered Hollywood&#8217;s new money &#8211; notably Mr. and Mrs. Cecil B. DeMille &#8211; into getting this precious cultural resource into something like stability. There was a big plastic bowl set up at the top of Peppertree Lane, to collect the pennies and dollars of the crowds for whom the Bowl and its offerings had become one of life&#8217;s essentials. On the last night of the Bowl&#8217;s first season, Mrs. Carter went on stage to burn the mortgage. <br />
          As financial stability came on, so did physical stability. Eventually the rickety benches were replaced by more solid construction; the hillside was landscaped into its present balloon configuration, and the heavy spenders got to sit in boxes just like at the Metropolitan Opera. The Bowl got its first real stage shell in 1926, an elaborate wood-and-canvas affair covered with exotic paintings but sporting lousy acoustics. The young architect Lloyd Wright, who had worked with his father Frank on the Barnsdall house, now came on the scene.  His first set, in 1927, was a tall pyramid, part of it cannibalized from the scenery he had recently  built for the Warner Bros. epic &lt;I&gt;Robin Hood.&lt;D&gt; Almost everybody loved it, but the weather gods did not. Wright&#8217;s 1928 set, a sleek, curvilinear Deco fantasy, fared less well with the patrons, and even worse with winter storms. The time had come for a permanent structure; this, created by the local firm of Allied Architects, preserved the sweeping curves of Lloyd Wright&#8217;s design &#8211; as does the Bowl&#8217;s perennial logo &#8212; but in a more lasting material.  Wright&#8217;s second design had cost $8,000; the new one cost four times as much, but has lasted  &#8212; plus or minus such adornments as Frank Gehry&#8217;s line of organ-pipe-like tubes or the present &#8220;Starship Enterprise&#8221; set of acoustic reflectors &#8211; seven decades.  My take on Hollywood Bowl&#8217;s  first decade is tinged with amazement. Think of a city with no real cultural roots, its population growing beyond any rational means of containment, with a brand-new symphony, no opera to speak of, a few struggling theaters and a lot of nut-case activity clustered around a growth industry itself anchored in unreality. Find a hillside with remarkable acoustics, handily accessible to traffic patterns, and set up a strong but irrationally ambitious program of hard-core symphony concerts (plus a few nights of opera staged or otherwise). Exhilarate the crowd with Tchaikovsky and Strauss waltzes; puzzle them with Stravinsky. It&#8217;s a lucky happenstance, of course, that Los Angeles has the right weather for outdoor  summertime; in my 20 years here one concert has been rained out, and there was another at which management gave out free plastic ponchos. You can&#8217;t do that in New York or London. <br />
           The Bowl had its share of nut-case events in its early years &#8211; and, perhaps, a few later as well. I&#8217;d have given anything to have been there on the night of Percy Grainger&#8217;s wedding on the stage, on August 9, 1928, to a Swedish poet Ella Viola Ström. One of the world&#8217;s great eccentrics in mind and deed, Grainger conducted the concert, and created a &#8220;bridal song&#8221; called &lt;I&gt;To a Nordic Princess.&lt;D&gt; Then they went hiking, in Glacier Park. Ten years later there was a complete &lt;I&gt;Die Walküre,&lt;D&gt; with Wagner&#8217;s mounted Valkyries galloping down Cahuenga Pass while hurling out their &#8220;Ho-yo-to-ho&#8221;s; alas, I missed that one too. <br />
          I didn&#8217;t mean this as a history lesson, exactly. You can get that at the exceptionally well-arranged show at the Bowl Museum, which is open year-round. The pictures are enchanting enough, and there&#8217;s music to sample on speakers and earphones. You can hear a vast aural panorama of Bowl events, including commercial recordings by one or another &#8220;Hollywood Bowl Orchestra.&#8221; On one, a 1926 performance of Dvorak&#8217;s &lt;I&gt;Carneval&lt;D&gt; Overture led by Eugene Goossens, reportedly the first-ever outdoor recording ever made of a symphony orchestra, you can hear an airplane flying overhead during the quiet, slow section. Déjà vu, at the Hollywood Bowl, can mean plus ça change. </div>
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		<title>Hell and&#160;Farewell</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2008/06/hell-and-farewell/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2008/06/hell-and-farewell/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 25 Jun 2008 23:15:02 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[soiveheard.com]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://65.58.242.66/?p=29</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[The Scuttling of KCSN (?)  Rumors now abound from high in that the University  has decided to sell KCSN the excellent little  station for which the University holds the broadcast license – perhaps by as early as July 1st.. As we last reported, Dean Robert Bucker (he of the deceptive letter in our last post) [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>The Scuttling of KCSN (?) <br />
Rumors now abound from high in that the University  has decided to sell KCSN the excellent little  station for which the University holds the broadcast license – perhaps by as early as July 1st.. As we last reported, Dean Robert Bucker (he of the deceptive letter in our last post) had initially arranged for Minnesota Public Radio to provide their Classical Lite ‘stream’ to replace KCSN award-winning “eclectic” ARTS &amp; ROOTS format.<br />
Perhaps as an aid to lessening the impact of their scuttling the station, Dean Bucker has not only cancelled the most recent Pledge Drive and fired Les Perry, KCSN’s leading programmer and fund-raiser, but has now taken KCSN’s stream off the Internet.<br />
The question is why. <br />
The current crisis at KCSN – if it has not already been resolved to the station’s extreme detriment – has its origin in a misunderstanding of the station’s functioning – especially in regards to transmitter power. As reported in Performances magazine – KCSN has the weakest signal of any Southern California radio station: 370 watts.  The range of all other stations is between 5,000 and 100,000 watts.  Thus KCSN has produced $42/per watt, far more than most public stations. Despite the fact that the station has received “Best of LA” from Los Angeles Magazine, is currently the station of choice for the Arts Community (where it enjoys an entirely favorable prestige, and that the station’s last 16 pledge drives have shown consistent increases from 5-15%, the University in the person of Dean Bucker (to whom KCSN reports)  has declared the station to be “underperforming”.<br />
Further, these successes have been achieved with a staff of 5 full-time employees and 2 paid part-time announcers.  More importantly is the lamentable fact that in the last 8 years CSUN has contributed nothing for Marketing for KCSN.   Not one penny.  While other “classical” stations have not only vastly greater power, and have spent large sums on bus-cards, print advertising and other marketing strategies, KCSN has relied exclusively on word-of-mouth.<br />
CSUN was approached with excellent opportunities for marketing and fund-raising by a uniquely credible entities. In addition a major LA broadcaster has tried to approach Bucker with a plan to fund and manage KCSN, bringing marketing, advertising and operating funds to remove all costs from CSUN’s responsibility,  to no avail<br />
 So, a unique jewel of a broadcast entity faces extinction because of CSUN’s failure to perform its fundamental task of business analysis: Strengths and Weakness. Here is a brief sketch:<br />
Strengths<br />
Programming<br />
Prestige<br />
Membership<br />
Weaknesses<br />
Power<br />
Marketing<br />
Underwriting<br />
Management/Oversight. <br />
SOME HISTORY <br />
As currently constituted KCSN is the product of the fertile brain, abundant spirit, and love of the Arts of retired Dean (of the College of Arts Media and Communication) William Toutant, PhD., an acclaimed composer, music professor, author of books on Music Theory and Host of The KCSN Opera House. The station is the result of Bill’s extraordinary vision, dedication to standards of excellence and hard work.  It was Dr. Toutant who hired Martin Perlich as Program Director. Recently Bill has said:”The best thing I ever did as Dean was to hire Martin and let him have his head.” <br />
In the ensuing 8 years Dr. Toutant’s faith has been rewarded: As Program Director Martin Perlich has brought uniquely thoughtful, high quality programming to KCSN. In the hands of Morning Host Ian Freebairn-Smith and Midday Host Laura Brodian the station has been able to present the best and broadest classical selection in Los Angeles.  As on-air Afternoon Host, Perlich has brought innovative programs such as his daily The Audition Booth (fresh out-of-the-box new releases) and Cost-Conscious Classix (Budget CDs), as well as Martin Perlich Interviews, his archive of historic chats with Leonard Bernstein, Frank Zappa, George Szell, Gore Vidal, Isaac Stern Itzhak, Perlman and hundreds more), As author of The Art of the Interview (Silman-James 2007) Perlich also  hosts ARF!! (Arts &amp; Roots Forum,) daily live interviews with “major contributors to Arts &amp; Roots  in Southern California”: Stacy Keach, Paul O’Dette, Terry Riley, Cecilia Bartoli,  YoYo Ma, legendary jazzman Buddy Colette, satirist Sandra Tsing-Loh, Henry Winkler and Sarah Chang,  as well as a wide variety of major cutting edge playwrights, filmmakers, authors, world music performers, choreographers, actors and directors. <br />
Unfortunately Toutant suffered a major coronary in 2006, and retired as dean. He was replaced by an interim dean who, despite having little if any understanding of broadcast, decided to attack the station’s Strengths – and change the station’s format. Fortunately, at the end of his term the Interim Dean returned to his academic chores.<br />
The new incoming permanent dean is a man of high musical and administrative achievement.  Robert Bucker is a man of probity, intelligence, discernment and high standards. Perhaps because of his newness, and the urgent need to attend to the many problems left to him by the inexperienced and unready Interim dean, the new dean initially focused little if any attention on  KCSN.  He declared in his first meeting with KCSN staff “You’re not on my ‘radar screen’”.  More distressing was his decision once his attention had turned to KCSN that station “fund-raising was paltry.” When informed of the station’s 370 watts transmitting power – which is truly “paltry”, he admitted ignorance of that fact.  So his judgment of KCSN’s performance &#8211; and subsequent decision to change format &#8211; was made in absence of sufficient research of the key facts: low power and total absence of marketing budget to make an informed decision. Why else abandon a long and well-established niche in the LA radio market of over 100 “sticks” with the mere hope of rebuilding audience, membership, prestige and fund-raising.<br />
This precipitous decision threatens the Los Angeles cultural, and broader listening audience with the removal of one its greatest (if weakest) gems, a station broadcasting programs of broad ranging classical music: new music by living composers and major 20th century masters, ancient music, plus chamber, choral, instrumental and vocal music heard on no other station in the LA market. <br />
In addition to classical – 6:00AM – 6:00 PM weekdays &#8211; evenings and weekends are filled with “Roots” music of the highest and most diverse nature: bluegrass, blues, rockabilly, jazz, singer/songwriter, “classic country”, plus substantive shows devoted to the music of Bob Dylan and the Beatles. When one adds to this mix the unique informational programs on the visual arts, psychology, women’s issues and wellness, it is clear that the effects of KCSN’s disappearance will be deeply felt.<br />
This is especially true when one considers that CSUN is currently building a new Performing Arts Center costing $125 million at current estimate, and called the “Valley Arts Center”, focusing primarily on the needs of residents of the San Fernando Valley and the large populations of adjacent communities.  Since we know that Dean Bucker’s first choice of replacement formats for KCSN was a “stream” of light classical music based in the Midwest, this would present at least an apparent contradiction to the avowed “localism” proclaimed by CSUN President Jolene Koester, whose “baby” the Performing Arts Center has been – except for the now-overlooked contribution of the of the above-mentioned Dr. William Toutant, whose idea it was in the first place.<br />
Ah, bureaucracy! Ah, Humanity.<br />
                                *        *         *       *        *       *<br />
ANOTHER DEPARTURE: I began writing out here just a little short of 30 years ago, covering musical events here and up north for an ill-fated, ill-considered attempt to clone the magazine that had sent me out here. What made life even partially bearable was the treatment I was accorded by the press department at the Los Angeles Philharmonic. Public-relations offices and print critics are not supposed to trust one another beyond each other’s earshot, and the notion of genuine human cordiality is a commodity that is not expected to exist in the shadow of those filing cabinets and Xerox machines <br />
    Norma Flynn made it that way, a public-relations genius and a warm-hearted momma who turned the job into a genuinely human interaction. Adam Crane hasn’t been a warm-hearted momma, but he’s been a pal, and that’s even rarer in p-r annals. His reasons for moving on are so human that you can’t be angry: he’s going home to Saint Louis, where his Dad isn’t well, his grandparents are really old, and  he has a great job with the Symphony Orchestra under David Robertson which is becoming truly important and adventurous.  If I didn’t  know what Saint Louis feels like in the summer, I’d be truly jealous</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Paul</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2008/06/paul/</link>
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		<pubDate>Sat, 21 Jun 2008 23:14:06 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[soiveheard.com]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://65.58.242.66/?p=27</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[MATTERS ORGANIC Paul Jacobs was in town on Friday; great lunch at Engine 28. He is bound and determined to convert me into the ranks of organ-music devotees, but then the conversation turns to items such as the Saint-Saëns Organ Symphony and I back down. In 1942 I had a best friend at summer camp, [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>MATTERS ORGANIC Paul Jacobs was in town on Friday; great lunch at Engine 28. He is bound and determined to convert me into the ranks of organ-music devotees, but then the conversation turns to items such as the Saint-Saëns Organ Symphony and I back down. In 1942 I had a best friend at summer camp, also named Alan; after that one summer we lost track of each other. When my book came out – you know which one – I had the urge to find him, via Google, and send him a copy, which I did. He’s a distinguished anesthesiologist, now retired, with an avocation of recording some of New York’s great church organists. He sent me a pile of his disks, which turned out not so bad as I feared, and I started going to organ concerts and writing about them. Came a letter from this Paul Jacobs, who is  the young (31) whizbang head of Juilliard’s organ department and full of chops to erase the old church-organist images – Albert Schweitzer on one hand, Virgil Fox on the other &#8211;  sort of welcoming me to the fellowship.<br />
   Paul was in town to check out the organ – excuse me, the William J. Gillespie Concert  Organ &#8212; at  the new Segerstrom &#8212; sorry, the Renée and Henry Segerstrom Concert Hall &#8212; in Costa Mesa. I asked to tag along, with the promise to withhold judgment  on the instrument itself, which isn’t quite finished and which will be formally inaugurated by Paul at a concert  with the Pacific Symphony– the Saint-Saëns, wouldn’t you know! – in September. (An open house and preview concert – free, but you need tickets – is scheduled for June 29.) And so we got to spend a whole afternoon in that oversized boudoir in its cold, cold color scheme, with its sweeping curves that are its architect’s ideas of the outlines of a cello, its silvery, pasted-on fake vertical organ pipes beside which Disney Hall’s “French Fries” look downright real.<br />
    But I mustn’t, as I said, comment. I’d never before been inside the workings of a real pipe organ and this, I must say, is damn impressive. A small door next to the console leads to a fantastic mingling of technology and mechanics. Metal pipes 32-feet tall tower over on one side; huge bellows are worked from the innards of a small cabinet of green computer boards, the same as in your cell phone.  Several loft areas are reachable from ladders; you get the impression of a huge expanse folded in upon itself. <br />
    Paul wants to take my picture at the keyboard, to seal the triumph of his conquest.  I rattle a few bars of the “Moonlight” Sonata, but the keys feel unnaturally resistant; can this be music-making? The organ is the product of C.B. Fisk, of Gloucester, Mass. There are several other Fisk organs in Southern California, including one in Pacific Palisades; Orange County’s is, of course, the largest. One of the two guys from the plant, who are out here working on the installation, wears an Ipswich tee-shirt, from the town next to Gloucester with the famous Clam House. Man, I could taste those steamers, and those fries all afternoon.<br />
 HARRY: A friend in London has sent me discs that he has recorded from the Beeb broadcast  of Harrison Birtwistle’s latest opera The Minotaur which had its world premiere at the Royal Opera in April and was broadcast and televised at that time. Think of that: an opera by a leading composer known for the intellectual strength and “difficulty” of his music, still made available  to the public at large.   <br />
   Birtwistle, much honored in his native land,  is too little known here.  Betty Freeman commissioned an excellent Piano Concerto which Uchida played at the Philharmonic.  and Manny Ax played a big piece at a Monday Evening Concert  last season. Milton Babbitt was an early influence, and Pierrot Lunaire caused him to think a lot about theatrical pieces in small shapes growing outward into  deceptive complexity. His Punch and Judy is a case in point; it is anything but a kiddie show. The Minotaur is one of several legend operas; it brings Theseus and Ariadne to the Minotaur’s labyrinth in Crete,  where the beast is eventually slain, but not before many Innocents are made to lie in their own blood, while the cohorts of the Beast devour their entrails. The music is fully up to this: dark, densely contrapuntal, not eimmediately congenial but powerful. It is at all times gripping, relevant to the violence and to the dark, poignant visions of Ariadne as well. The libretto is by David Harsent, wise and brilliantly metaphoric. Reading it, reflecting on what our local company considered a well-balanced season (the one just ended with Tosca and La Rondine), the only somewhat more rewarding one to come, or even the occasional letter to home from Mark Swed when traveling, I wonder if the very word “opera” shouldn’t perhaps be partitioned into several definitions.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Chutzpah Under the Sycamores: Ojai Music&#160;Festival</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2008/06/chutzpah-under-the-sycamores-ojai-music-festival/</link>
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		<pubDate>Wed, 18 Jun 2008 18:58:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=686</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[&#8220;How was Ojai?&#8221; you will ask, and the answer &#8211; as in every one of the past 61 years &#8211; remains the same: &#8220;Same old, same old &#8211; and wonderful.&#8221; The report usually starts with weather: drizzle some years; this year, uninterrupted sublime, the meteorological equivalent of Dawn Upshaw gift-wrapping a Schubert song. (There was [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>
<strong>&#8220;How was Ojai?&#8221; you will ask,</strong> and the answer &#8211; as in every one of the past 61 years &#8211; remains the same: &#8220;Same old, same old &#8211; and wonderful.&#8221; The report usually starts with weather: drizzle some years; this year, uninterrupted sublime, the meteorological equivalent of Dawn Upshaw gift-wrapping a Schubert song. (There was that too.)
</p>
<p>Among the myriad variations in nature, a little bit of repetition
</p>
<p>
Steve Reich was the dominant figure. A fair number of the pages in the lavish, 120-page program book trumpeted the news that he was America&#8217;s greatest composer, and there was evidence to sustain, perhaps to clobber. Opening night, Thursday (June 5), was all-Reich, old and new; closing day, Sunday, had Reich in the morning and again at night. Sometime in between, at a so-called symposium event, a capacity audience in an airless church sat through a half-hour of recorded Reich midway through what was billed as a &#8220;conversation.&#8221; A lot of Steve, to be sure.
</p>
<p>
Conductor Brad Lubman organized the opening program, with Signal, his brand-new performing ensemble, which had been christened only days before at New York&#8217;s Bang on a Can Festival. Young musicians working their way through the inventive intricacies of Reich&#8217;s <em>Eight Lines</em> and the sheer chutzpah of that historic audience goad <em>Four Organs</em> &#8211; it served as a kind of guarantee that the music would find its performers for another generation, at least. As for the final work on that opening program, Reich&#8217;s recent <em>Daniel Variations</em> &#8211; which was composed for and has now been recorded by our own L.A. Master Chorale &#8211; the performance under Lubman was less successful, turned into hash by microphoning that left the text incomprehensible and the orchestral detail muddy.
</p>
<p>
Better in all respects was the Sunday morning program, nicely organized by this year&#8217;s music director, David Robertson, around <em>Drumming</em>, Reich&#8217;s early, primal masterpiece. First came <em>Clapping Music</em>, that nice little portable number, done by its originators, Reich and Russell Hartenberger. Then this year&#8217;s sensational newcomer, L.A.-born pianist Eric Huebner, made an hors d&#8217;oeuvre out of a couple of killer Ligeti piano etudes. Every percussionist within reach &#8211; including Reich&#8217;s veteran Nexus group, the upcoming So Percussion, Huebner and festival artistic director Tom Morris &#8211; then piled on to the stage to re-create the granddad of all bang-away masterpieces, Edgard Varèse&#8217;s 1931 <em>Ionisation</em>, after which it was only natural for Reich&#8217;s 1971 <em>Drumming</em> to fall into place, all 75 minutes&#8217; worth.
</p>
<p>
What a great piece! And how it grows in the open air, as a visual and auditory phenomenon, the players moving in and out of position, building suspense even as they stand silently, raising expectation for their next lunge, as the music develops in complexity, reaches its zenith, subsides, creates a form all its own. From this music alone I might argue the case for some kind of Reichian supremacy &#8211; but does it matter? <em>Drumming</em> was, at least, the high point of this one festival. Later that day came <em>Tehillim, </em>a towering edifice of the Steve Reich that is; nothing can compare with the Steve Reich that was.
</p>
<p>
David Robertson, Santa Monica born, currently turning his Saint Louis Symphony into a consequential, forward-looking orchestra, was the excellent choice for Ojai&#8217;s music director this year; he is young, bright and full of ideas. That is not the same, however, as declaring that his ideas, the first time out, were exactly right for the territory. Of the four precious evenings on Ojai&#8217;s calendar, the two Steve Reich events were right for Ojai; two, it seemed to me, somewhat misjudged the territory.
</p>
<p>
One thing that the Libbey Bowl &#8211; that sylvan depression in Ojai&#8217;s town park, where concerts happen, friends gather, birds cluster to approve and sycamores overhang menacingly &#8211; is not is a place to show movies. Whatever motivated Robertson to turn over half a festival evening to a rerun of Charlie Chaplin&#8217;s <em>Modern Times</em>, it couldn&#8217;t have been the anticipated pleasure of reliving the 1936 curio, weeping along as David Raksin&#8217;s gooey tune slithers past several times too often, losing one&#8217;s heart once again to Chaplin&#8217;s travails or to Paulette Goddard&#8217;s gamine or to Chester Conklin&#8217;s delirious cameo. For the folks on the lawn up back, the film must have been nearly unseeable; for those in the first couple of rows down front, bent collarbones were also the order of the evening. I can see film as a festival adjunct, nearby at the Ojai Art Center or in the movie theater just across the street &#8211; but not subsuming half an evening&#8217;s program on the main premises in festival time.
</p>
<p>
The other half? There are those who hold a warm spot for the naiveté of America&#8217;s &#8220;bad boy&#8221; George Antheil, fondled by a generation of pseudo-intellectuals and hailed as some kind of genius manqué; his &#8220;Jazz Symphony&#8221; I find merely a shorter show-off piece than some of his trash, and offensive in its rooty-kazooty brevity. I had believed it the worst of its breed until I came across its program mate on Friday night, something by one François Narboni, quite accurately titled <em>El Gran Masturbador</em>, in which, I can only assume, that otherwise pleasurable household sport is extended to the art of composition.
</p>
<p>
<br /><strong>On Saturday we were invited</strong> into the presence of two high-strung &#8211; unless I can find a stronger word &#8211; women: the first one Nabokov&#8217;s Lolita, as imagined within the electronics of <em>En echo</em>, by Boulez disciple Philippe Manoury; the other Michael Jarrell&#8217;s <em>Cassandra</em>, proclaiming live the epic of betrayal as her beloved Troy (not New York) falls to ruin at her feet. For Manoury&#8217;s Lolita there was an empty stage, with a few lights behind a scrim and a soprano &#8211; Juliana Snapper &#8211; out front, as inappropriate an Ojai Festival setting as the Chaplin film had been the night before. The great German actress Barbara Sukowa, stage-filling under any circumstances, spoke the words of Cassandra in English; Jarrell&#8217;s music, mostly a raw, grinding undercurrent of no particular attractiveness, served to underscore the intensity of Sukowa&#8217;s delivery of Christa Wolf&#8217;s slashing text. (Remember Sukowa from her <em>Pierrot Lunaire</em> some years back? If anyone at LACMA had remembered that performance, LACMA would never have abandoned its music programming.)
</p>
<p>
Dawn Upshaw returned, as I was saying, to sing to Gil Kalish&#8217;s piano, a varied program: Stephen Foster, Kurt Weill, Bill Bolcom and a Schubert song as the one encore that seemed to encapsulate the delight those who love this place feel upon every happy return. That delight extends when someone new turns up with the same spirit, a way of knowing the breadth of music and where it aligns with the human spirit. I sensed that in this Huebner kid, whom I&#8217;ve known now through Juilliard and into his big career in New York, with his amazing fingers and all-knowing smile. At Ojai he also played Elliott Carter&#8217;s <em>Night Fantasies</em>, that extraordinary piece that simply fills the piano with notes. He will be with music for a long time.
</p>
<p>
So will Ojai. Next year&#8217;s &#8220;Music Director&#8221; is the chamber group eighth blackbird. If there&#8217;s any gas left, and any money to pay for it, I&#8217;ll be there. You too.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>La Rondine at L.A.&#160;Opera</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2008/06/la-rondine-at-la-opera/</link>
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		<pubDate>Fri, 13 Jun 2008 23:08:37 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[soiveheard.com]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://65.58.242.66/?p=23</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[MAGDA DOES JOAN: “La Rondine” is with us again,  Puccini’s elegant snore, with Marta Domingo’s tinkerings in place to confuse what is already inadequate in the dramatic resolution and with Michael Scott’s Coney Island Merry-Go-Round of an Act-Two stage set to cheapen and vulgarize even further what is already wrong-headed and simply clumsy in Signora [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>MAGDA DOES JOAN: “La Rondine” is with us again,  Puccini’s elegant snore, with Marta Domingo’s tinkerings in place to confuse what is already inadequate in the dramatic resolution and with Michael Scott’s Coney Island Merry-Go-Round of an Act-Two stage set to cheapen and vulgarize even further what is already wrong-headed and simply clumsy in Signora Domingo’s “conception and direction.” Speculations, however cynical,  as to why impresario Plácido tosses this directorial bone to his wife from time to time don’t work this time, since Plácido is also in town, conducting the last few performances of “Tosca.”  <br />
  Marta’s most blatant tinkering is to allow her heroine &#8212; mere moments after her Ruggero, having discovered the seedy details of her past, throws a hissy fit  of the sort that any exuberant loverboy  might throw from time to time and recover from an hour later – to hook onto a passing tsunami and disappear,  Joan Crawford style, into the billowing wave. The dramatic timing is completely wrong; a suicide scene in any other Puccini opera – “Madama Butterfly” for one – takes up a fair proportion of the act; this one goes wham-o, with music Marta has dug up from somewhere. Granted, the opera’s ending as  composed (and laboriously revised) by Puccini is hardly thrilling: the heroine  Magda bathed in melancholy resignation; at least the timing is right. Marta Domingo’s evasive justification for the suicide, as printed in the program, is so much baloney. And that placid expanse of ocean in Michael Scott’s set design looks as capable of churning up a tsunami as my backyard fishpond.<br />
  Is the current baggage at the Chandler Pavilion worth all this ink, or that $235 top ticket? No, not really. Patricia Racette is an okay hard-boiled heroine for contemporary opera, and a responsive Butterfly in Robert Wilson’s hands; here she’s a stick with a few pretty top notes. Marcus Haddock, the Ruggero here in 2000 and again now, looks a convincing goofy kid from the provinces and has a voice best described as utilitarian. [He’s also the Rodolfo in a new Telarc CD of “La Bohème,” conducted by Robert Spano, if anyone cares.] On the podium, but scarcely into the score, is a certain Keri-Lynn Wilson. She is the current spouse of Peter Gelb, who heads the Metropolitan Opera, a fact not mentioned in the program after a vita of her conducting history that includes practically every opera ever composed. There’s a lot to be said for family ties.<br />
FANTASTIC! Gustavo Dudamel’s performance, with the Philharmonic, of Berlioz’ “Fantastic” Symphony can now be had on a download via iTunes, five “songs” (as they insist on calling every item) at 99 cents per. This isn’t merely a brash kid making everything louder and faster than the next guy’s performance; it is a deep and penetrating study of Berlioz’s amazing rewrite of the whole language of the orchestra: the way, for example, he will take a solo instrument from the ensemble to highlight just the end of a phrase to give it a special radiance.<br />
   Don’t just listen to the spectacular sound-effects in the “March to the Scaffold”or the “Witches’ Sabbath,” where Dudamel carves fabulous sound-sculptures out of the massive percussion leading up to the strokes on the enormous bell. Listen also to the marvelous delicacy in the scoring for harps in the Ballroom Scene, which I’ve never heard so beautifully designed. This was Berlioz at 26, and now it’s Dudamel at the same age; there’s something to be said for that. Let’s see:Beethoven at 26, Mozart, Bach…there’s lots of good music there! The recording captures a fair amount of the sound of that performance in this great hall; at $4.95 it’s sinful not to have it.<br />
BARGAINS  As with any enterprise on the brink of obsolescence, the record biz seems to be cleaning off its shelves on the cheap, and we the customers stand to benefit. A nice box from Teldec – do not confuse with Telarc, which I often do – came to the doorstep yesterday: all seven Prokofiev symphonies on four disks, conducted by Slava, a “Puccini Experience” (blah) on two disks, and, best of all, the complete Teldec Ligeti series, five disks. The price per disk: seven bucks, half the original asking.    <br />
   The Ligeti series, you remember, was originally begun on Sony; Esa-Pekka was involved, and the series was underwritten by a financier Vincent Meyer. If you read the appendix in Paul Griffiths’ valuable Ligeti biography you’ll see the disk numbers assigned to the complete Sony series. It was only partially fulfilled, however; Ligeti  had wanted the Los Angeles Philharmonic involved; Sony had only come up with British bands of lesser quality. Meyer ended up in prison on a child-rape case. <br />
  Then Telarc undertook to complete the series, with the Berlin Philharmonic, the rising young British conductor Jonathan Nott, Reinbert de Leeuw and his Schoenberg Ensemble – all the right people. Between these five disks and the twelve on Sony, Ligeti’s heritage is well preserved. The Teldec set includes such gorgeous pieces as “Clocks and Clouds” (my favorite) and a performance of the Requiem  under Jonathan Nott almost as fine, as eerily bone-shaking, as the one Esa-Pekka led here not so long ago. Nothing can match that.<br />
BOB: New York Magazine began in April, 1968, the phoenix risen from the ashes of the Herald-Tribune. By September of that year we  had acquired enough self-confidence (and subscribers) to start acquiring a style of our own, and, occasionally, even acting cute. At the start of the music season I composed some poetry – or, rather, some rhyming couplets in arrogant doggerel &#8211;  to hail the occasion. Maybe I’ll run them here some week when I’ve run out of real material, maybe I won’t. Bob Grossman was one of our best illustrators, and he did this one for my page of verse, with Lennie perched on the typewriter and  with teeth I no longer own. I wrote Bob recently asking how much he would charge if I used this cartoon for my blog, and he instead made me this new color version, free. Nice guy. <a href="mailto:bob@robertgrossman.com">bob@robertgrossman.com</a></p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>More on&#160;Ojai</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2008/06/more-on-ojai/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2008/06/more-on-ojai/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sun, 08 Jun 2008 23:07:46 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[soiveheard.com]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://65.58.242.66/?p=21</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[THE LATEST FROM OJAI: I’m writing this a few hours after one of the best Ojai Festival concerts ever, the best kind of program for that special place. It began with high-class noise: Steve Reich’s “Clapping Music,” his early (1972) essay in pure rhythm, in an “original cast” performance: Steve and Russ Hartenberger. Music director [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>THE LATEST FROM OJAI: I’m writing this a few hours after one of the best Ojai Festival concerts ever, the best kind of program for that special place. It began with high-class noise: Steve Reich’s “Clapping Music,” his early (1972) essay in pure rhythm, in an “original cast” performance: Steve and Russ Hartenberger. Music director David Robertson had interceded at the start, asking the crowd to regard the entire  program as a single event, not applauding between pieces, but this clap-along piece was irresistible. Then came the amazing Eric Huebner, the new superstar of this year’s Festival’s, in two of Ligeti’s Piano Etudes, fabulously difficult peces with  their world of sound commentary wound into their complex piano magic, leading as if logically into the music that might have begun it all, the 1931 “Ionisation” of Edgard Varese for percussion ensemble, which drew the rest of the morning’s percussion contingent into the program: the veteran Nexus (the outgrowth of Steve’s original Players) plus the new So Percussion. And that was only the first half. <br />
    Make no mistake; this was the year of the big Steve Reich immersion at Ojai, and the catchphrase “America’s Greatest” resounded far and wide. I wasn’t so sure about all that; I find the “great” Steve less to my taste than the “fun” Steve, so I left before “Tehillim,” the final event. Three out of eight programs were all or largely Steve; midway, moreover,  in a Q&amp;A session an audience in a warm church found itself trapped for nearly half-an-hour of recorded “great” Steve. The music of Steve’s that I wanted to go out on came on the second half of that Sunday-morning concert: “Drumming,” 75 minutes of a young (35)  man’s exhilarating arrogance that set music onto a magical pathway.  I’ll donate 75 minutes of my lifetime to that piece anytime. At Ojai furthermore, it got the all-star treatment: Nexus and So Percussion.<br />
    Some other Ojai choices were somewhat more puzzling; Whatever music director David Robertson had in mind with a revival of the Charlie Chaplin “Modern Times,” it didn’t work. A movie screen in that outdoor setting, where half the crowd sits on the lawn behind the seats (a mini-Tanglewood) and thus must stand to see the film is one poor choice; the screen hanging over the front row of seats, without enough extra places to reseat those people from down front, is another. If the Festival wants to show something rare and wonderful, let it be at 11 p.m. in the Arts Center; this wasted a precious Ojai Festival evening. But so did the rest of the music that evening, the trashy Antheil “Jazz” Symphony and the unspeakable (if well-named) “Grand Masturbador.”   <br />
  Saturday night’s program, usually a big audience draw, proved even more puzzling this time around. Robertson’s choices consisted of two large-scale monodramas for woman’s voice: one by Philippe Manoury, a sometime Boulez protégé, for soprano – delivering in French, a fevered, erotic text for which no printed or supertitled information was provided &#8212; and electronics (nothing but, empty stage plus light show); the other an equally fevered accounting (but at least in English) as Cassandra relives her altogether messy life in Troy leading up to the moment of her murder, supported by orchestral music of one Michael Jarrell, grinding, grating but at least something to look at on stage. No program info in Mr. Jarrell; Wikipedia has him as a Swiss composer, born in 1958, and “a fascinating creature.” Barbara Sukowa, the great German actress who once delivered a stunning “Pierrot Lunaire” at LACMA, spoke the Cassandra; Juliana Snapper  delivered the Manoury, mostly at a howl.  <br />
   Wonderful solos: Saturday morning there was Dawn Upshaw, singing the birds down from their heavens, and gift-wrapping everything from Stephen Foster to Bill Bolcom to Kurt Weill to a divine Schubert encore that seemed to encapsulate everything about the place. Indoors at the Arts Center, young Huebner honored the centenarian Elliott Carter with his mysterious, piano-filling “Night Fantasies” and, with the veteran Erika Duke, the old timer’s journeyman Cello Sonata.  Well, he had to start somewhere.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Ojai Festival Day&#160;1</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2008/06/ojai-festival-day-1/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2008/06/ojai-festival-day-1/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Fri, 06 Jun 2008 23:07:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[soiveheard.com]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://65.58.242.66/?p=19</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Ojai again. After 62 years, nothing surprises. Thirty-five years ago a Carnegie Hall audience rose up in revolt at the minimalist nothingness of Steve Reich’s “Four Organs”;  Last night there were whoops and cheers of joy and celebrations. Reich is the main attraction this year; three of the main events are entirely his. The “Daniel [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<div class="blogRight">Ojai again. After 62 years, nothing surprises. Thirty-five years ago a Carnegie Hall audience rose up in revolt at the minimalist nothingness of Steve Reich’s “Four Organs”;  Last night there were whoops and cheers of joy and celebrations. Reich is the main attraction this year; three of the main events are entirely his. The “Daniel Variations,” which ended the first night, got a raucous, monotone reading by the Festival Orchestra and four solo singers under Brad Lubman  (instead of the prescribed small chorus that had sung it for the Master Chorale and recorded it for Nonesuch). The results were not nice.</p>
<p>Earlier, the “Four Organs” (by So Percussion) and “Eight Lines” (by Brad Lubman’s Signal) fared better. Still, there’s a lot of Steve Reich at Ojai this week; perhaps too much; Other seasons have offered greater variety. How dare I complain, though, with Dawn Upshaw on the premises, and the splendid young Eric Huebner with Elliott Carter’s “Night Fantasies” in his fingers, music I have just now fallen in love with. They tell me there are still tickets to be had, but that won’t be for long. .</p></div>
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		<title>soiveheard#6</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2008/06/soiveheard6/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2008/06/soiveheard6/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 04 Jun 2008 23:05:40 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[soiveheard.com]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://65.58.242.66/?p=17</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[WHERE SOMETIMES IS HEARD A DISCOURAGING WORD: The trials of KCSN, the plucky, valuable station attached but somewhat dangling at Cal State Northridge, continue. This letter was recently sent to all listeners complaining that the station had abandoned its fund-raising activities: Dear KCSN Listener: Thank you for expressing your interest in the current and future [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>WHERE SOMETIMES IS HEARD A DISCOURAGING WORD: The trials of KCSN, the plucky, valuable station attached but somewhat dangling at Cal State Northridge, continue. This letter was recently sent to all listeners complaining that the station had abandoned its fund-raising activities:</p>
<p>Dear KCSN Listener:</p>
<p>Thank you for expressing your interest in the current and future<br />
direction of KCSN, an important part of the Mike Curb College of Arts, Media, and Communications and a valuable instrument of service to the broader community.</p>
<p>As you perhaps are aware, during the past 18 months the University has been reviewing and evaluating the programmatic mission and supporting technical structure of the radio station.</p>
<p>While the station has some passionate listeners like you, the audience is currently so small that the station no longer qualifies for Corporation for Public Broadcasting funding. Historically, little money has been raised during the pledge drives to support the operating budget of the station.  This disconnection between the  station and the larger listening audience both on- and off-campus has lead us to  reflect on the future of KCSN. The University subsidizes the station significantly, and the current state budget environment has required us to prudently avoid entering into a pledge drive that implies programmatic promises that are not sustainable into the future.</p>
<p>Again, we are grateful for your support of the current format of KCSN and look forward to corresponding with you further following the completion of our review and evaluation process.</p>
<p>Sincerely,</p>
<p>Robert Bucker</p>
<p>Further news, considering that the station gains considerable prestige from its interviews with local composers and other arts personalities, who are willing to  drive to its Northridge studio, is this from someone else at CSUN with similar P-R skills:</p>
<p>&#8220;I’m writing on behalf of Martin Perlich to provide you with important updated parking information for guests that come to the KCSN Radio. Unfortunately, KCSN is no longer able to provide parking passes. Guests will either need to park on the street or purchase a parking pass as they enter the parking structure.&#8221;</p>
<p>(Proceeds from which, one presumes, will go to the school’s new performing-arts center.):</p>
<p>OKAY, BACK TO THE REAL WORLD:</p>
<p>Poking around in my Archives I found this old piece, which I rather like: a memoir of a Beethoven orgy by John Eliot Gardiner (now “Sir”) and his youthful orchestra to the “old” Segerstrom Hall back in 1999. O happy time: you could do a week of commuting to Orange County without the cost of gas entering your mind; only Beethoven.</p>
<p>    An all-in-one festival of the Beethoven Nine is one of music&#8217;s can&#8217;t-lose propositions. The size is right: five concerts of leisurely length, with room here and there for an overture or two. The music, needless to say, is also right: &#8220;the most sublime noise that has ever penetrated into the ear of man.&#8221; wrote E. M. Forster. <br />
Beethoven is &#8220;of all composers,&#8221; a wise critic once wrote, &#8220;the one who most insistently tells us that we cannot do without him.&#8221; The sublime efficiency of the hype machine &#8211; now well into its second century &#8211; further guarantees sellout crowds. They mustered last week at Orange County 3000-seat barn of a Performing Arts Center for the sublime Nine in the first-ever California visit by John Eliot Gardiner and his Orchestre Révolutionnaire et Romantique, brought in for an exclusive American stint by the Orange County Philharmonic Society. The parlay of Beethoven the genius and Beethoven the public-relations icon &#8211; however variable the performances themselves &#8212; made for an irresistible force.<br />
         Gardiner himself, now 56, is an important part of that parlay; so is his mostly-youthful orchestra founded in 1990,  with its recorded legacy (including the Nine) well-received and voluminous. Part of that generation of Brits whose work purports to reconstruct the music of past masters as the masters themselves had heard it &#8211; strings of gut rather than steel, woodwinds actually made of wood, valveless horns and trumpets that invoke the twin gods of music and plumbing &#8211; Gardiner has been more successful than some colleagues in folding the sounds of his historically-informed orchestra into a more modern need for the bone-rattling and the whizbang. It cannot be mere coincidence that the hottest tickets around town last week afforded admission to battlefields: the expanse of the &#8220;Star Wars&#8221; landscape or the no-less-fantastic realm as an intruding C-sharp in the &#8220;Eroica&#8221; marks the invention of modern music for all time. <br />
            It was the struggle-&#8217;n'-strife in this music that brought out the best in Gardiner&#8217;s week of performances: the brutal upheaval in the &#8220;Eroica&#8217;s&#8221; first movement that hurtles into vastly &#8220;wrong&#8221; keys; the blaze in the brass that bursts upon the spook-ridden scherzo in the Fifth; the manic rhythmic obsessions throughout the Seventh. The relatively small size of the orchestra (60 or so) and the silken clarity of old or quasi-old fiddles, beautifully broke apart the music&#8217;s complexity; rare indeed, the listener who found nothing new in Gardiner&#8217;s splendidly thought-out readings. <br />
            There were other moments not so fine. Whatever Beethoven&#8217;s own (and often challenged) tempo indications, it is neither possible nor worth the effort to breed certain expectations out of an audience: the chilling outcry of grief in the &#8220;Eroica&#8217;s&#8221; Funeral March, the celestial soft harmonies in the slow movement of the Ninth. These moments, and others of quieter, more mystery-laden lyricism in the Fourth and Sixth, brought out lesser insights on Gardiner&#8217;s part &#8211; and a surprisingly high quotient of instrumental bloops in the winds and brass as well. <br />
             At the end, the Ninth drew a standing, stomping, cheering 15-minute ovation. The miracle of Beethoven &#8211; one of them, at any rate &#8211; is the variety of sheer narrative momentum in each of the symphonies, each different, each leading to terminal exhilaration. Hearing the Nine as a unit &#8211; in a single sitting, you might say &#8211;  produces another kind of momentum, from the Haydnesque trickery of the first two symphonies to the Ninth&#8217;s ultimate triumph &#8211; marvelously voiced, by the way, by Gardiner&#8217;s own small Monteverdi Choir.  Great music never loses its power to surprise, to reveal something you never noticed before. The week of supremely familiar Beethoven became an exercise in constant surprise. &#8211; Alan Rich</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>soiveheard&#160;#5</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2008/06/soiveheard-5/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2008/06/soiveheard-5/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sun, 01 Jun 2008 23:03:44 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[soiveheard.com]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://65.58.242.66/?p=15</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[BEST OF ALL…I seriously doubt if any place on earth could provide a more intellectually stimulating and , ultimately satisfying musical  week  than the one we’ve just had here in Los Angeles and its environs. It began out on the edge, with Jacaranda in Santa Monica; it ended with Esa-Pekka’s new Piano Concerto downtown. Midway [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>BEST OF ALL…I seriously doubt if any place on earth could provide a more intellectually stimulating and , ultimately satisfying musical  week  than the one we’ve just had here in Los Angeles and its environs. It began out on the edge, with Jacaranda in Santa Monica; it ended with Esa-Pekka’s new Piano Concerto downtown. Midway came Thomas Adès, whose young genius exalts and disturbs us as any true genius should.<br />
Add a couple of days to that week, to allow for Adès’s  earlier program, chamber music to proclaim his private passion for the music of Couperin  (François “le Grand”, not  Louis or the eight other Couperins listed in Grove , although the program never made that clear). A delight in Couperin’s music is not difficult to fathom; it is the passion for the perfect, the exquisite, the unfettered fanciful , the perfect musicalizing of the spirit of an era. Play Couperin at a keyboard, even as poorly as I once did, and you  are transformed. The inventor of that marvelous  Apotheosis of Lully that Adès played with a couple of Philharmonic musicians, a kind of wet dream around the composer Lully returning to life in grand style, is the kind of madman-genius who reaches across centuries and shakes hands with the composer of Powder Her Face.<br />
    A week later Adès had a “Green Umbrella” to himself, with some music we’d heard here before and some we hadn’t. Arcadiana and Living Toys are early works: the one serene and packed with small imaginative darts, the other rather mad, the work perhaps of someone who might later become seduced by Couperin.  The splendid  Calder Quartet was on hand for Arcadiana, in a beautifully nuanced performance. The new work was In Seven Days  a visual on six screens created by Tom’s partner Tal Rosner to a new piano concerto with Nicolas Hodges the soloist, the whole package brought over from its premiere at London’s South Bank. The title refers, of course, to the Creation, and I suppose you could say that the entire work was some sort of intelligent design. I found it mostly disappointing: some attractive joining of music and watery flow for the start and the end, the rest mostly glorified screen-savers set to less than memorable music. Genius is entitled to its stumbles, but reports from Britain had prepared me for a major  multimedia  experience  and this did not happen.<br />
 <br />
   ON THE EDGE Then to Jacaranda: its fifth season finale in Santa Monica&#8217;s attractive First Presbterian, where it will return after opening next season at The Broad Stage a mere nine blocks inland; the midpoint in its wonderfully imaginative celebration of the Messiaen centennial by recreating the whole musical  world around that seminal composer.  Things still in my head from this music-laden event : Debussy’s Sacred and Profane Dances in their original setting for harp (Maria Casale) and five strings, an explosion of rich, lush harmony; the glorious racket of birdsong transformed in Messiaen’s Colors of the Celestial City  with Gloria Cheng, our local treasure, at the piano, and – music remarkable and most unfamiliar, Daniel-Lesur’s Song of Songs for chorus a cappella, the harvest  of darkest, ripest fruit set to music, sung by a small chorus under Grant Gershon to end the season not with a bang but a whisper. <br />
 <br />
   MASTERPIECE Salonen’s Piano Concerto should be well-known by now, downloads  of the New York broadcast have been circulating. It’s not just balderdash, however, to imagine another dimension to the work from hearing it at Disney – where, by the way, it is also being recorded this weekend, by DG, along with the rest of this remarkable if curious program. Salonen has spent 16 years working in Disney Hall; it’s impossible not to recognize the sound of that place, deeply embedded in his musical imagery wherever his writing desk may be located.<br />
  The Concerto is a great work. It flings free from bygone imagery even while its opening gambit – the solo breaking loose from the orchestra, struggling upward, is a clear image of the start of the Second Brahms. Piano and orchestra struggle that way on many occasions, usually along more original patterns. Maybe it takes a non-pianist to write for the instrument as forcefully as Salonen does in the second-movement cadenza; it’s a strange, wonderful moment. The endings are all surprises; in retrospect, they are all just right. Aside from the moments when Mr. Brahms pokes in his head – meaning no harm – this is firm, forthright, original music. Even though I own the music – in my computer, on a disc – I’m going twice this weekend.<br />
    Its program-mates are a mixed gathering. So much do I love Stravinsky’s Les Noces, with its wonderful rough edges and its raw, red earthiness, that I can welcome Steve Stucky’s orchestral transliteration of its instrumental substance if it makes the music more often accessible; four pianos can be a tall order. The transcription is well done, and the sounds are still edgy and percussive and the music curdled gorgeously under Salonen’s  leadership. Colin Matthews’ orchestration of four Debussy’s Piano Préludes are, on the other hand, shameful. I won’t write about them because I don’t want to make myself remember them.<br />
 <br />
   HARRY In September, 1953, I returned from my European year and resumed studies at U.C. Berkeley. The phone rang; it was KPFA. There had been a palace revolt  (one of many); could I hurry on down and become music director?  I filled in the time nicely: a Beethoven symphony here, a Brahms there. Came November  19, and I found myself confronted with a previous commitment  the station had made, beyond comprehension. Some wild-eyed eccentric named Harry Partch, with a collection of musical instruments just in from some other planet, was giving a concert  at International House which KPFA had promised to broadcast live. We ended up running cable down Bancroft Way, a mile at least. Somehow, the damn thing got on the air; don’t ask me how. That was the first-ever complete live performance of Harry’s Plectra and Percussion Dances. The second-ever took place at REDCAT this weekend.<br />
     In the intervening 55 years the world and I have matured to the point where we now understand and deserve Harry Partch. The original instruments have gone into hiding in a refuge in exotic New Jersey, but the heroic John Schneider of KPFK has undertaken to have them copied, or cloned if you will, and they made for a gorgeous interplanetary display on the REDCAT stage. I only missed the huge expanse of the original  glass cloud-chamber bowls; the new ones looked – well – dainty. But a handsome aggregation of CalArts people were on hand to wrest the Partch sound ideal from these splendid toys. Someone needs to make  a DVD,<br />
      Harry’s music? It is not, let’s face it, much. No rhythm beyond a basic pulse, nothing that could pass for melody, just that weird (and sometimes wonderful) pulsation and those oddball harmonies that lead nowhere most charmingly. That is apparently enough to satisfy the Harry-manes, who are numerous and who stem from all the ages,  to sell out the hall – twice this weekend . The sheer  daring  of the man abides, and the devotion of Schneider in bringing this all about—well, it borders on the saintly. . Hail to them all  – and to the ensemble of mostly CalArts folk past and present,, who keep  the memory of Harry alive ,and, perhaps, his music as well.<br />
 <br />
  BLOG It has gotten so that I can’t walk down my street, or into my local Trader Joe’s, or the Disney Hall lobby, without being besieged with questions about my blog and/or website-to-be, I’ll tell you what I know, what isn’t much. Marvelous friends have taken  care of the setting-up, so all I have to do is to pour my weekly wisdom into some mysterious electronic hole – which is what I always do – and it comes out in a neat format, The people who run the Ojai Festival are throwing a Bloggers’ Party next Thursday, and I’m supposed to be some kind of guest-of-honor. You’ll be at the Festival anyway, won’t you, so look in.<br />
 <br />
     Anyhow, starting next weekend, you find me by logging on to soiveheard.com  and going through a painless registration process where you choose your own password, etc. If there’s a problem, just let me know at <a href="mailto:alanrich1@mac.com">alanrich1@mac.com</a> and I’ll get Mark or Vanessa or Adam to fix it. Meanwhile, as  I get familiar with the thing, I expect to have all kinds of fun with the blog. I have a huge trove of archive material, including all my Herald-Tribune scrapbooks, and I’ve just learned how to operate my scanner.<br />
 <br />
 Stay tuned.<br />
 <br />
ADDENDUM: Sunday’s concert drew a super-large crowd, as expected,  Steve Stucky, Esa-Pekka Salonen and Yefim Bronfman waxed garrulous, charming and informative  on the matter of the Piano Concerto at the pre-concert “UpBeat Live,” which had the ushering staff working hard and in vain, trying to shoo away  the overflow crowd. The Disney Hall management might consider some training in tactful behavior, on the part of its young employees toward ticket-holders who might have paid up to $150  to get  in; words like “please” were in short supply. <br />
 <br />
    Stucky’s reworking of Stravinsky’s Les Noces was  marvelous to hear again; fortunately it will be included on the DG disc along with the Piano Concerto and the Matthews orchestration of the Debussy Préludes (which is a waste of time and space). The Concerto works its magic. There is a warm and lovely place:  in the slow movement, two horns interweave to carry a simple, elegant melody over a glistening fabric of string tone, and then the movement whispers to its close. Play this for people who tell you that composers today have lost the power to write beautiful music.<br />
 <br />
     Play it for the letter-writers in Atlanta, the people who wrote to today’s L.A. Times because Mark Swed had stepped on their fair city and its passion for musical Cream-of-Wheat, nurtured by Robert Spano, who leads that city’s Symphony (of frequent Grammy-winning fame). Let me stick a finger into this bowl of porridge if I may. A couple of months ago I got a call from London’s Gramophone,  a publication I have revered from the day I acquired my first album of 78s (Grieg’s Piano Concerto,  if you care).  Wow! They wanted me to do a Cover Story, and on a topic I knew something about: new music, who were the great composers. I was presented with the list of composers who had already been photographed to go with my story. Steve Reich,  Osvaldo Golijov,  John Adams, Tom Adès  AND Jennifer Higdon, Belle of Atlanta. There’s Atlanta for you: bad composers,     great  P-R. The magazine is out, by the way, the June issue. Every man has his price. I’m in   the July,issue,  too.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>A Street Musician&#039;s Symphonic&#160;Movement</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2008/05/a-street-musicians-symphonic-movement/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2008/05/a-street-musicians-symphonic-movement/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 07 May 2008 22:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=685</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Back in September 1964, Jascha Heifetz, the formidable fiddler, was attempting an ill-advised comeback recital at Carnegie Hall. The crowd out front was enormous, and it naturally included many people with long faces hoping for a turned-back ticket to this sold-out event. I was covering it as a music critic for the New York Herald [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>
<strong>Back in September 1964, Jascha Heifetz,</strong> the formidable fiddler, was attempting an ill-advised comeback recital at Carnegie Hall. The crowd out front was enormous, and it naturally included many people with long faces hoping for a turned-back ticket to this sold-out event. I was covering it as a music critic for the New York Herald Tribune of lamented memory. At that time, there was a violinist, 20 or so, nice Jewish boy, reasonably talented, who played in a regular spot in front of Carnegie on most concert nights, with his violin case open to receive coins. I had the idea that this guy would make a pretty good story for my paper, and what better time than after I had taken him to this night of nights? I proffered him my extra ticket; he looked at me the way Little Orphan Annie must have first looked at Daddy Warbucks.
</p>
<p>
Come concert time, the seat next to me was fully occupied, not by my grateful minstrel but by a corpulent heavy-breather who had bought my extra ticket, at a fairly inflated price, from the street fiddler. When I came out at intermission, that guy was still sawing away at his sidewalk station. I&#8217;ve never trusted one of those street players since.
</p>
<p>
Until, that is, Mr. Nathaniel Ayers began to restore my faith, with help from Steve Lopez. The slice-of-life columnist for the <em>Los Angeles Times</em> comes into the picture where I might have, if that klutz in New York hadn&#8217;t sold my ticket. Lopez&#8217;s splendid new book, fashioned from his columns, is called <em>The Soloist: A Lost Dream, an Unlikely Friendship, and the Redemptive Power of Music</em>. Lopez discovers Ayers first, a lone fiddler playing astonishingly well, on a downtown street corner. They meet, some bullshit is exchanged for better or worse, they part, they meet again. &#8220;&#8230;[Nathaniel] plays for a while, we talk for a while, an experience that&#8217;s like dropping in on a dream,&#8221; writes Lopez.
</p>
<p>
Nathaniel takes nonsensical flights, doing figure eights through unrelated topics. God, the Cleveland Browns, the mysteries of air travel and the glory of Beethoven. He keeps coming back to music. His life&#8217;s purpose, it seems, is to arrange the notes that lie scattered in his head &#8230;
</p>
<p>
<br />&#8220;Your violin has only two strings,&#8221; I say. &#8220;You&#8217;re missing the other two.&#8221;
</p>
<p>
&#8220;Yes,&#8221; he says, he&#8217;s well aware. &#8220;All I want to do is play music &#8230;&#8221;
</p>
<p>
<br />The encounter becomes a column, and then a series. A used-instrument dealer named Al Rich (not this one) donates intact instruments; so do others. Lopez digs deeper: Yes, a Nathaniel Ayers attended Juilliard some years back, showed great promise, dropped out, dropped off the planet. Former teachers remember him with passion; long to contact him. There&#8217;s a sister, a father still working in Vegas. Meanwhile the present-day Ayers becomes, for our dedicated journalist, something of a career, something of a handful.
</p>
<p>
Lopez turns impresario, virtuoso. With help from the Philharmonic&#8217;s press department, he invites Ayers to a rehearsal: Beethoven&#8217;s &#8220;Eroica&#8221; no less. Ayers sneaks his own instrument onto the emptied stage and plays some notes, hence qualifying as &#8220;soloist.&#8221; Against considerable and vociferous opposition, the middle-aged, cantankerous Ayers is force-fed into the city&#8217;s welfare system. A room is procured at one or another downtown Skid Row settlements; just as often, Ayers would prefer to plop his pillow in the Second Street Tunnel, usually out of the perfectly understandable need to stand watch over his possessions.
</p>
<p>
&#8220;The flapping of pigeon wings,&#8221; he explains, &#8220;comes down to me as applause.&#8221;
</p>
<p>
Obsessions battle: Ayers&#8217;, with maintaining his toehold in a Cloud Cuckoo Land where Beethoven calls the shots from above all rooftops; Lopez&#8217;s, to guide this tragically terminated, halfway-educated mooncalf back into loving, professorial arms and, perhaps, get him a decent job with a symphony orchestra or some such, thereby possibly harnessing his soaring spirit forever. You might ask yourself whether the world has to be so small that a reasonably amiable schizophrenic can&#8217;t sleep in a traffic tunnel and play on a two-stringed violin now and then.
</p>
<p>
The Soloist is a sweet and moving story, and there are some authentic tearjerks along the way: Ayers&#8217; old cello prof in Cleveland first getting word that his favorite pupil is alive; Ayers and his sister reunited after <em>all</em> those years. (There is also a film on the way from DreamWorks, and don&#8217;t say you&#8217;re surprised! Jamie Foxx is Nathaniel Ayers, Robert Downey Jr. is Steve Lopez, and Esa-Pekka Salonen plays guess-who.) I would, however, raise an eyebrow, draw a line, or whatever the current expression has it, concerning the subtitle. Believe me, there is no &#8220;redemptive power&#8221; in music, I am most happy to report after some 60 years. It&#8217;ll knock you out, drag you down; it has sandpapered some of Nathaniel&#8217;s more interesting edges, as Lopez carefully points out on almost every page. Thank God, it hasn&#8217;t redeemed him.
</p>
<p>
<br /><strong>THE SOLOIST: A LOST DREAM, AN UNLIKELY FRIENDSHIP, AND THE REDEMPTIVE POWER OF MUSIC</strong> | BY STEVE LOPEZ | G.P. Putnam&#8217;s Sons | 273 pages | $26 hardcover</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Parting&#160;Shots</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2008/04/parting-shots/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2008/04/parting-shots/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 23 Apr 2008 19:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=684</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[The Last Romantic Helmut Lachenmann cuts a solitary figure in today&#8217;s musical world. At a time when much of the talk centers on accessibility, on a generation of composer-heroes &#8211; Adams, Adès, Reich, Saariaho, Salonen, just for starters &#8211; who have found ways to reach out to audiences with serious and imaginative creativity, that old [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>
<strong>The Last Romantic</strong>
</p>
<p>
Helmut Lachenmann cuts a solitary figure in today&#8217;s musical world. At a time when much of the talk centers on accessibility, on a generation of composer-heroes &#8211; Adams, Adès, Reich, Saariaho, Salonen, just for starters &#8211; who have found ways to reach out to audiences with serious and imaginative creativity, that old notion of the composer on his private Olympus, proudly and defiantly cloaked in his mantle of inscrutability, rests almost solely with this tall, gaunt yet smiling German gent whose music ground its way through Zipper Concert Hall last Monday. This was the last, and most off-the-wall, of this season&#8217;s Monday Evening Concerts, the venerable series rescued and restored to its historic position as one of music&#8217;s most adventurous programming enterprises anywhere in the land.
</p>
<p>
Monday evening&#8217;s program began with Lachenmann himself, at the piano in a suite of <em>Ein Kinderspiel</em> (<em>Child&#8217;s Play</em>), nicely set with keys of the upper and lower octaves silently depressed so as to enhance the piano&#8217;s resonance. Okay so far? Came then <em>Movement (Before Paralysis)</em>, sizable music for 18 players, screeching out in all directions with jagged, dark, mysterious and inchoate patterns that defied connections (or welcomed disconnections?). This, we are told, is Lachenmann&#8217;s delight. &#8220;He is the world&#8217;s greatest composer,&#8221; proclaim a few holdouts in the new-music community who dote on inscrutability. At them in response, I fling my favorite James Thurber line: &#8220;nbsp;lsquo;He&#8217;s God!&#8217; screamed a Plymouth Rock hen.&#8221;
</p>
<p>
Yet the concert drew a large crowd, and there were many who stood and cheered at the end. I would love to know what they heard. Prior to this concert, I knew Lachenmann mostly from the ECM recording of his setting &#8211; &#8220;opera&#8221; in the broadest sense &#8211; of the Hans Christian Andersen story &#8220;The Little Match Girl,&#8221; onto which he has hung the whole paraphernalia of his &#8220;fractured aesthetic&#8221; (Alex Ross&#8217; term), culminating in a horrendous musical mishmash in which the ghosts of every composer in Lachenmann&#8217;s own scrapbook,  Mahler, Berg, Stockhausen, Boulez, pass by simultaneously as if in some horrendous wet dream. Does that lovely, sad Andersen story deserve that? Do we? Did we on Monday?
</p>
<p>
I had never before endured pain at a Monday Evening Concert; this time I did: pain and anger. A splendid young group, the Argento Chamber Ensemble, under Michel Galante, traveled with Lachenmann to perform the <em>Movement</em>; another, consisting of three members of Ensemble Recherche, played his <em>Allegro Sostenuto</em> (more of the same) after intermission. &#8220;Played,&#8221; by the way, often consisted of blowing through only the mouthpiece of a wind instrument, banging on the case of a piano, delivering frenzied blasts through a brass instrument and otherwise violating the customary sound possibilities of various instruments. Such procedures are not new, and they have a certain joke value the first time around. The Lachenmann works were long enough to allow these things to happen several times, and you all know what happens to a joke when you tell it more than once.
</p>
<p>
nbsp;<br /><strong>Beethoven, Bloomberg, Blog</strong>
</p>
<p>
Some of the happiest moments in a critic&#8217;s life come with discovering music you should have known long ago but didn&#8217;t. At Midori&#8217;s recital in Disney Hall, a week ago Sunday, there was a Beethoven Violin Sonata &#8211; A major, Opus 30 No. 1 &#8211; that I swear I had never heard before, or at least never paid attention. It had an ordinary, perky first movement. Then came an adagio straight out of heaven: a melting, embracing slow theme and a middle section that stood on a threshold and welcomed me with one arm and Franz Schubert with the other. Oh my, Midori plays wonderfully these days; so does Robert McDonald, her excellent collaborating pianist. A couple of weeks before, I had heard her in an unpublicized USC concert, before a paltry audience, performing a big, dramatic Penderecki sonata from 1999, very long and very intense; that work deserves to be brought out in a public performance now that she is located in Los Angeles and draws big crowds &#8211; as she did last week. I had gone to her Disney Hall concert out of curiosity for John Corigliano&#8217;s Sonata, but that turned out to be an early work, highfalutin Americana, not worth the carfare. It was Beethoven who made the evening.
</p>
<p>
Beethoven was my first love &#8211; the &#8220;Pastoral&#8221; Symphony, or what remained of it in Walt Disney&#8217;s <em>Fantasia</em> butchery. The Eighth Symphony figured in my first published review: <em>Boston Herald</em>, Thanksgiving Day, 1944, a Boston Symphony Youth Concert &#8211; and on that day, I abandoned my premed ambitions forthwith, breaking my mother&#8217;s heart, for a couple of years anyhow. (It was repaired when I introduced her to Leonard Bernstein.) Sue Cummings hired me as music critic for the <em>Weekly</em> in March 1992, and I got a nice note from her this week on the occasion of this, my final column. It was Cummings who thought up the title &#8220;A Lot of Night Music.&#8221; I wanted &#8220;A <em>Little</em> Night Music&#8221; in honor of two favorite composers (guess!), but I had no idea I&#8217;d be writing such a lot. Sixteen years! with the most cooperative local management and &#8211; honest! &#8211; the best readership any serious music critic could ever ask for. My lord! the outburst over my termination has been as gratifying as 10 <em>Marriage of Figaro</em> performances over a single weekend.
</p>
<p>
From this week, I&#8217;ll be writing regularly for <a href="http://bloomberg.com">bloomberg.com</a>. My own blog, soiveheard.com, will be starting up any day now; there&#8217;ll be announcements on KUSC and elsewhere. I&#8217;ll also be keeping one foot in the door here at the <em>Weekly</em>; in fact, I&#8217;ve already got an assignment.
</p>
<p>
So, you see, it&#8217;s not so bad.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Dear Old&#160;Friends</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2008/04/dear-old-friends/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2008/04/dear-old-friends/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 16 Apr 2008 19:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=683</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Before There Was Ambien The air was full of memories at the season finale of the &#8220;Piano Spheres&#8221; concerts last week; the music was too. Ursula Oppens was the pianist &#8211; &#8220;Oyssla,&#8221; as Morty Feldman always called her in his high Brooklynese &#8211; and everything on her program was also by one or another of [...]]]></description>
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<strong>Before There Was Ambien</strong>
</p>
<p>
The air was full of memories at the season finale of the &#8220;Piano Spheres&#8221; concerts last week; the music was too. Ursula Oppens was the pianist &#8211; &#8220;Oyssla,&#8221; as Morty Feldman always called her in his high Brooklynese &#8211; and everything on her program was also by one or another of her (or our) old friends: Charlie Wuorinen, who loved to shake things up in New York academe; Bill Bolcom, ragtimer one time and tragedian the next time around; and, to cap it all, the quizzical-empirical Elliott Carter. Ursula was one of the four genius pianists who had prevailed upon Carter to create what has to be the most challenging piece of keyboard music of the past century &#8211; perhaps of all centuries. Twenty-eight years later, Carter&#8217;s <em>Night Fantasies</em> remains fascinatingly inexplicable; four magnificent performances by the commissioning artists (Oppens, Charles Rosen, Gil Kalish and the late Paul Jacobs) have scaled its crags, and so have others. Each attempt fulfills its 25 or so minutes of tremendously full, eager, important piano figuration differently; each fulfills the composer&#8217;s visions of &#8220;fleeting thoughts and feelings that pass through the mind during a period of wakefulness at night&#8221;; each leaves one with another shading of the sense that thinking of the deepest, most sublime order has taken place.
</p>
<p>
Why ask for more? This is the one music by Carter that most moves me with the sense of a noble, creative mind at work. If some of his other music doesn&#8217;t do this &#8211; let me leave it at this, then. Ursula filled the Zipper Auditorium the other night with astonishing unwindings. Afterward, there was another Carter, more easily likable, <em>Caténaires</em> (<em>Chains</em>), pure trickery, a fast one-line piece with no chords, just a chain of notes, amusing and delightful. The shock of being amused by Carter was enough, I guess; I preferred the astonishment, this time, of the longer work. Garrulous Wuorinen, ponderous Bolcom and a couple of Joan Tower trivialities &#8211; nothing else remains from this remarkable concert that so challenges the memory of this one sovereign work.
</p>
<p>
nbsp;
</p>
<p>
<strong>Light and Dark Fantastic</strong>
</p>
<p>
There was music by Beethoven a night later, handsomely dispatched by András Schiff in the second grouping of his ongoing encounter with the &#8220;32&#8243;: a cluster of &#8220;early-middle&#8221; sonatas &#8211; Opp. 26, 27, 28 &#8211; from the time of the first couple of symphonies. The three sonatas of Opus 26 and 27 are all &#8220;irregular&#8221; in structure: the first with its Funeral March serving as the slow movement (a what-if sketch for the &#8220;Eroica&#8221;), the Opus 27 pair with their &#8220;Quasi una Fantasia&#8221; notation. If anything, the Opus 27 No. 1 is strangest of the group, with its opening movement, which keeps breaking off. Clearly, Beethoven was having some kind of high time playing with sonata structures, in no hurry to come to grips with the tread of history. There&#8217;s a splendid, if apocryphal, scene in the old Abel Gance <em>Beethoven</em> movie: Jilted one more time, the composer (the great Harry Baur) sneaks into the organ loft while his sweetie is being married to someone else, and hammers out the Funeral March from Opus 26.
</p>
<p>
There is something deliciously wayward about Beethoven&#8217;s state of mind at this time in his life. These &#8220;Fantasia&#8221; sonatas, even including the much-overprized &#8220;Moonlight,&#8221; have about them the sense of a carefree young experimenter in a lab. The specter of deafness hasn&#8217;t yet taken hold; the E-flat &#8220;Fantasia&#8221; Sonata, the sonata paired with the &#8220;Moonlight,&#8221; is a wild and wonderful work, musically all over the place, as though Beethoven had spilled all its pieces and is in no hurry to reassemble them. The closing theme is like one continuous chuckle.
</p>
<p>
For no reason I can easily pinpoint, I found these performances &#8211; the charm of the &#8220;Fantasia&#8221; works and, above all, the relaxation of the &#8220;Pastoral&#8221; Opus 28 &#8211; the most satisfactory of Schiff&#8217;s performances so far. Listening to early Beethoven sonatas in concentrated doses demands a certain amount of bucolic exercise, and it has, I admit, taken a while to bring this valuable series into focus.
</p>
<p>
&#8220;On the Edge of Santa Monica&#8221; and just plain on the edge: If ever a musical event fit that description, last weekend&#8217;s &#8220;Jacaranda&#8221; get-together surely did. Iannis Xenakis&#8217; <em>Nomos Alpha</em> began it: Tim Loo&#8217;s solo cello howling helplessly into dark corners, beyond definition or resolution, music so beyond human management that a second solo cello must needs be called upon to untangle its principal in its final few measures. It was no disgrace for Loo to enlist Erika Duke in this manner; the madness lay in the overly great expectations by Xenakis himself in projecting such intense but unperformable music. The intensity of the music would have justified the participation of a half-dozen cellists, if necessary. Not much of Xenakis&#8217; music invokes the sense of magic; this did. So, of course, did the evening&#8217;s final work, <em>Stimmung</em>, of which I have written often and with delight. Karlheinz Stockhausen&#8217;s &#8220;hippie campfire&#8221; (love that!) for voices intoning magic names ended the evening even more mysteriously, gloriously, on a heavenly set capped with a Sirius mockup and six singers robed in angelic white. You had to have been there.
</p>
<p>
<em>Obiter dictum:</em> &#8220;Night Music&#8221; goes dark next week after 16 years. I will write about the last of this year&#8217;s Monday Evening Concerts, which I helped to save a couple of years ago as part of my job. The decision to close down my column was not mine. The notes of protest have, of course, been wonderful; they come because we all realize that music &#8211; <em>all</em> music but especially the endangered kind &#8211; needs people to speak for it, certainly more than one voice per community. Meanwhile, I&#8217;ll continue to write about music &#8211; periodically for the <em>Weekly</em>, and regularly in a blog (<a href="http://www.soiveheard.com">www.soiveheard.com</a>) that friends are setting up, for KUSC (which was on the phone first thing), wherever. My first print was in 1944; I&#8217;m not gonna stop now.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>And When the Dust Had Settled&#160;&#8230;</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2008/04/and-when-the-dust-had-settled/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2008/04/and-when-the-dust-had-settled/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 09 Apr 2008 18:50:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=682</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Don&#8217;t Feed the Animals More of the same: The new guy has come and gone after his two-week Philharmonic guest shot, leaving behind echoes of adoration and tumults of anticipation &#8211; next Disney gig: November 24 &#8211; and memories of a sound spectrum ranging from the infinitesimal (the tail flicks of Debussy&#8217;s Afternoon of a [...]]]></description>
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<strong>Don&#8217;t Feed the Animals</strong>
</p>
<p>
More of the same: The new guy has come and gone after his two-week Philharmonic guest shot, leaving behind echoes of adoration and tumults of anticipation &#8211; next Disney gig: November 24 &#8211; and memories of a sound spectrum ranging from the infinitesimal (the tail flicks of Debussy&#8217;s <em>Afternoon of a Faun</em>) to the cataclysmic amorosities of Ravel&#8217;s <em>Daphnis and Chloé</em>. It was a program of sheer ecstasy on many levels, and, on one at least, beyond any challenge: the sheer delight in the phenomenon of a master music director, at the head of a supremely responsive orchestra, with a program of music specifically designed to bring out the best in that orchestra, playing for a hot-ticket audience at the edge of its collective seat, ready and willing to swallow it whole. You have to remember Esa-Pekka Salonen&#8217;s comment, on first seeing Gustavo Dudamel in action: &#8220;He&#8217;s a conducting animal.&#8221; There have been times these past two weeks when young Dudamel has turned us all into <em>listening</em> animals.
</p>
<p>
And so, they &#8211; we &#8211; got what they came for. And yet &#8230; for myself, I would have been happy with a lot less than the complete Ravel ballet, of which the first half-hour is taken up in mime and gesture and musical noodling, pretty to be sure, before the music coalesces in the great climactic dances known as the Suites 1  2. The sounds are lovely, ethereal, full of everything we admire in Ravel; I can&#8217;t help thinking that the time might have been put to better use, that there might have been the chance then for further acquaintance with our new guy: A Mozart symphony, perhaps? (He has conducted nothing less than <em>Don Giovanni</em>, at La Scala.)
</p>
<p>
Well, he leaves us now not exactly a stranger. His command of the balances, the lights and shades, in the Romantic orchestra is phenomenal; last week&#8217;s Berlioz and this week&#8217;s Ravel, with the lovely control of wordless chorus (the Pacific Chorale) against orchestra, demonstrate an amazing &#8211; what they call, simply, an &#8220;ear.&#8221; That showed too in his sympathetic work with soloists, especially in Leila Josefowicz&#8217;s supple, dazzling dispatch of Bartók&#8217;s Second Violin Concerto this past weekend. These were great concerts on their own, and greater in their promise.
</p>
<p>
nbsp;<strong>The D-minor Demon</strong>
</p>
<p>
There&#8217;s a D-minor Concerto for Strings by Vivaldi that has haunted me since boyhood. Serge Koussevitzky used to play it often in a ponderous, dense style with the full Boston Symphony string section; oh my, how those double basses would resonate in Symphony Hall! Then there was a single-disc recording led by Alexander Schneider, with, of all things, a <em>harpsichord</em> on, if I remember, a Mercury disc; that was the start of awareness, for a whole generation of collectors, that there was such a thing as authentic Baroque musical performance, or something like it. That concerto &#8211; No. 11 in the &#8220;L&#8217;Estro Armonico&#8221; collection &#8211; has always been a landmark for me, and I try never to miss a performance.
</p>
<p>
We&#8217;ve come a long way since 1950, I guess it was. We later passed through a time when the &#8220;authentic&#8221; Baroque violin couldn&#8217;t use vibrato, and was expected to sound sort of gray. We&#8217;ve come out of that too. Fabio Biondi&#8217;s Europa Galante, the 11-member &#8220;authentic&#8221; Italian ensemble that played Baroque-era music in Disney Hall the other night, performed on contemporary-looking violins (plus a great-looking old lute) and played with style, strength, clarity &#8211; and vibrato. They performed that D-minor Concerto I was telling you about; they whizzed through its convolutions and paused only briefly in its melodic moments &#8211; as Vivaldi&#8217;s own forces surely might have done. They also played a set of dances by Purcell that included the &#8220;Aire&#8221; that Benjamin Britten used for his <em>Young Person&#8217;s Guide to the Orchestra</em>. Nothing sounded ancient and dry; everything sounded fresh and &#8220;authentic.&#8221;
</p>
<p>
Three of the works were by Vivaldi, which was fine because of the marvelous robustness of his style and the genuine sadness he could muster in his slow movements. At the end, there was a set of single movements by eight composers, each of them a dance imitative of some national style of the late 17th century, all of them charming and clumsy in an endearing way and, for reasons beyond any serious musical sense, utterly enchanting.
</p>
<p>
nbsp;<strong>Ever on Sunday</strong>
</p>
<p>
Grant Gershon began his monthly Sunday Master Chorale program, at Disney, with a set of choral songs by Poland&#8217;s Henryk Górecki honoring the Virgin Mary, composed in 1985, 10 years after that minimalist composer&#8217;s Third Symphony, but seven years before it became what Gershon accurately described as a &#8220;fund-raising anthem for NPR stations coast-to-coast.&#8221; Card-carrying Góreckiites expecting a replay of the anguished white-on-white tunes from that work may have been dismayed at the Disney Hall concert on Sunday night; others, myself included, found the music touching in its simplicity. For Górecki to have composed so ardent and loving a setting of these sacred texts in a politically charged atmosphere seems to me courageous enough.
</p>
<p>
Gershon&#8217;s good work with his chorus is widely known and honored, perhaps more for their participation with other major projects than for their independent concert series. I had not realized until Sunday&#8217;s concert, for example, that they have embarked on a systematic survey of a truly important repertory project, performing the late Masses of Joseph Haydn, one per year: grand and grandiose works of Haydn&#8217;s final years, full of the wisdom absorbed in his London visits, therefore solidly aglow with the choral spirit of Handel, and at the same time marvelously rich with the melodic and harmonic wisdom of Haydn himself, this grand old innovator in the glow of mature wisdom. Sunday&#8217;s concert ended with a Mass in B flat, titled the &#8220;Theresa Mass&#8221; for reasons nobody knows. Its date is 1799. Haydn had already composed his last symphony, the &#8220;London,&#8221; with its amazing shifts of harmony like nothing he had attempted before. Some of these turn up in the long quartet for soloists in the &#8220;Gloria&#8221; in this Mass; the harmonies in the &#8220;Benedictus&#8221; are also lush and lovely, looking across the century gap toward, perhaps, Schubert. It&#8217;s a wonderful piece, lasting about half an hour; wouldn&#8217;t it be great if there were a church in town where music like this could be performed in its proper setting? (No, not the Cathedral, too big and too much echo.) Anyhow, I&#8217;ve got to stop neglecting these people; they&#8217;re an okay chorale.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Fantastique&#160;Shake-Up</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2008/04/fantastique-shake-up/</link>
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		<pubDate>Wed, 02 Apr 2008 18:57:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[Genius, Age 27 He&#8217;s real, he&#8217;s ours: Gustavo Dudamel. You could almost say they were made for each other, even to a similarity of hairdo &#8211; Hector Berlioz, who astounded musical society with his Symphonie Fantastique at the age of 27, and the Philharmonic&#8217;s maestro-designate, Gustavo Dudamel, who at the same age delivered Berlioz&#8217;s almost-masterpiece [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>
<strong>Genius, Age 27</strong>
</p>
<p>
He&#8217;s real, he&#8217;s ours: Gustavo Dudamel.
</p>
<p>
You could almost say they were made for each other, even to a similarity of hairdo &#8211; Hector Berlioz, who astounded musical society with his <em>Symphonie Fantastique</em> at the age of 27, and the Philharmonic&#8217;s maestro-designate, Gustavo Dudamel, who at the same age delivered Berlioz&#8217;s almost-masterpiece to a capacity, cheering Disney Hall audience last weekend.
</p>
<p>
The <em>Symphonie Fantastique</em>, concocted by Berlioz as a kind of woozy allegory for his unrequited passion for the Irish actress Harriet Smithson (whom he later married and came to regret), makes its way uneasily through the repertory. Devotees of French music &#8211; the formidable Nadia Boulanger, for one &#8211; have told me that they would prefer that Berlioz hadn&#8217;t existed at all. Too much of his heart appears on his sleeve, in this work and in some others, violating the easy generalities that one likes to posit about the French musical spirit. Perhaps it&#8217;s necessary, therefore, for a young spirit &#8211; a preternaturally wise 27-year-old musical spirit from another continent &#8211; to shake things up a bit. Enter Gustavo.
</p>
<p>
Dudamel&#8217;s exuberant, but also admirably wise, performance honored small details &#8211; the balance of brass tone against strings in the &#8220;Ball&#8221; movement, for example &#8211; that I hadn&#8217;t noticed in half a hundred previous live encounters. His performance had surge and impulse and, in the glorious vulgarities of the final movements, a command of orchestral balance that preserved sonorities. All repeats were honored, allowing for Berlioz&#8217;s formal design to take its proper shape. In his few times here, Dudamel has mastered the shape of Disney Hall, so that some of the magical acoustic moments in the score &#8211; the conversations between the shepherds in the slow movement, with woodwinds spread far apart &#8211; were captured in proper dimension. It was, all told, a performance of the work in real proportion, not only thrilling in the grandiose moments but eloquent and captivating in ways that might have astonished the composer himself.
</p>
<p>
Esa-Pekka Salonen provided a shadowy presence for his successor-to-be in the form of his 20-minute orchestral work <em>Insomnia</em>, which opened the program; Prokofiev&#8217;s jaunty First Piano Concerto, a showoff piece nicely performed by the young Simon Trpceski followed, music useful only to show young Trpceski&#8217;s power to bang on the keyboard. (A Debussy arabesque, a charming encore, showed off much more.)
</p>
<p>
nbsp;<strong>Second Fiddling</strong>
</p>
<p>
Earlier in the week, Dudamel was pressed into service in one of the Philharmonic&#8217;s Chamber Music Society programs, as second violinist in Mozart&#8217;s wonderful A-major Clarinet Quintet. As with the orchestral concert, this drew a full, cheering house, for any chance to see, no less hear, the town&#8217;s latest wonder boy, but perhaps not so much to hear chamber music and obey its rules. As it happened, there wasn&#8217;t much to hear; a second-fiddle role in a Mozart Quintet doesn&#8217;t consist of much in the way of solo ops. Philharmonic concertmaster Martin Chalifour had asked the crowd, please, not to applaud between movements &#8220;unless you absolutely have to.&#8221; Apparently, the crowd absolutely had to, because there was applause after every movement, ruining Michele Zukovsky&#8217;s sublime performance in the Clarinet Quintet and the whole of Mozart&#8217;s C-major String Quintet as well. Anyone who applauds, or even breathes, after the slow movement of the Clarinet Quintet just hasn&#8217;t been listening.
</p>
<p>
Which brings up a question I&#8217;ve been meaning to ask, or a complaint I&#8217;ve been meaning to air: What has happened to chamber music in our town? Chamber music is the result of playing together over long periods by ensembles, who develop a oneness of style and become known for an attitude toward performance, the same way that symphony orchestras hone their tone and their personality by working under a specific conductor. However skilled the individual members of the Philharmonic, I do not hear this quality in the Chamber Music Society concerts I&#8217;ve attended at Disney Hall. The Mozart Quintet performance with Dudamel is a case in point; he was in town, therefore available, and so it was a good PR trick to add him to the Mozart program. Immediately, that&#8217;s no longer chamber music. Janine Jansen, visiting violin soloist from the Netherlands, sat in on the program the week before; again, that becomes celebrity booking, not chamber music.
</p>
<p>
I mourn the passing of long-time-constituted string quartets, and chamber-music series with permanent memberships, playing repertory. It&#8217;s one more of the losses we suffered when LACMA shut down the Monday Evening Concerts, because one of my last memories from that series was the Parisii Quartet coming in with late Beethoven quartets. I long to hear the Cavatina of Opus 130 the way they played it the last time here. The Guarneri Quartet has disbanded after a distinguished career; I never got to hear the Alban Berg. Memories of the Sequoia Quartet still haunt me; I am tempted by new names in the New York ads, but I don&#8217;t see them here. There is hope: The Calder Quartet sound better all the time, and they have begun to play late Beethoven quartets. I just hope that the Colburn School, their local base, will have the good sense to hold on to them long enough to develop a repertory, and reveal to generations of bright-eyed students, pushing into those splendid new buildings on Grand Avenue, the miracles of Opus 130 and the Mozart Quintet, and when to applaud and when not to.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>On Closer Observation: Janine Jansen at Disney&#160;Hall</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2008/03/on-closer-observation-janine-jansen-at-disney-hall/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2008/03/on-closer-observation-janine-jansen-at-disney-hall/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 26 Mar 2008 18:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=680</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Not So StinkyEduard Hanslick, a.k.a. Beckmesser, cast one of his notorious thunderbolts in the direction of Tchaikovsky&#8217;s Violin Concerto in 1881 when the ink on its mss. was barely dry, and generations of us hot-pen scriveners have feasted on his words ever since. &#8220;It gives us for the first time the hideous notion,&#8221; Hanslick wrote, [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>
<strong>Not So Stinky<br /></strong><br />Eduard Hanslick, a.k.a. Beckmesser, cast one of his notorious thunderbolts in the direction of Tchaikovsky&#8217;s Violin Concerto in 1881 when the ink on its mss. was barely dry, and generations of us hot-pen scriveners have feasted on his words ever since. &#8220;It gives us for the first time the hideous notion,&#8221; Hanslick wrote, &#8220;that there can be music that stinks in the ear.&#8221; Well, Herr Hanslick was 53 when he delivered that monumental dictum; since I am no longer that, it may be the right time to re-examine those words in the light of my own experiences with the work in question, the most recent of which was the exhilarating, elegant and altogether winning version of it delivered at Disney Hall just a few nights ago by an admirable Dutch musician named Janine Jansen. I have lived through tortured performances by aging virtuosos &#8211; Bronislaw Huberman, for one, who lopped a whole five minutes from the last movement (it didn&#8217;t help) &#8211; and breathtaking, showoff affairs by the likes of Heifetz, who certainly supported the Hanslick view of the piece. Ms. Jansen&#8217;s performance, beautifully echoed by her countryman Edo de Waart and the Philharmonic, was neither of the above; it was swift without being the least heartless, lyrical without schmaltz (or whatever they call it in Amsterdam) and utterly beautiful. It set me on a whole new path of thinking about the piece, which is what a great performance should do.
</p>
<p>
I wish I could say the same about Schumann&#8217;s Third (&#8220;Rhenish&#8221;) Symphony, which filled out the program &#8211; the way Styrofoam fills out a package. I have no Hanslick quotation for this sorry smudge of a work, although this from a British paper of 1856 &#8211; &#8220;trivial in idea and poor in resource&#8221; &#8211; will do. There are nice sounds here: horns and winds in E flat, their most congenial key, but no rhythms or motion to send them along. The other Schumann symphonies conquer this motion problem with prettier tunes; this one starts out as a sad and noble failure and remains that way.
</p>
<p>
Ms. Jansen returned 24 hours later, on a Philharmonic &#8220;Chamber Music Society&#8221; night, with five colleagues, in an even more daunting task &#8211; to try to turn a real clunk from Tchaikovsky&#8217;s pen, the string sextet called <em>Souvenir de Florence</em> (12 years later than the Concerto and nowhere near as rewarding), into half an evening&#8217;s worth of happy listening. It didn&#8217;t work; whatever delight Tchaikovsky may have gleaned from his Italian journeys did not translate into anything nearly as lively as his <em>Italian Caprice</em> of many years previous. All that saved this gloomy, meandering work, in fact, was its superiority to its program mate, the wretchedly thick and dreary B-flat String Sextet by Johannes Brahms. Where was Herr Hanslick when we needed him?
</p>
<p>
<strong>Amen to That</strong>
</p>
<p>
My deep-purple words written under the spell of Olivier Messiaen&#8217;s <em>Visions de l&#8217;Amen</em> in our last week&#8217;s visit were written under the spell of music of similar color at the last &#8220;Piano Spheres&#8221; concert; those who have teased me about them, and were not at the concert, have only themselves to blame. Beyond their just deserts, they have been accorded a reprieve, since that astonishing work formed the major substance of last weekend&#8217;s &#8220;Jacaranda&#8221; concert &#8220;at the edge of Santa Monica,&#8221; and if you missed it this time, it&#8217;s there on a New Albion disc by the same performers, the piano duo known as Double Edge. With honest respect to Joanne and Mark at &#8220;Piano Spheres&#8221; &#8211; wonderful, brave players &#8211; the Double Edge performance, on disc and at the First Presbyterian Church last Saturday, ranks among my sublime experiences. Edmund Niemann and Nurit Tilles formed Double Edge in 1978. They have also played with Steve Reich&#8217;s Musicians almost since the beginning of <em>his</em> time. It tells you the stature of the Jacaranda people that they brought Double Edge out here for their own Messiaen celebration, and also for a major William Bolcom work.
</p>
<p>
Bolcom&#8217;s 1971 <em>Frescoes</em> is, like most of his best works, a &#8220;jumble of half-remembrances&#8221; that poke at you delightfully &#8211; this time from an assortment of keyboards, in other works a variorum of other kinds of etceteras. In a sense, the work set the tone for the entire program, which meandered agreeably past a couple of shorter Messiaen works &#8211; the evocative horn call from <em>Canyons to the Stars</em> and an early set of variations that had the feature, unique for Messiaen, of letting us know at every moment exactly where we were in the music. Once again, the &#8220;Amen&#8221; Visions projected no such message, however. I cannot yet reach ground zero in its vastness; someday I will.
</p>
<p>
<strong>Shared Saturdays</strong>
</p>
<p>
After all those years of solitary Saturdays by the radio, suddenly the Metropolitan Opera airings have become public experiences, to common delight. People meet in the theaters where these new telecasts are shown, and talk over the previous week&#8217;s production. It&#8217;s only logical, therefore, that these events have now moved into the marketplace, all the more so since the quality of the projections and the sound is, or can be, so much better than a peanut-gallery seat at a lot of live opera hereabouts.
</p>
<p>
I saw the last two productions: <em>Peter Grimes</em> and <em>Tristan und Isolde</em>. The <em>Grimes</em> was a new production by John Doyle, who did the L.A. Opera&#8217;s <em>Mahagonny</em> and Broadway&#8217;s <em>Sweeney Todd</em> and <em>Company</em>. Those, I thought, were mostly fine; the <em>Grimes</em> completely wrong. Instead of the expanse of British fishing village extending toward sunrise, we got a flat, vertical wall up front pierced with windows and doorways &#8211; Suffolk agrave; la Louise Nevelson, betrayed by Britten&#8217;s horizontal expanse of music. There were great performances, by Anthony Dean Griffey and Patricia Racette and by the soaring, murderous orchestra under Donald Runnicles. After the devastating first-act curtain &#8211; &#8220;HOME, you call that a HOME???&#8221; &#8211; a squeaky-voiced soprano broke the spell to lead us on a backstage tour.
</p>
<p>
Deborah Voigt was the Isolde, as expected. The Tristan was the handsome and clear-voiced Robert Dean Smith, the last of four tenors to outlive a sad succession of illnesses and accidents (one of them hilariously caught on film) that had plagued the Met over the week, and he was perfectly fine &#8211; better by far than our John Treleaven. Jürgen Rose&#8217;s sets and costumes were full of Eurotrash geometrics and shifts of focus; give me David Hockney any day. But oh, that stupendous Met Opera Orchestra!</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>The Axe Manual: Bang the Drum&#160;Quickly</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2008/03/the-axe-manual-bang-the-drum-quickly/</link>
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		<pubDate>Wed, 19 Mar 2008 20:25:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[Good Old Sir Harry Composer Harrison Birtwistle Two of the world&#8217;s most endearing originals showed up at the most recent Monday Evening Concert &#8211; their music did, at least. One was Ralph Shapey, long gone but long remembered by us exndash;New Yorkers for his fiery spirit: a small, ill-tempered but somehow lovable fighter for a [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>
<strong>Good Old Sir Harry</strong>
</p>
<p>Composer Harrison Birtwistle
</p>
</div></div>
<p>
Two of the world&#8217;s most endearing originals showed up at the most recent Monday Evening Concert &#8211; their music did, at least. One was Ralph Shapey, long gone but long remembered by us exndash;New Yorkers for his fiery spirit: a small, ill-tempered but somehow lovable fighter for a square deal for new music. That music was equally ill-tempered, tough-minded, seldom gracious, always big and argumentative in just causes. Cellist Erica Duke Kirkpatrick, pianist Liam Viney and, above all, percussionist Amy Knoles argued the cause of his Second <em>Evocation</em>, a bristling, abrasive piece, pure Shapey. Britain&#8217;s Harrison Birtwistle was the other one, still very much with us on the one hand, but actually not nearly enough. His <em>The Axe Manual</em> (a tribute to our own Emanuel Ax, get it?) gave the evening a bang-up ending.
</p>
<p>
Why hear we so little of Sir Harry? I ask the question every time one of his immensely expressive, massive works makes it through the cracks: his imposing <em>Earth Dances</em> or the sublime piano concerto <em>Antiphonies</em>, composed for Uchida. There are huge, original operas, while our local company celebrates Puccini. On Monday evening, <em>The Axe Manual</em> held the crowd &#8211; or me, at least &#8211; enthralled for nearly half an hour with just the interplay of piano (Aleck Karis) and Ross Karre, all over the place with his percussion monster: mostly woodblocks, temple blocks, vibe and marimba.
</p>
<p>
Best of all, the piece was an exercise of pure wit, of the Harry Birtwistle a small and selective world has come to know and love, handing out small but pertinent observations on the world around him and on the music he is being handed by a spirit of comparable consequence. I think that this is what music is supposed to be. Why did it have to stop?
</p>
<p>
Next night there was &#8220;Piano Spheres&#8221; in the same Zipper Hall (and what a fine meeting place that has become, with the Colburn School&#8217;s student cafeteria now functioning as a valuable adjunct). Once more, the apparently endless celebration of the Messiaen centennial (12-10-08) exerted its hold, with <em>Visions de l&#8217;Amen</em> occupying most of the hour, and the services of Joanne Pearce Martin and Mark Robson on two pianos &#8211; the school&#8217;s Steinway and Fazioli, which, I was coming to realize, were beginning to sound somewhat mismatched.
</p>
<p>
What am I to do with this music? For the better part of an hour, it had me pinned against a wall of seductive flame, flayed alive with these violently twisted strands of human emotion, drawn seductively across willing flesh. This was music beautiful beyond human permissiveness. Its ingredients were pure; not a false note disturbed the serenity of its surface. Its cadences were exactly well-placed, yet every step forward seemed sinful, a violation of the most basic laws of beauty.
</p>
<p>
The music surged ahead, not especially dissonant, a sequence in added sixths as in some most sophisticated jazz riff. Played on an organ, or in dense handfuls of notes as in Messiaen scores for piano, everything sounded rich and over-colored. Early in the program, there was a tiny Messiaen solo, <em>Morceau de Déchiffrage</em>, which Robson copied (&#8220;déchiffrer&#8221;) from a catalog page; funny, it had all the sweet beauty of the composer&#8217;s music, with no more than the required number of notes. Robson&#8217;s solo program also included Ravel&#8217;s wondrously scary <em>Gaspard de la Nuit</em>, the evening&#8217;s best music and best performance.
</p>
<p>
nbsp;<br /><strong>Stand and Deliver</strong>
</p>
<p>
At the end of the Philharmonic&#8217;s performance of the Shostakovich Seventh Symphony at Disney Hall last Thursday night, conductor Semyon Bychkov had the whole brass contingent stand to deliver their final peroration, their instruments, newly polished, waved back and forth to the point of blinding the audience. Forgotten was the merely excellent reading of Rachmaninoff&#8217;s &#8220;Paganini&#8221; Rhapsody, with the red-shoe-clad pianist Stephen Hough and the orchestra early on. This was what the crowd seemed to have come for, and the audience went off its collective rocker: whistles and yells. You&#8217;d think that Shostakovich and his Soviets had just won the war &#8211; <em>some</em> war &#8211; all over again, and maybe they had.
</p>
<p>
I was there. At summer camp on a July afternoon in 1942, we gathered around a radio to hear Toscanini&#8217;s broadcast of the new symphony of Soviet determination; heard Koussevitzky&#8217;s overheated performance in Boston a few months later (with an extra cooling-off intermission after the first movement); noted with pride the appearance of a real live composer on the cover of <em>Time</em>.
</p>
<p>
It took a few years of artistic growth on the composer&#8217;s part, a few more symphonies, a certain settling in the world&#8217;s values, to establish the fitting reputation for Shostakovich, cultural hero and composer of far finer symphonies and string quartets. The Seventh Symphony survived as the right music for the right time as, perhaps, &#8220;Yankee Doodle Dandy&#8221; was for its. Better, though, it survives, on the excellent press that has accompanied it from the time its first note went to paper, and on its sheer bulk. The vivid pictorials of its first movement render immaterial the awfulness of the ensuing scherzo and elegy (and the tune for double-bass clarinet in the scherzo is rather charming, actually), and that riot at the end of the finale is always good for getting an audience to its feet. History ordains the survival of the Shostakovich Seventh Symphony. An eager conductor, which Mr. Bychkov certainly was, and an outlay of brass polish certainly help.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Stirring,&#160;Terrifying</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2008/03/stirring-terrifying/</link>
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		<pubDate>Wed, 12 Mar 2008 17:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[Lesser Is Better Berlin&#8217;s Simon Rattle Wendy Lesser is the founder and editor of The Threepenny Review, a quarterly collection of thinking and, therefore, writing that I find indispensable. I don&#8217;t know her musical credentials, but her piece in the latest issue, on Simon Rattle &#8211; his Mahler performances with the Berlin Philharmonic, his masterly [...]]]></description>
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<strong>Lesser Is Better</strong>
</p>
<p>Berlin&#8217;s Simon Rattle
</p>
</div></div>
<p>
Wendy Lesser is the founder and editor of <em>The Threepenny Review</em>, a quarterly collection of thinking and, therefore, writing that I find indispensable. I don&#8217;t know her musical credentials, but her piece in the latest issue, on Simon Rattle &#8211; his Mahler performances with the Berlin Philharmonic, his masterly putdowns of unruly New York audiences, his rehearsals and, in general, the marvelous musician that he has become &#8211; is a splendid read. In this age of the blog, when anyone with a computer can self-identify as an authority in any field of choice, it&#8217;s heartening to come across this wonderfully expressed interaction between a person of broad intelligence and music with the greatest power to stir and to terrify of any I know &#8211; and I mean the Ninth Symphony by Mahler.
</p>
<p>
Not very much of this power is in any way recordable; you have to be there &#8211; to experience, for example, the way a dedicated musical leader can hold an audience in stunned silence at the end as Mahler, in the person of a solo cello, guides us toward oblivion. But Rattle&#8217;s performance, on a two-disc EMI set, is marvelously detailed and spirited, and it&#8217;s up to you to provide the setting: headphones late at night, perhaps, cat close at hand. It is Rattle and his orchestra, almost single-handed so to speak, who are keeping alive a recording industry devoted to superb new versions of orchestral repertory played by major performing forces on discs you can actually buy (somewhere, at least, if only down dark alleys). More power to them.
</p>
<p>
<strong>Counterpart</strong>
</p>
<p>
Out of the gathering of large masterworks from Beethoven&#8217;s late-life onrush &#8211; the quartets, the Ninth Symphony, the <em>Missa Solemnis</em> and the piano sonatas &#8211; one work seems to tower above the rest in terms of sheer emotional content and the composer&#8217;s struggle to reach out beyond the boundaries of his own artistic conscience. That work is the A-minor String Quartet (Op. 132), which the Calder Quartet grappled with manfully, and came close to conquering, before a fair-sized crowd at Zipper Hall last weekend. To me, this is the work that stands out in Beethoven&#8217;s legacy, as Mahler&#8217;s Ninth stands out in his. The order of events may be different. Beethoven ends on a note of diffident triumph; his grotesqueries have come earlier. But both works move to a point where the curtain is drawn back and the star-filled firmament is revealed. The young Calders haven&#8217;t been playing this music for long, and they will need to firm up their conquest in the years to come, but they played Beethoven&#8217;s slow movement, his &#8220;Hymn of Thanksgiving,&#8221; with just the right balance of ecstasy and melancholy, and I was able to lose myself in this sublime music, as required.
</p>
<p>
Earlier they performed some Mendelssohn, a capriccio and a quartet, both in A minor, as is the Beethoven. Classical-era composers, the generation before Mendelssohn, tended to steer clear of that key; something about it seems cold and menacing. There are no Haydn or Mozart quartets or symphonies in A minor, only this one quartet by Beethoven and a couple of his early violin sonatas. Mozart sets the pivotal scene in <em>The Magic Flute</em>, when Tamino learns that Sarastro is a good guy, not a villain, in A minor; other than that, there are an early A-minor piano sonata and a late A-minor rondo for piano, the latter chromatic and harmonically distraught. But these pieces of Mendelssohn have nothing to do with the classical A minor. They are flip, parlor pieces, almost insulting to their key, like supermarket marmalade spread on fine pastry.
</p>
<p>
<em>Good-manners note:</em> Wendy Lesser might be impressed by the way the Calders circumvent the danger of applause between movements, even with a mostly young audience, which this one was. It&#8217;s the trick of holding the bows aloft for a few extra seconds at music&#8217;s end, which nicely defuses the impulse to interrupt the flow. It worked, very nicely.
</p>
<p>
<strong>Leanness Envy</strong>
</p>
<p>
It was all-French at the Philharmonic, from the orchestra&#8217;s assistant conductor Lionel Bringuier&#8217;s first major triumph on the podium up front to the insidious rattle of Francis Poulenc&#8217;s castanets against the back wall. Bringuier looks wonderful in action, but can any body that slender really support life? His beat is modest, its power &#8211; to unleash the vast torrents of sound, within Disney&#8217;s willing acoustic framework &#8211; apparently endless. Ravel framed the program: the elegance of <em>Le Tombeau de Couperin</em> at the start &#8211; with the solo oboe of Ariana Ghez somewhere up among the galaxies &#8211; and a devastating <em>La Valse</em> at the end. That guy can certainly manage an orchestra: Bringuier, I mean; Ravel too.
</p>
<p>
I love Poulenc&#8217;s Two-Piano Concerto, perhaps more than I should. It hands out the most gorgeous melodies, some that Mozart, or at least Mendelssohn, would willingly acknowledge, and then trashes them forthwith under a barrage of orchestral roogie-roogie including the aforementioned castanets. The level of bad taste borders on the exquisite; I could not defend a note of this infectious, high-spirited delirium, nor could I sacrifice a single minute of its mere 20. Frank Braley and Eric le Sage were the fine soloists.
</p>
<p>
Albert Roussel&#8217;s relatively unknown Third Symphony, composed in 1930 on a commission from Serge Koussevitzky, should have been the program&#8217;s most substantial stuff, or so I thought from memories of previous hearings. Not so, alas; of all the music this marvelous evening, this protracted attempt at laying a wash of modernistic dissonance over the outlines of a classical symphony ended up neither modernistic nor classical but merely very tired. An overlay of rather ordinary percussion, meant, I am sure, to move the music forward, never did. &#8220;Undeserved&#8221; and &#8220;obscurity&#8221; don&#8217;t always go together.
</p>
<p>
<em>Obiter dictum:</em> The L.A. Opera&#8217;s opening-night <em>Otello</em>, which I reviewed, had required a substitute Desdemona; Chilean soprano Cristina Gallardo-Domâs, scheduled for the role, was ill. She returned later in the run, and &#8211; at the urging of my friends &#8220;Trader&#8221; Joe Coulombe and Alice, this city&#8217;s most ardent operaphiles &#8211; I saw her last Sunday, the final performance. Bless Joe, bless Alice, and bless Cristina, lithe and beautiful, wonderfully responsive in voice and body to the inner life in this most harrowing of all of Verdi&#8217;s tragic roles. This was, indeed, the superbly focused <em>Otello</em> I had missed the first time around. A week with <em>Otello</em> and Opus 132 makes this a pretty good job in a pretty good town.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Arnold and Edward, and Their Morning at Disney&#160;Hall</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2008/03/arnold-and-edward-and-their-morning-at-disney-hall/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2008/03/arnold-and-edward-and-their-morning-at-disney-hall/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 06 Mar 2008 05:05:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[Edward is 12, loves the piano and is beginning to take lessons at his school in Mar Vista. Sometimes he comes to my house, when his mother comes to clean, and he picks out tunes on the piano. Arnold is 13, loves basketball and pretends not to care about music. Neither they nor their mom, [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>
<strong>Edward is 12, loves the piano</strong> and is beginning to take lessons at his school in Mar Vista. Sometimes he comes to my house, when his mother comes to clean, and he picks out tunes on the piano. Arnold is 13, loves basketball and pretends not to care about music. Neither they nor their mom, Mercedes, had ever seen Disney Hall, inside or out, so I remedied that with some tickets to last Saturday&#8217;s Toyota Symphonies for Youth program. We got there early, and you could tell from the way the two boys were craning their necks, out on Grand Avenue, taking in the outlines of Frank Gehry&#8217;s design, that basketball had fallen to a momentary second importance. Actually, blase Arnold confessed that he had written a school paper on Gehry&#8217;s most illustrious buildings, but he couldn&#8217;t remember which.
</p>
<p>
At security, we were met by Adam Crane, the Philharmonic&#8217;s intrepid PR director, barely recovered from the stressful routines of the bigtime press conference of two days before &#8211; Esa-Pekka&#8217;s final-season announcement and the concomitant freeloaders&#8217; lunch. What keeps him nourished, Adam told me as we wandered through the backstage labyrinth, is the stimulus of gigs like this morning&#8217;s: escorting juvenile first-timers through the hall, and basking in their wonderment. Veteran Philharmonickers stopped by to chat with the kids about the mysteries of their art: bassist Richard D. Kelley, cellists Danny Rothmuller and Ben Hong, hornist Brian Drake, and Perry Dreiman, master of the Big Bang. Then came the Magic Door. It gets me every time: the moment in the guided tour when Adam opens the door from the backstage turmoil to the radiantly lit, eerily silent Hall itself, and I too become a juvenile first-timer, time and again.
</p>
<p>
The Toyota-backed youth concerts are an active and admirable series, too little noticed, especially since they represent a major expanse in the careers of the orchestra&#8217;s assistant conductors. The audience was near-capacity, and it gave off such waves of delight that this must needs be something of an outsider&#8217;s report. This week&#8217;s docket consisted of a curious bit of entertainment whose off-putting title, <em>The Composer Is Dead</em>, was the worst of it. The composer did, indeed, arrive in a coffin, announced by a florid epitaph sung, keened and, you might say, flounced by one Bennett Schneider, to the intent of fingering the true murderer within the orchestral ranks. Section by section, the orchestra members denied involvement &#8211; a kind of quot;Young Person&#8217;s Guilt to the Orchestraquot; &#8211; with the finger finally resting, to nobody&#8217;s surprise, on the day&#8217;s actual conductor, the sturdy and certainly blameless Lionel Bringuier, Oh, yes, the &#8212;&#8212;&#8211;<br />
AUTHOR of the accusing text was none other than Daniel Handler, otherwise known as Lemony Snicket. San Francisco&#8217;s Nathaniel Stookey seems to have had no compunction in accepting the blame for the bundle of orchestral blats and wheezes that passed for a score.
</p>
<p>
It was soon over. Backstage to shake hands with conductor Bringuier and join in a photo op, the lads and M<em>amacita</em> were models of awestruck diplomacy. We might have lingered, but I had invited the crowd to dim sum. Nobody had ever been to <em>that</em> before, either.
</p>
<p>
nbsp;<br /><strong>Nevertheless &#8230;</strong>
</p>
<p>
All the above wasn&#8217;t the weekend&#8217;s truly major event. <em>Radamisto</em> was. It&#8217;s interesting to speculate on the effect George Frideric Handel&#8217;s first major opera must have had on the noblemen of London&#8217;s Royal Academy back around 1720. The superb performance by Musica Angelica, honest and true to what I think Handel&#8217;s operas should sound like, was startling enough: the arias with their rhythmic patterns broken up into chunky, irregular patterns; the slithering chromatic lines that even Brahms might acknowledge; the ensembles that break off midway into conflicting actions. On a stage with no scenery, using orchestral forces with only a tenuous claim to quot;authenticityquot; &#8211; strings with modern bowing except for one six-stringed bass to add weight, an electric harmonium in lieu of organ &#8211; Martin Haselbock still drew from his ensemble a powerful and convincing argument for the dramatic power resident in this amazing repertory, much of which still awaits proper and intelligent rediscovery. If this was Handel Opera No. 1 in Musica Angelica&#8217;s agenda, to suggest something in the way of a series, count this as one approving vote.
</p>
<p>
The real magic of the performance lay in the singing ensemble, a group astonishingly able to cope with the vocal divisions in this extraordinarily tricky music in a manner ranging from excellent to supernatural. (quot;Divisionsquot; is/are the process of singing two, four or even eight notes on a single musical beat, and it is the life-throb of bel canto virtuosity, from Handel&#8217;s time through early Verdi. These folks, all seven principals, had it down pat.) Beyond that, there was further astonishment in the Radamisto of the Spanish countertenor Jordi Domenech, busy in European houses but here making his American debut: a singer of greater range and power than any countertenor in my memory, tall and burly, somewhat burly also in tone but a genuinely exciting young singer. Among other cast members, only soprano Elissa Johnston has sung here, as soloist with most of our local orchestras. An impressively loud baritone named Florian Boesch actually blew his voice out of whack at the end of his big-bad-menacing aria; it could happen to anyone, and Herr Boesch has a voice I&#8217;d like to hear as Sarastro someday. At the other end of the scale, a dear small bundle of Celine Ricci scored some square hits on high notes I didn&#8217;t even know were there.
</p>
<p>
What is <em>Radamisto</em> about? Better not ask; I started in on the synopsis, and got to where quot;Zenobia, exhausted and desperate, begs her husband to kill her so she will not fall into Tiridates&#8217; hands. He is reluctant, and fails to strike an effective blow and she throws herself into the river &#8230;quot; To Musica Angelica&#8217;s credit, they provided a nicely printed libretto, and dimmed the lighting at Schoenberg Hall only slightly so we could read along. That&#8217;s what&#8217;s known as managerial intelligence. Philharmonic management, please note.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Total Immersion: Long Beach Opera&#039;s Orpheus and&#160;Euridice</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2008/02/total-immersion-long-beach-operas-orpheus-and-euridice/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2008/02/total-immersion-long-beach-operas-orpheus-and-euridice/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 27 Feb 2008 17:10:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=676</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[The Devil in the Deep Blue Pool The lovers afloat There is this problem I have, trying to describe almost any production by the Long Beach Opera. Elektra in a Malibu beach house, Boris Godunov in a corporate boardroom &#8230; and now I&#8217;m up against Orpheus and Euridice in a Long Beach swimming pool. Please [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>
<strong>The Devil in the Deep Blue Pool</strong>
</p>
<p>
The lovers afloat
</p>
<p>
There is this problem I have, trying to describe almost any production by the Long Beach Opera. <em>Elektra</em> in a Malibu beach house, <em>Boris Godunov</em> in a corporate boardroom &#8230; and now I&#8217;m up against <em>Orpheus and Euridice</em> in a Long Beach swimming pool. Please believe, at least until I get the chlorine out of my lungs.
</p>
<p>
This version, words and music, is by Ricky Ian Gordon, who earned a measure of fame last year, out Midwest somewhere, with a well-praised opera on <em>The Grapes of Wrath</em>, which is due at one of our local companies next season. His <em>Orpheus</em> is not the imposing score of Monteverdi or Gluck; the text is a cycle of sad poems in memory of his &#8220;partner of the time&#8221; with the Orpheus character transposed to a solo clarinet, the poetry made into a lyrical set for soprano, and various gatherings of dancers more or less ad lib. In that modest form, it won an Obie in New York, as it well deserved. Long Beach Opera&#8217;s Andreas Mitisek, who obviously carries aloft the inexplicable banners of company founder Michael Milenski, dreamed up the addition of a few more instruments &#8211; mostly the Jacaranda concerts&#8217; Denali Quartet &#8211; plus the notion of a swimming pool as a stand-in for the River Styx. The two lovers ride around in a rowboat that, at times, is propelled by diabolical forces, and Euridice falls out. In the grand Long Beach tradition, the whole thing sounds a whole lot better than you&#8217;re ready to believe. The Orpheus was Todd Palmer&#8217;s clarinet &#8211; lithe, capricious and, er, liquid. Elizabeth Futral was the Euridice, a wonderful, elegant, vocally pure singer. Didn&#8217;t she take a milk bath in a Handel opera during her last time here?
</p>
<p>
Mr. Gordon is modestly talented. His tunes have a way of moving up and down with an airy lilt that almost makes you believe that anyone &#8211; you and I, for example &#8211; could write them as well, and that puts us at our ease. His &#8220;opera&#8221; lasts an hour; a couple of minutes more and we might have felt our leg being pulled. I can see where some of <em>The Grapes of Wrath</em> might be okey-dokey for this kind of music, but a lot might not be.nbsp;
</p>
<p>
<strong>Flattened Spheroid</strong>
</p>
<p>
Christopher O&#8217;Riley, encased in a program note of lurid self-congratulation, took over last week&#8217;s &#8220;Piano Spheres&#8221; recital for the injured Susan Svrcek, and endowed it with a generous serving of his specialty numbers, his piano versions of a broad swath across the contemporary pop repertory: Radiohead, the late singers Nick Drake and Elliott Smith, and on, I presume, down. Twenty pieces of almost exact size, lined up like eggs in a carton, made up his evening. As with eggs in a carton, you couldn&#8217;t easily tell &#8216;em apart.
</p>
<p>
Piano transcriptions of pre-existing repertory are a common enough phenomenon. The fine Japanese pianist Aki Takahashi has made a couple of CDs of Beatles numbers that are full of wisdom about the music. So are Franz Liszt&#8217;s transcriptions of Bellini, Donizetti, even Mozart operas. To believe Mr. O&#8217;Riley&#8217;s explorations into some of the great pop music of today &#8211; Radiohead&#8217;s &#8220;Arpeggi,&#8221; for example, which was when I first became aware at this concert of what was happening, or what was <em>not</em> happening &#8211; in Mr. O&#8217;Riley&#8217;s view, there&#8217;s apparently nothing more to transcribing music than just keeping the notes out of each other&#8217;s way. Mr. O&#8217;Riley, for all the glowing citations on those two pages of fine print, and the eager crowds that pushed into Zipper Hall at the start of his concert &#8211; in numbers drastically reduced at halftime, by the way &#8211; played the other night like a dead fish.
</p>
<p>
nbsp;<strong>Really Riley</strong>
</p>
<p>
&#8220;Please enjoy this new CD from our Sri Moonshine label,&#8221; read the note from Terry Riley, to which I happily comply. The disc is <em>Banana Humberto,</em> and it is a packaging, 50 minutes&#8217; worth, of pure, exhilarating joyousness, the kind that hits you when making music is the happiest thing you can do in the world and you&#8217;re doing it head-on. Terry plays here with the bassoonist Paul Hanson, the electric-violist Tracy Silverman (remember? from John Adams&#8217; <em>Dharma at Big Sur</em>?) and Paul Dresher&#8217;s Electro-Acoustic Band, Bay Area-based. Their music &#8230; what can I say, beyond my personal report of being grabbed, shaken, tickled and desensitized?
</p>
<p>
Terry is mostly at the piano, motivated into cadenzas compounded from Eastern scales and polyrhythmic patterns, now and then slowing to a blues moment and, in a dazzling finale, a stupendous plunge into deep, rich Latino coloration. It seems to be Terry himself, reminiscing at Mach 10, on everything great and good and colorful that has ever crossed his horizon, and daring us all to come along. It tells us all that, at Terry Riley&#8217;s age and beyond, the power to be delighted, and to pass it on, is one of the greatest possessions we can hold on to.
</p>
<p>
On that note, be sure not to miss Terry&#8217;s recital on the Disney Hall organ on Sunday, May 25. He heard the organ for the first time when he was here during the Philharmonic&#8217;s &#8220;Minimalist&#8221; festival, and was immediately moved to compose a full evening&#8217;s work for it. Nothing more important will have happened in this millennium so far; maybe I just mean musically, maybe I don&#8217;t.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Splendid Company at Disney&#160;Hall</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2008/02/splendid-company-at-disney-hall/</link>
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		<pubDate>Wed, 20 Feb 2008 17:05:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=675</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Paradise Lost and Found Robert Millard Verdi&#8217;s Otello at the Music Center &#8220;We are not the sole owners of our past,&#8221; wrote Jordi Savall, music&#8217;s great and original spirit, in a note accompanying his marvelous appearance at Disney Hall last week. His concert, with his ensemble of singers and players upon lovely old instruments, was [...]]]></description>
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<strong>Paradise Lost and Found</strong>
</p>
<p>
Robert Millard
</p>
<p>
Verdi&#8217;s Otello at the Music Center
</p>
<p>
&#8220;We are not the sole owners of our past,&#8221; wrote Jordi Savall, music&#8217;s great and original spirit, in a note accompanying his marvelous appearance at Disney Hall last week. His concert, with his ensemble of singers and players upon lovely old instruments, was devoted to music from &#8220;Hesperia,&#8221; an ill-defined area between the Italian and Iberian peninsulas whose musical fascination lay in its having housed a number of diverse cultures &#8211; Arab and Jewish, for example &#8211; who were able to live in peace and thus develop fascinating, hybrid artistic existences. Out of this remarkable melange emerged, among notable figures, Christopher Columbus, who, for all his reputation as an opportunist in his dealings in commerce, was also a serious observer of culture who kept large and important notebooks. One notebook page cited by Savall, which I find particularly fascinating in its power to lie across certain notebook pages of my own, is a leaf from the writings of the Roman poet and politician Seneca &#8211; yes, the old guy whom Nero does in in <em>The Coronation of Poppea</em> &#8211; prophesying the existence of a New World, which Columbus obviously took to heart.
</p>
<p>
Savall&#8217;s researches, which resulted in a marvelously diverse program of music relevant to the world around Columbus&#8217; explorations, have always been more than mere concerts. With Hesperion &#8220;I, his own gathering of instruments, and the dedicated singing of his wife, Montserrat Figueras &#8211; whose voice seems to embody the spirits of the past even as its pure vocal elegance fades away &#8211; the serendipity of his concert programming always is <em>about</em> something. Even the impersonal setting of Disney Hall, with its austere electronic loudspeakers standing around, did not, this once, seem an intrusion. Something about Jordi Savall and his music making manages to conquer time. This recent program about Columbus-era music comes with a fat picture book: not inexpensive, but indispensable. The next project, glowingly reviewed in the latest <em>Gramophone</em>, is a book and a set of discs (on the group&#8217;s own Alia Vox label, handled in the U.S. by Harmonia Mundi) inspired by St. Francis Xavier and his excruciating journeys around Africa to India to bring about massive Christian conversions and the music that happened along the way.
</p>
<p>
nbsp;<strong>High C&#8217;s on the High Seas</strong>
</p>
<p>
It could be that Shakespeare&#8217;s Othello and his storied warriors were prowling other corners of the Mediterranean at about the same time as the Columbus gang; more important is that they showed up here last week more or less simultaneously with the Verdi version. Those of us with long memories cannot easily relinquish the L.A. Opera&#8217;s very first night, an <em>Otello</em> of 1986, with the curtain stuck on that most precipitous of all operatic openings. The new production was not thusly plagued; the curtain rose promptly, but on a curiously proportioned crowd scene, rocking back and forth on designer Johan Engels&#8217; curved stage floor, which became an authentic visual plague as the opera wore on. (Example: the Cyprus Court Scene in Act 3, with the Governor&#8217;s throne unsettled in center stage and again seeming to rock back and forth.) Two massive, square tunnel openings, leading to nowhere in particular, flanked the stage. Some ill-defined lighting upstage in Act 3 may, or may not, have served as a vista of distant skyscrapers.
</p>
<p>
Ian Storey, fresh from Britain, was also fresh and invigorated in the role of Otello; it took very few lines of opera, however, just the curled, jet-black tones of his address to Roderigo not far into Act 1, to recognize who was to own this performance: the venom-tinged, insidious Iago of the unmatchable Mark Delavan, in his long-overdue local debut and in his effortless full embodiment of operatic evil at its unfurled fullness. Soprano Cristina Gallardo-Domas, the scheduled Desdemona, fell ill two days before opening curtain; the way these things work in the contemporary, well-oiled operatic machine, the Met was able to spring Russian soprano Elena Evseeva, a well-practiced Desdemona, just in time and then some. Barring no more than a glitch or two, Mme. Evseeva fulfilled her duty and perhaps a bit more.
</p>
<p>
To add to the weekend&#8217;s exhilaration, <em>Falstaff</em>, the other masterwork of Verdi&#8217;s ripest genius, was triumphantly and delightfully mounted by the newly reconstituted Opera UCLA, not at cavernous Royce Hall but sensibly at Schoenberg. Peter Kazaras was the stage director; Neal Stulberg led the exuberant orchestra; the Falstaff, Jeffrey Madison from the University of Minnesota, was singing the role for the first time in his life. O brave new world, and then some!
</p>
<p>
nbsp;<strong>Partial Recovery</strong>
</p>
<p>
It would be unfair to measure the success of James Conlon and the L.A. Opera&#8217;s &#8220;Recovered Voices&#8221; program on the measure of masterpieces restored from obscurity. The good work of the program should rest, I think, on a leveling of the field by filling in a repertory undeservedly lost through political elimination, whereupon these restored works would then gain or lose their place on the basis of quality. On this level, I would suggest that half of the double bill restored to circulation at the L.A. Opera this week was eminently deserving of the superb production (including Conlon&#8217;s musical leadership and the work of a superb cast) and half was not.
</p>
<p>
The deserving short opera was Alexander Zemlinsky&#8217;s <em>Der Zwerg</em> (<em>The Dwarf</em>), which already has had some circulation in Europe but not in the Western U.S. Based on Oscar Wilde&#8217;s &#8220;<em>Birthday of the Infanta</em>,&#8221; a taut, ironic, actually rather vicious and therefore delightful short story, it has been given a gorgeous setting here, worthy of the Velasquez painting that inspired it, a perfect gem of a production by Darko Tresnjak on a stage set up by Ralph Funicello and Linda Cho.
</p>
<p>
Sharing the evening is Victor Ullmann&#8217;s <em>The Broken Jug</em>, another work &#8211; along with his <em>Emperor From Atlantis</em> &#8211; riding the deserved fame of its composer&#8217;s concentration-camp history, but in need by now of facing the reality that life in a concentration camp does not automatically bestow the halo of genius.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Some Enchanted&#160;Evenings</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2008/02/some-enchanted-evenings/</link>
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		<pubDate>Wed, 13 Feb 2008 17:05:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[Gustav Mahler&#8217;s Sixth Symphony is the elephant in the parlor, bedecked with garlands of roses. Its every dimension is wrong. From within the 85 minutes of Christoph Eschenbach&#8217;s performance with the Philharmonic last weekend, any composition student with an X-Acto knife could shape a nicely proportioned 40-minute symphony. Yet that is part of its singular [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>
<strong>Gustav Mahler&#8217;s Sixth Symphony</strong> is the elephant in the parlor, bedecked with garlands of roses. Its every dimension is wrong. From within the 85 minutes of Christoph Eschenbach&#8217;s performance with the Philharmonic last weekend, any composition student with an X-Acto knife could shape a nicely proportioned 40-minute symphony. Yet that is part of its singular charm. Midway through the first movement, you nod off in self-defense as Mahler&#8217;s irritating dissertation on life&#8217;s myriad agonies grinds on and on; you awake, aware of being bathed in a warm, winning, lightly orchestrated cynical smile. (Mr. Eschenbach compounded the agony by observing the optional first-movement repeat.) You drop off again, only to emerge into angelic, soft music as enchanting as anything you&#8217;ve ever heard in your lifetime. Then comes the lurid and brutal finale, which pins you to your seat with the sheer, gruesome intensity of its volume. The music &#8211; if such it be &#8211; zooms past logical ending after logical ending. Someone &#8211; percussionist Perry Dreiman &#8211; comes onstage to wield a mighty hammer against a large hollow box, as if a next-door neighbor might be banging against a wall in justifiable complaint.
</p>
<p>
I have to marvel: Little more than a week after the Flying Dutchmen from the Concertgebouw held me spellbound with the Mahler Fifth, music toward which I have been known to express strong reservations, here comes the even-more-oft-despised Sixth, and once again I have succumbed. This time, Mr. Eschenbach was the triumphant warrior in the cause. He allowed no such sissy paraphernalia as a score in front of him on a podium. He attacked the music with flailing fists and flashing glare &#8211; if you&#8217;re my age, you had to be reminded of Dimitri Mitropoulos, similarly bald of pate &#8211; and drew from our Philharmonic sounds hard-edged and nicely defined. He came here preceded by stories of not getting along in Philadelphia, where he served that city&#8217;s orchestra as music director for a time. Tough.
</p>
<p>
The Sixth is not easy music; it stands in for Mahler at a time of personal tragedy. You have to be prepared, as with any member of <em>species mastodoni</em>, for the precipitous stop, the sudden wounded outcry. The range of emotion in the work is astonishing; this, especially in the last movement, is part of its weakness. The moods swing back and forth toward what you think may be a final definitive statement, but then we are tumbled back into the swirl. The thwacks with a large hammer &#8211; Fate exerting its blows against the Protagonist &#8211; give the work its fame, with percussionist Dreiman exiting and entering to manage some offstage effects as well as the biz with his oversize croquet mallet onstage. (Mahler&#8217;s original score called for three hammer blows, including one that fells the Protagonist to end the entire work. The later edition, which is now commonly used, calls for only two, presumably to allow the poor guy another chance at Life. Also &#8211; I might as well tell you, since nobody has sworn me to secrecy &#8211; several Philharmonic folk slipped word to me that they feel that the hammer was too small. Talk about your misguided economies!)
</p>
<p>
nbsp;<strong>Thinking Smaller but Big</strong>
</p>
<p>
Midway in the slow movement of Mozart&#8217;s B-flat Piano Concerto (Kochel-Katalog 595, the last of the 27 concertos that bear Mozart&#8217;s name), the music subsides to a near nothingness. The orchestra maintains a steady, throbbing harmony, nothing more than a backdrop for a one-finger melody for the pianist &#8211; a kind of operatic aria, except without words. Mozart&#8217;s mature piano concertos are full of these moments of enchantment &#8211; check out K. 466, 467, 488, and prepare to swoon. Each of these moments becomes like a wordless stand-in for one of his great operatic characters: Susanna or Cherubino probably most of all. What great and constant companions they all become, even through a pianist&#8217;s single finger!
</p>
<p>
Last Sunday at UCLA&#8217;s Royce Hall, there ended a great and memorable undertaking, Jeffrey Kahane&#8217;s complete traversal of all 27 of Mozart&#8217;s works in this genre: early, delightful, clattering works with the keyboard and the small orchestra doing not much more than imitating one another in exchange of neat 18th-century tuneful patterns, moving through a miraculously short lifetime toward the late works, in which soloist and orchestra fall to profound discussions for which no words could suffice. Who could find, or need, the words for the one-finger interlude in K. 595? Or that giddy, syncopated episode that skips through the many tonalities in the finale? Or the marvelous comic-opera finale to K. 466, also on last Sunday&#8217;s program? Or, further back in our concert-going history, the deep melancholy in the slow movements of K. 482 and 488, and the miraculous way they resolve &#8211; sending shivers down our collective spines &#8211; in just the last few measures? Does anything in any of those Brobdingnagian Mahler symphonies match the brain-cleansing impact of those extraordinary works of musical conversation, none longer than half an hour, none requiring more than pairs of woodwinds and a couple of timpani? Fortunately, Mahler knew enough not to try.
</p>
<p>
This was the last of Kahane&#8217;s concerts in this series, conducting from the keyboard the Los Angeles Chamber Orchestra, which he has brought to level of a richness, clarity and high spirits worthy to collaborate in a Mozart project. In three years of Mozart immersion, he, too, has become a deeper, wiser &#8211; and, vital for Mozart, wittier &#8211; exponent of all this matchless music. We are all much the better. The orchestra continues, in Glendale&#8217;s Alex Theatre and at UCLA&#8217;s Royce Hall. Under Kahane, it has become one of the area&#8217;s great treasures; his performances of Haydn symphonies are also noteworthy. Many of its programs are carried on KUSC; its fame, I gladly report, spreads even further than that.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Itzhak Perlman and Olivier Latry at Disney&#160;Hall</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2008/02/itzhak-perlman-and-olivier-latry-at-disney-hall/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2008/02/itzhak-perlman-and-olivier-latry-at-disney-hall/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 07 Feb 2008 00:55:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=673</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Dutch Treat I envy anyone his first look at Amsterdam. You step out of Central Station and there is the perfect urban landscape: old buildings in grand array, trolleys in front, everything numbered so that you know exactly where to go. Never mind that it&#8217;s raining or, at least, damp. That was my Amsterdam arrival, [...]]]></description>
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<strong>Dutch Treat</strong>
</p>
</div></div>
<p>
I envy anyone his first look at Amsterdam. You step out of Central Station and there is the perfect urban landscape: old buildings in grand array, trolleys in front, everything numbered so that you know exactly where to go. Never mind that it&#8217;s raining or, at least, damp. That was my Amsterdam arrival, two years ago, and the passion remains. The Concertgebouw, that stuffy, elegant home-away-from-home of a concert hall, all plush and velvet, is a short trolley ride away. Lord, I love that city, and the orchestra that is at home in that building.
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<p>
The Royal Concertgebouw Orchestra has been in Los Angeles before, in 1982 at Ambassador Auditorium of fond memory, where it sounded clean and bright in mostly classical programs under Bernard Haitink. At Disney, 1,000 seats larger, it played louder, darker music for Mariss Jansons &#8211; Brahms and Mahler &#8211; and everybody loved the rich, deep brass, so different from our own bright, sharply defined sound. (I love them both.) What I found particularly magical was the wind tone. Dutch clarinetists are known for a particularly forthright way of aiming their instruments high, so that a lot of sound comes out &#8211; almost like old jazzmen, one friend noted. Since the two programs included Brahms&#8217; Second Symphony, Strauss&#8217; <em>Don Juan</em> and the Mahler Fifth, there was plenty of chance to hear this particular wind quality. Whatever the case, it made for marvelously lively, in-your-face music making, especially valuable in the case of the Brahms, which does, after all, have its lugubrious passages. On the other hand, the performance of Debussy&#8217;s <em>La Mer</em> struck me as somewhat beached. Our guys do it better.
</p>
<p>
The Mahler got to me, most of all. You can, of course, link the Concertgebouw Orchestra all the way back to a tradition of Dutch Mahler performance that includes extreme tempo fluctuations &#8211; far more than are printed in the score &#8211; and considerable use of that weepy manner of string attack that is now smiled down on as indulgence. There may still be old-timers in the orchestra who played under Willem Mengelberg &#8211; who, after all, knew Mahler and conducted in Amsterdam until his banishment in 1945. Recordings exist, some good ones from the late &#8217;20s and early &#8217;30s with some knockout brass and wind playing, and some poor stuff elsewhere in the orchestra, that at least try to preserve the droopy sliding from note to note in the strings that so charmed your grandma. Janssons will have none of this affectation. He is a strong, straightforward leader with a musical beat to match. Like ours.
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<p>
nbsp;<br /><strong>His Cup Runneth Over, Also Cracketh</strong>
</p>
<p>
The current Philharmonic program book lists an impressive credential for the conducting career of Itzhak Perlman, to set beside his distinguished stature as one of the greatest of living violinists. His engagement under both hats at Disney Hall last weekend raised some interesting questions, however, concerning the gulf between the phenomenon of extracting any old loud and audience-pleasing sounds from an orchestra in a concert hall by waving a stick at it, thereby eliciting cheers and a standing ovation, and the subtler phenomenon of producing beautiful and balanced sounds relevant to the music under examination. I have unleashed many words of praise toward Mr. Perlman&#8217;s artistry during our many years within each other&#8217;s earshot, but I have seldom if ever heard our Philharmonic as ill-used as it was under his baton last Saturday night &#8211; the second of the three-concert run, please note, and therefore not to be condoned as a sight-reading session.
</p>
<p>
Bach&#8217;s E-major Violin Concerto began the evening on a high level, with Perlman in his familiar role as soloist, the concerto with the solemn, rhapsodic slow movement and the tricky finale that works out mathematically exact. But then the violin was put away, the baton brought out. Mozart&#8217;s &#8220;Haffner&#8221; Symphony ensued, with the orchestra oversize, the string tone coarse and outweighing the winds, allowing none of the airy, small-orchestra twinkle so important (and so lovely) in this music. The Brahms Fourth ended the evening, again with the crowd on its feet &#8211; cheering a great violinist&#8217;s illustrious career but surely not this one unfortunate excursion, with the strings harsh and the winds unbalanced with the texture of &#8230; well, of leftover Brahms. Perhaps even a night of Romantic French organ music, not my favorite noise, would sound good after this &#8230;<br />nbsp;
</p>
<p>
<strong>Brouhaha</strong>
</p>
<p>
And so it did, in the very same concert hall the next night. The first notes that Olivier Latry drew from the Disney Hall organ &#8211; an arresting fanfare introducing something or other by a certain Tournemire with just an acid touch in the harmony to identify it as French &#8211; nicely cleared all that Brahms from the air.
</p>
<p>
He began with an assortment of trivial pieces by the French Romantic organists I have deplored in this space more than once &#8211; Durufle, Alain, Langlais, that crowd; went on to one more-substantial piece of singular religious hysteria, Messiaen&#8217;s <em>L&#8217;Ascension</em>, and ended with an improvisation of his own that was by all odds the best thing on the program. Someone handed up a sheet of paper with an inscription: something, I gather, from a letter by Messiaen. After a moment&#8217;s pondering, Latry evolved a twisted theme from that inscription. It grew and grew, reached a climax in about 10 minutes&#8217; time, and came to a shapely and elegant, feathery ending. Church organists revel in this kind of trickery; this was one of the best I&#8217;ve heard, certainly better than anything on the printed program. Latry is titular organist at Notre Dame; that&#8217;s his instrument you hear groaning in that glorious edifice at noon every day &#8211; a job, he told the Disney crowd, he performs for glory and no money. I never did understand the economy of that country.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>In and Out of&#160;Church</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2008/01/in-and-out-of-church/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2008/01/in-and-out-of-church/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 31 Jan 2008 01:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=672</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Full ServiceThe crowd observed a moment of silence as Lorin Maazel brought his performing forces to a reverent ending in a darkened Disney Hall last week, then burst forth in high-decibel approval. As with Messiaen&#8217;s pictorial panorama the week before, and the urban masterworks of the preceding week, those who crave fare other than the [...]]]></description>
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<strong>Full Service</strong><br />The crowd observed a moment of silence as Lorin Maazel brought his performing forces to a reverent ending in a darkened Disney Hall last week, then burst forth in high-decibel approval. As with Messiaen&#8217;s pictorial panorama the week before, and the urban masterworks of the preceding week, those who crave fare other than the customary bread and butter on the Philharmonic programs have been uncommonly well-served lately.
</p>
<p>
This was the third time around in recent years for Benjamin Britten&#8217;s <em>War Requiem</em>: André Previn in 1991, Antonio Pappano in 2000, now Maazel. A bit much? I would trade any one of these for a performance with the groups properly spaced through the hall: the boys off in some loft to provide the celestial ceiling as two dead soldiers talk, in friendly terms, of their deaths. Nearly everybody at Disney last week was clumped together, with Lionel Bringuier&#8217;s chamber orchestra squeezed into the back of the principal orchestra and only the wonderful Nancy Gustafson given space (in the organ loft) to spread her angelic wings. Surely our gorgeous new concert hall must afford better use of space than that!
</p>
<p>
About the <em>War Requiem</em>: With all my fondness for Britten&#8217;s music &#8211; the exquisite strands of enchantment in his opera <em>A Midsummer Night&#8217;s Dream</em>, the haunting brutality of <em>Peter Grimes</em>, the small perfection in the chamber operas &#8211; there are works that just don&#8217;t make their way, and this is one. Yes, I am haunted &#8211; isn&#8217;t everybody? &#8211; by the one last line as his two soldiers meet in the Later On (&#8220;I am the enemy you killed, my friend &#8230;&#8221;) but not by the overpowering ironies that Britten attempted to winnow out of Wilfred Owen&#8217;s poetry. For once in all of Britten&#8217;s huge and admirable output, this is a work that keeps its distance. And since that is also pretty much my take on Maazel&#8217;s conducting, this time and on many previous encounters, it was not exactly my favorite week at the Philharmonic.
</p>
<p>
<strong>The Church at the End of Time</strong><br />As Paul on the road to Damascus, so am I on the high road of reconciliation to the music of Olivier Messiaen, and you&#8217;re just gonna hear about it for one more week. Amazement abounded in Santa Monica&#8217;s abundant rain last Saturday in the form, need I tell you, of the Jacaranda concerts&#8217; latest chapter in its multiyear Messiaen bash. First Pres was jammed; everybody was there except Mark Swed, who was in Oregon, where Peter Serkin&#8217;s Tashi, the first group ever to play the <em>Quartet for the End of Time</em> popularly in the real world, were having at it in an anniversary event. They couldn&#8217;t have played any better, with any more profound dedication, than Jacaranda&#8217;s folks.
</p>
<p>
Patrick Scott&#8217;s program notes for the quartet &#8211; detailing the prison-camp life out of which the music took shape, the early performance history, and the inner lights that cast their glow upon every aspect of the music itself and from the emboldened soul of its creator &#8211; constitute an enriching document. In themselves they demonstrate how this remarkable series stands apart from most other concert ventures: simply by maintaining this close identity between the music on each program and the genuine dedication and love of the people involved in it.
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<p>
There is no better way, of course, to present the music of this extraordinary work, this series of audible vignettes in which Messiaen lays before us his deep personal vision &#8211; &#8220;immaterial, spiritual, Catholic&#8221; &#8211; at the heart of the Apocalypse. Angels and birds intertwine in announcing the &#8220;End of Time&#8221; and the &#8220;Eternity of Jesus&#8221;; they further unite in praise to the &#8220;Eternity of Jesus, to &#8220;His Immortality.&#8221; These moments of praise are among the most poignant, the most painful, in their meaningful beauty, of all sections of the quartet&#8217;s eight movements. A solo for cello and piano (Timothy Loo and Gloria Cheng) transcended all in sheer radiance this time around.
</p>
<p>
Jacaranda&#8217;s program, the usual gatherum, began with organist Mark Hilt&#8217;s playing of Bach&#8217;s ever-popular D-minor Toccata and Fugue and went on to three movements only from Berg&#8217;s <em>Lyric Suite</em> followed by all of Ravel&#8217;s <em>Mother Goose Suite</em> for piano duet. The splendid Denali Quartet, Jacaranda&#8217;s resident ensemble, nicely dispatched the Berg movements, with Elissa Johnston to sing the Baudelaire verses that may or may not belong to the sixth movement; Gloria Cheng and Mark Alan Hilt played Ravel&#8217;s juvenilia like the grown-ups they are.
</p>
<p>
<strong>Or to Put It in Another Way</strong><br />My comment in this space last week &#8211; about cuts in Wagner operas &#8211; was inspired by common expectations that performances of these music dramas are normally curtailed, at least in American opera houses. Just before the recent <em>Tristan und Isolde</em> at the Music Center, I ran into David Hockney, the designer of the current splendid production, who told me with some wonderment that all cuts in the current production had now been restored. Whether such restorative service proves an out-and-out enhancement to such passages as, say, the first 17 minutes of the Act 2 duet, which consist of Tristan and Isolde tossing metaphors back and forth on the true meaning of love, <em>before they even get to sit down together</em>, I leave to you.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>In Living&#160;Color</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2008/01/in-living-color/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2008/01/in-living-color/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 23 Jan 2008 18:56:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=671</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[In 1973, the story goes, the wonderful, if eccentric, New York patron Alice B. Tully asked Olivier Messiaen to compose a piece for the American Bicentennial. Messiaen hesitated at first; the notion of celebrating American skyscrapers or the like did not appeal. Then Tully told him she had been invited to India, and one of [...]]]></description>
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<strong>In 1973, the story goes,</strong> the wonderful, if eccentric, New York patron Alice B. Tully asked Olivier Messiaen to compose a piece for the American Bicentennial. Messiaen hesitated at first; the notion of celebrating American skyscrapers or the like did not appeal. Then Tully told him she had been invited to India, and one of her adventures had been to shake the paw of a live lion. To accept money from a hand that had touched a lion&#8217;s paw, Messiaen could no longer resist. His plan for an American piece was to search out and extract the music in the &#8220;most beautiful&#8221; landscape in this entire country, and his eye and ear fell upon the canyons of Utah, especially Bryce and Zion. He then spent several weeks notating colors and birdsong in his familiar manner. That produced <em>From the Canyons to the Stars</em>, the lavish outpouring of personal ecstasy that burned bright during the 90 or so minutes of the &#8220;Green Umbrella&#8221; concert last week.
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<p><p>
I don&#8217;t know whether Esa-Pekka Salonen had planned the work as a pendant to the Philharmonic&#8217;s &#8220;Concrete Frequency&#8221; observation earlier this month; it was not so identified, and it was announced as a late addition &#8211; with the awesome virtuosity of the piano soloist, Marino Formenti, who had learned the score, with its cascading kazillions of notes, in less than three weeks. It certainly worked in that context, however. Salonen has recorded quite a lot of Messiaen&#8217;s music, including this work, but in Los Angeles he has kept that involvement somewhat under wraps. Perhaps (heh, heh) he was waiting for me to catch up, because that is what seems to have happened. I have struggled against the proclamations of eternal glorification in Messiaen&#8217;s grandiose scores for years. I heard the <em>Canyons</em> premiere (in New York&#8217;s Tully Hall, of course) and wrote a clunky review, in another paper, about the pianist&#8217;s (Yvonne Loriod, the composer&#8217;s wife) bright-orange gown being a nice match for a Utah sunset, and not much more. Tuesday night I began to hear what Messiaen is really all about, what he is trying to say and by what means he is saying it in this phenomenally multicolored, hugely expressive work.
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The mix is superbly achieved, by musical means in vast, exuberant quantities but poured out in controlled lines, about great archways shaped by heavenly forces and vast numbers of birds up close, so that they actually do make those brassy noises. He is our Handel, and his music shouts out the Hallelujahs for our times. We cannot sing along as we can with the other Handel, because Messiaen sings outside the lines, but that&#8217;s okay; interwoven with the flamboyance, there is an urge to believe, and that is the quality in Messiaen that finally reached me this past week. Those guys in Santa Monica with their &#8220;Jacaranda&#8221; concerts &#8211; there&#8217;s one this weekend &#8211; have always struck me as a little unhinged when they talk about planning year after year of odd and oddly titled works by this overly motivated Frenchman; after <em>Canyons</em>, I wanted to hug them both. Oh, and by the way, is anyone driving up to Bryce Canyon anytime soon?
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<p>
<strong>The Same Language</strong>Messiaen nourished his musical language on Wagner; throughout his teaching career, his class schedules listed lectures on <em>Tristan und Isolde</em>, and he would have been happy here this past weekend &#8211; with the irresistible surge  created by the local opera under James Conlon&#8217;s leadership and with the color scheme evoked by the sets devised by David Hockney, however faded in the 20 years since they were new. These are not necessarily evocative of your or my vision of a Wagnerian world, nor do they connect in any way with anyone else&#8217;s notion &#8211; not even Olivier Messiaen&#8217;s &#8211; of a particularly Wagnerian ecstasy. They are the world of a great and individual master of color, given a uniquely evocative musical drama to imagine into light and shape on a huge stage, with music by a composer he adores and aches to share with us. This matters more &#8211; <em>somewhat</em> more, anyhow &#8211; than questions of ordinary singers, banal staging, and an orchestra denied the weeks of rehearsal time that Wagner demanded and deserves. (It also matters more, although this is an argument for another day, than the ludicrous notion, practiced elsewhere in town, of breaking up and marketing this most continuous of all operas into three separate packages with someone else&#8217;s visualizations &#8211; including a nudie show.)
</p>
<p>
John Treleaven is the Tristan, I heard him in November in Munich; he&#8217;s on a DVD from Barcelona, and I&#8217;d swear I&#8217;ve heard him somewhere else: maybe Seattle, maybe here. (Ah, yes! The first &#8220;Tristan Project,&#8221; 2004!) In any case, you&#8217;d think that such a ubiquitous Tristan, born in Isolde&#8217;s Cornwall, would have something to offer, but no. I hear a dry, characterless tenor that hits most of the notes okay, but nothing more. No more of the ardent, defiant lover of acts 1 and 2; none of the drained, helpless shell of a hero at the end, whose penultimate &#8220;Ahhh, Isolde&#8230;&#8221; should drain every one of us. Linda Watson has a pretty voice, but she too discerns no heights and therefore rises to none. Her &#8220;Liebestod,&#8221; sung in a circle of green light, with the dead Tristan rising to hold her hand at the end, is just the latest in my lifetime of witnessing cute ways of solving a staging-biz problem better left alone. Thor Steingraber&#8217;s direction is mostly inoffensive, and I suppose it&#8217;s late in the game to note that the lovers sing of &#8220;hand in hand&#8221; while cavorting around half a stage apart.
</p>
<p>
The best of <em>Tristan</em>- and, indeed, of all Wagner &#8211; is, of course, the orchestra and its leadership, and in this regard the news continues great. Conlon is all over the place, to our great benefit. His orchestra continues slightly undersize and, by the standards of Wagner&#8217;s own demands, under-rehearsed, but he has gotten it to play at top capacity, and it sounded great on Saturday. Before all that, he was up in a public space, chatting up <em>Tristan</em> and Wagner in general until about 10 minutes before downbeat; he has an important article in the program, and more writing on his Web site. At the end he drew the biggest cheers, which was only right.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Not With a&#160;Whimper</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2008/01/not-with-a-whimper/</link>
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		<pubDate>Thu, 17 Jan 2008 01:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=670</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[It was good to hear Earl Kim&#8217;s music again; I knew him at Berkeley in the late &#8217;40s, when I had the job of working the Music Department&#8217;s only tape recorder and he was already composing deep, dark, moving songs, from which I learned much. Susan Narucki sang his Exercises en Route at the Monday [...]]]></description>
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<strong>It was good to hear </strong>Earl Kim&#8217;s music again; I knew him at Berkeley in the late &#8217;40s, when I had the job of working the Music Department&#8217;s only tape recorder and he was already composing deep, dark, moving songs, from which I learned much. Susan Narucki sang his <em>Exercises en Route</em> at the Monday Evening Concert (to begin with a bang what, you gotta admit, was a terrific week for us new-music folks). These are settings of long passages from Samuel Beckett &#8211; not so much poems as murky lights that suddenly come on beneath some of his pages. These are songs beyond wonderment; it is as if poet and musician, a continent apart and both in days not far from their last, seem &#8211; as Paul Griffiths suggests in an eloquent program note &#8211; &#8220;to have recognized a companion.&#8221;
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<p>
Anyway, it was time to hear Earl&#8217;s deep, dark, wonderfully intelligent songs; now it&#8217;s time for our orchestra to look at his Violin Concerto. It bears the curse of being written for a public virtuoso, Itzhak Perlman, but I remember it as being better than that. Narucki, whom I&#8217;ve been admiring for years and never get to write about, has blossomed into a strong-voiced, intelligent singer. Keep her around. This, I am delighted to keep on saying, was a beautifully planned and presented Monday Evening Concert, worthy of the tradition, and well attended, as it deserved. Let it also be noted that except for the visiting star singer, the performing forces were all local. Hurrah for us!!
</p>
<p>
<strong>Opera Irresistible</strong>I had been holding off on the new entertainment in town, the live-opera telecasts from the Metropolitan Opera in HD-Television in movie theaters. I had my reasons: 10 a.m. is no proper time for opera-going; I have my DVDs at home and a decent flat screen, blah blah. Saturday morning, I let myself be taken by a friend to Verdi&#8217;s <em>Macbeth</em> at a theater nearby, and wow! I&#8217;ll admit we had extra-good seats; Lady Macbeth (Maria Guleghina) went bonkers practically in my lap. But there is the technology for a damned exciting and serious musical experience, and what I saw this first time was an exciting production of an opera I had almost forgotten about, on an amazingly clear screen.
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<p>
What I missed, especially in this work, was someone on the screen handing out information about, say, Verdi&#8217;s two versions of <em>Macbeth</em> and how this one was drawn from some of each. Some of the chat during pauses and at the intermission was cued to an operaphile&#8217;s lowest intelligence. (By the same token, I would need to know about next week&#8217;s <em>Tristan und Isolde</em> here at the Music Center, in which there will inevitably be cuts, as always in Wagner. Where? By how much?) As opera becomes the latest show at your neighborhood 12-plex, where it looks and sounds terrific, something of that noble caring, I fear, will be lost. Am I the only one to care?
</p>
<p>
<strong>Brave New Trash</strong>The &#8220;Concrete Frequency&#8221; concerts, at least the &#8220;classical&#8221; programs &#8211; and how that term has endured a beating this past week! &#8211; ended with a bang with two brain-rattling programs, each repeated, over four days, admirably stocked with works that defy easy description, to you or even to myself. Let me try.
</p>
<p>
Luciano Berio&#8217;s <em>Sequenza</em> for solo trumpet (Gabriele Cassone) welled up out of darkness to begin the first of these concerts &#8211; a reminder, I suppose, of the days when it was safe to make solo music on city streets. That reminder was reinforced by a segue into the marvels of Charles Ives&#8217; <em>Central Park in the Dark</em>, a full panorama of what that magical space afforded, circa 1906. (A low bow here also to preconcert lecturer Robert Fink, whose presentation of this piece was especially vivid.) There were those who found reason to exult over Morton Feldman&#8217;s exasperating, little <em>Turfan Fragments</em>; I was not of their number.
</p>
<p>
The three dots at both ends of Pierre Boulez&#8217;s <em>&#8230;explosante-fixe&#8230;</em>, which began the next program, already signify that the work, like so many of his, is or was a cumulative work, compiled from an initial impulse dating back to 1971, the time of Igor Stravinsky&#8217;s death, with other musical motives later added, inspired by the deaths of others and so on. This has been Boulez&#8217;s way, and along that way he has produced music of exceptional beauty (if, at times, staggering complexity). That, it seems to me, is what you really need to know about a work like this. Three solo flutists front the orchestra and combine their playing into an insistent musical motto. They are backed by an ensemble of mostly winds and brass, just a couple of strings, and Emmanuelle Ophele&#8217;s MIDI flute, in a 37-minute dense and fascinating conversation. At the end, the texture thins out; we begin to hear the sounds of a small wind ensemble such as Mozart might recognize. Then the winds hold a single note, an E flat. That, in European terminology, is the note &#8220;Es,&#8221; or the letter &#8220;S&#8221; for &#8220;Stravinsky,&#8221; and we come out aware that we have been guided, masterfully and beautifully, by the Philharmonic under David Robertson, conductor visiting and valuable, toward that goal.
</p>
<p>
Came intermission; a screen dropped down, and many more players joined the orchestra. The last of all the works in this minifestival examining the relation of music and city &#8211; a gloriously cynical choice, so don&#8217;t think about it &#8211; was the collaboration of filmmaker Bill Morrison and composer Michael Gordon in <em>Dystopia</em>, a musical film about urban trash, brand-new and commissioned by the Philharmonic. In <em>Decasia</em>, their previous work (available on DVD), these guys created a lyrical, spooky rhapsody out of visual fragments of ancient, decayed film. Their source this time, for <em>Dystopia</em>, is real action stuff, of trash under treatment in various Los Angeles yareds: on moving belts as workers salvage usable items, in great truckloads of construction debris being dumped into oblivion. Again their visual material has been cut to a great tingler of a score that, somehow, comes across as the finest musical recapturing of a trash truck in action that ever was. <em>Ever</em>.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>A Rocky&#160;Landscape</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2008/01/a-rocky-landscape/</link>
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		<pubDate>Thu, 10 Jan 2008 01:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=669</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[The Cat House Afire Edgard Varèse arrived in New York in 1915, age 32. His journey from his native Burgundy had taken in most of Europe&#8217;s cultural capitals, where his scores had been played, admired, and many lost in a couple of fires. He had attended the notorious premiere of Stravinsky&#8217;s Rite of Spring, as [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>The Cat House Afire</p>
<p>Edgard Varèse arrived in New York in 1915, age 32. His journey from his native Burgundy had taken in most of Europe&#8217;s cultural capitals, where his scores had been played, admired, and many lost in a couple of fires. He had attended the notorious premiere of Stravinsky&#8217;s <i>Rite of Spring</i>, as would become obvious in some of his own music, notably <i>Amériques</i>, his first major work composed in what would become his home territory for the rest of his life. That work begins with a shameless rip-off &#8211; the first of many &#8211; of the Stravinsky shocker that New Yorkers had not yet heard in its pristine form. It soon becomes overlaid with a hammering, perhaps of workmen building a New York skyscraper: perfect music to cap the inaugural concert in the Philharmonic&#8217;s &#8220;Concrete Frequency&#8221; series last weekend, the latest admirable attempt by the orchestra&#8217;s programming management to draw a message from the concert-going experience, that these splendid concerts fit together to form a meaningful series.</p>
<p>The matter at hand is the city, and its impact on the lives and the culture of people who live in cities. And so we find Monsieur Varèse transported to his adopted land, at the beginning of an era in American history when great buildings rose in the cities, and American audiences also began to become aware of their own cultural importance, not just a veneer imported from European sources. <i>Amériques</i> &#8211; huge and scary, often reckoned the loudest symphonic score ever written, took a while to find its champion, but did so in 1926 in the person of Leopold Stokowski, whose performance awakened a chorus of New York critics with terms such as &#8220;boiler factory&#8221; and &#8220;a fire in a cat dormitory.&#8221; Its scoring was well-respected in David Robertson&#8217;s eloquent &#8211; yes, <i>eloquent</i> &#8211; Philharmonic performance in the matter of doubled brass, sirens of various tonalities and the exotic noisemaker known as the lion&#8217;s roar. There are passages when those sirens get going &#8211; softly, menacingly &#8211; when your skin really gets to crawl. And there are others where you&#8217;re sure the young composer had spent his formative years bathing in <i>The Rite</i> &#8211; specifically, that passage as the Old Sage makes his entry near the end of Part 1, where you always wished the music would never stop and this time it doesn&#8217;t.</p>
<p>Robertson, Santa Monica-born, whose current conductorship at the St. Louis Symphony has enlivened that city in the matter of energetic, new-music programming beyond anyone&#8217;s expectations, conducts two more programs in this beautifully planned series, not easily defined but all having to do with people and cities (with nothing on the programs as easily defined as <i>An American in Paris</i>). A splendid, witty host at both microphone and baton, he had a lot to say about the music on hand, and how it served the occasionally tricky program theme.</p>
<p>That included the opening work, <i>The City</i>, Pare Lorentz&#8217;s half-hour film for the 1939 World&#8217;s Fair, touting the small square house up the next block of square suburbia, with equally small square folks and their neighbors &#8211; the Americana dream of the time, now a relic with Aaron Copland&#8217;s music a sometimes-sardonic comment. A print of the film was shown in splendid, surviving black and white; the music, in similar coloration, was played live and in sync: all of it just swell. Would not Copland&#8217;s <i>Quiet City</i>, even without (but better with) its Jerome Robbins choreography, have served a better programmatic and musical purpose?</p>
<p>And then there was Frank Zappa, whose music earns space on distinguished programs through his avowed nonconnection with Varèse, consisting of one phone call to his wife, set forth in ecstatic Jabberwocky in a famous article &#8211; practically a credo &#8211; in a 1971 <i>Stereo Review</i> easily downloadable. &#8220;I never got to meet Mr. Varèse,&#8221; he proclaimed, on the strength of which I have seen him barge into Varèse concerts, memorials and symposiums and claim podium space, mouthing vitriol and potty-talk, offering music to match. (I never got to meet Mr. Beethoven; surely there must be some career mileage for me too.)</p>
<p>Zappa&#8217;s spot on the Philharmonic&#8217;s cityscape was <i>Dupree&#8217;s Paradise</i>: the name from a bar in South L.A., the music &#8211; seven minutes&#8217; worth &#8211; from not much of anywhere. A jittery rhythmic motive wound its way through other short fragments for a few inconclusive moments and was soon gone. The program listed an impressive gathering of winds, brass and percussion, not many of which actually showed.</p>
<p>Far more remarkable, if less noted in audience response, was George Crumb&#8217;s 17-minute soundscape <i>A Haunted Landscape</i>, music by a composer once greatly admired who keeps dropping out of sight these days. Bartók is somewhat the influence, those nocturnal pieces where single, mysterious instrumental intrusions ruffle a dark, sustained sound surface. Crumb has written wonderful music in this genre, and this work of 1984, an enthralling lingering at the edge of silence, is music worth restoring to our active presence. So is its composer.</p>
<p>Mozart as Torture</p>
<p>Never in this lifetime did I expect to commit those words to paper in that order, but there they are. On New Year&#8217;s Day at 12:01 a.m., I joined what must have been several thousands, phoning in to begin their Medicare prescription plan for the new year and get their new pills for zero copay. Rather than being connected to a clerk in Wichita or Bangladesh, I found myself in the arms of . . . Mozart: specifically, a hacked-up, tattered version of the &#8220;Kleine Nachtmusik&#8221; Serenade, which then segued to a similarly fragmented, bleeding chunk of the first movement of the &#8220;Hunt&#8221; Quartet (K. 458), the sequence then repeated, <i>and repeated</i>, on into the wee hours. Since any pill-popping Mozartian knows both these works by heart, the agony of hearing them thus butchered ad nauseam &#8211; interrupted only by assurances that &#8220;our associates are serving other customers in turn&#8221; &#8211; was bloodletting enough. During the 60 or so minutes that I waited on the line before just giving up, I endured the torture through some 50 repeats of these segues. Can anyone on this planet explain what purpose was better served by filling my tortured ear with these sewn-together scraps of Mozart than by playing the marvelous music whole? Two days later, by the way, I mustered the courage to try the call again, and it went straight through. </p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Onward! The Philharmonic&#039;s Concrete&#160;Frequency</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2008/01/onward-the-philharmonics-concrete-frequency/</link>
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		<pubDate>Wed, 02 Jan 2008 19:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[Starting From Here December wasn&#8217;t much; you get so many sing-alongs. One night, a young man of scholarly mien, Jonathan Biss, tried out his fingers, but not apparently his heart, on the Beethoven Fourth Piano Concerto at Disney. Afterward, he sat in front of me, and many people, rather rudely it seemed to me, crawled [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Starting From Here</p>
<p>December wasn&#8217;t much; you get so many sing-alongs. One night, a young man of scholarly mien, Jonathan Biss, tried out his fingers, but not apparently his heart, on the Beethoven Fourth Piano Concerto at Disney. Afterward, he sat in front of me, and many people, rather rudely it seemed to me, crawled all over both of us, to holler out words like &#8220;magnificent&#8221; and hand out discs for Mr. Biss to sign. What did people really experience that night, beyond a lot of fingers moving quickly over a keyboard? Will they crawl over the next pianist, more discs in hand, when the next set of fingers go clickety-clack? And, meanwhile, why doesn&#8217;t someone take Mr. Biss, who is good-looking and rather young, out of circulation for a while, to allow him some time to think about that magical moment when Beethoven yanks us from G major to B, and the others that ensue?</p>
<p>Anyway, it&#8217;s January, not December, that I wanted to talk about. The Philharmonic has a fascinating adventure called &#8220;Concrete Frequency,&#8221; which, like most clusters of demanding musical experiences that interlink in some inscrutable way meaningful only to the program instigators, will also demand some kind of symposium to explain its meaning to the outside world. Such a symposium will be made accessible, admission free, on January 5, and since Frank Gehry is one of the explainers, you can at least count on charm, if not on enlightenment.</p>
<p>The point, as I understand it so far (subject to change), will be to explore the links between the structures of cities, the structures in architecture and the structures in music. These, we all know, are fashioned out of many materials: steel, concrete and psychological. Disney Hall and its surrounding structures have shaped the urban psychology of this city no less profoundly than the Forum shaped Rome. It would be late for &#8220;Concrete Frequency&#8221; to rub our awareness in this; it will be fascinating to trace the way the consciousness of buildings has guided the pens of composers like Aaron Copland, Edgard Varèse, and Charles Ives, in whose <i>Central Park</i> piece a consciousness of the space between buildings has also worked its magic.</p>
<p>All this is crowded onto the January page of my wall calendar, barely leaving room for the rest of an uncommonly ambitious start for our musical life. Along with the Philharmonic&#8217;s five or six actual concerts in that series, there&#8217;s a related festival of classic films concerned with lives being shaped by big-city existence (as if there are any that aren&#8217;t!) &#8211; harrowing experiences like <i>Taxi Driver</i>, when you do actually feel the walls closing in. They&#8217;re at the ArcLight.</p>
<p>Then there&#8217;s the next Monday Evening Concert on the 7th, with the excellent, fearless singer Susan Narucki and our own local group XTET. Hail, too, the return, on January 19, of one of L.A. Opera&#8217;s most stunning productions, the David Hockney setting of Wagner&#8217;s <i>Tristan und Isolde</i>, created when Hockney had become intoxicated with the Chandler Pavilion&#8217;s new Lumilite lighting and worked out a blend of illumination and painted surface to create a visual hypnosis that nobody working at the house has achieved since that original 1987 production. John Treleaven and Linda Watson are the lovers; I heard them last month in Munich&#8217;s goofy production, and . . . hmm. But James Conlon conducts, and that&#8217;s hurrah.</p>
<p>Hurrah, too, for Olivier Messiaen, an easy step from <i>Tristan</i>&#8216;s flaming passions to the sunset glow of his Utah mountainscape, as <i>From the Canyons to the Stars</i> fills the January 15 &#8220;Green Umbrella&#8221; and the indefinable majesty of <i>Quartet for the End of Time</i> continues the &#8220;Jacaranda&#8221; concerts&#8217; homage at the month&#8217;s end.</p>
<p>And Ending Here</p>
<p>The inevitability, Esa-Pekka Salonen&#8217;s final season, &#8217;08-&#8217;09, as the Philharmonic&#8217;s music director &#8211; then continuing as friendly neighbor &#8211; has been planned as a gathering, in part, of the great musicians who have been close to him in his years here and before. That would include Kaija Saariaho, whose <i>La Passion de Simone</i> will surely, after several postponements, finally appear, with Dawn Upshaw as soloist. Guesswork would include on that list other musicians &#8211; composer Magnus Lindberg, cellist Anssi Karttunen, perhaps that marvelous chamber ensemble Toimii, which played a few years back at Ojai. We already know that Yefim Bronfman comes, in May, to play Salonen&#8217;s new Piano Concerto; the lucky ones among us have already gotten to hear its power, breadth and magnificence via one kind of download or another. And as for the final, ultimate, last of all (until the next time, at least): The heavy money so far seems to favor the Mahler Eighth . . . known, for good reason, as the &#8220;Symphony of a Thousand.&#8221;</p>
<p>One matter of celebration doesn&#8217;t exactly concern Salonen&#8217;s departure, but it surely involves some kind of departure in the ranks of high culture. Specifically, it involves <i>The Soloist</i>, a film by Joe Wright based on articles by Steve Lopez that ran in the <i>L.A. Times</i> in 2005, which if you didn&#8217;t read you should have. They told of Nathaniel Ayers, homeless, schizophrenic onetime expert player of many string instruments, whom Lopez befriended and eventually enabled to attend a Disney Hall rehearsal (of the Beethoven &#8220;Eroica,&#8221; no less!), meet Esa-Pekka Salonen, get his autograph and play his own cello in the hall. Jamie Foxx plays Nathaniel in the movie; Esa-Pekka plays himself.</p>
<p>Does this all sound, mayhap, as if the next continental shift will be from the sacred realm of the Music Center at First and Grand to the profane expanse of Hollywood and Vine? Consider this: The two opening offerings next September for the Los Angeles Opera season are as follows: Puccini&#8217;s <i>Il Trittico</i>, with the separate parts of the &#8220;triptych&#8221; staged by Hollywood directors William Friedkin and Woody Allen; and <i>The Fly</i>, U.S. premiere of the opera, music by film composer Howard Shore, libretto by David Henry Huang, directed by Hollywood&#8217;s David Cronenberg, conducted by Plácido Domingo.</p>
<p>Still to be decided: which major downtown culture palace gets the popcorn concession. </p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>The Year of&#160;Duda</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2007/12/the-year-of-duda/</link>
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		<pubDate>Wed, 26 Dec 2007 16:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[More Sharp Than Flat Long faces greeted the last new year. Record stores went broke; so did the manufacturers; so did symphony orchestras; so (sob!) did music critics. Long faces were soon replaced around here, however, with one that was round, cherubic and positively agleam, when Gustavo Dudamel came to town. He ascended the Disney [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>More Sharp Than Flat</p>
<p>Long faces greeted the last new year. Record stores went broke; so did the manufacturers; so did symphony orchestras; so (sob!) did music critics. Long faces were soon replaced around here, however, with one that was round, cherubic and positively agleam, when Gustavo Dudamel came to town. He ascended the Disney Hall podium on a January night and soon found the Philharmonic at his feet &#8211; and the rest of the town as well. Within weeks, the orchestra&#8217;s predator-in-chief, Deborah Borda, had snatched the legendarily talented 26-year-old Dudamel from the contract-dangling fingers of half a dozen other greedy American orchestras, and made him our own. The triumph of her move was set aglow later in the year, when Dudamel returned with his own hugely talented Venezuelan youth orchestra, and confirmed what he had already made abundantly clear: He&#8217;s good, and he&#8217;s ours. Starting in the fall of 2009, that is.</p>
<p>That all opened the good-news floodgates for the rest of 2007, or so it seems. Assembling memories of the year &#8211; in no particular order except as they come to me &#8211; I seem to find more happy talk than sad. You may notice that my list sometimes digresses from that of my colleague, Mr. Swed of Brand X. At least we remain friends; it sure wasn&#8217;t that way with his predecessor.</p>
<p>Mark includes the Los Angeles Opera&#8217;s <i>Mahagonny</i> on his &#8220;worst of&#8221; list. I place the DVD version, just out on Euro-Arts, near the top of my &#8220;best of&#8221; list. It&#8217;s the same performance, but the video producers have kept their cameras focused on the cast, perhaps a little too much on conductor James Conlon, but mostly away from the excessive Las Vegas-style neon lighting that filled, and let&#8217;s say cluttered, the stage. You&#8217;re brought much closer to the marvelous Audra McDonald and the almost-as-good Patty LuPone; I found the whole gang of <i>Mahagonny</i> thugs, even the lesser characters, more clearly outlined on the nearly empty stage &#8211; and so, indeed, the whole marvelous work &#8211; than in the two times I saw it live at the Music Center.</p>
<p>On other stages, there was the sweet tenderness of <i>A Flowering Tree</i>, brought from the Vienna original to a slight reduction in San Francisco, with Peter Sellars&#8217; working-around of an Asia-scented legend of lovers separated and rejoined, and music by John Adams. The very simplicity of dancing out the story was what drew tears; it was also wonderful how Adams, working with so many aspects of legend, could so easily locate their proper expressive levels. Something the same can be said, at a higher pitch, for the glorious fantasy that Korean composer Unsuk Chin has devised for her operatic <i>Alice in Wonderland</i>, which I journeyed twice to Munich to revel in. There, the staging was by Germany&#8217;s grandly fantastic stage wizard Achim Freyer, who is slated to deliver his version of the <i>Ring</i> to our own Wagner-deprived opera company someday soon.</p>
<p>Hearts of Darkness</p>
<p>Here at home, there was Leos Janácek&#8217;s stinging, painful domestic drama <i>Jenufa</i>, with Finland&#8217;s Karita Mattila making her long-overdue local debut, by far the most convincing evidence of the greatness potential within the L.A. Opera . . . a potential occasionally challenged by such gloomy matters as the ensuing <i>Don Giovanni</i>, with its sporadically splendid singing enclosed in a gloomy black box with coffins and similar gloomy paraphernalia lying all around.</p>
<p>Gloom and glory intermixed to greater effect in the Philharmonic&#8217;s two so-called festivals woven into the calendar: a Brahms series of symphonies and chamber music, with the eloquent Christoph von Dohnányi underlining the ponderous, old-world eloquence in all four symphonies and Esa-Pekka Salonen rustling the dead leaves to find the enduring strains of life in his Sibelius heritage &#8211; and finding it, paradoxically, in the least-approachable, darkest pages of the Fourth Symphony. I found new reasons to love this thorny, recalcitrant work, and even more reasons to forgive crusty old Uncle Brahms after rediscovering the enchantment in his Clarinet Quintet, which held me utterly in its spell on the Chamber Music night.</p>
<p>As easily as the collectible CD seemed to vanish from the marketplace, the few remaining new issues seem to wax all the more desirable. There&#8217;s Harmonia Mundi, France-based but giving off smiles and good hope from its local Pasadena HQ, continuing its superb and irreplaceable series of Mozart operas conducted by René Jacobs with a <i>Don Giovanni</i> throbbing with its intrinsic vitality. At another outpost, there&#8217;s the brave enterprise known as Innova, dedicated to new music, based among the frosts of Minnesota, and coming up with that performance of Steve Reich&#8217;s <i>Music for 18 Musicians</i> I wrote about recently, played with loving enthusiasm by a student group somewhere in Michigan and getting everything right. And then there&#8217;s a BBC disc to break everyone&#8217;s heart, the great mezzo-soprano Lorraine Hunt Lieberson, in a recital recorded in London&#8217;s Wigmore Hall in 1998, in the full flush of the rhapsodic artistry that death would end less than 10 years after. The disc includes songs by Peter Lieberson, Handel and Mahler; Roger Vignoles is the excellent pianist. In one Mahler song, there is the line &#8220;Ich bin gestorben . . .&#8221; Another mezzo dead before her time, Kathleen Ferrier, recorded that song in her prime with what I hear as the same foreknowledge. I keep their discs together on a shelf.</p>
<p>Those are my list, those and the extraordinary insights into music&#8217;s place in the world in Alex Ross&#8217; <i>The Rest Is Noise</i>. There are a couple more clinkers from 2007, if anyone cares. I haven&#8217;t yet recovered from Richard Strauss&#8217; <i>Domestic Symphony</i> at the Philharmonic last week, or the gall of Zubin Mehta, trying to pass it off as music. I was also no more enamored by the Philharmonic&#8217;s &#8220;<i>Tristan</i> Project&#8221; than I was the first time around, for reasons including Bill Viola&#8217;s videos, Peter Sellars&#8217; staging and the gall of peddling it as three tickets. The L.A. Opera is marketing it as a single ticket next month, with David Hockney&#8217;s sets. I heard both principals in Munich last month and they were okay. Just okay.</p>
<p>One more thing. I downloaded Esa-Pekka Salonen&#8217;s new Piano Concerto from the New York Philharmonic broadcast, so that it counts as a best-of-2007 event. It&#8217;s also scheduled here for May 29, so it also counts as a best-of-2008 event. Is it worth two listings? Boy-o-boy, is it ever! </p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Nagano: On the&#160;Road</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2007/12/nagano-on-the-road/</link>
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		<pubDate>Mon, 17 Dec 2007 22:01:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[Art Thou Not Kent? In Munich one week last month, Kent Nagano conducted three operas on that many nights. Unsuk Chin&#8217;s Alice in Wonderland in Achim Freyer&#8217;s staging was as delightful the second time around as when I&#8217;d seen it last summer. Tristan und Isolde began with Isolde on a modern yacht and ended with [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Art Thou Not Kent?</p>
<p>In Munich one week last month, Kent Nagano conducted three operas on that many nights. Unsuk Chin&#8217;s <i>Alice in Wonderland</i> in Achim Freyer&#8217;s staging was as delightful the second time around as when I&#8217;d seen it last summer. <i>Tristan und Isolde</i> began with Isolde on a modern yacht and ended with the lovers, alive and holding hands, witnessing their own deaths. In <i>Eugen Onegin</i>, the antagonists Onegin and Lenski arose for their duel from the same bed, and the Polonaise was danced by cowboys stripped nearly down to the altogether. Never have I heard a house erupt so vociferously in unanimous boos </p>
<p>Nagano looms large in Munich, and intercontinentally as well. His realm embraces much of the city&#8217;s orchestral life, as well as the superlative ensemble that fills the pit at the State Opera every night. He spoke with affection and amusement about a flourishing gathering called &#8220;Attacca,&#8221; whose members play regularly and seriously, but cling proudly to their amateur status, and play strictly for the experience of sharpening their perceptions so as to get more out of concertgoing. Nagano spoke with particular paternal pride of the Jünge Deutsche Philharmonie, the youth-orchestra model toward which all this current talk here at home &#8211; inspired in part by the recent visit of Gustavo Dudamel&#8217;s Simón Bolívar Youth Orchestra &#8211; is hopefully directed.</p>
<p>One immediate project has been to form an &#8220;Akademie&#8221; made up of a mix of Philharmonie members and young players from Nagano&#8217;s Berkeley Symphony, which he has led since 1978 and has always used as a kind of laboratory. A particular goal for the Akademie is to break through all the fuss about the necessity of using authentic &#8220;period&#8221; instruments in performing old music and seek ways of honoring the expressive values in Bach and his contemporaries with contemporary performance techniques on brand-new violins and flutes. Their first concert, in fact, took place this week in Berkeley, an exploration of Bach&#8217;s &#8220;Brandenburg&#8221; Concertos; the next &#8220;Akademie&#8221; in Berkeley is set for January 31.</p>
<p>More good news: Unsuk Chin&#8217;s Violin Concerto, which Nagano, his Berkeley Symphony and violinist Viviane Hagner introduced in the Bay Area a couple of years ago to great acclaim (including mine), will soon be recorded by ECM &#8211; same conductor and soloist &#8211; along with a new orchestral work by Chin that Nagano has commissioned.</p>
<p>The &#8220;Emperor&#8221; Unclad</p>
<p>During my visit to Munich, the new Jewish Culture Center was the scene of performances of <i>The Emperor of Atlantis</i>, the brief satirical opera composed by Viktor Ullmann in the Theresienstadt concentration camp, smuggled out by a friend after the composer&#8217;s death, now in worldwide circulation as a precious relic. The performance, co-sponsored by the Bavarian State Opera, was a further landmark in the warming of relations between the city&#8217;s Jewish community and the state-run culture machine, publicized, of course, up the bazooty. As was usually the case, the air at the performance &#8211; and later, the press &#8211; resounded with words like &#8220;masterpiece.&#8221; Many wept, as if the Wailing Wall had hove into view. One exception was the dour-faced critic of the <i>Süddeutsche Zeitung</i>, Egbert Tholl, who proclaimed, &#8220;Falsche Scheu,&#8221; in very large type: &#8220;False piety,&#8221; and I think it was about time these words appeared.</p>
<p>Ullmann was a respected composer, born in what is now the Czech Republic. At Ojai a couple of years ago, Marino Formenti played one of his big, impressive piano sonatas. His short opera <i>The Broken Jug</i> is scheduled for four performances by the L.A. Opera in February as part of music director James Conlon&#8217;s passion to restore Nazi-banned repertory. That work is a polished comedy by an accomplished young composer full of between-wars musical influences; its fate was that of any work by a Jewish composer after 1938. Ullmann was sent to Theresienstadt in 1942 and continued to compose, subject to the complications of his new restricted life.</p>
<p>The chamber and piano works from Ullmann&#8217;s camp days continue to show the eclectic eloquence of his prewar music, but <i>Atlantis</i> is a poor work, a pastiche of secondhand Hindemith and Weill. Its circulation since its Amsterdam premiere in 1975, the reactions it naturally stirs up around the facts of its existence, and the newsworthiness of its performances have indeed created this aura of false piety, through which the true qualities of Viktor Ullmann are ever more dimly visible. I cannot escape the impression of a work written in haste, perhaps even in desperation, drawing on familiar satirical clichés in a struggle to get the work out to the world as the clock ticks away. A creditable performance in Munich, under Bavarian State Opera auspices, on premises a stone&#8217;s throw from Mr. Hitler&#8217;s own favorite Gärtnerplatz-Theater, and with a college-age orchestra led by a smart director named Daniel Grossmann, still did not advance its cause.</p>
<p>On Other Shores</p>
<p>The cover photo for the San Francisco Opera&#8217;s <i>The Rake&#8217;s Progress</i> &#8211; the late James Dean in his convertible, nuzzling his horse (or <i>hoss</i>) out on the desert &#8211; led me to expect the worst, but that scene had apparently been dropped before I got to town. Aside from a delightfully tricky swimming pool devised by Cirque du Soleil director Robert Lepage, into which people seemed able to dive and then disappear, little went on that might have flapped the easily flappable Igor Stravinsky.</p>
<p>It was a lovely, straight performance under San Francisco&#8217;s soon-to-depart music director Donald Runnicles, sweetly sung by William Burden and Laura Aikin as the lovebirds, darkly done by James Morris as Nick Shadow, and carried to a hilarious turn by Denyce Graves as the bearded Baba the Turk. Carl Fillion&#8217;s stage set could not erase memories of David Hockney&#8217;s magical sets and costumes the last time around in San Francisco; nothing could. At least there was no horse.</p>
<p>Back home, I rack my brain and my far-flung gray cells to locate a memory of music uglier in overall sound, more exasperating in its inability to resolve its stated premise or reach its proposed point, more singularly inept in the mere housekeeping of its orchestral sounds such that inner orchestral voices become audible one from another, than the <i>Domestic Symphony</i> of Richard Strauss that befouled the air of Disney Hall last Thursday. Some of the fault may be laid to Zubin Mehta, who as usual approached the podium as though awakened from a bad dream, but I defy anyone, from Salonen on down, to turn that ghastly farrago into music. Following the Dvorák Cello Concerto, wondrously played by Johannes Moser, did not, of course, help. </p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Force&#160;Majeure</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2007/12/force-majeure/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2007/12/force-majeure/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 12 Dec 2007 19:18:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=665</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Spectral Delivery With a brassy blast onstage and an ethereal sigh from violas as if from another planet, the Monday Evening Concerts proclaimed their return in full force at Zipper Hall last week. Last year&#8217;s concerts had been a tentative set of &#8220;what if?&#8221; programs under guest curators, designed to see whether this basic and [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Spectral Delivery</p>
<p>With a brassy blast onstage and an ethereal sigh from violas as if from another planet, the Monday Evening Concerts proclaimed their return in full force at Zipper Hall last week. Last year&#8217;s concerts had been a tentative set of &#8220;what if?&#8221; programs under guest curators, designed to see whether this basic and essential venture in musical exploration could survive the shock of being rudely cut loose by its grossly misguided LACMA management. Now we know; last week&#8217;s was one of the great programs in Monday Evening Concerts annals: important music wisely chosen by a management firmly in place, performed by a nicely selected ensemble mix of local and international players. Of the three remaining programs in this season&#8217;s docket &#8211; the next on January 7 &#8211; the same may be said.</p>
<p>This one began with music by Romania&#8217;s Horatiu Radulescu, played by the Alsatian violist Vincent Royer, who in two extended works &#8211; one in partnership with our own Kazi Pitelka &#8211; took his instrument into mysterious, spectral realms while crowning those almost-silent areas with dark-toned, near-brutal melodic patches. &#8220;Spectral&#8221; is, in fact, the current term for this intensely inward music; it has many practitioners, including the late Gérard Grisey, whose works the Philharmonic has played. In his view of musical sound as a spiritual substance, Radulescu can also be seen as something of a disciple of the late Karlheinz Stockhausen &#8211; who died last week &#8211; although the task of cataloging the vastness of that German visionary&#8217;s influence on his several contemporary generations is likely to occupy decades.</p>
<p>So, of course, does the music of Igor Stravinsky, whose <i>In Memoriam Dylan Thomas</i> provided a brief oasis of almost-tonality. The Monday Evenings gave the work its premiere in 1954; I produced its radio premiere, simultaneously, at Berkeley&#8217;s KPFA. (Funny: There hasn&#8217;t been a day since, when I can&#8217;t hear old Edgar Jones singing on demand its five-note theme, yet I think of it as a melodically austere piece.)</p>
<p>Then came the music of Iannis Xenakis, another Romanian: first, the breathtaking solo percussion piece <i>Rebonds</i>, played by the astonishing Steven Schick; then <i>Eonta</i>, &#8220;chamber music&#8221; (it says here) for piano and five brass instruments. Two trumpets and three trombones have at the piano for some 20 exhilarating minutes. They play into the strings, aim their instruments upward to reverberate, against the ceiling and against the back wall, out into the crowd; they generally misbehave. The pianist &#8211; the phenomenal Eric Huebner, fearless, red-haired local-boy-making-good in the realms of new music &#8211; enters the fray with something like 20 fingers at the ready. The piece is an explosion of pure, nonstop energy. Xenakis wrote it for the Japanese virtuoso Yuji Takahashi. His sister Aki has also taken it over. That&#8217;s okay; there are notes enough for two.</p>
<p>With a Name Like Stucky . . .</p>
<p>The next night&#8217;s Green Umbrella concert was a long-overdue tribute to Steven Stucky, on the occasion of 20 years of his stewardship of the Philharmonic&#8217;s new-music programming (under several titles). I don&#8217;t know of another orchestra so handsomely endowed with the advisory services of a major musical figure so broad-minded in the quality of his musical outlook, so generous in the breadth of his involvement in the contemporary arts.</p>
<p>Stucky&#8217;s contributions to Tuesday&#8217;s program ran more or less backward: a piano quartet and the <i>Dialoghi</i> from the last couple of years at the start, the <i>Boston Fancies</i>, which go back to 1985, at the end. (Did I hear them then? And did I mishear them then as work by a glib conservative whom I could never befriend musically? How we have grown!) What I heard last week was the work of a skilled craftsman, master of musical expression through getting the right notes in the right places and &#8211; in the matter of the <i>Boston Fancies</i> in particular &#8211; leaving notes out when they weren&#8217;t required. These are spare, utterly charming pieces, for reasons I didn&#8217;t realize in 1985. The recent Piano Quartet is a big, eloquent piece. Its composer is a contemporary master, whose presence does us proud.</p>
<p>There was other music on the program, by Stucky associates: James Matheson&#8217;s <i>Songs of Desire, Love and Loss</i>, which, I deeply regret to say, I&#8217;ve completely forgotten after one hearing, and Susan Botti&#8217;s setting of Lewis Carroll&#8217;s &#8220;Jabberwocky,&#8221; which, I confess with equal regret, I remember all too well. That&#8217;s because her manner of song &#8211; composition and performance &#8211; closely resembles the upward-and-downward vocal pathways of Meredith Monk, which is a name that always makes me leave the room.</p>
<p>The Specters (cont.)</p>
<p>At Jacaranda on Sunday, there was more to be heard from spectral realms as this worthy concert series finally reached its goal for its multiyear plan, its celebration of the music of Olivier Messiaen. The landing was soft: a gathering of pieces from Messiaen&#8217;s tender years, packed with pretty ideas but hardly the substance of the visionary elder master and his explorations into the insubstantial &#8211; yes, spectral &#8211; world he would later explore so eloquently. Still, there was a lovely, warm-hearted <i>Vocalise</i> for cello and piano, and a couple of bird-in-landscape piano pieces from Messiaen&#8217;s 21st year that gave full notice of the scene painter of later years.</p>
<p>Some splendid programming of works from earlier pens &#8211; Liszt, Debussy, Ravel &#8211; gathered with the usual acumen of the Jacaranda guiding spirits, conditioned the audience&#8217;s ears for revelations to come. Steven Vanhauwaert (<i>van-ha-WARE</i>) was the pianist, a young man from Belgium who has carried off several local piano-competition prizes and played on Sunday afternoon as though he deserved them all. Timothy Loo, a Jacaranda founding spirit, was the excellent cellist in Debussy&#8217;s convoluted, quizzical Cello Sonata. The crowd at First Presbyterian was smaller than usual &#8211; the winds over Santa Monica blew chill that afternoon &#8211; but the brave were well-rewarded. </p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>La Bohème: Opera&#160;Everlasting</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2007/12/la-boheme-opera-everlasting/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2007/12/la-boheme-opera-everlasting/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 05 Dec 2007 19:56:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=664</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Small Perfection I like the L.A. Opera&#8217;s La Bohème, as I usually do. Hearing Puccini&#8217;s infinitely appealing score at Mrs. Chandler&#8217;s Pavilion the other night, in a generally excellent performance under Hartmut Haenchen, who had also led an okay Don Giovanni the night before, I found myself amazed once again (for perhaps the 500th time) [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><span style="font-weight: bold;">Small Perfection</span></p>
<p>I like the L.A. Opera&#8217;s <i>La Bohème</i>, as I usually do. Hearing Puccini&#8217;s infinitely appealing score at Mrs. Chandler&#8217;s Pavilion the other night, in a generally excellent performance under Hartmut Haenchen, who had also led an okay <i>Don Giovanni</i> the night before, I found myself amazed once again (for perhaps the 500th time) at what a sure piece of dramatic workmanship it all is. The cast is young and exuberant, and plays well to each other. I&#8217;ve always liked Herbert Ross&#8217; indoor-outdoor set, which looks like someplace where people actually live. I noted the anachronism &#8211; the half-finished Eiffel Tower in the background, which sets the date at around 1880, and Musetta&#8217;s fancy car in Act 2, from around 1930 &#8211; but I wasn&#8217;t in the mood to let such things bother me. I missed the scene from the third act, however, with the bicycles.</p>
<p>Alas, I awoke the next morning with a lousy cold, as I usually don&#8217;t, and wondered if something I&#8217;d previously written, among the dozens I&#8217;ve written about the opera, might hold my place this once. I think this one does:</p>
<p>What makes an opera work? If I were to guide a friend through the devious answers to that question, my final goal would be an understanding of the human interplay with Mozart&#8217;s music in <i>The Marriage of Figaro</i>, tempered with awe at the interaction of harmony and tragedy in Berg&#8217;s <i>Wozzeck</i>. There would be other major mileposts along our way &#8211; Verdi&#8217;s <i>Otello</i>, Wagner&#8217;s <i>Die Meistersinger</i> and parts of <i>The Ring</i>, Monteverdi&#8217;s <i>Orfeo</i>, Sondheim&#8217;s <i>Sweeney Todd</i>. We would start with <i>La Bohème</i>, and we would stay there for quite a while.</p>
<p>The very opening: It takes two brief musical phrases &#8211; Marcello&#8217;s music ill-tempered and choppy, Rodolfo&#8217;s response lyrical, soaring &#8211; and we know these two characters as well as they know each other. Later, Rodolfo&#8217;s graceful curve of a tune will recur during his first outpouring to Mimì (“<i>Che gelida manina&#8230;</i>”).</p>
<p>The guys plan their outing, to spend some new-found cash downstairs at the café. A melody winds its way softly through the orchestra, distinctive in its antique harmonies, which I had learned in Charles Cushing&#8217;s class at UC Berkeley <i>never</i> to use (parallel fifths! automatic D-minus!); it might be an old Christmas carol. The same tune, more joyous and aggressive, will usher in the festivities in Act 2. It will reappear, chill and bleak, at the start of Act 3, where it will transform into a haunting tone poem about a dismal corner of wintry Paris at daybreak. I love Puccini&#8217;s atmosphere pieces, usually at the start of operatic acts: the Roman daybreak in the last act of <i>Tosca</i>, life along the river at the start of <i>Il Tabarro</i>, dawn breaking over Nagasaki near the end of <i>Madama Butterfly</i>, even the offstage choruses resounding through the Chinese night in <i>Turandot</i>, leading up to “Nessun dorma.”</p>
<p><span style="font-weight: bold;">Aroma Therapy</span></p>
<p>Mimì knocks and enters; soft strings fill the room with her aroma. Her radiant, quiet tune becomes her first song to Rodolfo (“Mi chiamano Mimì”); it will identify her throughout the opera, will turn sad under her farewell in Act 3, and will shatter and drift away as her life ebbs at the end. Listen, in this first encounter, as she and Rodolfo move toward each other, shyly and with broken phrases, then a more substantial vocal line as their hands touch.</p>
<p>The second act of <i>La Bohème</i> is surely Puccini&#8217;s shortest: under 18 minutes in my favorite recording (not telling). It&#8217;s amazing how much takes place, with the interplay among the Bohemians down front, the biz with Musetta and her sugar daddy, the street kids and their balloons, the panorama of surging Paris life, including parading tin soldiers, on Christmas Eve. It&#8217;s all like cinematic writing before its time, and you can&#8217;t resist.</p>
<p>It&#8217;s easy enough to poke holes in Puccini&#8217;s art, and heaven knows that I&#8217;ve done my share. I saw the (2002) movie of <i>Tosca</i>, fell in love with Angela Gheorghiu in the title role, and still came home with the empty feeling of having wasted two hours on music that constantly must strain for its dramatic effect, whose harmonies curdle the senses with their drab insistence, whose characters derive no life from their music and remain cardboard even in moments of high passion. <i>La Bohème</i> is different; it teems with life, it reaches out in its youthful urgency and pulls you in. It survives restaging, as in the not-bad Baz Luhrmann updating. Its storyline outlives generation gaps, but its music retains its appeal even more fiercely. There is a moment in the last act, after the mortally ill Mimì is brought back to the garret to die, wherein if I&#8217;ve heard it 500 times I have wept real tears 500 times. The forgiveness scene at the end of <i>Figaro</i> also affects me that way, as does the moment in <i>Die Walkre</i> when the doors blow open and moonlight pours in; if this one masterpiece off Puccini&#8217;s workbench reaches me on that level, then Puccini can&#8217;t be all that bad.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>The Don&#039;s Early&#160;Might</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2007/11/the-dons-early-might/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2007/11/the-dons-early-might/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 28 Nov 2007 19:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=663</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Dirty Business Afoot &#8220;Don Giovanni,&#8221; the question ran, &#8220;is it the world&#8217;s greatest work of art, or merely Mozart&#8217;s greatest opera?&#8221; The late Winthrop Sargeant raised it, but left it dangling, in the old Life magazine in its juiciest days as pop-culture avatar. The Don Giovanni question &#8211; greatest vs. near-greatest &#8211; had already been [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Dirty Business Afoot</p>
<p>&#8220;<i>Don Giovanni</i>,&#8221; the question ran, &#8220;is it the world&#8217;s greatest work of art, or merely Mozart&#8217;s greatest opera?&#8221; The late Winthrop Sargeant raised it, but left it dangling, in the old <i>Life </i>magazine in its juiciest days as pop-culture avatar. The <i>Don Giovanni</i> question &#8211; greatest vs. near-greatest &#8211; had already been argued for more than a century, and continues to resonate &#8211; currently at the L.A. Opera &#8211; today and beyond. Whether calling for superlatives or not, and the current production certainly merits a couple, the opera came into the world unlike anything previously seen or heard on an operatic stage, and the strength of those differences remains awesome, 220 years later.</p>
<p>No opera before its time, and few since its time that come readily to mind, begins by holding its audience in relentless grasp over perhaps 20 minutes of continuous energy: the overture that breaks off for Leporello&#8217;s first music, which then is interrupted as the Don is pursued to midstage by Anna, then by the Commendatore&#8217;s intervention, the duel, the old man&#8217;s murder and the Don&#8217;s escape &#8211; all without stopping at a full cadence. It&#8217;s one of Mozart&#8217;s unparalleled methods for simply suspending our breath over extended time spans.</p>
<p>That is one of my favorite <i>Don Giovanni</i> moments, and it&#8217;s one that at least allows us time to follow its unfolding over several minutes. Another, in the second act, comes as a more sudden shock. Five of the characters, all of them angry at Giovanni for one reason or another, believe they have him cornered in a dark courtyard and are prepared to inflict five varieties of bodily harm upon their supposed captive. But that supposed victim turns out not to be Giovanni at all, only his schmuck of a servant, Leporello, disguised in his master&#8217;s cloak. The harmony has been sailing on in an agitated but steady C minor, but then Leporello reveals himself. The group onstage recoils in shocked surprise and, as the harmony reflects this in a sudden jolt downward from C to A flat, we too recoil. Mozart&#8217;s operas are full of these harmonic shocks, every one delicious in a different context. By Beethoven&#8217;s time, that kind of harmonic shock begins to appear in instrumental music as well &#8211; as early as the Opus 2 piano sonatas.</p>
<p>Anyone who really gets transfixed in the experience of a <i>Don Giovanni</i> performance is bound to end up disturbed. Our instincts lead us to expect a certain classical symmetry, overlain in Mozart&#8217;s case by a passion that shows itself in an amazing richness of harmony. In this opera, Mozart goes further. Music breaks off, leaving us in suspense. Another magnificent moment occurs when the wronged Elvira, who has apparently been trudging the streets of Seville bewailing her betrayal by the Don to anyone who will listen, comes upon Giovanni and Leporello while grinding out her torch song. Impolite to the last, the men break into her song, turning it into a freeform ensemble (and a magnificent one at that). The whole concept of operatic form moves forward at this moment; even Beethoven a generation later, who admired <i>Figaro</i> and <i>Così</i>, found <i>Don Giovanni</i> immoral.</p>
<p>Reruns</p>
<p>It is, which means that it maintains the crude power to inspire great performances. The first truly great complete operatic recording of <i>anything</i> came with a <i>Don Giovanni</i> performance at the 1936 Glyndebourne Festival, originally a schlep on 23 shellac discs, now still available &#8211; the last time I looked &#8211; on three CDs. Fritz Busch conducted, and the precision of his ensemble work remains untouched; John Brownlee was the suave Don, and Salvatore Baccaloni, before he became overly aware of himself as an Italian clown, was a beautifully antic Leporello. Ina Souez, who ended up running, and singing in, a gay bar in San Diego, was the incomparable Anna. After 70 years, the sound is amazingly clear; this set is to me the rock upon which any Mozart collection should be based.</p>
<p>But there have to be others. Of the three Mozart operas that Peter Sellars has monkeyed with and reset into contemporary landscapes, the <i>Don Giovanni</i>, relocated to New York&#8217;s East Harlem, with Lorraine Hunt&#8217;s Elvira to set your transistors afire and Eugene Perry punctuating the &#8220;Drinking Song&#8221; by hurling bottles against a brick wall, becomes an exact updating of the work&#8217;s pristine violence. At the other end, but comfortably in place, is Harmonia Mundi&#8217;s new recording under René Jacobs, wisely and beautifully sung throughout, the paradigm of Mozart performance in our time. Owning all three (especially with the Sellars on DVD) is no excess.</p>
<p>Director Mariusz Trelínski has located the opera somewhere on the edge of sanity, with little in the way of stage furniture &#8211; except for an open-sided coffin that rises and falls midstage and at the end divulges the moldering corpse of the Commendatore &#8211; hardly the &#8220;statua gentilissima&#8221; of Lorenzo da Ponte&#8217;s script. Boris Kudlicka&#8217;s stage is a large black box, pierced with openings for doors and windows, the black walls occasionally becoming mirrors to turn a handful of stage actors into a mob. There is gadgetry galore &#8211; a zany ballet to personify the &#8220;thousand and three&#8221; victims enumerated in Leporello&#8217;s &#8220;Catalog Aria,&#8221; a dancing forest around the Don&#8217;s latest hanky-panky. Giovanni works his oily seduction on the innocent Zerlina, while pushing her firmly onto a bed of garish crimson.</p>
<p>Costume designer Arkadius has decked out his principals &#8211; the heroines and their swains who occupy the Don during the course of the opera &#8211; in a consistent color scheme: paired yellows for the bumpkin lovers, formal black-and-green for the nobles, a rich, mournful blue for the jilted Elvira. The period is Mozart&#8217;s own, wildly exaggerated with the women&#8217;s gowns on panniers nearly as wide as the stage itself. The musical matters, under the excellent German conductor Hartmut Haenchen, accomplish much the same for the ear. Uruguay-born Erwin Schrott returns as Giovanni, lithe, insinuating, menacing with a voice of similar character. The women who bring about his downfall form a first-class ensemble: Alexandra Deshorties as the majestic if somewhat frazzled Anna, Maria Kanyova as an Elvira totally unhinged in the clash of love vs. hate. As the comic servant Leporello, Kyle Ketelsen delivers some expert and hilarious footwork, with singing to match. Stylistically, in fact, both servant and master seem adrift in a whole &#8216;nother opera &#8211; the one by Mozart. </p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>The Presence of the&#160;Past</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2007/11/the-presence-of-the-past/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2007/11/the-presence-of-the-past/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 21 Nov 2007 16:15:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[Those Were the Days As we waited for Alex Ross to show up to talk about his new book at the Los Angeles Central Library a couple of weeks ago, the hypnotic sounds of Steve Reich&#8217;s Music for 18 Musicians came over the PA system: one masterpiece filling in for another. Here is Ross on [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Those Were the Days</p>
<p>As we waited for Alex Ross to show up to talk about his new book at the Los Angeles Central Library a couple of weeks ago, the hypnotic sounds of Steve Reich&#8217;s <i>Music for 18 Musicians</i> came over the PA system: one masterpiece filling in for another. Here is Ross on that music: &#8220;The seeming stasis of the sound encourages the listener to zero in on seemingly inconsequential details, so that the smallest changes have the force of seismic shocks and something as simple as a bass line going down a half step sends chills up the spine.&#8221;</p>
<p>This is the writing of someone who knows how to listen, and the subtitle of Ross&#8217; <i>The Rest Is Noise</i> is &#8220;Listening to the Twentieth Century&#8221; (Farrar, Straus and Giroux, $30). That particular passage is the best explanation of listening to minimalism in its simplest manifestation that I have ever come across, by all means better than any I have ever attempted. (I must endeavor, difficult as it may be, to avoid a tone of jealousy here, so as not to undermine a friendship that began in 1992, in adjacent seats at the Met during an otherwise forgettable Philip Glass operatic premiere &#8211; music, by the way, that Ross more or less disowned in last week&#8217;s <i>New Yorker</i>.)</p>
<p>What Ross has done here, with wit and a grace of language that belie the expanse of his task, is to fold last century&#8217;s music &#8211; <i>all</i> of it: rock amp; roll, Webern, Ellington, <i>Salome</i> &#8211; into a tidily outlined social and political history. The range of his musical vision is his great enabling force; go to his blog, also called &#8220;The Rest Is Noise,&#8221; all one word, and summon up his huge and magnificent essay from 2004 &#8220;I Hate Classical Music&#8221; (subtitled &#8220;Listen to This&#8221;) and follow the evolution of this vision over years. It&#8217;s not classical music that he hates, by the way; it&#8217;s the need felt by those of pedantic turn of mind to isolate certain kinds of music as &#8220;classical&#8221; and other kinds of music as not.</p>
<p>Choosing a favorite episode would probably mean writing out the whole book, but some do linger. One is surely the best &#8211; and saddest &#8211; account to date of why there is no Sibelius Eighth Symphony, and why the aging composer&#8217;s musical pen was stilled for the last three decades of his life. Of all the critics outside of Finland who took up the Sibelius cause, none wrote more worshipfully, to the point of actual pestering, than <i>The New York Times</i>&#8216; Olin Downes. In letter after letter, cable and telephone call, Downes maintained a steady importuning to the bedeviled Sibelius on the matter of the Eighth Symphony. Downes even brought his mother into the act, a woman of some persuasive skill, who sent along an eloquent reminder that immortality could only befall composers of <i>Nine</i> Symphonies. In 1927, Downes actually journeyed to Finland in an attempt to exact that hoped-for Eighth Symphony and, of course, accord it a world premiere on American soil. The only result was to add to the old composer&#8217;s irritation. For another 15 years, the game went on: a promise, a postponement, another promise. Came World War II, with Finland joining the Nazi cause, and the game was suddenly over.</p>
<p>One other memorable vignette, also a study in decline but with softer lighting, is the Leonard Bernstein summation all critics attempt to write, with varying success. The last four pages of Ross&#8217; Lennie chapter succeed as well as any I&#8217;ve seen or tried: a concise rise-and-fall of the New York Philharmonic years, the Broadway years, the &#8220;stupefyingly powerful&#8221; Mahler advocacy, &#8220;freighting [the symphonies] with the themes he should or would have addressed in his own music if only he had the time or the energy or whatever it was that he ultimately lacked.&#8221; That&#8217;s what I&#8217;ve been trying to say, all these years.</p>
<p>18 and Counting</p>
<p>The town of Allendale, in western Michigan, is definitely &#8220;not on anyone&#8217;s touring schedule, except maybe John Deere,&#8221; says Bill Ryan, who heads the new-music ensemble at Grand Valley State University in Allendale. Last year, he and his ensemble were turned on by news that the world was celebrating the 70th birthday of Steve Reich; they decided to take part, and in no small way. The goal they decided upon was Reich&#8217;s formidable, hourlong <i>Music for 18 Musicians</i>, a work widely regarded as the masterpiece of &#8220;pure&#8221; minimalism (no argument here).</p>
<p>To say the least, Ryan&#8217;s ensemble was diverse, ranging from some students who had already memorized the score from the 1999 Reich CD to a few students who knew nothing of Reich or his music. &#8220;After a month of rehearsals,&#8221; says Ryan, &#8220;I began to realize that pulling off a good performance was not only possible but well within our grasp.&#8221; The next step was a pilgrimage, Ryan and five band members journeying to New York to attend the <a href="mailto:Reich@70">Reich@70</a> Festival at Carnegie, solicit coaching from some of Reich&#8217;s ensemble members and ask a blessing from the great man himself &#8211; all of which transpired. After a dizzying couple of days in New York, which some in the group had never seen, Ryan and his five returned to Grand Valley U., &#8220;exponentially enhanced.&#8221; The results are clearly audible in the sharp-edged, hugely energized playing on the Grand Valley State Music Ensemble&#8217;s new disc, on Innova, of <i>Music for 18</i>. Yes, they actually use 20, and somebody in the Reich band told them that that was okay. </p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Martha Argerich: Maximum&#160;Force</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2007/11/martha-argerich-maximum-force/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2007/11/martha-argerich-maximum-force/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 14 Nov 2007 19:58:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=661</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Worth the Wait Martha Argerich is a force of nature, pure and undiminished. Perhaps it&#8217;s true that she cancels out of many of her engagements; she has been ill a lot in recent years. But when she does appear, in the condition she was in last Thursday night at Disney Hall &#8211; boy oh boy, [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Worth the Wait</p>
<p>Martha Argerich is a force of nature, pure and undiminished. Perhaps it&#8217;s true that she cancels out of many of her engagements; she has been ill a lot in recent years. But when she does appear, in the condition she was in last Thursday night at Disney Hall &#8211; boy oh boy, does she perform! She drove through the Prokofiev Third Piano Concerto on all eight cylinders, leaving nothing by the roadside and turning that near masterpiece into a show of maximum strength and delight. I never knew the work, from Prokofiev&#8217;s flamboyant years in America, was that good, and I&#8217;ll never know again, unless I hear the EMI disc, which is also by Argerich and conducted by Charles Dutoit, as it was last week.</p>
<p>This was, incidentally, the next-to-last event in the Philharmonic&#8217;s Festival of Youth Orchestras, in which some of our local bands stood cheek by jowl, so to speak, with visitors from Venezuela and Finland &#8211; an unfair comparison, actually, since both those countries are miles ahead of ours in developing this kind of ensemble. They were here, if anything, to tell us to get a move on in this crucial area. There is already some good news on this front, however. The Philharmonic has sent advisers out to work as mentors for a three-year stint with eight local &#8220;partner&#8221; youth orchestras. Four of those local orchestras, furthermore, rang down the curtain on the current festival with a free concert at Disney Hall. This is the next step after symposiums, and it&#8217;s how things really have to start.</p>
<p>Thursday&#8217;s concert presented the UBS (Union Bank of Switzerland) Verbier (Switzerland&#8217;s festival in the town of that name) Orchestra, which was founded in 2000 by, among others, James Levine. (You knew immediately that some kind of bank or corporation was behind this, from the number of gents in suits, the number of areas in Disney roped off for private receptions, and the number of people applauding between movements.) Dutoit, Argerich&#8217;s former husband, was the congenial conductor for her sublime performance of the Prokofiev, for the Berlioz &#8220;Fantastic&#8221; Symphony and, as an encore, for Chabrier&#8217;s sure-fire <i>España Rapsodie</i>. Argerich on her own contributed one of those marvelous Scarlatti sonatas (in D minor) that are really takeoffs on a strummed guitar, and in which I swear she took every repeat twice (hurrah!). Then she played two parts of Schumann&#8217;s <i>Kinderszenen</i>, and we all held our breath that she&#8217;d play the whole set &#8211; but no. I don&#8217;t know anyone who plays Schumann better than Argerich.</p>
<p>Many people, however, conduct Berlioz better than Charles Dutoit. Many orchestras perform the &#8220;Fantastique&#8221; with greater suavity of tone. Dutoit&#8217;s reading of the &#8220;Fantastique&#8221; was speedy and loud, and Berlioz&#8217;s shepherds on their hilltops merely sounded like two oboists counting time, and his severed head failed to bounce.</p>
<p>Messianic Zeal</p>
<p>I missed the first of this season&#8217;s Jacaranda concerts through sheer stupidity &#8211; attending instead the Philip Glass opera in San Francisco. Last weekend&#8217;s concert held enough satisfaction for two events. The series&#8217; connoisseur programmers, Patrick Scott and Mark Alan Hilt, are engaged in a multiyear celebration around the 100th birthday (1908) of Olivier Messiaen in the broadest sense. This time, the program was all-Debussy, music by the composer furthest out of the ordinary world at his time and, therefore, closest in spirit to Messiaen&#8217;s. Later programs in 2007-08 will venture as far afield in search of Messaien influencers as Bach and Liszt, not to mention Tchaikovsky, Xenakis and Stockhausen.</p>
<p>The Debussy program included familiar treasures &#8211; the shimmering wonderment of the G-minor String Quartet, one of the earliest works, and the Violin Sonata, the very last &#8211; and some music less well-known. Outstanding among the latter were two sets of <i>Songs of Bilitis</i>, songs to poetry of Pierre Louÿs, lines to be sung with rapture, and wonderment, mostly, at the miracle of the female body &#8211; one set for singer and piano, another for reciter with flutes, harps and celesta rolling forth sounds one might expect to hear among heaven&#8217;s angels.</p>
<p>Over the years, Jacaranda has gathered a steady performers&#8217; group with its own nicely interlocking style. Chief among them is the Denali Quartet, founded by cellist Timothy Loo with violinists Sarah Thornblade and Joel Pargman and violist Alma Lisa Fernandez: a spirited ensemble that has braved the rigors of Ben Johnston&#8217;s just-intonation harmonies and the craggy rhythms of the totality of Revueltas in one sitting. Splendid pianists have come through the ranks, including ophthalmologist-turned-virtuoso Scott Dunn and Gloria, Mark and Vicki from the PianoSpheres roster.</p>
<p>It&#8217;s not too soon to talk about a &#8220;Jacaranda style.&#8221; It has to do with taste: the personal values of a couple of highly educated music lovers, which happen to interlock with a considerable audience who find common cause, don&#8217;t applaud between movements and welcome a reasonable alternative to the I-10 on a Saturday night. </p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>The New Guy: Gustavo&#160;Dudamel</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2007/11/the-new-guy-gustavo-dudamel/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2007/11/the-new-guy-gustavo-dudamel/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 08 Nov 2007 23:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[Strength in Numbers Chances are that the Philharmonic&#8217;s new music director, when he takes over the podium a couple of years from now, will not ask the orchestra to perform in patriotic jackets, nor will he ask the players to fling them out into the audience after the last encore. He is unlikely to demand [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Strength in Numbers</p>
<p>Chances are that the Philharmonic&#8217;s new music director, when he takes over the podium a couple of years from now, will not ask the orchestra to perform in patriotic jackets, nor will he ask the players to fling them out into the audience after the last encore. He is unlikely to demand that they twirl their instruments between solos, or toss them skyward at the slightest provocation. Yet these were some of the shenanigans in the final moments in the second of two concerts last week by the Simón Bolívar National Youth Orchestra of Venezuela and its &#8211; soon to be our &#8211; switched-on conductor, Gustavo Dudamel. With a capacity crowd in the hall tearing down the virtual goalposts and another onstage matching them cheer for cheer, you had to be there to experience the pandemonium. By any standard &#8211; social, political, musical &#8211; it was totally deserved.</p>
<p>There was a lot of talk about youth orchestras here last week. There was a symposium in which important people &#8211; the mayor, Philharmonic people, education people &#8211; spoke about the obvious benefits of full-fledged symphony-size orchestras as an extracurricular activity, moving on to forming serious ensembles, like the Bolívar and the Sibelius Academy that was here two weeks ago and the UBS Orchestra still to come, with players ages 18 to 24. We have such orchestras here, like the sleepy American Youth Symphony, whose free concerts at Royce Hall draw big, sleepy crowds; what we don&#8217;t have &#8211; yet &#8211; is a firecracker leader to inspire such an orchestra with a sense of its own importance, to its community, to its players. That will take a few more symposiums.</p>
<p>Here comes Dudamel, and the best news is that he&#8217;s real, a serious and dedicated musician who&#8217;s seized by the music he&#8217;s performing, and that he&#8217;s already a practiced hand in forming great and spirited young orchestras. His orchestra numbered something like 200, against our own Philharmonic&#8217;s 106. Just the sight of all those chairs on the empty stage was enough to turn you &#8211; or me, at least &#8211; dizzy. Dudamel led the big works on both programs &#8211; the Fifth symphonies of Beethoven and Mahler &#8211; from memory; okay, he&#8217;s recorded them both and is entitled to know them by heart. What&#8217;s important is the way both these works have come to live within him. The baton technique, mostly a forward thrust, is clear and not particularly graceful. His left-hand motions are more fascinating: also not graceful, not swooping, but with each finger delivering a separate message.</p>
<p>Of the two symphonies, I was more won over by the Mahler; I&#8217;d held off hearing the disc. Disney Hall offered no resistance to the mighty onslaught of 11 double basses, eight horns and similar bloated figures across the board. There was a fine, light humor in the pacing of the scherzo, and an even lighter touch in the folksy moments of the finale. The notorious &#8211; yet noble &#8211; <i>adagietto</i> was, to my taste, paced exactly right.</p>
<p>Beyond the inevitable wayward horn here and bassoon there, the Beethoven performance seemed to these ears somewhat waterlogged by the weight of it all. Even with the double-bass contingent whittled down to 10 &#8211; from the previous day&#8217;s 11 &#8211; I found the sound of four horns (for Beethoven&#8217;s two) and I-forget-how-many bassoons (for Beethoven&#8217;s most interesting scoring, his bassoon pairing) just a shade murky, no matter how excellent the performers and how spirited the splendid young conductor&#8217;s choice of tempos. But that crescendo out of the gloomy reaches of the scherzo, and the impact of the trumpets announcing the triumphant arrival at the golden frontier of C major, could not have been more thrilling. That&#8217;s why we need orchestras, and conductors, and Beethoven.</p>
<p>Olé</p>
<p>The ersatz conviviality of the Bernstein <i>West Side Story</i> dances had begun the first program (of two); now, following the Beethoven on the second, it was time to dig seriously into where these marvelous music people had gleaned their effervescence. Music by Mexico&#8217;s Arturo Márquez and José Pablo Moncayo and Argentina&#8217;s Alberto Ginastera &#8211; all throbbing with hot rhythms and that major/minor delicious uncertainty that colors the lifestyle south of the border &#8211; completed the printed part of the program. Then the lights went down for a few seconds; when they came up again, the whole orchestra sported the Venezuelan finery that I&#8217;m sure you all saw on YouTube.</p>
<p>Then who should show up but John Williams, to tone things down a peg with the <i>Star Wars</i> theme. (Surely, even he knows better music than that.) Then Gustavo &#8211; excuse me, Maestro Dudamel &#8211; got his podium back for three more numbers, including a replay of the Bernstein &#8220;Mambo&#8221; number from the night before, with the crowd getting happier and more insistent and the jacket biz . . . For all I know, they may still be there.</p>
<p>In the audience sat José Antonio Abreu, the distinguished gentleman who, with a group of musical advisers, dreamed up the National System of Youth Orchestras &#8211; known as El Sistema &#8211; that has now given Venezuela 130 youth orchestras comparable to Simón Bolívar, countless children&#8217;s orchestras and more than 30 adult orchestras, many of them peopled by children out of impoverished neighborhoods, given their instruments by the state. Put this together with the chorus that came up a few years ago to perform Golijov&#8217;s <i>St. Mark&#8217;s Passion</i> and you have a compelling picture of a national musical subsidy that needs a lot of study in this country. Perhaps more than symposiums, even. </p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Sibelius&#160;Unfound</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2007/10/sibelius-unfound/</link>
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		<pubDate>Wed, 31 Oct 2007 19:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=659</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[The Glorious Fourth The six blows of Thor&#8217;s hammer &#8211; the metaphor is Donald Tovey&#8217;s, not mine &#8211; resounded through Disney Hall on Friday night, and then we were done with Sibelius. Esa-Pekka Salonen had chosen the Fifth Symphony to end his three weeks of &#8220;Sibelius Unbound&#8221;: all seven symphonies, most of the tone poems, [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>The Glorious Fourth</p>
<p>The six blows of Thor&#8217;s hammer &#8211; the metaphor is Donald Tovey&#8217;s, not mine &#8211; resounded through Disney Hall on Friday night, and then we were done with Sibelius. Esa-Pekka Salonen had chosen the Fifth Symphony to end his three weeks of &#8220;Sibelius Unbound&#8221;: all seven symphonies, most of the tone poems, a single shard from the theatrical scores, not the violin concerto . . . I experienced no epiphanies, unless you count the Sixth Symphony, which I had never heard before in live performance, and the Third, which I still haven&#8217;t heard live, having made the unwise decision to journey to San Francisco for Philip Glass&#8217; new opera, about which more later. (I atoned by finally unwrapping my disc of that symphony, and wishing that I hadn&#8217;t. What a weak work!)</p>
<p>It&#8217;s easier for me to write about music close to my heart than it is the music I deplore. I came to these concerts in the firm belief that if anyone could turn around my long-standing dislike of these symphonies, it would be Salonen and our orchestra, with the magnificent clarity of their playing in that hall and with Salonen&#8217;s own newly acquired eagerness to plead the cause of his musical patrimony. (In our first interview here, he was all for dismissing the Sibelius heritage as an albatross.)</p>
<p>Instead, I heard the grand, rolling tune in the finale of the Second Symphony, almost a second national anthem after <i>Finlandia</i>, obscured through the buzz of strings. I heard the Sixth and Seventh Symphonies as almost nothing but buzz, with, in the Sixth, its maddening capriciousness in chopping off a promising idea, or even a whole movement, where logic might ordain a proper continuation. The Philharmonic&#8217;s program notes dub this work the &#8220;Cinderella&#8221; of the symphonies; might not &#8220;Rumpelstilskin&#8221; be more appropriate?</p>
<p>Then there is the Fourth Symphony, lean and hungry. I suppose it is some kind of perversion to find this the most satisfactory work of the seven, but hear me out. First, it <i>sounds</i> the best; its relatively spare orchestration allows everything to be heard, loud and clear. That &#8220;everything,&#8221; furthermore, I find exceptionally attractive, stirring in a way that I don&#8217;t often find in Sibelius. One of many instances is that magnificent brass tune that bursts out, after a long accumulative process, to cap the slow movement, followed immediately by wisps of melody that quickly come together as the theme of the finale. On my critics&#8217; bookshelf, I find little writing about the Fourth Symphony, but I like this, from Constant Lambert: &#8220;The work as a whole is notable for its intensity of mood, its grim austerity of color and its elliptical compactness of form, qualities in no way popular with the multitude and in 1912 definitely out of fashion with so-called advanced composers.&#8221;</p>
<p>So be it; you have to work hard to be moved by this grim, A-minor symphony. I am, and I find it worth the effort. Those receding mezzoforte chords that end it, in bristling, orchestral, that&#8217;s-all-there-is tones, are among the most gripping musical sounds I know.</p>
<p>Old School Ties</p>
<p>Came also the youthful orchestra from Salonen&#8217;s alma mater, the Sibelius Academy, with members ages 18 to 26, lively, attractive and just as good as the previous installment I&#8217;d heard in Carnegie Hall about 10 years ago. They landed with a full program: a brief C<i>horale</i> by Magnus Lindberg &#8211; a variation on Bach&#8217;s &#8220;Es ist genug&#8221; &#8211; Prokofiev&#8217;s Fifth Piano Concerto with soloist Juho Pohjonen, 26, and Sibelius&#8217; <i>Lemminkäinen Suite</i> of four tone poems. Salonen conducted. Everything came off capitally; the young Pohjonen &#8211; though not so young as reported in the <i>Times</i> &#8211; is the latest in a long dynasty of steely-fingered Northerners, and excellent of the breed.</p>
<p>Also adjunct to the series was an evening by the Philharmonic&#8217;s Chamber Music Society, with an evening perhaps somewhat more forgettable. Looming largest among the dispensables was the G-minor Quartet by Edvard Grieg, music for tea parties to be played behind potted palms, excruciatingly long-winded. Sibelius&#8217; one quartet was also played; I had planned to exculpate it as a juvenile work until I learned that it dates from between the Third and Fourth symphonies. Shorter and infinitely more amusing works by Carl Nielsen and Aulis Sallinen filled out the program, all neatly played by Philharmonic members.</p>
<p>Glass, Darkly</p>
<p>Something analogous to a death wish draws me over long distances to Philip Glass operas: the Columbus opera at the Met, a Bob Wilson <i>CIVIL warS</i> segment in Rome, a Doris Lessing sci-fi piece in Houston and now <i>Appomattox</i> at the San Francisco Opera. As you can glean from the title, this latest work concerns the ending of our Civil War, the meeting of the generals at the Virginia town of Appomattox Court House and Robert E. Lee&#8217;s surrender to U.S. Grant. If you need to bone up, there is James Thurber&#8217;s &#8220;If Grant Had Been Drinking at Appomattox,&#8221; which tells approximately the same story. Approximately, that is.</p>
<p>Christopher Hampton wrote the libretto, which covers considerable ground before and after the surrender: the last days of combat, some of it brutal, the virtual rape of Richmond by Grant&#8217;s army, racist behavior, including some raunchy speechifying against blacks up to the present time. Riccardo Hernandez designed the sets, among them a striking angled ramp that divided the stage and allowed director Robert Woodruff some spectacular action during the Richmond scenes. Glass&#8217; music rose to that occasion too, with snarling dark winds and percussion. Most of the time, however, it was pretty much just another Philip Glass score: noodle noodle. You wonder why I went. So do I. </p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Ludwig&#039;s&#160;Mirror</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2007/10/ludwigs-mirror/</link>
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		<pubDate>Wed, 24 Oct 2007 00:46:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=658</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Cornucopia Common knowledge has it that the 32 piano sonatas of Ludwig van Beethoven, composed over 26 of his 57 years, encapsulate the most revealing portrait of his creative life. By the same token, it has been said, performances of these works can also stand as a set of opinion pieces on Beethoven&#8217;s artistic life [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>  Cornucopia</p>
<p>Common knowledge has it that the 32 piano sonatas of Ludwig van Beethoven, composed over 26 of his 57 years, encapsulate the most revealing portrait of his creative life. By the same token, it has been said, performances of these works can also stand as a set of opinion pieces on Beethoven&#8217;s artistic life by every pianist who takes them on &#8211; and, by that token, by Beethoven himself on every pianist who braves their demands. By my latest count, we have access to 15 recorded sets of these implicit essays, plus the one that is currently taking shape under the fingers of András Schiff, in Disney Hall, several other halls, and on ECM discs. </p>
<p>No, I haven&#8217;t heard all the other 15, just some. They offer varying testimonials of the vulnerable genius, the legendary creator who found his piano his most willing companion to accept his earnest and sometimes violent musical thoughts, beyond the expressive power of the string quartet or even the small symphony orchestra. There&#8217;s a great scene in the Abel Gance Beethoven movie, the best of the lurid bunch: Ludwig at his piano composing the storm music for the &#8220;Pastoral&#8221; Symphony. There&#8217;s a fevered outburst on the piano, then a segue to a lightning flash, another run, another flash; it&#8217;s nonsense, of course, but that&#8217;s what&#8217;s really going on in Beethoven&#8217;s mind in the &#8220;Patheátique&#8221; Sonata or the &#8220;Appassionata,&#8221; or the fugues in Opus 106 and 111.</p>
<p>There&#8217;s some of that in the finale of the very first sonata, Opus 2 No. 1, which Schiff captured quite appropriately in the first of his Disney Hall concerts. On the whole, from the evidence of this first live concert and other performances on disc, I find his playing uneven &#8211; sometimes dry and overly precise, more like his excellent Bach recordings; sometimes marvelously relaxed and serene, like his Schubert on a wonderful DVD. What I&#8217;ve liked most of all so far was his performance of the slow movement of Opus 2 No. 3, which is, indeed, a foreshadowing of Schubert. What has puzzled me the most, so far, was his decision to drop the da capo, the specified reprise, in the Menuetto of Opus 2 No. 1, especially since he has otherwise been meticulous about observing repeats. He explained this decision in one of the lectures he once gave on the Internet, but even that strikes me as frivolous, especially as he doesn&#8217;t make similar omissions in other sonatas.</p>
<p>At home, I listen to my EMI discs by Alfred Brendel, the second of the three sets he has recorded, wise and spacious. Then, of course, there are the performances by Artur Schnabel, whom everyone of my generation revered for his wisdom, his poetic quirks and the cantankerous insights in the footnotes of his printed editions. Times were when there were the Schnabel discs and no others, and now Naxos-UK has issued them in Ward Marston&#8217;s excellent remasterings. I still refer to them, most of all for the sheer poetry Schnabel could extract from the slow movements of the late sonatas. But the fact remains that elderly fingers did not always fulfill his visions, and such passages as the finale of the &#8220;Hammerklavier&#8221; Sonata can be painful.</p>
<p>Old Pals</p>
<p>I have been too long away from the California EAR Unit. This sovereign new-music group, born at CalArts, more recently dispossessed at LACMA when that institution foolishly abandoned serious programming, is now at REDCAT, where last Wednesday&#8217;s program was mostly the same old same old, with mostly the same old personnel. Louis Andriessen&#8217;s 1986 Dubbelspoor led my favorites&#8217; list: quiet for Louis, a lovely sequence of crystalline tones led by the glisten of Amy Knoles&#8217; percussion magic. I also liked Raphael Biston&#8217;s .oscil, music for &#8220;bent&#8221; timbres and interesting sudden bursts. From Australia&#8217;s Lisa Lim and CalArts&#8217; Ann Millikan there were large, rather unformed pieces, whose bloviating program notes tended to promise more than what occurred; and from Franco Donatoni, onetime teacher of Esa-Pekka, a short concluding piece that teemed with his customary bustle.</p>
<p>Philip O&#8217;Connor&#8217;s clarinet and Eric Clark&#8217;s violin are new to the group since LACMA; Amy, Erika Duke Kirkpatrick&#8217;s cello, Dorothy Stone&#8217;s flute and Vicki Ray&#8217;s piano are the steadies from as far back as I can remember. That&#8217;s remarkable; the EAR Unit is one of the country&#8217;s foremost long-term ensembles serving music&#8217;s cutting edge. Its members do other things, of course: studio work, teaching. But they continue as well as the EAR Unit, and they are part of what outsiders have come to recognize as the unique ferment here in Los Angeles. They call it the &#8220;Continental Shift,&#8221; and other envious names.</p>
<p>The Dark Side</p>
<p>Deplorers of Sibelius&#8217; music, among whom I occasionally number myself, list the Fourth Symphony as the Great Exception, the expressive marvel that uses the fewest notes to state the most profound matters. So it is; this icy, barren work of half statements and unfinished thrusts engages our participation, obliges us to complete these paradoxes in our own imagination, and results in the link between listener and creative artist that is the goal of all great art. It isn&#8217;t just a matter here of the composer leaving blank spaces for us to fill in; it&#8217;s more that he engages us to join him along his rock-strewn creative path, which he has, this once, made enticing. For this latter process, there was the enormous assistance of Esa-Pekka Salonen and his orchestra, this past Thursday, appropriately turned gray-toned for the occasion.</p>
<p>The Seventh Symphony ended the program, as it did Sibelius&#8217; symphonic career. In between came Steven Stucky&#8217;s Radical Light in its world premiere. It&#8217;s a 17-minute crescendo and decrescendo, insubstantial up against other recent Stucky works, all of which I tend to admire for their attractive presence on a middle-ground, conservative plane. Less happens in the new work, perhaps, but its orchestral language is bright and appealing, with moments of jeweled twinkle that will attract friends, myself among them.nbsp;</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Umbrella Held&#160;High</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2007/10/umbrella-held-high/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2007/10/umbrella-held-high/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 17 Oct 2007 22:00:10 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[The Youth Has His Fling Many weeks before the whoopee at the Philharmonic attendant upon the accession of the 26-year-old Gustavo Dudamel &#8211; who returns, by the way, next month with his own Venezuelan youth orchestra &#8211; the even younger (21) Lionel Bringuier had also captivated the local judges and earned an assistant conductorship amid [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>The Youth Has His Fling</p>
<p>Many weeks before the whoopee at the Philharmonic attendant upon the accession of the 26-year-old Gustavo Dudamel &#8211; who returns, by the way, next month with his own Venezuelan youth orchestra &#8211; the even younger (21) Lionel Bringuier had also captivated the local judges and earned an assistant conductorship amid enthusiastic huzzahs. At last Tuesday&#8217;s Green Umbrella concert, this slender, bespectacled Niçois got to show his stuff before a grown-up audience &#8211; he had already led a couple of kiddie events &#8211; and made it clear that he had a lot of stuff to show.</p>
<p>The program was tough, challenging and rewarding: music by Finland&#8217;s Kaija Saariaho, the profound, often mystical classmate of our own Esa-Pekka, and Luigi Dallapiccola, the Italian who had evolved a style blending his innate romanticism with his allegiance to Schoenbergian atonality. Bringuier led Dallapiccola&#8217;s whimsically titled <i>Little Night Music</i> &#8211; lapidary, enchanting, so many gleaming crystals set into a dark and shifting landscape &#8211; and Saariaho&#8217;s <i>Graal Théâtre</i> &#8211; a violin concerto lasting half an hour, dense and dark, loaded, says the composer, with subtle allusions all the way from Arthurian knights to Beethoven. Jennifer Koh was the adept soloist; Bringuier&#8217;s leadership was poised, unmannered and clear. Orchestra members I spoke to, who had been bowled over by his showing at the auditions a few months ago, repeated their praise. At the same time, the junior reviewer from the <i>L.A. Times</i>, obviously in need of inventing a critical stance, decided that this was a performance superior to Salonen&#8217;s (with Gidon Kremer) on the Sony disc, and that is so much baloney.</p>
<p>About Dallapiccola: During my time in New York &#8211; the &#8217;60s, say &#8211; his music was a constant companion, at small chamber-music concerts and at orchestral events as well. His powerful opera <i>Il Prigionero</i> showed up in several productions, including one in 1960, conducted by Leopold Stokowski at the City Opera that I can still run on my internal video &#8211; it shared a double bill with Monteverdi&#8217;s <i>L&#8217;Orfeo</i>, would you believe! His music was, for me, a kind of reconciliation: intense, emotional beauty expressed in an espousal of the most forbidding contemporary principles. There are wonderful songs, choral works &#8211; Salonen has recorded his <i>Songs of Prison</i> as well as the opera &#8211; a big piano work inspired by <i>Finnegans Wake</i>, and chamber works. His legacy is small; he died too soon, just as students from all over were beginning to make the pilgrimage to study with him. Reviving this one work, whose Italian title, <i>Piccola Musica Notturna</i>, glides so beautifully off the tongue, should be the first step of many.</p>
<p>Also under the Umbrella were two shorter Saariaho works: <i>Six Japanese Gardens</i> for percussion, ably dispatched by San Diego&#8217;s Steven Schick, and <i>NoaNoa</i> for solo flute, ably played by the Philharmonic&#8217;s own Catherine Ransom Karoly. Both were &#8220;enhanced&#8221; &#8211; &#8220;cluttered,&#8221; I would say &#8211; by video projections by Jean-Baptiste Barrière. This the guy from the <i>Times</i> nailed spot-on: &#8220;Basically the 1960s light-show experience.&#8221;</p>
<p>The Winds Do Blow</p>
<p>&#8220;Sibelius Unbound&#8221; has begun at the Philharmonic, and there will be time in the next weeks to chart whatever discoveries, rediscoveries and reasons for changes of long-held opinions these interestingly planned programs may afford. So far no good, however: Trudging through the murk of the Second Symphony&#8217;s orchestra &#8211; woodwinds shrieking through the swirls of violas and cellos casting a fog over the insipid tune crafting &#8211; can hardly be reckoned an enlivening experience under any circumstances. Heard following the icy clarity of Salonen&#8217;s own <i>Wing on Wing</i>, as it was at last weekend&#8217;s concert, it lapses into utter grayness. I grew up in Boston, where Serge Koussevitzky played the Sibelius Second almost as an anthem, and where Sibelius&#8217; name continually appeared beside Beethoven and Brahms on fave-composer lists.</p>
<p>Salonen may never earn a place on those lists, but his emergence as a serious and original composer should be, for all of us, a matter of pride. &#8220;For all of us,&#8221; I say, because he himself has made it clear that life in Los Angeles and the benevolent deal the Philharmonic has cut him, equalizing the two sides of his career, have made it possible to work as an independent composer, not merely as a conductor who composes. I love the whimsy of <i>Wing on Wing</i>; it is a fantasy about Disney Hall itself and its architect. It is about the Philharmonic only in that its idiosyncratic demands are no longer beyond the powers of these 106 players, and Salonen can take credit for that.</p>
<p>The Los Angeles Chamber Orchestra&#8217;s winds are its treasure. Blended into the elegance of its small string section, they create the perfect facsimile of the 18th-century orchestra of our imagination. Alongside his series of Mozart piano concertos, in which these wind players&#8217; ongoing conversations with Jeffrey Kahane at the piano were one of the marvels, Kahane has also been devoting quality time to the symphonies of Haydn&#8217;s last years. Last Sunday&#8217;s concert at Royce Hall ended with No. 99. I might have been inclined to suggest, ever so softly, that Kahane might consider a more relaxed tempo here and there, but his Haydn performances are irresistibly lively, and, as I was saying, just their sound is a wonderland of its own. So it was with No. 99, with its tricky key changes in the first movement, and the sublime melody that sort of sneaks in to catch us by surprise and wonderment in the second. All repeats were observed. You wanted there to be more.</p>
<p>Augusta Read Thomas provided the evening&#8217;s novelty, <i>Murmurs in the Mist of Memory</i>, a 15-minute, four-movement piece for strings composed in 2001, inspired by four Emily Dickinson poems but working up a nice eloquence on its own. André Watts was the evening&#8217;s soloist, unburdening himself of Beethoven&#8217;s Fourth Piano Concerto in the noncommittal manner that has been all I&#8217;ve heard from his playing in the recent past. Many in the audience, need I add, stood and cheered; the spectacle of 10 fast-moving fingers is all it takes, sometimes. </p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Luminosities</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2007/10/luminosities/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2007/10/luminosities/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 11 Oct 2007 01:00:05 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=656</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Czech Mates Finally, Jenufa; finally, Karita Mattila: Our opera company has never more brightly shone. Leos Janácek&#8217;s opera probes deeply into human agony before extracting its triumph. Its flow, past moments of unspeakable horror, seems to echo at all times that of the human heartbeat. Even its Czech language seems readily comprehensible; that is the [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Czech Mates</p>
<p>Finally, <i>Jenufa</i>; finally, Karita Mattila: Our opera company has never more brightly shone. Leos Janácek&#8217;s opera probes deeply into human agony before extracting its triumph. Its flow, past moments of unspeakable horror, seems to echo at all times that of the human heartbeat. Even its Czech language seems readily comprehensible; that is the earnestness of Janácek&#8217;s music. It is also, of course, the penetrating dramatic intensity of the cast at work at the Chandler Pavilion, led by Mattila &#8211; who is not Czech but Finnish and who is at every moment transformed by her role into an irresistible entity. In her ability to wrest forgiveness from cruelty, Janácek&#8217;s lyric mastery makes his Jenufa one of opera&#8217;s towering personages; the further wonder is the way Mattila inhabits that character so completely: her moment of near madness at the loss of her child, the profundity of her acceptance as she looks beyond the sins of the man who has loved yet wounded her. I rank her accomplishment among my most profound experiences from any stage: alongside Kirsten Flagstad&#8217;s Isolde, Laurence Olivier&#8217;s Oedipus.</p>
<p>There is much of value, as well, from James Conlon&#8217;s musical direction, splendidly motivated and knowing. Long before the first notes sound, when most conductors might be vouchsafed a pre-downbeat martini or two, Conlon is already out front, chatting up the pre-performance crowd with his strong and valuable insights on the opera and its origins. Olivier Tambosi&#8217;s stage direction, previously seen at the Metropolitan Opera and on the DVD from the Liceu at Barcelona, is exactly right for this opera: long, austere lines of action, a stage largely open and uncluttered. (I could, however, learn to live without the large boulder that fills in most of the second-act space; it may have symbolic significance, but I found it blank and ugly.)</p>
<p>Eva Urbanová is the troubled stepmother, the Kostelnicka whose well-intentioned murder of Jenufa&#8217;s baby becomes the fulcrum of the unbearable human tragedy. Jorma Silvasti and Kim Begley are the brothers Steva and Laca, put on Earth to make life for Jenufa both complicated and interesting. <i>Jenufa</i> runs once more, this weekend; beg, borrow or steal your way in and share the pride in our opera company at its finest.</p>
<p>Gloria in Excelsis</p>
<p>Gloria Cheng finished her Piano Spheres concert last Tuesday with the piano smoldering on the Zipper Hall stage and the near-capacity audience in about the same state. Iannis Xenakis&#8217; music will do that to you sometimes. His 1973 <i>Evryali</i> certainly did: a portrait of &#8220;the eldest of three hideous Gorgon sisters . . . with hands of brass, sharp fangs . . .&#8221; Cheng&#8217;s program was, as usual, a fascinating tour around the sphere of today&#8217;s pianistic possibilities: from the trickery of Helmut Lachenmann&#8217;s anti-musical <i>Guero</i> &#8211; in which the performer extracts dry-point clicks and clacks by attacking the keyboard with a credit card (Amoco or Mobil, we were informed) &#8211; to the visionary quietude of a Takemitsu <i>Litany</i> and an exotic jungle fantasy by a young Messiaen. Of lesser interest was a brand-new, bone-dry sonata by UCLA grad student Dante de Silva, still in the academy in more ways than one.</p>
<p>That sorry venture was nicely balanced, however, by an elder, wiser one by John Cage, whose 55-year-old <i>Water Music</i> got the proceedings back on track. &#8220;Water,&#8221; as you might guess, actually consisted of a bowl of the stuff, plus some whistles, a radio, a pack of cards and some gadgetry for &#8220;preparing&#8221; the piano; all thoughts of Mr. de Silva&#8217;s run-of-the-mill formalities were nicely demolished, as our Gloria neatly restored the Piano Sphere to its proper dimension. A couple of knockout works by Luciano Berio and Elliott Carter filled out the program. Piano Spheres, one of our most cherishable concert enterprises, is again in orbit.</p>
<p>All in the Family</p>
<p>For four years now, there has been an annual bash in Carlsbad, north of San Diego. The Carlsbad Music Festival, organized by native-son composer Matt McBane, this year ran for a weekend in an auditorium in the town library, drew large and happy crowds. Three ensembles performed: So Percussion, Real Quiet and the Calder Quartet. All the music was by Americans, mostly young, all young at heart: Terry Riley, Philip Glass, Steve Reich, David Lang, Phil Kline and, of course, Matt McBane. The Monday before, there had been a preview concert at Zipper Hall at which all three ensembles performed. In Carlsbad, Matt&#8217;s sister sold tickets and discs; his dad ran the spotlights and mikes.</p>
<p>Aside from that family aspect of the festival, you had to admire the notion of a young composer taking upon himself the task of getting his music heard, and the music of people around him. So Percussion and Real Quiet are upcoming ensembles making their way, via small record labels. The Calders have pushed into more established territory, but they also came to Carlsbad to play Terry Riley&#8217;s music (which I had to miss for time pressures). I particularly liked Real Quiet &#8211; cello, piano and percussion &#8211; which must, of course, create its own repertory. The sense at Carlsbad, therefore, was of a festival of people involved with inventing music, not just playing standard stuff. The other good thing was that the audience, of native Carlsbaddies, were listening to all this new music without worrying about its newness or oldness or familiarity. I liked that.</p>
<p>Oh, and by the Way</p>
<p>The Salonen contingent was back at midweek; if there is a more thrilling resonance than the sound of the Philharmonic playing Berlioz in Disney Hall, it remains undiscovered. Two snippets from the <i>Roméo et Juliette</i> symphony served as wraparound for the opening-night gala, with Renée Fleming to sing Ravel and Puccini as the luscious middle. Also tucked into that half-length program: a curious Luciano Berio reworking of a Boccherini (!) martial fantasy, insubstantial but delightful.</p>
<p>Oddly enough, another Berio reworking, this time of the final, unfinished Contrapunctus of Bach&#8217;s <i>Art of the Fugue</i>, began the next night&#8217;s first subscription program, an interesting setting for winds and brass ending with a dissonance of Berio&#8217;s fashioning. Richard Strauss&#8217; <i>Metamorphosen</i> followed, solemn, dark and resigned music from the end of a sorrowing composer&#8217;s life, perhaps somewhat out of place as a season&#8217;s opening music. Even so, the meathead in the audience who tried to end it with premature applause &#8211; twice &#8211; strengthens my hopes that someday there will be IQ testers at the doorways of concert halls. Beethoven&#8217;s Seventh Symphony glisteningly performed, outstanding among feel-good symphonies, ended the evening properly. </p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Look Homeward,&#160;Angeleno</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2007/10/look-homeward-angeleno/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2007/10/look-homeward-angeleno/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 03 Oct 2007 19:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[I sit here deeply pondering, surrounded by the many years of my life, trying to decide what I could spare or miss. Over there is a small orange box of clippings, Boston Herald, 1944, my first halting steps. I&#8217;d be embarrassed to read them now, but they are there. Next is a fat binder of [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>I sit here deeply pondering, surrounded by the many years of my life, trying to decide what I could spare or miss. Over there is a small orange box of clippings, <i>Boston Herald</i>, 1944, my first halting steps. I&#8217;d be embarrassed to read them now, but they are there. Next is a fat binder of <i>New York Times</i> pieces, 1961-63, not bad. Then, the bulky scrapbooks from the <i>New York Herald Tribune.</i> The day that great paper folded, in its latter-day avatar as the <i>World Journal Tribune</i>, I drove down to Barclay Street and grabbed all the music archives I could carry, and here they still are. On a shelf, in Stor-All boxes, are my pages from <i>New York</i>, <i>New West</i>, the <i>Herald Examiner</i>, the <i>Daily News</i> . . . On my desk sits the iMac with my 15 years at the <i>L.A. Weekly</i> so far, which take up the space, electronically, of the following dot.</p>
<p>There sits my life, and everything else that I would miss in this world is the direct result of what&#8217;s in those boxes, those files. From them I have earned the right to shake hands with Esa-Pekka Salonen and hug Frank Gehry, to lunch with Ernest Fleischmann and bask in Zubin Mehta&#8217;s scorn. I have earned the right to sample the mysteries of the tasting menu at Matsuhisa and been guided by Jonathan Gold, in person, to discover the indescribable delicacy of steamed live shrimp at Full House. On my own I have mastered a couple of passable pâtés, and a jalapeño corn bread that gets me invited to illustrious homes.</p>
<p>It&#8217;s a life nourished, replenished and reinforced from younger, vital sources. Ryan, on his way to journalistic brilliance, saw to it that I got to James Brown&#8217;s concert at the Bowl and the Mingus Epitaph at Disney; I guided him through Monteverdi at the Opera. Raymond&#8217;s sound engineering, in a garage I used to think was mine, produces recorded rock of a depth and variety beyond any cliché I might have entertained about that genre. Barbara, who turns her shaggy dogs into sweaters, flew here from her farm in Indiana to drive me around after spinal surgery. Sixty or more people show up here on New Year&#8217;s Day, eat and drink well, and stay to talk into the night. I love them all, and love that it happens.</p>
<p>The room where I do most of my pondering is a second-story add-on that I put in about 12 years ago. There are windows on all four sides, and a balcony facing west. The stairway is lined with CD shelves, but not all the discs have been unwrapped. I love silence. A friend told me that the room is like a tree house, and that&#8217;s exactly right; it&#8217;s also the right size of the manageable remainder of my life at 83. Almost every afternoon, around 4:30, a flock of wild parrots goes streaming, and screaming, past my south-facing window: a streak of brilliant green flecked with bright red. That&#8217;s the most identifiably Californian thing about my life here that I would miss. The rest is identifiably my own. One of these days I might decide I could do without all or part of it, but not for some time.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Sound and&#160;Silence</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2007/09/sound-and-silence/</link>
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		<pubDate>Wed, 26 Sep 2007 22:00:15 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[One Class Act Of Karlheinz Stockhausen&#8217;s Stimmung, Andrew Porter wrote, &#8220;[It] is a piece that sounds ridiculous when described and yet proves enthralling in performance,&#8221; and I agree. The work, composed in 1968, consists of a B-flat chord sustained for about 75 minutes by six singers seated on pillows in semidarkness. The single harmony is [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>One Class Act</p>
<p>Of Karlheinz Stockhausen&#8217;s <i>Stimmung</i>, Andrew Porter wrote, &#8220;[It] is a piece that sounds ridiculous when described and yet proves enthralling in performance,&#8221; and I agree. The work, composed in 1968, consists of a B-flat chord sustained for about 75 minutes by six singers seated on pillows in semidarkness. The single harmony is &#8220;enhanced&#8221; by the recitation of magic names, short poems and rhythmic motifs that pass from member to member &#8211; all at a low volume that trails off now and then toward near silence. Some variation of vocal color is achieved by the singers&#8217; improvising with vowel color.</p>
<p>On the new Harmonia Mundi disc, the members of Paul Hillier&#8217;s Theater of Voices take a few liberties with vocal shadings and other tricks. The &#8220;New Cologne Vocal Soloists,&#8221; heirs apparent to the group for whom Stockhausen composed his piece, performed the work here at LACMA, much more straightforwardly, and thus more dully. Ideally, the work belongs in a small church, and we will hear it thus next April 12 in, you might guess, one of Santa Monica&#8217;s &#8220;Jacaranda&#8221; concerts.</p>
<p>The Hillier version makes for a wonderful disc. The music is quiet; it sometimes dips below the level of silence, but you must let it envelop you; don&#8217;t wander off. Hillier himself has wandered off. When I last lunched him, he was at the University of Indiana. Now he&#8217;s in Copenhagen and conducts a chorus in Estonia, from which he sends back marvelous recordings, contributing to one of the sadly few truly class-act classical labels in this parched world of ours.</p>
<p>Harmonia Mundi&#8217;s new <i>Don Giovanni</i> keeps alive one corner of that desert, however. It is now possible to marvel at all three of Mozart&#8217;s Da Ponte operas in these remarkable performances under René Jacobs, each of them an achievement in ensemble, vocal interaction and impetus that redefines the nature of this miraculous repertory for our time. That Jacobs has been able to bring this off in all three operas &#8211; <i>Figaro</i> and <i>Così Fan Tutte</i> no less than this new three-disc <i>Don Giovanni</i> &#8211; adds to his achievement. His singers make up no all-star casts; it is their brainpower that enchants here first, their tonsils later.</p>
<p>That said, this is an emphatically good <i>Don Giovanni</i>, superbly put together and intelligently packaged, with some cogent notations by Jacobs himself. Johannes Weisser is the splendid, insinuating Don, Lorenzo Regazzo his all-too-wise manservant, Leporello. Two Russian sopranos, Olga Pasichnyk and Alexandrina Pendatchanska, are the hysterics in Giovanni&#8217;s life, Nikolay Borchev and Sunhae Im the rustic lovers Masetto and Zerlina &#8211; a tidy and nicely balanced cast. One small problem easily resolved: The arrangement on discs follows the opera as given in Vienna, with a couple of arias from the Prague performance (including Ottavio&#8217;s &#8220;Il mio tesoro&#8221;) moved out of place to tracks at the end of the same disc where they would ordinarily occur earlier. Just push a couple of buttons and you&#8217;re back in Prague.</p>
<p>Another</p>
<p>I sit here with a book on my lap so heavy as almost to stop circulation, yet so beautiful that I have to hold it close. It is <i>Horizons Touched: The Music of ECM</i> (Granta Books), which could be just another record-company blurb, but isn&#8217;t. For one thing, it comes boxed and sells for 95 bucks; for another, unlike any other record-company blurb you&#8217;ve ever seen, it&#8217;s worth its selling price.</p>
<p>As I flip the pages, I listen to music: Valentin Silvestrov&#8217;s Symphony No. 6, played by Andrey Boreyko and an orchestra in Stuttgart, a huge and powerful work running over an hour. Silvestrov is a composer I know only because of several discs I&#8217;ve heard on ECM. I notice that an orchestra from St. Petersburg (Russia, not Florida) is coming here soon, and the program consists of Schubert, Schumann and Prokofiev. Why are they traveling 6,000 miles to show they can play music we already know? Why aren&#8217;t they playing Silvestrov or Schnittke, or perhaps some Russian composer we don&#8217;t yet know here at all? They would knock us out of our seats with the slow movement of the Silvestrov Sixth (get the disc and hear for yourself). But no, we get the Schumann Piano Concerto, with a burnt-out soloist who hasn&#8217;t been around for years.</p>
<p>Manfred Eicher started ECM in 1969, with far horizons in his line of sight. From these many pages, I see him as a serendipiter from the date of birth, with impulses that sooner or later had to find their way to disc. From our one meeting so far, at an Oregon Bach Festial in, say, 1984, I remember his all-seeing eyes most of all. (Arvo Pärt was also there, and I mostly watched him.) From Eicher more than any other one person, I have learned the breadth of the musical field &#8211; how, to cite one small example, you could fuse the very hot saxophone of Jan Garbarek to the medieval singing of the Hilliard Ensemble and forge a whole new art. (<i>Mnemosyne</i>, one of their several albums, is on my desert-island shelf.)</p>
<p>Anyhow, this gorgeous, fat, heavy book, with the same photography that makes every ECM disc a treasure even if you&#8217;re deaf, and with editing and profound essays by the superb British critic Paul Griffiths (whom I wish we had more of, or even one of), stands at once as a tribute to the visions of Manfred Eicher and a panorama of the contemporary, creative musical mind. The music that Manfred has brought to my attention &#8211; with a little help, by the way, from his New York right arm Tina Pelikan, one of the few press people whose calls I return &#8211; makes for an impressive list: Pärt, Garbarek, Holliger, Saluzzi, Tuür, Zehetmaier, Mansouri, and on and on. Getting their act between hard covers is only their next logical step. Trouble is, nobody in the record biz these days can afford their damn book. </p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>When the Going Was&#160;Good</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2007/09/when-the-going-was-good/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2007/09/when-the-going-was-good/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 19 Sep 2007 21:59:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=653</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[No, Luciano &#8220;But, of course, he&#8217;s no Pavarotti.&#8221; That was Thomas Wachtell in 1984, head of a bygone organization called Music Center Opera, discussing Plácido Domingo and defending the company&#8217;s decision &#8211; which I had deplored &#8211; to cancel the annual visits by the New York City Opera and pooh-poohing the recent guest shot by [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>No, Luciano</p>
<p>&#8220;But, of course, he&#8217;s no Pavarotti.&#8221; That was Thomas Wachtell in 1984, head of a bygone organization called Music Center Opera, discussing Plácido Domingo and defending the company&#8217;s decision &#8211; which I had deplored &#8211; to cancel the annual visits by the New York City Opera and pooh-poohing the recent guest shot by London&#8217;s Royal Opera in which Domingo had sung the lead in <i>Turandot</i>. &#8220;That&#8217;s a minor role,&#8221; said Mr. Wachtell, who also found occasion on the same KUSC interview to inform the listening world that &#8220;Alan Rich has the integrity of a cockroach.&#8221;</p>
<p>The Pavarotti of Tom Wachtell&#8217;s imagining was a symbol, already both more and less than the magnificently gifted and (yes!) artistically responsible musician whose New York debut (Rodolfo in <i>La Bohème</i>, with Mirella Freni, November &#8217;68) I heard with delight as critic for the fledgling <i>New York</i> magazine. There was intelligence in the way Pavarotti knew how to shape, and to shade, the curve of an Italian lyric line, and there are recordings to bear this out.</p>
<p>The Nemorino he creates in the 1973 <i>L&#8217;Elisir d&#8217;Amore</i> (London/Decca) is more than the rural booby of most productions. The &#8220;furtive tear&#8221; he describes is partly his own, and he sings for every lover whose crucial words have failed him. Add to that the confrontational fury in the banquet scene in his <i>Lucia di Lammermoor</i> of the year before (same label) and you have a supremely capable, musicianly tenor, with a voice of melting purity and a fine sense of how to direct that voice in the cause of high drama. Add to that Pavarotti&#8217;s remarkable sensitivity toward words &#8211; rare in opera singers of any stripe, almost nonexistent among Italian tenors &#8211; and you have the complete artist Pavarotti once was and could have remained. I love his singing of the word &#8220;primavera&#8221; in the so-called &#8220;Cherry Duet&#8221; in Mascagni&#8217;s <i>L&#8217;Amico Fritz</i>, a slight, pastoral opera that he and Freni render irresistible on a two-disc 1969 EMI set; it simply pulls &#8220;springtime&#8221; right into the room.</p>
<p><i>Yes, Giorgio</i> (1982) began the downward slope. The film was not only a disaster; it was a typical exploitational disaster: a celebrity pasted into a cornball script. Herbert Breslin was the producer, not quite the most disliked of all front men in New York&#8217;s classical-music world &#8211; let&#8217;s leave it at that. Breslin then went on to <i>produce</i> Pavarotti himself, not so much as a valued member of an opera company with a distinguished repertory and a growing intelligence toward the care and feeding of that superb but inevitably fragile voice and artistic conscience, but as a moneymaker willing to submit to the needs of the musical chop shop that builds the &#8220;Three Tenors&#8221; repertory and similar kibble.</p>
<p>Perhaps Pavarotti would have slanted his career toward the cheap side by himself; he wasn&#8217;t given the chance. His last opera appearances constitute a study in pathetic overreach. His last time here, a concert at Staples Center with the Hollywood Bowl Orchestra, was full of bravery and full of music that, even through the strident amplification system, now and then sounded like Pavarotti. That&#8217;s all you could ask for &#8211; that, and the memories.</p>
<p>Yes, Aaron</p>
<p>Alex Ross&#8217; <i>The Rest Is Noise</i> will be published next month; the Aaron Copland chapter was sneak-previewed in a recent <i>New Yorker</i>. Let me reiterate: This will be the best book on what music is about &#8211; <i>really</i> about &#8211; that you or I will ever own. This last week of classical concerts at the Hollywood Bowl, with Leonard Slatkin rounding out his three-year stint as principal guest conductor, was also full of Copland and other serious matters; strange, how closing weeks every year seem to offer the season&#8217;s most substantial programming.</p>
<p>Copland&#8217;s Third Symphony, the final work, was begun in 1944. It starts tough: quite a lot of grinding dissonance and heavy scoring, almost as if to compensate for the lighter scoring and the sweet harmonies of <i>Appalachian Spring</i> of the year before. The Ross chapter makes a lot of Copland&#8217;s closeness to the Soviet composers, and it&#8217;s possible to hear in his first movement some of the harmonic restlessness in the Shostakovich Fifth, which was new and much discussed at the time. (Ross goes on to discuss a composers&#8217; meeting &#8211; or, let&#8217;s say, collision &#8211; when a delegation of Soviets, including Shostakovich, came to New York.) As with its Soviet maybe-counterpart, the Copland symphony culminates in a flag-waving finale, which incorporates his previous <i>Fanfare for the Common Man</i>. I think I prefer <i>Appalachian Spring</i>.</p>
<p>That work of high enchantment, in fact, began the program two days before &#8211; not in the feather-light original version for 13 instruments, alas, which would probably have blown away in the Bowl&#8217;s breezes &#8211; but in the somewhat too resonant full orchestration; oh, well. Edgar Meyer was on hand, with the first of his bright and bouncy double-bass concertos, which he plays with huge displays of having the world&#8217;s best time. Both his concertos show off their composer&#8217;s diverse musical backgrounds: lovely, cantabile slow movements right out of 19th-century romanticism, great larrupin&#8217; finales right up there with Mister Copland and some fairly awesome finger-snappin&#8217;. There was a whole encore of that too; its name was &#8220;Pickle.&#8221;</p>
<p>Gunther Schuller&#8217;s <i>Seven Studies on Themes of Paul Klee</i> continued the Tuesday program, delightful, small coloristic pieces with the inspiring visuals shown on the video screens; Gershwin&#8217;s <i>Rhapsody in Blue</i> ended it, in a tentative, stumbling performance by Michel Camilo. Thursday&#8217;s crowning glory was the return of the too-long-away cellist Lynn Harrell, drawing audible poetry from the wondrous Dvorák Concerto, music the color of the oncoming twilight, with Eric Overholt&#8217;s horn solos the shape of the surrounding hills. That&#8217;s what you take home from the Hollywood Bowl, as from no place else on Earth. </p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Quality&#160;Time</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2007/09/quality-time/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2007/09/quality-time/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 12 Sep 2007 18:50:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=652</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Homecoming Esa-Pekka Salonen&#8217;s return to the Philharmonic at the Hollywood Bowl began a week of cultural overload such that you&#8217;d ordinarily expect in mid-January. Yet here we were in summer&#8217;s waning days. Well, for starters, it wasn&#8217;t just any old week at the Bowl; it was the kind of challenging, provocative week that the place [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Homecoming</p>
<p>Esa-Pekka Salonen&#8217;s return to the Philharmonic at the Hollywood Bowl began a week of cultural overload such that you&#8217;d ordinarily expect in mid-January. Yet here we were in summer&#8217;s waning days. Well, for starters, it wasn&#8217;t just any old week at the Bowl; it was the kind of challenging, provocative week that the place deserves at least once every summer &#8211; or more. There was even &#8211; would you believe &#8211; opera with the video screens used not just for mug shots of second clarinetists but actually for a purpose: to carry the translation of the text, just as in a real opera house. When did you ever see <i>that</i> before at the Bowl? (<i>Ans.</i>: never.) Someone in the Philharmonic&#8217;s video department has finally awakened to the reason those screens belong up there.</p>
<p>I have long admired Diavolo, Jacques Heim&#8217;s company of airborne dancers, athletes and, for all I know, masters of the game of Quidditch, who interact in bodily conversation with each other and with inanimate structures to create a language of dramatic movement beyond easy definition. On a warm Tuesday at the Bowl, cheered to the skies by a large and warm-hearted audience, the operative word was &#8220;interaction,&#8221; and the result was thrilling.</p>
<p>The music was Salonen&#8217;s 2001 <i>Foreign Bodies</i>, &#8220;fiery masses of sound,&#8221; says the composer. Out of Tina Trefethen&#8217;s large cube &#8211; placed center stage, pierced with several holes &#8211; arms, legs and then whole bodies twisted their way into view, matched by the music&#8217;s twisting, furious undulations. As the 10-member dance company re-formed downstage and continued their interactions, the cube behind them broke apart into large pie-shaped segments of lustrous metal and plastic on which the dancers zoomed up, down and around, propelled by the music&#8217;s built-in urgency. Lights onstage and overhead picked out spots on the structures, which then reflected back to surfaces along the Bowl&#8217;s walls and ceiling. The whole spectacle was an interlock of moving dancers and structures uncannily matched by Salonen&#8217;s marvelous score. I can&#8217;t remember ever seeing the Bowl&#8217;s performing space turned into something quite this sensually alive &#8211; oh, maybe when Gustavo Dudamel conducted the incandescent music of Revueltas at his debut there two years ago. When else?</p>
<p>Eventually, the parts of the cube pushed back into their original shape and the music wound down &#8211; it lasts some 20 minutes, and you can hear it on the same Deutsche Grammophon disc with Salonen&#8217;s <i>Wing on Wing</i>. I wonder at the future of this remarkable piece of performance art. It&#8217;s a masterpiece in Diavolo&#8217;s repertory and a gorgeous illumination of the Salonen work as well. It belongs with Salonen and the Phlharmonic, not to be danced with some creaky ballet orchestra and not with a recording. It needs to be on a stage as part of a concert, in the same place as a featured soloist in a concerto. Somehow or other, it belongs in a repertory, even if that repertory has yet to be invented.</p>
<p>Mahler&#8217;s First Symphony, by Salonen and the Philharmonic alone, filled out the program, with the called-for offstage trumpets at the start really far offstage &#8211; a trick that always makes you think that Mahler actually composed with the Bowl in mind. It was a grand, broad performance, properly vulgar where such seemed to be called for, properly heaven-storming at the end.</p>
<p>No Sex, Please</p>
<p>Two nights later, there was <i>Boris Godunov</i>, not the one with the familiar Polonaise and the Love Duet but Mussorgsky&#8217;s original, no-frills creation: austere, somewhat dry in orchestral sound, its rhythms and melodic shapes deeply rooted in its composer&#8217;s naive national identities before his &#8220;rescue&#8221; by his more sophisticated colleagues. This is the version that Valery Gergiev brought to Orange County earlier this season with his Kirov company and his trunkfuls of seedy scenery, the worthwhile part of their misbegotten &#8220;<i>Ring</i>-around.&#8221; Mikhail Kit, who was the Wotan in some of the <i>Ring</i> performances, was also the Boris in one of their two performances of that opera and, as he was at the Bowl, an aging but eloquent singing actor. It would be good to see him for once on a properly designed and directed stage set. One assumes that for Salonen this <i>Boris</i> project must be something of a trial run for some project as yet unannounced. Los Angeles&#8217; local companies have yet to produce a <i>Boris Godunov</i> in any version.</p>
<p>Nobody will ever agree on the proper <i>Boris</i>. Unquestionably, Nikolai Rimsky-Korsakoff&#8217;s reorchestration of the opening scenes, including the &#8220;Coronation&#8221; choruses, makes a swell but wrong noise. Mussorgsky&#8217;s dark, edgy original, with its irregular rhythms, peers behind Rimsky&#8217;s finery to reveal a more troubled Russia with its impoverished masses, and endows the ascent of Boris with the right cynical coloration. The Polonaise and all the love-duet stuff were Mussorgsky&#8217;s own inferior capitulation to spicing up the action; leave them out and you&#8217;ve got more than three hours of almost continuous men&#8217;s voices. Most performances of <i>Boris</i> are some kind of conflation of Mussorgsky&#8217;s own two versions, with scenes left in or out: a scene at St. Basil&#8217;s Cathedral from the first version, a scene in Kromy Forest from the second. Since both scenes end with a Holy Idiot bewailing the fate of Russia, you can&#8217;t have both, and at the Bowl we got St. Basil&#8217;s. Salonen&#8217;s performance, with Mr. Kit heading a capable cast of visitors, most of them from the Maryinsky Academy of Young Soloists and the massed but sometimes wobbly forces of the Pacific Chorale, followed the pure Mussorgsky original. Judging from wisps of overheard conversations from prematurely exiting Bowl-goers, it did not fulfill everyone&#8217;s idea of a swell night of opera at the Bowl. At the very end, as if on cue, there were coyotes in ardent conversation above the parking lot. They knew something that the rest of us must guess.</p>
<p>Opera Indoors</p>
<p><i>Fidelio</i> is back, to start the L.A. Opera&#8217;s 21st season, with music director James Conlon and his orchestra getting &#8211; and meriting &#8211; the evening&#8217;s biggest applause. The opening scenes with the country lovemakers are no less silly than ever; the opera doesn&#8217;t really start until they&#8217;re gotten rid of. But that&#8217;s Beethoven&#8217;s problem, not ours; <i>Fidelio</i> is must-see and must-hear, and this production is an honorable dispatch of this problematic but supreme opera. It is the work of Italian director-designer Pierluigi Pier&#8217;Alli, brought over from the Queen Sofia Palace of the Arts in Valencia. His stage is full of menacing verticals , and some strange mechanical images that make it look as if the hapless Florestan is imprisoned in some sort of huge factory. On the other hand, the staging at the moment of rescue, one of operadom&#8217;s sublime 60 seconds, is thrilling indeed.</p>
<p>Best of all, this is a <i>Fidelio</i> that sounds as it&#8217;s supposed to, and that&#8217;s rare. Rather than the usual beefy Wagnerian tenor, there is the youthful and young-sounding Klaus Florian Vogt; his first &#8220;Gott!!!&#8221; ringing out of the darkness seemed to herald a new era in <i>Fidelio</i> tenors, and all for the better. The Leonore/Fidelio, similarly, is the youthful Anja Kampe, with a rich, true voice that could cut right through all those horns in her first big aria and a figure that could pass for a lad in the Rocco household . That, by the way, is presided over by the magnificent basso Matti Salminen, and it&#8217;s a great casting choice to see him towering, a couple of feet taller, over the Pizarro of Eike Wilm Schulte. Good over evil; that&#8217;s what opera is all about, after all.</p>
<p>Verdi&#8217;s Requiem, concert music in operatic language, ensued on the same stage a few hours later. Great singers were on hand; the work demands no less. One, the phenomenal German bass Rene Pape, was making his long-overdue debut: Tall and handsome, with a voice of similar qualities, he is the Marke, the Sarastro, the Gurnemanz of everyone&#8217;s dreams; we here must continue to dream. Arturo Chacón-Cruz was a last-minute fill-in, the latest in a line of baby-faced Mexic<br />
an tenors and excellent of<br />
the breed; soprano Adrienne Pieczonka and mezzo Stephanie Blythe completed the vocal quartet. All performed handsomely.</p>
<p>From Plácido Domingo&#8217;s conducting I heard nothing but cues correctly obeyed, little from the L.A. Opera&#8217;s orchestra or chorus that told me of Verdi&#8217;s wonderful lyric lines, the &#8220;Lachrymosa&#8221; that sweeps across the heavens, the &#8220;Hostias et preces tibi&#8221; at which no listener should be able to sit dry-eyed. You do not shape a Verdian lyric line by simply waving a stick at a stageful of performers. The performance, I suppose I have to add, was sold out, at a $250 top. Go figure.</p>
<p>Where She Danced</p>
<p>Götz Friedrich&#8217;s television production of Richard Strauss&#8217; <i>Salome</i> is finally available on DVD, from Deutsche Grammophon. In 1974, it defined what opera could accomplish on a television screen; it does so again. Watched on a screen of any size, it vaporizes physical dimensions and hangs suspended as a breathtaking painting of its time &#8211; the masterpiece that Gustave Moreau, say, strove toward &#8211; in which the personages of the Strauss and the Oscar Wilde drama live their fetid existence and stride to its loathsome climax. Everything about color and sound and location seems exactly in place; above all, there is no awareness of camera and microphone. On my many shelves of DVD&#8217;d opera, there is nothing like this one. It doesn&#8217;t even matter that I have been known not to care for <i>Salome</i> very much; I can&#8217;t stop watching this one-of-a-kind masterwork.</p>
<p>Teresa Stratas is the Salome, her head imprisoned in a jeweled skullcap so that there is nothing but face, on which the full motivation of this willful, vengeful, poisonous child plays out. It is an amazing performance, to watch and to hear; she was 36 or thereabouts, and it is a full capturing of the adolescent monster of the Strauss score. Better yet, she is perfectly matched against her mother of the play, the Herodias of Astrid Varnay &#8211; she who once broke hearts with her Sieglinde and her Brünnhilde, here delivering the fiendish cackle that defines and fulfills the bloodlines of her unspeakable daughter.</p>
<p>But everything works here, from the slobber of Hans Beirer&#8217;s Herod to the helplessness of Hanna Schwarz, as the doe-eyed Page who must watch as her beloved Narraboth kills himself in helpless adoration of the unattainable <i>Prinzessin</i>. Karl Böhm, who has supped often at the Strauss table, does so yet again as conductor; with the Vienna Philharmonic to do his bidding, who could ask for anything more?</p>
<p>The Fat Man Sang</p>
<p>Luciano Pavarotti figured little in Los Angeles&#8217; operatic life &#8211; one <i>La Bohème</i> at the Bowl in his early (a.k.a. serious artist) years &#8211; but he did give his time and talent generously in pension-fund concerts at the Chandler Pavilion and elsewhere. About the &#8220;Greatest Star&#8221; headlines that have flashed across the skies in recent days I have been digesting second thoughts, while reliving the pleasures in the artistry of some of his authentic &#8220;greatest hits&#8221; &#8211; the tender, enveloping warmth of his <i>L&#8217;Amico Fritz</i> for one of many. More next week. </p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>The Boys of&#160;Summer</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2007/09/the-boys-of-summer/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2007/09/the-boys-of-summer/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 05 Sep 2007 18:20:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=651</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Fiddling on Grand Thursday was chamber-music night on Grand Avenue: indoors with the Calder Quartet in Zipper Hall, outdoors with the Kronos Quartet, plus Wu Man and her magical pipa a short walk down at the Water Garden in California Plaza. The timing was sufficiently staggered so that you could take in both programs. Both [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Fiddling on Grand</p>
<p>Thursday was chamber-music night on Grand Avenue: indoors with the Calder Quartet in Zipper Hall, outdoors with the Kronos Quartet, plus Wu Man and her magical <i>pipa</i> a short walk down at the Water Garden in California Plaza. The timing was sufficiently staggered so that you could take in both programs. Both were produced in association with the Western Arts Alliance Conference that was going on all week, which meant that the  audiences included numbers of incredulous-looking members in suits along with the rest of us ordinary Californians.</p>
<p>The Calder Quartet &#8211; violinists Ben Jacobson and Andrew Bulbrook, violist Jonathan Moerschel, cellist Eric Byers &#8211; grows in depth and expressivity, as chamber ensembles must. Their residence at the Colburn School continues, with more public concerts scheduled next season as Colburn becomes a full-time graduate school; their affiliation with Juilliard also continues, establishing them as our first bicoastal quartet. Their participation on Thursday was only half a program, but it included a beautifully shaded, sleek reading of the Ravel Quartet, full of nuance and insinuation and lovely half-lights. Their other music consisted of a curious segue &#8211; the adagio from a late Shostakovich quartet blending into the final movements from the Second Quartet of Christopher Rouse: music the guys have played before and probably the best music by Rouse I have yet heard. I had to forsake the rest of the program, a set by the Billy Childs Jazz-Chamber Ensemble, to make the trek to the Kronos.</p>
<p>That, as always, was full of fun and mystery, a program of many short and exotic pieces, studded with attractive names &#8211; Terry Riley, for one, and something I heard through the capricious sound system as &#8220;Laguba Laguba by Berman from India.&#8221; The incredible energy behind Wu Man&#8217;s playing of her equally incredible, towering stringed instrument came across as always, but was sometimes laid waste by the sound system that seemed to coagulate everything. The image I got was of strands of pasta unstirred in the pot and stuck together. Amplification at California  Plaza has never been kind to the sound of strings, solo or in small groups, and much of the exquisite tracery of Wu Man&#8217;s instrument &#8211; or, for that matter, the splendid work of the Kronos behind her &#8211; had to be taken on faith. Still, these admission-free concerts, which this summer have included such splendid explorations as an evening on the Harry Partch instruments and, still to come on Sept.15, a gamelan program, are part of what makes this city tick.</p>
<p>Rach Attack</p>
<p>Of all the really bad music that survives in unaccountably frequent performances, it is the Third Piano Concerto of Rachmaninoff that seems to me the least deserving. Bad enough that its ascendancy to even greater fame in recent years has rested on a film &#8211; Scott Hicks&#8217; 1996 <i>Shine</i> &#8211; which itself is based on a pack of lies. The concerto itself is a scrapbook of big, noisy pianistic ideas, each a catchy moment in itself but none of them with the cohesion that drives the attention forward. The Second Concerto of a decade before is so much the better work, not only in the richness of its basketful of grand tunes but also in its impulse as a piece of music, moving forward toward a climactic point and then properly letting go.</p>
<p>Still, Number Three seems to possess some degree of survival power. A good-looking pianist at work on its clattering nonentities indeed fulfills many peoples&#8217; ideal of what musical performance is supposed to look like, in a way that a less demonstrative musician &#8211; Jonathan Biss in the Beethoven Concerto, say, earlier in the Bowl season &#8211; might not. The video screens of Nikolai Lugansky&#8217;s finger work during his performance, last week  at the Bowl , of the Rach Three  &#8211; as it has come to be called since that movie &#8211; did, every now and then, take on the look of pots of pasta aboil. (Sorry, I seem to be stuck with that metaphor; it comes of writing hungry.) Furthermore, Mr. Lugansky did fulfill that ideal: a good-looking pianist at work, strong-minded as well as -fingered, capable of wading through all that you-know-what and emerging with trousers dry. Kirill Petrenko was the evening&#8217;s conductor.</p>
<p>On his own, Mr. Petrenko led the Philharmonic through the First Symphony of Shostakovich, a work full of adolescent nose-thumbing but many grown-up charms as well. The symphony seems to be about growing up, in fact; by the time we reach the slow movement, the composer has begun to preface every new idea with a &#8220;but seriously?.?.?.?&#8221; and it suddenly becomes very beautiful, very tragic in a 19-year-old&#8217;s way. Later there comes a portentous solo for timpani &#8211; perhaps the first such animal in the repertory &#8211; and a diabolical ending soon afterward. How to resist? Some people put down this First Symphony; I don&#8217;t think you can really know the inner Shostakovich unless you take this small, imperfect but genuine work to heart. I did, and it seemed to clear the air quite nicely.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>The Real&#160;Thing</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2007/08/the-real-thing/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2007/08/the-real-thing/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 29 Aug 2007 21:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=649</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Madame Butterball Stephen Hartke&#8217;s The Greater Good is something we&#8217;ve long awaited: an American opera of genuine musical stature that uses the elements of opera in proper balance to create dramatic ebb and flow consistent with a storyline. The opera is out on a two-CD Naxos album, recorded at its premiere last year at the [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>
Madame Butterball</p>
<p>Stephen Hartke&#8217;s <i>The Greater Good</i> is something we&#8217;ve long awaited: an American opera of genuine musical stature that uses the elements of opera in proper balance to create dramatic ebb and flow consistent with a storyline. The opera is out on a two-CD Naxos album, recorded at its premiere last year at the Glimmerglass Opera in Cooperstown, New York. It runs two and one-half hours; it could use a little trimming here and there, but what new opera couldn&#8217;t?</p>
<p>The story is Guy de Maupassant&#8217;s “Boule de Suif,” one of that French master&#8217;s magnificent ironies. Boule de Suif (“Ball of Fat” or, perhaps, “Butterball”) is a prostitute of considerable renown. Fleeing from Rouen in a packed stagecoach after the Franco-Prussian War, she alone has food, which she shares with her hungry, aristocratic fellow passengers. The coach is stopped and held prisoner by a Prussian officer at an inn. The passengers implore Butterball to venture her talents upon the officer to gain their freedom. At first, she is proud: She is not for hire. Then she relents. Next morning, the passengers embark; Butterball joins them, worn and bedraggled from a hard night&#8217;s work. They snub her: a common whore. The coach rumbles on.</p>
<p>The text is Hartke&#8217;s own, drawn from Philip Littell&#8217;s dramatic adaptation. The marvel of his music is its impulsive sense of ensemble, a bristling counterpoint in which the personalities of the individual passengers, crowded together in that rattletrap of a coach, burst forth. The orchestra is well used, a dissonant, sardonic commentary nicely balanced against the continuous fabric of interwoven anger and self-important pride. Now and then, a solo voice breaks through with some kind of aria; there are lovely, sad moments in the second act as the imprisoned passengers dream of home. One woman waxes rhapsodic over memories of snow “. . . except that it gets dirty right away.” An old man fusses about losing his bank accounts to the occupying Germans; an old woman misses her cat; a nun quietly recites her rosary. Boule de Suif herself is the voice of calmness, as she thrills the crowd with accounts of her conquests, her methods. Later, as the group is marooned at the inn and must pass the time in storytelling, the music loses some momentum; here is where some trimming might be in order. But there is one delicious moment, as the Butterball magic enfolds the susceptible Prussian officer and the creak of bedsprings (squeaky high woodwinds) filters down to the waiting crowd below.</p>
<p>The recording is from a live Glimmerglass performance conducted by Stewart Robertson, efficient and clear, every voice exactly right for what is needed, the audience presence to add a degree of resonance. Someday I&#8217;ll get to visit this enterprising little company in their tiny home in upstate New York with its amazing, adventurous repertory, next door to all the baseball stuff. The cream of it gets to the New York City Opera; I don&#8217;t know whether there are plans for this work by Hartke, who is on faculty here at USC, but there should be &#8211; in New York and for companies here as well. It will need superb musical and stage leadership to achieve the superb ensemble sense that you can hear on this recording.</p>
<p>It&#8217;s time also to mention the activities at Naxos over the past few years, totally contra the deplorable decline in recorded repertory elsewhere, in amassing a catalog of American music on disc. They include an “American Classics” catalog with every disc, and it&#8217;s an amazing document. It lists, for starters, practically everything important in the American symphonic repertory &#8211; Diamond, Harris, Schuman, Piston &#8211; newly recorded on Naxos. They go &#8216;way back, with the Gottschalk collection I went bananas over a few weeks ago, and a disc of charming, amateurish music by the great diarist and self-styled critic George Templeton Strong. They offer more of Charlie Ives than any other label has ever carried, more of Sam Barber, and a 50-disc collection of serious music by American Jewish composers, underwritten by the Milken Archive.</p>
<p>French CzechStéphane Denève was last week&#8217;s Hollywood Bowl conductor, a Frenchman of impressive mane who had also won hearts at a Disney Hall concert last season. He had good reason to do so again. Dvorák&#8217;s Eighth Symphony is a heart-warmer, and Monsieur Denève has learned its secrets. Mostly, they consist of allowing the orchestra to relax and allow its textures to lie open, so that flutes and oboes can make their way through the strings. That&#8217;s what Brahms never learned, and why all the symphonies of Dvorák are so much more fun to hear than Onkel Johannes&#8217; four ponderosities, however impressive their thought content.</p>
<p>Sergey Khachatryan was the soloist, crowd-pleasing before he played a single note of Prokofiev&#8217;s G-minor Violin Concerto, and crowd-pleasing all the more once he began. The stream of good-looking violinists is never-ending; it&#8217;s some kind of syndrome, I suppose. Young Mr. Kh . . . towers above the crowd; he was very, <i>very</i> good. That particular concerto towers too; it is a serious, intricate and genuinely intelligent work (despite its having been written for Heifetz, who, sure enough, played only on the surface of it on his recording).</p>
<p>All these good things happened on the program despite the wretchedness that began it, the Leopold Stokowski orchestral transcription, from the organ original, of Bach&#8217;s <i>Passacaglia and Fugue</i>. One must wonder: What brand of organ did Stokowski have in mind when he transcribed its sounds to the uncomprehending realm of the symphony orchestra? Perhaps a barrel organ at London&#8217;s Battersea Park? A Mighty Wurlitzer at Radio City Music Hall? I have had my reservations about the repertory and the sonorities rampant within the world of the pipe organ in my lifetime, but the sheer sonic brutality of that opening music the other night inspires me to bind myself to every pipe organ within reach &#8211; as some of my friends do to trees &#8211; to shield them from such abomination. </p></p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Home at&#160;Last</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2007/08/home-at-last/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2007/08/home-at-last/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 22 Aug 2007 22:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=648</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[The End of Mozart Someday I will have my own music school, and the course I will teach will be devoted to Mozart, one movement at a time per semester. I would start with the slow movement of the D-minor Piano Concerto (K. 466), which was on the Hollywood Bowl program last Thursday, and I&#8217;m [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>The End of Mozart</p>
<p>Someday I will have my own music school, and the course I will teach will be devoted to Mozart, one movement at a time per semester. I would start with the slow movement of the D-minor Piano Concerto (K. 466), which was on the Hollywood Bowl program last Thursday, and I&#8217;m not even sure that one semester would be time enough to expound on the reasons for being in love with this music.</p>
<p>You have to start with the setting. The colossal grump of the first movement has receded into shadows. Now comes a single solacing voice, the piano, with its little tune like candy wound around a stick; smiling, the orchestra echoes. Not much later (measure 40 if you&#8217;re following along), the true magic occurs: the piano alone in the simplest of one-finger tunes, over the lightest of orchestral throbbing. It could be Susanna at her marriage to Figaro, or Pamina handing off the Magic Flute, but Mozart doesn&#8217;t need words this time . . .</p>
<p>Okay, you&#8217;ll have to wait and take the course; just know for now that this is the kind of thing that happens in slow movements of Mozart&#8217;s piano concertos &#8211; try also K. 467 or 482, and 488 will break your heart. Shai Wosner, a young pianist from Israel with very long fingers that showed up well on the video screens, was the evening&#8217;s commendable pianist, not yet in the suspended animation that the slow movement demands &#8211; check out the Alfred Brendel recording for that &#8211; but certainly a young man worth watching. He used the Beethoven cadenzas in the first and last movements; not many pianists do, because they&#8217;re scary. They are oversize, adventurous rhapsodies on the music that the young Beethoven, recently arrived in Vienna and anxious to make his mark, had fashioned for a memorial concert organized by Mozart&#8217;s widow.</p>
<p>This was the last event of Nicholas McGegan&#8217;s four-concert &#8220;Grand Tour,&#8221; and it brought the vagrant Mozart home to Vienna for his &#8220;Jupiter&#8221; Symphony, the last of the three he composed in a miraculous burst of energy in six weeks in 1788. The program began with a set of sneeze-length Contradances that Mozart ground out to bring in bread and butter, sometimes recycling tunes from operas. The &#8220;Jupiter&#8221; was properly grand, with all the big repeats respected &#8211; when did this last occur at the Bowl? &#8211; and the contrapuntal finale taken at a considerate pace so that the monumental pileup at the end &#8211; all five themes in a simultaneous contrapuntal tangle &#8211; could be savored and marveled at.</p>
<p>The turnout was close to 10,000, twice the usual crowd for a Thursday Classics event. Not a single aircraft polluted the sky this night. Something about the size of the Mozart orchestration, even at its maximum in this &#8220;Jupiter&#8221; Symphony, seems exactly the right size for the Bowl. There is no more Mozart on this summer&#8217;s schedule, however.</p>
<p>Rumi Squared</p>
<p>When I got to the Disney Hall box office Friday night, there were only two tickets left, at $150, and several screaming expostulators. If nothing else, this first-time-on-Earth appearance by the &#8220;Rumi Symphony Project Cycle Number One&#8221; represented some kind of public-relations triumph. They put it on, you came, and boy-oh-boy did you yell yourselves hoarse over Lord-knows-what.</p>
<p>That title itself should raise eyebrows. Major Rumi projects have fared badly here before; the 1998 Philip Glass-Robert Wilson slide show to open the rebuilt Royce Hall ranks as one of the area&#8217;s major fiascoes. Now the venerated Persian poet is being honored for his 800 years; the symphony, however, is an art form of a mere 250. Why connect the two? Apparently today&#8217;s bridge builders aren&#8217;t that easily fazed. In amassing his &#8220;Rumi Symphony&#8221; project (not all that symphonic, since only nine musicians were involved last Friday), a certain Hafez Nazeri has proclaimed his inspiration from the words of the great poet. He is aided in this in that he is the son of Shahram Nazeri, the internationally acclaimed Iranian vocalist, singer and improviser to the poetry of Rumi, who, according to a press release that &#8211; although I haven&#8217;t tested it personally &#8211; is probably meant to glow in the dark, has been hailed as the &#8220;Persian Nightingale&#8221; and &#8220;Iran&#8217;s Pavarotti.&#8221;</p>
<p>What the younger Nazeri has done, from the evidence of Friday&#8217;s concert, is to absorb some of the melodic and harmonic idiom of his Persian heritage, spread it around a mix of indigenous and symphonic players (led off in a throbbing solo by Philharmonic cellist Ben Hong) and compose big Western-style music with this material. There&#8217;s nothing new about this; check out Rimsky-Korsakov&#8217;s<i>Scheherazade</i>, a successful if cornball Persian symphony. Maybe Nazeri didn&#8217;t use as big an orchestra as Rimsky-Korsakov, but Rimsky didn&#8217;t have microphones. Most bothersome was that he had, somehow, enlisted his father&#8217;s participation in this ersatz Orientalia. At the start of the program&#8217;s second half, however, the elder Nazeri took the stage alone, and for about 15 minutes sang his own, and the poet Rumi&#8217;s, freeform, rhapsodic music, which broke free of all the contrivances, the fakery of the rest of the evening&#8217;s music. Neither Pavarotti&#8217;s nor a nightingale&#8217;s, his voice was dark, rich, throbbing &#8211; the sound of a whole man&#8217;s soul. For those few minutes, an elderly man stood alone on a darkened stage, sounding forth with eloquence and pride the lyric poetry of his heritage, made us all happy to be there, and turned what might otherwise have been simply filial insults into some kind of art. </p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Grand&#160;Tour</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2007/08/grand-tour/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2007/08/grand-tour/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 15 Aug 2007 23:13:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[Waiving Rules, Ruling Waves A mighty man is he, this Nicholas McGegan. You might not think so at first; he&#8217;s a fellow slight of build, and he has a way of approaching the Hollywood Bowl podium a little like a demure bunny rabbit, but the might is there nevertheless. It&#8217;s in his music: his Handel [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Waiving Rules, Ruling Waves</p>
<p>A mighty man is he, this Nicholas McGegan. You might not think so at first; he&#8217;s a fellow slight of build, and he has a way of approaching the Hollywood Bowl podium a little like a demure bunny rabbit, but the might is there nevertheless. It&#8217;s in his music: his Handel recordings on Harmonia Mundi with the great Lorraine Hunt Lieberson and the terrific planning and music making manifest in his current stint at the Bowl. In that paradisiacal retreat in the Cahuenga Pass, he&#8217;s come up with a splendid and workable idea: four concerts on successive classical Tuesdays and Thursdays, outlining a sort of Grand Tour, with the young Wolfgang Mozart as the Grand Tourist who travels from one musical milieu to another &#8211; London, Venice, Paris, Vienna &#8211; surrounded by other people&#8217;s music in each place but also working on his own. This grows, from the baby talk of a First Symphony composed in London to the passion and original genius of the final &#8220;Jupiter&#8221; Symphony in Vienna. (Curiously enough, a tune that turns up in the slow movement of that First Symphony becomes, with or without Mozart&#8217;s contrivance, an important element in the &#8220;Jupiter.&#8221;)</p>
<p>The first program, which found the child Mozart being toasted in the Handel-dominated London, enlisted the aid of the fine British tenor John Mark Ainsley in a couple of Handel arias (&#8220;Where&#8217;er you walk,&#8221; &#8220;Waft her, angels&#8221;) of familiar but ravishing beauty, and also a couple with awesome coloratura that, alas, inspired some pretty dismal imitators in the men&#8217;s room at halftime. (I don&#8217;t get paid to review bathroom coloraturas.) At the end, there was music from <i>Alfred</i> by Thomas Arne, whose final number, McGegan told the crowd, &#8220;encapsulates all the virtues the British admire and like to think they possess.&#8221; Whereupon all 6,000 of us stood and sang &#8220;Rule, Britannia, Britannia rules the waves&#8221; and departed happy.</p>
<p>Vivaldi was the marquee name in Venice in 1770, when the 14-year-old Mozart brought in his <i>Mitridate, Re di Ponto</i>; McGegan&#8217;s second program leaned strongly toward the native son, with only two short orchestral bits from Mozart&#8217;s opera. Concertmaster Martin Chalifour performed two of Vivaldi&#8217;s solo concertos, of which one, in C major, also called for a solo lute as accompaniment in the slow movement; that work too (No. 190 in the catalog) stood out above the Vivaldian grasslands by virtue of some interesting dissonant harmonies. Chalifour also led the ensemble in two of Vivaldi&#8217;s concertos for four violins, from the notable &#8220;Estro Armonico&#8221; collection, whose intertwined writing for soloists probably had a direct influence on Bach&#8217;s &#8220;Brandenburg&#8221; Concertos.</p>
<p>I write in midseries, with Paris and Vienna still to be heard; so far, the turnout has been above average for midweek attendance, even though these programs do not call upon the full orchestral forces &#8211; and surely sound better through the amplification for exactly that reason. It&#8217;s about time that Bowl management occasionally faced the idea that this can be a place for brain-involving programming such as this miniseries, not only for music of the pleasant past but also &#8211; just now and then &#8211; something from our own time.</p>
<p><i>Obiter dictum:</i> I hope you won&#8217;t confuse McGegan&#8217;s &#8220;Grand Tour&#8221; with <i>Classical Destinations</i>, a dreadful package from EMI (CD, DVD and a book from Amadeus Press) of error-ridden musical essays setting composers in their native lands with simpering narrations delivered by Simon Callow in the affected appreciationese that, I am sure, is partially responsible for serious music&#8217;s tragically low estate these days.</p>
<p>The French Touch</p>
<p>Two operas, composed 232 years apart but no less fresh to the ear, emerge from the smoky ruins of the record industry. Clocking in mere moments short of three hours, with every repeat and da capo meticulously honored, Jean-Baptiste Lully&#8217;s <i>Thésée</i> in its gorgeous rendition from the Boston Early Music Festival, on CPO, might possibly challenge an unbeliever&#8217;s patience. At well under two hours, a long-hoped-for recording of Paul Dukas&#8217; <i>Ariane et Barbe-Bleue</i> on Telarc should be cause for some rejoicing despite predictable flaws.</p>
<p>To <i>Thésée</i>, then, the masterpiece of the sublime opportunist who weaseled his way into the court of the Sun King, Louis XIV, and practically invented the art of opera, dance and all the fancy production values they required. You love it or you don&#8217;t. There is a love story: Theseus and his Aeglé. The jealous Medea tries to interfere and is almost successful. Five minutes before the final curtain, the goddess Minerva, <i>dea ex machina</i>, drops in (literally) in her chariot, with full brass band, and resolves everybody&#8217;s problems. Before this, there has been three hours&#8217; worth of splendid music, sent forth in wonderful Baroque sonorities by the Boston Ensemble led by the lutenist Paul O&#8217;Dette, who has played here many times and whom we all know to be the best there is. So are Howard Crook, the countertenor who sings Theseus, and Ellen Hargis, the Aeglé.</p>
<p>We all know and love Paul Dukas&#8217; 1897 tone poem <i>The Sorcerer&#8217;s Apprentice</i> for more, I hope, than the cut-down version in <i>Fantasia</i>. His fantasy opera about Ariane and Bluebeard, written 10 years later, uses a text by Maurice Maeterlinck, a strange affair not easily unraveled. Ariane is the Seventh Wife, who outlives her predecessors to live on with her mysterious seducer. He, meanwhile, barely survives an attack by villagers outside his castle, angered by his evil deeds. The opera was admired in its time by no less than Arnold Schoenberg.</p>
<p>Now it&#8217;s here, in a recording led by the omnivorous Leon Botstein, with the BBC Symphony sounding somewhat tentative and the recorded sound a little murky, but enough to convey the remarkable richness and range of color in the scoring. The sounds are late French; I want to say Franck or d&#8217;Indy, but the music is better than anything I know by either of them. It&#8217;s a fascinating score all by itself. The singing, by Lori Phillips as Ariane and Patricia Bardon in the important role as her Nurse, is just okay. The whole venture satisfies my curiosity about the work but makes me want all the more to hear it live someday. </p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Michaelmas</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2007/08/michaelmas/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2007/08/michaelmas/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 08 Aug 2007 22:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[Ninth, but Not to the Nth Something, I am sorry to inform you, stood between me and the paroxysms of delight with which the other 12-or-so thousand happy spectators greeted the efforts of Michael Tilson Thomas of San Francisco in his two concerts leading the Philharmonic at the Hollywood Bowl last week. Simply put, that [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Ninth, but Not to the Nth</p>
<p>Something, I am sorry to inform you, stood between me and the paroxysms of delight with which the other 12-or-so thousand happy spectators greeted the efforts of Michael Tilson Thomas of San Francisco in his two concerts leading the Philharmonic at the Hollywood Bowl last week. Simply put, that something is my inability to take him as seriously as he, given his enormous talents for self-promotion, seems to expect. That said, I hasten to add that I enjoyed those two concerts considerably for what they were: a lot of very classy note playing performed by a very classy orchestra under a good-looking conductor who&#8217;s great fun to watch. What they were not, however, were any kind of serious measurements of the Ninth Symphony of Beethoven or &#8211; so far as they go &#8211; the lesser but worthy works of Bernstein and Copland that showed up on the second program.</p>
<p>I have said this before of MTT in action, indoors and out, and the suspicion remains: The principal subject of his performance is his performance. You could admire the detail in the Beethoven, at least in the first two movements, and still miss the magnificent sense of accumulation that makes both these movements the overpowering experiences that they are. In the scherzo, he observed Beethoven&#8217;s stipulated first repeat but not the second, thereby distorting the time scale. The slow movement went by so fast, with so little differentiation between its contrasting sections, as to trivialize its sublime impact. Before the finale, MTT went through some kind of ludicrous &#8220;now get this&#8221; motion on the podium, and then delivered nothing really worth the getting. The vocal forces were a mixed blessing. Eric Owens sang his exhortation mostly off key; a helicopter wiped out all of Jessica Rivera&#8217;s soprano solo later on; Philippe Castagner&#8217;s tenor solo was the evening&#8217;s distinguishing moment . . .</p>
<p>That, and some minor but attractive bits of Beethoveniana that MTT had dug up to fill out the program: stuff that the composer had churned out to keep the pot boiling in between his more substantial endeavors. Actually, some of Beethoven&#8217;s music for the August von Kotzebue drama <i>King Stephen</i>, which began the evening, is interesting as a sketchpad for tunes in the Ninth Symphony; other sections are interesting as proof that he could craft a ho-hum tune along with the rest of the Viennese tune spinners. And one little piece called <i>Bundeslied</i>, for singers and winds, is proof that Beethoven could dash off an authentic four-minute charmer better than the rest of them, and that MTT&#8217;s skill as a digger-outer is beyond challenge.</p>
<p>Someday the clouds will part around the name and achievements of Leonard Bernstein, and music like the <i>Symphonic</i> (why that?) <i>Dances From West Side Story</i> will probably figure among the genuine works of his genius, pushing the pretentious symphonies, choral works and other overreachings into deserved obscurity. These splendid, energy-laden <i>Dances</i>will, by that token, be removed from the purview of symphony orchestras, and restored to the realm of the smaller, theater-size bands who can do them better justice than all the noise MTT stirred up the other night.</p>
<p>There followed Aaron Copland&#8217;s turn: six (seven with the encore) of his wonderfully flavorsome settings of old American songs, rich, rugged music sung by Thomas Hampson, who owns them for this generation (<i>pace</i> Marilyn Horne). Then came more Copland, the quiet, reverent, deeply patriotic <i>Lincoln Portrait</i> that once, nevertheless, got banned by our nation as &#8220;lefty&#8221; (at the 1953 Eisenhower inaugural). Gore Vidal was the reader, an eloquent and significant choice. Seated in his wheelchair, the grand old hell-raiser rose to the occasion with a delivery of Lincoln&#8217;s words pointed and meaningful. At the end, he stood and walked off. MTT followed, not on water.</p>
<p>The Man Who Loved Mozart</p>
<p>The video of Ingmar Bergman&#8217;s <i>Magic Flute</i> seems to be hard to find these days; surely a memorial reissue is mandatory. Among the hundreds of opera tapes and DVDs now at hand, this one stands magically apart, an operatic film purposely made, not just shot from the wings, about a performance by people, totally absorbed in and in love with their work, finding their place during the course of an excellent performance of Mozart&#8217;s enchanted and enchanting play-with-music. The performing space is part of the magic: Sweden&#8217;s little Drottningholm Theater, the size and shape of spaces Mozart himself knew. Never mind that the theater was taken apart and reconstructed for the filmmakers; never mind all the other artifices, including the fact that Mozart&#8217;s <i>Die Zauberflöte</i>, which we usually hear as <i>The Magic Flute</i>, is here given in Swedish. The real music is still present, where it matters. Above all, this is a filming of Mozart&#8217;s work that also, with consummate ease, becomes a document of an audience having a wonderful time there, from the delighted face of the little girl (Bergman&#8217;s daughter) during the overture to the occasional backstage glances as the camera tiptoes around the theater while the magic unfolds onstage. It becomes a film of how we would like to see an opera someday, as a disembodied spirit freely roaming &#8211; through the theater, through the stage, through the mingled souls of everyone involved &#8211; only they won&#8217;t let us. Lucky Mr. Bergman.</p>
<p><i>Smiles of a Summer Night</i> is Bergman&#8217;s <i>Così Fan Tutte</i>: the game playing, the cynicism, the superior wisdom of the social inferiors, the awareness at the end that those final matchups aren&#8217;t really going to work. (Mozart and his librettist, Lorenzo da Ponte, are even more careful than Bergman to leave this point unresolved, to the continued bemusement of two centuries of opera directors.) Bergman adorns his plot with more characters than the opera&#8217;s six, but the parallels are inescapable. Both works are, unto themselves, perfect. </p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Hail,&#160;Farewell</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2007/08/hail-farewell/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2007/08/hail-farewell/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 01 Aug 2007 19:00:05 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[Firm Foundation The Philharmonic hires well. Last week&#8217;s classical concerts at the Hollywood Bowl were entrusted to the orchestra&#8217;s second-tier leaders, assistant conductor Joana Carneiro and associate Alexander Mickelthwate. They represent an orchestra&#8217;s crucial support system, the young conductors, recently out of conservatories or competitions, sometimes with a few years on podiums with orchestras in [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Firm Foundation</p>
<p>The Philharmonic hires well. Last week&#8217;s classical concerts at the Hollywood Bowl were entrusted to the orchestra&#8217;s second-tier leaders, assistant conductor Joana Carneiro and associate Alexander Mickelthwate. They represent an orchestra&#8217;s crucial support system, the young conductors, recently out of conservatories or competitions, sometimes with a few years on podiums with orchestras in the boonies here or abroad, sometimes not, who stand closely by. They conduct the kiddie concerts, perhaps a &#8220;Green Umbrella&#8221; or two. They attend rehearsals, make themselves useful doing all kinds of backstage chores, wait for the principal conductor to fall off the podium so they can re-enact the Cinderella story. Almost any major conductor you can name &#8211; Salonen, Tilson Thomas, all the way back to Toscanini &#8211; has at least one such episode in his vita.</p>
<p>Carneiro and Mickelthwate represented a nice contrast: the former born in Lisbon with a fair list of conducting dates in Portugal as well as here; the latter German, who in his first year here made his conducting debut on 30 minutes&#8217; notice, replacing an ailing conductor in a murderous program of Shostakovich and Adams. Both young conductors came to the Bowl last week with programs that could pass as self-portraits: Carneiro with a Hispanic mix, rendered impure but all the more enchanting with the added accents of the Frenchman Ravel and a couple of soloists out of Brazil; Mickelthwate with the German romantics and a Korean soloist to draw the crowd.</p>
<p>The steamy, slithery harmonies of Ravel&#8217;s <i>Spanish Rhapsody</i> glided effortlessly into the warmth over Cahuenga Pass on Tuesday; so did everything that followed. Carneiro&#8217;s musical impulses are admirable, and the orchestra was producing elegant, seductive sounds for her all night. Arnaldo Cohen, Brazil-born, now at the University of Indiana in Bloomington, was the pianist in a sleepy performance of Falla&#8217;s <i>Nights in the Gardens of Spain</i> &#8211; but I think the piece itself is sleep-inducing &#8211; and the fabulous Luciana Souza, whom we know and love for her singing of Golijov at Ojai and on a new DG recording, caused the very air to sizzle in the all-too-brief vocal passages in Falla&#8217;s <i>El Amor Brujo</i>. Most fun of all, I have to admit, was the closing, inevitable <i>Boléro</i> of Ravel, with the video screens, for once, really keeping up with the instrumental changes in this maligned, amazing work.</p>
<p>Thursday night&#8217;s inevitability was Sarah Chang again entangled in the Bruch Violin Concerto, the third pairing in my Philharmonic files, plus one I remember trying to forget in Orange County. Is it a matter of stuck wiring? Is it the Korean national anthem? (It does draw the crowds.) This was Mickelthwate&#8217;s final date as the Philharmonic&#8217;s associate conductor; why lumber his last program with this drab misadventure midway? He moves on to become music director of the Winnipeg (<i>brrr!</i>) Symphony, and when he returns (as he promises), it will be in the distinguished role of guest conductor. His tenure ended with a spacious unfolding of Schumann&#8217;s &#8220;Rhenish&#8221; Symphony in all its crippled but somehow affecting eloquence.</p>
<p>Bubbles (1929-2007)</p>
<p>I&#8217;ll bet anything that when Beverly Sills found the typo in the first line of <i>Bubbles</i>, her autobiography &#8211; &#8220;I sang my first aria in pubic&#8221; &#8211; she let it stand; it would be just like her.</p>
<p>One afternoon in 1979, we floated around on rubber horsies in her pool on the Vineyard. She&#8217;d just taken over the City Opera from Julius Rudel, and was full of tidbits about the mess he had left her: new productions booked without set designers, that sort of thing. Balancing a small tape recorder in a breezy pool isn&#8217;t the easiest of journalistic tasks, but I managed. I got it all into my article for <i>New York Magazine</i>, and Rudel exploded. Beverly phoned. &#8220;Oh, was that an interview?&#8221; &#8211; I could see the eyelashes coyly fluttering. &#8220;I guess I just didn&#8217;t know.&#8221;</p>
<p>That was a low point, and there were a couple of years after that when I felt I needed clearance from her implacable manager, Edgar Vincent, just to say &#8220;hello.&#8221; I prefer to dwell on the high points; there were many, though we started off slowly. I fished out my <i>Herald Tribune</i> review of her Cleopatra in Handel&#8217;s <i>Giulio Cesare</i> at the New York City Opera, September 28, 1966, which is generally reckoned as her career turnaround, and there isn&#8217;t much: &#8220;Beverly Sills is the Cleopatra of everyone&#8217;s dreams and her handling of some ferocious coloratura is all the more remarkable . . .&#8221; I was too much the scholar for the extended gush, too aware of how Handel&#8217;s score had been mishandled in the edition prepared for the New York City Opera.</p>
<p>I really fell for Beverly Sills in a college gym in Medford, Massachusetts, some four years later, as she came marching down the center aisle, waving an enormous Tricouleur and trilling Donizetti&#8217;s bugle call that begins his <i>Daughter of the Regiment</i>. Sarah Caldwell had put that performance together, as conductor and director, and those two ardent, blithe spirits &#8211; plus a gang of right-minded collaborators &#8211; had invented a way of creating opera out of voice and spirit and performing space that remains unique in my opera-going memory.</p>
<p>Sills would go on to a fabulous career under other conductors and directors, and make us aware of a repertory of great opera &#8211; of the bel canto era most of all &#8211; that we might otherwise not have known. When she sang with Caldwell&#8217;s company in Boston, or later together in some memorable <i>La Traviata</i> performances at the Met, there continued to be an interweave of musical understanding, of the nature even of a simple phrase, that elevated the artistry of both beyond anything they accomplished by themselves. Tragically, little or none of that great togetherness has been preserved.</p>
<p>We had too little of Sills&#8217; artistry here in Los Angeles. The brief visits by her City Opera incurred resentment from local forces over booking time at the Music Center, and the deal was finally torpedoed with an outburst of ignorant proclamations that I hope will never again come to light. Other, happier, memories are there for the keeping. </p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Once More Into the&#160;Bowl</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2007/07/once-more-into-the-bowl/</link>
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		<pubDate>Wed, 25 Jul 2007 23:30:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=644</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Missing the Moonlight Maurice Ravel composed his Piano Concerto as a handshake to the American audiences who awaited his first tour of this country. His first movement teems with his new love of the American vernacular; the jazz licks are straight out of Gershwin, maybe a line or two of Paul Whiteman, something of the [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Missing the Moonlight</p>
<p>Maurice Ravel composed his Piano Concerto as a handshake to the American audiences who awaited his first tour of this country. His first movement teems with his new love of the American vernacular; the jazz licks are straight out of Gershwin, maybe a line or two of Paul Whiteman, something of the blues with their flatted sixth note. Then something even more wonderful happens: The solo piano starts the slow movement with a tune fashioned out of pure moonlight. One by one, the winds take it over; when the sheer poignancy has set our souls to rest, the jazz returns for a happy awakening and farewell.</p>
<p>But it&#8217;s that slow movement that lingers. At Ojai, Pierre-Laurent Aimard played it just as that famous pink light of dusk engulfed the Valley, and there was no separation between sight and sound. That memory followed me into the Hollywood Bowl a few nights ago, and made it impossible to cope with Andreas Haefliger&#8217;s piano made hard-toned and jangly by the amplification, and the music itself made square and unlovely by the pianist&#8217;s notion that it existed in small, regular boxes of sound rather than streams of moonlight. The jazz in the outer movements was okay, however, just okay.</p>
<p>So here we are at Bowl time again, that amazing cornucopia of classical music, 10 weeks&#8217; worth, ranging from the inevitable Bruch Violin Concerto with Sarah Chang to Esa-Pekka Salonen conducting music of his own plus a complete <i>Boris Godunov</i> &#8211; and all served up, for the choosing, in catered Cytherean luxury or in dollar seats somewhere in Nebraska. No place in the world offers so much for so little. The amplification, with its flaws, is, I am assured, state-of-the-art. There are TV screens so that what you can&#8217;t hear you can watch. The fireworks couldn&#8217;t be more swell.</p>
<p>Leonard Slatkin conducted the first two weeks of classical concerts, as he has for the last two years. I opted out of Respighi&#8217;s <i>Pines of Rome</i>, which followed the Ravel; it came too soon after my trip to Munich, and collided with my jet lag. Actually, the best music making I heard during Slatkin&#8217;s stay came the following Tuesday, on a clever program he had arranged &#8211; and identified as a nostalgia trip to programs of his childhood at the Bowl (and mine too, at the Boston &#8220;Pops&#8221;) &#8211; that consisted entirely of short pieces, half-and-half trash and precious. &#8220;Precious&#8221; indeed was the Scherzo from Henry Charles Litolff&#8217;s <i>Concerto Symphonique No. 4</i>, with Christopher O&#8217;Riley as soloist. They don&#8217;t make &#8216;em like that anymore.</p>
<p>The piano virtuoso Litolff was another of those obscure Romantics, like the organist Julius Reubke I wrote about some months ago, who gained the admiration and support of Franz Liszt. He turned out several operas, and a small repertory of overstuffed, fustian but curiously attractive piano pieces, which soon vanished from the repertory. This one Scherzo from the fourth of Litolff&#8217;s five &#8220;Symphonic Concertos&#8221; goes clattering up- and downhill, never pausing for breath, spinning huge clouds of virtuosic tracery. There&#8217;s a huge legacy of delightful, bad music like this from around 1850, and I love almost every note; the Gottschalk disc that I chortled over a couple of weeks ago belongs on this spider web-draped shelf. This eight-minute tidbit by Litolff &#8211; in which O&#8217;Riley seemed to be splashing around delightedly &#8211; is one of the best. Sad, that only this one movement from the whole concerto ever gets played, and even that not often; I long to hear it all, and never have. How this genre declined, by the way, was tragically demonstrated by the next work on the Bowl program, Richard Addinsell&#8217;s <i>Warsaw Concerto</i>, cobbled together from music from a wartime movie, a compendium of flailings from all the terrible piano concertos &#8211; and there were many &#8211; concocted in the century since the time of Litolff.</p>
<p>Worth Keeping</p>
<p><i>Keepers of the Night</i>, which drew good crowds to Glendale&#8217;s Alex Theater over the Friday-the-13th weekend, was both an opera-for-children and an opera-with-children that did not insult the musical standards of grown-ups. Many of the latter around me on the night I went, important musical personages all, seemed both surprised and delighted at the charm, sophistication and deep beauty of the music. Inasmuch as the work&#8217;s creators, the composer Peter Ash and the librettist Donald Sturrock, bear the stigma of their previous work on Tobias Picker&#8217;s <i>Fantastic Mr. Fox</i>, one of our opera company&#8217;s gloomier escapades, more&#8217;s the surprise.</p>
<p>The plotline isn&#8217;t much; Shakespeare is not far off, as earthling couples mingle in the affairs of not-quite-earthly (all right, birdly) forest creatures. Everyone undergoes some degree of bewitchment, with the wondrous result, becoming increasingly wondrous as the second act moves on, of a series of ensembles of truly bewitching, complex harmonies. Evocations of Britten&#8217;s own &#8220;Dream&#8221; are hard to dispel; you want to rush home &#8211; at least I did &#8211; and play that wondrous score until well past midnight.</p>
<p>There were, however, insurmountable obstacles, born of mingling a cast of professional singers with even the genuinely talented kids of the Los Angeles Children&#8217;s Chorus, in an acoustically imperfect setting &#8211; which the Alex stage most emphatically is. On the one hand, here was Suzanna Guzmán, wonderful to hear and hilarious in her many-legged spider getup. (Eat yer heart out, Tobey Maguire!) Up against her were the four children of the bewitched family, almost inaudible except for Brother Dominic, the one in the group whose voice had changed. Microphoning would probably have worsened the imbalance; what to do?</p>
<p>Surely there is a 400-seat in-the-round space somewhere in the area where repertory like this can take hold and flourish. All told, this very worthy work, in an imaginative production conducted by the Master Chorale&#8217;s Grant Gershon and directed by Corey Madden, needed the chance for a better life. Keep it. </p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>On With Their&#160;Heads!</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2007/07/on-with-their-heads/</link>
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		<pubDate>Wed, 18 Jul 2007 22:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=643</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Hope Remains The grandiose pillared portico of Munich&#8217;s National Theater &#8211; built in 1825, gutted by our boys in 1943, reopened in 1963 &#8211; bespeaks a city that honors and is honored by its opera. Tristan and Die Meistersinger had their premieres there; the shadows of the Richards, Wagner and Strauss, linger at the podium. [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Hope Remains</p>
<p>The grandiose pillared portico of Munich&#8217;s National Theater &#8211; built in 1825, gutted by our boys in 1943, reopened in 1963 &#8211; bespeaks a city that honors and is honored by its opera. <i>Tristan</i> and <i>Die Meistersinger</i> had their premieres there; the shadows of the Richards, Wagner and Strauss, linger at the podium. New operas remain the tradition, even in this city of dark streets and terrible, dark food. So does the tradition of greeting new operas with &#8220;storms of booing&#8221; (as one critic reported on Unsuk Chin&#8217;s <i>Alice in Wonderland</i> last week) and then taking later performances to heart. Old European theaters are built with resonant wood floors, even more so than Disney Hall, and a responsive crowd &#8211; like the one around me at the third performance of <i>Alice</i> &#8211; can stomp out a fair imitation of several thousand timpani, fortissimo. So it was.</p>
<p>Unsuk Chin, 45, born in South Korea, now living in Berlin, is a wondrously versatile composer. Her Violin Concerto, which Kent Nagano brought out with his Berkeley Symphony two seasons ago, is complex and fiendishly difficult to play and to hear. It also happens to be the first truly great work of this millennium. Many of her chamber works have turned up here on &#8220;Green Umbrella&#8221; concerts; they are easier of access, and some are actually fun. <i>Alice</i> bestrides the broad range of her musical manners. David Henry Hwang&#8217;s libretto &#8211; in English, and produced in Munich with German supertitles &#8211; actually takes in quite a lot of Lewis Carroll&#8217;s proto-sci-fi fable, with the twist of enclosing it all in a dream sequence. Achim Freyer both designed and directed, and under both hats he has gone off like a sozzled skyrocket from the libretto&#8217;s suggestions. In press interviews, Ms. Chin has intimated that Freyer&#8217;s madcap designs have gone too far from her own visions of the Alice story. &#8220;Far&#8221; they certainly have gone; &#8220;too far&#8221; I would challenge. This is the best Lewis Carroll since the movie of my childhood that had W.C. Fields as Humpty Dumpty.</p>
<p>On a stage raked at close to a 45-degree angle, Freyer&#8217;s Wonderland characters poke their way out of holes, creating a hilarious geometry. An undulating green line turns into a clarinet-playing Caterpillar. A line of urchins wearing soup pots bang upon them in obeisance to a single can of Campbell&#8217;s (Mock) Turtle Soup. Most of the characters are masked in some way; only the venerable Gwyneth Jones as the Queen of Hearts, stentorian as ever, comes on in full blush. The composer salutes her presence in the opera with a sly quotation from <i>Turandot</i>, one of Jones&#8217; signature roles. A ballet of gadgetry &#8211; disconnected arms and legs, an enormously distended Cheshire Cat, distorted face masks for Alice and her White Rabbit pal &#8211; keeps the stage in constant motion.</p>
<p>There is music to match &#8211; music, that is, full of stylistic twitches that seem to touch breathlessly on an evocation of Baroque here, a jazzy blast there. Percussion dominates, with additional performers on side stages to complement the huge ensemble down front. Musical events, like the events onstage, whiz by with wondrous speed. Most of the singing takes place offstage, or through masks; only Sally Matthews, in a virtuosic stint as Alice, and Jones as the Queen actually perform onstage, companioned by Freyer&#8217;s marvelous array of puppets, marionettes and humanoids of all shapes and sizes.</p>
<p>Nagano conducted. He has for some time been an active advocate for Chin&#8217;s music. Two years ago, while still music director of the Los Angeles Opera, he had <i>Alice</i> placed on the agenda here, and there were excerpts played, as a sort of teaser, at the Ojai Festival. Then Nagano departed to become <i>Generalmusikdirektor</i> at the Bayerische Staatsoper; instead of <i>Alice</i>, we got <i>Grendel</i>. A spokesman for the L.A. Opera told me last week that the company is &#8220;still committed&#8221; to <i>Alice</i>; his boss, Mr. Domingo, stands by the somewhat weaker statement that there is &#8220;still hope.&#8221; With the company&#8217;s ongoing relationship with the great Freyer &#8211;  <i>The Damnation of Faust</i> in the past, <i>The Ring</i> to come &#8211; and with the triumph of <i>Alice</i> still resounding, it strikes me as pure damfoolery not to take the obvious next step.</p>
<p>Bill&#8217;s Double Bill</p>
<p>Talk about <i>Grendel</i>: There was another chunk of biz on the Munich stage that put that sorry affair&#8217;s infamous Wall to shame. It happened in <i>Salome</i>, when Alan Titus as John the Baptist, not merely rising from his prison cell as a single menacing personage, arose embedded in a huge Gibraltar-like structure, marvelously fetid and menacing, all the more so on a set that was otherwise all squares and straight lines. Hollywood&#8217;s own William Friedkin was the director, and the Salome &#8211; svelte, blond, insinuating, overpowering &#8211; was Angela Denoke; write down her name and remember it. Preceding the <i>Salome</i> was Wolfgang Rihm&#8217;s <i>Das Gehege</i>, a dark and cynical monodrama involving a woman (Gabriele Schnaut) who frees a caged eagle, challenges the bird to seduce her and stabs him as he approaches. As with his superb Bartók-Puccini double bill at the L.A. Opera in 2002, Friedkin came up with a way of subtly linking the two works: The same actor (Todd Ford), in the same angel-of-death getup, was cast in the mute roles as the Eagle in the Rihm and the Executioner in <i>Salome</i>, and Friedkin&#8217;s program note, in <i>Leberwurst</i>-dense German far over my head, explained their relationship.</p>
<p>Talk about folks from home: On my last night, the program was billed both as <i>Wagner-Gala</i> &#8211; meaning dress to the nines &#8211; and <i>Oper für Alle</i> &#8211; meaning come as you are. I chose the latter, although it actually referred to a huge video installation out in the Platz, where thousands more assembled under misty but not quite rainy skies. Inside, our own Plácido Domingo was Siegmund to Waltraud Meier&#8217;s Sieglinde in the first act of <i>Die Walküre</i>, with the fabulous bass René Pape, whom I hadn&#8217;t heard before, as Hunding. On his own, Pape sang King Marke&#8217;s lament from <i>Tristan</i>; the dressy crowd applauded happily, and the cheers from the happy Wagnerites outside filtered in through that grand portico. Someone who knows these things tells me that this was the hottest ticket of the entire European opera season . . . and me without a necktie! </p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Home&#160;Entertainment</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2007/07/home-entertainment/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2007/07/home-entertainment/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 11 Jul 2007 22:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=642</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Composers What can a composer say about his or her music that the music itself cannot say better? The question is voluminously argued, with results that fill libraries. Lately they&#8217;ve been filling DVDs as well, with results of varying quality. Here are two DVDs of recent issue or reissue. Both are documentaries on composers about [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Composers</p>
<p>What can a composer say about his or her music that the music itself cannot say better? The question is voluminously argued, with results that fill libraries. Lately they&#8217;ve been filling DVDs as well, with results of varying quality.</p>
<p>Here are two DVDs of recent issue or reissue. Both are documentaries on composers about whom I have expressed a qualm or two over the years (which people seem to remember vividly), along with words of high praise now and then (which nobody except me ever seems to remember). In any case, let that pass for now. One documentary is Frank Scheffer&#8217;s <i>Elliott Carter: A Labyrinth of Time</i>, on the Ideale Audience label; the other is Christopher Nupen&#8217;s two-part Jean Sibelius documentary, &#8220;The Early Years&#8221; and &#8220;Maturity and Silence,&#8221; on Allegro.</p>
<p>The Carter title should itself give off fair warning; through no fault of the venerable composer &#8211; now nearing 100 &#8211; the program is a labyrinth of metaphor. Somehow a convoluted metaphor involving the passage of time becomes entangled in Scheffer&#8217;s script with the collapse of the World Trade Center buildings and the collapse of the tower in the Cocteau film <i>Sang d&#8217;un Poète</i>, which Carter seems able to neither explain nor pronounce. The congenial composer is seen at his ease inscribing notes and slur lines on paper, one at a time, in his comfortable apartment, and then turns up for no good reason trudging across the Brooklyn Bridge (quite a trudge from West 12th Street). Illustrious figures, including the pianist and scholar Charles Rosen and the formidable Pierre Boulez, offer eloquent attestation to the stature of Carter among today&#8217;s composers, with which I have no argument. I do wonder at Rosen&#8217;s evocation of the Carter Cello Sonata as the &#8220;synthesis&#8221; of his compositional techniques, considering that the work dates from 1948 and, thus, predates virtually all his &#8220;significant&#8221; works.</p>
<p>Oh, well. We look in on Carter and his wife, the late Helen, bustling around their comfy apartment. &#8220;I make the beds,&#8221; he says. One genuinely wistful note sounds at the end, considering the, let&#8217;s say, prickly regard that his music enjoys in some circles. &#8220;Where do you see your music&#8217;s future?&#8221; he is asked.</p>
<p>&#8220;People will become much cleverer and sharper,&#8221; answers Elliott Carter. &#8220;Then they will like my music.&#8221;</p>
<p>You will succumb with far less difficulty, may I suggest, to the passionate beauty of Christopher Nupen&#8217;s Sibelius study. I did when it circulated on laserdisc; now it returns all that deeper, richer and more powerful. There is no metaphorical nonsense here, except what the music itself wants us to know. The biographical details are detailed and lavish. Musical performance matters are in the hands of the excellent Vladimir Ashkenazy, and there are two remarkable visual effects. One comes at the end of every work, when the camera captures the orchestra from behind as the string players hold their bows skyward and it&#8217;s like a Sibelius ocean. The other is the remarkable plastic face of Ashkenazy himself, so eloquent as a conductor that you wonder why he wasted all those years in his admittedly excellent career as a pianist.</p>
<p>Every detail of the entire range of Sibelius&#8217; symphonic career is carefully and honestly explained in Nupen&#8217;s painstaking prose; he has had some first-rate researchers. I&#8217;m only sorry that he has stopped short of the tone poems, which, as you know, are a Salonen specialty. As it is, I urge you to acquire this exceptional DVD &#8211; 151 minutes on one disc! &#8211; as preparation for our Philharmonic&#8217;s Sibelius splurge this fall (along with the chapter in the Alex Ross book I mentioned last week, which will also be out by then).</p>
<p>Now, about those 151 minutes . . . The last 30 of these are a kind of Christopher Nupen teaser, bits and pieces from some of his other documentaries of fond memories. There is one 30-second bit that you will play over and over: Jacqueline du Pré alone in a railway car, hugging her cello and plucking out something or other in sheer ecstasy. There&#8217;s more besides, but those few seconds are worth everything.</p>
<p>Action Shots</p>
<p>For <i>Glenn Gould Hereafter</i> (Ideale Audience), Bruno Monsaingeon has gathered a lot of old performance videos, much of them a young and tiresome Gould motor-mouthing, but set against some exhilarating piano performance. The worst is that this is another of these superimposed scenarios, a passel of obnoxious characters in communion with Gould revenant. The best of it, besides the music, are the miles upon miles of Canadian autumnal scenery. Twenty-five years after his death, Gould&#8217;s niche remains unchallenged. Would the <i>Goldberg Variations</i> figure in today&#8217;s vernacular had he not, as an exuberant but endearing brat, arrogantly updated them in his sexy 1956 recording? (To his credit, he then went on to learn their essence in time to record them once more.) A vast legacy remains on compact disc of the strengths, the originality &#8211; and, indeed, the occasional maddening wrong-headedness &#8211; of Gould&#8217;s musical thinking. It will, I fear, soon disappear; grab it now or never. On the Monsaingeon DVD, there&#8217;s lots of music in dribs and drabs, but not a single complete work and, therefore, no real evidence of what this dazzling, fascinating, irritating young genius really thought or really could do.</p>
<p>Spend a truly uplifting hour with Carlo Maria Giulini as he rehearses the Stuttgart Radio Symphony in Anton Bruckner&#8217;s Ninth Symphony, and another hour as he performs the work, on an ArtHaus DVD. The year is 1997; Giulini is 83, 13 years departed from Los Angeles. There are deeper lines in that handsome, Italian face and a little more around the middle, but the eloquence, the graceful movement in the arms, the pleading in the eyes: They are still there. &#8220;Please,&#8221; he tells the winds, &#8220;I can&#8217;t say it too often. We must sing.&#8221; And another time, again to the winds: &#8220;You give too much &#8216;puh.&#8217; I like more &#8216;aaah.&#8217; &#8221; At the very end of the first movement, there&#8217;s a fascinating exchange, as Giulini adjusts Bruckner&#8217;s marking between trumpet and trombone, the smallest dynamic detail. It&#8217;s what a conductor defines as a minor detail, and you and I hear as a great performance. </p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Small Things&#160;Considered</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2007/07/small-things-considered/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2007/07/small-things-considered/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Tue, 03 Jul 2007 22:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=641</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Déjà Vu All Over Again: Plácido Domingo zoomed out from the wings at the Hollywood Bowl on opening night, encased in Kristin Chenoweth as wraparound, and I was suddenly overpowered by memory. On October 23, 1966, at the New York State Theater, a somewhat younger Domingo gathered up a fragile Pat Brooks in exactly the [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><i>Déjà Vu All Over Again:</i> Plácido Domingo zoomed out from the wings at the Hollywood Bowl on opening night, encased in Kristin Chenoweth as wraparound, and I was suddenly overpowered by memory. On October 23, 1966, at the New York State Theater, a somewhat younger Domingo gathered up a fragile Pat Brooks in exactly the same way to launch into the most heartbreaking “Parigi, O cara” in my memory book. No, it wasn&#8217;t <i>La Traviata</i> at the Bowl this night, but for that split visual second, it was exactly that for me. For this big, messy evening &#8211; a comedy routine by Jack Black that I didn&#8217;t expect to like but did, a dumb-ass bit by Jason Alexander that I hadn&#8217;t planned to hate but did, young dancers from John Mauceri&#8217;s North Carolina School of the Arts that you couldn&#8217;t help but love &#8211; that suspended moment released the happiest memories.</p>
<p><i>“MaryAnn Bonino comes into the room,”</i> I wrote in this space in 1992, “and her smile is like the lighting of a hundred crystal chandeliers.” Last Friday at the Doheny Mansion, there was still that light, but also a sad shadow Bonino was there to announce her stepping down as head of the Da Camera Society, which since 1973 has brought world-renowned performance artists to play in settings worthy of them, the series known as “Chamber Music in Historic Sites,” which greatly enhances the audible and visible prestige of this area. The series will continue under the able leadership of the young Kelly Garrison, organist at St. Basil&#8217;s and a Bonino protégé these last several years. Garrison is a charming fellow, but nobody played a room like Bonino and her smile. Her future projects include writing histories of the magnificent Doheny home in the Adams District, where these concerts began and where many of them still go on, and of the Dohenys themselves, one of this city&#8217;s great families, who brought the likes of the fabulous tenor John McCormack to serenade their guests. In other words, Bonino is dropping out while staying put.</p>
<p><i>Youth Has Its Sing:</i> Google your way to the Alex Prior Web site and hear 14-year-old Prior, still this side of voice change, deliver Puccini&#8217;s tenor socko “Nessun dorma” in the boy-soprano range, a bit wobbly at that. He throws in an extra “Vincero!!!” at the end to even out the cadences, but the audience in the Kremlin &#8211; at least the bigwigs around Russian President Vladimir Putin &#8211; looks unmoved. Brit-born Prior is studying (what? all kinds of things!) in St. Petersburg, where he has composed ballets and symphonies, and is now working on an operatic version of Ibsen&#8217;s <i>A Doll&#8217;s House</i>.</p>
<p><i>Hey, Jay!:</i> Perhaps this is the time to look in on Jay Greenberg, another teenage prodigy, who stole the heart of a <i>New York Times</i> correspondent a year ago with his, well, prodigality. Alas, there is nothing on the Greenberg Web site since last August. Can it be?</p>
<p><i>Curious Replacements Along Parallel Pretexts:</i> The excellent Peter Davis, whom <i>New York</i> magazine fired recently on the pretext that it didn&#8217;t need a music critic, has now been replaced by Justin Davidson, former music critic of <i>Newsday</i>, on the pretext that Davidson will also write about architecture (and the unspoken pretext that he owns a Pulitzer and is a couple of decades younger than Davis). Even from over 2,400 aeronautical miles, this smells. And while we&#8217;re at it, I wonder at William Friedkin&#8217;s hilarious staging of Puccini&#8217;s <i>Gianni Schicchi</i> being dumped by the L.A. Opera after one time out, with the opera handed over to Woody Allen to direct in the 2008 season. Of the operas that make up that triple bill, I should think that the gooey, lachrymose <i>Suor Angelica</i> would far more need the Woody touch.</p>
<p><i>The New Gibberish, Anatomical Division:</i> (David Mermelstein, on Esa-Pekka, in <i>The Wall Street Journal</i>):</p>
<p>“One notices that his apple cheeks are giving way to jowls.”</p>
<p><i>Evidence of the Disappearance of the Symphony:</i> At its annual meeting last week, the 65-year-old American Symphony Orchestra League voted to change its name next September to the League of the American Orchestra. Whether the move will immediately enfranchise other orchestras not quite symphonic to join the league isn&#8217;t immediately known, but it&#8217;s significant that the voting took place in Nashville.</p>
<p><i>Leakage:</i> The same day&#8217;s mail brought the galleys of Alex Ross&#8217; <i>The Rest Is Noise</i>, as avidly awaited in circles close to me as that Potter affair seems to be in others also not far off. The publication date isn&#8217;t until mid-October, so I am bound to silence, or something close. Within the bounds of friendship, in this case, I don&#8217;t see anything wrong in suggesting that “avidly,” in the matter at hand, might well be tantamount to “deservedly”; after all, you&#8217;ve surveyed the level of his writing in Ross&#8217; columns in <i>The New Yorker</i> and in his blog named like the book. Furthermore, there is some leakage afoot. Ross has allowed the prepublication in the magazine of an entire chapter, as a teaser you might say; it happens to be the first chapter my eyes fell upon when the galleys arrived, the dark, elegiac piece on Jean Sibelius, largely on his symphonies, bearing the title “Apparition From the Woods: The Loneliness of Jean Sibelius.” There is strength and eloquence here, and the fascination with history going back into wonderful caverns of atmosphere such to make any listener &#8211; myself included &#8211; rush out to rehear these strange, multicolored works. How can an orchestra, or a league of orchestras, shirk the modifier “symphony,” confronted with such heritage? And, of course, the book hits the market just as our own Philharmonic starts the new season with its own Sibelius Cycle, a survey of exactly that music. Do I hear some wheels interlocking? Do I care?</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Hangin&#039; in&#160;There</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2007/06/hangin-in-there/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2007/06/hangin-in-there/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 28 Jun 2007 00:55:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=640</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Swan Songs And still they come. There&#8217;s no way of knowing where the latest classical disc releases may be had &#8211; something-or-other dot-com seems to be the easiest manner of acquisition &#8211; but some producers continue to behave as if the market were happy and flourishing, and there are releases out there worth your attention [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Swan Songs</p>
<p>And still they come. There&#8217;s no way of knowing where the latest classical disc releases may be had &#8211; something-or-other dot-com seems to be the easiest manner of acquisition &#8211; but some producers continue to behave as if the market were happy and flourishing, and there are releases out there worth your attention at full price. One of those apparent optimists is the French firm Harmonia Mundi, always a class act, whether at its home base in ravishing Arles or at its local branch in picturesque Burbank.</p>
<p>Philippe Herreweghe is one of the company&#8217;s star conductors, Belgian-born, now 60, a musician of exceptional probity and depth, particularly so in the way he can maintain a rich choral texture with the whole musical fabric resonant and clear. His Bach recordings on Harmonia Mundi are remarkable. The Mass, the Passions and a number of the &#8220;plus belles&#8221; cantatas reach that splendid middle ground: the clarity that casts clear light through the marvelous intricacy of Bach&#8217;s choral writing, mingled with the wondrous soft light that makes the mysterious beauty of Bach continually just beyond our reach.</p>
<p>Now there is a new Herreweghe release, perhaps even more mysterious: two discs, 88 minutes of choral music by Heinrich Schütz, German genius of the early Baroque. A contemporary and one-time pupil of Monteverdi, Schütz was a master on his own of the same kind of sudden harmonic coloration that can send the chill up the spine as a key dramatic word is illuminated in sudden dramatic underscoring. He composed exclusively for the church. In Dresden in the 1660s, about 10 years before his death, he began to prepare for that event by creating a setting of the huge text of Psalm 119, a series of motets to be sung at his funeral. It never happened; the manuscript was scattered, and only collected and performed in the 1970s. Whatever the funeral attendees may have missed in 1672 is our gain today.</p>
<p>The music is long, solemn and gorgeous. The chorus is Herreweghe&#8217;s 26-member Collegium Vocale of Ghent, with brass, strings and organ from the Concerto Palatino. Listen with a folio of Hieronymus Bosch on your lap, and keep the lights down.</p>
<p>The mood of this music continues, more or less, into the Third, or &#8220;Rhenish,&#8221; Symphony of Robert Schumann, not quite two centuries later and, appropriately, also on hand in a superb new Herreweghe performance on Harmonia Mundi &#8211; this time with l&#8217;Orchestre des Champs-Elysées. The best of this music is the movement that seems to capture, and hold in suspension, an ageless solemnity looking back to old Schütz, Bosch and beyond. Schumann&#8217;s First Symphony, which shares the disc, is not at all solemn, is much more fun, and dances happily under Herreweghe&#8217;s affectionate leadership.</p>
<p>Pianists Named David</p>
<p>From Virgin Classics comes some spectacular work at the piano by a photogenic young man named David Fray, who came before the microphones at 20, just out of the Conservatoire, and plays the Allemande from Bach&#8217;s D-major Partita so slowly (11&#8217;34&#8243; with repeats) as to enchant the program annotator almost to the point of gurgle. (Let him be advised that Glenn Gould plays the same movement at 6&#8217;27&#8243; <i>without</i> repeats, which comes to 12&#8217;54&#8243; <i>with.</i>) Young Mr. Fray clatters his way through two major Bach works and the <i>Notations</i> and <i>Incises</i> of Pierre Boulez. His fingers, from the pictures, look about 2 feet long, which may be why they sound so distant from his heart.</p>
<p>David Fung makes his recording debut on Yarlung, a local label; aside from a set of inconsequential Tan Dun pieces, his program is standard debut stuff: Mozart, Schumann, Rachmaninoff. Yes, he plays them very well. No, this is no way for a talented young pianist (which I presume he is) to make any kind of mark. Who does he want to hear this disc? Interested critics or adoring relatives? If the latter, give them Mozart, Schumann and Tan Dun. If the former, at least the other David played Boulez, and even got to pose with him.</p>
<p>&#8216;Tis of Thee</p>
<p>Back in the days of the LP, it was an act of considerable heroism for Goddard Lieberson&#8217;s Columbia Records to devote time and money to recording serious American music. Today, nearly every important event takes place in front of a microphone and a competent engineer, and now there is Naxos to build its considerable catalog of Americana from new and recently archived performances. And while Lieberson&#8217;s label nourished itself primarily on the luxury of New York performances, the Naxos catalog reaches far, wide and, now and then, risky.</p>
<p>Here, for example, is a perfect delight of a disc, of music from that grand pioneer Louis Gottschalk, who charmed the crowds here and abroad up through Civil War days with flamboyant, virtuosic display pieces. From last year&#8217;s Hot Springs (Arkansas) Festival comes a whole disc of Gottschalk&#8217;s orchestral works, and it&#8217;s a hoot. It includes the hilariously lovable <i>Célèbre Tarantelle</i> and <i>Night in the Tropics</i>, guaranteed to lift you off your seat on first hearing, and Gottschalk&#8217;s own arrangement for five pianos, nine horns and 112-piece orchestra of <i>The Young King Henry&#8217;s Hunt</i> (don&#8217;t ask). There&#8217;s even an opera, 13 minutes long, something Cuban. The Hot Springs forces are led by a certain Richard Rosenberg, and you haven&#8217;t heard any of the soloists, so you don&#8217;t need to now. The performances are as good as they need to be at the price; don&#8217;t forget, this is Naxos.</p>
<p>Even more worth your while is a disc of works by Charles Wuorinen, the New York composer who has worked for a time in the shadow of atonality but has more recently emerged into a more congenial, if intensely brainy, musical style, moved energetically forward by lively contrapuntal adventures. Two works on the disc are remastered archive recordings by the Group for Contemporary Music of superfond memory. They are for clarinet, violin, cello and piano, which was also the constitution of an ensemble called Tashi, and that &#8211; hold on &#8211; is the name of the first of the two pieces. (The other, for the same scoring, is called <i>Fortune</i>.) These are big, stirring, somewhat nerve-racking pieces, wonderful listening. In between comes a percussion quartet, played by a group from New Jersey, and that, too, is a dandy. So, in fact, is the whole disc. </p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Ojai: Survival and&#160;Revival</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2007/06/ojai-survival-and-revival/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2007/06/ojai-survival-and-revival/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 20 Jun 2007 22:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=639</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[The Fateful Tick Only György Ligeti could have dreamed it up. And while his Poème Symphonique actually had had its premiere several decades ago (in 1962) and many thousand miles away (in the Netherlands), it proved exactly the right curtain raiser for this 61st run of the wondrously indescribable festival-like-none-other that ennobled a long weekend [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>The Fateful Tick</p>
<p>Only György Ligeti could have dreamed it up. And while his <i>Poème Symphonique</i> actually had had its premiere several decades ago (in 1962) and many thousand miles away (in the Netherlands), it proved exactly the right curtain raiser for this 61st run of the wondrously indescribable festival-like-none-other that ennobled a long weekend up among the orange groves and horse farms at Ojai earlier this month. After a couple of years of worrisome relaxation, this was one of the best of the festivals, a return to the good old Ojai days of musical high adventure, some exasperation, deep satisfaction and sheer, delightful insanity. The Ligeti piece on opening night summed up quite a lot of that.</p>
<p>Let me describe what happened. One hundred metronomes &#8211; the old-fashioned, wind-up variety &#8211; were set up on 10 tables surrounding the outdoor audience area in Libbey Park, and were all wound and set off by operators, simultaneously, at tempo settings specified by the composer. (The entire score consists of one sheet of instructions.) The sounds of tick-tock filled the air &#8211; best heard on a sublimely warm, starlit night such as the gods afforded the entire weekend at Ojai. Gradually, after maybe five minutes, the rhythms began to fragment, as one metronome after another succumbed to mechanical realities. By 20 minutes, a real drama had taken hold; you began to think of all those movies, most of them bad, about the end of the world &#8211; <i>On the Beach</i>, maybe &#8211; and the band of survivors dying off one by one. Two metronomes survived, then one, then silence; you beat back a sob. Who but Ligeti could dream up such meaningful madness, such genuine tragedy, and then attach such a pompous title? His <i>Poème Symphonique</i> remained with me all weekend.</p>
<p>There was more Ligeti at the festival&#8217;s end, the Piano Concerto of 1986, that creative period late in his life, when great, exuberant works such as this seemed to erupt effortlessly. Two stunningly able musicians bear Ligeti&#8217;s banner forward, and they were both at Ojai: the pianist Pierre-Laurent Aimard and the conductor Peter Eötvös (<i>UHT-vuhsh</i>), and their collaboration in this concerto (and in the Ravel concerto to close the weekend) was the stuff of dreams. So is Ligeti&#8217;s concerto itself. I love the way he turns the harmony crazy every so often by dragging in unruly, untunable instruments such as the ocarina; his rhythms, with their illusion of several speeds happening at once, are crazier still. Somehow, this all seemed to embody everything unique and singularly wonderful about Ojai. There was another occasion when Ligeti&#8217;s music dominated the festival: 1989, when Pierre Boulez was the conductor and the Arditti Quartet played. It rained the whole weekend, and the Philharmonic musicians played in heavy jackets. This time around served as expiation.</p>
<p>Bang</p>
<p>Even Tom Morris joined in. The festival&#8217;s able artistic director, formerly of Cleveland, showed up among the percussion ensemble in Stravinsky&#8217;s <i>Les Noces</i> in the Friday-night concert and, as far as I could tell, didn&#8217;t miss a beat. Stravinsky&#8217;s epically vulgar foray into Russian prenuptial manners deserves more hearings; it would make a splendid thunder in Disney Hall. And so it did at Ojai, with an all-star cast including Kevin Short, our recent Porgy. Bartók&#8217;s Sonata for Two Pianos and Percussion began that program, with Aimard and Tamara Stefanovich at the pianos, and in the middle was quite an exciting work by the multitalented Eötvös, his <i>Sonata per Sei</i> for pianos, percussion and sampler keyboard, something of a memorial piece to Bartók but a knockout work on its own.</p>
<p>Percussion, as I was saying, supplied the beat for most of the festival. One of the morning concerts was taken over by Nexus, the Toronto-based quintet, with a program heavy on novelty (bird songs) and light on the serious repertory. Okay; the coordination, plus charm, in Steve Reich&#8217;s <i>Music for Pieces of Wood</i> was highlight enough for any morning, and I also happen to be a sucker for old-timey Tin Pan Alley songs on the xylophone.</p>
<p>Aimard&#8217;s solo recital filled the other morning concert with his remarkable brain &#8211; and fingers to match &#8211; operating at full force. First came an uninterrupted sequence: Quiet, reflective, short pieces from late in Schumann&#8217;s life segued into two parts of Bach&#8217;s final <i>Art of the Fugue</i> segued into short bits by Elliott Carter. The whole 25-minute sequence was more cohesive in the hearing than the telling could convey. Then came Charles Ives&#8217; &#8220;Concord&#8221; Sonata, whose cohesion, if any, was impaired by the introduction of ponderous descriptive material between movements, ponderously delivered by a local resident. I don&#8217;t want to believe that this was Aimard&#8217;s idea; his performance of the Ives, at Ojai and on disc, has a rich lyric progression. He succeeds in integrating the work&#8217;s obsession with the &#8220;Beethoven Fifth&#8221; motif into the flow better than any musician I&#8217;ve heard; why, then, this artifice? The printed program notes on the work were more informative.</p>
<p>One more concert I found less admirable: <i>Chinese Opera</i>, more Eötvös but less scrutable; not Chinese and not opera, he claims; then what? It&#8217;s a set of rowdy tone pictures of European theatrical directors worthy of the composer&#8217;s admiration. Filling most of that program was Mahler&#8217;s <i>Das Lied von der Erde</i>, not in its redolent, haunting orchestral colors that have nourished our souls with memories of Bruno Walter&#8217;s conducting and Kathleen Ferrier&#8217;s final &#8220;ewig . . . ewig,&#8221; but in a &#8220;portable&#8221; chamber-orchestra version prepared by Arnold Schoenberg among others. Monica Groop, well-known in these parts, sang admirably; a new tenor, Sean Panikkar, with a bright gleam of a voice, sounds like a real find; Douglas Boyd drew whatever sounds from the excellent St. Paul Chamber Orchestra that the arrangers allowed to remain. Mahler, however, it wasn&#8217;t.</p>
<p>Ojai, however, it was. Dawn Upshaw, a festival semiregular (and goddess) returns next year, and the music director is native son David Robertson. About time.</p>
<p><i>Obiter dictum:</i> Concerning the music-critic merry-go-round reported upon last week: Pierre Ruhe reports that he has been rehired by the <i>Atlanta Journal-Constitution</i> in &#8220;materially&#8221; the same capacity as when he was fired as critic. I&#8217;d watch that &#8220;materially.&#8221; </p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Curtain&#160;Calls</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2007/06/curtain-calls/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2007/06/curtain-calls/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Fri, 08 Jun 2007 22:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=638</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Flat Tortilla The opera company that rose to distinction with Don Carlo, Poppea and Mahagonny during its excellent season lurched toward triviality at season&#8217;s end, first with last month&#8217;s overproduced, overstuffed Merry Widow and now with Luisa Fernanda. In a press briefing a week before the premiere, general director Plácido Domingo expressed the idea of [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Flat Tortilla</p>
<p>The opera company that rose to distinction with <i>Don Carlo</i>, <i>Poppea</i> and <i>Mahagonny</i> during its excellent season lurched toward triviality at season&#8217;s end, first with last month&#8217;s overproduced, overstuffed <i>Merry Widow</i> and now with <i>Luisa Fernanda</i>. In a press briefing a week before the premiere, general director Plácido Domingo expressed the idea of founding a bicoastal troupe devoted to <i>zarzuela</i>, the endearing Hispanic musical theater studded with popular masterpieces, of which Federico Moreno Torroba&#8217;s <i>Luisa Fernanda</i>, out of his 80, is one. Domingo stopped short of proclaiming a glowing future for such a fragile, small, winsome entertainment adrift in a 3,000-plus-seat grand-opera house at $200-plus tickets; such a dream demands fulfillment in a setting smaller and friendlier to the art and its audience. However, since his personal history includes years in his parents&#8217; <i>zarzuela</i> troupe in Spain and in Mexico, I suppose it was inevitable that he&#8217;d be impatient to share this chapter of his personal history, however inappropriate the venue. Hence the current <i>Luisa Fernanda</i> in Mrs. Chandler&#8217;s Pavilion, a small, pretty bird where elephants once trod.</p>
<p>Domingo has cast himself in a leading role, one of Luisa&#8217;s rival suitors, thus placing others in this unbalanced cast at a disadvantage &#8211; most of all his almost voiceless rival, tenor Antonio Gandía, who actually makes off with the girl at the end &#8211; but assuring capacity ticket sales for the seven-performance run. There is nothing in Torroba&#8217;s pretty score, which dates from 1932, that you haven&#8217;t heard in some of this city&#8217;s best restaurants. Domingo was in fair voice on opening night, and so was Yali-Marie Williams, a mettlesome, strong-voiced soprano who took over for the &#8220;indisposed&#8221; star in the title role. Some old friends &#8211; the splendid mezzo Suzanna Guzman for one, always a welcome sight and sound &#8211; appear in minor roles. The sets, by old-time <i>zarzuela</i> hand Emilio Sagi, who also stage-directs, have already made the rounds of Madrid&#8217;s Teatro Real (as you can see on an ArtHaus DVD) and Domingo&#8217;s Washington Opera. They are a curious mix: rooms furnished with rows of plain ladderback chairs, with faint shadows of dancers behind a scrim, and a huge tree at the end that is pretty but cramps the whole stage, some striking abstractions, some washed-out emptiness. I gather that the <i>zarzuela</i> tradition does not embrace fancy scenery.</p>
<p>What I Do and Why</p>
<p>The small annoyances pass while the darker clouds gather. The news about classical music is not good; let&#8217;s face it. For every successful programming adventure by orchestra managements here or in San Francisco, for every signing of a dazzling and promising new talent, there is news of record companies going under, of orchestras cutting back on projects. The perpetrators are in trouble, and so, now, are the judges, as though Mr. Bush had decided that we could get along with only four or five justices on the Supreme Court &#8211; or maybe none.</p>
<p><i>New York Magazine</i> has just fired Peter Davis, one of its only two classical music critics since it began, as a Sunday supplement to the <i>Herald Tribune</i>, in 1963. (I was the other.) It can get along without a critic, says the editor. Okay, New York has others to look after its busy musical life, including <i>The New Yorker</i>&#8216;s Alex Ross, whom I aspire to be someday, but what about Atlanta and Minneapolis, whose major papers have lost or drastically cut back on coverage?</p>
<p>The loudest argument advanced by editors is that classical events usually occur only once or twice, so that they&#8217;re gone by the time the review appears (in a daily) or long gone (in the paper you hold). That puts yesterday&#8217;s Philharmonic concert in the same league with yesterday&#8217;s Dodgers game &#8211; and it doesn&#8217;t really work there either. The sun shines brighter when the Dodgers win than when they don&#8217;t. Classical music aerates a community; we&#8217;ve had explosive proof with Disney Hall. It comes cloaked in a certain air of mystery, which the critic is there to penetrate. Because it has a strong impact on emotions, it also generates a lot of nut cases who, these days, have access to the Internet, so that we have both not enough music criticism &#8211; or, let&#8217;s call it, &#8220;writing around music&#8221; &#8211; and too much in the form of blogs. Alex Ross&#8217; blog, TheRestIsNoise.com, is, however, required daily reading, for its own wisdom, for its generosity in linking to many of those others out there, and for the photos of his gorgeous cats.</p>
<p>This goes nowhere toward addressing the growing problem. A community&#8217;s musical life needs a spokesperson &#8211; no, more than one, it needs a couple who can disagree, as I do with Mark Swed , who loves <i>Luisa Fernanda</i> &#8211; whose credentials have been checked to include some degree of musical education. It disturbs me greatly that Peter Davis in New York, Pierre Ruhe in Atlanta and Michael Anthony in Minneapolis &#8211; guys of exceptional musical intelligence &#8211; are having their wings trimmed or lopped off. What bothers me even more is the double talk from their former employers, to the effect that the musical life in their respective communities &#8211; at a time when the falling off of ticket sales, new-music creativity, school activity, and every other sign you can name of music&#8217;s need for strong, intelligent evangelism at the center of each and every community &#8211; can somehow survive without the words of serious critical leadership.</p>
<p>Being a critic at its best means, to me, becoming worked up over an experience and simply bursting to share it. The words often begin to come in the car on the way home. After Karel Husa&#8217;s <i>Music for Prague</i>, I knew by the time I passed the La Brea turnoff that I had to use the B word for the first time in my life. (The one other time was a quote.) But my favorite experience &#8211; perhaps <i>ever</i> &#8211; came last fall, when I got so angry over Chris Pasles&#8217; ignorant putdown of the L.A. Opera&#8217;s <i>Poppea</i> that I circularized my mailing list imploring people to ignore it, spread the word and go. The opera company sold out the run, and I think I may have helped. That&#8217;s what critics do. </p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Shadow and&#160;Substance</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2007/06/shadow-and-substance/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2007/06/shadow-and-substance/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 07 Jun 2007 00:58:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=637</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[The Bullshit Factor The elderly white-haired gentleman sat on the stage and smiled. “This is one of the world&#8217;s greatest composers,” said Steven Stucky by way of introducing his old teacher from Cornell University days. “He is the world&#8217;s greatest composer,” repeats KUSC&#8217;s Jim Svejda about his Czech mate, week after week, in a heartwarming [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>
The Bullshit Factor</p>
<p>The elderly white-haired gentleman sat on the stage and smiled. “This is one of the world&#8217;s greatest composers,” said Steven Stucky by way of introducing his old teacher from Cornell University days. “He is the world&#8217;s greatest composer,” repeats KUSC&#8217;s Jim Svejda about his Czech mate, week after week, in a heartwarming litany. Now, at 85, Karel Husa himself had come to visit, to listen and smile some more at <i>Music for Prague 1968</i>, his best-known work, racking up 7,000 performances so far. Strange to relate, the Philharmonic had only gotten around to performing it last week, for the first time.</p>
<p>Strange? Strange that the most famous score by the world&#8217;s greatest composer &#8211; or so proclaimed &#8211; has taken nearly four decades to reach our local forces? That it has never been recorded by a major orchestra? Or on a major label? I&#8217;ll give you a hint: It isn&#8217;t very good.</p>
<p>The work was originally written for school band, with a lot of sharp licks that can lift a band into a fair imitation of seriousness. That, I suspect, accounts for a large part of the work&#8217;s circulation; large, meaty chunks of serious-pretending band music, especially with a deeply personal program attached, make for socko programming. Mr. Husa was born in Prague, studied here and there, settled permanently in the U.S. in 1954 and obtained U.S. citizenship four years later. Fourteen years later came the Soviet invasion of Czechoslovakia, and Mr. Husa suddenly became, in press releases at least, a heroic exile &#8211; from the country he had willingly forsaken long before. He composed this half-hour of orchestral meandering with a meaningful title attached to ensure fame: patches of nontonality here to secure his place in his own century, big militant noises there to attempt a handshake with fellow sufferer Shostakovich, a Bartók rip-off (merely embarrassing), and, at the end, a Czech anthem and some bells to proclaim some semblance of nationality with every cliché well in place.</p>
<p>I extend my homage to Esa-Pekka Salonen, who extracted enough agreeable noise from the work to elicit the normal Los Angeles standing ovation. (Rude question, which I, at almost Husa&#8217;s age, feel entitled to ask: Were they standing out of obeisance to all this “greatest” hype, or for what they heard in the clogged, constipated music?) I find it curious how little of Husa&#8217;s music shows up across the orchestral landscape, in the U.S. or abroad. His fame is maintained by small pockets of dedicated enthusiasts &#8211; my colleague at KUSC, or another local spokesman, Byron Adams, author of the simpering Husa article in <i>Grove&#8217;s Dictionary</i>. I cannot question the authenticity of their devotion; I just wonder what in hell they hear.</p>
<p>Elsewhere on Thursday&#8217;s program, there was much to hear, much that gave pleasure; this was next-to-last in the remarkably rewarding “Shadow of Stalin” series, devoted this time to lives just east of the Iron Curtain. First came Gyouml;rgy Ligeti, earlier music from his pen than most of us know, delightful and sweet. Yet this <i>Concert Românesc</i> had raised waves, banned by Bucharest authorities after one rehearsal; today, it sounds like a louder and more inebriated paraphrase of one of Enesco&#8217;s <i>Romanian Rhapsodies</i>, and a lot more fun that Salonen, aided by a couple of offstage musicians, rode to glory.</p>
<p>At the end came Witold Lutoslawski &#8211; another of Steve Stucky&#8217;s teachers, and a familiar and much-admired visitor here in his last years. His <i>Concerto for Orchestra</i> preceded those years. It dates from 1954, and shows a composer in his early 40s, writing with the ebullience and the wit that stayed with him to the end, but working within limits carefully defined by a watchful Soviet rule. The music is strongly outlined, folk or folklike, splendidly bright in coloration. You already know, from this early flight, where this composer will soar once his wings are set free.</p>
<p>Positive VibrationsI cannot find enough words of praise for the Philharmonic management for the outlay of imagination, and its realization in special projects like these “Shadow of Stalin” concerts and the “Minimalist Jukebox” of fond memory. They convey the message that the Philharmonic exists as a positive force in creating a culturally aware, informed public. The success has been overwhelming. You could have argued in the first year at Disney Hall that people were being lured by the new hall. Now it is four years later, and you should have seen the crowd on May 25 for a concert of excerpts from two Shostakovich operas and some other grinding Soviet stuff &#8211; by no measure an easy-listening program. You couldn&#8217;t get near the place; the crowd was mixed in age; at the end, they stayed to cheer their collective heads off &#8211; not dash out to grab a taxi as in New York.</p>
<p>The concerts themselves were put together with high imagination. It was a nice touch to have an old, original art-nouveau theremin on the stage, standing beside the one that was actually performed upon, during Gavriil Popov&#8217;s <i>Komsomol Patron of Electrification</i>. (I&#8217;m sorry to have missed “Pravda,” the all-nighter, with the orchestra of <i>10 theremins</i>, but I had a note from my doctor.) There were valuable film clips, and a fabulous climax with a complete screening of the Eisenstein masterpiece <i>Alexander Nevsky</i> with Prokofiev&#8217;s music performed live by Salonen and the Philharmonic, energized by the screen over their heads. Is there a more spine-crushing sequence in all film sound than those crashes of Prokofiev&#8217;s motoric, propulsive music in <i>Nevsky</i> against the bodies and steel of Eisenstein&#8217;s opposing armies? And wasn&#8217;t it further amazing to hear the splendor of that horrific noise resounding in Disney?</p>
<p>I wrote about Popov in 2004, at the appearance on disc of his one unadulterated symphonic work before Stalin&#8217;s ax fell, a First Symphony lasting some 50 minutes; I still hope to hear a proper live performance. The film score, as its title suggests, was somewhat more unruly in style, but there are flashes of a lyric style of considerable depth. Of the major musical talents that emerged during the time of Stalin and then fought to emerge from his shadow, Popov&#8217;s throttled genius constitutes a Russian tragedy all its own. </p></p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Higher&#160;Education</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2007/05/higher-education/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2007/05/higher-education/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 30 May 2007 19:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=636</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Some of the liveliest music making has come to my attention this season under the least-promising circumstances: one proud parent or another entreating my presence at some doted-upon offspring&#8217;s high school&#8217;s annual musical production. Los Angeles being the proverbial talent hotbed, the prospects are usually not so dire as at You-name-it-ville; in recent months, in [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><span style="font-weight: bold;">Some of the liveliest music making </span>has come to my attention this season under the least-promising circumstances: one proud parent or another entreating my presence at some doted-upon offspring&#8217;s high school&#8217;s annual musical production. Los Angeles being the proverbial talent hotbed, the prospects are usually not so dire as at You-name-it-ville; in recent months, in fact, the two shows I&#8217;ve attended, both of difficult and demanding material, were exceptionally well produced and performed.</p>
<p>The first was <i>Street Scene</i>, the most ambitious and closest-to-opera of Kurt Weill&#8217;s Broadway productions, indeed excoriated in some quarters for its pretensions at its 1946 opening (I was there). Yet these ambitions seemed not to daunt a brave ensemble from the Los Angeles County High School for the Arts, which mounted a lively, nicely staged, stark and vigorous facsimile of both drama and music at its home theater at Cal State University. Stephanie Vlahos, who has sung roles with the L.A. Opera, did the staging; Alan Mautner led the full-size student orchestra; Victoria Profitt designed the set, not the awesome streetscape I remember from 1946, perhaps, but not at all bad.</p>
<p><i>Street Scene</i> is a long and powerful show; opera companies here and abroad have taken it up, to good advantage. One cut too many in the second act of this performance sped the action from the murder to the murderer&#8217;s capture somewhat hastily. On the other hand, the program book itself carried a series of interesting essays on the characters in the drama, written by the student cast members themselves and offering a set of insights into the tonalities of the performance. Nice idea!</p>
<p>Over on the Westside, the Hamilton High School Academy of Music busied itself with nothing less than <i>Les Miz</i> in nine single-cast performances (with only one trip to the ER, says cast mom Gail Eichenthal). Founded nearly 20 years ago as a magnet within Hamilton High, the academy remains phenomenally active within many performance fields; earlier this season, it furnished the strings, percussion, recorders and hand bells for the glorious riot of <i>Noah&#8217;s Flood</i> under James Conlon at the cathedral (on the last day it rained).</p>
<p>I&#8217;ve seen <i>Les Misérables</i> before, but never with so much pleasure. It wasn&#8217;t only a matter of lusty, young voices singing the daylights out of themselves; it was that, plus the tremendous joy of their doing that with one another, discovering early in the run what marvels occur when voices blend. Lots of <i>Les Miz</i> is secondhand trash, but those guys, the Messrs. Boublil and Schonberg, knew how to compose musical ensembles, and that&#8217;s what their show is full of.</p>
<p>Joshua Finkel directed, Jim Foschia led the all-student orchestra, John Hamilton was the chorus master, and when those revolutionist-choristers piled up against the Paris barricades and fought off the right-wingers, you couldn&#8217;t ask for better musical theater at any price. And while it&#8217;s wrong to pick out individual names of participants in student productions, if Eichenthal&#8217;s kid, and the young gentleman who managed the passions of Jean Valjean, and the fabulous meanie who did the Inspector Javert &#8211; including a quite convincing suicide leap &#8211; survived the nine performances sounding as terrific as they did on the second night, we&#8217;ve got some great singers in our theatrical future.</p>
<p><span style="font-weight: bold;">Eloquent Endings</span><br style="font-weight: bold;" /><br />There is this amazing music by Franz Schubert: <i>Song of the Spirits Over the Waters</i>. The words are by Goethe, a metaphor of souls intertwined with watery images. Schubert struggled four separate times with setting the words to music, and finally came up with a richly colored, dark and resonant piece for eight solo men&#8217;s voices and five low strings &#8211; violas, cellos and a double bass &#8211; an impractical scoring seldom heard in concerts considering its extraordinary beauty. Trust the loving serendipity of the Jacaranda guys Patrick and Mark to bring the work forward, which they did to close the last of this season&#8217;s concerts, Saturday night at Santa Monica&#8217;s First Pres before another sold-out crowd.</p>
<p>It was another of their intricately planned, imaginative programs: all Viennese this time, starting with the Romantic landscape already under clouds (Alban Berg&#8217;s Piano Sonata, handsomely dispatched by Mark Robson), stepping back into sporadic sunshine for a Mahler group sung by the splendid bass-baritone Dean Elzinga. Beyond Mahler came a plunge into Schoenbergian non-tonality with the Opus 19 Piano Pieces played by Gloria Cheng and the wartime melodrama <i>Ode to Napoleon</i>, again with Elzinga. Came then the Schubert: “Soul of Man, how like water you are&#8230;,” a clearing of the air, a benediction.</p>
<p>Next season, announce the Jacaranda people, is the centennial of Olivier Messiaen, and this will initiate a two-year <i>hommage</i>: something of his on every program, and much other music by composers reached by his music and/or his spirit. There will also be eight concerts, more than ever before. The growth of this superbly planned and managed series adds to the sense of strength and enterprise &#8211; and, therefore, of pride &#8211; in all of this region&#8217;s musical life.</p>
<p>Jeffrey Kahane&#8217;s return to his Los Angeles Chamber Orchestra, after a doctor-ordered dropout, drew a happy welcome; he, too, is the object of great local pride and, let him not forget, he owes us &#8211; at his pleasure &#8211; one final Mozart concerto bash.</p>
<p>This time, instead, there was a pleasant new work &#8211; if along LACO&#8217;s typical blandness propensities &#8211; by composer in residence Gernot Wolfgang, <i>Desert Wind</i>, involving jazz accents and some bright statements by horn (Richard Todd) and oboe (Allan Vogel) soloists. Somewhat livelier was Astor Piazzolla&#8217;s delightful, jocular Vivaldi rip-off, his own <i>Four Seasons of Buenos Aires</i>, with violinist Lindsay Deutsch spinning her own magic webs around Piazzolla&#8217;s pseudo-Baroque patterns and the music zeroing in close to its original source material at the charming close. On her and Vivaldi&#8217;s own, Deutsch contributed one original “Season” and could, for my money, have danced all night.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Disney&#160;Nights</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2007/05/disney-nights/</link>
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		<pubDate>Thu, 24 May 2007 01:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=635</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Three diverse concerts in four nights at Disney: proof enough of the splendid variety of music in these parts &#8211; even in May, when the season is supposed to be winding down. The difference in the sounds echoing through these marvelous premises in close succession was, to put it mildly, considerable. From Behind the CurtainIn [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>
Three diverse concerts in four nights at Disney: proof enough of the splendid variety of music in these parts &#8211; even in May, when the season is supposed to be winding down. The difference in the sounds echoing through these marvelous premises in close succession was, to put it mildly, considerable.</p>
<p>From Behind the CurtainIn 1987, the great opera director and bridge builder Sarah Caldwell conceived a plan: a yearly exchange between Soviet and American composers, each group coming through the Iron Curtain with music and musicians previously unknown on the other side. The plan lasted exactly one year, but in Boston that year, we learned several new names and some fascinating new music. The Boston Symphony played symphonies by Alfred Schnittke; there was chamber music by Sofia Gubaidulina. Both composers &#8211; dowdy, gray, as if in their first time out of the mineshaft &#8211; were among the many in attendance. The Soviet Information Agency had set up a listening room with tapes. Gubaidulina&#8217;s music &#8211; including a wonderful concerto for bassoon and low strings, which deserves new performances &#8211; amazed us all. Now that both composers and their countrymen are old friends on Western programs, it&#8217;s amazing to realize how recently hearing their music seemed so difficult, even dangerous.</p>
<p>That&#8217;s what&#8217;s behind the Philharmonic&#8217;s title, “Shadow of Stalin,” for its current, fascinating concert series. Even after Stalin&#8217;s death, Iron Curtain composers needed to resort to certain subterfuges to cover up their most serious creative impulses. Both Gubaidulina and Schnittke composed film scores for their major income, along with other “happy” music on Khrushchev-era socialist-realist lines, in order to be able to scoot into dark rooms and compose works such as we heard on Tuesday&#8217;s program. Gubaidulina&#8217;s 1979 <i>In Croce</i> is an amazing work for cello (the Philharmonic&#8217;s Ben Hong) and organ (Mark Robson), ecstatic and ecstatically played: hypnotic, intense, an unceasing 19-minute mantra. <i>Concordanza</i>, an earlier (1971) work for chamber ensemble, held the attention in other ways: gritty, unyielding, unsmiling, like my early memories of the composer herself.</p>
<p>Schnittke&#8217;s Fourth Symphony of 1984 ended the program, a work built out of bell sonorities and, at the end, brief snips of wordless chant, convoluted and, to my mind, not likable. A big-boned performance under the Philharmonic&#8217;s associate conductor Alexander Mickelthwate stated its case; other works by Schnittke &#8211; including a boisterous First Symphony that includes a rock band, a marching band and a jazz band, all of them bursting into a garland of quotations from symphonies of the past &#8211; strike me as considerably more endearing.</p>
<p>EpitomeTwo major creative spirits collaborated in the spellbinding music that hammered at the beams of Disney Hall on Wednesday, and at the collective souls of the sellout crowd within those walls. One was the spirit of Charles Mingus, bygone but endearingly alive, whose variorum collection of music &#8211; some his very own, some snuck in from revered other sources &#8211; bore the collective title of <i>Epitaph</i>. The other was Gunther Schuller, jazz and classical scholar, musician under many hats, coiner of the term “Third Stream,” who had assembled and edited the Mingus collection for a performance in 1989, then subjected the work to 18 more years of expansion and “creative evolution.” With his help, Mingus&#8217; widow, Sue, has organized a 31-member jazz ensemble whose musicians, Schuller notes, “play jazz that is even more advanced than what Mingus wrote,” and turned out a three-hour chilling masterwork, which in its frequent great moments simply astounds any aware listener with the strength and resolution of its complexity at one moment, its quiet, wrenching beauty at another.</p>
<p>I write, bear in mind, as a newcomer and enchanted discoverer. I remember walking away from my friends&#8217; records of progressive jazz &#8211; Mingus among them &#8211; in college days, when I should have been receptive. Now I enjoy being transformed, of discovering &#8211; in my head and in my spinal column &#8211; the hand of a real composer, as plates of genius brass clash against one another in the Mingus “Better Get It in Your Soul” or as horizons darkly vibrate in his “Chill of Death.” There was much to be learned, too, in the variety in the Mingus grab bag: the serene, dark lyricism of an Ellington number, the guileless charm in a Jelly Roll Morton blues. This was an event full of varied racketing; Charlie Mingus, who spoke of <i>Epitaph</i> as a “symphony,” surely smiled his approval.</p>
<p>Mixed BagTime has run out on <i>Time Cycle</i>. Lukas Foss&#8217; adventure in contemporary chic &#8211; fluky rhythmic patterns, odd placements on the stage, the players called upon to whisper &#8211; served the needs of the Bernstein crowd in the 1960s to pass as new-music supporters. It was the centerpiece of Thursday&#8217;s curious collection of new and not-quite-new music, and its struggles toward with-it status turned it into the evening&#8217;s most old-fashioned music. Even the delightful bluster of Samuel Barber&#8217;s authentically hoary <i>Toccata Festiva</i>, which began the program, with its bingety-bang organ cadenza nobly dispatched by Simon Preston, was at least an honest work of its kind. Not even Dawn Upshaw&#8217;s brave management of the Foss vocal tricks could render that music honest.</p>
<p>But Upshaw was also there to sing the music of Osvaldo Golijov, and that is the heaven-made collaboration of our time: a wonderfully perceptive composer whose lyric sense is shaped and colored by a particular “rainbow of a voice” (his words). Golijov has orchestrated three of his songs into a cycle lasting nearly half an hour; the songs, in three languages, summon up the full range of a singer&#8217;s versatility. The middle song, “Lúa Descolorida,” is familiar from Upshaw&#8217;s performances at Ojai, and it racks the soul: the lament of a tortured conscience under an unforgiving moon. A charming Yiddish lullaby begins the cycle; sad poetry of Emily Dickinson ends it. A DG recording with Upshaw is out this month. When you hear it, and fall under the spell of that “rainbow,” you&#8217;ll know why I had to forgo the <i>West Side Story</i> dances at the concert&#8217;s end, the very bejesus out of which I&#8217;m sure Maestro Mickelthwate conducted. </p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>American&#160;Idolatry</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2007/05/american-idolatry/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2007/05/american-idolatry/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 16 May 2007 23:45:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=634</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Getting It Right Of a couple of dozen productions I have attended of the Gershwins&#8217; Porgy and Bess, the one currently at the Music Center (through this weekend) is by some distance the finest and the most enjoyable. It contains the most of George&#8217;s music, in an opera often cut, properly treated by both vocal [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>
Getting It Right</p>
<p>Of a couple of dozen productions I have attended of the Gershwins&#8217; <i>Porgy and Bess</i>, the one currently at the Music Center (through this weekend) is by some distance the finest and the most enjoyable. It contains the most of George&#8217;s music, in an opera often cut, properly treated by both vocal and orchestral forces under John DeMain, who, it might as well be admitted, knows how the music goes better than anyone else alive. The staging, by Francesca Zambello, has no blind, deaf or dull spot; it takes off at a breathless pace at the rise of the curtain and doesn&#8217;t perceptibly stop for breath (or allow any of us to do the same) for its approximately three hours&#8217; length. That&#8217;s about the same number of hours as last week&#8217;s <i>Merry Widow</i>, by the way, whose demands on your time, you could swear, came to twice as long.</p>
<p>“Porgy lived in the golden age,” begins the novel by Dorothy and DuBose Heyward, which gave us the stage play and, eventually, the opera, “. . . an age when men, not yet old, were boys in an ancient, beautiful city that time had forgotten but not yet destroyed.” Peter J. Davison&#8217;s stage sets have speeded up time&#8217;s processes somewhat. His Catfish Row, updated to the “early 1950s” from 1928, is a true slum. Doors hang from their hinges; the roller coaster on Kittiwah Island, where the Picnic Scene takes place, is a scrapheap. The spirit of the joyous community remains, however, and Porgy has inherited its gold. He is one of opera&#8217;s grandest personages, no less complex for his humble origins. The role was sung with noble resonance by Kevin Short in the first of the two alternating casts, the one I saw on opening night.</p>
<p>The Bess that night was a slithery, slinky bundle named Morenike Fadayomi, with pure, radiant high notes that lit up the house. She&#8217;s a versatile actress all the way from “happy dust”–sniffing floozie to adoring bedmate. You have to wonder, as <i>Porgy</i> becomes rooted in the serious repertory alongside <i>Figaro</i> and the <i>Ring</i>, how generations of singers come to deal with the work&#8217;s special vernacular. Years ago, the first recordings of this music were by white Metropolitan Opera stars, and the trials of hearing their “Bess, you is my woman now” were fairly excruciating. Now Ms. Fadayomi, born in London, raised in Nigeria and Switzerland, performs Aida and Mimi in Germany, yet sings Bess on our stage as if born to the part. I heard nothing but superb and wonderfully idiomatic voices that night, including Angela Simpson&#8217;s showstopping “My man&#8217;s gone now,” Ashley Faatolia&#8217;s delightful walk-through as the Crab Man and Jermaine Smith&#8217;s incomparable rubber-legged routines as Sportin&#8217; Life.</p>
<p>Matters of idiom aside, this was, simply put, a night of truly great opera, made especially so by Francesca Zambello&#8217;s stage-sure direction, in which even the cherishable small moments &#8211; the comings and goings of the street peddlers, the placing of scolding wives on various levels of Davison&#8217;s rickety set &#8211; left their ineradicable mark. The staging of the hurricane, with the terrified chorus clumped together in center stage and the scenery blowing every which way to the tremendous thuddings in the orchestra (probably amplified, but so what?), was something to carry home and relive. It made it possible to forgive Ms. Zambello, at long last, for her absurdity-studded 1991 staging of Berlioz&#8217;s <i>The Trojans</i>, in our opera company&#8217;s greener years.</p>
<p>Mort on MortI&#8217;ve known Morton Subotnick longer than any star in the new-music galaxy. In the 1950s, he was a freelance clarinetist in San Francisco, studying with Darius Milhaud at Mills and feeding me precious backstage gossip from the San Francisco Symphony during its bad old days under Enrique Jordá, for my crits on KPFA. I ran into him in New York one day, when he was composing big electronic works for Nonesuch Records &#8211; symphonies, almost &#8211; with names like <i>Silver Apples of the Moon</i>. He told me about his new job at a school back in California with funding from, of all people, Walt Disney, and we had a good laugh over that.</p>
<p>I visited one of CalArts&#8217; new-music festivals, and over coffee, Mort told me why life in California was better than anywhere else &#8211; partly because nobody took the critics seriously. He was composing what seemed to me pure magic: music for instruments and computers, with the instruments activating the technology so that music retained its relationship to a live performer and wasn&#8217;t just a matter of staring at loudspeakers. I looked in on his classes, watched some of his students&#8217; work with mixed audio and visual media. I think it was Mort more than anyone else who convinced me that the air in California was what I, too, wanted to breathe.</p>
<p>More recently, Mort has produced some excellent educational CD-ROMS, in a series called “Making Music.” Kids get to construct scales, rhythms, melodies. They learn about variations, at various grades of complexities. I have to confess: I&#8217;ve spent an evening or two “making music.”</p>
<p>At the season&#8217;s final “Piano Spheres” concert in Zipper Hall, Vicki Ray&#8217;s program ended with Subotnick&#8217;s <i>The Other Piano</i>, a piece for piano with surround-sound processing. The work is “other” to Morton Feldman&#8217;s 1977 piece called, simply, <i>Piano</i>; both run approximately half an hour. Vicki played, while Mort, at his laptop, captured her notes and formed harmonies that floated through the hall out of surrounding speakers. The music was mostly slow and dreamlike, not at all Feldmanesque, purely the other Mort. We, sitting there, floated, surrounded, inside the sound. Talk about your magic.</p>
<p><i>The Other Piano</i> will be released this summer on a Mode DVD in 5.1 multichannel: something to do the dishes to, or to lose yourself in. </p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Ernest&#160;Fleischmann</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2007/05/ernest-fleischmann/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2007/05/ernest-fleischmann/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 09 May 2007 19:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=633</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[The signing of 26-year-old Gustavo Dudamel to take over the Los Angeles Philharmonic podium &#8211; snatched from the hot grasp of half a dozen other conductor-hungry American orchestras &#8211; has been a coup both musical and political, in many circles even dwarfing the coming of soccer&#8217;s David Beckham. To Philharmonic president and CEO Deborah Borda [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><span style="font-weight: bold;">The signing of 26-year-old Gustavo Dudamel </span>to take over the Los Angeles Philharmonic podium &#8211; snatched from the hot grasp of half a dozen other conductor-hungry American orchestras &#8211; has been a coup both musical and political, in many circles even dwarfing the coming of soccer&#8217;s David Beckham. To Philharmonic president and CEO Deborah Borda credit redounds for the superlative end run, contract in hand; to her predecessor Ernest Fleischmann go the honors for recognizing the musical value of this remarkable young man, who will not arrive in Los Angeles to take over the orchestra until 2009. Let Ernest tell the story:</p>
<p>“In April 2004, the Bamberg [Germany] Symphony held its first-ever Gustav Mahler Conducting Competition. I was one of the judges, along with Jonathan Nott and a member of the orchestra. We received 300 videos, and chose 16 hopefuls to come to Bamberg. One was from Venezuela: Gustavo Dudamel, who led his Simón Bolivar Youth Orchestra, and already there was something exciting about that video that stood out from all the others, a passionate young orchestra that seemed to be playing at the edge of its seats. The competition program consisted of Mahler&#8217;s Fifth Symphony and Ruuml;ckert Songs, the Schubert Fifth and something contemporary from each competitor&#8217;s country. No, we didn&#8217;t inflict 16 complete Mahler Fifths on the orchestra or on ourselves; we could stop a performance when the points had been made. Only the finalists led complete performances.</p>
<p>“There were four finalists. Esa-Pekka joined us for the finals. By then there was simply no question that Gustavo was not only the winner; he was the kind of natural, instinctive musician that comes along rarely. His age has nothing to do with it; he had that ability to make musicians give something that they could not give otherwise.</p>
<p>“That November, Deborah, [vice president, artistic planning] Chad Smith and I traveled to Venezuela to see this phenomenon on his native turf. That&#8217;s when the wheels started turning. It&#8217;s an amazing thing that Deborah has accomplished in these past few weeks, by the way, literally flying in over the heads of agents and orchestra managers to sign this guy and make him our own. I think it helps that he likes it here.”</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Daniel&#160;Rothmuller</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2007/05/daniel-rothmuller/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2007/05/daniel-rothmuller/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 09 May 2007 19:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=632</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Daniel Rothmuller has been a member of the L.A. Philharmonic&#8217;s cello section since the 1970-&#8217;71 season, and associate principal cellist since 1975. That means he has played under Zubin Mehta, Carlo Maria Giulini, André Previn and Esa-Pekka Salonen, and is in fit qualification to get a handle on the orchestra&#8217;s music-director-designate, Gustavo Dudamel. I asked [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><span style="font-weight: bold;"><br />
Daniel Rothmuller </span>has been a member of the L.A. Philharmonic&#8217;s cello section since the 1970-&#8217;71 season, and associate principal cellist since 1975. That means he has played under Zubin Mehta, Carlo Maria Giulini, André Previn and Esa-Pekka Salonen, and is in fit qualification to get a handle on the orchestra&#8217;s music-director-designate, Gustavo Dudamel. I asked him to talk about how an orchestral musician judges an incoming conductor, and how that relationship builds (or doesn&#8217;t build) over the years. </p>
<p>“It doesn&#8217;t take much time,” he says, “and it doesn&#8217;t take many words. Whether it&#8217;s a new conductor, like Dudamel, or someone we&#8217;ve worked with for years, words are the most useless part of the communication process between the conductor and the orchestra. Take Giulini. Everything he wanted to tell us about the music, the interpretive magic of everything he played, was in the look in his eyes. André&#8217;s great failing was exactly his inability to make eye contact. His best work came when he was conducting from the piano, in a concerto or in chamber music; then he could reach out to the other players, but not from the podium.</p>
<div style="text-align: center;"><img src="/images/stories/07/25/0725drot.jpg" /></p>
<p>(Photo by Kevin Scanlon)</div>
<p>“Zubin? You had to keep your eyes on him every moment! We had trouble with Esa-Pekka at the start; it took him a while to learn about eye contact, but now he&#8217;s got it.</p>
<p>“People don&#8217;t acquire talent; they&#8217;re born with it, and then they acquire technique. The reason Gustavo has come on so strong with the whole orchestra is his fantastic ability to connect with everybody. That&#8217;s because he has acquired so much technique so soon, and knows how to use it. He seems to do everything so easily, so naturally. And he did this the first time, at the Bowl, with almost no English in his vocabulary. He&#8217;s only now making his way. We&#8217;ve all loved him from the start.”</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Old Hat, New Tenor,&#160;Etc.</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2007/05/old-hat-new-tenor-etc/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2007/05/old-hat-new-tenor-etc/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 02 May 2007 18:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=631</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Minimal MerrimentOf all the unreasonable choices for operatic fare to sweep cheery breezes across this season&#8217;s repertory, a revival of 2001&#8242;s The Merry Widow, in the San Francisco production by Lotfi Mansouri &#8211; originally conceived by him in 1981 as a gala vehicle for reigning diva Joan Sutherland, padded out to Wagnerian lengths (like this [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><span style="font-weight: bold;">Minimal Merriment</span><br style="font-weight: bold;" /><br />Of all the unreasonable choices for operatic fare to sweep cheery breezes across this season&#8217;s repertory, a revival of 2001&#8242;s <i>The Merry Widow</i>, in the San Francisco production by Lotfi Mansouri &#8211; originally conceived by him in 1981 as a gala vehicle for reigning diva Joan Sutherland, padded out to Wagnerian lengths (like this sentence) with songs, choruses and an interminable ballet from other Lehár operettas &#8211; is about as deadly a decision as I can conceive. Even the enlivening presence of the indomitable Susan Graham goes just so far. She makes her first entrance as a Dolly clone, in a red getup on a staircase surrounded by men in white tie, which draws its share of audience yuks and thus establishes the evening&#8217;s level of low-down jokiness.</p>
<p>To those unfamiliar with the airborne wonders of Lehár&#8217;s operetta under more reasonable auspices &#8211; the EMI recording with Schwarzkopf, to name one of several &#8211; I can only offer assurance that this is, indeed, a work of utmost elegance and pointed, sly humor, worthy to stand in the company of the best of Johann Strauss, and with a measure of tenderness that can even surpass that other Viennese master. To rev it up into this noisy burlesque of itself insults the work and its audience &#8211; whose response on opening night was considerably short of ecstatic, by the way, for all the recent journalism about the need for opera to dumb itself down. The greater pity is that the two principals of this production, the witty and genuinely intelligent Graham and the company&#8217;s longtime stalwart, Rod Gilfry, give off the sense that they could be the nucleus of a properly accented <i>Merry Widow</i>, which this noisy, waterlogged mess was not. They were in the wrong place the other night, and so was I.</p>
<p><span style="font-weight: bold;">Tristan Redeemed</span><br style="font-weight: bold;" /><br />Earlier in the week, I completed my 15-hour immersion in <i>Tristan und Isolde</i>, hearing Wagner&#8217;s transcendent masterwork for the first time at Disney Hall in a performance worthy of its name. Christian Franz had sung here before, through microphones at the Hollywood Bowl in Wagner led by John Mauceri, hardly reason to anticipate the rich, ringing, beautifully modulated Tristan he brought to Salonen&#8217;s ensemble, live at Disney. The more remarkable: He was flown in only in time for a day&#8217;s rehearsal with piano, to replace the ailing (and inadequate) Alan Woodrow, with a brief walk-through of the staging. The beauty of the blending of his bright, consistent tenor into the luminous torrents of Christine Brewer&#8217;s soprano is a memory that will remain; so will his racked death cry of “Isolde” as darkness finally closes in.</p>
<p>I am no further transported by the curious circumstance of <i>Tristan</i>-as-Project, or by the visual ecstasy, so widely proclaimed, in Bill Viola&#8217;s bubbles, after these many hours under the spell of the sound of the opera under Salonen with his orchestra, of Brewer and, finally, a tenor worthy of her. This matter of worthiness is at the core of my mixed feelings about the “Project,” and it concerns the height of the pinnacle upon which this one world-shaking, world-<i>shaping</i> work rests. It doesn&#8217;t diminish Bill Viola&#8217;s art by very much to believe as I do that it is unworthy of <i>Tristan und Isolde</i>; most art is.</p>
<p><span style="font-weight: bold;">Goldberg Unvaried</span><br style="font-weight: bold;" /><br />Johann Gottlieb Goldberg lives in history, not so much for any music he composed, but for the set of variations his teacher, J.S. Bach, wrote for him &#8211; or so the story goes &#8211; to play for his insomniac boss. The splendid Italian ensemble Il Giardino Armonico corrected that discrepancy at their Disney Hall concert last week by performing an attractive C-minor sonata (for two violins and viola) by the real Goldberg that contributes mightily to the man&#8217;s credit.</p>
<p>To the ensemble&#8217;s credit, as well, was an enterprising selection of works, almost none of which I had ever heard before in a long life of hearing Baroque music. Giovanni Antonini, the seven-member group&#8217;s director and recorder soloist, contributed three wonderfully madcap concertos for his instrument, by Telemann, Nardini and (need I add) Vivaldi &#8211; a perfect way, all told, to sweep the hall of its last Wagnerian echoes.</p>
<p><span style="font-weight: bold;">For Whom Mr. Bell Toils</span><br style="font-weight: bold;" /><br />From Washington comes encouraging word of a rise in musical taste among the general public. It seems that the <i>Washington Post</i> hired the violinist Joshua Bell to perform as a street musician, incognito, to test his recognizability, or the abilities of a transit-bound big city to respond to good music. One morning not long ago, the violinist stationed himself, with his expensive instrument, at a well-traveled spot near one of the city&#8217;s Metro stations, at morning rush hour. He wore the basic attire of a street musician. A TV crew and reporters were discreetly stationed nearby.</p>
<p>The program bestowed upon scurrying Washingtonians was generous and varied: Bach&#8217;s <i>Chaconne</i>, Schubert&#8217;s <i>Ave Maria</i>, Ponce&#8217;s <i>Estrellita</i>, the <i>Chaconne</i> another time. <i>Post</i> reporter Gene Weingarten had asked the conductor Leonard Slatkin what he thought the hour&#8217;s take might be for a world-famous violinist playing under such conditions. Slatkin&#8217;s guess was $150. Joshua Bell&#8217;s take came to $32.17, which, considering the playing I&#8217;ve heard from him lately, seems at least 17 cents too high.</p>
<p><span style="font-weight: bold;">Slava (1927–2007)</span><br style="font-weight: bold;" /><br />I met Mstislav Rostropovich twice. The first time was at a White House recital, when I was most impressed with the way Rosalynn Carter got all the Russian names right. The second was out here, when five minutes into our chat, there were already hugs. He called me “Alanchik,” which I still use for special messages. We talked about cellists becoming conductors, and he brought up something I&#8217;ll bet nobody else has ever thought about. I&#8217;ll try to remember his wonderful Russian word order. “After all, who knows how good play cello Toscanini?”</p>
<p>There&#8217;s one video that I often resort to for uplift: Slava and Carlo Maria Giulini performing the Dvorák Concerto (and also the Saint-Saëns, but never mind) on EMI. The man who could draw that long A-flat-minor melody in the first movement of the Dvorák into a conversation with all the gods of music is the man to spread the words of the peacemakers to the world at large. Slava was both. </p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Enchanted Evenings – and&#160;Not</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2007/04/enchanted-evenings-%e2%80%93-and-not/</link>
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		<pubDate>Thu, 26 Apr 2007 01:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=630</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[The Tristan Reject Not content with merely presenting the inscrutable masterpiece, the opera that changed the course of artistic thought forever, the Philharmonic offered further ennoblement under the rubric of “The Tristan Project.” First injected onto the Disney stage in 2004 with Wagner&#8217;s Tristan und Isolde kibbled into three separate acts, three nights, three tickets [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><span style="font-weight: bold;">The Tristan Reject</span></p>
<p>Not content with merely presenting the inscrutable masterpiece, the opera that changed the course of artistic thought forever, the Philharmonic offered further ennoblement under the rubric of “The Tristan <i>Project</i>.” First injected onto the Disney stage in 2004 with Wagner&#8217;s <i>Tristan und Isolde</i> kibbled into three separate acts, three nights, three tickets (with some appropriate additional music added each time as curtain raiser), this time around there were also two very long nights of the complete opera at single but raised ticket prices. Enhancing the performances has been a “realization” by the eminent video artist Bill Viola, projected (that magic word again) onto a screen above the orchestra, with another screen up back for the folks up front. Peter Sellars is credited with the staging, which consisted mostly of getting people on and off the stage. Best of all, Esa-Pekka Salonen and the Philharmonic served as pit band. On to New York the whole shebang now goes, for a two-night stand in Lincoln Center&#8217;s crippled acoustics at higher prices.</p>
<p>Any questions? I have a couple. I wonder first about the artistic integrity in offering an opera &#8211; <i>Tristan</i> in particular, so musically interlocked &#8211; on three separate tickets. Opera companies, including our own next season, get by without such curious practices. My next question has to do with sight versus sound: Wagner&#8217;s music in the gorgeous realization by Esa-Pekka and his orchestra in Disney Hall, rising to fulfill every curve of Frank Gehry&#8217;s design, versus the flat images of Viola&#8217;s video translations, which stop at the edge of their frames. It becomes a clash of dimensions; even a stage set &#8211; David Hockney&#8217;s for the L.A. Opera, which we&#8217;ll see next year, with its fabulous lighting &#8211; suggests an infinity that reaches out to embrace the music. Viola&#8217;s &#8211; and I am trying hard to circumnavigate the fact that this second time around, I am not all that crazy about his <i>Tristan</i> visuals anyhow &#8211; does not.</p>
<p>Beyond his staging, Sellars contributed a titillating program note, two pages of small print retelling the <i>Tristan und Isolde</i> story with a homoerotic overlay that posits a lovers&#8217; relationship for Tristan and King Marke, with Isolde brought in to silence the gossip columnists. This should delight Sellars&#8217; academic colleagues at UCLA, known for their outing of notable personages in the artistic galaxy. In any case, basso John Relyea&#8217;s dreary performance of Marke&#8217;s interminable “How could you?” litany, upon the discovery of the lovers&#8217; betrayal, suggested that Tristan, whatever affair he was in, was well out of it.</p>
<p>Aside from Christine Brewer&#8217;s larger-than-life, impressively accurate Isolde, in fact, there isn&#8217;t much joyousness to report about the singing. Canadian tenor Alan Woodrow, the Tristan, has the bright, plangent tone of his countryman Jon Vickers, but in both performances I saw last week, his wanderings from pitch made him almost unlistenable. (Past deadline, Christian Franz replaced him in the final performance; more next week.) Swedish mezzo Anne Sofie von Otter was gorgeous to hear in Debussy&#8217;s <i>La Demoiselle Élue</i> on one of the single-act nights, but she was miscast as Brangauml;ne in the opera itself, and her song of warning in the second act did not, as it should, merge into the moonlight that flowed, radiant and seductive, night after night, from Salonen&#8217;s magical orchestra.</p>
<p><span style="font-weight: bold;">Finland 2, Norway 0</span><br style="font-weight: bold;" /><br />Salonen was also on hand last week to curate the final event in this season&#8217;s Monday Evening Concerts at Zipper Hall and welcome its composers, Norway&#8217;s Rolf Wallin and Finland&#8217;s Kimmo Hakola, the latter a former classmate of Salonen&#8217;s from that legendary class at the Sibelius Academy, a veritable hotbed of compositional originality.</p>
<p>And indeed, it was a chamber concerto by Hakola that won most hearts in this large crowd, a brightly scored work for 11-member mixed ensemble starting off <i>Furioso</i>, ending <i>Misterioso</i> and encasing a middle-movement <i>Amoroso</i> so aswirl in amorous harmonies that nobody seemed to want it to end. After intermission, a few more hearts were won with <i>Capriole</i>, another Hakola charmer, shorter and full of strange turns &#8211; including a reminder of Finland&#8217;s part-Mongolian ancestry. Two works by Wallin, a collection of miniatures more attractive in their titles than in sound, and an ongoing <i>and ongoing</i> piece for improvising singer &#8211; the phenomenal Sidsel Endresen &#8211; in a computerized soundscape, won fewer hearts all told.</p>
<p>Performances through the evening of unfamiliar music were remarkable; the group included the full membership of the Calder Quartet, pianist Gloria Cheng &#8211; without whom half of Los Angeles&#8217; music making would disappear &#8211; and visitors clarinetist Carol McGonnell and cellist Claire Bryant. Thus ended, with great success, a concert season that many feared would never happen. Organizer, administrator and everything but dishwasher Justin Urcis tells me that the next season begins, at Zipper, on December 3.</p>
<p><span style="font-weight: bold;">Inescapable Anne</span><br style="font-weight: bold;" /><br />Here&#8217;s a where-has-he-been-all-my-life name for you: Grigori Frid. Born in Petrograd in 1915, he was apparently an influential Russian composer throughout his life, through many regimes. His monodrama for singer and small orchestra, setting passages from <i>The Diary of Anne Frank</i>, Grove&#8217;s Dictionary tells me, is popular in many German houses. Deservedly so, as last week&#8217;s performances by the Long Beach Opera made clear.</p>
<p>The work itself lasts about an hour. Andreas Mitisek, the company&#8217;s artistic director, extended the evening with the help of a Holocaust survivor named Laura Hillman, who lives nearby, who has published a memoir, and who, of course, would now be the age of Anne Frank had she lived. Mrs. Hillman sat onstage and read excerpts from her book interspersed into the 21 passages from the <i>Diary</i> that Frid had set to music. His music, reminiscent of some of Prokofiev&#8217;s bright, edgy film scores, was flung out by an expert nine-piece band. The songs and bits of dialogue were delivered with charm, grace and the stuff of heartbreak by a remarkable Armenian-American soprano, Ani Maldjian.</p>
<p>The whole thing took place not in any kind of auditorium, but in a basement space adjoining a parking garage at the Sinai Temple in West L.A. The walls were crude; the ceiling was low; the performing space was something you could almost trip over. You could, in other words, transport yourselves to Otto Frank&#8217;s attic in Amsterdam. Very clever: This was a transporting evening in more ways than one. </p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Dark&#160;Elegies</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2007/04/dark-elegies/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2007/04/dark-elegies/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 18 Apr 2007 22:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[When People Die . . . Back in 1992, the host of KCRW&#8217;s Morning Becomes Eclectic &#8211; what&#8217;s-&#8217;is-name? &#8211; let himself be hypnotized by the Third Symphony of the Polish composer Henryk Górecki, and passed it on to the rest of us. For several weeks, it seemed as if that was all you could hear, [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>
When People Die . . .</p>
<p>Back in 1992, the host of KCRW&#8217;s <i>Morning Becomes Eclectic</i> &#8211; what&#8217;s-&#8217;is-name? &#8211; let himself be hypnotized by the Third Symphony of the Polish composer Henryk Górecki, and passed it on to the rest of us. For several weeks, it seemed as if that was all you could hear, morning after eclectic morning, on the station. The recording, a Nonesuch number conducted by David Zinman with Dawn Upshaw singing the doom-haunted lyrics, some of them taken from walls in Nazi prison camps, seemed to stretch out this quality of vaporous melancholy compared to sturdier versions on Polish discs, but it certainly established Górecki&#8217;s reputation in the U.S. When he came here a year or two later to conduct a performance of the work at USC, the performance was even slower, more melancholy. Whatever his compositional inclinations may have been before the Third Symphony&#8217;s rebirth as a minimalist anthem &#8211; there are a few perky chamber works around on import labels, and a lively harpsichord concerto has had a few performances &#8211; his name exists tied principally to that one slow, quiet work&#8230;</p>
<p>Until now. Here at hand is one more work, also bearing the number 3, lasting nearly an hour, and bearing the subtitle “&#8230; songs are sung,” slow and quiet, purely instrumental this time, and of a dark, elegiac, penetrating beauty almost painful to hear but so demanding to be heard that you pray it will just keep going. It is the Third Quartet, played by the Kronos Quartet (who commissioned it, as they had Nos. 1 and 2) on a new Nonesuch disc. Górecki finished the quartet in 1995, but held it back from the world (“I don&#8217;t know why,” says the eccentric, reclusive composer) until the Kronos performed it late last year.</p>
<p>It is music to sit quietly to, and give yourself to, in undisturbed solitude. Four of its five movements are very, very slow; you might think of Shostakovich, perhaps of his 15th Quartet, but there isn&#8217;t the tragic undertone of that Soviet work here, rather a deep, heartfelt meditation. The one fast movement is the third (of five), and what surprises there isn&#8217;t the change of pace but of harmony. The music becomes very sweet, folkish. At the end, the music reverts back to its earlier mood, completing a cycle and, perhaps, inviting a second hearing. “When horses die, they breathe,” runs a poem by Velimir Khlebnikov that the composer cites. “When grasses die, they wither; When suns die, they go out; When people die, songs are sung.”</p>
<p>When Record Labels Live . . .New Albion was a San Francisco label that specialized in interesting new music, and did so very well, first with Bay Area composers &#8211; Terry Riley, Ingram Marshall, the Wind Chants of David Hykes, Lou Harrison &#8211; later with world composers. Foster Reed and his small company exemplified what record companies are supposed to be doing to fill in the blanks that the big guys always leave unfilled. Now the company has relocated to New York&#8217;s Taconic Hills, but a recent package of releases indicates that its pace of good work continues.</p>
<p>A disc (<i>Incantations</i>) of the music of Giacinto Scelsi strokes some of the same nerve centers as does the Górecki, but with a different rod. First off, you have to know that Scelsi&#8217;s English wife, Dorothy, was distantly related to the Royal Family, and their wedding reception was held in Buckingham Palace. (She later left him for good, and he lived his last years in a palazzo of his own, in Rome.) He was the Italian who chose to compose between the notes, exploring the microtonal areas reachable by the voice or by strings and brass instruments whose tone might be “bent.” An hour&#8217;s worth of solo “song” on this new disc &#8211; unaccompanied, or joined by mirror images on tape &#8211; starts off unsettling but not for long. The singer, Marianne Schuppe, has such remarkable control that you begin to hear her vocal lines, and her incredible range, as a musical language all its own, haunting, powerful and, in its own way, very beautiful.</p>
<p>So is the sound of one grand piano on another disc, surrounded by 10 musicians armed with long strings fashioned out of the stuff of musical bows, which are threaded under the piano strings and played by being pulled up and down. The sound is that of an idealized ensemble of supercellos, intensely resonant and richly harmonized; other players attack the strings with piano hammers and guitar picks &#8211; anything <i>but</i> fingers on the keys. This is the Bowed Piano Ensemble, based at Colorado College in Colorado Springs, whose inventor, composer and leader is Stephen Scott. Their fourth New Albion disc, <i>The Deep Spaces</i>, is an utterly charming selection of songs to poems of Wordsworth, Byron, Mary Shelley and the like, sung by Victoria Hansen.</p>
<p>Schubert UnfinishedOnce in a while, something splendid falls through from one of the big companies too. Such a windfall landed last week from EMI, the latest in its sporadic Schubert series combining Ian Bostridge singing lieder and Leif Ove Andsnes accompanying and performing some major piano work on his own. This one is full of storm and frustration. The storm is in the crash and clangor of the C-minor Piano Sonata, the first of three imponderable, huge piano works from Schubert&#8217;s last year, with its final movement like a nocturnal journey through a demon-infested dark forest with an Erlking behind every tree. It is also in a violent, ironic long song, “Grave-Digger&#8217;s Homesickness,” which Bostridge hurls forth, over lightning bolts from Andsnes&#8217; piano, in a manner to remind us that he is also the &#8212;&#8212;&#8211;<br />
AUTHOR of an excellent book on witchcraft.</p>
<p>Just as fascinating is a small collection to end the disc, of songs and piano pieces that Schubert left off without finishing. There are dozens more of these in the Schubert catalog; the six that were chosen are especially frustrating. They all build up a head of steam, they all modulate interestingly into some other region before Schubert leaves off. Most fascinating is “Johanna Sebus,” a song to a Goethe text about a bursting dam and a child faced with the task of carrying her mother and her goat to safety. Will they make it? Alas, we&#8217;ll never know, at least not from Schubert. </p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Passages</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2007/04/passages/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2007/04/passages/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 12 Apr 2007 01:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=628</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Moving Along One day in 2005, Ernest Fleischmann, former honcho of the Philharmonic and now of the musical world at large, invited me to lunch, a frequent and pleasant occurrence. This time there was good food, plus a command. On no circumstance, came the order from Ernest On High, was I to miss the upcoming [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><span style="font-weight: bold;">Moving Along</span></p>
<p>One day in 2005, Ernest Fleischmann, former honcho of the Philharmonic and now of the musical world at large, invited me to lunch, a frequent and pleasant occurrence. This time there was good food, plus a command. On no circumstance, came the order from Ernest On High, was I to miss the upcoming Hollywood Bowl debut of the conductor Gustavo Dudamel. Truth to tell, I had entertained every intention of missing that event; a late-season Tchaikovsky Fifth Symphony, with the trek to Cahuenga Pass long since grown tiresome, and the new opera season downtown beckoning, was something far down on the appeal scale.</p>
<p>But Ernest Fleischmann is, among his great attributes, a keen evaluator of young conducting talent. In his days of so-called retirement, he has spent much time as judge at major European conducting competitions. It is through his acumen that the Philharmonic had latched onto the services of Simon Rattle and Esa-Pekka Salonen. Now, in the past couple of years, he has returned to us from happy hunting with a pair of estimable trophies: the 20-year-old Lionel Bringuier, who starts his first season as the Philharmonic&#8217;s assistant conductor this fall, and Dudamel, who made his North American debut at 24 at the Bowl on that night to remember. </p>
<p>Word was out; the place was crawling with agents from conductor-hungry orchestras. Onstage too the atmosphere was electric. “We knew right off that this was a special talent,” cellist Dan Rothmuller remembered when we talked at Monday&#8217;s press conference. I wrote about Dudamel in this space, about “fiery, consuming energy,” about “the extraordinary electricity that warmed the otherwise chilled crowd that night.” He returned for a Disney Hall concert of equal merit a year later, and now earns his own spotlight as music director–designate, with his actual tenure beginning, at age 28, in the fall of 2009.</p>
<p>You should have been at that press conference last Monday, to take in those smiling faces. Ernest was off in Berlin, but everybody else was on hand to say the right thing. The triumph, of course, was to have grabbed the hottest young conducting property right from the hot grasp of the other top orchestras that are desperately seeking conductors right now: New York, Chicago&#8230; the list goes on. (One devastated critic in Chicago &#8211; onetime home, after all, of the Black Sox &#8211; has already written a weeping “Say it ain&#8217;t so” article.) The greater triumph, as the spread of honcha Deborah Borda&#8217;s smile made clear, is for the Philharmonic, with this one bold swoop, to have won the right, and the mechanism, to reshape and to redefine the relationship between the classical repertory and its audience &#8211; today&#8217;s and tomorrow&#8217;s. You can fill up young Dudamel on caviar from Patina, but in his adorable opening speech, he also let on his passion for the hot dogs at Pink&#8217;s. He fended off some questions about a possible leaning toward the popular arts, but I would guess that when it comes to establishing a relationship between the so-called serious and pop, young Gustavo is at least as interested in tearing down fences as in mending them.</p>
<p>Esa-Pekka Salonen has moved the Philharmonic far along this conciliatory path, and it&#8217;s significant that he chooses to remain among us, to continue to capture the essence of this place in his music. I thought the huge turnout when he showed off his composition methods at the Apple Store a few weeks ago was a fair indication of the heightened stature he and the Philharmonic have attained here. The piece itself, the nine-minute <i>Helix</i>, was the right kind of serious, unflinching contemporary music to engage a young audience&#8217;s interest and pride. I imagine Dudamel&#8217;s manner of community outreach will be somewhat different. The important thing is that both musicians seem to me to be participants in an extraordinary rejuvenation within an art form whose demise some naysayers have all too glibly foretold. What delight to be riding along!</p>
<p><span style="font-weight: bold;">No Place Like Home</span></p>
<p>Jacaranda is home again. Renovations are done at Santa Monica&#8217;s First Pres; the place looks good and sounds great. Last Saturday&#8217;s homecoming concert drew as close to a sellout crowd as never mind. There&#8217;s your success story.</p>
<p>The program was all-American and all-remarkable. Two really rough-cut works trod with emphatic step. One was Frederic Rzewski&#8217;s piano setting of “Winnsboro Cotton Mill Blues” from his <i>North American Ballads</i>, played by Scott Dunn, piano music that leaps off the keyboard to create a rural and menacing setting. Ben Johnston&#8217;s Fourth Quartet is also imbued with a rural atmosphere. Johnston, now 80, is the least known of our individualists, off in the woods somewhere devising tuning systems, teaching now and then, poking around in old hymnals and in Arnold Schoenberg&#8217;s 12-tone theories. This Fourth Quartet is probably his masterpiece; fiendish to play for its rhythmic complexity and because it keeps running off into odd scale patterns, it is also built around the old-timey hymn “Amazing Grace.” Jacaranda&#8217;s Denali Quartet handled it fearlessly, and made most else on the program &#8211; even Steve Reich&#8217;s <i>Eight Lines</i> for pianos, flutes, clarinets and larger string band &#8211; seem a piece of cake by comparison.</p>
<p>There was more and sweeter cake too, a piece by Morty Feldman: Who has even heard of his <i>Between Categories</i>? It&#8217;s for violins, cellos, pianos and <i>chimes</i>: two sets of each, answering each other, mostly pianissimo, across the front of the church: Imagine! Only those Jacaranda guys, Patrick and Mark, could have dug up a piece like that . . . and made it work. (It did, like a distant cloud passing far overhead.)</p>
<p>Scott Dunn began the program with a handful of Scott Joplin rags. Wonderful, rich, wistful pieces &#8211; “Solace” often has me in tears &#8211; these really constitute our American counterpart of Schubert or Chopin waltzes, and ought to be given equal prominence on concert programs. First, they need to be given substance; Dunn, an excellent and imaginative musician, lessened their value by omitting every one of the repeats. Something like that last refrain of “Solace” (remember it from <i>The Sting</i>?) needs the time to break our hearts. Cutting it short like that broke mine. </p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>One of Those&#160;Weeks</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2007/04/one-of-those-weeks/</link>
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		<pubDate>Wed, 04 Apr 2007 19:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[Rousing the Dead Christopher Rouse burst upon the scene in the 1980s, with a barrage of orchestral works bearing titles such as Bump, Phantasmata and Infernal Machine and, in sheer decibel power, living up to their names. Later on, he was to master the more eloquent modes of expression; a cello concerto (commissioned for Yo-Yo [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><span style="font-weight: bold;">Rousing the Dead</span></p>
<p>Christopher Rouse burst upon the scene in the 1980s, with a barrage of orchestral works bearing titles such as <i>Bump</i>, <i>Phantasmata</i> and <i>Infernal Machine</i> and, in sheer decibel power, living up to their names. Later on, he was to master the more eloquent modes of expression; a cello concerto (commissioned for Yo-Yo Ma and the L.A. Philharmonic) and a couple of string quartets expanded the range of his expressive powers while exploring the gentler regions of the audible spectrum. In his 90-minute <i>Requiem</i>, however, which received its world premiere in the capable hands of our Master Chorale and attendant participants under the enlightened leadership of Grant Gershon at Disney Hall a weekend ago, the volume knob was back at 11, and Mr. Rouse was back in his old stomping ground.</p>
<p>The idea here is to intersperse the Latin verses of the <i>Requiem</i> with poetry reflecting on those verses &#8211; English, or the Italian of Michelangelo: a plan reminiscent of Benjamin Britten&#8217;s in his <i>War Requiem</i>. A solo baritone, the eloquent Sanford Sylvan (Mao Ze-Dong and Klinghoffer in the John Adams operas), sang haunted poetry: Seamus Heaney on a child&#8217;s death, Siegfried Sassoon on suicide, Michelangelo on his own immortality. The chorus bursts through, most often ferociously and buttressed with the customary Rouse battery of multiple percussion. A children&#8217;s chorus sits immobile, and joins in after 80 minutes with celestial, forgiving harmonies as the baritone soothes an audience&#8217;s injured eardrums with a prayer for peace.</p>
<p>The skill here is exceptional; not a nut or bolt is out of place. Some people I have heard from &#8211; fellow critics, music students, ardent concertgoers &#8211; have been stirred by the piece. I was not. I enjoyed the contraptions, the splendidly concocted blasts, and the way Gershon&#8217;s vocal and instrumental forces kept everything in balance in that superb hall. I enjoyed all that exactly the way I enjoyed the sheer physical impact in that marvelous new Korean horror film, <i>The Host</i>, and if I had my choice of which work of art to experience again, I&#8217;d go back to the film any five times instead of once to Mr. Rouse&#8217;s <i>Requiem</i>.</p>
<p>It was quite the week for new music, actually, on both sides of Grand Avenue. Also at Disney Hall, a few days later, there was a much more rewarding premiere, Esa-Pekka Salonen&#8217;s <i>Helix</i> in its first U.S. hearing, music first written for a BBC peace celebration led by Valery Gergiev. Actually, this is the piece that Salonen had sneak-previewed at the Apple store in Santa Monica a few weeks ago to show off his use of the software program known as Sibelius. I wrote about it at the time.</p>
<p>The new piece is shorter than anything by the real Sibelius. What it is, is a nine-minute acceleration of a simple note pattern &#8211; a helix, in other words &#8211; and what is wonderful about it is that it is (a) a tough-minded, complex piece of contemporary orchestral music and (b) delightfully easy to follow, no more complex than (quite similar, in fact, to) Ravel&#8217;s <i>Boléro</i>.</p>
<p><span style="font-weight: bold;">South on Grand</span><br style="font-weight: bold;" /><br />Across the street at Zipper Concert Hall, there were two new-music events worth mentioning (if not for the same reasons): one worth every minute, the other worth few if any.</p>
<p>For someone who claims (in his biographical notes) never to have heard the Beethoven Ninth Symphony live, Mark Robson certainly demonstrated a wise and varied musicianship in his “Piano Spheres” concert on Tuesday night: music from all over the map, spread over the keyboard, invoking fond memories of old friends here and gone.</p>
<p>Framing the program was enchanting, rowdy music by Louis Andriessen at the start &#8211; his 1983 <i>Trepidus</i>, short, clangorous, jumpy music &#8211; and a clutch (four listed, but I counted six) of Gyouml;rgy Ligeti&#8217;s <i>Etudes Pour Piano</i> at the end, marvelously wise, complex aphoristic pieces from the composer&#8217;s last years. In between came more treasures of varying value: first, a set of Morton Feldman pieces from 1959, tiny, very soft, very freely composed for each hand, the Feldman we tend to forget in the light of the hourslong pieces of his last years; then, John Cage&#8217;s <i>The Seasons</i>, his ballet score transcribed for piano, music of greater discipline than most of his familiar scores, somewhat like Satie and, again, very beautiful. Also on the program was Mauricio Kagel&#8217;s “Piece of Filmmusic”: pure Dada, something involving a wrestling match between a semiclad pianist and a metronome, a holdover from when people went for that kind of thing.</p>
<p>The people of a chamber ensemble known as Nimbus have been bombarding me with reminders of their existence; Thursday night found them too at Zipper, and there was, therefore, reason to check them out. Nimbus, along with its music director, Young Riddle (that&#8217;s his name, and do you know your Harry Potter?), believes in themed programming; last Thursday&#8217;s theme was PALIMPSEST in large letters, which is the ancient practice of writing manuscripts on top of pre-existing manuscripts, with the earlier writing erased but sometimes recoverable. Mr. Riddle seems to have been attracted, perhaps unduly, by the fact that one of Yannis Xenakis&#8217; minor compositions bore the title <i>Palimpsest</i>, and decided to build part of his program around the matter. He enlisted a CSUN colleague, Dan Hosken, to compose an electronic overwrite over the Xenakis and to make both works the gist of the concert.</p>
<p>The program began with Schoenberg&#8217;s <i>Five Pieces for Orchestra</i> in the boiled-down version by Felix Greissle, in a performance by the ensemble that I will kindly extenuate as sight-reading. Then came the Xenakis, then the Hosken+Xenakis. Oh, I forgot, there were “mystery pieces” before each half: unannounced solo pieces (Stravinsky, Steve Hoey) to give the (very small) audience a swell tease. Mr. Riddle talked on and on, most of his words swallowed. This was easily the worst concert I&#8217;ve been to this year. No, the year is young; make that two years. </p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Bach and All Bach and&#160;All</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2007/03/bach-and-all-bach-and-all/</link>
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		<pubDate>Wed, 28 Mar 2007 21:50:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[Julius Who?If the name of Julius Reubke means nothing to you, that&#8217;s understandable; mine, however, is the even greater guilt. I&#8217;d seen the name for years, on posters and programs, record catalogs and small entries in encyclopedias, always connected with a single work, a long organ sonata of churchly mien. That had always been enough [...]]]></description>
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Julius Who?If the name of Julius Reubke means nothing to you, that&#8217;s understandable; mine, however, is the even greater guilt. I&#8217;d seen the name for years, on posters and programs, record catalogs and small entries in encyclopedias, always connected with a single work, a long organ sonata of churchly mien. That had always been enough to conjure an image of something grinding from around the dark and gloomy 1890s, piling up the chromatic counterpoints in the manner of, say, Max Reger. It was Reger&#8217;s <i>Fantasy and Fugue on B-A-C-H</i> &#8211; root canal set to music &#8211; that preceded Reubke&#8217;s sonata on Paul Jacobs&#8217; program at Disney Hall on a recent Sunday night, an exhilarating evening and a learning experience as well.</p>
<p>I learned above all that I had miscalculated Herr Reubke&#8217;s history &#8211; and, therefore, the shape and sound of his music &#8211; by several decades. His time had come and gone much earlier in the 19th century; born in 1834, he died of tuberculosis at the age of 24, leaving behind two large sonatas, one for organ and another for piano. Most important in that brief lifetime, he was a protégé of Franz Liszt, and the big Organ Sonata I was hearing that Sunday for the first time in my 82 years, with surprise and delight, simply glistens with the Master&#8217;s imprint.</p>
<p>To that sonata, Reubke attached a program, based on a complex paraphrase of Psalm 94. Pleas for Divine Vengeance and declarations of Faith and Trust resound; the entire work is built, in the Lisztian manner, out of a single theme undergoing transformation, building toward a climactic fugue, something of a ringer for Liszt&#8217;s own Piano Sonata &#8211; a resemblance in no way shameful. You had to marvel, at the power of the work and at the tragedy it entails. There is great beauty here, underlined in Jacobs&#8217; obviously loving registration; its power builds with the assurance of a composer in command of his craft, yet less than a year from a wasting death. According to the all-too-brief biography in Grove&#8217;s Dictionary, the Reubke Piano Sonata is an even more adventurous work than the one for organ; I await with some impatience the package from Amazon.</p>
<p>Inevitably, BachThe shadow of Sebastian Bach fell upon most of the music making last week, either in the celebration (most of the time) or in the defacement (as in the aforementioned Reger abomination). Paul Jacobs&#8217; organ program included one of Bach&#8217;s lovely trio sonatas, crisp and elegant and intricate and beautifully detailed under this remarkable musician&#8217;s young fingers. It also included a Mendelssohn sonata, which also hovered agreeably close to the spirit of Bach: the influence of the chorale melody, the lapsing into recitative, the charming solemnity. There was more Bach as encores, two short pieces to send us home uplifted and happy.</p>
<p>Next night, the Monday Evening Concert laid claim to a relationship to Bach, although a sense of strain was sometimes evident. “Bach and the Music of Today” was the overall title; Kent Nagano was listed as curator; pianist and conductor Ichiro Nodaira was out front in all but one of the works. His credentials as a performer of Bach might bear examining. He began the program with a pair of preludes and fugues from the <i>Well-Tempered Clavier</i>, went on to a rather hectic reading of the <i>Chromatic Fantasy,</i> pedaled as heavily as if some Chopin nocturne were the matter at hand, and ended with Ferruccio Busoni&#8217;s dreary, over-upholstered piano transcription of the Chaconne from the D-minor Partita (for solo violin), as false to the Bach original, and to the sound of its period, as the Reger noted above.</p>
<p>In between, there was music of &#8211; and truer to &#8211; its own time: the delightfully intricate <i>Viola, Viola</i> (for just those) by George Benjamin; the deliciously rowdy <i>Fantaisie Mécanique</i> by Unsuk Chin; Kurt Rohde&#8217;s <i>Double Trouble</i>, a double concerto for violas and small ensemble; and Nodaira&#8217;s own <i>Texture de Délire</i>, a nicely atmospheric piece for small ensemble including electronics, 25 years old but certainly more up-to-date than Nodaira&#8217;s performances of Bach. Strange, that a musician who creates such attractive music in the <i>spirit</i> of Bach, which this short, attractive piece from 1982 surely is/was, performs the composer&#8217;s original conceptions so poorly.</p>
<p>Spreading the PassionNext day came the <i>St. Matthew Passion</i>, its dimensions respected and its spirit as well. Under Martin Haselboeck, our local baroque ensemble known as Musica Angelica has grown in prestige and in programming ambition. Currently, they are joined with Haselboeck&#8217;s other group, his Orchester Wiener Akademie, in a tour of the <i>Matthauml;uspassion</i> that began in Mexico City, picks up choruses in various cities along the way, lands in Spain this weekend and ends up in Munich in time for Easter. Worth the trip? Yes.</p>
<p>Somewhat adrift in Pasadena&#8217;s acoustically iffy First United Methodist Church, with a cranny-filling audience of 800, the chorus &#8211; a too-small unit from John Alexander&#8217;s Pacific Chorale forced into inadequate space &#8211; faced the major problem: There was just no sound to the sound. Haselboeck solved one problem neatly, bringing soprano Christine Brandes out front to fill in the boys&#8217; voices in the opening tripartite chorus, but the two other parts &#8211; the wonderful “Who?” “Where” back-and-forth and the later “Donner und Blitz” that sets a hearer&#8217;s teeth on edge &#8211; were as formless as last week&#8217;s <i>Nudelsuppe</i>.</p>
<p>The soloists made amends, handsomely. Brandes, an old Philharmonic friend, held the room breathless with her “Aus liebe,” as did Klaus Mertens in the final aria, his rich bass-baritone beautifully twined around the plangent lament of William Skeen&#8217;s viola da gamba &#8211; the sound Bach used one time only in each of his Passions, at the moment of Jesus&#8217; death. An excellent young countertenor, Spanish-born Carlos Mena, took on the alto arias; if he didn&#8217;t quite break hearts with the “Erbarme dich,” I don&#8217;t know who can since we lost Kathleen Ferrier. Andreas Karasiak sang the Evangelist; Stephen Salters, the words of Jesus &#8211; both eloquently. Overall, the greater triumph belonged to the excellent Haselboeck, for his taut, beautifully shaded, forthright, dramatic reading. That man knows his Bach. </p></p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Fingerings</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2007/03/fingerings/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2007/03/fingerings/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 21 Mar 2007 22:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[Opus 110 As Alfred Brendel&#8217;s recital at Disney Hall last week amplified, in no work does the voice of Beethoven &#8211; defiant, despairing, triumphant, vulnerable &#8211; resound more compellingly than in the next-to-last of his 32 piano sonatas. I&#8217;ve never fully understood that glorious, quirky sonata of Beethoven&#8217;s declining years; Brendel&#8217;s grand, loving performance didn&#8217;t [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><span style="font-weight: bold;">Opus 110</span></p>
<p>As Alfred Brendel&#8217;s recital at Disney Hall last week amplified, in no work does the voice of Beethoven &#8211; defiant, despairing, triumphant, vulnerable &#8211; resound more compellingly than in the next-to-last of his 32 piano sonatas.</p>
<p>I&#8217;ve never fully understood that glorious, quirky sonata of Beethoven&#8217;s declining years; Brendel&#8217;s grand, loving performance didn&#8217;t so much solve its mysteries as cast them in wonderful lights. The sonata begins prettily enough; the complexities take over with an unexpected left-hand rumble after the scherzo. On the next page (of my old, tattered copy from Doblinger&#8217;s backroom in Vienna), there are half a dozen changes of key, sometimes two within the same measure. There&#8217;s a weird sequence of repeated high A&#8217;s, like a fire alarm, and a descent like the fall of an angel. A most dolorous lament ensues. In the next minutes, the lament will lead to an orderly fugue, which will give way to a return of the lament, which will then give way again to the fugue, sort of. This time, however, the fugal melody comes in upside down (legitimate practice, if you know your Bach), and not for long. Suddenly, the music gathers a fearsome momentum, not so much from speed as from a triumphant thickening of the harmony. If you want to know what “ecstasy” sounds like in its musical equivalent, these last pages of Opus 110 are what you turn to. I know of no other passage like this in Beethoven for sheer onward musical impulse; perhaps the coda of the first movement of the “Eroica”; what else?</p>
<p>Brendel began his program preparing our ears and our souls for the Beethoven with an unusually stormy, mettlesome late sonata of Haydn, a work in C minor full of jerks and changes and marvelous flights into uncharted harmonic regions. After the Beethoven, there was Schubert: three impromptus, sonata movements in all but name, meticulously dealt with but, to my taste, just a shade too much so. Tears should flow during the rhapsodic second theme in the F-minor Impromptu; the spine should shiver when the principal theme jolts back into earshot. The notes were all there; the music, not quite. (My ears are full, and will always remain so, of the playing of Mitsuko Uchida on a summer day at Ojai.)</p>
<p>To round off, there was more stormy, mettlesome C minor &#8211; the familiar, forward-looking Mozart sonata in that key &#8211; as if to create a dark, glowering frame for the whole splendid evening.</p>
<p><span style="font-weight: bold;">Unresolved Dominance</span><br style="font-weight: bold;" /><br />Doctor&#8217;s orders have obliged Jeffrey Kahane to suspend his survey of Mozart&#8217;s piano concertos, conducting his Los Angeles Chamber Orchestra from the keyboard, with one program (four concerti, including the popular D-minor) postponed indefinitely. One must not be greedy; what we have heard so far constitutes a joyous and distinguished event in our concert life, reason enough to anticipate the final concert, whenever.</p>
<p>Last month&#8217;s concert ended with the D-major “Coronation” Concerto. I had somehow forgotten the particular marvels of this late work, the interweaving of harmonies in the last movement. Their echoes remain with me, the uplift gleaned from the remarkable individuality in every one of these two dozen lapidarian works, the two dozen different ways this unique genius contrived to oppose a solo instrument and an orchestra, to create a wordless drama from that opposition, and to make it mean something different and wonderful each time. Everyone who comes under the spell of Mozart&#8217;s piano concertos does so for a different reason and falls in love with different moments. (Mine, above all others, occurs during the slow movement of the E-flat Concerto K. 482.)</p>
<p>Newly arrived in Vienna, the young Beethoven was stirred by his encounter with Mozart&#8217;s piano concertos, performed the D-minor at a memorial organized by Konstanze Mozart and composed cadenzas for the work. His own rather bland first concerto (published as No. 2) simmered sweetly in Christian Zacharias&#8217; self-conducted performance with the Philharmonic last weekend. Composed in the same year, 1796, Haydn&#8217;s final symphony (No. 104, the “London”), which shared the program, was something else again: amazing, robust, adventurous music with a flight of fantasy in the slow movement that, by itself, seemed to close the door on 18th-century musical propriety with a mighty slam.</p>
<p>Edgar Baitzel (1955–2007)</p>
<p>On paper, Edgar Baitzel was the L.A. Opera&#8217;s chief operations officer; he was also its heart. I did not rate the monthly breakfasts with him as did my higher-placed colleagues, but I do remember a lunch at the start of his tenure here: 2000, I think. I guess he had done a pretty good vetting job on my tastes and hang-ups. Ever the staunch company man, he came up with a fistful of testimonials to Mrs. Domingo as an operatic stage director, a matter on which I had expressed grave doubts. Better yet, he brought to that lunch table a gift basket of promises of what the L.A. Opera would do under his leadership. One was Schoenberg&#8217;s <i>Moses und Aron</i>, and of course I laughed myself silly at the possibility of <i>that</i> ever happening. (It did.) Then there was Wagner&#8217;s <i>Ring</i>. (Well, that promise is still alive.) There was a menu of pie-in-the-sky at that lunch, and sly Edgar Baitzel saw to it that it got served.</p>
<p>He was the right kind of executive for this company at that point in its development, for a most important reason (among others, to be sure). He <i>knew</i> music. The world is full of opera companies run by millionaires and impresarios and tenors; here was a man who actually knew what was going on on the stage &#8211; and, more to the point, what <i>should</i> be going on. He would have fixed the wretched look of that <i>Tannhauml;user</i> or heaved it off the Venusberg.</p>
<p>He will be hard to replace, but he <i>must</i> be replaced. If you ask me (and please don&#8217;t), I think that James Conlon has some of the brainpower, the imagination and certainly the musical knowledge that we&#8217;ve lost with Edgar Baitzel&#8217;s passing. Hold on to him. <br /><br style="font-weight: bold; font-style: italic;" /><br style="font-weight: bold; font-style: italic;" /><span style="font-weight: bold; font-style: italic;">At 10 a.m. on Friday, March 23, the L.A. City Council will honor Alan Rich for his contributions to the cultural life of Los Angeles.</span></p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Recoveries</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2007/03/recoveries/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2007/03/recoveries/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 14 Mar 2007 22:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[The Sound Ringing Forth Years of listening to his symphonies through Hollywood Bowl amplification can leave you with a distorted sound image of Tchaikovsky&#8217;s remarkable orchestral language &#8211; what old Bernheimer used to refer to as the “slush pump.” The Fourth Symphony doesn&#8217;t seem to fare well indoors either, rendered unpopular these days by its [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><span style="font-weight: bold;">The Sound Ringing Forth</span></p>
<p>Years of listening to his symphonies through Hollywood Bowl amplification can leave you with a distorted sound image of Tchaikovsky&#8217;s remarkable orchestral language &#8211; what old Bernheimer used to refer to as the “slush pump.” The Fourth Symphony doesn&#8217;t seem to fare well indoors either, rendered unpopular these days by its excessive popularity. It had been years since I had heard it in its proper setting, until two weeks ago at Disney Hall, which may explain why it sounded so good. Stéphane Denève was the conductor.</p>
<p>A string player explained what is special about the Tchaikovsky sound: a way of layering the string scoring that lets in air and light. Whatever the means, the orchestral sound under Denève, bolstered by his fine sense of shape, made uncommonly good sense of Tchaikovsky&#8217;s wayward symphonic meanderings. It filled the hall with a great and novel experience that turned his moldy old Fourth into something brand-new and even, dare I say, wonderful.</p>
<p>Being French, M. Denève seemed possessed of that admirable ideal of clarity and balance that we hang on all French musicians from Boulez on down. His guest shot began with a generous serving of orchestral excerpts from Prokofiev&#8217;s <i>Love for Three Oranges</i> and the last of Bela Bartók&#8217;s three piano concertos, with the marvelous Piotr Anderszewski as soloist. Bartók&#8217;s Third Piano Concerto may not challenge the fingers as do the first two; he wrote it for his wife Ditta, of lovely but modest talent. By the same token, it challenges the poet all the more. Winner of the 2002 Gilmore Award, that benefice that falls unsolicited from above, and remembered for a spectacular follow-up recital at Disney last season, young Anderszewski continues on his upward path.</p>
<p><span style="font-weight: bold;">The Sound Suppressed</span><br style="font-weight: bold;" /><br />By his exuberant extracurricular activities, James Conlon has virtually redefined the function of a major municipal opera company and its music director: not merely to present the masterworks of the repertory on a large stage in grandiose productions, but to attend to operatic creativity as it has been practiced in a far broader sense and to make this broad sphere, too, the responsibility of the major company. Obviously, there are many more directions for such a passion to extend than one person&#8217;s sympathies can embrace, but already, in his first season here, Conlon&#8217;s range of activity has been phenomenal: four main-stage productions, the <i>Noah&#8217;s Flood</i> at the Cathedral and, this past week, the inaugural of the long-term project known as “Recovered Voices.” All that, plus his willingness to take over as pre-event lecturer at all his activities &#8211; and the fact that everything he has done so far has been well done. This is what you call a mensch, Irish kid from Queens or no.</p>
<p>“Recovered Voices” actually began here a couple of seasons ago, when Conlon put together Viktor Ullmann&#8217;s concentration-camp opera <i>The Emperor of Atlantis</i> at a local synagogue. The term embraces not only music composed under imprisonment but music whose composers&#8217; lives were in some way affected under Nazi rule, Jewish or (as with Ernst Krenek or Paul Hindemith) not. Last week&#8217;s concert, with singers on the empty Chandler Pavilion stage against a projected backdrop with Conlon and the orchestra in the pit, was all-operatic: selections from five operas plus a complete performance of Alexander Zemlinsky&#8217;s <i>A Florentine Tragedy</i>. All was music composed in German-speaking Europe, almost all in the 1920s.</p>
<p>Six composers, neighbors more or less, worked to restart their art in a land shattered, at least economically and psychologically, after a devastating war. Music itself had reached ground zero. Mahler was gone; the symphony, bulwark of a century of concert-hall music, had run its course. Only opera, under Richard Strauss and, briefly, Franz Schreker, flourished, perpetuating a style that claimed its ancestry from Wagner&#8217;s <i>Tristan und Isolde</i> 60 years before, uneasily blended with Viennese kitsch and the Mediterranean weep. Some clumsy experiments with the newfangled American jazz provided a feeble enlivening force. For subject matter, these composers drew on the symbolism of the painters to the north. In the cabarets, a livelier style flourished; Marlene Dietrich danced, and the piano was played by men who would later become the first generation of Hollywood&#8217;s composers: Franz Wachsmann (later Waxman), Fritz (Fred) Hollander. Kurt Weill heard their music and Bertolt Brecht fashioned some of their lyrics, and together they created the musical drama that gives the era its real distinction.</p>
<p>Their music, too, incurred the wrath of Hitler&#8217;s goons, but it had leapt to international fame before the formulators of the “Degenerate Music” had pulled down the bars. The music in last week&#8217;s concert was entirely noble in the fact of its existence &#8211; Ullmann&#8217;s opera especially, whose ironic undertones have earned it frequent complete performances these days &#8211; and in its perpetuation. Krenek&#8217;s <i>Jonny spielt auf</i> is, if nothing else, a social phenomenon, the first opera to employ jazz, and popular for just that. (As students in Vienna, we all smoked Jonnys &#8211; cigarettes, that is.) But the jazz is corny and the sentiment worse, as a Long Beach Opera staging proved not so long ago. Korngold&#8217;s <i>Die tote Stadt</i> has unaccountably wriggled itself into the repertory, probably on the strength of its composer&#8217;s movie fame, although I&#8217;m willing to bet you could fashion a better opera out of his score for <i>Kings Row</i> than this hopeless goo.</p>
<p>Then there is Alexander Zemlinsky, whose one-act, hourlong <i>A Florentine Tragedy</i> was given complete in concert form. Zemlinsky has his champions. People were raving a few years ago when a disc of his Second Quartet appeared; I was not of their number, nor was I when the Philharmonic took up his <i>Lyric Symphony</i>, which merely seems the grandmother of all film scores. <i>Florentine</i>, to an ironic Oscar Wilde text ending in a juicy murder, is stronger stuff, especially down in the orchestra pit. Next season, we get his <i>The Dwarf</i>.</p>
<p>Not one of these works on this thoroughly fascinating and valuable program is meant to push aside any of our common fund of music. There is no set limit to the size or number of the active repertory. If I heard no new masterpieces, perhaps I heard a few more criteria for valuing the ones I already know. Reason enough.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Aromatherapy</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2007/03/aromatherapy/</link>
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		<pubDate>Wed, 07 Mar 2007 22:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[Potpourri To San Francisco I journey for John Adams&#8217; music; it is his shrine. Last season, his Doctor Atomic at the Opera House celebrated the blotting out of the sun; this past weekend, A Flowering Tree at Davies Symphony Hall celebrated its restoration. Peter Sellars, who supplied the words for both major events, was on [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>
Potpourri</p>
<p>To San Francisco I journey for John Adams&#8217; music; it is his shrine. Last season, his <i>Doctor Atomic</i> at the Opera House celebrated the blotting out of the sun; this past weekend, <i>A Flowering Tree</i> at Davies Symphony Hall celebrated its restoration. Peter Sellars, who supplied the words for both major events, was on hand both times, beguiling early arrivals with what has become, for him, not so much a pre-event lecture as an evangelical sermon, eyes wide shut, fortissimo to pianissimo. The crowd, at least on Saturday night, exploded. Ah, San Francisco.</p>
<p>First staged as part of a festival organized by Sellars in Vienna last year (to honor Mozart, you might know, by not playing a note of his music but observing his spirit indirectly), the work was brought to San Francisco with the staging cut down but the gorgeous power of its narrative maintained. An impoverished maiden transforms herself into a tree whose blossoms&#8217; fragrance enchant a prince. He marries her, but her jealous sister destroys her beauty. Both the maiden and her prince journey the world in broken state; a miracle reunites them. It is a kind of love story often retold; this version is from south India, and its overtones are not all that far from Mozart&#8217;s <i>Magic Flute</i>. Mostly, it deals with the motivating force of myth &#8211; transformation &#8211; and that becomes the strength of Adams&#8217; extraordinary score.</p>
<p>His performing forces, which he conducted, are large: full symphony orchestra plus, of course, all the percussion you can name of Eastern and Western worlds, including an exquisite array of metal chimes that put Davies Hall&#8217;s own ugly Erector Set décor to shame. Against this barrage there is &#8211; of course, this being John Adams &#8211; an exquisite array of small sounds: recorders, small glockenspiels, wind chimes and the like that gave the effect of a whole &#8216;nother world. Frankly, I felt the sound spectrum of <i>A Flowering Tree</i> sloped somewhat more toward the large sound; the gorgeous colors, on first hearing, tended now and then to run. But only now and then. The story is told in English; a chorus comments, rudely at times, in folksy Spanish.</p>
<p>George Tsypin&#8217;s original Vienna production used that amazing chorus from Carácas that erupts with such pizzazz on the recording of the Osvaldo Golijov <i>Pasión</i> (and sang it live twice in lucky Costa Mesa). Whatever those young singers have, it apparently doesn&#8217;t translate; the one weakness last weekend was the San Francisco Symphony Chorus. Nicely done up in pastel togs in a balcony, it stomped and shouted the Spanish text, preserving the notion of surrounding the Indian folktale with another folklike level, but did so routinely, and brought things down.</p>
<p>The solo cast, all seen in Vienna, consisted of three singers and three dancers whose movements doubled the emotions of the singers or, you might say, paraphrased their earthly experiences into their extraordinarily subtle and complex dance language. Eric Owens, whose Grendel we may now forgive, was the Storyteller, that eloquent, essential binding force in all exotic drama. Jessica Rivera was the ravishing young Kumudha of the blossoms; we know her from work with the L.A. Opera Workshop and the recordings of Golijov&#8217;s <i>Ainadamar</i> and his <i>Pasión</i>. Russell Thomas, new to me, was the passionate Prince.</p>
<p>Surrounding this fine vocal group, and welding themselves to its artistry in a way you&#8217;d have to see to feel, were three dancers from the Indonesian Institutes for the Arts in Sukarta. Their exhilarating strength lent an entirely new dimension to the entire passionate creation. Even though little of Tsypin&#8217;s production traveled to San Francisco &#8211; it will be done complete in London in August, and here in concert form in 2009 &#8211; the presence of dancers completed the dimension of the work most thrillingly. There was one (of many, actually, but especially one) moment of haunting beauty in the work; it stays with me still, and my eyes mist as I tell it.</p>
<p>The crippled Kumudha lies helpless. “My eyes,” she remembers, “were like the lotus. My arms had the grace of bamboo.” Across the stage, the sorrowing Prince wanders, lamenting, “I grieve for you, lie lost and sick for you.” Their songs, borne by mute dancers, meet midstage. That&#8217;s John Adams.</p>
<p>Purple, StreakedI had not intended to write about Brahms at this length. Hearing all four symphonies in five days should have clogged my pores for weeks, yet here we are. I have no fondness for terms like “meat and potatoes,” at least in musical parlance, but that&#8217;s what these performances under Christoph von Dohnanyi actually were: thoroughly wholesome, beautifully balanced, every first flute in coordination with every second. Ending the set was the Second Symphony &#8211; some folks&#8217; favorite &#8211; and its turgid, strained slow movement with horn solo that is like a paradigm of a tune that meanders onstage with no idea where to go. (Mozart did it better in his <i>Musical Joke</i>.) But that symphony allowed for some good, hefty brass at the close; if the Messrs. Green and company had stood up for their last fanfares and released a flock of white doves into the hall, it would not have been out of place. Strange to relate, but after Brahms, the Tchaikovsky Fourth Symphony on the same Disney stage this past weekend sounded downright lovable &#8211; <i>Tchaikovsky!!</i></p>
<p>A couple of days following the Brahms orchestral orgy, however, came an appendage to the event that nearly obliged me to swallow every harsh word I have flung at old Onkel Johannes these past weeks. Midway through an all-Brahms chamber concert by Philharmonic members came the Clarinet Quintet, a late work not often heard, music of lavender and deep purple, shot through with burnished-bronze outcries from the solo wind player. Memories of the similarly scored work by Mozart are not out of place; nothing else of Brahms &#8211; possibly excepting the trio with French horn &#8211; sends forth such immediate waves of deep, penetrating beauty. Well into the slow movement, David Howard&#8217;s solo clarinet unwound its slithering melodic line across the musical spectrum; the strings answered with passionate shivers, and their moonstruck conversation continues to echo in my skull days later. That&#8217;s Brahms. </p></p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Yea and Nay  on Grand&#160;Ave.</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2007/02/yea-and-nay-on-grand-ave/</link>
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		<pubDate>Wed, 28 Feb 2007 22:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[Zip Notes on an uncommonly splendid week at Zipper Concert Hall &#8211; and what a valuable asset to musical life that handsome, small room has become! The second in the reborn Monday Evening Concerts drew an almost-capacity crowd, despite there being not a familiar name on the program. Steven Stucky, who curated, had chosen well; [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Zip</p>
<p>Notes on an uncommonly splendid week at Zipper Concert Hall &#8211; and what a valuable asset to musical life that handsome, small room has become!</p>
<p>The second in the reborn Monday Evening Concerts drew an almost-capacity crowd, despite there being not a familiar name on the program. Steven Stucky, who curated, had chosen well; what was most compelling was the spread in styles, from the academic/contrapuntal (James Matheson, Sean Shepherd) to the youthful/kicky (Andrew Norman) to three short works (Philippe Bodin, Ana Lara, Brian Current most of all) in which the voice of an original composer with something important to say could be clearly heard. The performances, by members of XTET led by Donald Crockett, all of them locals, offered further assurance that if it should happen that serious composition manages to survive, it will be properly performed. I particularly liked Current&#8217;s <i>Faster Still</i>, the final work, an exhilarating study in changing tempos, with a killer part for solo violin (Movses Pogossian). In our previous chat, Stucky had described the piece as &#8220;Elliott Carter writing arpeggios,&#8221; which stops short of dealing with the energy of the piece, the startling jolts in its changes of pace. (Alternating Current, perhaps?) The composer lives in Toronto; he is worth watching, even from afar.</p>
<p>The best of Susan Svrcek&#8217;s &#8220;Piano Spheres&#8221; concert the next night dealt with worthwhile nostalgia, music from the &#8217;50s, &#8217;60s or thereabouts in styles bygone but still vivid. She began with our old friend Ingolf Dahl, once of USC: the <i>Sonata Pastorale</i> of 1959, neo-classic, jazzy here and there, thoroughly charming. A set of short works by the great loner Carl Ruggles was just as thoroughly uncharming. Later came a clutch of Polish works: a set of miniatures by Artur Malawski from 1947 and, at the end, the 1953 Sonata No. 2 by Grazyna Bacewicz, powerful, defiant music by one of the most significant composers to break through Stalinist dogma in post-WWII Poland.</p>
<p>On Friday, the Calder Quartet, which has been in residence at the Colburn School this season, drew the largest crowd I&#8217;ve ever seen at Zipper, and for good reason. Even more amazing, the near-capacity audience held its absolute silence during the Calder&#8217;s stunning performance of the Shostakovich Quartet No. 15, that heartbreaking work constructed of six continuous near-pianissimo movements in a bottomless pit. The crowd was young, some <i>very</i> young, and whoever assembled it should hire themselves out to other organizations in town who present serious concerts of quiet music. The program also included <i>Arcadiana</i>, a set of delicious, slinky bits by Thomas Adès &#8211; &#8220;each an evocation of paradise,&#8221; says the wicked composer, and a perfect comedown from the Shostakovich &#8211; as well as the second of Beethoven&#8217;s &#8220;Razumovsky&#8221; Quartets, delivered rather harshly at first (why leave out the first-movement repeat?) but with the slow movement entirely the &#8220;contemplation of the starry sky&#8221; that Beethoven himself noted. These Calders, all four USC-taught and -mellowed, are ripening into one of our prime resources.</p>
<p>At neither of those last two important events was our <i>Times</i> represented. Wonder what happened to that old expression &#8220;newspaper of record.&#8221;</p>
<p>Zap</p>
<p>Sooner or later, every opera company must take on <i>Tannhäuser</i>; the good news is that our local company&#8217;s responsibility is now behind it. Here&#8217;s what you need to know about this production currently at the Chandler. At the Bacchanale, near the start, the stage is full of Wagner&#8217;s steamy music, with bodies to match &#8211; nude, perhaps, but the lighting makes it difficult to discern, or to care. Out from the pile climbs Tannhäuser &#8211; in modern dark suit, red jacket. He walks over to a (!) grand piano, sits and begins his serenade to Venus (properly joined, from the pit, by the solo harp Wagner actually demands). Eventually, Tannhäuser is extruded from the Venusberg and finds himself back on Earth in a snowstorm while a Shepherd nearby sings of the balmy Maytime breezes.</p>
<p>What we have, you know by now, is one of those update jobs &#8211; the work this time of director Ian Judge and designer Gottfried Pilz &#8211; brought on by the Wagnerian sensory overload, the obsession that his music embodies the philosophies of religion, love, hate, damnation, redemption, dissonance and harmony, and is therefore subject to &#8220;anything goes&#8221; on the dramatic stage. I can&#8217;t imagine a stage spectacle more soporific than Wagner according to the Master&#8217;s original designs, and our museums teem with evidence to bear this out. But must the alternative insult the eye? The common sense?</p>
<p>You&#8217;d think so, from the recent Kirov Opera excursion to Costa Mesa, and now this <i>Tannhäuser</i>, which delivers Wagner&#8217;s perfectly agreeable (if hopelessly naive) early stage piece in a production that violates the word of Wagner&#8217;s text as well as its sense, for no discernible reason. Must the second-act &#8220;Hall of Song,&#8221; greeted for its grandeur in Elisabeth&#8217;s interminable aria, turn out an overcrowded hotel lobby with inadequate <i>Sitzplatz</i> for the guests? Whose idea, the drab warehouse setting for Act 3, lit with a kind of neonlike electronic green like the first generation of computer monitors, through which the Pilgrim&#8217;s Chorus trudges like zombies?</p>
<p>The music is okay, just okay. Peter Seiffert is the Tannhäuser with the modern mustache and the reedy, accurate voice; you have to wonder at the pheromones in that utterly sexless voice nonetheless capable of mounting that Venusberg. Petra Maria Schnitzer is a melting Elisabeth, Franz Josef Selig, as the Landgrave, a commanding figure in the Franz Josef tradition. Martin Gantner &#8211; stooped, spectacled, balding &#8211; is an odd casting choice for history&#8217;s poet Wolfram von Eschenbach, the romantic figure in Wagner&#8217;s script, but his &#8220;Evening Star&#8221; is curiously moving for all that. Better than any of this is the rousing musical leadership of James Conlon and the magnificent whoop-de-do of the orchestra&#8217;s brass contingent when called for. I wonder, though: If Conlon is serious about building a Wagnerian town here, mightn&#8217;t a somewhat larger chorus be in order? Just asking. </p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Esa&#039;s New&#160;Program</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2007/02/esas-new-program/</link>
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		<pubDate>Wed, 28 Feb 2007 22:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=621</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[It is hardly news that Esa-Pekka Salonen, the Philharmonic&#8217;s spellbinding music director, draws a turn-away crowd at a personal appearance. The difference, on a recent Thursday night, is that this appearance is without the usual 106-member Philharmonic as backup, and the venue is the Apple Store in the Santa Monica Promenade, with the ever-young musician [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>It is hardly news that Esa-Pekka Salonen, the Philharmonic&#8217;s spellbinding music director, draws a turn-away crowd at a personal appearance. The difference, on a recent Thursday night, is that this appearance is without the usual 106-member Philharmonic as backup, and the venue is the Apple Store in the Santa Monica Promenade, with the ever-young musician on hand to demonstrate &#8211; nay, celebrate &#8211; the ongoing symbiosis between art and technology.</p>
<p>Salonen is there to re-create some of the birth pangs of <i>Helix</i>, his latest orchestral work, whose U.S. premiere the Philharmonic will present on March 30. &#8220;The great Russian conductor Valery Gergiev asked me for a piece for a BBC concert to celebrate an organization called The World Orchestra of Peace. I had no idea what kind of composition I could write to celebrate the idea of peace. I called the BBC and they told me to just send along any old composition, and that&#8217;s what&#8217;s here.&#8221;</p>
<p><i>Helix</i>, like most of Salonen&#8217;s recent compositions &#8211; like the music of nearly any serious creative artist you can name these days &#8211; is the product of a collaboration: the invention of the composer and the software that facilitates turning that invention into the printout that the world receives as a readable, performable score. &#8220;There is a terrible loneliness about composing music,&#8221; Salonen tells the crowd, &#8220;and the software creates the illusion of a dialogue, of somebody else in the room &#8211; not composing, but at least telling me that what I&#8217;m doing is doable. It makes it possible to dream up symphonies, even operas, while I&#8217;m in an airplane or in a hotel room far from home. Then, when I get back I can quickly download those dreams.&#8221;</p>
<p>Two English brothers, Ben and Jonathan Finn, developed Salonen&#8217;s favored software and then gave it the name of Finland&#8217;s most famous composer, Jean Sibelius. &#8220;As far as I know,&#8221; says Salonen, &#8220;I am the first Finnish composer to use Sibelius.&#8221; He has plenty of company among fellow composers, though; the Sibelius Web site teems with names: Steve Reich, Michael Tilson Thomas, Lalo Schifrin &#8211; and takes a swipe or two at Sibelius&#8217; principal software rival, a program called Finale.</p>
<p>On a big screen at the back of the crowded Apple Store, Salonen gets to demonstrate himself, and Sibelius. The sounds aren&#8217;t yet the L.A. Philharmonic, but synthesizers provide a fair likeness. Several measures from the start of <i>Helix</i> are laid out; then, manipulated by software, the notes are altered in length, in duration and through combination. The textures thicken as combinations of notes are played off against themselves. Gradually, the music is transformed from an open-textured exercise into an intensifying, accelerating sound pattern of concentric circles. Over <i>Helix</i>&#8216;s nine-minute duration, the title begins to make sense. </p>
<p>At the end there are questions and, as expected, a certain pandemonium. The age spread is impressive; you get the feeling that the next great symphony might come from a 14-year-old Apple whiz, or from an 82-year-old critic, for that matter. Someone asks the inevitable: How does the program affect the division of his life?</p>
<p>&#8220;Anybody can conduct symphony concerts,&#8221; answers Esa-Pekka Salonen. &#8220;But only I can write my music.&#8221; </p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Brahms&#160;Rush</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2007/02/brahms-rush/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2007/02/brahms-rush/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 21 Feb 2007 22:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=620</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Immersion, Conversion &#8220;The last 80 years,&#8221; writes Ned Rorem in Facing the Night, his latest collection of terse and invigorating personal observations, &#8220;have been the sole period in history wherein music of the past takes precedence over the present .?.?. I never go to classical concerts anymore, and I don&#8217;t know anyone who does. It&#8217;s [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Immersion, Conversion</p>
<p>&#8220;The last 80 years,&#8221; writes Ned Rorem in <i>Facing the Night</i>, his latest collection of terse and invigorating personal observations, &#8220;have been the sole period in history wherein music of the past takes precedence over the present .?.?. I never go to classical concerts anymore, and I don&#8217;t know anyone who does. It&#8217;s hard still to care whether some virtuoso tonight will perform the <i>Moonlight</i> Sonata a bit better or worse than another virtuoso performed it last night.&#8221;</p>
<p>Either by accident or design, I haven&#8217;t actually heard the &#8220;Moonlight&#8221; for a very long time. With the help of our local band, however, I&#8217;ve been able to revisit the Beethoven Nine Symphonies over recent seasons, each of them juxtaposed with a new and different music that obliged me to ponder differences and hear both works in a new light. This weekend and next, I get to revisit the Four of Brahms &#8211; as, by coincidence, do audiences at New York&#8217;s Avery Fisher Hall, Boston&#8217;s Symphony Hall and Washington&#8217;s Kennedy Center &#8211; and have just recovered from the news that the next Disney season kicks off with all seven &#8211; count &#8216;em &#8211; Sibelius symphonies. I find this delightful, sort of. I have become famous for my out-of-hand deploration of the music of that Finnish master, based on a certain tendency in his music toward thickness and ugliness of sound and pomposity of oratory. Faced with the prospect of this new total immersion, I am now forced to confess that I have never, not once, heard live performances of the Sibelius Third or Sixth symphonies. It would not at all surprise me if I emerged from this Sibelius immersion waving the Finnish banner and chanting <i>Finlandia</i> at full voice. Something similar happened last summer, after all, when a performance of the Violin Concerto, a loathing for which I had often proclaimed, won me over completely at a Hollywood Bowl concert. I&#8217;m just as glad, however, it isn&#8217;t included on the Philharmonic&#8217;s new list.</p>
<p>As with &#8220;Beethoven Unbound,&#8221; the Brahms series aren&#8217;t just any old concert programs. Christoph von Dohnányi is the guest conductor, and his past visits here proclaim him as a uniquely warm-hearted visionary toward the Romantic orchestral repertory. He begins by leveling the playing field &#8211; literally, by bringing his podium and all the players down to almost the same level and thereby suggesting a kind of chamber-music-writ-large approach. This seems to clarify and make somewhat gentle what I often find unbearable in Brahmsian orchestration. I find Dohnányi&#8217;s Brahms actually almost likable; that&#8217;s a new kind of sound, for the Philharmonic and for Onkel Johannes as well.</p>
<p>The Brahmsian structures are awesome: not only the astonishing building up in the finale of the Fourth Symphony but the much more devious &#8211; and, in the end, far more elusive &#8211; accumulation of shape in the finale of the Second, which, after some 60 years of puzzling out, I&#8217;ve only now begun to comprehend. I also admire the marvelous trickery in the Brahms scherzi, every one a magic box of melodic invention. It&#8217;s the pure sound of the oratorical Brahms that I cannot abide, least of all in performances in the hard-edged, frenzied Toscanini manner that some critics have tried to pass off as &#8220;noble&#8221; and &#8220;eloquent.&#8221; If some high-minded brat of a composer had come at me with the opening of his First Symphony, those insolent drums and the C-minor constipation in the strings and the horns, I&#8217;d have been out the door before the 10th bar. Critics must have had stronger constitutions in those days.</p>
<p>Contemporary Hero</p>
<p>Tardily, and with some difficulty, I write of Steve Reich and of <i>Daniel Variations</i>, his most recent large-scale work for chorus and orchestra, which the Los Angeles Master Chorale introduced at Disney Hall in late January. The music sets words from the Book of Daniel and words spoken by Daniel Pearl, the journalist from Encino captured and slain by terrorists in Pakistan. Since the murder, a Daniel Pearl Foundation has come into being; Pearl&#8217;s parents, Ruth and Judea, were at the local performance.</p>
<p>All of which makes it difficult to deal along parallel lines with music and circumstance, the more so because of Reich&#8217;s much-honored excellence. <i>Daniel Variations</i> is a work for chorus and orchestra, about 25 minutes in length, which follows the layout of the previous <i>You Are (Variations)</i>, as well it should; that happens at the moment to be Reich&#8217;s extremely successful method of dealing with text, chorus, and the familiar Reich orchestra of keyboards, percussion and small numbers of instruments, all amplified. Not surprisingly, the new work sounds a lot like the earlier piece. That circumstance is bound to detract from the importance of the event, but it should not detract from the excellence of the music. Future performances will surely present <i>Daniel Variations</i> in other contexts than this first time, coupled with <i>You Are (Variations)</i>, and that will be the time to write about it as music.</p>
<p>Mahagonny Revisited</p>
<p>No opera company that can come up with this season&#8217;s <i>Don Carlo</i>, <i>Poppea</i> and <i>Mahagonny</i> in a single throw can be reckoned below first-rate. On the whole, I will stick to my words of praise for this honorable production of this one-of-a-kind masterpiece; a second visit left me, as at the first time, shaken by the raw strength of the whole. Audra McDonald&#8217;s Jenny is, in a word, unmatchable: totally insidious from her first line, oozing poison at every word. I could wish for the elimination of the &#8220;Cranes&#8221; duet in Act 3, which neither Brecht nor Weill felt wholly comfortable about, but at least she sings it with complete dishonesty. Anthony Dean Griffey is a splendidly goofy Jimmy, and it&#8217;s good that the new translation gives him a singable name: &#8220;McIntyre,&#8221; not &#8220;Mahoney.&#8221; I don&#8217;t know why I didn&#8217;t single out Donnie Rae Albert before for his Trinity Moses in the &#8220;Trial Scene&#8221;; he was terrific.</p>
<p>John Doyle&#8217;s staging doesn&#8217;t entirely work. He fills his stage with palookas and lets them fall over one another, and this especially undermines the ending. That is one of the most devastating endings in all opera, and James Conlon&#8217;s orchestra and chorus make it so here, but as Jimmy himself says, sometime earlier:</p>
<p>&#8220;SOMETHING&#8217;S MISSING.&#8221;</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Grandeur and&#160;Decadence</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2007/02/grandeur-and-decadence/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2007/02/grandeur-and-decadence/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 14 Feb 2007 18:58:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=619</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Turning Point Mahagonny is back in town, and it&#8217;s time to take to the trees. Eighteen years ago, when the steel-edged words and music of Bertolt Brecht and Kurt Weill were last at the L.A. Opera, they were accorded polite if stylish treatment: Kent Nagano&#8217;s musical leadership, Dr. Jonathan Miller&#8217;s brainy staging, nothing to pin [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Turning Point</p>
<p><i>Mahagonny</i> is back in town, and it&#8217;s time to take to the trees. Eighteen years ago, when the steel-edged words and music of Bertolt Brecht and Kurt Weill were last at the L.A. Opera, they were accorded polite if stylish treatment: Kent Nagano&#8217;s musical leadership, Dr. Jonathan Miller&#8217;s brainy staging, nothing to pin you against the wall or drive needles into your shoulder blades. Things have changed, however; the difference is James Conlon, and the difference is marvelous.</p>
<p>The opera dates from 1930. You can click on Wikipedia and learn the state of Germany at the time, the public attitudes toward Jewish musical intellectuals and left-leaning poets, even the high-riding creators of the recent <i>Threepenny Opera</i>. <i>Mahagonny</i> was a huge hit; it played all over Germany in its first year, but its every appearance was under clouds. A great &#8211; i.e., impolite &#8211; performance of the opera, such as the one Conlon is leading at the Dorothy Chandler Pavilion, communicates its agitprop power. The really powerful scenes are those in which its main characters &#8211; bums, every one &#8211; proclaim the uselessness of everything a prosperous German world in 1930, or a comparable one here today, holds dear. The finale is devastating: The crowd parades with placards past the electrocuted corpse of the so-called hero Jimmy, with its procession of nihilistic messages, and with the main tunes of the opera now made grotesque by enlargement grimacing through the orchestra. Wherever the opera is properly performed, there will be cheers and boos at that moment. &#8220;It&#8217;s not really an opera, after all,&#8221; said somebody in the exit line behind me, and I wish I&#8217;d had the hour or two to explain why that person was wrong. This, in brief: It <i>is</i> opera, and superior of its kind, because &#8211; for one of several reasons &#8211; at that moment there is an awesome, wrenching encounter between the thudding of Brecht&#8217;s words and the hammering of Weill&#8217;s music; they are an exact match, as the words and music of Cherubino&#8217;s &#8220;Voi che sapete&#8221; formed their exact match 144 years before.</p>
<p>Pierre Boulez once said that if he were running a major opera house, he would burn all existing repertory and run the house on nothing but continual performances of <i>Mahagonny</i>. I know of worse ideas, except that after a week, Boulez&#8217;s city would be destroyed, wiped out by the hot emotional winds that howl through this extraordinary artwork. The excellence of Conlon&#8217;s conducting, which I have not heard in previous <i>Mahagonny</i>s here or at the Met, is his success in harnessing those hot winds, not only in the orchestra but also in much of his cast. Audra McDonald, not so much girly as a tough broad from the start, is the best Jenny ever; Anthony Dean Griffey is a splendid Jimmy; Patti LuPone (whom I haven&#8217;t had time to write love lyrics to for her <i>Sweeney Todd</i> on Broadway) is the Leocadia Begbick of my dreams. The director, by the way, is John Doyle, also of <i>Sweeney</i>.</p>
<p>Past Particles</p>
<p>Allow me some memories. When I arrived in Los Angeles in 1980 (intending to remain one year, but that&#8217;s another story), Kurt Weill was very much a living memory. The place still teemed with great old Berliners; soon they would be gone. Margot Aufricht, widow of the man who had first staged <i>Die Dreigroschenoper</i>, was a smiling, garrulous presence in her small house in Beverly Hills. Robert Vambéry, whose play <i>Der Kuhhandel</i> had become <i>A Kingdom for a Cow</i>, Weill&#8217;s last European production (and most abject flop), was on hand among the émigré contingent.</p>
<p>So was Felix Jackson. As Felix Joachimson, he had been a noted Berlin essayist and critic, and had written the text for a Kurt Weill musical, <i>Na Und?</i> (<i>So What?</i>), that had completely disappeared. The story he told was that Hans Heinsheimer, Weill&#8217;s publisher at Vienna&#8217;s Universal Editions, had advised the composer to take the manuscript and drop it off a bridge into the Danube. Maybe Weill did just that; at least Joachimson, who changed his name to Jackson, married the singing star Deanna Durbin and wrote some of her movies, loved to tell the story. I could never get him to tell me the whole scenario of <i>Na Und?</i>, however, just a few bits. Neither would Heinsheimer, who immigrated to New York and gossiped a blue streak about every other aspect of Weill&#8217;s life.</p>
<p>Anyhow, meeting all those living mementos inspired me to assemble a radio documentary, which KUSC broadcast to fair acclaim in 1982. Kim Kowalke, the renowned Weill scholar, was still teaching here at Occidental &#8211; he&#8217;s now at the University of Rochester &#8211; and he helped me with tapes of music that wasn&#8217;t otherwise available at that time. Back in Rockland County, New York, before moving out here, I had become pals with Lotte Lenya, Weill&#8217;s widow, and had miles of tape of her boilerplate reminiscences. With all that material at hand, I turned out some pretty red-hot radio, if I do say so, but not so red-hot as this new <i>Mahagonny</i>. These folks really know what they&#8217;re doing. </p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>For&#160;Starters</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2007/02/for-starters/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2007/02/for-starters/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 07 Feb 2007 22:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=618</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Stormin&#8217; Norman When the Monday Evening Concerts began in 1939 &#8211; they were called &#8220;Evenings on the Roof&#8221; back then &#8211; the first composers bore names strange and unfamiliar to local audiences: Béla Bartók, Charles Ives, Ferruccio Busoni. Audiences came, anyway. The composers on next week&#8217;s Monday Evening Concert also bear unfamiliar names: Andrew Norman, [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Stormin&#8217; Norman</p>
<p>When the Monday Evening Concerts began in 1939 &#8211; they were called &#8220;Evenings on the Roof&#8221; back then &#8211; the first composers bore names strange and unfamiliar to local audiences: Béla Bartók, Charles Ives, Ferruccio Busoni. Audiences came, anyway. The composers on next week&#8217;s Monday Evening Concert also bear unfamiliar names: Andrew Norman, Brian Current, Ana Lara, and there&#8217;s a good chance you&#8217;ll be there, anyway. (February 19, 8 p.m., Zipper Hall)</p>
<p>I sat with Donald Crockett a few days ago, leafing through manuscripts of the six new works on that enterprising program. Professor of composition at USC, Crockett has been in charge of handing out encouraging words (and their opposite) to several generations of young composers; he will lead XTET, the excellent freelance ensemble, through the whichy thickets of that program&#8217;s new works. &#8220;One thing about new music these days,&#8221; says Crockett, &#8220;it looks good. Anyone with the right software can put out a professional-looking hot-off-the-press page of music and send it anywhere in the world. There&#8217;s a danger, of course: Just because it <i>looks</i> good (compared to the pen-and-ink scratches that used to pass for musical manuscripts in pre-computer days), that doesn&#8217;t mean that it <i>is</i> good.&#8221;</p>
<p>Why bother to compose serious music these days? Everybody has a hard-luck story about composers (conductors, violinists, critics, etc.) going broke, and yet they keep on. &#8220;Right now,&#8221; says Andrew Norman, &#8220;there are no &#8216;must writes&#8217; on my horizon. I am just following my creative interest and trying to hone my voice and my technique one piece at a time.&#8221; Norman&#8217;s <i>Gran Turismo</i> places him as the one local composer on the Monday Evening program, although he is currently living his own <i>gran turismo</i> on a Prix de Rome in Italy. Three years ago, in these pages, I put down a piece from his student days as &#8220;juvenile fluff.&#8221; At USC, he obviously underwent a quick metamorphosis. &#8220;Early on,&#8221; says Crockett, &#8220;he came to my classes writing a soaring, Barberesque kind of romantic melody. Now his music is more complex than mine.&#8221;</p>
<p>Seventeen</p>
<p>What can you tell a 17-year-old who comes to your classroom with hopes of becoming a &#8220;serious classical&#8221; composer? &#8220;First,&#8221; says Steve Stucky, &#8220;I have to say that there isn&#8217;t very much I can add that that 17-year-old doesn&#8217;t already know, and that is a source of continual amazement.&#8221; Consulting composer for new music at the L.A. Philharmonic &#8211; where he has been a guiding light in the exemplary &#8220;Green Umbrella&#8221; concerts since 1988 &#8211; and professor of composition at Cornell, Stucky chose the music for the upcoming Monday Evening Concert &#8220;partly out of things I&#8217;ve been wanting to hear for a long time and keep putting off.</p>
<p>&#8220;Sure, I have to tell a hopeful composer that it&#8217;s a low-percentage game these days. Even so, the ways of thinking about music are so much richer, so much more exciting; the ways of distributing music are vastly greater than before.&#8221;</p>
<p>I ask him about stylistic boundaries. In 1939, Californians knew nothing about making it in the New York music scene unless they moved there. There was a stylistic barrier between East and West Coast. Is there, still?</p>
<p>&#8220;No; it&#8217;s just too easy to move around. There&#8217;s nothing inherently &#8216;Californian&#8217; about Andrew&#8217;s piece except that he composed it here and that I happen to love it. On this program, we have Ana Lara from Mexico; the Long Beach Symphony has played her music. And you&#8217;ll also love Brian Current&#8217;s piece from Canada. It&#8217;s as if Elliott Carter wrote only arpeggios.&#8221;</p>
<p>Surf and Turf</p>
<p>There isn&#8217;t any music by Matt McBane on this upcoming program, but he&#8217;s out of the same USC academic swirl that spun forth Andrew Norman, and his life since graduation is a pretty good paradigm for making it as a serious musician these days.</p>
<p>&#8220;Getting out of school at age 22, I decided if I wanted something to happen, I had to make it happen. In 2003, I began talking with the Calder Quartet and with the city of Carlsbad &#8211; my and Calder member Ben Jacobson&#8217;s hometown &#8211; and came up with the idea for a Carlsbad Music Festival. Starting a festival with no prior arts-administration experience has been an incredibly steep learning curve, but I am very happy with where the festival is now. Last year, the Calders performed the winner of our first Young Composers Competition; the New York-based NOW Ensemble performed an entire program of music by young composers, and a large ensemble concert featured many of the best young musicians in L.A.: all these musicians together in the same place, sharing ideas and hearing each other&#8217;s work. Our next Carlsbad Festival will be in September 2007, with So Percussion, Real Quiet and the Calder Quartet.&#8221;</p>
<p>Paradoxically, in the midst of this California impact, Matt decided to move to New York. &#8220;My choice was based on a number of reasons, the biggest of which was simply the desire to live somewhere other than SoCal while I&#8217;m still young. I wanted to start an ensemble/band, and so I did. Tentatively, it&#8217;s called Abstraction; we had our first show in December, and we play only original music &#8211; by me, that is.</p>
<p>&#8220;Beyond that is the feeling, which many of my musician friends unfortunately share, that the Los Angeles musical establishment is still reluctant to endorse local composers, most of all the composers who haven&#8217;t yet established themselves elsewhere, and that there are more opportunities in New York for emerging composers &#8211; through commissions, competitions, grants, performance opportunities, etc. All that being said, I love L.A., am keeping my musical life there as active as I can, and plan on moving back in a couple of years. Also, I could never stay in New York for too long; it is just too damn cold here to surf most of the year.&#8221; </p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>First and Last&#160;Songs</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2007/01/first-and-last-songs/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2007/01/first-and-last-songs/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 31 Jan 2007 22:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=617</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Bananas At the sound of Elisabeth Schwarzkopf&#8217;s singing, strong men fell weak, nightingales blushed with envy, sunsets went pale. The pleasures she purveyed were guilty as hell, but how she could dish them out! We all had our favorite lines of her music, and they delivered sweet dreams: a defiance from a Johann Strauss operetta, [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Bananas</p>
<p>At the sound of Elisabeth Schwarzkopf&#8217;s singing, strong men fell weak, nightingales blushed with envy, sunsets went pale. The pleasures she purveyed were guilty as hell, but how she could dish them out! We all had our favorite lines of her music, and they delivered sweet dreams: a defiance from a Johann Strauss operetta, a sad resignation from the other Strauss&#8217; <i>Der Rosenkavalier</i>, a phrase from a Schubert song no matter how twisted out of context. Fond memory, cloaked in the pure silver of a Schwarzkopf recall, was enough to stop all clocks. &#8220;Sei nicht bös . . . ,&#8221; I will write (or simply breathe), and a teardrop will fall upon my keyboard . . . or almost.</p>
<p>&#8220;Sei nicht bös&#8221; &#8211; the traffic-stopping moment from Karl Zeller&#8217;s <i>Der Obersteiger</i> &#8211; isn&#8217;t even included in EMI&#8217;s new five-disc, reduced-price collection, but I&#8217;m sure that every well-equipped household already has its copy of a <i>Schwarzkopf Sings Operetta</i> disc in every room. The new collection has its own charms, and its curiosities as well. The first disc is worth the price of the whole set: a collection of Hugo Wolf songs that has been out of print for years. And on that disc there is a tiny pearl, lasting little more than a minute, that is worth the price of the entire disc: &#8220;Morgentau,&#8221; a perfect song you will play and replay and replay, and then go bananas over this wonderful young singer from back in 1954, who hasn&#8217;t yet learned how to flirt and fuss and turn into the Elisabeth Schwarzkopf that she would become, to the detriment of musical integrity, 20 years later.</p>
<p>This new collection seems made up of a fair number of barrel-scrapings: remastered recordings, outtakes from rehearsals, and worthy recordings retrieved from the dustbin. Almost everything is in mono. Some of the material doesn&#8217;t deserve the light of day: the 31-year-old soubrette chirping her way through a Strauss waltz; Wagner&#8217;s &#8220;Träume,&#8221; breathy and overphrased. A set of perfunctory songs by Walter Gieseking, with the eminent pianist at the keyboard, is hardly redeemed by his presence. But there are also treasures worth rediscovery: the Wolf disc, or a rehearsal sequence of Bach, with Schwarzkopf in harmony with the fabulous Kathleen Ferrier. Now and then, however, you can be beguiled by the bright clarity of the rising Schwarzkopf &#8211; not all that young, at 40 and 45, but clear of voice and strong of phrase and sometimes more the responsible, serious artist than she would occasionally later become. There is evidence, too, of ground she would never cover, for all those silvery tones. Listen, on disc No. 5, to her making her tortuous way through Bach&#8217;s Cantata No. 199 (&#8220;Mein Herze schwimmt im Blut&#8221;), pretty much note by note, phrase by phrase; listen then to the artistry, the comprehension of the late Lorraine Hunt Lieberson&#8217;s performance of the same music (on a Nonesuch disc issued two years ago).</p>
<p>Love for Love</p>
<p>Hunt Lieberson&#8217;s surpassing art has blessed this region lavishly in person, in opera, choral works and solo recital, but nothing so profound, so disturbing (in the best sense) as the set of orchestral songs to texts by Pablo Neruda that she sang here in May 2005. The music was by her husband, Peter Lieberson, who conducted the Philharmonic; the poems are Neruda&#8217;s own meditations on love. &#8220;My love,&#8221; sings the lover at the end, &#8220;if I die and you don&#8217;t, let us not give grief . . . We might not have found one another in time.&#8221; Only 14 months later, the wondrous singer herself was dead.</p>
<p>Peter Lieberson&#8217;s <i>Neruda Songs</i> stands as one of the romantic miracles of our time. The marvel extends to Lieberson himself, whose music on this occasion breathes a renewed sense of romantic communication, reborn from anything of his I know. The blending haunts us all &#8211; husband and wife, poetry and music, a oneness both ecstatic and desperate. Shaken as we are by the intensity of her recordings &#8211; the Bach cantatas, the Handel arias, even some of the earlier Lieberson songs &#8211; we also hear a quality that goes beyond the music: a reaching, a touching. The Nonesuch recording, done live with the Boston Symphony conducted by James Levine, is beautiful and moving; if it doesn&#8217;t quite touch my memory of that May night at Disney Hall, with Lorraine standing engulfed by the orchestra and Peter&#8217;s baton the embodiment of a love beyond expression, probably nothing can.</p>
<p>Refreshment</p>
<p>The rains came on Saturday night, and so did <i>Noah&#8217;s Flood</i>, both welcome. Benjamin Britten&#8217;s setting of the 16th-century miracle play, not quite an opera but more fun than most, was most magically dealt with under Los Angeles Opera auspices, as the latest in the admirable outreach program designed to involve other community agencies in widespread music making. Already that has meant more new activity &#8211; newly composed school opera and revivals of bygone works like this delirious Britten masterwork &#8211; than one pair of ears or legs can keep up with. The L.A. Opera&#8217;s new music director, James Conlon, has been the firebrand in much of this, with his restoration last season of music created under Nazi captivity, his announcement of further exploration of this extraordinary repertory and the impression he generates over all that the &#8220;out&#8221; in his &#8220;outreach&#8221; has no end.</p>
<p>Conlon was in charge of the Britten as well, masterminding the crowd &#8211; something close to 4,000, crammed into the Cathedral of Our Lady of the Angels &#8211; in a rehearsal of the sing-along hymns and leading the 40-minute production in similar high spirits. Jason Stearns was the Noah; Jamieson K. Price, the Voice of God; Phyllis Pancella, Mrs. Noah decked out with a gift for bitchcraft that the framers of the original Book of Genesis had somehow overlooked. Hamilton High School&#8217;s Academy of Music supplied the mostly percussion orchestra (with a few L.A. Opera ringers); the children and adults, under Eli Villanueva&#8217;s direction, were from St. John Eudes Church, every one a scene-stealer, every one entitled. </p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Coiled&#160;Serpents</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2007/01/coiled-serpents/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2007/01/coiled-serpents/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 24 Jan 2007 22:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=616</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Minimally Elderly How the decades fly past! Steve Reich turns 70, with Phil Glass in hot pursuit; John Adams glides into 60 with nary a wrinkle. Reich&#8217;s new choral work resounds at next Sunday&#8217;s Master Chorale concert; Adams&#8217; classics retains their bloom at a couple of Philharmonic events; the mail, as usual, delivers a new [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Minimally Elderly</p>
<p>How the decades fly past! Steve Reich turns 70, with Phil Glass in hot pursuit; John Adams glides into 60 with nary a wrinkle. Reich&#8217;s new choral work resounds at next Sunday&#8217;s Master Chorale concert; Adams&#8217; classics retains their bloom at a couple of Philharmonic events; the mail, as usual, delivers a new CD from Glass. Whatever your personal take on their music, elder-statesmanhood has fallen easily on all three. </p>
<p>The memories that remain from last year&#8217;s &#8220;Minimalist Jukebox&#8221; at the Philharmonic celebrate the longevity of the creative urge: something driving, unshakable. It&#8217;s an energy built into this music; it fueled the audience rebellions when I first heard Adams&#8217; <i>Grand Pianola</i> and Reich&#8217;s <i>Four Organs</i> in New York in the 1980s. It echoes in the pounding on my ribs that still awakens me some nights, and in the chords that hammer the <i>Harmonielehre</i> into life. It stoked the shared delight eight years ago, when Esa-Pekka Salonen and our (<i>his</i>) Philharmonic gave Adams&#8217; <i>Naïve and Sentimental Music </i>its first hearing, and that delight returned when those performers brought that music to Disney Hall this past weekend &#8211; where, of course, the piece truly belongs. This time the fantasy of Adams at work on the score, driven by poetic visions from the writings of Schiller, was further realized in the achievement of the acoustic ideal for which this lavish orchestral creation was actually composed.</p>
<p>Schiller&#8217;s essay (&#8220;On Naïve and Sentimental Poetry&#8217;) proposes a contrast of poetic attitudes; Adams, already skilled &#8211; as in <i>Nixon in China</i> &#8211; in the musical presentation of dichotomies, goes on from there. As from the clash of flint against steel, the conflagration grows; the conflict in the work&#8217;s final pages is terrifying. In his own eloquent notes Adams writes of the work as a quest for a balance, perhaps unreachable at a time when the writing of grandiose orchestral music has faded from the landscape. This, he admits, might be &#8220;a deeply sentimental act.&#8221; It could also be a naive act, &#8220;because speaking through the medium of the orchestra has always been a natural and spontaneous gesture for me . . .&#8221; True enough; what justifies the existence of a 50-minute work for huge symphony orchestra (plus a gathering of exotic percussion and a sampler or two) is the mastery, the insouciant ease, of the work itself. </p>
<p><i>Naïve and Sentimental</i> &#8211; last heard here at its premiere in the Chandler Pavilion in 1999 and therefore not properly heard until now &#8211; is the bulwark of this week&#8217;s Adams celebrations. From the congenial throb of its opening to the crashing, intimidating barrier against daylight that it throws up 50 minutes later, the music constantly astonishes. Its orchestral colors are dense and ravishing. Peer around its edges at your peril. Its title is elusive; there is nothing naive here. Rather it is the menace of coiled serpents, eternally fascinating, a challenge and a tribute to a superlative orchestra and its conductor, from a composer who knows what they can do and delights in his power to engage their best. </p>
<p>Beethoven&#8217;s Second Symphony shared the program. Two centuries, plus or minus, separate the works, yet there were challenges of a sort. Here too was a brash innovator trying things out, using the woodwinds in particular to fill the orchestral landscape with new sounds, new relationships. Sir Donald Tovey, my favorite writer about early classical music, wrote about the &#8220;great bassoon joke,&#8221; and the Beethoven Second is full of them, odd little veerings into the middle of next week, heralded by a chuckle from the bassoons and landing somewhere delightful, somewhere totally unexpected. Salonen&#8217;s way with these early, even-numbered Beethoven symphonies &#8211; this, and No. 4 as well &#8211; is always admirably energetic and richly humorous, and so it was this time.</p>
<p>Time&#8217;s End</p>
<p>Writing about Olivier Messiaen&#8217;s <i>Quartet for the End of Time</i> is no easy matter. The symbolism in  Messiaen&#8217;s apocalyptic visions is so intensely personal that you accept it fully or dismiss it as a fanatic&#8217;s ravings. If the latter, you must then deal with the music itself, its solo lines and its deeply poignant conversations of a melodic and harmonic beauty so profound that they sometimes hurt the ear. Desperately seeking somebody&#8217;s writing to crib from to fill my report on last week&#8217;s performance by Philharmonic chamber musicians, I found almost nothing on my otherwise well-stocked bookshelves. It&#8217;s as though my fellow critics share my fear of writing about this intensely beautiful, aching music. </p>
<p>This cannot be. Someone must write about the power of this music on purely musical grounds: the rich, flowing melody of the cello as, with piano, it extols the Eternity of Jesus in its simple, folklike tune. Someone must smile along as all instruments join in a kind of rustic jiggety-jog. Someone, most of all, must recoil at the blinding energy of the clarinet solos &#8211; wondrously played on this occasion by Lorin Levee &#8211; which burn into the imagination as if applying the Stigmata. (Is there any other music in the world more purely, upliftingly painful &#8211; to the ear, to the soul?)</p>
<p>A most distinguished concert, this &#8211; with the Messaien preceded, as was proper, by the Quartet of Claude Debussy. Two weeks ago I had deplored the tendency of Chamber Music Society audiences to applaud between movements, in this most fragile repertoire. This night, violinist Mitch Newman made a preconcert speech gently slapping the audience on its collective wrist. It worked. </p>
<p>Tree on the Move</p>
<p>The splendid Jacaranda Concerts still wait out the completion of remodeling at their Santa Monica venue; last Sunday&#8217;s concert found activities transferred to the Cypress Recital Hall at Cal State Northridge. A big and loyal crowd had found its way. Five sets of fingers were involved in the kind of varied piano program that only a true music-loving connoisseur could concoct; that has been the peculiar magic of these concerts from their beginning. The room at Northridge was pleasant enough, as school auditoriums go. (CSUN soon breaks ground for a major performing arts center, to open in 2009.) But Jacaranda&#8217;s home base &#8211; Santa Monica&#8217;s First Presbyterian, with its elegant small organ and its intimate layout &#8211; is a special place, and it will be good to get back, on April 7.</p>
<p>The program was the usual Jacaranda assortment of varied pleasures. Any concert that includes Schubert&#8217;s F-minor Fantasy, the overpowering piano duet from his last year, which moves from plaintive outcry to its final fugue that ties you in knots, needs nothing more. Hearing this work as an undergrad had caused me to change my major from pre-med to music. Sixty years later, the playing of Gloria Cheng and Robert Edward Thies confirmed the soundness of my decision. Eduardo Delgado&#8217;s Piazzolla and Ginastera, Scott Dunn&#8217;s Copland and Ives and some Liszt transformed into high-caloric goo by Steven Vanhauwaert added to the afternoon&#8217;s absurdities and its high delights. </p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Cause for&#160;Celebration</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2007/01/cause-for-celebration/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2007/01/cause-for-celebration/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 17 Jan 2007 22:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=615</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Times Change Get this: &#8220;New music has never been an integral part of the winter-season diet of the Los Angeles Philharmonic. On those rare occasions when our orchestra ventures an acknowledgement of the contemporary composer, the subscription audiences respond with stoic endurance at best, rude disdain at worst . . . The Philharmonic has never [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Times Change</p>
<p>Get this: &#8220;New music has never been an integral part of the winter-season diet of the Los Angeles Philharmonic. On those rare occasions when our orchestra ventures an acknowledgement of the contemporary composer, the subscription audiences respond with stoic endurance at best, rude disdain at worst . . . The Philharmonic has never demonstrated a thorough, ongoing commitment to music of the relatively recent 20th Century. Instead, it has made sporadic, dutiful gestures . . . Our orchestra has at best created a ghetto for any art that tries to look forward rather than backward.&#8221;</p>
<p>I came across these words while poking around in old <i>L.A. Times</i> files for something to help celebrate the 25th anniversary of the founding of the Philharmonic&#8217;s Contemporary Music Ensemble, the venture that, five years later, renamed itself less scrutably as &#8220;The Green Umbrella.&#8221; The &#8212;&#8212;&#8211;<br />
AUTHOR of those wishful words, dating from October 5, 1981, was the <i>Times</i>&#8216; then music critic Martin Bernheimer, whose mission among us seemed largely devoted to stamping out the notion of music as a matter for serious cultural advancement. The shards of his clouded crystal ball are all around us: Berio and Grisey at the reborn Monday Evening Concerts, the stage works of Pierre Audi and Robert Wilson at the L.A. Opera, this past week&#8217;s &#8220;Green Umbrella&#8221; concert at Disney, the one before that, and all the way back to their founding, under the scornful nose of Bernheimer, a quarter-century ago.</p>
<p>These concerts began small-scale, at the Japan America Theater in Little Tokyo, where one main advantage was the access to good, cheap food. A later move to Zipper Hall cost us that. The move to Disney seemed even more foolhardy: so many seats to fill, at too-high prices, once the Disney glamour wore off. Four seasons later, the too-high prices remain, but the seats are still filled &#8211; not to capacity, but still impressively for adventurous, new-music fare. Visiting concert managers and composers confess to astonishment at the size and response of the &#8220;Green Umbrella&#8221; audiences; what was this about &#8220;rude disdain&#8221;?</p>
<p>Take last week&#8217;s concert. The program had to be cobbled together quickly after Dawn Upshaw&#8217;s illness, and it was a beaut: music from old Los Angeles friends and new, cheered by not a sellout but certainly (for a concert of new music) an amazing-sized audience. It began with the <i>Chain I</i> by Witold Lutoslawski, an old friend; he had taught Steven Stucky, who has curated the Philharmonic&#8217;s new-music activities for years, and was himself on the program. The two made a splendid mix: Stucky leaning toward the conservative, Lutoslawski with a lovely thread of whimsy. Both were represented by splendid, small-scale works, and it was Stucky&#8217;s melting, loving string quartet <i>Nell&#8217;ombra Nella Luce</i> (repeated from a previous Chamber Music Society concert) that most immediately won hearts. The teacher-pupil relationship persisted with music by Franco Donatoni &#8211; <i>Hot</i> (piccolo sax and ensemble in high hysteria) &#8211; and his star disciple, Esa-Pekka Salonen, whose brand-new <i>Catch and Release</i> ended the evening in comparable high spirits. For the latter work &#8211; three movements, intensely motivated but somewhat given to fly off the handle &#8211; Salonen had declined to provide a program note. I would not be surprised if the version we heard, rushed into performance to fill the programming gap, was not quite the last word.</p>
<p>Low Downes</p>
<p>The fulminations of Bernheimer were as the mewlings of pussycats compared to the verbal barricades raised by the formidable Olin Downes &#8211; critic first at the <i>Boston Post</i>, later entrenched at <i>The New York Times</i>. His hegemony at both papers coincided more or less exactly with the rise in fame (or, as Downes would have it, in notoriety) of the music of Gustav Mahler. By 1918, still in Boston, he had propounded two principles that would govern his life: that worldwide damnation lay in the music of Gustav Mahler and that only Jan Sibelius held the keys to salvation. His writing style suggested a collaboration, with the other half of the team none other than the Lord Almighty. &#8220;We believe the music itself will be shelved,&#8221; he &#8211; oops, <i>they</i> &#8211; wrote in 1918, at the Boston premiere of Mahler&#8217;s Second Symphony, &#8220;long before the memory of the man and his services to his art will be forgotten.&#8221; And at another event, he simply took his leave from the concert hall in midperformance, and then simply wrote, &#8220;We do not like the Mahler Seventh Symphony.&#8221; On that occasion, the great Arnold Schoenberg, horrified at such effrontery, took it upon himself to scold the errant Mr. Downes. They argued back and forth for several weeks; the correspondence, published in Schoenberg&#8217;s <i>Collected Letters</i>, looms large in the annals of criticism.</p>
<p>What they might have missed just last week! I too, in my days of indiscretion, have had my reservations about certain expanses of the overstuffed Mahler. Friday night&#8217;s performance of the Seventh Symphony was, in a word, transforming: the Philharmonic under Salonen the source of an audible substance not yet heard, in a range of color not yet seen. Gatherings of instruments whispering, now under light strokes, now under exultant percussion . . . somebody stop me! By a great orchestra, in a great hall, under a great conductor, this was one of the great performances.</p>
<p>High Renaissance</p>
<p>All things to all people: The night before, there was Sting, not with memories of Police or Stewart Copeland (until the last number) but with Disney absolutely filled with a happy crowd that seemed to know why they were there. (For myself, I wasn&#8217;t so sure, at first.) The music at hand was by John Dowland, the Renaissance fabricator of exquisite, sad songs and slow, haunting lute tunes. (He made much of the pun on his name: <i>dolens</i>: &#8220;grieving.&#8221;) Between songs, Sting read lines from letters, or perhaps diary entries, outlining the sad journey of Dowland&#8217;s life, which was, indeed, a dolorous concoction compounded of rejections by potential employers and lovers. Edin Karamazov, a lutenist and guitarist who has performed with Paul Hillier and Jordi Savall, played on both instruments, somewhat percussively to my taste. Sting also played his own collection of lutes and guitars. A men&#8217;s octet, the Concord Ensemble, sang along on a few numbers, not nearly enough.</p>
<p>The beauty of Dowland&#8217;s songs justifies their appearance on any kind of respectable program, which this actually was. The earthiness of Sting&#8217;s delivery had its own appeal, so long as you didn&#8217;t think about Alfred Deller or the Hilliards. The songs included one by the Renaissance&#8217;s Robert Johnson and another by the one from our own time, which was cute. </p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Mastery Old&#160;Young</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2007/01/mastery-old-young/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2007/01/mastery-old-young/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 10 Jan 2007 22:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=614</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Being There My relationship with Bela Bartók&#8217;s Concerto for Orchestra has been historic and loving. I attended the world premiere, as a second-balcony usher in Boston&#8217;s Symphony Hall, December 1, 1944. Backstage after the performance, on my way to change out of uniform, I met Bartók and shook his hand. The look in that man&#8217;s [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Being There</p>
<p>My relationship with Bela Bartók&#8217;s Concerto for Orchestra has been historic and loving. I attended the world premiere, as a second-balcony usher in Boston&#8217;s Symphony Hall, December 1, 1944. Backstage after the performance, on my way to change out of uniform, I met Bartók and shook his hand. The look in that man&#8217;s eyes, already ravaged by the leukemia that would take his life nine months later, remains with me always. That memory, in fact, is the core of my regard for that work as one of the miracles of its time: the extraordinary contrast between the devastation I read in those eyes that night and the magnificent strength, the affirmation &#8211; even the rich, delicious humor &#8211; of that score. The paradox of this robust, youthful music from the pen of an elderly invalid (working, in fact, in his hospital bed) goes to explain the further marvel of last week&#8217;s wondrous performance at Disney Hall, with the latest phenomenon on the horizon &#8211; a real one, for a change &#8211; leading our Philharmonic through every nuance of this marvelous score, its ancient wisdom and its contemporary, youthful exuberance.</p>
<p>His name, which surely must come as no surprise by now as the PR machines have been grinding away, is Gustavo Dudamel; he is 26; he hails from Venezuela, where he has been a product of that country&#8217;s extraordinarily enlightened musical-education program; and he has already had musicians and audiences throughout Europe singing and orchestrating his praises. His North American debut was at the Hollywood Bowl in 2005, with Tchaikovsky and Revueltas; last week&#8217;s program contained, besides the Bartók, Kodály&#8217;s <i>Galanta Dances</i> and the Rachmaninoff Third Piano Concerto. Questions remain, therefore, about his more, let&#8217;s say, &#8220;classical&#8221; leanings. They can be answered in part by a new Beethoven CD on Deutsche Grammophon (solid, no serious errors, no reason to trade in your Carlos Kleiber recordings) and by a <i>Don Giovanni</i> at La Scala that was generally regarded as too much too soon.</p>
<p>Last week&#8217;s concert may have left a few minor questions unanswered, but handled the rest of them loud and clear; not merely the latest package to tumble off the prodigy assembly line, young Gustavo is an authentic talent. He knows what he&#8217;s doing, is greatly gifted in conveying that knowledge to the people around him and, better yet, seems uncommonly able to make those people work with him. Details in the Bartók that I have sometimes taken for granted &#8211; the strings&#8217; &#8220;buzzing&#8221; in the <i>Intermezzo interrotto</i> &#8211; seemed freshly profiled. Something comes across, a sense of the joy of music making. At the end of each piece, as the crowd goes bonkers out front, young Gustavo strolls through the orchestra, shaking hands all the way through the ranks. Maybe it&#8217;s only an act, but the conviviality it creates was something you could feel. No, it didn&#8217;t make the Rach 3 any less the overstuffed bundle of trash than the work truly is; not even the excellent Yefim Bronfman could work that level of miracle.</p>
<p>Comparisons between Dudamel and Britain&#8217;s Simon Rattle have been frequently voiced, and Rattle has, indeed, been eloquent in praise of this remarkable newcomer. It&#8217;s not just the mop of curly hair, however; if you watch early Rattle DVDs &#8211; the &#8220;Leaving Home&#8221; series on ArtHaus, for example &#8211; you see that same eagerness to put things across, that obsession almost to reach into the orchestra and pull things out into the light, that made everything in last week&#8217;s concert, wherever you sat in Disney Hall, more vivid, more thrilling. We need conductors like that; now we have one more.</p>
<p>Clap Trap</p>
<p>With five movements in the Bartók concerto, extroverted music in an enthralling performance, you might have expected some amount of renegade applause between movements, but there was none, the ultimate homage to the young maestro and his worthy impulses. The night before, there had been chamber music in that hall: Haydn and Schubert performed by Philharmonic members, classy, subtle stuff for an audience, you would think, aware that applause between movements in chamber music is never &#8211; repeat, <i>never</i> &#8211; done. (There&#8217;s even a full page of Roz Chast cartoons in the program book about concert etiquette, including applause between movements, maybe a little too cute to be taken as seriously as it deserves.) Still, there was applause &#8211; <i>hearty</i> applause &#8211; after each and every movement, and no attempt by players to wince, scowl or otherwise register displeasure at the practice. Go figure.</p>
<p>I am of several minds on the matter of interstitial applause in the concert hall. I would gladly applaud movements two and four of the Bartók concerto, just on the off chance that the composer&#8217;s spirit might be on hand to appreciate <i>my</i> appreciation of those sections&#8217; remarkable cleverness. But the listener who violates the silence that fulfills the spirit following a hearing of the slow movement of Schubert&#8217;s B-flat Trio, played as it was last week by Bronfman, Bing Wang and Ben Hong, simply cannot have been welcoming that music into his or her bloodstream. For such an attack of anemia at its most pernicious, perhaps a compulsory pair of boxing gloves, handed out by ushers to each auditor errant, might do the trick. </p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Enlightened&#160;Discourse</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2007/01/enlightened-discourse/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2007/01/enlightened-discourse/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 03 Jan 2007 22:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[Concerted Efforts Two segments remain (February 17-18, March 17-18) of the Los Angeles Chamber Orchestra&#8217;s two-year sweep through the piano concertos of Mozart: Saturdays at Glendale&#8217;s Alex Theatre, Sundays at UCLA&#8217;s Royce Hall. The turnouts have been close to capacity; it&#8217;s not just my imagination that I&#8217;ve absorbed these concerts as a kind of communion, [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Concerted Efforts</p>
<p>Two segments remain (February 17-18, March 17-18) of the Los Angeles Chamber Orchestra&#8217;s two-year sweep through the piano concertos of Mozart: Saturdays at Glendale&#8217;s Alex Theatre, Sundays at UCLA&#8217;s Royce Hall. The turnouts have been close to capacity; it&#8217;s not just my imagination that I&#8217;ve absorbed these concerts as a kind of communion, a closeness in which Mozart, Jeffrey Kahane at the piano, and his marvelous orchestra have been participants on an equal level, all of us with something important and wonderful to say, to hear and to believe in.</p>
<p>That&#8217;s Mozart, and I say this not to explain, just to marvel. At the concert in mid-December, there were three concertos: two from 1784 composed only weeks apart, one from two years later. The first (K. 451, referring to Ritter von Köchel&#8217;s chronological listing) is a jovial, rawboned work full of tricks &#8211; the piano bursting in too soon, that sort of thing. The second, K. 456, is colored with darker moods, with a slow movement, a set of melancholy variations, that suddenly jolts you by a turn from minor to major with strange and marvelous changes of light. Ending that program was K. 503, music from more troubled times, two years later. <i>Don Giovanni</i> and the G-minor String Quintet were now on Mozart&#8217;s worktable, and the piano concerto had become for him a more imposing kind of musical drama, its opening phrases in this case like blocks of granite colliding. (It had also begun to lose Mozart the audience that the more frivolous earlier concertos had earned.) In this work, too, there are later kinds of jolt: a tantalizing alternation between major and minor, a sudden, sublime theme out of nowhere midway in the finale.</p>
<p><i>Concerto Conversations</i> (Harvard University Press) is Joseph Kerman&#8217;s book on the way the inner life of a piece of music stems from the confrontation of the parts within that music, with the concerto through the ages as the paradigm for that kind of wordless drama. My Berkeley classroom memories teem with Kerman&#8217;s passion for this aspect of the musical language; I&#8217;ve asserted my own kindred spirit by dedicating my latest book to him. Some pages in his own book express his particular delight in those magical Mozart moments when the solo piano makes its first appearance in a concerto after the orchestra has made some kind of opening statement: the hilarious arabesque leading to a trill at the start of the so-called &#8220;Elvira Madigan&#8221; Concerto (K. 467); the shy testing-the-waters, one toe at a time, at the start of K. 503. Concertos model human relationships, Kerman claims, and even as he moves on from Mozart into music you wouldn&#8217;t be found dead listening to &#8211; not the first of Saint-Saëns&#8217; two cello concertos but the second, of all dead-as-doornail repertory! &#8211; he succeeds in finding in these works a dogged adherence to the dramatic principles that establish the concerto as the most subtle (because wordless) of musical forms. All told, Kerman&#8217;s book forms quite a thrilling compendium on matters of musical rhetoric, and of deviations from norms made acceptable only by their being set to music. (Anna Russell: &#8220;You can get away with anything, so long as you sing it.&#8221;)</p>
<p>The Major and the Minor</p>
<p>I write here rather often about goose bumps, about moments in music that activate the tear ducts or the shiver glands or whatever those reactive mechanisms are called &#8211; actually, something in the brain called the &#8220;left insula,&#8221; if anyone cares &#8211; and whatever they are, I bear them with pride. Something about the Mozart piano concerto is particularly dangerous ground for the care and feeding of the goose bump, for reasons not difficult to fathom. A pianist in proper tune with this music &#8211; Jeffrey Kahane, Emanuel Ax, Mitsuko Uchida &#8211; succeeds after very few notes in converting that great, clumsy music box into an instrument of pure song.</p>
<p>It takes very few fingers. The passages in Mozart&#8217;s piano concertos, in fact, that most readily reduce the listener&#8217;s spirit to a state comparable to a box of molten Godiva are usually nothing more than one-finger tunes: the slow movements of the aforementioned K. 467 (reduced to the status of slush, alas, by the background-music guys), K. 488 and K. 595. More readily than any of these, it is the slow movement of K. 482 that enslaves me utterly on every hearing. It turned up on Kahane&#8217;s final program last season. Emanuel Ax performed it with the Philharmonic this past November with Alexander Mickelthwate conducting. It is one of the most richly scored of all the Mozart concertos, with almost a full complement of winds, plus timpani. The work is in E flat, which for a 1786 orchestra means a full workout for clarinets and horns; their tuning makes them easier to play in flat keys.</p>
<p>The slow movement begins with a rather dour minor tune, with stops and starts and a stark harmonic palette. Over a series of slow variations, these sparse harmonies become gradually filled in, and one pretty variant &#8211; with a solo flute &#8211; seems to herald a warming trend. Even so, for a work whose first movement had been fairly jolly, and with horns and clarinets on hand to warm up the atmosphere, this still seems rather stern stuff <i>until</i> . . .</p>
<p>The minor tune takes on a new shape, a closing cadence of deep, tragic sentiment, breath-stopping in its simple beauty. And at its end, for just a few seconds, a cloud across the sunset, it quietly slips from minor to a sunburst of momentary major in what we call a deceptive cadence. The sky clears, the movement comes to an end; the silence allows us to breathe, to wonder, &#8220;What hit me?&#8221; Then the music starts again: the finale, with a tune that might almost pass for &#8220;The Farmer in the Dell.&#8221; That, as I was saying, is Mozart. </p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>More or&#160;Less</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2006/12/more-or-less/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2006/12/more-or-less/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 27 Dec 2006 23:59:45 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=612</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Paradoxes The collapse of Tower Records was, as much as anything, a failure of relevance. The new generation, which in the past would have become the next record-buying public and the next, now download the infinite riches of the market onto their iPods. The hi-fi crowd of my youth, with their 6L6s in push-pull and [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Paradoxes</p>
<p>The collapse of Tower Records was, as much as anything, a failure of relevance. The new generation, which in the past would have become the next record-buying public and the next, now download the infinite riches of the market onto their iPods. The hi-fi crowd of my youth, with their 6L6s in push-pull and their floor-to-ceiling Tannoys and Klipschorns, now have given way to something you wear in your shirt pocket. The paradox is that the few remaining quality classical-record producers &#8211; Harmonia Mundi with their <i>Gloryland</i>, Anonymous 4 singing old-timey American gospel songs in wrenching harmonies with guitar and fiddle; Nonesuch with Lorraine Hunt Lieberson&#8217;s heartbreaking singing of her husband Peter&#8217;s <i>Neruda Songs</i>; major works by Osvaldo Golijov on several labels &#8211; are exactly what I would have greeted in the past as ongoing evidence of the continued health of the record industry.</p>
<p>The Tower collapse came just in time to end the supply of discs to the Disney Hall gift shop &#8211; which had drawn its stock of recordings from the chain &#8211; and, thus, to temporarily deny concertgoers&#8217; access to Salonen and the Philharmonic&#8217;s new disc on DG. This was its first recording made in the hall (noise grandissimo, leading off, as you might guess, with <i>The Rite of Spring</i>) and it merited a champagne sendoff, but without any CDs to hand out and/or sell, there wasn&#8217;t much point. But don&#8217;t forget it: If you want to know why <i>The New York Times</i> assessed the emergence of Esa-Pekka Salonen, the Philharmonic and the Los Angeles music scene in general as a &#8220;Continental Shift,&#8221; you might start with this disc. </p>
<p>The year saw the usual punctuations, struggles in the underbrush to fulfill earlier rumors and generate a new crop. From the Philadelphia Orchestra, a hard-luck ensemble ever since the opening of its new, afflicted Kimmel Center (replacing its ancient, afflicted Academy of Music), came word that Christoph Eschenbach would resign as music director after only three seasons. The report was garlanded with the usual set of news items, if more vehement than usual: Eschenbach at odds with the orchestra, orchestra members at odds with him, Philadelphia at odds with his scheduling of new music, with the cut of his jib on the podium, with the city&#8217;s cultural stature as the shadow of New York. </p>
<p>In the latter city, too, the shadows danced restlessly. The New York Philharmonic&#8217;s Lorin Maazel, at 76 not yet retired but no spring chicken, made it known to board members that Daniel Barenboim, only a dozen years younger, would be his choice as successor &#8211; a choice that Barenboim himself, so far, has tossed aside. More than that, rumors fly thick and fast that Zarin Mehta, the New York Philharmonic&#8217;s managing director, has his own choice, the Venezuelan whiz Gustavo Dudamel, who has been burning his way across Europe to the adoration of audiences and players alike. Young Gustavo, two weeks short of 26, has already been here once, at the Hollywood Bowl in 2005 when he did, indeed, provide a one-man fireworks display. He returns for an indoor engagement, starting January 4. Twenty-six? Didn&#8217;t our own Philharmonic have a music director that age once? </p>
<p>Prodigies, hmmm . . . While wishing young Gustavo Dudamel all the good fortune in the world, I pause to wish him an equal measure of lasting talent. This has been a year of prodigies going fizzle or, at least, a year when I&#8217;ve really begun to have my fill of overpampered one-time whiz-bang soloists who, as the years press down and the wrinkles come, attempt to ride the prodigy wagon one time too many and come ever closer to falling off. Joshua Bell hit me that way, and the matchup between the fresh-faced schoolboy of his latest set of publicity shots and the tired <i>routinier</i> wandering through the Brahms Violin Concerto was most disheartening. A few weeks later came Sarah Chang, equally adrift in the Bruch Violin Concerto. Both, as kids, had been the exciting, youthful stars of their generation; perhaps, along the way, they simply neglected to learn the musical side of their music-making. Sad.</p>
<p>The Year</p>
<p>Wherever you looked &#8211; for a time, anyhow &#8211; it seemed that George Tsypin had you trapped. First there was <i>Grendel </i>at the opera. Elliot Goldenthal&#8217;s garish, ponderous score to John Gardiner&#8217;s wonderful retelling of the <i>Beowulf</i> legend reduced the piece to Saturday cartoon; Julie Taymor&#8217;s puppetry and other stage tricks have been around before. Tsypin&#8217;s humongous wall, once they got it to work, was . . . well, a humongous wall. Tony Tommasini of <i>The New York Times</i> aptly reduced the novelty of it all; the Met, he suggested, must have a dozen of these in its warehouse. Came October, and Tsypin was back with the home crew: his reimagining of Wagner&#8217;s <i>Ring</i> &#8211; all of it, headless giants, mudbaths, schmoolike dwarfs, huge, hulking structures, everything you&#8217;d want to see in a <i>Ring</i> except perhaps magic fire, galloping Valkyries, an all-purpose sword and the other crucial elements on which Wagner&#8217;s plot actually turns. Valery Gergiev imposed what sounded like an eloquent vision of Wagner&#8217;s score, but onto an orchestra rendered inept by an overcrowded Orange County venue, all in the name of inaugurating a new concert hall where the performance didn&#8217;t even take place. Oh yes, and there is a gorgeous Tsypin <i>Ring</i> on DVD from the Netherlands Opera, directed by Pierre Audi with the same imaginative use of space and minimal props as in Audi&#8217;s <i>Coronation of Poppea</i> that just ended its run at the L.A. Opera. </p>
<p>That was the event that lingers longest &#8211; that, and the Philharmonic&#8217;s &#8220;Minimalist Jukebox&#8221;; Golijov&#8217;s <i>Ainadamar</i> at Ojai; every note from the pen, the fingers and the baton of Thomas Adès during his two &#8220;residencies&#8221;; the &#8220;marathon&#8221; &#8211; eight hours culled from the past century, splendidly performed all by local musicians to inaugurate the new; &#8220;Jacaranda&#8221; concert season; Falla&#8217;s <i>Master Peter&#8217;s Puppet Show</i> led by Salonen to start the new Philharmonic season; his Mahler Third the next night; Alan Gilbert conducting the Mahler Ninth and the audience&#8217;s absolute silence that greeted it; Lucy Schaufer&#8217;s Cherubino in <i>The Marriage of Figaro</i> and &#8211; surprise! &#8211; Nikolaj Znaider&#8217;s reading of the Sibelius Violin Concerto, music I usually abominate but which came gloriously to life on this occasion. That&#8217;s why I keep going to concerts; you just never know. </p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Hardly&#160;Square</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2006/12/hardly-square/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2006/12/hardly-square/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 20 Dec 2006 22:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=611</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Words&#8217; Worth &#8220;Music is never pure,&#8221; wrote Luciano Berio of his Circles, &#8220;it is attitude; it is theater.&#8221; Berio&#8217;s great vocal adventure ended the 1961-62 season of Monday Evening Concerts, to a capacity crowd. It began the 2006-07 season last week, again with a turn-away box office. Much has happened in between; we&#8217;ll get to [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Words&#8217; Worth</p>
<p>&#8220;Music is never pure,&#8221; wrote Luciano Berio of his <i>Circles</i>, &#8220;it is attitude; it is theater.&#8221; Berio&#8217;s great vocal adventure ended the 1961-62 season of Monday Evening Concerts, to a capacity crowd. It began the 2006-07 season last week, again with a turn-away box office. Much has happened in between; we&#8217;ll get to that.</p>
<p>Berio&#8217;s late, great works all mirrored his fierce fascination with the interaction of words and sound. Before <i>Circles</i>, there had been a piece dissecting passages from Joyce&#8217;s <i>Ulysses</i> through electronic manipulation of sounds and syllables. <i>Circles</i>, even trickier, took poetry of e.e. cummings (which was already involved with fragmenting words and phrases) and broke them up even further so that the poet&#8217;s distinctive orthography found its mirror in its musical setting. The Berio legacy is a phenomenal repertory of music-plus-language, spilling over into opera, large-scale choral music, and glorious theatrical works, of which <i>Circles</i> is one.</p>
<p>That work was inspired by, and therefore created for, Berio&#8217;s wife at the time, the late, great actress/singer/indefinable creative spirit Cathy Berberian. Last March, when the Philharmonic&#8217;s &#8220;Minimalist Jukebox&#8221; came up with an extraordinary new actress/singer/indefinable creative spirit named Cristina Zavalloni, the whispers started to rise: Is there a new <i>Circles</i> on the horizon? The whispers reached the committee who were struggling to rekindle the Monday Evening Concerts, after that valuable enterprise had been bounced (for no good reason, and several bad) by the Los Angeles County Museum of Art, and the long story was made short last week at REDCAT. Zavalloni was back, as great as we knew she would be; she followed her spellbinding performance of <i>Circles</i> with another of Berberian&#8217;s numbers, a monologue made up of comic-strip punch lines. Cristina Berio, daughter of Berberian, looked pleased. Imagine, sitting still while someone just about half your age does your own mom onstage.</p>
<p>It was quite an evening, in fact, a benefit honoring the late Dorrance Stalvey, who had planned and managed the series for its last 34 years, literally single-handed, and made it one of the most adventurous concert programs anywhere in the country &#8211; in variety and in quality of performers. This first program bore this out: an established contemporary masterpiece, a respectable piece of new-music academe (by Stalvey himself) and a 40-minute work of genuine challenge by a composer, the late Gérard Grisey, out of the European mainstream, whose music might have lingered long on the doorstep if small organizations like MEC were not at hand to usher it in.</p>
<p>Three more Monday Evenings are in the works for this season, all at Zipper Concert Hall (across from Disney). The next, on February 19, will focus on young American composers.</p>
<p>Properly Magnified</p>
<p>Near the end of his <i>Magnificat</i> &#8211; music that sent a capacity Disney crowd homeward one night last week practically chortling in their joyousness &#8211; old Bach pulls one of those intricacy tricks that, so often with just the slightest flick of the pen, sets him sky-high above his Baroque buddies. It&#8217;s actually a very quiet passage: two sopranos and an alto in a slow tune about how God has helped out Israel in times of trouble. Two singers&#8217; vocal lines go up the scale; the third goes down in gentle counterpoint; the low instruments throb a simple accompaniment. But there&#8217;s one more thing: Over all this, two oboes intone yet another melody, an ancient &#8220;Magnificat&#8221; chant that Mozart would also use, 60 years later, in his <i>Requiem</i>. That sound, high above everything else in this quiet, soft-spoken movement, becomes like a star in a firmament. Long after the entire <i>Magnificat</i> is over, with its trumpeting exultations and its breathless string of tiny movements that come on like a bill of particulars on why our souls should, indeed, magnify the Lord, the exquisite craftsmanship of this one tiny passage lingers in the memory.</p>
<p>We all have our small pantheon of special moments; this tiny jewel in the <i>Magnificat</i>, set amid the splendor of the whole work, happens to be one of mine. (For your information, among its companions are a certain high D in Mozart&#8217;s G-minor Quintet, the modulation back to E major in Schubert&#8217;s C-major Quintet, and Violetta&#8217;s singing of &#8220;Ah! Dite alla giovine&#8221; in <i>La Traviata</i>). When listening to Bach, I am aware that different muscles are called into play than when listening to Mozart (ahhhh!) or Brahms (grrrr!). There is that extra dimension: the sense of being present at the solving of an intricate problem &#8211; an &#8220;elegant solution,&#8221; my mathematician friends like to say &#8211; and having it also come out beautiful and moving.</p>
<p>Proof? They&#8217;re all over the place. One is the slow movement of the first &#8220;Brandenburg&#8221; Concerto, which consists of a minor-key tune that twists upon itself in a kind of tense counterpoint. Because the tune is in a minor key, and starts on No. 5 of that scale, the progression No. 5 to No. 6 will be a wrench (G to A-flat on the piano, say). Play this off against itself, as Mr. Bach does quite on purpose, and your teeth begin to hurt. Hand it off to the lower-pitched instruments and the dissonance becomes all the more grating. Here is this churchly, correct composer stirring up the demons of dissonance, circa 1720; you could stick this stuff into a Mahler symphony and nobody would notice. Nor would the devout Wagnerite flinch at the music for the Crucifixion in the B-minor Mass; that wrenching dissonance is simply Bach himself flinching at that horrid moment, and shifting from one classical key to another as if to get the tragedy off his back.</p>
<p>Beauty plus process: It&#8217;s that mingling, on a level field, that breeds the particular satisfaction in the Bach experience. Canadian conductor Bernard Labadie, in his latest holiday-time visit with his wonderfully spirited, crystalline-voiced small chorus La Chapelle de Québec &#8211; 40 strong, joined to a Philharmonic contingent of like proportion &#8211; made this Bach immersion a mostly joyous experience. The <i>Magnificat</i> made the most glorious noise; to begin, there was sterner stuff, the motet <i>Jesu, Meine Freude</i> for chorus alone with supporting bass, and an alternative version of the Gloria from the B-minor Mass that I might have swapped for less familiar fare. But the night was Bach&#8217;s, and Labadie&#8217;s, and those two oboes&#8217;, and they outshone everything else. </p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Czech and&#160;Double-Czech</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2006/12/czech-and-double-czech/</link>
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		<pubDate>Wed, 13 Dec 2006 22:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=610</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Straight to the Kisser The Sixth Symphony of Antonin Dvorák disarms all protest. It snuggles into your awareness with a warm-hearted, syncopated throb, eases onto your lap and delivers an irresistible wet kiss. No other music in my acquaintance, large-scale or small, comes at you quite this way, although the previous symphony in the Dvorák [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Straight to the Kisser</p>
<p>The Sixth Symphony of Antonin Dvorák disarms all protest. It snuggles into your awareness with a warm-hearted, syncopated throb, eases onto your lap and delivers an irresistible wet kiss. No other music in my acquaintance, large-scale or small, comes at you quite this way, although the previous symphony in the Dvorák canon, No. 5 in F, tries the same trick and makes it work almost as well. When I was toying with the notion of a career in writing about music, I came across words about the Dvorák Sixth &#8211; it was listed as No. 1 back then, before the definitive catalog came out &#8211; by Sir Donald Tovey, and they firmed my resolve. Sir Donald wrote about the &#8220;sublimity&#8221; of this work, &#8220;that sublimity which is utterly independent of the size or range of the artist&#8217;s subject, which trails clouds of glory not only with the outlook of the child but with the solemnity of the kitten running after its tail.&#8221;</p>
<p>That is, indeed, the quality in Dvorák that some people often miss in writing off his best works as a kind of Brahms Lite. The child, the kitten &#8211; and the lover of beauty at any age &#8211; were part of the sublimity that filled Disney Hall last week as the Philharmonic and its inspired guest conductor Jiri Belohlavek took on the Dvorák Sixth and gave it exactly the right accent for delivering that aforementioned kiss and all the marvels that ensued. That same conductor, by the way, turns up on a two-disc Warner Classics set of both the Fifth and the Sixth, but the BBC Symphony doesn&#8217;t quite match the endearing accents he drew from our own Philharmonic. Here those accents &#8211; the little extra light at the top of the phrase, the ever-so-slight <i>whoosh</i> around the glorious tune of the slow movement (eat yer heart out, Doktor Brahms!) &#8211; were so beautifully managed that you&#8217;d swear the whole orchestra had spent the week on Pilsener transfusions. Oh my, it was beautiful!</p>
<p>Perhaps it was this that made the ensuing music, the G-minor Concerto of Max Bruch, land with such a thud, although a team of Heifetz, Paganini and Evelyn&#8217;s Magic Violin couldn&#8217;t have breathed the spark of life into this glorified café number. I just know that Sarah Chang, for all her pirouettes and expressive face making, didn&#8217;t. Can it be that I &#8211; along with the rest of the world &#8211; am beginning to tire of aging prodigies clinging to former glory through means other than musical? The ovation on Saturday night did not carry Sarah Chang through to an encore, nor had it for Joshua Bell a few weeks ago: proof, I&#8217;d like to think, that our audiences are maturing faster than some of our performers.</p>
<p>Janácek and Balance</p>
<p>Léos Janácek&#8217;s <i>Taras Bulba</i> in its full scoring, organ and all, returned the evening to its proper store of brilliant, slashing orchestral colors. Marvelous, quirky, full of dark shadows &#8211; and not much to do in tone or spirit with the Yul Brynner shoot-&#8217;em-up &#8211; this, too, is music full of subtle accents, nicely comprehended by the excellent Belohlavek.</p>
<p>By delicious coincidence, there had been other Janácek, in quite different accents, earlier last week: piano works including the well-known and exquisite suite <i>In the Mist</i> and a gathering of short, utterly charming, virtually unknown character pieces, all chosen by Thomas Adès to round off his Philharmonic &#8220;residency&#8221; with a guest shot at the neighboring &#8220;Piano Spheres&#8221; series. For the intimate space of Zipper Hall, this phenomenal Brit came up with a delightful program alternatively hard-nosed and whimsical, evidence of his ability to astound an audience with the depth and breadth of his musical purview. The crowd, by the way, was the largest I&#8217;ve ever seen at a &#8220;Piano Spheres&#8221; event, further proof that this phenomenal invader from the Homeland has staked out a considerable claim here in the Colonies. Included were a couple of merely cute, lightweight pieces by Stravinsky and the Italian pedagogue Niccolo Castiglione and a brace of canons composed by Conlon Nancarrow for mechanical piano and therefore, you would think, unplayable by human hands. (Think again.) Two early piano works by Adès himself, neither more than 10 minutes&#8217; duration but both bristling with a young composer&#8217;s eagerness to burst out into the world, provided the evening&#8217;s most substantial musical message; the temptation was to hear them, as I did, as echoes of <i>Asyla</i>, his great orchestral work from about the same time, which Adès had led with the Philharmonic only three nights before. <i>Asyla</i> invaded our complacency first at Ojai in 2000, then in 2003 as part of the Disney Hall inaugural weeks. Simon Rattle conducted both times; this was my first hearing of <i>Asyla</i> under another baton.</p>
<p>The work endures. Overpowering as the temptation may have been, at those first hearings, to overvalue the murderous hullabaloo of the one movement (of four) quite accurately labeled &#8220;Ecstasio,&#8221; further scrutiny brings the work into focus: an unruly, daring but consistent masterpiece of many moods marvelously comprehended. Its moods, and its mood changes, are deliberate and profound; they are no less valid than the wet kiss of Dvorák. It&#8217;s interesting, and not, I&#8217;m sure, accidental, that at the Philharmonic, <i>Asyla</i> shared the program with Tchaikovsky&#8217;s &#8220;Pathétique&#8221; Symphony, almost exactly a century older. There, too, an ecstatic third movement leads to a tragic ending &#8211; which, at that time, engulfed the composer as well as his music. (The podium was also shared that night: Adès to conduct his own work, Philharmonic assistant conductor Joana Carneiro to lead a tidy if noncommittal reading of the &#8220;Pathétique.&#8221;)</p>
<p>Both works end in darkness, <i>Asyla</i> with mysterious, threatening percussion off in undefined distances. &#8220;You haven&#8217;t heard the end of me,&#8221; the 26-year-old composer/prodigy seemed to be saying seven years ago. The good news is that time has proved him right. </p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>It&#039;s Baroque: Why Fix&#160;It?</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2006/12/its-baroque-why-fix-it/</link>
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		<pubDate>Wed, 06 Dec 2006 22:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=609</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Sex Triumphant . . . Beyond the memories &#8211; pleasant, as far as they go &#8211; of The Coronation of Poppea with the Emperor Nero cruising his realm in a Ferrari bearing ROMA-1 license plates, and far beyond the abject journalistic misrepresentation of the pristine work in last week&#8217;s hometown press, two aspects of this [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Sex Triumphant . . .</p>
<p>Beyond the memories &#8211; pleasant, as far as they go &#8211; of <i>The Coronation of Poppea</i> with the Emperor Nero cruising his realm in a Ferrari bearing ROMA-1 license plates, and far beyond the abject journalistic misrepresentation of the pristine work in last week&#8217;s hometown press, two aspects of this extraordinary artwork demand our immediate consideration. One is the opera itself, dated 1643 in Venetian performance annals, surviving in manuscripts that show the possible work of hands other than those of Claudio Monteverdi (who bears the principal attribution), hands most likely those of students or close associates of the master much imbued with his own musical and dramatic insight. The second is the awareness that, fun and frolic as lively updatings like the Long Beach Opera escapades in the 1980s may have provided (and they did put the company on the map), the alternative &#8211; a reproduction of exactly what was seen and heard on the stages of Venice in 1643 &#8211; would surely drive a 2006 audience from the hall, myself in the lead. Somewhere in the middle, the production currently at the Dorothy Chandler Pavilion accomplishes with glowing imagination to a 2006 audience what that premiere performance might have done in its time, but does so to eyes, ears and sensibilities honed by 363 years of intervening culture. It creates musical drama convincing, overwhelming, magical, four hours that whiz past like last week&#8217;s high winds.</p>
<p>This production of this rare, ancient and hugely powerful musical drama is an act of some bravery on the part of our local company. (The Metropolitan Opera, you will be interested to learn, has produced Monteverdi exactly once in its 120-year history: a cut-down, unstaged <i>L&#8217;Orfeo</i> in 1912.) The staging is from the Netherlands Opera, which sent us the Monteverdi <i>Return of Ulysses</i> in 1997. Both are works born from the fabulous imagination of Pierre Audi, with his extraordinary sense of the geometry of stage space and his use of fire as a spoken language amazingly, contrapuntally consistent with the sung language.</p>
<p>That sung language in the current cast is astonishing. Far removed though it be from Baroque ideals of crescendo, vibrato and <i>attacca</i>, it forms its own dramatic world: the intensity of Susan Graham&#8217;s creamy, importuning Poppea, her tiger&#8217;s claws cloaked in deepest velvet; the sheer nastiness of tenor Kurt Streit&#8217;s Nero (the most drastic &#8220;inauthenticity&#8221;; he is written as a castrato); the Wagnerian basso of the Seneca, the well-named Reinhard Hagen. An excellent, authentic touch: the nurse, Arnalta, sung falsetto as is proper by Christopher Gillett with costume to match; the comic drag nurse was to become one of Baroque opera&#8217;s most irritating clichés.</p>
<p>Harry Bicket&#8217;s small orchestra &#8211; long-necked theorbos (delightful to watch, like feeding ostriches), strings, harpsichord and an enchanting portative organ, a &#8220;carpet of starlight&#8221; I heard someone say, perhaps me &#8211; is nicely placed in a small recess downstage. &#8220;Stage&#8221; itself, as with <i>Ulysses</i>, consists mostly of empty spaces defined by single elements: a slanted pole, a ring, a sphere. It seems to bestride visually what the musical realization accomplishes for the ear: an artistic language of any and all times. You get the sense of floating in time, and in space as well.</p>
<p>That is part of the amazement of <i>Poppea</i>, something I don&#8217;t think those 1643 audiences could have grasped. Now, 363 years after the fact, we have this ethereal time/space journey, an ancient object beautifully restored to the sight and the sound of its original spirit. At the same time, we are confronted with this very <i>modern</i> opera. For the first time in operatic history, the characters are real, with names and listings in Plutarch (the Google of its day). They make their first entrance not in militaristic rhetoric but deep in conversation about how it was for both of them in bed last night. For the first (but not last) time, Evil (not Good) rules the roost at the final curtain. Just like <i>Tosca</i>, you say? No, better. This is where it began.</p>
<p>. . . And Beauty Too</p>
<p>There is a fierceness in Gerald Barry&#8217;s <i>Triumph of Beauty and Deceit</i> that hammers words and music into a single onward surge of energy. It was not surprising that the performance under Thomas Adès, by five excellent male singers and a contingent of Philharmonic players at last week&#8217;s &#8220;Green Umbrella&#8221; concert, left Adès himself with sopping shirt. The impact of the music, virtually nonstop, could easily be shared wherever you were in that vibrant hall.</p>
<p>Much was made of the work&#8217;s relationship to Handel, of whose <i>Triumph of Time and Truth</i> Barry&#8217;s score is a kind of treacherous paraphrase. Less was made of Barry&#8217;s countryman James Joyce, and yet the tumbling, headlong language rhythms, the rough impatience of the jig-time patterns seem at times to evoke the rough throbbings of <i>Finnegan</i> and of the great, atmospheric early works as well. The poetry is by Meredith Oakes, whose elegant paraphrase of Shakespeare&#8217;s <i>The Tempest</i> afforded Adès the remarkably free libretto for his recent opera on that play. Here her language is even trickier, indulging in delusions and rhyming paradoxes that then become wonderfully answered in Barry&#8217;s garrulous, immensely ingratiating score. If word got out that the score was actually the work of musically gifted leprechauns, it would not surprise me in the least. It would also help to explain the affinity the composer of such a work as the opera <i>Powder Her Face</i> might harbor for someone else&#8217;s music that seeks to elevate matters of truth, beauty, decay and deceit to a high artistic level. Both works, you see, were created in the same year. </p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Ripe, Rare,&#160;Romantic</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2006/11/ripe-rare-romantic/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2006/11/ripe-rare-romantic/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 29 Nov 2006 21:30:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=608</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Out of Mothballs Large-scale chamber works by Gabriel Fauré, I would have thought, might comfortably rest on one of the less accessible shelves in my musical larder, their presence acknowledged from afar. After succumbing to the absolute enchantment of one of these works, the C-minor Piano Quintet, at a recent Philharmonic Chamber Music Society concert, [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Out of Mothballs</p>
<p>Large-scale chamber works by Gabriel Fauré, I would have thought, might comfortably rest on one of the less accessible shelves in my musical larder, their presence acknowledged from afar. After succumbing to the absolute enchantment of one of these works, the C-minor Piano Quintet, at a recent Philharmonic Chamber Music Society concert, I rushed home to discover that yes, I did indeed own a recording of this remarkable score &#8211; along with the earlier D-minor Quintet &#8211; but that the disc, at least 15 years old and long out of print, had sat there gathering dust, never even unwrapped. Mine the shame.</p>
<p>There is much beguilement in Fauré: the songs, some charmers for piano, above all the Requiem, which is best heard by candlelight in a recording (there are two) conducted by Nadia Boulanger. The power in this 30-minute quintet, composed three years before the composer&#8217;s death, is a different language: an earnest, mysterious oratory, a brief and hilarious romp, a dark and somber meditation, and a final exultant resolution. At Disney, where some chamber works seem adrift in all that space, Fauré, of all people, filled the hall. Thomas Adès was the pianist; you have to assume that he hears a kindred voice in this music, however far from his own. Even more remarkable is the way the special pleading in his playing managed to motivate the rest of the ensemble, above all the very young Johnny Lee, whose violin sang most eloquently.</p>
<p>All told, a chamber concert nicely planned. Music by Jean Françaix began it, another French romantic, perhaps more deserving of his earned obscurity but a sweet charmer in his perky, neo-cancan fashion. Midway there was Steven Stucky&#8217;s <i>Nell&#8217;ombra, Nella Luce</i>, which, despite its Italian title, seemed quite French in its charming interplay of &#8220;light&#8221; and &#8220;dark&#8221; music. The music dates from 2000 and, to confound the Latin origins one step further, was first performed by the Cuarteto Latinoamericano. Against other works by Stucky that I greatly admire for their honesty and marvelous clarity, I find the <i>Nell&#8217;ombra</i> music of lesser substance. My memory of the concert resides, in surprise and delight, with the great work of Fauré.</p>
<p>Basic Bass</p>
<p>At the Philharmonic last weekend there was John Harbison&#8217;s not-quite-brand-new Concerto for Bass Viol (Double Bass to you) and Orchestra, and the orchestra&#8217;s own first bassist Dennis Trembly to do winning battle with its intricacies. Harbison is an old friend, although we once had more of his music &#8211; orchestral, vocal, chamber &#8211; than we&#8217;ve had lately. Dawn Upshaw sings his songs, and renders them gorgeous.</p>
<p>The new piece, I&#8217;m saddened to report, is of a lesser order. It is riddled with gadgetry, almost as if the composer had taken a box of &#8220;Handy Things You Can Do With a Double Bass&#8221; and scattered them through a very lazy orchestral texture. Perhaps John Harbison believes that is all you <i>can</i> do with a double bass, but I don&#8217;t believe that for a second, and there are too many players around, on both sides of the &#8220;serious&#8221;-&#8221;pop&#8221; divide, to make that stick. (See you at Charlie Haden&#8217;s concert tonight, December 1, at REDCAT?)</p>
<p>There are, indeed, all the tricks, and they are impressive. Dennis Trembly draws an expressive, long melody (properly marked &#8220;lamento&#8221;) out of his handsome instrument to start things off. Later on, there are some gorgeous, crackling displays of pizzicato. All as expected: You can&#8217;t have a bass viol on a stage and not expect a long melody here and a shower of pizzicato there. Mr. Harbison, at least, knows the territory. It&#8217;s sad that he stayed within its borders.</p>
<p>The Seventh Symphony of Antonin Dvorák was the evening&#8217;s great music, as it is whenever it appears. I seem to hear more and more often, to my ever-increasing satisfaction, the expressed sentiment that this is the greatest of all romantic symphonies, the one most deeply emotional, most beautifully shaped. Perhaps the continued availability of the venerable Giulini performance, one of the expressive miracles of all recordings (the two-disc set on EMI with the London Philharmonic, <i>not</i> the more recent Royal Philharmonic version), has helped spread the word.</p>
<p>More the pity, then, that the Philharmonic&#8217;s guest conductor, Carlos Kalmar, worked in so many ways to distort the power of this marvelous symphony: ignoring the specified repeats in both first and third movements, dragging down hard on expressive <i>retards</i>, driving the brass so brutally that you&#8217;d think you were back in the Chandler Pavilion. Maestro Kalmar&#8217;s vita boasts of <i>mittel-europäisches</i> blood, and his affectionate readings of some Janácek operatic excerpts at the start of the program, proved he had some. It seemed to have run out too soon.</p>
<p>The Big Sleep</p>
<p>A granddad behind a sandwich at the Music Center last Sunday was overheard bragging that he had attended 34 operas and slept through them all, and I suddenly understood why <i>Hansel and Gretel</i> remains in favor. Inside the Dorothy Chandler Pavilion that afternoon, I heard no delighted cheers &#8211; not very much, even, in the way of applause. The response from the middle-size audience was, let&#8217;s say, dutiful, especially that of the very well-behaved junior members respectfully fulfilling their elders&#8217; notion of a proper musical upbringing.</p>
<p>The funny animals, Maurice Sendak-inspired, with flashing eyes and all that stuff, were supposed to represent the &#8220;14 angels&#8221; of the famous Prayer. I counted only 12, and they drew so little response that I assumed that most of the kids had the same toys at home. Director-designer Douglas Fitch created a camouflage-fabric forest that came apart and came back together and looked merely ugly. Last year I expressed the desire to bundle up Lucy Schaufer, the Cherubino in <i>Figaro</i>, and install her among my own art treasures. At the risk of raising eyebrows, I must confess that my desire waxes hotter after her Hansel, if only to rescue her from the authentic agony the insipidity of this opera instills. I have interviewed enough 10-year-olds (as recently as this past Thanksgiving) to know that kids today have outgrown <i>Hansel and Gretel</i>. They need <i>Salome</i>. </p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Daring Young&#160;Men</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2006/11/daring-young-men/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2006/11/daring-young-men/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 22 Nov 2006 19:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=607</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Powder Keg Powder Her Face is an arrogant young man&#8217;s masterpiece, fearless and forthright. Its central character &#8211; the decrepit, decaying Duchess of Argyle, fornicating her way toward oblivion &#8211; is one in a grand line of operatic monsters from Amneris, say, to Lulu. Its creator &#8211; the formidable Brit Brat Thomas Adès, at 24 [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Powder Keg</p>
<p><i>Powder Her Face</i> is an arrogant young man&#8217;s masterpiece, fearless and forthright. Its central character &#8211; the decrepit, decaying Duchess of Argyle, fornicating her way toward oblivion &#8211; is one in a grand line of operatic monsters from Amneris, say, to Lulu. Its creator &#8211; the formidable Brit Brat Thomas Adès, at 24 &#8211; might also be accorded a place in a grand procession of the classically omnipotent, from the fire-wielding Prometheus of ancient times to Citizen Kane and, for that matter and closer to our own time, his creator, Orson Welles. It is nine years since <i>Powder Her Face</i>, and Tom Adès rides ever higher.</p>
<p>He is charming, when we chat, in his dismissal of <i>Powder</i> as a work from his giddy youth, still only best known through the easy sensationalism of being the first ever opera with a blowjob onstage. He likes to wonder aloud, with typical Brit whimsy, why anyone today takes the work seriously. Defying the possible wrath of parents and trustees, the coproduction last weekend by USC&#8217;s Thornton Opera and the L.A. Philharmonic, staged by Ken Cazan and conducted by the composer with an excellent orchestra and a group of gifted student singers, revealed, as all good performances have, that this is indeed a work of lasting strength and originality. If the staging lacked some of the madcap genius of David Schweizer&#8217;s Long Beach Opera production from 2001, it represented good, honest stagecraft and made no bones about the work&#8217;s less, er, family-fare elements.</p>
<p>The strengths of <i>Powder Her Face</i> outrun its notorious aspects; they lie in Adès&#8217; remarkably canny music. I do not foresee an independent concert life for very much of the music (aside from one nifty song for the Waitress, &#8220;Fancy being rich . . . Fancy purchasing a duke!,&#8221; that tags her as a blood cousin of Kurt Weill&#8217;s Pirate Jenny), but the mix of nowadays-pop sensibility, liberally laced with some X-rated tango slither, accomplishes some highly potent storytelling. Adès is particularly adept at this kind of narrative, with or without words. On December 2 and 3, his orchestral masterpiece (so far), <i>Asyla</i>, is paired at the Philharmonic with Tchaikovsky&#8217;s &#8220;Pathétique&#8221; symphony, and even though neither work follows a specified narration, both have a program deeply instilled. Be prepared, therefore, for more than just another soiree at Disney Hall.</p>
<p>Adès is here for several events &#8211; including a &#8220;Green Umbrella&#8221; on November 28, at which he will conduct music by his friend Gerald Barry, and a varied program with &#8220;Piano Spheres&#8221; on December 5. I have the feeling that he likes it here; who knows where that may lead?</p>
<p>Kindred Spirit</p>
<p>Sharing the weekend, most appropriately, was the G-major String Quartet of Franz Schubert, music by another restless spirit in his 20s, no less fearless and forthright. Its opening gambit flings down the challenge: a welcoming chord in G major that swells and bursts into G minor. That sets the tone for the entire work, an instability of major versus minor that permeates all four movements, each in a different manner, and seems on its own to pronounce the death knell of classical stability and balance. There is a miraculous moment later in that first movement, when that opening sequence returns but exactly in reverse: the G-minor chord swelling out to G major, and all, this time, absolutely pianissimo. I wrote last week about music&#8217;s great &#8220;What hit me?&#8221; moments; this is another.</p>
<p>I heard the Schubert, along with quartets of Schumann and Lutoslawski, in the beguiling setting of the Clark Memorial Library in West Adams, where there is chamber music once a month, with tickets trickily distributed on a lottery system. The players were the excellent Vogler Quartet from Berlin, which had also performed in the Doheny Mansion at one of the &#8220;Historic Sites&#8221; programs two nights before. The room, wood-paneled and with a gorgeous, intricate ceiling, seats a modest 141, which makes it small for chamber music; I found the sound aggressive, sometimes even shrill (likewise MC Peter Reill). I&#8217;d like to hear a harpsichord and baroque instruments there.</p>
<p>Glass, Darkly</p>
<p>The peripatetic Long Beach Opera dropped in at the Japan America Theatre last weekend for the latest stop in its yearlong wanderings through operatic curiosities. This item bore names worth noting: composer Philip Glass and his ofttime collaborator playwright David Henry Hwang, whose previous works include such major-league thumpings as <i>The Voyage</i>, the Metropolitan Opera&#8217;s big Columbus fiasco. This latest effort, produced with most of the original perpetrators from its American Repertory Theatre premiere in 2003, thumped to a more modest rhythm, but made for a dreary evening nonetheless. &#8220;First Philip Glass opera to be staged in L.A.,&#8221; screamed the publicity, which is not quite accurate if you remember the 1988 <i>1000 Airplanes on the Roof</i> at UCLA; call it, at least, the first Philip Glass opera to be staged here at a $98 ticket.</p>
<p>The matter at hand was a bill of two short plays, drawn by Hwang from Japanese ghost stories and given the dual title <i>Sound of a Voice/Hotel of Dreams</i>: the first set in ancient times and dealing with a samurai-ghost encounter in the manner of <i>Woman in the Dunes</i>; the second a modern fantasy about a bordello for men at the brink of death. For both, Glass has provided a musical underpinning so thin and aimless that it becomes difficult to identify as a melodic line. Now and then, a short burst from pipa or shakuhachi serves to pin down the ethnic identity, as did conductor Andreas Mitisek&#8217;s courageous management of this threadbare substance.</p>
<p>Two singers were involved, both from the original production. Suzan Hanson was the ghost in the first play, the all-knowing Madam in the second. Herbert Perry (the Leporello in the Peter Sellars <i>Don Giovanni</i> of fabled memory) made the switch from samurai to suited businessman. Both sang with force, but in an acoustical setting that tended to swallow words &#8211; a serious problem, since the supertitle projector conked out early in the evening. Robert Israel, stalwart stage designer of the Glass entourage, provided his usual &#8211; well, stalwart &#8211; set design, consisting mainly, in both plays, of a large, empty box. And &#8220;empty&#8221; was, indeed, the word.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>It Comes With the&#160;Job</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2006/11/it-comes-with-the-job/</link>
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		<pubDate>Wed, 15 Nov 2006 22:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=606</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Nothing More Than . . . The past few weeks have made their mark on my critical apparatus. Johannes Brahms has been his usual nasty scold. Richard Strauss has gone on a rant and a screech. A cadence in a Mozart piano concerto left me numb, and a pileup of dissonances in a Bach cantata [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Nothing More Than . . .</p>
<p>The past few weeks have made their mark on my critical apparatus. Johannes Brahms has been his usual nasty scold. Richard Strauss has gone on a rant and a screech. A cadence in a Mozart piano concerto left me numb, and a pileup of dissonances in a Bach cantata brought on a terrifying specter of the wages of sin. It&#8217;s all part of the job, of course, and I loved every moment, almost.</p>
<p>I did not &#8211; do not &#8211; love the C-minor String Quartet of Brahms, however, and cannot imagine why the excellent Calder Quartet devoted their splendid, youthful vigor to the task of turning it into music. To me this music is, in a word, cranky, the more so at Zipper Hall, where it came after the group&#8217;s splendid work in the last quartets of Mozart and Bartók. The Calder is well along in the mellowing process needed to produce good chamber ensembles (as with good wine &#8211; an apt analogy). They are in residence at the Colburn School, perfecting their art by teaching it to others and emerging for public performances not nearly often enough.</p>
<p>C minor is also the key of the slow movement of Mozart&#8217;s Piano Concerto, K. 482, which Emanuel Ax played with the Philharmonic and Alexander Mickelthwate this past weekend. Toward the end of that movement, there is a passage of hushed exaltation that belongs among the great &#8220;What hit me?&#8221; moments in all music. It is nothing more than a sudden shift from minor to major, set as a conversation between soloist and a few instruments from the orchestra, but if you know your Mozart, you know that a &#8220;nothing more than&#8221; moment can hit you very hard, and so this does. You also have to credit the excellent young Mickelthwate, who is now the Philharmonic&#8217;s associate conductor with one hand while conducting the Winnipeg Symphony with the other, for maintaining his composure in a program offering that miraculous Mozart concerto and the billboard-size proclamations of Richard Strauss&#8217; <i>Ein Heldenleben</i> with only the innocuous glitz of the Strauss <i>Burleske</i> to serve as bumper. If the <i>Heldenleben</i> must happen (a proposition I will argue), let it be in this vigorous, propulsive manner. Mr. Mickelthwate led the work without score; I hope he has left room in his head for better things as well.</p>
<p>Singers vs. Sinners</p>
<p>&#8220;Stand firm against all sinning,&#8221; warns the mezzo-soprano, &#8220;or its poison will possess you,&#8221; and Bach drives his poisoned needles homeward with shrieking dissonances such that his 1714 audiences might also have asked what mysterious power had smitten <i>them</i>. Even absent their ailing founder and leader, Reinhard Goebel, the strong-hearted ensemble Musica Antiqua Köln reaffirmed their reputation for sending forth sugar-free renditions of early music with its sinews pristine. If Bach&#8217;s cantata (No. 54, &#8220;Widerstehe doch der Sünde&#8221;) was their Disney program&#8217;s highlight, the other important message was how pokey and predictable so much of the rest of this ecstatically rediscovered Baroque stuff (Jan Dismas Zelenka, represented on the program by an endless on-and-on vocal motet) can be. Ilia Korol was the substitute leader in this, announced as Musica Antiqua&#8217;s farewell tour; Marijana Mijanovic was the vocal soloist, deep-voiced and resplendent.</p>
<p>Three decades before, contemporary with the birth of Bach, Henry Purcell&#8217;s music &#8211; its passions much colored by his studies of Italian music &#8211; also acquired much of the power to disturb and to amaze that would later come to Bach in a different world. At the First Congregational Church in, as you might guess, one of the &#8220;Historic Sites&#8221; series, which remains unrivaled anywhere else, the small group (five voices plus organ), Paris-based, that calls itself Ensemble européen William Byrd turned Purcell and his French contemporary Marc-Antoine Charpentier into magic on a recent Sunday.</p>
<p>The Purcell group, anthems composed for the newly restored Chapel Royal and most of them from the composer&#8217;s 20s, simply throbbed with dramatic force. From Italy he had absorbed the power of dissonance and sudden change. The force that we know in his later works like <i>Dido and Aeneas</i> is already here in, for example, the short three-voice drama <i>Saul and the Witch of Endor</i>, a scene in florid, Italian style in which the troubled Saul, on the eve of battle, begs the Witch to summon up the spirit of the dead Samuel. Under the leadership of the Australian-born Graham O&#8217;Reilly, the five Ensemble singers, French and with accents charmingly blended, transformed the music into an audible translation of the great rose window in the apse behind them.</p>
<p>Piping Hot</p>
<p>In 62 years of professional journalism, it has never occurred to me to write about organ music, least of all in a church, until this week. Here&#8217;s what happened. Sixty-<i>four</i> years ago, I had a best friend at summer camp; our friendship was cemented by a shared passion for Dvorák&#8217;s Cello Concerto, which I had brought with me on the five 78s, not being able to leave them at home. After that summer (1942), we drifted apart until about two months ago, when for a series of delightful reasons we resumed correspondence. He had in the meantime become a renowned anesthesiologist and, as a sideline, a producer of recordings of organ performances by Dr. Gerre Hancock at St. Thomas Church on Fifth Avenue in Manhattan. This is one of the great church organs in America, and Dr. Hancock, now at the University of Texas, ranks as one of the great organists of his time, especially with regard to his skill in improvisation. Nothing would do, therefore, but that I make my way to St. James&#8217; Episcopal Church on Wilshire Blvd. last Sunday, to listen to Dr. Hancock&#8217;s guest recital and compare his playing with all the discs my newly rediscovered friend has been sending me. (His name is also Alan.)</p>
<p>The improviser&#8217;s art is music&#8217;s central magic. The repertory sustains itself around its power to state and then to vary; the organ is the supreme exerciser of this power. Dr. Hancock&#8217;s program would conclude, it was announced, with an &#8220;improvisation on submitted themes&#8221; as once did concerts by Mozart and Beethoven. The &#8220;submitted theme&#8221; this time was John Williams&#8217; tune from <i>Star Wars</i>; one might have expected the worst. One would have been wrong; what we got instead was a beautifully fashioned, sophisticated, four-movement work that strayed far from the given theme, drew a splendid variety of thematic substances from its modest outline, ventured far into dark and complicated regions, and returned triumphant at the end. If this is what I&#8217;ve missed by ignoring church music for 62 years, perhaps it&#8217;s time to start listening. </p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Sound and&#160;Substance</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2006/11/sound-and-substance/</link>
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		<pubDate>Wed, 08 Nov 2006 21:40:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=605</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Battle of the Brands At Disney Hall, the conductorless chamber orchestra known as Orpheus performed its brand of Mozart against that of the pianist Emanuel Ax; they did not match. Orpheus, which is popular for the same reasons that attract crowds to blind tenors and one-armed acrobats, is proficient at producing a well-sculpted wall of [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Battle of the Brands</p>
<p>At Disney Hall, the conductorless chamber orchestra known as Orpheus performed its brand of Mozart against that of the pianist Emanuel Ax; they did not match. Orpheus, which is popular for the same reasons that attract crowds to blind tenors and one-armed acrobats, is proficient at producing a well-sculpted wall of sound that is little different whether the program calls for Mozart or Copland. &#8220;Manny&#8221; Ax, on the other hand, is a marvelously sensitive pianist with a deep understanding of the expressive differences between Mozart&#8217;s intimate, subtle G-major Concerto (K. 453) and the grand celebrations that fill the C-major work (K. 503) of only two years later. The pianist knew, in other words &#8211; as whatever unnamed force that guides the destiny of the orchestra does not &#8211; how and why an all-Mozart program is so uniquely stirring a musical experience.</p>
<p>András Schiff also knows, and his solo all-Mozart program at Disney five days later had the planning of a profoundly dedicated musician: small works and large, including less-known pieces that invariably evoke incredulity at their harmonic daring. One small accident marred the event: a dropped cane that went rattling down a long flight of wooden Disney stairs, midway in the amazingly rich B-minor Adagio, but the pianist soon recovered, and so did we. That Adagio, and the A-minor Rondo later in the program, are the pieces that you play to convince yourself of the vast chasm between finger-friendly and deeply profound in the music of this composer whom we will never fully know. I can play those notes, and so can you; we need an András Schiff, or an Emanuel Ax (or a Jeffrey Kahane), to turn them into music.</p>
<p>From an incredibly busy couple of weeks at Disney Hall, you don&#8217;t need my words to honor Yo-Yo Ma&#8217;s smooth-as-silk (as in &#8220;Road&#8221;) participation with Ax in a Beethoven program (in which the piano writing was conceived to dominate the cello line anyway) or the no-brain diversion, complete with facial isometrics, concocted by superstar violinist Joshua Bell in the name of the Brahms Violin Concerto this past weekend. Sheer delight on that last program, however (although you&#8217;d never know from the limping prose of the stand-in guy at the <i>Times</i>), was the chance to hear the Sixth Symphony of Schubert in the hands of a conductor &#8211; Britain&#8217;s Jonathan Nott &#8211; who really knows and values that small corner of the repertory.</p>
<p>Here is Schubert at 20, feverishly starting new works and tossing them soon after. His wastebasket includes a fabulously beautiful beginning of a piano sonata in F sharp minor (which András Schiff once played on a TV documentary). His completed works include a four-hand piano sonata and a set of variations that everybody should play. This C-major Symphony surpasses all. Its scoring for winds anticipates Mendelssohn; its jog-trotting finale (which Jonathan Nott took at exactly the right &#8220;Viennese&#8221; pace) cannot be heard without happy smiles.</p>
<p>A Movable Feast</p>
<p>Santa Monica&#8217;s Jacaranda Concerts, displaced while their church is being remodeled, zoomed into life somewhere else last weekend, and how! The first notes of Aaron Copland&#8217;s <i>Duo for Flute and Piano</i> sounded through the vastness of Santa Monica High&#8217;s Barnum Hall shortly after 4 p.m. last Saturday; the final fade-out of Terry Riley&#8217;s <i>In C</i> drew the die-hards&#8217; cheers just before midnight. The intervening eight hours had been filled with déjà vu mostly marvelous, a &#8220;Pan-American Music Marathon&#8221; of some of the best music, in the best performances, that the founders of this treasurable series have brought forth &#8211; to an ever-growing, supportive audience &#8211; in their past four years. </p>
<p>Like the splendid catered dinner from the Border Grill, the program was a nice mix of flavors and aromas, best exemplified by the inclusion of one of Osvaldo Golijov&#8217;s omnium-gatherum pieces to match his own heritage. Eduardo Delgado hammered out a couple of Ginastera&#8217;s piano sonatas; Gloria Cheng sailed by on the cloud known as John Adams&#8217; <i>Phrygian Gates</i>; there was lots of Steve Reich but no Philip Glass &#8211; my choice too. Only one piece struck me as dull, the finale of Charles Ives&#8217; Trio, and that was preceded by the previous movement, an authentic hoot. After a year of innumerable mistreatments delivered upon Riley&#8217;s pioneering masterpiece, it was encouraging to hear the work&#8217;s freshness endure and glisten, lovingly delivered, lovingly received.</p>
<p>Best of all, please note, these performers &#8211; string quartet, percussion ensemble, soloists, a whole gatherum for the Riley &#8211; were all local people. They work in studios, in local orchestras; many of them are from USC or CalArts. It&#8217;s when projects like Jacaranda succeed that they are encouraged to remain here rather than plunging into the New York maelstrom. Saturday&#8217;s program was broken into segments; the audience could come and go. Around the midpoint, when some of the best past Jacaranda performances &#8211; Joel Pargman&#8217;s of the Lou Harrison Violin Concerto, John Adams&#8217; <i>Shaker Loops</i> by seven strings &#8211; were being returned to life, you got the feeling of a lot of people, in a congenial room, sharing some happy memories.</p>
<p><i>Obiter dictum:</i> Daniel Cariaga, who left us last week at 71 &#8211; much too soon &#8211; was that rare phenomenon, a music critic and a gentleman. I met him first in 1980, at one of the early CalArts contemporary-music festivals. It would never have occurred to his boss at the <i>Times</i>, the ferocious Bernheimer, that this was an event demanding a paper&#8217;s chief critic. Danny, the second in command, was somewhat at sea during most of that weekend, but everybody admired his forbearance and his good humor, and the fact that he never wrote beyond what he knew. It would be a while before the <i>Times</i> got someone else like that, and the good news is that Danny did some teaching in his last few years. I hope those guys find jobs. </p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Conduct&#160;Becoming</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2006/11/conduct-becoming-2/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2006/11/conduct-becoming-2/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 02 Nov 2006 02:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=604</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[The Mystery Kid The young man &#8211; the slender, bespectacled, smiling schoolboy &#8211; strode to the Disney Hall podium, took his bow, turned to the orchestra. His gestures were modest, sure and eloquent; the curves and pulses of Mozart&#8217;s Figaro Overture fell beautifully into place. Whoever he was, the guy obviously knew the music and [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>The Mystery Kid</p>
<p>The young man &#8211; the slender, bespectacled, smiling schoolboy &#8211; strode to the Disney Hall podium, took his bow, turned to the orchestra. His gestures were modest, sure and eloquent; the curves and pulses of Mozart&#8217;s <i>Figaro</i> Overture fell beautifully into place. Whoever he was, the guy obviously knew the music and how to make it come alive.</p>
<p>He is Lionel Bringuier (LEE-oh-nell BRANG-ee-AY), and he has just turned 20. There he stood last Saturday before our formidable Philharmonic, unidentified by previous announcement from the stage or in print; he had replaced the scheduled assistant conductor, Joana Carneiro, at the latest Toyota Symphonies for Youth concert. He had had no benefit of rehearsal, but you wouldn&#8217;t have known this from the sparks he gave off on the stage that morning, the sense of assurance in a program of Mozart and Richard Strauss. He was at the end of a three-week visit to the Philharmonic, during which he had been hired by the orchestra to cover such situations as Carneiro being called out of town. He had also triumphed in a competitive audition to become the Philharmonic&#8217;s next assistant conductor (overlapping with Carneiro&#8217;s final year), a post he will take on next fall.</p>
<p>The buzz from that competition is that all who sat in judgment &#8211; conductor Esa-Pekka Salonen, orchestra members, Philharmonic president Deborah Borda and several highly placed board members &#8211; have been knocked off their collective feet by this small Parisian with the huge talent. And the buzz, inevitably, devolves back to the Philharmonic&#8217;s unique history in discovering and holding on to fantastically talented, wet-behind-the-ears conducting talent, with names like Salonen, Simon Rattle, and the current season&#8217;s Gustavo Dudamel coming immediately to mind, and the name of Ernest Fleischmann as supersleuth.</p>
<p>Out of 110 videos submitted as applications for the Philharmonic competition, seven conductors were invited to compete in person, leading the orchestra in unrehearsed passages with a judges&#8217; panel seated at a table behind the players. At a Music Center lunch, I wondered to young Lionel how much a competing conductor can reveal about him- or herself in such a high-pressure situation, without the chance of previous rehearsal.</p>
<p>&#8220;I think that if you have strong ideas about the music,&#8221; he answered in a potpourri of French and English that we had concocted for the occasion, &#8220;you should be able to show this with very little talking. To me it is important to prove to the orchestra that you are listening to them, and then they will begin to listen to you, and this begins to happen almost immediately without any necessity to speak. The quality of conducting means to me the quality of listening first; then comes all the rest.</p>
<p>&#8220;I was 4 when I knew that music was to be my life. That is when I began to play the cello. My parents have no musical talent, but there are four brothers and sisters, and we all play. One brother and I have a professional duo of cello and piano. By 14, I knew that I wanted to be a conductor. By that time, I had enough musical experience, however, that I didn&#8217;t want to be just a 14-year-old conductor, a kind of freak like &#8211; we won&#8217;t say any names. I was ready for a serious career.&#8221;</p>
<p>Yes, he is ready; that you can&#8217;t miss. Our lunchtime chat ranged far (the latest word on Formula One car racing, of which news I was a mere recipient) &#8211; and wide (the music of Marc-André Dalbavie). One further encouraging newsbit: On good authority I have it that when the victory of Lionel Bringuier was announced at Disney Hall, the members of the Philharmonic &#8211; a hard-boiled bunch, as we all know &#8211; stood and cheered.</p>
<p>The Finder</p>
<p>Ernest Fleischmann wants me to set the record straight on the story of his &#8220;discovery&#8221; of Esa-Pekka Salonen, when the young Finn leaped into the breach and replaced Michael Tilson Thomas at a London concert at which Ernest &#8220;just happened&#8221; to be in attendance. It was much more complicated; Ernest had already left London that day in 1983, and had to be summoned back from Los Angeles in order to catch up on this rising young phenom. In any case, in addition to his many years as Philharmonic honcho, assuring a tradition of stability that few musical organizations can match, Fleischmann is indeed the authoritative tracer of young conductors, a reputation that dates back a quarter-century and more.</p>
<p>Young Lionel first came across his line of sight a year ago, at the 49th running of the prestigious Besançon Competition for young conductors, where the young Parisian scored the same kind of jaw-dropping triumph that he later repeated at Disney Hall. With considerable career advice from Fleischmann, he has been able to develop his French and American triumphs into a career parlay: a part-time post with the small Orchestre de Bretagne, and the Los Angeles job, which will call for a couple of kiddie concerts (this time with name credit), a &#8220;Green Umbrella&#8221; program, a couple of runouts and &#8211; who knows? &#8211; a chance to step in when duty calls. He obviously understands the local priorities; he spoke at our last meeting about finding an apartment.?</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>As the Towers&#160;Fall</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2006/10/as-the-towers-fall/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2006/10/as-the-towers-fall/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 25 Oct 2006 22:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=603</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[A Broken Vow Brett Dean and his music burst rather politely upon the local scene over the past two weeks. Australia born, with several seasoning years as a violist with the Berlin Philharmonic and now a full-time composer back home, Dean produces a kind of internationally amiable music, which is not at all bad. At [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>A Broken Vow</p>
<p>Brett Dean and his music burst rather politely upon the local scene over the past two weeks. Australia born, with several seasoning years as a violist with the Berlin Philharmonic and now a full-time composer back home, Dean produces a kind of internationally amiable music, which is not at all bad. At Disney Hall he came on with a viola concerto, with himself as the able soloist, that lists the Philharmonic as co-commissioner. Viola concertos are not that common; there is a beautiful, dark-hued one by Walton that this new work is qualified to stand beside. Dean&#8217;s makes itself known in a soft, understated sort of way, and rises to a fair amount of hurly-burly in its middle movement. It has nothing to do with Australia: no koalas or birdcalls.</p>
<p>These &#8211; the birdcalls, anyway &#8211; came closer to the surface a few nights later in a Green Umbrella concert, all-Australian, that included not-so-amiable music by Dean, a &#8220;Pastoral&#8221; Symphony like none other, in which aggregations of native birds compete with the sounds of contemporary industrialized life, and not too happily. Composed in 2001 for Germany&#8217;s Ensemble Modern, the piece makes a stunning transition from soulful to soulless and quite overshadowed everything else on this remarkable program. A pair of radiantly alive piano improvs by the 26-year-old whiz-bang composer Anthony Pateras and some aimless note-spinning by Liza Lim (whose music continues to go nowhere with local audiences) completed the evening.</p>
<p>Esa-Pekka Salonen began the Philharmonic&#8217;s program with a spirited dash through Haydn&#8217;s &#8220;Bear&#8221; Symphony and a crackerjack romp through the Mussorgsky/Ravel <i>Pictures at an Exhibition</i>, a work I had, not long ago, vowed never to hear again but which, thanks to Donald Green&#8217;s red-hot trumpet, I heard with something close to rapture.</p>
<p>Discomania Revisited</p>
<p>Tower Records is gone, and nostalgia stalks the land. The first record store that ever engaged my time and my money was a small hole-in-the-wall across from Boston&#8217;s Symphony Hall. My pals Normie and Eddie and I would hike over after school, and the owner, a bustling little guy about the size of his cigar, would let us play some of his records so long as our hands were clean. His name was Jack Levinson, and his own favorite was a 10-inch 78-rpm disc of Heifetz playing &#8220;Hora Staccato,&#8221; and so we left every day with that thing buzzing in our ears. I bought my first album there: Tchaikovsky&#8217;s Fifth Symphony, by Frederick Stock and the Chicago Symphony, on six Victor Black Label discs. Victor had just lowered the price on some of its older 78s, from a dollar to 75 cents, and that gave birth to a new generation of collectors.</p>
<p>After college I moved to New York, and two doors down from my fifth-floor walkup was the Record Collectors&#8217; Exchange, which became my next haunt. This wasn&#8217;t much larger than Jack Levinson&#8217;s, but it was crammed with really rare stuff &#8211; discs from France, from Eastern Europe, used copies of recordings long discontinued. The cigar smoke was even thicker here, and so was the lingo. People would brag about finding a particularly choice item, &#8220;gold label.&#8221; If the record label was printed with gold ink, that meant it was a prewar pressing, better-quality shellac; that also meant, of course, that Herman Lemberg would mark it up to twice the original price. I always suspected that some of those guys didn&#8217;t even own phonographs; it was the collecting impulse, not the music, that drove everybody into that smoke-filled room on West 48th Street. But that was what we knew as a record store, and its graduates went on to run the other hangout shops of the &#8217;50s and &#8217;60s: Will Lerner&#8217;s Music Masters on 43rd Street, Joe Greenspan&#8217;s Discophile in the Village, and let us shed a tear for Alfred Leonard&#8217;s Gramophone Shop on Wilshire &#8211; snob shops where the educated clerks wouldn&#8217;t allow you to buy a recorded performance they considered below par.</p>
<p>Technology spelled the doom. Starting with the LP in 1948, exploding with hi-fi and tape and stereo and the War of the Speeds &#8211; brought on by RCA&#8217;s absurd insistence that its 45s were equal to the 33s as a medium for symphony and opera &#8211; the great connoisseur medium of bygone days became accessible, inexpensive and amazingly all-inclusive. At the Record Collectors&#8217; Exchange, you could perhaps find one or two Bach cantatas, or early Haydn symphonies, on some obscure European label at some exorbitant price; now the whole Haydn or Bach canon came in duplicate abundance.</p>
<p>The first time I walked into the classical branch of Tower Records in West Hollywood &#8211; not many hours after first arriving in Los Angeles in, I think, 1979 &#8211; I experienced a feeling exactly the same as at my first sight of the Grand Canyon: exhilaration tempered with helplessness (so much space, so little me). By the mid-&#8217;80s, you could paw through maybe 75 versions of the Beethoven Fifth Symphony, with nobody behind the counter &#8211; except perhaps a couple of haggling Maria Callas queens &#8211; to offer guidance. As someone who, perhaps misguidedly, still nourishes a certain affection for classical music, I have increasingly found the experience of being in the presence of classical merchandising nothing short of appalling. My list is long: placement of classical departments in stores where the sounds of pop feed through, ignorant labeling in the few bins that remain, an inability among personnel to muster even a blank stare in response to a request for information.</p>
<p>As with most people I know, ordering discs by mail order has been the solution to the collecting dilemma since the first signs of collapse appeared in the Towers. There is a small part of me, however, that responds to the experience of getting my hands on some object possibly worth the cherish, and then rushing home to see if I was right. One place remains to afford me that pleasure: the music room of Doug Dutton&#8217;s bookstore in Brentwood. It&#8217;s small, but somebody has chosen the merchandise with great taste, and is on hand to talk about it. It is, in other words, what a record store could be, used to be, ought to be &#8211; minus the cigar smoke, that is. </p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Imperfect&#160;Wagnerites</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2006/10/imperfect-wagnerites/</link>
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		<pubDate>Wed, 18 Oct 2006 22:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=602</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[The Ring? Wrongly Rung The performance annals of Wagner&#8217;s Ring of the Nibelung abound in tales of solemn ritual, of audiences driven to ecstasy thousands at a time, of published philosophical analyses by the ream. To George Bernard Shaw&#8217;s Perfect Wagnerite, the heroic Siegfried is the nihilist Mikhail Bakunin reborn; to Anna Russell, he is [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>The Ring? Wrongly Rung</p>
<p>The performance annals of Wagner&#8217;s <i>Ring of the Nibelung</i> abound in tales of solemn ritual, of audiences driven to ecstasy thousands at a time, of published philosophical analyses by the ream. To George Bernard Shaw&#8217;s <i>Perfect Wagnerite</i>, the heroic Siegfried is the nihilist Mikhail Bakunin reborn; to Anna Russell, he is Li&#8217;l Abner. Nobody merely <i>attends</i> performances of <i>The Ring</i>; the operative word is <i>pilgrimage</i>. Whether that is exactly the first definition that comes to mind during freeway traffic on a Friday afternoon on I-405, or while experiencing a damp sandwich, standing up for lack of lobby space, elbow to elbow with a jabbering Ringling in plastic Wagnerian helmet, I leave you to decide.</p>
<p>Yet those four days at Costa Mesa &#8211; celebrating not the 20-year-old-and-already-shabby Segerstrom Hall but the glossy new one still being worked on across the way &#8211; added up to a <i>Ring</i> of sorts, if a <i>Ring</i> fashioned as though from the far side of the moon. &#8220;You have to remember,&#8221; a friend wisely noted during one of the endless intermissions, &#8220;that in Russia there was no 20th century.&#8221; Wagner had gone unstaged there since before the First World War, until the defiant Valery Gergiev forced a rediscovery on his forces at the Kirov Opera in the late 1990s. This <i>Ring</i>, brought to these shores by Kirov forces that looked like a fair portion of St. Petersburg&#8217;s population, was listed as a &#8220;conception,&#8221; not a stage direction, by Gergiev and the designer George Tsypin (he of the recent <i>Grendel</i> and its famous wall). Absent any more specific clues, it seemed to be a creation that had been allowed to grow of its own cumulative energy. Ideally, that can turn a stage into something very exciting, a massive improvisatory force joined toward some end. Otherwise, it can result in a mess.</p>
<p>This one was a mess. On a stage that looked as if someone had simply overturned the contents of some theatrical warehouse in which most of the props were damaged anyhow, gaunt giants stood by, encircling the stage, some headless (like the ones in the Long Beach Opera&#8217;s mini-<i>Ring</i> last January and just as useless), some with heads that lit up from inside like distorted lava lamps. Smaller, bulbous creatures with single headlamps were scattered here and there; the sharp-eyed Bernie Holland of <i>The New York Times</i> spotted them as Shmoos, enhancing the Li&#8217;l Abner identity. Singing actors of varying levels of proficiency trudged through a fair likeness of Wagner&#8217;s music &#8211; in itself one of the world&#8217;s awe-inspiring creations. Awe-inspiring, too, was Gergiev&#8217;s command of the rise and fall, the surge and the impetus of this incredible score &#8211; including, by the way, several passages usually cut that were left intact this time.</p>
<p>The problems were compounded, however: first because, though the orchestra itself &#8211; as the world has discovered on its previous visits &#8211; is a force of awesome resonance and beauty of tone, in Segerstrom Hall it was obliged to play in a pit too small and too poorly designed to show off its splendor. The mess was further thickened because the casting night after night seemed to have been carried out on an eeny-meeny-choice basis, seldom with any two singers properly matched. I heard excellent tenors (our own Plácido, for one) matched with small-voiced sopranos, a wooly-voiced Wotan past his prime with a <i>Walküre</i> Brünnhilde of splendid strength, a first-rate <i>Götterdämmerung</i> Brünnhilde against a wimp of a Hagen (in drag, by the way) who was also greatly outsung by the Gunther whom he is supposed to dominate. It would have taken the acumen of Stalin&#8217;s secret police to determine, from the various printed programs, which singer was actually singing which role on which night. I would swear, for example, that the aforementioned &#8220;Brünnhilde of splendid strength&#8221; was the same terrific soprano (Olga Sergeyeva) on three consecutive nights; the programs had it otherwise. Oh, and I almost forgot, the Siegfried who looked so svelte in his red jammies one night was replaced the next night by a chubbier hero trying to fit into the same clothes, but not quite at home there.</p>
<p>Not Only Godunov, but Better</p>
<p>The Russian forces encamped at Costa Mesa for this 17-day &#8220;Maryinsky Festival&#8221; sufficed to populate two full opera projects, plus ballet and symphony galore. Nothing in these offerings proved more valuable, however, than the four performances of Mussorgsky&#8217;s <i>Boris Godunov</i>, the most prototypical and, up to now, most inexplicably neglected hereabouts of all great Russian works of art. Even in its later, bowdlerized transformations &#8211; its harmonies and orchestrations sweetened by lesser hands, its plotlines tampered with by the addition of love duets and a ballet &#8211; our local companies have shied away from <i>Boris</i> as if it were something other than the raw, daring, imperfect but astonishing masterpiece it truly is. In its original 1869 form, it was rejected by the ancestral Kirov company, which then triumphed mightily with bastardized versions. Three cheers and a &#8220;Slava!!!&#8221; then for the intrepid Gergiev, who brought the original <i>Boris</i> back to the company in 2002, recorded it and has taken it on tour.</p>
<p>Another few cheers, as well, for the result. There is undeniably great music in the additions made by Mussorgsky himself in his 1872 revision: the mighty choruses in the &#8220;Coronation&#8221; scene, the scene in the Kromy Forest with the Idiot&#8217;s monologue that provides the opera&#8217;s devastating ending. The five-CD Philips recording led by Gergiev is the ideal way to compare 1869 and 1872. It contains both versions; the 1869 Boris is the marvelous Nicolai Putilin, who also sang the role in Orange County last Sunday, the best single performance I heard during the entire Kirov visit.</p>
<p>But the 1869 <i>Boris</i> is more than a rough sketch. Its very terseness lays bare its personal drama. From the moment in the dialogue with the sardonic Shuisky when the specter of oncoming doom is laid bare, through to the end, the music doesn&#8217;t waste a breath, and neither do you. Suddenly, all that hanky-panky with gods and dragons from the previous nights seemed in retrospect like four nights of <i>Ring Around the Rosie</i> &#8211; fun, though.?</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Commencement&#160;Exercises</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2006/10/commencement-exercises-2/</link>
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		<pubDate>Wed, 11 Oct 2006 22:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=601</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Zero Decibels About an hour before the start of the Philharmonic&#8217;s subscription season on September 29, a friend and I were ushered into the empty Disney Concert Hall by an orchestra official. My friend had never seen the hall; I, of course, have made it my second home. Even so, I needed the reminder of [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Zero Decibels</p>
<p>About an hour before the start of the Philharmonic&#8217;s subscription season on September 29, a friend and I were ushered into the empty Disney Concert Hall by an orchestra official. My friend had never seen the hall; I, of course, have made it my second home. Even so, I needed the reminder of that phenomenon, the extreme silence of the place at rest, the design triumph of architect Gehry and acoustician Toyota. The day before, there had been a nonsubscription &#8220;Gala&#8221; concert, which Esa-Pekka Salonen and the orchestra began with the delicacies of Ravel&#8217;s <i>Mother Goose Suite</i>, an exquisite seasonal statement that the time of Hollywood Bowl-quality sound had passed and the sound of real music had begun. That moment of silence the next night (which would soon be followed with the irresistible racketing of Mahler&#8217;s Third Symphony) filled out the message.</p>
<p>The &#8220;Gala&#8221; program included another treasure, one that had people wondering where it had been all our lives: Manuel de Falla&#8217;s <i>Master Peter&#8217;s Puppet Show</i>. The work sets an episode from <i>Don Quixote</i>, and calls for live performers and/or life-size puppets in a mix with a chamber orchestra, using an episode from the Cervantes comedy that ends, as most of them do, in Quixotic chaos. This staging, by puppeteer Basil Twist &#8211; acclaimed most recently for his underwater production of Berlioz&#8217;s &#8220;Fantastic&#8221; Symphony in New York but not yet here &#8211; used the Disney organ loft and surrounding space, and did so with high imagination.</p>
<p>In all its 80-plus years, the Philharmonic had never once performed Falla&#8217;s small masterwork; in that span, the Mahler Third had turned up heaven knows how many dozen times. That tells us nothing, of course, about good music versus bad; I&#8217;ve never heard anyone advance notions about the Mahler Third being a <i>good</i> work, as I might hear about the Ninth, or <i>Das Lied von der Erde</i>. It belongs in the special category I&#8217;ve concocted known as Fun-Bad Works, and I suppose I should work up that list one of these days. (Let&#8217;s see . . . we can start off perhaps with <i>Porgy and Bess</i> or <i>Tannhäuser</i>.)</p>
<p>I love all that masquerading in the Mahler Third: the fake blood that oozes constantly in the first movement while Mahler giggles up his sleeve, and the delicious pomposity at the end, where the crowd really ought to be forced to its feet singing patriotic verses as white doves are released. It&#8217;s all a great con; Esa-Pekka rode the work to his position of eminence, but now that he no longer needs it, it has become his albatross. He leads his orchestra and the kiddie chorus most eloquently though its fraudulent measures, and through the sincere ones as well. At one time the Third served to prove his worthiness; now it is no longer worthy of him. Fifteen minutes of Ravel&#8217;s shimmering suite of childhood fantasies the night before told us far more about our marvelous conductor and the orchestra he has made for us.</p>
<p>Manon Second</p>
<p>It has taken 20 years for the Los Angeles Opera to produce romantic French opera in a musical style recognizable, respectful and altogether endearing. Like a warm and loving French kiss so perfectly placed that you never want it to end, the <i>Manon</i> currently at the Dorothy Chandler Pavilion speaks (and <i>sings!</i>) in accents so impeccably Russian and Mexican (among others) that they somehow result in the absolute French manner, the absolute enchantment of the blend of twinkling jewelry (even if sometimes costume) and twinkling lovespeak (even if sometimes fraudulent) that blends into French Romanticism at its most seductive. From the regally Russian Anna Netrebko and the slimily seductive Mexican Rolando Villazón comes authentic French lovemaking/hate-spinning that can send you up walls with its realness. Even the tentative baton of Plácido Domingo, this time around, sounds real. Still . . .</p>
<p>There remains about this production a sense of the French-opera-for-those-afraid-of-French-opera. Cuts abound; nearly an hour of music is missing, which begins to impinge on matters of responsibility. These matters are also engaged in the spirit of Vincent Paterson&#8217;s staging (he of Madonna, Michael Jackson and <i>Kiss of the Spider Woman</i>), in which onstage lighting equipment and cameras move in and around the crowd scenes, switching the sense of time and place from fin-de-siècle France to commencement-de-siècle Hollywood. Someone, you get the feeling, still hasn&#8217;t learned to trust Monsieur Massenet and his very pretty opera. That someone, I get the feeling, ought to unstuff his ears and listen to the treasures at hand.</p>
<p>Afloat</p>
<p>Not having 2,000-year-old ears (in spite of those letters, folks), I cannot deliver an insider&#8217;s evaluation on the Suzhou Kun Opera Theater of China&#8217;s Jiangsu Province or its production of <i>The Peony Pavilion</i> at Royce Hall. It would be equally foolish, however, to seek refuge behind historic and cultural time and miss out on the enormous and infinitely accessible pleasures these people brought to our midst in three sold-out nights of intense musical drama. Clearly visible and audible at every moment were pride of ownership and the privilege of sharing. I wonder what an analogue might be: something so deeply embedded in a nationality that it can travel and be shared with such integrity. (If <i>Porgy and Bess</i> is your answer, we are truly beset.)</p>
<p>Pride and dedication drove the wonderful singers, who were not so much beautiful to hear as intense and amazingly clear. With the torrent of events these past weeks &#8211; not to mention Orange County&#8217;s <i>Ring</i>, which I&#8217;ll get around to next week &#8211; I was able to hear only the last of the three live performances; there is also on DVD, of course, an abridged version of another telling of the <i>Peony Pavilion</i> love legend. Nowhere in my memories of musical drama, live or recorded, is there anything so culturally distant from my own experience as this one live performance, yet so artistically close.?</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Best Fiddler&#039;s&#160;Friend</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2006/10/best-fiddlers-friend/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2006/10/best-fiddlers-friend/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 04 Oct 2006 22:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=600</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Best Fiddler&#8217;s Friend Down the pathway beside the house on the West L.A. hillside, past the red door and down the steps, Kyozo Watanabe sits surrounded by bright, gleaming, brand-new stringed instruments: s, violas, cellos, perhaps a few double basses &#8211; enough to start up a full-size philharmonic, with enough for a chamber-music concert to [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Best Fiddler&#8217;s Friend</p>
<p><b>Down the pathway </b>beside the house on the West L.A. hillside, past the red door and down the steps, Kyozo Watanabe sits surrounded by bright, gleaming, brand-new stringed instruments:  s, violas, cellos, perhaps a few double basses &#8211; enough to start up a full-size philharmonic, with enough for a chamber-music concert to spare. &#8220;There is no instrument here that I made,&#8221; says the soft-spoken, smiling Watanabe with some pride, &#8220;but there is no instrument here that I won&#8217;t make better.&#8221;</p>
<p>Some instruments were made in China, mass-produced of perfectly good wood &#8211; maple and spruce, some native Chinese, some from Sri Lanka &#8211; but not very good quality overall before arriving in Watanabe&#8217;s Cremona Violin Shop. &#8220;They are all what I call &#8216;China basic.&#8217; You can buy instruments like this right out of the box in big stores for under $200, and give them to beginning children and make them think they are playing a violin. What I do is to add at least $165 worth of improvements: a better bridge, fingerboard, pegs, a soundboard. I can sell the finished product for only a couple of hundred dollars more, but it&#8217;s a real instrument.</p>
<p>&#8220;If music is going to survive, the first thing we have to insist upon is that beginning students must have good instruments. A child starting in is surely no more talented than the violin in his hands, and if it&#8217;s a bad violin that can&#8217;t respond to what he expects out of music, he simply gets discouraged and gives up. I don&#8217;t mean he has to start in with a Stradivarius. It&#8217;s just that he can&#8217;t start out with a piece of junk, or a toy.&#8221; Watanabe&#8217;s mission is to furnish the newcomer (of any age, by the way) with the first real instrument of his life in music.</p>
<p>Born in Japan, Watanabe commuted from Munich to the Bavarian town of Mittenwald, which, like Italy&#8217;s Cremona, is one of the world&#8217;s learning places for violin craftspeople. His wife, Miwako, was a member of the fondly remembered Sequoia String Quartet and still performs in chamber concerts here and in the Bay Area and elsewhere in the world. Watanabe himself is neither a retired virtuoso nor a frustrated conductor; his serenity and quiet humor bespeak a man who&#8217;s doing in life exactly what he wants to do.</p>
<p><b>CREMONA VIOLIN SHOP</b> 3213 Midvale Ave., West L.A., by appointment at (310) 475-5897</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Sphere of&#160;Action</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2006/09/sphere-of-action/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2006/09/sphere-of-action/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 27 Sep 2006 22:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=599</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Gloria in Excelsis The crowd at Zipper Hall last Tuesday night, for the first of this season&#8217;s &#8220;Piano Spheres&#8221; concerts, was one of those spectacles that renew your confidence in the future of energetic, serious musical programming. These concerts have been going on now for 12 years, and the audience has steadily increased while the [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Gloria in Excelsis</p>
<p>The crowd at Zipper Hall last Tuesday night, for the first of this season&#8217;s &#8220;Piano Spheres&#8221; concerts, was one of those spectacles that renew your confidence in the future of energetic, serious musical programming. These concerts have been going on now for 12 years, and the audience has steadily increased while the programs themselves have become more and more adventurous &#8211; including not only great works of the piano repertory but some interesting wanderings afield. Last week&#8217;s big work had begun life as part of a string quartet; another was built around the reading of a sad and sexy poem. I heard nobody complain that there wasn&#8217;t enough piano.</p>
<p>That&#8217;s because the pianist was Gloria Cheng, one of the series&#8217; great founding spirits and a superb adventurer on her own. The big work was the &#8220;Great Fugue&#8221; of Beethoven&#8217;s Opus 130 String Quartet, bipolarity in music if anything ever was, in a keyboard transcription that Beethoven may or may not have had anything to do with. Robert Winter delivered some of his typical madcap program notes and joined Gloria in a two-piano reading of similar quality that had to put everything else on the program somewhat in the shade. &#8220;Everything else&#8221; included some rather harebrained Beethovenesque variations by Saint-Saëns and the delightfully footloose <i>Hallelujah Junction</i> by John Adams (both also for two pianos, with the two splendid conductors Neal Stulberg and Grant Gershon on the second), as well as some morose bits by Thomas Adès in anticipation of his full participation on the next &#8220;Spheres&#8221; program come December.</p>
<p>Two movements from Stephen Andrew Taylor&#8217;s <i>Seven Memorials</i> made no stronger case for this composer than the complete performance had two years ago. Never mind: Overall, this was another cherishable concert, music for the thinking listener by the thinking musician. The season has begun.</p>
<p>People in Glass Houses .?.?.</p>
<p>They built it, and we came.</p>
<p>Nonchalantly tripping over the TV cables in the plaza where the lima beans once grew, brushing away the cinders from the fireworks that hailed the inaugural of their new concert hall, the folk of County Orange cornered one another, and waylaid the visitors just in from I-405. Had their Millennium now truly dawned? they wondered; could the Boston Symphony, and Carnegie Hall, and those pretenders from beyond the mountains now truly eat their hearts out in sheer envy? &#8220;No, not yet,&#8221; the answer seemed to resound, &#8220;but any day now.&#8221;</p>
<p>The journalistic hoo-hah that greeted the unveiling of Costa Mesa&#8217;s Renée and Henry Segerstrom Concert Hall was, of course, not a decibel less than the building&#8217;s $200 million price tag merited. Read carefully some of the meticulous prose &#8211; Daniel J. Wakin in <i>The New York Times</i>, for example, or Philip Kennicott in <i>The Washington Post</i> &#8211; and the undertones begin to rise to the surface.</p>
<p>.?.?. Shouldn&#8217;t Stow Thrones</p>
<p>&#8220;We&#8217;re in complete control of our artistic destiny,&#8221; Mr. Wakin has Henry Segerstrom, realtor, former bean farmer, telling his new tenant, the Orange County Pacific Symphony. &#8220;The hall can do anything you guys can do.&#8221; That being so, I don&#8217;t see much &#8220;destiny&#8221; in the freelance orchestra that shivered its way through a Mahler symphony on its first night in its new hall (a performance norm in recent years) and mounted three half-baked performances of Lou Harrison under the rubric of an &#8220;American Composer Festival&#8221; last spring (while the Los Angeles Philharmonic&#8217;s &#8220;Minimalist Jukebox&#8221; festival, I might as well notice, was drawing worldwide notice and worldwide participation).</p>
<p>Mr. Kennicott, meanwhile, has our Gubernator Schwarzenegger, whose homeland offers such acoustic and architectural splendors as the Vienna Musikverein and that city&#8217;s Philharmonic, pronouncing the Segerstrom masterpiece as &#8220;the best in the world,&#8221; which ought to be of some use in the Angelides camp. Okay. So there were those pretty-good fireworks, a pretty-good sit-down dinner, and Pacific Symphony honcho John Forsyte (not so long ago of the Kalamazoo Symphony), now flashing his supersmile, mouthing off about comparisons with Boston and New York. The next few months at the new hall offer a few serious concerts, and lots of pop and ice shows. Next door, at the old hall, there is some opera, as usual.</p>
<p>The promotion circulating around Costa Mesa&#8217;s new hall, in the reams of wastepaper that have landed on my doorstep in recent weeks and in the civic bluster at the ceremonies in recent weeks, might lead one to believe that the construction of this large bubble of glassy glitz signals some kind of much-needed cultural advance for its area. I wish I could believe that, because I do believe that a major musical force in Orange County, with genuine musical talent at its core and energetic, enterprising programming as its purpose, can succeed as well as anywhere else in this interesting nation. Unfortunately, in Orange County, perhaps more than elsewhere, a preponderance of overambitious, unrealistic leadership has gotten there first. What I would suggest, while there is still some land available down there, is for someone to plant a few lima beans, wait a couple of years and start all over again.</p>
<p>Impossible? Check out the history of &#8220;Piano Spheres&#8221; and ask yourself once more.?</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>No Greater&#160;Attainment</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2006/09/no-greater-attainment/</link>
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		<pubDate>Thu, 21 Sep 2006 01:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=598</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[To Hell With Perfection Don Carlo is Verdi&#8217;s Everest, its peak shrouded, unattainable, magnificent. The Los Angeles Opera&#8217;s current version, at the Music Center through October 1, handily measures the company&#8217;s emergence as a major performing force since its previous stab at the work (April 1990, a quick, pathetic replacement for a scheduled Pique Dame), [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>To Hell With Perfection</p>
<p><i>Don Carlo</i> is Verdi&#8217;s Everest, its peak shrouded, unattainable, magnificent. The Los Angeles Opera&#8217;s current version, at the Music Center through October 1, handily measures the company&#8217;s emergence as a major performing force since its previous stab at the work (April 1990, a quick, pathetic replacement for a scheduled <i>Pique Dame</i>), ranking, by the same token, as its best Verdi since . . . well, since ever. The gorgeous physical production, dark as nobly shed blood, looks the way the music sounds. Philip II of Spain sings of the gloomy &#8220;stone vaults under the Escorial,&#8221; and John Gunter&#8217;s designs set those vaults to a dismal dance on their own that is just right. When the King collapses back into the folds of his throne, his royal presence diminished to a meager wisp in the strangulation of the Grand Inquisitor&#8217;s menacing tones, can any of us out front in the cavernous theater not share the chill, the sudden emptying of humanness that comes with the music, the bleakness forming a vacuum that drains us all? What is there in opera to match that moment? What more ardently proves the power of that kind of music to hold every listener by the knots in the spine and manipulate our willing bones beyond the power &#8211; beyond the need, even &#8211; to resist?</p>
<p>Whatever the magic, James Conlon and his orchestra achieved exactly that result at their opening <i>Don Carlo</i>, and if I had my way, I would post their achievement &#8211; which included the stupendous King Philip of Ferruccio Furlanetto and the Inquisitor of Eric Halvarson (like a pair of haggling contrabassoons), along with the chilling Eboli of Dolora Zajick, a couple of octaves higher, and the not-bad Carlo of Salvatore Licitra, much improved from his over-promoted days as Pavarotti redux &#8211; as the standard to which any and all modern opera companies might strive. This being Verdi&#8217;s longest and most crag-strewn opera, the perfect performance exists only in the sternest musicologist&#8217;s dreams, and the deviations between this or any contemporary staging and Verdi&#8217;s original intent add up to quite a list. The language &#8211; not French but Italian &#8211; is wrong. One whole act is missing. A ballet has been omitted (thank heaven), and a number of smaller cuts, more or less important, have been observed. If you let these things bother you, you&#8217;ll probably never witness even a halfway-satisfactory <i>Don Carlo</i> (which this one is, and more), and thereby you will miss one of opera&#8217;s greatest treasures.</p>
<p>Down Costa Mesa Way</p>
<p>The champagne &#8211; pink, mostly &#8211; flowed freely; the Orange County damsels pushed their hors d&#8217;oeuvres, doing their best not to trip over miles of video and light cables that turned the plaza into Sargasso. Like an elderly relative dolled up for the party but seated on the sidelines, the &#8220;old&#8221; Segerstrom Hall (a mere 19, actually) dangled a few strings of neon like last year&#8217;s costume jewelry. Attention, of course, was focused on the parvenu across the way, the Renée and Henry Segerstrom Concert Hall, the $200 million worth of glass bubble that opened its doors last Friday night for the first of an oddly situated set of events that will turn this Segerstrom real estate into more of a cultural center, needed or not. The best of the celebratory concerts, actually, will take place in the old hall. It&#8217;s just that operas and ballets are more celebratory than mere symphony concerts, and the new hall, like Disney, has no place for a pit.</p>
<p>And so the fanciest wingdings go on somewhere else: in the older Segerstrom, with its grandiose but wacko seating plan. Normally, bigtime concert halls go with bigtime symphony orchestras offering bigtime concert schedules (e.g., Disney Hall). The Orange County Pacific Symphony plays a far smaller schedule despite its dreams-of-glory gestures (e.g., last season&#8217;s European trip). Even beyond the small disaster near the end of last week&#8217;s inaugural concert, an electronic glitch whose origin is still under debate as I write, the orchestra&#8217;s performance of the Mahler First under Carl St. Clair was strictly small-scale: a bad horn night, for starters. The Pacific Symphony Board does a pretty good job of pretending like big time: lots of commissioning of &#8220;safe&#8221; composers. Everyone is careful not to mention St. Clair&#8217;s predecessor, Keith Clark, although his performance of Schönberg&#8217;s <i>Gurrelieder</i> was one of the area&#8217;s most famous fiascoes.</p>
<p>The new hall is pleasantly small, welcoming about 2,000 on seats of light-colored maple and bright-red fabric. The sound of the Mahler was clean and dry; I heard everything with proper clarity, but St. Clair&#8217;s performances are hard to remain awake for even at best. The new work, a set of García Lorca texts composed by William Bolcom for Plácido Domingo, was very much wide-awake, however: passionate music with humorous asides, set down with the consideration a superior composer can muster for what a great but aging singer can produce. Quite frankly, I expected something far kindlier; these are strong, gorgeous pieces, and I can only hope that Plácido has the generosity to pass them on into the repertory.</p>
<p>Sitting It Out</p>
<p>My attendance record at the Hollywood Bowl being no cause for shame most of the season, I allowed myself the indulgence of denying my company to Carl Orff&#8217;s <i>Carmina Burana</i>, which ended the &#8220;classical&#8221; portion of the season that final Thursday. The night had turned cold; the gin had run low; there are few works I despise more thoroughly, and for a greater number of reasons. Just the thought of this bespectacled, small-minded pedant amusing his Führer by constructing this lurid travesty, assuming the small fragments out of ancient German songbooks and twisting them into beer-hall jabberings as if to reinvent a new musical language, is offensive enough. The ugliness of this vulgar work would offend me even if the text were pure, serene and biblical; it is none of these. Listen to the exquisite original medieval &#8220;Burana&#8221; songs on disc and grieve for the fate of German art.</p>
<p>Earlier on, the program was the young Jefferson Friedman&#8217;s tone poem constructed in honor of the famous sculptural grouping at the Smithsonian <i>The Throne of the Third Heaven of the Nations&#8217; Millennium General Assembly</i>, the visionary creation by handyman William Hampton. Young (32) Friedman was on hand; he plans to incorporate his shiny, charming piece into a musical triptych honoring &#8220;outsider&#8221; artists and their inspirational, shimmering artworks. This one certainly does.?</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Opera As&#160;Toy</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2006/09/opera-as-toy/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2006/09/opera-as-toy/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 14 Sep 2006 01:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=597</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[The New Regime La Traviata was my first opera; wasn&#8217;t it everybody&#8217;s? Jan Peerce howled and wobbled; Jarmila Novotna sobbed. Nobody noticed whether the Metropolitan Opera Orchestra played in tune; from a vantage point in the standing room at the back of a Boston movie palace, it couldn&#8217;t have mattered much. The distance between that [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>The New Regime</p>
<p><i>La Traviata</i> was my first opera; wasn&#8217;t it everybody&#8217;s? Jan Peerce howled and wobbled; Jarmila Novotna sobbed. Nobody noticed whether the Metropolitan Opera Orchestra played in tune; from a vantage point in the standing room at the back of a Boston movie palace, it couldn&#8217;t have mattered much. The distance between that glorious Saturday afternoon and last week&#8217;s was measurable in more than miles. It became apparent about two minutes into the exquisitely paced, shaded performance of the sad, <i>sad</i> Prelude under the company&#8217;s new music director, James Conlon. It began to widen with the first words of greeting from the company&#8217;s new Violetta, Renée Fleming of the gorgeous, floating tones but in more gorgeous, floating tones even by her usual standards. It burst into incandescence as that seductive hunk of Latino tenor, Rolando Villazón, shaped the first phrase of his &#8220;Un dì felice&#8221; into the musical equivalent of diamonds and rubies.</p>
<p>Suddenly it became clear why people fish their black tie out of mothballs on a sweltering Saturday to parade around like penguins in a stuffy lobby, spill drinks on one another, shriek like boobies when high notes resound, and dump $6 million moneybags toward the building of some 18-hour proto-Freudian production far down the line, all just to prove that the magic word &#8220;Ring&#8221; holds the same thrall over humankind&#8217;s gold as it did in Wagner&#8217;s hands 150 years ago. The power that makes otherwise rational people behave this way, including now and then the writer of these words, became once again audible when Fleming and Villazón merged tonsils in that Act 1 duet from Verdi&#8217;s <i>La Traviata</i>, and then went on to finish the work in like fashion. It didn&#8217;t even matter that the production was the same clunky stagecraft that Momma Domingo had inflicted upon the Chandler Pavilion in two previous seasons, with its overpopulated floor and clotted action patterns &#8211; which she had replaced one time only with an even more unconscionable updating. This time around, with musical forces such as these onstage and on the podium, Verdi conquered all.</p>
<p>The Other Coast</p>
<p>Kyle Gann (Dallas, 1955- ) is a composer (microtonal; music with complex tempo structures); musicologist (late-20th-century American music); &#8212;&#8212;&#8211;<br />
AUTHOR of books with a leaning toward American eccentric composers (Conlon Nancarrow, La Monte Young); associate professor at Bard College; writer of PostClassic, a web log at Arts Journal; and music critic (1986-2005) at our associate publication <i>The Village Voice</i>. <i>Music Downtown</i> (UC Press, $19.95) contains about 100 of Gann&#8217;s 500 <i>Voice</i> articles. A valuable insight into his state of mind, and into his cloudless-clear expressive style, is his September 8 blog entry, &#8220;Ignoring Progress&#8221; (www.artsjournal.com/postclassic/), his answer to a questioner who insists that music history must entail growth in stylistic complexity, that every generation of composers inevitably builds on the subtlety and sophistication of the preceding generation.</p>
<p>Subtly applying his own views as an acupuncturist might his set of needles, Gann proceeds to devastate his questioner&#8217;s straight-line view of history, tracing the rise and fall of relationships between the stylistic curve of, say, the early Aaron Copland and the social conditions surrounding his ventures into cowboy ballets at one time and nontonal chamber music at another, and adapting his more curvaceous view of history to The Way Things Actually Are &#8211; in music and elsewhere as well. His path in this one brief but valuable article leads to the nearly 300 pages of <i>Music Downtown</i>, a tough but exhilarating panorama of a turbulent time and place in our music, still very much aboil &#8211; although its most eloquent <i>Voice</i> has undergone something of a diminuendo in its coverage of serious new music.</p>
<p>I suppose I need to invoke full disclosure along about here, not only about my own place within this organization but also about my own recent book that is also largely a collection of published articles originally printed out of the same corporate ink pot. But somehow the contrast between my <i>So I&#8217;ve Heard</i> and Kyle&#8217;s collection feels about as contentious as the struggle between a set of banana-cream-pie how-tos and Kyle&#8217;s uncle&#8217;s crippling chili recipe (also on the site). I scarcely know Kyle Gann, but I would proudly share a bookshelf with this and all his books.</p>
<p>Downtown music, as I glean from the many definitions set forth or implied in Gann&#8217;s collection, is the music that happens in the area of Manhattan below 14th Street &#8211; but spills over into Brooklyn, Queens, San Diego and any other fertile land where the spirit can thrive, where the venues are small but barely adequate to the ardor of the crowds. The music is what it is; one of Gann&#8217;s delicious definitions early on is &#8220;that it is only as good as it sounds.&#8221; But that is already distinction enough to set it apart from &#8220;Uptown&#8221; music, which exists on charts and diagrams that can be published and pored over by critics and doesn&#8217;t really need hearing at all. The ranks of &#8220;Uptown Composers,&#8221; says Gann, embrace the likes of Elliott Carter and Milton Babbitt. There is a &#8220;Midtown&#8221; subgroup, he adds, more likely to bear the taint of Juilliard than the Uptowners&#8217; Columbia: John Corigliano, Joan Tower and Bill Bolcom, for example. John Cage, who died before assuming the mantle, is of course the acknowledged Saint of Downtown. I like to let myself believe that my own 15 pages on John Cage qualify me for at least part-time membership in Kyle&#8217;s Downtown club.</p>
<p>It&#8217;s in the matter of journalistic criticism &#8211; meaning to a New York-based writer, of course, the <i>Times</i> &#8211; that Gann&#8217;s venom flows full and deep. Most of his collected writing is from his earlier years at <i>The Voice</i>, when he pretty much had the quality-criticism scene to himself. Alex Ross hadn&#8217;t yet come to <i>The New Yorker</i> nor Jeremy Eichler to the <i>Times</i>. Uptown criticism (&#8220;the heroism-detecting machine&#8221;) raged full force. The death of Cage in August 1992 loosed a torrent of vitriol from the New York press comparable to that attendant on the passing of any Nazi tyrant. Gann, of course, screamed back, and then wrote his own John Cage obituary &#8211; the final pages in his book &#8211; which you have to read, and then go back and read again, and come away aware that, even now, in this shaky, maligned and underpopulated profession that Kyle Gann and I and a few others attempt to practice, there are things worth saying and ways in which to say them. </p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Concerto&#160;Conversations</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2006/09/concerto-conversations/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2006/09/concerto-conversations/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 07 Sep 2006 00:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=596</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Concert Mastery The annual schizophrenic week of the music season is upon us: the time of overlap that ordains the alternation of Hollywood Bowl picnic supper one night and grand opera, with mandatory matching socks, at the Music Center&#8217;s Dorothy Chandler Pavilion, the next. The transition this time has been neatly handled; nothing paves the [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Concert Mastery</p>
<p>The annual schizophrenic week of the music season is upon us: the time of overlap that ordains the alternation of Hollywood Bowl picnic supper one night and grand opera, with mandatory matching socks, at the Music Center&#8217;s Dorothy Chandler Pavilion, the next. The transition this time has been neatly handled; nothing paves the path from the wordless passions of the concert stage to the explicit dynamics of the dying heroine better than a good, lusty concerto. Last week&#8217;s Bowl programming was notably generous in that regard. You mightn&#8217;t have gotten that idea from the local press, but it was there nonetheless.</p>
<p>Something about the Brahms Violin Concerto and the Bowl come together to overcome my reservations about the place and my distaste for the work itself. It has always been that way. There is a memory of a magical evening &#8211; Carlo Maria Giulini conducting, Itzhak Perlman as soloist, sometime around 1983 &#8211; that I invoke on my inner Victrola at times of stress; it&#8217;s always there for me. Last week&#8217;s performance may not have reached that luxurious eloquence, but it was splendid on its own level. Martin Chalifour, the Philharmonic&#8217;s all-knowing concertmaster, was the soloist, using his exceptional sense of ensemble to play in and around his colleagues. Xian Zhang, the evening&#8217;s guest conductor, just about half Chalifour&#8217;s height, concocted an admirable rapport between soloist and orchestra, something as agreeable to hear as to watch on the video screens (intelligently used this once). Much has been made of Ms. Zhang&#8217;s quick success as the New York Philharmonic&#8217;s associate conductor; it was somewhat demeaning to bring her all the way here to divide labors on a concerto and deliver nothing more on her own than a flashy Prokofiev ballet. More, please.</p>
<p>Beethoven&#8217;s First Piano Concerto was the work at hand at the Bowl two nights later, music so unproblematically likable that its genuine points of subtlety often pass by unnoticed. There are many: abrupt changes of key brought on rudely and dramatically within this otherwise polite and undramatic context; a sudden prospect of paradise as the solo clarinet takes hold in the slow movement; a delicious thumbing of the nose as the closing measures knock you off your seat. Maybe your grandmother had the Beethoven First in her piano lessons at the academy, but there&#8217;s more to the work than that, and Ingrid Fliter, that marvelous prizewinner who burst upon us last spring as a substitute for Martha Argerich (which is a career in itself), proved at the Bowl that her span of insights, her command of the work&#8217;s expressive range, was more than a mere one-shot. Our Philharmonic&#8217;s own diminutive assistant-about-to-become-associate conductor, Alexander Mickelthwate, was the capable collaborator.</p>
<p>On his own, Mickelthwate led the Shostakovich Fifth Symphony in a manner tense and original. Popular as the work has become &#8211; &#8220;to its detriment and maybe ours&#8221; do I hear someone whisper? &#8211; the votes are not yet counted on the &#8220;definitive&#8221; (hateful word) Shostakovich Fifth, from the broad, dark panoramas outlined in Kurt Sanderling&#8217;s hourlong Philharmonic performance, which I cherish on tapes, from the &#8217;80s, to Zubin Mehta&#8217;s zippy vulgarity, which he still inflicts. From Mickelthwate the other night, I heard a clear, reasoned approach to the Fifth, nicely restrained so that the structural details &#8211; the simplicity in the way large, forceful themes metamorphose to jagged versions of themselves &#8211; stood out under the bright orchestration. Intrusions, including, at a crucial point in the slow movement, a garrulous pack of cruising coyotes, reminded us that summer still had some time remaining, and it was overall a fine night to be at the Bowl.</p>
<p>Words&#8217; Worth</p>
<p>I had my own reasons for feeling this way; others had others. In last Thursday&#8217;s <i>Times</i>, I learned from the words of one Adam Baer that Martin Chalifour &#8220;remained keenly aware of how to perform as a team player&#8221; and shared &#8220;rhythmic landings [!] with Zhang while drawing rich-sounding [<i>nonexistent</i>] arpeggios from his instrument.&#8221; The slow movement, our man in Box 830 seems to have noticed, was &#8220;sung lyrically, with a touch of speed [<i>huh?</i>],&#8221; which sounds to me like some kind of disagreement in tempo. No, it sounds like somebody using words for no real reason.</p>
<p>Look around, as many do nowadays, at the news of classical music&#8217;s sad decline in popularity, at the box office and at the now-disappearing record store; sooner or later, some of the blame descends upon the pall of ignorance that envelops the consuming public. Who&#8217;s around these days to write to the 12,000 people who heard Chalifour&#8217;s moving and beautiful version of the Brahms Concerto and the Prokofiev ballet music on a balmy night &#8211; or to the nearly 7,000 who heard this marvelous young Argentine pianist (&#8220;ending long phrases not with a bang but with a Mozartean rounding-off&#8221;) and our own superb young conductor doing great Beethoven and Shostakovich &#8211; and come back in the city&#8217;s one and only culturally responsive newspaper to help them put a value on what they heard and why? The jilted listeners find, instead, the gibberish of an Adam Baer or a Chris Pasles, or a couple of other preening dilettantes of comparable brainpower who throw a lot of artsy words around at the cultural life of this growing community, and nobody cares about stuffing a rag into their word processors.</p>
<p>I am a member of an endangered species. Encountering dangerous members of the species makes me frightened or sick, especially at 82. I happen to think that I am better than a lot of them, on the strength of having studied with superior teachers and stayed awake in their classrooms. (The best of them, Joseph Kerman, wrote a book whose title I stole for this article. I also dedicated my own recent book to him.) The best of the active critics are Mark Swed, Alex Ross and, I guess, myself. All three of us have four-letter names. But so does Adam Baer, so this proves nothing.?</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Seasonal&#160;Malfeasance</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2006/08/seasonal-malfeasance/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2006/08/seasonal-malfeasance/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 30 Aug 2006 22:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=595</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[One of a Kind Few musical works of consequence have endured the variety of treatment, ranging from the ecstatic to the abusive, that befalls Antonio Vivaldi&#8217;s The Four Seasons. Even though its time in the spotlight has been relatively brief (composed around 1715, it never really attracted notice until some 200 years later), the musical [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>One of a Kind</p>
<p>Few musical works of consequence have endured the variety of treatment, ranging from the ecstatic to the abusive, that befalls Antonio Vivaldi&#8217;s <i>The Four Seasons</i>. Even though its time in the spotlight has been relatively brief (composed around 1715, it never really attracted notice until some 200 years later), the musical world has made up for lost time with plenty to spare. The work&#8217;s shabby treatment at the Hollywood Bowl last week, dubbed &#8220;a mess&#8221; far too kindly by the <i>Times</i>&#8216; Mark Swed, was by no means the worst misuse visited upon this otherwise charming, imaginative, inventive and infinitely beautiful music.</p>
<p>What is there about <i>The Seasons</i> that invites such wanton tampering &#8211; a transformation at the Bowl into a raucous and out-of-focus salsa travesty, elsewhere mutations into a Yiddish-cum-klezmer songfest, fodder for a koto-based rock band, a tango fest, tunes to download to your cell phone? Nobody has vented this violence on any other of Vivaldi&#8217;s 600 concerti or those of Corelli or Geminiani. Vivaldi here stands forth as the victim of his own ingenuity, the &#8212;&#8212;&#8211;<br />
AUTHOR of a one-of-a-kind set of serenely simple-minded sonnets celebrating the rural life during the passing of the seasons, and of the musical settings to accompany those verses day by day. There is nothing particularly earthshaking in the poems, nor scenic in their scene painting; dogs bark, flies buzz, thunder roars, warm feelings at the fireside are underscored by a warm-hearted tune. The pictorial elements are common stuff; they abound in poems and pictures of the time, including the deservedly famous set by Boucher. Other composers have tried their hands at programmatic effects, often with much more sophisticated musical usage &#8211; the &#8220;Biblical Sonatas&#8221; of Johann Kuhnau, for example, in which the stone from David&#8217;s sling all but hits you in your eye. Yet it&#8217;s the pretty tunes of Vivaldi that light the lights.</p>
<p>Kuhnau and Vivaldi make their programmatic points far better on their own than all the interfering forces the other night from Jimmy Bosch&#8217;s Salsa Dura band and the acrobatic fiddling of Pekka Kuusisto (which was, at least, cute if painfully overdrawn). It was most of all depressing to find in the middle of all this conductor Nicholas McGegan, the excellent Britisher who has led some of the most honest and forthright performances of music of this genre &#8211; on discs and even at the Bowl. For about five minutes in this grossly over-calculated concert, in fact, there was a brief visitation by the McGegan of old: the slow movement of a Handel concerto (Opus 3 No. 2), with the solo oboe of Anne Marie Gabriele fashioning a silver thread directly to the stars, and the strings around her in hushed reverence.</p>
<p>Come to think of it, it strikes me that the classical-music audience this summer has been shortchanged more than this once, in that several &#8220;Classical Nights&#8221; among the promised &#8220;Symphonies Under the Stars&#8221; have turned into something more like &#8220;Perversions Under the Planets.&#8221; First there was the night of <i>Amadeus</i>, too much of that particular dramatic travesty luridly read, too little music. There followed a dance program of shredded Bach bits. Then came this Vivaldi, and on September 12 comes a program of film bits conducted not by John Mauceri &#8211; who knows how to vitalize this kind of presentation &#8211; but by Leonard Slatkin, who surely must have other music to offer. Four &#8220;classic&#8221; nights out of 10 this summer turn out &#8220;classic&#8221; only by the most generous stretch of the imagination.</p>
<p>Angels in America</p>
<p>In these doleful days of the disappearing disc, there is infinite heartsease in the latest treasure from Harmonia Mundi, wherein Anonymous 4, that superlative distaff ensemble that first sang its way into our hearts via the abstruse meanderings of ancient polyphonies, lately turns its collective imagination and glorious intonation toward our own indigenous lore. <i>Gloryland</i> is their second disc, after <i>American Angels</i> (2003), to re-create the heritage of American gospel, revival and rural folk song; the new issue adds the artful collaboration of violinist Darol Anger and Mike Marshall on mandolins and guitar.</p>
<p>It&#8217;s difficult to describe the beauty of these two discs, simply because my eyes fill and I can&#8217;t see to type. The purity of the four voices &#8211; Marsha Genensky, Susan Hellauer, Jacqueline Horner (relatively new to the group) and Johanna Maria Rose &#8211; renders the lines of the 14th-century polyphonies astonishingly clear without compromising the harmonies toward a later style. Some of that identity with very old musical textures carries over here as well; naive as those old revival singers may have been, their singing reached toward an artistry, and there are counterpoints in these old hymnals and other collections that combine into sonorities simply beautiful by any measurement. ?I defy anyone to make his or her way through No. 5, the gospel song &#8220;Where we&#8217;ll never grow old,&#8221; without picking up the needle, or pushing the button &#8211; or whatever it is that people do these days &#8211; to play the song once again, and then again.</p>
<p>What astounds me no less is the richness in the solo singing: the way Bronx-born Susan, to cite one example of many, sings of &#8220;The Wagoner&#8217;s Lad&#8221; with the folkish accent so firmly in control and, just as firmly, the exact harmonic &#8220;bending&#8221; of every phrase. I&#8217;ve admired this quality in Anonymous 4 from the start, and it&#8217;s gratifying to hear them carry it intact from one kind of music, across centuries and a wide ocean, to another. Beyond these highfalutin words: This is a wondrous, essential, fabulous collection. If all this talk about the end of the disc era has slowed your collecting zeal, wait out this one final spark of life. After all, these songs were meant to restore the faith.?</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Past&#160;Particles</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2006/08/past-particles/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2006/08/past-particles/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 23 Aug 2006 22:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=594</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Backward, Turn Backward At 14, the precocious Wolfgang Mozart had already turned out 10 symphonies, four operas, three concertos, masses, sonatas, a string quartet and a basket of serenades. At that age, the slowpoke Jay Greenberg has ground out a mere five symphonies, one chamber work and a clutch of overtures. True, his time has [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Backward, Turn Backward</p>
<p>At 14, the precocious Wolfgang Mozart had already turned out 10 symphonies, four operas, three concertos, masses, sonatas, a string quartet and a basket of serenades. At that age, the slowpoke Jay Greenberg has ground out a mere five symphonies, one chamber work and a clutch of overtures. True, his time has also been taken up in newspaper interviews (<i>The New York Times</i>, August 13), in tossing a ball around for the cameras to assert his American-boyishness, and, one assumes, in listening to and jotting down juicy passages from the grand symphonic repertory out of which to build his own oncoming glory.</p>
<p>That commodity is already well-launched. The <i>Times</i> article strikes a proper tone of awe toward a prodigy who demanded his own cello at 3 and invented his own notation system to compose for it. He soaks up the musical world around him, best of all the &#8220;Mars&#8221; music from Holst&#8217;s <i>The Planets</i> and &#8211; sure enough &#8211; succeeds in regurgitating large clods of his own in that same musical style. Now the world has been endowed with a big chance to meet young Jay Greenberg and his music. On the Sony Classical label, once valuable for bringing us the best experimental and new music, there is now a full hour of Jay Greenberg&#8217;s expertly rewriting the mannerisms and footprints of his musical past: a Fifth Symphony and a String Quintet. &#8220;For him it is 1904,&#8221; marvels one interviewer, &#8220;and anything is possible.&#8221;</p>
<p>Yes, 1904. Let&#8217;s see: The young Rachmaninoff pokes around in the trash bins for discarded melodic gambits. His countryman Rimsky-Korsakov collects bits of tinsel for his hootchy-kootch Oriental numbers. Jolly old Sir Edward Elgar and his dour colleague Jean Sibelius busily stir in the musical equivalent of cornstarch to darken and thicken the orchestration of their sonic landscapes; on the Continent, Max Reger&#8217;s fugues and canons accomplish the same. Little do any of these believe that, a century later, an earnest young New York schoolboy will still be constructing overtures and symphonies with the same melodic turgidity, building the same tottering musical structures out of counterpoints that ultimately self-strangle on their own complexity and collapse under the weight of their own fragility.</p>
<p>The shadow of Mozart usually falls across reports of latter-day wonder-kids; it doesn&#8217;t in Matthew Gurewitsch&#8217;s <i>Times</i> piece on Greenberg, but I&#8217;m sure it lurks close at hand. The difference, however, is obvious. Mozart composed in the latest manner of his day, not in the manner of 1904, or whatever its equivalent throwback at the time. &#8220;I think originality is way overprized,&#8221; says Sam Adler, one of Greenberg&#8217;s teachers, in the article. There is nothing wrong, in other words, with expending the cost of a Juilliard education in learning how to recompose Brahms counterpoints in a Sibelius orchestration and, thus, assuring the world that modern music doesn&#8217;t matter. &#8220;The allegros [in the Greenberg Fifth] have the swashbuckling appeal of movie music,&#8221; writes Gurewitsch, and he&#8217;s wrong there too. The best movie music these days has moved far ahead of the swashbuckling glop that fills out most of this symphony. Even the clever score of a lightweight movie like <i>Wordplay</i> transcends what &#8220;movie music&#8221; used to portend. And <i>Crash</i> takes it miles further still; so much for movie music as metaphor. If originality be overprized these days, Sam Adler, so is the blatant practice of helping yourself to other people&#8217;s music.</p>
<p>Mahler Mania</p>
<p>Sometimes I start to think that everything at the Hollywood Bowl is just as right as right can be: that the sound quality is fine, that the lights and the teevee are splendid, and that the food guys have been pared down to minimum interference. Then something happens like the occurrence last Thursday, when the Goodyear blimp took to the sky over the Bowl directly at the start of Beethoven&#8217;s <i>Coriolan</i> Overture, and buzzed the space with its racket and its neon signage for nearly half the length of the overture &#8211; not a casual passing but a deliberate and extended interference. Even if Goodyear were the only product on the market, I would drive on rims; we are owed an apology.</p>
<p>Edo de Waart was the guest conductor, and Mahler&#8217;s First Symphony the evening&#8217;s major offering. The Dutch have Mahler in their bones; always have and always will. It may be because of the early friendship between Mahler and Amsterdam&#8217;s Willem Mengelberg: a unique matchup between genuinely erratic personalities. It might be something deeper that I won&#8217;t try to explain, but in Amsterdam last year for the first time in my life, I felt Mahler&#8217;s closeness. I feel it in the first movement &#8211; the quirks, the invasions by clouds of cuckoos &#8211; and in the third movement with its frenetic klezmer band that comes and goes. Maybe it was my imagination, but I think de Waart agreed with me on these particular quirks. Something in this symphony, with all its rudeness of language and its tendency to chew its cabbage a few extra times &#8211; which de Waart nicely controlled by eliminating a couple of repeats &#8211; comes very close to a listener&#8217;s ear in a properly measured performance. That&#8217;s what happened this time around.?</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Concertos on Land, Fire&#160;Water</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2006/08/concertos-on-land-fire-water/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2006/08/concertos-on-land-fire-water/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 16 Aug 2006 19:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=593</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Earthbound What is there to say about the Mendelssohn Violin Concerto? Its music evokes the full vocabulary of bland, useless adjectives: well-balanced, elegantly detailed, perfect. On my well-stocked shelves of critical writing I find no poisoned pen aimed against the work. Even that teeming battleground, Nicolas Slonimsky&#8217;s Lexicon of Musical Invective, provides nary a harsh [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Earthbound</p>
<p>What is there to say about the Mendelssohn Violin Concerto? Its music evokes the full vocabulary of bland, useless adjectives: well-balanced, elegantly detailed, perfect. On my well-stocked shelves of critical writing I find no poisoned pen aimed against the work. Even that teeming battleground, Nicolas Slonimsky&#8217;s <i>Lexicon of Musical Invective</i>, provides nary a harsh word.</p>
<p>Yet the music disturbs the senses. At the sudden slippage into a minor key in the slow section, you justifiably catch your breath; a dedicated soloist &#8211; Hilary Hahn at the Hollywood Bowl last week &#8211; has heartfelt confidences to share, and speaks them with suddenly acquired passion. The moment soon passes, but during its time it has elevated the entire work onto a new plane. Our trampled emotions need the sheer giggling delight of Mendelssohn&#8217;s last movement &#8211; most of all that magical flight of fancy when he blends his fairyland theme with one that is slower, more reflective, and, miraculously, makes the two contrasting tunes stick together &#8211; to get things into balance once again.</p>
<p>Hilary Hahn has pushed her way through the hordes of sloe-eyed, cute teenage fiddlers to emerge, at 26, a musician of intelligence and consequence. Her journey has been well managed; you can trace it on discs, from the Bach she performed three years ago with the L.A. Chamber Orchestra to the remarkable intellectual breadth she brought to the grandiloquent sprawl of the Elgar concerto a year later. Splendid teachers have guided her hands in command of her instrument, but you get the feeling that the brain that guides her playing is her own. So was the marvelous sense of conversation she generated with conductor Hugh Wolff and the Philharmonic.</p>
<p>Burnt Offering</p>
<p>Sad the lot of Tchaikovsky&#8217;s First Piano Concerto, which usually turns up at the Bowl on one of the fireworks nights and, thus, is relegated to the position of curtain raiser for the <i>1812 Overture</i> &#8211; a lowliness of stature I would not wish upon any music whatsoever within my cognition. The piece rides around over a mass of self-contradiction; &#8220;bad, trivial, common,&#8221; raged Nicholas Rubinstein, who two years later sang Tchaikovsky&#8217;s praise to the rich Russian widow to gain funding for his Conservatory. Self-contradiction lies at the heart of the work itself: a catchall of disconnections and empty gestures, agreeable moments that never return, other moments that merely kill time, like so much Some Assembly Required that still hasn&#8217;t happened.</p>
<p>Why is the work popular? The first of the unassembled parts turned into a pretty pop tune (&#8220;Tonight We Love&#8221;), and the clangorous chords underlying that tune are a popular notion of what piano virtuosity is supposed to sound like. The slow movement dissolves into the kind of Mendelssohnian scampering that Mendelssohn accomplished far better. Only at the end, in the finger-busting octave passage before the return of the Big Tune (which even Vladimir Horowitz managed to fudge on most of his several recordings, to the delight of those who have lusted after his crown) does it begin to sound like the grand, romantic concerto that the overambitious 34-year-old composer fancied himself to be writing. Yet the work rides on its aura of romantic blather and, I suppose, on its fame: less deservedly so than any work of its proportions I can name.</p>
<p>Yet, as I was saying, it brings on the fireworks in the <i>1812</i>, and I do not let a Bowl season go by without such adventure. If you don&#8217;t know, or care to know, about the Bowl&#8217;s fireworks, I cannot be of much help; you have to be there. You have to marvel at the complexity of the structures over the top of the Bowl that spell out building shapes and, on Tchaikovsky night, the flags and insignia of the warring Czarist and Napoleonic forces as they bring about an amazing visual counterpart to Tchaikovsky&#8217;s cornball counterpoint. Most of all, you sit back in astonishment at the rhythmic precision of the firings: not only the downbeats but, amazingly enough, the notes in between. &#8220;Pyro spectaculars by Souza; Gene Evans, special effects consultant&#8221; is all the program tells us about this wizardry; I suspect the emergence of an authentic art form, but maybe it&#8217;s just the kid in me.</p>
<p>Afloat Without Conductor</p>
<p>The fountain tricks at intermission at the &#8220;Grand Performances&#8221; in California Plaza downtown are remarkably similar to the Bowl&#8217;s fireworks, if on a more modest level. The air traffic overhead is similar to that at the Bowl but on a more extravagant level; buses and trucks along Grand Avenue add to the obbligato. Once every summer, at least, it is worth enduring the impossibilities of the setting to take in the annual concert by the excellent Mládí Chamber Orchestra, as I did last Saturday. At least my harsh words last year have caused management to abandon the ludicrous practice of a segue from the live music to recorded pop at intermission and at the end. Never doubt the power of the press.</p>
<p>&#8220;Mládí&#8221; was Janácek&#8217;s work, meaning &#8220;Youth,&#8221; and the small orchestra, which functions without conductor, played with its usual exuberance and clarity: a crisp and clean Prokofiev &#8220;Classical&#8221; and a suite from the Stravinsky <i>Pulcinella</i>. In between, the evening was rendered divine by Donald Foster&#8217;s clarinet in Mozart&#8217;s Clarinet Concerto, where suddenly all other sounds anywhere around seemed suspended and nothing else could matter. That&#8217;s Mozart for you.</p>
<p><i>Obiter dictum:</i> Something else that <i>did</i> matter was the sound of the string bass of Christian McBride, at the Wednesday-night jazz program back at the Bowl, which &#8211; I admit with some shame &#8211; was the first of the series I&#8217;d gotten to this summer. McBride is the Philharmonic&#8217;s new creative chair for jazz, and the glory trail of his career runs at least as far back as 1990. What I heard the other night wasn&#8217;t merely a matter of my visit to another category. The deep pulse of McBride&#8217;s instrument was a bass of richness not before known to me; its infiltration into the sounds of the others in his band &#8211; Ron Blake&#8217;s saxophones, Terreon Gully&#8217;s drums, even Geoffrey Keezer&#8217;s keyboards &#8211; was something I could easily share. His set was one of three on the program, with Joshua Redman and Herbie Hancock, but the sound that followed me home was the bass of Christian McBride.?</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Songs Sad and&#160;Seasonal</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2006/08/songs-sad-and-seasonal/</link>
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		<pubDate>Wed, 09 Aug 2006 19:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=592</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Molar Malaise There are moments in Hector Berlioz&#8217;s music when the harmonies become so clumsy, so befuddled in the sheer ugliness of their sound, that the mere progression around a simple turn of phrase starts to throb like a toothache &#8211; especially when, as with mine, the teeth are new. But then you immediately realize [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Molar Malaise</p>
<p>There are moments in Hector Berlioz&#8217;s music when the harmonies become so clumsy, so befuddled in the sheer ugliness of their sound, that the mere progression around a simple turn of phrase starts to throb like a toothache &#8211; especially when, as with mine, the teeth are new. But then you immediately realize &#8211; or I do, anyhow &#8211; that the downright arrogance of these passages somehow makes up for these lapses of musical common sense, and that Berlioz&#8217;s harmonic peccadilloes come from his having studied music on the guitar (rather than a proper concert instrument), where he often was induced to leave out the middle notes of chords and create those empty, rude chordal tones in which the <i>Grand Funeral and Triumphal Symphony</i>, exhumed last week by Bramwell Tovey and the Philharmonic out of the Good Lord knows where, so agonizingly abounds. (To students in search of paradigms for the overstuffed Berlioz style at its most flamboyantly impenetrable, I recommend that last sentence.)</p>
<p>You will journey far through music&#8217;s realm before encountering the like of this woolly not-quite-masterwork, which the Philharmonic, along with most of us, encountered for the first time ever at these recent Bowl concerts. As augmented by a local brass contingent from Granada Hills High School and the Pacific Chorale, with the noisemaking forces bolstered by a glorious gadget (bells and other percussion, dolled up with banners and feathers and bearing the grandiose title of Jingling Johnny &#8211; or Turkish Crescent or Pavillon Chinois, depending how you shake it), the work turns out a conglomeration of march patterns, a wordless &#8220;funeral oration&#8221; for solo trombone, and a final &#8220;apothéose&#8221; of high-level carrying-on, including a choral invocation of &#8220;glory and respect to the sublime victims of the Fatherland&#8217;s fallen!!!&#8221; Apparently, they knew how to do those things pretty well back in 1840, but I&#8217;m also willing to bet that an appropriate musical setting of some recent presidential press conferences (your choice) might very well end up sounding like certain passages in Monsieur Berlioz&#8217;s <i>Grande Symphonie</i>.</p>
<p>Let me tell you about Bramwell Tovey. He&#8217;s a Brit, as you might guess, but no apparent relation to Sir Donald, the eloquent Scotsman who so influenced my own writing back when. He comes out of a Salvation Army background, which explains his larrupin&#8217; success with the massed brass on the Berlioz half of the program, and the genuine audience-reaching charm of his introductory words to this half, which makes him an obvious candidate to replace the about-to-retire John Mauceri as the Bowl&#8217;s master-of-all-imagination. Beyond that he has a serious side, as conductor of the Winnipeg Symphony, where he has introduced quite an impressive program of new music to that chill and windswept city. He began last week&#8217;s programs (given on both Tuesday and Thursday; I heard the second) with a substantial, tightly controlled Beethoven Fifth: not at all sloppy, as I was told the Tuesday performance had been, but clearheaded and cumulative. It had a single flaw but a common one: a failure to repeat the last-movement exposition, which robs the symphony&#8217;s glorious peroration of the last full measure of grandeur.</p>
<p>All Seasons</p>
<p>Having lived through a time &#8211; pre-1948, let&#8217;s say &#8211; when Vivaldi&#8217;s <i>The Four Seasons</i> was a musical entity known only to a few desiccated musicologists, I find it somewhat disconcerting, but surely delightful, to encounter the work showing up in a broad repertory, including a salsa version on the Bowl agenda next week and the ring tones of the cell phone of a friend otherwise unreached by the musical attainments of the High Baroque. I wasn&#8217;t aware of any potent shock of recognition sweeping through the John Anson Ford Amphitheater last Sunday night as our excellent local ensemble Musica Angelica explored Vivaldi&#8217;s landscape in its &#8220;normal&#8221; scoring, with all its picturesque seductions nicely underlined. None was necessary. Elizabeth Blumenstock&#8217;s solo violin contributed the most expressive singing of any musical event I happened upon during the week &#8211; operatic cast, solo trombone, whatever. The Angelica ensemble, succumbing to her example, played &#8211; well, without belaboring the matter, as angels might. Only a recalcitrant amplification system added a touch of the satanic: Was it needed at all?</p>
<p>For its annual summer-season opera, the Music Academy of the West has a long reputation for coming up with some whiz-bang repertory in performances of comparable quality, to reward the horror of what usually turns out a 90-mile bumper-to-bumper drive into Santa Barbara&#8217;s Fiesta Weekend. This year&#8217;s opera was Rossini&#8217;s <i>Il Viaggio a Reims</i>, and while there are valid reasons for arguing that the work isn&#8217;t much of an opera at all, those demurrers become less important once the music starts. The opera dates from 1825, and is basically a bootlicking piece to honor the coronation of France&#8217;s Charles X, with a lot of elegant people gathered on their way to the coronation, enduring foul-ups amorous and otherwise, finally deciding that none of them matters and singing to honor the new king. The best of the music &#8211; especially a splendid chorus-and-ensemble piece that made up most of Act 2 in the original &#8211; later got reused in Rossini&#8217;s <i>Le Comte Ory</i>, a far better work. Why didn&#8217;t they do that one instead?</p>
<p>That <i>Il Viaggio</i> exists at all today is due to some masterful cobbling activity by the Rossini Foundation, based in Pesaro, the composer&#8217;s birthplace, which reassembled the score from scattered manuscripts and produced the famous performance I saw in 1984, under Claudio Abbado with an all-star cast. Brave souls, even of less than all-star quality, have kept the work in circulation since that illustrious resurrection, but the recording of that event remains to shame them all, and so it was last weekend. I heard pretty voices, a lively orchestra under Christopher Larkin, an ensemble cast deployed by director Casey Stangl (honest!) around Allen Moyer&#8217;s serviceable but bland stage set in the airless Lobero Theater. I didn&#8217;t hear a single trill in proper Rossinian style, or a long and lovely phrase delivered with a sense of line with shading and blossoming and shape. In the audience sat the great Marilyn Horne, who is the Music Academy&#8217;s Voice Program director in the tradition of the school&#8217;s founding divinities Lotte Lehmann, Martial Singher and Maurice Abravanel. I&#8217;m sure she knew how much ground had been covered in presenting this altogether pleasant evening of opera, and how much ground remained to be covered.?</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>How Some Birds Changed Sibelius and My&#160;Life</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2006/08/how-some-birds-changed-sibelius-and-my-life/</link>
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		<pubDate>Wed, 02 Aug 2006 22:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=591</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Magnificent Obsession Those of you who have been following this page for any length of time, and are easily shocked, are advised to direct your gaze elsewhere this week, because my mood, which no amount of medication in my well-stocked cabinet is able to divert, seems irrevocably fastened on an obsession to break out in [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Magnificent Obsession</p>
<p>Those of you who have been following this page for any length of time, and are easily shocked, are advised to direct your gaze elsewhere this week, because my mood, which no amount of medication in my well-stocked cabinet is able to divert, seems irrevocably fastened on an obsession to break out in praise of &#8211; if you&#8217;re ready &#8211; Jean Sibelius. That dour Finn, and his equally dour music, turn up frequently around here as matter for excoriation; so, especially, does his Violin Concerto, dourest of all. Yet that very work was on at the Hollywood Bowl a week ago; I found the performance magnificent, the setting more so, and perhaps the circumstances also contributed. All I know is that it was one of the best events I have experienced at the Bowl, going back to . . . well, how about Giulini and Perlman playing the Brahms Concerto (another work I am sometimes given to deplore) in, I think, 1982.</p>
<p>My box mate at last week&#8217;s concert was a smart young writer, the broadening of whose horizons I have made a summer project of my own, and let me state right away that there is no better way to enhance your own involvement with an experience &#8211; music, food, a Dodger game &#8211; than to go with someone who asks questions and really wants to know. &#8220;What is a concerto?&#8221; my friend asked at the start, and, boy oh boy, did the answer fall into our laps as if fashioned by the gods. That wispy gray nagging tune for solo violin, not stumbling as it usually does, awash in a thin orchestral gruel, made its way into our awareness this time on a cloud of bird song, the happy populace of Cahuenga Pass making tidy for the night and sharing its magic with the world. What a radiant moment! It seemed to ordain a different way of hearing the entire work &#8211; all 30 minutes of up-and-down strained melody following strained melody in no logical sequence, here a cute effect for the bassoons, there a vulgarity for brass &#8211; as though, this once, some great and happy intelligence had shaped a design. And that, my friend, is a concerto.</p>
<p>Nikolaj Znaider was the soloist &#8211; born in Denmark to Polish-Israeli parentage &#8211; and he delivered a phenomenal performance, technically flawless and so splendidly up-front that you stopped listening to technique and began listening for musical matters. From the awesome repertory list in his biography, he apparently knows something about these matters as well, and he&#8217;s welcome to play them in our back yard at any time. Sir Andrew Davis, the week&#8217;s Philharmonic guest conductor, obviously knows his way around the Sibelius landscape &#8211; and also around the ersatz-Sibelius sound of Gustav Holst&#8217;s <i>The Planets</i>, which filled in the rest of the program like so much packing straw.</p>
<p>Footloose</p>
<p>Two nights previous, one of the Bowl&#8217;s small stock of &#8220;Classical Tuesdays&#8221; had been squandered on a ragtag dance program: 14 members of Hubbard Street Dance Chicago wandering through Mozart&#8217;s Symphony No. 40 and a gathering of single movements by Bach. I must first register my predilections: I object to music being <i>used</i> (as in bad jokes to Mozart&#8217;s magisterial symphony) as opposed to <i>danced to</i> (as in Balanchine&#8217;s <i>Concerto Barocco</i>, which, along with Jerome Robbins&#8217; <i>Goldberg Variations</i>, is the only danced Bach I truly admire). I also object to the kind of disrespect that thinks it&#8217;s perfectly swell to take single movements, willy-nilly, out of Bach concertos and keyboard suites and string them together as dance suites. You still hear the music, but the jolt of the segue to the haunting D-minor adagio of the First &#8220;Brandenburg&#8221; Concerto after parts of the E-flat Cello Suite is something neither Bach nor I should be asked to endure; it stands for a lousy attitude toward the music, especially on one of the few nights in the Bowl season that are supposed to be about music.</p>
<p>You would think, furthermore, that by the third season of those big video screens at the Bowl, they would have begun to make sense. I suspect that there is not as yet anything in the Bowl or the Philharmonic organization like a real production staff in charge of making sense out of all that obviously expensive equipment bunched up at the front of the property: the screens, the speakers, whatever. The sound is greatly improved, by the way. Whatever those big green boxes are down front, they have dealt properly with the ridiculous echo that plagued the orchestral sound in the past couple of years, and the sound from where I sit &#8211; about halfway back &#8211; is that of an extremely good home hi-fi, and I don&#8217;t expect an outdoor installation will ever get better than that.</p>
<p>But the video screens are just plain goddamn wasted. The dancers the other night were mostly dark shadows blended in among the orchestral players, and the coordination &#8211; the right player at the right time &#8211; is only minimally better than before. And it is absolutely absurd that on a night with singing or speech &#8211; the <i>Tosca</i>, the Beethoven Ninth finale and the arias in <i>Amadeus</i> &#8211; there are no visual texts. That lack all but concedes the day to the objections to the whole idea of Bowl concerts frequently raised, with what I detect lately as a noticeable crescendo, by my friend and colleague Mark Swed of the <i>Times</i>.</p>
<p>All told, I think I have a better time at the Bowl than Mark does. He complains about the &#8220;picnic obsession,&#8221; which is a matter to complain about to Patina&#8217;s management (or bring your own food, which I do, and which is more fun anyhow). He invokes that old bugbear &#8220;musical insignificance,&#8221; and he&#8217;s dead on; hire Leonard Slatkin if you must, as summertime top conductor, but set him loose on significant American music, which is his specialty, not just the tidbits of his September 12 program. Mark cites the comparison with Tanglewood, where people drive 150 miles (from New York or Boston) to the concerts and therefore know how to behave when they get there. I love Tanglewood too, but also remember a lot of summer music in New York&#8217;s Lewisohn Stadium, which was a short subway ride and played to the proles. I loved the sight of 8,700 people at the Bowl earlier last month, listening to <i>Tosca</i> and picking up some fascinating insights from John Mauceri&#8217;s spoken lead-ins. One more step, treating the opera as if there were words on a screen to go with the music on the stage, would have raised the whole evening to a state of musical significance. <i>Tosca</i>, which is also no particular love object in my books, deserved that much at least.?</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>The 20th Century and Me:&#160;Beginnings</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2006/08/the-20th-century-and-me-beginnings/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2006/08/the-20th-century-and-me-beginnings/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 02 Aug 2006 19:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=590</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Editor&#8217;s note: Alan Rich has been the classical music critic at the L.A. Weekly for the past 15 years. Prior to the Weekly, he wrote for Newsweek and the Herald Examiner and California Magazine and, before that, New York Magazine and the New York Herald Tribune. Now 82, he is a local and national treasure, [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><i>Editor&#8217;s note: Alan Rich has been the classical music critic at the </i>L.A. Weekly<i> for the past 15 years. Prior to the </i>Weekly<i>, he wrote for </i>Newsweek<i> and the </i>Herald Examiner<i> and </i>California Magazine <i>and, before that, </i>New York Magazine <i>and the </i>New York Herald Tribune.<i> Now 82, he is a local and national treasure, if we do say so ourselves, and he has a new book, a collection of his criticisms and essays, most of which appeared in these pages. The following is excerpted from a piece written in 1999, a list of 100 works from the 20th century that define their time. The full piece can be viewed online at <a href="http://www.laweekly.com.">www.laweekly.com.</a></i></p>
<p>No time in recorded history could match the sense of wonderment, the euphoria, the eager curiosity about the future that gripped the Western world right around 1900. The previous couple of decades had given the world the telephone, the light bulb, the phonograph, the automobile, and, a couple of years later, would give it the airplane; these were not merely improvements on things already in existence (as the compact disc might &#8211; just might &#8211; seem an improvement on the 78-rpm shellac disc, or the Airbus on the DC-3); they added up to an explosive expansion beyond what had previously been assumed the limits of human possibility. All the arts seemed to draw new energy from the spirit of innovation in the land; in the decade and a half from 1900 to the outbreak of World War I, the air crackled with the shock of the new.</p>
<p>Some of the newness may have been the logical consequence of the recent past; the whisperings and half-lights of Debussy&#8217;s <i>Pelléas et Mélisande</i> clearly stemmed from the impulses that guided Claude Monet&#8217;s brush at his lily pond; Gustav Mahler&#8217;s last symphony and the first works of Arnold Schoenberg took the agonized harmonic frustrations of Wagner&#8217;s <i>Tristan und Isolde</i> onto the concert stage. So, with more surface glitter and less inner substance, did Richard Strauss in his blood-drenched <i>Elektra</i>. Igor Stravinsky&#8217;s first ballet scores were recognizably the work of Rimsky-Korsakov&#8217;s star pupil. Yet the spirit of the times seemed to drive the new creators hard and fast. The merely two-year stylistic gap between Stravinsky&#8217;s <i>Petrushka</i> and his <i>Rite of Spring</i> yawns wider than the 20 between Beethoven&#8217;s &#8220;Eroica&#8221; and his Ninth. So do the two years between Mahler&#8217;s Ninth Symphony and the <i>Pierrot Lunaire</i> of his self-anointed apostle, Arnold Schoenberg.</p>
<p>Jump back a few decades &#8211; to 1880, say. The European bourgeoisie prospered; the great cities celebrated their grandiosity by building concert halls and opera houses. Virtuosos flourished &#8211; sopranos, pianists, conductors. The old masters &#8211; Beethoven, Haydn and Bach in monstrously perverse re-orchestrations &#8211; held their place; just the opening bars of Beethoven&#8217;s Ninth Symphony, that supremely romantic gesture of bringing the music in gradually as if from a distant cloud, became the gambit for dozens of latter-day rip-offs, some successful. It was taken for granted, however, that by far the majority of the concert and operatic fare was to be music hot off the press. The audience eagerly awaited the latest Brahms symphony, the latest Verdi opera. Richard Wagner died in 1883, and the world awaited with bated breath the emergence of his successor, assuming beyond argument that there would be one.</p>
<p>Around 1900, however, the signs first appeared of a schism between &#8220;music&#8221; and &#8220;new music.&#8221; Wagner had implanted some of the attitude with his orotund pronouncements about &#8220;the music of the future.&#8221; By 1900, too, Europe&#8217;s great music-publishing houses had caught up with the past, with complete performing editions of practically every major composer, from Bach to Beethoven and on through Schubert, Mendelssohn, Schumann, Berlioz. Performers could, better than before, think in terms of a &#8220;repertory&#8221; of past masterpieces; audiences, too, developed a fondness for wallowing in the familiar. And so the world at large no longer awaited the next symphony by Mahler or the next string quartet by Debussy with the hunger for newness that had driven taste in, say, 1880. Newness had become newer, and therefore more fearsome, than in the good old days. The impact of <i>Pierrot Lunaire</i> and <i>The Rite of Spring</i> &#8211; and the dozens of similar assaults on the musical status quo &#8211; drove the wedge.</p>
<p>Music&#8217;s world expanded beyond its traditional French/German/Italian/Slavic boundaries in these years. Finland&#8217;s Jean Sibelius brought his country its first fame, with music basically rooted in the mainstream past but with at least one splendid work, the bleak, ascetic Fourth Symphony, that does indeed mirror the fog-shrouded bleakness of its native soil. Spain&#8217;s Manuel de Falla wrote Spanish-tinged music that went past post-card prettiness in a dark, edgy and wonderfully witty manner. England&#8217;s Ralph Vaughan Williams, though defiantly anchored in his country&#8217;s ancient musical styles, at least turned out a repertory of symphonies that did not sound fresh off the boat from Germany, as did those of his countryman Elgar. And the United States, whose handful of respectable 19th-century musicians also composed with heavy German accents, produced its first generation of indigenous crackpot/geniuses with the likes of good ol&#8217; boy Charlie Ives, Henry Cowell, Carl Ruggles and the émigré Edgard Varèse, who proclaimed his Americanness with a wildly dissonant piece called <i>Amériques</i> that had the critics disputing whether it was more descriptive of a zoo or a boiler factory.</p>
<p>The War happened, and then jazz happened, and the timing was just right. Great wars always leave the creative world with the need for a fresh start from some zero point. In the post-WWII decade, the musical world would flop around for a time in desperate search of fresh impetus, adopting and rejecting a variety of artistic possibilities; but in 1918 that impetus had come ready-made, or so it seemed: a fresh, immensely vibrant language, laden with fascinating interconnections to other arts (Cubism, for one), its horizons far out of sight. Like its music, its very name &#8211; jazz &#8211; was a hybrid of arguable origin. Its vitality was, however, beyond argument. Almost everybody was hooked at first.</p>
<p>Visiting New York, France&#8217;s Darius Milhaud raided the shelves of Harlem record shops and returned home to create his <i>ballet nègre</i><i>The Creation of the World</i>; Germany&#8217;s Paul Hindemith blended the kicky new rhythms into his Bach-inspired chamber concertos; Stravinsky tried his hand at a couple of ragtime pieces, both terrible. Paul Whiteman toured Europe with his big, symphonic jazz band and played George Gershwin&#8217;s synthetic <i>Rhapsody in Blue</i> to awestruck crowds &#8211; lively stuff, even if neither jazz nor symphony. In Paris, another young innovator, Aaron Copland, was urged by his teacher &#8211; the legendary Nadia Boulanger, godmother to a generation of American composers &#8211; to use music as a way to define himself and his world. He did so by including, in his delicious, lighthearted <i>Music for the Theater</i>, a generous admixture of the newfangled jazz.</p>
<p>Stravinsky&#8217;s revolutionary orchestration in <i>The Rite of Spring</i> gave off all kinds of messages about new ways to make musical sounds. Ten years later, Stravinsky created <i>Les Noces</i>, depicting a Russian folk wedding, with an orchestra consisting of four pianos and a huge battery of percussion; the American George Antheil, in cahoots with the Cubist painter Fernand Léger, did some of the same in his <i>Ballet Mécanique</i>, whose scoring included an airplane propeller. Before either of these, a San Francisco teenager named Henry Cowell astonished audiences with his piano pieces that involved reaching inside the instrument to stroke the strings or whomping down on the keys with a fist or forearm to produce what he called &#8220;tone clusters.&#8221; Later, Cowell would become mentor and role model to the most carefree and influential of the century&#8217;s innovative spirits, the Los Angeles-born John Cage.</p>
<p>If Arnold Schoenber<br />
g had little taste for per<br />
cussion ensembles or airplane propellers, he had his own visions of musical sounds hitherto unheard. Six months before Stravinsky&#8217;s bombshell went off in Paris, Schoenberg&#8217;s <i>Pierrot Lunaire</i> had earned a comparably hostile &#8211; if less vociferous &#8211; reception in Berlin: music in which a solo voice keened, wailed, howled and whispered poetry about a moonstruck madman, joined by a chamber-music ensemble enhancing the spooky atmosphere with music devoid of any sense of harmonic progression or key. Standing aloof from all the jazzy razzmatazz, Schoenberg sought to codify his wholesale revision of traditional musical values with his &#8220;method of composition employing all 12 tones,&#8221; which he perennially explained as the logical extension of principles reaching back to Bach. His 1923 Suite for Piano, his first &#8220;pure&#8221; piece employing all 12 tones in strict serial order, did indeed link hands with Bachian models. But it was Schoenberg&#8217;s disciple Alban Berg, in  <i>Wozzeck</i>, his harrowing, immensely powerful operatic setting of Georg Büchner&#8217;s play, who proved, even more fluently than his teacher, the expressive potential of the Schoenbergian style, moving in and out of 12-tone writing, and also in and out of the Mahlerian shadows, as the moods of the intensely moody story dictated. Just by themselves, <i>The Rite of Spring</i> and <i>Wozzeck</i> were enough to prove that the new century had not lost the ages-old power to produce masterpieces. </p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>The Sound of&#160;Magic</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2006/07/the-sound-of-magic/</link>
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		<pubDate>Wed, 26 Jul 2006 22:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=589</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Pedophilia in Elysium In Austria about 20 years ago, I had the rare good fortune to chat with the legendary critic H.H. Stuckenschmidt, shortly before his death. The old man had lived through everything, all the way back to Mahler, and the thing I remember best about his conversation was that the rich, steamy orchestration [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Pedophilia in Elysium</p>
<p>In Austria about 20 years ago, I had the rare good fortune to chat with the legendary critic H.H. Stuckenschmidt, shortly before his death. The old man had lived through everything, all the way back to Mahler, and the thing I remember best about his conversation was that the rich, steamy orchestration of his era&#8217;s music &#8211; the assembled forces of Richard Strauss, the last gasp of German romanticism before Mr. Hitler&#8217;s housecleaning &#8211; had become part of his own language. We talked in particular about the fate of one composer, who by the early 1980s had become an unknown quantity to most of the musical world: Franz Schreker. Herr Stuckenschmidt had one special word for his music. &#8220;Oh yes,&#8221; he said, &#8220;that is quite remarkable. Full of <i>Klangzauber</i>.&#8221;</p>
<p>What a marvelous word, which the Germans make especially so by running its parts together: &#8220;soundmagic.&#8221; And now that Schreker&#8217;s music is working its way back into worldwide attention, some of that <i>Klangzauber</i> is also around again. His opera <i>Die Gezeichneten </i>(&#8220;The Branded&#8221;) was revived at last year&#8217;s Salzburg Festival, and attended by representatives of political factions who would have trampled it in the dust not long before. Now that production, conducted by Kent Nagano and staged by Nikolaus Lehnhoff &#8211; he mounted San Francisco&#8217;s last <i>Ring</i> &#8211; is available on a EuroArts DVD.</p>
<p>Schreker wrote his own libretto, in Vienna in 1915. It tells of a wealthy hunchback on an island called Elysium, off mythical 16th-century Genoa, who hates his appearance but can use his gold to counterbalance awareness of it. He maintains a gold-plated mansion, which Schreker&#8217;s orchestra limns in surging orchestral opulence highlighted with bright, jangly percussion; there&#8217;s your <i>Klangzauber</i>. A mysterious artist, who paints only hands, persuades him to marry her, but then jilts him for a thug. The hunchback murders his rival. Elsewhere on his island, a gang of the hunchback&#8217;s colleagues are running a brothel of underage local girls.</p>
<p>Surrounding the tale is considerable talky-talk on the nature of love and beauty and aesthetic limits; meat on the table in the Vienna of Freud and Hofmannsthal. Schreker&#8217;s operas were enormously popular, rivaling those of Richard Strauss up through the 1920s. He never erred, as did his colleagues, by venturing into the morass of dissonance or &#8211; horror! &#8211; atonality. But he was partly of Jewish extraction, and not given to fighting the good fight. As the Nazis rose to power in the 1920s, he was pushed off the cultural map almost overnight, and a large legacy of intense, powerfully dramatic operas fell with him. One or two have recently been recorded, however; there is a genuine Schreker revival under way. The great success of <i>Die Gezeichneten</i> in this marvelous production under Nagano, with some extravagances in Lehnhoff&#8217;s staging that are worthy of the excesses in the plot, will help.</p>
<p>What is really amazing is the richness of just the sound of the music as it roars by. There are touches of this <i>Klangzauber</i> stuff in Strauss: the business around the Silver Rose in <i>Der Rosenkavalier</i> and some lush, gooey moments in <i>Don Juan</i>. But this is baby talk compared to the Schreker sound and the poisoned kiss of the Schreker harmony. He builds huge, thundering orchestral bursts that crest like the frosted waves on a Hiroshige scroll. His gardens of sound can be, of course, dangerous; don&#8217;t get too close. But people who like that stuff in Strauss &#8211; no thanks &#8211; should go double-ape over Schreker.</p>
<p>Later Magic</p>
<p>You cannot talk about soundmagic without also referring to Giacinto Scelsi, the reclusive, indefinable composer who died in Rome in 1988. <i>Indefinable</i> is, I think, the first operative word for this remarkable Italian visionary. The new ECM disc of his music begins by plunging us into a splendid confusion of sound, a dense web concocted by a gathering of 16 string players in an anarchy that, nevertheless, drives obsessively forward. For Scelsi, the normal division of the scale into eight or 12 tones was only a beginning; each note revealed a spectrum beyond. String instruments, therefore, became his chosen medium, and his collaborations late in life with the American-born cellist Frances-Marie Uitti were like a new beginning. Uitti now lives in Amsterdam; in her last concert here, at the start of the final LACMA season, she created an audible rainbow &#8211; <i>Klangzauber</i>, indeed &#8211; with works of Scelsi that she played with the phenomenal double-bow technique she has devised.</p>
<p>The new disc, <i>Natura Renovatur</i>, athrob with magical sounds, alternates works by Scelsi for Uitti&#8217;s solo cello with three of his amazing pieces for &#8220;clusters&#8221; (more applicable than &#8220;ensembles&#8221; in this case) of string players; Christoph Poppen conducts the Munich Chamber Orchestra, and perhaps we can allow him back in the house after his misbegotten <i>Morimur</i> expedition of a few years back.</p>
<p>Older Magic</p>
<p>Being given at times to reliving past pleasures (and feeling entitled at my advanced age), I hail the arrival of a couple of discs on the low-priced (Michael) Dutton label, with music and performances I remember with great delight from years long past and rediscover with equal delight today. One is part of a collection called <i>The Art of Constant Lambert</i>, and I&#8217;m only sorry that it leaves out that British conductor/composer/sourpuss-critic&#8217;s delicious if naive Americana bit <i>The Rio Grande</i>. What it does include, however, is a suite from William Walton&#8217;s <i>Façade</i>, delightful little satirical and rhythmic/experimental pieces to Walton&#8217;s jazzy score, with Edith Sitwell&#8217;s poetry intoned by herself and by Lambert. Walton (in 1929, long before the &#8220;Sir&#8221;) conducts, and I defy anyone to come under the spell of &#8220;We bear velvet cream, green and babyish . . .&#8221; and then shake loose.</p>
<p>Another disc includes, among other trinkets, a suite from <i>Scuola di Ballo</i>, notes by Luigi Boccherini in a reorchestration by Jean Françaix (for the Ballets Russes de Monte Carlo) that sends this most ordinary music skyward. Once you&#8217;ve tapped your toes to this wonderfully spirited music, I promise, you&#8217;ll never take your Boccherini straight again. The disc also includes about eight minutes &#8211; all you need &#8211; of Stravinsky&#8217;s Tchaikovsky-derived ballet <i>Le</i><i>Baiser de la Fée</i>, and some charming Chabrier, but it&#8217;s the Boccherini that sells it. Antal Dorati is the conductor, and I can&#8217;t think of anything better he ever accomplished than this magical quarter-hour.?</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Beethoven, Myth and&#160;Reality</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2006/07/beethoven-myth-and-reality/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2006/07/beethoven-myth-and-reality/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 19 Jul 2006 19:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=588</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Another Opening . . . I will never tire of writing about Beethoven&#8217;s Ninth Symphony, or of encountering new reasons for wanting to. On a benign Tuesday last week, that music &#8211; calm and openhanded one moment, furious and mysterious the next, triumphant yet watchful at the end &#8211; joined the air traffic and the [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Another Opening . . .</p>
<p>I will never tire of writing about Beethoven&#8217;s Ninth Symphony, or of encountering new reasons for wanting to. On a benign Tuesday last week, that music &#8211; calm and openhanded one moment, furious and mysterious the next, triumphant yet watchful at the end &#8211; joined the air traffic and the heavenly bodies over the Hollywood Bowl, sent aloft by a respectful if not exactly eloquent performance by the forces massed, under Leonard Slatkin&#8217;s direction, on the stage down below. It was an Occasion (capital O): the Bowl&#8217;s first classical concert of the season &#8211; not to be confused with &#8220;Opening Night,&#8221; however, which had taken place some days (or weeks) before. You could tell this one, however, because the dwindling ranks of the classical press &#8211; freeloaders all &#8211; were beguiled pre-concert by a splendid Patina spread.</p>
<p>It seems to me, however, that a performance of the Ninth Symphony used to be even more of an Event (capital E). I heard it first in Boston in 1942. It was a Special (capital S, okay, let&#8217;s drop this) Boston Symphony Pension Fund concert that took up the whole of Easter Sunday afternoon and evening. It began with the &#8220;Egmont&#8221; Overture, and there was a dinner intermission after the first movement of the symphony. (Imagine!) The concert itself is not very clear in my memory, except for the way Serge Koussevitzky got the cellos and basses to play the &#8220;Ode to Joy&#8221; theme so softly that you heard it in your chest rather than in your ears, and for the fact that the Ninth Symphony came over to me and my self-important Harvard-freshman friends as some kind of unapproachable relic that one attended with a special brand of awe reserved for this one occasion and spoke about only in hushed tones for weeks afterward.</p>
<p>Times change. The Ninth has been with us twice in recent weeks, and when Esa-Pekka Salonen performed it to end his &#8220;Beethoven Unbound&#8221; series last May, its impact was much diminished by its proximity on the program to the Ligeti <i>Requiem</i>. A vast and all-encompassing Beethoven Myth began soon after the composer&#8217;s death in 1827; no other composer &#8211; no other figure in the arts great or small &#8211; has bequeathed so rich a fodder to feed that kind of myth and renew its impact over the generations. The letters left behind (the Testament, the Unnamed Beloved), the unresolved family squabbles (the nephew), the mere biographical facts (the fights with landlords, the unpaid bills, the final illness, the funeral orations) . . . all these fuel novels, movie scripts. More than that, they spin off their own stories. They give us the Beethoven cult, not that far removed from the neo-Nazis of <i>A Clockwork Orange</i>. Somewhere in a drawer I think I still have a T-shirt from 1970, the Beethoven Bicentennial, from a Bay Area DJ, with the message that &#8220;Beethoven was Black (and Proud).&#8221;</p>
<p>This is all sideshow material, however, which the facts of Beethoven&#8217;s life supply in profusion. They go nowhere, however, in reaching a reconciliation in words with the miracle that takes place as fragments of musical gesture emerge out of blankness, somehow know to attach like ovarian cells, and form the astonishing bulk out of which the Ninth Symphony is born. This process, furthermore, is being regulated before our wondering ears by an aging, ailing, neurotic dyspeptic who happens, incidentally, to be stone-deaf, who finds from somewhere within his wounded soul the power to lead this material, to shatter it and rebuild it, to transform it at one moment into a song for horns of shivering, distant beauty, and at another into howling, defiant apotheosis. The first movement of the Beethoven Ninth is one, perhaps the foremost, of the Significant Monsters of my musical treasure chest. Hearing it sort of slink by, under a conductor who obviously knows the notes but doesn&#8217;t seem to let on that he cares for them, was not my happiest Bowl memory. (Mr. Slatkin did have the good manners, however, to observe all of Beethoven&#8217;s called-for repeats in the ensuing scherzo, and in the Eighth Symphony before intermission. Not all Bowl conductors are that considerate.)</p>
<p>Another Show</p>
<p>It&#8217;s easy enough to belittle the wonderful Eighth Symphony, especially if it turns up &#8211; as it did this time &#8211; as curtain raiser (&#8220;prep work,&#8221; my colleague dubbed it) to the Ninth. The connection is only an accident of numbering; the Sixth is hardly prep work to the Seventh. The individuality of the Eighth lies on every page, but most marvelously in the game-playing with sudden key changes, the quick lunges from a solid footing in one key to somewhere in the middle of next week. These tricks abound in the first movement and finale, and they are great fun.</p>
<p>The last two or three minutes of the work sum up the best that was in Beethoven&#8217;s lighter side. An orderly finale has come to its supposed close along the lines of proper classical form. The opening theme had come to an unruly cadence on a C sharp that had no place in the well-behaved key of F major. Now, at what should be the end, Beethoven lands on that C sharp, and it suddenly turns into a skyrocket. Where the music should properly end, it launches into a headlong flight through a sequence of unrelated keys, while the winds in the orchestra seem to surround the process with giggles and laughter. It&#8217;s a glorious event that eventually straightens itself out. Besides drawing from Mr. Slatkin an infinitely more spirited and, I dare say, more comprehending reading, the Eighth proved itself, as it always does, very much its own work. Told by some critic that his Eighth Symphony was less a success than the longer, larger-scale Seventh, Beethoven is said to have replied, &#8220;That&#8217;s because it&#8217;s so much better.&#8221; I think he was right.?</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Man of Many&#160;Parts</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2006/07/man-of-many-parts/</link>
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		<pubDate>Wed, 12 Jul 2006 22:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[Only Partly Used Memories around John Mauceri come to mind as he begins his final season as the Hollywood Bowl&#8217;s Man of Much Music. They start back in 1973, as the Yalie with the golden curls, still John MOSS-ery to his classmates, is summoned to Brooklyn Academy by Leonard Bernstein to conduct the revised and [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Only Partly Used</p>
<p>Memories around John Mauceri come to mind as he begins his final season as the Hollywood Bowl&#8217;s Man of Much Music. They start back in 1973, as the Yalie with the golden curls, still John MOSS-ery to his classmates, is summoned to Brooklyn Academy by Leonard Bernstein to conduct the revised and much-improved <i>Candide</i>, which Harold Prince&#8217;s restaging had rescued from its stodgy beginnings. They advance to 1991, as the self-renamed Maestro mow-CHAY-ry charms an Osaka audience on New Year&#8217;s Eve with a few memorized Japanese phrases and a program of spellbinding pops by his brand-new Hollywood Bowl Orchestra, ending with a clap-along &#8220;Stars and Stripes Forever.&#8221; They swing down to Costa Mesa around the same time, where Wagner-deprived Los Angeles operaphiles have journeyed to hear Mauceri pull the minor-league Opera Pacific through a major-league reading of <i>Die Walküre</i>, and to wonder why operatic conducting of that quality never seemed to happen with our own company. (Those were the days of Peter Hemmings&#8217; leadership, remember, when the podium at Chandler was held down &#8211; if that&#8217;s the term &#8211; by lightweights like Randall Behr and Lawrence Foster. Things are better now.)</p>
<p>Mauceri&#8217;s 16 years with the Bowl Orchestra &#8211; still, as it always was, an aggregation of top-quality studio freelancers whose roster can change from week to week &#8211; has considerably raised the musical stature of the place. For the weekend programs, which have been his principal territory, he has greatly enriched the concept of the light-music concert, especially through his work in what you might call Hollywood musicology. He has exhumed (sometimes literally, from tons of discarded manuscript pages) scores from past films and reconstructed a whole genre of film sound as it was practiced by the generation of big-name composers, most of them Hitler escapees, who flourished here in the days of great studio orchestras. By the standards of the European symphonic repertory &#8211; Brahms, Mahler, those guys &#8211; the surging hearts-aflame concoctions by the likes of Korngold, Rózsa and Steiner come in a few notches down on the cultural pole. Mauceri&#8217;s job was to select the nearly forgotten content from choice pages of what turns out to be a huge amount of music, clean it up some and fling it forth, with some immensely congenial commentary, in the glittering showplace in Cahuenga Pass &#8211; a perfect matchup, in case you hadn&#8217;t noticed. Bless him for that; he came to us from another world &#8211; Yale, New York, several European halls and opera houses &#8211; and stayed long enough to confront us with the beauty and, yes, the musical value of some of our own culture. And I will take a large sundae cup of Erich Korngold&#8217;s score for <i>Kings Row</i>, or the cello concerto he wrote for Bette Davis&#8217; boyfriend in <i>Deception</i>, over half a dozen Richard Strauss tone poems I could name.</p>
<p>Without saying it in so many words, Mauceri has advanced the notion of film-plus-music as some kind of art form. The Bowl &#8211; the marvelous expansion of the perfect movie palace, and so what if there&#8217;s no roof &#8211; has been his lab. Those wonderful nights when he puts together collections of movie scenes, on the big screens with their music played live, are like panoplies of masterpieces, and Mauceri &#8211; in his selections and in the warmth and wisdom of his talks &#8211; has always sustained the impression that these unique blendings of sight and sound contain within them the potential of great art. That one facet of his Bowl repertory, I think I will especially miss.</p>
<p>John of Opera</p>
<p>But there is more to Mauceri, and I get the feeling that, either by accident or by design, we have missed out on a portion of his good works. In Andrew Porter&#8217;s collected writings &#8211; he was critic at <i>The New Yorker</i> before Alex Ross &#8211; I read, with pangs of jealousy, accounts of Mauceri conducting Verdi&#8217;s <i>La Forza del Destino</i> at the Met and, would you believe, Wagner&#8217;s <i>Rienzi</i> in San Antonio. Why not here? It was Mauceri who led the premiere of Andrew Imbrie&#8217;s <i>Angle of Repose</i> in San Francisco, the most deserving piece of all the music created for the American Bicentennial. I absorb all this, and get the feeling that we&#8217;re letting him leave us with the best of him unexplored. Oh well, he&#8217;s only 61, and there&#8217;s even a little gold still in those curls.</p>
<p>In Europe, Mauceri&#8217;s reputation rests primarily on his operatic conducting: at the Scottish Opera, where Bernstein and Kurt Weill as well as Wagner have figured in his repertory, and in Torino and other major houses on the Continent. In Los Angeles, his operatic stage has been the Bowl, where his performances have been delivered without actual staging but with a remarkable amount of stage verisimilitude even so &#8211; helped, of course, by the new video screens, which can be a nuisance in some circumstances but which at least allow us to share the vocal sufferings of heroes and villains. Last year&#8217;s opera night consisted of great chunks of Wagner, and as I remember it, the surge and thrust of the performance was quite decently simulated.</p>
<p>Last Sunday there was Puccini&#8217;s <i>Tosca</i>, music very much at home, of course, on a stage where movie music sometimes reigns. Mauceri presided, a perfect host; I would entrust any operatic newcomer to his witty, welcoming narration of the goings-on, and the further elucidation of his strong, eloquent performance. The sheer fakery of the music blended nicely with the fakery of the performing circumstances; it was all just perfectly, in a word, swell. Patricia Racette sang the Tosca; the Butterfly in the Robert Wilson staging here earlier this season, she&#8217;s a brainy, attractive singer of no particularly ravishing voice but a wide range of usefulness &#8211; a latter-day Dorothy Kirsten, say. Frank Porretta, second in a line of adequate tenors of that name, sang the Cavaradossi with its basic brutality intact and nothing more. (<i>Is</i> there anything more?) James Morris, the Wotan-turned-Scarpia, brought a tone of authority, plus a few that sounded rather scraped. The real drama lay, to nobody&#8217;s surprise, with Mauceri and &#8211; this time &#8211; the Philharmonic itself. They deserved each other.?</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Looking on the Dark&#160;Side</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2006/07/looking-on-the-dark-side/</link>
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		<pubDate>Wed, 05 Jul 2006 19:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=586</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Please Send No Flowers Old Sourpuss has been heard from again. &#8220;A large chunk of masonry fell off the music industry last week . . .&#8221; announced the London-based critic, observer, editor (of a book of mine, even) and all-around gadfly Norman Lebrecht in his Montreal-based La Scena Musicale, &#8220;. . . another step towards [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Please Send No Flowers</p>
<p>Old Sourpuss has been heard from again. &#8220;A large chunk of masonry fell off the music industry last week . . .&#8221; announced the London-based critic, observer, editor (of a book of mine, even) and all-around gadfly Norman Lebrecht in his Montreal-based <i>La Scena Musicale</i>, &#8220;. . . another step towards cultural oblivion.&#8221; The &#8220;chunk,&#8221; as Mr. Lebrecht saw it, was the closing down of classical operations at Warner Classic Recordings; his statement was followed within the week by stern denials. The classics, stated Warner executives in a rebuttal in <i>Playbill Arts</i>, &#8220;will remain a key part of the Warner music family.&#8221; Warner Classics, it turns out, is being incorporated into Rhino, which has actually managed the label in the U.S. for nearly three years. &#8220;We remain committed to classical music,&#8221; says a company statement, &#8220;and look forward to continuing to pioneer new ways to bring our content to consumers&#8221; et cetera, et cetera.</p>
<p>There are two sources of summer-reading diversion you can derive from all this. The one is the news that Mr. Lebrecht is alive, well and moving onward. There is nothing in the tone of his article to surprise his constant readers. His book <i>Who Killed Classical Music?</i> bears the publication date of 1997; both it and classical music are still going strong. Just before the start of this year, he greeted the oncoming Mozart anniversary with a piece titled &#8220;Too Much Mozart Makes You Sick,&#8221; which advanced the fear that the Salzburg darling would be so overperformed in 2006 that the truly important anniversary &#8211; the Shostakovich 100th &#8211; would be totally overlooked. &#8220;Mozart has nothing to give to mind or spirit in the 21st century,&#8221; he fulminated. &#8220;Let him rest. Ignore the commercial onslaught. Play the &#8216;Leningrad&#8217; Symphony. Listen to music that matters.&#8221; Beyond that last sickening suggestion, Mr. Lebrecht&#8217;s fears have so far gone unrealized; Mozart and Shostakovich have each, by midyear, received a fair share of adulation.</p>
<p>A Different Spin</p>
<p>There is another, more serious misapprehension in Mr. Lebrecht&#8217;s observations that just may have eluded him &#8211; the assumption that these record producers, whose demise he has come to equate with the collapse of classical music, matter anymore. Last March, when the L.A. Philharmonic made programming history with the &#8220;Minimalist Jukebox&#8221; programs, which opened new horizons, brought in new, young audiences, and redefined the excitement level possible at a symphonic concert in a large hall, some of these events were recorded for iTunes and, within days, made available on home computers. This was a pioneering venture by the Philharmonic, but only by minutes; the New York Philharmonic was experimenting with the same techniques, with less exciting programs (Mozart, Mr. Lebrecht). The sound quality at home could be superb; even an old duffer like me can twist a couple of cables and run sound from my computer into my stereo.</p>
<p>This old duffer, by the way, has lived through a lot of technology. I worked at a record store in Berkeley when LPs came along. We sold a dinky little player with a metal needle and for every three we sold we had to take back two and the sound was shrill and scratchy, but within a year there were good machines and the London &#8220;ffrr&#8221; discs, and collections of 78-rpm records were showing up in junk shops. When the CDs arrived, there was a scientist at Caltech who ran demonstrations on the superiority of analog to digital reproduction (as long as you had $50,000 to spend on equipment), but you don&#8217;t hear from him anymore.</p>
<p>My friend Adam Crane is the Philharmonic&#8217;s director of public relations and communications, and he is one of those people &#8211; I am not &#8211; who lives in music the way a goldfish lives in water. His goldfish bowl is his iPod, and he fills it constantly from iTunes on the Internet. Wherever he goes &#8211; any room in his apartment, his office, his car &#8211; he is never far from a port where he can plug in that iPod. I have wall upon wall of CDs; Adam has the same thing in his shirt pocket. Most amazing (so far) is that he has told me that the children of Esa-Pekka Salonen, oldest 14, cannot understand the purpose of Tower Records. They have no conception of a disc.</p>
<p>Right now the market is, let&#8217;s say, minimal. The Philharmonic will continue to record its concerts for iTunes &#8211; at least four next season &#8211; but will also produce discs. (One, the orchestra&#8217;s first recordings in Disney &#8211; Mussorgsky, Bartók and of course <i>The Rite of Spring</i>- will be out on DG in September.) So will the New York Philharmonic, and rumors abound of other orchestras &#8211; Chicago, for one &#8211; trying to climb onto one Internet service or another. Problems of copyright clearance and union players will remain. One interesting ramification: If you download a concert from iTunes into your iPod, you can purchase the whole shebang or only selected tracks. In the case of the Beethoven Fifth/Lutoslawski Fourth concert, Adam tells me, the statistics divided evenly among people who bought only the Beethoven, only the Lutoslawski, or the whole concert.</p>
<p>Those faint glimmers can make it look as if the dark demise that Norman Lebrecht has been concocting for classical music is still some distance into the glowing future. The folks at iTunes tell us that the proportion of classical downloaders has now risen to a remarkable 12 percent: four times the best figure compact discs ever attained. I ran into Philharmonic president Deborah Borda in the hallway at Disney. I wondered whether this new technology would someday make coming to concerts at concert halls a waste of time.</p>
<p>&#8220;Just the opposite,&#8221; she beamed. &#8220;You come to Disney, you go home and buy what you&#8217;ve just heard. It&#8217;ll enhance the concert experience. Not dying . . . thriving!&#8221;?</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Earthly and Heavenly&#160;Delights</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2006/06/earthly-and-heavenly-delights/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2006/06/earthly-and-heavenly-delights/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 28 Jun 2006 19:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[The Mundane Earlier this month, the Philharmonic ended its Disney Hall season with Rimsky-Korsakov&#8217;s Scheherazade, music as familiar to me as the oldest shoe in my closet. I don&#8217;t wear that shoe anymore, yet I went to the concert with some eagerness. I thought this elderly and well-worn work might fare interestingly, perhaps even well, [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>The Mundane</p>
<p>Earlier this month, the Philharmonic ended its Disney Hall season with Rimsky-Korsakov&#8217;s <i>Scheherazade</i>, music as familiar to me as the oldest shoe in my closet. I don&#8217;t wear that shoe anymore, yet I went to the concert with some eagerness. I thought this elderly and well-worn work might fare interestingly, perhaps even well, in young hands, those of the Philharmonic&#8217;s associate conductor, Alexander Mickelthwate &#8211; newly upgraded from assistant &#8211; and I also thought the rest of the program was sure to make me feel neither elderly nor well-worn. I was right on all counts.</p>
<p>It&#8217;s easy enough to groan, &#8220;Oh, not <i>Scheherazade</i> again,&#8221; although it is not, surprisingly, on this summer&#8217;s upcoming Hollywood Bowl program (a first?). You may groan, instead, for &#8220;Oh no, not the Tchaikovsky Piano Concerto,&#8221; or &#8220;the Mendelssohn Violin,&#8221; and nobody will argue against granting a deserved sabbatical to these and similar portions of the standard Bowl repertory (&#8220;slushpump,&#8221; as the eloquent Martin Bernheimer used to describe it ad nauseam). Actually, a couple of big novelties in this summer&#8217;s programming might be worth your attention even without the catered dinner to help ease them down. One is the grand, noisy but rare <i>Funereal and Triumphal Symphony</i> by Hector Berlioz on August 3; the other I&#8217;ll get to in a moment.</p>
<p><i>Scheherazade</i>, cleanly and forcefully set forth by the orchestra under the excellent Mickelthwate, with Martin Chalifour&#8217;s solo violin as narrator, reminded me that I hadn&#8217;t listened to it in a very long time &#8211; <i>really</i> listened, I mean, to its remarkable orchestral effects. The big ones, the grand clamors of brass and cymbals, are immediately dazzling; so, however, are the small ones, the tiny pinpoints from the piccolos, the muted trumpets, the vast display of pure orchestral iridescence. It made me wonder how many other pieces out of the slushpump I&#8217;ve been unjustly only half-hearing lately. I must try to go to the Bowl this summer with cleaner ears. (No promises, of course.)</p>
<p>Starting off the Mickelthwate program were the marvelous <i>Le Boeuf sur le Toit</i> of Darius Milhaud &#8211; Charlie Chaplin set to music &#8211; and the grand pomposity of Francis Poulenc&#8217;s Organ Concerto, to my mind the best of all doomed attempts to combine the grandeur of the pipe organ with orchestral forces (strings and timpani only, wisely, in this case). Vincent Dubois was the organist.</p>
<p>One may suspect, in this slender young German-born conductor, a flair for the rambunctious French between-the-wars repertory; so far he has given us splendid, richly idiomatic readings of two works of Milhaud and now this one of Poulenc. It&#8217;s a repertory in danger, far better than the small number of performances nowadays suggests. (When was the last time you let Honegger&#8217;s <i>La Danse des Morts</i> make your hair stand on end?) Some of it kicks up heels as delightfully as <i>Le Boeuf sur le Toit</i>, with its deep and saucy obeisances to American ragtime and burlesque. There is also a passionate, oratorical side with religious overtones. Poulenc&#8217;s organ concerto knows its place within ecclesiastical architecture &#8211; its opening summonings tell us as much &#8211; but within that setting it behaves like a piece of music, with a beginning, a climax and a proper end. Its scoring, without winds or brass, holds it apart from the pietistic goo of Saint-Saëns or Strauss. As you&#8217;ve suspected, I don&#8217;t like organ music much (at least from after 1750); Poulenc&#8217;s concerto, that work virtually alone (alongside, perhaps, Lou Harrison&#8217;s), keeps the instrument respectable.</p>
<p>The Divine</p>
<p>One small ritual I always carry out when in Washington, D.C., is to visit a small cranny in the Smithsonian Institution&#8217;s Folk Art Museum, whose permanent installation bears the title <i>The Throne of the Third Heaven of the Nations Millennium General Assembly</i>. In 1950, William Hampton, a handyman at the museum, was visited by the Virgin Mary and several angels, who commanded him to build a Throne of a grandeur worthy of that title. This he proceeded to do over the next 14 years, assembling found objects (discarded light bulbs, junk of all shapes, a barber&#8217;s chair to serve as throne, chandeliers, you-name-it). He covered everything in gold or silver foil and assembled it all on a platform that Smithsonian authorities had allotted him. You stand in front of this assemblage, and it strikes you (or does me, at least) that you are facing the entirety of a man&#8217;s life, his hopes, his beliefs. I find my visits to Mr. Hampton&#8217;s life enormously moving. You can do it all now on Google, of course, but it&#8217;s better if you&#8217;re there. There aren&#8217;t that many honest things in Washington anymore.</p>
<p>Several writers have created books of poems and essays inspired by William Hampton&#8217;s <i>Throne of the Third Heaven</i>, and now there is music. A 32-year-old composer named Jefferson Friedman, born in Swampscott, Massachusetts, has written an orchestral piece bearing the same full title. Leonard Slatkin gave it its premiere with his Washington National Symphony last year, and he has it on a Hollywood Bowl program on September 14. Sharing &#8211; let&#8217;s say &#8220;profaning&#8221; &#8211; the program is Carl Orff&#8217;s <i>Carmina Burana</i>. Just be careful to park where you can leave at intermission.</p>
<p><i>Colorblindness:</i> Several friends of the late György Ligeti have questioned my citing his mention of designer Calvin Klein, in my last week&#8217;s farewell, as the formulator of a particular shade of blue. That was on the transcript I was given, but a visit to the original tape &#8211; which I should have done before &#8211; revealed the name as the painter Yves Klein. My apologies all around, to the great spirit of Ligeti, and to Clan Klein.?</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Ojai at&#160;60</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2006/06/ojai-at-60/</link>
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		<pubDate>Wed, 21 Jun 2006 19:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=584</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Blackbirds at Dawn The sun broke through only in the last minutes of this year&#8217;s Ojai Festival, embracing the final Bach chorus in that legendary pink twilight that is part of the local legend. This was the 60th, the third under the management of former Clevelander Tom Morris &#8211; and it had its share of [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Blackbirds at Dawn</p>
<p>The sun broke through only in the last minutes of this year&#8217;s Ojai Festival, embracing the final Bach chorus in that legendary pink twilight that is part of the local legend. This was the 60th, the third under the management of former Clevelander Tom Morris &#8211; and it had its share of memorable moments, along with others.</p>
<p>Perhaps it&#8217;s time, however, that we stopped living in Ojai&#8217;s past, because the element most clearly lacking, at this year&#8217;s festival and probably from now on, is that thread of serendipity, mingled with unreality, that winds through every account of Ojai&#8217;s history. It is unreal that Stravinsky and Boulez walked the streets of this rural never-never land, that Lawrence Morton and Ernest Fleischmann planned and produced concert programs in a rustic town park with music too demanding even for the boldest Music Center audiences. There was wonderful music at this year&#8217;s festival, and there were wonderful performers, but after the concerts you could rush up to the record booth and buy the same music with the same performers (if you got there soon enough), as you might at Disney Hall. I was often delighted by what I heard &#8211; it couldn&#8217;t have been otherwise; who could miss, in the presence of Dawn Upshaw&#8217;s singing, or Osvaldo Golijov&#8217;s music? &#8211; but I missed being startled, as I had been in memorable years past by Thomas Adès and Magnus Lindberg and (repeatedly) by Pierre Boulez. I take it as ominous that I couldn&#8217;t find a single thing to buy at Bart&#8217;s Books, and that the new management at Antonio&#8217;s has installed outdoor live music so loud that you have to flee to the dreary indoors to enjoy the still-excellent chiles relleños.</p>
<p>The festival&#8217;s opening program was denied the local press by the conflicting postponed opening of the L.A. Opera&#8217;s <i>Grendel</i>, on whose merits I will withhold further comment. One part of the Ojai opener I had seen before to great delight, a mingling of the inscrutable creative talents of the composer Conlon Nancarrow and the German-born, Seattle-based gadget-sculptor Trimpin. Some years ago, Trimpin worked out a way of transforming the rhythmic complexity of Nancarrow&#8217;s player-piano rolls to a piston-operated keyboard, and thence to small gadgets to activate various sounding devices. At Telluride, these were wooden shoes going clickety-clack. For Ojai, Trimpin built more complex trumpetlike gadgets that children could work as toys, but which the Nancarrow pieces could also activate gorgeously (or so I judged from a demonstration the day after the concert). Trimpin is some kind of cherishable, unique near genius who needs to come among us more often to impart his precious twinkle to the contemporary creative process.</p>
<p>From Golijov there was the short opera <i>Ainadamar</i>, which we had here in a poorly staged early version at a &#8220;Green Umbrella&#8221; in 2004, but which has now been extensively rethought and stands forth as intense, disturbing drama built around the murder by Spanish fascists of the poet García Lorca, through the memoir of the actress who loved him and who speaks now against tyranny. The fusion of nationalities in the tone of Golijov&#8217;s music &#8211; a mix of the slashing Hispanic and Hebraic, which remain somewhat apart and strike sparks in between &#8211; draws an uncanny match from Upshaw: The sweet, angelic Susanna and Barbarina of her early days goes through an amazing transformation in this music; it gets into her blood and into ours.</p>
<p>Two days later, Upshaw returned in Golijov&#8217;s <i>Ayre</i>, the wondrous cycle of song-passions gathered from Mediterranean lands at many times in many tongues. Again as at a &#8220;Green Umbrella&#8221; earlier last season, her companions were the chamber group Eighth Blackbird, but this time much transformed from the mere accompanists of the previous performance. For whatever reason &#8211; more careful listening to the singer, or to the intense guitar of Gustavo Santaolalla &#8211; the performance took on a luster that the &#8220;Umbrella&#8221; event had not. For further luster, Upshaw and the group began that memorable Sunday morning with the work that is the disc-mate to <i>Ayre</i> (and which Golijov cites as inspiration for his work), Luciano Berio&#8217;s <i>Folk Songs</i>.</p>
<p>There was more: Robert Spano and his Atlanta Symphony slogging through John Adams&#8217; <i>Chamber Symphony</i>, the orchestra&#8217;s Chamber Chorus in a dreary program that had no place, and mezzo-soprano Luciana Souza just okay in Falla&#8217;s <i>El Amor Brujo</i>.</p>
<p>György Ligeti (1923-2006)</p>
<p>Somehow Ligeti was on my mind all the Ojai weekend. The Salonen performance of his <i>Requiem</i>, from four weeks back, continues to reverberate, of course. The damp weather brought back memories of another summer years ago, the Ardittis performing both Ligeti quartets, the cold mist almost seeming to blend into the swirling, muttering, magical music. Then, on Monday, Ligeti was gone.</p>
<p>Herewith, a pastiche of excerpts from 1993, the last time we met, at a private concert. (The pianist Pierre-Laurent Aimard was to play Ligeti&#8217;s Piano Etudes, and the conversation grew out of those phenomenal, iconic works. Aimard, the way these things sometimes happen, is next year&#8217;s major musician at Ojai.) As best I could, I have left Ligeti&#8217;s diction unadorned.</p>
<p>&#8220;I didn&#8217;t really change my ideas, but I work like somebody in science, when he solves the problem comes a hundred new problems. Calvin Klein. I have a lot of admiration, but Klein developed . . . a certain blue and then he used only this blue. I am the opposite. My ideal is Stravinsky, went from Russian to Pergolesi to Bach to Webern finally. My music has a lot to do with jazz, but is definitely not jazz.</p>
<p>&#8220;You know, we have certain drawers. There is a drawer of so-called classical music and jazz is in a different drawer and pop and rock, but there are places where the drawers mix. So I have my love for jazz even I don&#8217;t play jazz. When Stravinsky wrote his <i>Piano Rag Music</i>, his ragtime was also very, very deep . . . In fact I dare to say that the real musical style of the 20th century, the real big thing that happened was jazz, this melding of African rhythmic thinking and English, Irish melodies . . . more important, I feel, than many of the deep learned music.</p>
<p>&#8220;There are some composers, some very distinguished colleagues, who really use algorithms, calculating methods. I don&#8217;t do them. I feel very close to the scientific community, to the computer people, to the artificial-intelligence people. I&#8217;m a member of the secret mafia of fractal geometry, of chaotic and dynamic systems and nonlinear equations, but I don&#8217;t use them. If a composer pretends that he invented anything, he is a liar. Nobody invented nothing. Everybody is starting from somebody else.&#8221;?</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Monstrosities</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2006/06/monstrosities/</link>
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		<pubDate>Wed, 14 Jun 2006 22:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[A Tradition Upheld If life followed the standard operatic scenario, the Grendel that ensued on the Dorothy Chandler Pavilion stage last week &#8211; after the chaos that delayed its opening, cost the L.A. Opera some $300,000 in added expenses on top of the $2.8 million of the original production, and occasioned the flow of perspiration [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>A Tradition Upheld</p>
<p>If life followed the standard operatic scenario, the <i>Grendel</i> that ensued on the Dorothy Chandler Pavilion stage last week &#8211; after the chaos that delayed its opening, cost the L.A. Opera some $300,000 in added expenses on top of the $2.8 million of the original production, and occasioned the flow of perspiration both at the Music Center and at New York&#8217;s Lincoln Center (where the work is to be the diadem of next month&#8217;s Festival) &#8211; should end up as superb musical drama worthy of the majestic complexities of the George Tsypin stage set and the directorial acumen of Julie Taymor, known to have tamed Lion Kings, Flying Dutchmen and Queens of the Night. It does not.</p>
<p>It joins, instead, the gloomy annals of operatic world premieres &#8211; four so far &#8211; perpetrated by the local forces under the grand delusion that the future of large-scale opera lies in cramming poor music into old outlines. (Don&#8217;t worry; the Metropolitan Opera&#8217;s record is just as bad.) In the case of the drearily gesturesome <i>Kullervo</i> and the hopelessly second-rate <i>Fantastic Mr. Fox</i> and <i>Nicolas and Alexandra</i>, these were at least the work of operatic professionals. <i>Grendel</i>, however, is the first venture into opera of Elliot Goldenthal, after a well-oiled career in film scoring. Though his musical vocabulary is the kind that goes down well in patriotic oratorios commissioned by suburban philharmonic societies, he is now faced with the matter of creating personalities on the stage in the process of growth. As far as I can tell, after two hearings of his maiden attempt and reams of his orotund proclamations live and in print, I detect no idea in his work of how to join music to character.</p>
<p>He has taken the wonderful Grendel concept, which novelist John Gardner distilled out of the <i>Beowulf</i> epic and endowed with a centuries-spanning personality, and reduced him to growls and howls (which Eric Owens, made up to look like a belligerent potato, delivers far better than they deserve). Librettist J.D. McClatchy, who seems to have cornered the literature-into-libretto market lately (<i>Our Town</i>, <i>Miss Lonelyhearts</i> and Lorin Maazel&#8217;s much-clobbered <i>1984</i>), collaborated with Taymor on the text, which does not confine its violence to the title character, but wanders arrogantly over the subtly lit terrain of Gardner&#8217;s fantastic text, which is in its pristine form a delightful read.</p>
<p>The all-knowing (if deliciously cynical) Dragon, for example, who delivers to the young Grendel the wisdom that will enable him to winnow out the matters of true importance in his life, has via Taymor-McClatchy morphed into a kind of Dietrich-plus-Erda vamp. Operatic exigencies, I suppose, demand a woman&#8217;s voice somewhere before the end of Act 1, but all this distortion proves is the willingness of today&#8217;s &#8212;&#8212;&#8211;<br />
AUTHORs to cast aside yesterday&#8217;s integrity, and so it goes. Gardner&#8217;s splendid <i>Grendel</i> has, therefore, sadly metamorphosed into artistic grotesquery heaped upon dramatic dishonesty. None of the L.A. Opera&#8217;s former fiascoes went <i>that</i> far.</p>
<p>Oh yes, there is that mighty roar by Eric Owens in the title role, truly a spectacular howl for those who seek that manner of operatic thrill. As the Dragon, Denyce Graves manages an impressive vocal range; Laura Claycomb, that marvelous Zerbinetta of two seasons ago, coats her tiny assignment as Queen Wealtheow in tones of pure silver. Come to think of it, I can&#8217;t remember an opera, new or old, in which so many excellent singers have been squandered in so many tiny roles. Can it be that Mr. Goldenthal is afraid of singers? The best performance in <i>Grendel</i> is by Desmond Richardson, the Beowulf, who comes to end Grendel&#8217;s lifetime of depredations. He dances terrifically and doesn&#8217;t sing a note. (Nor does the stageful of clever puppets, of course, without which it wouldn&#8217;t be a Taymor show.)</p>
<p>And then there is that set: Tsypin&#8217;s monster of a wall, moving this way and that, spectacularly clanking up, down and sidewise, its 26 computers finally brought into sync to afford Owens and a couple of his pals something to climb up and down upon as their imprecations rock the Chandler&#8217;s night air (plus two matinees) &#8211; shiny on one side to stand for a world under ice, forested on the other to stand for . . . well, forests. At the end of one scene, Mr. Owens is asked to deliver a curtain line that is unique in the annals of opera lyrics, and may be equally so in the annals of instant criticism. The line is &#8220;bullshit.&#8221;</p>
<p>Mama Knows Best</p>
<p>On the previous night, the company&#8217;s <i>La Traviata</i> began not with the familiar party scene but out on the sidewalk under a solitary streetlamp, with streetwalkers plying their usual trade &#8211; this during the haunting melancholy of Verdi&#8217;s overture. Violetta then arrives on the arm of her swain-of-the-evening, in a snazzy town car &#8211; Duesenberg, or some such. Everybody goes inside, which means that the car must make its exit through the ballroom, but never mind. By then you&#8217;ve guessed that this is the stagecraft of Mama Domingo, patroness saint of the opera-plot rewrite, and you&#8217;d be right.</p>
<p>There isn&#8217;t as much wrong with Marta Domingo&#8217;s <i>Traviata</i> as with some of her past desecrations (remember <i>La Rondine</i>?), and the general squalor of her production, of which she is both director and designer, is offset by the general excellence of the singing and of the music itself. Her stage sets seem to consist of objects simply dropped at various places: a Deco table and chairs at midstage against some singularly ugly trees for Act 2, a bed downstage in the final scene with a blanket that makes it look as if Violetta is lying in soapsuds. Overall, however, I see no point in any attempt to move this intensely 1850s work, remarkable in its day as an opera set in its own time, out of that time. Every wisp of fragrance in the music, every current in the moral tone of its story, belongs where Verdi &#8211; and his inspiring playwright, Alexandre Dumas &#8211; set it, and an Art Deco <i>Traviata</i> is just willfully and groundlessly false.</p>
<p>But there are the Violetta of Elizabeth Futral, her pure coloratura tinged with a splendid sense of urgency; the Alfredo of Joseph Calleja, a remarkably convincing dramatic tenor new to these ears; and the Papa Germont of Dwayne Croft, forthright and sympathetic. John Fiore&#8217;s musical leadership strikes me more as tidy than inspired, but a strong tidying hand, considering the onstage mess, isn&#8217;t such a bad idea.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>The&#160;Experimentalists</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2006/06/the-experimentalists/</link>
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		<pubDate>Wed, 07 Jun 2006 19:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=582</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[The Antic Romantic Concerts of all six of Bach&#8217;s &#8220;Brandenburg&#8221; Concertos drew capacity, turn-away crowds to Disney Hall last week. Music by Harry Partch, downstairs in the small theater known as REDCAT, likewise, had people begging tickets out on the sidewalk. REDCAT is only a tenth the size of Disney, but I found both events [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>The Antic Romantic</p>
<p>Concerts of all six of Bach&#8217;s &#8220;Brandenburg&#8221; Concertos drew capacity, turn-away crowds to Disney Hall last week. Music by Harry Partch, downstairs in the small theater known as REDCAT, likewise, had people begging tickets out on the sidewalk. REDCAT is only a tenth the size of Disney, but I found both events and the crowds they drew &#8211; mostly young and marvelously receptive &#8211; similarly exhilarating. Each program had to do with a composer, at a certain defiant moment in his career, trying things out.</p>
<p>Anyone who believed, as many did, that Harry Partch&#8217;s hypnotic but daffy music would fade from the scene after his death in 1974, and after the weird but fragile instruments he had fashioned for realizing his stratospheric creative visions had gone under lock and key, had reckoned without the innate magic of his work, and the zeal of his believers. John Schneider &#8211; musician, KPFK program host and prime mover &#8211; has seen to the duplication of the prototype instruments, with the blessing of the Partch trustees. Nine of these replications, whose originals Partch built from 1930 to 1950, now form the ensemble that calls itself, simply, Partch; its weird and wonderful sonorities, truly unlike anything else on Earth or any neighboring celestial body, filled the air at REDCAT most enchantingly. Marvelous to watch and to hear, the physical beauty of their structure and the haunting resonance of their sounds, as they wandered among the labyrinthine designs of Partch&#8217;s 43-note octaves and the vagaries of their percussive adventures, re-created the living experience as it was when Partch and his gang were among us. Last week&#8217;s players, including such CalArts stalwarts as David Johnson and Vicki Ray, plus of course Schneider himself, helped reinforce the links with the past. A group of latter-day CalArts dancers, alas, merely contributed clutter.</p>
<p>I don&#8217;t know whether any of Partch&#8217;s music counts as &#8220;great&#8221; as we music critics like to define it. Nowadays we have learned to live comfortably in the spaces between the notes of the C-major scale; we know the sounds of gamelan, of medieval chant in authentic tunings, of synthesizers large and small. The shock value that I remember from my early Partch encounters has diminished; the beauty remains, but sometimes wears thin. The best of Partch lies in its power to evoke visual counterparts, and a DVD just out on Innova includes the dance-drama <i>Delusion of the Fury</i>, as staged at UCLA in 1969, which really does match sight to sound. The fearless arts patron Betty Freeman financed that production, and she also produced a film on Partch, at work on his <i>The Dreamer that Remains</i>, that never once attempts to state a case for his possible sanity. That cherishable half-hour&#8217;s worth of free fall is also on the DVD.</p>
<p>There were small pieces on the Partch program, too, and they revealed a gentler side not often found in his rowdier music. Several were songs, nicely sung by Schneider, to poetry by Ella Young, a dear lady who deserves to be remembered. Celtic by birth, she settled up near Big Sur and was widely known for her ability to talk with trees. I read her children&#8217;s books when young, and read them still.</p>
<p>That&#8217;s Entertainment</p>
<p>A night with all six &#8220;Brandenburgs,&#8221; I once wrote, is like having a whole box of Godiva chocolates to yourself. Now I am under doctor&#8217;s orders to entertain less caloric daydreams. Whatever the simile, the entire series &#8211; at one sitting or singly &#8211; constitutes an absorbing study of a musical mind in action: a problem conceived; a problem partitioned into six entirely separate modes of beginning and ending, traversing entirely different landscapes en route; a problem magically resolved with six different applications of creative genius.</p>
<p>Here is a composer at 35, still upwardly mobile in acquiring artistic command, at a time when composing for orchestras or solo instruments was still a new and untried art &#8211; and he flings forth these six killer essays in instrumental usage, which, for all he knew, were beyond the technical skill of any players of his time. Moreover, their artistic demands were rather heady stuff for the time as well. Try those wrenching dissonances in the slow movement of No. 1, for example; people weren&#8217;t whistling that kind of thing on the streets back in 1720. What other composer of the time would have dreamed of joining the soft politeness of flute, oboe and small violin to the boisterous assertiveness of a solo high trumpet &#8211; and turned the result into the irresistible proclamation of sheer exuberance that constitutes No. 2? Or conceived the dark-hued meditations of low-strings-only that cause No. 6 to stand apart?</p>
<p>Giovanni Antonini, whose ensemble Giardino Armonico has been the commendable background for Cecilia Bartoli&#8217;s uncommonly adventurous recital programs in recent years, led the properly small group of Philharmonic players, and tootled along with Inga Funck as the two-recorder contingent in the Fourth Concerto. (Put two recorders together, by the way &#8211; <i>any</i> two recorders &#8211; and the harmony begins to verge on Harry Partch; ever notice?) The performances under Antonini were of the contemporary almost-authentic style that seems to have become the proper stylistic approach, at least when old music takes place in as contemporary a setting as Disney: no more than 18 string players in the supporting orchestra strings, playing with just enough vibrato to make them audible but no more, and with tempos decently crisp, but with a genial slowdown to round off the cadences.</p>
<p>Among the visiting soloists were David Washburn of the L.A. Chamber Orchestra, who stole the Second Brandenburg with his note-perfect high-trumpet acrobatics, and Lucinda Carver of the L.A. Mozart Orchestra of fond memory, whose support at the harpsichord was solid in all six works, and whose cadenzas in No. 5 bore witness that in this remarkable work the whole notion of the solo keyboard concerto was born. Without the Bach Five, in other words, we&#8217;d never have had a Rach Three. Forgiveness is in order.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Sudden&#160;Shock</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2006/05/sudden-shock/</link>
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		<pubDate>Wed, 31 May 2006 19:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=581</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Wanderings Claude Vivier was born in Montreal in 1948 to anonymous parents, raised in an orphanage and then by foster parents named Vivier. Honored eventually as a brilliant if disturbing composer, he ended up in Paris, where, at 34, he was stabbed to death in his apartment by a young man he had picked up [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Wanderings</p>
<p>Claude Vivier was born in Montreal in 1948 to anonymous parents, raised in an orphanage and then by foster parents named Vivier. Honored eventually as a brilliant if disturbing composer, he ended up in Paris, where, at 34, he was stabbed to death in his apartment by a young man he had picked up in a bar. On his worktable there was found a completed manuscript, a cantata for voices and orchestra whose narrator tells of cruising a young man who then stabs him to death; the piece ends with the same sudden shock, and then silence, that took place in Vivier&#8217;s room. In the hourlong documentary that is part of <i>Dreams of a Marco Polo</i>, a new two-disc DVD produced by Opus Arte and distributed here by Naxos, a Canadian friend of Vivier&#8217;s reads some of the composer&#8217;s last letters, which talk of suicide in the most haunting way; there are also hints that another project, which he never began, was to be a dramatic work in which the despairing Tchaikovsky, naked and in full acceptance of his homosexuality, confronts the ways of taking his own life. The DVD set &#8211; discs and cover alike &#8211; is all in black, as it should be.</p>
<p>In 1971, at 23, Vivier had attracted good notices in Canada, and was sent to Europe on a stipend. There he joined the circle around Karlheinz Stockhausen (who, the story goes, was repelled by the stink of his ancient sheepskin jacket &#8211; see photo) and developed his own powerful insights into music as ritual, music as a function of color, music saturated with the scents and the sense of the East. By the time of his death, his praise had been sung by György Ligeti and by the enterprising leadership of the Netherlands Opera. The 150 minutes of Vivier&#8217;s music that fills out this extraordinary DVD set has been pieced together by the Dutch conductor Reinbert de Leeuw (who brought us Louis Andriessen&#8217;s music during the Minimalist Jukebox, and who becomes a compelling, wise presence as video host) and the Netherlands Opera&#8217;s Pierre Audi. Powerful, insinuating, drenched in a restless passion, it is by some distance the strongest music by a Canadian composer I have ever heard, the first I have heard that stands absolutely free from the shadow of that country&#8217;s southern neighbor.</p>
<p>Overall, the sequence has been given the name <i>Dreams of a Marco Polo</i>, assuming Vivier himself as the self-proclaimed restless wanderer through many worlds. It begins with his short opera <i>Kopernikus</i>, subtitled &#8220;a ritual opera of death,&#8221; which involves not so much the medieval scientist as it does real and mythical figures (Lewis Carroll, Merlin, Tristan . . .) around whom dazzling, blinding light images take shape. Into a &#8220;Marco Polo&#8221; collage several of Vivier&#8217;s shorter works have been blended, including <i>Lonely Child</i>, achingly sad evocations of a neglected childhood, set for soprano and ethereal strings. The sense of suffering builds; the final work is the piece on the table in the fateful room. &#8220;Do you believe,&#8221; the chorus intones, &#8220;in the immortality of the soul,&#8221; with that &#8220;immortality&#8221; in German &#8211; &#8220;<i>unSTERBlichkeit</i>&#8221; &#8211; itself like a dagger&#8217;s thrust. I find a comparable shock, actually, in the impact of this whole astonishing program.</p>
<p>Maestro, by the Pound</p>
<p>On the matter of astonishment, perhaps of shock, this would be a good time to tell you about Maestro. Let me start with the asking price: $4,975 &#8211; five grand, minus carfare. This is what you get. Maestro itself is a device for playing music, quite a lot of music in fact, which has been loaded into it in the form of the Cornerstone Collection. (Like your computer full of iTunes, in other words, except that the Cornerstone Collection is very, very big and you get it all at once.) If you&#8217;ve never had a smidge of classical music in your house, or anything more recent than a wind-up Victrola, this might be the way to establish yourself suddenly as a highly cultured individual for the whole world to admire.</p>
<p><i>Except</i>: Just possibly, you might derive some discomfort from the fact that some of the outlay of exquisite discretion and taste that normally goes into the process of collecting &#8211; of music or art objects or fine racing horses &#8211; has already been done for you by the &#8220;classical-music experts&#8221; behind the scenes at Maestro headquarters in exotic San Diego. All the music that has been processed and iTuned is from one label &#8211; Naxos. Most of it, in fact, is from Naxos&#8217; early years of high-quantity, low-quality catalog building from cheapo Eastern European sources, long discontinued. There&#8217;s no choosing your Beethoven symphonies from, say, Rattle and the Berlin Philharmonic or Giulini and the home team; it&#8217;s the Esterházy Sinfonia for you; no Brendel or Barenboim on the Beethoven Sonatas, only Jenö Jandó; and are you willing to entrust your Mahler experience to the Polish Radio Symphony?</p>
<p>True, there are roadways around the dilemma, but they aren&#8217;t simple and they are not well-paved. If you happen to have discs in your own collection that you&#8217;d rather have processed to play on Maestro than, say, the Mozart of Barry Wordsworth&#8217;s Capella Istropolitana, you can bundle up your own discs, ship them off to Maestro; they&#8217;ll process them into their own Web site, return the now-obsolete silvery corpses (which you&#8217;re free to use as cocktail coasters) and pipe their content into your gleaming new Maestro player (available in silver or black). That process, by the way, is not cheap; you subscribe to the transfer service at 10 bucks per month, which entitles you to five discs. Oh, and by the way, the service also includes digital copies of the booklets &#8211; even librettos! &#8211; that you can read on your computer screen as the Maestro chugs along.</p>
<p>Am I the only one who finds this whole business distasteful to the point of upchuck? who&#8217;s finding in this whole Maestro presentation a disdain for anyone so minimally sophisticated as to care about the identity of the listening experience? the difference between slovenly performance values and care and pride in the presentation of music? Why have I been doing this for the last 60 or so years? or Ernest Fleischmann? or Esa-Pekka? or the man up the block who makes fine violins? or his wife, who plays chamber music? or the next generation now at work at the Crossroads School or Colburn? Surely not to produce the kibble or the wallpaper that these Maestro people represent, with their absurd promotional jargon &#8211; &#8220;the most-loved, important, influential music&#8221; &#8211; and their outrageous prices and their Esterházy Sinfonia. Stop me, somebody; this stuff, and the attitude behind it, has me really angry.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>A Honeyed&#160;Thunder</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2006/05/a-honeyed-thunder/</link>
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		<pubDate>Wed, 24 May 2006 19:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=580</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Hybrids Even in his much-regretted absence, the late Lou Harrison remains a glowing presence. The paltry three concerts of his music in Orange County over the past few days that have been passed off as this year&#8217;s Pacific Symphony American Composers &#8220;Festival&#8221; left much great music unplayed, and wasted time on insignificant works. Even so, [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Hybrids</p>
<p>Even in his much-regretted absence, the late Lou Harrison remains a glowing presence. The paltry three concerts of his music in Orange County over the past few days that have been passed off as this year&#8217;s Pacific Symphony American Composers &#8220;Festival&#8221; left much great music unplayed, and wasted time on insignificant works. Even so, there was obvious love behind the planning, and Lou came through loud and clear. Eva Soltes&#8217; documentary film clips showed the 100-year-old gamelan guru Pak Chokro talking about Lou, his eyes filled with reverence. A stageful of kids from the nearby Harvey Mudd College banged away on their gamelan instruments with pride and precision under Lou&#8217;s onetime disciple Bill Alves. And you knew some of the reasons for Lou&#8217;s importance among us, and why he is so sadly missed.</p>
<p>On the first concert, a bunch of time was squandered on Lou&#8217;s old-timey and rather silly piece of pseudo-Satie called <i>Marriage at the Eiffel Tower</i>, even though the astute programmer, Joseph Horowitz, had bothered to resurrect tapes of the narrations from a previous performance, delivered in the twee, buttery tones of Virgil Thomson and Lou himself. You could wish that conductor Carl St. Clair had instead been up to one of Lou&#8217;s big symphonies. We used to hear these great, garrulous (and therefore very Lou-like) works regularly when Lou was around to run his own festivals at Aptos, and Dennis Russell Davies was around to conduct. Why not now?</p>
<p>&#8220;His music was so spare in design as to seem naive,&#8221; wrote <i>The New Yorker</i>&#8216;s Alex Ross, &#8220;but it was not simple, and he was not a simple man.&#8221; Alex&#8217;s tribute, dated March 3, 2003, on the occasion of Lou&#8217;s death, is brief but speaks all about the man and his music; it&#8217;s on Alex&#8217;s Web site, <a href="http://www.therestisnoise.com,">www.therestisnoise.com,</a> and it appeared at the time, ironically, when this country had finally become aroused to the significance and stature of Harrison&#8217;s music. Lou had died, at 85, on his way to a college festival of his music in Ohio; earlier that year a similar celebration had taken place at Juilliard, a major awakening of New York&#8217;s ears to his West Coast-based music. Conductors around the world &#8211; America&#8217;s Davies, the Netherlands&#8217; Reinbert de Leeuw &#8211; have taken up the cause.</p>
<p>&#8220;Cherish the hybrids,&#8221; Lou used to say, and say again as a mantra, &#8220;they&#8217;re all we&#8217;ve got.&#8221; His early years saw a search for ingredients for the ideal mix: a dash of Schoenberg here, a soupçon of Satie there. Gradually we sense an epiphany, the emergence of a musical language that is Lou Harrison&#8217;s and no one else&#8217;s. The great <i>Double Concerto</i> of 1981 &#8211; an old friend, actually, with recent performances by Xtet at LACMA resounding in the memory &#8211; served to open proceedings last week with exactly the proper calling card. The work is pure mongrel, and wonderful of its kind. The background is, of course, the honeyed thunder of the small gamelan &#8211; and that was already a sight, five very undergrad-looking kids whomping away at the devices from a culture half a world and half a millennium away. Against this, the solo instruments play an almost continual rhapsodic line that seems to have both shape and no shape at all. There is other music like this: some Terry Riley perhaps, but there the melodic impetus is more Celtic than Pacific.</p>
<p>It&#8217;s probably pointless, however, to seek out resemblances; there are just so many notes in the world, after all. What has happened here, and it is more delightful than anything else, is that Harrison has accomplished an overlay of Western concerto principles onto this alien foundation, made it adhere in some strange and cockeyed way, and turned out something close to a masterpiece. This exhilarating <i>Double Concerto</i> is just that. It&#8217;s easy to make the distinction in dealing with new music that diatonic harmonies plus tunes equals conservative, and that abstruse harmonies plus bristling melodic lines equals progressive. But those equations break down constantly in the real world, and they do with Lou.</p>
<p>Sight, Sound, Sanity</p>
<p>Nerve centers in tune with Lou Harrison&#8217;s music should throb joyously at the stuff on the walls at Westwood&#8217;s Hammer Museum these days (through August 20). The show honors the activity of the Société Anonyme, an &#8220;experimental&#8221; modern-art museum founded in 1920 whose members included the likes of Marcel Duchamp, Man Ray and Piet Mondrian. The Hammer&#8217;s walls fairly vibrate with color: slashing lines, here a dizzying Kandinsky abstract, there a prismatic Klee; over in a corner a 1926 animated cartoon by somebody unpronounceably German making Disney look secondhand.</p>
<p>Twice during the run (last Saturday and on July 15), musical events tie in with the exhibition, and as the &#8212;&#8212;&#8211;<br />
AUTHOR of a book once described as &#8220;coffee-table gestalt&#8221; (relation of music to visual arts, don&#8217;t bother, long out of print), I am always a sucker for this kind of enterprise. Remember Neal Stulberg? Used to conduct the Philharmonic&#8217;s young people&#8217;s concerts? Last Sunday, Neal and some of his UCLA students performed music by Les Six, the six French composers active and famous right after World War I and, therefore, in time with the art in the Hammer show. The Hammer&#8217;s auditorium is a dinky space that looks like a made-over furnace room, but it served the purpose, and the music included a violin sonata and some songs by the Six&#8217;s two least-known composers, Germaine Tailleferre and Louis Durey, and a suite of tiny pieces by all six. (The others were Darius Milhaud, Arthur Honegger, Francis Poulenc and Georges Auric.) Best of all, the entertainment ended with one of the great wacky films of all time, René Clair&#8217;s silent Dada epic <i>Entr&#8217;acte </i>(1924) with Erik Satie&#8217;s score arranged as a piano duet by Milhaud and played by Stulberg and Cha-Lin Liu. Satie himself is one of the characters on the screen &#8211; firing a cannon from a Paris rooftop, if you must know.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Spinal&#160;Column</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2006/05/spinal-column/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2006/05/spinal-column/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 17 May 2006 19:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=579</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[The Only Other Music György Ligeti&#8217;s Requiem first makes itself known in your lower spine, moves overpoweringly upward and explodes into full awareness. Deep, dark harmonies resound from the low voices in the two interwoven choirs, further colored by the orchestra&#8217;s most solemn contingent; they form a dense web whose very lack of compass stops [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>The Only Other Music</p>
<p>György Ligeti&#8217;s <i>Requiem</i> first makes itself known in your lower spine, moves overpoweringly upward and explodes into full awareness. Deep, dark harmonies resound from the low voices in the two interwoven choirs, further colored by the orchestra&#8217;s most solemn contingent; they form a dense web whose very lack of compass stops the breath. Now and then a peal of brighter brass shatters the mysterious trombone and bassoon sonorities; the chorus and the two vocal soloists warn of the Day of Wrath. There is no other music quite like this extraordinary summoning from this greatest of living composers &#8211; nothing I can name that so totally, so insidiously exerts so firm a hold over a willing listener.</p>
<p>At the 1965 Stockholm premiere, a critic wrote, &#8220;For a while, all other music seemed impossible.&#8221; I would change the quotation: &#8220;All other music but one seemed impossible.&#8221; The &#8220;other music&#8221; that night was Beethoven&#8217;s Ninth Symphony, as it was again at Disney Hall last week, the only &#8220;other music&#8221; that can stand next to that awesome darkness and gather the strength to begin again. Esa-Pekka Salonen&#8217;s performance of that symphony went some distance to reveal, and then to dispel, that darkness.</p>
<p><i>Some</i> distance, that is. To these ears, Salonen&#8217;s conception of this most problematic of the Beethoven Nine suffers from one basic misconception: a tendency to drive emphatically forward toward the big, grandiose choral finale but to devote less weight of expression to the far more complex first movement &#8211; which to me is the greatest of all Beethoven&#8217;s symphonic movements. Time and again in last week&#8217;s performance I waited for a shaping of phrase in the first movement, a recognition of remarkable melodic outgrowth in those irresistible gatherings of strength. It simply did not happen. Someday mastery will come; some of Salonen&#8217;s Beethoven in this year&#8217;s series has been not only promising but truly remarkable &#8211; No. 4, for example &#8211; measured against his past performances.</p>
<p>We live in hope. The musician who could re-create the incredible intensity of this imponderable Ligeti masterwork &#8211; the violent contrasts, the frenzy and the immobility, the half-hour&#8217;s immersion in the workings of sheer genius (drawn from the Philharmonic, the Master Chorale, and vocal soloists Caroline Stein and Jill Grove) &#8211; is entitled to a little extra time to work on his Beethoven.</p>
<p>Unsuk Heroes, Reynolds Rap</p>
<p>Ever larger looms the name of Korea&#8217;s Unsuk Chin. Rumors persist that her <i>Alice in Wonderland</i> opera, which Kent Nagano conducts in Munich next season, still heads here eventually, as does her fabulous (but murderously difficult) Violin Concerto. Her reputation as a master of musical jokes and wordplay is already known here, and at last week&#8217;s Green Umbrella, her <i>Cantatrix Sopranica</i> provided 26 minutes of sheer delirium along those lines. It is a piece for singers (three) about singing: vocalises, language jokes, a delightful dig at Chinese-through-the-nose, some passionate Italianate nonsense. Beyond all that, the piece is wondrously virtuosic: two sopranos and a countertenor in exact coordination through demanding roulades and cadenzas. The music is both enchantingly pretty and wickedly to the point. Sopranos Caroline Stein and Hila Plitmann and countertenor Paul Flight made up the chorus of would-be nightingales; Alexander Mickelthwate conducted.</p>
<p>Sharing the program was Roger Reynolds of UC San Diego, whose Center for Musical Experiment has given us commendable multimedia works in many stripes, some of them grateful to eye and ear. <i>Illusion</i>, alas, proved congenial to neither. Commissioned by a handful of big-name foundations, and given here in its world premiere, the work did serve to illuminate one aspect of Disney Hall I hadn&#8217;t noticed before. The sightlines are such that you get a clear view of people walking out early from anywhere in the hall. Mr. Reynolds&#8217; work lasted, I am told, 70 minutes; I joined the procession at minute 51. Salonen conducted, and therefore was stuck with the whole thing.</p>
<p><i>Illusion</i> purports to tell of the run-up to the Trojan War, with texts adapted from Aeschylus and Euripides, spoken or sung or otherwise hurled at an ensemble of brass, percussion and piano performing rather thuddy music. The multimedia bit has to do with singers and actors (whom I leave unnamed, out of kindness) moving from one music stand to another onstage. At the intermission before the piece, there was a sound installation in the lobby with more of the Reynolds score. Wherever I wandered, however, it was well drowned out by conversation, mostly about the pleasures of the Unsuk Chin piece.</p>
<p>All in a Night&#8217;s Work</p>
<p>Life in 2006 is a big, gleaming round of one all-Mozart celebration after the other &#8211; as, for example, the one that ended the Jacaranda concert season last weekend. Some of it traced familiar ground: <i>Eine kleine Nachtmusik</i>, the &#8220;Exsultate&#8221; motet, the Flute and Harp Concerto. You might have dismissed the concerto from your anticipation: No. 299 in the Köchel Catalog, out of 626, means it&#8217;s an early work, immature, maybe not worth serious listening. The first movement, up-and-down, tonic-dominant, fits these expectations, except that the Jacaranda people devised a cute cadenza, with quotes from Mozart&#8217;s other &#8220;flute&#8221; work, the &#8220;magic&#8221; one.</p>
<p>But then came the slow movement, with its soft, tentative first phrases and then, out of nowhere, an episode that soars toward sublimity, a conversation of deep import, compounded of sequences of the most heartbreaking harmonies. Suddenly there is the very young Mozart, baring his own inmost thoughts and engaging ours in the process. Mozart does that to people.</p>
<p>The performers &#8211; soprano Maria Lazarova, flutist Pamela Vliek, harpist Maria Casale and the Denali Quartet &#8211; represented Jacaranda in full blossom. Like the Monday Evening Concerts of comparable value, the series has been rendered temporarily homeless &#8211; not this time out of managerial chicanery, but for repairs to Santa Monica&#8217;s First Presbyterian that will take about a year. Next concert: a &#8220;Pan-American Marathon&#8221; in a Deco setting, November 4 in Barnum Hall at Santa Monica High.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>To Wonder, to&#160;Ponder</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2006/05/to-wonder-to-ponder/</link>
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		<pubDate>Wed, 10 May 2006 22:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=578</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Unfinished but Polished One question immediately surfaced, as a near-capacity audience cheered itself hoarse at the sublime artistry of Ian Bostridge and Leif Ove Andsnes, and the performers had run out of encores: Why aren&#8217;t there more concerts like this? Art-song programs, we are told, draw poorly; solo piano recitals, too, unless they&#8217;re performed by [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Unfinished but Polished</p>
<p>One question immediately surfaced, as a near-capacity audience cheered itself hoarse at the sublime artistry of Ian Bostridge and Leif Ove Andsnes, and the performers had run out of encores: Why aren&#8217;t there more concerts like this? Art-song programs, we are told, draw poorly; solo piano recitals, too, unless they&#8217;re performed by under-30 exotics &#8211; too much intelligence, too little fun. Here was refutation, a program that seemed to be motivated from first note to last by the love of music and of making music happen. It was planned, furthermore, with an uncommon outlay of imagination, with music by trustworthy composers, to be sure, but works mostly unfamiliar, some of it even mere fragments (more unfinished Schubert to pile onto the one symphony we already know).</p>
<p>And it was all fascinating, rewarding, a generous serving of music-making intelligence that also entailed a deep bow of respect to an obviously grateful audience. At the start there was Beethoven&#8217;s <i>An die ferne Geliebte</i>, the first-ever linking by a composer of several songs into a continuous narration, thus the progenitor of song cycles by Schubert and Schumann. Later came a Schubert set, the three &#8220;Harper&#8221; songs from Goethe&#8217;s <i>Wilhelm Meister</i>, linked not so much by story as by mood. Then came a really fascinating clutch of Schubert bits: songs and piano pieces that Schubert had begun and then set aside unfinished, sometimes right up to the last couple of measures.</p>
<p>Why? The pile of unfinished Schubert lives on to tantalize us: whole movements of symphonies, almost-whole movements that others have completed, reams of songs and other short pieces sometimes simply throbbing with beautiful ideas. Living on the edge, Schubert often may have had to set one project aside for a chance to score a little cash with another. Like any artist, he may have felt that he had painted himself into a corner for reasons only he could recognize. In any case, here was this bag of glistening fragments to light up the Disney Hall stage, and here were these supremely imaginative artists to delight themselves and tantalize us all with a glimpse inside. On his own, Andsnes performed the next-to-last Beethoven piano sonata (Opus 110) with such command of the forward momentum &#8211; most of all in the final, ecstatic pages of the concluding fugue &#8211; as to make that work, at least this once, seem the greatest of all the &#8220;32.&#8221; He could, in fact, be right.</p>
<p>. . . And Just Finished (for Now)</p>
<p>At approximately 11 p.m. on May Day, Marino Formenti sat at the piano in the Bing Theater at the County Museum to end his recital &#8211; which had begun about four hours before &#8211; with <i>Palais de Mari</i>, Morton Feldman&#8217;s last work for piano, composed 20 years before. Formenti&#8217;s American career had begun on that stage in 2000, in a concert that concluded with a jaw-dropping performance of the Sonata by Jean Barraqué, a work widely regarded as unplayable. Now he was back to usher out the Monday Evening Concerts, the series that had given him and countless other torchbearers for contemporary and other adventurous music their first platform &#8211; here in Los Angeles and, in many cases, the world.</p>
<p>Formenti had planned this final concert as an &#8220;Homage&#8221; to the Monday Evening Concerts, and he offered a full menu: an &#8220;hors d&#8217;oeuvre&#8221; of Ives, Cowell, Schoenberg and the gang; contemporary inscrutables, including Salvatore Sciarrino and a Nam June Paik number that demanded an amplified violin dragged across the concrete floor. For dessert, there was a clutch of Boulez&#8217;s <i>Notations</i> and an elegant jazzy bit by the MEC&#8217;s late mastermind, Dorrance Stalvey. The smiling countenances of John Cage and Igor Stravinsky hovered close overhead.</p>
<p>Feldman&#8217;s exquisite half-hour of rippling near silences filled the hall like a benevolent emanation. Formenti had invited anyone who wanted to, to come onstage, sit on a chair or spread across the floor, to hang out at this ludicrously unnecessary event, suspending a series that had begun on a Silver Lake rooftop in 1939 and gone far to establish this city as a firm mover of serious musical creativity. The Monday Evening Concerts (which began as &#8220;Evenings on the Roof&#8221;) have been obliged to move before. Already a committee to assure their continuance has scheduled concerts in Zipper Concert Hall downtown on February 19, March 19 and April 16, 2007; one of those concerts will be curated by Esa-Pekka Salonen. Stay tuned.</p>
<p>Notes in Transit</p>
<p>In New York last week, I thoroughly enjoyed the newly revised <i>Sweeney Todd</i>, Stephen Sondheim&#8217;s razor-edge intensity greatly sharpened by the staging, in which cast principals also serve as orchestra. Patti LuPone&#8217;s Mrs. Lovett is so vivid and original a creation that I can finally forgive her Evita; Michael Cerveris, the Sweeney, wipes out any previous image I might have had of that role. Next night, as it happened, I succumbed to friends&#8217; longtime urging and looked in on <i>The Light in the Piazza</i>, which I found admirable for very much the same reasons: a show brought down to manageable size in a kind of chamber-music conception &#8211; small pit band, small chorus, splendid sense of ensemble. Adam Guettel&#8217;s music is the best new theatrical score I&#8217;ve heard since . . . well, since the original <i>Sweeney Todd</i>, and that goes back a long way. I left the theater thinking that if André Previn, for example, had been wiser, this is how he should have set <i>A Streetcar Named Desire</i>: something close to the emotions in the play, rather than all that garbage in the orchestra pit.</p>
<p>And on the subject of garbage, my other night in New ?York was spent at Juilliard, which was celebrating its centennial with a proudly commissioned brand-new opera by an alum: Lowell Liebermann&#8217;s misbegotten mishmash raked ?out of Nathanael West&#8217;s <i>Miss Lonelyhearts</i>. It&#8217;s depressing ?to discover how this kind of cliché-ridden pseudo-modernism can earn the fond embrace of the well-fed trustee, yesterday at the Metropolitan Opera (<i>American Tragedy</i>) or today ?with this piece of claptrap out of Liebermann. It&#8217;s enough ?to make you want to head back to Monteverdi and start all over again.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>The Past&#160;Master</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2006/05/the-past-master/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2006/05/the-past-master/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 03 May 2006 19:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=577</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[The New Art Act 2 of Monteverdi&#8217;s L&#8217;Orfeo begins in a sunlit meadow. Orpheus and his pals &#8211; nymphs, shepherds, homeless &#8211; are celebrating his recent marriage to Euridice. Orpheus, the greatest singer of the day, spins off song after song on his &#8220;golden lyre&#8221; to the happiest of harmonies. Suddenly a dark figure blots [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>The New Art</p>
<p>Act 2 of Monteverdi&#8217;s <i>L&#8217;Orfeo</i> begins in a sunlit meadow. Orpheus and his pals &#8211; nymphs, shepherds, homeless &#8211; are celebrating his recent marriage to Euridice. Orpheus, the greatest singer of the day, spins off song after song on his &#8220;golden lyre&#8221; to the happiest of harmonies. Suddenly a dark figure blots out the sunshine, the harmony turns minor, and the melodies become halting; the Messenger has brought the news of Euridice&#8217;s death. All through the history of opera as drama &#8211; which can be said to have begun at this moment, at the Gonzaga Palace in Mantua in 1607 &#8211; music has served to underline and make thrilling the element of surprise: Susanna&#8217;s emergence from the closet in <i>The Marriage of Figaro</i>, Siegmund pulling the sword in <i>Die Walküre</i>; the general unmasking in <i>Falstaff</i>. This is where it happened first, the soft, subtle but unmistakable shift from major to minor harmonies, underscored by a change from high to low instruments, as death&#8217;s shadow darkens the stage in the world&#8217;s first great opera.</p>
<p>This moment, and the rest of the supreme accomplishments as Monteverdi fashioned his &#8220;new art&#8221; from the different kinds of musical drama that he and his Renaissance colleagues had already brought to high estate, is brilliantly set forth in <i>Opera&#8217;s First Master</i>, an uncommonly well-told accounting of Monteverdi&#8217;s operatic legacy by Mark Ringer, a New York director, dramaturge and writer (Amadeus Press &#8211; also my publisher &#8211; paperback, $29.95). What Mr. Ringer has done here is to create &#8211; rare, in my experience &#8211; writing about great music so close to the music itself that it can be read almost like a score. There is no jargon here, no Karl Haas/Jim Svejda/Alan Rich gobbledygook.</p>
<p>Read (and, virtually, listen to) this brief sample (I abbreviate slightly): &#8221; &#8216;Ah, bitter event! Ah, impious and cruel fate!&#8217; sings the Messenger, in a grating minor-key recitative. Incredulous, the tenor Shepherd keeps to his major key when he asks &#8216;What sounds of mourning perturb this happy day?&#8217; But the setting of the last word, &#8216;perturba,&#8217; creates a brief dissonance, suggesting the upward inflection of the voice at the end of a question and a sense of foreboding . . .&#8221;</p>
<p>Trying to write about any kind of abstraction &#8211; music, the visual arts, another writer&#8217;s style &#8211; should embody the urge to send the reader back to the source; Ringer&#8217;s triumph is that I sit here with my desk strewn with Monteverdi: <i>L&#8217;Orfeo</i> on a Virgin-Veritas CD with Ian Bostridge, <i>The Return of Ulysses</i> and <i>The Coronation of Poppea</i> in the René Jacobs discs on Harmonia Mundi, half a dozen DVDs. His book brings them marvelously to life, and by doing so re-creates a marvelous era in the arts. Whether I know the work already or not, his kind of writing communicates a deep and honorable appetite for the music under his enthusiastic examination.</p>
<p>The Public Art</p>
<p><i>L&#8217;Orfeo</i> was created for invited guests at a grand palazzo. Three decades later, opera for a ticket-buying public had become a reality, and Monteverdi was in Venice, composing for that public. A compact disc bound into the cover of Ringer&#8217;s book provides a pretty good measure of how public taste in opera had developed in the three or more decades between <i>L&#8217;Orfeo</i> and the great works that survive from his time as resident composer at the first &#8211; or perhaps second &#8211; public opera, the Teatro di SS Giovanni e Paolo, which opened in Venice in 1639. Already by then the public taste for fine vocal work was on the rise &#8211; not only showoff virtuosity but also deep, expressive singing. From <i>The Return of Ulysses</i> the disc includes Penelope&#8217;s great aria of longing with the heartbreaking refrain &#8220;Return, oh return, Ulysses.&#8221; If you remember the way Frederica von Stade sang it with the Los Angeles Opera a few years back, or hear how Bernarda Fink sings it on this disc (or on the Jacobs recording on Harmonia Mundi whence it comes), you&#8217;ll know that, all the way back to 1640, opera had already gained the power to move, and to break, human hearts.</p>
<p>But there is something even more wonderful in <i>Ulysses</i>, and reading Ringer&#8217;s excellent description of the very last music makes me want to spend a day or two just running and rerunning that final scene. Ulysses has returned after all those years, killed off all the hangers-on around Penelope&#8217;s palace, proved his ownership of the magic bow. Only Penelope still needs convincing that he is he, and all that will work for her is that this new guy will be able to identify the one thing he alone can know: the embroidery pattern on the marital bed she has kept fresh for him. He does.</p>
<p>&#8220;The opera ends with a duet by the reunited couple,&#8221; Ringer writes. &#8220;They sing a gentle minor-key tune with solo and overlapping lines that changes the emotional temperature from extroverted rapture to private, glowing tenderness. Long pent-up emotion seems to bring them to the verge of tears. Newly invigorated, she sings her own lyric: &#8216;Fly from our breasts, feelings of sadness,&#8217; and now Ulisse sings his refrain with his own slight variant, &#8216;<i>Si, si, si, core, si, si</i>.&#8217; The opera ends with a powerful affirmation in five bars of unison singing, &#8216;<i>Si, si, si, core, si, si</i>.&#8217; Just those simple sounds, fading away; nothing more. Name another opera, if you can, that ends so enchantingly.&#8221; (I can, one: Ravel&#8217;s <i>L&#8217;Enfant et les Sortilèges</i>.)</p>
<p>That final duet is included on the disc (with Christoph Prégardien as Ulysses); there is also a fair sampling of music from <i>The Coronation of Poppea</i>, which is on the L.A. Opera&#8217;s docket for next season, in a production from the same Netherlands Opera that sent us the <i>Ulysses</i> a few years back. Meanwhile, as I was saying, you can almost taste this extraordinary repertory in the remarkably vivid, informed &#8211; and, I can well imagine, dedicated &#8211; writing in this exceptionally valuable book. </p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>An Annual&#160;Alphabet</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2006/04/an-annual-alphabet-2/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2006/04/an-annual-alphabet-2/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Fri, 28 Apr 2006 01:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=576</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[John ADAMS: An atomic opera in San Francisco and a multimedia Nativity last month here preserved hopes for classical music&#8217;s present and future. Heinrich BIBER: Madcap violin virtuosity from Germany&#8217;s leading composer pre-Bach. In concerts and on disc, he&#8217;s taken over on the charts from Vivaldi. CLEVELAND Orchestra: Dvorák&#8217;s rarely heard Fifth Symphony made the [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>John <b>ADAMS</b>: An atomic opera in San Francisco and a multimedia Nativity last month here preserved hopes for classical music&#8217;s present and future.</p>
<p>Heinrich <b>BIBER</b>: Madcap violin virtuosity from Germany&#8217;s leading composer pre-Bach. In concerts and on disc, he&#8217;s taken over on the charts from Vivaldi.</p>
<p><b>CLEVELAND</b> Orchestra: Dvorák&#8217;s rarely heard Fifth Symphony made the orchestra&#8217;s Costa Mesa stint especially wonderful.</p>
<p><b>DORRANCE</b> Stalvey: After leading the distinguished Monday Evening Concerts at LACMA almost single-handedly for 33 years, he died last year. The concerts themselves are also on borrowed time.</p>
<p><b>ESA-PEKKA</b> Salonen: <i>Musical America</i> puts him on its cover as Musician of the Year. Who are we to differ?</p>
<p><b>FLICKA</b> Von Stade: A little long in the tooth for Offenbach&#8217;s man-eating Duchess at the L.A. Opera? Perhaps, but we love her all the same.</p>
<p><b>GUSTAVO</b> Dudamel: A 24-year-old Venezuelan fireball of a conductor made his local debut late in the Hollywood Bowl season and wowed us all.</p>
<p><b>HAYDN</b>&#8216;s String Quartet, Opus 54 No. 2, amazing, adventurous, lit up the Penderecki Quartet&#8217;s program ?at LACMA, the kind of music that LACMA now intends ?to ditch.</p>
<p><b>INDISPENSABLE</b>: Osvaldo Golijov&#8217;s <i>Ayre</i> and Luciano Berio&#8217;s <i>Folk Songs</i> sung by Dawn Upshaw on DG, with the Andalucian Dogs barking away in the background.</p>
<p><b>JEFFREY</b> Kahane: At keyboard or on podium, he has brought his L.A. Chamber Orchestra into a golden age, in time to provide ol&#8217; Wolfgang with the ideal birthday gift.</p>
<p>Olga <b>KERN</b>: With piano and TV cameras at the ready, she came to the Bowl and established the Tchaikovsky Piano Concerto as the prototypical sex toy.</p>
<p><b>LORRAINE</b> Hunt <b>LIEBERSON</b> sang her husband Peter&#8217;s <i>Neruda Songs</i> with the Philharmonic: beauty of thought matching beauty of artistry.</p>
<p><b>MARIN</b> Alsop survived the sexist uprising at her newly acquired Baltimore Symphony post; with our own Philharmonic, she led a strong and exceptionally brainy Tchaikovsky Fifth.</p>
<p><b>NAXOS</b>, <b>NONESUCH</b>: the two labels that sustain hope that classical recording has a continuing sales strength, room for imaginative programming, and perhaps even ?a future.</p>
<p><b>OJAI</b>&#8216;s programming had some interesting divergences from the Good Old Days, with more (e.g., Golijov&#8217;s wonderful opera, newly revised) to come. Stay tuned.</p>
<p>The <b>PHILHARMONIC</b> returned to classical orchestral seating (second violins down front on the right) and much improved its clarity and resonance, especially in 18th-century music.</p>
<p>The Denali <b>QUARTET</b> is the mainstay of the superb Jacaranda series at Santa Monica&#8217;s First Presbyterian. It plays Revueltas and Ravel, and raises goose bumps.</p>
<p>Terry <b>RILEY</b> got a messier 70th-birthday concert, at Royce, than the great minimalist deserved, but his own playing and singing gave off the rainbow&#8217;s authentic glow.</p>
<p>András <b>SCHIFF</b> played the piano and led the Philharmonic in a warm-hearted and friendly program of small and lesser masterpieces, a most comforting evening.</p>
<p><b>THOMAS</b> Adés composed a marvelous Piano Quintet, which you can hear on EMI and also hear in person when he comes to the Philharmonic in February.</p>
<p>Frances-Marie <b>UITTI</b> used her double-bow techniques, in a LACMA concert, to turn the throbbing, mystical cello works of Giacinto Scelsi into beauty beyond words.</p>
<p><b>VIOLETA</b> Urmana, commanding of stature and of voice as well, came as close as humanly possible to endowing Puccini&#8217;s Tosca with a semblance of authentic blood and fire.</p>
<p>Schubert&#8217;s <b>WINTERREISE</b> underwent the unlikely process of being turned into a stage work; the Long Beach Opera&#8217;s production, in a tiny theater, had its own genuine power.</p>
<p>Sheer <b>XTASY</b>: the final trio of Strauss&#8217; <i>Der Rosenkavalier</i>, staged at the L.A. Opera by Maximilian Schell and conducted by Kent Nagano. Can opera get any better than this? (Probably, but not often.)</p>
<p><b>YING</b>: The string quartet of that name (four siblings) played short works in a dim sum restaurant as one of the Da Camera Society&#8217;s &#8220;Historic Sites&#8221; concerts, which always match the right sounds to the right place.</p>
<p><b>ZERO</b>: The future stability of the arts, as foreshadowed by the management of the Los Angeles County Museum, on the West Coast; and by the fall of former-maecenas-turned-money-launderer Alberto Vilar, detained somewhere back East. </p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>On All&#160;Fours</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2006/04/on-all-fours-2/</link>
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		<pubDate>Wed, 26 Apr 2006 19:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=575</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Morton Feldman&#8217;s music, the perceptive Alex Ross once wrote, works best in isolation. A week in mid-April had begun with splendid public chamber music: the exuberant Cuarteto Latinoamericano in a &#8220;Historic Sites&#8221; setting, playing music to match in an animated Mexican restaurant in East L.A. It had ended with the vast but intensely private expanse [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Morton Feldman&#8217;s music, the perceptive Alex Ross once wrote, works best in isolation. A week in mid-April had begun with splendid public chamber music: the exuberant Cuarteto Latinoamericano in a &#8220;Historic Sites&#8221; setting, playing music to match in an animated Mexican restaurant in East L.A. It had ended with the vast but intensely private expanse of Feldman&#8217;s String Quartet No. 2, in a setting far less appropriate, surrounded by spectators and gallerygoers free to come and go, strolling on hardwood floors nearly as resonant as those at Disney Hall, and with conversations audible near and far including those of children. I knew that the last two hours of the six-hour performance, with the County Museum officially closed and the audience reduced to believers, would turn into the proper setting. Long before those hours, however, I was put sufficiently out of sorts by the affront to Morty Feldman and his dedicated performers &#8211; just another LACMA boo-boo &#8211; to flee to the refuge of my own DVD player and my own Feldman discs.</p>
<p>Two of &#8220;the New York School&#8221;&#8216;s signature works deal with time scale: John Cage&#8217;s four-minute, 33-second &#8220;silence,&#8221; which is created anew by the surroundings of each performance, and this huge projection of Feldman&#8217;s, which (insofar as human endurance can maintain) draws apart from the surrounding world. Off by itself, it communes with its four dedicated participants to propose, discuss, ponder and then move on to some new idea in this endless progression of the most elemental kinds of music. Sometimes a fragment of melody will immediately unwind into something else very similar; sometimes the next idea will turn into a stern rejection of what has gone before. Sometimes all four instruments will suggest a melodic fragment in four-part, grinding harmony, and you sit up straight as if something from above has hit you hard. In every case, you have the sense of a connected, ongoing process in this work, which moves in definite melodic shapes that are often quite long. This differs from other long Feldman works I know &#8211; the four-hour <i>For Philip Guston</i>, for example, which I swam around in for nearly a month while writing the notes for the Bridge recording without ever really discerning a melodic process (not that it mattered).</p>
<p>For the playing of the Flux Quartet (whose name stands in tribute to &#8220;Fluxus,&#8221; the battlefield of musical renegades in the youth-stirring days of the younger Feldman, the topless Charlotte Moorman, Nam June &#8211; shed a tear! &#8211; and Yoko), I have nothing but praise mingled with awe. Their insights uncovered the depths of the musician that was Morty Feldman &#8211; we also used to talk about Schubert, after all &#8211; and I wish I could have shared their stamina.</p>
<p>Mexico&#8217;s Cuarteto &#8211; three Jewish brothers named Bitrán plus cellist Javier Montiel &#8211; celebrated their own mix, starting off with Osvaldo Golijov&#8217;s ubiquitous <i>Yiddishbbuk</i> and moving on to indigenous Latin material of slighter but delightful substance. I found Gabriela Lena Frank&#8217;s <i>Leyendas</i> particularly congenial: charming dance pieces infused with Andean folk rhythms and imitations of local instrumental colors. There is more than one kind of chamber music in this world, and more than one way to hear it.</p>
<p>Sir Donald Tovey, whose writings decades ago started me on the gloomy career pathway I still tread, wrote with purple eloquence about the C-minor Piano Quartet of Brahms. The work isn&#8217;t that often performed nowadays-for reasons not necessarily the fault of Sir Donald or myself &#8211; so it seemed proper to look in on last week&#8217;s performance by the Philharmonic&#8217;s Chamber Music Society, which had the visiting pianist Garrick Ohlsson joined with members of the orchestra&#8217;s string section in that very work.</p>
<p>If I should have learned anything since those years of reveling in Toveyesque eloquence, it should be that Brahms in C minor &#8211; a piano sonata, a string quartet, a symphony and this piano quartet &#8211; spells emotional ruination at the bottom of a mountain of pure ice. What dismal gesticulation! What an infinitude of arm-waving in the desperate search of a melodic shape! In my tattered Tovey I read of &#8220;purging through pity and terror,&#8221; of an Aristotelian nobility and permanence, of a denial of &#8220;cold academicism.&#8221; Perhaps I&#8217;m holding the book upside down. Mr. Ohlsson, who himself is the size of a couple of Disney Hall&#8217;s grand pianos, gave the work the full measure of his convictions; cellist Jonathan Karoly played the gurgling cello solo in the slow movement very nicely, but I found the work empty and cold beyond endurance. My strongest sensation, in fact, was embarrassment at remembering that I had once spent quite a lot of money for the only available recording, with a pianist named Olive Bloom, on some English private label. Last time I looked there were 12.</p>
<p>The Thirteenth of Shostakovich&#8217;s String Quartets, also on the program, is yet another of those racked late works that tell us, even more than the symphonies, of some kind of unnamed torment &#8211; political? physical? conscience? &#8211; that drove the composer&#8217;s self-ruinous late years. Here he assigns his outcry to the solo viola, and John Hayhurst&#8217;s agonized final terror lingered long in the memory. Along with the cycle of symphonies, the five-year cycle of the Shostakovich String Quartets, which has involved many of the orchestra&#8217;s players, has been an enlightening experience as an adjunct to the concerts. I should imagine it has well served the musicians, too.</p>
<p>Garrick Ohlsson was back a couple of days later, looming large over Mendelssohn&#8217;s fragile G-minor Piano Concerto, which, truth to tell, might better have profited from somewhat more tinkle than roar. But the roar was also supplied in impressive measure by the Philharmonic and its guest conductor, who used to be more often in our midst, the American-born, Swedish-raised Herbert Blomstedt, who delivered the Fourth Symphony of Anton Bruckner in a beautifully shaped, clear-visioned performance full of the good sense and excellent balance that earned him his staunch following in his San Francisco days. Aside from a passing bad moment among the horns &#8211; including a muffed opening note that surely must go into St. Peter&#8217;s book &#8211; the orchestra rose well to his urging. The sound of Bruckner&#8217;s scoring in Disney Hall is one more reason why they didn&#8217;t really need that other organ.?</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>The Life of the&#160;Partita</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2006/04/the-life-of-the-partita/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2006/04/the-life-of-the-partita/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 12 Apr 2006 19:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=574</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Artist in Resonance It was a smooth transition, from the substantial wisdom of John Adams&#8217; Harmonielehre, which ended the Minimalist celebration, to the no less imposing substance of the Bach program that ensued. Disney Hall surely needed the two days to air the place out, but you could detect some overlapping echoes. Better yet, the [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Artist in Resonance</p>
<p>It was a smooth transition, from the substantial wisdom of John Adams&#8217; <i>Harmonielehre</i>, which ended the Minimalist celebration, to the no less imposing substance of the Bach program that ensued. Disney Hall surely needed the two days to air the place out, but you could detect some overlapping echoes. Better yet, the crowd was, once again, near-capacity and, from what I could tell, loving.</p>
<p>All-Bach keyboard programs, live or on disc, tend to favor the <i>Goldberg Variations</i>, with British harpsichordist Richard Egarr&#8217;s superb new Harmonia Mundi recording most recently in view. The Partitas, of which Richard Goode played three, contain both sterner and lighter stuff: opening movements that wander rhapsodically and propound powerful, edgy counterpoints that suggest restlessness and the urge to explore far horizons &#8211; sounds far beyond your textbook Bach, in other words. Later movements adhere to regular dance patterns most of the time, but also sometimes go afield; an occasional Allemande will turn downright pensive. Of the six works to which Bach attached the term &#8220;Partita&#8221; (as opposed to &#8220;French&#8221; or &#8220;English Suite&#8221;), two &#8211; in C minor and E minor &#8211; leap far beyond what we expect to hear in everyday Baroque music; they are big, passionate, surprising works, which, properly (i.e., broadly, expansively) performed, run at least half an hour each. That&#8217;s the way they came across on Goode&#8217;s program &#8211; plus a third, in G major, of sunnier outlook &#8211; on a full-size piano in a full-size hall to a full-size audience last week.</p>
<p>The emotion this splendid musician revealed in this music rendered moot the usual question of piano versus harpsichord. Since his background includes studies with Rudolf Serkin and Clara Haskil, identification with the high-brain-power musical crowd at the Marlboro Festival, and a much-acclaimed CD box of the Beethoven &#8220;32,&#8221; the solidity and the eloquence (and, yes, Goode-ness) of Goode&#8217;s performance the other night came as little surprise but high pleasure nonetheless.</p>
<p>What works these are! At home I listen often to the wrenching sequence of C-minor harmonies that begins the second of these Partitas. From Trevor Pinnock&#8217;s harpsichord I hear a sense of structure, of a piling up from dissonance to unnerving dissonance made the more grating in the sound of the instrument. From Glenn Gould&#8217;s piano I hear an awed reconstruction of Bach&#8217;s own thought process, the sense of improv re-created anew. From &#8211; don&#8217;t laugh &#8211; the old set of <i>Bach&#8217;s Greatest Hits</i> by the original Swingle Singers, I revel in lead singer Christiane Legrand turning the long fugue subject into pure melodic ecstasy. I listened to Richard Goode&#8217;s performance the other night with all of these in my memory, and I heard echoes of them all &#8211; plus the workings of Goode&#8217;s own substantial contemporary intelligence, which drew upon them and from itself the power to turn Bach&#8217;s own imaginative patterns into music forthright and moving. That kind of music-making overrides, it seems to me, questions of authenticity and historicity; it was wonderful to hear.</p>
<p>Puttin&#8217; On Airs</p>
<p>Several times this season, at various Southern California venues including Zipper Hall, there have been concerts bearing the grandiose name Camerata Pacifica. Artistic director Adrian Spence shares that grandiosity, greeting audiences at a flowery length that might make such other local greeters as UCLA&#8217;s David Sefton seem virtually mute by contrast. &#8220;Camerata Pacifica Artists,&#8221; so-called in the expensive-looking program &#8211; in which the advertising, by the way, is all from Santa Barbara &#8211; is actually a sampling of familiar Los Angeles freelancers. The crowd at Zipper last Saturday was fair-sized, about half capacity I&#8217;d say; I didn&#8217;t recognize more than two or three of the familiar chamber-music crowd. The ones I did recognize told me that they had gotten their tickets free through Goldstar, an online booking service that helps failing concert and theatrical promoters fill houses.</p>
<p>Mr. Spence, who sports a leprechaun&#8217;s brogue and plays the flute, the leprechaun&#8217;s instrument of seduction, speaks of &#8220;emotional programming,&#8221; but his program &#8211; this year and in next year&#8217;s brochure &#8211; is full of nice, safe novelties. William Bolcom&#8217;s 1976 Piano Quartet was this evening&#8217;s highlight, with the Philharmonic&#8217;s excellent pianist Joanne Pearce Martin but with string players who didn&#8217;t seem very much at home. It&#8217;s a wonderful piece, building beautifully from a rather troubled, quiet beginning through a gorgeous outburst of the juicy ragtime-pastiche style of Bolcom&#8217;s &#8220;Ghost&#8221; pieces to a sensational rowdy-dowdy finale; it deserves a rerun with the emotional lights turned higher.</p>
<p>With a top ticket of $40 &#8211; if buyers be found &#8211; for concerts by locally known personnel, the Camerata Pacifica programs as listed seem rather skimpy. At Jacaranda we never get out before 10:30; Saturday I was home by 9:45. Given the abundance of freelance talent in these parts &#8211; and the eagerness you overhear when people talk about the need for more chamber music, more new music or even the steady presence of a group dedicated to keeping the Beethoven quartets alive and well &#8211; it&#8217;s depressing when a potentially promising project becomes overshadowed with the suspicion of misplaced ego and the wrong leadership wasting time, talent and money. I refer here to my suspicions concerning Adrian Spence (with whom I&#8217;ve lunched) and his Camerata Pacifica. I refer also to a certain Peyman Farzinpour, whose &#8220;Erato Philharmonia&#8221; produced two or three of the most misconceived and, therefore, disastrous musical events on the scene last season, and whose appointment now as some kind of musical director is the latest in this season&#8217;s list of egregious errors by our County Art Museum, where the propensity for enacting managerial atrocities seems without bounds.</p>
<p>At Zipper, too &#8211; although I keep forgetting to mention it &#8211; a charming and communicative pianist named Amy Dissanayake came on from Chicago on March 7 to fill in the wild-card position in this year&#8217;s Piano Spheres roster. With her came Chicago music: six Piano Etudes by Augusta Read Thomas attached to descriptive titles &#8211; &#8220;Cathedral Waterfall,&#8221; &#8220;Rain at Funeral,&#8221; etc. Seven etudes by David Rakowski were more specific: &#8220;Repeated-note,&#8221; &#8220;Etude on Melody and Thick Chords.&#8221; I don&#8217;t usually expect to get much from the terseness of the piano etude (unless the composer be Ligeti), but these turned out as a pair of valuable, attractive garlands, very nicely put forth. David Rakowski teaches at Brandeis; when last heard from he had run his string of etudes to 70.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>To the&#160;Max</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2006/04/to-the-max/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2006/04/to-the-max/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 05 Apr 2006 22:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=573</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Free at Last And so the stigma has been lifted, and we can sport the mantle of &#8220;minimalist&#8221; in public without shame. It comes, in fact, in all sizes, shapes and colors. At a symposium on the final day of the Philharmonic&#8217;s &#8220;Minimalist Jukebox,&#8221; which concluded last weekend, the fortissimo guitarist Glenn Branca, whose full-length [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Free at Last</p>
<p>And so the stigma has been lifted, and we can sport the mantle of &#8220;minimalist&#8221; in public without shame. It comes, in fact, in all sizes, shapes and colors. At a symposium on the final day of the Philharmonic&#8217;s &#8220;Minimalist Jukebox,&#8221; which concluded last weekend, the fortissimo guitarist Glenn Branca, whose full-length concert three days before I had forsworn in self-defense, proclaimed himself a &#8220;minimalist&#8221; in one breath, and named Gustav Mahler as his prime musical influence in the next. Try that on your stereo.</p>
<p>From any point of view, the &#8220;Jukebox&#8221; was a brave, enterprising, successful event. You can argue, as Philip Glass did when I ran into him in the hall after the final concert, that it was largely a celebration of old music and therefore belonged with festivals of Bach and Mozart. But that leaves out a vital aspect of this latest event: the audience it drew, and the response that aggregation of teens and college kids (plus young-in-heart of other ages as well) provided. Some way must be found to keep this audience &#8211; not through contrivance, as with the hokey &#8220;First Nights&#8221; concoctions, which common sense is finally ending after this season, but with the unencumbered recognition of where genuine adventure lives and pulsates within the musical repertory.</p>
<p>Until this is done, the notion of stigma remains. What was remarkable about these two weeks of concerts was their revelation of so much music that needs to move into the repertory and, by doing so, start to attract that young-spirited crowd that showed up at Disney these past weeks. Example: There was an all-Steve Reich program, three big works &#8211; orchestral and <i>Tehillim</i> with singers &#8211; that should be lighting up symphonic programs all over the world where <i>Till Eulenspiegel</i> and the <i>1812</i> currently add to the clutter. Example: Terry Riley sat behind me on the night when Mark Robson played a small organ piece by Arvo Pärt, and you knew what a wonderful event Terry and his <i>A Rainbow in Curved Air</i> would create on that organ someday, and you knew that he was thinking the same; it should happen. Example: Forty minutes from the Glass <i>Akhnaten</i> was scarcely enough to rekindle memories of his great years; that work (not to mention <i>Einstein on the Beach</i>) should have nuzzled its way onto the operatic roster beside <i>La Traviata</i> years ago. The &#8220;Jukebox&#8221; was a wonderful teaser; now it&#8217;s somebody&#8217;s job to stand there and keep pushing the quarters into the slot.</p>
<p>Discoveries</p>
<p>It was both amazing and gratifying, in fact, how much new and undiscovered got threaded among the time-honored minimalist masterworks. Who, for example, had ever heard of Terry Jennings? The opening program, which ended with the wholesale murder of Riley&#8217;s iconic <i>In C</i> (by a CalArts ensemble 10 times too large, organized with cue cards instead of allowing the musicians free choice from one element to the next), began with a proper-size CalArts ensemble performing Jennings&#8217; 1960 String Quartet, music of hypnotic silences and near silences, fashioned at 20 by a legendary colleague of Riley and of La Monte Young. Something that made the work even more interesting, if in retrospect, came late in the series, at a Riley celebration at the Getty Center, when the Calder Quartet played a Riley quartet also from 1960, almost a double of the Jennings (in purpose if not in actual sound). These two works of &#8220;pure&#8221; minimalism, dating from four years before <i>In C</i>, which is generally accorded patrimonial stature for the minimalist movement, seemed to bookend the whole local program in all but name. (La Monte Young, also among the minimalist &#8220;fathers&#8221; for, among other masterworks, his fortnightlong single-note compositions, declined to participate in the &#8220;Jukebox,&#8221; musically or personally, for reasons of his own.)</p>
<p>The legend of the 1973 New York audience revolt that greeted Steve Reich&#8217;s <i>Four Organs</i> seemed reason enough to schedule the work (for the four members of PianoSpheres, on itty-bitty electronic keyboards), with audience docility a measure of the changing times. That program included its own brand of latter-day chaos in Louis Andriessen&#8217;s <i>Worker&#8217;s Union</i>, for four banged-upon full-size pianos, again politely if adoringly received. Andriessen, who taught at CalArts in the 1980s and worked out a vivid mix of American minimalism with the theatrical outlooks of Luciano Berio and others, also brought to the mix two great, steamy works: the familiar <i>De Staat</i> (melding some of Plato&#8217;s harmonic rules into a political context) and the brand-new <i>Racconto dall&#8217;Inferno</i>, a glistening, hellish travelogue made all the more infernal in the gyrations of a captivating, diabolical mezzo-soprano with, or so it seemed, a 7-inch waist, a certain Cristina Zavalloni. Wow.</p>
<p><i>Decasia</i> drew the event&#8217;s smallest crowd; I know it&#8217;s available on DVD, but the resonance of Michael Gordon&#8217;s score, excellently dispatched by USC musicians, bouncing off Disney&#8217;s walls to surround Bill Morrison&#8217;s film fantasy, was a whole &#8216;nother kind of media experience. For me, what it meant was that Gordon&#8217;s rich, lush musical score was, in some way, creating the tattered, abstract images of Morrison&#8217;s film scraps and turning them into some kind of visual drama beyond anything you see and hear. If you don&#8217;t know what this is all about, that must mean you still have <i>Decasia</i> ahead of you, and I envy you that.</p>
<p>By Saturday, the &#8220;Minimalist Jukebox&#8221; was firmly in John Adams&#8217; hands, conducting a Philharmonic program that included the &#8220;pure&#8221; minimalism of the <i>Akhnaten</i> excerpts, ended with Adams&#8217; own <i>Harmonielehre</i> and also included, before that, a marvelous talk by Adams, interspersed with musical bits, on his life among the shaping forces of today&#8217;s music. These included, to my delight, the electronic wizardry of Mort Subotnick&#8217;s early adventures at the Buchla synthesizer, so that I could relive my own hair-raising discovery of <i>The Wild Bull</i> (1967, was it?). Then Adams spoke of something newer and electronic called Aphex Twin, and I felt the little remaining hair rising again. Then on to <i>Harmonielehre</i>, in which, along with the throbbings and repetitive textures and clear-headed tonalities and modulations on the edge of minimalism, there are long, eloquent, sinuous, passionate melodies that grab you by the ears, don&#8217;t let go for minutes at a time, and even, perhaps, make you think of Mahler. Try that on your stereo.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Mozart&#039;s&#160;Side</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2006/03/mozarts-side/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2006/03/mozarts-side/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 29 Mar 2006 22:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=572</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Wild Oats Several minutes into the second act of Mozart&#8217;s The Marriage of Figaro, the lovesick adolescent Cherubino sings a song, addressed ostensibly to the Countess Almaviva but really aimed at womanhood in general. &#8220;You [plural] who know about love,&#8221; he sings, &#8220;tell me what&#8217;s in my heart.&#8221; Nobody in all of music had ever [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Wild Oats</p>
<p>Several minutes into the second act of Mozart&#8217;s <i>The Marriage of Figaro</i>, the lovesick adolescent Cherubino sings a song, addressed ostensibly to the Countess Almaviva but really aimed at womanhood in general. &#8220;You [plural] who know about love,&#8221; he sings, &#8220;tell me what&#8217;s in my heart.&#8221; Nobody in all of music had ever written a melody like this before: its sighing lines, its rising and falling chromatics. Mozart accompanies his Cherubino with a clarinet, the most humanlike sound in his orchestra then as it is today.</p>
<p>At that moment in the opera, the song is also intended, of course, to convey a message to the Countess. At least twice Cherubino&#8217;s age, she is not the target of his testosterone &#8211; the opera provides us with Barbarina for that &#8211; but the idealized Supermom-with-tits of every adolescent&#8217;s dream. In the current production at the Dorothy Chandler Pavilion (through April 15), director Ian Judge has his Countess so undone that by the end of Cherubino&#8217;s song, she has removed nearly every stitch of his clothing; only because her servant, Susanna, has tapped her on the shoulder does she remember who and where she is. The Countess &#8211; who is otherwise defined in the opera by a final act of forgiveness that becomes the most sublime of all opera&#8217;s sublime moments &#8211; becomes, in the vision of our misguided local production crew, a sex-mad ninny. (Never mind that Monsieur Beaumarchais, on whose plays the Figaro operas are based, later wrote an untidy sequel in which the Countess does indeed bed down with Cherubino. That&#8217;s another play in another time.)</p>
<p>This is a revival of the <i>Figaro</i> of May 2004, with the sex parts tarted up, and with the same curious anachronisms left intact. We first see the Countess <i>on the telephone</i> (to whom?). The hanky-panky in the garden is lit up with modern-looking flashlights, often painful to a watcher&#8217;s eyes. Adrianne Pieczonka went a bit flat at the start of the Countess&#8217; &#8220;Porgi amor&#8221; on opening night but recovered. Barbara Bonney&#8217;s Susanna, long overdue, is worth the wait. A tiny bundle of mezzo-soprano named Lucy Schaufer, as Cherubino, steals hearts and scenes alike. Kent Nagano ends five years as the company&#8217;s music director with a pacing okay but nothing more. But he has that aforementioned Forgiveness Scene as his farewell music, which, you gotta admit, is a great way to go.</p>
<p>Simon&#8217;s Side</p>
<p>In nearly 500 pages of collected criticism (<i>John Simon on Music, 1979-2005</i>, Applause Press, $27.95), Simon manages the name of Mozart only once, and then in the context of John Corigliano&#8217;s Mozart-flavored pastiche opera <i>The Ghosts of Versailles</i>. (&#8220;I am not a Mozart man,&#8221; he confessed without shame in an earlier collection.) Of Beethoven there is no mention. Bach? &#8220;I know of no sounds less bearable than those of baroque music,&#8221; writes Simon in a review of the marvelous film about baroque music <i>Tous les Matins du Monde</i>: a self-recusing statement, you&#8217;d think, but then you don&#8217;t know John Simon.</p>
<p>Best remembered for driving his critical juggernaut over the New York theatrical scene (in the pages, until recently, of <i>New York</i> magazine), Simon has also produced enough sharp-edged verbiage on films and classical music &#8211; in smaller publications for the most part, and in theatrical playbills &#8211; to fill three volumes of selections. Of the three, the choice of material in the music volume is by some distance the most curious. Very little of it relates in any way to the real musical world, or even the unreal world of opera. Not much of it, for that matter, creates any kind of portrait of a writer in his chosen field of art, concerned about that art, in love with its place in the world, willing to do battle with the pluses and minuses within that art. His book fancifully supplements, but surely does not supplant, any other collection of critical writings (including my own due out in June, which full disclosure ordains my mentioning).</p>
<p>Instead, John Simon builds his own world out of inanities and unimportances. Forsaking the masters, he waxes eloquent, page upon page, over the operatic and symphonic heritage of Nino Rota, the polite proprieties of proper Brits Sir Charles Villiers Stanford and Lord Berners, the lightly peppered landscapes of Xavier Montsalvatge, the dense horrors of Belgium&#8217;s Joseph Jongen. In one feat akin to the taxidermy of long-dead turkeys, he manages to extract a 10-page essay out of Aulis Sallinen&#8217;s <i>Kullervo</i>, that gray-upon-gray venture that our local Opera got snookered into staging in 1992 but which &#8211; I had surely thought &#8211; had been left to deserved oblivion.</p>
<p>When Simon locks horns with a composer any of us are likely to have heard of, or to care about &#8211; Leos Janácek, for one &#8211; it is usually with the purpose of launching into a monograph, or several, on the literary figures who served that composer as librettists. When he does take on a genuine musical event &#8211; Debussy&#8217;s <i>Pelléas et Mélisande</i> at the L.A. Opera, say &#8211; you get the impression that he has flown here for the sole and long-nurtured intent of flaying director Peter Sellars alive, at unconscionable length, for the sins of a lifetime. Is there music in this opera? A conductor named Esa-Pekka Salonen? Singers with names? Seek your answers elsewhere.</p>
<p>For the most part, Simon seems content to forsake live music making for the rarities on disc that &#8220;cry out for rediscovery&#8221; (to whom? and why?). Now and then a taste for provocation rears its powdered head. &#8220;Opera attracts the queerest ducks,&#8221; he proclaims, and makes no attempt to distance himself from the feathered flock, launching into a deeply devoted probe into the aforementioned Corigliano abomination and an appallingly unfunny interview with a concocted &#8220;Tobias Maria Blauschuh,&#8221; who intends to stage <i>Faust</i> with Marguerite played by Siamese twins.</p>
<p>For someone who, in our days as <i>New York</i> co-workers, was famous for his volcanic fulminations at the appearance of a single typo in his printed columns, Simon has been the victim of haphazard editing this time around. Page 80 has Bartók&#8217;s <i>Bluebeard&#8217;s Castle</i> &#8220;having little to do&#8221; with the Charles Perrault fairy tale, while Page 229 has it that the opera &#8220;derives mostly&#8221; from Perrault. Better yet, Page 332 has the French emperor identified as &#8220;Napolean&#8221; three times in one paragraph. What I wouldn&#8217;t give to have witnessed Simon&#8217;s discovery of <i>that!</i></p>
<p>I found the word <i>minimalist</i> once in Simon&#8217;s book, accompanied by the epithet <i>cursed</i>. After enduring Terry Riley&#8217;s <i>In C</i>, the great public monument of the movement, turned into Joseph Jongen by CalArts forces on the opening night of the Philharmonic&#8217;s &#8220;Minimalist Jukebox,&#8221; I began to edge over to Simon&#8217;s side, ever so slightly &#8211; just this once.?</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Sharp&#160;Contrasts</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2006/03/sharp-contrasts/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2006/03/sharp-contrasts/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 22 Mar 2006 19:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=571</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Late Night Thoughts Seven years separated the writing of Mahler&#8217;s Fifth and Ninth symphonies; just a week separated their hearings at Disney Hall early this month. Ingo Metzmacher (whose photo appeared in this space last week miscaptioned &#8220;Louis Andriessen&#8221;; oops) led a performance of the Fifth as hot-blooded and indulgent as Alan Gilbert&#8217;s of the [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Late Night Thoughts</p>
<p>Seven years separated the writing of Mahler&#8217;s Fifth and Ninth symphonies; just a week separated their hearings at Disney Hall early this month. Ingo Metzmacher (whose photo appeared in this space last week miscaptioned &#8220;Louis Andriessen&#8221;; oops) led a performance of the Fifth as hot-blooded and indulgent as Alan Gilbert&#8217;s of the Ninth had been taut and controlled the week before. In the case of both conductors, theirs was the proper approach.</p>
<p>The Fifth, I know, is popular; it epitomizes Mahler&#8217;s prototypical neurosis. It embodies the Mahler of the Ken Russell movie, grotesque and hair-tearing, as gross an exaggeration of its central character as <i>Amadeus</i> of its. What little there is of genuine beauty is almost immediately betrayed; even the Adagietto, the very pretty slow movement, which every hater of Mahler clings to as the Great Exception, is perverted forthwith as its tunes are made to twist and turn in the ensuing finale. Mahler is said to have written the slow movement as a love note to Alma; it may have worked for her, but it doesn&#8217;t for me.</p>
<p>I constantly re-read the late Lewis Thomas&#8217; <i>Late Night Thoughts on Listening to Mahler&#8217;s Ninth Symphony</i>. In 1982, in a world still obsessed with survival possibilities in an atomic age &#8211; 40 million? 80 million? &#8211; Dr. Thomas&#8217; essential question seems to be whether, after those final notes of Mahler have died away, there is anything more in that world that mere human language can possibly express. I had taken the book down after hearing the Ninth, and it was still on my desk after the Fifth, which is perhaps why that work sounded so small this time.</p>
<p>Orchestral bloat even less admirable was inflicted upon a Royce Hall audience earlier that week by the visiting London Philharmonic Orchestra, with Finnish conductor Osmo Vänskä substituting for the ailing Kurt Masur. Word from Minneapolis, where Vänskä has amassed a loyal fan club, made attendance seem worthwhile despite a so-so program and the LPO&#8217;s reputation as one of its hometown&#8217;s lesser ensembles; alas, disillusion reigned. It set in immediately, as the charming <i>Simple Symphony</i> of Benjamin Britten&#8217;s boyhood was buried under the weight of the orchestra&#8217;s full string section, which then remained onstage to extend similar burial treatment to an early Mozart symphony. Music, if you can call it that, by Khachaturian and Strauss ensued. Maestro Vänskä&#8217;s podium antics are fun to watch, and bear a certain resemblance to musical exuberance in general, if less to that night&#8217;s program in particular.</p>
<p>Piano Forte</p>
<p>The news at the keyboard last week was bad, bad, super and super: cancellations by Murray Perahia and Martha Argerich, substitution by Ingrid Fliter, heroism on schedule by Jeffrey Kahane. As stand-in for Argerich, the Philharmonic hit it big in the svelte and elegant form of Argentina&#8217;s Ms. Fliter, proclaimed only weeks before winner of the solid-gold ($300,000) Gilmore Piano Award in exotic Kalamazoo. Perhaps Beethoven&#8217;s First Piano Concerto isn&#8217;t exactly the high-powered vehicle to show off an incoming pianist&#8217;s brain or muscle power. (She is also slated to play it at the Hollywood Bowl this summer.) Perhaps Charles Dutoit wasn&#8217;t exactly the most attuned conductor to accompany this important debut performance. (The Philharmonic&#8217;s Alexander Mickelthwate will do the job at the Bowl.) But young Ms. Fliter managed to charm the Disney audience, and the somewhat simple-minded concerto of Beethoven&#8217;s journeyman days as well. She is surely on her way.</p>
<p>Four Mozart piano concertos on a single program: Never mind the toll on Jeffrey Kahane, conducting these works from the piano in a single sitting; the glandular toll on an enthralled audience out front is also something to be taken seriously, something no amount of overpriced coffee or pastry in the Royce Hall lounge can counteract. Imagine, having to deal in a single night with that endless thread of single melody (a.k.a. &#8220;Elvira Madigan&#8221;) that forms the slow movement of the Concerto K. 467, only moments after that other sublime melodic thread, the clarinet solo in the slow movement of K. 488!</p>
<p>Yet another phenomenal reward of this series (which continues through the Chamber Orchestra&#8217;s next season, by the way, eventually including all 23 of Mozart&#8217;s actual original concertos) has been the wonders that come to light in the earlier works, before the great breaking-out of expressive mastery upon Mozart&#8217;s move to Vienna. An early work in B flat, K. 238, lay delightfully between two giants on last week&#8217;s program and gave off its own kinds of charm &#8211; most of all in some charming rampaging for horns in the finale. The writing for winds and horns in every one of these concertos, from the beginning, is one of the great joys in Mozart discovery. It is also one of the great strengths of our L.A. Chamber Orchestra.</p>
<p>The Palisades Are Alive</p>
<p>Two nights later, some of those same Chamber Orchestra musicians &#8211; notably clarinetist Gary Gray and French hornist Richard Todd &#8211; were at it again, making music up in the hills as members of Chamber Music Palisades, now in its ninth season at the attractive (if perhaps overly vibrant) St. Matthew&#8217;s Parish. Delores Stevens, pianist, teacher and musical prime mover on at least two coasts, is the series&#8217; co-founder, along with LACO flutist Susan Greenberg. Last week&#8217;s program, which drew a near-capacity crowd, consisted of four works for which the overall description of &#8220;delicious&#8221; would not be excessive. Stevens was at the piano in all four. At intermission, there were cookies and hot apple juice.</p>
<p>Matters got under way with Todd and Stevens at joyous, rambunctious work in Beethoven&#8217;s little-known early Horn Sonata. One work was new: Peter Golub&#8217;s <i>Threaded Dances</i>, commissioned and played by Susan Greenberg &#8211; 10 or so most attractive minutes&#8217; worth of quiet nocturnal music nicely full of California mountainside and fog. The program&#8217;s other surprise was the Sextet for piano and winds by Ludwig Thuille, a little-remembered contemporary of, say, Mahler and musically a closer clone of Brahms or, save the mark, the much-maligned Max Reger. Better than any of the above-named, this work showed a nice understanding of when to stop.</p>
<p>Best of all was the final work, the piano-wind Sextet by Francis Poulenc: wit, wisdom, sarcasm, tenderness, sheer delight; worth any drive up mountain roads. Hurrah, Palisades! Where have I been all those nine years??</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Surging Forward by Standing&#160;Still</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2006/03/surging-forward-by-standing-still/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2006/03/surging-forward-by-standing-still/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 15 Mar 2006 20:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=570</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Red-hot Needles The scene: a January night in New York&#8217;s Carnegie Hall, 1973. The Boston Symphony is in town for one of its hot-ticket subscription nights, but conductor Michael Tilson Thomas is trying something new. This will be an experimental &#8220;Spectrum&#8221; concert, the ads have announced: Bach, Bartók, Liszt and Steve Reich&#8217;s Four Organs. Come [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Red-hot Needles</p>
<p>The scene: a January night in New York&#8217;s Carnegie Hall, 1973. The Boston Symphony is in town for one of its hot-ticket subscription nights, but conductor Michael Tilson Thomas is trying something new. This will be an experimental &#8220;Spectrum&#8221; concert, the ads have announced: Bach, Bartók, Liszt and Steve Reich&#8217;s <i>Four Organs</i>. Come as you are. The orchestra will play in shirtsleeves. (Sound familiar? Just like last week&#8217;s &#8220;casual&#8221; Mahler at Disney Hall!)</p>
<p>The Reich begins: four players onstage &#8211; including Reich himself and MTT &#8211; at four small electronic organs as at rock concerts, plus four players with maracas. After a couple of minutes of the same harmonic progression repeated, repeated, repea . . . the audience begins to stir and exchange unhappy, concerned glances. Some of the crowd are young and casual, but some have subscribed to these Boston Symphony concerts since the Koussevitzky days. The stir grows louder. A woman zooms down the aisle, bangs on the stage with her shoe and achieves instant if anonymous fame. &#8220;All right,&#8221; she screams, &#8220;I&#8217;ll confess!&#8221;</p>
<p><i>Four Organs</i> plays out its 16 minutes: a terse progression in which the components of a stated chord undergo a gradual augmentation, and the chord itself, in episodes of a few seconds each, pulls itself apart. Some of the crowd, along with <i>The New York Times</i>&#8216; Harold C. Schonberg, react as to &#8220;red-hot needles inserted under fingernails.&#8221; Your humble scribe, wearing the colors of <i>New York</i> magazine, finds it &#8220;marvelous, original invention about musical time and rate of change.&#8221; At the end, there are boos and assorted vociferations reminiscent of the famous birth pangs of Stravinsky&#8217;s <i>Rite of Spring</i> in Paris 60 years before. It would also be quite a while into the future before a major symphony orchestra might once again hazard to schedule <i>Four Organs</i> &#8211; or much more of the substantial musical world that has taken root around the pioneering efforts of Steve Reich and his fellow believers &#8211; on a regular program.</p>
<p>This the Los Angeles Philharmonic has done. There are several aspects of &#8220;Minimalist Jukebox,&#8221; the generous chunk of programming spread across the orchestra&#8217;s efforts for the rest of this month, that speak with compelling eloquence of courage, imagination and overriding intelligence. Observers of the endangered classical-music scene might well be moved to take such qualities to heart these days. Whatever their secret sources, our local planners act as if there actually might be a tomorrow, and perhaps a next day, too. More than just a retrospective, &#8220;Minimalist Jukebox&#8221; celebrates a continuing creative vitality.</p>
<p>Long Gone</p>
<p>&#8220;Oh well, minimalism,&#8221; says Philip Glass in the latest <i>The Gramophone</i>, &#8220;that&#8217;s been over for 20 years already.&#8221; Listen in on the Philharmonic&#8217;s &#8220;Jukebox,&#8221; and the continuing vitality might astonish even Phil Glass. Minimalism came on the scene as a sorely needed housecleaning. New York when I arrived, circa 1960, was a vast cobweb of compositional academe. Twelve-tone was easy to teach, and the small halls were full of tone rows being passed off as brand-new music. Along came La Monte Young with his two-week-long single-note concerts and violins burned in Bob Rauschenberg&#8217;s loft; Yoko Ono and Nam June Paik and the topless cellist what&#8217;s-her-name at 5:30 concerts when Carnegie Recital Hall could rent for pennies: This all got people talking and cleared the air. John Cage put on Satie&#8217;s <i>Vexations</i>, 14 hours of it, in a downtown theater, and we were ready for <i>In C</i> and, eventually, for <i>Einstein on the Beach</i>. How fresh and alive it all sounded! I witnessed both <i>Einstein</i> performances at the Met in 1976, ducking out occasionally for terrific omelets at a restaurant across the street. When <i>Einstein</i> returned to the Brooklyn Academy in, I think, 1984, I sat through four performances uninterrupted.</p>
<p>Don&#8217;t tell me that minimalism is over. I hear this vitality &#8211; of notes standing out in clear air, of tonalities cleanly defined as they brush against one another and do battle &#8211; in whatever latest music John Adams brings forth, because it&#8217;s truly amazing how many ways he has made its basic principles work in how many kinds of music. Steve Reich&#8217;s latest works, including the <i>You Are (Variations)</i> he wrote for our Master Chorale, keep coming up with fascinating new ideas on the relationship of the spoken voice and melodic lines, and these relate back to some of his early minimalist phasing works like <i>Come Out</i>. Louis Andriessen, who took the minimalists&#8217; ideas back to Holland after his teaching terms at CalArts in the 1980s, and mixed them in with some European ideas, is bringing some works old and new to the &#8220;Jukebox.&#8221; (His recent opera, <i>Writing to Vermeer</i>, to a text by Peter Greenaway, is due out soon on Nonesuch. I&#8217;ve heard it and it&#8217;s fabulous.)</p>
<p>The Neighborhood</p>
<p>The Minimalists arrive at Disney (mostly) in interesting circumstances. For two weeks before, there has been great, lumbering, overwritten Mahler (about which more next week). In the week after, there is not-so-great, horrendously overwritten Rachmaninoff. Nothing could better set off the splendid clarity, the power of this music in which every note will count. (I will except, falling back for the first time on my several decades&#8217; life span, the Glenn Branca concert. I do know my limitations.)</p>
<p>But then there is <i>Figaro</i>, opening next weekend across the street and not to be overlooked at any cost. Talk about making every note count! The curtain goes up. Figaro is measuring space for a marital bed; Susanna is trying on a bonnet and trying to distract him. Each has his/her own music; neither will be distracted until the breakthrough. How do we recognize the breakthrough? Simply because he now sings her music as well, harmonizing in a very pretty duet. Three minutes&#8217; worth of singing, and the power of music to tell its story is forever nailed down.</p>
<p>Or take that moment in Act 2. The Count thinks Cherubino is hiding in the Countess&#8217; closet; so, at the moment, does she. <i>Give me the key</i>, he roars; <i>I am blameless</i>, she dithers. The door opens: not Cherubino but Susanna. The Count is dumbfounded; his music grinds to a halt, rendering him mute. The Countess, backed by Susanna, laughs herself silly. The music tells it all, not a note wasted. The neighborhood around First and Grand is full of great music these next couple of weeks; don&#8217;t miss a note.?</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Send No&#160;Flowers</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2006/03/send-no-flowers/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2006/03/send-no-flowers/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 08 Mar 2006 22:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=569</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Cloud Nine There is no sound more beautiful in a concert hall than the silence of an audience profoundly moved at the end of a musical experience and held captive by the invitation to share the performer&#8217;s trance. For well over a minute at the end of Mahler&#8217;s Ninth Symphony, Alan Gilbert&#8217;s raised baton kept [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Cloud Nine</p>
<p>There is no sound more beautiful in a concert hall than the silence of an audience profoundly moved at the end of a musical experience and held captive by the invitation to share the performer&#8217;s trance. For well over a minute at the end of Mahler&#8217;s Ninth Symphony, Alan Gilbert&#8217;s raised baton kept the Disney audience in that kind of suspension; the magic of the music flowed without pause from one edge of audibility to the other.</p>
<p>That was as it should be. There is a transcendence in that Mahler moment, a passage from sound to less sound to near-silence to absolute silence, borne onward by the simplest of means &#8211; a solo cello, not much more. At the dawn of the 20th century, more was dying out in the musical world than the final note of a sublime work by one great but dying composer. A whole kind of music was dying, an era. Mahler would attempt, but abandon, one more resuscitation, a Tenth Symphony couched as a long personal confessional to his Alma. But the Ninth was his ending, and the great performances &#8211; of which last week&#8217;s was one &#8211; are the ones that allow that process to take place unblemished by personal intrusion. &#8220;Look, folks, this is me, MTT, performing the Mahler Ninth,&#8221; said Michael Tilson Thomas, seemingly, when he brought his San Francisco Symphony to town a year or so ago. That&#8217;s the other way.</p>
<p>This greatest of all Mahler symphonies, composed as the whole realm of the Romantic symphony was passing from currency, is for all its power and its expanse an artwork of great fragility. Four times, over the course of each very long movement, it rises out of banal beginnings to some truly fearsome midpoint, and then subsides. Yet that subsidence at the very end &#8211; the cello solo mounting heavenward to end 90 minutes of music that had begun so simply, with a most unpromising &#8220;So what?&#8221; of an opening tune for the two harps &#8211; leaves you drained of breath, in a kind of benign catatonia. No wonder you cannot immediately applaud.</p>
<p>Or couldn&#8217;t, at least, as Alan Gilbert &#8211; New York-born, 1968, currently busy with two or three major European orchestras &#8211; drew the work from Philharmonic players during his one-week guest appearance here. Being merely human, he did not quite return us to the deep, reflective poetry of the early-&#8217;80s Giulini performance here that people still talk about in hushed tones (and whose memory I reinforce via Giulini&#8217;s Chicago Symphony recording on D.G.), but it was a Mahler Ninth honest and thoroughly respectable, delivered with a beat simple and clear. Tempos were flexible, expressive but not fussed with; everything sang out. For a one-shot guest engagement, you&#8217;d think the guy had been conducting that orchestra, in that hall, for weeks. Maybe, someday soon, he should. (He returns for one week next October, with Mozart and Richard Strauss: not enough.)</p>
<p>And Schnittke</p>
<p>We heard quite a lot of Alfred Schnittke&#8217;s music when it first burst upon us in the last days of the Soviet cultural standoff. Gidon Kremer played his violin concertos here with the Philharmonic; the Kronos played his quartets; now those excellent musicians have other worlds to conquer. There was some delightful Schnittke here last month, however. The English violinist Daniel Hope came to the L.A. Chamber Orchestra with Schnittke&#8217;s Sonata No. 1, which is actually for violin and small orchestra, a delightful, all-over-the-place kind of piece (pure Schnittke, in other words), somewhat Mozart-permeated with some jolly dance stuff at the end that could just as easily pass as a &#8220;La Cucaracha&#8221; rip-off.</p>
<p>There was more &#8211; Schnittke&#8217;s 1975 <i>Prelude in Memory of D. Shostakovich</i>, which Joel Pargman and Sarah Thornblade played at last Saturday&#8217;s Jacaranda, standing with their violins at opposite sides of Santa Monica&#8217;s First Presbyterian Church. The trick there was that one violinist played the four notes &#8211; DS(don&#8217;t ask)CH &#8211; of Dmitri Shostakovich&#8217;s name; the other played the four notes of BACH. Gradually, over the time and space, they merged, thus forming a statement on the shared eminence of both composers: resource and trickery worthy of Schnittke &#8211; and worthy also of Jacaranda.</p>
<p>Sharing the Road</p>
<p>If any music on the planet stands as more convincing evidence of the dark side of mortality than Mozart&#8217;s Requiem, let it be the Mahler Ninth. I don&#8217;t blame the Philharmonic for scheduling those two somber masterworks a week apart; such death-dealing doings were probably merely a matter of guest conductors&#8217; availabilities and not any kind of demonic plotting. It just so happened, however, that those particularly mournful events also served as portals of doom within my own life scape &#8211; a dour week that also embraced my rendezvous with dentistry and my run-in with . . . let&#8217;s call her Miss Jessica Blue.</p>
<p>The first of these trials cannot in all honesty, however, be ascribed to either Mozart or Mahler; Westside Dental had had me on its appointment books for weeks in advance. Nevertheless, a procedure that requires an active critic to submit in a single sitting to the removal of six of his sharpest fangs &#8211; and to the replacement of these instruments of renowned predatory efficiency with a nondescript plastic gadget that looks terrible and tastes even worse &#8211; cannot be regarded lightly. Furthermore, the damn thing hurts.</p>
<p>Miss Blue, whose license plates proclaimed that she hails from Ohio, entered my life through a shared desire to occupy simultaneously the same segment of the Santa Monica Freeway: I with Mozart&#8217;s accents of mortality still throbbing in my grateful ears, she with heaven-knows-what in hers. We ended up sharing a lot more &#8211; names of insurance companies, phone numbers, that sort of thing. I survived unblemished; the tow truck, my violated vehicle ignominiously suspended behind, deposited me at home in full view of the folks next door. I&#8217;ve always regarded it as a civic duty to keep my neighborhood entertained; this latest in a string of episodes &#8211; which included the building of my second-story add-on, not to mention last summer&#8217;s paramedics &#8211; nicely fulfilled my responsibility.?</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Sounds About Town, Mozart About&#160;Time</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2006/03/sounds-about-town-mozart-about-time/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2006/03/sounds-about-town-mozart-about-time/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 01 Mar 2006 22:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=568</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Well-Schooled Brave and forthright rang the sounds of the Santa Monica High School Symphony; I don&#8217;t remember anything quite so ear-shattering in Disney Hall&#8217;s two-and-a-half-year history. Near the end of Tchaikovsky&#8217;s Second Symphony, in fact, the guy on cymbals had to duck backstage and replenish his supply with a second set; his big golden platters [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Well-Schooled</p>
<p>Brave and forthright rang the sounds of the Santa Monica High School Symphony; I don&#8217;t remember anything quite so ear-shattering in Disney Hall&#8217;s two-and-a-half-year history. Near the end of Tchaikovsky&#8217;s Second Symphony, in fact, the guy on cymbals had to duck backstage and replenish his supply with a second set; his big golden platters weren&#8217;t the only things worn out that night &#8211; all in a good cause, of course.</p>
<p>Santa Monica High (&#8220;Samohi&#8221; in common parlance) fields a top-notch student orchestra, and has for years. The school&#8217;s trophy shelf is well stocked, and it was no idle gesture to bring the orchestra to Disney for one of the &#8220;Sounds About Town&#8221; programs. Joni Swenson has led the group for four years, and she turned one number on the program &#8211; the Adagietto from Mahler&#8217;s Fifth Symphony &#8211; over to an old-timer she identified as <i>her</i> mentor, Vince Gomez, whose credentials as a founder of student music-making here and abroad make him a virtual Johnny Appleseed of school orchestras.</p>
<p>At Disney, the Samohi contingent delivered loud, robust performances of a Rimsky-Korsakov march, the Tchaikovsky Second, the Mahler movement (smoothly delivered by the string section alone) and Gershwin&#8217;s <i>An American in Paris</i>. It was particularly rewarding to hear the bright and ballsy Tchaikovsky, which is unjustly neglected in favor of the later symphonies. (Stravinsky was fond of it; it was one of the few works not written by him that he conducted.) I wonder, however, what value today&#8217;s young orchestras derive from the Gershwin piece, which, for all its charm, came across that night as a curio in a bygone language, the newest music on the program and yet the one piece least worth the effort of this excellent, greatly talented ensemble.</p>
<p>Less Well</p>
<p>The USC Thornton Choral Artists, which formed the backdrop for the <i>Requiem</i> at the Philharmonic&#8217;s better-late-than-never Mozart observance last week, probably averaged a few years older than the kids of Samohi; yet the sounds I heard from their massed forces, 83 strong, struck me as raw and unbalanced, lacking in vocal maturity. The clash of bright, harsh voices against instruments, especially against the remarkable range of Mozart&#8217;s orchestral tone colors in this extraordinary work, I found fatally disturbing. I could only balance my own disappointment, in a performance I had long anticipated, </p>
<p>with what I imagined &#8211; from my long-standing regard for conductor Christoph von Dohnányi&#8217;s own musical conscience &#8211; to be his own as well.</p>
<p>There are emanations from this work that go beyond its hokey accumulated mythology (including the rank absurdity of its treatment in the Peter Shaffer play and film) and the picky-picky discussions over editions and completions. Something happens at the very start &#8211; the plangent tones of mournful bass clarinets in darkest purple, the soft golden chords from massed trombones, the outcries from the strings &#8211; that never happened before in music, not even on Mozart&#8217;s most visionary pages. Where did he stand, at that moment, we ask as our spines shiver at these centuries-deep sounds? Into what chasm did he gaze? The question repeats itself: in the violence of the false cadence that ends the &#8220;Kyrie&#8221; and, most distressing of all, in the murky, muttered dissonances that lead out of the &#8220;Confutatis&#8221; and into the &#8220;Lacrimosa.&#8221;</p>
<p>We don&#8217;t need a fraudulent Salieri to guide a grotesquely overblown Mozart past these musical marvels; we do, however, need a chorus to capture their overtones of eternity with singing that is loving and awestruck. This the well-meaning youngsters of USC did not provide the other night. Illness by the scheduled soloist also cost us the Mozart piano concerto that would have properly balanced the program &#8211; the last in the series, with its slow movement also of breath-stopping melodic substance. Instead we got an agreeable but more juvenile work &#8211; No. 19 in F major, its third appearance here in the past two years &#8211; in the agreeable but juvenile hands of somebody-or-other.</p>
<p>Dohnányi has become a valued regular visitor. Under his &#8220;classical&#8221; hat he gave us Schumann last season, and returns with all the Brahms symphonies next. There&#8217;s more than that, however; two weeks ago, there was a beautifully shaped &#8220;complete&#8221; <i>Firebird </i>(shorn of a few feathers that were easily spared) and a brief, attractively dark and atmospheric piece by Britain&#8217;s Harrison Birtwistle, of whom we hear not nearly enough. Cherish this Dohnányi; everybody seems to like him, and with good reason.</p>
<p>Hail, Farewell, Hail</p>
<p>Everybody seemed to like Tom Adès, too. At his final &#8220;Green Umbrella&#8221; concert last week, there were broad hints dropped that his return next season (when, among other chores, he will look in on a staging at USC of his giddy operatic near-masterpiece <i>Powder Her Face</i>) might be the first in a series. We could do worse, and so could he.</p>
<p>This last concert was one more delightful omnium-gatherum: something very early &#8211; his Opus 2 Chamber Symphony &#8211; and other works, of later vintage. <i>The Origin of the Harp</i>, a middle-aged work for clarinets, violas, cellos and percussion (no harps), charmed me no end: a muttering, whirling, secretive sort of piece full of color and private jokes. At the end came the new Piano Quintet, which I raved about last fall and will do again anytime: serious, beautifully organized chamber-music writing. Music of dots and dashes &#8211; one more set of tiny, quizzical György Kurtág songs lasting little more than a minute and leaving behind disturbing prickles; 12 meditative epigrams by Niccolò Castiglioni &#8211; filled out the program, nicely delivered by singers Elizabeth Keusch and Cyndia Sieden (the Ariel of the previous week&#8217;s <i>Tempest</i>).</p>
<p>What Adès leaves behind is the memory of an exceptional presence among us, and the awareness it seems to have stirred up in musical circles: the quality of mind that seems to inform his way of composing and the splendid richness of his musical resource. Everybody in the classical crowd reacted to his being here, and talked about it, and this created a kind of vision of what musical life in an active community becomes every time something &#8211; or somebody &#8211; lively and interesting turns up at its core. We in Los Angeles are uncommonly blessed in this regard.?</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Onward</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2006/02/onward/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2006/02/onward/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 22 Feb 2006 22:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=567</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Maybe it&#8217;s something I ate, or didn&#8217;t, but I&#8217;ve been feeling unusually good about new music these days, for any number of reasons. The Philharmonic has had Thomas Adès as guest composer/conductor/pianist, and after some concerts there have been crowds &#8211; mostly young &#8211; pushing backstage to welcome him. Steve Reich&#8217;s You Are (Variations), in [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Maybe it&#8217;s something I ate, or didn&#8217;t, but I&#8217;ve been feeling unusually good about new music these days, for any number of reasons. The Philharmonic has had Thomas Adès as guest composer/conductor/pianist, and after some concerts there have been crowds &#8211; mostly young &#8211; pushing backstage to welcome him. Steve Reich&#8217;s <i>You Are (Variations)</i>, in the new Master Chorale recording on Nonesuch, sounds better every time I play it. The Philharmonic&#8217;s new season, which includes a big commissioned work by Kaija Saariaho, is a model of imaginative planning. Osvaldo Golijov&#8217;s music conquered on both coasts over the holiday weekend. John Adams keeps at it. It wasn&#8217;t long ago that some of the Gloomier Guses among critics were wondering where the Great Ones were. Well, they&#8217;re here.</p>
<p>Tom Terrific</p>
<p>Adès began his visit here at the piano in a Chamber Music Society concert that included Schubert&#8217;s &#8220;Trout&#8221; Quintet, and that somehow seemed appropriate: one young man&#8217;s exuberance in touch with another&#8217;s, the one cramming five notes where one might suffice, the other having one helluva good time making it happen. (I seem to have said some of this last September, when the EMI recording appeared. Schubert was one for revisitation.) It has only been a decade since Adès&#8217; arrival on the scene with the explosive ebullience of <i>Asyla</i> and the nose-thumbing exhilaration of <i>Powder Her Face</i>. The catalog of his works over those years is long and impressively varied, but the marvel with Adès &#8211; as with Schubert over the same time span &#8211; is the ongoing sense of control in every kind of music he has so far essayed, the way high spirits and magnificent purpose manage to interact, the way you always know what is happening.</p>
<p>On his first &#8220;big&#8221; Philharmonic program, which he conducted, there was his new violin concerto, bearing the title &#8220;Concentric Paths,&#8221; in a dazzling execution by fellow Brit Anthony Marwood. What grabbed me immediately in this supremely beautiful and original work was its blend of event and process, the charm of melodic invention and the clarity of its unfolding. Much happens; my memories, after a single hearing, center on a slow movement of haunting, quiet beauty, but are tangled with other moonlit memories from Adès&#8217; opera, which shared the program.</p>
<p>Music from <i>The Tempest</i> filled out that evening: Tchaikovsky&#8217;s and Sibelius&#8217; orchestral prettifications of negligible worth, but then a marvelous wad of selections from Adès&#8217; great opera, first done at Covent Garden in 2004. Meredith Oakes provided the libretto, a free gloss on the Shakespearean fantasy that moves the Caliban character to center stage and decks him out with music as close to moonlight as mere earthlings can contrive. In the half-hour Suite at Disney, we were denied this character, but were compensated with the opera&#8217;s incredible, airborne Ariel music, flying higher than human throat ought to aspire to but reached nevertheless by the high E&#8217;s of the awesome Cyndia Sieden; music of wisdom and regret for the Prospero of Simon Keenlyside; and paler but no less haunting moonlight for the young lovers sung by Toby Spence and Patricia Risley.</p>
<p>A few evenings later there was more to admire and ponder, Marwood and Adès in a &#8220;Historic Sites&#8221; program at the Doheny Mansion: all of Igor Stravinsky&#8217;s oeuvre for violin and piano, the music he created or transcribed for his friend violinist Samuel Dushkin &#8211; transcriptions of <i>Pulcinella</i> and the <i>Fairy&#8217;s Kiss</i> Divertimento, the <i>Duo Concertant</i> and some small pieces. In its own curious way, this was also a memorable concert, music of decidedly unimposing stature made important by the sense of players able to project the message that they, too, were having one helluva good time making it happen.</p>
<p>Go Golijov</p>
<p>Over last weekend, as Lincoln Center&#8217;s Osvaldo Golijov festival ended with the glorious cacophony of his <i>La Pasión Según San Marcos</i>, Santa Monica&#8217;s Jacaranda didn&#8217;t do so badly, either. <i>The Dreams and Prayers of Isaac the Blind</i>, with which the Kronos Quartet (plus airborne clarinetist David Krakauer) first brought Golijov to our delighted attention in 1994, was the centerpiece of an altogether splendid evening of &#8220;Pampas, Tangos, Dreams amp; Prayers&#8221; that filled Santa Monica&#8217;s First Presbyterian Church to near capacity. Works by Ginastera and Piazzolla rounded out the program with, of course, a decidedly Argentine accent; the clash between these and the whole panorama of backgrounds and derivations within the one 30-minute Golijov work was one of the concert&#8217;s many rewards.</p>
<p>This matter of nationality and accent in music is not easily dealt with, and Golijov, with his mingled background of Jewish, Russian, Latino and, currently, Bostonian, has always been uncommonly successful at drawing upon this and making it work in his music. <i>Isaac the Blind</i> deals primarily, of course, with Yiddish ancient history; the clarinets of several sizes stand in for the <i>geschrei</i> of the traditional klezmer band &#8211; and, possibly, of the abandoned Jewish mother. Yet it is more than that; already, in 1993, Golijov had mastered the many strands in his own heritage. Surrounded on the Jacaranda program by the intense Hispanic identity of Alberto Ginastera&#8217;s music &#8211; a couple of songs and the short, powerful Piano Sonata, which more people should play &#8211; it became by far the evening&#8217;s richest music. Its multinational spirit was handsomely caught by Jacaranda&#8217;s resident Denali Quartet &#8211; its own membership of mixed heritage including Jewish, Hispanic and Chinese &#8211; plus clarinetist Donald Foster.</p>
<p>Resplendent in shirt of flaming crimson, veteran Argentina-born pianist Eduardo Delgado &#8211; currently on faculty at Cal State Fullerton &#8211; performed the Ginastera Sonata and several short works; sweet-voiced soprano Maria Lazarova sang a couple of songs; John Walz performed a short work for cello: a long, varied and rewarding program. From Jacaranda&#8217;s enlightened planners, we have come to expect no less.?</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>The Great&#160;Recycler</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2006/02/the-great-recycler/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2006/02/the-great-recycler/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 15 Feb 2006 22:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[A Mighty Fortress Sunday morning in the devout Leipzig of Sebastian Bach, centuries before the Lutherans&#8217; conquest of Minnesota, was an arduous if uplifting experience. The faithful gathered in one of the two main churches, St. Michael or St. Thomas, at 7 a.m. By the time they had, in heart, soul, rump and knees, journeyed [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>A Mighty Fortress</p>
<p>Sunday morning in the devout Leipzig of Sebastian Bach, centuries before the Lutherans&#8217; conquest of Minnesota, was an arduous if uplifting experience. The faithful gathered in one of the two main churches, St. Michael or St. Thomas, at 7 a.m. By the time they had, in heart, soul, rump and knees, journeyed past the readings from Scripture, sung along in the day&#8217;s chorale plus a few dozen hymns, absorbed the musical wonders of Kapellmeister Bach&#8217;s latest cantata and the Sermon &#8211; ah, yes, the Sermon, the 1725 forerunner of &#8220;News From Lake Wobegon&#8221; but without the jokes &#8211; the noon hour would have struck. There would be time for socializing, the exchange of the &#8220;Grüss Gott&#8221; and the week&#8217;s gossip, but by then the Sunday <i>Rostbraten und Kartoffeln</i> would be waiting at home.</p>
<p>The nucleus of the Lutheran service was the body of the chorale melodies, collected and codified by the Founders, and assigned to each Sunday of the church year &#8211; as the Gregorian melodies were assigned to the Roman year. Like the dozens of other musical craftsmen in the organ lofts of Germany and Northern Europe, Bach had the task of fashioning each week&#8217;s music as a paraphrase &#8211; a recycling, if you will &#8211; of that specific melody, and the miracle is the amazing resource with which he went about his task. His 200 or so surviving cantatas, most of them created during his time as music director for the city of Leipzig, are more than merely a collection of great and beautiful executions of the given task; they represent the outlook of a devout and devoted mind on the nature of faith and its interaction with the nature of artistic expression. (Another 100 or so cantatas, by the way, are noted in catalogs but have yet to be found.)</p>
<p>Sir John Eliot Gardiner was in town recently, primarily to conduct a Mozart concert (which I had to miss due to an exceptionally conflicted weekend, with nothing less than Wagner&#8217;s <i>Ring</i> and a new arts center competing for attention), but also to talk about Bach cantatas. In 2000, the 250th anniversary of Bach&#8217;s death, Sir John had taken his Monteverdi Choir, the small instrumental group called the English Baroque Soloists and a solo vocal group on a &#8220;pilgrimage&#8221; to perform and record all surviving Bach church cantatas, in churches worldwide chosen for ideal size and sound qualities, and all on the appropriate Sunday in the church calendar. This would mean four or five works on most days: a full-length concert and, better yet, a full CD. Deutsche Grammophon was to release the performances; it issued five discs and backed off from the project, returning the masters to Sir John. Now, with private funding &#8211; from a donor list including Alberto Vilar, but we won&#8217;t go into that &#8211; Sir John has undertaken to release the recordings on his own label, Soli Deo Gloria, which was Bach&#8217;s own signature, in handsome two-disc packages distributed by Harmonia Mundi. There will be some 25 in all; there are five so far. Even if you were deaf, you&#8217;d want them for Steve McCurry&#8217;s haunting cover photographs: faces in Asian villages and monasteries, whose haunting eyes prepare you for the music inside. The music making under Gardiner, with his superbly motivated soloists both vocal and instrumental, somehow goes with this artwork. Even with the tiny and negligible flaws of live performances, I find this a new and deeply satisfying way of listening to Bach.</p>
<p>Soli Deo Gloria</p>
<p>&#8220;Whatever your beliefs,&#8221; said Sir John, &#8220;you have to respond to the irresistible power in this music, of Bach&#8217;s ambition to serve a higher power. What is even more remarkable, of course, is the way even his self-doubts come through, the anxieties, the pleading. This is the most human of all Bach&#8217;s music, and the most <i>humanistic</i> as well. Probably for that reason, because it is so unlike the standard image &#8211; the &#8216;divine sewing machine&#8217; of the instrumental works, for instance &#8211; these cantatas are the least explored of all his works. They are also the music that he was most obviously creating for the future. His sons recognized this. Carl Philipp Emanuel, who moved so far ahead of Sebastian in so much of his own music, listed the cantatas first when he set about cataloging his father&#8217;s legacy.</p>
<p>&#8220;In later time, too,&#8221; Sir John went on, &#8220;even in the 19th century, when so much was being reorchestrated and romanticized for Victorian audiences, there were passages in the unadulterated cantatas that were amazing Romantic composers . . .&#8221;</p>
<p>&#8220;That sequence in Cantata No. 8 . . .&#8221; I interrupted.</p>
<p>&#8220;Exactly. That passage sounds exactly like Brahms, and Brahms knew it and recognized it. And in No. 27, that opening chorus turns up exactly in the Brahms <i>Requiem</i>: &#8216;Denn alles Fleisch . . .&#8217; And what is the Brahms <i>Requiem</i>? Music about death, &#8216;borne patiently only by the corpse,&#8217; as G.B. Shaw once said. And what are Cantatas 8 and 27? Also music about death.&#8221;</p>
<p>Cantatas No. 8 and 27 &#8211; the numbers are a cataloger&#8217;s caprice and have no relation to chronology &#8211; go along with 161 and 95 in the set for the 16th Sunday after Trinity; they were performed and recorded on October 7, 2000, at Santiago de Compostela, Spain. Death is the subject matter in all four works: not the tragedy at life&#8217;s end, but the release at life&#8217;s fulfillment. All four works include at least one aria, usually toward the end, that is downright jovial; the piece in jig time at the end of No. 8 is a ringer for the jiggety-jog at the end of the sixth &#8220;Brandenburg.&#8221; What I find even more striking are the opening movements, each of them a multilevel musical drama.</p>
<p>No. 161 dates from Bach&#8217;s Weimar years before he moved on to Cöthen and then to Leipzig. &#8220;Come, sweet hour of death . . .&#8221; sings the alto, and the chorus answers with comforting words: &#8220;Though the body be consumed by worms . . .&#8221; To complicate matters still further, a solo oboe intrudes with yet another tune, the so-called &#8220;Passion&#8221; chorale, which will be a frequent visitor throughout Bach&#8217;s legacy. A chorale tune in No. 95 hollers out a death warning over a syncopated chorus exulting that &#8220;Christ is my life!!!&#8221; No. 8, from the Leipzig years, starts off with that Brahmsian harmony, and with what is supposed to be a funeral chime but clanging (!) merrily; &#8220;Dear Lord,&#8221; sing the young men and women of the Monteverdi Choir, &#8220;when will I die?&#8221; Not soon, if the vitality in these superb new discs is any indication.?</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Dark&#160;Landscapes</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2006/02/dark-landscapes/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2006/02/dark-landscapes/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 08 Feb 2006 19:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[Twinkle, Twinkle . . . There is no music for piano, large-scale or small, quite like the G-major Sonata of Franz Schubert. Its first sounds tease your imagination: What instrument could Schubert possibly have had in mind, in October 1826, capable of producing the ethereal, meditative sonorities at the edge of silence that begin this [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>
Twinkle, Twinkle . . .</p>
<p>There is no music for piano, large-scale or small, quite like the G-major Sonata of Franz Schubert. Its first sounds tease your imagination: What instrument could Schubert possibly have had in mind, in October 1826, capable of producing the ethereal, meditative sonorities at the edge of silence that begin this piece &#8211; an instrument that, furthermore, would rise in fury moments later to renounce those harmonies with sustained outbursts, which must surely have intimidated the ears of the time? A few blocks away from Schubert&#8217;s humble studio, in the same Vienna at about the same time, Ludwig van Beethoven had also, in his “Hammerklavier” and other sonatas, explored another whole new range of piano sound. Schubert&#8217;s accomplishment, the daring of his invention in this one amazing sonata, is little less remarkable. He would compose three more great piano sonatas, all in 1828, the final year of his tragically shortened life; none was more adventuresome than this noble work of two years before.</p>
<p>Schubert himself was no piano master, and most of his writing for the instrument leans toward the ordinary. It is in this one work, this strange, willful amalgam of solemnity and giddiness, which would make its way into public acceptance far more slowly than the acclaimed late works of Beethoven, that he sets out to explore a new piano territory, and does so enchantingly. “It is right and proper,” proclaimed the <i>Vienna Arts Journal</i>, September 29, 1827, “to rank this work among the good pianoforte compositions that by no means aim at being mere dancing lessons for the fingers.” Lost in a hushed, dark landscape of whispered harmonies and understated bits of tunes, you meet a Schubert strange, mysterious and wonderful in unsuspected new ways. Further surprises &#8211; some astounding in their violence, some simply disarming &#8211; await around every turn. At the end, nearly 50 minutes later if the performer has observed all the prescribed repeats, there comes a final, smiling, exquisite rush of harmony that would not be out of place in Debussy, and you find yourselves sharing that smile.</p>
<p>Radu Lupu, who ended his Schumann-Schubert recital at Disney Hall last week with this G-major Sonata, honored all of Schubert&#8217;s repeats, but not all of the smile. I confess to being spoiled beyond redemption in the matter of this work, going back to Easter Sunday, 1948: Artur Schnabel performing in Chicago&#8217;s Orchestra Hall. Schnabel had done more than any other pianist to restore Schubert&#8217;s large-scale works to public awareness, and from a seat onstage that afternoon I could watch the twinkle in Schubert&#8217;s miraculous modulations (G to E-flat to C at the drop of a pinkie) play out across the great musician&#8217;s face. I wait for that twinkle whenever the G-major Sonata is on the bill; I hear it in Mitsuko Uchida&#8217;s recording. There was a detectable twinkle that night in Lupu&#8217;s performance of Schumann&#8217;s <i>Waldszenen</i> (but not in his <i>Humoreske</i>, which I found dull beyond rescue), and not in the Schubert.</p>
<p>Lights Out</p>
<p>The Philharmonic&#8217;s five-year Shostakovich survey ended with nary a twinkle: the Symphony No. 13 in January, a gigantic outburst for dark voices compounded out of Yevgeny Yevtushenko&#8217;s bitter anti-everything poetry, and No. 14 last week, equally long but for modest forces, linking death-tinged poetry not so much sardonic as directly tragic. (No. 15, the actual final work in the series, had been performed earlier in the season.) It has been a distinguished project, the more so since Esa-Pekka Salonen&#8217;s personal feelings on several of the works &#8211; including the Fifth Symphony, by some distance the most popular &#8211; were not exactly a secret. He originally announced that he would conduct the entire series, but then thought better. “Thinking better,” I guess, would include taking a good, hard look at, say, Nos. 11 and 12 &#8211; which did receive good performances, but in others&#8217; hands.</p>
<p>No. 13, which was led by James Conlon, sets the Yevtushenko poetry about the Nazi massacre of the Jewish populace at Babi Yar and further thoughts on Soviet racism. On the first night, it was preceded by one of the Philharmonic&#8217;s “First Nights” minidramas, wherein actors from outside and orchestra members acted out a 30-or-so-minute biz about Shostakovich and Yevtushenko being harassed by Soviet cultural delegates and the performance of the work itself threatened. There are several of these entertainments buried like land mines through the season. (The next, on April 7, concerns Rachmaninoff&#8217;s Second Symphony, which, come to think of it, probably does need all the help it can get.) I don&#8217;t think I am alone in finding them just a tad patronizing. I can read program notes, and attend the Philharmonic&#8217;s pre-concert talks (which are good most of the time). Minitheatricals, however eloquent several of the orchestra&#8217;s sturdy players turn out to be, are an unnecessary burden. Be that as it may, the performance under Conlon was taut and dark and nicely lit from within by the young baritone Nmon Ford, who replaced the scheduled soloist.</p>
<p>No. 14 is a problem work, and worth the effort. Having Mahler on your mind helps: The deep, solemn opening might have fallen from the sketches from the Mahler 10th; the poems themselves share the mood of the <i>Kindertotenlieder</i>. The sparse scoring &#8211; strings, percussion and celesta as in Bartók&#8217;s great work, but with more prominence given to the death-rattle percussion &#8211; enforces careful listening. I was glad that the pre-concert entertainment this time included a Shostakovich string quartet (No. 14); it made for good ear training. The two soloists were baritone Matthias Goerne, who is familiar, and mezzo-soprano Tatiana Pavlovskaya, who is not but who is a superb, rich-voiced tragic singer whom I would love to hear in any dozen operatic roles.</p>
<p>Also on the program, and not insignificant, was Haydn&#8217;s Symphony No. 103, the “Drumroll,” one of the most adventurous and brilliantly scored of the 12 “London” Symphonies. We haven&#8217;t heard enough Haydn from Salonen lately; it makes for a superb matchup. Something about the edge in Haydn&#8217;s humor &#8211; the way, in this work, that the finale builds its theme on the repeating figure in the horns, and the back-and-forth major-minor in the slow-movement variations &#8211; exactly works in Salonen&#8217;s hands, and always has. No. 14 was a valuable experience, I suppose, but it was the Haydn that rode home with me in my head, and remains today. </p></p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Clipped&#160;Wings</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2006/02/clipped-wings/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2006/02/clipped-wings/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 01 Feb 2006 22:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[The Inner Music Silenced Robert Wilson&#8217;s production of Puccini&#8217;s Madama Butterfly, as produced by the L.A. Opera two years ago, soared both on Puccini&#8217;s lyric urgency and on an inner music created out of Wilson&#8217;s own visions, his unique sense of stage movement and color, his repertory of gentle invention, to deepen &#8211; but not [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>The Inner Music Silenced</p>
<p>Robert Wilson&#8217;s production of Puccini&#8217;s <i>Madama Butterfly</i>, as produced by the L.A. Opera two years ago, soared both on Puccini&#8217;s lyric urgency and on an inner music created out of Wilson&#8217;s own visions, his unique sense of stage movement and color, his repertory of gentle invention, to deepen &#8211; but not supplant &#8211; the dramatic sense of the work itself. Wilson&#8217;s art is serious and subtle; alas, like the Butterfly of the story, it languishes in his absence. It needs his guidance, in his famous painstaking rehearsal technique, to deal with matters of lighting, the positioning of hands, of exact body movement. As enhancement to Puccini&#8217;s all-too-famous tearjerker, Wilson drew upon our powers of recognition, for example, by his exact contrast between the hand positions of his Butterfly and the American Kate Pinkerton at their meeting, and it told worlds about the clash of their civilizations, adding a layer of information to an opera that can &#8211; and often should &#8211; just as easily be ignored as second-rate entertainment. He created a whole character out of Butterfly&#8217;s small boy, and gave him a lovely, appealing choreography to make us aware of the tragedy that will devastate his life after the opera&#8217;s final curtain.</p>
<p>Wilson hasn&#8217;t been here for the current <i>Butterfly </i>revival (through February 19), which is not badly performed on the whole, but is no longer the deeply haunting stage masterwork of two years ago. A small boy &#8211; Nathan Cruz on the night I went, one of two brothers alternating in the role &#8211; busied himself amusingly on the stage, but he was merely cute and not at all moving. I found no fault with Patricia Racette and Marcus Haddock as the leads; they looked and sounded like every Mr. amp; Mrs. Pinkerton you&#8217;d expect in a major-league opera house. Margaret Thompson&#8217;s Suzuki is familiar coinage hereabouts; Vladimir Chernov&#8217;s Sharpless fulfilled his modest demands &#8211; well, modestly. The young Israeli conductor Dan Ettinger, impressive in last season&#8217;s <i>Aida</i>, continues to impress.</p>
<p>No, there were no musical faults, and dozens of big-time houses would not be ashamed asking $205 for this night of opera. But this production rests on the memory of something far finer: haunting to the eye and the dramatic sense, with lighting beautifully controlled (not contaminated, as it is now, with follow spots), a dramatic cast whose body movements mesh with what words and music are struggling to proclaim, the overall sense that even this maligned Puccini potboiler can be made to matter. It did then; it doesn&#8217;t, quite, now.</p>
<p>The Presentable Past .?.?.</p>
<p>Concerts at the Getty Center come nicely planned but burdened with a problem. It&#8217;s a fine idea to immerse yourself in a current exhibition and then, a few feet away, experience music related in time and impulse to what you&#8217;ve just seen. On a recent Saturday, there was the beguilement of a small room hung with the awesome lavishness of Titian: two military portraits in full Renaissance panoply and a Magdalene, plus a showcase of small engravings of similar splendor; one left short of breath. At the Harold M. Williams Auditorium down the way, the five members of the Hilliard Ensemble sang wonderful music of that exact time, all the parts of a Mass by Nicolas Gombert (1495-1560 or thereabouts) and works of near-contemporaries including one gorgeously complex motet by Josquin Desprez, who may have been Gombert&#8217;s teacher.</p>
<p>To hear is to adore. Gombert&#8217;s earmarks are a certain wildness, a complexity in the way his lines of counterpoint push against one another, that gives his music a kind of momentum different from the serenity of Josquin. And the problem at the Getty is that the Williams Auditorium, the only performing space, is not a concert hall at all but a dry lecture room that sucks the sound out of performers (unless they&#8217;re an amplified rock group). You could feel singers straining to get the sound out, especially the higher voices, and the result was not pleasant. The whole of the Gombert Mass, plus other works, is out on a new ECM disc by the Hilliards, and the sound of the group at ECM&#8217;s wonderful small church, Austria&#8217;s Propstei St. Gerold, is to the Getty sound as choirs of angels are to your local boiler factory.</p>
<p>At Westwood&#8217;s United Methodist, I heard most of Musica Angelica&#8217;s &#8220;Splendor of Venice&#8221; concert before dashing over (along with several of the players) to the Chamber Orchestra&#8217;s Mozart program I exulted over last week. Italy&#8217;s Rinaldo Alessandrini was the guest conductor, but it&#8217;s the orchestra&#8217;s regular conductor, Martin Haselböck, who deserves a low bow for reshaping this into the really fine Baroque orchestra it has always tried to be. Their program &#8211; you know, Locatelli, Vivaldi, Albinoni, the usual &#8211; came off with spirit and a sense of discovery and even, in a bloodletting Geminiani concerto, the message that this music isn&#8217;t all the same after all. Angelica is back on a one-concert-per-month basis; Mozart on February 24 and 26. If you&#8217;d written them off, as I had for a while, it&#8217;s time to write them back on.</p>
<p>Pierre Without Fear</p>
<p>Pierre Boulez made his first entry into local awareness with his <i>Le Marteau Sans Maître</i>, whose score he had under his arm when he first arrived here. Every local musician who survived that first performance &#8211; ask Bill Kraft, for one &#8211; has his own nightmare story about that Monday Evening Concert, March 1957. Robert Craft, who was supposed to conduct, gave up; Boulez came to the rescue and rehearsed for 10 days. The program also included electronic Stockhausen. &#8220;If this is music,&#8221; fumed the <i>Times</i>&#8216; Albert Goldberg, &#8220;it&#8217;s time to drop the H-bomb.&#8221;</p>
<p>Over the years, <i>Le Marteau</i> has subsisted as much on its bogeyman reputation as on its actual quality; this was the work in which the outlooks of the young (32) Boulez first crystallized into musical shape. Live performances remain rare. At the last Green Umbrella Concert, the Philharmonic&#8217;s young assistant conductor, Alexander Mickelthwate, led <i>Le Marteau</i> as what it now is: a contemporary work of great complexity, but also great beauty rising most of all from embedded melodic lines, sinuous and rapturous and no more threatening to the ear than beautiful, great music of any other time.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>250 Candles for&#160;Wolfgang</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2006/01/250-candles-for-wolfgang/</link>
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		<pubDate>Wed, 25 Jan 2006 22:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[The Humanist Once again there is an Anniversary; I have barely gotten through the 179 CDs of Philips&#8217; 1991 compleat Mozart, a splendid highlight of the recording industry as it then flourished. Now there will be another Mozart torrent, even while word also arrives of serious-minded record stores, and labels, too, going out of business. [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>The Humanist</p>
<p>Once again there is an Anniversary; I have barely gotten through the 179 CDs of Philips&#8217; 1991 compleat Mozart, a splendid highlight of the recording industry as it then flourished. Now there will be another Mozart torrent, even while word also arrives of serious-minded record stores, and labels, too, going out of business. Consider the alternative; a <i>New Yorker</i> cartoon, stuck on my fridge like a memento mori, shows a desert, bleak beyond imagining. The caption: &#8220;World without Mozart.&#8221;</p>
<p>We grant him a special place &#8211; &#8220;I hate classical music, except for Mozart, of course&#8221; &#8211; because of his uncanny take on the human condition and the ease with which this understanding comes through in the music. The great late operas prove this the most easily, but they are not alone. Listen, for starters, to the amazing display of human emotions and reactions in the 20 or so minutes of nonstop interaction that ends the second act of <i>Figaro</i>. The Count, with murder on his mind, thunders forth his menacing octaves; the Countess, quite honestly terrified, dithers in shivering roulades. Then the closet door opens to reveal not the expected philandering Cherubino but the blameless Susanna, and the stupefied Count is reduced to a monotone while the women giggle around him in triumph. On and on the scene proceeds: More people join in, more complex the music grows, with every line a separate, beautifully preserved personage. And while all this is happening, Mozart is also working within the classic framework that involves our listening process with the logic of key change, key return &#8211; the design that makes it all work.</p>
<p>Verdi&#8217;s operas are full of marvelous character depictions; Wagner&#8217;s <i>Ring</i> drew tears, even in those patched-together performances at Long Beach last week. But it is to Mozart that I turn for the sublime equilibrium of musical shape and the power to stir the emotions through the balance of harmony and design. The operas make this power the most accessible because of the words. But it is a power ingrained in Mozart&#8217;s music itself, almost from the start of his amazing if brief trajectory. One of the few honest episodes in the otherwise execrable <i>Amadeus</i> comes when Salieri overhears and eloquently describes the slow movement of the <i>Serenade for 13 Winds</i> (361 in Koechel&#8217;s chronological catalog of Mozart&#8217;s works) and is undone by mingled awe and jealousy. (&#8220;I was suddenly frightened. . . . It seemed to me that I had heard a voice of God!&#8221;) If ever words have served to describe the process of falling in love with a piece of music, perhaps beyond reason, let it be these.</p>
<p>The Synthesis</p>
<p>You can undergo similar processes in the whole treasury of &#8220;wordless operas,&#8221; the dozen piano concertos from Mozart&#8217;s last years in Vienna, in which, time after time, the interplay between solo piano and orchestra becomes a serious, loving conversation on subject matter too subtle for words. Even more than the symphonies &#8211; and the violin concertos, which are works from youthful days &#8211; Mozart&#8217;s mature piano concertos represent a synthesis between his operatic language and his individualistic orchestral idiom in which the woodwinds of the orchestra take on almost human characteristics. This past weekend, Jeffrey Kahane and the L.A. Chamber Orchestra began their series of Mozart piano concertos, which will run into next year, and on that first concert, the last work &#8211; the G-major Concerto, K. 453 &#8211; has a slow movement that is a marvel among marvels in this regard. The orchestra proposes a small fragment of a theme; the piano responds with the theme ever so slightly varied; the tone gradually deepens, then lightens; and after eight or nine minutes we find that, unconsciously, we&#8217;ve moved to the edge of our seats &#8211; as if to connect with every word of a profound overheard discourse with words unspoken but clearly understood.</p>
<p>These marvelous works constitute by themselves a wide-ranging repertory of Mozartian dramatic devices. The March 12 program includes two works whose slow movements are almost too emotionally draining to coexist on a single evening: the C-major K. 467 and the A-major K. 488. The first of these contributed a slow movement to a very pretty if morose Swedish film romance under the name of <i>Elvira Madigan</i>, where it kept getting clipped off in midphrase by a director obviously tone-deaf. The A-major has a slow movement of similarly breath-stopping beauty, a melody for one finger, stark and simple. And on May 21 there is the great E-flat Concerto, K. 482, the most grandly orchestrated of the concertos, in which all kinds of strange and wonderful things happen in all three movements, including a conclusion to the slow movement that leaves you in a &#8220;What hit me?&#8221; state of mind.</p>
<p>Near the end of his life, Mozart discovered the music of Bach, from manuscripts in the libraries of Viennese collectors, and from his own discoveries on journeys to Bach&#8217;s churches in Leipzig. The possibilities of creating drama by ramming lines of counterpoint together in daring and novel ways impressed him deeply, and the parts of the <i>Requiem</i> that he actually completed can lead us to tantalizing speculation as to what his next works would have been, with mastery of contrapuntal devices even more firmly in hand. To me, the last of Mozart&#8217;s symphonies, the so-called &#8220;Jupiter,&#8221; is the real synthesis of his command over the complex musical textures that he gleaned from his contrapuntal explorations. Even before the famous finale, the working out in this exultant, extroverted work is uncommonly rich-textured &#8211; the wisps of string tone surrounding the themes in the slow movement, the brass punctuation in the minuet: Could classical orchestration have moved further than this deep, lustrous sonority? Then comes the finale, with its five-part melding of voices, a composer triumphantly staking out his conquest over the complexity of his art.</p>
<p>It didn&#8217;t end there, of course. After came the profound sublimity of the Clarinet Concerto and the endearing sublimity of <i>The Magic Flute</i>. And it doesn&#8217;t really end then, either. The next Mozart year comes in 2041; see you then.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>The Ring of&#160;Truth</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2006/01/the-ring-of-truth/</link>
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		<pubDate>Wed, 18 Jan 2006 17:30:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=562</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Rhine Stones If you raise a questioning eyebrow at the news that the Long Beach Opera is currently offering a reasonable likeness of Richard Wagner&#8217;s 18-hour Ring of the Nibelung in something close to 10 hours, that can only mean that you don&#8217;t know Long Beach&#8217;s not-so-little opera-company-that-could (and does) and its infinite capacity for [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Rhine Stones</p>
<p>If you raise a questioning eyebrow at the news that the Long Beach Opera is currently offering a reasonable likeness of Richard Wagner&#8217;s 18-hour <i>Ring of the Nibelung</i> in something close to 10 hours, that can only mean that you don&#8217;t know Long Beach&#8217;s not-so-little opera-company-that-could (and does) and its infinite capacity for inflicting creative mayhem upon the jewels of the repertory and for making it all (like this sentence) work out at the end. And if you hustle down to Long Beach&#8217;s Center Theater &#8211; a welcoming performing space even when empty but far better this very weekend for the second of the company&#8217;s two <i>Ring</i>-arounds &#8211; you can verify all this for yourself.</p>
<p>To be sure, the version at hand, created by Jonathan Dove for Britain&#8217;s Birmingham Opera and also currently in the repertory of Opera Theater of Pittsburgh, reduced both in time scale and in orchestration, takes a few tucks in Wagnerian holy writ that will surely send ardent apostles of the Bard of Bayreuth &#8211; a stiff-chinned lot at best &#8211; up walls. Conversational tidbits gleaned during intermissions at Long Beach last weekend were studded with revolutionary rumbles of the sort that might have landed the Master himself on proscribed lists in his day. Those unhappy souls will find their surcease locally next fall from &#8211; of all unexpected sources &#8211; Russia&#8217;s Kirov, whose Costa Mesa <i>Ring</i> promises to be longer and surely louder.</p>
<p>I, too, await this benefice with mind, heart and rump at the ready, as I have many such experiences in the past. Meanwhile, I found little difficulty in identifying this 10-hour squeezed-together two-day (instead of the usual five) &#8220;Ringlet&#8221; as an authentic Wagnerian experience, at times an exhilarating one, and seldom below competence: pure Long Beach, in other words. Credit, above all, falls to Andreas Mitisek, who in his years with the company &#8211; first as chief conductor and now as artistic director &#8211; has grasped the founding ideals of Michael Milenski and advanced them as if in a single breath. With an orchestra of a mere 25, mostly young, and placed in the theater behind the action so that eye contact between conductor and actors was impossible, Mitisek was still able somehow to mold a reasonably cohesive performance, one in which &#8211; the Gods&#8217; entry into Valhalla, for one instance &#8211; you could almost imagine an authentic Wagnerian sonority. No, it wasn&#8217;t Bayreuth, and it wasn&#8217;t even the Met or Seattle, but I have the feeling that those fussbudget, dyed-in-the-dirndl Wagnerians were really struggling to have as rotten a time as they were proclaiming in the Long Beach intermissions last weekend.</p>
<p>Jonathan Eaton managed the stage action, in a single area around a ring-shaped structure set off with Danila Korogodsky&#8217;s gadgetry, including standing headless statuary of various sizes and forms and a huge suspended ball stuck with skulls on spikes that stood for the Rhine&#8217;s gold but reminded me more of those cheese-ball hors d&#8217;oeuvres at fancy parties. Stage movement was mostly of the lurch-&#8217;n'-clutch school; success with the elegant complexities of Andrew Porter&#8217;s English text was varied.</p>
<p>I did, however, hear some excellent singing, by a few old friends and a number of new ones. Among the former was the tenor Gary Lehman, who sang the ardent Siegmund with a fine thread of the tragic; he had been the substitute Parsifal with the L.A. Opera last fall. John Duykers, one of our great character singers, was the Mime in <i>Siegfried</i>, making me regret that the role had been cut from <i>Rhinegold</i>. The Perry brothers, Eugene and Herbert, whom everybody remembers from the Peter Sellars video of <i>Don Giovanni</i> set in Harlem, sang the brothers Fasolt and Fafner in <i>Rhinegold</i>, and Herbert came back to do the Fafner in <i>Siegfried</i>. Among singers new to me I found particular pleasure in Suzan Hanson, who returned to life after 20 years asleep as the Brünnhilde in <i>Siegfried</i> and bounced and cavorted (with Dan Snyder as a cavorting Boy Scout Siegfried) like the lady in the sleeping-pill ads: a new tack on Brünnhilde and a delightful one. (She sobered up properly in the final <i>Twilight of the Gods</i>.)</p>
<p>Yes, cuts are cuts. And there are good reasons to raise eyebrows, as I am wont to do, at the kind of damage done to accepted masterpieces that this <i>Ring</i> treatment represents. One slash I found truly unacceptable: the murder of Siegfried that took place without the motivation of the preceding music in which the hero&#8217;s memory had begun to return, leading to the Funeral March, which everybody knows and loves, but which was chopped in half. I recognized many of the cuts, but I also recognized the music around them as authentic Wagner and authentically beautiful, and there were times when that was enough. Ten hours with Wagner&#8217;s <i>Ring</i> is no small strudel.</p>
<p>Keepers of the Flame</p>
<p>A questioning eyebrow at the most recent Monday Evening Concert, confronted with the news of the series&#8217; approaching final flicker, might well question; the program by XTET, the intelligence in its choices and the strengths in its execution were close to anybody&#8217;s ideal as to what constitutes a perfect evening of new-music presentation. Word, furthermore, had gotten around; the crowd was large and enthusiastic. What kind of managerial fool puts such enterprise to rest?</p>
<p>Yet the County Museum management seemed bent on playing the fool, or at least on sabotaging the event. The sound system &#8211; which, as any fool will tell you, is crucial to any new-music event &#8211; was left untended; there were no stagehands to assist in the considerable between-numbers rearrangement; the program might have worked just as well out on the sidewalk. With the growing attention afforded our city for its cultural growth (as in last Sunday&#8217;s <i>New York Times</i> music section), you&#8217;d almost think that LACMA was out to bring public disgrace upon itself on purpose.</p>
<p>The program began with a whimsical reminder of better times, a Stravinsky song that had had its world premiere at a Monday Evening Concert way back when. The big new works were by local composer Tom Flaherty &#8211; an exceptionally appealing duo for cello and marimba &#8211; and a Passion-inspired ensemble work by the East Coast&#8217;s Christopher Rouse. XTET, one of our truly significant freelance ensembles, whose regular members include the treasurable singer Daisietta Kim and the sturdy cellist Roger Lebow, has been performing new music at LACMA for 20 years. With a couple of misguided pen strokes, it is about to become homeless.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>The Muses on the&#160;Tube</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2006/01/the-muses-on-the-tube/</link>
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		<pubDate>Sat, 14 Jan 2006 22:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=561</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Aching Beauty Three years ago I wrote under the spell of Kaija Saariaho&#8217;s L&#8217;Amour de Loin, whose American premiere I had attended at the Santa Fe Opera. The recording that was promised at the time has now materialized, a Deutsche Grammophon DVD, identical to the Santa Fe production (which had come originally from Paris&#8217; Théâtre [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Aching Beauty</p>
<p>Three years ago I wrote under the spell of Kaija Saariaho&#8217;s <i>L&#8217;Amour de Loin</i>, whose American premiere I had attended at the Santa Fe Opera. The recording that was promised at the time has now materialized, a Deutsche Grammophon DVD, identical to the Santa Fe production (which had come originally from Paris&#8217; Théâtre du Châtelet) except that the conductor is now Esa-Pekka Salonen, a longtime friend of and fellow student with Saariaho in their native Finland. We heard some music from the opera a year ago, when Salonen preceded one of the acts of the so-called &#8220;<i>Tristan</i> Project&#8221; with a suite of excerpts, a wise move since both operas in their way breathe similar sorrows and undergo similar pain. <i>L&#8217;Amour de Loin</i> is a work of extraordinary power and beauty. Hear it, if you will, remembering the Metropolitan Opera&#8217;s recent broadcast of the workaday exemplar of what passes for innovative, contemporary opera in some circles these days &#8211; Tobias Picker&#8217;s drab note-spinning around Dreiser&#8217;s <i>An American Tragedy</i>- and it may restore your hope that, somewhere on the planet, opera does, indeed, survive. It is a work that, furthermore, restores the lyric stage to the level of myth and mystery, of appeal to an audience to lose itself in timeless imagery &#8211; not just the reworking of some popular movie scenario. It is, in other words, a genuine opera.</p>
<p>The text, by the Paris-based Arab writer Amin Maalouf, is drawn from the medieval account of the troubadour Jaufré Rudel, the Countess Clémence whom he worships from afar for her purity of heart and body, and the Pilgrim who crosses the Mediterranean to carry messages to the separated lovers. At the end they are united in transfiguring death. Peter Sellars&#8217; evocative production fills the stage with water, not only to signify the gulf separating the lovers, but to cast a rippling shimmer that gorgeously reflects Saariaho&#8217;s deep, dark, achingly beautiful music &#8211; its orchestra wondrously enhanced by subtly interspersed electronics. Dawn Upshaw&#8217;s final ironic outburst, as the dead Jaufré (Gerald Finley, San Francisco&#8217;s recent Oppenheimer) lies in her arms, is, simply put, the stuff of sublime operatic drama.</p>
<p>Try This on Your iPod</p>
<p>I&#8217;ve had to add new shelves for my operatic DVDs. While classical recordings dwindle, or self-feed on repackaged reissues, the flood of video operas continues unabated and, for the most part, rewarding. I can remember when experiencing just the sounds of Wagner&#8217;s <i>Ring</i> at home meant piecing together several albums of excerpts with varied casts and agonizing omissions. Now my shelves bend under the weight of five complete videos of the cycle. One of these, from the Metropolitan, follows Wagner&#8217;s stage rubrics more or less literally: the sword in the tree, Brünnhilde the same soprano awakened on her rocks as when she was put to sleep there 20 years before, the dragon Fafner an honest-to-Wotan fire-breather and not just some hydroelectric monstrosity on the banks of the Rhine. The others, however, take all kinds of staging liberties, while offering plenty of proof that the world these days is well populated with good-to-excellent Wagnerian singers. Instead of being starved for the sound of a single proper Wagnerian performance on your home Victrola, in other words, you had damn well better be prepared to wrestle with the luxury of owning all five.</p>
<p>An opera date at the Dorothy Chandler Pavilion can run you $410 these nights, tickets alone. Far be it from me to shoo you off the box-office line, but consider what else $410 can land you, including &#8211; since we&#8217;re still in the season of list-making &#8211; 10 marvelous operatic DVDs, Wagner aside, that can get you a lot closer to excellent performances than connections at the Chandler box office ever could. That&#8217;ll leave you something over for dinner &#8211; not at Patina maybe, but too much of that stuff isn&#8217;t good for you.</p>
<p>Let&#8217;s proceed chronologically. The fascinating Pierre Audi production of Monteverdi&#8217;s <i>Return of Ulysses</i> that played here back in the Peter Hemmings days is available now, with some of the cuts restored, on a two-disc Opus Arte set, again conducted by Glen Wilson. Move on then to my favorite among half a dozen <i>Don Giovanni</i>s: Riccardo Muti conducting on Opus Arte, with Thomas Allen as Mozart&#8217;s incurable rake and Ann Murray as the tragic, put-upon Elvira. Also on Opus Arte: a spectacular containment of Berlioz&#8217;s <i>Les Troyens</i> from Paris&#8217; Châtelet, with Sir John Eliot Gardiner conducting his properly named Orchestre Révolutionnaire et Romantique and our own Susan Graham as Dido.</p>
<p>Achim Freyer is remembered here better for his marvelous staging of the Berlioz <i>Faust</i> than for his fussed-with Bach Mass; one of his stage masterworks was his production of Weber&#8217;s <i>Der Freischütz </i>as a real Germanic folktale, and a Kultur DVD has nicely captured a Stuttgart performance conducted by Dennis Russell Davies. For <i>Carmen</i> there is an interesting choice: two performances with Plácido Domingo&#8217;s prime Don José. On TDK there&#8217;s a Franco Zeffirelli staging, quite old (1978) but conducted by the legendary Carlos Kleiber; the other, on TriStar, is the Francesco Rosi movie, with Julia Migenes-Johnson. You really need both; hell, they&#8217;re only one disc each. For <i>The Barber of Seville</i> only one choice is possible: Cecilia Bartoli, on ArtHaus, in a shameless flirtation with her cast, with Rossini&#8217;s music and with us all.</p>
<p>For any composer named Strauss, again only one choice is possible. Something about Kleiber&#8217;s presence in the pit becomes an irradiating force that can reach out to his orchestra, to his singers and to the audience. I was able to feel it during my one in-person experience, and much of that presence lingers as captured on video; I don&#8217;t want to try to explain it further than that. Anyhow, there are Deutsche Grammophon DVDs of <i>Die Fledermaus </i>and two performances of <i>Der Rosenkavalier</i> that somehow under Kleiber&#8217;s leadership become transformed into the <i>excelsis </i>of wise, all-knowing, human comedy. If people really knew how to immerse themselves in any or all of these miraculous events, the makers of Prozac would suddenly recognize their product as superfluous.</p>
<p>For Verdi, I can let myself be bowled over by the sheer force of Jon Vickers&#8217; <i>Otello </i>(on DG, with Herbert von Karajan conducting) and try not to notice the lousy lip-synching. Bryn Terfel&#8217;s larger-than-life Falstaff (from the recent Covent Garden production) on BBC is the one performance I&#8217;ve seen on video that might persuade me to look into one of those oversize HDTV jobs. On the other hand, I hear that the 2-inch pictures on those new TV iPods are pretty good, too.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>An Annual&#160;Alphabet</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2006/01/an-annual-alphabet/</link>
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		<pubDate>Thu, 05 Jan 2006 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=560</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[John ADAMS: An atomic opera in San Francisco and a multimedia Nativity last month here preserved hopes for classical music&#8217;s present and future.Heinrich BIBER: Madcap violin virtuosity from Germany&#8217;s leading composer pre-Bach. In concerts and on disc, he&#8217;s taken over on the charts from Vivaldi.CLEVELAND Orchestra: Dvorák&#8217;s rarely heard Fifth Symphony made the orchestra&#8217;s Costa [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>John <b>ADAMS</b>: An atomic opera in San Francisco and a multimedia Nativity last month here preserved hopes for classical music&#8217;s present and future.Heinrich <b>BIBER</b>: Madcap violin virtuosity from Germany&#8217;s leading composer pre-Bach. In concerts and on disc, he&#8217;s taken over on the charts from Vivaldi.<b>CLEVELAND</b> Orchestra: Dvorák&#8217;s rarely heard Fifth Symphony made the orchestra&#8217;s Costa Mesa stint especially wonderful.<b>DORRANCE</b> Stalvey: After leading the distinguished Monday Evening Concerts at LACMA almost single-handedly for 33 years, he died last year. The concerts themselves are also on borrowed time.<b>ESA-PEKKA</b> Salonen: <i>Musical America</i> puts him on its cover as Musician of the Year. Who are we to differ?<b>FLICKA</b> Von Stade: A little long in the tooth for Offenbach&#8217;s man-eating Duchess at the L.A. Opera? Perhaps, but we love her all the same.<b>GUSTAVO</b> Dudamel: A 24-year-old Venezuelan fireball of a conductor made his local debut late in the Hollywood Bowl season and wowed us all.<b>HAYDN</b>&#8216;s String Quartet, Opus 54 No. 2, amazing, adventurous, lit up the Penderecki Quartet&#8217;s program ?at LACMA, the kind of music that LACMA now intends ?to ditch.<b>INDISPENSABLE</b>: Osvaldo Golijov&#8217;s <i>Ayre</i> and Luciano Berio&#8217;s <i>Folk Songs</i> sung by Dawn Upshaw on DG, with the Andalucian Dogs barking away in the background.<b>JEFFREY</b> Kahane: At keyboard or on podium, he has brought his L.A. Chamber Orchestra into a golden age, in time to provide ol&#8217; Wolfgang with the ideal birthday gift.Olga <b>KERN</b>: With piano and TV cameras at the ready, she came to the Bowl and established the Tchaikovsky Piano Concerto as the prototypical sex toy.<b>LORRAINE</b> Hunt <b>LIEBERSON</b> sang her husband Peter&#8217;s <i>Neruda Songs</i> with the Philharmonic: beauty of thought matching beauty of artistry.<b>MARIN</b> Alsop survived the sexist uprising at her newly acquired Baltimore Symphony post; with our own Philharmonic, she led a strong and exceptionally brainy Tchaikovsky Fifth.<b>NAXOS</b>, <b>NONESUCH</b>: the two labels that sustain hope that classical recording has a continuing sales strength, room for imaginative programming, and perhaps even ?a future.<b>OJAI</b>&#8216;s programming had some interesting divergences from the Good Old Days, with more (e.g., Golijov&#8217;s wonderful opera, newly revised) to come. Stay tuned.The <b>PHILHARMONIC</b> returned to classical orchestral seating (second violins down front on the right) and much improved its clarity and resonance, especially in 18th-century music.The Denali <b>QUARTET</b> is the mainstay of the superb Jacaranda series at Santa Monica&#8217;s First Presbyterian. It plays Revueltas and Ravel, and raises goose bumps.Terry <b>RILEY</b> got a messier 70th-birthday concert, at Royce, than the great minimalist deserved, but his own playing and singing gave off the rainbow&#8217;s authentic glow.András <b>SCHIFF</b> played the piano and led the Philharmonic in a warm-hearted and friendly program of small and lesser masterpieces, a most comforting evening.<b>THOMAS</b> Adés composed a marvelous Piano Quintet, which you can hear on EMI and also hear in person when he comes to the Philharmonic in February.Frances-Marie <b>UITTI</b> used her double-bow techniques, in a LACMA concert, to turn the throbbing, mystical cello works of Giacinto Scelsi into beauty beyond words.<b>VIOLETA</b> Urmana, commanding of stature and of voice as well, came as close as humanly possible to endowing Puccini&#8217;s Tosca with a semblance of authentic blood and fire.Schubert&#8217;s <b>WINTERREISE</b> underwent the unlikely process of being turned into a stage work; the Long Beach Opera&#8217;s production, in a tiny theater, had its own genuine power.Sheer <b>XTASY</b>: the final trio of Strauss&#8217; <i>Der Rosenkavalier</i>, staged at the L.A. Opera by Maximilian Schell and conducted by Kent Nagano. Can opera get any better than this? (Probably, but not often.)<b>YING</b>: The string quartet of that name (four siblings) played short works in a dim sum restaurant as one of the Da Camera Society&#8217;s “Historic Sites” concerts, which always match the right sounds to the right place.<b>ZERO</b>: The future stability of the arts, as foreshadowed by the management of the Los Angeles County Museum, on the West Coast; and by the fall of former-maecenas- turned-money-launderer Alberto Vilar, detained somewhere back East.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>The Festive&#160;Muse</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2005/12/the-festive-muse/</link>
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		<pubDate>Thu, 29 Dec 2005 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=559</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[The Babe Set Free At its first hearing here (March 2003, at the Old Place), El Niño was warmly received, but with one reservation almost unanimously voiced. John Adams&#8217; musical evocation of the Nativity story is, for most of its two-hour length, powerful and haunting, made especially so by the superb writing for its vocal [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><strong>The Babe Set Free</strong><br />
At its first hearing here (March 2003, at the Old Place), <i>El Niño</i> was warmly received, but with one reservation almost unanimously voiced. John Adams&#8217; musical evocation of the Nativity story is, for most of its two-hour length, powerful and haunting, made especially so by the superb writing for its vocal soloists, including soprano Dawn Upshaw, mezzo-soprano Lorraine Hunt Lieberson and baritone Willard White. The text is a conflation of ancient poetry with modern Hispanic poetry by women writers, including some dealing with topics parallel to the Nativity story &#8211; e.g., the massacre of students in Mexico City in 1968 &#8211; assembled by Adams with some input from Peter Sellars. The plan also originally included a stage production by Sellars plus a film, in which the participants in the biblical action became teenagers in, possibly, an East L.A. barrio, with Maria and José and their <i>niño</i> pursued into the Mojave by Herod&#8217;s cops in a Toyota truck.It was that visual stuff, which also showed up on the DVD conducted by Kent Nagano, that was widely regarded as the one major impediment to a full awareness of the stature of the work &#8211; of Adams&#8217; music, and of the literary sensitivity with which the text was assembled from its many sources. “My own <i>Messiah</i>,” Adams called the work at Disney last week in his marvelously congenial pre-concert talk, and that is what the work now, free of its visuals, truly is. You don&#8217;t need a movie for <i>Messiah</i>. In the sense of bringing a hearer close to one of civilization&#8217;s prime miracles, there are passages in <i>El Niño</i> that have the same power to grab and vibrate the spirit as parallel moments in Handel&#8217;s incomparable score. Take, as an ecstatic example, Handel&#8217;s “For unto us a Son is born”; set it up against the same scene in the Adams retelling that also undoes me utterly: a setting for full ensemble of the Hildegard von Bingen text as “The Son of God through/Her secret passage/Came forth like the dawn.”Shorn of Sellars&#8217; intellectual overload &#8211; which may, for all I know, make a pretty good movie in itself, about teenage love and loss in East L.A. &#8211; <i>El Niño</i> takes its place at the very top of Adams&#8217; major scores, a work of overpowering compassion and warmth of emotion. Its text, which bestrides the centuries with historical and emotional similarities &#8211; the matchup between Herod&#8217;s massacre of the Israelite children and the Mexico City outrage is, of course, especially tricky &#8211; is rendered viable by the power and range of Adams&#8217; music. His orchestra is, for him, relatively modest: no trumpets, horns and trombones used in quiet masses, discreet synthesizer, few strings. The music is carried, most of all, by the sheer beauty of the vocal lines. The pure, untroubled wonderment of Dawn Upshaw&#8217;s virginal responses to the Annunciating Angel is a sound you want to live with forever.Upshaw and Willard White (now “Sir”) have been with the work from its beginning; Michelle DeYoung has taken over, quite well, since Hunt Lieberson&#8217;s illness. Esa-Pekka Salonen, our old Adams hand, quite clearly welcomed the chance to let the work assume its proper aural grandeur. Hearing <i>El Niño</i> at Disney unencumbered &#8211; twice, I delightedly report &#8211; was like discovering a brand-new masterpiece.<br />
<strong>Diversions</strong><br />
No sooner had the stardust settled from the morning performance of the Adams glory than siege was laid to the Disney stage by the assembled forces of the ineffable P.D.Q. Bach and his scarcely more effable doppelgänger, Peter Schickele. A newly fangled P.D.Q. cantata, “Gott sei dank, dass heute Freitag ist,” figured clamorously among the offerings: “God be thank that today Friday is” (which indeed it was). The Schickele/P.D.Q. team has been at it lo these many decades; everyone I spoke to the other night had his own memories, usually involving Great Entrances: down the high wire, up from the Hollywood Bowl lagoon, the post-deadline tumultuous dash down the center aisle. Friday&#8217;s mere mosey out from the wings at concert time seemed a letdown. Okay; muscles get old, and stiff. I might have thought the audience (near-capacity, as usual) would be mostly old-timers reliving memories. The high percentage of teens and college-age kids was encouraging.The muscles have stiffened; the brain has not. A tiny set of Shakespeare settings was ascribed to Schickele, not to P.D.Q., but in reality it had a delightful mix of both: elegant, literate poetic bits (soliloquies from <i>Macbeth</i>, <i>Romeo</i> and <i>Hamlet</i> and Marc Antony&#8217;s speech from <i>Julius Caesar</i> musicked to tiny shards of jazz, boogie-woogie, blues, etc., but none lasting more than a sneeze). Two choral pieces &#8211; one delectably titled <i>The Art of the Ground Round</i>, the other a clutch of anti-Christmas ditties &#8211; nicely underscored the underlying marvel of this whole P.D.Q. Bach business: an unerring sense of humor combined with the musical knowledge to reinvent an imitation, just slightly skewed musical style so close to the victim of its satire that you just never know the which from the what.A supporting orchestra, mostly Philharmonic players, went nicely along with the gags under Joana Carneiro&#8217;s direction. Soprano Michèle Eaton, tenor profundo David Düsing and an enchanting small handful of mezzo-soprano named Gian-Carla Tisera made up the vocal contingent.<i>Parsiflage:</i> On December 14, the L.A. Opera fielded a new Parsifal in Robert Wilson&#8217;s production at the Dorothy Chandler Pavilion, unannounced beforehand (even to staff members) until the ailing Plácido Domingo took the microphone right at the 6:30 curtain. Gary Lehman was his name, and, for all that, he wasn&#8217;t at all bad: slender and youthful, the voice clean and bright, only a little pinched at top. Who is he? His vita lists him as a leading <i>baritone</i> at several opera companies, with no <i>tenor</i> experience listed except that he is <i>working</i> on Parsifal and Siegmund &#8211; the Domingo/Wagner repertory, in other words. There&#8217;s nothing like starting at the top.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Pianissimo</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2005/12/pianissimo-2/</link>
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		<pubDate>Thu, 22 Dec 2005 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[Andsnes in Depth The Philharmonic has had the admirable idea, for the last couple of years, of inviting some of the more interesting guest artists to tarry in town for more than the usual one-week stint, to display a broader range of their interests than just a single concerto. Last year&#8217;s &#8220;on location&#8221; visitor was [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><strong>Andsnes in Depth</strong></p>
<p>The Philharmonic has had the admirable idea, for the last couple of years, of<br />
inviting some of the more interesting guest artists to tarry in town for more<br />
than the usual one-week stint, to display a broader range of their interests than<br />
just a single concerto. Last year&#8217;s &#8220;on location&#8221; visitor was<br />
Emanuel Ax; this year, Leif Ove Andsnes took part in four different programs (nine<br />
concerts in all) and departed a respected, valued and well-known friend. He returns<br />
in May in yet another kind of program, as participant in a Lieder recital with<br />
Ian Bostridge.</p>
<p>At 35, handsome and plain-mannered on the stage, Andsnes seems phenomenally right<br />
for his time and for ours. He has followed the proper paths, won the right competitions,<br />
paid his dues with the apposite number of Grieg Concerto performances to honor<br />
his Norwegian ancestry, recorded the requisite Rach 3. In his first concert here,<br />
he played Mozart &#8211; the G-minor Piano Quartet and the Piano-Wind Quintet<br />
- with Philharmonic members at one of the Chamber Music Society programs,<br />
and it was all very correct and well-balanced, if somewhat dry. In his final concert,<br />
he again played Mozart, the E-flat Piano Concerto (K. 449), the first of the series<br />
composed for Vienna; this time he, Esa-Pekka Salonen and a small Philharmonic<br />
contingent joined in exploring the sheer delights of a work too often undervalued:<br />
whimsy, surprise and, in the slow movement, melody to charm the senses -<br />
nearly half an hour of wise, airborne music making.</p>
<p>Turning to music of our own time, Andsnes accomplished some eloquent pleading<br />
on behalf of two major, unalike masters: Hungary&#8217;s quixotic, secretive Gyouml;rgy<br />
Kurtág, whose thoughts unwind in lapidary nuggets of often little more<br />
than a breath&#8217;s duration, and the supremely rational Marc-André Dalbavie<br />
of France, who works in grand designs subtle but clear. At a Green Umbrella event,<br />
there was music of both &#8211; a night of spine-tingling discoveries. At the<br />
start came a clutch of Kurtág&#8217;s &#8220;Game&#8221; pieces for solo<br />
piano, some of less than a minute&#8217;s duration, small, flashing, uncut gemstones<br />
to dazzle eye and ear at once. At the end, there was the Tactus of Dalbavie, music<br />
for nine instruments with the piano of Andsnes serving as a rhetorical pivot.<br />
This I found even more extraordinary, a work that seemed to balance major dramatic<br />
material with a remarkable clarity of organization that made the geography of<br />
the music clear and involving at every point. Not much strong new music these<br />
days treats its listeners with that degree of respect. Dalbavie &#8211; whom I<br />
know also from a disc on the Naiuml;ve label with a big Violin Concerto and a<br />
piece rightly titled <em>Color</em> &#8211; is someone eminently worth our attention.<br />
Andsnes performs his Piano Concerto in Chicago sometime next year.</p>
<p>Anyhow, the Umbrella concert had other small pleasures along the way, including<br />
a madcap piece by Kurtág with toy trumpets and harmonicas deployed through<br />
the hall. Andsnes did, of course, get to play the Grieg Concerto during his time<br />
here &#8211; at the end of the &#8220;Northern&#8221; program I wrote about last<br />
week &#8211; and he played it with all the notes in place. That concert began<br />
with Salonen conducting Sibelius&#8217; Finlandia. To every man his albatross.</p>
<p>
<strong>88 x 2</strong></p>
<p>Piotr Anderszewski began his Disney Hall recital (the night following Andsnes&#8217;<br />
departure) with Mozart (the C-minor pairing of Fantasy and Sonata) and ended with<br />
Bach (the D-minor English Suite): serious stuff, in other words, with performances<br />
to match. I have missed previous appearances (and recordings) by this Polish-born<br />
pianist of Hungarian-Polish parentage, which was a mistake; this was a terrific<br />
recital. It was so, most of all, in the Bach. No two pairs of ears will ever agree<br />
on piano Bach, and the sins committed in the matter are egregious and legion (see<br />
below). Anderszewski&#8217;s performance was notable for its detail and its perspective.<br />
It was not a piano trying to be any kind of older instrument, and it was not a<br />
piano taking off on old musical patterns to indulge in a virtuoso spree (see below).<br />
It was a re-creation of superb musical designs whose light and shade had possessed<br />
a certain integrity on its original instrument, but which can be reconstituted<br />
- with a new outlay of integrity &#8211; on another.</p>
<p>In this great work, perhaps the most complex of all the English Suites, the splendid<br />
young (36) pianist had found the way to preserve the power of that complexity.<br />
I&#8217;ve been trying to remember hearing another performance of that suite on<br />
a modern piano in which I was left so free to concentrate on Bach and less on<br />
its performer &#8211; Glenn Gould or Edwin Fischer or that self-indulgent Tureck<br />
woman or whoever; I don&#8217;t think I can. The Mozart pairing also drew a big,<br />
thunderous performance &#8211; which this music can stand. The set of Szymanowski&#8217;s<br />
<em>Métopes</em> &#8211; three gorgeous pieces full of the aura of Greek<br />
ruins and reminiscences of Odysseus&#8217; sea journey &#8211; moved me to acquire<br />
that music, by that pianist, on the Virgin label.</p>
<p>The pianist Sergey Schepkin was a curious entry in this season&#8217;s Monday<br />
Evening Concerts lineup, which is otherwise devoted to heroes from past seasons.<br />
Who knew him, and from where? A program note identifying him as a laureate of<br />
a Maestro Foundation Fellowship should have been a red flag, since Maestro is<br />
a dilettante operation devoted to good food and innocuous music in a Santa Monica<br />
private home. Schepkin was booked to LACMA on the strength of his promise to perform<br />
a work of the Monday Evening Concerts&#8217; late guiding spirit, Dorrance Stalvey,<br />
but he then found the style of the music too difficult and backed down. We were<br />
left, instead, with a short work by Sofia Gubaidulina not at all representative<br />
of her style, and a performance of Bach&#8217;s &#8220;Goldberg&#8221; Variations<br />
that might raise words like <em>disgraceful</em> to new expressive heights: slippery<br />
glissandos, drooling rubatos &#8211; the kind of virtuoso spree (see above) that<br />
might appeal to Maestro&#8217;s dilettantes, but to nobody that you or I might<br />
care to know. That he decided, properly, to honor all of Bach&#8217;s specified<br />
repeats only intensified the annoyance.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Terrae&#160;Incognitae</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2005/12/terrae-incognitae/</link>
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		<pubDate>Thu, 15 Dec 2005 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[Painting by Tahir Salahov,Courtesy Los AngelesPhilharmonicDark Regions E-flat minor is dank and sinister territory. Ascribing personalities to specific tonalities is a shifty business at best; very often mere mechanical considerations of particular instruments make the difference. The E-string is the highest on the violin, therefore works in that key will be high-pitched; French horns are [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Painting by Tahir Salahov,Courtesy Los AngelesPhilharmonic<strong>Dark Regions</strong><br />
E-flat minor is dank and sinister territory. Ascribing personalities to specific tonalities is a shifty business at best; very often mere mechanical considerations of particular instruments make the difference. The E-string is the highest on the violin, therefore works in that key will be high-pitched; French horns are most at their ease in E-flat; clarinets in B-flat. But as you journey around the circle of fifths and end up in E-flat minor &#8211; six flats &#8211; you&#8217;ve arrived in music&#8217;s no man&#8217;s land, an area bleak and unpopulated. Few enough pieces inhabit the realm &#8211; a strange and aimless late piano work by Schubert, a spook-haunted Brahms Intermezzo, the two craggy pairs of Preludes and Fugues in Bach&#8217;s <i>Well-Tempered Klavier</i>, nary a movement by Mozart, Haydn or Beethoven. Later on there&#8217;s one monstrously dull String Quartet by Tchaikovsky and then, finally, the last quartet of Dmitri Shostakovich&#8217;s 15, as dismal &#8211; yet as heart-rending &#8211; as any 35-minute expanse in the entire realm of chamber-music masterworks. Four members of the Philharmonic &#8211; violinists Bing Wang and Varty Manouelian, violist Meredith Snow, cellist Peter Stumpf &#8211; explored the mysteries of No. 15 at a recent Chamber Music Society concert. Fortunately, there was Mozart afterward to serve as balm, but it was the Shostakovich, in a superb performance, that left me the most shaken, and I still am.How explain this unbroken sequence: six movements all marked <i>adagio</i>, funereal in pace and in mood but never boring, never relaxing their hold? They challenge explainers; a couple of years ago Britain&#8217;s Théâtre de Complicité and the Emerson Quartet came to UCLA with a kind of live documentary in which that quartet took shape out of tragic and harrowing memory fragments. The stage presentation was a marvelous experience, but no more so than the ensuing simple performance of the work itself &#8211; which, as I recall, the Emersons delivered standing up, as if in homage. Tahir Salahov&#8217;s painted portrait of Shostakovich dates from the same time as the Quartet &#8211; 1974, a year before the composer&#8217;s death &#8211; and that, too, seems to emerge from the music itself.There is, of course, a problem inherent in this music, and in hearing all music so deeply personal and mysterious. Andrew Porter, whose <i>New Yorker</i> reviews are my constant reading, writes a sad account of a New York concert at which a lap dog in a canvas bag, carried by a woman to a performance of No. 15, began to yap during the final measures. No such horror occurred at Disney Hall, but evidence of human presence was, nevertheless, constantly at hand. Total and all-inclusive audibility is one of the less admirable aspects of the hall&#8217;s acoustic splendors. You can write in a figurative sense, as I am wont to do, about the Shostakovich 15th Quartet as music that stops the breath; stopping the sneeze and the cough is, alas, quite another matter.About Mozart&#8217;s G-minor Piano Quartet, with its ethereal slow movement, and the burbling delights of his E-flat Quintet for Piano and Winds &#8211; both ennobled by the visiting blithe spirit of pianist Leif Ove Andsnes &#8211; I will have more to say at our next rendezvous. After the Shostakovich, at least, these two works restored the power and pleasure of normal breathing.<br />
<strong>Brighter Lands</strong><br />
Here&#8217;s a new name for you: Wilhelm Stenhammar. His music, says conductor Neeme Järvi, “is like Brahms, only better,” and, indeed, it is Järvi who has toiled the most nobly &#8211; in concerts and on recordings &#8211; to keep the name alive some 80 years later. Esa-Pekka Salonen&#8217;s recent performance of Stenhammar&#8217;s F-major Serenade was the Philharmonic&#8217;s first ever. It formed the centerpiece of an all-Northern program, the least inevitable element of a bill that otherwise included, wouldn&#8217;t you bet, the well-trodden Piano Concerto of Edvard Grieg (freshly reconsidered by Andsnes but still Grieg) and &#8211; everybody rise &#8211; the <i>Finlandia</i> of Sibelius.I am not ready to climb rooftops and proclaim the exhumation of the Stenhammar Serenade as the rebirth of a cruelly neglected genius from the past. Furthermore, if you&#8217;ve been following these lines over the years, you should know how easy it would be to compose better music than Brahms. But this 35-minute effusion of Stenhammar&#8217;s is a thoroughly attractive piece, enough so to make you wonder how many other big orchestral works are lurking out there, denied recognition because they come from the “wrong” country, or from composers who can&#8217;t also afford a press agent. Where is our Bulgarian repertory? Or Icelandic? Or Portuguese?Stenhammar was Swedish. His Serenade dates from around 1914. As with most composers of Northern persuasion &#8211; Sibelius included &#8211; it was a trip to Italy that warmed his creative juices, and this the Serenade makes delightfully clear. Despite the informality suggested by the title, it is a big, expansive work including a full percussion contingent. The first and last movements make the broadest statements, but I find the three connected inner movements the most original and the most charming: a moonlit waltz, a frisky scherzo and an ethereal nocturne. The last few pages, a hilarious change of pace reminiscent of, let&#8217;s say, the very end of <i>Der Rosenkavalier</i>, are the best of all. If I detected, as I think I did, some real affection in Salonen&#8217;s performance, let this be a prod to continue his Stenhammar researches. The Philharmonic, the <i>Times</i>&#8216; Ginell had it, “betrayed some unease with its difficulties.” Curious, the coven of musical second-stringers at that journal. Do you suppose they invent those wacko opinions just to fill the space?<i>Obiter dictum</i>: God bless Amazon.com. It came up with a used copy of the Stenhammar Serenade (Järvi, on BIS), which bore a sticker: “Discard from the Milton, MA, Public Library.” Nostalgia: 1935, a lady at the Milton Public Library helping an eager 11-year-old with research for the Milton Junior High Stamp Club Poster Competition. (I won.)</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Opera on&#160;Grand</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2005/12/opera-on-grand/</link>
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		<pubDate>Thu, 08 Dec 2005 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[Photo by Robert MillardSacred Richard Wagner&#8217;s Parsifal stands as one of opera&#8217;s unassailable peaks; full credit is due to any company for attempting the work at all &#8211; and, I suppose, to any audience willing to undergo its five-hour dimensions. Further credit, then, redounds to our local company for assuming the difficulties of an already [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Photo by Robert Millard<strong>Sacred</strong><br />
Richard Wagner&#8217;s <i>Parsifal</i> stands as one of opera&#8217;s unassailable peaks; full credit is due to any company for attempting the work at all &#8211; and, I suppose, to any audience willing to undergo its five-hour dimensions. Further credit, then, redounds to our local company for assuming the difficulties of an already famous production that compounds those hazards with a personal stamp involving a certain denial of elements that might ease the lengthy journey. Robert Wilson&#8217;s <i>Parsifal</i> does not add up to a jolly evening at Mrs. Chandler&#8217;s opera pavilion, but it is a stirring and unforgettable experience nevertheless. A week of performances remains, and I urge you to join me in taking advantage.There are, of course, other ways of dealing with this “consecrational festival drama” than the superlative deployment of empty space out of which Wilson&#8217;s conception is largely built. It can be made very beautiful, very “Wagnerian” if you will, with forests and cathedral-like spaces and gorgeous gardens of ravishing flower-maidens. If memory serves, the Metropolitan Opera&#8217;s <i>Parsifal</i> looks like this, or used to. There is a wonderful film version, available on DVD, by the German director Hans-Jürgen Syberberg, which links an excellent musical performance to a huge array of symbolic paraphernalia in which the Knights of the Grail morph into Nazi storm troopers, Parsifal undergoes a gender change (visually, not vocally) after enduring Kundry&#8217;s kiss, and the stage itself turns into Wagner&#8217;s death mask.If you know Wilson&#8217;s work &#8211; his <i>Madama Butterfly</i> here two seasons ago, which is scheduled to return next month, or the Gluck operas available on DVD &#8211; you know that his stage ideal embraces none of the above. Or &#8211; let me put this another way &#8211; his stage ideal is to respect his audience&#8217;s imagination to create this kind of drama for ourselves. He has claimed that his <i>Parsifal</i> &#8211; which, by the way, I first saw and admired in Houston some 15 years ago &#8211; has been purged of its religious element. This I don&#8217;t quite believe; he <i>has</i>, however, relieved us of churchgoing, turned the Hall of the Grail into a vast, brightly lit space in which Wagner and we are free to interact. Space in Wilson &#8211; around the dancing numerals in <i>Einstein on the Beach</i>, around the solo dancing of the young boy at the end of <i>Butterfly</i>, or now in <i>Parsifal</i> &#8211; is rendered sacred by the music that is allowed to expand within it. It consists of great distances, which we are then entrusted to fill in.And this is the overriding value of this marvelous production now on view. If Plácido Domingo has no business bending his aging tones to the sounds of the youthful Parsifal on his journey of self-discovery, that&#8217;s the price one pays in the opera racket. As recompense, there is the rich solemnity of Matti Salminen&#8217;s Gurnemanz and the quite decent eloquence of Kent Nagano&#8217;s orchestra.<br />
<strong>Profane</strong><br />
There are no distances to resolve in Puccini&#8217;s <i>Tosca</i>; the whole thing is like a lap dance. Ian Judge&#8217;s production was new in 1989 and ugly then, but there is a great Grand Guignol moment in Act 2, when Cavaradossi is being tortured offstage and the lights and shadows at the back of Scarpia&#8217;s ugly, <i>ugly</i> room do a dance on the walls.There&#8217;s a new Tosca, Violeta Urmana, and she&#8217;s great: tall and loud and domineering. Two years ago, she was the Kundry when Pierre Boulez did Act 2 of <i>Parsifal</i> with the Philharmonic, and I kept thinking of her during Linda Watson&#8217;s just-okay performance this time. Salvatore Licitra is the Cavaradossi; he&#8217;s the one who stepped in for Pavarotti&#8217;s so-called farewell appearance at the Met, with zillion-dollar seats and worldwide media. It would be nice to carry that story forward, but this is Los Angeles, not Hollywood, and Signor Licitra is, I fear, cut from ordinary cloth. Samuel Ramey&#8217;s Scarpia and Kent Nagano&#8217;s conducting are as expected.<br />
<strong>Afloat</strong><br />
Down the street at REDCAT last weekend, there was <i>Wet</i>, the fourth opera by Anne LeBaron of the CalArts faculty, to a text by Terese Svoboda. Water is the matter at hand; not Katrina this time but pollution, scarcity and the rain forests. Evil Hal and his corporation chop down trees to free up water, which he bottles and sells worldwide. “Water is the new oil,” someone sings. Hal also finds time to impregnate most of the local girls. Eventually the world turns dry and sandy. Everybody, or almost everybody, ends up in heaven.There is plenty of attractive plotline here; as near as I could tell, LeBaron has fashioned it into strong and varied vocal stuff. I have to insert the qualifier, however, because the room at REDCAT, for all its adaptability as a performance space, is pretty much a flop as a musical theater with orchestra pit. Groans and whines from tuba, didgeridoo and pedal steel effectively overrode the sounds of lighter instruments and, worse, most of the words as well. I kept glancing upward in hopes of supertitles; none were there. (Have I become so spoiled in my old age?)LeBaron is an interesting composer; her 95-minute score has some delightful moments, some charming razzmatazz, and some strong vocal writing as well. Marc Lowenstein was the conductor, Nataki Garrett the stage director. The indestructible Jonathan Mack was the evil Hal, and a charming soprano named Ani Maldjian had a killer aria near the end. I&#8217;d like to hear the whole enterprise gathered up bodily and implanted somewhere else where I could hear what it was all about. I suspect there&#8217;s some real quality there.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>The Year In Night&#160;Music</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2005/12/the-year-in-night-music/</link>
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		<pubDate>Thu, 01 Dec 2005 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[Photo by Walter SchelsPianists: Two of the world&#8217;s best began and ended the Philharmonic year at Disney. For starters, Mitsuko Uchida &#8211; who does for pantsuits what Olivier used to do for Hamlet &#8211; lit magical lights through all five of the Beethoven concertos. At the end, as these words fall onto the press, the [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Photo by Walter Schels<b>Pianists:</b> Two of the world&#8217;s best began and ended the Philharmonic year at Disney. For starters, Mitsuko Uchida &#8211; who does for pantsuits what Olivier used to do for <i>Hamlet</i> &#8211; lit magical lights through all five of the Beethoven concertos. At the end, as these words fall onto the press, the supremely imaginative young Norseman Leif Ove Andsnes comes to town to do similar service for more Beethoven, plus Mozart plus Grieg. Betweentimes, with the high adventure of the ongoing “Piano Spheres” concerts at zippy Zipper Hall, it has been a town that old man Steinway would have drooled over.<b>Paradoxes:</b> Management of the County Museum turned blind and deaf to the<br />
world-famed Monday Evening Concerts on its premises, declaring that such events<br />
— a cultural landmark actually since 1939 &#8211; will henceforth have no place within<br />
this sacred institution. Simultaneously, a brand-new series of similarly enterprising<br />
musical events &#8211; Jacaranda in Santa Monica &#8211; has in two years built its audience<br />
up from scratch to near capacity, offered challenging out-of-the-way programs<br />
including brand-new works, and made liars out of LACMA&#8217;s glib naysayers.<i><br />
</i><b>The Best New:</b> It was the year of great new sets of songs greatly sung.<br />
Peter Lieberson led the Philharmonic, with his wife Lorraine Hunt Lieberson at<br />
his side, in a cycle he had composed for her of settings of Pablo Neruda poetry,<br />
songs in which the love of a poet for language and a husband for a sublimely gifted<br />
wife mingled in dark, haunting lyrics. For Dawn Upshaw (not his wife), the remarkable<br />
Argentine/Israeli/American composer Osvaldo Golijov created <i>Ayre</i>, a 40-minute<br />
cycle of mysterious texts in ancient Hispanic dialects, accompanied by throbbing<br />
guitars and howling woodwinds that turned all of Disney Hall one night into a<br />
place of irresistible passion. And in San Francisco there was John Adams&#8217; <i>Doctor<br />
Atomic</i>, not songs but an opera about Dr. Oppenheimer and his Bomb, in which<br />
the most moving moments were songs indeed: of fear and conscience, as a man of<br />
troubled morality confronts the enormity of his own inventive genius.<br />
<b>The Not-So-New:</b> Composer Tan Dun seemed to come up with a new piece &#8211; in<br />
person or on DVD &#8211; at every turn, or perhaps it was the same piece under a new<br />
name. The Master Chorale launched his <i>Water Passion</i>, 90 uninterrupted minutes<br />
consisting to large extent of sloshing, gurgling and trickling water in large<br />
containers onstage, interspersed with text lines from the Gospel of Saint Matthew.<br />
The lines were fine; the impact of the sloshing, on elderly prostates out in the<br />
audience, left something to be desired and you know damn well what.<br />
<b>The New Toy:</b> Once the standard <i>Zarathustra</i> and the Saint-Saëns Symphony<br />
No. 3 had been disposed of, there wasn&#8217;t much left to engage the Philharmonic<br />
and the Disney&#8217;s new pipe organ simultaneously. Out of the rubble came a <i>Sinfonia<br />
Concertante</i> by one Joseph Jongen, a work of ghastly drear. Most successful:<br />
the annual Halloween observance, this time a revival of the great old Dracula-style<br />
silent shocker <i>Nosferatu</i>, with organist Clark Wilson&#8217;s own imaginative<br />
noodling as musical counterpart.<br />
<b>Opera Undressed and Overdressed:</b> Without my suggesting for a moment any<br />
innate merits in the music itself, the Los Angeles Opera&#8217;s production of Gounod&#8217;s<br />
<i>Roméo et Juliette</i> was easily the season&#8217;s best capturing of the spirit<br />
of a hopelessly bygone work &#8211; not only for the intelligently maintained nudity<br />
in the bedroom scene (with an extremely watchable Anna Netrebko and Rolando Villazón)<br />
but for an overall “let&#8217;s get on with it” attitude rare and admirable in romantic<br />
French opera. The next French opera, Offenbach&#8217;s <i>Grande Duchesse</i>, which<br />
opened the fall season, had its spirit by contrast laid on with a heavy trowel,<br />
its humor disastrously unfunny.<br />
<b>New Faces:</b> With a minimum of pre-appearance hoopla, an unknown new conductor<br />
turned up at the Hollywood Bowl in the season&#8217;s last couple of weeks and scored<br />
an impressive victory over crowds and the powers that be. His name: Gustavo Dudamel,<br />
24, from Venezuela, where he already has his own orchestra. His European career<br />
is already under way, and the Bowl that night was crawling with talent scouts.<br />
Rumors have it that he&#8217;ll be back next summer with his own group. Count the days.<br />
<b>Old New Face:</b> Heinrich Biber, German Baroque composer of the generation<br />
before Bach, creator of wildly virtuosic solo violin music that a Britisher named<br />
Andrew Manze played at Disney Hall a couple of weeks ago and all but set the place<br />
on fire. He records for Harmonia Mundi.<br />
<b>There&#8217;s Hope for Us Yet:</b> In a town where great chamber music seems to be<br />
a thing that people reminisce about around roaring fireplaces, there were actually<br />
two wondrous performances of Beethoven&#8217;s Quartet in C Sharp Minor (Opus 131) this<br />
season: the Penderecki Quartet at LACMA in May and the Juilliard Quartet at Disney<br />
Hall in October. I heard them both, and have survived to tell the tale.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Departures</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2005/11/departures/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2005/11/departures/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 24 Nov 2005 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[Home Away From Home Home, to Sir Simon Rattle, is the familiar musical repertory we most often hear at concerts and on the radio, music from the 19th century or before, when the tunes and the harmonies were friendly and set the mind at rest. Leaving Home is the television series that Rattle and some [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><strong>Home Away From Home</strong></p>
<p>Home, to Sir Simon Rattle, is the familiar musical repertory we most often<br />
hear at concerts and on the radio, music from the 19th century or before, when<br />
the tunes and the harmonies were friendly and set the mind at rest. <i>Leaving<br />
Home</i> is the television series that Rattle and some friends dreamed up at<br />
the BBC some years ago, to tell where music has gone since then. Produced in<br />
1996, the series is now being released here on ArtHaus DVD and is, I think,<br />
the best package of music-plus-information I have yet come across on any medium.<br />
One of the “friends” who worked on the series, by the way, was the late Sue<br />
Knussen, who later came here in the Los Angeles Philharmonic&#8217;s education department.<br />
Those of us who came to love her in her time here will, I think, recognize her<br />
spirit and her remarkable level of imagination in these programs.</p>
<p>There are seven, each lasting 50 minutes. Rattle is at the center of each, with<br />
his City of Birmingham Orchestra. His eyes skewer you to your seat as he talks<br />
with spellbinding intensity about the directions that music has followed through<br />
the 20th century. He traces the unfolding of rhythm, starting (as expected)<br />
with the ecstatic outbursts in Stravinsky&#8217;s <i>Rite of Spring</i> but moving<br />
further afield toward Steve Reich&#8217;s purely rhythmic concoctions and the wild<br />
mechanical creations of Conlon Nancarrow&#8217;s player-piano rolls. On another episode<br />
he steers us through the dark passions of Bartók&#8217;s <i>Bluebeard&#8217;s Castle</i>,<br />
the tortured elegies of the late Shostakovich. The great Polish composer Witold<br />
Lutoslawski is on hand to join Rattle in an explanation of his ideas on chance<br />
music, the technique of allowing performance choices to be decided in part by<br />
the players themselves.</p>
<p>One program is all about American music, a topic I entrust to British speakers<br />
only with extreme hesitation. This one is gorgeous, however, starting with Gershwin&#8217;s<br />
<i>Rhapsody</i> through the lithe curve of pianist Wayne Marshall&#8217;s playing,<br />
and continuing on with a splendid collage of short works (Feldman, Carter, Ives,<br />
Copland&#8217;s <i>Appalachian Spring</i> with Martha Graham&#8217;s first dancers, Cage,<br />
and the smallest shard of <i>West Side Story</i>) set against New England autumnal<br />
scenes of heartbreaking beauty. The whole 50 minutes becomes a tone poem about<br />
American music, an achievement in itself.</p>
<p>The marvel of these programs – the three that have been released so far (by<br />
Naxos) and the four on the way – is their extraordinary success in reaching<br />
a level of seriousness and importance that is informative, valuable and totally<br />
free from condescension. This is a rare happenstance. People my age were supposed<br />
to go all weepy at the reissue, several months ago, of a large box of Leonard<br />
Bernstein&#8217;s New York Philharmonic Young People&#8217;s Concerts, and those discs are<br />
supposed to rekindle all the first things we ever learned about music, on top<br />
of which all our future artistic wisdom has been erected. I respectfully bow<br />
out; these programs are riddled with misinformation, glibly delivered and intended<br />
to establish points about musical history or sonata form or what-have-you that<br />
are simply wrong. For all the famous Lenny charm, a quality arguable at best,<br />
I find these programs next to unwatchable. Thirty-eight years separate the first<br />
of the Lenny series from these excellent essays by Simon Rattle and his musical<br />
forces. Let that stand, then, as a measure of civilization&#8217;s advance in those<br />
years.</p>
<p>
<strong>Words, Words<br />
</strong><br />
<i>What makes it great?</i> asks Rob Kapilow about Mozart&#8217;s “Jupiter” Symphony,<br />
but he leaves the question, alas, unanswered. Composer, pianist, lecturer, former<br />
student (at 19) of the legendary Nadia Boulanger, the first-ever licensee granted<br />
access to the words of Dr. Seuss, leader of the “What Makes It Great Players,”<br />
Kapilow has somehow not crossed my path up to now, although I understand that<br />
he sets up shop at the Cerritos Center now and then. His “What Makes It Great”<br />
number on Mozart&#8217;s Symphony, issued on Vanguard&#8217;s “Everyman” Classics, is at<br />
hand. On it he talks his way through selected passages of the “Jupiter” Symphony.<br />
Once in a while he will identify a previously mentioned theme as “bub-bub-bup,”<br />
so that we will know what he&#8217;s referring to. About halfway through the first<br />
movement, just before the first appearance of one of the juiciest themes, he<br />
gives up and moves on to the second movement. That strikes me as strange. Maybe<br />
there wasn&#8217;t room on the disc for discussion of the whole symphony, although<br />
the theme he leaves out is one of the things that makes the “Jupiter” Symphony<br />
great, or so it seems to me. The point is: Discs are cheap and easy to make,<br />
and you don&#8217;t need to have much going for you nowadays to turn out lousy product<br />
like this. (The actual performance of the “Jupiter” on the disc is a Vanguard<br />
recording first issued in 1960.) I understand that quite a few people buy tickets<br />
to Rob Kapilow&#8217;s lectures, and that makes me wonder what makes <i>him</i> great.</p>
<p>You don&#8217;t need the 29 volumes of the latest <i>Grove&#8217;s Dictionary</i>, and you<br />
can probably squeak by without the six volumes of the <i>New Oxford History<br />
of Western Music.</i> But everybody feels kindly toward penguins these days,<br />
and the <i>Penguin Companion to Classical Music</i> is by some distance the<br />
best single-volume reference I have ever encountered. Paul Griffiths is its</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Twice&#160;Fifteen</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2005/11/twice-fifteen/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2005/11/twice-fifteen/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 17 Nov 2005 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=553</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Last Breaths During the several years&#8217; survey of the symphonies of Dmitri Shostakovich, the Philharmonic has had the admirable idea of preceding each symphony with the like-numbered string quartet in a pre-concert presentation, performed by orchestra members. Those quartet performances were later repeated as part of the Philharmonic&#8217;s “Chamber Music” series. The matchup hasn&#8217;t always [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><strong>Last Breaths</strong><br />
During the several years&#8217; survey of the symphonies of Dmitri Shostakovich, the Philharmonic has had the admirable idea of preceding each symphony with the like-numbered string quartet in a pre-concert presentation, performed by orchestra members. Those quartet performances were later repeated as part of the Philharmonic&#8217;s “Chamber Music” series. The matchup hasn&#8217;t always been exact; the pastoral gentility of the Fifth Quartet made for a curious contrast with the raucous street parades of the Fifth Symphony.</p>
<p>In last week&#8217;s concert, which paired the final work in each series &#8211; the harrowing death processionals of the Quartet No. 15, which unfurl in 35 minutes of near silence, and the grinning death masks of the Symphony No. 15, which usher out the composer&#8217;s last musical breaths in music of almost indescribable desolation &#8211; the match was exact and shattering. The marvelous reading of the Quartet, by orchestra members Bing Wang, Varty Manouelian, Meredith Snow and Peter Stumpf, was somewhat undermined by the sound of latecomers tromping over Disney Hall&#8217;s resonant floors; their performance will be repeated under proper concert conditions on November 29. The Symphony was flung forth under the leadership of guest conductor Andrey Boreyko, young, flamboyant chief conductor of orchestras at Hamburg and Bern, obviously headed topward.</p>
<p>What are we to make of this final symphony, with its strange baggage of trivial references and percussive effects from a battery of toys, nose to nose with dire Wagnerisms and those final nihilistic pages? Solomon Volkov, in his now-discredited “memoir,” has Shostakovich talking of a 15th Symphony based on Chekhov; that, we know, didn&#8217;t happen. The symphony dates from times of poor health; some of it must be a final sweeping-out of very old memories, some from childhood. However strange these digressions &#8211; most memorable, of course, the references to Rossini&#8217;s <i>William Tell</i> &#8211; the symphony in proper hands becomes a work of mounting power. Kurt Sanderling&#8217;s performances, here in 1988, revealed what the work was all about. Young Boreyko, I think, has captured some of that insight. Against dietitian&#8217;s orders, I remained to the concert&#8217;s end, and allowed myself to be captivated by his intense and totally thrilling unwinding of Tchaikovsky&#8217;s high-carb <i>Romeo and Juliet</i>. It&#8217;s nothing but lettuce and water for me now for a week.</p>
<p>Boreyko is also the conductor on the latest release in ECM&#8217;s ongoing service to the endlessly varied and unpredictable body of music by Arvo Pärt. <i>Lamentate</i> is, for once, a large-scale work for piano and orchestra &#8211; well, actually not so large-scale, since it breaks down into 10 movements, many lasting little over a minute. The inspiration is <i>Marsyas</i>, the imposing sculpture created by Anish Kapoor at London&#8217;s Tate Modern, which has inspired, says Pärt, “a <i>lamento</i> not for the dead but for the living.” That is, indeed, the mood: quiet, penetrating, with the kind of stabbing, poignant harmony you may best know from such works as <i>Fratres</i>. Alexei Lubimov is the pianist; both he and the conductor have mastered the composer&#8217;s unique art of causing time to stop.</p>
<p><strong><br />
Truth, Beauty, Fantasy</strong><br />
I don&#8217;t mean to sound obsessed with the Santa Monica concert series known as Jacaranda. (We are just good friends.) It&#8217;s just that its concerts have generally been so fine, its programs so adventuresome, the audience growth &#8211; in the handsome, small and comfortable First Presbyterian Church &#8211; has been so encouraging, and I wonder why in three years the <i>L.A. Times</i> has chosen to review only two of its programs.</p>
<p>Saturday&#8217;s program was all Schubert, including two works from his last year &#8211; the Trio in E flat and the F-minor Fantasy for piano duet &#8211; whose magnificence everybody takes on faith but that rarely turn up in live performance. Most gorgeously accoutered of all music&#8217;s elephants, the Trio crashes headlong through outer space, fearlessly chasing its own tail, endlessly and arrogantly reiterating its blustering key changes, which under some star-borne momentum actually seem to intensify in momentum and ecstasy. Jacaranda&#8217;s resident players &#8211; violinist Sarah Thornblade, cellist Tim Loo and, need one add, pianist Gloria Cheng &#8211; played as if delighted to imbibe the music&#8217;s dangerous brew. By mid-finale, by the forty-&#8217;leventh mad Schubertian hurtle from E flat to C flat, it seemed as if all willing souls in that enchanted space “at the edge of Santa Monica” were sharing the same spell, and happy to be there.</p>
<p>The Fantasy, that troubled outcry that intrepid pianists (including myself in braver times) attempt at home but rarely get to hear alive in concert, stands up to the Trio as an exact opposite: terse and stern, melting only in the magical moment when the melancholy F-minor theme dissolves into a momentary wisp of F major. It was that work of Schubert, above all others, that first made me aware &#8211; as a Berkeley grad student shopping for a thesis topic &#8211; of his scope and depth. As Gloria Cheng and Steven Vanhauwaert performed it last Saturday, my own 60 years with Schubert passed by most agreeably. (We were just good friends.)</p>
<p>More Schubert ended the program, with utter delight: four of his choral pieces, quite nicely sung by 32 members of the Cal State Fullerton Men&#8217;s Chorus. Two of them were short and familiar, but two were special. One was <i>Nachthelle</i>, an ecstatic nocturne for high tenor (Shawn Thuris) and voices; the other, <i>Nachtgesang</i><i>im Walde</i>, perched on a Wagnerian threshold, set a long, woodsy text for voices and, up in the organ loft, a quartet of French horns. Talk about your magic!?</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Passions Most&#160;Noble</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2005/11/passions-most-noble/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2005/11/passions-most-noble/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 10 Nov 2005 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=552</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Bravely, Uphill Alone on a concert stage or facing an orchestra, András Schiff is a comforting presence. He puts on no airs, nor does his music-making. Something about his quiet, undemonstrative manner tells us that we, and his chosen music, are in trustworthy hands. This was so last season at Disney, in his intelligent solo [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><b>Bravely, Uphill<br />
</b>Alone on a concert stage or facing an orchestra, András Schiff is<br />
a comforting presence. He puts on no airs, nor does his music-making. Something<br />
about his quiet, undemonstrative manner tells us that we, and his chosen music,<br />
are in trustworthy hands. This was so last season at Disney, in his intelligent<br />
solo performance of Bach&#8217;s “Goldberg” Variations. It was so again<br />
a week ago, when he joined the Philharmonic as both soloist and conductor in<br />
a curious program that contained nothing truly great, gathered in quite a lot<br />
from music&#8217;s lower shelves in fact, and still ended up enjoyable -<br />
at times even enchanting beyond expectations. This happened, I think, because<br />
of the sense that Schiff always gives off &#8211; in concerts I have attended,<br />
on recordings I treasure, and also on some videos that have come my way -<br />
that he believes, profoundly and unalterably, in what he is doing. Without naming<br />
names, I have the feeling, and so do you, that there are only a few musicians<br />
on this planet about whom that can so easily be said.
</p>
<p>Schiff began his program with one of the 12 Symphonies for String Orchestra<br />
that the very young Felix Mendelssohn composed as muscle-stretching exercises.<br />
Some of these juvenile pieces, in fact, turned out to be quite handsome, grown-up<br />
compositions, and there are recordings to bear this out. Schiff conducted one<br />
of the shorter of these works, No. 10 in B minor, a slow preamble leading to<br />
a dark, beautifully formed allegro &#8211; a real discovery and, as it happened,<br />
by some distance the best music on the program. Then came music for piano and<br />
orchestra by Robert Schumann, not the Concerto (which I&#8217;m sure Schiff plays<br />
marvelously) but an unfamiliar one-movement piece, the<i> Introduction and Allegro<br />
Appassionato</i>. It begins like Schumann at his most romantic: rippling piano<br />
arpeggios and a moonstruck horn solo; then it turns dramatic. It struggles ardently,<br />
but also seems at times to self-strangle on its own gesticulations &#8211; as<br />
if to prove to us why it doesn&#8217;t get performed very often. Still, it was<br />
worth the hearing this once. Then, to clear the air, there came the better-known<br />
D-major Piano Concerto of Haydn, an agreeable piece that lives on its composer&#8217;s<br />
name without having anything much to say on its own.</p>
<p>More Schumann ended the concert &#8211; the “Spring” Symphony, amiable,<br />
sometimes downright jovial (with even a triangle added to the percussion contingent,<br />
to underscore the jollity), but with its prettiest moments hopelessly thickened<br />
by Schumann&#8217;s orchestral ineptitude and, thus, beyond repair. Of Schumann&#8217;s<br />
four symphonies, I find this the one with the most attractive ideas and the<br />
clumsiest manner of setting them forth: melodic lines ruined by excessive doubling,<br />
solo winds reduced to squalls. It makes you (or me, anyhow) want to get down<br />
there and rescore the piece for toy instruments, or perhaps kazoo and harpsichord.<br />
Under Schiff&#8217;s fond leadership, the music huffed and burbled nobly and<br />
bravely along its uphill path. All that love, and the cause was lost nonetheless.<br />
It always is.</p>
<p><b><br />
True Brits</b><br />
The sound of kazoo did not figure on last week&#8217;s superb program at Disney<br />
by Andrew Manze and his English Concert, but harpsichord surely did &#8211; along<br />
with theorbo and other baroque strings. Manze, who has taken over from Trevor<br />
Pinnock as head of the “Concert” (as in “Consort,” and kindly<br />
spare me explaining these fine points of archaic nomenclature), stands for a<br />
new and free spirit in early-music performance, dashing and at times delightfully<br />
unruly. A splendid pile of discs on Harmonia Mundi bears witness to his good<br />
works. Heinrich Biber, violin virtuoso and composer from the generation before<br />
J.S. Bach, is the new Baroque aficionados&#8217; hero. This concert began with<br />
five extensive Biber movements, wildly virtuosic, harmonically all over the<br />
place. It went on to music by the better-known Biber contemporary Johann Pachelbel<br />
- not the much-overused Canon but a ravishing Suite in minor keys. (Trivia<br />
note: I&#8217;ll bet you didn&#8217;t know, and cannot be made to care, that Johann<br />
had a son, Charles Pachelbel, who gave concerts in New York coffeehouses in<br />
the 1730s and died in South Carolina.)</p>
<p>The result of all this passionate musical experimentation from the pre-Bach<br />
decades, which also included a fascinating Purcell Fantasia with harmonies off<br />
the walls, floor and ceiling, was to make the evening&#8217;s later, more familiar<br />
music &#8211; most of all a Vivaldi cello sonata, even though elegantly performed<br />
by Alison McGillivray &#8211; sound square and predictable. If Andrew Manze and<br />
his explorations have finally brought the Vivaldi fetish to its well-earned<br />
sabbatical, our gratitude will have been justly earned. At the end there was<br />
more familiar music but unfamiliarly transformed: Bach&#8217;s B-minor Suite<br />
“deconstructed” to a putative early version, with the solo line taken<br />
by violin instead of the later flute. Since the violinist was Manze himself,<br />
and his cavorting in the final Badinerie was of a level of infectiousness to<br />
make anyone want to dance along, no blame need be reckoned or ascribed.</p>
<p>At Royce Hall on Sunday another welcome visitor, Britain&#8217;s Harry Bicket,<br />
fondly remembered here for his leadership of Handel&#8217;s <i>Giulio Cesare</i><br />
with the L.A. Opera, took over the L.A. Chamber Orchestra and succeeded, with<br />
less than a week&#8217;s rehearsal, in transforming that excellent ensemble of<br />
players on contemporary instruments into something you could easily take for<br />
a gathering of early-music specialists. This was done, as first violinist Margaret<br />
Batjer explained in the pre-concert talk, simply by guiding the players to rethink<br />
matters of pressure on the bow, and to phrase groups of consecutive notes in<br />
a sexier-than-usual manner. The result, in a program of 18th-century music of<br />
no particular expressive depth but enormous charm &#8211; Mozart, C.P.E. Bach<br />
and Rameau &#8211; was ravishing. For some, the highlight was David Shostac&#8217;s<br />
show-stealing performance of the C.P.E. Bach D-minor Flute Concerto, a work<br />
of many notes but slender content. For me, the revelation was a work I&#8217;ve<br />
known all my life, Mozart&#8217;s little <i>Serenata Notturna </i>for strings<br />
and timpani, so beautifully phrased under Bicket&#8217;s loving baton that I<br />
could not shake the sense that the music was talking to me in person. That&#8217;s<br />
Mozart for you, or can be. </p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Bliss</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2005/11/bliss/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2005/11/bliss/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 03 Nov 2005 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=551</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Two concerts, on successive nights of a recent weekend, were enough to restore anyone&#8217;s faith in the continued strengths of our music, our music makers and the people who make music happen. Both drew capacity, cheering crowds. I&#8217;ll write about them in reverse chronology, according to the relative age of the music itself. Minimal On [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><b>Two concerts, </b>on successive nights of a recent weekend, were enough to<br />
restore anyone&#8217;s faith in the continued strengths of our music, our music makers<br />
and the people who make music happen. Both drew capacity, cheering crowds. I&#8217;ll<br />
write about them in reverse chronology, according to the relative age of the music<br />
itself.</p>
<p><b>Minimal</b><br />
On the Saturday (10/22), at Santa Monica&#8217;s First Presbyterian Church, the treasurable series known as “Jacaranda” began its third season with a whiz-bang program of American minimalism: John Adams&#8217; <i>Shaker Loops</i> in the original version for eight players in a daredevil performance without the usual safety net of a conductor; Steve Reich&#8217;s <i>Music for Mallet Instruments</i>; a small and, perhaps, expendable Philip Glass organ solo; and &#8211; wonder of wonders &#8211; a suite concocted out of the “knee plays” from the Glass–Robert Wilson <i>Einstein on the Beach</i>, the most extensive hearing of anything from that legendary, elusive bedrock masterwork to make it to these shores ever.</p>
<p>Imagine! <i>Einstein on the Beach</i>, finally here! We were doled out only 40 minutes out of 300, to be sure, and without the spaceship, the locomotive, the crazed dancers acting out the numerals, the recitation &#8211; 39 times repeated &#8211; about bathing caps and the Beach. Yet the sense of the work was somehow there, with Gail Eichenthal and Ken Page among the narrators to deliver the frenzied verbiage and with Jacaranda&#8217;s string players &#8211; Sara Parkins, Joel Pargman and Sarah Thornblade &#8211; to stand in for Dr. Einstein&#8217;s fiddling. Jacaranda&#8217;s heroic founders, master mover Patrick Scott and conductor-organist Mark Hilt, had had to move mountains to pry some of the work&#8217;s tattered manuscripts out of the publisher&#8217;s vaults. To their greater glory, this third season &#8211; seven imaginatively planned small-ensemble programs, each a connoisseur&#8217;s wet dream &#8211; began, as it deserved, with a capacity crowd. All-Schubert comes next, November 12: concert planning to die for.</p>
<p>
<b>Maximal</b><br />
If the sense of the minimalist composers rests on a distancing of self from expression, the marvel of Osvaldo Golijov&#8217;s music, brought forward more clearly in every new major work, is a fascinating process of self-revelation of his own variegated heritage, gorgeously made clear in one work after another. <i>Ayre</i> &#8211; you could call it a 40-minute song cycle &#8211; compiles texts from Hispanic, Sephardic and Israeli sources with some words by Golijov himself. The passions are bitter, brutal and sardonic, often hidden behind a wash of angelic simplicity. All of this relates to Golijov&#8217;s own backgrounds &#8211; Eastern European, Israeli, Argentine, suburban Bostonian &#8211; and the enthusiasm with which he has allowed them to guide his pen. One further dimension is the extraordinary amalgam of his multifaceted expressive language with the artistic impulse of singer Dawn Upshaw, whose musical soul Golijov&#8217;s music has deepened and strengthened into one of the treasures of our time.</p>
<p>Upshaw&#8217;s performance of <i>Ayre</i> has just been released on an essential Deutsche Grammophon disc, along with Luciano Berio&#8217;s <i>Folk Songs</i>, a similar enterprise of a generation ago. Her singing of the Golijov at Disney Hall (10/21) had the same vocal magic; alas, the participating instrumental ensemble did not quite. Instead of the rhapsodic mania of klezmer clarinetist David Krakauer on the disc (from the ensemble Andalucian Dogs), there was the merely polite work of Michael J. Maccaferri and his colleagues from Eighth Blackbird. Instead of the marvelous Berio suite on the disc, there was more of the Blackbird repertory, a gooey conceit by a certain Derek Bermel, who is mostly memorable as an intrusive presence on otherwise memorable concerts in these parts in previous years. In fairness, I must note that guitarist Gustavo Santaolalla, from the aforementioned Andalucian Dogs, was on hand to join with Upshaw in some solo songs and perform with the ensemble, but that marvelous disc has spoiled me.</p>
<p><b><br /> More</b><br />
It had been 25 years and counting since I last heard, and was deeply challenged by, Karlheinz Stockhausen&#8217;s <i>Mantra</i>; a couple of CalArts undergrads performed it then at one of the school&#8217;s new-music festivals. It was one of the events that convinced me that California and I deserved each other, and I moved out here a year later. At this season&#8217;s first “Piano Spheres” concert (10/4), with Vicki Ray and Liam Viney at the pianos and Shaun Naidoo managing what have now become the charming, old-fashioned electronics, the piece sounded like an old friend, a predictable and beautifully worked-out set of variations with, in the final few minutes, a virtuosic scramble that old Franz Liszt would have been proud to acknowledge. There are works of Stockhausen that, in my opinion, render him certifiable; <i>Mantra</i> isn&#8217;t of their number. It lasts a mere 60 minutes, and deserves a place in the repertory.</p>
<p>On 10/17, the embattled “Monday Evening Concerts” began what might be their last stand (and might not) with the kind of off-the-wall program that did full honor to the late Dorrance Stalvey&#8217;s imagination and drew a crowd large enough to honor his memory. The phenomenal Italian bassist Stefano Scodanibbio, whom Stalvey had first brought to our midst, was on hand with works of his own that seemed to resound from far deeper than the confines of his fabulous instrument. Joining him, with even more profound resonances, was the American cellist Frances-Marie Uitti, she of the double-bow techniques, who studied with, and spreads awareness of, the Italian visionary composer Giacinto Scelsi. From his works, suspended as they are between the boundaries of familiar harmonies and, thus, outside anyone else&#8217;s kind of music, Uitti has fashioned a <i>Trilogy</i> of throbbing, radiant colors that seems to probe endlessly into strange, dark regions and end up in realms of beauty beyond rational criticism (as you may have noticed). And this, says an art museum&#8217;s management, has no place within its walls.</p>
<p>Washington&#8217;s National Symphony came to town (10/19) for the first-ever transcontinental junket in its 75 years, and with our hometown boy Leonard Slatkin in charge and the First Symphony of John Corigliano as its tastiest offering. The work has earned both the composer and Slatkin their Grammys and their international huzzahs and, as Slatkin told the audience twice at Disney (at the pre-concert talk and again from the podium), has earned more performances in its 15 years than any major work in the past whatever. It is possible to believe all that, and still find the music shallow, contrived, agonizingly protracted and, at many junctures, ugly beyond recall. So turns the world.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Beginnings</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2005/10/beginnings/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2005/10/beginnings/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 20 Oct 2005 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=550</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Still Bound Just that teasing first chirp from the superb woodwind contingent was news good enough to start off the Philharmonic&#8217;s 87th season, its third in Disney Concert Hall, the first of its “Beethoven Unbound” series. That sound &#8211; the tricky woodwind seventh chord that starts Beethoven&#8217;s First Symphony, delightfully, in the “wrong” harmony &#8211; [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><b>Still Bound</b></p>
<p>Just that teasing first chirp from the superb woodwind contingent was news good enough to start off the Philharmonic&#8217;s 87th season, its third in Disney Concert Hall, the first of its “Beethoven Unbound” series. That sound &#8211; the tricky woodwind seventh chord that starts Beethoven&#8217;s First Symphony, delightfully, in the “wrong” harmony &#8211; hung suspended in Disney&#8217;s welcoming air, a magical presence. Do people bother to notice the elegance in Beethoven&#8217;s scoring for winds? That, to these ears, has been the special pleasure so far in the orchestra&#8217;s Beethoven project, which has now reached its midpoint and will resume sometime next spring. The premise &#8211; the lordly Nine Symphonies set against music of more recent vintage &#8211; is sound enough if you don&#8217;t ponder it too hard. Fortunately, management has stopped short of trying to find truly compatible companion works to “unbind” the masterworks of yore; of the three new works so far, only one struck me as truly worthy to share a program with even Beethoven&#8217;s most rudimentary symphonic venture.</p>
<p>Nobody will yet claim Esa-Pekka Salonen as the eloquent friend to Beethoven&#8217;s music he may someday ripen into. His performances to date, these past few weeks and in previous seasons, have been clear-headed, conscientious and, let&#8217;s say, noncommittal. He makes all the right moves. He seats the orchestra in the “classical” formation, with the second violins to his right, which nicely underlines the marvelous interplay among the strings. His orchestral balances favor the winds, and in these weeks there have been two splendid young tryout oboists who have turned Beethoven&#8217;s frequent oboe solos into pure stardust. Salonen&#8217;s attitude toward the composer&#8217;s stipulated repeats is, however, somewhat capricious; he honored the first-movement repeats in the First, Second and Fourth symphonies, not in the “Eroica” and “Pastoral”; in the Fourth, he omitted the repeat in the final movement, turning that wondrous whirlwind into a brusque breeze. It may take a few years&#8217; mellowing before Salonen allows the brook in the “Pastoral” to flow unimpeded in its natural bed; this past weekend&#8217;s stream was the triumph of artificial plumbing. On the positive side, I could not ask for a more seductive 10 minutes in all of the Viennese repertory than the time spent with Salonen and his glorious woodwinds in the slow movement of No. 4.</p>
<p>Oliver Knussen&#8217;s Violin Concerto, which came between the “Pastoral” and No. 4 this past weekend and was delivered with infectious delirium by Leila Josefowicz, is, like its composer, a likable piece of work; in that respect, at least, it formed a fit companion for those particular Beethoven symphonies. Now and then it reaches into its British ancestry, with an occasional “hey nonny nonny” as if to flash its passport; most endearing, however, is a kind of all-over-the-place athleticism. Of the previous “unbinding” works &#8211; Henri Dutilleux&#8217;s <i>The Shadows of Time</i> and Magnus Lindberg&#8217;s <i>Sculpture</i> &#8211; my memories are so negative that fairness demands further hearings before I can honestly write.</p>
<p>Apropos honest writing, however&#8230; the pre-concert talks for the Beethoven series<br />
have been delivered &#8211; nay, hurled &#8211; by UCLA&#8217;s Robert Winter, who in his day held<br />
audiences spellbound with his three-dimensional musicological discourse but seems<br />
of late to have fallen into a fantasyland of his own fashioning. At the session<br />
on the “Eroica,” I wandered in as Dr. Winter was leading a group sing-along in<br />
“The Star-Spangled Banner” to demonstrate three-quarter time. A few minutes later<br />
he produced, or so he claimed, a recording of the “Eroica” by “my friend Artur<br />
Nikisch,” who a) died in 1922 and b) never recorded the “Eroica.”</p>
<p>
<b>Meanwhile . . .</b></p>
<p>The new season has burst upon us. Six other events held my attention in the past few weeks; let&#8217;s see if I can squeeze them in.</p>
<p><i>L.A. Chamber Orchestra at Royce Hall (9/25): </i>An opening blast from Mozart&#8217;s <i>Titus</i> overture confirmed the sheer vitality of Jeffrey Kahane&#8217;s marvelous small orchestra. Cellist Alisa Weilerstein&#8217;s performance of Tchaikovsky&#8217;s <i>Rococo Variations</i> was as good as the music needs, but boy! do that tired piece and I need a vacation from each other (after three hearings this summer).</p>
<p><i>EAR Unit at REDCAT (9/28): </i>Our great innovative ensemble began business as usual at its new venue after being dropped at LACMA. In the usual gathering of self-indulgences and small-scale delights, Jacob Gotlib&#8217;s taut, nicely shaped contrapuntal exercise <i>Filaments</i> cast a particular glow in the latter category.</p>
<p><i>Terry Riley 70th Birthday Concert at Royce (10/1): </i>I don&#8217;t often walk out of concerts early, but the lurid travesty perpetrated upon Terry&#8217;s <i>In C </i>by Japan&#8217;s Acid Mothers Temple (with, I&#8217;m told, Terry&#8217;s acquiescence) started a considerable exodus, in which I was not the first. Terry&#8217;s participation in his <i>A Rainbow in Curved Air </i>was the redeeming feature in an otherwise painful evening.</p>
<p><i>L.A. Master Chorale at Disney Hall (10/2): </i>Francis Poulenc composed his <i>Figure Humaine </i>in France in 1943; ?the poetry, by the Resistance poet Paul Éluard, had been secretly circulated in occupied France during the war. The last of these choral settings is a passionate cry of pain: “On my notebook, on my desk, on each gust . . . I write your name!” In a fearsome crescendo, the rhythms and tempo continually interlocking and building over 21 stanzas, the poet struggles to write the name: LIBERTY!! And whatever you may think &#8211; whatever I have thought &#8211; about the frivolous beauty of Poulenc&#8217;s music, this final outcry on Grant Gershon&#8217;s program with his Master Chorale grabbed a capacity audience by the scruff of our collective neck and held us spellbound.</p>
<p><i>Cecilia Bartoli at the Dorothy Chandler Pavilion (10/10): </i>Extraordinary, that with all the easy roads open to her to shine in the standard, even crossover, operatic fare, Bartoli has applied her awesome talent &#8211; a voice of melting, vibrant beauty, technique of pinpoint accuracy &#8211; to exploring unfamiliar, bygone Italian repertory of historical interest that nobody else seems to want to touch. Some of this material is, let&#8217;s face it, not all that great on its own. When Bartoli sang it in town the other night, with a splendid backup orchestra of early-music specialists, nobody seemed to notice.</p>
<p><i>The Juilliard Quartet at Disney Hall (10/11): </i>The personnel has changed over the years, but the gold standard remains unalloyed; this is the quartet that knows how to prove that the late string quartets of Beethoven and the works of Elliott Carter are part of the same language. If anything, Carter Five in the Juilliard&#8217;s hands seemed to speak in gentler tones than Beethoven 131, but that was just part of the evening&#8217;s magic. Some grossly misinformed stringer in the <i>Times </i>has it that the Juilliard was once “brash.” That&#8217;s how a critic becomes an endangered species.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Learning to Love the&#160;Bomb</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2005/10/learning-to-love-the-bomb/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2005/10/learning-to-love-the-bomb/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 13 Oct 2005 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=549</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[The Clouds Gather Like the explosive “gadget” that forms its centerpiece, John Adams&#8217; Doctor Atomic casts a blinding light upon the gloomy musical landscape. Suddenly there is something new and famous in classical music: an American opera, no less &#8211; not a rewrite of a movie script this time (as is contemporary practice among lesser [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><b>The Clouds Gather<br />
</b><br />
Like the explosive “gadget” that forms its centerpiece, John Adams&#8217; <i>Doctor Atomic</i> casts a blinding light upon the gloomy musical landscape. Suddenly there is something new and famous in classical music: an American opera, no less &#8211; not a rewrite of a movie script this time (as is contemporary practice among lesser souls) but a work of serious, attention-grabbing artistic stature. And if you thought that Adams might have been flirting with trouble by orchestrating Richard Nixon, Henry Kissinger and Palestinian terrorists onto his operatic stages in his lifetime, consider that his latest foray into lands once held sacred by the likes of Mozart and Verdi terminates in a sound and a stage effect that could very well be meant to stand in for the end of the world &#8211; depicted, need I further inform you, in the brilliant, imaginative orchestral language that happens to be one of Adams&#8217; specialties.It was appropriate, of course, for the San Francisco Opera to involve itself in a work about the conception and birth of the atomic bomb, much of whose planning took place in nearby Berkeley, where Adams himself now resides. The notion of commissioning and putting forward an opera on this level of enterprise, furthermore, reflects the mindset that made Pamela Rosenberg such a strong choice to head the company four years ago. San Francisco&#8217;s operagoers, alas, have proved not yet ready to countenance such strength. A leadership that began nobly with Messiaen&#8217;s <i>Saint-François</i> and ended memorably with <i>Doctor Atomic </i>(and embraced along the way two Handel operas in modern-dress productions, German imports that I could learn to live without) will not be soon stricken from San Francisco&#8217;s memory book.<i>Doctor Atomic</i> teeters precariously on a needle point of history &#8211; June<br />
and July 1945, on the eve of the Bomb&#8217;s first test &#8211; in New Mexico at Manhattan<br />
Project HQ in Los Alamos and at the detonation site at Alamogordo, 200 miles to<br />
the south. Assembled around this moment of crisis are the scientists J. Robert<br />
Oppenheimer and Edward Teller and their idealistic acolytes, facing off against<br />
the hard-nosed military project command. Ideals and moralities do battle. Germany<br />
has surrendered; the question resounds: Why develop so deadly a weapon merely<br />
against Japan, which is virtually defeated anyhow? Voices offstage sound further<br />
dissonant counterpoints: A letter from physicist Leo Szilard implores scientists<br />
to petition President Truman against using the bomb; word comes that Enrico Fermi<br />
is taking bets that the A-test will destroy the world&#8217;s entire atmosphere in a<br />
chain reaction. Closer to home, an unseasonal electrical storm threatens to set<br />
off the trial bomb (or “Gadget,” as it is known) ahead of schedule. “I demand<br />
a signed weather forecast,” General Leslie Groves blusters at the post meteorologist,<br />
“and if you are wrong I will hang you.” Interesting operatic material this, beside<br />
which Adams&#8217; <i>Nixon in China</i> might pass for <i>La Traviata</i> redux.<br />
<b>This Is How It Ends &#8230;</b><br />
I wrote some months ago, in a different context, that the words of Peter Sellars cry out for musical setting. Here we are, then; Sellars&#8217; libretto for <i>Doctor Atomic</i> constitutes a poetic and rhetorical foundation that endows its dark life even beyond musical considerations. Much of his text derives from military and scientific notes and from conversational scribblings possibly fished out of wastebaskets &#8211; chitchat, for example, about General Groves&#8217; dieting problems. For leavening there are the human sidelights: family life among the Oppenheimers, with alcoholic Kitty drawing solace from Muriel Rukeyser poetry, Robert lost in lines from John Donne. Pasqualita, their Navajo nanny, croons her own visions. From these discordant fragments, personages take shape in the dimly lit desert landscape &#8211; and that is the genius of Sellars&#8217; words. Subtle, anticipatory moments nudge the alert observer. One of the scientists mentions Hiroshima among possible Japanese target cities, and Adams&#8217; orchestra gives off a meaningful groan. At the final curtain, as a chorus down front cries out its anticipation of humanity&#8217;s oncoming agony, the words of a single Japanese woman sound above the multitude.<br />
Measured against its time and place &#8211; a major Hiroshima anniversary year, widely<br />
observed in literature and conferences, nowhere more assiduously than in and around<br />
the Bay Area, where so much of the thinking began &#8211; <i>Doctor Atomic</i> might<br />
be easy to tag as a work of ambitious opportunism. Adams, as with his 9/11-inspired,<br />
Pulitzer-honored <i>On the Transmigration of Souls</i>, has no problems in transforming<br />
contemporary headlines into important, large-scale musical designs. The wonder<br />
of <i>Doctor Atomic</i>, overriding the timelessness of its subject matter and<br />
the intelligence in the way it has been set forth, is the deep penetration of<br />
Adams&#8217; music into the troubled souls of his characters. More than in any large-scale<br />
work of his to date, I get the sense here of extraordinary mastery over a vast<br />
spread of expressive technique, and the intelligence to summon its variety at<br />
the proper moment. This is operatic writing in the grandest sense, the more so<br />
for it being entirely of its own time &#8211; and ours.<br />
Pamela Rosenberg speaks of the opera as the last in a series she has produced to reflect the Faust legend. In the <i>Doctor Atomic</i> of Adams/Sellars I detect more of Wagner&#8217;s <i>Parsifal</i> and, in their troubled genius/mystic/hero, the tortured martyr Amfortas himself. “Batter my heart, three-person&#8217;d God,” cries Oppenheimer at the shattering first-act curtain under the Bomb&#8217;s menacing shadow, in the words of John Donne that had given the Bomb project the subtitle Trinity, “for I never shall be free, nor ever chaste, except you ravish me.” Later in atomic history Oppenheimer will feel the thrust of the betrayer&#8217;s spear, as Edward Teller leads the inquisition that will bleed him of his stature among scientists. But that is matter for another opera, another time.At San Francisco&#8217;s Opera House, where I attended the third and fourth mountings of <i>Doctor Atomic</i> last weekend, Donald Runnicles led bone-chilling performances of Adams&#8217; many-edged music, before not-quite-sellout audiences. Gerald Finley is the Oppenheimer; Kristine Jepson has the underwritten and arguably superfluous role of Kitty; Richard Paul Fink is Teller; and the real star, the Bomb itself, hangs over the production like some evil-eyed monster from the deep about to swallow us all. The marvelous abstractions of Lucinda Childs&#8217; choreography take us back to her work in <i>Einstein on the Beach</i>, and that seems exactly right. The work needed to be heard twice; I found it the brainiest, the most challenging of Adams&#8217; large-scale stage works, the one least subject to easy solutions. Even the final explosion, which everyone in the theater knows is coming, turns up in Adams&#8217; music and Sellars&#8217; staging as a splendid and imaginative backward thought. Since there are four performances left this coming week, I will say no more.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>The&#160;Tastemaker</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2005/10/the-tastemaker/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2005/10/the-tastemaker/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 06 Oct 2005 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=548</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[“Look, here&#8217;s a young couple back from their fellowship in Europe. They&#8217;ve had a year of good bread, good cheese, good wine. They should be able to enjoy those things here and for not very much money. They can&#8217;t do so at the supermarket, with the big brands, but they can here.” The year was [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>“Look, here&#8217;s a young couple back from their fellowship in Europe. They&#8217;ve<br />
had a year of good bread, good cheese, good wine. They should be able to enjoy<br />
those things here and for not very much money. They can&#8217;t do so at the supermarket,<br />
with the big brands, but they can <i>here</i>.”</p>
<p>The year was 1982, and Joe Coulombe was explaining to me the philosophy behind his creation, the Trader Joe&#8217;s markets. We sat in the South Pasadena store that was the first <b>Trader Joe&#8217;s</b>. Shared musical passions had made us buddies back then, and Joe&#8217;s wife, Alice, would become a mover in the Los Angeles Opera League. Joe tied his marketing philosophy entirely to his grasp of demographics &#8211; all those young couples returning from European fellowships.</p>
<p>“I can give them a good bottle of wine for a buck,” Joe continued, “and a great cheese for two bucks a pound. In France there isn&#8217;t all this fuss about pricey, vintage wine. They just pour the stuff and drink it.”</p>
<p>When I arrived in Los Angeles 25 years ago, none of the expected treasure chest of new discoveries was more curious, more rewarding, than the small shack of an emporium up the block from my first rental in West L.A. It bore two names: “Pronto Market” and, just above in bolder, cruder capitals, “Trader Joe&#8217;s.” It was a food store of sorts, but those “sorts” demanded explanation. They still do. Think of food store as love object; there were people I met, in those first months in Los Angeles, who made career choices on the basis of Trader Joe&#8217;s, people who would accept or reject out-of-town job offers on the basis of whether the new location offered a T.J.&#8217;s branch nearby. It wasn&#8217;t as though access to T.J.&#8217;s offered the well-stocked life in those days; it&#8217;s somewhat better now. You couldn&#8217;t buy ordinary table salt there, only rough crystals from the Mediterranean; no paper towels or laundry soap; no Crest, but an organic toothpaste with bee propolis that didn&#8217;t taste like candy; marvelous fruit compotes from Belgium and an extraordinary range of wines priced in those days at 99 cents. No fresh-meat counter and no fresh produce &#8211; those amenities would come later. Somehow, the very selectivity of T.J.&#8217;s offerings created a fellowship among us early customers &#8211; we knew why we were there.</p>
<p>
By the early 1960s,the San Diego–born Joseph Coulombe had bought in and<br />
out of a drugstore chain and launched Pronto Markets, a chain of convenience stores<br />
(“boozacola,” he called them) throughout Southern California.</p>
<p>“In 1971,” he recalls in a recent chat to relive old memories, “an article in <i>Scientific American </i>on the growing consumer market in herbal products and vitamin awareness brought about a conversion comparable to St. Paul&#8217;s on the road to Damascus, and I merged the Pronto merchandise into a line of health products, vitamins and more. Meanwhile the 7-Eleven markets had come to town from Dallas with their big bucks, and eventually Pronto got swallowed. I saw that coming, so I had opened the first Trader Joe&#8217;s, sort of on top of the Prontos, in 1967. At the same time that was happening, for several reasons, the whole idea of brand-name dominance had begun to disintegrate, so there we were at Trader Joe&#8217;s with our own brands and our own pricing and our own marketing philosophy based on our own understanding of the kind of people who come into our stores and the kind of people we hire to serve them.</p>
<p>“The real success of Trader Joe&#8217;s,” he continues, by now unstoppable, “is our ability to realize our demographic focus. Our ideal customer is overeducated and underpaid &#8211; music critics, for example. Another principle is that we have the highest-paid staff in the retail business. In my time we had almost no turnover. Nobody is just a cashier. Everybody works the whole store, at median income which, with benefits and bonuses, works out to $48,000.”</p>
<p>Coulombe sold his interest in Trader Joe&#8217;s in 1989 to a large European corporation, which has maintained the identity of the stores to a remarkable degree. Advances in packaging have made it possible to stock meats and produce that weren&#8217;t possible in 1982; there are also paper towels, for whatever reason. The chain has expanded to more than 200 stores in 19 states.</p>
<p>Two years ago, when I made a sentimental journey to Brookline, Massachusetts, I found a Trader Joe&#8217;s at Coolidge Corner, two blocks from the temple where I had been bar mitzvahed. The snow was packed in the parking lot; the trolley cars clanged along Beacon Street. Inside there was the sales help in Hawaiian shirts, the burritos and frozen soups in the rough wooden bins, the hand-lettered signs of my own T.J.&#8217;s back in West L.A.</p>
<p>“Sure,” Joe says, “Doug Rau manages our Eastern stores from New England to Minnesota. He had some questions about carrying Mexican food in Boston, or the Hawaiian shirts, but I told him not to worry, and I was right.”</p>
<p>
Today I ask Joe, now 75, in his wonderfully light-spangled aerie high above<br />
Pasadena&#8217;s Arroyo, about his frequent use of “I” and “we” as he talks on about<br />
recent and current events at the chain of stores that honor his name.</p>
<p>“Don&#8217;t worry,” he assures me, “the old bastard is gone, dead, off the rolls. My<br />
influence in the stores these days is absolute zero. Even so&#8230; I can&#8217;t help but<br />
notice certain things that go a long way back. The turnover in CEOs that I hired<br />
has been next to nil. Dan Bate of the Del Mar–and–Lake store in Pasadena lives<br />
two blocks west from me &#8211; we just celebrated his 35th anniversary at the stores.<br />
We talk all the time, but never about business. I spend a lot of spare time on<br />
the boards of companies that don&#8217;t have a cutoff age limit: sporting-goods and<br />
drugstore chains, mostly, and something called True Religion Jeans. I write a<br />
wine column for several papers based around Pasadena. Oh yes, and I paint.”</p>
<p>He points proudly to tidily framed watercolors on the room&#8217;s brightly lit walls: vivid splotches, loving portraits and desert landscapes whose sharp outlines and colors Georgia O&#8217;Keeffe would not disown.</p>
<p>“A few years ago I found that my sight was becoming weak in one eye due to macular disintegration, so I decided to take up painting, both as a hobby and perhaps a therapy. That&#8217;s some of my work, on these walls. Not too bad, would you say?”</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Star&#160;Tracks</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2005/09/star-tracks/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2005/09/star-tracks/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 29 Sep 2005 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=547</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Photo by Dan PorgesShake Ernest Fleischmann summoned me to lunch a few weeks ago, to share the following concern: Under no circumstances, stated Ernest in his familiar brook-no-opposition tones, was I to miss the forthcoming Hollywood Bowl engagement of the young Venezuelan conductor Gustavo Dudamel, the first-ever appearance in this country of a young man [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Photo by Dan Porges<b>Shake</b><br />
Ernest Fleischmann summoned me to lunch a few weeks ago, to share the following concern: Under no circumstances, stated Ernest in his familiar brook-no-opposition tones, was I to miss the forthcoming Hollywood Bowl engagement of the young Venezuelan conductor Gustavo Dudamel, the first-ever appearance in this country of a young man who is already burning a star trail across Europe and South America. Messages of this urgency from Ernest, who, in his day as Los Angeles Philharmonic honcho, introduced to local audiences (and, really, to the musical world at large) the likes of Simon Rattle and Esa-Pekka Salonen, are not to be taken lightly. Even though the Philharmonic&#8217;s own publicity machine had been notoriously reticent on the matter of the young Señor Dudamel (not a peep of a puff in the <i>Times</i> prior to his concert last week), and even though the Bowl in mid-September, after the opera season has opened downtown and the evenings have turned cool, begins to feel anachronistic, there was no choice but to attend this debut and share the extraordinary electricity that warmed the otherwise chilled crowd that night.Gustavo Dudamel is 24. He stands, I would guess, 5-foot-6. His features are roundish, cherubic you might say, and they are full of the music he is making, and hearing, at the moment. Seldom have I been so grateful for the Bowl&#8217;s new video system; the big screens seemed to light up with the intensity of the young musician&#8217;s involvement with his music. It was wonderful to watch, not only during the vibrant slash of Silvestre Revueltas&#8217; <i>La Noche de las Mayas</i>, from a time and language familiar to Dudamel, when the earth shake of percussion and the summoning howl of the conch shell seemed to fill the Bowl to the brim with fiery, consuming energy. It happened as well during music of more artifice and greater flummery, the romantic affectations of Tchaikovsky&#8217;s Fifth Symphony, with its overwrought gesticulations from an alien time and place. At his tender age, Dudamel has already mastered the crucial task that eludes many in his profession throughout their lifetimes: the power to believe in the music at hand and transfer that belief, through a responsive orchestra, to a willing audience.Dudamel was nurtured in the youth-orchestra system of Venezuela, a country that, for all its political problems, seems to know a thing or two about support for the arts. (Remember the extraordinary ensemble that came here from Caracas for Oswaldo Golijov&#8217;s <i>Pasión</i> in 2002?) Now he leads the Simón Bolívar National Youth Orchestra, which has gained the ear and admiration of Simon Rattle and will tour Europe. Dudamel himself has pulled down major conducting awards, and is listed for guest shots throughout Europe this coming season. At the Bowl concert, Dudamel&#8217;s U.S. debut, the place was crawling with management reps from orchestras far and wide. Oh, and did I mention he has signed a recording contract with Deutsche Grammophon?You had to be there that night. Even after a summer of some pretty good stick-waving and a couple of moments approaching the magical &#8211; Gil Shaham&#8217;s Beethoven, Neville Marriner&#8217;s Mozart, Yo-Yo on the Silk Road &#8211; here was a night of music making that delivered a message, fortissimo: that brilliant, young talent can still emerge from anywhere on the planet, make the right moves and eventually come to matter. It could also make you wonder whether a little more well-designed pre-concert promotion, for which this major event received exactly none, might have lured a larger crowd than the mere 7,000 who came, succumbed and cheered themselves silly that night. One week before, the <i>Times</i> had wasted half a page of worthless hype on an event &#8211; three orchestra members as soloists in Beethoven&#8217;s wimpy “Triple” Concerto &#8211; for which any observer on Mars could have predicted the disaster that trustworthy friends informed me actually occurred.<br />
<b>Rattle and Role</b><br />
Simon Rattle (now “Sir”) also made his L.A. Philharmonic debut at 24; our first conversation consisted mainly in his informing me that this was the worst orchestra he&#8217;d ever conducted and boasting that he still knew only one Beethoven symphony. (Times have changed.) We all noted, the other night, the similarities in the way Gustavo Dudamel gave off, in every measure, the same sense of sheer joy in his work that everyone has always noted in Rattle. You can&#8217;t fake that.Rattle and the Berlin Philharmonic continue to record on EMI, and their recent two-disc set of late works by Antonin Dvorák is full of gorgeous music that you&#8217;ve probably never heard before &#8211; nor have I, at least in such gleaming presentations. These are the “folk ballads,” music composed after Dvorák&#8217;s return from his American sojourn and, thus, later in style than the “New World” Symphony. The inspiration is a set of poems, both spooky and folksy, by a minor Prague poet, dealing with witchcraft, enchantments and a magical spinning wheel. From Dvorák they elicited a more colorful orchestral language than in any of his previous works, full of shimmer and stardust, more like the naturalistic tone poems of his compatriot Smetana. There are four of these “ballads,” each lasting about 25 minutes. Their music is episodic, and there are stops and starts, but the beautiful moments are plentiful and ravishing. Some &#8211; the grandiose finale to <i>The Golden Spinning-Wheel</i>, for one &#8211; will make you want to stand up and sing along.Some of Rattle&#8217;s earlier recordings have been reissued on midprice EMI Classics, and you can&#8217;t go wrong &#8211; not easily, at any rate. For those whose tastes dote on the musically Brobdingnagian, Rattle&#8217;s performance of Olivier Messiaen&#8217;s <i>Turangalila-Symphonie</i> ranks among the best-behaved of the many on disc. The orchestra is Rattle&#8217;s City of Birmingham Symphony, which he built to high excellence; Peter Donohoe is the pianist, and Tristan Murail masters the Ondes Martenot&#8217;s infernal electronic wails. It comes in a two-disc set with the composer&#8217;s <i>Quartet for the End of Time</i>, which, to my taste, is all the Messiaen a well-ordered household should require.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Pained&#160;Notes</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2005/09/pained-notes/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2005/09/pained-notes/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 22 Sep 2005 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=546</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Marni Nixon is probably best known as the voice of Audrey Hepburn&#8217;s Eliza Doolittle in the film version of My Fair Lady. She continues her own stage career as well &#8211; most recently in a nationwide tour as Frau Schneider in Cabaret. “Smog is the reason I don&#8217;t live in Los Angeles any more,” writes [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><b>Marni Nixon</b> is probably best known as the voice of Audrey Hepburn&#8217;s Eliza Doolittle in the film version of <i>My Fair Lady</i>. She continues her own stage career as well &#8211; most recently in a nationwide tour as Frau Schneider in <i>Cabaret</i>.</p>
<p>“Smog is the reason I don&#8217;t live in Los Angeles any more,” writes Nixon. “My children and grandchildren are now in the L.A. area; my husband wants me to move back. I could be busy with, maybe, other things besides what I do in New York, with more movies and TV. But I hate the smog.”</p>
<p>From time to time she receives offers of employment in Los Angeles. “I know, it always seems attached to a PR person who keeps implying that it is getting better and better, but that&#8217;s ridiculous as far as I&#8217;m concerned, and you may quote me.</p>
<p>“Smog affects the membranes of my throat,” she rants on. “It dries it out and makes everything hurt. I cough, and the sinuses get all messed up. Yes, I could take pills, I guess, to moisturize and deaden and coat. But it still hurts to sing when there&#8217;s smog in the air.”</p>
<p>There&#8217;s no question that the presence of particulate matter in the atmosphere, in whatever concentration, presents a singer &#8211; and especially a singer of classical music where exact realization of what the composer has set down on paper is of some importance &#8211; with a certain handicap. “Think of the body as a sound-producing mechanism: the generator, the vibrator and the resonator,” says David Alessi, a Beverly Hills physician with an ear-nose-throat specialty.  “Any impurities that get into that chain of events along the way are going to clog the process, both the input and the output.” </p>
<p>The more singers you talk to, the more the impression emerges of Los Angeles as a prime booby trap for anyone who contemplates a serious vocal career. If the smog doesn&#8217;t get you, says Rhonda Dillon, who sang major roles and covered others for three years during the first run of <i>Phantom of the Opera</i> at the Ahmanson Theater downtown, the Santa Anas will. “Those dry winds got to me while I was still a vocal student at USC. Smog is one great enemy; the other is mucus. You choke on one, or you drown in the other. Early on, the most important thing you study is your own body.”</p>
<p>Natalie Limonick, the charming, smiling, white-haired woman emanating wisdom that you hear at nearly every vocal performance in the area, echoes her advice. Before your time and mine, she produced some of the best student opera performances in Southern California. “Even before you start to sing,” Limonick says, “you fortify yourself against the dangers by developing a strong speaking voice &#8211; like yours, for example. Better than anything you can take to medicate yourself &#8211; better than antihistamines, or cortisone, or Alkalol, or anything the allergists will prescribe &#8211; you work on yourself to fortify those membranes, and you have a chance against those impurities.”</p>
<p>No other hope? “Sure,” says David Alessi, “but it&#8217;s not very practical: maximum hydration. The more moisture you can create around yourself, the less you&#8217;ll be affected by outside impurities. That&#8217;s why people sing in the shower, after all. Surrounded by moisture, the human voice takes on a lot more resonance &#8211; men more than women. Equip our opera houses with a continual onstage water spray, and singers won&#8217;t have any problems with smog.”</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>High Notes,  and&#160;Low</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2005/09/high-notes-and-low/</link>
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		<pubDate>Thu, 15 Sep 2005 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=545</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[More or Less Offenbach at the L.A. Opera in the hands of Garry Marshall . . . need I go on? Doom descends even before a note is sounded, when a smarmy character, gotten up to impersonate composer Jacques Offenbach in the flesh, pops up on the podium and tries to wrestle the baton away [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><b>More or Less</b></p>
<p>Offenbach at the L.A. Opera in the hands of Garry Marshall . . . need I go on? Doom descends even before a note is sounded, when a smarmy character, gotten up to impersonate composer Jacques Offenbach in the flesh, pops up on the podium and tries to wrestle the baton away from conductor Emmanuel Villaume. Throughout the evening&#8217;s long and exasperating attempt to present Offenbach&#8217;s <i>La Grande Duchesse de Gérolstein </i>on the Chandler Pavilion&#8217;s uncomplaining stage, this obnoxious individual &#8211; played by the same Jason Graae who made such a pest of himself in the <i>Merry Widow </i>fiasco a few seasons back &#8211; skitters in and out of the production to inform us out front as to what&#8217;s going on (which we out front have been mostly, actually, trying to ignore).</p>
<p>I suppose I might as well give up on hope of experiencing Offenbach in the true colors of delight &#8211; the wit, the elegance, the sheer ravishment of the tenderness in a tune like the Duchess&#8217; “Dites-lui.” Instead we have the raucous cutes of a Garry Marshall rewrite, secure in the assurance that somewhere along the line there will be a matzo joke and a joke about weapons of mass destruction. There was a time when Frederica von Stade could manage the curve of an Offenbach lyric line so as to seduce any beating heart in an audience of any size; that she could no longer do so with the music of the title character, at least on opening night, was the evening&#8217;s major sadness. (Where was Susan Graham when we needed her?)</p>
<p>What we got, therefore, was not Offenbach in any stylistic sense, but an oversized, overstaged laff riot with some well-conducted, gorgeous music in the background, some above-competent singing (Constance Hauman, Rod Gilfry, Paul Groves) and, overall, the sorry spectacle &#8211; not the first in L.A. Opera history &#8211; of a representative from an alien industry taking on an artistic product, not to create something innovative and interesting, but merely to insult.</p>
<p>The next night&#8217;s <i>Pagliacci</i>, first seen here in 1996, offered similar over- and underkill. The Franco Zeffirelli production seemingly involves the entire population of several Sicilian villages &#8211; although that doesn&#8217;t mitigate the fact that a whole evening of that one short opera here constitutes half of a double-bill anywhere else (at ticket prices that have now broken through the $200 mark). The Zeffirelli whoop-de-do has been restaged by Marco Gandini, still with TV sets and motorbikes mingled with antique theatrical flourishes to give a sense of no time and all time. The evening&#8217;s tragedy is the Canio of Roberto Alagna, which is utterly without tone. Nicola Luisotti&#8217;s orchestra screams its “Ridi, Pagliaccio” at the climactic moment, but over it Alagna&#8217;s pale, colorless tenor shows no emotion or motivation. His Mrs., Angela Gheorghiu, does her baby-doll Nedda quite prettily, and rises to some expression at the end, but in a lost cause.</p>
<p><b><br />
Isolde Gets Her Man<br />
</b><br />
Richard Wagner&#8217;s <i>Tristan und Isolde </i>is variously titled in popular parlance. It is most often spoken of simply as <i>Tristan</i>. Among dedicated discophiles, however, it is further identified by its female star: the “Flagstad <i>Tristan</i>” or, in more recent times, the “Nilsson <i>Tristan</i>.” Its identity might also relate to the podium; the Flagstad <i>Tristan </i>is no less the “Furtwängler <i>Tristan</i>,” with good cause. There is also a “Kleiber <i>Tristan</i>,” deservedly named for the remarkable performance that the legendary Carlos drew from a quite ordinary singing cast.</p>
<p>Now there is the much-anticipated “Domingo <i>Tristan</i>,” a three-CD set on EMI, which at least corrects the gender mismatch. The album notes also cite an eminently justifiable dedication to the memory of Kleiber. The image-makers have let it be rumored &#8211; although not yet officially confirmed &#8211; that this will be the last-ever operatic recording produced in a studio. Given the current state of classical recording, this is a little like announcing the end of the manufacture of dial telephones. Operatic recording, taken from live stage performances, rather than studio setup with the dramatic effects and distances artificially produced, has advanced to fair estate nowadays; if the record companies prefer to give over their Abbey Road studio time to sentimental ballad collections by the Alagnas or violin tidbits by the next doe-eyed subteen to come down the pike, theirs be the privilege.</p>
<p>Given access to technology that doesn&#8217;t yet exist, but may be upon us by the time these words see print, my desert-isle <i>Tristan und Isolde </i>would be an electronic montage assembled from individual excellences already on hand: conducted by Kleiber, with Furtwängler&#8217;s Philharmonia Orchestra playing with the eloquence it possessed in 1951. The Tristan would be Jon Vickers, with the heroism and the beauty of tone he brought to a recording led by Herbert von Karajan in the 1960s; the Isolde would, of course, be Furtwängler&#8217;s Kirsten Flagstad, still ardent and aflame in spirit in 1951 though vocally somewhat past her prime.</p>
<p>Lacking the means as yet to create that singular superperformance, I have no problem according shelf space to this new EMI version, to the surge and eloquence of the Royal Opera House Orchestra under Antonio Pappano, and to the abiding intelligence toward word meaning and phrase shape that has allowed the astonishing Plácido Domingo, at 63, to operate so freely and so movingly in a musical realm that he has, after all, only recently come to conquer. The Isolde is the Swedish soprano Nina Stemme, who has also taken on this killer role just recently. For now, I suppose, she will be thought of as <i>Domingo</i>&#8216;s Isolde, but she is also Wagner&#8217;s: a singer of genuine power and personality, clearly embarked on a career out from anybody&#8217;s shadow. Mihoko Fujimura is the Brangaene, René Pape the King Marke; Olaf Bär manages a Kurvenal a shade less boring than anyone else you&#8217;ve ever heard in the role. The profligate casting even includes top-rank lyric tenors in walk-on roles: Ian Bostridge as the Shepherd and Rolando Villazón as the Sailor. Along with the three CDs of the complete <i>Tristan</i> comes a bonus, a DVD that contains the entire audio performance on – get this! &#8211; a single disc in surround sound which also shows the running text in German and a translation in your choice of English or French. O brave new gadgetry!</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Carrying&#160;On</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2005/09/carrying-on/</link>
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		<pubDate>Thu, 08 Sep 2005 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=544</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Photo by Betty FreemanBoy Wonderful At 35, Thomas Adès continues to surprise, delight, mystify and elude me. If I had my way, everyone on the planet would own the new EMI recording of his recent Piano Quintet, as the indisputable evidence that classical music is still being created as a manner of expression urgent, powerful [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Photo by Betty Freeman<b>Boy Wonderful</b><br />
At 35, Thomas Adès continues to surprise, delight, mystify and elude me. If I had my way, everyone on the planet would own the new EMI recording of his recent Piano Quintet, as the indisputable evidence that classical music is still being created as a manner of expression urgent, powerful and meaningful. The disc also contains Schubert&#8217;s “Trout” Quintet of 182 years before, and I would like to believe that the coupling is not accidental. Something about youth, exhilaration and a healthy disregard for set-in-stone artistic conventions bonds these two works over the two centuries that separate them chronologically. The fact that the omnipotent Adès is the pianist in both works on this indispensable disc strengthens the bond.The Adès Quintet is a single movement lasting about 20 minutes. The musical discourse &#8211; the pianist and the splendid Arditti Quartet &#8211; is spirited and seems to touch on matters of great import but with great good humor and a touch of the punster. A constant stylistic vacillation &#8211; grinding dissonance here, butter-wouldn&#8217;t-melt consonance there &#8211; forms an explosive mix. At one juncture a tangle of harsh counterpoint nears the incendiary point, and a sudden phrase of Mozart (or Brahms? or honky-tonk?) floats by to lighten the atmosphere. I admire the wisdom here, the energy. Ten years ago, with <i>Asyla</i> and the high-camp opera <i>Powder Her Face</i>, there was some fear that this new kid on the block might burn out too quickly, as Wunderkinder have been known to do. But this Quintet is a work in which bedazzlement links up with brain power. The Schubert performance (with the Belcea Quartet) is, perhaps, a shade hard-edged, but you need more than one approach to this sublime work on your shelf anyhow, and surely an Alfred Brendel or an Artur Schnabel recording can&#8217;t be that hard to find.Adès is due here next February: a two-week Philharmonic “residency” in programs that include a new violin concerto and, better yet, scenes from his opera drawn from Shakespeare&#8217;s <i>The Tempest</i> (which will also be done complete at Santa Fe next summer). I know the opera so far from a video and an audio from two London performances with different casts. What I have said about the Quintet goes many times over for this extraordinary score, which restores to the lyric stage an operatic setting of true literary quality: not merely continuing the lyric language from where Benjamin Britten left it at his death, but moving far onward from there toward a new expressive level.<br />
<b><br />
Last Gasp</b><br />
There is no long-term good news from the County Museum concerning its decision to phase out its serious musical activities. Press releases and proclamations from officials in high places continue to trumpet the tone-deaf philosophy that an art museum&#8217;s sole responsibility is to serve the visual arts, and anything else becomes mere distraction. Nobody at LACMA, apparently, seems at all aware of the broadening provided by the music at New York&#8217;s Metropolitan Museum, the Chicago Art Institute (most of it free) and on down a distinguished list.LACMA&#8217;s contemporary-music programming will be the greatest loss &#8211; to the public, and to the stature of the museum itself. I have no head for public relations &#8211; a matter of some personal pride &#8211; but it strikes me as a kind of PR suicide that LACMA should be painting itself into a corner on its music policies at the same time that it&#8217;s catching all the flak for playing footsie with commercial interests on the King Tut front. At least there&#8217;s a fine interplay of ironies – and a thread of nobility as well – in the news that CalArts will now sponsor the EAR Unit residency concerts at its REDCAT Theater at the Music Center. Founded at CalArts in 1981, spun off in &#8217;87, resident at LACMA since then, the EAR Unit has served its community as everything a living, throbbing, creative artistic pulse should be. For LACMA to self-amputate such a vital force from its own artistic center constitutes a confession of inadequacy, ignorance and incompetence I find painful to contemplate.Before his death in July, Dorrance Stalvey had planned the one last Monday Evening Concert series that LACMA has allowed him; it begins on October 17. First of all, it is a triumphant retrospective of worldwide performers whose Los Angeles debuts were at these concerts: the amazing Italian bassist Stefano Scodanibbio, the Penderecki and Parisii String Quartets, the extraordinary pianist Marino Formenti (who will end the series with a four-hour marathon “Homage”). Scodanibbio will be joined by the cellist Frances-Marie Uitti, about whom I wrote adoringly some weeks back. New York&#8217;s Continuum will play a Milton Babbitt program. The two former “resident” ensembles, XTET and the EAR Unit, have a program each. The Flux Quartet will perform Morton Feldman&#8217;s six-hour String Quartet. Pianist Sergey Schepkin will play Bach&#8217;s “Goldberg” Variations and music by Stalvey.<br />
The Monday Evening Concerts &#8211; formerly Evenings on the Roof &#8211; flourished in many<br />
venues, including some more congenial, before moving into LACMA&#8217;s Bing Theater<br />
in 1961, 22 years into their history. If LACMA now chooses to disown them and<br />
their distinguished history, LACMA&#8217;s is the loss. The lesson from the LACMA years,<br />
notably the last three decades under Stalvey&#8217;s virtually single-handed leadership,<br />
is that an amazing run of strong-willed, stimulating, brave concert programming<br />
<i>can</i> be assembled and produced &#8211; even in a drab, unwelcoming, poorly lit,<br />
oversize room, with no organization support, no promotion, on some nights no parking-lot<br />
management &#8211; if somebody out front is dedicated to the proposition that it serves<br />
the betterment of the arts. It&#8217;s hard to believe that somewhere in this community<br />
there doesn&#8217;t exist the backup, and the locale, to continue this vital service.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Nerve&#160;Endings</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2005/09/nerve-endings/</link>
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		<pubDate>Thu, 01 Sep 2005 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=543</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[To Any Lengths Gustav Mahler has some goddamn chutzpah. Envious of my general good feelings at the evening&#8217;s start, he rams a solo trumpet into my ear to kick off his Fifth Symphony. “These are my neuroses, my Weltkvetch,” he screams at me through the agency of a zillion-member symphony orchestra, “and you will pay [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><b>To Any Lengths</b></p>
<p>Gustav Mahler has some goddamn chutzpah. Envious of my general good feelings at the evening&#8217;s start, he rams a solo trumpet into my ear to kick off his Fifth Symphony. “These are my neuroses, my <i>Weltkvetch</i>,” he screams at me through the agency of a zillion-member symphony orchestra, “and you will pay attention or else.” On and on he rants: one movement very sad, another movement marked “with utmost vehemence” (and, boy, does he mean it!), a third movement that has the utter gall to chew on the same indigestible wad for a good &#8211; no, make that “bad” &#8211; 20 minutes. Comes then a moment&#8217;s relaxation, a sublime, quiet slow elegy, but it&#8217;s over almost before it begins. Then comes a ludicrous finale that transforms the melody from that divine slow movement into a ludicrous travesty of itself.</p>
<p>Basically, I resent Mahler&#8217;s right to assume my interest in his personal hang-ups, as he pins me to my seat and hammers an endless enumeration into my long-suffering eardrums. This just might be a minority report, of course, although I won&#8217;t swear to it. Long may I argue that 75 minutes of Mahlerian <i>Weltschmerz </i>might not be the most appropriate entertainment for a pleasure-seeking audience on a balmy night at the Hollywood Bowl. Yet there were 6,000-plus merrymakers last Tuesday night, applauding and cheering like a bunch of sozzled hedonists, happily anchored in the opposite opinion.</p>
<p>Sure, the Mahler Fifth has its champions. (Even more strange to relate, so do the Sixth and the Seventh.) It starts magnificently; its opening trumpet solo could waken the dead, and is probably meant to do just that; the ensuing drum beats are like rushes of blood. The tension soon dissipates; Symphonies Two and Three also begin that way, but hold on more firmly in a grip more icy. Number Five, to these ears, is more diffuse. An hour passes, then comes the one genuine marvel, the ethereal Adagietto like a vapor trail, so brief that we virtually hear it as a double take. But the grotesque finale profanes that one tender memory; you even wonder whether Mahler himself recognized the beauty of his quiet creation.</p>
<p>Under Leonard Slatkin, and with the Philharmonic in reasonably responsive condition, the Fifth came across with no major commitments, no egregious sins. I do mourn the passing of the <i>portamento </i>in Mahler performances, the swoop from note to note in his eloquent melodic string writing, notated in the composer&#8217;s own scores and preserved in old recordings by conductors familiar with the style &#8211; Bruno Walter&#8217;s performance of the Fifth with the New York Philharmonic and a treasurable performance by Willem Mengelberg of just the Adagietto.</p>
<p>Leonard Bernstein&#8217;s so-called Mahler revival in the 1960s involved a certain amount<br />
of laundry work, and one of the results was a wholesale scrubbing-out of the old<br />
performance styles. Most of all, <i>portamento </i>was banished as unclean, sentimental<br />
— <i>feh</i>. This attitude merely betrayed an ignorance of this important aspect<br />
of Mahler&#8217;s expressive principles and Mahler&#8217;s own carefully detailed means of<br />
achieving them. (As I remember, Salonen&#8217;s per-formances and recording of the Fourth<br />
Symphony do a better job than most in honoring Mahler&#8217;s markings.) Slatkin&#8217;s performance<br />
of the Fifth the other night was a fair example of the contemporary-bloodless<br />
approach: very clean, very nicely detailed, with not a moment&#8217;s appeal to the<br />
tear ducts. There was a lot more meat to be carved, in fact, from Slatkin&#8217;s nicely<br />
controlled reading of Ives&#8217; <i>Three Places in New England</i>, which began the<br />
program, with the multiple marching bands of General Putnam&#8217;s Revolutionary Camp<br />
nicely set apart.</p>
<p><b><br />
Slatkin Territory</b></p>
<p>Slatkin&#8217;s presence at the Bowl, in the newly created post of principal guest conductor for the summer seasons, continues a long family connection extending back to early sound-studio days and arousing memories of wonderful chamber-music performances as well. Start with Eleanor Aller, born to Russian immigrants in New York in 1917; her grand uncle, Modest Altschuler, headed an orchestra of Russian expatriates that gave first American performances of music by Scriabin and Mussorgsky and toured with the newly arrived Rachmaninoff. The Allers &#8211; all of them musicians &#8211; immigrated to California in 1933, on word (which proved true) of employment in the studios. There Eleanor met the St. Louis–born conductor Felix Slatkin; they were married in 1939, and gave birth to the first Hollywood String Quartet (half of it, anyhow) soon thereafter. They also gave birth to Leonard and to Fred, who has gone back to the old family name of Zlotkin. Fred Zlotkin is an active freelance cellist in New York; you can hear him in the pit at the New York State Theater, and on the latest Cyndi Lauper disc, among dozens of others. He sent me an old video of the Hollywood Quartet in action. Watching Eleanor Aller playing the eye game with her three colleagues tells you everything you need to know about chamber music.</p>
<p>World War II brought on several personnel changes in the original Quartet. The ensemble that came together in 1945 &#8211; Slatkin and Aller, with Paul Shure and Paul Robyn in the center positions &#8211; soon became recognized as one of the great quartets of the time, the more so for the rarity of its being entirely American-formed. During my student days in Berkeley, the Hollywood Quartet&#8217;s frequent visits were a major part of my own musical discoveries. A Sunday that began with a hike on Mount Tamalpais and ended with the Hollywoods (plus guests) performing Hindemith&#8217;s Third Quartet, the Schubert C–major Quintet and Schoenberg&#8217;s <i>Verklärte Nacht </i>is a memory I need very little chemical assistance in reliving.</p>
<p>The Hollywood String Quartet disbanded in 1959, leaving happy memories to folks of my generation and a fair number of recordings (on the Testament label &#8211; in mono, but so what?) to everybody else. They include my favorite of all versions of the Schubert Quintet (with the cellist Kurt Reher); performances of the last Beethoven Quartets so close to unsurpassable as never mind; and a disc of Kodály, Smetana and Dvorák Quartets that tells me, in a language beyond words, exactly what it means to be in love with music, and with the ability to bring it to life.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Goose Bumps Along the Left&#160;Insula</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2005/08/goose-bumps-along-the-left-insula/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2005/08/goose-bumps-along-the-left-insula/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 25 Aug 2005 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=542</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[I Love Wolfgang A recent New York Times Science section had a QA about music and emotion. “Why is it,” asked Q, “that particularly beautiful music gives me goose bumps or even makes me cry?” “It&#8217;s because,” answered A, “of a particular area called the ‘left insula,&#8217; [which is] involved in the emotional processing of [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><b>I Love Wolfgang<br />
</b><br />
A recent <i>New York Times</i> Science section had a QA about music and emotion. “Why is it,” asked Q, “that particularly beautiful music gives me goose bumps or even makes me cry?” “It&#8217;s because,” answered A, “of a particular area called the ‘left insula,&#8217; [which is] involved in the emotional processing of music.”</p>
<p>Armed with this splendid new information, I betook myself and my left insula to the all-Mozart program at the Hollywood Bowl last Tuesday, fully aware of the imminent peril to that part of my brain and the rest of my composure as well. Mozart&#8217;s (and my) old friend Sir Neville Marriner led the Philharmonic that night; the last work on the program was the Symphony No. 39. Before that had come the “Haffner” Symphony, the early (but astonishing for its time) E-flat Piano Concerto, K.271, nicely rattled off by Jonathan Biss, and a couple of concert arias yelled at by the young American soprano Marisol Montalvo. It was a poor night for audience behavior, and a worse one for Bowl restaurant caterers&#8217; behavior &#8211; as my colleague Mark Swed noted far too amicably.</p>
<p>But it was Mozart 39 that redeemed the evening &#8211; came close, in fact, to making my entire summer worth the endurance. There is one particular spot in that lustrous work where I am sure to break out in goose bumps. It&#8217;s in the first movement. The low strings hold a sustained note, and the high strings meander around it. Clarinets, in heartbreaking harmony, ask a question, twice. The strings attempt an answer over a pizzicato. In perhaps a minute at a fairly leisurely tempo, we are asked to consider four, five, maybe six interlocked melodic propositions, every one of them gorgeous in a different way; only at the end of this truly amazing sequence is there time to draw a breath and sort them out. Now you know why Mozart specifies that the expositions of his first movements should be repeated. Realities at the Bowl, alas, apparently make this impractical. At least the beautifully spacious, congenial pacing of Sir Neville&#8217;s performance made this utterly marvelous symphony, the most richly orchestrated of all Mozart&#8217;s 41, come to life the first time around.</p>
<p>Anybody who loves Mozart at all must have a personal collection of goose-bump moments. If I tell you some of mine, it&#8217;s with the proviso that the list could change tomorrow. I don&#8217;t think I&#8217;ll ever stop waiting breathlessly, however, for the moment in <i>The Magic Flute</i> when Tamino and Papageno assault the Three Ladies with questions about finding Sarastro&#8217;s palace, and their answer comes with a miraculous change in the orchestra to winds and pizzicato, and the Three Genii appear overhead; it&#8217;s for moments like this that people build opera houses. I&#8217;ll never stop writing about the moment in the G-minor String Quintet when the change from B flat minor to B flat major is signaled by a high D from the first violin; to me that is the greatest single note in all music.</p>
<p>Then there&#8217;s that Sonata for Two Pianos, the one that some psychologists studied for its possible effect in raising students&#8217; IQ scores. I think those findings have been fairly well debunked, which doesn&#8217;t come between the work and me in the slightest. There is a passage just before the end of the slow movement, a gradual shutdown of the melodic energy but with the most elegant pianistic decoration to speed the music on its way. More than goose bumps, that passage is the small gray Myrtle I no longer possess, rolling on her back in greeting to re-enact the ultimate act of love. In <i>The Marriage of Figaro</i> there is a similar moment: Susanna in the Act 3 Sextet, spinning out her slow, quiet cadenza over the massed joyousness of five other characters as &#8211; for the moment at least &#8211; her marriage to Figaro has come out from behind the clouds. And then there&#8217;s that . . .</p>
<p><b>And the Others, Too<br />
</b><br />
For the Crucifixus of his B-minor Mass, J.S. Bach takes a lamenting movement from<br />
an earlier cantata, unplugs the original German text (“Weinen, klagen&#8230;”) and<br />
installs the Latin description of Christ&#8217;s crucifixion, ending with “sepultus<br />
est” (“he was buried”). For those words, with the deep, dark resonance of the<br />
middle syllable (“pul”) sung by basses, Bach gives the harmony a wrench, and this<br />
is something you cannot hear (or I cannot and you should not) without the fuzz<br />
between your shoulders going rigid. Is Bach trying to tell us something about<br />
the emotional pull of the sudden modulation, nearly a century before Schubert<br />
and the Romantics? I don&#8217;t know, but there is a particular song by Schubert, one<br />
of the hundreds, that affects me in exactly the same way: the haunting, small<br />
“Nacht und Träume,” a quiet, moonlit nocturne in which, again, the harmony just<br />
suddenly drops &#8211; and so do we. And then you cannot leave Schubert without sharing<br />
the emotional scars from his own last weeks on Earth: the tortured flicker that<br />
ends the slow movement of the String Quintet, or the astonishing key changes midway<br />
in the final Piano Sonata, when C sharp becomes C natural out of sheer defiance<br />
and the music flames hot.</p>
<p>It&#8217;s the heat of defiance that reaches me the most profoundly in Beethoven&#8217;s music,<br />
too: the trumpet that shrieks midway in the “Eroica”&#8217;s Funeral March, the horns<br />
on their high E all the way through the Seventh Symphony, all four string players<br />
in the bloodbath that is the <i>Grosse Fuge</i>. But there is one work of Beethoven<br />
that raises goose bumps especially high, and I think something I wrote about it<br />
five years ago belongs here.</p>
<p>“Beethoven&#8217;s first theme is its own kind of miracle. It crashes in on you, out of the mists of uncertainty, like the <i>Titanic</i>&#8216;s iceberg, massive and gruff. Later, it splits apart in wondrous ways: now haunting and melancholy, now a horn solo like a distant benediction. Midway in the first movement, its fragments knock against one another and, with terrific energy, coalesce once more in a recapitulation both sardonic and triumphant. The interweave of counterpoints &#8211; close at hand, in the middle distance and afar &#8211; is staggering; time and again you have to remind yourself that all this incredible detail is the fashioning of a mortal totally and tragically deaf. At the movement&#8217;s end, Beethoven&#8217;s incomparable theme pulls itself once more out of a mumbling, eerie blackness and flings itself against us, against the gods.”</p>
<p>Well, I just checked out the first movement of the Beethoven Ninth against the left insula, and the goose bumps still work.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>The Many Excellences of Yo-Yo&#160;Ma</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2005/08/the-many-excellences-of-yo-yo-ma/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2005/08/the-many-excellences-of-yo-yo-ma/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 18 Aug 2005 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=541</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Infinite Variety Even if he weren&#8217;t one of the finest performers on his chosen instrument anywhere in today&#8217;s musical world, Yo-Yo Ma would stand apart. Fame rests upon his shoulders as a benevolent aura. His recent appearance at the Hollywood Bowl, not so much at the head of his Silk Road Ensemble but in its [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><b>Infinite Variety</b></p>
<p>Even if he weren&#8217;t one of the finest performers on his chosen instrument anywhere in today&#8217;s musical world, Yo-Yo Ma would stand apart. Fame rests upon his shoulders as a benevolent aura. His recent appearance at the Hollywood Bowl, not so much at the head of his Silk Road Ensemble but in its midst, drew a sellout crowd of more than 17,000. He did not, that night, thrill the crowd &#8211; as he sometimes does &#8211; with a show of personal virtuosity in a cello concerto by Dvorák or Schumann, which he plays as well as anyone on Earth. He participated, instead, as a member of an ensemble performing interesting music in styles colored by influences from world sources &#8211; Asian, African, Eastern-European &#8211; in which he took brief solos on his cello or on other instruments of more exotic design. All evening, in other words, he functioned as one of many.</p>
<p>The more than 17,000 people who had shown their continued delight that night had come, from what I could glean from conversations around me, to spend the evening with the friend they had known for many years, from his appearances on <i>Sesame Street</i> or with Mr. Rogers. They knew their friend Yo-Yo because years ago he had shown them how it was possible to be a nice guy as well as a wonderful musician. Anyone contemplating a career in the performing arts &#8211; or in anything else, for that matter, for which becoming famous might be a helpful ingredient &#8211; would do well to study the example of Yo-Yo Ma.</p>
<p>Yo-Yo formed the Silk Road Ensemble at Tanglewood in 2000, an open-ended consortium of musicians from the various cultures along the famous old trade route between China and the West, with the intent of reviving past musical cultures or re-creating contemporary imitations of their stylistic outlines. The group first visited here, at Royce Hall, in 2002, and I found the concert “curiously unsatisfying, a smorgasbord of tidy but blandly spiced dishes.” Either I or the Ensemble &#8211; maybe both &#8211; have changed over three years because the concert at the Bowl last week was satisfying, and occasionally thrilling. There was a kind of eloquence in the seven, long-listed works, and even in the dazzling encores, in which echoes in a time warp &#8211; a cascade of fast plucked notes from Wu Man&#8217;s <i>pipa</i>, a virtuoso vocal cadenza by supersinger Ganbaatar Khongorzul, a mournful <i>cantilena</i> from Yo-Yo&#8217;s cello, or from an ancient cello-like instrument of similar shape &#8211; seemed to hang suspended in time, belonging to both past and present.</p>
<p>I don&#8217;t know where any of this is heading, this music that defies boundaries or<br />
definition; must I? This was a concert of serious, very beautiful, sometimes extremely<br />
exciting music, and perhaps that&#8217;s all the definition we need to restart the troubled<br />
performing arts. Incidentally, in the same review from 2002 in which I deplored<br />
the earlier version of Silk Road, I delivered something of a rave for Tan Dun&#8217;s<br />
<i>Water Passion</i>, which had just come out on a Sony recording. Now I can&#8217;t<br />
stand the work. <i>Plus ça change</i>&#8230;</p>
<p>
<b>Opera by Template</b> </p>
<p>Within five days, September 15–19, 2003, the infamous mad monk Rasputin trod the stage in opera houses on both sides of the planet. In Los Angeles &#8211; as I am sure you&#8217;d prefer to forget &#8211; there was Deborah Drattell&#8217;s <i>Nicholas and Alexandra</i> with Plácido Domingo himself self-cast as the flamboyant charlatan. At the Finnish National Opera in Helsinki, Matti Salminen took on the title role in Einojuhani Rautavaara&#8217;s <i>Rasputin</i>. That opera, recorded and televised at the world premiere, is now at hand on an Ondine DVD. You don&#8217;t need me to tell you which is the better of the two operas, but I can tell you by how much. </p>
<p>Rautavaara (born in 1928 and, by the way, in Finnish you have to pronounce every vowel separately, so leave yourself plenty of time) studied for a time in the U.S. with Copland, Persichetti and Sessions. He belongs to a group of Finnish neoromantics, all of them prolific and well supported at home, who have created a respectable native rep-ertory. Aulis Sallinen, whose <i>Kullervo</i> was per-formed here in 1992, is probably the best known.</p>
<p>There is nothing wrong with <i>Rasputin</i>; up against Drattell&#8217;s opera, you can take this as high praise. Everything that happens in the opera is exactly what you&#8217;d expect to happen. The orchestration is big, romantic and dark. Rasputin&#8217;s first long aria, in which he asserts his power and informs the assembled Russian royalty of how indispensable he intends to be to the continued health of the empire, is a marvelous showpiece, and Salminen dines on it most lavishly. (He&#8217;ll be the Gurnemanz in the L.A. Opera&#8217;s upcoming <i>Parsifal</i>.) Jorma Hynninen is Tsar Nicholas; Lilli Paasikivi is his Tsarina. Mikko Franck, who made his local debut last season at Disney Hall leading Shosta-kovich&#8217;s Twelfth Symphony, but took ill after one performance (wouldn&#8217;t you?), is the conductor.</p>
<p>Dark and handsome (I won&#8217;t bother you with any more vowels to chew on) in Helsinki&#8217;s marvelous new house, <i>Rasputin</i> strikes me altogether as the personification of an operatic dead end. No, perhaps “per-sonification” is wrong; come to think of it, somewhere behind the excellent work of the human cast and orchestra and the intelligence of the stage director and designers, the impeccable turning of some kind of operatic machine is faintly, but clearly, heard.</p>
<p>And suddenly the inferiority of Drattell&#8217;s opera doesn&#8217;t seem so bad. At least its incompetence was the work of human hands.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Sex and The  Piano&#160;Concerto</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2005/08/sex-and-the-piano-concerto/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2005/08/sex-and-the-piano-concerto/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 11 Aug 2005 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=540</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Waist Not, Want Not I may have the measurements slightly off here, but it seems to me that Tchaikovsky&#8217;s First Piano Concerto and the Hollywood Bowl are artworks of about the same size, and were actually made for one another. Both are eminently satisfying, with few demands on the thinking apparatus, to large groups of [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><b>Waist Not, Want Not</b></p>
<p>I may have the measurements slightly off here, but it seems to me that Tchaikovsky&#8217;s First Piano Concerto and the Hollywood Bowl are artworks of about the same size, and were actually made for one another. Both are eminently satisfying, with few demands on the thinking apparatus, to large groups of people (more than 6,000 last Thursday night). Both actually take on an enhanced luster when their proponents display small and forgivable human flaws. When Olga Kern joined the Los Angeles Philharmonic to dish out the work at the Bowl last week, she hit a couple of clinkers as early as in the famous introductory passage, and somehow I felt myself in the presence of a friend. My first-ever recording of the Concerto was by Artur Rubinstein (back when he spelled his first name without the “h”) on Victor M-180, and at the start of the last movement Rubinstein hits a great, gleaming clinker that will, forever, be embedded in my view of the work. (The recording is still available, on an RCA reissue; John Barbirolli conducts.) Any performance that fails to include that particular fistful of wrong notes is, for me, foredoomed. To that extent (but to no others) Ms. Kern&#8217;s performance was a letdown.</p>
<p>In truth, Ms. Kern &#8211; recent winner of the famous (did someone whisper “notorious”?) Van Cliburn Piano Competition down Texas way &#8211; played the bejesus out of Tchaikovsky&#8217;s lame-brained concoction, and the Philharmonic, under its bright young assistant conductor Alexander Mickelthwate, followed her along every misguided note of Tchaikovsky&#8217;s vulgar trajectory. Actually, the splendiferously endowed young Russian-born pianist, string bean–svelte and blond as if to challenge the sheen of Fort Knox&#8217;s gold, provided two performances of the concerto at once: one to manage the rise and fall of the music&#8217;s virtuosic ambitions, and another to justify the presence of the Bowl&#8217;s video screens, as few performances I have seen up in that Cahuenga Pass venue ever have. It would not surprise me to learn that she had carefully studied her repertory of facial expressions from the back pages of the publication you now hold; lucky for the riot police she didn&#8217;t include the phone numbers as well.</p>
<p>Filling out the program, and returning it to the realm of serious musical consideration, young (36) Mickelthwate took on the Berlioz <i>Fantastique </i>Symphony under handicaps not of his making. First was the venue. If ever a single work has demonstrated the acoustic marvels of the Disney Concert Hall it has been this, which Esa-Pekka Salonen has conducted in both seasons so far. Second, of course, was Salonen&#8217;s performance itself, a probing by a modern-day orchestral master of the extraordinary sound panorama in this one-of-a-kind creation from the past.</p>
<p>Up against these memories, and with some interesting new competition at the Bowl from squabbling coyotes up on the hill and gabbling newly hatched wildfowl somewhere high up in the stage mechanism, Mickelthwate&#8217;s performance, if not truly “fantastic,” was a good deal more than merely creditable. He makes friends with the audience in a manner pleasant and unstrained; as befits his German upbringing, once he reaches the podium he is all business. He has a strong, clear beat, and a stage presence agreeably free from choreography. I could have wished that he had taken the repeats in the first and last two movements; they actually give the work shape and logic, as the Salonen performances have proved. The second-movement Waltz did not quite dance, but the enchantment of the third-movement Pastoral was beautifully captured. Keep your eye on Mickelthwate; he has the goods. Next season he conducts in a couple of “Green Umbrella” concerts and a Christmas program, but he needs to be thrown a symphony or two.</p>
<p><b><br />
Serendipity</b></p>
<p>The Bruman Concerts at UCLA, which I had only discovered two weeks ago, came to an end for this summer with the fine young Calder Quartet nearly filling the hall. Christopher Rouse&#8217;s Second Quartet was the tough new work: strong, shapely and quite eloquent. Rouse began his career with music in an aggressive, pin-&#8217;em-to-the-seat style that didn&#8217;t have much to tell me beyond sheer impact. This quartet is something different; I found its ending, a long, quiet chorale, exceptionally beautiful. The work dates from 1988; Rouse later transcribed it for string orchestra (<i>Concerto per Corde</i>) and it has been recorded in that form, but the chamber version also deserves circulation. Smetana&#8217;s E-minor Quartet (“From My Life”) ended the program: wonderful, robust music that used to be performed more often than it is today. The Calder guys have moved up quickly &#8211; with residencies currently at both the Colburn and Juilliard schools &#8211; and I suspect that they haven&#8217;t yet learned to relax into the fun of this kind of middle-European repertory. Neither the dancing nor, at the end, the dark tragedy of this bucolic masterpiece came completely alive on the stage at Korn Hall; the marvelous scenery and colors beyond the notes remained unexplored.</p>
<p>Downtown at California Plaza (next to MOCA) there are “Grand Performances” so-called,<br />
a variorum of free musical entertainments set up in that charming watery environment<br />
of fountains and lagoons just in from Grand Avenue. On Saturday night there was<br />
the Mládí Chamber Orchestra, this time in full force. Through the wretched microphoning<br />
and overwrought amplification, and in a locale directly under a much-used commercial<br />
flight route, an outlay of imagination could still discern that this gathering<br />
of local freelancers, which functions without a conductor and gives concerts in<br />
several locales during the season, is an elegant and well-trained &#8211; and, therefore,<br />
valuable &#8211; small orchestra. Saturday&#8217;s concert began with an early Haydn symphony<br />
— No. 7, “Le Midi” &#8211; and moved on to the pallid charms of Tchaikovsky&#8217;s “Rococo”<br />
Variations, with cellist Timothy Loo excellently maintaining the music&#8217;s modest<br />
semblance of momentum. Following intermission came the gut-wrenching Chamber Symphony<br />
of Shostakovich, music written in horror at the composer&#8217;s first view of war-bombed<br />
Dresden. When I tell you that the ending of this wonderful work was allowed to<br />
segue directly into recorded pop music to send the crowd home happy, you may ask<br />
whether the management of this music series is worthy of trust to produce classical<br />
music on Grand or any other avenue in town. So do I.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Native&#160;Sounds</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2005/08/native-sounds/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2005/08/native-sounds/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 04 Aug 2005 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=539</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Photo by Jim ArndtFinished Symphonies Aaron Copland&#8217;s Third Symphony, on at the Hollywood Bowl last week, was the most significant out-of-the-way music in this summer&#8217;s Bowl programming. It dates from a time when the notion of the Great American Symphony was taken as a cultural imperative: the triumphant assertion of this country&#8217;s ordained place in [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Photo by Jim Arndt<b>Finished Symphonies</b><br />
Aaron Copland&#8217;s Third Symphony, on at the Hollywood Bowl last week, was the most significant out-of-the-way music in this summer&#8217;s Bowl programming. It dates from a time when the notion of the Great American Symphony was taken as a cultural imperative: the triumphant assertion of this country&#8217;s ordained place in the cultural firmament. Never mind that an American cultural identity had by 1945 already nailed down its place in that firmament, and Copland had done his part along with others &#8211; Gershwin, Thomson, Ellington, you-name-&#8217;em &#8211; in inventing a serious musical language. Still, there was something magic about “symphony”; it implied the privilege of sitting with the grownups, membership in an international club. And so we got symphonies: grandiose extended works by America&#8217;s first symphonic generation. Roy Harris, William Schuman, Roger Sessions, David Diamond, Walter Piston and their lesser colleagues wrote symphonies by the basketful. Conductors of the day, most of all Boston&#8217;s eager-eyed Serge Koussevitzky and his acolyte Leonard Bernstein, introduced each work as “the greatest since Brahms.” Copland had the good sense to stop at No. 3. (His first two, actually, came early in his career, his lively experimental days; he really only contributed the one to the basket.)While it might be taken as bad manners to generalize over so considerable an output of music that has kept so many orchestral musicians employed and recorded over half a century &#8211; and enabled minor figures like Seattle Symphony conductor Gerard Schwarz to carve a niche for themselves as champions of America&#8217;s symphonic glory &#8211; I am obliged to insert my own small voice right about here and suggest that the Great American Symphony still remains uncomposed, and rightly so. Do we live in hope? I don&#8217;t see why we should; there are better ways for today&#8217;s composers to occupy themselves than engaging the symphonic chimera, and better names for the results. (In case anyone asks, I consider the Second Symphony of Roger Sessions the least disastrous American symphony so far.)The Copland Third received a strong performance under the Eugene Symphony&#8217;s Giancarlo Guerrero. From his credentials I gather that he devotes a fair amount of time in Eugene to new American music, and the more power to him. But the Copland is, to me, beyond salvation. Its first two movements force bland, formulaic music into “symphonic” attitudes they do not fit: development, variation, repetition. The second movement has some of Copland&#8217;s fine jiggety-jog, but again forced into repetitive symphonic patterns; a few cowboys or Appalachian settlers whoopin&#8217; across the stage would help. The slow movement is deadly dull and morose, and the finale gains somewhat by its inclusion of the famous “Fanfare for the Common Man,” although the peroration strikes me as cheap. Overall, I cannot see Copland&#8217;s motivation for cantilevering any of this material out to symphonic length. The symphony runs nearly 45 minutes, the longest of his orchestral works and the most diffuse. The two by Tchaikovsky that began the program &#8211; the <i>Romeo and Juliet, </i>and the <i>Rococo Variations</i> with the young Johannes Moser, the mettlesome cello soloist &#8211; made their musical points far more tidily than the lumbering behemoth of a pseudosymphony that ensued.<b>Mom, Pop, Uncle George and Bill</b><br />
Bridge Records is a small mom-&#8217;n'-pop company up the Hudson from New York, run by guitarist David Starobin and wife Becky, and one of its missions is to create a complete recording of the music of grand old George Crumb. The ninth disc, now at hand, includes music that stood as a landmark &#8211; in my generation at least and, I&#8217;m sure, others &#8211; for its revelation of the far boundaries of “classical” music, and for how little those boundaries really mattered anymore. <i>Ancient Voices of Children</i> was a piece like no other, drawing on known poetic sources (the dark lyrics of Garcia Lorca) but set, with remarkable freedom, to musical resources beyond definition: a boy soprano, a percussionist using tuned stones, a musical saw. Its time was the start of the Solid &#8217;70s, but here was music beyond time, existing untethered in pure air, and even beckoning to us to join. On the original LP with Jan DeGaetani among the singers, the work turned the Nonesuch label into a generational imperative. I had smoked my first joint shortly before <i>Ancient Voices</i> came around. The disc has made it possible to repeat the experience anytime, straight. It was the first head music respectable enough to appear on a concert stage. (Crumb&#8217;s <i>Black Angels</i>, from the same era, was the second.)The new recording comes 35 years too late to revisit upon civilization exactly the same impact, but the music is there still, and the aura remains as well. Tony Arnold is the soprano, Justin Murray the boy soprano; David Colson leads the marvelously heterogeneous ensemble. There are further treasures: four sets of Garcia Lorca settings (<i>Madrigals</i>) for soprano and ensemble, and, I happily report, the <i>Eine</i><i>Kleine Mitternachtmusik</i> (<i>A Little Midnight Music</i>), Crumb&#8217;s extended set of the “ruminations” &#8211; not quite improv, in other words &#8211; on Thelonious Monk&#8217;s “&#8217;Round Midnight” that we heard during last season&#8217;s Pacific Symphony Crumbfest in Costa Mesa.William Bolcom has seven symphonies to his name, but the world knows him better<br />
for his vocal music &#8211; the operas, which have triumphed at the Chicago Lyric and<br />
Met, and the great cycle of William Blake poems <i>Songs of Innocence and of Experience</i>,<br />
which the Pacific Symphony gave us two years ago and which has now been recorded<br />
on Naxos. Now, again on Naxos, there is a glorious collection of solo songs: pieces<br />
from his off-Broadway musicals, children&#8217;s songs and a cycle of American women&#8217;s<br />
poems. As with the Blake cycle, the amazement here is in the variety of Bolcom&#8217;s<br />
music, from the most endearing childlike charm to a song called “The Last Days<br />
of Mankind” wherein you&#8217;d swear that the ghosts of Kurt Weill and Bert Brecht<br />
were again abroad in the land with heavy tread. The powerhouse singer is Carole<br />
Farley, whom I have admired as Berg&#8217;s Lulu; Bolcom himself takes charge of his<br />
complex, nicely shaded piano collaborations. The disc begins with a lumbar-leveling<br />
scream, and goes onward and upward from there.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>The Right Time and&#160;Place</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2005/07/the-right-time-and-place/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2005/07/the-right-time-and-place/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 28 Jul 2005 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=538</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Donkey&#8217;s Ears Every year around this time I start keeping a yellow pad close at hand, to jot down all the reasons why classical music at the Hollywood Bowl is a totally unworkable proposition. The list is long and sad; it should be familiar by now. Most of it dates back to Bernheimer days. Some [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><strong>Donkey&#8217;s Ears</strong></p>
<p>Every year around this time I start keeping a yellow pad close at hand, to jot down all the reasons why classical music at the Hollywood Bowl is a totally unworkable proposition. The list is long and sad; it should be familiar by now. Most of it dates back to Bernheimer days. Some items on the list seem to come and go. The concerts two weeks ago, for example, deluded me into believing that the sound engineers had beaten back the echo problem that had been so annoying last year. Not so; last week&#8217;s Beethoven program, with those quick, sharp sforzandos that stand out in Ludwig&#8217;s musical signature, restored that particular bugaboo in full glory. The Bowl endures, warts &#8216;n&#8217; all.<br />
But then there are the times when those warts impart to the joys (and perhaps even the sorrows) of Bowl-going a radiance of their own; you have to realize that there is nothing just like this cultural phenomenon anywhere else in the land, and that it is our great good fortune to have it among us. Take the aforementioned Beethoven program, an event that, though it promised modestly on paper, I still cannot get out of my ears in the actuality. To begin, the weather gods were all enthroned that night; it was one of those sublime, calm, 70-ish nights when the 6 o&#8217;clock news is full of Texas hurricanes and East Coast heat waves but the local air offers naught but benevolence. Beethoven&#8217;s Violin Concerto, music that I have often found somewhat soft-spined and lacking in point of view in indoor concerts, a pretty but inactive piece more endurable than adorable, sounded on that night no less miracle-strewn than the surrounding air: smiling and caressing. The special marvel of Beethoven&#8217;s orchestral language in this particular work &#8211; the way, for example, that he bends his violin solos around the first bassoon in notable passages in all three movements &#8211; stood out like a newly fashioned stripe on an audible rainbow. The most magical of all its episodes &#8211; the hushed G-minor rhapsody in the first movement, when the violin soars heavenward with a newly fashioned variant of the main theme, accompanied far below with the timpani&#8217;s insistent throbbing of the movement&#8217;s principal rhythmic motif &#8211; was transformed that night into irresistible messages from some distant galaxy. And that power, friends, to convert the musically ordinary into the celestially extraordinary merely through the phenomenon of atmosphere, is reason enough to keep up attendance at the Hollywood Bowl.<br />
Gil Shaham was the soloist, with Jeffrey Tate the evening&#8217;s conductor. Born in Illinois, raised in Israel, Shaham has earned most of his following so far through his service to the flashy, romantic side of the repertory. Moving on toward Beethoven seems, therefore, like a step upward. I heard his effort as honest, dedicated and intelligent &#8211; the foundation, in other words, of what may turn into an important statement on Beethoven&#8217;s quiet not-quite-masterwork, but not there yet.<br />
Beethoven&#8217;s Seventh Symphony rounded out the program, with Tate observing all the composer&#8217;s specified repeats &#8211; a rarity at the Bowl. I found this a strong, beautifully shaped rendition, with special care lavished once again upon Beethoven&#8217;s remarkable wind scoring. I struggle somewhat to visualize the shape of the donkey&#8217;s ears through which the junior critic on the <i>Times</i> apparently heard the performance, with the quiet, melancholic allegretto turned into a “funeral march.”<br />
<strong>My Fair Mládí</strong></p>
<p>Musical pickings are sparse during the summer months, but rewards await the ardent serendipiter. Two days after the Bowl&#8217;s Beethoven, I happened upon an eminently satisfying chamber-music concert in a UCLA lecture hall, and was glad I did. The players were five members of Mládí, the ensemble whose wintertime programs in an old apartment building near Silver Lake I have also found reason to praise. The setting, Korn Convocation Hall at the Anderson School, is your basic drab lecture room, but the sound is warm and welcoming. There are five concerts every summer, endowed by and named after Henry J. Bruman, a UCLA professor who liked the idea of making music available, and admission is free.<br />
The Bruman concerts are solid, interesting and challenging. Last week&#8217;s program consisted of four new or newish works for winds. One, a perky and thoroughly delightful duet for flute and oboe by the local composer Alex Shapiro, was brand-new, and Shapiro was on hand to deliver a few words about her piece. The final work, the Six <i>Bagatelles</i> by György Ligeti, is the kind of energy-packed music, novel and adventurous at every turn, that you keep on hand to play for people who tell you that contemporary music isn&#8217;t worth the ink it takes to print it. The hall at UCLA seats about 600 at a guess, and it was comfortably filled. Most of the audience were on the gray side, the kind of people who&#8217;d have the time for a concert on a Monday or a Thursday afternoon, and they seemed thoroughly pleased with the kind of programming these concerts tend to offer. I bring this up in relation to the fear that seems to stalk the land &#8211; concerning LACMA&#8217;s “Sundays Live” concerts and their broadcast sponsor, for example &#8211; when the matter of unfamiliar or contemporary music comes up.<br />
There are three more Bruman concerts: July 28, August 1 and August 4, with the superb Calder Quartet on hand for the last of these. Don&#8217;t tell me that nothing happens out here in the summer.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Bowlsful</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2005/07/bowlsful/</link>
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		<pubDate>Thu, 21 Jul 2005 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=537</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Ringlets They knew how to do things then. Opening night, 1938, at the Hollywood Bowl consisted of nothing less than Wagner&#8217;s Die Walküre, four hours plus, with Valkyries on horseback careening down the verdant nearby hills. The legendary Maria Jeritza was the Brünnhilde; Richard Hageman, better known for such salon tearjerkers as “Do Not Go, [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><b>Ringlets</b></p>
<p>They knew how to do things then. Opening night, 1938, at the Hollywood Bowl consisted<br />
of nothing less than Wagner&#8217;s <i>Die Walküre</i>, four hours plus, with Valkyries<br />
on horseback careening down the verdant nearby hills. The legendary Maria Jeritza<br />
was the Brünnhilde; Richard Hageman, better known for such salon tearjerkers as<br />
“Do Not Go, My Love,” was on the podium. National and international celebrities<br />
attended, or so the press gushingly reported.</p>
<p>Nowadays we get our Wagner one act at a time, indoors and out. The Philharmonic<br />
gave us <i>Tristan und Isolde </i>over three nights (with three admissions) this<br />
past season, and a single act of <i>Die Götterdämmerung</i> served to light up<br />
the sky as the Bowl&#8217;s first serious-music event earlier this month. (Okay, so<br />
an 80-minute single Wagnerian act runs the same as the whole of <i>La Bohème</i>.<br />
Even so&#8230;) And now news is at hand that the first-ever local production of all<br />
four parts of Wagner&#8217;s <i>Ring of the Nibelung</i>, the grandiose 18-hour artwork<br />
that keeps getting promised and postponed and promised again by the Los Angeles<br />
Opera, is slated to sneak in instead under the auspices of the Long Beach Opera<br />
for two performances next January. The four operas will be performed &#8211; get this<br />
— over two days, each opera running anywhere from two to three hours, in English<br />
in the 820-seat Center Theater. On top of this comes news that the Metropolitan<br />
Opera is planning a new “family version” of its current production of Mozart&#8217;s<br />
<i>Magic Flute</i>, to run 90 minutes instead of the usual three hours. No word<br />
has come from the Met as to whether ticket prices will be adjusted accordingly.<br />
Wanna bet?</p>
<p>John Mauceri conducted the <i>Götterdämmerung</i> at the Bowl; no Wagnerian slouch, he had led a respectable <i>Walküre</i> at Opera Pacific during that company&#8217;s more adventurous days. He also delivered an authoritative and delightful exegesis on the whole tangled <i>Ring</i> plot that almost, if not quite, atoned for the lack of supertitles. This was, surprisingly enough, Mauceri&#8217;s first time on the Philharmonic podium in 25 years.</p>
<p>Christine Brewer, the Philharmonic&#8217;s Isolde last December, moves on rapidly toward Wagnerian eminence. Her Brünnhilde, even through microphones, had its own thrilling impact, defiant and, at the end, richly human. Christian Franz, the Siegfried, and Christine Goerke, the Gutrune, were forged from lesser metal but not by much; Kurt Rydl, whose wobble had lent a nice comic edge to his Ochs in the L.A. Opera&#8217;s recent <i>Rosenkavalier</i>, put it to far less admirable service as the villainous Hagen this time around.</p>
<p>Some work has obviously been done on the Bowl&#8217;s sound system over the down time. The absurd echo has been vanquished or substantially reduced; the sound, from a point halfway back, is at least as true-to-life as, say, an early LP. The video screens still strike me as wasted expense, but perhaps I&#8217;m missing some of the pop-oriented entertainment that fills them on the weekend concerts. The coordination between the camera shots and the people actually performing at any moment is no better than last year; it can&#8217;t be without an enormous budget for extra rehearsals, and I&#8217;m still not convinced that all that many people go to the Bowl to watch TV screens. You&#8217;d think that at least there&#8217;d be a way of getting the texts for vocal works up on the screen, but that might also be wasted effort for the benefit of few. At least the short bursts of Magic Fire &#8211; live, at center stage &#8211; as Valhalla and its neighborhood went up in flames at the grand Wagnerian finale, provided the evening&#8217;s visual reward for those among the fast-dwindling crowd who had stuck out those 80 minutes to the end.</p>
<p><b>By George</b></p>
<p>Two nights later there was Gershwin: not the master of Broadway sass whom we all<br />
rightly adore, but the aspirant to a place among the Higher Artists whose aspirations<br />
merit a raised eyebrow or two. The Piano Concerto in F, from which Jean-Yves Thibaudet<br />
extracted the ultimate measure of razzle-dazzle on this occasion (with proper<br />
support from conductor Leonard Slatkin and the Philharmonic), is my case in point<br />
— a head-on collision between high-flying creative ambition and a woeful inability<br />
to make anything work from one minute to the next. Any single musical notion is<br />
uncommonly attractive, and their variety is vast: the veritable torrent of syncopated<br />
flourishes that begin the work, the curious lapse into a kind of static Charleston<br />
rhythm that stops everything a few minutes later, the lovely blues tune for solo<br />
trumpet that begins the slow movement, the pseudo-Yiddish kvetch that takes over<br />
midway in that movement. But what is there in this music that holds us by the<br />
collarbone and renders thrilling the progression from idea to idea? This question<br />
seems beyond Gershwin&#8217;s power, or his interest, to resolve; we are left, in the<br />
perceptive words of Paul Rosenfeld, one of the few American critics to resist<br />
the inevitability of the “Great American Composer” bandwagon in Gershwin&#8217;s case,<br />
with “a heap of extremely heterogeneous minor forms and expressions.”</p>
<p>Curiously, the same program also included a shorter and less-known Gershwin piece also for piano and orchestra, his <i>Variations on “I Got Rhythm,”</i> in which I sensed the presence of a real and serious composer, genuinely in charge of his material and aware of where he wants to take it. The form of the piece, a series of compositional essays on a single (and singularly great) tune, prevents its wandering afield, and the permutations devised by Gershwin over its 10-or-so-minute span are the work of a genuine smart-ass.</p>
<p>The program ended with Gershwin&#8217;s <i>An American in Paris</i>, a piece whose cleverness<br />
I usually find endearing and surely would have this time. But I was out of sorts<br />
by then; one large chunk of inferior Gershwin and two monumentally undistinguished<br />
pieces by Gershwinoids Ferde Grofé and Robert Russell Bennett disinclined me to<br />
inflict my state of mind on anything else that evening.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Silence&#160;Prevails</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2005/07/silence-prevails/</link>
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		<pubDate>Thu, 14 Jul 2005 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=536</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Dorrance Stalvey, who single-handedly planned, directed and managed the Monday Evening Concerts at L.A. County Museum of Art since 1971, died Sunday at 75, after a yearlong illness, while the following words were being written. His passing, while not unexpected, takes from our midst a genuine musical hero we can ill afford to spare. It&#8217;s [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><i>Dorrance </i><i>Stalvey, </i><i>who </i><i>single-handedly </i><i>planned,<br />
</i><i>directed </i><i>and </i><i>managed </i><i>the </i><i>Monday </i><i>Evening<br />
</i><i>Concerts </i><i>at </i><i>L.A. </i><i>County </i><i>Museum </i><i>of<br />
</i><i>Art </i><i>since </i><i>1971, </i><i>died </i><i>Sunday </i><i>at </i><i>75,<br />
</i><i>after </i><i>a </i><i>yearlong </i><i>illness, </i><i>while </i><i>the<br />
</i><i>following </i><i>words </i><i>were </i><i>being </i><i>written. </i><i>His<br />
</i><i>passing, </i><i>while </i><i>not </i><i>unexpected, </i><i>takes </i><i>from<br />
</i><i>our </i><i>midst </i><i>a </i><i>genuine </i><i>musical </i><i>hero </i><i>we<br />
</i><i>can </i><i>ill </i><i>afford </i><i>to </i><i>spare. </i><i>It&#8217;s </i><i>now<br />
</i><i>all </i><i>the </i><i>more </i><i>urgent </i><i>that </i><i>the </i><i>shameful<br />
</i><i>situation </i><i>described </i><i>in </i><i>my </i><i>article </i><i>—<br />
</i><i>and </i><i>“shameful” </i><i>is </i><i>the </i><i>exact </i><i>word </i><i>that<br />
</i><i>comes </i><i>to </i><i>mind </i><i>— </i><i>not </i><i>be </i><i>allowed<br />
</i><i>to </i><i>stand. </i></p>
<p align="right">
–A.R. </p>
<p align="left">
<b>Double Talk <br />
</b><br />
As I had hoped, a number of pens (or word processors) have been active over<br />
the past few months in response to the actions by the Los Angeles County Museum<br />
of Art in drastically curtailing its music programming. Nothing has yet been<br />
amended from LACMA&#8217;s original announcement. The Residency Concerts &#8211; the EAR<br />
Unit and XTET series and the Rosalinde Gilbert Chamber Concerts &#8211; have been<br />
canceled as of now; the Monday Evening Concerts, the crown jewels of the museum&#8217;s<br />
musical activities, have been granted one more year of existence. The free concerts<br />
- jazz on Friday afternoons and the Sunday Live concerts by young musicians<br />
- will continue, at least for now. </p>
<p>Some of the correspondence from LACMA officials to the protesters has been circulated<br />
by recipients, and it makes for depressing reading. Let us you and I, for example,<br />
take one paragraph from a recent letter to a well-known and distinguished arts<br />
patron, and read it together. It is dated June 16, and comes from one Bruce<br />
Robertson, who is the deputy director of art programs at LACMA and the chief<br />
curator of its Center for the Art of the Americas. “Over the last decade or<br />
more,” Mr. Robertson begins, “we have been very proud that LACMA&#8217;s classical-music<br />
programs have consistently won awards for their quality.” No argument so far.</p>
<p>“At the same time,” Mr. Robertson continues, “we have noticed declining audiences<br />
and a real divergence between the programs and audiences and our art programs<br />
and membership.” May I suggest, as I did in a letter of my own to Mr. Robertson,<br />
that the fact that many of the LACMA concerts have drawn small audiences is<br />
not at times the fault of the music, but the fault of LACMA itself for obliging<br />
its concerts to exist with zero publicity support: not a penny&#8217;s worth of advertising<br />
budget. Perhaps if Mr. Robertson had looked in on these concerts himself, he<br />
might have noticed &#8211; to cite one instance of many &#8211; the interesting tie-in a<br />
couple of years ago between the “Made in Los Angeles” concert series and the<br />
similar exhibition at the museum. The museum exhibits were lavishly promoted;<br />
the concerts, not at all. Divergence? </p>
<p>Mr. Robertson goes on: “We feel that the musical landscape of Los Angeles is<br />
changing and that what LACMA needed to do 20 years ago, when we started developing<br />
our current classical musical programs, is not what we need to do now . . .”<br />
Yes, the musical landscape is changing, and a great deal of the credit for this<br />
goes to the progressive musical forces in the area: the Philharmonic, CalArts<br />
and the Monday Evening and Residency concerts at LACMA. The significance of<br />
the LACMA programs isn&#8217;t the matter of the small houses, but the power of word<br />
of mouth that has, on many occasions, counteracted LACMA&#8217;s do-nothing policy<br />
in this regard. Take just three of many examples: the Arditti Quartet, the bassist<br />
Stefano Scodanibbio, the pianist Marino Formenti. All three made their local<br />
debuts at LACMA with pathetically small houses; all drew near-sellout crowds<br />
from then on. With just minimal support from LACMA&#8217;s publicists, that phenomenon<br />
might have been repeated on a regular basis. For a LACMA spokesperson to blame<br />
audience drop-off on changing tastes, at a time when critics worldwide write<br />
enviously about Los Angeles&#8217; musical progress, liberally citing the LACMA concerts<br />
along the way, suggests that either Mr. Robertson and his office mates have<br />
no conception of today&#8217;s musical world, or that they don&#8217;t want to know. </p>
<p>They even seem to believe that their “core mission, of serving the public through<br />
making the visual arts available to them,” can somehow function in silence,<br />
setting aside a unity of the arts on which civilization has rested for several<br />
millennia. Somehow it doesn&#8217;t strike me that free Friday jazz is going to go<br />
very far in piercing that silence. Nor will the free Sunday Live concerts, since<br />
their broadcast medium, KMZT-FM, does so with the stipulation that they include<br />
no “difficult” (i.e., contemporary) music. The condition of music, which all<br />
the arts were once wisely said to approach, seems ever more distant. </p>
<p>
<b>That You, Ludwig? <br />
</b><br />
It&#8217;s a sunny Viennese morning in the summer of 1804. The musicians gather at<br />
the Lobkowitz Palace, dressed in livery but with hairstyling of two centuries<br />
later. Beethoven shows up, a large bundle of musical scores under his arm, cleanly<br />
notated despite what we know of his penmanship. He looks a lot like the several<br />
W.B. Mähler paintings of the real 34-year-old Beethoven, including the famous<br />
scowl, but he is actually the actor Ian Hart. The musicians gather for their<br />
first-ever reading of Beethoven&#8217;s new symphony, a huge new work in E flat; there<br />
are complaints about the length, about the rhythms; there is small talk about<br />
whether the symphony is to be dedicated to Napoleon Bonaparte or simply titled<br />
“Eroica.” </p>
<p>The audience arrives, a gathering of invited nobles including a sourpuss named<br />
Count Dietrichstein. He is obviously the Martin Bernheimer of his day, prepared<br />
to despise the new symphony before he hears a note and equally prepared to make<br />
sure everybody knows it. (There was an actual Count Dietrichstein in Beethoven&#8217;s<br />
life, but not for another 20 years.) The great and revered Joseph Haydn arrives<br />
in time for the last movement. He, too, wears a sour face, but at least lets<br />
loose one quotable statement. “Everything is different from today,” says Herr<br />
Haydn, and we know that history will prove him right. </p>
<p>One false start, but then the music sails on effortlessly. Imagine: an orchestra<br />
in 1804, presented with the most innovative orchestral writing of its time -<br />
violent rhythmic quirks, sudden key changes and dynamic shifts, and practically<br />
at sight they start to sound like, well, like Sir John Eliot Gardiner and his<br />
Orchestre Révolutionnaire et Romantique (who, indeed, they are). <i>Eroica,<br />
</i>Nick Dear&#8217;s “award-winning period drama,” on a BBC Opus Arte DVD, serves<br />
up a lavish chunk of musical and historic absurdity, beside which our old friend<br />
<i>Amadeus </i>pales into a steadfast document of unimpeachable accuracy. </p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Dirty Work&#160;Afoot</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2005/07/dirty-work-afoot/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2005/07/dirty-work-afoot/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 07 Jul 2005 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=535</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Britten as Written Considering that Henry James wrote The Turn of the Screw for Collier&#8217;s Weekly, a popular fiction magazine in 1898 as it was until its demise some 60 years later, his ghost story has borne the weight of considerable serious analysis and interpretation. There is reason to suggest that music &#8211; i.e., Benjamin [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><b>Britten as Written</b></p>
<p>Considering that Henry James wrote <i>The Turn of the Screw</i> for <i>Collier&#8217;s<br />
Weekly</i>, a popular fiction magazine in 1898 as it was until its demise some<br />
60 years later, his ghost story has borne the weight of considerable serious analysis<br />
and interpretation. There is reason to suggest that music &#8211; i.e., Benjamin Britten&#8217;s<br />
tightly crafted chamber-opera setting of 1954 &#8211; puts forward the best of all explanations<br />
of the wavering fault lines between fantasy and reality in James&#8217; out-of-reach<br />
landscape. The performances in the new BBC Opus Arte DVD of Britten&#8217;s opera (distributed<br />
in the U.S. by Naxos), conducted by Richard Hickox &#8211; which is not a staging but<br />
a re-enactment in a natural setting &#8211; allow the work to take its own shape. Katie<br />
Mitchell&#8217;s opening up of the drama frees us from having to surmount the unnatural<br />
barrier (in this instance) of equating a character&#8217;s inner thoughts with the spectacle<br />
of singing mouths and artificial body movement on a cramped stage. Since much<br />
of Britten&#8217;s opera consists of inner dialogue, the device is splendidly successful<br />
here as it might not be in, say, <i>La Traviata.</i></p>
<p>The setting is a not-all-that-grand country mansion in decaying, swampy woodlands,<br />
with mists arising to mask the ghosts&#8217; coming and going. The cast is as good as<br />
you could want, with an insolence in the young Miles (Nicholas Kirby Johnson)<br />
that you want to slap down on first meeting, and a plain-Jane helplessness in<br />
Lisa Milne&#8217;s Governess that tells you she is up for defeat from the start. Mark<br />
Padmore is the Quint and also sings the Prologue; something both ingratiating<br />
and slimy in his tenorial thrusts chills you from the start. Their voices under<br />
Hickox form a fine ensemble, without ever allowing this harrowing, vivid musical<br />
drama to take on the artifice of mere opera. Like the studio-created version of<br />
John Adams&#8217; <i>Death of Klinghoffer</i> that I wrote about late last year, this<br />
DVD points the direction of a new joining of music drama and video to the greater<br />
enhancement of both.</p>
<p>
<b>Ring Around<br />
</b><br />
The treasure of DVD operas currently available, and rapidly growing, is astonishing:<br />
No similar luxury of choice has ever been available on any previous medium, not<br />
even counting the “pirate” versions of, say, legendary Callas performances that<br />
once drove collectors gaga &#8211; and play-actors too, as in Terence McNally&#8217;s <i>Lisbon<br />
Traviata</i>. European and Australian opera houses televise most of their productions,<br />
and these show up a few months later on DVDs, most often in decent productions<br />
properly translated. Live-performance recording has its dangers, of course, but<br />
one major advantage is the assurance of freedom from incompetent lip-synching.<br />
Some of the earlier opera videos &#8211; the Karajan studio productions, for example<br />
— are virtually unwatchable in this regard. </p>
<p>Wagner fares well &#8211; in quantity if not always quality. I wrote some time ago about<br />
the Eurotrash <i>Ring of the Nibelung </i>from the Stuttgart Opera, with four<br />
different directors imposing four ludicrous “modernized” settings on the timeless<br />
mythology. Now, from Barcelona&#8217;s Gran Teatre del Liceu, another <i>Ring</i> takes<br />
shape, also on Opus Arte. Of the four dramas, <i>Die Walküre</i> and <i>Siegfried</i><br />
are already at hand. Bertrand de Billy is the conductor; he has been here, with<br />
the Los Angeles Opera, in something-or-other. Falk Struckmann is the Wotan, Deborah<br />
Polaski the Brünnhilde; both are excellent German-repertory singers at the top<br />
of their powers. John Treleaven, the Siegfried, is not up to their level, however.<br />
I found him brash and rather squally, and kept dwelling on Anna Russell&#8217;s immortal<br />
description of Siegfried as “a veritable Li&#8217;l Abner.” Harry Kupfer is the stage<br />
director; his production was originally mounted at the Deutsche Staatsoper Unter<br />
den Linden in Berlin.</p>
<p>Kupfer&#8217;s work is the principal attraction here; these discs &#8211; and presumably the<br />
entire <i>Ring</i> when the other parts appear &#8211; document one of the most creative<br />
of the new generation of European stage directors. Like his Eurotrash-oriented<br />
lesser colleagues, he tends to rethink and, thus, to recast classic operatic material.<br />
The <i>Ring</i> seems to play out in a vast enclosure hemmed in with geometric<br />
patterns generated by tubular lights that change color and thereby create dramatic<br />
undertones and overtones. Most of Valhalla&#8217;s denizens, Wotan included, are thugs,<br />
and that adds an important level of credibility to Wagner&#8217;s cynical dramatic design.<br />
Time and place are kept purposefully fluid. If you&#8217;re not going to stage these<br />
grand music dramas as Wagner&#8217;s own high Romanticism &#8211; as they are on the Metropolitan<br />
Opera videos and in Stephen Wadsworth&#8217;s staging at the Seattle Opera &#8211; I think<br />
these Harry Kupfer productions are, easily, the next best thing.</p>
<p>Nikolaus Lehnhoff&#8217;s controversial take on Wagner&#8217;s <i>Parsifal</i> got my back<br />
up in San Francisco some years ago, and has since traveled to Chicago, London<br />
and now to an Opus Arte DVD via a production at Baden-Baden conducted by Kent<br />
Nagano. The problem here is not one of changed time or place &#8211; as it is, for example,<br />
in the Syberberg film, which I find otherwise thrilling &#8211; but of a whole overlay<br />
of ersatz symbolism with which Lehnhoff has burdened both the work and its audience.<br />
The look of the production he has created, and the performance under Nagano -<br />
in which Christopher Ventris, the Parsifal, has grown greatly since San Francisco<br />
— are eloquent and moving; the Gurnemanz of Matti Salminen leaves me all aquiver<br />
to see and hear him here, in the Robert Wilson staging, come November. But having<br />
already succumbed to the spell of Wilson&#8217;s version in Houston some years ago,<br />
I&#8217;ve come to resent the false turnings that Lehnhoff obliges me to follow in his<br />
cockeyed interpretation, however splendid the musical performance under Nagano.</p>
<p><i>Obiter dictum: </i>You need something cool after all this, and so, on ArtHaus,<br />
there is <i>Pierre le Grand</i>. André Modeste Grétry is the composer, a lesser<br />
(but not by much) contemporary of Haydn and Mozart. It&#8217;s a comic opera with spoken<br />
dialogue having to do (but not much) with the founding of the city of St. Petersburg<br />
by Peter the Great and his several girlfriends. The text, please note, is by one<br />
Jean-Nicolas Bouilly, who went on to write the play <i>Leonore, or Conjugal Love</i>,<br />
which served as the basis for Beethoven&#8217;s <i>Fidelio</i>.</p>
<p>Still here? <i>Pierre le Grand</i> is sung, in French and Russian, by the Helikon<br />
Opera of St. Petersburg under Sergey Stadler. The voices are young and agreeable.<br />
The production looks as if painted on bed sheets for the grand finale at a summer<br />
camp, and somehow that is exactly right for the aura around this whole enterprise.<br />
The music, as with everything in the small repertory of Grétry that anyone gets<br />
to hear, is fabulously beautiful. <i>Parsifal</i> it isn&#8217;t.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Dark&#160;Elegies</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2005/06/dark-elegies-2/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2005/06/dark-elegies-2/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 30 Jun 2005 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=534</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[WORDS BECOME MUSIC The sound of Frances-Marie Uitti&#8217;s cello resonates in the bloodstream. She would have it so; she has devoted considerable time and effort to enhancing the seductive throb of her instrument &#8211; developing a cello with six strings, and a way of playing with two bows. Next fall she starts a year&#8217;s residence [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><b>WORDS BECOME MUSIC </b></p>
<p>The sound of Frances-Marie Uitti&#8217;s cello resonates in the bloodstream. She would have it so; she has devoted considerable time and effort to enhancing the seductive throb of her instrument &#8211; developing a cello with six strings, and a way of playing with two bows. Next fall she starts a year&#8217;s residence at Berkeley, working on interactive electronic systems. I have no idea whether she uses this advanced technical stuff when she plays Bach or Dvorák; mostly she has hung out with the composers who match her visions: John Cage, Giacinto Scelsi, Iannis Xenakis. Born in Chicago, to Finnish parents, she now lives in Amsterdam, the world&#8217;s best place for visionaries. </p>
<p>On a new ECM disc, <i>There </i><i>Is </i><i>Still </i><i>Time, </i>Uitti plays her own music while Paul Griffiths reads his poetry. Griffiths, Welsh-born, a sometime music critic and the author of some excellent writing on new music, has a voice that sounds like Uitti&#8217;s cello &#8211; don&#8217;t all Welshmen? &#8211; and he uses it the way she plays: intense, throbbing, now and then breaking off and darting in some unexpected direction. His poetry is darkly tinged with memory &#8211; “There it was, and it was, and it is gone.” Single words and phrases seem to dissolve into cello sound, and just as often the process is reversed. “Think of that day,” the poet intones. “Be there again,” he and the cello join to implore. “It was then &#8230; now it&#8217;s then again.” In Munich, where poet and cellist first performed the sequence live, Griffiths insisted on appearing barefoot. </p>
<p>There are 17 poems in <i>There </i><i>Is </i><i>Still </i><i>Time, </i>some of few words, some crammed with words and breathless. When its 55 minutes are past, it is nearly impossible to resist playing the disc immediately again. I have written before about the Korean composer Unsuk Chin, mostly abut her great Violin Concerto, which we haven&#8217;t heard here yet, and about her <i>Alice </i><i>in </i><i>Wonderland </i>opera, which was supposed to show up at the L.A. Opera next season but is apparently lost down the rabbit hole. One major work of hers that has been performed here is the delightful <i>Acrostic </i><i>Wordplay, </i>which George Benjamin conducted at a “Green Umbrella” concert seven years ago, and which heads a splendid collection of her short works on a recent Deutsche Grammophon disc. There is a hint of <i>Alice </i>in this 1993 work, too; the text is drawn from Lewis Carroll and other author, with narrative reduced to syllables or word fragments until only their significance remains. Text becomes music, music becomes text &#8211; or so the program notes imply, although I think that the aforementioned cello and reader achieve a more satisfactory metamorphosis. On its own, however, there is some delight in this bouncy, perky piece, and in the performance by the Ensemble InterContemporain, under Kazushi Ono, with Piia Komsi burbling out the syllables. </p>
<p><b>SPACE </b></p>
<p>On the same disc is the formidable <i>Xi </i>from 1998, with the EIC led by David Robertson; they played it here, at Royce Hall, that same year. <i>Xi </i>calls for large ensemble plus electronics, and multichannel processing, and sends the sound on a single broad arc around the performing space. The title in Korean, says the composer, means “the smallest unit, the origin of all things &#8230; thus, the idea of metamorphosis.” The buildup is awesome, from the sound of simple breathing to a wrenching, percussive apotheosis. Don&#8217;t make the mistake I did, hearing the music first on a car stereo in murderous Friday traffic on I-405 on my way to the Philip Glass concert I&#8217;ll tell you about a couple of paragraphs down. The sense from the music, that the whole car was coming apart, was not, let&#8217;s say, pleasant; it took further hearings to restore the realization that <i>Xi </i>is, indeed, some kind of sonic masterpiece. </p>
<p>So is the extraordinary Violin Concerto by Marc-André Dalbavie, which comes with two other works by him on a new disc from a label known as Naïve, which it is anything but. Pierre Boulez led one work by Dalbavie at a “Green Umbrella” concert in 1998; another is scheduled here next season. The three works on the new disc are vast soundscapes, with Debussy in their ancestry &#8211; above all the sense of limitless space in works like La Mer and the Nocturnes. The Violin Concerto, stupendously dispatched by Eiichi Chijiwa with Christoph Eschenbach conducting, comes with voluminous program notes on relationships of music to space and the “spatialization” of sound objects. But the exhilaration of the music speaks for itself. </p>
<p><b>GLOBAL GOOP </b></p>
<p>At Costa Mesa&#8217;s Segerstrom Hall there was Philip Glass, his ensemble, an international gathering of participants, and <i>Orion, </i>90 minutes of the usual accompaniments-plus-riffs that pass as his music these days. The gadget this time &#8211; there always is one &#8211; was the celebration in Athens last summer of the Olympics. Musics of many lands performed by talented proponents &#8211; Australia, China, Canada, the Gambia, Brazil, India, Greece &#8211; were stirred into the familiar background of our old friends, the Philip Glass Ensemble. The outdoor performance in Athens last June &#8211; a month when it never rains there &#8211; was accompanied by a howling downpour. Times were when people were more adept at heeding warnings from the gods. </p>
<p>What am I missing in the ongoing fame and acclaim surrounding the Philip Glass<br />
phenomenon? I watch in wonderment as large audiences greet, with whoops and hollers<br />
and standing ovations, works large and small – the Fifth Symphony, the new soundtracks<br />
glued onto splendid old Cocteau movies, the insipid little Piano Etudes and now<br />
this protracted venture in hands-across-the-seas patronization. I recoil at the<br />
sheer tastelessness, not to mention the ugliness of sound, in combining the crystalline<br />
elegance of Wu Man&#8217;s pipa (even if amplified to satisfy the space of Costa Mesa&#8217;s<br />
barn of a hall) with the bovine keening of the alto sax from the Glass ensemble.<br />
I reach for earplugs as the needlepoints in the sounds of an Indian sitar become<br />
crammed into Western rhythmic patterns. What is put forth as assimilation, of<br />
a joining of musical styles under the night sky lit by the stars of the Hunter<br />
Orion, I hear as mindless exploitation. I do not enjoy mindlessness in a composer<br />
I once admired. Come back to the beach, Einstein; we need you. Philip needs you.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>At Long Beach, Unusual Biz As&#160;Usual</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2005/06/at-long-beach-unusual-biz-as-usual/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2005/06/at-long-beach-unusual-biz-as-usual/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 23 Jun 2005 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=533</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Photo by Kenneth Ian PolakoffSITE NON-SPECIFICTrust the Long Beach Opera as time-and-place travelers. Not so long ago the company asked us to accept a transplant of Richard Strauss&#8217; blood-drenched Elektra from sun-swept Grecian isles to the doom-haunted shores of Malibu. For its latest venture into anachronism, revealed two weeks ago in the Carpenter Center at [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Photo by Kenneth Ian Polakoff<b>SITE NON-SPECIFIC</b>Trust the Long Beach Opera as time-and-place travelers. Not so long ago the company asked us to accept a transplant of Richard Strauss&#8217; blood-drenched <i>Elektra </i>from sun-swept Grecian isles to the doom-haunted shores of Malibu. For its latest venture into anachronism, revealed two weeks ago in the Carpenter Center at Cal State Long Beach, the opera in question was Handel&#8217;s <i>Semele </i>— high-flying sex games among the crowd on Mount Olympus&#8217; sacred slopes &#8211; and the curtain rose on an exact replica of the set for that further-down-to-earth epic of recent memory known as <i>Dallas. </i>Jupiter&#8217;s courtship of the nymph Semele went on at real-life Texas-style barbecues, and moved on a few scenes later to a motel complete with neon signage surrounded with a veritable fleet of cut-out cars of late-&#8217;70s vintage. And, to the surprise of nobody among us innumerable Long Beach Opera well-wishers, it all somehow worked. Isabel Milenski, daughter of the company&#8217;s founder, contributed another of her strong, imaginative productions &#8211; daring in outline, never beyond good sense. What mattered most, the preservation of Handelian musical values, came through beautifully projected in the strength of Andreas Mitisek&#8217;s musical leadership and the almost (if not entirely) crystalline clarity of the supporting Musica Angelica instrumental ensemble. Caroline Worra, the Semele, managed her couple of killer arias very nicely; Cynthia Jansen, the best-known name in the cast, was the bitch-goddess Juno and set the stage aflame in her well-known manner. Darcy Scanlin&#8217;s scenery for <i>Semele </i>used dozens of fake cars to good effect. <i>The </i><i>Threepenny </i><i>Opera, </i>Long Beach&#8217;s other June offering, had one genuine police car onstage, to no effect. Christopher Alden, directorial stalwart (along with his brother David) at Long Beach since the company&#8217;s founding, came up this time with a lame-brained staging of the Weill-Brecht masterpiece, empty in sight and sound. There were extensive cuts, and songs were assigned to the wrong characters (beginning with the “Mack the Knife” song sung by Macheath himself!) so as to undercut &#8211; dramatically and musically &#8211; much of the work&#8217;s glorious bite. The right instruments were in the pit, and Mitisek was successful in drawing from them the sounds and rhythms to honor Weill&#8217;s 1928 idea of down-and-dirty jazz. But not many people on the stage seemed capable of carrying that concept forward: only Constance Hauman as a blowzy Mrs. Peachum; Suzan Hanson, who delivered Polly&#8217;s two great songs; and Mark Bringelson as a deliciously corruptible Tiger Brown. But there was no swash and even less buckle in Hans Tester&#8217;s Macheath; the notion of enlisting a male singer (John Altieri) as Jenny (Lotte Lenya&#8217;s role in the original) was a touch of imposed cuteness whose benefits escaped me.<br />
<b>CARLO MARIA GIULINI (1914–2005)</b><br />
It was a sight nobody can forget: the noble figure out of some grand seicento painting, approaching the Philharmonic&#8217;s podium proudly yet humbly. The music Giulini made during his time with us was the personification of that image: aristocratic and eloquent above all. I had the supreme good fortune of spending a week watching him rehearse the Beethoven Fifth in 1981: a warhorse, to be sure, but a work he hadn&#8217;t conducted in 16 years. His performance back then had displeased him; he had taken the time off to rethink his own attitude toward the score. Part of this process had been to re-study the hen-scratches that constituted Beethoven&#8217;s original manuscript, to puzzle over tiny details that might have eluded him 16 years before &#8211; and that might have eluded many other conductors as well. Sure enough, I went home and checked some of those details he showed me with other recordings on my shelves, including a couple of legendary Toscanini versions. Giulini had made some discoveries &#8211; not world-shaking, perhaps, but significant. This tells me much about Giulini not as a man of musicology, but as a man of conscience; that&#8217;s the memory I cherish. His Deutsche Grammophon recording of the Fifth, from those 1981 sessions, abides. His repertory was small, and it was limited to the music that lay within the realm of his own great spirit. At our first meeting &#8211; at a brief interview in Chicago, when he was still principal guest conductor of that city&#8217;s orchestra &#8211; he explained his difficulty with the music of Richard Strauss. “He comes toward me so strongly,” he explained, “that he leaves no room for me to come to him.” Later that day, Giulini conducted Chicago&#8217;s musical forces in Mozart&#8217;s <i>Requiem </i>at Orchestra Hall, and the first notes of that performance, the deep, sorrowing woodwinds, shared those sorrows with me in a way that I can still remember.<br />
I talked to longtime Philharmonic cellist Dan Rothmuller the other day, collecting<br />
Giulini reminiscences. “There&#8217;s a murderous passage in the Beethoven Ninth, one<br />
of many,” Dan recalled. “It has the strings playing in sextuplets building up<br />
to a crescendo. I remember once when Kurt Sanderling was guest-conducting, that<br />
stern East German with a passion for detail. ‘Gentlemen,&#8217; he shouted to the orchestra,<br />
‘that passage is supposed to be the Apocalypse.&#8217; Giulini came, and a couple of<br />
years later we played the Ninth with him, and we came to the same passage. ‘Gentlemen,&#8217;<br />
he told us, ‘this passage is the music of God and the lights of the Firmament.&#8217;”<br />
Last year, on Giulini&#8217;s 90th birthday, Tim Mangan of the <i>Orange County Register<br />
</i>got through to him by phone and published their conversation: sad, moving<br />
and somehow deeply tinged with the Giulini we want to remember. <a href="http://www2.ocregister.com/ocrweb/ocr/article.do?id=93985">Download<br />
it here</a>, and while you read it, listen to the Giulini recording that remains<br />
my absolute favorite, the Dvorák Seventh Symphony with the London Philharmonic<br />
that comes (or used to) on a two-disc EMI set with Nos. 8 and 9. Next week I&#8217;ll<br />
list a few more essential Giulini recordings.<br />
<b>Obiter </b><b>dictum: </b>A quest for pure pleasure drew me back for a second<br />
viewing of the Los Angeles Opera&#8217;s <i>Der </i><i>Rosenkavalier </i>at its next-to-last<br />
performance. Margaret Thompson replaced the ailing Alice Coote as Octavian; Suzanna<br />
Guzmán replaced Thompson as Annina. Both were wonderful.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Movable&#160;Cleveland</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2005/06/movable-cleveland/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2005/06/movable-cleveland/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 16 Jun 2005 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=532</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Photo by Tre VorleightonANTONIN, FRANZ AND RUDI Two clarinets entwine around a soft arpeggio, and Antonin Dvorák&#8217;s F-major Symphony (No. 5 by modern listing, formerly No. 3) is under your skin before you feel its soft touch. No symphony makes its presence known more subtly, more endearingly, yet the work is seldom played. Franz Welser-Möst [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Photo by Tre Vorleighton<b>ANTONIN, FRANZ AND RUDI </b><br />
Two clarinets entwine around a soft arpeggio, and Antonin Dvorák&#8217;s F-major Symphony (No. 5 by modern listing, formerly No. 3) is under your skin before you feel its soft touch. No symphony makes its presence known more subtly, more endearingly, yet the work is seldom played. Franz Welser-Möst and the Cleveland Orchestra performed it at Orange County&#8217;s Segerstrom Hall last week; before that, the last local performance I remember was by Christoph von Dohnányi and the Cleveland Orchestra at Ambassador Auditorium in 1991. Why the orchestra of this particularly gray, unlovable city should claim possession of this particularly radiant, lovable symphony escapes me; lucky Cleveland! The symphony is full of jollity, and also full of ghosts. The ghost of Schubert beguiles me the most. It lurks behind the marvelous good spirits of the opening movement, which is worthy to recall the giggling opening measures of the “Trout” Quintet. Its exuberance is touched with shadows, as it is in the String Quintet of Schubert&#8217;s last year. The symphony&#8217;s slow movement is the most Schubertian of all; the quiet, melancholy shading into exquisite dark lyricism uncannily evokes the extraordinary Andante of the symphony from Schubert&#8217;s deathbed, which has now been rescued from oblivion and published as the Tenth &#8211; and which Dvorák, of course, could not possibly have known. I do, I admit, hold a special place for the Dvorák Fifth; it is based on memories<br />
of long standing. In student days in Vienna, my friend Rudi and I spent many an<br />
afternoon working on this very symphony, in the four-hand piano-duet version that<br />
I had bought, probably for 50 cents, in the used-music back room at Doblinger&#8217;s<br />
music store. I&#8217;ll bet Franz Welser-Möst &#8211; who is, after all, from that sacred<br />
land &#8211; shops there, too.<br />
<b>HOT AND COLD </b><br />
Now Welser-Möst has inherited the Cleveland, with its tradition of performance excellence more burdensome than that of any other American orchestra. Here over the past week he has performed three varied programs in three venues, none of which &#8211; not even at Ojai &#8211; reflects the adventurous musical fare he has brought to Cleveland in his three years there. (Do we need whippersnappers from beyond the mountains to show how Ravel should go, so soon after our own Philharmonic season?) Not only for sentiment, I found the Dvorák the most successful manifestation of Welser-Möst&#8217;s musical profile during his time here. Looking back over my reports on his seasonal visits guest-conducting the Philharmonic, I find them hot and cold in almost equal measure, with words like “bratty” in frequent occurrence. In Cleveland, if David Mermelstein&#8217;s recent <i>Los </i><i>Angeles </i><i>Times </i>interview is to be believed (no easy task with that writer), he incurs critical wrath more often than not. Yet his contract has already been extended. (Zubin Mehta redux?) The orchestra, as heard last week at Segerstrom, at Disney and at the Ojai Festival, is not quite the legendary instrument invented by George Szell and maintained by Dohnányi; as much as one could tell from a tour date, its tone strikes me as high-class ordinary. Bartók&#8217;s Concerto for Orchestra, which followed the Dvorák at Segerstrom, was efficiently delivered but without the biting wit that is at its core. The elegance of Beethoven&#8217;s First Symphony turned flat and logy in the Disney concert from the conductor&#8217;s decision to employ an almost-full-string complement including six double basses; half as many would have been twice more, as Edo de Waart and our own Philharmonic had proved not many weeks before. Nothing in my book could have saved that concert&#8217;s major (in the sense of longest) work, Henri Dutilleux&#8217;s Second Symphony, known as “Le Double” for reasons having to do with the way the orchestral members were seated. I&#8217;ll leave it at that, since what I heard from the stage was just undifferentiated sound unrelated to who sat where. Dutilleux pushes on toward 90. He has his admirers; I am not one. His music descends from the imponderable French academics post-Franck, the d&#8217;Indy crowd, spiced with Stravinsky rhythms and Milhaud jazz &#8211; neither used with grace. “Le Double” has been around; it dates from 1959, and I cannot begin to tell you how delightful my life has been without having heard it until now. It did have the advantage of making Ravel&#8217;s <i>Boléro, </i>which followed it on the program, sound like a masterpiece. <b>THEN OJAI </b><br />
Under the live oaks and sycamores, Welser-Möst and the orchestra played Stravinsky (the “Dunbarton Oaks” Concerto) and Mozart (the “Linz” Symphony) with forces properly reduced on a stage of no discussable acoustic properties, with the sound amplified for folks on the lawn up back. Down front the sound was clear and truly lovely, recognizably “Cleveland” in quality. The novelty was an alto-sax concerto by Ingolf Dahl, a onetime Ojai hand, revered as the teacher of, among others, Michael Tilson Thomas. Noisy and brash, the work survives only as a curio; a knockout performance by Joseph Lulloff was of little avail. On another concert there were dueling concertmasters: the Cleveland&#8217;s William Preucil and the Philharmonic&#8217;s Martin Chalifour, in solo sonatas, some of Bartók&#8217;s beguiling Duets and an utterly worthless, utterly adorable Suite by Moritz Moszkowski. Better yet was Peter Serkin&#8217;s marvelously concocted solo recital &#8211; his first ever at Ojai &#8211; a brainy mix of ancient vocal and keyboard pieces neatly transcribed, mixed in with modern conceits, including a Messiaen bird number that exactly echoed the surrounding landscape. Strangest of all &#8211; and most forgettable &#8211; was an evening of bits and pieces that simply didn&#8217;t work. It started off with <i>Kantrimiusik, </i>a wildly divergent omnium-gatherum of pastoral dances, songs and sound effects somehow cobbled together by German-Argentine minimalist/collagist Mauricio Kagel. This led into more of same, another pastoral gatherum, this time of hey-nonny-nonny persuasion, of tunes invented or collected by the Australian-American charmer Percy Grainger &#8211; harmonized and orchestrated, actually, with more enterprise than is commonly ascribed to his name. Grant Gershon, pressed into service upon the illness of announced music director Oliver Knussen, marshaled his forces &#8211; singers, players, sound effects on- and offstage, including an impressive thunderstorm &#8211; with bravery that struck me as far beyond duty&#8217;s call. At the closing concert &#8211; and about time &#8211; there was a visitation of the kind of new music on which Ojai&#8217;s 59-year reputation rests: a big, rawboned, unashamedly romantic Violin Concerto by Knussen, written three years ago for Pinchas Zukerman and here handsomely dispatched by William Preucil, and <i>Testament </i>by the young (34) British composer Jonathan Cole, conducted by Brad Lubman in its world premiere. A haunting, soft meditation for small ensemble, <i>Testament </i>was underwritten in part by the Sue Knussen Commissioning Fund, to honor the much-missed educator and producer once at the Philharmonic. Next year the Ojai Festival turns 60. Robert Spano and the Atlanta Symphony are<br />
listed among the celebrants, also Dawn Upshaw and Osvaldo Golijov. Celebrations<br />
are in order.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>The Dirty Old Men Meet the&#160;Critics</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2005/06/the-dirty-old-men-meet-the-critics/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2005/06/the-dirty-old-men-meet-the-critics/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 09 Jun 2005 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=531</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Photos by Robert MillardFADED NOBILITY The critics were all over town last week &#8211; dance, theater, music &#8211; convening with their self-importance in full array, convoking their endless panel discussions (I led one), checking out what Los Angeles had to offer that Dayton did not, allowing themselves grudging respect for local amenities. I hung out [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Photos by Robert Millard<b>FADED NOBILITY</b> The critics were all over town last week &#8211; dance, theater, music &#8211; convening with their self-importance in full array, convoking their endless panel discussions (I led one), checking out what Los Angeles had to offer that Dayton did not, allowing themselves grudging respect for local amenities. I hung out with a few of the saner members of the music crowd, who spoke with some awe about Chinatown and even more about Amoeba. After all, New York or Chicago could house some 500 high-rise apartment dwellers, all waiting in line for the elevator, on the land of that awe-inspiring emporium. Our local music makers were at their best. Esa-Pekka and the Philharmonic, with some help from the Pacific Chorale, filled Disney Hall with the audible rainbow that is Ravel&#8217;s <i>Daphnis </i><i>et </i><i>Chloë </i>to end their season. Before had come John Adams&#8217; <i>Dharma </i><i>at </i><i>Big </i><i>Sur </i>— ear-catching in its billowing outbursts around Tracy Silverman&#8217;s electric violin but, for Adams, a curiously static piece. With the hall&#8217;s improved sound system, it didn&#8217;t antagonize the ear as it had during the inaugural concert in October 2003, but it remains a lesser work for Adams &#8211; which still places it on a high shelf. Across the street, the L.A. Opera ended splendidly, with two performances on levels unattained during an otherwise so-so season. No matter that both works &#8211; Verdi&#8217;s <i>Falstaff </i>and Strauss&#8217; <i>Der </i><i>Rosenkavalier </i>— told basically the same tale in much the same way: dirty old man&#8217;s comeuppance at the hands of younger, cleverer connivers. Both resounded gloriously. They&#8217;re still on; for once, a top ticket price of $190 can be reckoned as “mere.” The <i>Falstaff </i>treads old ground. The sets date back to 1982, before there was an opera company, when the Philharmonic&#8217;s great Carlo Maria Giulini let himself be lured into opera. They were make-do then; look for the old laserdisc from when the production was new. But now there is Bryn Terfel&#8217;s Falstaff, which is sheer creative genius &#8211; not just the roisterer of the opera&#8217;s present day but the remnant of yesterday&#8217;s nobility. The comparison, actually, is worth attention: between the whole man &#8211; not the usual Falstaff stereotype &#8211; that Terfel creates in the final scenes of Verdi&#8217;s opera and the Baron Ochs embodied by Kurt Rydl in the <i>Rosenkavalier </i>as marvelously rethought by director Maximilian Schell. At the end, Ochs, too, in his most abject moment of discomfiture, must be reminded by the Marschallin that he, too, is a nobleman; in a quick, telling gesture he draws himself up accordingly. Many an Ochs I have seen has let this precious moment go by. Rydl did not. Kent Nagano conducts both operas: efficiently and nicely paced in the <i>Falstaff; </i>richly expressive and with the full range of authentic affection in the <i>Rosenkavalier. </i>The latter, indeed, is one of the company&#8217;s great triumphs, a visual rewrite of a work so encrusted in a much-observed tradition that you&#8217;d think the slightest new move might upset the balance. But no, from the opening in a bedroom furnished not in period fustian but in bare walls magically drenched in Alan Burrett&#8217;s saturated lighting, to the glorious overstatement of the look of the Baron himself, who seems costumed in neon, to the Marschallin&#8217;s final entrance, when the flush of her face seems to have drained into the unsexed blue of her gown, this is a story told in color and transformed &#8211; by the shaping skills of Max Schell&#8217;s direction and the design genius of Gottfried Helnwein &#8211; into a <i>Rosenkavalier </i>freshly renewed. The singing is every note as glorious as this enlightened production deserves: the clear yet melting sensibility of Adrianne Pieczonka&#8217;s Marschallin; the sturdy, unaffected Octavian of Alice Coote; the airborne shimmer of Elizabeth Futral&#8217;s Sophie &#8211; together in that final trio, which still floats in my ear like enchanted quicksilver. One further touch speaks for the evening&#8217;s high inventive level. Accompanying all three of the (admittedly long) act preludes are projected scenes from the 1926 silent film of <i>Der </i><i>Rosenkavalier, </i>which was directed by Robert Wiene (of <i>Caligari </i>fame), and which now actually go very well with the noisy, trivial music. I&#8217;d love to see the film; both Strauss and his librettist, Hugo von Hofmannsthal, insisted that it contain no action from the opera itself, and the cast did include the Marschallin&#8217;s husband (as the opera did not). We also get to see the young Octavian (played by the renowned Jacque Catelain) riding his horse to battle. Talk about filmic license! (Sudden flash: Could that misleading same-sex clinch on the Opera program book be a still from the film? I&#8217;ll bet!)<br />
<strong>NAGANO&#8217;S WEEK</strong><br />
For his week&#8217;s third major accomplishment, Nagano delivered to a sold-out Royce Hall his <i>Manzanar: </i><i>An </i><i>American </i><i>Story </i>— first developed with his Berkeley Symphony, performed at other California venues, and brought here on a wave of publicity, most of it deserved. To call the work an oratorio is to raise fears; the genre has absorbed much balderdash in recent years. <i>Manzanar, </i>however, rises far above expectations. Its music saves the day. Philip Kan Gotanda&#8217;s play details the Japanese presence in America, from the first arrivals to the forced internment in government camps after Pearl Harbor &#8211; with Manzanar, in Central California, singled out &#8211; to war&#8217;s end, the Vietnam era and the Reagan-engineered congressional “apology.” The text alternates between narration and drama, and was doled out this time among a distinguished cast that included Senator Daniel Inouye and noted actors Martin Sheen and Pat Suzuki. Nagano conducted the American Youth Symphony, which played this once far over its collective heads.<br />
The music is a collaborative affair, with bursts of pop-music pastiche by David Benoit to establish the American timeline and a rather pretty pastorale by Jean-Pascal Beintus underscoring the routine of life at Manzanar. By far the most, and the best, of the music is the work of Naomi Sekiya, Japanese-born, USC-educated. I heard her music first at Ojai a few years ago, where an excellent short orchestral work of hers won a young composer&#8217;s prize; I&#8217;ve encountered a few student works at USC, also with pleasure. None of this prepared me for the power of her <i>Manzanar </i>score, however, which is big, raw, muscular and truly eloquent. Remember the name, Naomi Sekiya; you&#8217;re going to hear it again.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Bad Nights at the&#160;Opera</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2005/06/bad-nights-at-the-opera/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2005/06/bad-nights-at-the-opera/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 09 Jun 2005 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=530</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[It happened on another 9/11 &#8211; 2000, to be exact. Tenor-superior Plácido Domingo, the L.A. Opera&#8217;s newly anointed artistic director, called a press conference, and the freeloaders were all there to sip the opera company&#8217;s coffee and sample Domingo&#8217;s pie-in-the-sky. There was plenty: a new production of Wagner&#8217;s Ring involving George Lucas, a new opera [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><b>It happened on another 9/11</b> &#8211; 2000, to be exact. Tenor-superior Plácido Domingo, the L.A. Opera&#8217;s newly anointed artistic director, called a press conference, and the freeloaders were all there to sip the opera company&#8217;s coffee and sample Domingo&#8217;s pie-in-the-sky. There was plenty: a new production of Wagner&#8217;s <i>Ring </i>involving George Lucas, a new opera by John Williams, continual production swaps with the mighty Kirov of St. Petersburg. A quiet, bespectacled man sat up back. “I am delighted that my friend Alberto Vilar has pledged to me ongoing support for Los Angeles Opera,” said Domingo. “His extraordinary involvement will be manifested in supporting the Los Angeles Opera with an initial donation of $2 million in the 2001-02 season . . .” None of the above proclamations ever achieved fulfillment. </p>
<p>Alberto Vilar&#8217;s name still remains in two places on the L.A. Opera&#8217;s program, on the board of directors and among “Domingo&#8217;s Angels,” an elite list of “individuals who have made a leadership commitment to fulfilling the artistic initiatives of the Domingo seasons 2001–2005.” That does not, however, mesh with recent news about this flamboyant, if controversial, arts figure, co-founder (with Gary Tanaka) of the money-management firm Amerindo Investment Advisors, who with his partner spent the recent holiday weekend in a New York City jail facing criminal-fraud charges, unable to raise bail. There, as of June 6, Vilar remained. </p>
<p>In his day, Vilar rode his technology stocks to dazzling heights, and used the take to finance his operatic passion. At the Metropolitan his benevolence got him his name, in foot-high gold letters (recently removed), over the “Vilar Grand Tier” and a lifetime seat in Orchestra Row A-101 (a lousy location for a true opera lover for both sight and sound, if truth be told). London&#8217;s Royal Opera sported a Vilar Young Artists&#8217; Program; the Vilar Center for the Arts stood proud in Avon, Colorado. </p>
<p>By the time Vilar had come to flash his bankroll at Domingo and the Los Angeles Opera, Vilar&#8217;s fortunes were already showing signs of tottering. One technology fund he controlled, <i>The </i><i>New </i><i>York </i><i>Times </i>reported, fell 64.8 percent in 2000, and declined another 50.8 percent in 2001. The story circulated at the time that Vilar had decided to play footsie with Domingo in his new Los Angeles post only after the San Francisco Opera, which he had previously supported, backed away from his choice as artistic director and went with the modernist-leaning Pamela Rosenberg. For whatever reason, Vilar and Domingo became entwined. In the summer of 2000, Vilar invested heavily in Domingo&#8217;s prestigious “Operalia” talent competition, and then stayed on to lay his $2 million pledge on the company itself &#8211; plus $2 million to Domingo&#8217;s other company, the Washington Opera. </p>
<p>Almost immediately, things started not happening. The best anyone can glean from the public-relations strongholds at the Met, the Washington Opera and Los Angeles is that part of Vilar&#8217;s pledges &#8211; a total hovering around some $20 million over five years &#8211; has been restored by friends, including, of course, Domingo. (Rude thought: Might this be why the great man continues to pull down his singer&#8217;s fees, at an age when most tenors might sit back and retire the tonsils?) In 2002, New York Philharmonic conductor Lorin Maazel replaced, from his own pocket, a $700,000 pledge that Vilar had made for the orchestra&#8217;s conductors&#8217; competition. </p>
<p>None of this, of course, adds up to the kind of boondoggle that results in a kind-faced, opera-loving gentleman &#8211; 64, born in New Jersey, raised in Cuba and Puerto Rico &#8211; being picked up by the feds at the Newark Airport on a holiday weekend. According to government sources, the charges involved an actual theft: $5 million from an old friend and Amerindo investor, and from three other women who accuse Vilar of helping himself to millions more of their money and refusing to give it back or to come up with promised interest. </p>
<p>One of the alleged victims is a woman who should be dear to all local opera lovers: Tara Colburn, the very classy, slender lady who sat down front center and set the whole Dorothy Chandler Pavilion aglow by her presence. Tara had endowed the opera company to pay for the supertitles that run above each performance; her husband, Richard, had paid for that whole music school across the street. Tara had deposited a large sum in Vilar&#8217;s investment firm, and when the market turned skittish, she tried to get it back. She died in May 2003. Vilar still hasn&#8217;t returned her money.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Goddard&#039;s&#160;Kid</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2005/06/goddards-kid/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2005/06/goddards-kid/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 02 Jun 2005 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=529</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Amor, Amor . . . The Liebersons have spent the week with us, and we are the better for it. Peter Lieberson is the son of Goddard, who in his day was one of music&#8217;s authentic heroes. Goddard Lieberson was the head of Columbia Records in the 1950s, the early days of the LP, when [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><b>Amor, Amor . . . </b><br /> The Liebersons have spent the week with us, and we are the better for it. Peter<br />
Lieberson is the son of Goddard, who in his day was one of music&#8217;s authentic heroes.<br />
Goddard Lieberson was the head of Columbia Records in the 1950s, the early days<br />
of the LP, when records were a dominant means of preserving and transmitting the<br />
essence of culture. He recorded all the music of Stravinsky, most of Schoenberg,<br />
the playing of Glenn Gould, Bernstein&#8217;s Mahler, the first music anybody heard<br />
by Steve Reich or Pierre Boulez. He didn&#8217;t care that Columbia lost its shirt recording<br />
esoteric repertory, because it also sold millions of copies of André Kostelanetz<br />
and <i>South Pacific </i>and balanced the books that way. Young Peter grew up<br />
in a home where Stravinsky came to dinner, and Miles Davis. His mother was the<br />
dancer and actress Vera Zorina; you saw her in great old movies (<i>The</i> <i>Goldwyn<br />
Follies, </i>for one) and heard her as the speaker in Stravinsky&#8217;s recording of<br />
his <i>Perséphone. </i>Inevitably, Peter grew up with a head full of music. </p>
<p>His own influences included Milton Babbitt and Donald Martino and Tibetan Buddhism. A few years ago, Peter Serkin was here to perform a Lieberson piano concerto, which I found full of wheels going around but not very friendly. At one of last week&#8217;s concerts at Disney Hall there was another dry-point early work, Lieberson&#8217;s <i>Drala </i>from 1986. Both had been written before Lorraine Hunt entered Lieberson&#8217;s life, and became his wife and his voice. Most of his music that was played here these past two weeks &#8211; the songs to texts by Rilke and Neruda, a Piano Quintet and a Horn Concerto &#8211; postdate that meeting. It is all a different kind of music, by a composer wondrously transformed by the presence of, let&#8217;s say, the greatest dramatic singer of our time. Before Lorraine Hunt Lieberson came onstage to join Esa-Pekka Salonen and the Philharmonic in her husband&#8217;s <i>Neruda </i><i>Songs </i>last week, I might have wondered why management was devoting that much program time to not that eminent a composer. Half an hour later, I wanted it all to go back and start again. </p>
<p>The poems are love songs by Pablo Neruda to his third wife, Matilde &#8211; not ardent mooncalf stuff but aching, middle-aged, wise love full of dark coloration. Lieberson, wisely I think, left them in the original Spanish, allowing Lorraine to draw upon gorgeous, sensuous vocal purples and dark wines for such words as <i>luna </i>and <i>azul. </i>His orchestra is small and beautifully used, always mirroring the rapture of the words. A recording has been promised; count the days. At a “Green Umbrella” concert a few days later there were more songs for Lorraine, a set of Rilke settings with piano, more complex in musical line and with the rasp of German words rather than the mellow Spanish. But the instrumental works &#8211; the Piano Quintet, with its charming echoes of country fiddling, and the jolly bluster of the Horn Concerto, with visiting virtuoso William Purvis to blow it sky-high &#8211; were further evidence of the warming and humanizing that seems to have taken hold in Lieberson&#8217;s music these past few years, and it isn&#8217;t hard to figure out why. Love conquers all. </p>
<p><b>Double Doom</b> <br />
A proper performance of Franz Schubert&#8217;s <i>Winterreise </i>can move an audience to deep sadness with nothing more than a singer and a pianist delivering the cycle of 24 songs alone on the stage. Alone in a cold attic room, a reader can make his or her way through Johann von Goethe&#8217;s <i>Sorrows </i><i>of </i><i>Young </i><i>Werther </i>with nothing more than the book in hand, and be driven at the end to suicide &#8211; as, apparently, hundreds of impressionable adolescents were in the &#8212;&#8212;&#8211;<br />
AUTHOR&#8217;s day. Combining the two as a single entertainment, a venture in redundancy to say the least, might produce, you&#8217;d think, a roomful of lemmings. </p>
<p>You would, however, be reckoning without the enterprise of the Long Beach Opera, whose new managerial force, Andreas Mitisek, is apparently out to prove himself ready to maintain high aloft the brave banners of iconoclasm erected by the company&#8217;s founding spirits. Against every better judgment I could possibly summon under the circumstances, Mitisek has, indeed, worked out a conflation of these two trajectories down the dark road of heartbreak and self-destruction, and played them off against each other without violating the integrity of either. This all happened not in the company&#8217;s usual performing venue at Cal State Long Beach, but in an experimental space, not much larger than this page, at the Edison Theater in downtown Long Beach, where, according to plan, such small-scale LBO productions will occur from time to time. </p>
<p>Mitisek directed, gave the pre-performance talk, hung out with the crowd, did<br />
everything but pour coffee; it&#8217;s clear that he wants this to be <i>his </i>company,<br />
and he&#8217;s entitled. He has been fortunate in his principal performer this time,<br />
a young baritone named Erik Nelson Werner, who sang the 24 songs of Schubert&#8217;s<br />
cycle (23 of the 24, actually, since one song was an offstage recording of “Frühlingstraum”<br />
for reasons that escape me) quite creditably and interspersed them with forceful<br />
spoken excerpts, in English, from Werther&#8217;s self-pitying monologues. That much,<br />
at least, worked quite well. For staging there was a cluttered attic room, a bed<br />
and scattered trash &#8211; almost exactly the same set, if anyone cares to remember,<br />
as the 1986 Long Beach <i>Tales </i><i>of </i><i>Hoffmann. </i>Unfeeling, rejecting<br />
Lotte was done in dumb show by a dancer, Jennifer Hart Jackson. At the very end,<br />
when the dead Werther lay in her lap, she extended one hand in a caress &#8211; a small<br />
directorial touch that I found extremely moving. Michelle Schumann was the pianist,<br />
behind a scrim. Midway, she added part of the slow movement of Schubert&#8217;s last<br />
piano sonata, which, in this context, became the saddest music in the world -<br />
and also, at that moment at least, the most beautiful. </p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>A Deaf&#160;EAR</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2005/05/a-deaf-ear/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2005/05/a-deaf-ear/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 26 May 2005 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[A HOLLOW RING The news had begun to circulate over the weekend, so that by Monday night the crowd at the County Museum for the EAR Unit season&#8217;s final concert was considerably larger than usual. The news involved decisions by LACMA&#8217;s directors to end, or at least curtail, its activities as a presenter of concerts [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><b>A HOLLOW RING </b><br /> The news had begun to circulate over the weekend, so that by Monday night the<br />
crowd at the County Museum for the EAR Unit season&#8217;s final concert was considerably<br />
larger than usual. The news involved decisions by LACMA&#8217;s directors to end, or<br />
at least curtail, its activities as a presenter of concerts in its 600-seat Bing<br />
Theater, activities that considerably predate the building itself and that include<br />
the Monday Evening Concerts that have been the oldest continuous series of its<br />
kind anywhere in the country. “Its kind” has meant programs of high adventure:<br />
contemporary music, early music, music from the familiar repertory from all periods,<br />
in performances of unusually high caliber. There have also been programs on other<br />
nights: concerts of more familiar repertory supported by the Rosalinde Gilbert<br />
Estate, Ensemble Residencies by two of the area&#8217;s most enterprising chamber groups<br />
— the EAR Unit and XTET &#8211; and free jazz concerts on the museum&#8217;s plaza. </p>
<p>Now, suddenly, word is out that the ax is poised and about to fall. Before the EAR Unit concert, as it happened, there was a dinner at the museum for visiting arts journalists at which the program&#8217;s two composers, Paul Dresher and Mort Subotnick, legitimized the event by talking about their music. There were also boilerplate speeches by the museum&#8217;s curators and other reps, rattling on about LACMA&#8217;s commitment to the arts, but these rang hollow given the occasion. There is further word of negotiations still going on, but the situation at this writing is that the Monday Evening Concerts &#8211; the most creative series, the direct inheritor of an enterprise that began (as “Evenings on the Roof”) on a Silver Lake rooftop in 1939 and has been the heartbeat of the Los Angeles creative impulse since then &#8211; will be vouchsafed one more year of life, under the leadership of Dorrance Stalvey, who has run the series since 1971, and then close down forever. The free jazz will continue. The residency programs and the Rosalinde Gilbert series will be discontinued. </p>
<p>People around town are writing letters, as well they should. There were things wrong with the museum concerts, most of all the drab, uncomfortable auditorium, which was much too large. Stalvey, 75 and not well, has never had the support from the museum that would have enabled him to publicize his concerts properly; some amazing events have gone on before audiences of 100 or fewer. The eventual end of programming at the museum does not pull the plug on small-music concerts in the area, of course. There&#8217;s Santa Monica&#8217;s Jacaranda (see below), which I&#8217;ve come to love; there&#8217;s more and more good music at the Zipper Concert Hall downtown, including the valuable “Piano Spheres” series, and at Disney Hall&#8217;s REDCAT. There are the hot-ticket “Historic Sites” concerts, if you can get near them. I am concerned, however, at the decline of serious music events at UCLA, whose current program manager, David Sefton, seems to have his head buried in esoteric foreign theater while one of the city&#8217;s best halls, Royce, goes sadly underused. </p>
<p>But music at LACMA has always been more than any of this, because Stalvey &#8211; and Stalvey alone &#8211; has run the series as a flowing pipeline to the world of current creativity, blended into the strong impulses of music&#8217;s great past. Cases in point: the Penderecki Quartet concerts, which I exulted over last week, or the New York New Music Ensemble, or the Parisii, or the amazing bassist Scodanibbio &#8211; all of whom entered Los Angeles&#8217; awareness thanks to Stalvey&#8217;s booking. The EAR Unit, rounding out 18 years&#8217; residence at LACMA, was and remains a unique organization, above all for a certain built-in ecstasy in its playing that sends everything skyward. </p>
<p>Most of the EAR members and Subotnick grew up at CalArts, after all; there was something in Mort&#8217;s new big piece they played the other night, the 2003 <i>Release </i>for electronic sounds and instruments, that seemed to sum up the broad gestures of their lifetimes: something of his pioneering earlier work, the electronic/symphonic <i>Silver </i><i>Apples </i><i>of </i><i>the </i><i>Moon </i>or the mixed-media <i>Key </i><i>to </i><i>Songs, </i>historic but still very fresh and exuberant. So, too, for Paul Dresher&#8217;s <i>The </i><i>Tyrant </i>— unusually, for him, a non-electronic piece, a monodrama for tenor and instruments drawn from an Italo Calvino text on tyranny that also became Luciano Berio&#8217;s <i>Un </i><i>Re </i><i>in </i><i>Ascolto: </i>tense, bitter drama handsomely set forth by the apparently indestructible Jonathan Mack. </p>
<p><b>A HAPPIER ENDING </b><br />
Splendidly planned and produced, the Jacaranda concerts at Santa Monica&#8217;s First Presbyterian Church give me the impression of a series of aristocratic musical evenings fashioned by exceptionally intelligent people for their own pleasure first of all, and for anyone of like mind who happens by. The exceptionally intelligent people are the partners Patrick Scott and Mark Hilt, and the second year of Jacaranda, which concluded last weekend with a Benjamin Britten program, has been a glowing tribute to the high inventive level that these concerts have attained from the start. The like-minded, furthermore, have been happening by in droves. The church itself is handsome, small and comfortable; its new concertgoing friends pray that the current round of repairs and additions will keep it so. Patrick does the welcoming, and writes the uncommonly informative program notes. Mark is the organist and choir director, and the one small drawback at this Britten evening was that the Chancel Choir, numbering 14, is not quite ready for prime time. </p>
<p>Everything else was. The Denali Quartet, which has been Jacaranda&#8217;s resident string group from the start and grows in strength and expressive depth, mastered the Britten Third Quartet, a work of remarkable richness and subtlety of tone, centered on a slow movement that is a long, haunting violin solo with other instruments massed as a soft shimmer underneath. Oboist Keve Wilson and violist Alma Lisa Fernandez unearthed Britten solo works seldom heard, and the chorus did muster a fair degree of strength at the end to deal with the mix of the childlike and the visionary in the remarkable cantata <i>Rejoice </i><i>in </i><i>the </i><i>Lamb. </i></p>
<p>Jacaranda&#8217;s third season begins in October with an American program. The whole<br />
season isn&#8217;t quite set, but what&#8217;s been confirmed includes a lot of my favorite<br />
music and, perhaps, yours as well. They may run out of music at LACMA, but not<br />
in Santa Monica.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Conversation&#160;Pieces</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2005/05/conversation-pieces/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2005/05/conversation-pieces/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 19 May 2005 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[All Fours Two nights of high musical adventure at the start of the month were reason enough for gratitude: to the dauntless, imaginative programming and performance skills of the Penderecki String Quartet, and to the leadership of the County Museum, which has brought the group here repeatedly for some of the best chamber-music events I [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><b>All Fours </b><br /> Two nights of high musical adventure at the start of the month were reason enough<br />
for gratitude: to the dauntless, imaginative programming and performance skills<br />
of the Penderecki String Quartet, and to the leadership of the County Museum,<br />
which has brought the group here repeatedly for some of the best chamber-music<br />
events I have encountered anywhere in the world in recent years. The Penderecki<br />
— Toronto-based despite its name &#8211; has sailed into challenging new music with<br />
ardor and creative impulse worthy of its namesake in his own early, astonishing<br />
years (and therefore, alas, far beyond the damping of those flames in his recent<br />
years). On this visit, the ensemble also took on similar challenges in music from<br />
earlier times: extraordinary works by Haydn and Beethoven in which the urge to<br />
move beyond familiar boundaries throbbed no less powerfully. Aside from one trashy<br />
bit easily forgotten, in fact, both programs were strictly edge-of-seat stuff.</p>
<p>“Surely the saddest thing ever said in notes,” wrote Richard Wagner of the opening music of Beethoven&#8217;s C-sharp minor Quartet (Opus 131), thus setting aside his own third-act Prelude to <i>Tristan </i><i>und </i><i>Isolde. </i>Here is Beethoven a year from death, illness-racked in a world swept by his music&#8217;s growing fame . . . “tapped and drained and physicked and hayseed-bathed and narcotized,” writes Joseph Kerman, “[ordering] in the string quartet what he was so pitifully unable to order in any other aspect of his existence.” The exercise of compositional power in this stupendous work grabs you in the dismal emptiness of that opening fugue with its dying falls into bleak dissonances. It releases you, also somewhat tapped and narcotized, 40 minutes later. </p>
<p>The dedicated performances, of which the Penderecki Quartet&#8217;s was one, jar you mightily with every one of the music changes, because those changes are like nothing that has ever happened in music before that time. C sharp to D, the squeeze over just a half-step; D grinding back to C sharp: These shifts, for 1826, represent music&#8217;s ultimate bad manners. Beethoven delivers these blows not spread throughout a classical format with four movements neatly spaced, but in a nonstop 40-minute expanse with no moment to breathe and every change delivered as a rude jolt. As well as I think I know the sequence of astonishing events in this one-of-a-kind work, I was delightedly swept away by the Penderecki performance, the explosive power of its transitions, the sublime if brief relaxations in the slow variations, the bone-crushing exuberance of its final measures. </p>
<p><b>Secret Messages </b><br />
Exactly a century separates Alban Berg&#8217;s <i>Lyric </i><i>Suite </i>of 1926 from the tortures that produced Beethoven&#8217;s Opus 131. Recent researches in the form of newly discovered letters, fragments and manuscripts reveal that this work, too, is a document of torture, a fabric of interwoven references and messages relating to Berg&#8217;s secret affair(s), with the person or persons in question subtly identified by initials, which then become embedded in the musical themes. The score thus becomes a complicated web of clues leading toward the elaborate plotting of a love affair that, in all probability, was never fulfilled and was never even meant to be. (The final, climactic quotation from Wagner&#8217;s <i>Tristan </i><i>und </i><i>Isolde, </i>that epic of coitus interruptus, all but screams this out loud.) </p>
<p>What should be a lot more important is the beauty of the music; this, again, was<br />
the element made most luminous by the Penderecki, intense and stirring. I know<br />
of two ways to approach this work. One takes most seriously Berg&#8217;s capitulation,<br />
for the first time in a large score, to the 12-tone principles of his teacher<br />
Schoenberg, and delivers the work as proud if somewhat uptight product of Vienna<br />
II. The other reacts more seriously to the music&#8217;s many built-in rubrics (<i>amoroso</i>,<br />
<i>estatico, giovale</i>) and respects the urging of the title itself. I found<br />
this a deeply moving performance, possibly the most so of my experience. It seemed<br />
in a strange way to bridge the century between these two troubled masterworks:<br />
the glistening, insinuating, delirious scherzi of both; the lyric urgency of their<br />
slow movements, which takes on an almost human throb. </p>
<p><b>Other Voices</b> <br />
Witold Lutoslawski&#8217;s one String Quartet began the first program; one of Joseph Haydn&#8217;s 83 works in that medium &#8211; the C-major, Opus 54 No. 2 &#8211; began the second: works 177 years apart, once again original unto themselves. The Haydn, in fact, is quite an amazing work. Its departures from the hypothetical Rule Book of Classical Practice begin in the slow movement, wherein the first violin soars high above the quiet melodic line in a rhapsodic, Gypsy-like improvisation. They continue with the crushing dissonances in the Trio of the Minuet, not at all your basic 18th-century <i>dancerie. </i>They conclude when the finale, not the usual jovial sendoff, turns into a quiet, slow benediction. Expect the unexpected, Haydn tells us, and in no uncertain terms. </p>
<p>Lutoslawski, a frequent visitor here until his death in 1994, fashioned his String Quartet, as many of his works, on a flexible blending of chance principles and strict usage: elements not necessarily audible from out front but clear enough to musicians brave enough to work through his ideas onstage. What comes over from, say, the combination of players working simultaneously in different rhythmic variants and with changing textures, is a music of terrific emotional impact, often shading with brutal suddenness toward huge climaxes, then back to a shattering, sudden silence. It is also, as these words may suggest, not the world&#8217;s easiest music to describe. Its power, however, is beyond argument, as is its ability to bring out the best in brave performance ensembles. </p>
<p>Oh yes, I mentioned “trash” back there, didn&#8217;t I? That was supplied by Omar Daniel&#8217;s<br />
<i>Annunciation, </i>wherein the 45-year-old Canadian composer seeks to distill,<br />
via string quartet, color slides and some vague electronic grumbling, the moment<br />
of the Angel Gabriel breaking the news to Mary as captured by seven Renaissance<br />
masters. Since that particular biblical moment has inspired some of the world&#8217;s<br />
most sublime art, as the slide show all too clearly proved, you&#8217;d think that perhaps<br />
an upstart composer like Mr. Daniel might want to earn his spurs with a musical<br />
setting of perhaps an R. Crumb cartoon or a Carnation Baby calendar. You&#8217;d be<br />
wrong. </p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>The Lemons of&#160;Orange</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2005/05/the-lemons-of-orange/</link>
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		<pubDate>Thu, 12 May 2005 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[Photo by Betty FriedmanBY GEORGE The Pacific Symphony&#8217;s American Composers Festival is a class act if ever one was. The fifth running, which ended last weekend, may have been a lumpier mix than some, but it brought some interesting music to venues in Irvine and Costa Mesa, and some of its composers came along as [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Photo by Betty Friedman<b>BY GEORGE</b><br />
The Pacific Symphony&#8217;s American Composers Festival is a class act if ever one<br />
was. The fifth running, which ended last weekend, may have been a lumpier mix<br />
than some, but it brought some interesting music to venues in Irvine and Costa<br />
Mesa, and some of its composers came along as well. Interspersed among the four<br />
main concerts there were talks and exhibitions. The Pacific Symphony management<br />
produced a splendid DVD full of archival material and interviews; everybody got<br />
a free copy. That&#8217;s what you call enlightenment.<br />
Joseph Horowitz plans these festivals: not just a lot of good music, but concerts interestingly built around Horowitz&#8217;s own area of concern, the history of interaction between serious music making and the consciousness of American audiences. The first of this year&#8217;s concerts dealt particularly with American composers exploring the world. It began at some distance, with Colin McPhee journeying to Bali in the 1930s and trying, not entirely successfully, to transfer the sounds of a gamelan to Western instruments. (McPhee died in 1964, in an alcoholic haze on the UCLA faculty, having failed to persuade that famously shortsighted institution to recognize ethnomusicology as a legitimate study.) From recent times a McPhee imitator, Canada&#8217;s José Evangelista came up with more pseudo-Balinese stuff, reminiscent of Muzak in a tiki-tiki cocktail lounge. Something of Lou Harrison&#8217;s far more observant gamelan-inspired music would have been appropriate here, but he is being held on tap for next year&#8217;s festival. Instead, in a giant leap forward, we soared airborne on the clarinet of Richard Stoltzman, to the maximal minimalism of Steve Reich&#8217;s <i>New </i><i>York </i><i>Counterpoint </i>and the Yankee aphorisms of John Adams&#8217; <i>Gnarly </i><i>Buttons. </i>Not Yankee but Appalachian, George Crumb &#8211; “the Uncle of Us All,” as I called him the last time he was in town &#8211; was on hand for the second concert. A Sunday-evening program in modest surroundings consisted entirely of his music, with Uncle George himself, in his easygoing twang and deep musical wisdom, as host. He is such good company that it&#8217;s easy to forget the power of his music from long ago, the paralyzing electricity of <i>Black </i><i>Angels </i>or the breath-stopping subtleties of the <i>Ancient </i><i>Voices, </i>not to mention the disarming portrait of the Crumb family dogs, scored for junk instruments, with which he beguiled us last time. This time the music was mostly ethereal, hovering on the edge of silence: the <i>Voice </i><i>of </i><i>the </i><i>Whales </i>and <i>Lux </i><i>Aeterna, </i>with the players in half-masks to enhance the sense of non-worldliness. The music hangs in the air and seems to penetrate our every pore, not merely our ears. Crumb enhances the sense of distance with instruments of many worlds: a sitar from <i>there </i>combined with flute and percussion from <i>here. </i><b>VANITY FAIR</b>  Joe Horowitz, soft-spoken, rabbinical in mien, a veteran of the wars as music<br />
critic and concert manager, has found an interesting niche in his overview of<br />
the history of musical consumership, nicely detailed in previous books on the<br />
inane media exploitation of Toscanini in the conductor&#8217;s last, almost-senile years,<br />
and on the mass hysteria that sent audiences gaga by the thousands &#8211; mostly women<br />
— in the early days of Wagner adoration. His new book, <i>Classical </i><i>Music<br />
</i><i>in </i><i>America </i>(Norton), casts a broader net: not so much a story<br />
of star performers or composers as about promoters and audiences across the land,<br />
and about high culture and low manipulators in the broad panorama of the growth<br />
of America&#8217;s musical taste. You wonder at the curious fellowship of Beethoven<br />
and Barnum, and at their survival. It&#8217;s all gossip of the highest order.<br />
I wonder, therefore, what kind of chapter the Pacific Symphony might merit in some future edition of Horowitz&#8217;s book, if he ever gets around to allotting the West Coast the space it merits (which he hasn&#8217;t, yet). Here is an orchestra like several in the area &#8211; Long Beach, Pasadena, Ventura, Hollywood Bowl &#8211; drawing its personnel from the pool of freelance players who work in the studio by day and salve their consciences by tossing off a symphony or two at night. The PSO offers a 10-program classical subscription season, plus pops and kiddies&#8217; concerts, about a third of what a full-time orchestra (the Philharmonic, say) plays. Its personnel remains fairly constant from concert to concert, even from year to year, but you can&#8217;t talk about a distinctive orchestral “personality” when players must shift style so drastically from one gig to the next. The orchestra was founded in 1978; Carl St. Clair is only the second conductor. You have to dig deep to discover the name of the first; people don&#8217;t talk about Keith Clark except to hold their noses when they mention particular performances. St. Clair, whose talents I would list as middle-echelon all-purpose, is locally adored. He is young-looking, sort of cute with major hair, talks freely of his friendship with Lenny and other flamboyant notables, and builds his prestige with a few guest shots on European podiums. The orchestra has gold-plated an aura by commissioning a few new works by American composers in that safe, oracular mode that lets audiences believe that they&#8217;re hearing new music but enables them to emerge without a scratch: an <i>American </i><i>Requiem </i>here, a <i>Vietnam </i><i>Oratorio </i>there. You know the stuff; it&#8217;s a whole repertory designed to allow boonie orchestras on limited rehearsal schedules to gratify local donors with player- and listener-friendly affectations of High Artistic Significance. And now those local donors will stand all the taller, as the Pacific Symphony readies its travel togs for its first-ever European tour, in the spring of 2006, with some of this grand American repertory in its luggage. Think of it, this ad hoc aggregation of studio freelancers and part-timers, touring the concert halls of Europe just like the Boston Symphony and the Los Angeles Philharmonic. There&#8217;s pride for you. Or “vanity,” did I hear someone whisper? Back home in Costa Mesa, a new venue is being readied for the Pacific Symphony upon its return. The new Segerstrom Hall, with its 2,000 seats, is bound to be an improvement on the older, 3,000-seat Segerstrom Hall across the way &#8211; although the most glamorous of the opening-week celebrations, the visiting Russians with their ballets and operas, take place in the old hall. Meanwhile, as in some of the best operas you can name, the dark clouds gather. Opera Pacific, not so long ago a major adornment at the old hall, now totters: one performance canceled, one new production replaced with a warehouse item, the once-splendid <i>Porgy </i><i>and </i><i>Bess </i>reduced to an unstaged version. Nobody ever said it would be easy.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Six Feet Two, Eyes of&#160;Blue</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2005/05/six-feet-two-eyes-of-blue/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2005/05/six-feet-two-eyes-of-blue/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 05 May 2005 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[BOY-OH-BOY We have yet to experience the pleasure of observing Susan Graham in action on the operatic stage, but her solo recital at the Chandler Pavilion, from first note to last, was an event of high and delightful theater. “First note” consisted of her acting out simply, with her fingers slinking insinuatingly around the edge [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><b>BOY-OH-BOY </b></p>
<p>We have yet to experience the pleasure of observing Susan Graham in action on the operatic stage, but her solo recital at the Chandler Pavilion, from first note to last, was an event of high and delightful theater. “First note” consisted of her acting out simply, with her fingers slinking insinuatingly around the edge of Malcolm Martineau&#8217;s piano, tracing the insidious double meanings of delightful Apollinaire nonsense texts amplified to triple and quadruple meanings in a set of endearing Poulenc songs. “Last note” was the desperate high hilarity of her final encore, “Sexy Lady,” an autobiographical lament created for her by Ben Moore, detailing the sad fate of a 6-foot-2 mezzo-soprano of irresistible stature and honeyed voice, condemned by these physical magnificences to a lifetime of roles as trousered, oversexed, male warriors. (Sad, but boy-oh-boy fabulous . . . or did you miss her Octavian in the Met broadcast of <i>Der </i><i>Rosenkavalier </i>a couple of weeks before?) </p>
<p>She is a treasure, this Graham, a matter happily known to opera audiences everywhere but here. The breadth of her program was astonishing in itself: not just the usual recital routine with the solid stuff at first and then the Twinkies. This time an adoring near-capacity house was better rewarded, with an elegantly planned range of entertainments to engage both the intelligence and the delight of its hearers, starting with the insidious wit of Poulenc and Ravel balanced against the radiant lyricism of Berlioz from a century earlier. Following intermission there was a momentary slump via some vapid note-spinning by the opportunistic yet woefully talentless Jake Heggie, but that emptiness was soon redeemed with a cheering gathering of Ives, unfamiliar and extraordinarily beautiful. At the end, where the lightweight novelty numbers go on most recital programs, there came instead a set of Mahler, haunting and powerful. A singer who trusts her audience with this kind of programming deserves a return visit. Is it ungallant to suggest that the title role in Offenbach&#8217;s <i>Grand </i><i>Duchess </i><i>of </i><i>Gerolstein, </i>on the books for the Los Angeles Opera&#8217;s next season, has been allotted to only the second-best choice? <br />
<b><br />
THE RIGHT “TOUCH” </b></p>
<p>Alone of the hell-raising artists who made up the so-called New York School in the 1950s &#8211; among them the composers John Cage and Morton Feldman and the painter Philip Guston &#8211; Christian Wolff survives; he has always been the least-known. Until his recent retirement he taught classics at Dartmouth. His 2002 piano piece called <i>Touch, </i>written for the Stanford pianist and teacher Thomas Schultz, was the major work on Schultz&#8217;s Piano Spheres recital at Zipper Hall last week, the season&#8217;s final concert in this nicely planned series. </p>
<p>Like much of the work of his New York Schoolmates, Wolff&#8217;s 20-minute piece is a neat mix of options and strictures. Dynamics are left to the performer&#8217;s choice, and there are times when the manuscript even leaves unspecified whether a passage belongs in treble or bass clef. But, as Schultz pointed out in well-written program notes, and did again in congenial talk before his performance, such matters are of less importance than matters of texture, drive and actual sound. In these regards I found <i>Touch </i>an exceptionally attractive new work for piano. I would also urge on the enlightened Piano Spheres management, whose series has become one of this city&#8217;s major assets (although you wouldn&#8217;t know this from the paltry size of last week&#8217;s crowd), to consider ways of enhancing the value of premieres such as this by scheduling second, third and fourth hearings in the not-too-distant future. Premieres are all very well; however, I left Thomas Schultz&#8217;s concert with a lot of other good music in my head, but an immediate desire to hear that one piece again. </p>
<p>The “other good music” included one of Karlheinz Stockhausen&#8217;s killer Klavierstücke and a big, dramatic work by Frederic Rzewski, one of his marvelous “Four Pieces” from 1977. There was also considerable time wasted, alas, with a pair of wispy, cruelly overextended pieces by the Bay Area Korean composer Hyo-Shin Na, where a repeat of the Christian Wolff would have been a more imaginative choice. But I dream. <br />
<b><br />
SOME OF MY BEST FRIENDS . . . </b></p>
<p>On a summer evening some 30 years ago, a friend and I arrived at Troisgros, the legendary three-star multifork restaurant in the south of France, aglow with anticipation for a dinner we had reserved many months before. Upon being seated, we noted with horror the adjoining table, where sat a company of well-fed executive types heavily wreathed in cigar smoke. Mustering my rudimentary French, I cast my culinary hopes upon their mercies &#8211; to no avail. Fortunately, Monsieur Troisgros allowed us to postpone dinner until the air had cleared. His explanation came with a resigned shrug: “Ce <i>sont </i><i>des </i><i>Belges.” </i></p>
<p>Memories of that dinner &#8211; not the masterworks from the Troisgros kitchen but the atrocities that preceded &#8211; returned loud and clear at Disney Hall last weekend as the Philharmonic, organ and all, took on Joseph Jongen&#8217;s <i>Symphonie </i><i>Concertante, </i>music as painful to the senses as anything I can remember being imposed upon me in my long years on the local scene: music, indeed, of a terribleness so wretched as to stir up memories of those clouds of cigar smoke in Roanne that night of contrasting fragrances so long ago. Monsieur Jongen, perhaps I neglected to inform you, was also a Belgian. </p>
<p>The music dates from 1926, composed originally for the monster pipe organ at the Wanamaker department store in Philadelphia (where I once participated in a <i>St. </i><i>Matthew </i><i>Passion </i>sing-along, standing next to the necktie counter). Imagine the loudest, most chromatically convoluted, defiantly non-ending piece of César Franck&#8217;s organ music, and paste onto that an orchestral counterpart equally loud and long, but also grindingly out of tune with the organ (as orchestras-versus-organs inevitably are). Thirty-five minutes pass. The ears ache, the teeth rattle, you wish for a lungful of Belgian cigar smoke as blessed relief. Before that, on this disastrously downhill program, had come the wonderfully smart, insinuating Piano Concerto of Maurice Ravel; before <i>that, </i>the clear-headed, ballsy First Symphony of Beethoven. </p>
<p>Edo de Waart conducted; apparently he likes the thing, and has even recorded it.<br />
Jean-Yves Thibaudet was soloist in the Ravel, mucho zippy. Cherry Rhodes, dressed<br />
in Dracula colors, was seated that day at the organ. At the end, where even a<br />
loud C-major chord usually draws a standing ovation from the Disney crowd, there<br />
was next to none. There is hope for us yet.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>International&#160;Menu</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2005/04/international-menu/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2005/04/international-menu/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 21 Apr 2005 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=524</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Blini Three orchestras held the Disney stage on successive evenings last week, diverse in program offerings and in musical language. Two of the groups were of symphony-orchestra size (100 or so); the other numbered 10. In Disney&#8217;s acoustic splendor, all three produced, when called for, prodigious varieties of wondrous sound. I didn&#8217;t hear a deathless [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><b>Blini </b></p>
<p>Three orchestras held the Disney stage on successive evenings last week, diverse in program offerings and in musical language. Two of the groups were of symphony-orchestra size (100 or so); the other numbered 10. In Disney&#8217;s acoustic splendor, all three produced, when called for, prodigious varieties of wondrous sound. I didn&#8217;t hear a deathless masterpiece at any of the concerts, but I wasn&#8217;t lured into an early departure at any of them either &#8211; not even when, at the first event, I stumbled over the Sibelius Violin Concerto lurking in some dark corner of the program by Valery Gergiev and the visiting Kirov Orchestra (fresh in from the Mariinsky Theater of St. Petersburg). </p>
<p>That singularly empty, aimless, drab spinoff from the Sibelius treadmill &#8211; phenomenally played this time by the Greek whizbang Leonidas Kavakos as if in a single stroke of the bow &#8211; didn&#8217;t even turn out to be the worst piece on that program (as it usually is). The place of dubious honor belonged that night to the Second Symphony of Sergei Prokofiev, the least known of his seven, music so little played that I couldn&#8217;t find a fellow critic&#8217;s comment to crib, music thoroughly terrible and therefore, I suppose, worth hearing this once. The score, “a symphony of iron and steel,” the composer once said, dates from 1924. Compared to Prokofiev&#8217;s other great dissonant works of the time &#8211; the <i>Scythian </i><i>Suite, </i>for example, or the opera <i>The </i><i>Fiery </i><i>Angel </i>— its half-hour&#8217;s music seems to meander nowhere and everywhere, with a final movement that consists of an opening theme and about six logical endings, all of which the composer bypassed. Like everything else on Gergiev&#8217;s program, it was accorded the full 21-gun treatment. </p>
<p>With or without his orchestra, Gergiev has acceded to living-legend stature; while among us last week, he also planted a few more flags in press conferences down in Orange County, where he will help celebrate the new concert hall by leading operas in the old concert hall. In the Kirov Orchestra he has created an icon, a self-image in both sight and sound. Hearing the unit hurl itself upon the first measures of Borodin&#8217;s Second Symphony &#8211; with the double basses massed up in the corner of the stage, howling like wolves on the moonlit steppes &#8211; you might wonder how this onslaught on Borodin&#8217;s careful structures might relate to the intentions of the gentle pharmacist-turned-composer. Even with its native music so blatantly overplayed, you recognize that this is some kind of unique orchestra, with whip-cracking conductor to match, and that they mean business. </p>
<p><b>Ravioli </b></p>
<p>The second work on the next night&#8217;s program, Samuel Scheidt&#8217;s <i>Battaglia </i><i>á </i><i>5 </i>— battle music for five string players and keyboard, published around 1621, performed by the Italian visitors who call themselves Il Giardino Armonico (the Garden of Harmonies) &#8211; seemed like a distant but accurate echo of the Russian hurly-burly of the night before. Styles have changed rapidly in the performance of Baroque string music, as I noted a few weeks ago when some gooey, romanticized version of Vivaldi&#8217;s <i>Seasons </i>hit the market. Not long ago, the “authentic” Baroque style consisted of the very elegant, if somewhat bloodless, foursquare playing of I Musici and the Virtuosi di Roma, who purvey their Vivaldi very straight and nicely patterned. Now come these harmonious gardeners &#8211; only half of the full group that you can hear on their new Naïve disc titled <i>At </i><i>Home </i><i>With </i><i>the </i><i>Devil, </i>but still plenty loud and full of the Big Baroque Bounce. By contrast with their tractor-driven horticultural approach, those earlier “authentic” ensembles suddenly sound just a bit sleepy. </p>
<p>The aforementioned Scheidt piece called for great outbursts of sound: trills and cascades of tone, the instruments re-tuned to create dissonances and strange sound effects. The Giardino&#8217;s leader, Giovanni Antonini, performed a Vivaldi flute concerto with a remarkable slow movement, full of chromatic twists and turns. Another flute concerto, by one Nicola Fiorenza, ended the program with a full-scale, four-handkerchief jerking of tears, music as firmly anchored in the minor modes as any Verdian death scene in the centuries to come. They don&#8217;t write &#8216;em like that anymore, I am happy to report. </p>
<p><b>Palatschinken </b></p>
<p>By the end of his two-week residency on the Philharmonic podium, Iván Fischer had infused the orchestra&#8217;s language with the soft, elegant melancholy of Central Europe &#8211; specifically, this second week, the robust, carb-laden harmonies of Bohemia&#8217;s romantic masters Bedrich Smetana and his younger countryman Antonin Dvorák. Mistreated as their music may be through the years at Bowl and Pops concerts, the proper shaping hand &#8211; as Fischer wields with exceptional grace and wisdom &#8211; draws from this music a message coaxing and irresistible. In music as simple as the B-major <i>Notturno </i><i>for </i><i>Strings, </i>which Dvorák originally planned as a movement in his G-major Quintet and later expanded, any modest turn of phrase, when phrased as Fischer&#8217;s strings did the other night, becomes a memory that clings. </p>
<p>Dvorák&#8217;s Violin Concerto was the evening&#8217;s most substantial work, nicely played by Martin Chalifour but with no more drive than it deserves. Dvorák&#8217;s legacy glows with one supremely great concerto, but this isn&#8217;t it. What was lovelier to hear from his pen this night, and far less familiar, was the set of the early Moravian Duets for soprano and mezzo (Carolyn Betty and Kelley O&#8217;Connor), with a gentle orchestration contrived by Fischer himself: bittersweet, piercing harmonies that defined the wonderful, distinctive language that Dvorák would go on to shape into the great works of his mature years. Ending the program were three of the six audible travel posters that make up Smetana&#8217;s <i>My </i><i>Country: </i>the often-sailed <i>Moldau </i>and two others less known but no less enchanting. If there had been a Czech Republic travel agent outside Disney Hall that night, I would have been first in line for tickets.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Wanderings</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2005/04/wanderings/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2005/04/wanderings/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 14 Apr 2005 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=523</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Rhapsodic Hungarians Seldom had the Brahms First Symphony sounded more turgid, more irrelevant, than at the end of last week&#8217;s Philharmonic concert. Preceding that hapless work, visiting conductor Iván Fischer &#8211; master programmer, he &#8211; had set the air aglow at Disney Hall with the music of Brahms&#8217; own birthright: the rhythms and harmonies of [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><b>Rhapsodic Hungarians </b></p>
<p>Seldom had the Brahms First Symphony sounded more turgid, more irrelevant, than at the end of last week&#8217;s Philharmonic concert. Preceding that hapless work, visiting conductor Iván Fischer &#8211; master programmer, he &#8211; had set the air aglow at Disney Hall with the music of Brahms&#8217; own birthright: the rhythms and harmonies of Hungary&#8217;s gypsies, some of it straight, some of it refined and sugarcoated for the serious concert hall. Latter-day gypsies had come over from some of Budapest&#8217;s finest bands: a fiddler in the old style, his violinist son, and a virtuoso on the cimbalom. The music they played &#8211; a couple of Franz Liszt&#8217;s <i>Hungarian </i><i>Rhapsodies, </i>Pablo de Sarasate&#8217;s <i>Zigeunerweisen, </i>even a delicious bit of sentimental drool by Brahms himself &#8211; may have been old friends, but the manner of performance, the insinuation in both rhythm and harmony, was so fresh, vital and captivating as to sound utterly new. There was nothing wrong with Fischer&#8217;s clear-headed, intelligent projection of the Brahms First after intermission, but it was obvious from the work&#8217;s first thudding, constipated C-minor chords that the evening&#8217;s fund of authentic ecstasy had come to an end. </p>
<p>The Pasadena&#8217;s Symphony&#8217;s Jorge Mester, of mixed Mexican and Hungarian ancestry, played the Hungarian card last weekend with the shards of the Viola Concerto left incomplete by Béla Bartók at his death and pieced together by several hands. Clouds of suspicion hang over the work; if its actual &#8212;&#8212;&#8211;<br />
AUTHORship isn&#8217;t firmly established, its sounds represent some pretty good gestures of the music of its time and place. The world doesn&#8217;t have enough viola concertos, nor enough Bartók even ersatz, and the soloist, young Antoine Tamestit, made a convincing case for whatever it was that he performed. Shed a tear, however, for the Pasadena Symphony&#8217;s imperfect home, the Civic Auditorium, with its lousy acoustics downstairs and its life-threatening steepness upstairs &#8211; while the superior Ambassador Auditorium sits pathetically underused a few blocks away. </p>
<p>No sooner had I let loose a few snide words on the usual low level of Pulitzer<br />
Prize–winning music, when word came of a genuinely excellent winner, Steven Stucky&#8217;s<br />
<i>Second </i><i>Concerto </i><i>for </i><i>Orchestra. </i>At the Philharmonic&#8217;s<br />
premiere last March, I wrote of Stucky as “a composer with something to say, and<br />
a pretty good handle on the language in which to say it,” and it&#8217;s nice to be<br />
agreed with by distinguished judges. This is only the second Philharmonic commission<br />
to cop a Pulitzer; Mel Powell&#8217;s <i>Duplicates </i>of 1990 was the first. </p>
<p>
<b>Historic Bites </b></p>
<p>When it comes to masterly programming, nobody need defer to MaryAnn Bonino and her “Chamber Music in Historic Sites,” going strong now for well over 30 years. Take this recent event: A sit-down dim sum dinner for 150 or so at Chinatown&#8217;s spacious Empress Pavilion (and never mind it being the wrong time of day) was followed, in another part of the same room, by musical dim sum, a program of short pieces for string quartet by Chinese composers plus Ravel, played by the four young Chinese-American siblings who constitute the Ying Quartet. Born in Chicago, trained at Eastman and united as a quartet since 1992, the Yings played beautifully, with a couple of short but strong pieces by Chen Yi and her husband, Zhou Long, as the concert-stealers and two exquisite bits from Ravel&#8217;s Quartet &#8211; dappled with gorgeous splotches of color no less Oriental than French &#8211; not far behind. </p>
<p>Vicki Ray&#8217;s recent “Piano Spheres” concert at Zipper was also all about those sight-versus-sound overlaps: short, lovely pieces from all over that drew upon visual inspirations, and David Rosenboom&#8217;s longer suite, <i>Twilight </i><i>Language, </i>which evokes the gestures of 10th-century Tibetan artists. Vicki, too, plans programs with a knack for marvelous freeform artistry; what she draws from her piano always relates in wondrous ways to all the senses. At the end she joined with the splendid tenor Jonathan Mack in Poulenc&#8217;s charming song cycle, setting Paul Éluard&#8217;s poetry about seven painters: synesthesia writ large. </p>
<p>At LACMA, everybody&#8217;s favorite local soprano, Daisietta Kim, persuaded her colleagues<br />
in Xtet to allow her <i>Windup, </i>a self-celebration of a lovely and varied<br />
career in which she got to sing bits from her repertory (this and that, framed<br />
within a Schubert song), with dancing, recitations, projected artwork &#8211; an olla<br />
podrida of the many ways the remarkable Daisietta has found to enchant us over<br />
the 28 years of her performance career so far. I can only hope that her title,<br />
<i>Windup, </i>is to be taken in the sense of the star pitcher preparing for action;<br />
any other interpretation would be beyond contemplation. </p>
<p>
<b>All in the Family </b></p>
<p>Over 18 years I&#8217;ve been fairly successful in avoiding Pacific Serenades, even though its programs are often attractively baited. This, in case you&#8217;ve been even luckier than I in dodging its expert press-agentry, is a movable chamber-music feast, four or five programs a year, repeated in small public venues and in private homes where elegant food is often served. The series is the vanity operation of Mark Carlson, a composer who has in the past been affiliated with UCLA. Over its years of operation, Pacific Serenades has given 18 world premieres of works by Mr. Carlson, although, judging from the works I&#8217;ve heard, another way of putting this is that the group has given world premieres of the same work 18 times. The list of donors includes nine Carlsons. Other solid, academic, conservative, eminently trustworthy UCLA composers whose names appear frequently on Pacific Serenades programs include Roger Bourland, Paul Reale, Ian Krouse and Paul Chihara. Hurrah for the C-major scale! </p>
<p>I mentioned bait. There must be money in the Pacific Serenades operation, because the performers are top rank. What finally got me to one of the concerts was the lure of two chamber works: Mozart&#8217;s G-minor Piano Quartet and Schumann&#8217;s Piano Quintet. The Philharmonic&#8217;s Joanne Pearce Martin was the pianist; Miwako Watanabe and Jim Dunham, of the long-lamented Sequoia Quartet, were the first violinist and violist; Connie Kupka and David Speltz rounded out the ensemble. The performance I got to was at the UCLA Faculty Club, a nice, intimate setting for chamber music, and the performances were superb. In the middle there was a new work, <i>Collage, </i>by 35-year-old Pasadena resident Peter Knell &#8211; faceless, aimless, harmless music, pure Pacific Serenades stuff as I&#8217;ve heard on their discs and, accidentally, elsewhere. </p>
<p>Apropos of discs: I made it a point to tune in on intermission conversations with notepad in hand. I heard the word <i>sciatica </i>17 times. </p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Fresh&#160;Air</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2005/04/fresh-air/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2005/04/fresh-air/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 07 Apr 2005 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=522</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[THE LEVEL FIELD Christian Zacharias&#8217; midseason visits to the Philharmonic have a cleansing effect: the right music at the right time. His luggage is filled with 18th-century music: Mozart and Haydn and their pals, symphonies and concertos. He furloughs the orchestra&#8217;s heavy brass and the strings&#8217; back-desk players; he stands among the musicians on floor [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><b>THE LEVEL FIELD </b></p>
<p>Christian Zacharias&#8217; midseason visits to the Philharmonic have a cleansing effect: the right music at the right time. His luggage is filled with 18th-century music: Mozart and Haydn and their pals, symphonies and concertos. He furloughs the orchestra&#8217;s heavy brass and the strings&#8217; back-desk players; he stands among the musicians on floor level, not above them on a podium. The sense prevails of a benign chamber music writ large, and of musicianship of the highest order. Whatever he chooses to perform, familiar or not, becomes a discovery of delight. </p>
<p>This time he brought us two Mozart piano concertos, which he led from the keyboard: the early B-flat (No. 6 in the usual listing), with the 20-year-old composer simply spilling forth melodies from one elegant phrase to the next, and the F-major (No. 19) of only eight years later, subtle, mysterious, full of surprises around every turn. Framing these were two off-the-wall symphonies, neither well-known, both hovering at the outer expressive limits of what constituted the unstated rules of the “classical” &#8211; and, therefore, polite and predictable &#8211; usage of the day. </p>
<p>First came the early Haydn symphony (No. 31 of the 104), known as the “Horn-Signal,” whose forward momentum is subject to constant and hilarious disruption by a quartet of horns who sometimes join in the design but just as often obstreperously out-shout it. If we anchor our awareness of Haydn around the great dozen symphonies of his mature years, we miss the marvelous experimentation of the early symphonies, when his orchestra at the Esterházy Palace was like a sonic Erector set, a glorious toy for trying out all kinds of sonorities and forms. Aided no end by the Philharmonic&#8217;s intrepid brass contingent, Zacharias captured the essence of this remarkable work, both the soaring wood notes wild and the overall inventive exuberance. So did he, too, in the final work, a G-minor symphony by one Johann Vanhal, music from around 1770 drenched in the mood of Sturm und Drang (breast-clutching, fist-waving). The key of G minor seems to have been invented to allow 18th-century composers to let down their hair. Mozart&#8217;s Symphony No. 25 in that key &#8211; that great orchestral screech at the beginning of <i>Amadeus </i>— said it even better, and the great No. 40 said it the best of all. </p>
<p><b>LARGE RED STAR</b> </p>
<p>Two concerts at LACMA last week afforded too-small audiences the chance to welcome back Antares, the enterprising New York chamber ensemble that first beguiled us in December 2003 and in the meantime has been gathering up virtually every chamber-music prize you can mention. The name refers to a large red star in Scorpio (or just as easily to the impressively red thatch of its pianist, Los Angeles–born Eric Huebner); the group seeks to build upon the meager repertory of music for violin, cello, clarinet and piano, through commissions or just by being so good. Since five of the seven works on the two programs were from the past decade, that repertory is not so meager as one might have thought. </p>
<p>Of particular interest, on their second program, was Paul Moravec&#8217;s <i>Tempest </i><i>Fantasy, </i>the chance to sample what kind of music wins Pulitzer Prizes these days. Same kind as usual, I guess: thin, harmless, agreeable, forgettable. Mr. Moravec ladles out three movements describing characters in Shakespeare&#8217;s play, one devoted to the line about “sweet airs that give delight” and one a sort of hodgepodge on the music just heard. Music inspired by <i>The </i><i>Tempest </i>that reflects more of this most precious of dramas&#8217; magic than does this treacly flapdoodle by Moravec ranges from the recent opera by Thomas Adès to the suite of incidental pieces by Sibelius. </p>
<p>Actually, the music I found most attractive in these two concerts, to my surprise, was a 1938 quartet by Paul Hindemith. In general, I lean toward the Hindemith of the 1920s: sassy, sometimes even diabolical, inflamed by the newfangled jazz that was sweeping across Europe, bosom buddies with Schoenberg on one arm and Kurt Weill on the other. Then a soberer Hindemith takes over; the bright, sharp orchestral colors turn Brahmsian. <i>Mathis </i><i>der </i><i>Maler </i>becomes his <i>Parsifal, </i>but without the sex. In some ways this quartet is a kind of memoir, a throwback in the best sense to the vintage Hindemith style &#8211; not all the way to the opera of 1929 with its nude bathtub scene, but close. Its structural lines are strong and clear; it makes its points tersely, and with high artistry. I rushed home to scour my shelves but found no copy. Fortunately, Amazon had several as low as $1.25. O brave new world! </p>
<p><b>DREAM ON</b> </p>
<p>Two weeks ago, the American Youth Symphony drew a full house at the Dorothy Chandler Pavilion for its gala program, what you might call an out-of-town tryout for its Carnegie Hall concert last weekend. Tickets went for $100. Veteran violinist, teacher and Philharmonic concertmaster Alexander Treger conducted; he took over the AYS from its founder, Mehli Mehta (daddy to Zubi), in 1998. There was some new music, <i>Dreams </i><i>and </i><i>Whispers </i><i>of </i><i>Poseidon </i>by the 32-year-old Russian-born Lera Auerbach (with well-remembered Philharmonic alumnus David Weiss on musical saw). Yundi Li, the latest Chinese whiz-bang to hit these shores, played a Chopin concerto. For the rest, spooned over the second half of the program like last week&#8217;s warmed-over kasha, there was the Tchaikovsky Fifth Symphony. </p>
<p>At the post-concert dinner, young orchestral members spoke glowingly about playing in Carnegie Hall &#8211; even if buried among 100 orchestral colleagues &#8211; as the realization of a lifetime ambition. Board members bestowed awards upon one another and spoke of the vast privilege of transporting the Tchaikovsky Fifth cross-country, fulfilling a historic mission in the very hall where the great Tchaikovsky had led the same work 114 years before &#8211; as if the AYS had existed these 40 years for no other purpose. </p>
<p>Perhaps it doesn&#8217;t, anymore. Beyond all this money-backed pride is the sad reality<br />
that the AYS is no longer the spirited enterprise of the Mehli Mehta days. Many<br />
young musicians I have talked with tell me that the dropout rate is high, and<br />
that a stint with the AYS is no longer the inevitable career move it once was.<br />
Surely this level of soggy, unbalanced playing is not qualified to tour any farther<br />
than, say, Glendale. I can only hope that those predatory New York critics found<br />
something else to do last Saturday night. </p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Rainy&#160;Season</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2005/03/rainy-season/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2005/03/rainy-season/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 31 Mar 2005 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=521</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Photo by Craig SchwartzGURGLE Tan Dun flows endlessly on. The week that brought his Water Passion After St. Matthew to Disney Hall through the admirable efforts of Grant Gershon&#8217;s Master Chorale was also adorned by recent releases on Deutsche Grammophon DVD of two other major Tan works of high liquidity. One is Tea, an opera [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Photo by Craig Schwartz<b>GURGLE </b><br />
Tan Dun flows endlessly on. The week that brought his <i>Water </i><i>Passion </i><i>After </i><i>St. </i><i>Matthew </i>to Disney Hall through the admirable efforts of Grant Gershon&#8217;s Master Chorale was also adorned by recent releases on Deutsche Grammophon DVD of two other major Tan works of high liquidity. One is <i>Tea, </i>an opera concerned with that beverage in its mythic significance to Tan&#8217;s own countrymen and their neighboring Japanese. The other is <i>The </i><i>Map, </i>which is something of an audio/video voyage through Chinese geography and dance ritual morphed into a cello concerto, performed in this instance outdoors in a river village with adoring thousands on the banks, bathed in the pretty music and the words of self-adoration by its returning musical hero. In his nearly 20 years since fleeing the restrictive musical outlooks of his native China for the cultural liberation of the West, Tan Dun has not yet acquired all the skills of a first-rank composer, but he has certainly learned how to behave like one. Tan was one of the several composers who broke out of artistic bondage at the end of China&#8217;s “cultural revolution.” He came to New York in 1986 and seemed from the start awesomely adept in turning his Chinese background into both music and publicity. His interviews, including one or two that I&#8217;ve done, rattle on eloquently about a boyhood deprived of real music, finding messages in stones and sticks and the gurgling of water; so each of the three big pieces noted above and most everything else &#8211; including his <i>Concerto </i><i>for </i><i>Paper </i><i>Instruments, </i>scheduled for the Philharmonic on April 28 &#8211; becomes yet another chapter in a Tan Dun audio-biography. Moments in the <i>Water </i><i>Passion, </i>in fact, that did not involve stones and water and primitive percussion and vocal effects, but merely lyrical passages for chorus and instruments, were by far the evening&#8217;s dullest. <i>Water </i><i>Passion </i>was one of four contemporary interpretations of the biblical Passion narrative (of which J.S. Bach himself had set two) commissioned by Helmuth Rilling and his International Bach Academy in 2000 for that composer&#8217;s 250th death anniversary. Four distinctive works eventuated: Wolfgang Rihm&#8217;s intensely Bachian; Sofia Gubaidulina&#8217;s ancient-Slavic-ritualistic; Osvaldo Golijov&#8217;s dazzling-Latino; and this of Tan Dun, most remote by far in its influences and certainly &#8211; with its assemblage of bowls of water and primitive and symphonic percussion, but also two solo strings, two vocalists, chorus and synthesizer &#8211; the most bizarre in sound. Matthew&#8217;s words are denied the harrowing flow of Bach&#8217;s setting; they go forward in short, disconnected soundbites, more as memory devices than as narration. The music, too, proceeds as a series of short explosions, a sequence of musical events not clearly related. The range of devices is vast and impressive; the vocalists &#8211; soprano Elizabeth Keusch and baritone Stephen Bryant in the Disney performance &#8211; are called upon to create, among other gullet tighteners, the extreme ranges of Tibetan “throat singers.” On its primitive level, the music builds at times to shattering and chilling climaxes: best of all the moment of the stoning of Jesus by the crowds at the Trial, when all 63 members of the Master Chorale broke out their handfuls of clickety-clack flat stones. Oh yes, the water. Tan&#8217;s <i>Water </i><i>Passion </i>actually begins with chapters in Matthew several before Bach&#8217;s text, allowing the image of water as unification: baptism at the start, tears at the end, and a nice, drippy memento mori along the way. The end is in darkess, with 17 players stationed at that many bowls, spattering, dripping, sloshing and &#8211; after 95 intermissionless minutes &#8211; delivering a measure of agony to many an elderly prostate out front unreached by the compassion of St. Matthew.<br />
<b>SLURP </b><br />
The music for <i>Tea </i>is by Tan, and he also co-wrote the libretto (with Xu Ying). Given its contemporary provenance, this is a rather attractive reconstruction of what we know &#8211; or what we want to know &#8211; about musical theater back in the 17th century in the inscrutable East. Its plot involves a rivalry; two men &#8211; one a Chinese prince, one a Japanese monk &#8211; struggle to prove the verity of the book on the meanings behind the traditional Tea Ceremony, for which the ancient Tea Sage must be located in a distant land. Lest this suggest a certain flimsiness of story substance, be reassured that there is plenty, including blood and weeping at the end. The opera was created for Tokyo&#8217;s Suntory Hall and the Netherlands Opera; it is also listed for the San Francisco Opera in 2006. The Netherlands&#8217; Pierre Audi &#8211; who gave us that fabulous Monteverdi <i>Ulysses </i>some years back &#8211; directed, creating in what is basically a concert hall a remarkable stage setting with a few large planks laid at angles; let that be a lesson to whoever next tries to stage stuff at Disney. Somehow, this work comes across with a fullness of musical language that I find lacking in much of Tan&#8217;s work, including the <i>Water </i><i>Passion. </i>He seems to know the peculiarities of Chinese vocal lines, the sinuous turns, the glottal punctuations, the strange shadings created by indigenous vowel sounds. His singers &#8211; two of them Chinese, three not &#8211; form a homogeneous ensemble, as does the usual mix of stones, water, etc., plus, this time, a full-size orchestra under Tan&#8217;s leadership. All told, I find this one of Tan&#8217;s closest-to-successful large-scale works, moving and rather beautiful. I also find it the one least affected by the “international” influences that have befallen him since his arrival in America. Perhaps someone should have confiscated his green card when there was time. Even without the “Aren&#8217;t you lucky that I&#8217;ve come back to you” hometown bushwa of the DVD of <i>The </i><i>Map, </i>this is pure hokum: a piece that sets a solo cello to wailing Chinese operatic laments (Yo-Yo Ma in the Boston Symphony premiere, Anssi Karttunen on the DVD) against orchestral outbursts and Chinese travel movies on screens all around. I yield to nobody in my admiration for old <i>National </i><i>Geographics, </i>and for Anssi Karttunen&#8217;s skill as a cellist, but I haven&#8217;t yet been able to get all the way through this piece of misguided entertainment, and am not sure I ever will.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Max to the&#160;Max</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2005/03/max-to-the-max/</link>
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		<pubDate>Thu, 24 Mar 2005 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=520</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[WHOLLY MONSTROUS AND MAD Sir Peter Maxwell Davies (known to his friends as Max) lives on, at least in this country, but barely. His several symphonies, massive works that once enjoyed the attention of Simon Rattle, seem to have disappeared from the landscape. Some of his interesting dramatic works for mixed ensembles &#8211; e.g., Resurrection, [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><b>WHOLLY MONSTROUS AND MAD</b> Sir Peter Maxwell Davies (known to his friends as Max) lives on, at least in this country, but barely. His several symphonies, massive works that once enjoyed the attention of Simon Rattle, seem to have disappeared from the landscape. Some of his interesting dramatic works for mixed ensembles &#8211; e.g., <i>Resurrection, </i>for singers, orchestra, Salvation Army band and rock group &#8211; have apparently come and gone. The Fires of London, the extraordinary performance ensemble that toured and recorded his music in thrilling, close-to-the-bone performances, no longer exists. Two works remain popular in the U.S.: his film score to Ken Russell&#8217;s <i>The </i><i>Devils, </i>so far available only on VHS, and his solo theater piece <i>Eight </i><i>Songs </i><i>for </i><i>a </i><i>Mad </i><i>King, </i>which was brought forth at last week&#8217;s Jacaranda Concert at Santa Monica&#8217;s First Presbyterian Church in a performance that might modestly be described as stupendous. The “mad king” is, of course, our old friend George III, with Randolph Stow&#8217;s text a series of crazed monologues partially based on remembered words from the dotty monarch himself. Onto these manic recitations Davies affixed music of comparable vehemence, imposing on an interpreter a vast array of vocal demands &#8211; including a span of four-plus octaves &#8211; while allowing considerable theatrical freedom in the way those demands might be met. For last week&#8217;s performance at Jacaranda, an extraordinarily gifted singer/actor/acrobat/tragedian/clown named Dean Elzinga, previously unknown to me, met these demands with the force of Lord Nelson&#8217;s massed cannons, and delivered one of the most memorable solo turns of my recent memory. Arriving onstage in high hysteria, barely covered in a tattered hospital gown, then departing in silent tragedy half an hour later to a solemn drumbeat and a held low F on the cello, Elzinga shaped an astonishing gamut: searing, shocking and remarkable, too, in the absolute clarity of his diction even at the most piercing falsetto. Earlier in the evening he had forged another level of pleasure, in the wacko charm of HK Gruber&#8217;s “pan-demonium,” <i>Frankenstein!! </i>— music that, despite its composer&#8217;s best intentions, has worked its way out of the prescribed cabaret milieu and onto the concert stage. As cabaret, the nose thumbing is murderous and hilarious: Batman and Robin in bed together, Goldfinger vs. “Jimmy Bond,” Superman with his pants down &#8211; not all that removed from the subtle slashing of Mikel Rouse (see below). As a stage piece of innocent merriment, everybody loved the Robinson Crusoe song, which drew an encore. Participating in all this was the excellent young ensemble that has formed around these Jacaranda events, including the Denali Quartet, whose praises I have previously sung, and Mark Alan Hilt, the musical director who, with Patrick Scott, has dreamed up this whole series of resourceful, imaginative programs in this exceptionally pleasant Santa Monica venue. I&#8217;m sorry if I sound like a Jacaranda pitchman, which I&#8217;m not, but the impulse behind this series &#8211; and its fruition &#8211; is a pretty good case study in the way a musical community can be served, from within, by its members. The crowd last week was gratifyingly large and continues to grow, as it should. The next Jacaranda concert is listed for April 30. <b>ROUSE, KROUSE</b> In adjacent rooms in a UCLA theater complex last week, one could, on successive nights, sample the musical approximations of human banality and human carnality. Score one, this time around at least, for the humdrum. Mikel Rouse is not so much a man <i>of </i>the theater; he <i>is </i>the theater. A few years back, alone on another local stage with harmonica and guitar, he turned himself into a pair of Kansas murderers, their victims and their retribution. This time, in the Macgowan Little Theater, he and his tunes became <i>Music </i><i>for </i><i>Minorities, </i>the interlock of small points of view into which you and I and everyone we know somehow fit. His tunes achieve a simultaneous boredom and hypnosis. His video images &#8211; cast onto a screen behind him &#8211; are achingly everyday. He is like <i>A </i><i>Prairie </i><i>Home </i><i>Companion </i>with cayenne instead of ketchup. Across the lobby, in the larger Freud Playhouse, self-indulgence reigned. There is a cookie-cutter sameness to UCLA&#8217;s composers, both its faculty and its graduates; it goes back generations. It is a music of slick derivativeness that gladdens trustees&#8217; hearts and makes elderly alumni decide that this modern music isn&#8217;t so bad after all. The other night it made three hours of Puccini rewrite &#8211; by professor Ian Krouse, who is currently head of UCLA&#8217;s composition department &#8211; slide down easily, like warm Cream of Wheat with just the slightest dash of cinnamon. You left, however, hungry, bored, dissatisfied &#8211; perhaps even outraged. The language of this kind of audience-friendly music calls for great lyrical outpouring; instead, there is feeble gesture. The opera is <i>Lorca, </i><i>Child </i><i>of </i><i>the </i><i>Moon, </i>to a libretto by Margarita Galban, first composed in 1984, several times revised and left to gather dust in the intervening years, now finally staged (also by Galban). Its plotline finds the poet Lorca himself, wandering among episodes from three of his small tragic dramas, reaching out helplessly to their destroyed heroines, seeking ultimate solace in death. Pirandello? Whatever substance abides in Galban&#8217;s book is immediately canceled out by the drab, gadget-ridden music. I have seen commendable opera at UCLA in past years: a <i>Rake&#8217;s </i><i>Progress </i>not at all bad, an excellent <i>Falstaff, </i>the two short Ravel operas as a delightful double bill. The opera program has had funding over the years from the Maxwell H. Gluck Foundation, all to the good. But what purpose is served, I have to ask, aside from the ego of its well-placed composer, to impose this work upon a large cast mostly student (orchestra and production crew likewise), tying up a considerable portion of their college career with a work that anyone with half an ear should recognize as doomed? What ever happened to the fine art of student protest?</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>The Glorious&#160;Fourth</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2005/03/the-glorious-fourth/</link>
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		<pubDate>Thu, 17 Mar 2005 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=519</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[CONVERSATIONS Beethoven&#8217;s Fourth Symphony is so seldom played that every new hearing becomes a trove of rediscovered delights; so was it with the Philharmonic last week. The orchestra, just back from its weeklong conquest of Cologne (read the reviews if you doubt this), might have been entitled to some jet lag; perhaps it was the [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>CONVERSATIONS </p>
<p>Beethoven&#8217;s Fourth Symphony is so seldom played that every new hearing becomes a trove of rediscovered delights; so was it with the Philharmonic last week. The orchestra, just back from its weeklong conquest of Cologne (read the reviews if you doubt this), might have been entitled to some jet lag; perhaps it was the luxury of Beethoven&#8217;s orchestral language, and the enlivening guest leadership of Rafael Frühbeck de Burgos, that forestalled this consequence. </p>
<p>The personality of Beethoven&#8217;s orchestral sonority per se is not often dealt with; I put forward the slow movement of the Fourth Symphony as containing the most seductive sounds in his entire legacy. They consist in the main of conversation among the winds, a solo clarinet (Michele Zukovsky&#8217;s the other night, pure rapture) answered by a somewhat more serious bassoon, a horn gently trying to change the subject, strings and even the timpani as concerned onlookers. The miracle &#8211; and I use this word advisedly &#8211; is compounded when you realize that this music dates from a time when Beethoven&#8217;s oncoming deafness had already begun its inroads. There is a small body of moments in Beethoven&#8217;s music, from around the time of this Fourth Symphony (Opus 60), that give off this particular kind of ecstasy; you shiver when you hear them, or should at any rate. I tend to grow weak-kneed, for example, during the slow movements of the first and second “Razumovsky” string quartets (Opus 59); the rhapsodic G-minor episode that intrudes upon the blandness in the first movement of the Violin Concerto (Opus 61) affects me the same. </p>
<p>There are other remarkable moments in the Fourth. Just the beginning, for example, tries out an effect new in Beethoven&#8217;s usage, but one he will employ again in other contexts later on: the notion of the music emerging out of a cloudy nowhere, one note at a time, with empty space in between, and then suddenly getting down to business with a mighty whoosh. (Twenty years later he will pull the same trick in the Ninth Symphony, and every good German composer &#8211; and some bad &#8211; from then on will follow that lead.) What is interesting, and delightful, in the Fourth is the way Beethoven, later on in the first movement, repeats that whole coming-from-nowhere process, much condensed but just as surprising the second time around. </p>
<p>The performance under Frühbeck was strong, beautifully detailed, respectful of Beethoven&#8217;s stipulated repeats and respectful, too, of the winged spirits that make of the final movement an entire wondrous library of joke books. The rest of the program had to be downhill; the second of Prokofiev&#8217;s two violin concertos is a rather drab business under any circumstances, although Alexander Treger dealt bravely with its convoluted patterns. Even so, I hadn&#8217;t expected to enjoy the two suites of Falla&#8217;s <i>Three-Cornered </i><i>Hat </i>music that ended the program; instead, I kept wishing it wouldn&#8217;t end. In a lifetime of pop-concert and Hollywood Bowl performances, I have apparently missed the sizzling, diamond-hard orchestral language of the piece and, of course, the gorgeous, insinuating curvature of its rhythmic patterns. It doesn&#8217;t always follow that Spanish conductors can make this music work; ask any San Franciscan who remembers Enrique Jordá. But Frühbeck, in what couldn&#8217;t have been many days&#8217; work after the European jaunt, got the Philharmonic to master his own accents to a remarkable degree. The sound of that music, in that hall, was something to roll around on your happiest receptors for hours afterward. </p>
<p>PAST MASTER </p>
<p>The death of Carlos Kleiber last year has activated the consciences of the media, leading to the issue or reissue of most of his recorded performances. Every one of these is essential not only for the strength of the insights that he brought to his chosen (if limited) repertory, but also for the amount of the man himself, the musician infused by music and by the act of making music, that both microphone and camera have been able to capture. You start with the two videos &#8211; on Sony and on Deutsche Grammophon &#8211; of the New Year&#8217;s Day concerts he led at Vienna&#8217;s Musikvereinsaal in 1989 and 1992. You are first held spellbound by the sheer gorgeousness of the room itself, the gold of its décor, then of the music that fills it &#8211; Vienna&#8217;s golden treasury of waltzes and the like &#8211; and by the smiling, delighted companionship of the man who is making it happen. There is a lot of folderol around about how musicians make music: about God moving the baton, or Beethoven coursing through the veins. The remarkable thing about watching Kleiber is the sense of easy companionship between him and the task at hand. The remarkable thing about listening to Kleiber is how much of this sense comes through. </p>
<p>The reissues include a CD on Deutsche Grammophon of Schubert&#8217;s early Third Symphony and the “Unfinished” in a performance that may leave you paralyzed for some ensuing minutes. The DVDs include Beethoven symphonies &#8211; the Fourth and Seventh &#8211; and a Mozart “Linz” Symphony so immediate that you fancy yourself onstage, feeling the phrases as they take shape. You&#8217;re also onstage, or so you feel yourself, in a Vienna performance of <i>Die </i><i>Fledermaus, </i>supremely funny and supremely wise. There should also be a <i>Rosenkavalier </i>one of these days, if not already; he recorded it twice, and both versions were released on laserdisc. That was the only opera I saw him conduct in person. Lucky me. </p>
<p>Most remarkable among the Kleiber releases, however, on TDK, is a <i>Carmen </i>from the Vienna State Opera, never before released, with &#8211; get this &#8211; Elena Obraztsova as Carmen and Plácido Domingo as José, designed and directed by Franco Zeffirelli. The date: December 9, 1978. Above everything else &#8211; and “everything else” in this case includes Zeffirelli&#8217;s 500 co-workers and eight horses &#8211; this is the most nearly complete imprint of a Kleiber performance. The exigencies of 1978 TV production keep him visible for large time segments: molding drumbeats with his whole body, string passages with perhaps 40 fingers in the air, settling back to allow his orchestra &#8211; the Vienna Philharmonic, after all &#8211; to do what it knows to do. Domingo is youthful, ardent, and takes the B flat in the “Flower Song,” alas, at full volume; Obraztsova is coarser at times than I would have expected; Yuri Mazurok, the Escamillo, is splendidly stentorian. Zeffirelli&#8217;s production, need I add, abounds with pretty chorus boys out front; his Lillas Pastia Tavern might be the Grand Canyon. The bad version of <i>Carmen </i>is used, with sung dialogue and not a line left out. At Domingo&#8217;s L.A. Opera, at least, they cut. </p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Crossings</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2005/03/crossings/</link>
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		<pubDate>Thu, 10 Mar 2005 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=518</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[BANG BANG On comparing the body count before and after intermission at last Thursday&#8217;s concert, it was clear that the latest visit by the reigning superpianist Lang Lang, rather than the interesting orchestral offerings by the China Philharmonic Orchestra, had brought out the near-sellout crowd to UCLA&#8217;s Royce Hall. True, the performance before intermission by [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>BANG BANG</p>
<p>On comparing the body count before and after intermission at last Thursday&#8217;s concert, it was clear that the latest visit by the reigning superpianist Lang Lang, rather than the interesting orchestral offerings by the China Philharmonic Orchestra, had brought out the near-sellout crowd to UCLA&#8217;s Royce Hall. True, the performance before intermission by Mr. Lang² of Rachmaninoff&#8217;s <i>Paganini </i><i>Rhapsody </i>(plus one of Liszt&#8217;s <i>Sonetti </i><i>di </i><i>Petrarca </i>as encore) had sent out its share of musical skyrockets. Some, however &#8211; your scribe among them &#8211; might argue that the program&#8217;s real value lay elsewhere. </p>
<p>Most of our knowledge of contemporary Chinese music comes from the four exceptionally interesting musicians who made their way out of Beijing soon after the collapse of the Cultural Revolution and did their advanced compositional study in New York. There is a violinist named Chen Yi in the China Philharmonic, but she&#8217;s obviously not the same jolly, roly-poly lady whose tough, gritty compositions we know and admire. These youngsters from Beijing all looked like refugees from a Jenny Craig ad. </p>
<p>Under the able leadership of conductor Long Yu, the China Philharmonic showed its muscle at Royce in some rafter-rattling stuff by Rimsky-Korsakov and Bartók (his China-permeated <i>Miraculous </i><i>Mandarin). </i>The homegrown offerings began with a pretty, old-fashioned piece by Hua Yanjun, who died in 1950: atmospheric music of little consequence. The second indigenous work, however, was of considerable stature, a song cycle by the 40-year-old Xiao Gang Ye bearing the title <i>Das </i><i>Lied </i><i>auf </i><i>der </i><i>Erde </i>and, thus, evocative even before a note is struck. Its text, indeed, is drawn from the same collection of ancient lyric poetry that &#8211; in German translations that bent their meanings somewhat away from their origins &#8211; elicited the great <i>Das </i><i>Lied </i><i>von </i><i>der </i><i>Erde </i>of Gustav Mahler. (Notice the difference: the Chinese “song from the Earth” against Mahler&#8217;s “song of the Earth.”) </p>
<p>It probably stretches a point to suggest that the contemporary Xiao Gang Ye, in this 20-minute cycle of five songs for soprano and orchestra, has returned Mahler&#8217;s poetry to its source. Yet the relationship between the two works is fascinating, and so is Xiao Gang Ye&#8217;s music: shot through with bright bursts of color and emotional warmth. It breaks through no stylistic boundaries. It may be significant, however, to compare these substantial, well-schooled but basically old-fashioned musical manners with the kick-butt music of Chen Yi and her American-trained “Gang of Four” colleagues, who broke out of their Chinese upbringing so dramatically and acquired their musical manners half a planet away. </p>
<p>As for the proficient and highly decorative Lang², concerns about musical manners still lie concealed behind an ample trick repertory in which the Rachmaninoff <i>Paganini </i><i>Rhapsody </i>fairly gleams by virtue of brevity and superior invention. Musicality mattered less on this occasion; dimples more. Next season he drops in on our own Philharmonic with Bartók&#8217;s Second Concerto; that&#8217;s a step forward. </p>
<p>ANOTHER COAST </p>
<p>To LACMA&#8217;s Bing Theater, with music from elsewhere in the world, came the New York New Music Ensemble, excellent and frequent visitors. The Bang on a Can folks had visited David Lang&#8217;s <i>Cheating, </i><i>Lying, </i><i>Stealing </i>upon us earlier this season; time does not soften its jerks, false starts and general juvenilia. Magnus Lindberg&#8217;s <i>Ablauf, </i>for somewhat the same instrumentation (clarinet and aggressive percussion) did the same things but on a grown-up level. Most of the program, in fact, consisted of workings-out of unlikely combinations of melodic instruments and percussion, including an uncommonly likable piece by Dorrance Stalvey &#8211; <i>Exordium, </i><i>Genesis, </i><i>Dawn, </i>now 15 years old but new to me. The one work “normally” scored, the 1971 Piano Trio by Britain&#8217;s Jonathan Harvey, seemed so much weak tea in such energetic company. </p>
<p>Too few people seem aware of the extraordinary contribution Dorrance Stalvey has made to our musical life, carrying on the pioneering efforts of these Monday Evening Concerts, which date back to 1939 and have given this city a backbone of awareness of music for small performing forces &#8211; very new, very old, set forth on a consistently high level that few communities can match in this country or in many others. Since 1971 (34 <i>years!), </i>Stalvey has planned and guided these concerts virtually single-handedly, with minimal financial support from the museum and only half a page&#8217;s worth of outside donors. He is also a composer of considerably above-average competence, and the least, you&#8217;d think, would be that he&#8217;d insist on having a piece of his on every other program over the years. But no; he has been too busy running this remarkable concert series, bringing in new-music groups from New York, string quartets from Paris, Terry Riley from up in the mountains. He turns 75 this year (next August), and in his honor several of the museum programs include his music. It&#8217;s about time. </p>
<p>FANTASTIC </p>
<p>Not many performers, and even fewer writers, bother much with Ferruccio Busoni these days; Alfred Brendel is a noble exception. Of Busoni&#8217;s <i>Fantasia </i><i>Contrappuntistica, </i>“that monumental fusion of thesis and antithesis, of counterpoint and fantasy, Bach and Busoni, that confrontation of an infinitely subtle range of keyboard colors with a Baroque-style independence from tone-color,” Brendel recommends “a thorough study.” A student of this work, he suggests, “may find himself transported into a novel sphere of instrumental art.” To those willing to trust Brendel&#8217;s words (as I always am), and armed with a fair supply of courage and patience, Busoni&#8217;s work does yield its rewards; Susan Svrcek and Mark Robson reaped them at the last “Piano Spheres” concert at Zipper, in Busoni&#8217;s edition for two pianos. (The work comes in several versions; Brendel himself recorded it as a solo early in his career, although that may require something of a search.) What the work is, is a mammoth (half-hour-plus) meditation on the music that Bach left unwritten on his deathbed, <i>The </i><i>Art </i><i>of </i><i>the </i><i>Fugue. </i>If that sounds vague, it has been clearly expressed, and so was the performance. </p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>High&#160;Baroque</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2005/03/high-baroque/</link>
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		<pubDate>Thu, 03 Mar 2005 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=517</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Photo by Josef AstorBIT BY BIT Thirty-three short pieces made up the Philharmonia Baroque Orchestra&#8217;s program at Disney Hall last week: 29 orchestral bits by Rameau and Handel, and four Handel arias. I would not have spared a single one. There is something immensely joyous in the way both these composers employed their orchestral forces [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Photo by Josef AstorBIT BY BIT Thirty-three short pieces made up the Philharmonia Baroque Orchestra&#8217;s program at Disney Hall last week: 29 orchestral bits by Rameau and Handel, and four Handel arias. I would not have spared a single one. There is something immensely joyous in the way both these composers employed their orchestral forces to tickle the fancies of their aristocratic audiences &#8211; and, more to the point, their pleasure-loving monarchs (Rameau&#8217;s Louis XV and Handel&#8217;s George I). Their music throbbed in dance rhythms, and the sounds themselves seemed to dance: the roulades for flutes and oboes, the daring leaps into midair for the horns, the fanciful treads for the strings, the solid anchoring chords from the keyboard. The Philharmonia Baroque, Bay Area–based, was one of the first ensembles on this coast to seek out the historically correct way of performing this music. The Berkeley hills in my grad-student days were alive with the sound of music: early-music making on harpsichords and clavichords from build-it-yourself kits, recorders and sackbuts brought home from European shops by the first generations of Fulbright scholars, horns without valves and therefore as treacherous to play upon as those at last week&#8217;s concert. Lively and ambitious musicians &#8211; the name of harpsichordist Laurette Goldberg remains in my memory &#8211; assembled the first Philharmonia Baroque in 1981; the English-born Nicholas McGegan came on a few years later, and the ensemble grew (in quality, that is, and, therefore, in fame). Several years ago they tried a concert series here at the County Museum that fizzled because of poor attendance; last week&#8217;s concert, in a hall three times the size, was very nearly sold out. McGegan, part hobbit and part wizard, is great fun to watch, as he doesn&#8217;t so much conduct as re-enact the music. His arms sweep around it in a giant bear hug, but the smallness of his frame enables him at times to disappear inside its glowing splendor. The program ended with one of the three suites that make up Handel&#8217;s <i>Water </i><i>Music, </i>the one that ends with the hornpipe that sounds like a toy version of an Elgar <i>Pomp </i><i>and </i><i>Circumstance </i>of many decades later. Something in McGegan&#8217;s performance, at once grandiose and respectful, managed to reconstruct that bridge across the time span. Lisa Saffer was the evening&#8217;s soloist, bright-voiced and virtuosically sure. She is, like McGegan, an artist exceptionally adept in crossing time bridges. Her four Handel arias ranged from the deeply pathetic side of that composer&#8217;s work that we are only now properly honoring (“Se pietà” from <i>Giulio </i><i>Cesare) </i>to the delicious goofiness of the “Sweet Bird” duet (from <i>L&#8217; </i><i>Allegro) </i>with flutist Stephen Schultz. The orchestra as heard here (lacking trumpets) numbered 36, larger than our Musica Angelica, but a good size to resound handsomely in Disney&#8217;s welcoming space. (Among its members is the violinist Elizabeth Blumenstock, who also plays with Angelica.) I can only hope that the turnout last week, and the response, signals more frequent visits for this excellent group and its greatly imaginative, cuddly conductor. They have been missed. TROUBLED SLEEP I am not at all sure whether the coupling of a piece called <i>Insomnia </i>and a 65-minute Bruckner symphony carried some deep soporific significance, but I&#8217;m willing to let the matter pass lacking further confirmation. The right of exit and re-entry during performances of Bruckner symphonies remains my prerogative, however, which I tend to exercise less often for the Seventh than for certain other symphonies in the canon. I remember being wide-awake for the tuba&#8217;s held C sharp at the end of the slow movement this time, and considering it one of the most beautiful sounds yet heard on the Disney Hall stage. <i>Insomnia, </i>composed in 2002, brought to a close the Philharmonic&#8217;s “3 x Salonen” minifest. Salonen had conducted it in a guest shot in San Francisco, and it&#8217;s also on the new DG disc with the Finnish Radio Orchestra, but now it&#8217;s an “official” work, and so much the better. The scoring includes four Wagner tubas, which makes it a fit program competitor (and, for my money, a shoo-in winner) for Bruckner. It doesn&#8217;t need that kind of skid grease; it&#8217;s a great work on its own. Salonen&#8217;s notes for the piece breathe menace and fear: not the nocturnal fantasies of Chopin or of the “Lord Chancellor&#8217;s Nightmare” of GS, but of demons and machines and imprisonment. The dark-toned brass rumble and thud; the momentum holds you not by your breath, but by the scruff of your neck. Even the ending is ironic and bitter. The music quiets down, and the sunrise dispels the procession of nighttime torments; maybe now you can get to sleep, but it&#8217;s too late. The three Salonen works played during February date from 2000 to 2003, a pin drop in a composer&#8217;s life span. (Another work, <i>Giro </i>from 1982, revised 1997, was played during the month by the American Youth Symphony.) They are alike in outline &#8211; each lasts something like 25 minutes &#8211; and while the cello concerto, <i>Mania, </i>used a somewhat cut-down orchestra, all are aimed at a symphonic context. The real resemblance is on a higher level, however; each in its own way is the work of a composer with an extraordinary sense of what an orchestra can produce, what sonorities can arise from combinations and &#8211; most crucial &#8211; what lines of counterpoint are defined by which instruments. Each of these works sets about dealing with this matter in a distinctive way. So did the 1997 <i>LA </i><i>Variations, </i>Salonen&#8217;s touchstone composition. Every time I hear that music, which is often, I am amazed all over again at how much of the inner workings of the variation process Salonen makes clear by his instrumental choices. Then there is some of this same technique, which seems to unfold in the teeth of a Pacific typhoon, in <i>Wing </i><i>on </i><i>Wing, </i>which is on the whole a lighter piece. In <i>Mania </i>it rides on the astonishment of the soloist&#8217;s virtuosity &#8211; Anssi Karttunen, not just a concert cellist but a Salonen surrogate in this instance. And in <i>Insomnia </i>the music grinds its way under the skin of each of us, leaving us so transfixed that even if the next piece on the program were something more substantial than Bruckner&#8217;s pathetic gesticulations, it wouldn&#8217;t matter.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Manny&#039;s Happy&#160;Returns</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2005/02/mannys-happy-returns/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2005/02/mannys-happy-returns/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 24 Feb 2005 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=516</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[A MANY-FINGERED THING Emanuel Ax (who likes to be called “Manny”) has been in our midst quite a lot this season, to our great pleasure and, I hope, his. At the Disney Hall first-night gala he turned up with five pianist buddies, in a piece too ludicrous to write about seriously but great fun nevertheless: [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><b>A MANY-FINGERED THING<br />
</b>Emanuel<b> </b>Ax<b> </b>(who likes to be called “Manny”) has been in our<br />
midst quite a lot this season, to our great pleasure and, I hope, his. At the<br />
Disney Hall first-night gala he turned up with five pianist buddies, in a piece<br />
too ludicrous to write about seriously but great fun nevertheless: the multicomposer,<br />
multiperformer piano escapade called <i>Hexaméron </i>cooked up by Franz Liszt<br />
and his pals in a frenzy of romantic hubris. Then he was back with sterner stuff,<br />
Beethoven cello sonatas with Yo-Yo Ma at Royce Hall. This month he has been practically<br />
living at Disney: in some rare and better-forgotten early Debussy with the Philharmonic,<br />
in a chamber concert with orchestra members, and in more Debussy &#8211; ravishing,<br />
this time &#8211; in last week&#8217;s Green Umbrella. He returns on March 23, with Yefim<br />
Bronfman in a two-piano program that includes even more Debussy, the wonderful<br />
and rarely heard suite <i>En </i><i>Blanc </i><i>et </i><i>Noir. </i><br />
I would not have typed Manny Ax, this outgoing, chunky, Polish-born woolly bear, as a performer of Debussy. When I was asked to do notes for his early recordings I was bowled over by his larger-than-life Chopin, and that&#8217;s where I thought he was going. Now he is one of the most loving and considerate of all chamber-music participants, and his Debussy these past couple of weeks has been full of the soft lights and shades and half-tones that I remember from one or two Walter Gieseking recitals during my student year in Paris and from not many people since. He even brought this superb coloristic command to a piece that didn&#8217;t deserve it, the <i>Fantaisie </i>for piano and orchestra that Debussy scribbled down during his student days &#8211; formula music more suggestive of a second-rate Chausson, say, than of the composer who would soon thereafter rise to <i>Afternoon </i><i>of </i><i>a </i><i>Faun, </i>his very next work. The Umbrella program bore that overused-of-late imprint: not just a “concert” but a “project” &#8211; Debussy, as with the recent <i>Tristan, </i>enthroned among the music he may (or may not) have made happen. Project or no, the three sonatas that were Debussy&#8217;s final works make a fascinating statement when heard together: wise, reflective, sardonic now and then, not a wasted note. All are differently scored, so they don&#8217;t often get programmed together; this was a rare and welcome chance. The piece for flute, viola and harp might be a bit of sea mist left over from <i>La </i><i>Mer; </i>the Cello Sonata has some of Debussy&#8217;s longtime regard for African and Asian rhythms; the Violin Sonata, best and best-known of the three and Debussy&#8217;s last completed work, tells me something new, profound and witty on every hearing. Interspersed were two new works over which Debussy&#8217;s shadows occasionally play: haunting, dark music for low strings and piano in a trio by Kaija Saariaho, and a Steven Stucky sonata for oboe, horn and harpsichord &#8211; a nice companion to the elegant piece for recorder he gave us a couple of years ago, which I long to hear again. To name the participants in this exceptionally euphoric concert would be to reproduce a large chunk of the Philharmonic roster; better to say that everyone involved &#8211; including Manny Ax on both piano and, despite his cute and surely unmeant protest, harpsichord &#8211; made the capacity crowd at Disney Hall most of all aware of and, apparently, happy at the splendor of the music itself. <b>MEANWHILE </b></b><b>. </b><b>. </b><b>. </b>So many concerts, so little space. It was understandable that David Daniels, the excellent countertenor, might try to climb out of the limited repertory of Handelian warriors and make his way in a wider world, but there were things wrong at his Royce Hall recital early this month that were matters not of musical ability but of judgment. His choice of Martin Katz as accompanist was certainly wise; Katz has a particularly distinguished career with singers in Daniels&#8217; range (Marilyn Horne, Janet Baker). But Daniels, for all the beauty of his tone, lacks their carrying power, and he was outshouted all evening by Katz&#8217;s 9-foot grand piano resounding on the Royce Hall stage. In more intimate circumstances, the fact of Daniels&#8217; attempt to move into later kinds of music &#8211; romantic songs, mildly contemporary stuff &#8211; might have seemed less out of place. This time, however, nothing worked. Over at the County Museum, the EAR Unit concert originally scheduled for January 10, wiped out on that date by mudslides, finally dug itself out four weeks later, sort of. What I mean is, the music got played, but it didn&#8217;t completely dig itself out. David Lang&#8217;s 40-ish-minute piece called <i>Child </i>remained buried in self-deprecating program notes (“overly subtle,” “more interesting”). Steven Mosko&#8217;s <i>J </i>came along with an elaborate dissertation on a druid alphabet whose letters relate to members of the EAR Unit. Only the Estonian composer Erkki-Sven Tüür sent along some words that placed his musical thinking anywhere in the scheme of things. “I am very interested in a combination of opposites,” wrote Mr. Tüür, “especially in the way they change from one to another.” And so are we all. Verbiage aside, it was one of those lively, enterprising EAR Unit concerts, sparked by the ongoing sense that these people are really driven by a joy in what they do. Lang remains an enigma or, if you will, something of a brat; he has a way of preying on one&#8217;s patience, and this new (2003) work surely does that. Then there is a turn, a percussion moment, an elegiac line for cello, and you know that you&#8217;re in the presence of a composer. “Lucky” Mosko the same, except for the brat part; his piece, which also dates from 2003, is serious, well constructed, not a moment too long. And in the <i>Architectonics </i><i>VII </i>of Tüür, alas, I heard nothing but what his note promised: opposites changing. Maybe there&#8217;s something in this program-note stuff after all. The last Chamber Orchestra concert began with a Haydn symphony (No. 96), music which Jeffrey Kahane conducts as well as anyone around. Then David Finckel, sometimes of the Emerson Quartet, played the bejesus out of Shostakovich&#8217;s First Cello Concerto &#8211; extraordinary, angry, sardonic music that raises every hair on the back of your neck and which Finckel plays as if it does the same for him. Finally came weak tea: the Beethoven “Triple” Concerto, with Finckel&#8217;s wife, Wu Han, at the piano and LACO violinist Margaret Batjer. I thought, maybe out of kindness to Beethoven they could have reversed the order. Then I thought, after that performance of the Shostakovich I&#8217;d probably have had to go out and kick somebody, and so would we all.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Super&#160;Conductor</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2005/02/super-conductor/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2005/02/super-conductor/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 17 Feb 2005 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=515</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[ESA-PEKKA IN EXCELSIS If anyone needed further confirmation of the strengths of Esa-Pekka Salonen, and his success in sharing those strengths with the musical life of this city, the events of the past week should answer any lingering questions. Those events included performances with the Philharmonic of huge and demanding orchestral works familiar and otherwise, [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>ESA-PEKKA IN EXCELSIS </p>
<p>If anyone needed further confirmation of the strengths of Esa-Pekka Salonen, and his success in sharing those strengths with the musical life of this city, the events of the past week should answer any lingering questions. Those events included performances with the Philharmonic of huge and demanding orchestral works familiar and otherwise, and other works of high quality composed by Salonen himself. There was also a personal affirmation by Salonen, in the presence of well-fed members of the local and national press at a well-laid brunch, that &#8211; contrary to the much-reported attitudes of other symphonic conductors toward their managements, their orchestral players and their public &#8211; Maestro Salonen apparently likes life in Los Angeles and is willing to keep at it for another term of contract, maybe more. Imagine: A happy conductor; what will they think of next? </p>
<p>All of this, along with the announcement of next season&#8217;s musical fare, which immeasurably enriched the state of mind at the aforementioned gathering of press freeloaders, adds up to thrilling news &#8211; the more so in the face of the outpourings of doom &#8216;n&#8217; gloom from many of the musical establishments beyond the mountains: James Levine&#8217;s ill health in Boston, Lorin Maazel&#8217;s lousy press in New York, acoustics in Philadelphia&#8217;s new hall. (Only Cleveland&#8217;s orchestra, apparently, thrives &#8211; for anyone, that is, who might want to live in Cleveland.) </p>
<p>Arnold Schoenberg&#8217;s <i>Gurre-Lieder </i>began Salonen&#8217;s wonder week, with its four harps downstage, 10 horns up back and other performing forces of comparable size. The work survives on its composer&#8217;s name; it throbs with the visionary monumental bloat that came into the Germanic musical language (and, fortunately, soon departed) right around the turn to the 20th century, leaving such works as this, the Mahler 8th and certain unmentionables by the likes of the Franz boys Schreker and Schmidt in its wake. There are beautiful moments among the love songs that make up the long first part, and the immensely sad contralto aria for the “Wood Dove,” which Lilli Paasikivi sang most touchingly, has a separate life as a concert piece. Salonen&#8217;s orchestra, deep and rich and bone-shaking, howled wondrously into every cranny of the hall, and Grant Gershon&#8217;s Master Chorale provided the proper added demonry. Two of the three performances were closed affairs, for the visiting members of a choral directors&#8217; conference, which was curious since the big choral numbers in the piece come only at the end (which, to these ears, couldn&#8217;t have come too soon). </p>
<p>SIGNATURE TUNES </p>
<p>More convincing demons danced later in the week, on two programs with what might now be reckoned as Salonen signature tunes: Stravinsky&#8217;s <i>Rite </i><i>of </i><i>Spring </i>on Thursday and the Berlioz <i>Fantastique </i>on Saturday (in preparation for the orchestra&#8217;s next European tour). Both flourish under Salonen&#8217;s leadership. There is something in his unfolding of the opening measures of the Stravinsky, the hard-edged platelets of wind tone gradually moving apart and upward into Frank Gehry&#8217;s clear air space, that has come to define for me, in a microcosm, everything good about this hall &#8211; and the people who work in it. The Berlioz was no less marvelous: the thrusting string tone at the start, the phenomenal urging of the summoning bell at the end (but why was it moved offstage this year?). One complaint: Salonen left out the repeats this time. He shouldn&#8217;t have; every note of his performance is precious. </p>
<p>The real matter at hand on these two programs and a third one yet to come (on February 24) is the beautifully designed, well-fitting second hat worn by Salonen himself as one of our times&#8217; major, serious composers. Conductors who compose are nothing new on the landscape. Elephantine bloats by the likes of Wilhelm Furtwängler and Bruno Walter belong among the sorry items cited two paragraphs ago; Leonard Bernstein&#8217;s symphonic ventures will gather dust while his stage shows continue to flourish. Salonen came to Los Angeles with a commendable repertory of a young man&#8217;s smart, craftsmanlike pieces that showed the touch of good teaching and good companionship. His music since his arrival has taken enormous forward strides; it is some of the most important music being composed anywhere in the world today, and the remarkable thing is that it gets better right along with his strengths as a conductor. </p>
<p>The <i>L.A. </i><i>Variations </i>of 1997 was his giant step; it is now a repertory piece. It is the work of a master of orchestral practice, a knowing testimonial to the excellent state to which he had brought his own orchestra at that time. But it is also a work of musical mastery, a process piece that holds you in its grip as the variations unfold. The three works on the current “3 x Salonen” Mini-Festival follow logically. (I heard the first two, <i>Wing </i><i>on </i><i>Wing </i>and <i>Mania, </i>at last week&#8217;s concerts, and <i>Insomnia </i>— which is on the third program &#8211; from the new Deutsche Grammophon recording.) </p>
<p><i><i>Wing </i></i><i>on </i><i>Wing </i>was wonderful to hear again live, breezing through the same hall and through the musical forces for which it was written, saddening to hear in its inferior preservation with its cramped, studio sound on the D.G. disc. I love its sparkle, its cold, clear wind. Wherever it may travel, with its amiable intrusions by the sampled voice of Frank Gehry, it remains our piece, Disney Hall&#8217;s piece, lightest of this “festival&#8217;s” three works, but a treasure. <i>Mania </i>draws the phenomenal cellist Anssi Karttunen into the mix, removing most of the orchestra (strings, especially) from his manic path. </p>
<p>When I first interviewed Salonen, soon after he began his career here, he seemed anxious to downplay the image of Sibelius, as Grandpa in the attic, the dark secret borne by all living Finnish musicians. The sense I get, in both <i>Mania </i>and the imperfect hearing of the thrilling <i>Insomnia </i>on disc (which I will write about again after the live performance) is that Salonen has found a way to extract at least one valuable aspect of Sibelius&#8217; orchestral style, the wonderful headlong dash in, for example, the end of the first movement of the Fifth Symphony or again in the Seventh. Both these new pieces, it occurs to me on early acquaintance, seem to have found the way to make Grandpa respectable once again in polite society. That takes some doing. </p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Vivaldi for All&#160;Seasons</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2005/02/vivaldi-for-all-seasons/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2005/02/vivaldi-for-all-seasons/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 10 Feb 2005 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=514</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[GOLD-SPUTTERED MASTERY The eloquent blurb writers at Naxos, the little record label that could, have been lighting the sky lately with pronouncements on their latest reissued treasure, the first-ever recording (or so they say) of Vivaldi&#8217;s The Four Seasons, newly dusted off to join the 80 or so versions of that much-loved work already on [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>GOLD-SPUTTERED MASTERY </p>
<p>The eloquent blurb writers at Naxos, the little record label that could, have been lighting the sky lately with pronouncements on their latest reissued treasure, the first-ever recording (or so they say) of Vivaldi&#8217;s <i>The </i><i>Four </i><i>Seasons, </i>newly dusted off to join the 80 or so versions of that much-loved work already on the market. The violinist, also much loved, is the late Louis Kaufman; the performance dates from 1947, and its reappearance at this time has been enough to send me scurrying back into history &#8211; especially the performance history of the work itself, which is somewhat remarkable. This recording, by the way, is on the Library of Congress&#8217; National Recording Registry as the “first LP recording” of Vivaldi&#8217;s elegant conceit, a notation that might merit some revision. </p>
<p>Let&#8217;s start around 1920. Even in Vivaldi&#8217;s native Italy, almost nothing was known of his music at that time: a few overarranged pages from concertos, a few arias from his operas. Several Italian musicians, however, became obsessed with implanting a native persona in their musical life, to set it apart from the heavy German influence. One of the first things they did was to exhume these four unknown Vivaldi concertos and publish them &#8211; in a version for (!) piano duet. In 1927, the highly regarded conductor Bernardino Molinari (who later was to become the teacher of Carlo Maria Giulini) fashioned his orchestration of <i>The </i><i>Four </i><i>Seasons, </i>making sure to dedicate it, with all the proper Italianate flourishes, to Benito Mussolini as testimony to the rebirth of Italy&#8217;s pride in its grand orchestral heritage. That version, with full symphonic-size string sections (16 first violins), organ, grand pianos doctored to sound like harpsichords, harps, and a violin soloist well versed in the expressive methods of Italian bel canto at its weepiest, found its way to records in 1942 &#8211; six 78-rpm discs on the CETRA label. You can still buy it on CD online &#8211; at least I did, last month &#8211; on the Aura-Music label, and it&#8217;s a hoot. </p>
<p>And that, friends, was the first-ever recording of Vivaldi&#8217;s <i>Four </i><i>Seasons. </i>It was already in circulation when Louis Kaufman made his (also on six 78s); I know, because I worked for the importer, in New York, at the time. Kaufman, a well-known studio musician on both coasts and a respected concert artist as well, recorded his performance on the Concert Hall Society label, an upscale producer (“discs pressed from gold-sputtered masters”), with a small orchestra conducted by Henry Swoboda. Then and now, the project lay claim to representing the “authentic” Vivaldi (as opposed to the Colosseum-size Molinari Vivaldi), but it is no such thing. Kaufman&#8217;s solo performance has the same inauthentic juiciness &#8211; sliding into notes, slowing down at the ends of phrases &#8211; as his predecessor&#8217;s. When either of them takes on the slow movement of “Winter,” you can almost hear Andrea Bocelli wailing out that gorgeous tune. The orchestra under Swoboda lacks clarity; a harpsichord is credited in the notes, but I don&#8217;t hear it; and I think that? that&#8217;s a (horror!) harp in the slow movement of “Autumn.” (Both recordings, by the way, were reissued on LP in the U.S. in 1950.) </p>
<p>Don&#8217;t blame Louis Kaufman. What he delivers is a beautiful rendition of the historically uninformed way violinists were performing Vivaldi, Corelli and the rest of the Baroque orchestral repertory in 1947. A year later Renato Fasano, who had succeeded Molinari at the Santa Cecilia Academy in Rome, founded the first “authentic” ensemble for this music. His Virtuosi di Roma opened people&#8217;s ears to smaller, cleaner sounds, initiated the “Baroque Revival” that still goes on, and led eventually to the 80 <i>Four </i><i>Seasons, </i>etc.? recordings now at your local discothèque. </p>
<p>FIDDLE-FADDLE </p>
<p>A generation before Vivaldi, and far to the north, the violin had come into its own as an expressive and virtuosic instrument to rival the human voice. Salzburg&#8217;s Heinrich Biber (1644 1704) is the new star on the charts; two recent discs of his music for solo violin, riding high and wild above a supporting organ and/or harpsichord, fill your ears with vast torrents of sound. On a two-disc Harmonia Mundi set, Andrew Manze plays Biber&#8217;s <i>Rosary </i><i>Sonatas, </i>15 short works whose titles carry you through the “mysteries” of Christian faith from the Annunciation to the Life of Jesus to the Resurrection and the Assumption, each short work a tense, fabulously beautiful meditation or outcry. On an ECM disc no less irresistible, John Holloway traces Biber&#8217;s depiction, with fanfares and whooshing onslaughts in ecstatic virtuosity, of the Turkish invasion of Austria, the siege at Vienna and the ultimate victory of Christians over the infidel invaders. </p>
<p>The notion of entrusting all this to a solo violin may strike you as naive, especially since Biber took great care to inscribe in his manuscripts the exact identification for every episode in his musical retelling; in this regard, his work prefigures the charming lines of poetry that Vivaldi inscribed along with his <i>Seasons. </i>What delights me in this music is the sense of trying things out. The violin itself was new at the time; the great Italian makers were just then sending their wares throughout Europe. Biber and his colleagues messed around with experimental tunings &#8211; <i>scordatura, </i>later to be used by Mahler and many others &#8211; which allowed them unusual harmonic shadings. Both these performers, consummate Brits in whom the spirit of exploration burns bright, capture in their playing a sense of the creative joy that must have gone into these oddball little pieces at the start. This may be the world&#8217;s first over-the-top music, and the playing matches it marvelously well. </p>
<p>Back another two centuries, there was Antoine Busnois (boon-WAH, d. 1492), principally employed at the Burgundian court. He is newly celebrated by a disc on Harmonia Mundi of essential, unearthly beauty: songs, motets and a Mass. This is early Renaissance counterpoint; listening from one early work of his to another of later date is like watching an organism hatch in a petri dish. The harmonic sense emerges, the dominant-to-tonic cadences begin to sound like other music we know. But the older pieces have their own beauty: the way lines of counterpoint twist around one another to form a rich if tangled fabric. The very distance of these harmonies from more familiar territory (Palestrina, say) suggests the outlines of the church of St. Sauveur at Bruges, whose vastness the music of Busnois once filled. Performances are by the Orlando Consort, a men&#8217;s quartet that sang here a couple of weeks ago in one of the “Historic Sites” concerts that my own tangled fabric of a schedule made unreachable. This disc is fair recompense. </p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Verona in Waltz&#160;Time</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2005/02/verona-in-waltz-time/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2005/02/verona-in-waltz-time/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 03 Feb 2005 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=513</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Photo by Robert MillardMUD AND SUGAR If there must be Gounod &#8211; a point I will argue &#8211; let it be thus. The mud and sugar of his Roméo et Juliette do not entirely disappear behind the splendor of the L.A. Opera&#8217;s performance, but that night at the opera is, indeed, a dream happenstance. If [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Photo by Robert MillardMUD AND SUGAR If there must be Gounod &#8211; a point I will argue &#8211; let it be thus. The mud and sugar of his <i>Roméo </i><i>et </i><i>Juliette </i>do not entirely disappear behind the splendor of the L.A. Opera&#8217;s performance, but that night at the opera is, indeed, a dream happenstance. If you come away more oppressed by humidity than by heat, the fault resides in the opera&#8217;s original formulators, not in the team currently at work at the Music Center. They have done their work well. Anna Netrebko sings the Juliet, and what comes out &#8211; most of all in her Waltz number, which is the only tune anyone remembers from this very long opera &#8211; is the stuff of moonbeams. Rolando Villazón, the Romeo, is a dreamboat who sings like an angel while climbing ladders onto balconies and into hearts. There&#8217;s a scene in bed, with paired bare abs and pecs all agleam in dawn&#8217;s early light; yum. Marc Barrard sings of Queen Mab, trippingly and with high delight; Suzanna Guzman is a delightfully crusty Nurse in the few lines the creators have left her; Anna-Maria Panzarella steals a small scene in the song for Stephano (Balthasar in Shakespeare). John Gunter designed the sets, a cluster of multilevel, movable scaffold units that create interesting crowd spaces for showing off Tim Goodchild&#8217;s opulent period costumes. Director Ian Judge, an L.A. Opera stalwart, moves people around with fine intelligence; I particularly admire the way he lets the Act 3 fight gradually emerge out of the crowd. Conductor Frédéric Chaslin, new to the company, is French; that means, I suppose, that he has mastered the art of conducting without embarrassment the astonishingly large repertory of bad romantic music by his countrymen, to which Gounod supplied a fair amount. And yet I read, in the words of &#8212;&#8212;&#8211;<br />
AUTHORs I admire, words like <i>exquisite </i>in writings about <i>Roméo </i><i>et </i><i>Juliette </i>— though never, of course, about Gounod&#8217;s <i>Faust, </i>toward which even the most optimistic have abandoned hope. Re <i>Faust, </i>however, I do admire Joseph Kerman&#8217;s “pastel timidities,” and I think that the “timidity” problem, in whatever color intensity, underlies this later opera as well. Nothing soars; the ecstasy, the urgency behind Romeo&#8217;s “Ah, lève-toi, soleil” at the start of the Balcony Scene, is clipped as the tune itself falters. (Even Tony&#8217;s “Maria,” in the comparable spot in <i>West </i><i>Side </i><i>Story, </i>flies higher.) And that is the start of Gounod&#8217;s sad catalog. In New York I used to get letters from a “Society To Prevent Cruelty to Gounod,” which I think was formed solely to do me battle. I wonder if it&#8217;s still around. SMALLER PLEASURES Chamber music, most of it homegrown, flourished especially well during January. The Los Angeles Chamber Orchestra, conductorless for once, wasted 10 or so minutes of everybody&#8217;s time with Joel McNeely&#8217;s <i>Two </i><i>Portraits, </i>composed by Mr. McNeely &#8211; a proficient creator of film scores, I&#8217;m told &#8211; for his wife, the LACO&#8217;s first violinist, Margaret Batjer. I haven&#8217;t seen any McNeely films &#8211; which include <i>Holes </i>and <i>Ghosts </i><i>of </i><i>the </i><i>Abyss </i>— but I can guess that he has developed a fair expertise at his craft, and another fair expertise at tearing off swatches of his musical wallpaper and passing them off as serious music when the urge is upon him. The evening&#8217;s high point, and it was very high, was an elegant performance of Wagner&#8217;s <i>Siegfried </i><i>Idyll, </i>in its original scoring for 13 players, sweetly led by Ms. Batjer from the first violinist&#8217;s chair and gorgeously lit by the solo oboe of Allan Vogel and the clarinet of Gary Gray. At such times, LACO remains unsurpassable. Earlier in the month, Santa Monica&#8217;s Jacaranda concerts came up with yet another of their exceptionally rewarding, brainy events, a Latino affair culminating in all four of the string quartets by the troubled and still grossly undervalued Silvestre Revueltas: 45 minutes of music composed in a grand whoosh (around 1930-31) and probably demanding to be performed that way. There are sags; the throb of a life colored by alcohol and political conscience pulls the music this way and that. The final music, full of fiesta sounds and yet tragic, is thrilling. The splendid young Denali Quartet, who have had to reconstruct, even re-imagine, the music from incomplete published sources, made it their own at the end of a knockout program that also included a percussion segment, with Varèse&#8217;s <i>Ionisation </i>gloriously blasting against the walls of Santa Monica&#8217;s First Presbyterian. Very much like Jacaranda &#8211; in fact, sharing some of its performers &#8211; is Mládí, which has been going now for four years but which I only discovered last weekend. The name is Bohemian for “Youth”; the aim, once again, is to develop a chamber-music awareness in Los Angeles, with the widest possible repertory and with a generation of devoted young players who, above all, seek an alternative to the inevitable New York destiny. Most concerts are in the acoustically spectacular lobby of the famous old Los Altos Apartments on Wilshire, where Patty Hearst&#8217;s apartment is now a museum. The room seats about 100. Residents occasionally walk through, some with dogs; a fire crackles; there is wine and coffee. It&#8217;s a real chamber-music venue, in other words. Last week&#8217;s program included Bernard Herrmann&#8217;s garrulous <i>Souvenirs </i><i>du </i><i>Voyage </i>and Darius Milhaud&#8217;s elegant wind quintet about King René&#8217;s chimney. Mládí&#8217;s next concert is March 26. The new work was Alex Shapiro&#8217;s <i>Current </i><i>Events, </i>which was receiving its second performance hereabouts and deserves circulation. Her title, by the way, refers to her hobby, which has something to do with “communing with the sea life at tide pools.” It&#8217;s music exceptionally well made if fairly low on surprises; I found it most attractive, especially in a long, beautifully unfolding slow movement. In her pre-performance talk she kept invoking the ghost of Brahms, but I think she sold herself short on that count; her string scoring had little of the thickness with which the good <i>Doktor </i>was often given to burying his best thoughts. I wonder if he ever caught the romance of a tide pool. <b>Obiter </b><b>Dictum: </b>I suppose I am expected to say something about Michael Tilson Thomas, the San Francisco Symphony and the Mahler Ninth, just to stop being cornered. I found it to be a performance of MTT performing the Mahler Ninth. Far into the next night I listened to Bruno Walter&#8217;s performance with the Vienna Philharmonic (which has just been reissued by EMI), re-read Lewis Thomas&#8217; <i>Late </i><i>Night </i><i>Thoughts </i><i>on </i><i>Listening </i><i>to </i><i>Mahler&#8217;s </i><i>Ninth </i><i>Symphony, </i>and eventually felt both worse and better.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Whoopee, Italian&#160;Style</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2005/01/whoopee-italian-style/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2005/01/whoopee-italian-style/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 27 Jan 2005 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=512</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Photo by Robert MillardTHE THEATRICAL DIMENSION Nearly a century separates the two beguilements installed at the Music Center in recent weeks: Giuseppe Verdi&#8217;s Aida of the 1870s and Luciano Berio&#8217;s Laborintus II of 1965. Nobody would mistake the style or purpose of the one for the other; they are both shrewdly welded to the taste [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Photo by Robert Millard<b>THE THEATRICAL DIMENSION</b> Nearly a century separates the two beguilements installed at the Music Center<br />
in recent weeks: Giuseppe Verdi&#8217;s <i>Aida </i>of the 1870s and Luciano Berio&#8217;s<br />
<i>Laborintus </i><i>II </i>of 1965. Nobody would mistake the style or purpose<br />
of the one for the other; they are both shrewdly welded to the taste of their<br />
respective times. Something grander links them &#8211; an innately Italian sense of<br />
theater that unites all the arts of the region into a single onrush of word, music<br />
and movement. To the north, Richard Wagner made a great fuss as he dreamed up<br />
his &#8220;total artwork&#8221; concept with ream upon ream of explanatory philosophy. To<br />
the Italian spirit, that unity of the expressive arts was simply a form of breathing.<br />
Petrarch, Monteverdi, Tintoretto, Berio . . . just the names by themselves take<br />
on a theatrical dimension.<br />
<i>Laborintus </i><i>II </i>is Berio&#8217;s love letter to language, one of many. Edoardo<br />
Sanguineti is the poet; this was his second <i>Laborintus. </i>He is not so much<br />
a collaborator as an alter ego, sharing the same skin; his words are a free-associative<br />
ragout. Dante bubbles up &#8211; the piece was occasioned by that poet&#8217;s 700th anniversary<br />
- and so do Ezra Pound, biblical phrases, gibberish and Sanguineti&#8217;s own words.<br />
The music is their match; it ranges freely over a broad spectrum of Berio&#8217;s concerns.<br />
Three years later he would create the most famous of his combinative works, the<br />
third movement of his <i>Sinfonia; </i>the bursting energy of that spellbinding<br />
conception is already here. No other two works that survive the &#8217;60s define that<br />
wondrous era more forcefully. Try to find the recording on Harmonia Mundi&#8217;s Musique<br />
d&#8217;Abord label, conducted by Berio and with Sanguineti himself delivering the poetry,<br />
sly, insinuating and wise. What&#8217;s more, the lead singer is the great Christiane<br />
Legrand of the original Swingle Singers, who first brought <i>Sinfonia </i>to<br />
life.<br />
At Disney Hall, Esa-Pekka Salonen began the latest &#8220;Green Umbrella&#8221; concert with<br />
music of his own <i>- Memoria, </i>a brief, slight, charming wind quintet written<br />
for Salonen&#8217;s own new-music ensemble in Helsinki. The ghosts of Debussy, perhaps<br />
also of Berio, sweep across; the writing for horn (Salonen&#8217;s own instrument, here<br />
played by Elizabeth Cook-Shen) is uncommonly eloquent. Colin Matthews&#8217; <i>Continuum<br />
</i>followed, in its U.S. premiere &#8211; tortuous, desiccated settings of two Eugenio<br />
Montale poems (sung by Janice Felty, barely audible through thick scoring). Then<br />
came the Berio to raise the roof and the spirits. Some deplored the excess of<br />
local accent in the roof raising, and it is true that neither William Stone&#8217;s<br />
reading nor Hila Plitmann&#8217;s coloratura hysteria quite caught the authentic Italianate<br />
whoopee of bygone days &#8211; when, for example, the set for Sanguineti&#8217;s own staging<br />
at La Scala consisted of undulating penises. I had a great time at <i>Laborintus<br />
</i><i>II, </i>and I&#8217;m sorry if you didn&#8217;t.<br />
<b>THE REAL <i>AIDA </i></b><br />
Given the best-of-all-opera-plots &#8211; love versus loyalty &#8211; and the genius of Giuseppe<br />
Verdi as the world-champion inventor of the right melodies for turning those plots<br />
into white-hot music, you would expect the Verdian repertory to loom large among<br />
the triumphant pages of any major opera company. The sad fact seems to be, however,<br />
that our local company, now nearing its 20th birthday, has yet to mount a completely<br />
satisfactory Verdi production. Some of its failures have, in fact, ranked among<br />
the worst doozers in its history. (Remember the Kabuki-style <i>Macbeth? </i>The<br />
Bruce Beresford <i>Rigoletto?) </i><br />
The current <i>Aida, </i>a revival of the 2000 production that was, in turn, a rerun of the 1987 staging that had inaugurated the new opera house in Houston (the night before the world premiere there of <i>Nixon </i><i>in </i><i>China), </i>is not a doozer. Musically, in fact, it belongs in the upper echelon of second-rate local Verdi. A new conductor, the schoolboyish-looking Dan Ettinger (Israeli, 34), keeps things moving nicely and, considering the predilection of his singers to favor the high end of the dynamic range against Verdi&#8217;s own markings, manages at times to create some sense of ensemble. Michèle Crider is the Aida, new to the company and quite obviously in a family way. Maternal matters aside, she is quite a splendid young singer, possessed of a ravishing top that floats across the Nile like the stars in Verdi&#8217;s woodwinds and a real heartbreak as the opera&#8217;s final wisp of melody merges with the darkness. The Radames, Franco Farina (left over from last year&#8217;s wretched <i>Trovatore), </i>delivers his calling card on his first entrance, a &#8220;Celeste Aida&#8221; with Verdi&#8217;s called-for pianissimo annulled by a ringing fortissimo. A much more impressive fortissimo later in the evening, however, is delivered by the Amonasro, Lado Ataneli, on his opening line at the end of Act 2, and it suddenly hits you that this is the first male singing of genuine quality that you&#8217;ve heard all evening. He&#8217;s a wonderful singer, this Ataneli he was the Nabucco a couple of years ago; the problem is that he outsings the ensembles. Irina Mishura acts out her Amneris as a Theda Bara villainess in some silent (but hardly silent) movie. Vera Calábria&#8217;s new staging makes do without some of Pier-Luigi Pizzi&#8217;s Egyptian-museum props, which cluttered his original version; a few more could go. The production is in no way handsome. The sliding panels that set off scenes are ugly in themselves and boring in their use; the pillars in Amneris&#8217; boudoir bring on nostalgia for New York subway stations. And then there is the matter of the battling life-size toy elephants and other ludicrous onstage happenings during what is hopefully titled the &#8220;Triumphal Scene.&#8221;<br />
That scene begins and ends with grand, sweeping choruses and ensembles that pin<br />
you to your seat with the Italianate melodic ecstasy I was talking about back<br />
there. In between comes an expanse of orchestral music &#8211; 10 minutes, or so it<br />
seems &#8211; that is meant to accompany pantomimes and dances as the Egyptians exult<br />
at their victory over the Ethiopians. Some of it is new; some of it, Verdi&#8217;s rehash<br />
of music previously heard (a speeded-up version of &#8220;Ritorna, vincitor,&#8221; for example);<br />
all of it is inferior to anything else in the opera. Minus one or two repeats,<br />
the current <i>Aida </i>includes this whole sequence, with a bunch of swell acrobats<br />
to help pass the time and to help make the opera into an entertainment package<br />
to compete with any other package now in town bearing the same title. I am ordinarily<br />
disinclined to advocate incomplete performances, least of all in music I otherwise<br />
admire. In this case, however, less would be definitely more.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Note After&#160;Note</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2004/11/note-after-note/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2004/11/note-after-note/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 04 Nov 2004 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=511</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Photo by Alice Arnold Steve Reich&#8217;s You Are (Variations), the Master Chorale&#8217;s gleaming new acquisition unveiled at Disney Hall last weekend under Grant Gershon&#8217;s proud direction, starts off on congenial ground. We are immediately thrust among old friends: the Reich signature of pulsating polytonal chords lit with the familiar ping of marimbas and vibes. Music [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Photo by Alice Arnold
<p>
Steve Reich&#8217;s <i>You Are</i> (Variations), the Master Chorale&#8217;s gleaming new acquisition unveiled at Disney Hall last weekend under Grant Gershon&#8217;s proud direction, starts off on congenial ground. We are immediately thrust among old friends: the Reich signature of pulsating polytonal chords lit with the familiar ping of marimbas and vibes. <i>Music for 18 Musicians</i> began that way in 1976; so did <i>The</i> <i>Desert Music</i> in &#8217;84. The latter piece used a small chorus to intone and entwine brief lines from William Carlos Williams; the new work for small chorus and instruments &#8211; a co-commission by the Master Chorale, Lincoln Center and Germany&#8217;s Ensemble Modern &#8211; incorporates “aphoristic truisms” (Reich&#8217;s words) from ancient Hebrew and more recent Wittgenstein, sources Reich has used before. The marvel of the latest work is the newness of its expression, the fresh sounds and messages Reich has found within materials that are already known aspects of his musical language.</p>
<p>
The essence of that language is repetition, and the richness of impact to be gained from the infinite variety of that technique. “You are wherever your thoughts are” is the line by a Hasidic mystic that gives the work its title. Like a jewel examined in changing light, the text rises and falls through the instrumental texture, with single words or entire phrases passing in and out of audibility. Like all of Reich&#8217;s music, the work must use amplification in live performance as a means, he explains, of controlling the clarity in the percussive textures. In Disney, where amplification problems still loom, there were moments of harshness.</p>
<p>
This kind of music, which has grown directly from Reich&#8217;s earliest minimalist exercises and flourishes mightily, is now only a part of his legacy. Beside it are his multimedia pieces &#8211; <i>The Cave</i>, <i>Three Tales</i> &#8211; in which other kinds of lyric writing usurp the attention and in which some fascinating uses of speech patterns become further elements among musical sources. He continues to find new uses for his “classic” minimalist techniques, as <i>You Are (Variations)</i> handsomely suggests. His publisher recently sent along a tape of a new <i>Counterpoint</i> for cello and tape, a worthy shelf-mate for the “Vermont” (flute) and “Manhattan” (clarinet) <i>Counterpoints</i>. He becomes positively flirtatious when the matter of writing an opera comes up in conversation. The final text for this splendid new work for the Master Chorale, it might be worth noting in this regard, is “Say little and do much.”</p>
<p>
 </p>
<p>
<b>Piano Spheres and Lead Balloons</b></p>
<p>
At Zipper Auditorium two nights later, Gloria Cheng began the 11th season of Piano Spheres, with the presence &#8211; only in spirit this time &#8211; of founding mentor and participant Leonard Stein, who left us last June. Some of her program had been Stein&#8217;s choice (for himself, although his fingers had been stilled a year before). Seventy rain-soaked minutes on I-10 had cost me the first of Schoenberg&#8217;s Opus 19 “Little Piano Pieces”; what I heard elicited from Cheng the elegance, the fantasy, the daring of a young composer breaking through that I doubt Stein could have approached at any time in Piano Spheres&#8217; history. Stein had also pushed for George Benjamin&#8217;s <i>Shadowlines</i>, and indeed this British composer needs better attention over here than this set of wispy short pieces suggests. The evening&#8217;s strongest work was also short and also Brit: a single section from Harrison Birtwistle&#8217;s <i>Harrison&#8217;s Clocks</i>, marvelously intricate and witty, an emphatic drumbeat for a composer whose neglect &#8211; locally, and in the U.S. on the whole &#8211; measured against his considerable strengths is a matter of some shame.</p>
<p>
Music by two composers named Stephen Taylor &#8211; a set of sound-effect pieces by Stephen Andrew relative to scenic wonders (Antarctica, Tibet, etc.) and something by Stephen James about anger expressed in intervals of seconds and sevenths &#8211; were further linked by shared triviality. Stephen Andrew offended with his fondness for fortissimo trills with great handfuls of notes at the top of the keyboard, a process for the inflicting of pain upon large numbers of trapped people that bears criminal investigation.</p>
<p>
 </p>
<p>
<b>In Praise Of Popov</b></p>
<p>
But for the irresistible evangelism of Alex Ross, periodically in <i>The New Yorker</i> and virtually day-to-day on his Web site (<i><a href="http://www.therestisnoise.com">www.therestisnoise.com</a></i>), I might have passed to an unquiet grave without hearing a note of the music of Gavriil Popov; now curiosity and satisfaction possess my inmost soul. Popov&#8217;s dates are 1904–72, making him an almost exact contemporary of Dmitri Shostakovich; his music made something of a splash last summer as part of Leon Botstein&#8217;s Shostakovich Festival at Bard College. There were recordings, apparently rather dim, of three of his seven symphonies on the Olympia label, now defunct. Now there is a new recording of No. 1 on Telarc, not at all dim, with Botstein conducting the London Symphony.</p>
<p>
The Popov story reads like that of Shostakovich, but without the happy endings. This First Symphony, commemorating the October Revolution, had won a newspaper prize; the day after its 1935 premiere it was attacked and banned in <i>Pravda</i> as “formalist,” reflecting “the ideology of classes hostile to us.” The ban was eventually lifted, but Popov was scarred by the experience. For the rest of his life he ground out safely non-formalist, party-line music. He had some contact with Shostakovich, but they were not close.</p>
<p>
This First Symphony, then, can be taken as the one work encapsulating Popov&#8217;s full genius, which is considerable. The work, in three movements, lasts about 50 minutes. The Shostakovich Fourth comes to mind in the music&#8217;s massive outreach, but Popov&#8217;s control of his material makes for a tighter, stronger organization. David Fanning&#8217;s program notes refer to a “manic momentum,” and that is a fair estimate. The shape (“formalism” if you prefer) of the first movement disturbs me somewhat; it seems to come to an end too soon. Perhaps a conductor with a greater command of oratory than the rather all-purpose Leon Botstein can make this work better, although this recording is already an open window to a remarkable “new” masterwork.</p>
<p>
Obiter dictum: As promised, I checked out the B-team for the L.A. Opera&#8217;s <i>Carmen</i>, a group most notably motivated by the vital, sizzling conducting of Nicola Luisotti &#8211; whose arrival in the pit the orchestral musicians loudly cheered. May he soon return, in better company. Catherine Malfitano is the aged, clumsy star, her tattered off-cue voice the ghost of Carmens past. “<i>Je veux danser en votre honneur</i>,” she tells Don José in Act 2, and proceeds to “dance in his honor” by standing stock-still without a twitch. Mario Malagnini is the acceptable B-team José; at least he doesn&#8217;t bray.</p>
<p>
I promised I&#8217;d go, but I didn&#8217;t promise I&#8217;d stay to the end. I mean . . . gee whiz, folks!</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Three Strikes on&#160;Carmen</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2004/10/three-strikes-on-carmen/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2004/10/three-strikes-on-carmen/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 28 Oct 2004 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=510</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Every opera company needs Carmen as the “C” to complete the “A” (Aida) and the “B” (La Bohème) of the essential repertory; this season our local forces are providing the full complement. Do not mistake that out of hand, however, as the stamp of good health. The current Carmen at the Music Center is the [...]]]></description>
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<b>Every opera company</b> needs <i>Carmen</i> as the “C” to complete the “A” (<i>Aida</i>) and the “B” (<i>La Bohème</i>) of the essential repertory; this season our local forces are providing the full complement. Do not mistake that out of hand, however, as the stamp of good health. The current <i>Carmen</i> at the Music Center is the company&#8217;s third try, and they haven&#8217;t gotten it right yet.</p>
<p>
The problems go back to the opera&#8217;s early days, to Bizet&#8217;s original sizzling opéra comique with its abrasive orchestration and the spoken dialogue between musical numbers that moved the action furiously forward. Bizet died soon after the 1875 premiere, and tampering hands got to work on the score, slowing the action with sung instead of spoken dialogue, diluting the genius of the original with lesser hackwork. This became the “standard” <i>Carmen</i>, so identified in all the press handouts. Everybody knows that Bizet&#8217;s original is by far stronger, but the “standard” version has become so ingrained that singers and conductors are too lazy to learn the better score. Francesco Rosi&#8217;s marvelous film, with Plácido Domingo and Julia Migenes-Johnson, now on DVD, preserves this original version.</p>
<p>
Like its previous attempts in 1992 and 1998, the Los Angeles Opera&#8217;s new <i>Carmen</i> is defeated at the start by its espousal of the corrupt “standard” version, further weakened by the nothing-much conducting of Domingo on opening night, by the work of three of the four principal cast members that ranged from negligible to deplorable, and by a production that clogged the visual receptors even as the music offended the ears. (Two casts of principals are being fielded during the 12 performances, and two conductors. I&#8217;ll check out the B-team and report, if there&#8217;s anything worth reporting. How&#8217;s that for heroism beyond the call?)</p>
<p>
Milena Kitic is the A-team Carmen, Belgrade-born, currently residing in Pasadena, active in local opera. She sings prettily, but without much in the chest. Worse, for a woman of her slender and attractive build, her stage movements are without slink: a Carmen behaving like a Micaela. That latter part &#8211; my nomination for opera&#8217;s most unnecessary role even under optimum conditions &#8211; was sung by Carmen Giannattasio with the requisite forgettable, pale sweetness. From the yawps and howls of Richard Leech&#8217;s Don José there were no surprises: a tenor never more than second-rate-utility at the height of his career, now in decline from even that sad state. Only the larruping Escamillo of the ever-reliable Erwin Schrott produced something like a spark of life.</p>
<p>
 </p>
<p>
<b>To its great credit,</b> and our no-less-great edification, the Philharmonic&#8217;s current “Silenced Voices” program uncovers a segment in musical history virtually unknown and certainly undervalued: two generations of Central European music, mostly but not entirely by Jewish composers, deemed unacceptable by Nazi artistic standards and thus removed from circulation. Some of it, of course, survived with its composers who were able to emigrate &#8211; Korngold, Weill, Zemlinsky; much of it did not, vanishing as its composers perished in Hitler&#8217;s gas ovens. Absent this music, we lack a whole strand of 20th-century musical history parallel to the development of atonality and neoclassicism.</p>
<p>
One single thread that did survive, miraculously, is the music of Viktor Ullmann, who as a prisoner at Theresienstadt composed almost 20 works, including an opera, and managed to pass the manuscripts on to a librarian at the camp who preserved them and, many years later, made their presence known. An amazed world first heard the one-act satirical opera <i>The Emperor of Atlantis</i> in 1975; it was given here this past week at the Wilshire Boulevard Temple. James Conlon conducted with a small vocal ensemble from Juilliard and the Philharmonic New Music Group; on discs and in two weeks at the Philharmonic, this “Irish kid from Long Island” (his words) has made the rediscovery and restoration of this suppressed concentration-camp repertory a matter of personal priority.</p>
<p>
There is more to this music than its creators&#8217; personal stories; both the opera and Ullmann&#8217;s Second Symphony, which Conlon conducted with the Philharmonic, are strong and fascinating works that do indeed fill in great stylistic gaps in our awareness of their time. The opera, to a libretto by Peter Kien, treats a fable familiar itself for its time, an allegory involving the personification of Death held at bay, and an Emperor and a Harlequin at odds on the value of Life; into the music there went the expected shreds of Strauss (all Strausses), some Mahler, much Weill, much of the bristle of the young Hindemith. In the symphony, fleshed out by a contemporary editor from notations left by Ullmann on the manuscript of a piano sonata, there is all of the above plus, in a powerful slow movement, a richness of oratory that has the outlines of a Bruckner on a level of eloquence that tragic figure never attained. This is, then, important music. There are Conlon recordings of the two symphonies, on Capriccio; see for yourself.</p>
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 </p>
<p>
<b>Cage, Ives, Harrison, Riley . . .</b> somebody in heaven must have had a hand in concocting Jacaranda&#8217;s first program of the season (and the second one, too, all-Mozart on November 20, with the 13-Wind Serenade, the Piano-Wind Quintet and the “Dissonance” Quartet). Surely you know this concert series by now: chamber music lovingly planned, handsomely set in Santa Monica&#8217;s First Presbyterian (where even the organ is the proper size). This first concert, a rewarding variorum of masterwork and not-quite, drew well; word is around.</p>
<p>
Matters began with the endearing trivialities of Cage&#8217;s <i>Living Room Music</i>, congenial strokings of household furniture brought onstage for the occasion, some to Gertrude Stein poetry, some not. Later there was Cage&#8217;s famous silent piece <i>4&#8217;33”</i> performed by pianist Scott Dunn with majestic solemnity; Dunn also participated &#8211; fingers and all this time, and with violinist Sarah Thornblade and cellist Timothy Loo &#8211; in Charles Ives&#8217; Trio, with its hilarious jumble of quotations one minute and its apparent inability to get to any kind of point the next. Guitarist Miroslav Tadic and violinist Thornblade collaborated in a set of garrulous Terry Riley pieces whose inability to get to a point was part of their charm. Best of all was Lou Harrison&#8217;s hugely insistent, dramatic Concerto for Violin and Percussion Orchestra, its killer solos dispatched by a phenomenal 22-year-old violinist named Joel Pargman &#8211; remember that name &#8211; with a mostly student ensemble led by Donald Crockett.</p>
<p>
There are times when you&#8217;re listening to a piece, and you squirm in your seat and can&#8217;t wait for it to end. There are times when you sit transfixed and pray that it never ends. On successive nights last week &#8211; the <i>Carmen</i> and Lou Harrison&#8217;s Concerto &#8211; I was able to touch both extremes.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Collector&#039;s&#160;Items</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2004/10/collectors-items/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2004/10/collectors-items/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 21 Oct 2004 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=509</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[BY A COINCIDENCE of trifling importance, the Los Angeles Opera&#8217;s two music directors &#8211; Kent Nagano present and James Conlon future &#8211; turn up on disc releases this month. By further coincidence, both works are musical turkeys: clumsy, noisy choral works by major composers that add nothing and detract considerably from their creators&#8217; otherwise lustrous [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>
<b>BY A COINCIDENCE </b>of trifling importance, the Los Angeles Opera&#8217;s two music directors &#8211; Kent Nagano present and James Conlon future &#8211; turn up on disc releases this month. By further coincidence, both works are musical turkeys: clumsy, noisy choral works by major composers that add nothing and detract considerably from their creators&#8217; otherwise lustrous reputations. Both, of course, will gladden the hearts of those peculiar fanatics among the world&#8217;s galaxy of collectors, the ones who must have everything, who would regard a collection lacking, say, an unfinished deathbed composition of Franz Liszt, however flawed, the way you or I might regard a pebble in a shoe.</p>
<p>
In a whole shelf of tomes on the life and works of Beethoven, I find no writing kindly disposed toward the oratorio <i>Christ on the Mount of Olives</i>, yet Nagano&#8217;s new Harmonia Mundi recording is actually the fifth of the work to appear since the dawn of the CD era. Worse yet, Franz Liszt&#8217;s <i>St. Stanislaus</i> rates no more than a footnote in my three or four biographies of that worthy composer, yet here on Telarc is an hour&#8217;s worth of music from this unfinished work from Liszt&#8217;s dying years, a performance Conlon put together at last year&#8217;s Cincinnati May Festival, an annual event he has shepherded since 1973.</p>
<p>
The ardent collector would have us believe, of course, that the less renowned a work&#8217;s position in its composer&#8217;s pantheon of masterworks, the more exalted its stature as a masterpiece. These two works from, respectively, the dawning and the sunset years in the era of the overstuffed romantic choral escapade &#8211; an era illuminated along its way with such flickering lights as Mendelssohn&#8217;s <i>Elijah</i> and the Brahms <i>Requiem</i> &#8211; hold a certain fascination. Terrible as they are, they serve as paradigms: the Beethoven as the perfect specimen of the bloodless academic counterpoint he so brilliantly surpassed in the fugues of his last string quartets, the Liszt as a blind alley where Wagner-inspired chromatic harmonies seem to strangle themselves in their own complexity.</p>
<p>
Beethoven&#8217;s 48-minute oratorio tells of Jesus&#8217; betrayal by Judas and the arrest in the Garden of Gethsemane; there are important roles for Jesus, Peter and a Seraph, and a chorus of soldiers and disciples gets to whoop things up at the end. But nothing ever moves; arias and recitatives fall into blocky forms, and even the choral movements lack impulse. Everything goes by formula &#8211; it&#8217;s difficult to realize that this stodgy music was conceived earlier in the same year (1803) that produced the “Eroica.” Plácido Domingo sings the Jesus; his recent success as Wagner&#8217;s Parsifal would, you&#8217;d think, endow his voice with the intensity to countenance the pathos in this kind of music, but Beethoven gives him little. Nagano and his Berlin Deutsches Symphonie provide a fine resonance; Luba Orgonasova and Andreas Schmidt take the subsidiary roles.</p>
<p>
An oratorio on Poland&#8217;s Saint Stanislaus, who in 1079 had the sass to confront the tyrannical King Boleslaw and get him to recant his evil ways, occupied the aging Franz Liszt in his last days, until failing eyesight forced him to put the project aside with two of the four scenes completed. Since those scenes already add up to an hour&#8217;s music, there was plenty for Conlon, his May Festival Chorus, seven vocal soloists and the Cincinnati Symphony to sink their teeth into for their world premiere last year; this, after all, is the kind of event that brings the Lisztomaniacs, the media and the recording engineers on the run (or would have, in my day).</p>
<p>
There is only one problem, and it reveals itself about 30 seconds into the tortured, slithering, aimless chromaticism of the opening orchestral introduction and never shakes itself loose thereafter: This music is dull, as if nothing in the world had ever been dull before. It is dull like a parody of dullness; it is dull as if the Brahms <i>Requiem</i> had turned into a klezmer convention; it is dull as if the AMA had defined a new level of physical pain. In a wretched sequence, chorus passes into aria; aria passes into orchestral fantasy on some obscure Polish hymn, then to another. One excellent soloist is Kristine Jepson, who sang the role of Sister Helen in Opera Pacific&#8217;s <i>Dead Man Walking</i> and, therefore, knows her way around lost causes &#8211; which do, after all, count as collectibles.</p>
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 </p>
<p>
<b>IT IS TIME </b>— long past time, in fact &#8211; for me to write about Valentin Silvestrov, one of that remarkable group of Eastern European composers whose cause in the West has been most forcefully undertaken by the noble record producer Manfred Eicher of ECM. Born in Ukraine in 1937, Silvestrov followed a more or less standard evolution &#8211; some 12-tone, some Cage, some Shostakovich and Schnittke &#8211; toward the unique stylistic mix his music presents as a challenge to latter-day description.</p>
<p>
His <i>Requiem for Larissa</i>, released on ECM this past spring and composed in memory of his late wife, explodes out of darkness. Deep-toned percussion (“a black lake,” writes Paul Griffiths in his notes) floods our ears; a horn and the chorus can&#8217;t quite get the words out: “Requiem.” The music pounds, then stops, then pounds once again. Of all the settings of the words of the Mass for the Dead, the “Dies Irae” here, in its jagged savagery, strikes the deepest terror. Later a solo mezzo-soprano sings the “Lacrimosa” in a tortured, fearful melody, and the men of the chorus fling it back at her. “Eternal rest” lies far out of reach in these harmonies that pierce the eardrums. Near the end solo, winds and brass hurl fragments of troubled melody over what sounds like an empty vastness, yet this soon melts into a kinder vision, as soft bells, harp and celesta offer the comfort long awaited and a soft wind seems to caress the troubled landscape.</p>
<p>
Silvestrov writes strong music that hurtles across many styles. On another ECM disc from a year ago, there&#8217;s his <i>Postludium</i>, a massive work for piano (Alexei Lubimov) and orchestra (Dennis Russell Davies, conducting), astonishing in its brutality at times but no less astonishing for its angelic apotheosis at the end. His music comes to us this coming March, when UCLA and ECM join in an extended festival they&#8217;re calling “Elective Affinities,” with a number of ECM notables on hand that I&#8217;ve written about in awe over the years &#8211; the Hilliard Ensemble, Jan Garbarek, Dino Saluzzi and the Keith Jarrett Trio. One event, listed for March 17, has music by Valentin Silvestrov and Arvo Pärt played by the Munich Chamber Orchestra. Both composers will be in attendance, and you should be, too.  </p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Pipe&#160;Poop</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2004/10/pipe-poop/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2004/10/pipe-poop/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 14 Oct 2004 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=508</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[ON A RECENT SATURDAY the euphoria downtown was something you could walk on: a ninth-inning grand-slam home run at Dodger Stadium, a brand-new bundle of organ pipes down the hill at Disney Hall. With the Dodgers&#8217; joy, and their pipe-dream-come-true (at this writing, at least), I have no problem sharing; from the new toy at [...]]]></description>
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<b>ON A RECENT SATURDAY</b> the euphoria downtown was something you could walk<br />
on: a ninth-inning grand-slam home run at Dodger Stadium, a brand-new bundle of<br />
organ pipes down the hill at Disney Hall. With the Dodgers&#8217; joy, and their pipe-dream-come-true (at this writing, at least), I have no problem sharing; from the new toy at Disney, I must &#8211; what&#8217;s that word in the legalistic lingo? &#8211; recuse myself.</p>
<p>
Impressive, yes; awesome, yes; one more Frank Gehry visual to do honor to its creator, definitely yes; what I cannot do, with the new organ at Disney or with any other of its kind, is to accept its sound as beautiful. The sound of the pipe organ, any pipe organ, is a noise mechanically created, by extraordinarily complex means, to simulate musical tones. It cannot, at the same time, simulate the human impulse that creates these tones &#8211; the impact of breath or finger. It cannot simulate the way a singer or a string player can bend a tone slightly to match another tone nearby. (Not all “human” instruments can do all of this, either, which is why we have ensembles made up of many kinds of instruments.)</p>
<p>
And so, organs (pipe, electronic, whatever) are some kind of elaborate fake, and they sound fake. The opening dash to the cadence of Bach&#8217;s D-minor Toccata and Fugue, which Todd Wilson played to start the first subscription concert, was a glazed, metallic, tooth-jarring shriek that had nothing to do with any musical sound I could acknowledge. Organs in churches much smaller than this one, of course, have been used by great composers like J.S. Bach to create wonderful musical designs; has anyone actually described the sound of these works as “beautiful,” as the term might apply to a slow movement from a Brandenburg Concerto or an aria from the Mass? The organ works are masterpieces of design, and we hear them that way. They have paved the way for generations of lesser composers, who have perverted Bach&#8217;s compositional impulses on perversions of Bach&#8217;s instruments to create the contemporary organ repertory. Olivier Messiaen has been more eloquent than most in employing the instrument to convey his long-winded personal messages to the Heavenly Host and all His pals.</p>
<p>
Some composers have been tempted to blend the organ into monster orchestral compositions. In the Philharmonic&#8217;s first two weeks the programs have put forth two of the best-known horrors along this line: the so-called “Organ” Symphony by Saint-Saëns and Richard Strauss&#8217; <i>Also Sprach Zarathustra</i>, along with Strauss&#8217; Festival Prelude, which is my new nominee for the worst music ever written. It&#8217;s worth noting that, although both the Saint-Saëns and <i>Zarathustra</i> owe their fame to their bone-rattling C-major organ blasts, in both of them these blasts occur only one or two times during music of a half-hour duration. Most likely, both Saint-Saëns and Strauss were shrewd enough to realize that the discrepancy in tuning between organ and other instruments would have created harmonic chaos if allowed to settle into an audience&#8217;s awareness.</p>
<p>
I asked the Disney Hall organ builder, Manuel Rosales, how designers deal with this discrepancy, the clash in intonation between the organ and instruments in equal temperament. (The Saint-Saëns, which calls for both organ and piano, sets up a particularly horrendous clash, which nobody bothers to notice because the music is so busy at the time.) He had no real answer: “We just make the organ sound as nice as we can.” The one really satisfactory organ-plus-instruments music on these inaugural concerts was Lou Harrison&#8217;s Concerto for Organ and Percussion that was stuck between the Bach and the Saint-Saëns and, in terms of innovative sounds deployed with high imagination, put everything else to shame. Wilson&#8217;s stilted performance, however, had the feel of a stranger in a strange land.</p>
<p>
 </p>
<p>
<b>PIPE ORGANS IN GREAT cathedrals</b> become part of the architectural psychology; their sound seems to fulfill the interior of the building. Two wheezy ancient organs answering each other across the vast space of San Marco in Venice renew the inspiration that drove Monteverdi and the Gabrielis 400 years ago. High mass at Notre Dame in Paris involves some turgid, nondescript music by a latter-day hack composer, but the place defines the sound and vice versa. At Disney Hall it&#8217;s the sound of the orchestra on the stage &#8211; Salonen and the Philharmonic performing Berlioz, say &#8211; that fulfills the space; the organ comes at you from one place, up high in the hall. I&#8217;m not at all sure that we&#8217;re going to make the adjustment to include that sound in the fullness the hall provides. Maybe, but don&#8217;t take bets.</p>
<p>
Pipe organs in concert halls are prestige items. The New York Philharmonic suffered a terrible blow to its ego when its pipe organ had to be ripped out of Avery Fisher Hall during one of its frequent acoustic make-overs. (That organ, by the way, currently resides at the Crystal Cathedral in Garden Grove.) In the concert hall it is not totally useless, of course; at Sunday&#8217;s Master Chorale concert, which consisted entirely of choral music plus organ, the sound supporting the chorus in the D-major Mass of Dvorák was lush and lovely; the trumpeting dissonances in and around James MacMillan&#8217;s Magnificat helped redeem the churchly dullness of the interminable vocal stuff. But at the Philharmonic pre-concert event, the orchestra&#8217;s CEO Deborah Borda had rattled off, as benefits bestowed by the possession of the new organ, the gladsome tidings that the orchestra would now be able to schedule the Poulenc Organ Concerto and Franz Liszt&#8217;s <i>Battle of the Huns</i>, and it struck me that those works of arguable merit may have been acquired at rather a high price.</p>
<p>
Meanwhile, back at the opera . . . I had promised you, and myself, to look in on the Los Angeles Opera&#8217;s <i>Ariadne auf Naxos</i> one more time as Laura Claycomb took on the role of Zerbinetta for the last two performances. This, in a word, was stupendous: more than a flawless vocal performance, a creation of body and voice and spirit so grand in conception as to spread its magic to those around her. Everything worked; the creature of light and air scratched together by Strauss and von Hofmannsthal out of random scraps became a whole new and vital gear in the turning of the drama. Claycomb, who has sung songs of Salonen at Ojai and Bellini&#8217;s Juliet at the Music Center, became here not just a late-in-the-run replacement but a great and original creative artist. Cherish her.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Uneasy&#160;Rider</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2004/09/uneasy-rider/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2004/09/uneasy-rider/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 30 Sep 2004 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=507</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Inevitably, but at glacial pace, the art of Robert Wilson moves westward. In European theater, his work has exerted a volcanic influence over the past three decades. In New York, or at least in Brooklyn, he has maintained a stronghold for even longer. In Los Angeles, however, he has been on our conscience, but not [...]]]></description>
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<b>Inevitably, but at glacial pace,</b> the art of Robert Wilson moves westward. In European theater, his work has exerted a volcanic influence over the past three decades. In New York, or at least in Brooklyn, he has maintained a stronghold for even longer. In Los Angeles, however, he has been on our conscience, but not on our stages, since the city&#8217;s failure &#8211; of funding, but also of vision &#8211; to import the gargantuan, multinational, multimedia <i>CIVIL warS</i> that he concocted for the 1984 Olympics. Attempts to restore to circulation his <i>Einstein on the Beach</i>, his signature work and in some ways his greatest, have also sputtered; about the 1998 <i>Monsters of Grace</i>, a later collaboration with Philip Glass, his one original work seen here so far, the less said the better.</p>
<p>
But last season&#8217;s <i>Madama Butterfly</i> at the L.A. Opera, not a new production but a carefully prepared revival, was pure Wilson: the exquisitely intricate sense of stage movement, the lighting that swept the eye toward magical far horizons, and, most remarkable, the way the characters onstage seemed to absorb light and color until it became their defining dimension. And if you make the pilgrimage to San Francisco&#8217;s Geary Theater &#8211; where Wilson&#8217;s <i>The Black Rider</i>, the first completely original work of his to play these shores, will be on the boards for another week &#8211; the first thing you will notice is that same intensity, as though the confraternity of dyestuff and paint and lighting has saturated everything and made the essence of color into a dimension of itself.</p>
<p>
The fable of <i>The Black Rider</i> partakes deeply of the essence of theater: good versus evil, the power of make-believe to enlist the participation of all the senses. This particular permutation derives from a German folktale, but the aura is universal. Wilhelm, the simple-minded schnook, needs to win the huntsman&#8217;s contest to earn the hand of Katie; on his own, however, he can&#8217;t even hit a barn door. Enter the Devil, who offers a handful of Magic Bullets, but doesn&#8217;t let on that the last bullet belongs to him. Needless to say, that last bullet becomes the bearer of mischief; Katie falls, and Wilhelm ends up in the loony bin. Carl Maria von Weber took the same story into <i>Der Freischütz</i> but gave it a happy ending. The only treatment of the tale that comes close to the Wilson version is Achim Freyer&#8217;s staging of the Weber with the Stuttgart Opera, which, to our great good fortune, has just turned up on DVD.</p>
<p>
Wilson&#8217;s<i> Black Rider</i> dates from 1990, first performed in German at Hamburg&#8217;s Thalia Theater; when it came to the Brooklyn Academy for a 10-day run in 1993, it was already a legend. With an insight born of genius, Wilson gathered to the making of the work the high/low art of two of his time&#8217;s most eloquent spokesmen for inner disturbance, the drug-sozzled writer William S. Burroughs and the abrasive balladeer Tom Waits. As with <i>Einstein</i>, the resultant work is so seamless that it seems to stem from a single impulse, a single genius. The English version had its premiere at London&#8217;s Barbican last May, and was brought to San Francisco by that city&#8217;s admirable American Conservatory Theater. It travels now to lucky Sydney.</p>
<p>
The songs, a marvelous stew of Brecht, Weill and Waits himself, cackled forth by an enchanted cast led by Marianne Faithfull (as, of course, the Devil) and the rubber-legged dancer Matt McGrath (recently of <i>Hedwig and the Angry Inch</i>), seem to mirror the stage pictures, with their grotesque props like children&#8217;s drawings gone askew. Now and then there&#8217;s an evocation: a moment from some long-forgotten silent film, some children&#8217;s cutouts you remember from kindergarten. Memories go fleeting by, and you don&#8217;t quite grasp them, because some of the theater is happening within your own head. In the pit, a band calling itself the Magic Bullets grinds out new music full of Kurt Weill&#8217;s sourness; a virtuoso on the musical saw sets your teeth on edge.</p>
<p>
The vital element of Wilson&#8217;s art is his amazing power of concentration, of drawing a dramatic detail out of a situation and bearing down on its implications at whatever length. That, I think, is the crux of <i>Einstein</i>, and it works here as well. Not for him the diversionary tactics of the trash mongers I wrote about not long ago, whose notion of modern theater is to stage Wagner&#8217;s <i>Ring</i> in an office-building basement. He starts with reality, and goes on from there. Given the breadth of his imagination, he can go far.</p>
<p>
 </p>
<p>
<b>Rounding out my Bay Area weekend, </b>there was Kent Nagano&#8217;s Berkeley Symphony at UC&#8217;s Zellerbach Hall, with the American premiere of the Violin Concerto by Unsuk Chin, a work preceded by considerable fame &#8211; including the winning of the $200,000 Grawemeyer Award at the University of Louisville, no small potatoes &#8211; and worth every blast. Born in Korea but mostly educated in Berlin, Chin has been moving forward at a fair clip, with Nagano one of her strong proponents. Her tricky chamber piece <i>Acrostic Wordplay</i> turned up on a Green Umbrella program a couple of years ago; her opera on <i>Alice in Wonderland</i> is slated for the L.A. Opera&#8217;s 2005-06 season (conducted by guess who), and there was a short excerpt from that work, along with a big electronic work, at last summer&#8217;s Ojai Festival.</p>
<p>
The Violin Concerto, which Vivianne Hagner performed at Berkeley, is stronger than anything of Chin&#8217;s I have yet heard, a phenomenally tense, marvelously scored piece lasting about half an hour. Much is made of the violin intoning a rhapsodic melodic line over a percussive throbbing. Much, too, is made of killer virtuoso stuff. Chin writes with what seems to me a natural gift for the concerto, for making solo instruments <i>say</i> something along with an orchestra. She has composed concertos for piano and for percussion, which I am eager to hear. I am eager, in fact, to hear <i>anything</i> that proclaims the arrival of an important composer with serious, original ways of finding new things to say within the old shapes. These days, that&#8217;s rare.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>For All&#160;Seasons</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2004/09/for-all-seasons/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2004/09/for-all-seasons/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 16 Sep 2004 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=506</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Photo by Viaamse Opera, Annemie Augustijns Haydn at the Bowl on one balmy night, Mozart at the Music Center on another: The segue between seasons here is less a meteorological matter than sartorial, and the transition this time has been unusually smooth. Idomeneo comes laden with genius, and with problems. The title role sits uneasily [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Photo by Viaamse Opera, Annemie Augustijns
<p>
<b>Haydn at the Bowl on one balmy night, </b>Mozart at the Music Center on another: The segue between seasons here is less a meteorological matter than sartorial, and the transition this time has been unusually smooth.</p>
<p>
<i>Idomeneo</i> comes laden with genius, and with problems. The title role sits uneasily in the repertory; it is the one Mozartian lead that can attract a supertenor without collapsing under his tonsils. Pavarotti and Domingo have both sung and recorded it; the last Idomeneo here &#8211; in a cutesy Maurice Sendak production in 1990 about which the less said the better &#8211; was the Wagnerian Siegfried Jerusalem. Domingo&#8217;s Idomeneo may be ready to abandon his throne, however, if last week&#8217;s performance on the Los Angeles Opera&#8217;s opening night is any judge. The heroic ring had severely faded, and so had the lovely lyricism. Domingo seems to have recognized this, since some 20 minutes of the opera, most of it the noble resignation as the deposed ruler relinquishes his realm to his son, had been cut. It&#8217;s a wise opera boss who knows his own score.</p>
<p>
The opera represents Mozart&#8217;s final leap out of provincial captivity before moving on to his conquest of Viennese musical society. This curious hybrid represents the melding of his sublime genius for creating operatic human beings in full harmonic clothing and setting them to breathe within the archaic dramatic framework that enlists the aid of gods to resolve human dilemmas and expresses manly bravery in the soprano, coloratura vocal registers. These exasperating mechanisms had creaked to their demise in Handel&#8217;s time a generation before: above all the da capo (or cabbage twice-chewing) aria complete with final cadenza that occasions its hero or heroine to tread and then retread familiar ground in the cause of classical symmetry. As with Handel, we wait long hours for two characters to actually sing to one another instead of out to the audience or upward to the favoring zephyrs.</p>
<p>
But how they sing! There is a phrase in the cadences of poor, put-upon Princess Ilia&#8217;s song to the breezes that starts the last act, and when that phrase floats in upon you, you just have to pick up the needle and play it again and again. It&#8217;s at times like this that you draw your comfort by knowing that Mozart will, in due time, come around to repeating that phrase; he, too, knew a good tune and a melting harmony when he heard them. Later in that act the Prince Idamante and the Princess Ilia finally get around to recognizing that they&#8217;re in love and have been for the last three or so hours, and so they sit on the ground &#8211; at least in Vera Calábria&#8217;s tidy staging &#8211; and sing about it, and that too is wonderful. Ten years from then, when Papa Geno and his Mama get together in a later opera and start making babies, perhaps Mozart remembered the delight that earlier duet had created.</p>
<p>
<i>Idomeneo</i> is nevertheless hard to love. Nobody will ever satisfactorily explain the presence of the character known as Elettra, who is actually the same Electra who goes bonkers (and, presumably, dies of terminal ecstasy) at the end of the Richard Strauss opera &#8211; or the Sophocles drama, if you prefer &#8211; but turns up here to get in everybody&#8217;s way to no purpose, bestriding the stage, hurling forth brainless coloratura to establish herself as forerunner of the Queen of the Night To Come. The opera abounds in that kind of late-baroque foofaraw; the wonder is that Mozart and his librettist could light a path through it all, create a drama in which the dramatic strengths are so strong and so harrowingly beautiful that the moments of surrender to past usage become close to bearable. I am not ready to swallow whole the note I often come across, i.e., that “<i>Idomeneo</i> is the richest and most original of all the Mozart operas . . .” (as in the recent booklet with EMI&#8217;s Ian Bostridge recording). As a case study in survival, however, in preserving the glow of its genius through the encrustations of period usage, the work is some sort of miracle.</p>
<p>
The failure of firmness and eloquence in the name role is, of course, a drawback, but the strengths of <i>Idomeneo</i> are various, and are on the whole nicely represented here in the elegant orchestral ensemble under Kent Nagano and the cumulative power of William Vendice&#8217;s chorus. Verónica Villarroel dines well on Elettra&#8217;s madness, if at times at the expense of Mozart&#8217;s melodic shapes, but I cannot deny her the evening&#8217;s biggest cheers, which she pulled down on opening night. More to my &#8211; and, I think, Mozart&#8217;s &#8211; taste were the beautifully matched Idamante and Ilia of Kate Aldrich and Adriana Damato, whose eventual coming together in that aforementioned duet is one of the memories I gladly took home on opening night.</p>
<p>
Michael Vale&#8217;s set, from the Flanders Opera, is adequate in the best sense, a backdrop of several panels that catches Tina MacHugh&#8217;s lighting onto abstract shapes and opens to show the menacing God Neptune at climactic moments and a raked performing area down front: nothing more, nothing more needed. Calábria, an old <i>Idomeneo</i> hand (she worked on several productions with the legendary Jean-Pierre Ponnelle), moves the action simply and with a welcome lack of pretense. If this oversized almost-masterwork is going to reveal its genius and glide past its problem patches, let it be thus.</p>
<p>
<b>At the Bowl the season</b> lumbers on. At the moment I ponder: Do I really want to sit through a symphony drawn from <i>Lord of the Rings</i> on those giant screens, or spend evenings with reality and my new DVD at home? Basically the video at the Bowl has been a farce and a fiasco. The use the video setup should be put to &#8211; information, names of songs, well-coordinated integration with players &#8211; would mount to hopeless expense in equipment and rehearsal time. Besides, who would want it? Who comes to the Bowl for that much education about the onstage goings-on? It would be interesting to learn how much of this was foreseen and discussed before those screens went up.</p>
<p>
My favorite moment at the Bowl came two weeks ago when Nicholas McGegan was conducting Haydn&#8217;s “Surprise” Symphony. You know the place, don&#8217;t you &#8211; the Big Bang in the slow movement that gives the piece its name? Well, McGegan did the Bang, and it echoed off the nearby buildings as the Big Bangs have been doing all summer . . . And for all I know it may be echoing still.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Bliss for the&#160;Thunderers</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2004/09/bliss-for-the-thunderers/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2004/09/bliss-for-the-thunderers/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 09 Sep 2004 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=505</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Nirvana looms for the organic crowd &#8211; not the veggies-and-sprouts folks this time, but the seekers of ecstasy in the sounds of the “world&#8217;s most perfect” (and, thus, least musical) instrument, the devotees of Diggle and Thistlethwaite. This is the month when the wraps come off the organ at Disney Hall, that interesting mass of [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>
<b>Nirvana looms for the organic crowd</b> &#8211; not the veggies-and-sprouts folks this time, but the seekers of ecstasy in the sounds of the “world&#8217;s most perfect” (and, thus, least musical) instrument, the devotees of Diggle and Thistlethwaite. This is the month when the wraps come off the organ at Disney Hall, that interesting mass of architectural every-which-way (most accurately described as a bag of McDonald&#8217;s fries newly dropped) and sight-joins-sound.</p>
<p>
Organ fanciers are a strange lot. They do, indeed, put up with an instrument inherently out of tune with anything else in the concert spectrum; it shares this incompatibility with the piano, but the two are also incompatible with each other. Noise and more noise: That seems to be their ideal. A British record label, Priory, runs around the Isles recording great, clattery instruments in vast, echoey cathedrals, and they promote these as “The Thunderer” and “The Super-Thunderer,” with a ghastly repertory by obscure churchly souls sporting such names as Roland Diggle and N (no period, please) Thistlethwaite, last week&#8217;s Yorkshire pudding set to music. The only serious music for the instrument was created for an ambiance that has nothing to do with large concert halls or vast cathedrals, which probably explains why Frederick Swann&#8217;s inaugural program at Disney lists only one piece by Bach &#8211; the F-major Toccata, with its marvelous showoff cascades of pedal work &#8211; adrift among the kind of romantic trash that sustains the contemporary organ repertory.</p>
<p>
Grand organs look wonderful enthroned in concert halls; where else would you put them, in fact? (There is, however, a splendid one in the grand hall of Wanamaker&#8217;s department store in Philadelphia. I remember hearing Bach&#8217;s <i>St. Matthew Passion</i> there.) Boston&#8217;s Symphony Hall glows from the majesty of its organ pipes; so does Vienna&#8217;s Musikverein. Frank Gehry&#8217;s Disney organ captures and condenses the visual wit of the building it adorns. From what I&#8217;ve heard of the instrument so far, organ builder Manuel Rosales&#8217; creation captures the sound of the hall no less dramatically.</p>
<p>
But to what use? A large organ in a concert hall can serve the magnificence of the Bach legacy for an audience of the size this music deserves and, so long as attendance isn&#8217;t made compulsory, serve as well the funereal maunderings of the French romantics Franck, Widor and their coterie. I can think of maybe five pieces in the repertory that benefit from a real pipe organ as opposed to an electric jobbie, and we&#8217;re getting a fair sampling this season. Strauss&#8217; <i>Zarathustra</i> and the Saint-Saëns Third Symphony both contain crowd-rousing C-major organ blasts &#8211; one each; is that worth the cost of a real pipe organ? Aside from the sensation of the brief but awaited episodes with the pipe organ blowing its blooie-blooie, both works eventually come up against the clash between that instrument&#8217;s tuning and the sounds of the orchestral woodwinds. So does Copland&#8217;s 1925 Organ Symphony, which will be a valuable revival even so. (Note, however, that Copland later removed the organ part and re-scored the work as his First Symphony.) The one work that really makes it important that the hall possess a real organ comes with the Philharmonic&#8217;s first-ever performance of Lou Harrison&#8217;s Concerto for Organ With Percussion, listed for the first subscription weekend, October 2-3.</p>
<p>
You might have known that Harrison, with his marvelously eclectic ear for worldwide tuning systems, would cut through the nonsense of attempting to blend the organ&#8217;s immovable Pythagorean overtones &#8211; “hopelessly tonal,” he called it &#8211; into symphonic tunings (as do Strauss and Saint-Saëns). Percussion tuning forms the ideal mating, and this far-seeing work may, indeed, be the world&#8217;s first successful attempt to bring the organ into the orchestral realm. It is also, by the way, one of the Philharmonic&#8217;s all-too-rare attempts to bring the rich and far-flung imagination of this wise and lovable composer within earshot of local audiences. If this signifies an eventual discovery of the California musical climate by our globe-trotting conductor, so much the better.</p>
<p>
 </p>
<p>
<b>Fears that the Philharmonic&#8217;s scheduling</b> might lapse into the ordinary after last season&#8217;s sensational house party have proved groundless. The mix of the standard and the not-so is, if anything, even more imaginatively shaped in the upcoming season. The what-more-Beethoven factor, for example, is balanced against the delight of having Mitsuko Uchida on hand for all five piano concertos. The Berlioz <i>Fantastique</i> returns uncluttered after last year&#8217;s debacle, and the coupling with Salonen&#8217;s <i>Mania</i> is, to say the least, cute. Salonen and the Philharmonic performing Berlioz in Disney Hall, in case you haven&#8217;t noticed, is the world&#8217;s champion sound parlay, bar none.</p>
<p>
About the overall sense of the so-called <i>Tristan Project</i> &#8211; three acts presented separately, over three nights once repeated, in a Bill Viola visual context and surrounded by other music &#8211; I must reserve judgment, but the joining of one of the acts of Wagner&#8217;s drama with music from Kaija Saariaho&#8217;s <i>L&#8217;amour de Loin</i> (which I heard and marveled at at Santa Fe) is pure programmatic magic. Considering the length, difficulty and fame of Schönberg&#8217;s <i>Gurrelieder</i>, I am baffled to see it listed for a single performance. Chalk it up as just another of those unanswered questions.</p>
<p>
The five “Green Umbrella” programs are as distinguished a new-music offering as I know of from any major American orchestra, the more so since four of the programs involve Philharmonic members themselves. The variety is astounding, from the “classic” Stockhausen, Berio and Reich to a new commissioning series to honor the memory of the much-missed Philharmonic education director Sue Knussen, to an evening with the phenomenal Lorraine Hunt Lieberson singing her husband Peter&#8217;s songs, to new music by Salonen himself. The premises are being put to good use; the fun and games continue.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>The Marriage Made in&#160;Heaven</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2004/09/the-marriage-made-in-heaven/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2004/09/the-marriage-made-in-heaven/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 02 Sep 2004 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=504</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[The best thing about this job &#8211; one of the best things, anyhow &#8211; is the chance it affords me to write about Mozart&#8217;s The Marriage of Figaro, as often as I like. I got to write about it last spring when the L.A. Opera put on its so-so production. Now a new recording has [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>
<b>The best thing about this job</b> &#8211; one of the best things, anyhow &#8211; is the chance it affords me to write about Mozart&#8217;s <i>The Marriage of Figaro</i>, as often as I like. I got to write about it last spring when the L.A. Opera put on its so-so production. Now a new recording has landed on my desk. Actually, I&#8217;ve never needed an excuse; <i>Figaro</i> is always somewhere on my mind. It not only contains some of the most beautiful music I know, it is also the most convincing demonstration of the way music can move the personages within a drama and, therefore, move the personages witnessing that drama &#8211; in a theater, at home in front of a video screen or even just a couple of speakers.</p>
<p>
If I can prove this at all, the best way would be from one of the ensembles, when Mozart allows two or more characters to sing what&#8217;s on their minds simultaneously, with the music setting them apart &#8211; the power of music, in other words, to conquer time. Mozart&#8217;s own favorite ensemble in <i>Figaro</i>, or so he wrote somewhere, is the sextet in Act 3. The old harridan Marcellina, who has been trying to get Figaro to marry her, has now discovered that he is actually her illegitimate son; this also thwarts the designs of the Count, who has been trying to get<br />
into the panties of Figaro&#8217;s intended bride, Susanna. Mother<br />
and son are now reunited in a series of gooey, saccharine lovey-dovey phrases that show off Mozart&#8217;s marvelous mastery of musical parody.</p>
<p>
In walks Susanna, who&#8217;s not yet in on developments; all she knows is that her darling Figaro is standing there cuddling in the arms of that dreadful Marcellina, and so, naturally, she throws a snit. What Mozart has been delivering to us as all sweetness and light, F major followed by C major, brightness and cheer, is nudged in two quick measures into an ill-tempered minor key. The harmony loses its direction utterly and modulates in sheer desperation, climaxing as Susanna hands Figaro a resounding slap on the ear. Finally Figaro gets in his explanation, joined by the rest of the company, and serenity &#8211; dramatic and harmonic &#8211; is restored.</p>
<p>
But not quite. Perhaps to balance the fact that Susanna has come late into the ensemble, she is now allotted new music of her own: a haunting, serene, flowing tune made up of the most innocent phrases that expand into a perfect arch of melody, a kind of benediction on the joyous resolution of the day&#8217;s latest (but not last) crisis. I could argue for this moment as the most beautiful in the entire opera; perhaps Mozart felt that way, too. In any case, it is the kind of flourish that he alone could command, that last little light shone on his characters that lifts them out of artifice and onto a more accessible level where we can share their emotions, even their breath.</p>
<p>
 </p>
<p>
<b>The first <i>Figaro</i> was a haphazard affair</b> on 17 78-rpm discs recorded over two seasons (1935-36), with cast changes, at Britain&#8217;s Glyndebourne Festival and issued without recitatives. It wasn&#8217;t until 1952, well into the LP era, that a company risked an integral recording. (Trivia note: That was the album used by Tim Robbins in <i>The Shawshank Redemption</i>.) In its final issue in 2001, the <i>Schwann</i> catalog listed 15 versions, and I&#8217;ve lost count since. On my desert-island shelf sits London/Decca&#8217;s Vienna State Opera performance conducted by Erich Kleiber (father of Carlos), with Lisa della Casa&#8217;s Countess and Cesare Siepi&#8217;s Figaro, a performance of such deep eloquence that I never expected to contemplate moving it aside.</p>
<p>
But now there is Harmonia Mundi&#8217;s performance conducted by René Jacobs, and with it comes virtually a whole new way of listening to the sound of Mozart. The Belgian-born Jacobs, 58, has a distinguished dual career as countertenor and conductor, favoring mostly a baroque and classical repertory, with some marvelous Monteverdi and Handel operas to his credit. His ensemble is the Concerto Köln, playing on instruments of Mozart&#8217;s time and, more to the point, playing with a clarity of impact that Jacobs believes &#8211; and goes to some length to elucidate in excellent notes &#8211; was regarded by Mozart as integral </p>
<p>
to the dramatic integrity of this music. You sense this immediately, and it is thrilling, as the small string section comes crashing down on the first fortissimo of the overture. Go back from here to the warm syrup of the Vienna Philharmonic on this same<br />
passage; that, too, is beautiful, but suddenly it has become<br />
rather tame.</p>
<p>
The new cast is imbued with this power, this sense of danger. Figaro (Lorenzo Regazzo) measures the space for his and Susanna&#8217;s bed, and his lips almost smack at thoughts of that space in the future. Simon Keenlyside&#8217;s Count hurls imprecations at his dithering Countess like a fanfare of trombones; she &#8211; Véronique Gens &#8211; draws tears with every troubled response. </p>
<p>
The rest &#8211; Patrizia Ciofi&#8217;s Susanna, Angelika Kirchschlager&#8217;s Cherubino all a-twinkle &#8211; couldn&#8217;t be better; together with the marvelously spirited leadership, they turn the venture into a new kind of intensely human chamber music writ large.</p>
<p>
 </p>
<p>
<b>Harry Bicket, who was in town</b> to lead only one (why?) of last week&#8217;s Hollywood Bowl concerts, is also of the current generation of Europeans who speak the early-music languages particularly well; his 2001 Handel <i>Giulio Cesare </i>with the L.A. Opera is fondly remembered. At the Bowl he gave a nicely balanced reading of the last of Haydn&#8217;s symphonies, with the Philharmonic forces properly reduced and loving attention paid to the miraculous flights of harmony in the slow movement. Once again, however, as so often this summer, the intrusive echoes in much of the Bowl&#8217;s seating area rendered Haydn&#8217;s dramatic scoring ludicrous. This is not a minor problem, and will require some serious construction to correct.</p>
<p>
The rest of Bicket&#8217;s program consisted of interesting trash. First there was a Salieri overture, an early piece from long before he and Mozart locked horns. After intermission there was an extended collection of clichés and rip-offs in the manner of, say, a 14-year-old Felix Mendelssohn, a parody of a piece of early romantic fluff afflicted by an inability to bring itself to an ending. The music was no better for the fact that it actually was composed by the aforementioned Mendelssohn: a Double Concerto for Violin and Piano, grossly protracted, well enough played (by Yura Lee and Shai Wosner). The Salieri overture that Mr. Bicket conducted, by the way, was to an opera called <i>The Stolen Bucket</i>. There&#8217;s probably a joke in there somewhere, but it hardly seems worth the effort.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Two&#160;Bernsteins</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2004/08/two-bernsteins/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2004/08/two-bernsteins/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 26 Aug 2004 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=503</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Leonard Bernstein&#8217;s Mass dates from the fade-out of his years as an important composer. After 1971 there would be the pathetic operatic venture A Quiet Place, the failed Broadway project 1600 Pennsylvania Ave. and its various spinoffs, and several inconsequential concert works. The music of Mass was little better than any of these, but the [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>
Leonard Bernstein&#8217;s <i>Mass</i> dates from the fade-out of his years as an important composer. After 1971 there would be the pathetic operatic venture <i>A Quiet Place</i>, the failed Broadway project <i>1600 Pennsylvania Ave</i>. and its various spinoffs, and several inconsequential concert works. The music of <i>Mass</i> was little better than any of these, but the circumstances that surrounded it (as an inaugural piece for Washington&#8217;s Kennedy Center, composed at Jacqueline Kennedy&#8217;s personal request) and the nature of the collaboration (on a first-name basis with the Almighty Himself) have served to hold its place. At the Hollywood Bowl last Thursday the case for <i>Mass</i> &#8211; that&#8217;s the title, by the way, no “The” &#8211; was eloquently set forth and well attended and cheered; whatever the reason, the work lives on. A new recording, led by Kent Nagano, is due out on Harmonia Mundi in October, with the rather curious choice of an operatic tenor, Jerry Hadley, as the Celebrant. (Was Pavarotti not to be had?) At the Bowl the robust eloquence of Jubilant Sykes was the spellbinding alternative.</p>
<p>
Well I remember hot, sticky Washington nights in September 1971. The papers reported that audiences &#8211; Supreme Court justices, Hubert Humphrey, Bernstein himself, but not, of course, the Nixons &#8211; wept copiously at the messages of brotherhood and courage set forth in all this terribly earnest, appallingly contrived balderdash. Never mind that the best of it turned out to be blatant reruns of better, briefer, happier Bernstein bits &#8211; the sardonic “America” number from <i>West Side Story</i>, for one, hardly a patriotic, liturgical or architectural tribute. Then, as now, the manipulation stuff was masterful; there is no power on Earth to resist the throat-grab as a small boy (Eugene Olea this time) with sublimely pure soprano tones comes onto a chaos-strewn stage and sings of “secret songs to God.”</p>
<p>
This is, as you surely must know, a vast theater piece, conceived as a trope around the Roman Mass but turned ecumenical by musical and dance visitations from dozens of other cultures (including, of course, Lenny&#8217;s old pal Adonai, whom he had once beguiled with warm chicken soup in a piece called <i>Kaddish</i>). Alvin Ailey had done the original choreography; at the Bowl, Kay Cole maintained the plan, which involves onstage hordes of casually dressed youngsters throwing their arms around and generally behaving the way show-biz professionals imagine show-biz kids act (something they learn from road-show companies of <i>Bye Bye Birdie</i>). Brass bands come out and tootle; a rock band plays the cleanest rock this side of Lawrence Welk; and all the while a text is being run through (Lenny plus God plus more words provided by <i>Godspell</i>&#8216;s Stephen Schwartz, newly revised), full of 1971 hang-ups: a handbook of radical chic, man, rewritten by the editors of <i>My Weekly Reader</i>.</p>
<p>
There are purple moments in <i>Mass</i>, and they uphold every glowing report about the unique, daring genius who set them forth. The tragedy lies in the way they crumble. From lack of interest or from the inability to sustain the arch of a grandiose thought, one great moment after another in Bernstein&#8217;s “serious” music simply collapses, as if someone has flicked the switch on life-support. Something like this happens about midway through <i>Mass</i>. The Celebrant himself suffers a momentary crisis of faith, and launches into a recitation that begins to take the form of a mad scene in some as-yet-unwritten bel-canto opera.</p>
<p>
But there was music in those Donizetti mad scenes; in the Bernstein version, there is barrenness, a sudden, expressive vacuum in which a stageful of excellent performers under Marin Alsop &#8211; the Philharmonic, the Pacific Chorale, the Los Angeles Children&#8217;s Chorus, marching bands, dancers, singers and dancers, all tidily arranged by director Gordon Hunt to turn the Bowl stage into something resembling a very classy bank lobby &#8211; have been completely abandoned by the creative force they were there to serve. I actually felt a chill from this sudden absence, and it occurred to me that I had felt that same chill on a hot, miasmic Washington evening in 1971, faced with the same sad masterwork. A few minutes later some new Bernstein ideas clicked in, the little boy came out and sang his solo, and the music sped to its finish.</p>
<p>
But that was the sad story of Bernstein&#8217;s aspirations as a “serious” composer; the higher the aim, the more abject the result. The great works &#8211; the shows above all &#8211; cavort and scamper and, once in a while, even thrill; they whiz from one purple patch to the next, and we come out of the theater having willingly sacrificed two hours of our own breathing. This is the music that will last as long as people care about theater. Now, when “classical” or “serious” or whatever-you-want-to-call-it music faces extinction, bad music like this clumsy, unworkable Bernstein repertory only adds further density to the gathering cloudbank. There&#8217;s a Bernstein newsletter called <i>Prelude, Fugue and Riffs</i>, named after one of the lesser pieces, like naming a Beethoven newsletter <i>King Stefan</i>. It perpetuates news of performances of the big, dead concert works, the very ones that do the reputation the most damage, an elaborate, sad study in the art of kicking a dead horse.</p>
<p>
 </p>
<p>
In the best film scores, hearing the music can serve to re-create the scene itself: the look of it, and what it did the first time we saw it. Leonard Bernstein knew this, and it&#8217;s sad that he didn&#8217;t give more time to the art; his <i>On the Waterfront</i> music simply throbs with Jersey grayness and Brando, and that was his one work in the genre. Elmer Bernstein (no relation; they agreed early on, Elmer told me, that he would be “Steen” and Lenny “Stein”) gave his life to that genre, happily, until its end last week. I love the versatility: the ease in the way he brought jazz into bigtime films without ruining it (e.g., the way he used Chico Hamilton&#8217;s Quintet in <i>Sweet Smell of Success</i>), the way he could do Western skies (in <i>The Magnificent Seven</i>) without making it inevitable that John Wayne would have to come riding around the next bend, and, above all, the deep, rich humanity of the father and those kids in <i>To Kill a Mockingbird</i>.</p>
<p>
<i>Mockingbird </i>has to be everybody&#8217;s favorite, but I have another couple. One is a tiny moment in <i>Sweet Smell</i>, a tender parting near the end, with a solo clarinet picking up the mood for just a few seconds. Elmer was delighted when I told him how much I valued that moment, because he did, too. The other is the score he did for the designer Charles Eames for a short film all done with old-fashioned toy trains running through a toy landscape; it&#8217;s on a DVD collection of Eames short subjects, a lovely disc. It was the first music of Elmer Bernstein I ever heard, at a film festival in 1954, and I was sure they had gotten the name wrong. They hadn&#8217;t.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>A Little Night&#160;Music</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2004/08/a-little-night-music/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2004/08/a-little-night-music/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 19 Aug 2004 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=502</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[The film scores of Nino Rota constitute a body of lyric excellence that carries forward the dramatic vernacular of his Italian forebears into the medium of his own time. I say this, of course, with some trepidation; I have only examined one of his 12 operas, although I am currently completely under its spell thanks [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>
<b>The film scores of Nino Rota</b> constitute a body of lyric excellence that carries forward the dramatic vernacular of his Italian forebears into the medium of his own time. I say this, of course, with some trepidation; I have only examined one of his 12 operas, although I am currently completely under its spell thanks to the performance I experienced last week in Santa Barbara. But I hold a special place for the films he has helped to create &#8211; the Fellini collaborations like <i>Amarcord</i> and <i>8<sup>1</sup>/2</i> in which the music does, indeed, forge a texture that puts me in mind of the fully musical works of composers a century and more ago, and the huge Verdian melodramas like Visconti&#8217;s <i>The Leopard</i> (finally out on DVD) and Coppola&#8217;s <i>Godfather</i> epics, which transcend not only their cinematic medium but even their language.</p>
<p>
At Santa Barbara the students of the Music Academy of the West produced an actual Nino Rota opera, his 1955 setting of that grand old farce-comedy <i>The Italian Straw Hat</i>, which lingers for most of us in the treasurable 1927 silent film produced by René Clair. The film is still around on VHS, or was the last time I looked; unfortunately, it comes with an endless, obtrusive honky-tonk piano track that you just have to turn off. Rota&#8217;s music also goes like the wind, but in a superior direction: a nonstop pastiche of comedic giggle, Offenbach stirred into Rossini and some grand sourness from Rota himself. (Remember the clowns&#8217; dances in <i>8<sup>1</sup>/2</i>?) The Santa Barbara production was similarly airborne. Frank Corsaro&#8217;s direction set wings to everything; a 16-member cast handled the pitter-pattering Italian text (or seemed to, to these alien ears) to the manner born; even Randall Behr, distantly remembered &#8211; if at all &#8211; for his leaden baton at the Los Angeles Opera, managed a performance full of grace, wit and authentic accent. I would not miss these once-a-year productions at the Music Academy, if only to deliver a big, loving hug to Marilyn Horne, the school&#8217;s current director, and tell her how right she is to be proud of what her school, with its superior faculty, has accomplished.</p>
<p>
 </p>
<p>
<b>Nino Rota&#8217;s music hung</b> light in the summer air; so, two nights later, did Dvorák&#8217;s, at the Hollywood Bowl. If you question the connection, try this: The sad trumpet tune for the waif Gelsomina in Fellini&#8217;s <i>La Strada </i>is an exact haircut off the slow movement of Dvorák&#8217;s String Serenade, Opus 22. (You see what happens to people&#8217;s minds on hot summer days?) My readings in Sir Donald Tovey, as I have noted in this space more than once, guide me through the music of Antonin Dvorák, through the particular and personal dimensions of his grandeur, “the sublimity which is utterly independent of the size and range of an artist&#8217;s subject.” These words apply, of course, to Rota&#8217;s music as well; his <i>Italian Straw Hat</i> is a different kind of excellent Italian operatic comedy from Mozart&#8217;s <i>Figaro</i> or Verdi&#8217;s <i>Falstaff</i>, and its sublimity is of a different dimension. But it exists.</p>
<p>
At the Bowl, Yakov Kreizberg led the Philharmonic in the Dvorák G-major Symphony (No. 8 by current listings, although Tovey knew it as No. 4). Actually, Tovey slighted this work in the original collections of his 1939 <i>Essays in Musical Analysis</i>; the huge new collection, <i>The Classics of Music</i>, which came out in 2001, effects a reconciliation. Sir Donald&#8217;s working adjective for the symphony is “naughty.” He is troubled that the first movement&#8217;s main theme reminds of the old English music-hall number “The Man Who Broke the Bank at Monte Carlo,” but he was wrong. The clearer resemblance is to our own “Mairzy Doats,” which the saintly Antonin probably picked up, if proleptically, on his American visit.</p>
<p>
That, however, is neither here nor there. The crowd at the Bowl last Tuesday was of above-average size, as it should have been. Kreizberg, who has been well-received here before &#8211; especially in a lively reading of the Shostakovich Ninth in 2000 &#8211; delivered an eloquent performance of the G-major Symphony, beautifully balanced and, in the slow movement, quite genuinely moving. On this all-Dvorák program the Cello Concerto was the opening work, in a technically capable but tame rendition by the young German cellist Alban Gerhardt. Dvorák&#8217;s orchestral language in both works called for a profusion of short, sharp chords, and from a box seat halfway back on the right side<br />
these were accompanied at many instances by a series of short, sharp echoes.</p>
<p>
 </p>
<p>
<b><i>The</i> <i>New York Times</i>&#8216; obituary notice</b> on David Raksin&#8217;s passing included Stephen Sondheim&#8217;s claim that Raksin&#8217;s main theme for Vincente Minnelli&#8217;s <i>The Bad and the Beautiful</i> is “one of the best themes ever written in films.” Raksin was a pioneer, one of the first Americans to stake a claim as Hollywood&#8217;s doors were opening mostly to the European crowd. His credentials were in order; perhaps it took some harmony lessons with Arnold Schoenberg to undertake the chromatic twists in “Laura,” his signature tune. Earlier today I fished out Raksin&#8217;s old RCA recording of the <i>Bad and the<b> </b>Beautiful Suite</i> to check Sondheim&#8217;s claim. True enough; as surging, upwardly moving, symphonic, American-style movie scores go &#8211; the genre of film music that Raksin inhabited in his day &#8211; this is spectacularly good music. Hearing it brought me back in memory to watching that superheated Hollywood romance in Pauline Kael&#8217;s movie theater on Telegraph Avenue half a century ago, plus or minus. Just as music, therefore, it did what soundtrack recordings are supposed to do; I wonder how many of them do that nowadays.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>The&#160;Catalyst</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2004/08/the-catalyst/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2004/08/the-catalyst/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 12 Aug 2004 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=501</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Carlos Kleiber&#8217;s recent passing left no noticeable tremors on the musical landscape. He had suffered, the obituary notices read, from a “long-term illness,” but the world had suffered from his even longer-term absence; his last performances of any consequence were in 1994, although there were scattered appearances (and scattered cancellations as well) in ensuing years. [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>
Carlos Kleiber&#8217;s recent passing left no noticeable tremors on the musical landscape. He had suffered, the obituary notices read, from a “long-term illness,” but the world had suffered from his even longer-term absence; his last performances of any consequence were in 1994, although there were scattered appearances (and scattered cancellations as well) in ensuing years. I saw him once, in September 1990, conducting <i>Der Rosenkavalier</i> at the Met in his last American engagement.</p>
<p>
Even so, I have always spent a lot of time with Kleiber, and have stepped up the pace in the last few weeks. My laserdisc treasures include Mozart, Beethoven and Brahms symphonies, a Johann Strauss “New Year&#8217;s Concert” with the Vienna Philharmonic in its gold-encrusted Musikvereinsaal, two versions of <i>Der Rosenkavalier</i> and one of <i>Die Fledermaus</i>. Some of these have also appeared on DVD, and all of them should. I also cherish an <i>Otello</i> from La Scala on videotape, many times dubbed but with the sound still clear.</p>
<p>
A performance of Mozart&#8217;s “Linz” Symphony from Vienna is a particular prize. What passes between Kleiber and the orchestra is not so much a matter of master and commander &#8211; a Lenny or a Herbie handing down the tablets from On High. It is more a matter of sharing, of a communion among players and conductor with an audience invited to look on. Perhaps other matters have passed between Kleiber and the players beforehand &#8211; his rehearsals were famously inaccessible &#8211; but what I see in these performances, and love to watch time and again, is this extraordinary oneness of the musicality and the seeming lack of self-serving personal furor in the process of making it happen. There are times when he sets his baton at rest and simply lets his gentle smile do the job.</p>
<p>
The furor is there, all right. Through the blurred images on my precious tapes of the La Scala <i>Otello</i> there is a musical storm seething through the house that could send anyone running for cover &#8211; with an occasional fleeting view of Kleiber himself, his young (40) face lit with a beatific smile, mouthing the words of the “fuoco di gioia” chorus as a privileged participant. On a bargain-priced Deutsche Grammophon compact disc there is a Beethoven Fifth Symphony from Vienna that will knock your socks off. No matter how many times that surge to the end of the first movement has picked you up by the scruff of the neck and shaken you helpless, this one will do it again, with the electricity turned up to 11. There is a Schubert “Unfinished,” also on DG, whose celestial dying out will leave you shorn of access to words.</p>
<p>
Seldom heard, even more rarely seen, Kleiber among us was some kind of catalytic force. His performance repertory was small, fatally so for anyone attempting to build a “normal” conducting career in this or the past century. That was obviously not his purpose; his limited range of public activity, and the quality of his performance values, stand as a touchstone, a reminder of times when a sublime performance of the Beethoven Fifth could make people stop and think about the music&#8217;s greatness and how to get it into the bloodstream.</p>
<p>
Nowadays, with anywhere up to 100 Beethoven Fifths competing for your dollar at the local megastore &#8211; and with the classical department often moved over behind pop so that you have to leave your brain outside anyhow &#8211; you have to ask whether Kleiber died for the cause, and whether the cause soon will die with him. In his time he was a small but clear beacon light; the job now is to keep it aglow.</p>
<p>
 </p>
<p>
<b>My words for <i>Florencia en el Amazonas</i></b>, the opera by Daniel Catan that the Los Angeles Opera sprang on its supporters in October 1997, were not particularly kind: “one more threadbare attempt to rekindle the operatic manner of Puccini and his lesser followers,” etc. Time has been kinder, either to Mr. Catan&#8217;s opera, to my wavering pen, or possibly to both; a semistaged cut-down version of <i>Florencia</i>, up at the John Anson Ford Amphitheater a few nights ago, turned out not bad at all &#8211; rather more than that, in fact.</p>
<p>
<i>Florencia</i>, drawn from an episode in the writings of Gabriel García Márquez, belongs to the well-populated aging-diva-and-her-memories genre, set on an Amazonian riverboat. It suffers, as do all memoir-operas of my acquaintance, from a tendency to devolve into rather long arias. Furthermore, like most operas of the breed, there needs to be a second, younger singer with a second set of memories &#8211; or, at least, prospects &#8211; and this, in turn, leads to other long arias. <i>Florencia</i> falls into both traps, but does so rather prettily; at the Ford there was the further decided advantage of the excellent soprano Shana Blake Hill to sing Florencia&#8217;s sad songs and the radiant mezzo Suzanna Guzman to light fires under the music of the young Paula.</p>
<p>
All this turned out as stronger, shapelier music than I remembered from 1997. Yes, the arias did run on somewhat. But the staging at the Ford also included some lively, attractive choral pieces and even, considering the limitations of the outdoor space, some clever shenanigans to suggest jungle and fog and the rest of the make-believe setting. The one real problem &#8211; throughout the evening, in fact &#8211; was the obviously slapped-together orchestra under the somewhat wobbly leadership of one Sean Bradley, “former army ranger, presidential escort, automobile repossessor and public school teacher.”</p>
<p>
The program was presented under the aegis of Opera Nova, and was further burdened by a master of ceremonies, Michael Riggins, who managed to mispronounce nearly every name. Music by the excellent local composer Carlos Rodriguez began the program: a short fanfare and some enterprising interaction for cello (Matt Cooker) and electronics. Along the way the Uruguayan-born Miguel del Aguila came on to perform two movements from his Piano Concerto, a loosely glued-together concatenation of hilariously inept zingers from a Rachmaninoff scrapbook.</p>
<p>
Two nights later, across the street at the Hollywood Bowl, there was almost exactly the same piece again, this time under the name of the Piano Concerto by the Brazilian composer Hekel Tavares, who died in 1969. Brazil, Uruguay, Moscow Conservatory: The program notes this time went on about the self-taught Senhor Tavares drawing his poetic inspiration from the forms of Brazilian folk song, and this may very well be, but once again the Rachmaninovian clatter o&#8217;ershadowed all: the virtuoso plink-plank, the belly-flop landing on the third-related modulation. I think you can buy that stuff in squeeze bottles nowadays.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Love&#039;s Voice Wearies&#160;Not</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2004/08/loves-voice-wearies-not/</link>
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		<pubDate>Thu, 05 Aug 2004 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=500</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Photo by Decca/Andrew Eccles The sound of Renée Fleming in song belongs on that shortlist of amenities &#8211; sunset through the Golden Gate, dinner at Matsuhisa &#8211; that make life on this planet preferable to all others. Even through the iffy electronics at the Hollywood Bowl last week, even with a slapdash and wildly varied [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Photo by Decca/Andrew Eccles
<p>
<b>The sound of Renée Fleming</b> in song belongs on that<br />
shortlist of amenities &#8211; sunset through the Golden Gate, dinner at Matsuhisa &#8211; that make life on this planet preferable to all<br />
others. Even through the iffy electronics at the Hollywood Bowl last week, even with a slapdash and wildly varied program in which some numbers were, by her own admission, wrong for her glowing talents, Fleming delivered a full evening&#8217;s worth of her famous enchantment. I left after her third encore &#8211; I didn&#8217;t want anything to interfere with my memory of her “Casta diva” (from <i>Norma</i>); for all I know, she may be up there singing still. She has sung here before, but only in recital; she makes her L.A. Opera debut (in<i> La Traviata</i>) season after next. With the San Diego Opera she has sung Dvorák&#8217;s <i>Russalka</i>, and I keep a tape of her “Song to the Moon” from that opera close at hand, as some<br />
people keep Prozac. Hers is the voice that sounds the way<br />
moonlight looks.</p>
<p>
I love the way Fleming has broadened her repertory in the past few years without the condescension that some opera stars indulge in. At the Bowl she began with Handel &#8211; two arias from <i>Rodelinda</i>, which the Met is staging for her next season, with the coloratura in beautiful command and the voice so pure that the Italian words not only came through but even made sense. (Wouldn&#8217;t it have been smart to use the video screen for those?) Later there were Broadway songs: Cole Porter and Richard Rodgers and, as an encore, the Lullaby from <i>Porgy</i> &#8211; all delivered with real feeling, not the encumbrance of an opera diva manufacturing operatic emotion. There was also some classy operatic stuff: the Bolero from Verdi&#8217;s <i>Sicilian Vespers</i> (showoff music that she&#8217;ll probably never get to sing onstage, as she fessed up in her endearing running commentary) and a knockout performance of the one worthwhile piece from Catalani&#8217;s <i>La Wally</i> &#8211; the only opera, Fleming delightfully explained, in which the heroine commits suicide with the help of a passing avalanche.</p>
<p>
Charm, humor and genuine musicianship over a wide swath: These were the elements of a superior evening, far beyond the on-paper promise of an evening of tidbits. The Philharmonic, under the Houston Grand Opera&#8217;s Patrick Summers, contributed handsomely. And so, I am pleased to report, did the Bowl itself, whose sight-and-sound electronics staff seems finally, a couple of weeks into the season, to be gaining command of the monster. Fleming&#8217;s voice was nicely microphoned, cushioned by surrounding air and well balanced with the orchestra. The uncoordinated roving by video cameras was kept to a minimum &#8211; a sensible decision, with something as beautiful as Fleming&#8217;s face to focus upon. Even so, with a program like this &#8211; listing 18 separate works (plus encores), with the print impossible to read after darkness sets in &#8211; it seems<br />
like a waste of superior equipment not to run at least the names of selections, never mind the texts, across the screens. Such an omission communicates to the crowd that the music itself is<br />
the least important part of the Bowl experience, and I am here<br />
to disagree.</p>
<p>
<b> </p>
<p>
Karl Kohn &#8211; Vienna 1926,</b> Harvard, Pomona since 1950 &#8211; is a distinguished and ongoing part of our musical history; so is his wife, Margaret, whom he met as a Harvard undergrad. As a two-piano team they performed Book II of Pierre Boulez&#8217;s <i>Structures</i> at a Monday Evening Concert in March 1965, celebrating the opening of LACMA and the composer&#8217;s 40th birthday. In November 1959, the Kohns had performed Book I of <i>Structures </i>at a previous Monday Evening Concerts venue, Fiesta Hall in Plummer Park. Walter Arlen, writing in the <i>Los Angeles Times</i>, found that the performers “produced cold and glassy sounds with astonishing sureness on two pianos which . . . surely must have been wired for agony.” Last week the Kohns again played <i>Structures</i> (Book II this time) at a special Monday Evening Concert put together to connect with LACMA&#8217;s “Beyond Geometry” Exhibition. Walter Arlen was in the audience, as he usually is for such events. Some things remain.</p>
<p>
The “cold and glassy sounds wired for agony” this night might better refer to music earlier in the program, a John Cage proposition called <i>19”37.998&#8242; for a Violin Player</i> in which the fearless Johnny Chang drew sounds from Cage&#8217;s fragmentary scribbles on paper. These sounds, said the program, were meant to be heard by strollers as they moseyed through the extensive display of abstractions spread through the museum&#8217;s Anderson Building &#8211; an audible counterpart, if one was stirred to make the connection, to the varied visual intentions of the works on exhibit. Beyond the Cage work&#8217;s apparent intent to inspire from Chang&#8217;s instrument a constant stream of the most unappealing sounds imaginable, it had the happier result of turning the most abstruse components of the Kohns&#8217; two-piano program across the plaza in the Bing Theater, by contrast, into lighthearted delight.</p>
<p>
These included Steve Reich&#8217;s 1967 <i>Piano Phase</i>, music from Reich&#8217;s early fascination with effects reachable through tape phasing (as in his <i>Come Out</i>), music we once heard with a certain need for forbearance, perhaps some gentle mockery. All this is past; these early Reich works &#8211; <i>Come Out</i> most emphatically, and full-length performances of <i>Drumming </i>and this relatively brief <i>Piano Phase</i> &#8211; are part of a concert repertory of fundamental minimalist works from the last half-century, and I expect them to last.</p>
<p>
About the Boulez <i>Structures</i> (either set) I am less sanguine. The freshness in the music the other night came from the Kohns&#8217; vivid performance, the sense of conversational give and take as they fed each other the alternatives out of which each perfor-<br />
mance can be built. But this is the music of a bygone Boulez even so: later than the astounding <i>Marteau Sans Maître</i> but somehow stillborn. György Ligeti&#8217;s wonderfully vivid <i>Three Pieces</i> of 1976 came in between: music bursting with vitality and wit and, in the last of the three, overflowing with glints of color both subtle and wild, as if a painter&#8217;s trove had suddenly overturned and drowned us all. Perhaps it was hearing these amazing small works that drained the vitality from the Boulez; they made for an act I would not have wanted to follow.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Mischief</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2004/07/mischief/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2004/07/mischief/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 29 Jul 2004 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=499</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Photo by Christine Alcino In the matter of togetherness programmed in heaven, try this for a night at the Hollywood Bowl: Beethoven&#8217;s “Emperor” Concerto, with its roistering, rolling E-flat piano arpeggios before intermission; John Adams&#8217; Grand Pianola Music, with its roistering, rolling E-flat piano arpeggios after. The Beethoven, soberly but accurately played by Andreas Haefliger, [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Photo by Christine Alcino
<p>
<b>In the matter of togetherness</b> programmed in heaven, try this for a night at the Hollywood Bowl: Beethoven&#8217;s “Emperor” Concerto, with its roistering, rolling E-flat piano arpeggios before intermission; John Adams&#8217; <i>Grand Pianola Music</i>, with its roistering, rolling E-flat piano arpeggios after.</p>
<p>
The Beethoven, soberly but accurately played by Andreas Haefliger, with Ilan Volkov conducting the Philharmonic, drew a fair ovation from the paltry (5,500 out of 18,000) crowd. The Adams, with Gloria Cheng and Joanne Pearce Martin at the two pianos, drew the expected pitter-patter of applause with a few halfhearted boos. My memories of previous hearings of that work include a roof-raising chorus of cheers at the world premiere (San Francisco, 1982) and an equal volume of boos (New York, a year later). Maybe the warm summer air dampened reaction this time.</p>
<p>
Those earlier outpourings &#8211; San Francisco pride of ownership versus New York xenophobia &#8211; were easily understood 20 years ago. The lingering hostility, considering the heights that Adams&#8217; music has attained since then, is more troubling today. Adams created his <i>Grand Pianola Music</i> &#8211; mischievously, he has stated &#8211; as a respite, even a lark, after the ferocious self-declaration of <i>Harmonium</i>, his astounding choral work commissioned by the San Francisco Symphony and still refulgent in the repertory. <i>Pianola</i> rattles on, at some length to be sure, but congenially, with nothing more on its mind than a quest to reach E flat. It arrives via a constant nibbling and ultimately lands with a gigantic, Beethovenian <i>whoosh</i> &#8211; worthy not of the “Emperor” Concerto perhaps, but at least of some upper-echelon bad piece like, say, the “Triple” Concerto.</p>
<p>
Adams has gone further, in directions not easy to predict at the time of the <i>Pianola</i> premiere, yet you can&#8217;t just dismiss this as an apprentice work. The exuberance that carries it forward to that climactic cataract remains inbred in his musical language. Works of even longer duration and even more discursive content &#8211; the <i>Naïve and Sentimental Music</i>, for one &#8211; rely on just that fund of ferocity to carry an audience around the bends and the upgrades. Years after <i>Pianola</i>, when <i>Nixon in China</i> had established Adams&#8217; predominance among practitioners of his time, he said of the earlier work, “It&#8217;s the most thorough piece about who I am musically. It has a real streak of vulgarity about it, full of the vernacular of the American musical experience.” With a name like John Adams, what else would you expect?</p>
<p>
My neighbors in the next box at the Bowl, whom I&#8217;ve gotten to know over the years in all but name &#8211; they give me cookies and stuff &#8211; loved all the E-flat adventures in the “Emperor” Concerto, but were reduced to groans and moans as soon as Adams&#8217; equally pretty music began. “Oh, my God,” said the woman next to me, as trombone and tuba propounded a long-held dominant-seventh chord, perhaps a little more insistently scored than it would have been in Beethoven, but the same chord nevertheless. Fear stalks the land, and a name out of the new-music galaxy &#8211; Adams, Cage, perhaps even Salonen &#8211; can strike terror. There&#8217;s still work to be done.</p>
<p>
<b>More mischief.</b> A report last week from one of <i>The</i> <i>New York Times</i>&#8216; roving critics told of opera stagings in Berlin: Mozart&#8217;s <i>Abduction From the Seraglio</i>, wherein the Pasha drags the heroine, Constanze, around on a leash and the hero, Belmonte, guns down some prostitutes; Verdi&#8217;s <i>Don Carlo</i> with the heretics duct-taped, doused with gasoline and torched with cigarette lighters. All this happens, of course, in the name of contemporary stagecraft; blow the dust off the old operatic attitudes, and a new art is born. In case this report stirs up envy and wanderlust, you can save a little travel money and check out instead the four parts of the new EuroArts DVD of Wagner&#8217;s <i>Ring des Nibelungen</i> &#8211; all 901 minutes &#8211; in which every scrap of Wagner&#8217;s explicit staging information has been subjected to the same quality of imagination that has guided the hand of the Messrs. Himmelmann and Bieito in Berlin.</p>
<p>
The performances are from the Stuttgart Opera, first produced in 1999 (and, therefore, during the last year of Pamela Rosenberg&#8217;s leadership before she came to the San Francisco opera), revived and recorded in 2002-03. Each of the four dramas is the work of a different director, and the casts are almost all different as well: three Wotans, three Brünnhildes. One constant is the conductor, Lothar Zagrosek; the other constant is that nothing must look like anything </p>
<p>
in any of Wagner&#8217;s dreams. No, I </p>
<p>
take that back; the Prologue in <i>Götterdämmerung</i> is a rather pretty old-fashioned German mountain scene. But at the end of <i>Siegfried</i>, that same setting &#8211; the rock, after all, where Brünnhilde awakens after having been put to sleep &#8211; was an elegant bourgeois bedroom fresh out of Ethan Allen. And at the end of <i>Die Walküre</i>, that same “rock” where she was actually put to sleep was a bare table and chair downstairs in the Valkyries&#8217; locker room. And let&#8217;s not get into the flowing blond tresses that the formerly brunette Brünnhilde somehow acquired during her 20-year nap.</p>
<p>
Still here? Okay, so we have the Rhine Maidens splashing around in a catch basin down in the cellar of some office building, with elevators leading here and there. We have Sigmund transfixed by a mini-sword projected on a blank wall, and the Dragon Fafnir a homeless bum clinging to a chainlink fence. The Forest Bird is a blind sprite, a nice touch. At the end, the very end, when Wagner&#8217;s music spells out, note for note, the collapse of the old world and the blazing hope for a new one, the screen goes blank, and the plain letters of Wagner&#8217;s stage directions &#8211; poetic in themselves, I suppose &#8211; fill the screen, with no magic fire, no steam, nothing but a matronly Brünnhilde, standing to the side in a red dress.</p>
<p>
I guess this, too, is the new European stagecraft: Forget what the music tells you, and just go off on your own. The pity is that it is expended here on a quite decent musical presentation. Zagrosek paces a surging performance that reaches eloquence in the perorations of all four works. There are excellent singers, none of them among today&#8217;s well-known stars, but all at least adequate and sometimes more: Lisa Gasteen, the <i>Siegfried</i> Brünnhilde; Tichina Vaughn, the <i>Walküre</i> Fricka; and a stunning bass named Roland Bracht, one of the few in double roles, the Fasolt in <i>Das Rheingold</i> and the Hagen in <i>Götterdämmerung</i>.</p>
<p>
From Stuttgart too comes Achim Freyer&#8217;s legendary staging of <i>Der Freischütz</i>, Weber&#8217;s forest legend magically produced, with creatures out of Bosch and singers out of heaven. Dennis Russell Davies conducts on a Kultur DVD; Rosenberg had announced this for her first San Francisco season, then withdrew it for money reasons. Redemption is at hand.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Summer Enchanted&#160;Evenings</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2004/07/summer-enchanted-evenings/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2004/07/summer-enchanted-evenings/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 22 Jul 2004 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=498</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[The night sky in midsummer over the Athenian forest is fully dark; over Sweden&#8217;s northern latitudes it maintains a dusky twilight streaked with sunset reds. By delicious happenstance, both phenomena have been ours to observe and marvel at lately: the deep night of Shakespeare, via Mendelssohn, at the Hollywood Bowl; the “smiles” of Ingmar Bergman&#8217;s [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>
<b>The night sky in midsummer </b>over the Athenian forest is fully dark; over Sweden&#8217;s northern latitudes it maintains a dusky twilight streaked with sunset reds. By delicious happenstance, both phenomena have been ours to observe and marvel at lately: the deep night of Shakespeare, via Mendelssohn, at the Hollywood Bowl; the “smiles” of Ingmar Bergman&#8217;s summer night, via Stephen Sondheim&#8217;s magical night music, continuing through the month at the Dorothy Chandler Pavilion; both venues rendered sublime by context.</p>
<p>
Shakespeare&#8217;s <i>A Midsummer Night&#8217;s Dream</i> has its own history at the Bowl. Survivors remain from the grandiose 1934 Max Reinhardt production, which, filmed a year later and decked out that time with Erich Korngold&#8217;s lush rewrite of the Mendelssohn score, still epitomizes Hollywood&#8217;s take on world culture. Mickey Rooney, the 14-year-old Puck of that production, was on hand in last week&#8217;s audience, his still-puckish grin magnified on the new video screens. A quick clip from the old movie made one wish for more. Throughout the evening, in fact &#8211; the summer&#8217;s first “classical” event after several weeks of assorted “family” folderol &#8211; the suspicion kept surfacing that the whole Bowl experience had become a new kind of media mix, perhaps for the better and perhaps not.</p>
<p>
Shakespeare&#8217;s words, much abridged, were delivered this time not by Hollywood all-stars, but by the excellent local company A Noise Within, with imaginative sets and props easily pushed around the stage and occasionally sent aloft. Esa-Pekka Salonen and the Philharmonic dispatched Mendelssohn&#8217;s airborne music straight, without the extra Korngold goop. (I have to admit, however, that the opening scene of the old movie, with monster forces intoning a choral version of the end of the “Scottish” Symphony, does warm my old vulgarian heart.) The vocal soloists, Heidi Grant Murphy and Stephanie Blythe, sang prettily of “spotted snakes” and “thorny hedgehogs” (and returned two nights later to sing of Eternal Life in Mahler&#8217;s Second Symphony). Everything that happened on the stage happened many times larger on the screens, if not always in coordination. (Did it occur to nobody that the screens might also have carried the texts for the songs?) A bassoon or clarinet solo in the orchestra was likely to show up on the screen as a close-up of a flutist or the string section. This is a serious matter; there is a real temptation to watch the screens rather than the stage, but the lack of coordination becomes a distraction.</p>
<p>
This, then, is the new, improved Hollywood Bowl experience: no longer just a night out at a concert of one kind or another, with the option of food and drink and the mixed blessing of ambient sound, but all of these dwarfed by &#8211; and rendered subservient to &#8211; a nicely crafted, if clumsily managed, visual component. The metaphor of a roofless home theater comes to mind. But home theater, if I hear the Best Buy salesman correctly, goes in for a lot of loudspeakers surrounding the listening area front, back and sides, while the new sound setup at the Bowl has all the speakers down front, with the music microphoned through first-rate equipment but microphoned nonetheless. The previous sound system, with Frank Gehry&#8217;s fiberglass balls turning the stage into Starship <i>Enterprise</i>, employed 150 separate sound sources spread throughout the real estate; now there is one. Can it be that the sound engineers at the Bowl have spent all those millions to come up with the 2004 model of your grandfather&#8217;s Atwater Kent?</p>
<p>
Summer music means different things to different people. I cling to memories of nights at Tanglewood, with perhaps 15,000 people spread out on the great lawn, the Boston Symphony off in the distance but clearly audible without a single microphone on the premises. There were no police helicopters overhead, no freeway within miles, no audience ears with standards perverted by home audio. This was a lifetime ago, but &#8211; except for the last part &#8211; I am told that it still happens. There is still a genuine pleasure in going to concerts at the Bowl, and some of it actually has to do with music. Salonen&#8217;s performance of the Mahler Second last week was a knockout, best of all when the offstage brass and percussion got going in the last movement (unamplified, by the way) and added a whole &#8216;nother dimension. From the stage, the amplified sound was loud and bright. Nobody could pretend, of course, that this is the natural sound of a flesh-and-blood symphony orchestra.</p>
<p>
 </p>
<p>
<b>Stephen Sondheim&#8217;s elegant love games</b> play off in soft twilight, in sight and &#8211; in the Dorothy Chandler&#8217;s new production of <i>A Little Night Music</i> &#8211; in sound as well. Slithery dancers dimly lit move to slithery, chromatic, ironic waltz rhythms. Nostalgia floods your brain: When was the first time you saw Ingmar Bergman&#8217;s <i>Smiles of a Summer Night</i>? The second? With whom? Literature nowadays tends to metamorphose into musical settings via the movie versions: The operas carved out of <i>Dead Man Walking</i>, <i>Gatsby</i>, <i>Streetcar</i> all ended up as particularly loud soundtracks, betrayed by their composers&#8217; inability to sense &#8211; and then to translate &#8211; the music inherent in the original medium. The special genius of <i>A Little Night Music</i> is that it does succeed in exactly that translation &#8211; not only the words of Bergman&#8217;s near-perfect film but their resonance. You come away enamored of both works in equal measure.</p>
<p>
To an extent, it&#8217;s also the wonder of Sondheim&#8217;s word mastery that gives his work its caustic edge and, best of all, its rhythmic profile. <i>Night Music</i> is, famously, a work in waltz time, but it gleans a special zing when the words push it into 6/8: “per-PET-ual SUN-set is RA-ther an UN-sett-ling THING.” “Send in the Clowns” not only challenges the most beautiful theater songs of any era; nobody, since its 1973 first hearing, has come close. For a haunting ballad up there on the charts, it is remarkably structured: a series of phrases, each longer than the previous, thus rising to a climax both structural and emotional. Jonathan Tunick&#8217;s orchestration of the song, with clarinet predominating, evokes Mozart, who also knew how to build music this way.</p>
<p>
Memories of my own conversation with Sondheim, circa 1972, come flooding back; <i>Night Music</i> was on his worktable, but <i>Così Fan Tutte </i>was his other obsession. The connections are easily made: the pairings of lovers who sunder and are then restored in more logical fashion; the cynicism; the resignation coupled with worldliness that comes together in music almost too beautiful to bear &#8211; Mozart&#8217;s lovers in their letter-writing quintet, “Send In the Clowns.” Above all there is the extraordinary mastery in both works of the kind of vocal-plus-dramatic counterpoint that conquers time: both of Mozart&#8217;s act finales, Sondheim&#8217;s “A Weekend in the Country.” You could suggest (but to what point?) that <i>Don Giovanni </i>might later have guided Sondheim&#8217;s pen in <i>Sweeney Todd</i>. <i>Così</i> and <i>Night Music </i>are definitely worthy of each other&#8217;s company, and of ours.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Four Centuries and&#160;Counting</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2004/07/four-centuries-and-counting/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2004/07/four-centuries-and-counting/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 15 Jul 2004 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=497</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Photo by David Thompson It will soon be 400 years since the world&#8217;s first operatic masterpiece seduced its first spellbound audience, in an elegant room at the Gonzaga Palace in Mantua, where model centaurs pawed the ground and drew fountains of water from the built-in plumbing, and where Apollo made his descent at the end [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Photo by David Thompson
<p>
It will soon be 400 years since the world&#8217;s first operatic masterpiece seduced its first spellbound audience, in an elegant room at the Gonzaga Palace in Mantua, where model centaurs pawed the ground and drew fountains of water from the built-in plumbing, and where Apollo made his descent at the end in a golden chariot. By February 1607, opera was already 7 years old, but Monteverdi&#8217;s <i>L&#8217;Orfeo</i> gave the audience something it hadn&#8217;t experienced before: a large and varied ensemble of instruments to orchestrate the emotional climate of the work. When, in the second act, the Messenger interrupts the happy pastoral celebrations of Orpheus&#8217; marriage with the news that his Eurydice has died, the whole sound-image darkens to illustrate the wrenchings in Monteverdi&#8217;s harmonies; the danceries of high strings give way to gambas and a small organ, and it&#8217;s as if Monteverdi has flicked a light switch. You can really say that opera, in the true implication of its dramatic and emotional potential, was born at that moment. When you hear it again, in the superb new recording on Virgin Classics&#8217; Veritas label, the power of that scene remains intact.</p>
<p>
Matters of musicological accuracy aside, this new release is a splendid performance that, at least, sounds right. It is led from the harpsichord by Emmanuelle Haïm, with the small ensemble of European Voices and Le Concert d&#8217;Astrée, a wondrous group of all the right instruments &#8211; including a ferocious, gruff “regal” (a primitive organ) for the bellowing of the recalcitrant Charon, the boatman at the River Styx. Purists afflicted with perfect pitch need to be warned, however: The recording is tuned up to an “authentic” A = 465 Hz.</p>
<p>
The Orpheus is Ian Bostridge, the marvelous, sensitive young Brit who seems currently to own the “can do no wrong” territory that laps over into art song and contemporary opera. (His Caliban in Thomas Adès&#8217; <i>The Tempest </i>is a thing of high wonderment.) Particularly admirable is Bostridge&#8217;s management of the curiosities of Monteverdian ornamentation &#8211; the repeated-note trills, for example &#8211; that other singers have turned into affectations but which Bostridge makes, properly, into simple emphases of the vocal line. Alice Coote &#8211; the Ruggero in the San Francisco Opera&#8217;s <i>Alcina</i> a couple of seasons ago &#8211; has the Messenger&#8217;s heartbreaking lines; Natalie Dessay is the delightful La Musica in the prologue, inviting us to share in her power “to soothe all troubled hearts.” How right she is!</p>
<p>
Bostridge is with us again in another heartstring-tearing baroque opera, Henry Purcell&#8217;s <i>Dido and Aeneas</i>, an Aeneas lighter in voice than we expect, which disturbs us for about six notes of his first solo and nowhere thereafter. Wherever the truth may lie in the actual history of this work &#8211; whose origin is shrouded in conflicting legend &#8211; <i>Dido</i> remains a one-of-a-kind piece of work. Italian opera of the sung-through variety had not gained a foothold in Purcell&#8217;s England; the episodic masquelike pieces interspersed with spoken interludes were more favored. </p>
<p>
 </p>
<p>
Yet here was this one intense miniature by Purcell with that old-fashioned, Monteverdian power to stop the breath and draw the tear, as the Italian master had managed seven and eight decades before.</p>
<p>
Aeneas himself may be something of a swaggering boob;<br />
he gives in far too easily to the gods&#8217; command to abandon his little love nest and sail on, and is equally willing to reverse his decision at the first sign of Dido&#8217;s tantrum. But Dido&#8217;s final scenes constitute one of music&#8217;s great tragedies &#8211; not only her “farewell” song but the recitative leading to it (“Thy hand, Belinda”) and the wrenching segue to the final chorus (“With drooping wings”). If you can breathe during this music, it isn&#8217;t being properly performed.</p>
<p>
Once again the performing forces, on Virgin/Veritas, include Emmanuelle Haïm with her European Voices and Le Concert d&#8217;Astrée, and the Dido is that other do-no-wrong artist, our own Susan Graham, who has us in the aisles with her Offenbach one day and shivering with the raw tragedy of the wronged Queen Dido the next. The role is well-enough known to have become a repertory piece for a certain kind of commanding, regal singer &#8211; usually, alas, toward the later end of their careers. Kirsten Flagstad&#8217;s famous recording is a case in point, with Elisabeth Schwarzkopf as her sidekick Belinda, also locked in combat with age and with the English text. Performances like this excellent new one &#8211; and others of note, including one on Harmonia Mundi by Lorraine Hunt Lieberson conducted by Nicholas McGegan &#8211; at least serve to rescue this very grand, if very small, opera from the plaything category.</p>
<p>
 </p>
<p>
<b>On Virgin DVD</b> there is more Monteverdi to treasure, his penultimate opera, <i>The Return of Ulysses</i>, which came to us in the Netherlands Opera&#8217;s abridged but gloriously tricky production not so many years ago. (“Return, O return,” cry we, echoing Penelope&#8217;s words from her great lament.) This one is not abridged, not tricky, and no less glorious, a production from the 2000 Aix-en-Provence Festival, created by Adrian Noble and performed by William Christie&#8217;s Les Arts Florissants, which comes to us far too seldom. (Return, O return.) Unlike <i>L&#8217;Orfeo</i>, <i>Ulysses</i> was created for a ticket-buying, not an invited aristocratic, audience; its orchestral and scenic resources were therefore modest. But Monteverdi, 30 years after <i>L&#8217;Orfeo</i>, had become a master of vocal expression. From the opening prologue to the final scenes, when the returned Ulysses breaks through Penelope&#8217;s 20-year ache and convinces her that he is really he, the intensity &#8211; the absolute <i>rightness </i>— of these musical lines holds you in their grasp. The orchestra is small: strings, a couple of winds, a nicely varied contingent of continuo instruments; the chorus numbers five. That&#8217;s all it takes for three hours of sheer delight.</p>
<p>
I wrote some time ago, with praise bordering on ecstasy, about Peter Sellars&#8217; production of <i>Theodora</i> at Glyndebourne when it was released on VHS; now it, too, is on DVD. Against the chaste authenticity of the aforementioned Monteverdi and Purcell, this release, on Kultur Video, offers a different kind of delight but a delight nevertheless. Handel&#8217;s oratorio deals with self-sacrificial love between a Christian virgin and a Roman soldier; Sellars has reset it in today&#8217;s America &#8211; simply and, if you think for a moment, convincingly. More to the point, his performers are Dawn Upshaw, Lorraine Hunt Lieberson and David Daniels, with, once again, William Christie conducting. With that cast of characters, you could stage the work on a four-level freeway and it would work.</p>
<p>
P.S. The L.A. Opera&#8217;s <i>A Little Night Music</i>, which opened this past weekend, is an altogether enchanting production of the work I regard as America&#8217;s most beautiful stage musical. I plan to verify these words half a dozen times, for pure pleasure, during this one-month run, and so should you. More next week.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>The Wing and the&#160;Wind</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2004/07/the-wing-and-the-wind/</link>
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		<pubDate>Thu, 08 Jul 2004 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=496</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[In one of those imponderable ironies by which the music industry slowly but surely succeeds in cannibalizing its own, the Deutsche Grammophon recording of Esa-Pekka Salonen&#8217;s Wing on Wing will be made not by Salonen&#8217;s Los Angeles Philharmonic (for which it was written), in the Walt Disney Concert Hall (whose architecture it celebrates), but half [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>
In one of those imponderable ironies by which the music industry slowly but surely succeeds in cannibalizing its own, the Deutsche Grammophon recording of Esa-Pekka Salonen&#8217;s <i>Wing</i> <i>on Wing</i> will be made not by Salonen&#8217;s Los Angeles Philharmonic (for which it was written), in the Walt Disney Concert Hall (whose architecture it celebrates), but half a planet away in Helsinki, by the Finnish Radio Orchestra. The reason, it should not surprise you to learn, is money.</p>
<p>
I don&#8217;t have the exact figures involved in this case, but I do for a parallel situation reported in last week&#8217;s <i>New York Times</i> Sunday magazine. The New York Philharmonic management recently learned that John Adams&#8217; <i>On the Transmigration of Souls</i>, which he composed for that orchestra in 2002 as a memorial for 9/11, was slated to be recorded by a London orchestra rather than its own, since the cost differential would be something like $40,000 as against $95,000. In that case, an enraged New York Philharmonic patron came up with the difference. I would not hang by my thumbs expecting a similar resolution in Los Angeles, especially since the D.G. recording also includes two other Salonen works, of which one (<i>Insomnia</i>) hasn&#8217;t yet been heard here. (I would, of course, be delighted to be proved wrong.)</p>
<p>
This is all part of a dark cloud that overhangs classical music these days. Domestic orchestral recording by the major orchestras on the major labels has all but stopped; what persists are the few projects of individual orchestras producing and marketing performances on their own labels &#8211; as in San Francisco &#8211; but, of course, without the blockbuster promotion that RCA and Sony were once able to accord the Boston, New York and Los Angeles orchestras. The irony aches especially in the case of <i>Wing on Wing</i>, since the piece comes wrapped in so many layers of pride &#8211; with, at the core, music of exceptional beauty and delight.</p>
<p>
As I read through the printed score for several days before the two performances I heard, that sense of pride was as clearly visible as the notes themselves, in the care with which Salonen had mapped out the movements of the solo musicians &#8211; the two singers and the two deep-toned wind instruments that impersonated some kind of marine specimen. The voice of Frank Gehry intrudes now and then, as part of the obbligato of pride that pervades the work. No matter how clear the tape, will that voice, that identity, transplant to a Finnish recording studio? Against the complexity of other works &#8211; the hugely successful <i>LA Variations</i> and the manic turmoil of <i>Insomnia</i>, which I&#8217;ve heard on a pirate disc &#8211; this is, for Salonen, a lighter piece; it has some of the cold, clear wind of his homeland, without the murk that his musical ancestor seemed fond of stirring up. It does him proud, and us, too.</p>
<p>
 </p>
<p>
<b>Cool heads at the season&#8217;s beginning</b> warned that all might not fall into place at Disney Hall the first time out, that there would be kinks and that patience might be in order. Those wise words notwithstanding, dissing Disney soon became the town&#8217;s newest game. Horror stories resounded: longtime Philharmonic patrons becoming lost on their way to their newly assigned seats; neighbors in nearby condos suffering sunstroke brought on by afternoon reflections from the stainless steel; tender knees, shoulders and ankles shattered from the unconscionably narrow spaces between rows in the upper reaches. A broadside, widely circulated, contained assurances by a USC professor to the New Jersey Classical Society that the excellences of Disney Hall&#8217;s acoustics were just another of those Hollywood myths.</p>
<p>
There are, indeed, problems in the new hall, of magnitude great and small. It is somewhat embarrassing to contemplate the blanket currently flung over the shiniest part of the steel exterior, where the afternoon sun bears down; presumably someone will get up there with a Brillo pad one of these days and dull the surface down. It is equally embarrassing, it seems to me, to pay 14 bucks for an entrée in the café downstairs and be asked to deal with it with plastic “silverware.” The space between rows is narrower than at the Dorothy Chandler, where the space had to be wide because the rows themselves were so long. I find the creature discomforts easier to deal with than the aesthetic discomfort of the garish floral pattern on the seats (and carpets) themselves. That goes with plastic forks.</p>
<p>
The gardens, and the outdoor spaces in general, have turned out exactly as I had hoped: a beautiful thing to have happened in the middle of what has always been a basically nondescript city. They put the rest of the Music Center to shame. The two small outdoor theaters have begun to be well used for children&#8217;s entertainments, and it has been fun to watch people improvising uses for them even when they&#8217;re otherwise empty. The gardens themselves are just plain wonderful, at intermissions and also in the daytime. Early on, I wished they had installed name tags for the plants and trees, or at least pamphlets with maps as at national parks. Now I&#8217;ve learned to admire the area in the abstract. The gardens are a success, and so is the garage. Whatever it took to plan a space with such ease of access and exit, I wish someone would cross the street and teach it to the rest of the Music Center.</p>
<p>
“The wood simply acts as a highly reflective surface,” says this idiotic paper from New Jersey, “making sound waves bounce around and impact against the surfaces, thus creating a harsh acoustic environment.” I don&#8217;t know where Professor Noll was when the sound waves of Salonen&#8217;s Berlioz impacted against the walls of Disney Hall this season, or when the solo-wind writing at the start of Stravinsky&#8217;s <i>Sacre du Printemps</i> stood out like etched monoliths, or when the wintry chill of Matthias Goerne and Alfred Brendel&#8217;s Schubert turned the very air of the hall to hoarfrost. Yes, there were other occasions less perfect, when rethinking was in order. The hall did not serve the needs of the new Golijov chamber opera, or the acted-out monkeyshines imposed upon the Berlioz <i>Fantastique</i>, both of which challenged the hall&#8217;s still-imperfect amplification system. Okay; it was a new hall, a new stage, a new space, and the only way to find out what works (and what doesn&#8217;t) was by doing it.</p>
<p>
Night after night, in this proverbial cultural desert, you could see the lines stretching from the Disney Hall box office up Grand Avenue to First Street and beyond, hoping in vain for cancellations. They built it, and you came.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Biz as&#160;Usual</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2004/07/biz-as-usual/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2004/07/biz-as-usual/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 01 Jul 2004 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=495</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[The management has changed, but not the balls. The Long Beach Opera was back in business with the usual offering of repertory no other company would dream of taking on, and with the usual daredevil production values that endear this off-the-wall enterprise to the hardy, come-what-may crowd that came close to selling out Cal State [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>
<b>The management has changed</b>, but not the balls. The Long Beach Opera was back in business with the usual offering of repertory no other company would dream of taking on, and with the usual daredevil production values that endear this off-the-wall enterprise to the hardy, come-what-may crowd that came close to selling out Cal State Long Beach&#8217;s Carpenter Auditorium for four performances over two weekends midmonth. Nobody will pretend that our operatic lives were immeasurably enriched by the discovery of Richard Strauss&#8217; <i>The Silent Woman</i> or of Astor Piazzolla&#8217;s <i>Maria of Buenos Aires</i>; in the first of these instances, I might argue just the opposite, in fact. But the total phenomenon of dedicated, inventive work lavished on repertory off the beaten path, of manners of performance within shoestring circumstances with something new and important to tell us &#8211; even occasionally about a work we think we already know &#8211; that&#8217;s what Michael Milenski gave us in the 25 years of his Long Beach Opera, and what Andreas Mitisek seems poised to carry forward in his new leadership.</p>
<p>
Mitisek has been the company&#8217;s principal conductor for the past several years; he also founded and led a small company in Vienna apparently similar to Long Beach. That background probably accounts for the Strauss in his bloodstream; he led a creditable <i>Elektra</i> here a few years ago. <i>Die schweigsame Frau</i>, however, is decidedly lower-rung Strauss, a tired, overextended attempt that reworks the old farce-comedy routine of Donizetti&#8217;s <i>Don Pasquale</i> et al. at twice the length. Ben Jonson&#8217;s <i>Epicene</i>, from which Stefan Zweig drew his libretto, has the old bachelor duped into marrying a “silent woman” who then turns out to be a boy; there is no such gender crossover, therefore no such fun, in the Zweig-Strauss. Back in its carefree days, Long Beach might have better known how to deal with such matters. The opera is seldom done, and with good reason. A meticulously rehearsed performance, its ensembles controlled with Mozartian precision, might put it over; that would take months to prepare, and not even the most ardent Straussian &#8211; which I am ardently not &#8211; could claim it worth the while. This version, for all the valiant staging creativity of Isabel Milenski and John Collins&#8217; clever breakaway scenery, clearly radiated the usual Long Beach make-do philosophy.</p>
<p>
Piazzolla&#8217;s sad little portrait of loveless street life in Argentina&#8217;s capital, throbbing with his sour rhythms and with Horacio Ferrer&#8217;s sordid verses, was decidedly worth the while, but was somewhat undervalued in John Lloyd Davies&#8217; production, which prized stage trickery (dancing chairs) over forthright musical power. The onstage orchestra, with Mitisek at the piano, seemed underpowered; perhaps a few more bandoneons would have helped. With all my respect for preserving a composer&#8217;s original visions, I have to assert that the Gidon Kremer re-orchestration of the piece, on the Teldec recording, comes a lot closer to the steamy essence of the music &#8211; with the decided further advantage of the great Ferrer to read his own verses. In Long Beach, at least, Noelia Moncada&#8217;s Maria had a bewitching intensity; at the moments when she commanded an observer&#8217;s eyes and ears, you knew what was right, unique and endearing about this one-of-a-kind opera company.</p>
<p>
 </p>
<p>
<b>“With all my respect,”</b> as I was saying, I have to confess that the Boston Baroque&#8217;s clean, “authentic” performance of Claudio Monteverdi&#8217;s <i>Vespro Della Beata Vergine</i> that ended Disney Hall&#8217;s Baroque Variations series a couple of weeks ago aroused a certain nostalgia for those terrible old recordings that were just as wrong as wrong could be. You know the ones: the Harvard and Radcliffe glee clubs, maybe 300 strong; the whole brass contingent of the Boston Symphony; E. Power Biggs on the mighty organ; and the Bellini painting of those massed forces whooping it up in the Piazza San Marco. That would have made the two hours pass fleetingly by, as Martin Pearlman&#8217;s musicologically trained forces did not.</p>
<p>
A pileup of scheduling earlier in the month at both ends of the Music Center made it impossible to get up to Ojai for most of this year&#8217;s festival, which was interesting and varied under Thomas Morris&#8217; new leadership. Next year&#8217;s programs &#8211; the Cleveland Orchestra in residence, with the splendid composer/conductor Oliver Knussen in charge &#8211; are scheduled for later in June and are, thus, easier of access. I heard this year&#8217;s final concert: Kent Nagano leading his Los Angeles Opera Orchestra in a supple and tidy jaunt through the Beethoven Fourth Symphony &#8211; music that I love for all kinds of new reasons at every hearing &#8211; and a couple of novelties. One was Arnold Schoenberg&#8217;s <i>Friede auf Erden</i>, a brief prayer for peace to words by Conrad Meyer in the intense, pre-atonal style of the First Chamber Symphony, compellingly sung by a small chorus as a quick segue after the Beethoven. (Earlier on the program, an orchestral version of the same music had been less successful.) The other was <i>snagS  Snarls</i>, five small and not very revealing bits, cutely sung by Margaret Thompson, from an <i>Alice in Wonderland</i> opera-in-progress by the extraordinary Korean composer Unsuk Chin, a lot of whose recent music has the world abuzz. The opera is due here in the L.A. Opera&#8217;s &#8217;05-&#8217;06 season; Chin&#8217;s spellbinding Violin Concerto, which pulled down a $200,000 Grawemeyer award last year, is scheduled at Nagano&#8217;s Berkeley Symphony this coming September.</p>
<p>
 </p>
<p>
<b>Suddenly, there is no more Leonard Stein</b> to lend his beaming, lanky presence to the most enterprising of our concerts, to punctuate the events with the pithy commentary whose fortissimo delivery he could not have controlled even if he had so wished. He left us quickly, in a series of seizures at age 87 last weekend, just in time to miss a dinner party to celebrate one of the latest of his good deeds, the 10th birthday of the Piano Spheres concert series, in which five remarkable pianists (himself included until last year) assumed the absolute right to explore music most meaningful to them without regard to commercial program building. Before that series there had been the leadership of the Schoenberg Institute, maintained and then dumped by USC, the model of a research-plus-performance facility too precious for a growth-obsessed university to understand. Before that there had been the service to Schoenberg himself, as teaching assistant, good right hand, and editor of writings and compositions. It will be a long time, therefore, before our musical life shakes free of his influence &#8211; or just the echo of that voice.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>The View From Four&#160;Score</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2004/06/the-view-from-four-score/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2004/06/the-view-from-four-score/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 24 Jun 2004 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=494</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[The interesting thing about turning 80 is how much of the old stuff still clings. In the last few years, I&#8217;ve resumed contact with my two best friends from Boston Latin, the two most responsible for my involvement in classical music, Normie Wilson and Eddie Levin. From before high school I have paltry musical memories: [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>
The interesting thing about turning 80 is how much of the old stuff still clings. In the last few years, I&#8217;ve resumed contact with my two best friends from Boston Latin, the two most responsible for my involvement in classical music, Normie Wilson and Eddie Levin. From before high school I have paltry musical memories: failed piano lessons with a birdlike spinster at age 6, years in bed with rheumatic fever and a tinny radio playing dance-band hits. At 14, I modulated into a brighter key. Normie played the piano &#8211; better than Paderewski, it seemed to me at the time. He played a fancy solo from the Grieg Piano Concerto at every school assembly, and so that concerto was the first recording I bought. Eddie collected records, so I heard a lot of music at his house. My mnemonic for the opening of the “Eroica” was “The worms crawl in . . .”</p>
<p>
Eddie&#8217;s records all had program notes, and I remember being fascinated by the ways you could describe music in words. My first records came on some cheapo label without program notes, so I wrote my own. Something about this accomplishment really inflated my own self-image (which needed inflation at the time, since my premed studies, mostly undertaken to indulge my parents&#8217; “my son the doctor” ambitions, were going nowhere). Somebody in physics lab one day showed me a book by Sir Donald Francis Tovey full of marvelous musical descriptions: A main theme in César Franck&#8217;s symphony returns “striding grandly in its white confirmation dress.” From that moment on there was nothing I wanted to do more than write about music. In Harvard&#8217;s music department there was the spellbinding G. Wallace Woodworth, who could lecture on musical form so that every transition became a cliffhanger worthy of a Saturday-matinee serial. A course with Woody on classical symphonies further stoked my passion. A letter to Rudolph Elie, music critic of the <i>Boston Herald</i>, taking issue with some trivial point he had raised about a Mozart symphony and awash in self-importance, got me the offer of a job as a stringer at three bucks a column. After graduation (in 1945) it was on to New York, where stringers at the <i>New York Sun</i> advanced to the lordly sum of $7.50. There was no turning back. I have all that stuff in a box. Wild horses couldn&#8217;t get me to look at it.</p>
<p>
Even so, the contents of that box were enough to persuade UC Berkeley to overlook my lousy pre-med grade points from Harvard and admit me as a graduate student in music. I had the idea that a solid musical education might set me apart from most music critics, even at the expense of time spent singing correct intervals and working out 16th-century counterpoints. From Roger Sessions &#8211; speaking oraclelike through a dense cloud of pipe smoke &#8211; I learned to chart the exquisite logic of classical structure on huge expanses of squared paper. From humanist musicologist Joseph Kerman &#8211; soft-spoken and immensely witty &#8211; I learned how music reaches its hearers through the interplay of a work&#8217;s own logic with the usage of its era. Blending these two kinds of teaching, I learned how to get music into my bloodstream. One sublime example was my discovery, in a Mozart seminar, of the G-minor String Quintet. When I decided to write this article, that one work clicked into place. Thirty-three years ago, halfway between Berkeley and today, I had already found the words for that particular obsession. (See sidebar.)</p>
<p>
Schubert was another Berkeley discovery, thanks largely to Leon Kirchner, a fellow grad student and already an important composer. Leon had the magnificence of spirit to tolerate my terrible piano playing, and we shared in amazed discovery of this great composer&#8217;s four-hand piano pieces &#8211; the F-minor Fantasy, the A-flat Variations &#8211; that nobody seemed to know at the time. Thus inspired, I did my M.A. thesis on Schubert, earned a year abroad, and returned with every expectation of a career in advanced scholarship. My Ph.D. orals, wherein it was assumed that I could recite from memory such burning issues as the content of the card catalogs of major libraries, suggested the necessity of finding other paths.</p>
<p>
Actually, I had already embarked on one. Berkeley in the 1950s was the home of KPFA, the first-ever venture in non-commercial, listener-supported broadcasting, with all the maverick programming those concepts entailed. I joined the staff after returning from Europe, resigned a few months later, then came back after one of the frequent palace revolts. Our doors were open to politicians and philosophers of all stripes, and to composers as well; I encountered new music and its creators not on the UC campus but down the hill in KPFA&#8217;s makeshift studios: Harry Partch, Lou Harrison, John Cage, Ravi Shankar. I put Pierre Boulez on the air during his first American visit, and I cherish my tape of three local composers totally undone by every one of this arrogant young Frenchman&#8217;s revolutionist theories. The San Francisco Symphony was in the hands of an inadequate conductor named Enrique Jordá, whom the society dames adored and whom the newspaper critics at least tolerated. I didn&#8217;t, in my weekly tirades, and one of KPFA&#8217;s major donors, J.D. Zellerbach of the toilet-paper millions, threatened to withdraw his support. KPFA&#8217;s founder, the visionary Lewis Hill, told him to climb a tree.</p>
<p>
 </p>
<p>
In 1960, KPFA acquired WBAI as its New York outlet, and I was sent to help run things, as St. Paul to the Romans. This provoked a clash between my California idealism and New York political hardball beyond the powers of my gamesmanship. One day I walked over to <i>The</i> <i>New York Times </i>and asked whether they needed another music critic. As it happened, they did. As low man in a five-man department, I covered a steady stream of sad, hopeful debuts, usually at 5:30 on Saturday afternoons, when Carnegie Recital Hall could be rented on the cheap, and quite a few first-performance-on-this-planet events whose perpetrators imagined as advancing the cause of new music. Sometimes, however, they were right; my days at KPFA had softened my sympathetic ear toward the early escapades of Yoko Ono, the topless cellist Charlotte Moorman and the outpourings of La Monte Young, whose fortnightlong recitals on a single sustained note represented the birth pangs of what would later take on the name of “minimalism.” I think I was fairly successful in isolating a thread of sanity in these events, even when my presence in the hall represented half the audience.</p>
<p>
You couldn&#8217;t pretend that the cause of new music was getting much support from the New York press, however. Harold Schonberg, the <i>Times</i>&#8216; top critic, demanded that his one staff member with compositional talent, Eric Salzman, choose between the two hats; Eric chose composition and departed. In 1963, when the <i>Herald Tribune</i> offered me the top job to replace its retiring critic, Columbia musicologist Paul Henry Lang, the only message Lang had to offer at the changing-of-the-guard lunch was the hope that I would continue his vendetta against his Ivy League composer colleagues. I&#8217;m afraid I let him down.</p>
<p>
Lincoln Center opened Philharmonic Hall in 1962, and its other components soon after, setting the pattern of the cultural supermarket that other cities soon followed &#8211; Los Angeles with its Music Center in 1964. Governmental subsidy for the arts, with all its enablements and its dangers, became a reality in 1965. Leonard Bernstein strode to glory on his New York Philharmonic podium and in the national media as well. He even attempted to drag his orchestra into a confrontation with the present day, programming an “avant-garde festival” of music by John Cage, Pierre Boulez and other violators of the public tranquillity. Having no real feeling for this kind of music, he turned the event into a laff riot. “If you can understand what this music is all about,” he told the audience one night, “please tell me.” “Mr. Bernstein used everything short of a Flit gun to wipe out the avant-garde at Philharmonic Hall last night,” I wrote in one of my first days at the <i>Herald Tribune</i>.</p>
<p>
Eventually the <i>Trib</i> succumbed, except for its Sunday magazine, boasting its Milton Glaser artwork and its with-it masthead &#8211; Tom Wolfe, Gail Sheehy, Jimmy Breslin, Gloria Steinem, Clay Felker and me &#8211; which survived as <i>New York</i> magazine and which flourishes still. It was at <i>New York</i> &#8211; thanks not so much to Felker&#8217;s editorial guidance as to his willingness to leave me alone &#8211; that I assumed the freedom to invent the kind of first-person, personally involved writing about music that I did then and have been doing ever since.</p>
<p>
By 1970 the skies brightened perceptibly over the new-music scene. Boulez took over from Bernstein on the Philharmonic podium, bearing the news that the musical establishment might have a message or two for young ears about the vitality in the contemporary creative scene. Kids in jeans showed up for meet-the-composer concerts at Alice Tully Hall, and for informal Boulez “Encounters” in Greenwich Village. There was talk of minimalism, and it blended with talk of Dylan and Perotin and Mahler and Stockhausen. In later years, several hundred thousand people would swear they were at the Metropolitan Opera House on the two November nights in 1976 for the Philip Glass–Robert Wilson <i>Einstein on the Beach</i>.</p>
<p>
 </p>
<p>
In 1979, <i>New York</i> cloned itself as <i>New West</i>, and I was dispatched here to function for a year as a bicoastal music critic. California&#8217;s principal orchestras had distinguished new conductors: Edo de Waart in San Francisco and Carlo Maria Giulini in Los Angeles. Opera was thriving up north, and there were stirrings in Los Angeles and San Diego. I was to find a critic for classical music on the West Coast, turn over the keys to the kingdom, and return to the real world. Instead I&#8217;m still here. The new-music scene in Southern California was lively and well-run, yet held in durance vile under the snide negativism of the <i>Los Angeles Times</i>&#8216; Martin Bernheimer, who fancied himself the incarnation of Austria&#8217;s Eduard Hanslick but merely ‰ skimmed off Hanslick&#8217;s virtuosic vitriol, with little of his profound aesthetic sensibility. It saddened me to attend interesting concerts here and overhear audiences parroting Bernheimerisms in the guise of musical wisdom. From such a dragon Los Angeles needed and deserved rescue. Within three months, Bernheimer and I were no longer speaking, a situation that did not forfeit me my claim to have truly lived.</p>
<p>
I made the rounds through local journalism: <i>New West</i> and its equally hapless successor <i>California</i>, KUSC, KFAC, <i>Newsweek</i>, the <i>Herald Examiner</i> of fond memory. The day the <i>Her-Ex</i> folded, I was actually on the <i>Times</i>&#8216; payroll for approximately three hours; guess whose foot went down on that one. Never mind; when Bernheimer finally gave up on his efforts to remake Los Angeles as Vienna West and departed eastward, the <i>Times</i> hired Mark Swed, a fellow enthusiast in matters of contemporary music. The <i>Times</i> came out ahead, I came out ahead, and the two of us now give the area a lively musical outlook that not many American cities can match.</p>
<p>
When I arrived in Los Angeles, the musical power structure was uniquely strong and active, and it gave the lie to the suspicions my New York friends frequently voiced, that I was out of my mind to give up a power job in the East and move out to where nothing ever happens. The Philharmonic&#8217;s Ernest Fleischmann had taken unto himself a lot of the music director&#8217;s prerogatives, which had made Giulini happy and, before him, Zubin Mehta. It enabled Fleischmann to scour the world for young talent: Esa-Pekka Salonen and Simon Rattle on the podium, and the lamented Robert Harth in the front office. It also encouraged Fleischmann to create brave new programs like the “Green Umbrella” series, and promote them properly. Lawrence Morton was still on hand here; he had run adventurous new-music concerts, first as “Evenings on the Roof” on a rooftop studio in Silver Lake in 1939, now as the “Monday Evening Concerts” at the County Museum (where they&#8217;re still going on, under Dorrance Stalvey&#8217;s astute leadership). Leonard Stein, Arnold Schoenberg&#8217;s right-hand assistant at one time, ran the Schoenberg Institute at USC and organized musical events and symposia all over town. And Betty Freeman spent her money wisely to pay composers&#8217; rent and underwrite recordings of their music, and invited them to her home to talk about their music to small gatherings and have it performed by excellent local musicians.</p>
<p>
Win a few, lose a few. Los Angeles finally gained its long-overdue professional opera company, although there was some ominous symbolism in the fact that the opening-night curtain on the company&#8217;s first-ever performance, in October 1986, stuck halfway up and resisted all efforts at dislodging for several throat-tightening minutes. Ambassador Auditorium, Pasadena&#8217;s ideal small concert hall, was shuttered in the collapse of its fundamentalist governing board and looms unused to this day. The excellent Sequoia String Quartet fell victim to internal dissent, as did the well-attended Chamber Music L.A. concert series at the Japan America. After two or three exhilarating seasons of amazing fare brought in from all over &#8211; including Osvaldo Golijov&#8217;s <i>St. Mark Passion</i> and György Ligeti&#8217;s <i>Piece for 100 Metronomes</i> &#8211; Orange County&#8217;s Eclectic Orange Festival appears to have been squeezed dry, from the look of next season&#8217;s ordinary playlist. Inside and out, however, Walt Disney Concert Hall sounds almost as good as it looks, and gives the concept of music in Los Angeles an enhanced stature at a time when that kind of boost is sorely needed.</p>
<p>
 </p>
<p>
Music, it is an open secret, is in bad shape: orchestras folding, composers reduced to waiting on tables. Criticism, oddly enough, may be in better shape, so long as people realize why it&#8217;s important. I write criticism as a way of reporting on the rise and fall of the cultural health of the community. Sure, most of the events I write about are history by the time my report gets into print. What remains, I like to think, is the extent of my reaction: The fact that I got worked up about Esa-Pekka Salonen&#8217;s performance of such-and-such a new work, or Mitsuko Uchida&#8217;s way with a Schubert sonata, or Robert Wilson&#8217;s staging of <i>Madama Butterfly</i>, will make people want to experience these people&#8217;s work the next time around. A city that can support, and fill, a Walt Disney Concert Hall night after night &#8211; and can turn out in fair numbers for an all-Bartók concert at the County Museum, and for Jordi Savall&#8217;s viola da gamba at the Getty &#8211; is the city I feel like writing to, sharing my enthusiasms with. When I run out of great performances to write about, there is always great music to be discovered and, a few years later, rediscovered. I don&#8217;t think I will ever run out of new things to discover in the Beethoven “Eroica.” Or that Mozart quintet. Or Renée Fleming singing Schubert&#8217;s “Nacht und Träume.” Or . . .</p>
<p>
When <i>New York</i> magazine gave me a page of my own, with the implication that I could be trusted to write about whatever interested me so long as I kept the magazine out of the courts, I succumbed to the delusion that I <i>knew</i> something about everything. Those early pages, which I keep as a kind of memento mori, contain some pretty embarrassing stuff from beyond my field of awareness, about Balanchine&#8217;s choreography and rock  roll. I got a free trip to London from RCA to hear its new star David Bowie, and came back with a clever headline &#8211; “I&#8217;ve Been to London To Visit the Queen” &#8211; and no valid information at all. My worst howler, long before <i>New York</i>, was to condemn Stravinsky&#8217;s <i>Symphony of Psalms</i> as “sentimental.” (It didn&#8217;t, you see, sound like the <i>Rite of Spring</i>, which was the only Stravinsky I knew.)</p>
<table border="0" cellpadding="10" align="right">
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<td><img src="http://www.laweekly.com/images/ink/04/31/31lede2.jpg"><br /><font size="-1"><b>Rich in 2004</b><br />(Photo by Debra DiPaolo)</font>
</td>
</tr>
</table>
<p>
If I&#8217;ve learned anything over the past few decades, it has been that there is nothing disgraceful in recognizing one&#8217;s own limitations and operating within them. My admirable colleague, <i>The New</i> <i>Yorker</i>&#8216;s Alex Ross &#8211; 45 years younger by his own admission &#8211; is doing now, wisely, what I tried to do, unwisely, back then. With the background and the breadth of intellect that I only imagined I possessed, he has reinvented musical criticism and made it stick, relocating the boundaries of the territory so that he can write about Sonic Youth and the Beethoven Fifth and locate them exactly in the broader scheme of things. His long article from last February, “Listen to This,” a map of the territory brilliantly plotted and drawn, is on his Web site (<i><a href="http://www.therestis">www.therestis</a> noise.com</i>), and it&#8217;s required reading. It tells me, as clearly as any evidence I&#8217;ve come across in a very long time, that there&#8217;s hope for us, after all, and for music, too. So far, in other words, so good.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Spatial&#160;Non-Delivery</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2004/06/spatial-non-delivery/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2004/06/spatial-non-delivery/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 10 Jun 2004 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=493</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Henry Brant is on my conscience. Nimble, animated, instantly lovable in his sunglasses and engineer&#8217;s cap, this 91-year-old sprite talks about his music, and talks and talks. He is, let&#8217;s face it, cute, and the crowd eats him up; it disturbs me that I cannot be of their number. He has his act down pat, [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>
<b>Henry Brant is on my conscience</b>. Nimble, animated, instantly lovable in his sunglasses and engineer&#8217;s cap, this 91-year-old sprite talks about his music, and talks and <i>talks</i>. He is, let&#8217;s face it, <i>cute</i>, and the crowd eats him up; it disturbs me that I cannot be of their number.</p>
<p>
He has his act down pat, and loosed it twice on adoring audiences during last week&#8217;s “Building Music” celebrations: once at the Green Umbrella concert at Disney, when his <i>Verticals Ascending</i> was played, and again at the Getty Center to bring on a whole evening of his music. The act consists of a zigzag journey through history, wherein precedent for his compositional style &#8211; the notion of spreading performers in and around the available space &#8211; is to be found in the famous 40-part <i>Spem in Alium</i> motet by Thomas Tallis and the spot in <i>Don Giovanni</i> where Mozart sets three dance bands playing against one another in different meters. Does it matter that in both cases the different parts are performing the same harmonies and, therefore, filling in the same texture? Not to Henry it doesn&#8217;t.</p>
<p>
“Spatial music,” he calls the hundreds of pieces he has composed since the &#8217;50s. At Disney, it pleased him to seize upon the spatial temptations of opposite sides of the stage (a horizontal setting for a piece about verticals &#8211; the Watts Towers &#8211; but never mind); at Getty, the stage, balcony and several spots among the seats; in a sports arena at St. Paul on a recent recording, choirs, orchestras, bagpipe bands and jazz bands, etc. (One thing to realize is that nothing, but nothing, of Brant&#8217;s music works on a recording; all you hear is the bad music reduced by one dimension. You have to be there, with perhaps a trombone in the row behind you blasting into your ear.) I found the music at the Getty concert consistently awful: run-of-the-mill dissonance with no real stylistic identity, its interest not at all heightened by the tricky placement of instruments. The worst of it by far &#8211; its dullness a matter of physical pain &#8211; was an aimless string quartet (the third of a set of four, the composer warns us), with two cellos onstage, a viola across the aisle to my left, a violinist upstairs: an exact denial, in other words, of why string quartets had been invented.</p>
<p>
All this took place, mind you, in the week when the Philharmonic and its massed forces delivered the ultimate testimonial to space, and to the rightness of its need for a new concert hall, and to the splendor of the one it has been given. I have no proof that the dimensions of the Berlioz <i>Requiem </i>formed the template for Frank Gehry&#8217;s architectural designs for this hall of everybody&#8217;s dreams. This, however, I am willing to bet: When Esa-Pekka Salonen turned on his podium to cue in the forces spread across the upper reaches of Disney Hall to “scatter the trumpet&#8217;s awesome sound across the graves of the land,” a blind person could have sketched the outlines of Gehry&#8217;s masterpiece from that gorgeous blast of authentic, archetypal, spatial music.</p>
<p>
That moment is, of course, the most famous of all in this extraordinary work, and it remains brightest in my memories </p>
<p>
of the few live performances I&#8217;ve heard. There were other details in Salonen&#8217;s performance that I&#8217;ve never heard so beautifully shaped, in person or on disc: the horrifying brass intrusions into the Lacrymosa; the sense of vast space &#8211; three flutes, eight trombones, nothing in between &#8211; in the Hostias; the ethereal clangor of 10 (!) pairs of cymbals, pianissimo, behind Eric Cutler&#8217;s eloquent Sanctus. From the evidence of this sovereign </p>
<p>
performance, and the concerts earlier this season, it&#8217;s clear that among Salonen&#8217;s exceptional abilities is a remarkable regard for the richness of the Berlioz sound and, more than that, the subtlety and occasional pitfalls in dealing with his textures. Berlioz&#8217;s music &#8211; complex, inward, secretive but bathed in its own kind of magnificence &#8211; has always needed its champions. To the small but distinguished list &#8211; Thomas Beecham, Charles Münch, Colin Davis &#8211; Salonen has become a worthy addition.</p>
<p>
 </p>
<p>
<b>Surrounding Brant&#8217;s <i>Verticals Ascending</i></b>, last week&#8217;s Green Umbrella, the last of the season, was all about building-inspired music, with Stravinsky&#8217;s <i>Canticum Sacrum </i>(a cold-hearted, meticulously inscribed love note to Venice&#8217;s Basilica of San Marco) a last-minute addition. Morton Feldman&#8217;s <i>Rothko Chapel</i> was the program&#8217;s one masterpiece; it ended the evening in a radiant flush of near silence. If ever a piece of music achieved the crossing-over to capture the sense of a physical space, this sublime creation surely does. In its 30 minutes (for Feldman, a mere sneeze), a wordless chorus touches on small points of vocal tone, a vibraphone and celesta deliver distant plinks over distant thunder from the timpani, and a solo viola fashions a fragment of melody &#8211; all to conjure, with amazing exactitude, the intense experience of being in the namesake small building in Houston.</p>
<p>
Edgard Varèse&#8217;s <i>Poème Electronique</i> began the program, a tape piece from 1958 created for Le Corbusier&#8217;s Phillips Pavilion at the Brussels World&#8217;s Fair and pretty much an antique of proto-electronic bloops and bleeps. In an elementary way, the sweeping lines of the piece do seem to mirror the shape of the building. Varèse was fascinated by the potential of the new media, and was deeply into experimentation at the time of his death; one can only speculate. At a later concert last week, Iannis Xenakis&#8217; <i>Metastaseis</i> provided an interesting contrast. This too was music composed under Le Corbusier&#8217;s influence; Xenakis, both composer and architect, planned the orchestral work so that the visual aspect of the score influenced the </p>
<p>
design of the same Brussels building for which Varèse would later compose.</p>
<p>
About Esa-Pekka Salonen&#8217;s <i>Wing on Wing</i>, which had its first performance in a one-time-only concert last Saturday, I will have more to say later; the Philharmonic has granted the rare indulgence of a repeat performance this weekend, the season&#8217;s final program. The work&#8217;s title comes from sailing; its hero is Frank Gehry, his idealistic and creative dreams, his passion for sailing and for designing beautiful concert halls. The setting is oceanic; the words of Gehry, straight or processed, mingle with wordless siren songs sung (wonderfully) by sopranos &#8211; Jamie Chamberlin and Hila Plitmann &#8211; who wander through the hall. This all seems to float on a billowing orchestra that laps up against Debussy now and then and even crackles with a few Sibelian icicles &#8211; without ever once sounding like anything but what it is: exhilarating new and original music by a consummate master of his orchestra and its surroundings. I can&#8217;t wait to hear it again.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Footloose and&#160;Footless</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2004/06/footloose-and-footless/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2004/06/footloose-and-footless/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 03 Jun 2004 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=492</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[There is no ballet in Verdi&#8217;s Il Trovatore as composed in 1853; one was added, to accord with the demands of Parisian taste, for Le Trouvère in 1857, its music an anonymous hodgepodge of garish re-orchestrations of parts of the Gypsy-camp music from a previous scene. For reasons beyond fathoming, the Los Angeles Opera&#8217;s 1998 [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>
There is no ballet in Verdi&#8217;s <i>Il Trovatore</i> as composed in 1853; one was added, to accord with the demands of Parisian taste, for <i>Le Trouvère</i> in 1857, its music an anonymous hodgepodge of garish re-orchestrations of parts of the Gypsy-camp music from a previous scene. For reasons beyond fathoming, the Los Angeles Opera&#8217;s 1998 production was burdened with a restoration of a pared-down version of this ballet, and it has been allowed to remain in the current revival. How insane this decision has<br />
been should become clear when I relate the action of Andrew George&#8217;s choreography, in which a group of the Count di Luna&#8217;s armored soldiers chase down, corner and gang-rape a bevy of prisoners (read “detainees”). Where was Michael Moore when we needed him?</p>
<p>
Stephen Lawless&#8217; production, never a thing of beauty for the eye, has at least been drastically bettered for the ear. The American soprano Sondra Radvanovsky &#8211; in her 30s and with some history in workshops here at UCLA and USC but only now coming into her own &#8211; has the ideal voice for the put-upon Verdi heroine. She has the dark throb that evokes the sounds of the magical past &#8211; of Leontyne, of Maria, of Zinka on her good nights, and their power to draw tears from a turn of phrase (most of all in the magical sequence of arias at the start of Act 4). Beyond all of that she also commands, or did on opening night, an ease of coloratura only sporadically vouchsafed to those goddesses of the past; she is, in other words, a Find.</p>
<p>
That was enough to elevate the <i>Trovatore</i> this time around over the previous run, drab scenery, pseudo-symbolic staging<br />
and all. But there was also more: the dazzling, headlong Azucena of Dolora Zajick, without whose firebrand tonsils no company should consider producing this opera nowadays. There was the decent Manrico of Franco Farina, clean and spirited and blessedly free of the tenorial self-indulgences that encrust the role. There was the workaday Count di Luna of Roberto Frontali and, in the pit, the leadership of Lawrence Foster: neither disgraceful,<br />
neither memorable.</p>
<p>
Above any of these varied pleasures, however, there was one truly memorable event when sight and sound did come together. It happened during what is my favorite moment in the opera, when Verdi spins a sublime counterpoint out of the mutterings of the foiled Count on one part of the stage, his soldiers echoing his frustrations over on the other and, in between but offstage, a chorus of nuns singing of matters celestial. At this juncture, by accident or design, the panels of Benoît Dugardyn&#8217;s ugly stage separated to create a visual triptych that exactly mirrored the music. One moment here, the next moment gone, but it&#8217;s what I remember most from the whole up-and-down evening.</p>
<p>
nbsp;</p>
<p>
Last week&#8217;s Master Chorale concert at Disney offered fair evidence of Grant Gershon&#8217;s enterprise in building his ensemble into a significant part of our musical life, offering concerts for the thinking listener as well as the pleasure-seeking. This program was decidedly aimed at the former: Only a small portion of the chorus was involved; seekers after the thunderous Alleluia were doomed to disillusion. Three major works, historically as well as musically important, made up the program; they spanned some 900 chronological years and yet bore strong relationships across that time span.</p>
<p>
Much is made in your Music 101 of the Pérotin <i>Viderunt Omnes</i> as the music in which counterpoint was invented (in the 12th century), and of Palestrina&#8217;s <i>Pope Marcellus</i> Mass as the music in which counterpoint was rescued (in the 16th). That&#8217;s rather pat, of course, although the survival strengths of both works do provide valuable samplings of their time &#8211; if not, of course, of their respective place, which was something other than an acoustically excellent concert hall. The smooth, elegant, jig-time rhythms of the Master Chorale&#8217;s take on Pérotin might surely have offended the pious Magister of Notre Dame, but possibly tickled the good scholar who reported on such matters (and whose non-name survives as Anonymous Four). Of the Palestrina Mass, the legend &#8211; counterpoint on the brink of churchly condemnation, Palestrina&#8217;s pretty music saving the day &#8211; is the stuff of greater romance, and has been turned into at least one actual opera (by Pfitzner, and don&#8217;t ask). The problem here is that the music is so harmonically correct and therefore bland that it becomes unlistenable. Give me Gesualdo and a few parallel fifths any day.</p>
<p>
At the end there was the fresh air of our own time &#8211; fresh, bracing and swept along under clouds of gray in the <i>Te Deum</i> of Arvo Pärt. Not for him the exuberant jiggety-jog of Pérotin or the sweet welcomings of Palestrina; if anything, the dark elegies on Pärt&#8217;s bleak landscape seem to extend back to the start of time. With small groups of singers spread through the hall, his music seems to define space &#8211; not as Berlioz will with his massive forces in the <i>Requiem</i>, but in small points of sound echoing across emptiness. On tape there were other sounds, gusts of winds recorded on the Norway coast. The harmonies clash; at a distance their mingling resembles a favorite Pärt sound, the ringing of bells. This is music from 1984, revised in 1992; it seems at once the newest music on the program and the oldest.</p>
<p>
One aspect of Arvo Pärt&#8217;s music I value most highly is his ability to outline space with the most modest means: a few </p>
<p>
performing groups, or simply solos widely spaced, or a few musicians performing together but in harmonies marvelously spaced. Composers are not always so successful. Liza Lim&#8217;s <i>Ecstatic Architecture</i>, which Esa-Pekka Salonen and the Philharmonic performed last week, was commissioned as part of the orchestra&#8217;s “Building Music” festival now going on. It purports, or so the Australian composer would have us believe, to celebrate the hall and its architect. On the stage is a kind of design concept: cellos down front, horns off to the sides, brass with woodwind mouthpieces, ecstatic &#8211; no, I mean <i>exotic</i> &#8211; percussion, all setting up a momentous racket for 25 minutes. Whether the result is more Disney Hall than, say, Grand Central Station I am not enough of an architect to say. I have liked some of Lim&#8217;s music, including <i>The Heart&#8217;s Ear</i>, a chamber piece at a recent Green Umbrella concert, but this piece, at least on first hearing, I found most unattractive and also &#8211; when matched against her pre-concert<br />
statements, which smacked of flack-talk at its most arrogant -<br />
something of a leg-pull. At my advanced age, I prefer my legs under me.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Iberian&#160;Airs</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2004/05/iberian-airs/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2004/05/iberian-airs/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 27 May 2004 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=491</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Spain&#8217;s music is the art of the soloist, and Jordi Savall&#8217;s old instruments sing it well. He brought some of this music to the Getty Center two weekends ago with his ensemble, Hespérion &#8220;I, and it was a fine occasion. The Getty&#8217;s Harold M. Williams Auditorium is a utilitarian sort of room that doesn&#8217;t inspire [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>
Spain&#8217;s music is the art of the soloist, and Jordi Savall&#8217;s old instruments sing it well. He brought some of this music to the Getty Center two weekends ago with his ensemble, Hespérion &#8220;I, and it was a fine occasion. The Getty&#8217;s Harold M. Williams Auditorium is a utilitarian sort of room that doesn&#8217;t inspire artistic thoughts by itself, but in another part of the museum there was an exhibition of Spanish drawings and prints from about the same era </p>
<p>
as the music, from the 1500s to the time of Goya. This, too, was mostly single-line work, elegant designs surrounded by a lot of space; if you kept the artwork in mind while listening to the music, it all came together.</p>
<p>
The ensemble, which hails from Barcelona, has changed personnel over the years under its leaders &#8211; Savall, who draws magic from his viola da gamba, and his wife, Montserrat Figueras, whose deep, plangent contralto is the exact equivalent of her husband&#8217;s instrument, a sound that makes strong men weak. Their kids Arianna and Ferran were along this time to make this a family affair; they sing and play many instruments. The percussionist Pedro Estevan may be a family “outsider,” except that his playing &#8211; even on things as simple as a couple of sticks &#8211; becomes a blood relative of everybody else&#8217;s work. Every time I see the group perform, there&#8217;s a kind of dissolve between the audible and the visual. That happened this time, too, even within the bare walls of the room at the Getty.</p>
<p>
The program was an interesting grab bag. Some of the most significant early Spanish music comes from the outer edges: the Sephardic songs the Jewish exiles then carried to other countries, and the Catalán songs in their fierce, defiant, separatist language. Much of the music the group performed exists merely as outlines calling for improvisations. All of this the Hespérion people handled wonderfully well, and they threw in some contemporary improv that didn&#8217;t at all break the style. Everything they perform &#8211; at this concert and on their own Alia Vox record label, which Harmonia Mundi distributes &#8211; has this marvelous sense of sounding very old and brand-new simultaneously. Daughter Arianna found notes of her own devising to sing a love poem redolent with ancient symbolism. Son Ferran, the latest addition to the group, sang a high-flying improv in an appealing, reedy tenor. But the sound memory that I summon up, a week later, embodies the loving obsessions of the instrumental partners repeating a simple chaconne bass by Tarquinio Merula while the voice of Montserrat Figueras floated like a royal purple robe above it all in a continuous melodic exaltation. During such moments you ask yourself whether music can get any better, and the answer has to be: No.</p>
<p>
 </p>
<p>
<b>Both L.A. Opera&#8217;s final</b> seasonal offerings are set in a storybook, operatic Spain, and <i>Figaro</i>&#8216;s marriage ceremony actually includes a Mozartian fandango, if a rather stately one. The new <i>Marriage of Figaro</i>, which opened last weekend, is the production of Ian Judge, after four times around for the respectable Sir Peter Hall version; it is splendidly sung, tidily conducted by Stefan Anton Reck in his local debut, but burdened with visuals that range from inexplicable to hideous.</p>
<p>
In the former category is a design sense &#8211; both in Tim Goodchild&#8217;s generally dismal sets and in the strangely unfocused costumes of Deirdre Clancy &#8211; that seems to lie across several centuries at once. During “Porgi amor,” her haunting aria of loneliness, Countess Almaviva is obliged to recline in her Louis XV bedroom swilling wine from a new-looking bottle and chatting into a white bedside telephone (to whom? Susanna? A previous scene had shown an old-fashioned annunciator system in working order). The disguised lovers in the final scene prowl the palace gardens in 18th-century ball gowns and military costumes while equipped with modern-day flashlights. The business of keys, crucial to the action in the second act, is carelessly managed; a door ostensibly locked one moment yields to the touch the next.</p>
<p>
This I find intrusive and, if you&#8217;ll pardon the expression, borderline insane. It goes against what is otherwise a sublime musical performance, most of all by the Susanna and Figaro of Isabel Bayrakdarian and Erwin Schrott, both recent winners of Plácido Domingo&#8217;s “Operalia” competitions and both singing actors of taste, intelligence and a marvelous command of the Mozartian line. For Ms. Bayrakdarian&#8217;s spinning of the radiant, silver, stardust-encrusted thread of her “Deh vieni” aria in the last act, with disarming stage presence to complement, no appropriate critical terms are yet known to me. As the battling Almavivas, Darina Takova and David Pittsinger were considerably above okay, while a lithe mezzo named Sandra Piques Eddy, also new to the company, created a scene-stealing Cherubino of pure adolescent testosterone.</p>
<p>
 </p>
<p>
<b>And then there&#8217;s <i>Merlin</i>,</b> which is also Spanish but no way soloistic. Are you ready to accept the news that the same Isaac Albéniz who composed all those virtuosic piano pieces and Spanish dances also entertained the notion of creating an operatic trilogy on the legends of King Arthur &#8211; <i>in</i> <i>English</i> &#8211; and actually got all the way through the first part?</p>
<p>
Albéniz completed <i>Merlin</i> in 1902, immediately set out on <i>Lancelot</i>, dropped it halfway and left <i>Guinevere</i> untouched. The texts were by an eccentric Brit named Francis Burdett Money-Coutts, who had also become Albéniz&#8217;s patron; they are in a highfalutin synthetic Olde English beside which Tolkien reads like this morning&#8217;s <i>Times</i>. <i>Merlin</i> deals with Arthur&#8217;s arrival and marriage to Guinevere (a mute dancer) and the old wizard&#8217;s overthrow at the hands of Morgan le Fay. On a BBC/Opus Arte DVD of a 2003 production from Madrid&#8217;s Teatro Real, in a revised and apparently cleaned-up orchestration by José de Eusebio, the opera&#8217;s three acts run close to an hour apiece, not far behind <i>Parsifal</i> &#8211; which it somewhat resembles in, say, a John Williams rewrite.</p>
<p>
Of the Albéniz we know and love there isn&#8217;t a smidge &#8211; until, that is, late in the third act, when Morgan and her gnomes start planning their sinister derring-do, the orchestra breaks out in something close to<i> </i>a seguidilla, and finally &#8211; too late &#8211; we&#8217;re back in Albéniz country. Too late, alas, also applies to major cast members: veteran Brünnhilde Eva Marton as Morgan le Fay and Carol Vaness as her accomplice Nivian, both of whom have sung on better days. The performance is identified as the world premiere of the Eusebio orchestration, and gets a snazzy production at Madrid&#8217;s opera house, full of fancy lighting effects and a lit-up Excalibur straight out of <i>Star Wars</i>. <i>Merlin</i> is exactly the right opera for the collector who thinks he already has everything but longs to be contradicted.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>The Real&#160;Thing</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2004/05/the-real-thing-2/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2004/05/the-real-thing-2/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 20 May 2004 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=490</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[The Goldbergs on a 9-foot concert grand at Disney; Hildegard von Bingen among the Presbyterians in Pasadena: What price authenticity now? Actually, the term is a land mine, and has always been. I have lived through three kinds of Goldberg Variations performances. Wanda Landowska played on her giant, clangorous harpsichord &#8211; grossly mannered, rhythmically distorted, [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>
The <i>Goldbergs</i> on a 9-foot concert grand at Disney; Hildegard von Bingen among the Presbyterians in Pasadena: What price authenticity now?</p>
<p>
Actually, the term is a land mine, and has always been. I have lived through three kinds of <i>Goldberg Variations</i> performances. Wanda Landowska played on her giant, clangorous harpsichord &#8211; grossly mannered, rhythmically distorted, swaddled in an aura that suggested that nobody out front dare stir. Glenn Gould stopped halfway through his acrobatic romp, had a drink and asked that somebody shut a balcony door. András Schiff at Disney last week delivered the work in a spellbinding single breath. Rather than “authentic,” I would regard each of these, and the perhaps half a hundred other versions I have encountered of Bach&#8217;s sublime exploration of the inmost implications of his supple small saraband tune, as a ritual in the best sense.</p>
<p>
There is one aspect of “authenticity” that must remain constant, however, which Schiff&#8217;s performance did honor, and that is the matter of overall proportion. Bach specifies that each section of each variation be repeated, and the high art of his complex working-out demands no less. Schiff&#8217;s performance ran almost exactly 80 minutes, as does his recent ECM recording. Recordings pre-CD, understandably, omit some or all repeats, leaving architecturally distorted versions. You may think this a trivial matter, but I invite you to figure out the incredible chromatic harmonies of Variation 25 on a single hearing. Bach knew what he was doing, and so did András Schiff; this was a vivid, exuberant performance. Its authenticity was in its recapturing of the creative impulse that set the music onto paper in the first place.</p>
<p>
I don&#8217;t want to get into the was-there-or-wasn&#8217;t-there Hildegard business again; the music that Anonymous 4 sang for the Da Camera Society at Pasadena&#8217;s huge, handsome Westminster Presbyterian sounded like what we know about 11th- and 12th-century music, and the texts were like the writings of the mysterious Hildegard, who was resanctified as a crossover heroine a few years ago. The four women of Anonymous 4 (their name from an authentic and important medieval scribe) are about to disband and go their separate ways into various musical projects &#8211; films, children&#8217;s programs, research. They leave behind glowing pages. The group came together to explore old music that could be sung by more or less equal voices (rather than tenors, baritones and basses) and found a thrilling repertory. They invented a singing style not dusty-authentic but faithful to the spirit, which is different. Their latest disc (<i>American Angels</i>, on Harmonia Mundi) brings their wonderful energy to early American hymns, and it&#8217;s already high on the charts, as it should be.</p>
<p>
 </p>
<p>
Southwest Chamber Music, which had for some time offered a curious mix of enterprising programming and substandard performance, reconstituted itself a few months ago with a number of personnel changes, and a recent concert at Zipper Hall was an encouraging result. Morton Subtonick&#8217;s <i>Release</i> was the major new work &#8211; his last composition, he claims, which nobody is prepared to believe. It is, in any case, a big work, dense and at times appealingly romantic. It&#8217;s set in several sections, for quartet &#8211; the instrumentation of Messiaen&#8217;s <i>Quartet for the End of Time</i> &#8211; and computer electronics, which send the sound into motion. The clarinet is particularly important &#8211; autobiographical, says Subotnick, who once played that instrument. The one thing it doesn&#8217;t sound like is a last work.</p>
<p>
Luciano Berio&#8217;s marvelous <i>Naturale</i> began the program &#8211; viola (Jan Karlin) and percussion (Lynn Vartan) interwoven with tape of a Sicilian folksinger &#8211; one of those extraordinary demonstrations of that composer&#8217;s deep love of the infinite treasures of the human voice. Midway came an endearing curiosity: Samuel Beckett&#8217;s radio play <i>Cascando</i>, for which William Kraft had written some dabs of music, and with the play itself (also pretty much dabs) spoken by John Schneider and Martin Perlich. Say what you will, those Southwests do come up with things.</p>
<p>
Two other chamber concerts offered brave repertory from the same years a continent apart. The imaginative Jacaranda series filled Santa Monica&#8217;s First Presbyterian Church with a nice pairing of early Ravel and Stravinsky, music wound around with tendrils of art nouveau. From both composers there were fragrant, willowy song cycles: Ravel&#8217;s to poems of Mallarmé, Stravinsky&#8217;s to bits of <i>Japanoiserie</i> composed later in the year of <i>The Rite of Spring</i>. Both called for ensembles of winds and strings, and so to start things off there could be Ravel&#8217;s <i>Introduction and Allegro</i> for harp and those instruments. Susan Kane was the singer, Maria Casale the harpist; the young, splendid ensemble included the Denali Quartet. Blessings on them all, and on the planners of this exceptionally tasteful, worthwhile series that has one more program this season, on June 20.</p>
<p>
At Zipper, before far too small a crowd, the area&#8217;s single celebration of Charles Ives (50 years dead May 19) consisted of an offering by members of the Armadillo Quartet plus guest: a single well-packed program including both string quartets, five songs and a miscellany. Within the limitations of four players, the music proved adequately rambunctious to suggest its ornery composer: the First Quartet from the Yalie days that loses its manners now and then and sideslips into the middle of next week, an intermezzo from <i>The Celestial Country</i> that manages to thumb its nose at its own treacly ooze. Juliana Gondek was on hand to sing five songs, their piano parts arranged for strings by Barry Socher, ending with the rowdy patriotic send-up “He Is There!” After intermission came the Second Quartet, arguably one of the good works, and, at the end, the weird, polytonal convolutions of the “Washington&#8217;s Birthday” movement from the <i>Holidays Symphony</i> boiled down successfully for quartet but leaving unanswered the usual Ives question: Dabbler or genius?</p>
<p>
To LACMA came MOSAIC, yet another </p>
<p>
New York–based new-music group and, apparently, an adventurous one. Tania León&#8217;s <i>Azulejos</i> had its world premiere; I love her tense, flavorsome music (some of which Dawn Upshaw has recorded), but this piece was too short to judge. There was George Crumb to make amends: seven huge chunks from his 1973 <i>Makrokosmos</i> to bring me back to the excitement of first hearing this stupendous stuff for amplified piano-plus and to wonder why nobody plays him anymore. There was a manic touch in MOSAIC&#8217;s Emma Tahmizian&#8217;s performance, which was just right. Rand Steiger&#8217;s dark, eloquent 1989 <i>In Memoriam</i> began the program; Steve Mackey&#8217;s 2001 <i>Heavy/Light</i> ended it with Mackey on electric guitar: smart-ass New York stuff by a composer who once seemed to be going somewhere. I did like the tennis balls dropped on the bass drum, however; that&#8217;s<br />
real orchestration.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Borrowed&#160;Finery</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2004/05/borrowed-finery/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2004/05/borrowed-finery/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 06 May 2004 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=489</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Photo by Betty Freeman “Cherish the hybrids,” Lou Harrison used to say, and say again, as a kind of mantra. “They&#8217;re all we&#8217;ve got.” Two big works, 33 years apart in the infinite variety of his legacy, were on hand last week, each a different kind of mix and, as it happened, each a different [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Photo by Betty Freeman
<p>
“Cherish the hybrids,” Lou Harrison used to say, and say again, as a kind of mantra. “They&#8217;re all we&#8217;ve got.” Two big works, 33 years apart in the infinite variety of his legacy, were on hand last week, each a different kind of mix and, as it happened, each a different kind of marvel. What they shared were those cherishable qualities we are only now coming to discover about Harrison&#8217;s music, its beauty and its strength.</p>
<p>
That latter quality in particular eludes some listeners. Harrison never concealed his fondness for writing pretty music, and some of it, to be sure, simply melts in your ear. The final moments of <i>The Perilous Chapel</i>, which the USC Thornton Contemporary Music Ensemble performed at last week&#8217;s Green Umbrella concert, fades out in a haze of pure diatonic velvet for which no better word than <i>pretty</i> will suffice. But the music in context, as the resolution to previous barbarous goings-on &#8211; all scored for soft-spoken ensemble of harp, flute, cello and small drum, and therefore sounding off in the distance like a bunch of garrulous toys &#8211; is exactly the proper sweet resolution.</p>
<p>
That music dates from 1948. Harrison was in New York; his circle included Virgil Thomson and John Cage, and he had made a name for himself editing and performing the Third Symphony of Charles Ives and guiding it toward recognition 40 years overdue. Some of that work&#8217;s naive and folkish melodic style rubs off on the young (31) Harrison&#8217;s work, but the sound of this early piece, the wonderful “open” scoring of those solo instruments, points unmistakably ahead to the fascination with matters exotic and otherworldly that would seize his imagination many years later.</p>
<p>
The <i>Double Concerto for Violin, Cello and Javanese Gamelan</i> dates from 1981 and reveals that fascination in full flower. Harrison had by then journeyed around the Pacific Rim and absorbed the languages of its musics until he could make those languages his own. He then set himself up in California as a missionary, teaching college kids fresh off the beach how to compose in the tuning systems of Bali and Java, how to build and tune their own gongs and drums and form their own gamelans, and yet &#8211; this is important &#8211; how to merge these sounds and these harmonic systems into their own Western melodic and rhythmic instincts. Cherish the hybrids, he taught, and become them. His own music led the way.</p>
<p>
This <i>Double Concerto</i>, which concluded a splendid XTET program at LACMA in a burst of glory, with Susan Jensen and Roger Lebow as soloists and Bill Alves&#8217; Harvey Mudd American Gamelan from the Claremont Colleges, is pure mongrel, and wonderful of its kind. The background is, of course, the rich, subtle sounds of the excellent small gamelan &#8211; and that&#8217;s already a sight, five very undergrad-looking kids whomping away at the devices from a culture half a world and half a millennium away. Against this the solo instruments play an almost continual rhapsodic line that seems to have both shape and no shape at all. There is other music like this: some of Terry Riley&#8217;s long works for the Kronos, but there the melodic impetus seems more Celtic than Pacific.</p>
<p>
It&#8217;s probably pointless, however, to seek out resemblances; there are just so many notes in the world, after all. What has happened here &#8211; and it is more delightful than anything else &#8211; is that Harrison has accomplished an overlay of Western concerto principles onto this alien foundation, made it adhere in some strange and cockeyed way, and turned out something close to a masterpiece. The exhilarating <i>Double Concerto </i>is just that. It&#8217;s easy to make the distinction in dealing with new music, as I wrote for another magazine in 1987 and do so again, that diatonic harmonies plus tunes equals conservative and that abstruse harmonies plus bristling melodic lines equals progressive. But those equations break down constantly in the real world, and they do with Lou Harrison.</p>
<p>
 </p>
<p>
Donald Crockett conducted both the USC ensemble and XTET Harrison performances; if that establishes him as the local authority on that composer, so much to the good. Also on the USC program &#8211; planned as a celebration of Pacific Rim music &#8211; was a work by Australia&#8217;s Liza Lim, whose <i>Ecstatic Architecture</i>, commissioned by the Philharmonic, comes up later this month at Disney Hall&#8217;s Building Music Festival. <i>The Heart&#8217;s Ear</i>, based on the 13th-century mystic poet Rumi, a 10-minute-or-so piece of attractive floating adrift in a just-intonation tuning system, finished too soon after its start. It does make her next piece worth the expectation. At the end came <i>AC/DC</i> by Vietnam&#8217;s P.Q. Phan, which on one hearing seemed like a lot of aimless noise. Mr. Phan, says a program note, is “currently composing music which integrates the musical aesthetics of Southeast Asia and the West.” <i>Plus ça change . . .</i></p>
<p>
The XTET program boasted an all-star list: Luciano Berio (his <i>O King</i>), Morton Feldman&#8217;s second <i>The Viola in My Life</i> and Olivier Messiaen&#8217;s <i>Pièce</i> for piano quartet, along with the Harrison. Feldman&#8217;s <i>Viola</i> pieces are too seldom done; their reputation probably suffers from their composer&#8217;s reputation for diffuseness, which is unfair because these pieces go somewhere &#8211; and beautifully. At LACMA, Kazi Pitelka&#8217;s viola seemed to fill the stage with little points of light, greeted and echoed by the soft “pings” from David Johnson&#8217;s percussion on one side of the stage and Vicki Ray&#8217;s celesta on the other. Magical.</p>
<p>
Messiaen&#8217;s <i>Pièce</i> for piano and strings was his musical farewell, written a year before his death. Surprise seemed to dominate the intermission conversation, that this master of the transcendental panorama had gone off so tersely, yet this four-minute piece seemed loaded with explosive power, full of twists and turns that, if left to their own devices, might easily go off. Daisietta Kim, too seldom on our stages, sang Luciano Berio&#8217;s harrowing lament on the death of Martin Luther King Jr. in the version consisting of nothing but the syllables of his name sung shudderingly against musical dots from a small ensemble &#8211; the version that Berio later expanded for his <i>Sinfonia</i>. Here is music that says exactly what it means, no more and no less. Composers tempted to add extra measures to whatever they may be </p>
<p>
working on are urged to study this work and take heed.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Lifetime of a Sorrowing&#160;Giant</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2004/04/lifetime-of-a-sorrowing-giant/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2004/04/lifetime-of-a-sorrowing-giant/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 29 Apr 2004 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=488</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[In three concerts over eight days, the excellent Penderecki String Quartet &#8211; visitors from Canada despite their chosen namesake &#8211; re-created the life span of one of the past century&#8217;s giants: Béla Bartók, through his six quartets. Though he never acknowledged them as such, these remarkable works stand forth as the autobiography of his most [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>
In three concerts over eight days, the excellent Penderecki String Quartet &#8211; visitors from Canada despite their chosen namesake &#8211; re-created the life span of one of the past century&#8217;s giants: Béla Bartók, through his six quartets. Though he never acknowledged them as such, these remarkable works stand forth as the autobiography of his most productive years. With remarkable sureness of musical resource from the outset, they begin a tale of an eager, observant young man, surrounded by the infinite variety of the musical world circa 1908 and willing to absorb some of everything. They carry the line forward three decades to a man of deep sadness and physical pain, as shadows close in around that world. Is there a more profound leave-taking in all music than the descent into darkness by the solo cello at the end of the last of these quartets?</p>
<p>
As with Beethoven &#8211; some of whose chamber music formed a fitting companion to Bartók&#8217;s on these concerts &#8211; the quartets come closest to the composer himself, of all his works, in tracing his musical states of mind. The First does indeed move rather easily through European musical society. Ravel drops in, perhaps also Debussy; the shadow of late German Romanticism &#8211; Reger, say, or the young Schoenberg &#8211; looms not far off. The lyricism is rich and attractive, but there is little to hint at the extraordinary inventions of the later works &#8211; the stomping, jagged rhythms that intrude upon the serene landscape in the Second, the concision of power in the Third until you think the work is about to explode inside you, the nocturnal spooks that sweep across the Fourth like shadows from another planet. There are outcries in these works that perhaps tell us more about Bartók himself than we ought to know; my one encounter with him &#8211; backstage, at the premiere of his <i>Concerto for Orchestra</i> &#8211; left me with a memory of eyes of penetrating sorrow that, 60 years later, I would not erase if I could.</p>
<p>
There are good recordings of these quartets &#8211; the Emerson, the Takács, the old Juilliard (which was the first and which blew everybody&#8217;s mind on LP around 1950) &#8211; yet the experience of hearing them surrounded by air, even in the lousy acoustics of LACMA&#8217;s Bing Theater, greatly enhanced the element of closeness to their composer that makes these works unique. Filling out the programs with late Beethoven was also exactly right: the Quartets Opp. 130 and 135, and they, too, were superbly played. Opus 130, however, presented the usual problem. Beethoven&#8217;s original plan was to follow the supremely beautiful Cavatina &#8211; a slow thread of endless melody best heard, as it surely was imagined, in a single breath &#8211; with a final fugue of staggering difficulty. From an emotional point of view, that would have been the proper balance. Beethoven, however, let himself be persuaded &#8211; probably by the ancestors of today&#8217;s “good music” radio programmers &#8211; to let up on his audiences, and so he plugged in a much lighter dingbat of a finale that really betrays everything that has come before, and published the <i>Great Fugue</i> separately. At LACMA, the Penderecki played Opus 130 Lite before Bartók No. 3, and the <i>Great Fugue</i> alone before Bartók No. 5. If I had been running the show, I&#8217;d have done the <i>Great Fugue</i> twice and dumped the dingbat altogether.</p>
<p>
 </p>
<p>
<b>While Bartók was fashioning</b> string quartets in Hungary, Carlos Chávez was throwing notes against a piece of paper in his native Mexico and calling it his Third Piano Sonata. Susan Svrcek&#8217;s Piano Spheres concert at Zipper Hall last week &#8211; the final event in this season&#8217;s series &#8211; included this work, and while I have heard some fairly aimless music in my time, this 1928 concoction in four movements took a kind of new prize for something that came out of nowhere, ended nowhere, and went nowhere in between. The program also included an interesting group of homages to Chopin by Chávez, Villa-Lobos and Schumann, some juvenile fluff by local composer Andrew Norman, and, at the end, a real knockout piece, Villa-Lobos&#8217; <i>Rudepoêma</i>.</p>
<p>
That work&#8217;s dates are 1921–26, and I can see where it would take that long just to get all the notes written down. Villa-Lobos was in Paris during most of that time, not his native Brazil, so this isn&#8217;t one of his nicely cultivated <i>Bachianas </i>pieces. Its sources are more primitive, the new passions for African chants and dances, drums and shouts &#8211; all boiled down to a virtuoso piano style that sounds like three performances of Liszt&#8217;s <i>Mephisto Waltz</i> played simultaneously. It goes on and on, nearly half an hour&#8217;s worth of tail chasing and padding of various sorts, but it&#8217;s a damned exciting piece, and Susan Svrcek did indeed play the living hell out of it &#8211; without ever letting on why anyone would want to. The work was dedicated to Artur Rubinstein (before he became “Arthur”), and he wrestled with it early on. In later years, the only Villa-Lobos he ever played were the pretty little pieces about dolls and gardens.</p>
<p>
The most beautiful performance I have heard in recent weeks &#8211; or months, or perhaps even years &#8211; was none of the above, however. It happened last week at Royce Hall, when the Los Angeles Chamber Orchestra performed Bach&#8217;s Concerto for Violin and Oboe before a sold-out, cheering crowd, as if Callas and Caruso had suddenly come to town. Margaret Batjer and Allan Vogel, LACO&#8217;s first-desk players, were the soloists; Helmuth Rilling was the conductor of this all-Bach program that also included three cantatas with fine soloists and a cut-down contingent from the Master Chorale. The singing was okay, and the cantatas themselves were out of Bach&#8217;s top drawer, but it was that concerto and the joyous, deep conversation among the two instrumental soloists and the wonderful small orchestra that put the whole evening up on the topmost top shelf.</p>
<p>
Can you remember the first time you heard that concerto? I can; it was at the Liberty Music Shop in Manhattan, in the days when small groups of music lovers gathered as new shipments of 78-rpm discs from abroad were tenderly unpacked and tenderly placed on the record player. There was a recording from Denmark, of a Bach concerto nobody had ever heard, with performers whose names nobody could pronounce. After the slow movement, with that sublime melody passed back and forth between soloists, with the orchestra simply strumming its approval, we all stood there in silence, with our jaws dropped. That was the kind of performance I heard again last week.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>700 Years Old, Still&#160;Cool</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2004/04/700-years-old-still-cool/</link>
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		<pubDate>Thu, 22 Apr 2004 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=487</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Photo by Friedrun Reinhold If I tell you that my favorite disc of recent months contains over an hour&#8217;s worth of three-minute bursts of the same kind of music, seven centuries old and built on principles in no way related to anything else in our repertory experience, you may want to change stations . . [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Photo by Friedrun Reinhold
<p>
If I tell you that my favorite disc of recent months contains over an hour&#8217;s worth of three-minute bursts of the same kind of music, seven centuries old and built on principles in no way related to anything else in our repertory experience, you may want to change stations . . . but wait! Know first that the disc is on ECM, one of the more trustworthy of surviving classical labels, and that the performers are the Hilliard Ensemble, that lively and questing group &#8211; countertenors, tenors, baritone &#8211; whose lust for stylistic exploration is apparently boundless. Here they sing a collection of motets by the 14th-century poet, philosopher, musician and churchman Guillaume de Machaut, music whose strange, distant beauty is much enhanced by the typical ECM treatment: haunting, softly echoey sound that bespeaks the cold stones of the small Austrian church that their microphones have re-sanctified, and the dark, mysterious distances of the photography in the accompanying booklet. There aren&#8217;t many class acts left in the recording industry; ECM, along with Nonesuch and Harmonia Mundi, bravely holds the fort.</p>
<p>
The Machaut motet is a different concoction from the polyphonic motets of Palestrina and his Renaissance pals. It is a form built up in layers, sung simultaneously. The low voice (<i>tenor</i>, from <i>tenere</i>, to hold) sings a very short text, maybe just a couple of words, in long, sustained notes. A higher voice above him (<i>motetus</i>) sings a much faster melody, with words that relate to the tenor&#8217;s text. A third voice (<i>triplum</i>) sings faster still, with a third text again related to the other two. In the first Machaut motet in the ECM collection, the <i>tenor</i>&#8216;s entire text is “I sigh”; the <i>motetus </i>begins “with sighing, suffering heart . . .” and the <i>triplum </i>has what amounts to a whole sermon on what to do when you fall in love. This all creates a hopeless jumble of text, of course, and you have to wonder whether Machaut or any of his numerous colleagues had any interest in having this music performed, or whether these pieces were more like philosophical designs set to music. Many of the motets have religious connotations; some will have a hymn of praise to the Virgin Mary in the lower voices, coupled with a fairly carnal encomium to the girl next door in the upper voice.</p>
<p>
But then there&#8217;s the music. As I listened the other night, a friend asked if this was Arvo Pärt; he was off by 700 years, but right on as well. We cannot, of course, hear this music with 14th-century ears, but the weight of history can be a marvelous enablement for discovering a whole new level of freshness in this repertory. Is it so wrong to hear Arvo Pärt or Bartók or Charles Ives in the cross-relationships and false cadences in Machaut? It would be equally wrong to hear this music as any kind of primitive, to miss the high level of poetic daring in the textual or musical crossovers, the sheer beauty in the sinuous melodic lines.</p>
<p>
Last week, an NPR music programmer told <i>Talk of the Nation</i>&#8216;s Neal Conant that he uses these motets &#8211; along with Peruvian tribal chants and other assorted exotica &#8211; as “buttons” between news items on <i>All Things Considered</i>. Things being what they are in classical music these days, we take what we can get.</p>
<p>
 </p>
<p>
<b>I wrote with some ecstasy </b>a couple of weeks ago about Thomas Adès&#8217; operatic setting of <i>The Tempest</i>, of which recordings are not available. Now there is more music by this remarkable young (33) Brit, and it is available, a collection of short works on EMI Classics, which comes with a “parental advisory” sticker on the cover for reasons not hard to discern. In 1999, the New York Philharmonic commissioned six composers to write “messages for the millennium” for performances on the eve of 2000, and Adès came up with the 16-minute <i>America: A Prophecy</i>, which heads this new disc and gives it its title. For his text and his theme, he chose to look not ahead but back, to the stable Mayan civilization of half a millennium before, and its destruction by conquerors and looters from abroad. He drew upon ancient writings (including <i>La Guerra</i> by the 16th-century Mateo Flecha) and on later texts sympathetic to the fate of the Mayans. “<i>O my nation, prepare</i>,” sings a mezzo-soprano in a twisted line resonant with ancient sounds, her voice rising out of an opening orchestral bombardment full of terrified shrieks and tongues of flame. “<i>The people move as in dreams! They are weak from fuck and drink . . .</i>” She sings of invaders from the east, who destroy and burn. “<i>They will come from the east</i>,” the chorus sings. “<i>They will burn all the sky</i>.” “<i>Ash feels no pain</i>,” responds the soloist. All this was performed in New York, 22 months before 9/11. Was nobody listening?</p>
<p>
I don&#8217;t know whether circumstances will allow this work the circulation it deserves; hearing it on disc, long after the facts it uncannily portends, still has its dark overtones. That has to do mostly with the writing for the solo mezzo (Susan Bickley on the disc), which is pained and intense. But that matter aside (if possible), this is music of tremendous power. Percussion predominates; the sounds wrench and pound. The composer conducts the City of Birmingham Orchestra and Chorus.</p>
<p>
An interesting variorum of short works, mostly of slight stature, fills out the disc and draws a nice picture of a composer of admirable curiosity at his cluttered desk, busily trying things out: a bit of Omar Khayyam, a wise line or two from John Donne, a snatch of Tennessee Williams erotica, a Couperin harpsichord number ingeniously transcribed for chamber ensemble, <i>Cardiac Arrest</i> (the rock number that showed up at a Green Umbrella not long ago) and, finally, <i>Brahms</i>. This is a tiny, hilarious poem by, of all people, pianist and sometime Brahms interpreter Alfred Brendel. It&#8217;s all about <i>that</i> composer&#8217;s very worst side. “<i>This wading through chords and double octaves wakes even the children from their deep sleep</i>,” proclaims the text. “<i>‘Not Brahms again!&#8217; they wail</i>.” And Adès, with his fine parodistic sense, and with the help of a ponderous (i.e., Brahmsian) baritone named Christopher Maltman, has done for Brahms exactly what we have all longed to have befall him all these interminable years.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>A Panoply of Piano&#160;Play</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2004/04/a-panoply-of-piano-play/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2004/04/a-panoply-of-piano-play/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 15 Apr 2004 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=486</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[On Tuesday of last week, and again on Friday, Alfred Brendel &#8211; current patron saint of thinking piano aficionados &#8211; played music by the usual dead Viennese (Beethoven, Mozart, Schubert) in the usual concert garb (white tie, tails) to the usual sold-out house at Disney Hall. On Thursday, on the same stage, Lang Lang, current [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>
On Tuesday of last week, and again on Friday, Alfred Brendel &#8211; current patron saint of thinking piano aficionados &#8211; played music by the usual dead Viennese (Beethoven, Mozart, Schubert) in the usual concert garb (white tie, tails) to the usual sold-out house at Disney Hall. On Thursday, on the same stage, Lang Lang, current superwhiz idol to a whole &#8216;nother variety of piano fanciers, wooed another sold-out house with another kind of music &#8211; the Rachmaninoff “Full Moon and Empty Arms” Second Piano Concerto &#8211; which he performed in a Chinese shirt of fetching fuchsia. And while you would have thought that the audience for Lang Lang&#8217;s performance might have torn the place apart during his performance, and especially between movements of the concerto, to inform him of their approving presence, quite the opposite took place: His taut, surprisingly well-controlled performance kept the crowd in check until the final note had skyrocketed through the hall, whereupon, of course, chaos descended. (The encore &#8211; surprise! &#8211; was not the expected trapeze act, but Schumann&#8217;s quiet <i>Träumerei</i>, quietly played.) By contrast, the sadly misinformed audience for Brendel&#8217;s Friday program, which he shared with his son, Adrian, in a program of Beethoven cello sonatas, took it upon themselves to applaud after every movement. You just never know.</p>
<p>
Brendel has been a generous presence these past few weeks: an eloquent shaping force with Matthias Goerne in the <i>Winterreise</i> I wrote about last week, a fine soloist (with David Zinman and the Philharmonic) in Beethoven&#8217;s C-minor Concerto, a solo recitalist and, finally, the duo program with his son. This last event was disappointing for other reasons than the audience&#8217;s behavior; Adrian seems a proficient rather than an expressive musician &#8211; not ready for prime time, as a friend aptly put it. But the Beethoven cello sonatas somewhat favor the piano anyhow, and even though memories of my old Emanuel Feuermann–Myra Hess recording of the A-major kept flooding back upon me, it was the beautiful points made along the way by the elder Brendel that were most worth carrying home afterward.</p>
<p>
The solo recital (wherein the audience behaved itself admirably) abounded in such points. The first half was all early Mozart &#8211; those sonatas in the Köchel 200 that nobody takes seriously enough, that are easy to play through at home but then round corners into astonishing harmonic turns that catch us up short. Brendel played two of these, as big, serious music, and that was a revelation. He began with more unfamiliar Mozart, a C-minor Fantasia (K. 396, not the more famous K. 475) and revealed a remarkable, forward-looking piece of large-scale sonata-form structure that, once again, is worth anyone&#8217;s study. Brendel then went on to the marvelous, late <i>Klavierstücke</i> of Schubert, prophetic works from his last year in which foreshadowings of Schumann and Brahms are uncannily present, and ended with Beethoven&#8217;s Opus 109 Sonata. The memory I most happily cherish was Brendel&#8217;s shaping of light and shade as Beethoven&#8217;s achingly beautiful final tune re-emerges from clouds and refreshes itself whole in the final measures. For this one can forgive the <i>Missa Solemnis</i>.</p>
<p>
 </p>
<p>
Richard Goode is another of our distinguished, white-haired piano eminences, and his recent Royce Hall recital drew a large crowd. Schumann&#8217;s <i>Davidsbündler</i> Dances, which bulked large on the program, were handsomely and imaginatively played, but they do try the patience: 18 short pieces in pretty much the same language, alternately brave and droopy, with no sense of why we have gone from No. 13, say, to No. 14. The evening&#8217;s great work was Janácek&#8217;s two-movement <i>Sonata October 1, 1905</i>, serious, bitter celebration of a revolutionary event in the composer&#8217;s native Brno. With Mozart&#8217;s stark A-minor Sonata at the start and Chopin&#8217;s G-minor Ballade at the end, the program did somewhat lean toward the somber; perhaps the Schumann was needed, after all.</p>
<p>
Not much in music is as stark, however, or as somber, as the Eighth String Quartet of Shostakovich, which we have had here twice in recent weeks. Shostakovich wrote the work in shock upon his first visit to war-ravaged Dresden in 1960, when the effects of the Allied bombing were still to be seen. With all the jabberwocky (true or false) written about inner meanings and autobiographical contents of this or that work, the “secrets” of this quartet are fairly clear. Its musical motto is the composer&#8217;s own musical signature: D-S-C-H (with the “S” standing for the German E flat, the “H” for B). The quartet has had a second life in Rudolf Barshai&#8217;s transcription as the Chamber Symphony, and it is equally compelling that way.</p>
<p>
Either way, it tears you apart. At the Philharmonic, played by orchestra members, it served as pre-concert entertainment to David Zinman&#8217;s performance of that composer&#8217;s Eighth Symphony, an obscene juxtaposition if ever one was. (Alfred Brendel&#8217;s performance of Beethoven&#8217;s Third Piano Concerto came between the two to soften the blow.) From this hourlong collection of spare parts, assembled by Shostakovich as World War II wound down, I get nothing: no sense of coherence, nothing from the kicky scherzoid moments that hadn&#8217;t been better expressed in earlier, shapelier works, no power from the affected oratory of the slow movements. “If there&#8217;s a theme here it escapes these ears,” writes program annotator Herbert Glass of one particularly sticky moment. If there is music here it escapes these.</p>
<p>
At UCLA&#8217;s Schoenberg Hall, the Eighth Quartet served to conclude a dazzling evening by the St. Lawrence String Quartet, the new ensemble out of Canada that has become the darling of the chamber-music world. Everybody loves them for the sheen of their performance style, and the way they have of playing straight out to the crowd: something like the Lang Lang approach, except that they play better music. At Schoenberg they gave an edge-of-the-seat performance of the Shostakovich; before that they played the Ravel Quartet with such elegance, such purity, that it seemed to hang suspended. Before that they played Osvaldo Golijov. Their best-selling disc (on EMI/Angel) has the Golijov pan-national repertory: the phenomenal <i>Yiddishbbuk</i> inspired by inscriptions from Prague ghetto walls, the klezmer-inspired <i>Dreams and Prayers</i> <i>of Isaac the Blind</i> (with clarinet), and his <i>Last Round</i>, which the Philharmonic has done here orchestrally. At Schoenberg the St. Lawrence played just the <i>Yiddishbbuk</i>, haunting and exhilarating. Get the disc, and be prepared to dance on the ceiling.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Presense and&#160;Future</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2004/04/presense-and-future/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2004/04/presense-and-future/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 08 Apr 2004 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=485</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Matthias Goerne, who has spent some quality time with us at Disney Hall over the past two weeks, is a transfixing musical presence. As dramatic baritones go, he is at 37 barely dry behind the ears, but he has already taken his place in a distinguished dynasty. In my time that dynasty has included such [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>
Matthias Goerne, who has spent some quality time with us at Disney Hall over the past two weeks, is a transfixing musical presence. As dramatic baritones go, he is at 37 barely dry behind the ears, but he has already taken his place in a distinguished dynasty. In my time that dynasty has included such names as Friedrich Schorr, Hans Hotter and Dietrich Fischer-Dieskau; their musical line extends from the role of Jesus in the two Bach Passions, Mozart&#8217;s Count Almaviva and Papageno, Schubert&#8217;s song cycles, Wagner&#8217;s Wotan and, of more recent vintage, Berg&#8217;s Wozzeck: noble palaces built for noble inhabitants. Goerne came to us first in 1998, in a remarkable recital of music that he has widely championed, the biting satire mingled with personal pain of Hanns Eisler&#8217;s <i>Hollywood Songbook</i>, mostly to the words of Bertolt Brecht, high art carved out of monumental venom by two of our most ungrateful refugees.</p>
<p>
On this visit Goerne came with even higher artistic goods, two days apart. First there was an hour&#8217;s worth of Mahler&#8217;s <i>Wunderhorn</i> songs with Esa-Pekka Salonen and the Philharmonic &#8211; a glorious assemblage from Romanticism&#8217;s final sputter, a companion-in-kind to the nose-thumbing Shostakovich Ninth, which shared the program &#8211; and Schubert&#8217;s <i>Winterreise</i> with pianist Alfred Brendel. Those two offerings, along with the memory of the Eisler program (available on Decca at one time, although you never know anymore), make an interesting sequence: tense, human portraits, their sporadic flashes of humor nearly always defeated at reality&#8217;s doorstep. Might not the starving child of Mahler&#8217;s “Das Irdische Leben” be equally at home amid the howling dogs of Schubert&#8217;s nameless village, or abandoned in one of Eisler&#8217;s garbage-strewn alleys?</p>
<p>
We associate <i>Winterreise</i> with dark voices. The tragedy in the poetry, and the resonances that fill the silences in Schubert&#8217;s harrowing music, make this an automatic reaction. Most of Schubert&#8217;s singers, however, were tenors; baritones and basses must sing his music transposed from their original keys; so much for “authenticity.” The real difference comes with piano sonority; transposed down to lower keys, the sound necessarily thickens. The special quality of Goerne&#8217;s collaboration with Brendel last Monday was the balance, the lightness of the piano, even in lower tonalities, against the outgoing drama in Goerne&#8217;s singing. Comparing his performance at Disney Hall with his 1996 recording with Graham Johnson, part of Hyperion&#8217;s encyclopedic Schubert collection &#8211; as I was inspired to do later that night &#8211; you hear pretty much what you expect to hear. That, too, is an intensely moving performance by a 30-year-old singer fully aware of the richness and beauty of his voice, not yet fully confident about using its full power, but already fully responsive to the human tragedy of poet Wilhelm<b> </b>Müller&#8217;s irony-beset misanthrope. The growth of Goerne&#8217;s power between that recording and his performance last week is reason enough to welcome his presence &#8211; and his future &#8211; as one of the great singing artists of our time.</p>
<p>
<b>The late Pauline Kael</b>, who, you might as well know, was my favorite critic in all the arts, coined one of the phrases that I live by, the notion that an observer might conceivably “admire but not like” a work of art. Beethoven&#8217;s <i>Missa Solemnis</i>, which the Master Chorale inflicted upon a large and apparently ecstatic audience at Disney Hall last week, heads my “admire but not like” list and, I think, always has. There are no extenuating explanations for my dislike of the work. Beethoven had not run out of steam; there are the five late string quartets to prove that, full of original and beautiful ideas, and fugues &#8211; great, hair-raising fugues that challenge the imagination even now. The <i>Missa Solemnis</i>, on the other foot, is full of truly dreadful fugues, stuff that even Handel wouldn&#8217;t have handled.</p>
<p>
Aware throughout his life of the value of a fast buck, Beethoven turned out plenty of potboilers that his most fervent proponents try to stay away from in order to preserve his reputation &#8211; a piano sonata here, a violin sonata there, an overture, some variations, even a couple of big choral numbers. (Heard <i>Das Glorreiche Augenblick</i> lately?) But a 90-minute Solemn Mass, dating from those last prodigious years of the Ninth Symphony and all those other good works &#8211; with a media premiere in the offing and with archdukes and archbishops waiting in the wings, and with trumpets and drums at the end heralding the cause of Peace on Earth &#8211; was something the world could not ignore in those halcyon days of post-Napoleonic bliss. “From the heart to the heart” Beethoven had penned on his manuscript, and this seemed enough to obliterate notice of those limping melodic lines, those Amen choruses with textures like wet paper towels, and with fugues that, like the proverbial snake, persisted in swallowing their own tails.</p>
<p>
Grant Gershon led his 100-member chorus and a fair-sized orchestra in a decent approximation of the music, for what it was. The vocal quartet &#8211; Elissa Johnston, Paula Rasmussen, Stanford Olsen and Ron Li-Paz &#8211; did wander off pitch in their solo section of the “Sanctus,” but that might have been out of exasperation with what had come just before. Beethoven being Beethoven, and supporting audiences for choral organizations tending toward rather churchly tastes, it&#8217;s probably inevitable that the <i>Missa Solemnis </i>makes its turgid way into the schedule every decade or so. If you find yourself leaving the next performance surprisingly unsatisfied for reasons you can&#8217;t quite explain, take it as a sign of growing up.</p>
<p>
Thanks to friends in medium-high places,<br />
I have come by a video of <i>The Tempest</i>, Thomas Adès&#8217; new opera produced by London&#8217;s Royal Opera and broadcast by the BBC in mid-February, and it is a work of extraordinary beauty. Meredith Oakes wrote the text, freely and imaginatively built from Shakespeare&#8217;s outlines; Adès himself conducted the marvelous performance, with Simon Keenlyside as the Prospero and an amazing coloratura soprano, Cyndia Seaden, as an Ariel who is truly a creature of light and air. The music is like nothing of Adès I have previously heard; it has a soft luster that seems at times both old and new; at moments of particular poetic elegance it moves with a gentle syncopation called <i>hemiola</i> that Henry Purcell also used most eloquently. A final ensemble, set in that rhythm, leaves you dizzy with delight. When may we have it here, please?</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Local&#160;Color</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2004/04/local-color/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2004/04/local-color/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 01 Apr 2004 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=484</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Photo by Diane Alancraig Two events on last week&#8217;s crowded calendar, with music created eons apart, came agreeably close to whatever it is that people can define as “perfection.” One was Gloria Cheng&#8217;s piano concert in Santa Monica on Saturday, especially in extended works by Olivier Messiaen and John Adams; the other came a night [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Photo by Diane Alancraig
<p>
<b>Two events on last week&#8217;s</b> crowded calendar, with music created eons apart, came agreeably close to whatever it is that people can define as “perfection.” One was Gloria Cheng&#8217;s piano concert in Santa Monica on Saturday, especially in extended works by Olivier Messiaen and John Adams; the other came a night later at the Los Angeles Chamber Orchestra&#8217;s concert at UCLA&#8217;s Royce Hall, with Gary Gray as soloist in Mozart&#8217;s Clarinet Concerto. Vastly different kinds of music these, written under vastly different circumstances, yet I find a similar urgency &#8211; call it hypnosis and you won&#8217;t go too far astray &#8211; in the strength of Mozart&#8217;s lyricism and the motive power in the unfolding of two &#8216;prentice works from these unalike French and American figures of our own time.</p>
<p>
We rack our own expressive resources, and have now for centuries, seeking the words to explain the shivers as the simplest Mozart tune unfolds &#8211; the slow movement of this Clarinet Concerto, for one. An arpeggio moves upward, then down, then up again but with a few extra notes to darken the harmony: That&#8217;s all there is, the same as there is nothing but water and sunlight to a rainbow. The wonder of Mozart &#8211; here, and in the galaxy of similar unimposing tunes and astonishing harmonic devices that can trouble our sleep in the remembrance (the Countess&#8217; “Porgi, amor” in <i>Figaro</i>, the Wind Serenade invoked in the one sane moment in <i>Amadeus</i>) &#8211; is the sublime exactitude with which these exquisitely fashioned small ideas fill their space. And it is that ability to fill their space that sets the works of the classical language apart from anything else in music, no matter how eloquently (and convincingly) one might argue for the place of this or that contemporary language alongside the dead masters.</p>
<p>
But I digress. Cheng&#8217;s concert was part of the new and charmingly chosen “Jacaranda” series at Santa Monica&#8217;s First Presbyterian, with benches that make you sit upright and music that makes it worth the effort. Messiaen&#8217;s <i>Eight Préludes</i>, from 1929, shows us a young and ardent composer under Debussy&#8217;s spell and trying out the extreme ends of his palette, with enchanting sounds that would stay with him in later, surer works but with an earnestness that already bears his own signature. Cheng has performed and recorded a lot of Messiaen; she wears his colors well. Her command of color also ennobles her concept of Adams&#8217; <i>Phrygian Gates</i>, which becomes, with her, a marvelous ebb-and-flow that transcends the “pure” minimalist patterning and assumes its important position as the ancestor of much of Adams&#8217; later mastery. The plan of the work, the interplay of modalities and modulations as set forth in Adams&#8217; intricate program notes, is important in itself; in every succeeding performance from Cheng &#8211; I have heard several, plus her two recordings &#8211; I become more aware of the dramatic instincts that motivate the piece and make its final moments both devastating and thrilling.</p>
<p>
 </p>
<p>
<b>Cheng is one of our local heroes;</b> as is Vicki Ray, whose Piano Spheres concert earlier this month was, as usual, full of high spirits and adventure, and who turned up again at LACMA as the spark plug at last week&#8217;s Xtet concert; as is Jeffrey Kahane. The L.A. Chamber Orchestra concert included the aforementioned Clarinet Concerto, a Bach concerto with Kahane conducting from the keyboard and a pair of Vivaldi double concertos &#8211; two cellos, two oboes &#8211; with orchestra first-desk players as soloists. Under Kahane the orchestra flourishes; the programs are lively and so is his leadership. As you might expect, he is being nibbled at by other bigtime orchestras, including, I am told, the Denver; orchestral bigamy is all the rage these days. Before the concert he lectured and demonstrated, charmingly and intelligently, on the differences between harpsichord and piano. The Vivaldi soloists included the orchestra&#8217;s first oboist Allan Vogel, who is as fine an exponent of that treacherous instrument as exists anywhere in the land today. The program also included a weak-tea bit by one David Matthews, an <i>Introit </i>for strings, and a final peal of trumpets composed for Gloucester Cathedral, where it might have done well to remain.</p>
<p>
At LACMA there was another excellent Xtet program, providing further expansion to the current Shostakovich glut and the chance to revisit some early Aaron Copland too often neglected, the Sextet for Piano, Clarinet and Strings. This was Copland&#8217;s reworking, wisely undertaken, of his 1933 <i>Short Symphony</i>, music from which both the intrepid Serge Koussevitzky and Leopold Stokowski had backed away on the matter of rhythmic complexity (and which the no-less-intrepid MTT of SFO has recorded with the ease of a knife through butter). It&#8217;s a great piece of sassy, jazzy, in-your-face Copland, but it belongs in the hands of chamber players &#8211; the kind of handle-anything studio musicians who make up groups like Xtet, with Vicki Ray at the piano and guest clarinetist Philip O&#8217;Connor.</p>
<p>
The concert ended in similar high style with a journey through the Shostakovich Piano Quintet of 1940 &#8211; music serene, sarcastic and dark at times but beautifully balanced. Two years before the garish Seventh Symphony &#8211; and, of course, a year before the disastrous Nazi invasion that necessitated such perversion of his artistic impulses &#8211; here is the work of a composer totally in command of his art. The comparison should be not with the overdrawn billboards of the wartime symphonies Nos. 7 and 8, but with the more self-possessed Ninth of 1945 &#8211; which, perforce, the Philharmonic also played last weekend &#8211; which immediately followed the war and which, in some ways, joins with this quintet as a pair of bookends surrounding Shostakovich&#8217;s wartime involvement. The further irony, of course, is that the quintet was well-received by Soviet higher-ups, while the Ninth Symphony, whose brash sarcasm was more readily noted than its rich fund of lyric impulse, almost landed him in Siberia.</p>
<p>
The Shostakovich enigma remains to puzzle and delight. At the very least, his legacy embodies a repertory of intensely performable music, written down with a profound understanding of what it will sound like and how it will leap off a stage. In this, the kinship with Mahler is immediately apparent, and was especially so at last week&#8217;s Philharmonic program, where the Ninth shared the evening with Mahler&#8217;s <i>Wunderhorn</i> songs (about which more next week). Mozart is not far behind.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>East Comes&#160;West</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2004/03/east-comes-west/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2004/03/east-comes-west/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 25 Mar 2004 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=483</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Photo by Heny Fair In its several years&#8217; existence, the Pacific Symphony&#8217;s American Composers Festival has staked out a broad and interesting territory, while expanding the very scope of its title: Aaron Copland at the movies, Antonin Dvorák in New York, Bill Bolcom&#8217;s entanglement with William Blake&#8217;s poetry, and &#8211; for two splendid weeks earlier [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Photo by Heny Fair
<p>
<b>In its several years&#8217; existence,</b> the Pacific Symphony&#8217;s American Composers Festival has staked out a broad and interesting territory, while expanding the very scope of its title: Aaron Copland at the movies, Antonin Dvorák in New York, Bill Bolcom&#8217;s entanglement with William Blake&#8217;s poetry, and &#8211; for two splendid weeks earlier this month &#8211; the Chinese diaspora to America. The concerts were nicely planned and well attended. The ideal now would be for some of its excellent new music, most of it unknown beforehand to audiences from Orange County and beyond, to find its way toward second hearings. The overall message from this festival is that the Chinese composers who have settled in our midst in the last several years constitute a potent creative force. Those who lament the assumed demise of the forward impulse in serious new music would do well to pay heed to what we have been hearing down off the 405 these past weeks.</p>
<p>
Pay heed, in particular, to the music of Chen Yi, with whom I chatted in these pages a couple of weeks ago. She is one of the several composers sprung from Cultural<br />
Revolution servitude in the 1980s, later educated at Columbia and Juilliard, who have evolved a strong manner of merging Chinese folk background, including a purposeful harmonic crudity, into a Western orchestral mastery shot through with dark glints. For the festival&#8217;s one commissioned work, she came up with a dazzling virtuoso piece for supercellist Yo-Yo Ma, a hand-in-glove collaboration. I had my reservations a couple of years ago about Yo-Yo Ma&#8217;s “Silk Road” programs, which struck me as a tad exploitative and self-conscious; Chen Yi&#8217;s new <i>Ballad, Dance and Fantasy</i> is superior stuff for composer and cellist/collaborator, an extraordinary synthesis of Chinese melodic essence and manic contemporaneity that reaches beyond borders, partakes of anything that comes under the rubric of “music,” pauses now and then for moments of sweetness, regains a dizzying momentum and, at a breath-stopping end, simply and wondrously evaporates.</p>
<p>
Apparently unwilling to trust its own musical resources, the Pacific Symphony billed this final program not for its extraordinary musical content but as “The Great Yo-Yo Ma and Friends,” and on that strength it did, indeed, sell out the monster space of Segerstrom Hall for two performances. There was other splendid music on that program: Zhou Long&#8217;s rich, intense <i>Two Poems From Tang</i>, and Bright Sheng&#8217;s tragic tone poem <i>China Dreams</i>, music that seems suffused with the sadness of a composer happy in a new home but unable to forget an old one. Zhou Long, by the way, is married to Chen Yi; speculate for a moment on the pleasures and dangers of marriage between two composers of similar high quality.</p>
<p>
Given a gathering of half a dozen concert events in as many musical styles, the freelancers that make up the Pacific Symphony acquitted themselves in, let&#8217;s say, not-bad fashion, as did yeoman conductor Carl St. Clair. Again, the festival was put together with high imagination -<br />
surrounded by talks, demonstrations of Chinese instruments and art forms, and children&#8217;s concerts &#8211; by the New York–based Joseph Horowitz, who is what you might call a musical sociologist. His books deal with craze: the exploitation around the aged and near-senile Arturo Toscanini by the media, the bloodsucking at piano competitions (the Van Cliburn in particular), and the mania for Richard Wagner&#8217;s music that drove a generation of New York matrons bonkers in a Coney Island concert hall around 1890. You shouldn&#8217;t buy a concert ticket without first reading one of Joe Horowitz&#8217;s books.</p>
<p>
 </p>
<p>
<b>On the matter of Van Cliburn,</b> by the way, and on the matter of media fame: The last time Los Angeles saw the efforts of conductor Vassily Sinaisky was on a sad evening at the Hollywood Bowl in 1984. Sinaisky was leading his Moscow Philharmonic; Van Cliburn was the soloist, back after a long time away, in a heroic program of two concertos; the event was part of the World Cup celebrations. But the Cup that night ranneth over &#8211; Cliburn zonked out at intermission; bye-bye Sinaisky.</p>
<p>
Last week Sinaisky returned to our own Philharmonic, standing in for Esa-Pekka Salonen to lead that media phenomenon known as the Shostakovich Seventh Symphony. Salonen&#8217;s reason for bowing out was his need for time to work on his new piece due here in June; if you know the Shostakovich Seventh, you should know that nobody needs an excuse for dropping out. If ever a work has survived on its fame and not on a shred of musical integrity, let it be this.</p>
<p>
The fame, of course, is delicious. Summer 1942; Leningrad under siege; heroic Shostakovich remaining behind to complete the work, which is then smuggled by microfilm (via Tehran) to New York, where Toscanini and Stokowski are engaged in a gigantic hair-pull over first-performance rights. (Toscanini wins; the performance, now on CD, is a travesty.) Shostakovich makes the cover of <i>Time</i>. All that is lacking from any of this is the matter of quality. Crude, vulgar, monumentally dull in every page (except for a rather charming bass-clarinet solo in the second movement), the Shostakovich Seventh is an extraordinary example of music that bloats itself on its own fame. The Philharmonic has had the charming (if not entirely workable) idea of preceding each symphony in its Shostakovich survey with the string quartet of the same number, played in the pre-concert spot by members of the orchestra. The Seventh Quartet dates from 1960, 18 years after the symphony of that number, and it was rather amusing the other night to watch the evening&#8217;s speaker, musicologist Robert Fink, twist himself into knots trying to establish connections (which, of course, do not exist) between the gentle sarcasms of the lovely quartet and the bull-roars in the symphony.</p>
<p>
“There is a river in Macedon and a river in Monmouth,” spouts Shakespeare&#8217;s pedantic Fluellen in trying to liken Alexander the Great to Henry the Fifth. It didn&#8217;t work then, either.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Wise&#160;Counselor</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2004/03/wise-counselor/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2004/03/wise-counselor/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 18 Mar 2004 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=482</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Photo by Dewey Neild With a name like Steven Stucky, he has to be good, and so he is. Since his arrival at the Philharmonic in 1988, his official titles have included composer in residence, new-music adviser and, at present, consulting composer for new music. He is actually a composer in nonresidence; his day job [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Photo by Dewey Neild
<p>
<b>With a name like Steven Stucky</b>, he has to be good, and so he is. Since his arrival at the Philharmonic in 1988, his official titles have included composer in residence, new-music adviser and, at present, consulting composer for new music. He is actually a composer in nonresidence; his day job is as a professor of composition at Cornell, and that&#8217;s all to the good, since he serves as a pipeline from the orchestra to life beyond the mountains and counteracts any imputation of provincialism at either end. His essays on the phenomenon of new music &#8211; what it means to create out in front of popular taste and expectation, what composers and their audience “owe” one another &#8211; have made the printed Green Umbrella programs over the years documents worth pondering and saving; I have several times urged him to submit them for publication. The list of new works he has created for the Philharmonic &#8211; for full orchestra or various component groups &#8211; forms a considerable repertory. His Second Concerto for Orchestra, which had its world premiere here last week under Esa-Pekka Salonen&#8217;s exuberant leadership, is a distinguished addition to that list.</p>
<p>
I write of Stucky and his music in good faith and with genuine admiration. I think we are past the time of judging music as a branch of politics, liberal versus conservative, non-tonal radical versus defender of the C-major scale. There is too much bad, aimless, non-tonal showoff music around, and too much enthralling neo-tonal stuff from the John Adams gang <i>et alii</i> to make those old categories stick. The composer nowadays who has something to say, we can generally assume, has a pretty good handle on the language in which to say it. (There are exceptions, but we&#8217;ll get to her later.)</p>
<p>
By that assumption, Stucky&#8217;s new piece shows him as an easy master of polyglot. He confessed as much in the pre-performance rituals at last week&#8217;s premiere, part of the Philharmonic&#8217;s First Nights series. Debussy and Stravinsky rank high among his household gods, as does Witold Lutoslawski, his onetime teacher. That in itself forms a fascinating amalgam: color, rhythm, propulsion. On the strength of one hearing, plus a few days with the score, the new work&#8217;s strongest music is its slow movement, a set of variations  that range broadly across a vista of both land and sea, with bright solo instrumental writing and breath-stopping dark sonorities. There are glimpses, sure enough, of Debussy&#8217;s seascape &#8211; not as thievery but as tribute, which is a very different matter. The work is full of tributes, in fact Stucky refers to them as “friends”: musical puns wherein the notes themselves spell out names through a complex referring system more to be seen than heard. An opening movement, not much more than a fanfare with a short romantic interlude midway, and a boisterous, ovation-<br />
generating finale frame this slow movement, </p>
<p>
but the latter is the music I would most want to live with.</p>
<p>
The First Nights have been popular; management tells me that the series was the first to sell out. Each of the events has been built around a premiere &#8211; Stravinsky&#8217;s <i>Rite of Spring</i>, the Beethoven Fifth and now this &#8211; with some dramatic effects onstage, some well-chosen bits of other music to complement the work in question, but also &#8211; alas &#8211; a copious outpouring of old-school music-appreciationese written and delivered by the actor John de Lancie in a manner that, last Friday night, raised such terms as “insufferable” to expressive heights. Festivities included an album of Stucky-family snapshots projected on the screen and a visit from an old school buddy (“This Is Your Life, Stevie Stucky”). Three local composers, after hearing the inconclusive first movement, got to come onstage and go “gee whiz” about the music in a gathering of clichés strained and embarrassing. About halfway, Stucky himself was finally vouchsafed the microphone, and, from then on, with the help of Salonen and the orchestra, actually explained and demonstrated some of the melodic and contrapuntal mechanisms of the new piece. Why there hadn&#8217;t been more of this genuinely valuable material, and less of the baloney, is something beyond my powers of explanation.</p>
<p>
 </p>
<p>
<b>It had been, in fact,</b> something of a Stucky week, to our greater pleasure. Monday&#8217;s Green Umbrella offered the world premiere of a song cycle, <i>To Whom I Said Farewell</i>. These are settings of four poems by A.R. Ammons: elegiac meditations on death from immediately inside the grave, set for mezzo-soprano (the marvelous Janice Felty, too long away) and 15 players. Solemn, melodically graceful pieces, these are Stucky&#8217;s best kind of music; they reflect the same impulses that, written somewhat larger, surge through the slower parts of the orchestral work. They also have its same sense of instrumental color. The texts were printed, in the program book, in black against a gray background; the house lights were kept low to render them illegible. Words like “inconsiderate” come to mind; also “stupid.”</p>
<p>
Pianist Xak Bjerken, a faculty colleague of Stucky at Cornell, began the program with a set of attractive miniatures by Stucky and György Kurtág. Stucky&#8217;s <i>Four Album Leaves</i> of 2002 are no more than their title suggests: miniatures in, perhaps, the Schumann mold, with No. 3 &#8211; a slow-moving harmonic sequence &#8211; a particularly appealing small interlude. Eight Kurtág pieces from a set called <i>Games</i> were something more, however: small, self-contained explosions, intense and teeming with thoughts unsaid but swirling beneath a turbulent surface. Bjerken returned after intermission in Judith Weir&#8217;s Piano Concerto, which he has also recorded.</p>
<p>
Try as I might, I cannot come away from Dame Judith&#8217;s music unwounded &#8211; in spirit and sometimes also in lower spine. She has previously crossed my path with musical evocations of Chinese opera and the Bayeux tapestry; on the matter of the concerto, in program note and pre-concert chat, she had the gall to pass off this twiddly small concoction as something Mozartian &#8211; pinpointing the Piano Concerto K. 449 as the specific target. Is there no justice? Dame Judith&#8217;s aspirations have elevated her this time not to anything remotely dreamed of in Herr von Köchel&#8217;s catalog, but something closer to the tea-and-crumpets manner of Cécile Chaminade, with a naughty wrong note here and there to tickle the peasantry. Christopher Rouse&#8217;s <i>Compline</i> was the attractive ending work, music inspired by the bells of Rome&#8217;s churches but actually scored for the instrumentation of Ravel&#8217;s <i>Introduction and Allegro</i>: harp, winds, string quartet. Smart coattail riding, that, and smart music as well.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Man of Many&#160;Worlds</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2004/03/man-of-many-worlds/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2004/03/man-of-many-worlds/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 11 Mar 2004 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=481</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[(Photo by Betty Freeman) In the music of Osvaldo Golijov I hear a robust proclamation of joy in the creative act. It is a mere dozen years since he first flashed across the horizon with his Yiddishbuk &#8211; which, by the way, the St. Lawrence String Quartet will perform on March 25 at UCLA&#8217;s Schoenberg [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>(Photo by Betty Freeman)
<p>
In the music of Osvaldo Golijov I hear a robust proclamation of joy in the creative act. It is a mere dozen years since he first flashed across the horizon with his <i>Yiddishbuk</i> &#8211; which, by the way, the St. Lawrence String Quartet will perform on March 25 at UCLA&#8217;s Schoenberg Hall &#8211; but in those years he has demonstrated an astounding mastery of music in remarkable variety. It helps, of course, that the variety in his composition reflects the pattern of the 44 years (so far) of his own life. Understanding his background &#8211; of Eastern European Jewish refugee parents, a boyhood in Argentina, thence to Israel and to the U.S. for study with, among others, George Crumb &#8211; makes it easier to reconcile, say, the dark, Judaic lamentations in the <i>Yiddishbuk</i> and the surging, pagan-Christian-Latino vitality of his <i>St. Mark Passion</i>.</p>
<p>
Two weeks ago the Philharmonic arranged a small Latin (mostly Argentine) music festival around Golijov&#8217;s visit, with his new chamber opera, <i>Ainadamar</i>, as the centerpiece and with associate conductor Miguel Harth-Bedoya (now also out front with the Fort Worth Symphony) here to conduct. Inevitably the orchestral program included music by Argentina&#8217;s top-dog composers Alberto Ginastera (the <i>Variaciones Concertantes</i>, which is much more European/ international than indigenous/Latin in style) and Astor Piazzolla (the Bandoneón Concerto, which is very Argentine in style, very charming but also rather naive). Golijov&#8217;s <i>Last Round</i> for string orchestra, which the Philharmonic first played two seasons ago, was by some distance the evening&#8217;s best work, fragrant and serene.</p>
<p>
Golijov&#8217;s <i>Ainadamar</i>, which filled the next night&#8217;s Green Umbrella program, held the major interest. It lasts but an hour; at its Tanglewood premiere last summer it shared a double bill. Although it&#8217;s listed as a “chamber opera,” its performing forces &#8211; with a generous percussion contingent, a sound crew and 14 vocal roles &#8211; were hardly “chamber”-size. There were moments, in fact, when the enterprise threatened to overflow Disney Hall&#8217;s capacious stage &#8211; and its electronic equipment as well.</p>
<p>
The text, by Broadway&#8217;s David Henry Hwang, tells of the death of Spain&#8217;s hero-poet Federico García Lorca and of the great actress Margarita Xirgu, whom he memorialized in one of his plays. The aging Margarita, shrouded in flashbacks of her life, occupies center stage; García Lorca himself moves in and out of her shadows. Ainadamar (“Fountain of Tears”) is the spring in Granada near where the poet, yoked to two common criminals, was executed by Franco&#8217;s minions at the start of Spain&#8217;s Civil War; the opera begins and ends with taped sounds of flowing water.</p>
<p>
There are great beauties here, and small imperfections. With all my respect for Hwang&#8217;s dramatic sense (<i>M Butterfly</i>, etc.), I find his handling of the timeworn old-lady-flashback formula, with its interminable crowding-in of final echoes and voices, depressingly facile. His play &#8211; and therefore its concomitant music &#8211; runs out of steam some 10 minutes before its end and thus loses what has been until then a rewarding and haunting experience.</p>
<p>
So much, however, is good. There is a tone color in the voice of Dawn Upshaw, a blend of womanliness and intensity, that Golijov knows exactly how to orchestrate; she brings to his music that marvelous power to seek out the exact passion in the simplest melodic turn. (He tells me that he is working on a set of Spanish Sephardic song settings for her. Lucky Osvaldo; lucky Dawn.) As García Lorca there was Kelley O&#8217;Connor, a young mezzo, now a graduate student at UCLA, one of those remarkable young artists who arrive in our midst with voice and instincts fully formed from the start. I had seen her in student productions (the Ravel double bill at UCLA last season) when it was too soon to single her out. Now I can. Actually, she reminded me the other night of an occasion 19 years ago, when I happened to be in New York and a manager begged me to come and hear an unknown new singer, and I was bowled over. I have a tape of that event, and I use it instead of pills. It was Dawn Upshaw singing Schubert.</p>
<p>
 </p>
<p>
<b>“Cleverness is not necessarily lovely,”</b> Mel Powell once wrote, in lines quoted in a recent REDCAT program, “nor is loveliness necessarily clever.” The California EAR Unit&#8217;s recent tribute to their onetime friend and mentor was enough to prove that, in at least one instance of Powell&#8217;s music, those attributes did come together. What a treasure was this Mel Powell! Everything in his varied life formed a unity in his music: the early triumphs as a jazz pianist (with the Benny Goodman and Glenn Miller bands as well as his own), the studies with the formidable Paul Hindemith, his pioneering work in electronic music, the teaching, even the early years as a semipro baseball player and tennis nut. His musical legacy is full of sparkling, intricately cut jewelry, some exquisitely infinitesimal and some as expansive as the sunrise.</p>
<p>
The REDCAT program was like a bygone civilization brought miraculously to life: a time when the EAR Unit was still a bunch of eager graduate students at CalArts, with Mel Powell among them zooming down the corridors on his motorized wheelchair. Most of their program last month consisted of music Powell had composed for them &#8211; as individuals or a group &#8211; so that the entire evening was a family affair. It began, in fact, with a “new” media concoction wherein percussion virtuosa Amy Knoles “remixed” an old Mel Powell abstract painting with the ensemble&#8217;s recording of Powell&#8217;s <i>Immobiles</i>.</p>
<p>
Powell&#8217;s 1996 Sextet, his last work of consequence, written two years before his death, ended the program, as much a love letter from composer to performers as music can boast. From first note to last, he guided his six players through the art of conversation: the solo statement, the refutation, the argle-bargle, the rumination, the reconciliation. If you need a single work to define the essence of chamber music, let it be this. If you need a single group of supremely dedicated players to define the essence of what it means to make music together, let it be these.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>A Couple of&#160;Strausses</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2004/03/a-couple-of-strausses/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2004/03/a-couple-of-strausses/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 04 Mar 2004 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=480</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Photo by Robert Millard Of the two composers named Strauss &#8211; unrelated, so far as anyone knows &#8211; who commanded the attention at downtown emporia in recent weeks, it was Richard who generated the louder noise and Johann Jr. who made the prettier music. Some of my colleagues seemed put out to discover something so [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Photo by Robert Millard
<p>
<b>Of the two composers</b> named Strauss &#8211; unrelated, so far as anyone knows &#8211; who commanded the attention at downtown emporia in recent weeks, it was Richard who generated the louder noise and Johann Jr. who made the prettier music. Some of my colleagues seemed put out to discover something so trivial (their word, not mine) as one of Johann&#8217;s waltzes in the sacred precincts of a Philharmonic subscription concert. Others had the wisdom to apply adjectives like “silly” to the four-hour endurance challenge of Richard&#8217;s <i>Die Frau ohne Schatten</i> at Mrs. Chandler&#8217;s newly anointed opera house. I&#8217;m only happy that Mrs. Chandler wasn&#8217;t around for this ordeal &#8211; happy, and perhaps a little envious.</p>
<p>
Guest conductor Franz Welser-Möst, Austrian by birth (not quite Vienna, but Linz &#8211; of the Linzer Torte &#8211; which is close enough), drew on a fine old Viennese tradition, honored by the likes of Furtwängler and Walter, by ending his Philharmonic program with Johann Jr. in three-four: <i>Künstler-Leben</i>, to be specific, with all the intros and repeats to bring the work out to respectable length. You could, if you wished, stir in your seat and grumble at the sacrilege of introducing such fluff into precincts where Beethoven has so recently reigned. You could also, if you preferred, tune in on this quite superb performance, drink in the elegance of the unique orchestration &#8211; first violins doubled by piccolo in the first theme, for one delight of many &#8211; and marvel at how this splendid young conductor managed to put across the peculiarity of the Viennese rubato, with that subtle holding-back on the second beat, in only a couple of days&#8217; rehearsal.</p>
<p>
I have not always been that taken with Welser-Möst&#8217;s conducting, and I found some of last week&#8217;s Philharmonic program &#8211; above all, the Schubert “Unfinished” and the collaboration with Radu Lupu on Mozart&#8217;s A-major Piano Concerto (K. 488) &#8211; a shade lacking in grace. His programming at his new post with the Cleveland Orchestra has been full of adventure and new music; I wonder why he came here with so old-fashioned a bill. Lupu&#8217;s performance of the Mozart, with its divinely melancholic slow movement, seemed offhand, as much audibly slouching as he actually appeared onstage. Alban Berg&#8217;s <i>Three Pieces for Orchestra</i> of 1913-14 instilled a little more life: great, thudding echoes of a young man&#8217;s agonies as a world closes down around him (and, thus, an interesting mirror of the awful Richard Strauss biz from the same years going on just up the street).</p>
<p>
Yet the waltz of <i>Artists&#8217; Life</i> was the evening&#8217;s real event. It sent me scurrying back to my own collection &#8211; most of all to my videos of two New Year&#8217;s concerts at Vienna&#8217;s Musikverein conducted by Carlos Kleiber, and to an even older CD by his father, Erich. These performances are more than musical experiences; they are lessons in a subtle and (I would have thought) untranslatable language, beyond explanation by any system of supertitles yet invented. Yet the young Welser-Möst had our Philharmonic speaking it &#8211; no, <i>singing</i> it &#8211; remarkably well.</p>
<p>
 </p>
<p>
<b>Richard Strauss&#8217; </b><i>Die Frau ohne Schatten</i> bears some kind of contemporary relevance, I suppose; it accomplishes the feat of delivering messages of comfort and joy both to readers of Betty Friedan and to bombers of abortion clinics. It delivers the same message &#8211; married life is better with babies &#8211; in four hours that Mozart&#8217;s Papageno and Papagena deliver in four minutes. Hugo von Hofmannsthal&#8217;s overwrought outrage of a fairy tale accorded with literary tastes circa 1912; Richard Strauss, post-<i>Elektra/Salome</i>, easily commanded its musical equivalent. Today it serves the needs of painters with full pots of garish colors at their disposal, and designers with vast arrays of stage machinery to play with. Its most famous American production was as the showoff piece for the scenery-changing gadgetry at the new Metropolitan Opera House in 1966. Its one positive attribute at that time was the heavy cutting imposed on the score by its conductor, Karl Böhm, which the Los Angeles Opera preserved in the John Cox production first seen here in 1993 and now, restaged by Patrick Young, in its return. It runs through March 13.</p>
<p>
By some distance, the current revival is the best production of the work I&#8217;ve seen or could imagine seeing, better by far than the Metropolitan Opera&#8217;s tinfoil spectacular (now replaced) or the austere video version from Salzburg (conducted by Georg Solti at such breakneck tempos that, uncut, it runs almost the same time as the cut version seen here). In 1993, Randall Behr was the hapless conductor of a cast of comparable mediocrity, so that my memories of the David Hockney stage designs survived mostly in black and white. Now, finally, I have them in full color &#8211; great globs of color, a huge 3-D impasto of exquisite bad taste exactly in tune with the music &#8211; thanks to the musical outlines of the performance itself. Kent Nagano&#8217;s surging, billowing orchestra lays siege to the senses with what may be the world&#8217;s first audible legal narcotic.</p>
<p>
The cast &#8211; one and all &#8211; proves as worthily chosen as the 1993 aggregation was unworthy. Inga Nielsen is the Empress, smaller and brighter of voice than the usual Wagnerian soprano (Leonie Rysanek in the Böhm recording), and by that measure more sympathetic; Linda Watson as the shrewish Dyer&#8217;s Wife is, by the same token, further down the scale of humanness and thus more overpowering. Best of all is Wolfgang Brendel as Barak the Dyer, a truly memorable portrait. Never have I been tempted to urge upon my reading public so horrendous a musical baggage purely on the strength of performance values . . . well, hardly ever.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>The Gang of Four Invades Orange&#160;County</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2004/02/the-gang-of-four-invades-orange-county/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2004/02/the-gang-of-four-invades-orange-county/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 26 Feb 2004 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=479</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[There was a time in China, Chen Yi remembers, when playing Paganini on your violin &#8211; or Mozart or Beethoven &#8211; could land you in a labor prison, with your instrument confiscated or burned. “I was about 13,” she says, “and I remember that I had to play with heavy blankets over the windows, and [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>
There was a time in China, Chen Yi remembers, when playing Paganini on your violin &#8211; or Mozart or Beethoven &#8211; could land you in a labor prison, with your instrument confiscated or burned. “I was about 13,” she says, “and I remember that I had to play with heavy blankets over the windows, and a big iron mute over the strings to mute the sound.”</p>
<p>
That began to happen in 1966, at the time of the infamous “Cultural Revolution” (which was anything but cultural), organized to support the artistic policies of Mao Zedong and his nihilistic wife and carried forward by the formidable Red Guard and their up-front “Gang of Four.” One astonishing result from that sorry page in Chinese history, however, has been the emergence of yet another gang of four: four composers of extraordinary talent, born within four years of one another (1953–57), all of them with the same history &#8211; early musical talent, crushed by governmental forced labor for a time, emerging the better for their experience to gain international fame. All four &#8211; Chen Yi; her husband, Zhou Long; Bright Sheng; and Tan Dun &#8211; managed the transition to American acclaim (and residence) in the 1980s. All four are in Orange County this week to participate in the Pacific Symphony&#8217;s annual “American Composers” festival. That event reaches its climax on March 10 and 11 at Costa Mesa&#8217;s Segerstrom Hall, with music by all four composers performed by Carl St. Clair and the Pacific Symphony, including the world premiere of Chen Yi&#8217;s <i>Ballad, Dance and Fantasy</i> <i>for Cello and Orchestra</i>, with Yo-Yo Ma as soloist. During the week, the festival also includes music by one more Chinese composer, our own &#8211; Pasadena&#8217;s, that is &#8211; Joan Huang.</p>
<p>
On the phone from her home in Brooklyn, just back from performances of her <i>Chinese Myths Cantata </i>in England &#8211; a characteristic work combining indigenous instruments and men&#8217;s chorus (Chanticleer) &#8211; Chen Yi is her usual <i>sparkle</i>, sounding very much like her piece of that name which stole the show at a Green Umbrella concert not long ago. Her message, however, is anything but sparkly as she reminisces about life under that other Gang of Four. “I think my life was even more miserable than the other composers, because my parents were really, <i>really</i> bad &#8211; in the eyes of Madame Mao, that is. My father was a doctor, which meant that he had contact with all kinds of Western medicine &#8211; <i>very</i> bad. My mother worked in a hospital. When the Red Guards came first to our building, in 1966, our neighbors tried to tell them that we were good people and that they should leave us alone, and so they went away for a while. But in 1968 they came back. My mother was made a prisoner in that hospital, and I was taken out to work, to plant vegetables &#8211; barefoot &#8211; and to carry 100-pound loads of stone and mud up the hill, maybe 20 times a day.”</p>
<p>
It&#8217;s only recently that we have come to realize the impact of that horrifying decade in Chinese cultural history: the destruction of an entire educational system, and of an educated generation. Throughout that overpopulated nation, young people raised in good middle-class homes were forced to abandon their career ambitions and were shanghaied into labor camps and youth gangs in the Chinese countryside. We know their story only because of the few happy endings &#8211; the four surviving composers brought together by favoring circumstance being one example.</p>
<p>
Yet the benefits from just this small composer group have already had an impact on the contemporary musical scene. All four composers have provided a substantial repertory of striking, original music: the delightful sound creations (involving water, paper and all manner of toy creations as well as large-scale devices) that sent Tan Dun high onto the charts, the wrenching musical memoirs of Bright Sheng (including his <i>H&#8217;un &#8211; Lacerations </i>— which begins the Orange County Festival) and the remarkably vivid works of Chen Yi with their rich, colorful combinations of large-scale “Western” orchestral tone and the dark mysteries of sinuous Chinese melodies.</p>
<p>
 </p>
<p>
<b>Somehow, fate</b> &#8211; or the ancient gods of music &#8211; intervened in the case of these four young musicians, all of them initially dragged off toward a destiny similar to Chen Yi&#8217;s. Dog-tired as she was by her daily exertions, she still found time to entertain her co-workers with revolutionary songs on her violin at night. “I felt a big release,” she says, “in being able to exercise some creativity in making something out of these circumstances. Frankly, it wasn&#8217;t until the Cultural Revolution that I found my roots, my motherland, and really appreciated the simple people of the earth. I found my own language when I realized that my mother tongue is really the same as what the farmers speak.” Off in Mongolia, her future husband, Zhou Long, in another labor camp, experienced the same epiphany, driving a tractor by day and playing the accordion for folk dances at night. Bright Sheng taught himself piano at a work farm in Qinghai province. Tan Dun, youngest and most completely self-taught of the four, planted rice in a commune by day and sought out musical sounds in rocks, water and paper by night.</p>
<p>
“In 1970,” Chen Yi remembers, “Madame Mao had composed a revolutionary opera, a big piece that needed a Western-style orchestra. But all the Western-style musicians in Beijing had been fired and sent to prison camps, so they needed a new orchestra, and very quickly. So suddenly I had a job playing my violin, out in the open! Not only that, I had to compose a lot of music, very quickly: overtures, dance pieces, songs. Now I had a job, and most of the other composers came to work with me in the Beijing Opera as well. We had a company that toured through many cities, and that made life a little better.”</p>
<p>
By 1977, the Cultural Revolution was over and the Chinese conservatories could be open again. Chen Yi had a huge pile of compositions to submit, from the music that she had composed for the operas. “No, it wasn&#8217;t very good,” she says, “and no, I don&#8217;t want to use any of it now, but everybody was amazed that I had such a large pile. Still, I had to start at the beginning, to learn orchestration techniques and harmonies and to do all the straight things that I had been doing just by instincts. In 1986, the Chinese Central Philharmonic gave a whole concert of my work. But I had gone as far as I could at the Beijing Conservatory, so I applied to Columbia and was accepted. I got a visa in one week &#8211; imagine that!</p>
<p>
“Also I got to travel with Tan Dun, on a project to collect folk music in Chinese villages. We would travel some distance on a bus, and then we would walk, maybe 90 miles, to where there was a singer, or a musician that we could record.” This was the same thing that Bartók had done, recording the folk music of his native Hungary, and it helps to define the particular strength in the music of Chen Yi. Listen to her latest disc: <i>Momentum</i>, a 13-minute orchestral work on Sweden&#8217;s BIS label, or <i>The Music of Chen Yi</i> on New Albion; not packaged exotica on the Rimsky-Korsakov level, these are strong, confrontational pieces in which the strands of Chen Yi&#8217;s own concerns stand forth in stark relief.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Angel&#160;Wings</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2004/02/angel-wings/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2004/02/angel-wings/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 19 Feb 2004 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=478</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[In Orange County last November, a production of Madama Butterfly opened on a stageful of bustle: a consular office in old Nagasaki with secretaries at typewriters, young Japanese clerks pushing papers around, girls singing “Quanti fiori!” with nary a flower in sight, Lieutenant Pinkerton and marriage broker Goro hot and heavy in negotiations &#8211; all [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>
In Orange County last November, a production of <i>Madama Butterfly</i> opened on a stageful of bustle: a consular office in old Nagasaki with secretaries at typewriters, young Japanese clerks pushing papers around, girls singing “<i>Quanti fiori!</i>” with nary a flower in sight, Lieutenant Pinkerton and marriage broker Goro hot and heavy in negotiations &#8211; all in coordination with Puccini&#8217;s busy, contrapuntal music. At the Dorothy Chandler Pavilion last week, the Los Angeles Opera&#8217;s <i>Madama Butterfly</i> began on an empty stage, the figures of Pinkerton and Goro picked out in strong lighting against an equally strong background of color, further identified by the contrast in the way each man held his hands, and with nothing else onstage except a flat landscape punctuated in the distance by a small bridge over a stream. The Orange County <i>Butterfly</i> was Francesca Zambello&#8217;s 5-year-old production from Houston, restaged for Opera Pacific by Garnett Bruce; the L.A. Opera&#8217;s was Robert Wilson&#8217;s 1993 creation for the Paris Opéra de Bastille, rebuilt here for its North American premiere. Having seen both productions within three months, and been bowled over both times, I find myself obliged to retract a lifetime&#8217;s worth of negative estimates of the value of Puccini&#8217;s exquisite tragedy.</p>
<p>
Wilson&#8217;s <i>Butterfly</i> soars, of course, as much in coordination with its own inner music as with Puccini&#8217;s; yet the remarkable effect is to leave you closer to its personalities than you might have believed possible. Unlike current and recent smart-ass directors who must reinvent story lines to accord with their advanced visions of an opera&#8217;s “true meaning” (names on request), Wilson&#8217;s way seems in general to be one of subtraction rather than addition. His sole <i>Butterfly </i>addition has been to create an enhanced stage presence for the boy cast as “Trouble,” the leftover son of Butterfly and Pinkerton&#8217;s romance, but this has been so artfully done &#8211; and enacted so charmingly by 10-year-old James Prival &#8211; as to disarm complaint.</p>
<p>
Verónica Villarroel was the opening-night Butterfly, not her first time here as a “sweet and sad” heroine, if you remember 1994&#8242;s ill-fated <i>El Gato Montès</i>; the voice is now a little less sweet, perhaps, but she stood well on opening night and captured Wilson&#8217;s lighting. (Two others will assume the role during the 14-performance run, Angela Maria Blasi and Xiu Wei Sun.) John Matz was the nicely lyrical Pinkerton; Susanna Poretsky, the rich-voiced Suzuki. Greg Fedderly, as Goro, mastered best of all a stylized “Japanese” walk; I could swear he was on wheels. Kent Nagano&#8217;s musical leadership, in fact, put the whole evening on wheels, smooth and well on track.</p>
<p>
The “inner music” is most aptly defined through Wilson&#8217;s vocabulary of body movement, a quantity always cherishable in musical theater, but something intrinsic and unique in his language. Memorable moments abound; just to observe this one quality &#8211; how it works even on a stage as large as ours, and how it interlocks with constant color changes in lighting &#8211; would be worth a return visit. Take one small but crucial moment: the meeting near the end between Butterfly and Kate Pinkerton, the innocent cause of her ruination. Just the contrast in the two women&#8217;s holding of their arms &#8211; Butterfly stiff, Kate beckoning and natural &#8211; spells out the culture barrier, the uncrossable bridge so clearly defined at that moment. Take that further, as Wilson implicitly demands, and recognize what that bridge will symbolize in the future tragedy when that beautiful boy of Butterfly and Pinkerton&#8217;s loving is forcefully carried into the American life his philandering father and his new, insignificant wife have come to represent. You don&#8217;t get that from any dime-a-dozen <i>Butterfly</i> production; I did, from Bob Wilson.</p>
<p>
Wilson&#8217;s operatic repertory is small, because his choices fall only upon works that generate that kind of resonance. I ache to see <i>Einstein on the Beach</i> once &#8211; or 10 times &#8211; again. His technique is famous, and sometimes ridiculed by nonbelievers, for the rehearsal time he spends on the sort of detail I&#8217;ve tried to describe; I watched him once, in Rome for the <i>Civil Wars</i> that Los Angeles never got, working for three hours on the lighting on a hand. I worry, therefore, at the news that the Los Angeles Opera will revive this <i>Madama Butterfly</i> in three or four years, but that Wilson will not be here to supervise its preparation.</p>
<p>
 </p>
<p>
<b>Jon Vickers&#8217; performance</b> as Benjamin Britten&#8217;s Peter Grimes comes close to being the finest single operatic performance on video; it was available on laser disc and now has been re-formatted on a Kultur DVD. The performance is from London&#8217;s Royal Opera in 1981, conducted by Colin Davis and directed by Elijah Moshinsky; it is therefore the same production that came here during the Olympic Arts Festival in 1984. Even Britten, who had written the part for Peter Pears, was obliged to accept the Vickers performance as the more complete fulfillment of this harrowing, tragic role.</p>
<p>
You get it from the start, that amazing throb that epitomizes defiance and helplessness at the inquest into the death of his first &#8216;prentice. “What harbor shelters peace . . .?” &#8211; is there a vocal line of greater desperation anywhere else in music? (Yes, perhaps in Schubert&#8217;s <i>Die Winterreise</i>, but elsewhere?) <i>Peter Grimes</i> has become an essential opera, and there have been excellent performances since Vickers&#8217; time, even here. Yet this DVD, with the fine Ellen Orford of Heather Harper and the sturdy Balstrode of Norman Bailey, is also an essential part of an operatic collection.</p>
<p>
So is Alban Berg&#8217;s <i>Lulu</i>, which has yet to make it to these precincts. (Don&#8217;t hang by your thumbs.) It&#8217;s interesting enough that a new DVD of the work (not the first) is of a performance from Britain&#8217;s Glyndebourne Festival, shrine of great Mozart and Monteverdi; mountains do get to move now and then. This is also a tremendous presentation: Christine Schäfer in an exact mix of kitten and tiger, Kathryn Harries as a sad old blunderbuss of a Countess Geschwitz, Andrew Davis leading the strong, well-paced performance I would not have expected from him 10 years ago. Truly amazing, the operatic repertory currently available on DVD. Robert Wilson? For starters, there is Gluck&#8217;s <i>Alceste</i> from Paris, directed by Wilson, conducted by John Eliot Gardiner, with Anne Sofie von </p>
<p>
Otter in the title role; who could ask for<br />
anything more?</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Maestro Gatti Takes the&#160;Fifth</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2004/02/maestro-gatti-takes-the-fifth/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2004/02/maestro-gatti-takes-the-fifth/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 12 Feb 2004 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=477</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Tchaikovsky at Royce Hall, Schumann at Disney: After three weeks of Berlioz&#8217;s hectoring, perhaps it was time to ride the warhorses for a couple of nights. Last week they ran sleek and handsome. It&#8217;s easy enough, in my line of work, to face an evening&#8217;s gig with an inevitable “oh no, not the Tchaikovsky Fifth [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>
Tchaikovsky at Royce Hall, Schumann at Disney: After three weeks of Berlioz&#8217;s hectoring, perhaps it was time to ride the warhorses for a couple of nights. Last week they ran sleek and handsome.</p>
<p>
It&#8217;s easy enough, in my line of work, to face an evening&#8217;s gig with an inevitable “oh no, not the Tchaikovsky Fifth again” attitude. Hereabouts, the Fifth is a hardy perennial, indoors at the Music Center, outdoors at the Bowl. I&#8217;ve written a whole book on the Fifth (HarperCollins, out of print here, published also in Taiwan), and I didn&#8217;t think there was anything new for me to learn about it. At Royce, Daniele Gatti and London&#8217;s Royal Philharmonic proved me wrong. His zippy tempos, achieved by his mostly young players at no loss of clarity, gave the first movement a buoyancy I&#8217;d seldom if ever heard before; his marshaling of lights and shadows in the waltz movement seemed to evoke real swans this once. Best yet, the hornist in the slow movement achieved his famously romantic solo without the smarmy vibrato that I always believed was built into that dreaded moment, and turned it instead into something close to music.</p>
<p>
Gatti is 42. He guest-conducted our own Philharmonic in 1991. From the evidence of this program &#8211; which he had to trundle around to three other Southern California venues before arriving here &#8211; and from the recording on Harmonia Mundi, he has built one of London&#8217;s “other” orchestras into a much-improved ensemble. His beat is strong and clear; it&#8217;s obvious that his motions are for the orchestra, not the audience. Gatti&#8217;s program at Royce began with a first-rate Prokofiev “Classical,” the strings like gossamer, the winds all a-twinkle and the pacing bright and bouncy. Midway, and best of all, came an absolutely splendid reading of the Mozart 40th. Here, again, is music I think I know backwards and forwards and every way in between; yet I found myself astonished and bolt upright at the gorgeous wind writing in the trio of the minuet that had somehow passed me by a couple of thousand times before. I liked that Gatti seats the orchestra in the classic manner, with the second violins down front on the conductor&#8217;s right and the basses up in back. At Royce, at least, it made for a stronger, more forward sound. (It did at Disney the next night, too, in fact, when guest conductor Christoph von Dohnányi also seated the Los Angeles Philharmonic that same way for another “warhorses” program.)</p>
<p>
One sour note, or two, however, may be in order. The program booklet for Gatti&#8217;s concert, while reasonably informative about the music itself, lacked the customary courtesy of a list of orchestra personnel, leaving unstated the fact that the horn soloist in the Tchaikovsky was John Bimson, or that Tim Watts and Leila Ward played the exquisite oboe duet in the Mozart. Programs by traveling orchestras invariably provide these lists, and the booklet for the same concert did so when the Royal Philharmonic played in Orange County the week before. At Royce, however, last month&#8217;s concert by John Eliot Gardiner&#8217;s Monteverdi Choir went on unaccompanied by the customary text sheet, nor was there a text provided for the Bach <i>Passion According to St. John</i> when the Suzuki Ensemble from Japan performed it there last season.</p>
<p>
All of this suggests that somewhere in the management of UCLA Live there is a decline of caring about the integrity of the presentation of serious music, a suspicion supported by a serious tapering off in the number of serious musical events this season compared to previous years. From my limited knowledge of demographics, it seems to me that the opposite should be true. After the Gatti concert I approached David Sefton, the head of UCLA Live, and I think that perhaps the word “shame” passed my lips. Mr. Sefton, not widely known as a charmer, waxed hissy. “Do you know that it cost me 180,000 fuckin&#8217; dollars to bring those people over . . .” Those words having explained the situation to his satisfaction, if not to mine, I took my leave.</p>
<p>
<b> </p>
<p>
Christoph von Dohnányi</b> tried hard and nobly to make Schumann&#8217;s Second Symphony lovable in his guest stint with the Philharmonic, and came as close as anyone can. It just won&#8217;t work. The opening fanfares, the impact of trumpets smudged by trombones, are already wrong; the first movement seems to consist of balloons inflating and running out of air. A pretty scherzo, a kind of Mendelssohnian outtake, puffs along merrily. Then comes that slow movement, the apotheosis of droop, and the grand bravado of the finale that backs our hapless composer into a corner out of which he bravely marches amid a battalion of tin soldiers. I hear 10 minutes of interesting music in this Second Symphony, which even the eloquence of Dohnányi&#8217;s presentation, the sleek elegance of the strings, the nicely balanced sparkle of the winds, could not prolong into the 40 minutes it demanded of my time.</p>
<p>
It&#8217;s good to know that Dohnányi, whose 20-year contract with the Cleveland Orchestra precluded his guest appearances with other American orchestras, is finally on the loose. As a Philharmonic welcome guest, much admired by the players, according to my private grapevine, he could provide a valuable connection with a Central European repertory that may not reside entirely within Salonen&#8217;s orbit. On last week&#8217;s program he also led a beautiful, dark reading of Mozart&#8217;s “other” G-minor Symphony (No. 25), with its slow movement that went by like a passing, scented cloud, and a serious <i>Til Eulenspiegel </i>somewhat low on jokes and, therefore, above average, musically responsible. Even among the warhorses, it doesn&#8217;t hurt to do a little thinking now and then.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>If This Be&#160;Madness</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2004/02/if-this-be-madness/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2004/02/if-this-be-madness/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 05 Feb 2004 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=476</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Photo courtesy of L.A. Philharmonic The sounds of Hector Berlioz and the shape of Walt Disney Concert Hall are a perfect match. It was fitting, therefore, that the Philharmonic&#8217;s three wondrous weeks celebrating this most certifiably mad of certifiably sane composers should thunder to their close last weekend with a dizzying photomontage: a 90 or [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Photo courtesy of L.A. Philharmonic
<p>
The sounds of Hector Berlioz and the shape of Walt Disney Concert Hall are a perfect match. It was fitting, therefore, that the Philharmonic&#8217;s three wondrous weeks celebrating this most certifiably mad of certifiably sane composers should thunder to their close last weekend with a dizzying photomontage: a 90 or so seconds&#8217; sweep across the two centuries since Berlioz&#8217;s birth that took in the invention of the railroad and a few other gadgets, a couple of world wars, Adolf Hitler, Marilyn Monroe and the building of Disney Hall &#8211; a proper visual counterpart to the comparably dizzying final pages of the <i>Symphonie Fantastique</i>. <i>Alors!</i></p>
<p>
The celebration of Berlioz&#8217;s 200th birthday, which involved our two major performing forces at the top of their form, was an altogether creditable event; I don&#8217;t know of a better parlay of Berlioz celebration and top-grade performance anywhere else, here or abroad. At the Philharmonic, Esa-Pekka Salonen was the hero of heroes, beginning with his glowing reading of <i>L&#8217;Enfance du Christ</i> two Christmases ago and continuing this past month with three programs that mingled familiar works with valuable, less-known music, and also with intelligent parings of “problem” scores with which, it pains me to inform you, the Berlioz legacy teems. (Still to come, in late May, is the mighty Requiem, the <i>Grande Messe des Morts</i>. Its scheduling collides with the Ojai Festival, but it is an inevitable event even so. You have to believe that our new concert hall was conceived with the sound and shape &#8211; four brass bands! four choruses!! drums as far as the eye can see!!! &#8211; of this Berliozian lollapalooza in mind.) Alongside these Philharmonic wonders was the L.A. Opera&#8217;s spectacular treatment of <i>La Damnation de Faust</i>, all aglow with director/designer Achim Freyer&#8217;s proof &#8211; above evidence clumsily proffered at San Francisco and at other companies here and there &#8211; that Berlioz&#8217;s quirky concert piece can work brilliantly onstage. The L.A. Opera, by the way, is supposed to be readying a DVD of that terrific achievement; watch the skies.</p>
<p>
Disney Hall, as I was saying, was put on Earth to house the sound of Berlioz. Here was a composer, after all, who knew the value not only of the grand roar but also of the near-silence. The sad shepherd&#8217;s piping in the slow movement of the <i>Fantastique</i> seemed encased at Disney in a silence you could caress. One of the great Berlioz silences comes at the end of the “Funeral March for the Last Scene of <i>Hamlet</i>,” which concludes the little suite called <i>Tristia </i>(“sad pieces”) that Salonen revived out of nowhere on the second program: solemn brass and a wordless chorus retreating upon Horatio&#8217;s “Go, bid the soldiers shoot . . .” Alas, on the first night, a medical occurrence in a balcony ruined part of the moment; friends who were there the next night reported the “silence” as awesome. It&#8217;s a wonderful eight-minute piece, by the way, surely the best “unknown” work brought out of obscurity for the festival.</p>
<p>
But then there were the racketings that the new hall&#8217;s welcoming spaces made clear as I had never heard them made clear before: Romeo screaming his song of sorrow in rude counterpoint against the Capulets&#8217; party music in the nicely rearranged pastiche that Salonen had made out of <i>Roméo et Juliette</i>; the tocsins of doom at the end of the <i>Fantastique</i>, with not just dinky chimes but huge, hall-shaking brass bells perhaps swiped from some nearby cathedral. <i>Harold in Italy</i> is one of those “problem” pieces, rather given to chasing its own tale at times, but I don&#8217;t think I&#8217;ve ever heard so exquisite a balance as Salonen achieved this time between its viola soloist &#8211; the splendid young Nokuthula Ngwenyama &#8211; and Berlioz&#8217;s bulldozer orchestra.</p>
<p>
Anne Sofie von Otter was radiantly on hand for the <i>Nuits d&#8217;Été</i> song cycle, the one work of Berlioz that nobody doesn&#8217;t like; she also sang the long solo in the <i>Roméo</i>, where Salonen had the good sense to separate the two alike stanzas with other music from that difficult work. Another intelligent touch was the inclusion of the lovely <i>Mort d&#8217;Ophélie</i> in its two versions, the one as sung by von Otter as a solo with piano, and the other, a week later, by a women&#8217;s chorus as part of <i>Tristia</i>. And another smart move was to include Berlioz&#8217;s essay on the Beethoven Ninth in the program book for a concert the week before the festival. It certainly cast a stronger light on that masterwork than did the performance under Zubin Mehta.</p>
<p>
 </p>
<p>
<b>By now you may be wondering about</b> that photomontage, and well you might. It happened at the third and final program of the Berlioz wingding, when Salonen joined forces with the excellent British media group Complicite (spelled without the accent but pronounced “complicity”; those Brits!), who had created a marvelous theater piece around a Shostakovich quartet at UCLA in 2002. With Complicite&#8217;s narrators, singers and filmmakers in tow, the matter at hand was not only the <i>Symphonie Fantastique</i> &#8211; for which Berlioz had, after all, spelled out a grandiose scenario involving drugs, demons and diverse dalliances &#8211; but also <i>Lélio</i>, the sequel, in which the “hero” returns to life, metamorphoses into a narrator and an MC for a concert program with singers, chorus, piano and orchestra, and has further hallucinations, mostly involving himself as Hamlet. Okay so far?</p>
<p>
Well, now, it has been the pleasure of Complicite&#8217;s Simon McBurney and his troupe to turn things upside down, starting with the order of events itself &#8211; <i>Lélio</i> being, at best, rather weak tea to follow the wild churnings at the end of the <i>Fantastique</i>&#8216;s Witches&#8217; Sabbath. Musically, therefore, the reversal worked just fine: The collection of <i>Lélio</i>&#8216;s small pretties &#8211; a fisherman&#8217;s ballade here, some jolly brigands there &#8211; were soon dashed from the memory by the surging, marvelously colored <i>Fantastique</i> that has now become one of Salonen&#8217;s great properties. Visually, however, the reversal process didn&#8217;t work so well. The stage pictures for <i>Lélio</i> were okay, sort of, although McBurney&#8217;s painstaking delivery of Berlioz&#8217;s words &#8211; one of those superheated Romantic “Who am I who seeks and doth not find?” affairs &#8211; could have used the pruning shears. (I&#8217;m probably spoiled by the old Jean-Louis Barrault recording, with Boulez conducting, a doozy!) The projected imagery for the <i>Fantastique</i> seemed to consist mostly of one man fighting off sleep. He couldn&#8217;t have been listening to the Salonen performance.</p>
<p>
But then, at the end, there came that grand whoopee, wherein sight and sound did for each other exactly what each has needed lo these 200 years, superfast and superswell. Who&#8217;s crazy now?</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Ridiculous and&#160;Sublime</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2004/01/ridiculous-and-sublime/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2004/01/ridiculous-and-sublime/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 29 Jan 2004 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=475</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[“This must be what the gods were like,” writes Craig Seligman about Così Fan Tutte in the latest issue of the excellently wise Threepenny Review &#8211; which, by happenstance, landed on my doorstep on the eve of Opera Pacific&#8217;s production of Mozart&#8217;s sublimely ridiculous, tragic operatic comedy. Only gods, indeed, could contrive the harmonies that [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>
<b>“This must be what the gods</b> were like,” writes Craig Seligman about <i>Così Fan Tutte</i> in the latest issue of the excellently wise <i>Threepenny Review</i> &#8211; which, by happenstance, landed on my doorstep on the eve of Opera Pacific&#8217;s production of Mozart&#8217;s sublimely ridiculous, tragic operatic comedy. Only gods, indeed, could contrive the harmonies that rise like audible ambrosia as the girls in Act 1 bind their departing swains to promises of once-a-day letter writing. Only a goddess could hurl divinely accurate thunderbolts across vast skyscapes as the heroine Fiordiligi proclaims the unassailability of her supernal womanly honor. And only a composer whose hand is flawlessly guided by Forces From Above could contrive an ensemble for four voices, the first three entering one at a time, with the same tune in exquisite harmony, the fourth (having partaken too freely from the flask) disrupting the shebang with a whole &#8216;nother vocal line about his own drunken anger.</p>
<p>
<i>Così</i> has had its problems, and still does. Lorenzo da Ponte&#8217;s libretto, even if based on an actual episode as reported in a Viennese scandal sheet of the time, takes a low view of bedroom politics both His and Hers. Romantic audiences were shocked, <i>shocked</i>; if the opera was performed at all, it was often with a new title and text. It reached its first American audience only in the 1920s, 130 years late; what a treat it must have been to share the surprise and delight of a New York audience at the “Winds” Trio, the “Per pietà” duet with horn and every other godlike note on that magical evening! (Not unanimously: Paul Rosenfield, the critic I respect the most from that time, found it “elegant fribble.”) It helped the cause not at all that neither text nor music leaves a clue as to whether the girls, after having been deceived into falling in love with each other&#8217;s boyfriends (in high disguise, of course), then return to the original pairings or stay with the new suitors: a happy ending built on foundations of sand, in other words, or the ultimate cynical reflection on woman&#8217;s fickleness. In Bernard Uzan&#8217;s staging for Costa Mesa, they most decidedly stayed with the new guys; <i>la donna è mobile</i> indeed!</p>
<p>
Somebody in the company obviously values the opera highly, and one of them was clearly the company&#8217;s music director, John DeMain, whose musical conception &#8211; horns and clarinets pressed into a wine fit for the gods, strings woven into the finest silk &#8211; flowed as a kind of chamber music writ large. The cast looked and, for the most part, sounded young and marvelously involved: Pamela Armstrong and Kristine Jepson as the <i>donne mobile</i>, Eric Cutler and the remarkably suave Kyle Ketelsen as their conniving swains, John Packard a somewhat weak-voiced Alfonso, and Alicia Berneche, a scene-stealer to the manner born, in the great theft-worthy role of Despina.</p>
<p>
Opera Pacific&#8217;s opening-night performance played to a sea of empty seats; where were you? The production was an old Jean-Pierre Ponnelle number, created originally for the Michigan Opera during that company&#8217;s days of partnership with Opera Pacific, and obviously well-traveled since then. (Judging from a video of a Ponnelle <i>Così</i>, a few background pieces have been lost along the way.) A few old touches remain, however: the girls&#8217; quick costume changes from white to black reflecting the mood of the moment, the wine bottle (evidence of the men&#8217;s wager on the girls&#8217; fidelity) that remains center-stage, Grail-like, through the opera.</p>
<p>
Midway in its 18th season &#8211; the same age as the Los Angeles Opera &#8211; Opera Pacific, in its first two productions, has offered standard repertory stuff but in far-above-standard performances. I still can&#8217;t get over how much I was moved, against all better judgments, by its <i>Madama Butterfly</i> a couple of months ago, and now this. John DeMain&#8217;s musical leadership is strong; from the way he is greeted in the hall, the audience seems to recognize his qualities. But that audience is way too small &#8211; which is another way of saying that Segerstrom Hall is much too big &#8211; and with the new concert hall a-building the company is going to have more dates to fill in a couple of years. Its repertory is safe and standard, although I&#8217;m happy to see some Gilbert and Sullivan on next season&#8217;s schedule. The company has its assets, however: DeMain, and good young singers like the ones who made up this <i>Così</i> cast. (Ketelsen returns next season as Mozart&#8217;s Figaro.)</p>
<p>
 </p>
<p>
<b>On gloomier days</b> the gods weep at the fate of the nameless wanderer of Wilhelm Müller&#8217;s poetry, as set to music in Franz Schubert&#8217;s <i>Die Winterreise</i>. Sanford Sylvan, the Figaro and Alfonso of Mozart&#8217;s operas, the Chou En-lai and Klinghoffer of Adams&#8217;, had the wisdom to let Schubert&#8217;s set of 24 songs draw the audience&#8217;s tears on their own last Saturday night. Other singers succumb to the temptation to take a greater part in these unstageable dramas, and if truth be known, this sovereign music does bristle with temptation to act out &#8211; with voice, gesture or, in some sorry examples, with actual staged dramas &#8211; events along the misanthrope&#8217;s downward path.</p>
<p>
Sylvan did not. “Intelligent” is the operative word, as on his marvelous Nonesuch disc of Schubert&#8217;s other cycle, <i>Die Schöne Müllerin</i>. Give or take the information that he was fighting off a bit of the whatever &#8211; as who isn&#8217;t, this time of year? &#8211; his singing was remarkably straightforward and admirably vivid, strongly seconded by David Breitman&#8217;s piano. (But was the piano&#8217;s out-of-tune-ness supposed to be an “authentic” touch?) Sylvan&#8217;s is not a voice you&#8217;d call beautiful; it&#8217;s an even-textured darkish brown with not much velvet. His German tends more toward the hard-toned North (“Liebken”) than Schubert&#8217;s softer Viennese (“Liebschen”), and I put this forward merely as observation, not criticism. I admire most his ability to let the music score its own points. By the time his singing had filled in that chill final picture &#8211; of the derelict-hero, more dead than alive, seeking the companionship of the frozen-fingered organ grinder &#8211; the wind-chill factor in the handsome precincts of the Doheny Mansion, where this “Historic Sites” concert took place, had sunk out of sight. Brrr, as in brrravo.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Boys of Bad&#160;Music</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2004/01/boys-of-bad-music/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2004/01/boys-of-bad-music/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 22 Jan 2004 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=474</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[In his sweat-drenched confessional called Bad Boy of Music, George Antheil allowed as how his discovery of the music of the future came to him in a dream. Acting upon his visions, he abandoned his comfortable Trenton, New Jersey, home, caught the next boat for Europe, and set about demolishing pianos to the delight of [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>
In his sweat-drenched<br />
confessional called <i>Bad Boy of Music</i>, George Antheil allowed as how his discovery of the music of the future came to him in a dream. Acting upon his visions, he abandoned his comfortable Trenton, New Jersey, home, caught the next boat for Europe, and set about demolishing pianos to the delight of cultural nabobs in the major capitals. The time was the early 1920s; an American composer with exotica in his luggage &#8211; a <i>Sonate Sauvage</i> or an <i>Airplane Sonata</i> &#8211; was sure to draw crowds. (Last week&#8217;s Antheil jamboree at LACMA delivered the curious information that he still does.) Antheil, in 1922, was young and, I gather, rather pretty; he was handed around among the Virgil Thomson crowd, the Gertrude Stein crowd, the Jean Cocteau crowd. Ezra Pound wrote an adoring monograph about his music, which I tried to read once but gave up on after a sugar reaction set in.</p>
<p>
Antheil&#8217;s noise piece, the <i>Ballet Mécanique</i>, had earned a mix of <i>épater le bourgeois</i> and flop in Paris and New York; so did a later series of indefinable attempts at pursuing the chimera of the “music of the future.” He died in 1959, leaving behind a quantity of undistinguished Hollywood scores (one of which, a clip from <i>The Pride and the Passion</i>, was an embarrassing addition to the LACMA program), but also a trunkload of unpublished material to which later generations of Antheil mythologists have attached the romantic epithet “lost.” Charles Amirkhanian, one of my successors as music director of KPFA in Berkeley and ardent supporter of losing causes, co-wrote the Antheil entry in Grove&#8217;s Dictionary (and stands up as well for Alan Hovhaness). The latest tub-thumper is the pianist Guy Livingston, whose visits to LACMA&#8217;s Monday Evening Concerts have been eccentric enough in their own right, if you remember his recital of “60 one-minute compositions” a couple of years ago. His recent night of “lost George Antheil” was weirder by far.</p>
<p>
For one thing, the program was clothed in a dramatic context: Livingston in 1920s shabby-genteel getup, typing away on a <i>Bad Boy</i> manuscript and reading therefrom in a tremulous tone no match for the rampant egotism of the text. Then he played music, painfully protracted excerpts from “lost sonatas” 3 and 5, which moseyed on and on with no shape or sense of direction. Were they beginnings? Endings? Random pages fished out of “rejects” bins? There was no way of knowing, and no reason for wanting to know. This was an awful concert; inexplicably, it drew one of LACMA&#8217;s largest Monday Evening Concert audiences.</p>
<p>
The audience the next night, at Zipper Concert Hall, was far smaller, the rewards far greater. Leonard Stein, gray eminence and one of five co-founders of the excellent Piano Spheres series, has earned a distinguished retirement; his place on the series this year was taken by the splendid young pianist (and, if you care, former ophthalmologist) Scott Dunn, with a visionary and varied program that included one masterwork (Elliott Carter&#8217;s 1945 Sonata), one utterly charming non-masterwork (Richard Rodney Bennett&#8217;s <i>Noctuary</i>), and some almost-bearable stuff by Chopin and Lukas Foss. In a time when we are beset with young, emergent performers of limited repertory delivered with unlimited flamboyance, Scott Dunn&#8217;s concert was exceptional in a number of agreeable ways.</p>
<p>
What bright, eloquent music, that tidy, two-movement work by the 37-year-old Carter! The Sonata belongs in “early” Carter, but already there is his striking use of sonority and resonance &#8211; not merely as sound but as something to be composed with &#8211; that gets tangled up with all the rest of his abstruse workmanship later on. The final jazzy fugue is, would you believe, delightful, a word I use with Carter&#8217;s music only with great caution. The Sonata runs 25 minutes; I would gladly have heard it twice, at the sacrifice of Lukas Foss&#8217; nattering, minimalist–rip-off <i>Solo for Piano</i>. (Did Foss ever write anything of his own?) Rodney Bennett&#8217;s <i>Noctuary</i> was another kind of delight, an essay on Scott Joplin&#8217;s winsome Mexican serenade called <i>Solace</i> (you heard it in <i>The Sting</i>) that floats through the musical language, acquires harmonic complications along its way, climaxes as an unlikely essay in 12-tone, then wafts back to Scott Joplin&#8217;s earth.</p>
<p>
 </p>
<p>
Back on that earth, there were also some most welcome British visitors, Sir John Eliot Gardiner&#8217;s Monteverdi Choir and his “Revolutionary and Romantic” Orchestra, serenading a Royce Hall crowd (plus far too many empty seats) with glorious, sharp-edged Handel, Haydn and Mozart. The Haydn was the <i>Lord Nelson Mass</i> of 1798, arguably the finest of the Austrian master&#8217;s choral works. The performance was somewhat compromised: Winds were used rather than the massive summonings of a proper organ, but the famous outlines of Gardiner&#8217;s clear, classic points of view were there to be observed and admired. (For that matter, the entire evening was somewhat compromised by the lack of proper promotion and by the lack of printed text handouts. Has UCLA Live stopped caring about its serious musical offerings? This program, and last month&#8217;s by the Tallis Scholars, ranked among the town&#8217;s best-kept secrets, or so you&#8217;d think by the paltry crowds.)</p>
<p>
For those of us there, it was a splendid evening, ennobled by Sir John&#8217;s individual sensibility, and by the rich, balanced sound of the vocal ensemble &#8211; 24 strong &#8211; and in the individual excellence of an angelic young soprano whose name, Angharad Gruffydd-Jones, is only the least diverting of her qualities. It began royally, with <i>Zadok, the Priest</i>, one of Handel&#8217;s grandest coronation anthems, brought on with the blazing brass of long, natural trumpets and the great Handelian counterpoints that melt into hallelujahs once all the voices are safely tucked in. A Mozart Vesper Service (K. 339) came next, velvety, deep music on its own, its piety nicely squared off until about two-thirds in, when a stupendous fugue takes shape on the same subject that will later serve as the “Kyrie” in the <i>Requiem</i>, which served Handel as “And with His stripes” in <i>Messiah</i> and Bach as Fugue VIII in Book I of <i>The Well-Tempered Clavier</i>. How small the world!</p>
<p>
I suppose I should write about Esa-Pekka Salonen&#8217;s concert with the orchestra of the Crossroads School at Disney Hall, but there&#8217;s a problem. The orchestra is famous and proficient; its program &#8211; Haydn, Mozart, Bartók &#8211; was well-chosen; it was clear that Salonen had rehearsed them carefully. But the music was heard against a background of noise so continuous &#8211; feet stomping against that famously resonant floor, doors slamming constantly during performances, applause at every nook and cranny &#8211; that concentration became a matter of service beyond the call. I know good things about the education offered at Crossroads, but a course in concert manners &#8211; compulsory for all ticket holders, students, parents and, for all I know, board members &#8211; might be a valuable addition to the curriculum.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Born&#160;Again</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2004/01/born-again/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2004/01/born-again/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 15 Jan 2004 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=473</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Photo by Joshua Paul The Death of Klinghoffer is again before us, insistent, moving, inescapable. Nobody of consequence has ever challenged the intense musical power of John Adams&#8217; opera; within a different dramatic context, absent the outcries of Palestinian terrorists singing so passionately the basis of their hatreds, of their belief that “America is one [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Photo by Joshua Paul
<p>
<b><i>The Death of Klinghoffer</i></b> is again before us, insistent, moving, inescapable. Nobody of consequence has ever challenged the intense <i>musical</i> power of John Adams&#8217; opera; within a different dramatic context, absent the outcries of Palestinian terrorists singing so passionately the basis of their hatreds, of their belief that “America is one big Jew,” this opera of 1991 would be everywhere recognized as a dramatic score of foremost quality. Yet the work survives in an aura of hatred. Michael Steinberg&#8217;s program note for the original Nonesuch recording of the opera struck an ironically prophetic note: “On whichever date you read these words,” he wrote concerning the tragedy of Leon Klinghoffer, “there will be a new installment in the morning paper.”</p>
<p>
Now <i>Klinghoffer</i> has been reborn, in a version that, beyond all previous stagings &#8211; and certainly beyond all carefully unstaged concert renditions &#8211; creates the best possible context for the work&#8217;s greatness. Another irony: Adams and the British filmmaker Penny Woolcock were creating this version in London when the news of 9/11 broke; it took only a moment&#8217;s hesitation before the decision was made to continue. The result, which played at last year&#8217;s Sundance Festival, is now available on a DVD issued by Decca.</p>
<p>
The film offers the strengths of <i>Klinghoffer</i>, by more and by less. “By more” is the fact that the score has been drastically reworked; dramatic reordering has occasioned musical reordering as well, and the results are spellbinding. Much use has been made of news footage: A Palestinian sings of his family&#8217;s being dispossessed by new Jewish settlers in 1948, and there are shots to support his words. The passengers aboard the hijacked cruise ship sing of their sufferings of generations past, and shots of Nazi pogroms are intercut. “By less” is a minor deprivation: The opera has been shorn of 20 shearable minutes.</p>
<p>
More to the point, the action of the opera itself has been moved onto a plane of reality far away from Peter Sellars&#8217; original, somewhat idealized conception. The murder of the wheelchair-ridden Leon Klinghoffer actually takes place center stage &#8211; not offstage, as in Sellars&#8217; version &#8211; and then his final tragic invocation, “May the Lord God and His creation,” is sung by his murdered body as it slowly descends through clear Mediterranean waters. Once again, as with the opera since its creation, the eloquent Sanford Sylvan inhabits the personage of the good, tragic Klinghoffer fiber by fiber; no less powerful is the steel-and-granite Marilyn Klinghoffer of Yvonne Howard. Adams himself conducts.</p>
<p>
Stunning opera making, stunning moviemaking: I am tempted to regard this remarkable piece of silvery plastic as a major forward step in the dissemination of an artistic commodity through the popular media. The fluidity &#8211; the easy transition between the reality of trapped, innocent people on a cruise ship in the hands of equally confused captors and the social forces that have brought them to this point; the transitions as well between these people at this point in their lives, and the state of their lives yesterday and the week before &#8211; is an element wedded to film. It is brilliantly managed here.</p>
<p>
At the end there is nearly an hour&#8217;s worth of auxiliary material, every word of it relevant to the matter at hand, with filmmaker and composer especially inflamed by the splendor of the work they have created. Most moving also are the words of librettist Alice Goodman, whose life has been drastically changed by the fate of Klinghoffer, the citizen and the opera. A “nice Jewish girl from Chicago” in 1991 (with the enormous triumph of the Adams/Sellars <i>Nixon in China</i> to rest upon), she has assumed the brunt of the reproach leveled at <i>Klinghoffer</i>&#8216;s controversial message and stands by her words. Whether because or despite, she has in that time abandoned Judaism and now preaches at an Anglican church in London, to a largely Palestinian congregation. She comes off in the video as someone you&#8217;d love to meet, and someone you have to believe.</p>
<p>
 </p>
<p>
<b>One no longer looks</b> to the major record labels for the thrill of discovery; the latest withered harvest includes such redundant items as a couple of Rach concertos, a Brahms or two, not one but two boxes of the Beethoven nine and, for leavening, an unspeakable item called <i>The Idiot&#8217;s Guide to Classical Music</i>, offering no fewer than 99 Greatest Themes. Who could ask for anything more?</p>
<p>
Amid the tired chaff, however, there gleams one item of genuine value and delight, the more so as a brand-new offering from EMI Classics, a label whose main activity these days seems to be living in its own past. In a two-disc set, Michel Plasson conducts the chorus and orchestra from the city of Toulouse in an enchanting collection of choral works by Hector Berlioz, short, mostly unfamiliar, and amazing for their range of subject matter and musical style. Here is Berlioz at 24, inflamed with the Romantic urge, turning cries of “<i>victoire</i>” and “<i>triomphe</i>” into a pageant of the Greeks&#8217; battle for independence. A year later, his pen again catches fire as the dying Orpheus is torn apart by the sex-mad Bacchantes &#8211; in a cantata that lost him the Prix de Rome on his first application. By 1830, his adoration of Shakespeare (via the Juliet of Henriette Smithson) has led him to his <i>Symphonie Fantastique</i>, but also to delectable small vocal pieces depicting the death of Ophelia and a fabulously dark-colored Funeral March for <i>Hamlet</i> with wordless chorus. (Those last two works form part of a suite called <i>Tristia</i> &#8211; “Sad Things” &#8211; which figures on the Philharmonic&#8217;s January 22 program.)</p>
<p>
These are among the treasures in this new collection, along with a <i>Ballet of the Shades</i> for voices and piano that could be an outtake from the spooks&#8217; celebrations in the <i>Fantastique</i>, and an exquisite setting of a Victor Hugo poem &#8211; “Sara at Her Bath” &#8211; that shocked Leipzig audiences in 1834. A couple of pompous patriotic pieces &#8211; one a memorial to Napoleon, the other to celebrate the opening of France&#8217;s first railway line &#8211; call forth a more workaday aspect of Berlioz&#8217;s writing, the work of a man who did not always eat as well as he wished. To the well-planned anniversary celebrations hereabouts of this hard-to-define French genius, such a marvelous disc release is a valuable adjunct; it spreads, far wider than we might have previously realized, our estimate of the breadth of his vision.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Last Year&#039;s Last&#160;List</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2004/01/last-years-last-list/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2004/01/last-years-last-list/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 08 Jan 2004 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=472</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[In Glendale&#8217;s Alex Theater on a Saturday night in late September, the voice of Lorraine Hunt Lieberson soared upward on a jagged trajectory laid down by Johann Sebastian Bach. “Mein Herze schwimmt im Blut,” she sang, and the heart&#8217;s blood of an adoring capacity audience throbbed in concordance. Bach&#8217;s symbol-laden cantata texts demand a certain [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>
In Glendale&#8217;s Alex Theater on a Saturday night in late September, the voice of Lorraine Hunt Lieberson soared upward on a jagged trajectory laid down by Johann Sebastian Bach. “Mein Herze schwimmt im Blut,” she sang, and the heart&#8217;s blood of an adoring capacity audience throbbed in concordance. Bach&#8217;s symbol-laden cantata texts demand a certain forbearance from today&#8217;s listeners, but the passionate groveling of his repentant sinner took place beyond the power of words in the fire-scorched dark hues of his recitative and in the incandescence of the singer who gave them shape on this occasion &#8211; the season&#8217;s opening concert by Jeffrey Kahane&#8217;s Los Angeles Chamber Orchestra. Hunt Lieberson is our sovereign singer &#8211; for the mahogany-rich seamlessness of her voice, the intelligence in her use of it over a remarkably wide repertory. I heard her on that occasion on my first night out after spinal surgery, but that is only part of the reason she heads my list of last year&#8217;s fondest memories. Fortunately, I have her Nonesuch disc of the same Bach cantata (one of two, actually), so I can relive the miracle of that night even with my own scars practically healed.</p>
<p>
Earlier last year she had also sung &#8211; with comparably heated powers of communication &#8211; in the Philharmonic&#8217;s production of John Adams&#8217; El Niño. The work&#8217;s imperfections lay more in Peter Sellars&#8217; cluttered visuals than in Adams&#8217; music, whose moments of affecting simplicity I found greatly touching. Adams&#8217; year has been rich beyond measure: El Niño and two major new works, the 9/11-inspired On the Transmigration of Souls (botched, alas, in its Orange County premiere) and the Disney Hall dedicatory The Dharma at Big Sur. Neither score is top-drawer Adams, but both are infused with the parlay of enormous skill and urgency that has made it possible to welcome in Adams the presence of a composer seriously talented, with something on his mind and the skill to send it forth.</p>
<p>
The best new music of the year &#8211; to these ears, anyway &#8211; was none of the above, however, nor is it as yet available. The name of Unsuk Chin gradually makes its way; her Violin Concerto was due for a hearing by Kent Nagano&#8217;s Berkeley Symphony but had to be canceled because of the illness of its soloist &#8211; Viviane Hagner, the sole master (so far) of its excruciating demands. Meanwhile, the work has gone on to win the University of Louisville&#8217;s $200,000 Grawemeyer Award, and a disc of a performance from the Berlin premiere (also with Nagano) has fallen into a few fortunate hands. It is a work of dazzling power, a startling mix of angry, almost brutal rhetoric and elegant, lyric humor. Its composer, 42 years old, born in Korea, will be at Ojai this summer &#8211; not with the Violin Concerto but with a new work &#8211; and word circulates of a commission from the Los Angeles Opera for 2005.</p>
<p>
The best sound of the year &#8211; I report with relief shared by, I am sure, millions &#8211; came first with the burnished clarity of the intertwined winds at the start of Stravinsky&#8217;s Rite of Spring, followed soon after by the centuries-deep resonance of the bass drum, all of these sounds new and unheard in the Philharmonic&#8217;s previous excursions through this score. Yes, there are glitches in certain aspects of the Walt Disney Concert Hall, as it amused me to list in this space a couple of weeks ago; some are reparable with Band-Aids applied to the hall, others with Band-Aids applied to audience behavior. None of these stands in any way in opposition to the overall sight and sound of our new hall, a gigantic step forward in the annals of serious-music consumership.</p>
<p>
William Bolcom&#8217;s enormous setting (choruses, orchestras and combos, varied soloists) of William Blake&#8217;s Songs of Innocence and of Experience was completed in 1981 and has taken this long to reach our shores. It did so earlier last year, in a distinguished performance by Carl St. Clair and the Pacific Symphony, with auxiliary forces that included Bolcom&#8217;s wife, the wonderful song stylist Joan Morris. As in the poetry itself, not everything works in Bolcom&#8217;s three-hour score; what does work &#8211; the ferocious, bone-chilling setting of “Tyger, tyger burning bright” for one &#8211; is great, imaginative, American music making. Why is there no recording?</p>
<p>
 </p>
<p>
<b>Another mixed grill</b>, and a delightful one, marked Michael Milenski&#8217;s farewell to the Long Beach Opera he had launched 25 years ago. This was a set of seven tiny operas &#8211; ranging from Darius Milhaud&#8217;s delectable Opéras-Minutes, teensy satires of Greek myths, all the way back to a Monteverdi cycle on Death. As usual at Long Beach, it added up to an afternoon of expectations tickled, fulfilled and thwarted, diverting at every turn. Michael&#8217;s successor, Andreas Mitisek, has already proved himself as a conductor with the company; filling Milenski&#8217;s boots, however, will leave him with &#8211; oops! &#8211; his hands full.</p>
<p>
To sample the joys of vivid imagination, we look to the Long Beach Opera, to the members of the California EAR Unit, and to the concerts scattered hither and yon (but never yawn) in MaryAnn Bonino&#8217;s Chamber Music in Historic Sites. The latter two met enchantingly one Sunday afternoon, in the old freight yard now occupied by SCI-Arc, the forward-looking architecture school, whose premises were filled that day with a nostalgic event by the EAR people &#8211; nostalgia in this case being a program carved out of the dust of the 1970s with, as a typical madcap touch, printed programs distributed as paper airplanes.</p>
<p>
To LACMA came music making of sterner stuff, three programs in January by Stuttgart&#8217;s Neue Vocalsolisten that included two chunks of dark and rarefied atmosphere from the recent past: Karlheinz Stockhausen&#8217;s Stimmung and the late Luciano Berio&#8217;s A-Ronne: music you had to take home and relive in a private room, music that explores the far reaches of the drama inherent within (and even behind) the spoken word. From Stuttgart also came the mysterious and disturbing stage magician Achim Freyer, whose previous L.A. Opera stint had been a destruction of Bach&#8217;s B-minor Mass, but who then atoned last September with a season-opening Damnation of Faust that bespangled Berlioz&#8217;s flamboyant oratorio with lights, shadows and a torrent of theatrical brilliance that accorded note for note with the tortured genius of the work itself. That one company could, as successive offerings, put forth the genius of this theatrical mastery and the abject nonentity of the misconceived Nicholas and Alexandra &#8211; well, there&#8217;s the miracle of opera for you.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Disney Hall, The Sound, the Fury, the Wounded&#160;Knees</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2003/12/disney-hall-the-sound-the-fury-the-wounded-knees/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2003/12/disney-hall-the-sound-the-fury-the-wounded-knees/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 25 Dec 2003 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=471</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[1 Footsteps on Disney Hall&#8217;s balcony stairs: They clatter, they clomp, and musicians onstage have been known to complain out loud. Berlin Philharmonic violinists, over on stage left, could be seen mocking the noisemaking before the start of one of their recent concerts here. Wanna bet they don&#8217;t do that in Berlin? 2 Want some [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>
1 Footsteps on Disney Hall&#8217;s balcony stairs: They clatter, they clomp, and musicians onstage have been known to complain out loud. Berlin Philharmonic violinists, over on stage left, could be seen mocking the noisemaking before the start of one of their recent concerts here. Wanna bet they don&#8217;t do that in Berlin?</p>
<p>
2 Want some <i>real</i> sound? Arrive early and drive down to Level 4 of the parking garage when it&#8217;s still fairly empty, and slam your door really hard. The echo &#8211; 10 seconds&#8217; duration at the very least &#8211; will knock your socks off. Come back again, with drums and a tuba, and have a ball.</p>
<p>
3 The rows in the “Orchestra East” and “West” sections taper off at the top to a single seat. Getting into that top seat demands a contortionist&#8217;s skill far beyond duty&#8217;s call.</p>
<p>
4 So does making your way into <i>any</i> seat in the top balcony, an area made further dangerous by an impossibly steep rake, a front rail much too low, and the elevator that stops one floor below.</p>
<p>
5 Compared to the Dorothy Chandler Pavilion&#8217;s generous layout, the creature spaces at Disney do tend to be somewhat cramped. Pushing into a row takes its toll upon the knees; the up-and-down aisles were certainly not planned with social gatherings in mind. One remembers the disaster of a few years ago, when the Philharmonic moved its chamber-music series over to the misshapen new hall at the Skirball Center and was then obliged, by audience protest, to return to its former site at the Gindi Auditorium (losing many subscribers in the process). The Philharmonic may not be obliged to return to the Pavilion anytime in this millennium, but there are the wounded spirits and sore knees to mark the ongoing tight straits even so.</p>
<p>
6 To say nothing of (ugh!) the garish new upholstery.</p>
<p>
7 The stage floor on the right, where the cellos sit &#8211; announced as being hard oak but obviously something much softer &#8211; has already become so pitted by those instruments&#8217; spikes that, a Philharmonic official told me recently, it has been slated for replacement. At Zipper Hall, across the street, cellists are forbidden to use spikes; there are other anchoring devices that work just as well.</p>
<p>
8 Not all the news is bad. On December 8, in the small café at REDCAT, that haven of computerized wizardry downstairs from Disney, the electronic cash register had broken down, and the coffee was free.</p>
<p>
9 An independent environmental study has come up with the information that the average temperature in the Disney Hall area in the afternoon, when the stainless steel of the building reflects the sun, is 10 degrees higher than before its construction. (Expect perfection of no one, says a recent Chinese cookie; even the sun has its spots.)</p>
<p>
10 A guard on duty in the garden tells me that this has been a continued success, that crowds push into the lovely space practically all day. They come to admire the lavish plantings, but when darkness falls, you can also watch the crowds drift toward the garden&#8217;s west wall to watch the comings and goings in the top-floor apartments of the Promenade Condominiums across Hope Street. After all, Frank Gehry did describe Disney Hall as a living room for the city.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>The Spirit&#160;Survives</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2003/12/the-spirit-survives/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2003/12/the-spirit-survives/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 18 Dec 2003 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=470</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Little Joe&#8217;s mother is sick, but there&#8217;s no money for milk. Joe and his friend Annette go to the village square to sing for money, but that annoys Brundibár, the town minstrel. He drowns them out with a loud song. With the help of the Cat, the Bird and the Dog, Joe and Annette muster [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>
Little Joe&#8217;s mother is sick, but there&#8217;s no money for milk. Joe and his friend Annette go to the village square to sing for money, but that annoys Brundibár, the town minstrel. He drowns them out with a loud song. With the help of the Cat, the Bird and the Dog, Joe and Annette muster the village children, who defeat the minstrel and save the Mother. Curtain.</p>
<p>
That&#8217;s not much, as opera plots go, but the history of <i>Brundibár</i> itself, which I saw performed by a bunch of exuberant kids at Santa Monica&#8217;s Miles Memorial Playhouse a couple of Fridays ago, is better yet. Its composer, Hans Krása, created the short opera in Prague in 1938, for the children of a Jewish orphanage. Came the Nazi takeover, and the establishment of the concentration camp at Terezín (Theresienstadt) as a showcase to prove to the outside world that Hitler&#8217;s thugs did indeed care for the arts. Krása led 55 performances of <i>Brundibár</i> at Terezín, including one before a visiting Red Cross commission, and one that was filmed and circulated in a documentary about those lovely, art-loving Nazis. Soon thereafter, Krása was dragged off to the gas chambers at Auschwitz. In addition to the opera, his name survives in a small repertory of chamber and vocal works, some of them composed during his years of imprisonment.</p>
<p>
<i>Brundibár</i> arrived here garlanded in publicity, but it turns out to be a slight work, its harmonies nicely spiced with a touch of Weill/Hindemith, its tunes obviously the work of a man who knew how to make young singers and their audiences feel good &#8211; which this ensemble certainly did, thanks to Eli Villanueva&#8217;s staging and Daniel Faltus&#8217; musical direction. This was the latest production of Opera Camp, a project now 3 years old, a partnership of the Los Angeles Opera and the Madison Project of Santa Monica College, with additional collaboration this time from the Museum of Tolerance and Santa Monica&#8217;s Miles Memorial Playhouse. The value of such a project should be obvious every time you face another snoozing, doddering operatic audience at the Music Center.</p>
<p>
One further aspect of this particular event moved me deeply: Next to me at the Miles Playhouse sat a lady by the name of Ela Weissberger, smiling and giving off waves of pride. It turned out that she had been the Cat in 1944 performances of <i>Brundibár</i> at Terezín (including the one on film). Imagine! Imagine the memories this glorious old person can wear like a bright medallion! Mrs. Weissberger immigrated to the U.S. shortly after WWII and now lives in my old stomping ground, New York&#8217;s Rockland County. (The Nazi-made film of Terezín&#8217;s children, including a scene from <i>Brundibár</i> with Ela Weissberger, has been incorporated into <i>Prisoner of Paradise</i>, Malcolm Clarke and Stuart Sender&#8217;s new documentary on the treacherous charms of Terezín. It opens here in late January.)</p>
<p>
So there we were, this authentic piece of history and my humble self, side by side, schmoozing about the 76 House and the Community Market and Mr. Hitler. Tell me I don&#8217;t have the world&#8217;s best job!</p>
<p>
 </p>
<p>
<b>Clarinet, violin, cello, piano:</b> It&#8217;s an attractive combination, and you&#8217;d automatically assume the presence of a large romantic repertory for such a combo &#8211; Schumann, surely, and Hummel and Spohr. But no; my search of Grove&#8217;s Dictionary yields nothing. The brave young ensemble called Antares (a large red star in Scorpio) must seek its repertory in the present and the as-yet-unwritten. Another group of similar constitution &#8211; Tashi, whose members included Peter Serkin and Richard Stoltzman &#8211; has come and gone, leaving some impressive footsteps for Antares to follow. If it&#8217;s as good as it sounded at its debut concert at LACMA last week, that shouldn&#8217;t be a problem.</p>
<p>
Antares drew a large and friendly crowd, much of it drawn from the past and present student body at Crossroads, that superior private high school with one of the best music programs in town; the group&#8217;s pianist, Eric Huebner, is a Crossroads product, and still something of a local hero for some bright and ballsy music making while he was still a student. Now the group &#8211; whose other members are violinist Vesselin Gellev, cellist Rebecca Patterson and clarinetist Garrick Zoeter &#8211; has been pulling down residencies and prizes all over the map and eliciting the beginnings of a repertory of its own.</p>
<p>
Charles Wuorinen&#8217;s <i>Tashi</i> filled most of the first half of the program,<i> </i>music written and named for the previous ensemble. I&#8217;ve nurtured an ongoing admiration for Wuorinen&#8217;s music, with its high quotient of braininess. But if I needed an East Coast paradigm to illustrate why I&#8217;m happier on the West Coast, this very correct, very complicated, intricate music would do just fine. I just can&#8217;t write about this music anymore; you can kick a dead cat for just so long. The program&#8217;s second half had newer music and newer ideas. Antares is a lively bunch; the free swing of Kevin Puts&#8217; <i>Simaku</i> and a lovable James Matheson trifle called <i>Buzz</i> brought things to life on both sides of the stage. It wasn&#8217;t all fluff, either; a long, haunting, jazz-tinted piece called <i>Exil</i> by a Stuttgart composer named Volker David Kirchner evoked the spirits of Bartók and Miles Davis along its expressive path.</p>
<p>
 </p>
<p>
<b>It had been nearly 20 years</b> since local-born Michael Tilson Thomas last conducted the local orchestra. His behavior on the Philharmonic podium in his last appearances here &#8211; not easily forgotten, including a version of the “Eroica” best described as “bratty” &#8211; had brought down management&#8217;s wrath, and deservedly so. As a vehicle for riding back into the affections of the hometown folks, he chose curiously: Mahler&#8217;s Sixth Symphony, of all the Viennese master&#8217;s off-putting works the one most hopelessly awash in pure <i>Weltkvetsch</i>.</p>
<p>
In those 20 years away, most of them spent sopping up adoration in the community he was put on Earth to serve, the Tilson Thomas legend has grown to resemble the exact size and shape of San Francisco itself. The two elements were inseparable in the Mahler: a flamboyant opportunism that paid little heed to such matters as musical form and narrative, but feasted blatantly and gorgeously upon every disconnected moment. Since the matter at hand was a work of exasperating prolixity and &#8211; especially in its final half-hour (or was it half a day?) &#8211; of ugliness difficult to match anywhere in the symphonic repertory, the exercise left the world no worse off than before. Bad music, badly chosen and performed no better than it deserved: It was the same old MTT; you&#8217;d know him anywhere.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>The Discovery of&#160;California</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2003/12/the-discovery-of-california/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2003/12/the-discovery-of-california/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 11 Dec 2003 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=469</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[The year was 1978, and while some guys on Sunset were concocting the prototype of the paper you now hold, I was 2,500 miles away, holding down the classical-music gig at New York magazine and convinced that life held no fairer prize. Came a bloke named Dick Houdek with an invitation, plus plane ticket, to [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>
The year was 1978, and while some guys on Sunset were concocting the prototype of the paper you now hold, I was 2,500 miles away, holding down the classical-music gig at <i>New York</i> magazine and convinced that life held no fairer prize. Came a bloke named Dick Houdek with an invitation, plus plane ticket, to a place called the California Institute of the Arts, which was about to stage its first Contemporary Music Festival. The students at CalArts, Dick told me as a kind of lure, had recently staged a rally at the school, boycotting a baroque-music concert with signs reading, WE WANT NEW MUSIC. This, I decided, I gotta see.</p>
<p>
CalArts in 1978, like CalArts today, was indeed that kind of place. That “new-music festival” was crammed with composers from the school, such as the electronic pioneers Morton Subotnick and Mel Powell (who had once, at 17, been Benny Goodman&#8217;s piano man), and other Californians, including a lively contingent from the University of California at San Diego. Over four days, practically around the clock, I heard the requisite quotient of modern-day masterpieces: works by the late Earle Brown, who had terrorized New York audiences a few years back; Stockhausen&#8217;s <i>Mantra</i>, in an amazingly assured student performance.</p>
<p>
But the bulk of the festival was given over to truly new music and to musical sounds mostly unfamiliar &#8211; electronic sounds, percussion ensembles carrying on in the John Cage/Lou Harrison tradition, familiar instruments used in unfamiliar ways &#8211; by composers many of whose names were also mostly unfamiliar: Roger Reynolds, Virko Baley, Wilbur Ogdon, Harold Budd. Most of it, furthermore, was good; some of it was extraordinary; some was worthless, as runs the average in life itself. The feeling emerged, however, that I had ventured upon a musical world inadequately recognized or credited outside the walls of CalArts. I was obsessed in two opposite directions: to get back to New York and tell everybody about what I&#8217;d been hearing, and to stay on and continue to wallow in it.</p>
<p>
<i>New York </i>had just cloned itself with a West Coast counterpart called <i>New West</i>, and we cooked up a deal wherein, for a year, I&#8217;d become the world&#8217;s first bicoastal classical-music critic, covering the scene on both coasts on alternate fortnights and finding someone in California to anoint for the job after I left. (I interviewed Mark Swed, and can&#8217;t remember now why I didn&#8217;t hire him.) After that year, of course, I&#8217;d return to my senses and to the real world.</p>
<p>
During that year I lived pretty well, on the company&#8217;s due bills at the Beverly Wilshire and the St. Francis, and continued my astonished discovery of California&#8217;s music. I was naturally curious as to why a composer with the chops to make it in the real world &#8211; Subotnick, for example &#8211; would prefer a life on this side of the mountains. “That&#8217;s easy,” said Subotnick in 1978. “Nobody reads the West Coast critics. Everybody knows they&#8217;re hostile to all new music, so it doesn&#8217;t matter what they write.” “West Coast critics” meant, above all, the acid-penned Martin Bernheimer of the <i>L.A. Times</i>, who after 13 years had still not forgiven Los Angeles for failing to have metamorphosed into Vienna under his stern guidance, and who had suffered the worst fate to befall anyone in this line of work &#8211; predictability.</p>
<p>
At San Diego I heard half-hour pieces for nothing but cymbals, and pieces for “extended voices” that required singers to build on techniques best known from the “throat singing” of Tibetan monks. The great old composer Robert Erickson, one of the most influential teachers I&#8217;ve ever known, played me tapes of natural sounds &#8211; waves, Sierra brooklets &#8211; that he had retuned through recycled coffee cans; you couldn&#8217;t get more Californian than that. At Stanford&#8217;s computer-music labs in 1979, I sat in on the day-by-day creation of a mixed-media piece that involved drummers, a belly dancer, digitally processed howling (by the Grateful Dead&#8217;s Bob Weir) and much else culled from a brave new electronic world that I will never understand but always marvel at. The composer, Janis Mattox, accessed a large roomful of equipment through a bank of keyboards and drew her sounds out of loudspeakers the approximate height of elephants. Nowadays you do it with laptops.</p>
<p>
My time was up. During that year I had produced three public-radio series (including one on why West Coast composers were different from anyone else). I had been invited to teach criticism at CalArts and USC. I had been pulled unconscious from a burning car and, out of a need to show off my tan on my trips to New York, been operated on for skin cancer. I had, in other words, become a Californian, and in record time. It would have been foolish to go back. I&#8217;m still here.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Disney&#160;Primeval</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2003/12/disney-primeval/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2003/12/disney-primeval/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 04 Dec 2003 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=468</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[TO ALL THAT OPULENCE on view at Disney Hall, REDCAT is the perfect counterbalance. Nobody cares about the acoustics, since most of its music is miked. Nobody cares about the look of the place, since its 200-seat space is infinitely adjustable. You don&#8217;t begrudge Walt Disney his kazillion-dollar entry to high culture through Frank Gehry&#8217;s [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>
TO ALL THAT OPULENCE on view at Disney Hall, REDCAT is the perfect counterbalance. Nobody cares about the acoustics, since most of its music is miked. Nobody cares about the look of the place, since its 200-seat space is infinitely adjustable. You don&#8217;t begrudge Walt Disney his kazillion-dollar entry to high culture through Frank Gehry&#8217;s fabulous doorway upstairs. But REDCAT &#8211; whose name stands for Roy and Edna Disney/CalArts Theater &#8211; transports us in spirit to Walt in his workshop in the 1920s, roughing out the early adventures of Oswald the Rabbit, hobnobbing with the likes of Salvador Dali, learning firsthand about hunger pangs. The first few nights of REDCAT&#8217;s “official” opening were nicely planned (as had been Disney Hall&#8217;s upstairs): retrospectives of electronic music from CalArts founding father Mort Subotnick and of Walt&#8217;s early cartoons, a night with CalArts&#8217; current new-music ensemble: no masterpieces, but good energy.</p>
<p>
There&#8217;s an interesting turnaround here. When Disney&#8217;s dream of a school for all the arts materialized in the underpopulated spaces of 1969 Valencia, its first generations of students placed high value on the isolation of the place &#8211; someplace to drop in and drop out, when such things were important. Now the emphasis has apparently shifted toward this downtown beachhead; certainly the performance schedule over the next few months &#8211; one “creative music festival” after another, jazz from Anthony Braxton, Scottish marching bands, multimedia artists, our own EAR Unit (itself a CalArts offshoot) honoring founding father Mel Powell, something called “Plunderphonics” with someone called John Oswald &#8211; sets up a whole new contemporary force in our midst. Will CalArts itself follow this southward tidal wave? When you ponder the relative value of all that tracted land around Valencia compared to 1969&#8242;s wide-open spaces, you can&#8217;t help wondering.</p>
<p>
What I like most about REDCAT, in fact, is its success in transplanting that “drop in, drop out” message right into downtown &#8211; a counterpart to Mrs. Disney&#8217;s 24/7 garden upstairs. There&#8217;s a café with good coffee, an art show, daytime musical and performance events that seem to take shape spontaneously, some video now and then, even a bookstore &#8211; tiny, but intelligently stocked. All this, plus MOCA across the street.</p>
<p>
 </p>
<p>
<b>UPSTAIRS</b>, as if to carry on this catalog of miracles, there was Pierre Boulez last week to lead the Philharmonic in agonizing, deeply probing music: the first movement of the 10th Symphony that Mahler had left unfinished, and the second act of the <i>Parsifal </i>that was Wagner&#8217;s most disturbed music drama &#8211; not a program for the insecure of faith. Set against this was the further miracle of Boulez himself, whose interpretive art deepens and haunts the memory even as his presence on the podium in recent years becomes the more abstract. The most important musician of his time, he seems obsessed with embodying the essence of that time in the simplest, most rational terms. On Friday night he and his orchestra had sought out, and revealed in full glory, the lyric essence of the German Romantic line &#8211; the single line from which the Mahler adagio departs and to which it makes its pain-racked return, the coiling, dangerously expanding complex of lines with which Wagner nails our stupefied souls, each of us, to our own cross. The emotion this night, further lit in the audible flames from the driven, inspired orchestra (and the vocal ensemble led by Willard White&#8217;s searing Klingsor), was as intense as any audience should be asked to endure fully clothed.</p>
<p>
Earlier last week, Disney&#8217;s other resident ensemble announced its arrival, as Grant Gershon and the Master Chorale reminded us, via John Adams&#8217; <i>Harmonium</i>, how long this excellent composer has been in our midst. Adams has traveled great distances since 1981, and the occasional rough-cut passages here, the minimalist patches that seem patchier than a later Adams might countenance, draw an indulgent smile. Our gratitude to Gershon for reviving this edgy masterpiece is unbounded, especially so in the context of a choral concert rather than a symphonic event. Audiences for choral concerts tend toward conservatism. Tune in, as I did this last time, on conversations among clumps of church organists; you can wonder if you&#8217;re listening on the same planet. The diapason crowd surely must have found greater surcease in the pretty, overstuffed but basically small-scale pieces Bobby McFerrin had composed for the group; Gershon was right to perform them, but he was on even firmer ground in scheduling the Adams. Right on, Grant!</p>
<p>
 </p>
<p>
<b>IN AS MANY PERFORMANCES</b> of <i>Orfeo ed Euridice</i> as I&#8217;ve succumbed to in six or so decades of operagoing &#8211; a dozen, maybe &#8211; it has never occurred to me to look upon Gluck&#8217;s sovereign score as dull, or unbalanced, or anything but noble and generally uplifting. It has taken our local forces to instill those other points of view, which it now has, I&#8217;m sorry to say, in the production currently at the Dorothy Chandler Pavilion (through December 21). I find it a bane to the eye, an insult to most other senses (including common). The crowd on opening night, honor bids me report, cheered &#8211; not loudly, but cheered nonetheless.</p>
<p>
The opera exists in two basic versions. The first, in Italian, was performed in Vienna in 1762. The second, in French, was given in Paris in 1774. The common version today is a conflation of the two, sung in Italian but with the changes and additions of the French version. Reverting to the 1762 version, as was done here, deprives us of many cherishable details large and small: Euridice&#8217;s sublime Elysian aria, and most of the Elysian ballet, including the D-minor solo for flute that has been reckoned the most beautiful melody ever composed for that instrument. (In the Cocteau <i>Orphée</i>, it&#8217;s the tune that comes over the car radio.)</p>
<p>
The pangs of deprivation are deep. They are deepened by the absurdity of the production, in which a blank frame-shaped structure lumbers up and down on the stage, obscuring the feet of Lucinda Childs&#8217; dancers and setting up nonsensical barriers. Vivica Genaux, the Orfeo, wears a tieless tux and a floor-length coat, looks like a young Tom Cruise, but lacks the body in her voice to fill in the role. (The sublime Kathleen Ferrier recordings have just been reissued on London.) Maria Bayo, the Euridice, chirps prettily in the few scraps of the score left to her; so, with an even smaller plateful of scraps, does Carmen Giannattasio as Amor, God of Love. Both are wasted on this trivial evening, as was I.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Simon Says,&#160;Simon</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2003/11/simon-says-simon/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2003/11/simon-says-simon/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 27 Nov 2003 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=467</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Photo by Alan Wood “ISN&#8217;T THIS A DREADFUL orchestra?” said Simon Rattle, curly-topped, dimpled, transfixingly blue-eyed &#8211; not yet “Sir” &#8211; over cups at a downtown coffee den. The year was 1981, and he had just been made principal guest conductor of the Los Angeles Philharmonic; a year before, he had taken over the City [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Photo by Alan Wood
<p>
<b>“ISN&#8217;T THIS A <i>DREADFUL</i><br />
</b>orchestra?” said Simon Rattle, curly-topped, dimpled, transfixingly blue-eyed &#8211; not yet “Sir” &#8211; over cups at a downtown coffee den. The year was 1981, and he had just been made principal guest conductor of the Los Angeles Philharmonic; a year before, he had taken over the City of Birmingham Orchestra, with which, he promised, he would wipe the Los Angeles, and most other orchestras, off the map. I teased him about being stuck with an orchestra in the British boonies, and he flew into a rage. “You don&#8217;t know <i>anything</i>, do you?”</p>
<p>
He calmed down, and we discussed the road ahead of him. Since he had grown up as a percussionist, and only recently come to conducting, there were still great chunks of the symphonic repertory he didn&#8217;t know, including many of the Beethoven symphonies. Even so, he had already made a splash back home with recordings of gritty contemporary British works that nobody else wanted to touch: symphonies by Peter Maxwell Davies, for example. He knew, about himself, that he was a quick study. I don&#8217;t remember ever meeting anyone quite so justifiably self-confident as the very young (26) Simon Rattle that afternoon.</p>
<p>
Ernest Fleischmann, an absolute genius at spotting and grabbing raw talent, had fixed his eye on Simon Rattle when the 21-year-old whizbang had come to the Hollywood Bowl leading an orchestra of British schoolkids back in &#8217;76. After 1981, despite Rattle&#8217;s professed contempt for the local players, his name showed up frequently on the Philharmonic schedule, joined a couple of years later by another Fleischmann acquisition,<br />
Esa-Pekka Salonen.</p>
<p>
Rattle was mentioned now and then as the logical successor to Carlo Maria Giulini after that great man&#8217;s retirement in 1985, but Rattle knew what he was doing. He returned to Birmingham, wangled a great new concert hall out of the city, and filled it with a world-class, no-longer-boonie orchestra.</p>
<p>
And look at him now. Look at him, on the podium that once belonged to Arthur Nikisch, Wilhelm Furtwängler, Herbert von Karajan. Look at him, ensconced in the concert hall &#8211; Berlin&#8217;s Philharmonie &#8211; whose outlines and acoustic design the Los Angeles planners freely admit to have cribbed from in planning our own great new venue. Look at him this past weekend, with the honorific “Sir” now affixed, escorting his very own Berlin Philharmonic through two programs of music-making eloquent, exquisite, enterprising and sometimes still whizbang, before sellout crowds at the highest ticket price ($17 o5) of any Disney Hall event (except for the black-tie galas, of course) this season.</p>
<p>
Was it worth the price? You betcha! Just that delicate, floating pianissimo that began Bartók&#8217;s <i>Music for Strings, Percussion and Celesta </i>last Friday night was worth the price, even with the cruel punctuation from the uncontrolled cougher in, I would guess, M-130 of the Upper Orchestra (yes, the acoustics are that good). That performance &#8211; the one on the stage, that is &#8211; was pure virtuosity, every contrapuntal line etched in exact detail, the exuberant propulsion of the music in beautiful balance. The Schubert Ninth suffered somewhat from that same exuberance, most of all from an excess of roogie-roogie from the trombones. My way of hearing that noble, majestic music is from the Berlin Philharmonic of another era &#8211; December 1951, in Berlin&#8217;s Church of Jesus Christ, under Furtwängler (still on D.G.); <i>eheu, fugaces labuntur anni</i>.</p>
<p>
Saturday afternoon&#8217;s concert was more of the same: its money&#8217;s worth in even more glowing measure. A Haydn symphony began it (No. 88, full of jokes and full of love); Debussy&#8217;s <i>La Mer</i> ended it, its extroverted gorgeousness a magic that you could touch. Both performances, I suspect, will remain my way of hearing those two works for quite some time. In the middle there was new music by France&#8217;s Henri Dutilleux, composed for Rattle and the orchestra (and for Dawn Upshaw, who, being indisposed, was handsomely replaced by Valdine Anderson). The music, <i>Correspondances</i>, was a series of settings of mystical texts by letter-writers (among them Rilke, van Gogh, Solzhenitsyn) lasting about 20 minutes. I have had trouble with Dutilleux&#8217;s music in the past, and did so again; I respect his 87 years, but find nothing from them that speaks to me; the new songs come across in many shades of gray &#8211; so gray, in fact, that the Sibelius Seventh Symphony, the next work on the program, simply throbbed with color. Coals to Newcastle: Rattle performing Sibelius in Salonen precincts did seem to find greater warmth in the music, without necessarily improving the result.</p>
<p>
 </p>
<p>
<b>LATER THAT DAY</b>, across the street at the Dorothy Chandler Pavilion, and at a top ticket 5 bucks less than for the Berlin, the Los Angeles Opera came up with a <i>Lucia di Lammermoor</i> respectable at all times and sometimes genuinely splendid. The star is Anna Netrebko, the Russian coloratura soprano who has been eating up opera houses on both coasts since her San Francisco Opera debut in 1995. She is wondrous to look at (“Audrey Hepburn with a voice,” reads one spumaceous e-mail), and generates PR the way Vesuvius generates lava (did you know she once washed floors for a living?); better yet, she sang a first-rate <i>Lucia</i>, tragic in the tragic moments, horrifying in the mad moments, stupendous in the high-E moments. Surrounding her was a production of above-average resource both musical and dramatic, with sure and affectionate pacing from veteran conductor Julius Rudel and an intelligent frame for the action created by Marthe Keller. Vitalij Kowaljow is the resonant, sympathetic Raimondo; Jose Bros the somewhat reedy Edgardo who drew the loudest cheers for some reason. I have a theory: Tenors have the largest families.</p>
<p>
Yes, I had a couple of reservations. <i>Lucia</i> is part of a repertory that has become fair game for music editors, who hide behind a pretense of scholarly authenticity with one hand, and go snip snip snip with the other: a second stanza dropped here, a repeat or a cadence formula dropped there. Just in <i>Lucia</i>&#8216;s opening scene, the complex of arias that proceeds from “Regnava Nel Silenzio” and ends with the duet with Edgardo that is on every Italian barrel-organ, I kept hearing the snip of the editor&#8217;s scissors. The more this repertory becomes known &#8211; through enlightened performances and dozens of recordings &#8211; the more audible, and therefore the more painful, these minor surgeries become. All told, they don&#8217;t remove more than, say, 10 minutes from the complete score, yet you feel their pain, their drip, drip . . .</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Present At the&#160;Creation</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2003/11/present-at-the-creation/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2003/11/present-at-the-creation/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 20 Nov 2003 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=466</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[The most beautiful sound I have yet heard at Disney Hall was the dark-blue/violet invocation from James Rotter&#8217;s alto saxophone that began Darius Milhaud&#8217;s La création du monde at last week&#8217;s Philharmonic program: throbbing, mysterious, hall-filling yet seeming to rise from far reaches. The ugliest sound came just before: last-minute arrivals pounding their way to [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>
The most beautiful sound I have yet heard at Disney Hall was the dark-blue/violet invocation from James Rotter&#8217;s alto saxophone that began Darius Milhaud&#8217;s <i>La création du monde</i> at last week&#8217;s Philharmonic program: throbbing, mysterious, hall-filling yet seeming to rise from far reaches. The ugliest sound came just before: last-minute arrivals pounding their way to their seats across drumlike floor spaces in a percussive sequence that has become the hall&#8217;s most noticeable defect &#8211; and a considerable one. Last week&#8217;s conductor, David Robertson, was obliged to remark (quite audibly, of course) on the intrusion, as had Keith Jarrett at the start of his jazz concert two nights before. The defect is reparable &#8211; in the structure of the hall itself, by an extensive program of audience intimidation or by both &#8211; but no purpose is served by pretending it doesn&#8217;t exist.</p>
<p>
Historically and artistically, Milhaud&#8217;s 80-year-old score is a remarkable work; it is hard to believe that this was its first complete Philharmonic performance. I would have thought that Otto Klemperer, who plunged deeply into the rising tide of jazz awareness, would have championed it during his time here. In 1923, Milhaud had returned to Paris with armloads of records purchased at Harlem shops, infatuated with the new jazz consciousness and the companionate passion for African-inspired cubism in painting and sculpture. Cubism&#8217;s Fernand Léger designed the sets for his new jazz ballet; it told the Creation story through African eyes and African movements. To a Paris rattled by the comparable primitivism of Stravinsky&#8217;s <i>Sacre</i>, still echoing a mere 10 years later, <i>La création</i> provided a glorious aftershock.</p>
<p>
Under the remarkable Robertson&#8217;s leadership the other night, its solo colors so vividly put forward in these new surroundings, <i>La création</i> had nothing of the relic quality it can easily display. Sure, some of its cadence-formulas are pure Mickey Mouse, the same way <i>Hamlet</i> can be full of old quotations if you let it be. What I heard from this performance, however, was the picture of a composer just past 30, caught up in the discovery of a new musical language and full of delight as he twists this resource one way and another, coming up with a wonderfully weird, fresh, one-of-a-kind masterpiece.</p>
<p>
Robertson, Santa Monica born, is an appealing, considerably talented conductor who needs to be kept in mind when matters of podium succession come under discussion. A protégé of Pierre Boulez for several years, he chose Bartók&#8217;s <i>The Wooden Prince</i> to fill out his program here &#8211; worth noting, since Boulez had conducted it with the Philharmonic in 1987. I remember that performance as small-scale, even dull; this one was neither. (Can such things be?) One major difference was the presence, this time, of running supertitles to detail the complications of Béla Balázs&#8217; folktale plot for the original ballet, which, in true <i>mittel-Europäisch</i> fashion, has its principals dying, resurrecting, falling in and out of love, cutting off and restoring their own hair, while the forests around them surge and wither &#8211; all over nearly an hour&#8217;s time span. You can see why a supertitle or two might come in handy.</p>
<p>
This is early Bartók. Its dates are 1914–17, but the shadows that fall across it are more of Strauss than Stravinsky. Its orchestra is huge, and managed with great facility; however, though you can hear an occasional wisp of a folk tune, it is difficult to glean the outline of the later Bartók &#8211; even of the startling <i>Miraculous Mandarin</i> of only two years later &#8211; from this brightcolored but heavy-lying score.</p>
<p>
Midway in this energized program, Emanuel Ax played one of the greatest of Mozart&#8217;s late piano concertos, the C-major K. 503 &#8211; wise in content (with that magical F-major moment in the finale that I&#8217;ve sputtered over many times) and wise in the execution. Oddly, he performed in black tie, with the orchestra, as usual, in white. I asked him about this afterward. “I&#8217;ve given up performing in tails,” he said. “Mazel tov,” I answered.</p>
<p>
 </p>
<p>
The prospect of yet another <i>Madama Butterfly</i> exerted, at best, a feeble spell, and the recent go-around at Costa Mesa&#8217;s Opera Pacific, of a production well-traveled since its debut (at the Houston Grand Opera) in 1998, drew me with halting steps. More&#8217;s the surprise, therefore, to report on a powerful &#8211; no, make that thrilling, perhaps even enlightening &#8211; evening in which Puccini&#8217;s saga of hearts athrob achieved its devastating purpose this once, leaving me shaken and convinced against all wisdom that the damn opera is, indeed, some kind of masterpiece.</p>
<p>
Francesca Zambello, as is her custom, has raised a certain havoc with the Giacosa/Illica plotline, and some of her conceptions &#8211; preserved in Garnett Bruce&#8217;s restaging &#8211; required looking the other way here and there to blot out certain inconsistencies. The action took place not in a pretty cottage up the hill, but in the office of Consul Sharpless, with scrim walls that vanished at times, and with an American flag (44 stars) and a Pledge of Allegiance (no “under God”). A hubbub at the start (a nice match to the music of the prelude) filled the place with bustling Japanese trying to conduct business, bustling secretaries trying to cope, and bustling flunkies trying to conduct a marriage <br />
of convenience that none of them cares much about.</p>
<p>
The tragedy of deep love betrayed by noncommittal game playing emerged from this human mass; even <i>Butterfly</i>&#8216;s heart-rending “Un bel dì” surfaced on a crowded stage, the suffering solo figure surrounded by uncaring life. A brilliant, frazzled Chinese soprano, Xiu Wei Sun, wound her long, unruly hair around her distress; at her suicide, with the bare stage suddenly flooded in blood-red fabric, the whole of Segerstrom Hall seemed to recoil at the shock. John DeMain conducted; on opening night his orchestra achieved no prodigies of accuracy, but its way of wrapping itself into the human tragedy was something you &#8211; meaning I &#8211; could strongly share.</p>
<p>
Word is out: Opera Pacific, along with many other of our noblest musical institutions, is up against financial distress; its latest deficit report runs to seven figures. The <i>Butterfly</i> was not a lavish production; its almost-bare stage was covered not with expensive scenery, but with people making interesting movements in attractive, naturalistic costumes.</p>
<p>
The whole thing, in fact, looked and sounded like the kind of opera that made it easy to believe, to be moved, to weep along.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Gadgetry&#160;Galore</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2003/11/gadgetry-galore/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2003/11/gadgetry-galore/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 13 Nov 2003 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=465</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Photo by Anne Fishbein FINDING YOUR WAY through the intricate programming of this first Disney Hall season &#8211; the “Creation Festival” here, the “Baroque Variations” there, the “Sounds About Town” all over the place &#8211; is as challenging a process as finding your way through the hall itself. I note with some amusement the new [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Photo by Anne Fishbein
<p>
<b>FINDING YOUR WAY </b>through the intricate programming<b> </b>of this first Disney Hall season &#8211; the “Creation Festival” here, the “Baroque Variations” there, the “Sounds About Town” all over the place &#8211; is as challenging a process as finding your way through the hall itself. I note with some amusement the new hand-lettered stickers in the elevators, clarifying that “3” equals “Terrace” or “East Orchestra” or whatever. A troop of Boy Scouts or Saint Bernards, stationed through the corridors, might also be in order.</p>
<p>
Last Friday saw the inaugural of “First Nights,” the L.A. Philharmonic&#8217;s new series to explain, and then perform, music that ruffled feathers at its inception; Stravinsky&#8217;s <i>Rite of Spring</i> was the logical choice for starters. Even so, I approached with some trepidation. Harvard&#8217;s Dr. Thomas Kelly, whose book gives the series its title, does not inspire my admiration; his book, an avatar of what Virgil Thomson used to call “the music-appreciation racket,” is a slick but unbalanced job. (Imagine, in the discography, a survey of <i>Messiah</i> performances that doesn&#8217;t list a single vocalist!) On the Disney stage Prof. Kelly was no less slick and &#8211; in his attempt to act out choreographer Vaslav Nijinsky&#8217;s ballet steps &#8211; no less unbalanced. After this sorry disquisition, however, there came a kind of magic: Esa-Pekka Salonen conducting one of the <i>Rite</i>&#8216;s spectacular outbursts, with a gathering of costumed dancers struggling with the beat, an actor impersonating Nijinsky screaming out numbers and a well-placed claque of vociferous protesters throughout the hall, enacting the famous first-night Paris riot of May 1913 that did, indeed, launch that music&#8217;s notoriety.</p>
<p>
Not everything worked that well. The assembled actors &#8211; as Nijinsky, Diaghilev, Stravinsky, conductor Pierre Monteux &#8211; made something of a goulash out of affected accents, and John de Lancie&#8217;s narration (of his own text) moved in and out of focus, as is his wont. Mostly, however, the hour&#8217;s worth of concocted entertainment led cleverly to the final performance by Salonen and the orchestra &#8211; preceded, as it had been on that night in 1913, by the saccharine closing moments of Chopin&#8217;s <i>Les Sylphides</i>. That, I needn&#8217;t tell you, was the cat&#8217;s pajamas.</p>
<p>
The program was sold out, with thwarted attendees lined up at the box office. So, in fact, was the first “Green Umbrella” event earlier in the week (with the hall&#8217;s stratospheric balcony wisely closed). Think of it: more than 1,900 new-music aficionados at a concert that used to draw something like 400 at its previous venue, across the street at Zipper Hall. The program was hardly condescending: new or almost-new works for single instruments, with or without electronic support, performed by Philharmonic members. Some, not all, was rather wonderful: Thomas Adès&#8217; piano nocturne <i>Darknesse Visible</i>, enchantingly played (at the edge of silence) by Joanne Pearce Martin; David Breidenthal gobble-gobbling his way through a Colin Matthews piece for solo bassoon; concertmaster Martin Chalifour&#8217;s spellbinding playing of Salonen&#8217;s <i>Laughing Unlearnt</i>, last heard two summers ago at the Ford Amphitheater. The program&#8217;s one “classic,” Steve Reich&#8217;s <i>New York Counterpoint</i> for solo clarinet (Lorin Levee) and eight more on tape, was somewhat misrepresented by the big distance between solo instrument and the taped companions on loudspeakers; the piece relies more, I think, on give-and-take than on wide-open spaces.</p>
<p>
 </p>
<p>
<b>TWO WEEKENDS AGO </b>there was Bach aplenty: five concertos by Musica Angelica at Zipper, four more by London&#8217;s Academy of Ancient Music at the <i>Queen Mary</i> &#8211; a “Historic Site” if ever one was. Michael Eagan&#8217;s Musica Angelica has been around for a while, mostly in pleasant, rather informal concerts in churches. Last year it decided to expand &#8211; in image if not in numbers; now it is allied with the Colburn School, and has upped its ticket prices accordingly: $47 for the Zipper concert, as opposed to $44 for the Academy on shipboard.</p>
<p>
The mathematics did not match the events: the solemn, slogging and sometimes sloppy performances by Eagan&#8217;s group, with the three and four harpsichords grinding away like so many sewing machines and the string players dropping notes all over the place. (I except, of course, the eloquent baroque violin of visiting soloist Elizabeth Blumenstock, who rose high above her fellows all evening.) Eagan&#8217;s archlute served as continuo in several of the concertos, but did so practically inaudibly (to these ears, anyway, in a seat halfway back in the excellent Zipper) and without anything identifiable as a firm beat. Los Angeles deserves a permanent early-music ensemble, and Angelica has been pushing hard for that kind of recognition, but I didn&#8217;t hear playing that night worthy of that status &#8211; and certainly not worthy of $47.</p>
<p>
From the Academy&#8217;s hard-edged Mozart on their Christopher Hogwood discs of the 1980s, I would not have expected the warm, flexible and &#8211; yes &#8211; humorous performances that made the Sunday drive to Long Beach eminently rewarding. This was a small group from the larger ensemble &#8211; eight players, led from Richard Eggar&#8217;s harpsichord, and lit from within by the seductive burble of Rachel Brown&#8217;s flute (and her piccolo, in the one encore). Nobody has yet come up with a single “definitive” way of performing Bach, and that is just fine. What remains true, however, is the rubric that, however flexible the tempi and the phrasing, however mighty the performing forces, Bach is never dull. Listen to the supreme masterwork on the Academy program, the D-minor keyboard concerto (part of which also served Bach in one of his church cantatas); listen especially to the rhapsody spun forth by the solo harpsichord above the dark menace of the strings in the slow movement. If ever music dug deep into the souls of the listeners, to sing of matters beyond the power of any imagined words, it is in these eight or so minutes of wordless passion. Angelica had played the same music the night before &#8211; in the violin-concerto reconstruction &#8211; and it was just plain . . . dull.</p>
<p>
At LACMA, the New York New Music Ensemble took “Elektro Akoustiks: The New Tradition” to title its local visit, but in a sequence of short works by Jonathan Harvey, Eric Chasalow, Ezequiel Viñao and Mathew Rosenblum, ending with David Felder&#8217;s <i>Partial [dist] res[s]toration</i>, I found that the cute orthography far outweighed any strength of spirit in the music, or any joy in performing it. Two nights later, the EAR Unit, with its usual kind of joyous perusal &#8211; above all of two strong works by the late (and much-missed) Earle Brown &#8211; restored confidence that there is still something to be said these days in music&#8217;s varied realms, and still some pleasure in the act of saying it.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Bravery Beyond the&#160;Call</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2003/11/bravery-beyond-the-call/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2003/11/bravery-beyond-the-call/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 06 Nov 2003 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=464</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Elliott Carter composed his Night Fantasies in 1980, and entrusted its power to the four pianists who had commissioned it (and later recorded it): Paul Jacobs, Gilbert Kalish, Ursula Oppens and Charles Rosen. Nearly a quarter-century later, this half-hour work maintains that strange power to mirror any performers brave enough to take on &#8211; and, [...]]]></description>
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Elliott Carter composed his <i>Night Fantasies</i> in 1980, and entrusted its power to the four pianists who had commissioned it (and later recorded it): Paul Jacobs, Gilbert Kalish, Ursula Oppens and Charles Rosen. Nearly a quarter-century later, this half-hour work maintains that strange power to mirror any performers brave enough to take on &#8211; and, if possible, to soar above &#8211; its crevasses and crags. On the Internet I found a dissertation on the work by one John F. Link of William Paterson University (<i><a href="http://www.wpunj.edu/coac/music/">www.wpunj.edu/coac/music/</a></p>
<p>
link/sonus/sonuspaper.html</i>); If I didn&#8217;t know Dr. Link was writing about music by Elliott Carter, I might take his words as parody of a scholar up to his ears in musical abstruseness. That&#8217;s Carter for you.</p>
<p>
I do, however, find the <i>Night Fantasies</i> a work of remarkable depth, possibly my favorite music from this prolific composer&#8217;s legacy, and Gloria Cheng&#8217;s performance at her recent Piano Spheres concert at Zipper Hall reminded me of the music&#8217;s wonders. Carter himself writes about the music with unusual warmth (for him, that is); it recalls to his mind the “poetic moodiness” of Schumann, and the comparison is just. Time has not reduced the terrors in the work, and the Cheng performance &#8211; broadly expressive, splendidly responsive to the work&#8217;s title &#8211; was a matter of bravery beyond the call. I hope she records it; from the music&#8217;s original dedicatees, only a Rosen performance survives.</p>
<p>
Cheng&#8217;s program called itself a “Bounty of Birthdays,” and celebrated major anniversaries for Carter (95), John Harbison (65), William Kraft (80) and the late Jacob Druckman (75), as well as for the Piano Spheres series itself (10). The range of styles was, let&#8217;s say, interesting, from the pretty colors of Kraft&#8217;s <i>Translucences</i> of 1979, to the neoclassic hard lines of Harbison&#8217;s 1987 First Piano Sonata, to the charm of a set of <i>Album Leaves</i> by the non–birthday boy Steven Stucky (54). Two short, recent Carter pieces filled out the program, trivial music from a man who has earned the right to nod now and then. Piano Spheres, one of the city&#8217;s most distinguished concert series, has not nodded as yet and probably won&#8217;t; the next event, a program by Susan Svrcek, is listed for January 14.</p>
<p>
Across the street, a few nights later, came the latest in Disney Hall&#8217;s baptismal events, its first-ever piano recital, delivered by Evgeny Kissin. At 32 and, thus, no longer the apple-cheeked wunderkind of yore, Kissin remains brave; it is indeed an act of bravery for a young virtuoso, his career nicely anchored among spellbinding performances of <i>Pictures at an Exhibition</i> and the Rach 3, to devote nearly an hour of a recital program to the last of Franz Schubert&#8217;s Piano Sonatas, all the repeats in place, sprightly when required. I wish, therefore, that I could report on the event with unmodified rapture.</p>
<p>
Overall it was a stupendous concert, made uncommonly generous by a full half-hour of encores no less substantial than the scheduled program (Schubert&#8217;s G-flat <i>Impromptu</i>, Liszt&#8217;s <i>Soirées de Vienne</i> and one of his <i>Paganini Etudes</i> and on and on). There were, indeed, fine moments in the sonata in unexpected places &#8211; that imponderable, jolting turn in the slow movement, for one, where Schubert drops us precipitously, trembling and with hearts afire, from C-sharp minor to C major. The phrasing of the broad, eloquent opening theme &#8211; twitchy, uneven and at odds with lyric flow &#8211; had led me to expect far worse. Come to think of it, I have yet to hear from a pianist of Russian background &#8211; Horowitz, Richter and now Kissin &#8211; a Schubert sonata played with comprehension of that astonishing interplay of intimacy and grandeur that sets this music apart on its own pedestal.</p>
<p>
 </p>
<p>
As of this writing I have been to four scheduled events at Disney, seated in a different part of the hall each time: high against a side wall in the terrace section, in the front row of the balcony, in an orchestra aisle seat about halfway back and, for the Mahler Second the other night, in an “Orchestra East” seat above the orchestra and over the harps, where Esa-Pekka Salonen and I could, if we had so chosen, play eye games with each other. So far as my aged ears could detect, the differences in sound from one perch to another were negligible; the hall sounds as good as the press department wants me to believe. I would not happily return to that perch in the balcony, however; if I had had to push my way into a center seat, instead of being on the aisle, the narrowness of the space and its height would have brought on an attack of vertigo. Should the Philharmonic really want me up there, let them sponsor a paper-airplane competition, not a concert.</p>
<p>
The problems with audience noise remain; the solution will be for the hall itself to instill a sense of awe, delight and pride. It can happen; already the amenities have earned widespread comment. Praise resounds for accessible johns on every floor (except, once again, that awful balcony), escalators to get you there, a handsome bookstore (which still needs to be stocked with merchandise pertinent to the concert at hand), a really splendid small cafeteria (which I mention only hesitantly, for fear of overcrowding) and, above all, the garden with its plantings lit by the smile of Lillian Disney.</p>
<p>
The Mahler Second was, to nobody&#8217;s surprise, sufficiently off-the-wall to make the music itself seem almost lovable this time around. I find the affection lavished upon this score somewhat ludicrous &#8211; whether from Esa-Pekka Salonen, whose performance last week was a marvel of orchestral detail meticulously defined and blended, or from that obsessed New York capitalist Gilbert Kaplan, who buys himself the chance to wave a stick at this music when and wherever he chooses, but conducts nothing else in God&#8217;s entire realm. The vast acoustic excellences of Disney Hall make it possible to enhance the dimensionality of the music &#8211; the offstage brass and percussion that stop all forward momentum early in the finale, and the uprushing cellos and basses early on. Nobody pays nearly enough attention to the enchanting Schubertian-ness of the slow movement, where Salonen encouraged his elegant violins to turn themselves into inelegant fiddles and dowse the music in giggles and chortles. That, to these ears, is the culmination of the Mahler Second, and the other night it was supergorgeous. The rest was high-class blah.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>The Right&#160;Rite</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2003/10/the-right-rite/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2003/10/the-right-rite/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 30 Oct 2003 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=463</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Consider the irony. In 1940 there was Fantasia, the hat-in-hand appeal by the Walt Disney Studios to secure a blessing from the citadels of High Culture. Stravinsky&#8217;s The Rite of Spring was the big number, its 33 minutes hacked down by a third, its sequence of events deranged, its scenario a ludicrous if colorful number [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>
<b>Consider the irony.</b> In 1940 there was <i>Fantasia</i>, the hat-in-hand appeal by the Walt Disney Studios to secure a blessing from the citadels of High Culture. Stravinsky&#8217;s <i>The Rite of Spring</i> was the big number, its 33 minutes hacked down by a third, its sequence of events deranged, its scenario a ludicrous if colorful number involving amoebas, dinosaurs, floods and earthquakes, introduced in Deems Taylor&#8217;s patronizing exordium. Stravinsky was, naturally, furious; the names of Walt Disney and classical music would be forever sundered &#8211; until last week, when the Walt Disney Concert Hall opened its doors, with Stravinsky&#8217;s masterwork &#8211; this time integral &#8211; again on the agenda.</p>
<p>
Another <i>Rite of Spring</i>, a dazzling performance by Esa-Pekka Salonen and the Los Angeles Philharmonic, lingered in many ears, many memories. In 1996, Salonen and the Philharmonic had performed it in a three-week Stravinsky Festival at the Théâtre du Châtelet in Paris, known for its terrific acoustics and an architecture that put orchestra and audience practically in each other&#8217;s laps. A large contingent of Philharmonic board members were on that Paris junket, and when they returned home, they brought the obsession that, come what may, Los Angeles also had the right to hear what its orchestra really sounded like &#8211; a privilege denied within the blocky precincts of the Music Center&#8217;s Dorothy Chandler Pavilion. Ground had already been broken for a new concert hall, designed by Frank Gehry and with acoustic design by Yasuhisa Toyota, but the work had stopped. Now, nothing would do but that the concrete mixers and the welding torches once again be activated. Last week the results of that insistence gave Los Angeles&#8217; musical life &#8211; and, for that matter, the nationwide institution of performed classical music, languishing of late &#8211; a rebirth whose consequences are exhilarating to contemplate.</p>
<p>
Everything &#8211; well, almost everything &#8211; about that seductive, welcoming room of wood, set within the incandescent curves and sparkles of its lustrous metal wrapping, deserves place in the jubilation. There are, of course, problems; did you ever hear of a new performing space that emerged unbeset by problems the first time out? Salonen and the orchestra have already encountered, and for the most part solved, small matters of echo and dead spots here and there, and the tweaking will go on into the future. In the opening-night gala there were things that didn&#8217;t work. I detected serious unbalances as the Master Chorale sang a complex, densely grained work of György Ligeti (the <i>Lux Aeterna</i>, which has also had a movie career, thanks to Kubrick&#8217;s <i>2001</i>). The Gabrieli <i>Canzona</i> for antiphonal brass ensembles might have worked better if some of the players had performed in a balcony area, rather than across the orchestra seating.</p>
<p>
But then came the tidy little Mozart symphony (No. 32), with the interplay between winds and strings suspended in midair, the horns and drums resounding like the lights on a distant shore. This was a sound of music you can remember from the Los Angeles Chamber Orchestra at Royce Hall, or remember more faintly from visiting orchestras at the Ambassador Auditorium, but never in the precincts at First Street and Grand. In the nine minutes of that crystal-textured performance was exemplified every reason for the building of this great new music-space, and every hope for its success. The Stravinsky after intermission carried its own bag of thrills; could anyone hear the rich resonance of Raynor Carroll&#8217;s bass drum &#8211; or the clamorous interplay of the winds, or the dark mysteries of muted brass &#8211; without sending up flares of gratitude to architect and acoustician, and without remembering Paris? By intermission, the dreams of this city&#8217;s hopeful concertgoers had already been fulfilled.</p>
<p>
Certain other problems may require more imaginative solutions. The very liveness that endows the sounds of music making in the hall also resounds to its detriment. A cough anywhere in the hall, a dropped program or &#8211; heaven forfend! &#8211; a cell phone is immediately and emphatically audible. So are footsteps on the wood flooring or, worse, on the stairways in the terrace and balcony levels. On the opening nights, the voices of broadcast engineers behind the balcony area also carried throughout the hall. Members of the orchestra have spoken about the problems in getting used to their new performing area; it must also happen that audiences will face these problems. Somewhere in this world, people take off their shoes before entering public spaces.</p>
<p>
 </p>
<p>
<b>On the second night</b> the music making was of more challenging mien, although both Salonen&#8217;s own <i>LA Variations</i>, which began the program, and Revueltas&#8217; <i>Sensemaya</i>, which ended it, have been elevated to local classics. John Adams&#8217; <i>The Dharma at Big Sur</i>, co-commissioned by the Philharmonic and the Orange County Philharmonic Society, may someday join their ranks. The inspiration is indigenous California, the roadrunner fictions of Jack Kerouac, and the music of Terry Riley and Lou Harrison that stretches out to the harmonies of the Pacific Rim. It&#8217;s a strange but appealing work, a minute or two overlong, perhaps. Tracy Silverman, the soloist who belongs among the inspirers, plays a six-string electronic violin into a microphone and into processing circuitry; it gives him the remarkable ability to carry a lyric line all the way from the highest notes of a normal violin down into cello territory. The lines Adams has given him are powerful and seductive; you hear them as a single, nonstop outpouring. Therein lies the Lou Harrison connection.</p>
<p>
Having heard another Adams premiere &#8211; the intense, harrowing, Pulitzer-winning <i>On the Transmigration of Souls</i> &#8211; in Orange County earlier last week, I might be justified in regarding <i>Dharma</i> as something of a lightweight. On the other hand, the Pacific Chorale and Pacific Symphony were so poorly led by John Alexander, miles out of his depth, that I&#8217;m not sure I heard the work at all. Both works, obviously, need further hearing. Both proclaim Adams as one of our worthiest modern masters. Meanwhile, back at Disney, further exultation on the matter of Friday&#8217;s program devolves upon the phenomenal Yo-Yo Ma, set loose on Witold Lutoslawski&#8217;s gloriously quizzical Cello Concerto. Lutoslawski, another worthy master, visited us often in his time and is much missed; this concerto from 1970, with its fascinating back-and-forth argle-bargle between soloist and orchestra and its trick ending that leaves you dangling, belongs among his masterpieces.</p>
<p>
I&#8217;ve left myself no space to gurgle about the Disney surroundings: the gardens, the great blue cabbage rose of a fountain, the sense of belonging that it shares with the city around it. Among last week&#8217;s masterpieces, the sunset on Thursday night also deserves honored mention. Our new hall has already earned its blessing from On High.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Earth, Sky and Regions in&#160;Between</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2003/10/earth-sky-and-regions-in-between/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2003/10/earth-sky-and-regions-in-between/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 23 Oct 2003 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=462</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Photo by Jay Blakesberg In Santa Monica there was In C, Terry Riley&#8217;s first great work, now approaching 40. In Costa Mesa there was Sun Rings, Riley&#8217;s latest great work, in its first local hearing. The music of the years between these two strange and wondrous masterpieces forms a body of creativity like nothing else [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Photo by Jay Blakesberg
<p>
In Santa Monica there was <i>In C</i>, Terry Riley&#8217;s first great work, now approaching 40. In Costa Mesa there was <i>Sun Rings</i>, Riley&#8217;s latest great work, in its first local hearing. The music of the years between these two strange and wondrous masterpieces forms a body of creativity like nothing else on Earth: irritating at times and self-indulgent beyond redemption but often lit with a visionary&#8217;s authentic ecstasy. Were our pathways not already illuminated by the presence of this smiling, soft-spoken, supernally wise gnome, he would be impossible to invent.</p>
<p>
<i>In C</i> has always been a piece apart, an ingenious trick to test a hearer&#8217;s perception, a whimsical spinning of substance out of nothingness. That&#8217;s all very well, but the performance earlier this month at Santa Monica&#8217;s First Presbyterian Church &#8211; the first event in a nicely concocted new chamber-music series called “Jacaranda” &#8211; struck me as being about more than mere tricks. It seemed to me as if the work has now settled into the repertory as a milestone in the onrush of music over the past several decades. The 45-minute performance in Santa Monica &#8211; nine players, led by Mark Hilt on the church&#8217;s excellent small organ &#8211; was spirited and forward-moving, but it was the work itself that provided the evening&#8217;s luster: the right music in the right place at the right time. The next Jacaranda concert, all-Schubert, is scheduled for November 8.</p>
<p>
It won&#8217;t take 40 years for <i>Sun Rings</i> &#8211; given in Segerstrom Hall as the high point of this year&#8217;s Eclectic Orange festival &#8211; to prove itself a masterpiece; it already is. The work&#8217;s fame has preceded it here, most of all in Mark Swed&#8217;s admiring report in the <i>Times</i> last November. Its foundation is in the researches of Dr. Don Gurnett of the University of Iowa, who has devised a way of recording the tweets and bongs produced around certain planetary bodies by the movements of gases, as caught by Gurnett&#8217;s plasma-wave recorders mounted on Voyager spacecraft. Two propositions emerged as consequences to this repertory of celestial noises captured in Dr. Gurnett&#8217;s gadgetry: that Terry Riley was the inevitable earthling to transmute these sounds into a musical design and that the Kronos Quartet was the inevitable agency to transmute that design into performance art.</p>
<p>
The result is, indeed, art of high quality. The space sounds dance around the stage, mirrored in classy projections of planetary stuff and laboratory formulas. The Kronos sits in a galaxy of its own, downstage, surrounded by small lights on metal rods, and by a few other rods that function like the receptors on a theremin. The tech sounds are amplified at times, and, of course, processed so that tweet occasionally turns into boom and vice versa. Best of all, they are sparingly used; not for Terry Riley the exuberant balderdash of Alan Hovhaness and the mating moans of humpback whales. Riley&#8217;s own music, from the Kronos live and from more kinds of synthesizer than I could ever list, is many kinds of gorgeous &#8211; the enchanted tripping of his folk-dance stuff (as in his <i>Harp of New Albion</i>) and a melodic manner rich, lyrical and breath-stopping that I haven&#8217;t heard before. In two of the 10 movements a chorus enters, softly and tenderly. You fear for a moment or two the intrusion of Gustav Holst and his gooey <i>Planets</i> stuff, and just between us, those movements might be spared.</p>
<p>
So much, however, is good. I&#8217;ve been writing about <i>Sun Rings</i> in the present tense, because it stands to reason that the work is meant for further touring and, eventually, for DVD. The crowd at Segerstrom was fair-sized, expanded by several school groups, mostly middle school. I&#8217;d give anything to have heard the reports in classrooms the next morning.</p>
<p>
 </p>
<p>
Three Tales, with music by Steve Reich and video by his wife, Beryl Korot, is all the proof you need of the value of DVD as one of the most enlightened phenomena of this age. The “tales” themselves are actually three glosses on era-defining events: the explosion of the Zeppelin <i>Hindenburg</i> in New Jersey in 1937, the atomic tests at Bikini Island just after WWII and the cloning of the sheep Dolly in 1997. Originally there was a plan to blend the <i>Hindenburg</i> into footage of the real General Hindenburg, who had led Germany into the hands of Adolf Hitler in 1933; that episode was dropped, but is included in the outtakes on the video. Count on this new DVD technology to preserve what was, and what might have been, in equally brimming measure. (<i>Three Tales</i> had been scheduled for performance at Royce Hall this season, but was canceled when it was found that the hall was inadequately wired for its demands.)</p>
<p>
Strange as the mix of “tales” may sound, the work comes across as the bearer of disturbing, extraordinarily powerful information. What makes it so, above all, is the interaction of sight and sound, the way Korot&#8217;s repetitive pounding of video images exactly mirrors the obsessive voices in Reich&#8217;s music. You cannot easily come away from that moment in the <i>Hindenburg</i> section, for example, when the manic reruns of the sight of the explosion are intercut with the sound of CBS&#8217;s on-the-scene announcer Herb Morrison&#8217;s hysterical repeats of the word <i>flame</i>. Nor from the agonizing scenes where Uncle Sam&#8217;s diplomatic envoy explains to a gathering of Bikini residents, several times repeated, why they must give up their island to the American atomic testers for the salvation of mankind. Nor from the gathering of scientists (including, no less, Stephen Jay Gould and “virtual reality” inventor Jaron Lanier) dealing with where the world might go past the barrier of animal and human cloning.</p>
<p>
Where the world might go &#8211; past the marvelous joining of words and music, audible and visual composition &#8211; is the further prospect raised by this remarkably brainy creation of the Reichs, and the capturing of it onto a tiny piece of shiny plastic. Brave new world, indeed!</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Life as&#160;Music</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2003/10/life-as-music/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2003/10/life-as-music/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 09 Oct 2003 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=461</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[The office of composer laureate does not yet exist here; if it did, John Adams would be the hands-down choice for occupant. In the quarter-century since his works reached their first thunderstruck, cheering audiences, he has found within his soul the appropriate music for a swath of American history that includes Richard Nixon&#8217;s visit to [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>
<b>The office of composer laureate</b> does not yet exist here; if it did, John Adams would be the hands-down choice for occupant. In the quarter-century since his works reached their first thunderstruck, cheering audiences, he has found within his soul the appropriate music for a swath of American history that includes Richard Nixon&#8217;s visit to China, San Francisco&#8217;s Loma Prieta earthquake, the hijacking of a cruise ship by Islamic terrorists, the impact of 9/11 on the streets of New York, and the poetic mystique of California itself. <i>On the Transmigration of Souls</i>, the work for voices and orchestra reflecting the 9/11 tragedy, commissioned and first performed by the New York Philharmonic, went on to win this year&#8217;s Pulitzer Prize; it gets its first local hearing on October 19 at Costa Mesa&#8217;s Segerstrom Hall, by the Pacific Symphony and Chorale under John Alexander. That poetic obsession with the Californian essence forms the substance of <i>The Dharma at Big Sur</i>, first to be heard here on October 24 in one of the three “gala” events celebrating the opening of Walt Disney Concert Hall.</p>
<p>
“I had no intention of writing a piece about 9/11,” says Adams on the phone from his Berkeley home, in a one-day break between preparing the California performances and leading the inaugural performances at Carnegie Hall&#8217;s new Zankel Hall, where he seems to have left no room for his own music on the all-American concert he will conduct. “But then the New York Philharmonic called with the offer of a commission, and that was like a command performance. For my generation &#8211; and for generations before &#8211; growing up with music meant growing up with the Philharmonic: the concert broadcasts on Sunday afternoons, and the educational programs with Leonard Bernstein; this was a totemic orchestra. After 9/11 some people gave blood, some people wrote books; everybody was moved to do whatever possible, and writing music was, for me, the obvious possibility.”</p>
<p>
Both new works, as it happens, are substantial examples of what Adams refers to as his “public” pieces. “You&#8217;ve known me for now, what, 25 years; you know that basically I&#8217;m a very private person, the outgrowth of my Yankee upbringing. Lately I&#8217;ve had to reconcile that attitude with the demand for public works; without blowing my own horn, I like to link myself with Frank Gehry. Large pieces &#8211; operas, orchestra works, concert halls &#8211; need to preserve the personality of the maker while pleasing the outside world, and it&#8217;s not always easy.”</p>
<p>
Maybe not, but you have to admire Adams for trying, and succeeding in so many ways. <i>Transmigration</i> feeds on the horror of the 9/11 attack, not as a Straussian tone poem, but from the inside. Its words &#8211; for chorus, children&#8217;s chorus and tapes of people directly affected by the violence &#8211; form an emotional core. Voices call out the names of the missing; the sirens mingle with other city noises, and with the large orchestra that seems to vibrate as a horrified eyewitness. “We love you, Chick,” intones a boy&#8217;s voice out of the murk. “I loved him from the start,” echoes the children&#8217;s chorus, in the words of a bereaved lover. At the end, the chorus calls out a litany of names of the missing: “Juan Garcia . . . Michael Taldonio . . . my mother,” and the music dissolves into a pianissimo “I love you” and mingles with the dust of that awful day.</p>
<p>
<i>Dharma</i> is, of course, happier stuff; take it as the latest step in the growing love affair between Adams and California, an affair that began in 1971, when his parents &#8211; both musicians of sorts &#8211; presented him with a copy of John Cage&#8217;s <i>Silence</i> upon his graduation from Harvard. “That owner&#8217;s manual of the alternate arts became for me a summons to abandon the Ivy League and move west,” he says. “Thirty years later, I can still remember that primordial moment, my first viewing of the Pacific Ocean. My own memory resounds with the writings of the others, from Fra Junipero Serra to John Muir to Robinson Jeffers to Jack Kerouac. It resounds in the music of Lou Harrison, who looked out across the Pacific and found other echoes on the far shore.” (Harrison&#8217;s <i>Concerto in Slendro</i>, his radiantly beautiful music inspired by Indonesian scales and rhythms, figured in Adams&#8217; inaugural concert at New York&#8217;s Zankel Hall. It&#8217;s high time the East Coast learned more about the much-neglected Harrison and his westward glance.)</p>
<p>
“I planned <i>Dharma</i> as a piece about ambiance,” says Adams, “and then in addition it became a violin concerto. That happened when I discovered the phenomenal Tracy Silverman, who will play the solo part on his six-string electric violin. One important aspect of the ‘Californian&#8217; quality is my use of unusual tuning systems, especially that much-misunderstood system known as ‘just intonation.&#8217; Lou Harrison was a strong proponent of unusual tunings, because they brought us closer to a universal harmony. <i>Dharma</i> uses a big orchestra, plus all kinds of electronic devices, plus Tracy; it runs nearly half an hour.”</p>
<p>
 </p>
<p>
<b>Within the time frame </b>of the two Adams premieres in Southern California, his kinky orchestra piece called <i>Lollapalooza</i> will delight audiences at two hearings in Barcelona, audiences at the Prague National Theater will hear two performances of his opera <i>The Death of Klinghoffer</i>, and Leila Josefowicz will unleash her phenomenal energies on the Violin Concerto with the Toledo (Ohio, this time) Symphony. Most remarkable among these events is the resurgence of <i>Klinghoffer</i> after its troubled American premiere in 1991 and a history of summary rejections in the intervening years. The Los Angeles Opera, one of the work&#8217;s co-commissioners, reneged on its announced performance, and the Boston Symphony canceled a scheduled performance of excerpts that would have taken place a few weeks after 9/11. The problem has never been Adams&#8217; score, which remains one of his most emotionally loaded works, but rather the Alice Goodman text, in which members of an Islamic terrorist cell, now in command of the hijacked cruise ship <i>Achille Lauro</i>, sing of their hatreds toward the outside world. “America is one big Jew” did not go over well in 1991; it has taken a decade and more to let these words settle back into perspective and the music be recognized for its eloquence.</p>
<p>
The tide turned. I was at the concert performance at London&#8217;s Barbican, to start a dazzling all-Adams weekend, in January 2002; it was a hot-ticket item that drew an ecstatic, mostly young crowd. At that time elsewhere in London, Adams himself was preparing a film version of the score; that has now been shown in Britain and the U.S., and is due for DVD release before the year&#8217;s end; this month&#8217;s Prague production is one further step along its road to redemption. “The subject matter is painful,” Adams freely admits. “But the best thing is that people have gone back to it.”</p>
<p>
<i>I Was Looking at the Ceiling and Then I Saw the Sky</i>: A true laureate can even set a California earthquake to music, and this frisky bit of stage biz shook up a few viewers at its 1995 Berkeley premiere. “A few people felt that this was a comedown,” Adams remembers. “They just don&#8217;t know about my lighter side. They forget that my very first performance was next to my mother in a production of <i>South Pacific</i> in Concord, New Hampshire. That was me on that stage, with two other stage brats, singing ‘Dites-moi, pourquoi, la vie est belle.&#8217;</p>
<p>
“When I first came to San Francisco,” he continues, “I did some teaching at the Conservatory, but I prefer a less formal framework. Our house in Berkeley is always full of kids &#8211; my own and other people&#8217;s. We work on projects, mostly in musical theater on the level of <i>Ceiling/Sky</i>, and it becomes a real workshop. The first boy you&#8217;ll hear on tape in <i>Transmigration</i>, singing ‘missing . . . missing,&#8217; is one of my kids. My musical life began working with kids, and a lot of it continues that way.”</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Their Country, &#039;Twas of&#160;Thee</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2003/10/their-country-twas-of-thee/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2003/10/their-country-twas-of-thee/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 02 Oct 2003 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=460</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Two recent items from the University of California Press, too small for the wisdom they contain, provide some interesting insights on American music making and creative attitudes over the last several decades. One is Paul Bowles on Music, a collection of writings by the late man-of-many-arts during the years (1935–46) of his gainful employment as [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>
<b>Two recent items </b>from the University of California Press, too small for the wisdom they contain, provide some interesting insights on American music making and creative attitudes over the last several decades. One is <i>Paul Bowles on Music</i>, a collection of writings by the late man-of-many-arts during the years (1935–46) of his gainful employment as music critic on the New York scene. The other is the <i>Reflections of an American Composer</i> by Arthur Berger, at 91 still very much with us and with it. This also has a few scraps from his time as music critic, but not nearly enough; the greater substance deals with Berger&#8217;s memories of the pitched battle among music&#8217;s ardent practitioners, a listening public whose collective ears always seem to lie immediately out of reach, and the stern judges whose powers of determination may impede the back-and-forth flow of acceptance and rejection. As with Bowles, Berger&#8217;s field of vision begins somewhere in the 1930s, but continues right up to a few hours ago.</p>
<p>
Both men were members of a confraternity that has pretty much gone out of existence: practicing, serious composers, employed by one newspaper, the <i>New York Herald Tribune</i>, where their chores often entailed writing about the music of their colleagues and competitors. The man who ran the <i>Trib</i>&#8216;s music department, Virgil Thomson, saw nothing wrong with this interesting conflict; it was balanced by the exceptional acuity and experience of its members. (Lou Harrison, John Cage and Theodore Chanler were other sporadic members of this ambidextrous assemblage.) Between the lines of both these books is a panorama of an active musical life &#8211; in New York most of all, but also on other East Coast outposts &#8211; with composers mostly young, chased back from their European strongholds by the growing Nazi specter, and striving with all their might to establish an American musical identity. (Interesting comparison: Coincident with this rising tide of Americanism on the New York scene was the sudden emergence of Los Angeles as a kind of Europe-in-exile, with Stravinsky and Schoenberg, Toch and Castelnuovo-Tedesco, exploding into awareness through the “Evenings on the Roof” concerts and similar activities.)</p>
<p>
Berger&#8217;s <i>Reflections</i> becomes a series of battlefield reports; he delights in dualities. In music criticism there was Thomson, whose entry onto the <i>Trib</i> consisted of taking a bloody bite out of the rival <i>Times</i>&#8216; sacred cows, the symphonies of Jan Sibelius. Paul Rosenfeld, the unpredictable gadfly in all the arts, faces off in a Berger essay against B.H. Haggin of the legendary narrow, woefully predictable tastes; the two most ardent proponents of new-music adventure, conductors Serge Koussevitzky and Dimitri Mitropoulos, cross swords even as they seem to join the battle on the same side.</p>
<p>
There is a brief teaser of Berger&#8217;s critical prowess; I hope there&#8217;ll be more. From a few brief scraps we learn nothing we couldn&#8217;t learn again today: that the Shostakovich Sixth consists mostly of emptiness; that there is genuine power in the music of Leon Kirchner, promise in the then-young Ned Rorem&#8217;s music, and less in the music of George Rochberg. In the Bowles collection (edited, with obvious enthusiasm if a few proofreading slips, by the <i>O.C. Register</i>&#8216;s Tim Mangan), the Shostakovich Sixth fares even less well &#8211; “the esthetic of the billboard rather than of the canvas.” That guy could write.</p>
<p>
The Bowles collection begins with freelance pieces for <i>Modern Music</i>, that noble light in the darkness that flickered out in 1946. You have to be struck immediately by the range of his interests: black jazz in its raw vitality, a prescient note on Silvestre Revueltas, and, most interesting of all, a gathering of insightful film-music essays whose profundity no writer of my acquaintance seems to match these days. Film music, to Bowles, was an art to be taken seriously, spread-eagled across the same standards that might apply to opera or cantata before a live audience; did it occur to any other critic of Bowles&#8217; or our time to deal so seriously with the “gilt and plush horror” of Disney&#8217;s <i>Pinocchio</i>, or to note that “Franz Waxman&#8217;s score for <i>Rebecca</i> is not even as good as Hitchcock&#8217;s direction”?</p>
<p>
Bowles&#8217; <i>Trib</i> stuff is outstandingly bright and knowing. Maybe something can be said against composers as critics, but surely nothing can be wrong with an honest-to-God <i>writer</i> invading the sacred precincts of our art. His musical writing chronicles the discoveries and determinations of a graceful and wise mind. To my troubled outlook, struggling with the agonies a week after spinal surgery when every turn of phrase is extruded from the word processor with the twist of a blunt-edge scalpel, the discovery of this kind of writing is like therapy at its coolest, most soothing.</p>
<p>
 </p>
<p>
Of Walter Piston, Arthur Berger wrote that “he was someone who seemed to be completely self-possessed . . . he always spoke good sense.” Piston was the American educational eminence of his day, comparable in stature to Nadia Boulanger in Paris; everybody had to walk through his shadow at one time or another. Today his music is in the shadows, even though his large-scale works &#8211; the eight symphonies above all &#8211; also speak good sense. It&#8217;s hard to remember back to my days at Harvard, when this terse, organized music was the newest, and the most fearsome, stuff in the local concert halls.</p>
<p>
The Second Symphony stirs special memories. At Harvard I was an about-to-become-lapsed premed, my love of the place sustained only by music classes with the exhilarating G. Wallace Woodworth. Woody got the nod to guest-conduct the Boston Symphony in the 1943 premiere of the Piston Second, and we in the class got to go to his dress rehearsal. It was the first piece of music by a living, visible composer I ever knew. It was then what it is now, a clear, neatly cohesive work that you could take into a classical-sonata-form class and locate all the points &#8211; tidy and expressive, with a drop-dead-beautiful slow movement. Naxos, that splendidly adventurous company, has just reissued the Gerard Schwarz recording (formerly, costlier, on Delos). It neatly fills out the aura around these fine new books.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Caviar&#160;Empty</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2003/09/caviar-empty/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2003/09/caviar-empty/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 25 Sep 2003 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=459</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Everything that is splendid about the Los Angeles Opera&#8217;s Damnation of Faust &#8211; about which I rhapsodized at our last get-together &#8211; is imponderably awful in Deborah Drattell&#8217;s Nicholas and Alexandra, the season&#8217;s second offering and the company&#8217;s first full-scale commission, given here its world premiere. For three excruciating hours, the sad fate of Russia&#8217;s [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>
Everything that is splendid about the Los Angeles Opera&#8217;s <i>Damnation of Faust</i> &#8211; about which I rhapsodized at our last get-together &#8211; is imponderably awful in Deborah Drattell&#8217;s <i>Nicholas and Alexandra</i>, the season&#8217;s second offering and the company&#8217;s first full-scale commission, given here its world premiere. For three excruciating hours, the sad fate of Russia&#8217;s dysfunctional Romanovs and their demons oozes across the Pavilion stage; at the end, Deborah Drattell&#8217;s woefully inept score has revealed nothing more about the characters &#8211; 39 separate singing roles! &#8211; than we gleaned from the printed program. Preparing for this event, I ran the 1971 Franklin Schaffner film of the Robert K. Massie book of the same title, and came away convinced that nobody could produce a drearier hunk of music than its Richard Rodney Bennett score. Boy, was I mistaken!</p>
<p>
For the Brooklyn-born Drattell, 47 and the happy mother of four, a history of less-than-rapturous reviews of her previous work &#8211; the opera <i>Lilith</i>, which the New York City Opera produced in November 2001, and one of the three one-acters that made up the City Opera&#8217;s <i>Central Park</i> trilogy a couple of years before &#8211; doesn&#8217;t seem to have dampened her creative ardor. She talks a good interview, all about her long-held dreams of writing this opera, and especially of writing it for Plácido Domingo. Her librettist is Nicholas von Hoffman, whose previous credentials include a biography of Roy Cohn and who, she wants us to know, comes from a Russian background. (So do I, if anyone cares.)</p>
<p>
Dreams and bloodlines do not always spell out great operas, and the inadequacies of <i>Nicholas and Alexandra</i> are numerous and painful. Nothing in Drattell&#8217;s dense, tuneless, pseudo-high-Russian-romantic smog of a score serves to identify her characters: Russia&#8217;s bumbling, kindhearted, ineffective last ruler; his loving but put-upon empress; the conniving self-proclaimed monk who holds the royal family in his thrall; the plotters and subplotters who bring about their nation&#8217;s downfall. Who are these people? Do they love one another, or pity, or loathe? We expect music in an opera to answer these questions &#8211; at least from a composer whose instincts are basically the urge to please a crowd with music that the old folks at home might groove to. When two leading characters join voices in one of their rare happy moments, we expect something like a love duet &#8211; not <i>La Traviata</i>, perhaps, but at least music that suggests that these people are listening to each other. But no.</p>
<p>
Rodney Gilfry is the Nicholas, Nancy Gustafson the Alexandra; both are commendable singers capable of shaping attractive, memorable melodic lines; Drattell&#8217;s score offers them none. As the hemophilia-racked Tsarevich Alexis, the opera&#8217;s one sympathetic character, young Jonathan Price gets to wail “Mama!” a few times, little more. Plácido Domingo is the Rasputin; Drattell, no fool she, has handed him the longest role, the loudest and the juiciest &#8211; enough to throw the dramatic structure seriously off balance. (Why, in fact, didn&#8217;t she just call the thing <i>Rasputin</i>, or <i>Plácido</i>?)</p>
<p>
It could be, of course, that all the PR gobbledygook around Domingo&#8217;s taking on his first-ever villainous role bears a semblance of truth; maybe he heard something in the music beyond the comprehension of us mere mortals. Even so, his Rasputin is a mistake, a masterpiece of miscasting, a misplanned stunt, a failure within a failure. The rich plangency of Domingo&#8217;s Siegmund shines through and defeats that overtone of evil that Drattell has written into the part. On opening night, despite an announced tracheal inflammation, Domingo sang out loud and clear, a hero but not a demon. Tradition regards Rasputin as a basso, preferably profundo. There might be a tenor sound that could work for that character &#8211; the weasely sound of, say, a Shuisky in <i>Boris Godunov</i>. That such a sound is beyond Domingo&#8217;s reach can be taken as a compliment.</p>
<p>
Anne Bogart, a practiced Drattell hand, directs; with her comes SITI, a company of 10 dancer/athletes whose job is to mix in on the already crowded stage and push around the sliding panels of Robert Israel&#8217;s monochrome stage designs. (Interesting coincidence: The Achim Freyer Ensemble, also comprising 10 dancer/athletes, served a similar purpose in the <i>Faust</i>.) On the podium is Russian supercellist/conductor Mstislav Rostropovich, whose qualifications include ownership of a cache of Rasputin documents acquired at a Russian auction. That, however, doesn&#8217;t get him through the turgidities of the score, and its obsession with small rhythmic figures that eventually turn into nagging. Upstage, behind a scrim, the chorus groan out some Slavic harmonies; toward the end, one of their melodic lines gestures passionately in the direction of a Bach chorale but doesn&#8217;t quite make it.</p>
<p>
Nothing, in fact, does.</p>
<p>
 </p>
<p>
This is the time of year when our local seasonlessness makes for interesting segues: one night at the Hollywood Bowl, then an opera, then more Bowl. On the final Philharmonic Tuesday came one of the summer&#8217;s best programs: Michele Zukovsky&#8217;s sublime performance of Mozart&#8217;s Clarinet Concerto and the Mahler First. Yasuo Shinozaki conducted the bejesus out of the Mahler: a huge performance, raucous and unruly in the very best ways, with the eight horns at the end standing up and commanding the heavens to open.</p>
<p>
On Thursday, Esa-Pekka Salonen did his usual number on the Beethoven Ninth: neat and crisp, the Scherzo repeats properly respected, the slow movement a bit on the juiceless side. Preceding the Ninth, and rendering that work pale by comparison, came a curious revenant from bygone musical enthusiasms, Ariel Ramírez&#8217;s <i>Misa Criolla</i>. An alluring pastiche, it blends the text of the Latin Mass &#8211; parts of it, anyhow &#8211; into a background of maracas, guitars and anything noisy available. There were lots of these pieces around at one time; I remember clerking at the Art Music Co. in Berkeley, with the listening booths fairly vibrating to their beat. Perhaps the Vatican&#8217;s 1963 legitimizing of vernacular liturgy had something to do with it. Hearing it live at the Bowl, in a performance by Huayucaltia and Opus 7, was like opening an old and forgotten closet. There isn&#8217;t much music in the work; the tunes are right out of an old provincial hymnbook. But then the percussion takes over, you can&#8217;t resist, and you don&#8217;t really want to.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>The Devil His&#160;Due</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2003/09/the-devil-his-due/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2003/09/the-devil-his-due/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 18 Sep 2003 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=458</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Photo by robert millard Everything you could hope to encounter in an evening of truly enlightened musical drama &#8211; superb music splendidly comprehended, a dramatic concept original yet honorable, a stage design to stimulate the eye &#8211; is there for your delectation in the Los Angeles Opera&#8217;s La Damnation de Faust, which began the company&#8217;s [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Photo by robert millard
<p>
<b>Everything you could hope</b> to encounter in an evening of truly enlightened musical drama &#8211; superb music splendidly comprehended, a dramatic concept original yet honorable, a stage design to stimulate the eye &#8211; is there for your delectation in the Los Angeles Opera&#8217;s <i>La Damnation de Faust</i>, which began the company&#8217;s 18th season last week and lingers through September 28. Any persistent doubts concerning this offering&#8217;s value &#8211; based, perhaps, on the awareness that <i>Faust</i>, an exemplar of Hector Berlioz&#8217;s creative imagination at its most refulgent, was first planned as a concert piece and not an opera at all &#8211; should be dispelled forthwith. Whatever its category, this is marvelous musical theater, by Berlioz and by the enlightened spirits who have brought his work to life on our local stage.</p>
<p>
From the theatrical imagination of Achim Freyer, who conceived, designed and directed, I expected no less. Although I found evidence of misadventure in his last work here &#8211; a visual production, arguably redundant, of Bach&#8217;s B-minor Mass &#8211; there is a level of intelligence in his stage work that sets him apart from, and above, most of his European colleagues. (The one available DVD of his work is his version of Philip Glass&#8217; <i>Satyagraha</i>, and it&#8217;s a knockout.) You have only to compare the inventive level in this new <i>Faust</i>, its high-flying fantasy still maintaining an honest awareness of the incendiary collaboration of Goethe and Berlioz, with the willful Eurotrash of Thomas Langhoff&#8217;s production of the same work visited upon a hapless San Francisco Opera audience last June. On that sorry evening, the Sylphides sported whips and thongs, Méphistophélès a baseball cap; some of the most beautiful music &#8211; the Will-o&#8217;-the-Wisps&#8217; minuet, for example &#8211; was omitted entirely.</p>
<p>
Achim Freyer&#8217;s Wisps dance deliciously on a blacked-out stage, their costumes edged in Christmas-tree lights; his Sylphides are puffs of airborne whiteness that exactly echo the flecks of woodwind tone in Berlioz&#8217;s magical orchestration. Freyer&#8217;s demons chant their demonic nonsense syllables through gigantic trumpets overhead; his angelic choir is a delightful kiddie chorus, their heads barely protruding up from hellish depths. His Méphisto wears a large number “6,” the familiar icon of <i>diablerie</i>. Some among us seemed puzzled by the presence onstage of a cavorting black poodle. Read your Goethe, folks; this is the very “Pudel” (but, of course, French this time) that follows Faust to his home and there morphs into his satanic companion.</p>
<p>
The cross-references are wondrously rich. If the stage biz echoes the sound of the Berlioz orchestra, the looks of the production also evoke the aura of Dr. Faust&#8217;s own universe: a Brueghel world (or Bosch, perhaps?) of grotesque, larger-than-life masks and raucous folk dancing; of oversize toy soldiers acting out their Hungarian marches, and boozy students pouring out of some medieval Animal House. In a program note, Freyer takes some pains to link the geometry of his stage pictures to the spirit of the play: the vertical lines that connect heaven and earth, the horizontals to suggest movement and time. More to the point, it seems to me, are the connections Freyer&#8217;s stage pictures suggest to the expanse of Berlioz&#8217;s own musical genius, and the interaction of that ardent spirit with the dark flames of Goethe&#8217;s all-knowing text. We live in an age when wiseass operatic producers delight in transplanting familiar repertory pieces into uncharted territory &#8211; ah, there, Peter Sellars, with your <i>Figaro</i> in the Trump Tower! This <i>Faust</i> of Achim Freyer &#8211; the final creation of his lifetime, according to his statement made here last week &#8211; is something quite different: an intensely thought-out examination and expansion of the work&#8217;s fiery genius as rekindled from within.</p>
<p>
 </p>
<p>
<b>Kent Nagano&#8217;s orchestra frames</b> these wonders with colors richly applied. (It may be true that a Berlioz sound spectrum loses some of its flicker when performed in an orchestra pit rather than on a stage; this is a redesign matter that the Los Angeles Opera could profitably address in its new role as sole possessor of the premises.) The pacing is sure, and the complexities in the ensemble writing &#8211; even in the famous fugue, which Berlioz himself described as “<i>la bestialité dans toute sa candeur</i>” &#8211; are kept in nice balance. Some of Berlioz&#8217;s stratospheric writing constitutes cruelty to innocent tenors, but Paul Groves manages most of the challenges with commendable &#8211; if not supreme &#8211; marksmanship. The Méphistophélès is, of course, Samuel Ramey; his certificate of ownership of that role (in its many operatic manifestations) is beginning to fray, but the style is still there. On opening night, however, Denyce Graves hit rather a depressing number of misdirected notes for a singer this early in her career. Perhaps the need to cope with hair braids the width of the Pavilion stage disconcerted her somewhat. I know they would me.</p>
<p>
Minor objections aside, this wonderfully brainy production needs to stand as a landmark, a glowing assertion of the power and the glory of contemporary operatic thinking. The visual magic in Freyer&#8217;s conception is immediately attractive; this is a night of operatic enchantment that can beguile on any level. But there is more here: an investment of creative energy in a work not at all familiar, itself drenched in arrogance and bravado. In his two productions here, both this marvelous <i>Faust</i> and the Bach of two seasons ago (which was at least an interesting failure), Freyer and his cohorts have offered Los Angeles a demonstration of opera-making strong, distinctive and true.</p>
<p>
Landmarks do, however, crumble at times; I write these paeans the morning after the dress rehearsal of the L.A. Opera&#8217;s “other” season&#8217;s opener, Deborah Drattell&#8217;s <i>Nicholas and Alexandra</i>. That experience sent me to my thesaurus to locate new synonyms for “inept.” Stay tuned.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Built-in&#160;Obsolescence</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2003/09/built-in-obsolescence/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2003/09/built-in-obsolescence/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 11 Sep 2003 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=457</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Christopher O&#8217;Riley toiled honorably at the Hollywood Bowl last week, and so did the Philharmonic under its excellent assistant conductor Yasuo Shinozaki, but the music slumbered on. Edvard Grieg&#8217;s Piano Concerto has, I&#8217;m afraid, reached the end of its useful days. Like its spavined companions in the ranks of warhorses ready for the glue factory [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>
Christopher O&#8217;Riley toiled honorably at the Hollywood Bowl last week, and so did the Philharmonic under its excellent assistant conductor Yasuo Shinozaki, but the music slumbered on. Edvard Grieg&#8217;s Piano Concerto has, I&#8217;m afraid, reached the end of its useful days. Like its spavined companions in the ranks of warhorses ready for the glue factory &#8211; names on request, starting perhaps with the César Franck symphony and lurching downward from there &#8211; its bones have been picked dry. I still give it a little shelf space, in distinguished past readings by the likes of Dinu Lipatti and Walter Gieseking, but I&#8217;m convinced that Mr. Grieg and I will remain on friendlier terms if we now acknowledge each other&#8217;s existence in silence.</p>
<p>
O&#8217;Riley is a skillful, caring pianist. I think that what he was trying the other night, with his tempos on the slow side and his relatively limited dynamics, was to reinvent the piece, to wrap it in soft, romantic accents as if to reiterate its obvious kinship with the one past masterpiece it most closely resembles. That didn&#8217;t work; all his approach seemed to accomplish was to point out the great debt owed by Grieg&#8217;s inferior piece to the infinitely superior concerto of Robert Schumann composed 23 years earlier. Strange, isn&#8217;t it, how close these two concertos are, how much design and actual melodic substance the later work actually cribs from the earlier work &#8211; and how, in terms of survival strength, the glorious Schumann concerto towers over the pallid rip-off by the lesser spirit from the North.</p>
<p>
It was, in fact, a week of warhorses at the Bowl, with the Grieg at the low point, and a couple of Slavic symphonies whose staying power remains intact. The Philharmonic&#8217;s two backup men were in charge, the splendid Shinozaki and the ebullient Miguel Harth-Bedoya. Both young conductors are well on their way toward important careers: Shinozaki as a much-admired guest with several orchestras in Finland, Harth-Bedoya as head of the Fort Worth Symphony. Our own orchestra would do well to hold on to as much of their services as it can.</p>
<p>
Borodin&#8217;s Second Symphony concluded Shinozaki&#8217;s program in a bright, vivid performance; like most of the works by this insecure and alcohol-ravaged member of the Russian “Five” (and by his compatriot Mussorgsky), the music needed several other hands to bring it to completion. But the resultant hybrid is strong stuff: the brutal menace of the first movement, the airy edginess of the scherzo (written in the curious time signature of 1/1) and, above all, the ecstasies of the haunting slow movement. Maybe it hasn&#8217;t yet attained “warhorse” status, in fact; I kept discovering previously unnoticed musical turns in Shinozaki&#8217;s performance. Dvorák&#8217;s “New World” Symphony, which began Harth-Bedoya&#8217;s program, may be better music by some hypothetical measurement; in a sensible, dry-eyed performance such as Harth-Bedoya delivered, its emotional impact can still be overpowering. An excess of fame garnered over its 110-year lifetime has relegated it to the “Oh no, not that again!” category, and its beautiful orchestral points &#8211; the interplay of winds and strings that makes Dvorák&#8217;s orchestral works better company than their close relatives from the pen of Brahms &#8211; didn&#8217;t all come across through the Bowl&#8217;s amplification. Still, Harth-Bedoya&#8217;s reading got me to sit up straight and pay proper attention.</p>
<p>
Prokofiev&#8217;s lightweight score for the (apparently, alas, lost) film <i>Lieutenant Kije</i> came and went congenially midway in Shinozaki&#8217;s program, its orchestral fine points victimized by poor mike placement. Samuel Barber&#8217;s enchanting <i>Knoxville: Summer of 1915</i>, which should have cast a further glow on the Harth-Bedoya program, was rendered virtually textless by Elissa Johnston&#8217;s poor diction. A dear, departed old friend did, however, turn up in the Barber work, in the program notes by Nicolas Slonimsky, which dealt wisely and wittily with what the music was about and how it was meant to sound. They don&#8217;t write &#8216;em like that anymore &#8211; not often enough, at any rate.</p>
<p>
 </p>
<p>
A new ECM release on the shelves next Tuesday offers two works by USC&#8217;s Stephen Hartke that create a fascinating linkup between the spirits of adventure bygone and up-to-date. <i>Tituli</i>, the first and longer of the works (42 minutes), draws upon fragments of inscriptions carved or scratched onto ancient Roman artifacts, and expands seven of these brief phrases into complex musical structures for small vocal ensemble, a solo violin and percussion. The music itself is a haunting mix of the mannerisms of ancient chant &#8211; harmonies in the parallel movement known as organum<i> </i>mingled with a rhapsodic melodic line for the violinist and a background of solemn thudding from small drums and the lower register of a marimba. If you share my passion for a previous ECM release called <i>Mnemosyne</i>, in which Jan Garbarek&#8217;s ecstatic saxophones twined around voices intoning chantlike music old and new, you should recognize a kindred spirit in this new work of Hartke&#8217;s &#8211; which, by the way, was one of the three finalists for the 2001 Pulitzer Prize.</p>
<p>
Once again, as in <i>Mnemosyne</i>, the singers are the members of the Hilliard Ensemble (with a couple of personnel changes and their number upped from four to five). Michelle Makarski is the violinist; Lynn Vartan and Javier Diaz are the percussionists. The performance originated at USC in January 2001, conducted by Donald Crockett. The companion work is Hartke&#8217;s 18-minute <i>Cathedral in the Thrashing Rain</i> for voices alone, a setting of words and moods by the Japanese poet and sculptor Kotaro Takamura. Here the inspiration is a visual image, the ecstasy of the writer&#8217;s first view of the Cathedral of Notre Dame in Paris. Again, the harmonies draw upon influences old and new: passages of organum that translate the look of Notre Dame&#8217;s grandiose interior into deep, dark sound, and an exhilarating sound-picture of the rainstorm itself.</p>
<p>
Next week the New York Philharmonic performs Hartke&#8217;s Third Symphony, a commissioned work that again employs the Hilliard Ensemble, with an Anglo-Saxon text prophetic of the 9/11 catastrophe. In 2006 the enterprising Glimmerglass Opera in upstate New York will stage his new commissioned opera, based on the Maupassant short story <i>Boule de Suif</i>. A satirical cantata, <i>Sons of Noah</i>, in which the sons fight over dividing up the property even before the ark has landed, was released on the New World label earlier this year; a clarinet concerto written for Richard Stoltzman is listed for release on Naxos this month. Hartke, at the moment, rides high.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>The Mozart&#160;Cure</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2003/09/the-mozart-cure/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2003/09/the-mozart-cure/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 04 Sep 2003 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=456</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Okay, so the science guys have backed down, and Mozart&#8217;s music no longer bears the seal of approval as a remedy for dumbness. Believe this if you will &#8211; you and the Times&#8216; Mark Swed, who broke the sad tidings in his review of last week&#8217;s all-Mozart program at the Hollywood Bowl. I sat through [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>
Okay, so the science guys have backed down, and Mozart&#8217;s music no longer bears the seal of approval as a remedy for dumbness. Believe this if you will &#8211; you and the <i>Times</i>&#8216; Mark Swed, who broke the sad tidings in his review of last week&#8217;s all-Mozart program at the Hollywood Bowl. I sat through this excellent program (on its Thursday-night repeat) rapturously rediscovering the intelligence that shaped every note in these three sublime works from over 13 years in their composer&#8217;s foreshortened existence. There was much cause for this rapture: the unforced eloquence in concertmaster Martin Chalifour&#8217;s delivery of the earliest of these works, the G-major Violin Concerto of 1775, and the way guest conductor Bernard Labadie managed and balanced the intricacies in one of the earlier symphonies (No. 34, from 1780) and, above all, in the miraculous “Jupiter” Symphony (No. 41, from 1788). Maybe it&#8217;s true that Mozart&#8217;s music won&#8217;t raise the IQ of those fortunate enough to fall under its spell, but it&#8217;s the best cure I know for self-importance. I couldn&#8217;t write any of this music, and neither could you.</p>
<p>
It&#8217;s easy to fall into the mental set that relegates Mozart&#8217;s teenage output &#8211; the violin concertos, the early chamber music, the operas built around the conventions of rococo artifice &#8211; onto a lesser level of quality. Take this G-major concerto, however, and measure it against the voluminous output of the prolific craftsmen of the time &#8211; Boccherini for one, and even the formidable Salieri; the human voice through all three movements of this marvelous, original, perfectly formed music sings in a different language, and tells us a lot more than merely the shape of the C-major scale. Mozart builds his first movement around an ongoing dialogue between the solo violin and the orchestra&#8217;s first oboe &#8211; with no words, but so much on their minds! He starts off his slow movement with a tune that in its first bars seems to hang suspended, unsupported; only later the orchestra comes in under with its supporting harmonies. (This is a Mozart trick often used; both symphonies in last week&#8217;s program also begin their slow movements in the same way.) He interrupts the progress of his last movement with a whole &#8216;nother episode that breezes in and then out again; we react to it as in a double take. How many violin concertos had <i>you</i> composed at 19?</p>
<p>
Labadie, like Chalifour, is of French-Canadian origin. He was last here in April 2001, in a program of early Haydn symphonies with the Los Angeles Chamber Orchestra. He is written about as an early-music specialist, but visions of straitjacketed tempos and rigidity of phrasing that adhere to others under that epithet seem not to apply in his case. He apparently has his own ideas about when to observe Mozart&#8217;s specified repeats (the “Jupiter” Symphony) and when not to (the 34th); his phrasing &#8211; as in the opening of the “Jupiter” &#8211; tended toward the loose, the loving and the communicative. All evening, I had the distinct impression that Mozart and I were in direct communication and I was learning a lot.</p>
<p>
 </p>
<p>
Across Cahuenga Pass earlier last week there was chamber music at the John Anson Ford Amphitheater, three substantial works performed by the young and proficient Calder Quartet. I love the Ford, and always have, even though chamber music has been only a small part of this summer&#8217;s offerings. The current setup, however, has not been designed to please admirers of intimate and subtle music making. Instead of the clear-plastic backdrop, which in previous years had reflected the music out into the audience without blocking the view of the forest behind, the performances the other night were amplified, excruciatingly so, and the lovely closeness of the place (which seats a mere 1,200, after all, as opposed to the Bowl&#8217;s 18,000) was destroyed. Before the program there was a rambling, doddering welcoming speech by old-time local concert promoter Gene Golden, which elicited exasperated glances from people around me. The printed program was a mélange of misinformation. Haydn&#8217;s “Rider” Quartet is in G minor, not D.</p>
<p>
All this aside, along with a snapped string on Eric Byers&#8217; cello &#8211; a legitimate setback &#8211;  the Calder performed splendidly. The group was founded at USC in 1998 and has traveled widely, including two summers at the Aspen Festival and several dates in Europe. This coming season, the quartet will be in residence at the Colburn School. Benjamin Jacobson, Andrew Bulbrook and Jonathan Moerschel are the other members, all still in their 20s. The Haydn &#8211; an amazing work, with a slow movement that knocks on Romanticism&#8217;s door &#8211; was capitally played; Beethoven&#8217;s Third “Razumovsky” Quartet, with its dizzying <i>perpetuum mobile</i> finale, went almost as well. At the end they were joined by four more USC string players in the Mendelssohn Octet &#8211; endearing, youthful but unchallenging music that is actually beginning to wear rather thin.</p>
<p>
Los Angeles needs a resident quartet; on the strength of this one hearing, the Calders are worthy of consideration. When I came here in 1980 the Sequoia Quartet was making the best noise in town. More recently we had the Angeles, which broke apart when first violinist Kathleen Lenski moved north; its compact-disc set of the complete Haydn is testimonial to its value. In Zipper Hall the city finally has a small-sounds venue that&#8217;s acoustically admirable and comfortable; the problem will be to fill it with sounds worthy of its sight. Yesterday&#8217;s mail brought news of a new project, Chamber Music Los Angeles, which is to reach young audiences with concerts, master classes, open rehearsals and hospital visits; the kickoff concert is at Zipper on September 28, with the Angeles resurrected this one time and a program that includes, need I add, the Mendelssohn Octet. Somebody around town should be marshaling similar benevolent music making for us grown-ups.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>The Seasons&#160;Unseasoned</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2003/08/the-seasons-unseasoned/</link>
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		<pubDate>Thu, 28 Aug 2003 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=455</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[If you&#8217;re as old as I am, you can remember a time when Vivaldi&#8217;s The Four Seasons was one of music&#8217;s unknown quantities. My Gramophone Shop Encyclopedia from 1948 &#8211; the year the long-playing disc hit the market &#8211; doesn&#8217;t list a single authentic recording. By 1952 there were two &#8211; an honorable version with [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>
If you&#8217;re as old as I am, you can remember a time when Vivaldi&#8217;s <i>The Four Seasons</i> was one of music&#8217;s unknown quantities. My Gramophone Shop Encyclopedia from 1948 &#8211; the year the long-playing disc hit the market &#8211; doesn&#8217;t list a single authentic recording. By 1952 there were two &#8211; an honorable version with the violinist Louis Kaufman as soloist and a dishonorable one juiced up in high romantic fashion by Bernardino Molinari. My latest Schwann lists 80, including one on a disc titled <i>Build Your Baby&#8217;s Brain </i>and another whose soloists include “The Winter Trombone.” These days you can fill a hall by scheduling <i>The Four Seasons</i>; last week&#8217;s two performances at the Hollywood Bowl drew what looked to me like the biggest crowds of any “classical” night this season. Perhaps the additional presence on the program of Mark O&#8217;Connor&#8217;s <i>The American Seasons</i> helped draw the crowds, but I&#8217;d like to credit Los Angeles audiences with better taste than that.</p>
<p>
JoAnn Falletta conducted, remembered more or less fondly from her days as head of the Long Beach Symphony, currently leading the Buffalo Philharmonic and the Virginia Symphony Orchestra; last New Year&#8217;s Day she led the same Vivaldi/O&#8217;Connor double bill on PBS. She gets around, but she didn&#8217;t get very far around Vivaldi&#8217;s picturesque fantasies on this occasion. The four violin soloists, all Los Angeles Philharmonic members &#8211; Michele Bovyer, Akiko Tarumoto, Stacy Wetzel and Jonathan Wei &#8211; had played the work at the Music Center under Miguel Harth-Bedoya last November, and had been encouraged by the conductor to approach the performance with four different takes on proper baroque style. I remember with particular pleasure how Wei turned the final section into a lively winter carnival. Apparently Falletta had no such intent; everything about her performance was clean, correct and little more. You could march to it, perhaps, but never dance.</p>
<p>
Credit Mark O&#8217;Connor with the business sense to compose a complementary work to the Vivaldi: the same half-a-program length and &#8211; except for guitar replacing harpsichord &#8211; the same scoring. Of musical sense in his work I detected somewhat less. O&#8217;Connor has made a name in a kind of thinking person&#8217;s crossover; Yo-Yo Ma and Richard Stoltzman are among his companions, and they draw upon sources rooted in world lore: a worldwide indigenous language that extends from the Silk Road to Route 66. O&#8217;Connor composes a synthesized Americana; it sounds like old-timey fiddle tunes prettied up with sophisticated harmonies and with some attempt to draw them out into a serious structure. It is in that last regard that he fails &#8211; in this new <i>American Seasons</i> and in other works on disc, the “Fiddle Concerto” and a few chamber works. As a violinist he manages another synthesis; his stylistic swings from Corelli to country were smooth, if you like that kind of thing; to me they were sickening.</p>
<p>
Any piece of music that earns my respect &#8211; a large number, I hasten to assure you &#8211; begins with a secret message that tells me what I need to know about shape, length and proportion. Each of the four concertos in Vivaldi&#8217;s <i>Seasons</i> accomplishes this most eloquently, heralding not an hour&#8217;s length of the same thing, but four 15-minute varied episodes on a shapely landscape. The clouds out of which Beethoven&#8217;s Ninth Symphony takes shape tell us that the ensuing structure will be vast; the same revelatory power holds for any great work you can name. The failure in O&#8217;Connor&#8217;s music the other night was exactly that, a lack of a thread that made me want to anticipate the next thing, the inability of any moment to explain why it&#8217;s there and how it got there. Music that cannot explain itself makes me profoundly uncomfortable, and &#8211; on Tuesday of last week &#8211; it got me homeward bound ahead of time.</p>
<p>
 </p>
<p>
Dealing with long pieces of music that have the power to explain themselves leads me logically to Franz Schubert and his piano sonatas &#8211; of which pickings were also slim back in the 78-rpm prehistory; in my latest Schwann they fill four columns of very small print. That hasn&#8217;t deterred EMI from launching a new series, nor should it. The pianist is the exceptional young Norwegian Leif Ove Andsnes, and his two discs so far have further value in that tenor Ian Bostridge fills in the extra space with Schubert songs, with Andsnes at the piano.</p>
<p>
The latest disc offers the D-major Sonata of 1825, and Bostridge&#8217;s nine songs come from around that time; it was also the time, three years before his death, when Schubert began work on the “Great” C-major Symphony. The D-major is the first of the five final sonatas, all of them large-scale and personal works. Its origins are fascinating to speculate on. He is obviously under the spell of Beethoven&#8217;s vast “Hammerklavier” Sonata, with its huge handfuls of clangorous chords smashed up against one another, and its dizzy plunges into foreign keys. All this happens in the first movement, mostly at breathtaking speed. The slow movement is different, a fond journey through paradise, its melodies shy and fragmented at first, gradually merging, the junctures accomplished with single soft harmonies for which there are no proper words. The Scherzo starts off like a three-legged clog dance, but the middle section &#8211; when played with the serenity that Andsnes commands here &#8211; again elicits shivers. The finale is all sunshine and meadows, the evocation of a place and its colors that could teach Mark O&#8217;Connor a thing or two about simple gifts.</p>
<p>
Andsnes is a marvelous musician; if his slow movement doesn&#8217;t yet have the eloquence that, in Mitsuko Uchida&#8217;s performance, can melt steel, his own brand of steel in the other movements has a glint that I find irresistible. And then there is Bostridge, with his own poet&#8217;s imagination for word-color and word-emotion, and the clear, unforced beauty of his tone; you have to believe that this was the sound that rang in Schubert&#8217;s own soul as he put pen to these miraculous outpourings. Andsnes&#8217; collaboration is on a level for which mere “accompanist” will not do. At this writing my ears resound to their partnership on “Auf der Bruck,” with its crashing dissonances in the pianist&#8217;s left hand and the singer&#8217;s intoxicated exhilaration at his vision of the mountainous landscape that only music can properly describe.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Monuments, Indoor and&#160;Out</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2003/08/monuments-indoor-and-out/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2003/08/monuments-indoor-and-out/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 21 Aug 2003 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=454</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Twenty years, give or take, separate Beethoven&#8217;s “Emperor” Piano Concerto and Berlioz&#8217;s “Fantastic” Symphony; one week separated their presence at the Hollywood Bowl (in very classy performances, if you were wondering). The two works sing in different languages, but they occupy similar positions in the musical annals. Both stand at a crossroads. Beethoven&#8217;s vast design, [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>
Twenty years, give or take, separate Beethoven&#8217;s “Emperor” Piano Concerto and Berlioz&#8217;s “Fantastic” Symphony; one week separated their presence at the Hollywood Bowl (in very classy performances, if you were wondering). The two works sing in different languages, but they occupy similar positions in the musical annals. Both stand at a crossroads. Beethoven&#8217;s vast design, grandest and most complex of his ventures in the classical concerto, carried that genre to its logical point of no return. The young Berlioz, his head full of newly discovered Beethoven (and Shakespeare and <i>Faust</i>), created something in the name of “symphony” that escorted his awestruck audiences to the very gates of hell.</p>
<p>
Other composers after Beethoven&#8217;s time would try their hand at composing concertos, some even successfully. But the “Emperor” stands alone. Its sheer size commands awe. Its tunes are vast, and they move toward unpredictable new regions. Sometimes there is no tune at all, just a pounding, obsessive rhythm hollered forth by piano and orchestra in turn. Classical harmonic procedures fall by the wayside; after all the triumphant E-flat posturing that fills the first movement&#8217;s 20 or so minutes, Beethoven probably frightened his 1809 audience right out of their britches by bringing on the slow movement in a totally unrelated key: B major, five sharps after three flats! At the end of that soft-spoken, divinely beautiful slow interlude, he escorted his dumbfounded listeners back to E-flat with a sudden jolt &#8211; no preparation, no smooth transition, no easeful modulation, just BANG! (a soft bang, to be sure, but a shock nonetheless). There are other wonders in store. His finale is built around a skittery sort of tune; perhaps it turns up once too often. But right at the end, he pulls a part of that tune out of context and transforms it into a new obsession &#8211; DAH-da-dum, DAH-da-dum over and over &#8211; pushing it higher up the scale, wreathing it in harmonies more and more insistent. If you&#8217;re looking for a musical illustration of ecstasy at its purest, that bit of Beethovenian peroration will do just fine.</p>
<p>
The “Emperor” crowned two evenings at the Bowl in which Jeffrey Kahane, conducting from the piano, led the Los Angeles Chamber Orchestra in all five of the Beethoven Concertos, a sequence that spanned the 14 years of Beethoven&#8217;s conquest of the musical world. Kahane and his wonderful small orchestra have done the cycle before, indoors; on two nights at the Bowl, irradiated by a couple of the Almighty&#8217;s superior sunsets (and with only one intruding bit of aircraft), and with the smallish orchestra &#8211; four stands of first violins instead of the Philharmonic&#8217;s six, four cellos instead of eight &#8211; Beethoven&#8217;s remarkable wind scoring seemed the right match for those evenings&#8217; benevolent, balmy air. Notable, too, was Kahane&#8217;s own conception of his place in the scheme: not as a pounding virtuoso, but as a member of an idealized chamber ensemble. A mashed note now and then, a scale passage ever so slightly out of focus, these detracted not at all from the eloquent music-making.</p>
<p>
The “Fantastic” ended Esa-Pekka Salonen&#8217;s last of three programs “previewing” the Philharmonic&#8217;s brief visit to the Edinburgh Festival; other Berlioz &#8211; the “Royal Hunt and Storm” music from <i>Les Troyens</i> &#8211; began the evening; both works served as good company for Salonen&#8217;s own <i>LA Variations</i> midway. Salonen&#8217;s music wears well. There are new discoveries on each rehearing, and it would not be insolent to suggest that Salonen himself may also be learning more about the work as he goes along. The inner structure &#8211; the dovetailing and the contrasts that create the sense of “variations” &#8211; demands, and rewards, a certain amount of hard work. This is genuinely great music, however, a sense now widely corroborated by reports from beyond the mountains.</p>
<p>
Berlioz has become, for Salonen, congenial territory. Here is a conductor who knows the music&#8217;s extraordinary range of color &#8211; the way a single note from the strings can shine a light upon a wind passage, the way the harps, in the “Fantastic”&#8217;s waltz movement, become the dancers&#8217; jewels, the horrors outlined at terrifying distances by the snarling trombones at the gates of Hades. An outdoor “Fantastic” puts amplifying systems to a cruel test, and the sound of the performance under Salonen at times only suggested the depths of the orchestra&#8217;s command of the music. One awaits further proof; if Salonen and Berlioz are made for each other, surely the new sounds at Disney can only seal the relationship.</p>
<p>
Indoors, there was some quieter<br />
French music at the County Museum, in an evening of piano duets as a pendant to LACMA&#8217;s current Belle Epoque exhibition centering around the seductive, flowing lines of Modigliani&#8217;s paintings. Vicki Ray and Joanne Pearce Martin chose well; indeed, there is music from that time that catches most abundantly the insidious play of line and color in those magical roomfuls upstairs at LACMA. Ravel&#8217;s <i>Mother Goose </i>always sounds better in its original piano-duet scoring; enough of the color is inherent in those intricate lines to create a full range of sound in the ears of any imaginative listener. There was, perhaps, too little Satie that evening; I would have been happier with his <i>Pieces in the Shape of a Pear</i> than the too-brief <i>En Habit de Cheval</i> . . . maybe next time. Darius Milhaud&#8217;s <i>Le Boeuf sur le Toit</i> was the evening&#8217;s most substantial work, and the evening&#8217;s show-stealer at that. Its comedy remains delicious, its giggling delight at its own discovery of Latin jazz makes even its obsessive repetitiousness seem too short. Bits and pieces of Stravinsky&#8217;s doodling filled in around the edges, as did Poulenc&#8217;s 1918 Sonata, a lesser work, overshadowed by his later piece for two pianos.</p>
<p>
Indoors, too, in the airless reaches of Santa Barbara&#8217;s Lobero Theater, this summer&#8217;s Music Academy of the West Festival ended with Mozart&#8217;s <i>Marriage of Figaro </i>in as close-to-perfect a small-scale production as never mind. A young cast had been finely drilled, by a faculty with Marilyn Horne at the top, in everything worth knowing about Mozart&#8217;s sublime comedy: the exact cadences of Lorenzo da Ponte&#8217;s airborne Italian, the flow of emotion that merges heartbreak into joy, chicanery into resourcefulness. Even the conducting of Randall Behr, obviously in happier circumstances at Santa Barbara than in his days at the Los Angeles Opera, had snap and sparkle and a fine sense of ensemble. Some superior vocal and dramatic training shone forth in the work of every member of the cast, and I left wondering how many <i>Figaro </i>performances I have attended of which I could say as much.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>The Passionate&#160;Adventurers</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2003/08/the-passionate-adventurers/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2003/08/the-passionate-adventurers/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 14 Aug 2003 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=453</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Strange are the workings of the Fates. A couple of weeks ago, as I rummaged through the collected writings of Olin Downes in search of his adulatory bloviations on the matter of Jan Sibelius, the telephone rang with the news of Harold Schonberg&#8217;s death. Olin Downes had been chief music critic at The New York [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>
Strange are the workings of the Fates. A couple of weeks ago, as I rummaged through the collected writings of Olin Downes in search of his adulatory bloviations on the matter of Jan Sibelius, the telephone rang with the news of Harold Schonberg&#8217;s death. Olin Downes had been chief music critic at <i>The</i> <i>New York Times</i> from 1923 to 1955. Harold Schonberg had held that post from 1960 to 1980. It was Harold who had given me my first leg up in New York; I was at the <i>Times</i> for two years starting in 1961 until the <i>Herald-Tribune</i> made me an offer I couldn&#8217;t refuse. Everybody knew that the <i>Trib </i>was close to the end of its illustrious lifetime, but Harold rightly insisted that I take the job &#8211; “if only,” he said, “so that I can be writing against a pro for once.” We were on good terms then, but that didn&#8217;t last. Harold didn&#8217;t take to being disagreed with in print; he didn&#8217;t, for example, like being ragged about his famous disemboweling of Glenn Gould on the day of the Brahms Concerto. (“Maybe the reason he plays it so slow,” Harold had written in a strange and ill-conceived review couched in an affected East European accent, “is that his technique is not so good.”)</p>
<p>
Enthroned at the <i>Times</i>, Harold was<br />
the last of a breed, of critics at that august journal whose power over lives &#8211; of rising young musicians, of established virtuosos and of composers native-born or imported &#8211; was that of chief justice or, at times, of Lord High Executioner. The breed had achieved its first full glory in the time of Olin Downes, who never wrote alone but always as half of the team known as the “editorial we.” The Almighty God was the other half. Downes had first wielded his scepter at the <i>Boston Post</i> as long ago as 1906, when Boston and New York were pretty much cultural equals. He held his throne when Gustav Mahler and Arturo Toscanini shared the Metropolitan Opera podium, when Richard Strauss was the dangerous young upstart and Stravinsky&#8217;s <i>Rite of Spring</i> boded ill for the future of mankind.</p>
<p>
Downes found greater comfort in the lush upholstery of the Sibelius orchestra. He heard Debussy&#8217;s <i>La Mer</i> at its American premiere with misgivings (“to us this music lacks the vast, elemental tone”); he found more to praise in the clear-eyed neoclassicism of Ravel. No critic in this country &#8211; and perhaps only Eduard Hanslick in Europe &#8211; held so much power while so much of the substance of classical repertory was taking shape. At the end, music had pretty much left him behind. In 1948, in the collected writings, there is a pathetic exchange of correspondence between Downes and Arnold Schoenberg, brought on by the former&#8217;s abject detestation of Mahler&#8217;s Seventh Symphony: the one correspondent unable to cope with where music had gotten to in Mahler&#8217;s late works, the other unable to cope with the possibility that criticism might consist of the “nay” as well as the “yea.”</p>
<p>
 </p>
<p>
Harold dissolved the partnership of the “editorial we,” but he could never go as far as identifying himself in the first person singular. He imposed an absurd clumsiness whereby the “I” in an interview always had to be “a visitor,” and until late in his hegemony you couldn&#8217;t use the word <i>cello</i> without preceding it with an apostrophe. He had one other bugaboo, which may have cost the musical world some important critical thinking. The notion that a critic could also be a composer was anathema to him; never mind the precedents set by Berlioz, Schumann, Debussy and others. He couldn&#8217;t accept the possibility of a fair hearing by one practitioner of another&#8217;s work, and in at least one instance while I was at the <i>Times</i>, he obliged a writer of exceptional brilliance, and of the exceptional insight into contemporary music that Harold himself lacked, to choose between hats and, therefore, to leave the <i>Times</i>. (One of the first things I did at the <i>Trib</i> was to give that writer-composer, Eric Salzman, a job.)</p>
<p>
He did, of course, have support for his attitude. Back in the 1940s and &#8217;50s, the <i>Trib</i> had a staff of critics that was a veritable beehive of composers: Virgil Thomson as the queen bee, and Lou Harrison, Arthur Berger, Paul Bowles among the workers. (Interesting trivia note: Berger, Harold and I were all, at one time in our careers, part-timers for the long-gone, unremembered <i>New York</i> <i>Sun</i>.) Thomson did, indeed, gain somewhat naughtily from his position; performances of his own music became much more frequent after his accession, and performers who favored his music got to see their names in print more often than before. (Look at Betty Freeman&#8217;s photograph; this is the glare of a man you don&#8217;t mess with, or dare to ignore.) Was this blatant misuse of power on Thomson&#8217;s part? Maybe so, maybe no; more important, it seems to me, is the wisdom contained in Virgil Thomson&#8217;s collected writings, the insights of a man who, from his own vantage point well inside the art of music, was therefore singularly well equipped to penetrate everything around him. (Thomson&#8217;s writings, by the way, are still in print; those of Olin Downes are not.)</p>
<p>
Harold&#8217;s writings are also still in print, though not, alas, his one collection of <i>Times</i> reviews. But there are books on performers &#8211; pianists, conductors, Vladimir Horowitz &#8211; that underscore the greatest of his passions, the indefinable dynamic that makes one performer sublime and another a klutz. Another of his arguable phobias was the notion of critics and performers becoming friends; there was more to be gained, he claimed, by avoiding the appearance of conflict of interest than by learning one another&#8217;s innards. His personal Great Exception, by the way, was his vaunted pride in having played piano duets with Horowitz &#8211; whose name, by the way, no junior critic at the <i>Times</i> was ever allowed even to whisper in print. (Heifetz, too, fell under that rubric, but that&#8217;s another story.) Harold loved everything about the piano, everything about romantic, flamboyant musicianship (Jorge Bolet, sí; Alfred Brendel, no).  Baseball was another passion, and he could rattle on about today&#8217;s World Series game while typing out a letter-perfect 600-word review in no time flat.</p>
<p>
Anatole France described criticism as “the adventures of the mind among masterpieces.” Writing about Harold&#8217;s adventuring, I see I&#8217;ve used the word <i>passion</i> quite a lot. There is no other way.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Fast&#160;Forward</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2003/08/fast-forward/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2003/08/fast-forward/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 07 Aug 2003 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=452</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Tod Machover&#8217;s Hyperstring Trilogy, on the Oxingale label and by some distance the most exhilarating disc release of these otherwise drab summer months, sets off memories of the not-too-distant past and stirs up all kinds of hopes for a not-too-hopeless future. Riffling through my old writings, from when this publication and I were 10 years [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>
Tod Machover&#8217;s <i>Hyperstring Trilogy</i>, on the Oxingale label and by some distance the most exhilarating disc release of these otherwise drab summer months, sets off memories of the not-too-distant past and stirs up all kinds of hopes for a not-too-hopeless future. Riffling through my old writings, from when this publication and I were 10 years younger, I came across a lot of gee-whiz prose about a fantastic toy shop called the Electronic Café, where a pianist on a stage in Santa Monica got to play duets with somebody in Santa Fe or New York, and where dancers and musicians, strung up with several miles of cable and connected to wondrous, flickering machinery, could take two steps to the right and bring about a cataclysm of electronic sound. Tod Machover took part in these events, a curly-topped moppet recently back from a stint at Pierre Boulez&#8217;s IRCAM in Paris. In Santa Monica, if memory serves, Machover showed off a fabulous wired glove whose wearer only had to think about wriggling a pinkie and musical hell would break loose.</p>
<p>
I don&#8217;t remember whether any of the stuff at the now-defunct Electronic Café had much to do with good or bad music, and I don&#8217;t think it mattered; the gadgetry was fascinating enough. Machover &#8211; now installed as the head of the Media Lab at MIT &#8211; has continued to invent, especially in the area where certain time-honored performance techniques interact with computer technology to produce a range of sound light-years beyond what a normal cello, viola and violin could produce on their own. The new disc contains three extensive works by Machover for those instruments &#8211; a solo piece for “hypercello,” a work for “hyperviola” with computer-manipulated voice and a small ensemble of “live” instruments, a work for “hyperviolin” and chamber orchestra. These are works of considerable extent, and the most important thing about them is that they are also powerful, intense, beautiful music.</p>
<p>
Machover, himself a cellist, is therefore something of a romantic. His operas so far include a brilliant, disturbing setting of the Philip K. Dick sci-fi fantasy <i>Valis</i> for which the orchestra includes several hyperinstruments; a <i>Brain Opera</i> that creates itself inside the head of whoever is watching it at the time; and a rather lush setting of Leo Tolstoy&#8217;s <i>Resurrection</i>, full of retro orchestral effects and arias. <i>Begin Again Again . . .</i>, the 21-minute work for solo hypercello on the new disc (played by Matt Haimovitz), has something of this stylistic sweep; most of all it is a deeply expressive work, something that gets into your blood and tells you that it is possible to draw upon the most sophisticated technology the lab guys at MIT can concoct and still shape a moving, communicative musical art. Kim Kashkashian is the solo violist in <i>Song of Penance</i> (with Rose Moss&#8217; poetry intoned by Karol Bennett); Ani Kavafian, noble veteran of the new-music wars, is the violinist in the third work, <i>Forever and Ever</i>. Sure, having the playing of all three musicians drastically modified by this computer stuff makes it a little difficult to praise their performances in normal critical terminology; it&#8217;s like reviewing champion swimmers who rely on water wings. Whatever, the technical mastery on this disc is breathtaking, and so is the music.</p>
<p>
 </p>
<p>
While we&#8217;re on the subject of indefinability, consider Clogs, a kind of chamber group that has come to my attention, with one disc out on the Brassland label and another due out next week. Australia&#8217;s Padma Newsome is the group&#8217;s founder, chief composer and violinist/violist; guitarist/composer Bryce Dessner, percussionist Thomas Kozumplik and &#8211; if you&#8217;re ready &#8211; <i>bassoonist</i> Rachael Elliott complete the group. They have a date at the Temple Bar in Santa Monica later this month.</p>
<p>
Okay, so here is a quartet of excellently proficient, classical-trained musicians who create a repertory not quite like anything already out there. Jazz tints their musical style, yet events like 6&#8217;33” of quiet, free-flowing beauty in a rapturous duet for bassoon and viola over the insistent <i>plink</i> of steel drums &#8211; in the title cut of their disc called <i>Thom&#8217;s Night Out</i> &#8211; don&#8217;t readily fit into journalistic pigeonholes. (Must they?) The group is on the move; a recent commissioning grant from Chamber Music America puts them in cahoots with Ingram Marshall, another indefinable composer. Anyhow, I love this new disc of theirs, most of all for its still, nicely controlled sensibility &#8211; even if I don&#8217;t quite know where it goes on my shelves.</p>
<p>
<i>Extempore II</i>, from Harmonia Mundi, is even stranger, and no less lovable. It is a collaborative effort between England&#8217;s Orlando Consort, a vocal quartet (countertenor, tenors, baritone) with a following for their early-music performances, and Perfect Houseplants, a jazz quartet (prepared piano, winds, percussion, bass). “Oh, oh,” you can say with some justice; the graveyards are well-supplied with those who would cross over between musical styles and between millennia. And that is exactly what happens here. The plan is to concoct a latter-day <i>Mass for the Feast of St. Michael</i>, following along the outlines of a medieval Mass and also &#8211; as with frequent ancient practice &#8211; including a well-known song of the time as a structural element within the Mass. The song is the famous “L&#8217;Homme Armé,” a hit-parade item circa 1350, and these Orlando Houseplants aren&#8217;t the first group to use that song in modern times; there&#8217;s also a setting by Peter Maxwell Davies. This one is a lot more fun.</p>
<p>
What makes it so is that these performers &#8211; the singers, of course, but also the jazz combo &#8211; perform with a real awareness of what made this music tick for the churchgoers of the distant past, and what it needs to be made to tick today. There is a fine, elegant slitheriness in the parallel movements of archaic harmonies (“fauxbourdon,” you remember from Music 101) and an exaltation in the outbursts of “Alleluia” that keep things moving. No, this kind of crossover activity doesn&#8217;t answer the problem of how to bring medieval music to life in contemporary jazz clubs. All I can say is that this project is the work of honest, enthusiastic musicians bridging what used to be regarded as an unbridgeable chasm. The result is 62 minutes of music not at all disgraceful and &#8211; as a matter of fact &#8211; decidedly not bad.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Low&#160;Tide</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2003/07/low-tide/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2003/07/low-tide/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 31 Jul 2003 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=451</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[“There is the feeling of the vasty deep,” wrote Olin Downes in the days when music critics coined not only phrases but actual words, “of the thresh of waters and the sough of winds . . .” At the Hollywood Bowl, the 10 minutes of Sibelius&#8217; seascape The Oceanides, which had inspired such lexicographical ecstasies [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>“There is the feeling of the vasty deep,” wrote Olin Downes in the days when music critics coined not only phrases but actual words, “of the thresh of waters and the sough of winds . . .” At the Hollywood Bowl, the 10 minutes of Sibelius&#8217; seascape <i>The Oceanides</i>, which had inspired such lexicographical ecstasies from the redoubtable Downes, turned out as tiresome as any expanse of Sibelius on land; for once I found myself praying for an intruding aircraft. I suppose that something or other by Sibelius was ordained as an Esa-Pekka calling card; last week&#8217;s    programs at the Bowl were part of the Philharmonic&#8217;s luggage that Salonen has packed for its upcoming week&#8217;s visit to the Edinburgh Festival, and there are, after all, longer &#8211; and therefore even more tiresome &#8211; works than <i>The</i> <i>Oceanides</i> that might have been chosen instead. On Thursday&#8217;s program the Sibelius was followed by Debussy&#8217;s <i>La Mer</i>, and while that superlative piece of maritime tone painting needed no further assistance from such humble precincts, I have never been more grateful for its arrival than I was that night, or admired it more and with better reason.<i></p>
<p>
</i>You have to accord Sibelius some place of importance in the cultural firmament, for his efforts in defining his country&#8217;s awareness of its roots by creating music in the Finnish language rather than the more acceptable Swedish. Where no musician of quality had existed in Finland before, Sibelius loomed large; he still does. The remarkable measure of support offered today by the Finnish government to young musicians is directly traceable to the nation&#8217;s pride in its first major musical celebrity. Without that background, we mightn&#8217;t so easily be afforded the enormous talents of today&#8217;s Finnish generation: Salonen, Magnus Lindberg and Kaija Saariaho. I can&#8217;t imagine that any of them &#8211; trained in Paris, where Sibelius&#8217; music earns its well-deserved neglect &#8211; hold this music close to their respective souls. But devoting 10 minutes to the gray, meandering wisps of <i>The Oceanides </i>can be reckoned, for Salonen, reasonable dues. Nary a note of Sibelius figures in Salonen&#8217;s own programming for his first season at Disney Hall; the Seventh Symphony is on the list, but the performance is by the visiting Berlin Philharmonic.</p>
<p>
The Berlin Philharmonic performing Sibelius? That, too, seems like a violation of stereotype; yet here is a three-disc Deutsche Grammophon set, in the low-price “Trio” packaging, with all seven of the symphonies in reissued strong, idiomatic performances by the Finnish-born Okko Kamu and &#8211; surprise! &#8211; the formidable Herbert von Karajan. The set has one flaw, but it&#8217;s a serious one: The Fourth Symphony, by far the best of the seven, especially for its power to hold a hearer in an unrelaxed icy grip, is divided between two discs. Sure, I grew up in the days when you changed record sides every four minutes; now, however, I&#8217;m spoiled, and this split &#8211; especially inflicted on this symphony and on Karajan&#8217;s extraordinary performance &#8211; indicates some pretty dumb thinking somewhere in the industry.</p>
<p>
 </p>
<p>
Salonen&#8217;s calling cards for this first of his two Bowl weeks also included worthier stuff: Ravel and Debussy beaucoup and a remarkably strong, dry-point rendition of the complete Stravinsky <i>Petrouchka</i>. A complete Ravel <i>Daphnis et Chloë</i>, however, is a mixed blessing. Every measure is gorgeously scored &#8211; especially when, as last week, the performance includes the wordless chorus. Quite a lot of the first 35 of its 50 minutes, however, consists of purely functional ballet music designed to get dancers from one spot on the stage to another. (I have to confess similar feelings about complete <i>Firebird</i> performances.) Then come those last 15 minutes &#8211; which live independently as the “Suite No. 2” &#8211; and the sky catches fire; there are individual measures in that sequence that are like nothing else in music, and the cold and rational Salonen, in whose veins the vasty thresh of Sibelius soughs and throbs, lights lights under this music better than anyone I know.</p>
<p>
Some of this, of course, I report on faith, or on memories of previous encounters indoors. There is no way of pretending that Salonen&#8217;s marvelous realization of the exquisite scoring of <i>Daphnis</i>, or of Debussy&#8217;s <i>Nocturnes</i> or <i>La Mer</i>, for all the caress of summertime breezes up in Cahuenga Pass, has anything to do with the sound of that music in real life. The sound of classical music at the Bowl is a magnificent fraud, and has been since the first microphones were installed, and will continue to be even if the new construction of the orchestral shell passes muster as an acoustic miracle.</p>
<p>
Classical music was composed to be performed in rooms: the salon of a Viennese aristocrat, the first concert hall open to a ticket-buying audience, the 3,000-seat monsters like the Dorothy Chandler Pavilion. Its sound is shaped by the orchestra or chorus onstage, but it is shaped as well by the walls, floor, ceiling and the collective physiognomy of the people in the hall. If I write, as I have over the years, that the sound at the Hollywood Bowl is pretty good &#8211; I may have even written “excellent” somewhere along the line &#8211; that is only within the scope that music traveling through unenclosed air, from loudspeakers carefully placed or from the stage, still exists without the crucial shaping force that is designed by acoustical engineers and architects under million-dollar contracts. That said, I have to take notice of the swirl of gossip, rumors and firsthand reports on the state of affairs currently at Disney Hall downtown. Unlike normal summertime procedures, Salonen and the Philharmonic have been rehearsing their Bowl programs (which are also their tour programs) in their new downtown hall. The reports from players, who have a lot more insight &#8211; and a lot more at stake &#8211; range from favorable to ecstatic. Stay tuned.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>The Lost Lady,&#160;Found</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2003/07/the-lost-lady-found/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2003/07/the-lost-lady-found/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 24 Jul 2003 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=450</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Something about La Traviata, fragrant creation from Verdi&#8217;s early mastery, takes hold no matter what. At the Los Angeles Opera it has survived several reruns of Marta Domingo&#8217;s clumsy staging; Linda Brovsky&#8217;s San Francisco Opera production, brought down to Costa Mesa&#8217;s Opera Pacific in 1999, restored Verdi&#8217;s lost lady to musical respectability. John Mauceri conducted [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>
Something about <i>La Traviata</i>, fragrant creation from Verdi&#8217;s early mastery, takes hold no matter what. At the Los Angeles Opera it has survived several reruns of Marta Domingo&#8217;s clumsy staging; Linda Brovsky&#8217;s San Francisco Opera production, brought down to Costa Mesa&#8217;s Opera Pacific in 1999, restored Verdi&#8217;s lost lady to musical respectability. John Mauceri conducted then, and Elizabeth Futral was the Violetta. Both were on hand again at the Hollywood Bowl last week; even without staging, and with a supporting cast of variable quality, the wonder of this most heartwarming of all romantic operas lingered in the muggy air like a two-and-a-half-hour caress.</p>
<p>
None of Verdi&#8217;s other wonderful operas has as much power as this one to undo a listener&#8217;s complacency and activate the tear ducts. The emotional impact is easily explained &#8211; up to a point, at any rate. Verdi&#8217;s audiences in the 1850s were shocked at an opera set in the present, with 1850 costumes in 1850 Paris; after <i>Traviata</i>, another half-century went by before another composer succeeded with a close-to-the-bone tragedy of its own time and place: Puccini in <i>La Bohème</i>. Any performance of either work that doesn&#8217;t draw buckets of tears at its final curtain must be reckoned a failure. Last week&#8217;s <i>Traviata</i> was a noble success.</p>
<p>
One scene serves my purpose whenever someone asks for proof of what&#8217;s so great about opera. Alfredo and Violetta are blissfully tucked away in their countryside retreat; enter Alfredo&#8217;s father to pour cold water on their ménage. Their sinful existence, he informs Violetta, has stirred up scandal among the folks back home and threatens the marriage of Alfredo&#8217;s young sister. The old man is horribly obtuse to the possibility that Alfredo and Violetta might actually be in love; Verdi&#8217;s jagged, sour music exudes sarcasm and ill will. Of all Verdian villains &#8211; the Count in <i>Il Trovatore</i>, Carlo in <i>La Forza del Destino</i>, down the roster of loud baritones &#8211; Papa Germont is the one you really want to kick, the one whose meanness is interwoven with stupidity.</p>
<p>
He is adamant; knock it off, he tells Violetta, there are plenty of studs around for her playpen. She is devastated. In what has to be the most melancholy waltz tune ever conceived (“Ah, dite alla giovine . . .”), she capitulates to his demands. In phrases cynical and unfeeling, he tells her to go ahead and weep. He leaves. Violetta must compose a farewell note to Alfredo, but she cannot find the words. In her place a solo clarinet in the orchestra pit continues the lament. Fortunate is the lover, past or present, who can hear those few minutes of utter bleakness in the opera house without an onrush of a bitter personal memory. That&#8217;s what opera can do to you, if you let it.</p>
<p>
The Bowl is hardly the opera house of anyone&#8217;s dreams. The singers were spread across downstage, on either side of Mauceri; the chorus was up back. There was no chance of re-creating the lovely effect in Act 1, when the dance band at Violetta&#8217;s party is supposed to be heard offstage. (Maybe, in the new Bowl . . .) As compensation, however, Mauceri&#8217;s robust, nicely paced performance opened some of the cuts that ill-advised conductors still observe: Alfredo&#8217;s cabaletta at the start of Act 2, Germont&#8217;s at the act&#8217;s end, repeats of Violetta&#8217;s “Addio del passato” and “Parigi, o cara” in the last act. Futral &#8211; remember her Handel&#8217;s Cleopatra with the nudie milk bath? &#8211; was again, as in Costa Mesa, a dream Violetta, elegant in her coloratura, intense in her tragedy. Frank Lopardo was the bright, powerful Alfredo; Earle Patriarco, a Germont with a fine sense of drama but not much voice.</p>
<p>
Word is out; all the Disney Hall hoo-ha obscures the other new piece of concert architecture in the offing. Shortly after the end of this Bowl season, the wrecking ball moves in on the orchestral shell. June 14, 2004, is the latest target date to inaugurate the new shell, designed by the Los Angeles firm of (Craig) Hodgetts and (Hsin Ming) Fung. This is already two years later than the original plan; a woefully misguided protest advanced the notion that the current shell, in use since 1929 and subjected to several architectural changes since then, was a sacred landmark demanding preservation of the same rank as the Chinese Theater&#8217;s footprints and the Hollywood Sign. An organization called Hollywood Heritage Inc., headed by a certain Robert Nudelman, filled the air with pious absurdities that vested the structure with sacrosanct status. The fight has been in the courts almost constantly since September 2000, when the county Board of Supervisors passed Zev Yaroslavsky&#8217;s motion to replace the crumbling and acoustically lousy structure.</p>
<p>
Mr. Nudelman&#8217;s 15 minutes of fame was based on the ludicrous premise that the current Bowl is somehow worth saving. The present structure, the fourth one in that space, was by far the least interesting of the four; earlier attempts, including one designed by Lloyd Wright (Frank Lloyd&#8217;s son), had some kind of design personality. Structure No. 4 has undergone drastic changes over the years, including additions (later subtracted) by Frank Gehry. If anything, the new design &#8211; without all those Styrofoam balls that turn the stage housing into a mockup of the Starship <i>Enterprise</i> &#8211; returns the look of the Bowl stage to the 1929 original, except that the stage is now more spacious, and choristers won&#8217;t have to be jammed against the back wall (as they were for <i>La</i> <i>Traviata</i>).</p>
<p>
Zev Yaroslavsky, the latest story goes, recently visited the Bowl structure and broke off a piece with his hand. It might be a nice tribute, and save a few bucks, if he could finish the job on his own.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Wings Over&#160;Ludwig</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2003/07/wings-over-ludwig/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2003/07/wings-over-ludwig/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 17 Jul 2003 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=449</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Photo by James Minchen The timing was, as usual, immaculate. Only one aircraft penetrated the space over the Hollywood Bowl on opening night of the Tuesday/Thursday “classical” series, but that transgression occurred during the evening&#8217;s quietest moment. In the slow movement of Beethoven&#8217;s Seventh Symphony, there is a point when the simplistic, throbbing principal theme [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Photo by  James Minchen
<p>
The timing was, as usual, immaculate. Only one aircraft penetrated the space over the Hollywood Bowl on opening night of the Tuesday/Thursday “classical” series, but that transgression occurred during the evening&#8217;s quietest moment. In the slow movement of Beethoven&#8217;s Seventh Symphony, there is a point when the simplistic, throbbing principal theme disintegrates down to a couple of notes that simply chase each other against a background of silence; eventually this activity takes on the shape of a fugue (which is, after all, another word for “chase”), and there is a swift, ferocious buildup. It&#8217;s a wonderful moment, but it&#8217;s the one we didn&#8217;t get to hear that night. Oh well, here we go again; I love the Bowl and so should you, but there are those problems . . .</p>
<p>
Actually, this was one of the better Bowl evenings, and the size of the crowd &#8211; 7,500 or thereabouts &#8211; was above the Tuesday average. The high-flash piano whiz-bang Jean-Yves Thibaudet showed up in a suit, all shine and glitter, that exactly matched the music he got to play, the shine and glitter of Franz Liszt&#8217;s Second Piano Concerto. What distasteful music, these 20 or so minutes of empty exploitation of a shapeless tune, now fast and now slow now loud and now even louder! The young Thibaudet managed its banalities with steady hands; at the end one knew no more about his musical qualities than 20 minutes before; the paltry applause barely allowed for a solo bow.</p>
<p>
Young Andreas Delfs conducted; he is German-born, currently head of the St. Paul Chamber Orchestra and the Milwaukee Symphony. I had few kind words for his Philharmonic debut at the Dorothy Chandler Pavilion last year (Mozart, plus a new and empty-headed piece by Theodore Shapiro &#8211; remember?); all the greater, therefore, was his triumph at the Bowl this time around. The Beethoven Seventh is glorious, action-packed music, but that&#8217;s not the same as stating that the work can conduct itself. Aside from the usual Bowl practice of ignoring the composer-specified repeats, this was a strong, knowing performance, clear and brave and, allowing for the usual acoustic drawbacks, responsive to the work&#8217;s astonishingly broad range of sonority. (That range, I might as well confess, includes one of my favorite single notes in all music: the first horn&#8217;s blazing high E at the very end of the first movement. The Philharmonic&#8217;s William Lane did that note, and this grateful listener, proud.)</p>
<p>
A smart performance of a Beethoven symphony always sends me home with the compulsion to write, write, write about Beethoven, and so it was this time. Everybody knows that not one of these nine works sounds like any other; what I find even more remarkable is that not one of the symphonies solves its own problems in the same way. The Fifth is extraordinary in its self-obsession; the Sixth, in its discursiveness; the Eighth, in its fond revisiting of ancestral models. The Seventh is a succession of irresistible crescendos, tidal waves, perhaps. The great recorded performances &#8211; Toscanini with the New York Philharmonic in 1936, Szell with the Cleveland in 1963, Harnoncourt with his own orchestra in 1990 &#8211; re-create that succession, and leave you exalted and drenched. Every movement seems to begin out of nowhere and build irresistibly. In the first movement it happens twice: in the spacious introduction, which takes you to the edge of a chasm and leaves you there, and the movement itself, which starts with the merest thread and jerks you constantly and violently until that culminating high E lands you safely ashore. In some way each of the ensuing movements works you over in similar fashion until the almost unbearable last few minutes. The low instruments grind out their final menace, and the rest of the orchestra, virtually aflame, becomes something you even feel in your teeth.</p>
<p>
 </p>
<p>
You don&#8217;t need me to write about Beethoven; the bookshelf is well-stocked. Lewis Lockwood&#8217;s <i>The Music and the Life of Beethoven</i> (W.W. Norton, $39.95) is a recent arrival, and an excellent one. It is the latest in a long line of fat volumes that bravely attempt a synthesis between the questions in Beethoven&#8217;s pain-haunted life and the answers that might lurk within the music. The most honorable of these &#8212;&#8212;&#8211;<br />
AUTHORs &#8211; and Lockwood is one, along with (among others) Maynard Solomon in 1977 and Alexander Wheelock Thayer in 1866 &#8211; quickly come to realize that synthesis is impossible. The lifeline of Beethoven himself, and the lifeline of the 138 opus numbers that make up his staggering legacy, intersect only sporadically and then inconclusively. How do we match up the Seventh Symphony, with its gigantic outbursts of sheer joviality, the pounding rhythms of dancers not yet choreographed, with the composer whose hearing was virtually gone, whose abdominal distress and bronchial trauma were constant companions?</p>
<p>
Lockwood is an excellent companion, as we struggle with, and then reject, the need to answer such questions. His account of Beethoven&#8217;s life, the society in which he moved, the dealings with publishers and performers to get his music attended to, manages with considerable grace to keep in front of us the awareness of the unfathomable genius about whom this history is being told. As often as we have heard the account of the “Eroica” Symphony, the planned dedication to Napoleon Bonaparte and the erasure of that dedication, Lockwood tells the story particularly well. Best of all, in his near-600 pages on the vagaries and products of genius, he keeps us close to Beethoven&#8217;s own awareness of what he is about. We know today that the “Eroica”&#8217;s explosive implications &#8211; the intensity of its language and the vastness of its design &#8211; changed the nature of music for all time. What we might forget, however, is that Beethoven himself knew what he had accomplished, in this work and across the realm of his creativity: that the “Eroica” in its time was “the greatest work I have yet written.” The image of the innocent genius, on whose shoulders the hand of God gently rests, makes for good film scripts and music appreciation CD-ROMs; this splendid new book, accessible and reader-friendly as it is, tells of battles hard fought and won, and thereby tells the truth.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Past&#160;Perfection</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2003/07/past-perfection/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2003/07/past-perfection/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 10 Jul 2003 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=448</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Thanks to the separate efforts of the record company called Naxos and the Web site–cum–magazine known as Andante-dot-com, recorded music&#8217;s past appears in better shape than its present &#8211; and probably its future as well. I wrote last week about Naxos and its superb reissues at bargain prices of gone but unforgotten repertory. Since there [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>
Thanks to the separate efforts of the record company called Naxos and the Web site–cum–magazine known as Andante-dot-com, recorded music&#8217;s past appears in better shape than its present &#8211; and probably its future as well. I wrote last week about Naxos and its superb reissues at bargain prices of gone but unforgotten repertory. Since there hasn&#8217;t been all that much live music-making around here lately, let me now tell you more about Andante, whose discs sell for almost twice the price of eight-buck Naxos but whose packaging is a lot fancier, with virtually a whole tome of printed information &#8211; including Tim Page&#8217;s eloquent invocations &#8211; before you even get to the music.</p>
<p>
Andante&#8217;s recorded repertory stretches serendipity to new heights. Some of it is from the heyday of the 78-rpm disc; some comes from broadcast tapes found in European archives. Out of the latter comes a marvelous <i>Marriage of Figaro</i> from the 1937 Salzburg Festival, conducted by Bruno Walter in an outpouring of energy nothing like the work of his mellow late years. Ezio Pinza&#8217;s Figaro in those days was one of the world&#8217;s authentic wonders; Jarmila Novotná&#8217;s Cherubino wasn&#8217;t far behind.</p>
<p>
Somebody at Andante must harbor an irrational affection for the rampages of the mercurial Leopold Stokowski in his golden ascendancy; the Andante catalog is a rich trove of his escapades: the “symphonic syntheses” he concocted out of the Wagner music dramas (with, of all people, the musical and <i>Hit Parade</i> star Lawrence Tibbett as Wotan), the vast Technicolor fantasies he drew from Bach&#8217;s organ works. There&#8217;s a three-disc collection of Willem Mengelberg leading his Amsterdam Concertgebouw Orchestra, dating back to the early days of electrical recording. His 1929 performance of Liszt&#8217;s <i>Les Preludes</i>, with his white-hot brass echoing through Amsterdam&#8217;s great hall,<i> </i>will curl your hair; I can only hope that Disney Hall will sound that good.</p>
<p>
But the Andante album that I most want placed in my pyramid is a four-disc set of chamber music by Franz Schubert, with performances dating from 1926 to 1944: both piano trios, the “Trout” Quintet, the C-major Quintet for strings, the Octet, the two big works for violin and piano plus one of the lesser sonatas. Every one of these works has been recorded many times over; I cannot abandon these pristine renditions, nor could I the Emersons&#8217; recording of the C-major Quintet (with Rostropovich as the extra cellist) or the Melos Ensemble&#8217;s Octet. My amazement at the elegance and passion of Fritz Kreisler and Sergei Rachmaninoff at work on the A-major Violin Sonata is stronger than the appeal any later performance of that music could extend.</p>
<p>
These are the recordings that won me to Schubert&#8217;s music in the first place, and hearing them again &#8211; nicely cleaned to extract the last overtone from those ancient grooves &#8211; is like renewing a whole string of old romances. The loving is in the performances themselves. Take the incredible rendition of the Octet, in a recording dating from 1928. The strings are the Léner Quartet from Budapest. They are <i>real</i> Hungarians, and Hungarian is the way they play &#8211; above all in the melting slides to give Schubert&#8217;s seductive tunes their ultimate impact. The wind players are all Brits, including the legendary hornist Aubrey Brain. The blend of musical languages is complete; there is an impulse in this performance, clearly audible under 75 years of dust, that makes you believe that all eight of those splendid gentlemen could not possibly have wanted to be anywhere else but in that London studio on that day in March 1928.</p>
<p>
 </p>
<p>
The C-major String Quintet is performed, in 1935, by another renowned ensemble, the Pro Arte Quartet of Brussels, with Anthony Pini as the second cellist. There are 32 performances of this sovereign work in my latest Schwann, and many, I must admit, are extraordinary. (How, for that matter, could anyone become involved in this music and not rise high?) The Pro Arte Quartet, formed in 1912, was busy in the recording studios right up to WWII, after which some of the members immigrated to the United States. Their manner tended toward the suave and unruffled; I love the way they mesh with Artur Schnabel&#8217;s twinkling piano in the “Trout” Quintet on the first disc of this album. Even so, I don&#8217;t know another recording that so compellingly conveys the breathtaking beauty of that endless slow melody that begins the slow movement of Schubert&#8217;s C-major Quintet, the shattering change midway to a drastically different key, and then the melody&#8217;s return under the persistent echoes of that interruption. Listen to that music, and try to tell me &#8211; as many writers have &#8211; that Schubert knew nothing about musical form. (One flaw in Andante&#8217;s Schubert album is the error-ridden essay by Paul Turok, who claims, for example, that the first movement of this quintet has no development section. What else, friend Paul, do you call the seething drama in bars 155–266 of that beautifully formed movement?)</p>
<p>
The B-flat Piano Trio, played by the Jacques Thibaud–Pablo Casals–Alfred Cortot trio, whose Beethoven “Archduke” Trio I wrote about last week, is duplicated on Naxos and the Andante album. This is, to my taste, the finest of all that “celebrity” trio&#8217;s performances, the one that allows violinist Thibaud to sing at the top of his lung power and cellist Casals to demonstrate the superhuman legato of his bowing arm. The E-flat Trio is performed by Adolph Busch, Hermann Busch and Rudolf Serkin, a bit stolidly. The two trios were composed only a few weeks apart; they are unalike in ways that should further confirm anyone&#8217;s estimate of Schubert&#8217;s strengths as a composer of instrumental music. The B-flat Trio rides along on an endless flow of melody &#8211; <i>tunes</i>, actually; coming in 1827, a year before its composer&#8217;s death, it can count as Schubert&#8217;s last totally happy work. The E-flat Trio, from a few weeks later, is sterner stuff, fascinating in its sudden shifts from “bright” keys &#8211; E flat, certainly &#8211; to the somber regions of B minor, and including as its slow movement something that could pass as a funeral march.</p>
<p>
The restrictions of the original 78-rpm recording, with individual sides running four and a half minutes at most, are evident in these performances. Even in music as broadly conceived as these enchantingly garrulous, discursive works, observing Schubert&#8217;s specified repeats would have made them seem shorter. Every note is precious.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>&#8230;Of Things&#160;Past</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2003/07/of-things-past/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2003/07/of-things-past/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 03 Jul 2003 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=447</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Read a chapter or two of Remembrance of Things Past, or watch the wonderful movie (Time Regained). Nibble on a plate of madeleines dipped in lime-leaf tea; now you&#8217;re ready to listen to the singing of Maggie Teyte. Her dates are 1888–1976; she was already singing, and recording, long before Proust began his mighty roman-fleuve. [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>
Read a chapter or two of <i>Remembrance of Things Past</i>, or watch the wonderful movie (<i>Time</i> <i>Regained</i>). Nibble on a plate of madeleines dipped in lime-leaf tea; now you&#8217;re ready to listen to the singing of Maggie Teyte.</p>
<p>
Her dates are 1888–1976; she was already singing, and recording, long before Proust began his mighty roman-fleuve. Born Margaret Tate in Wolverhampton, she settled in France as a self-willed teenager and, in 1907, studied the role of Debussy&#8217;s Mélisande under Debussy himself. From him she not only gleaned the essence of that role, but also insight into the prosody and indigenousness of its language. She sang Mélisande in Paris, in London and in New York (at age 60, perhaps unwisely). She recorded extensively, starting in 1908 &#8211; that old parlor number, “Because” &#8211; but the cream of her recording activity came in the 1930s, when she and the great French pianist Alfred Cortot produced the discs of Debussy songs that will forever remain the standard for the way those songs must be performed. Those old 78s are now the nucleus of a two-disc Naxos “Vocal Portrait,” which I urge upon anyone who needs convincing that sung French &#8211; what they call <i>la musique de la langue</i> &#8211; belongs among the world&#8217;s most beautiful sounds.</p>
<p>
Teyte was unique, her voice the sound of an idealized oboe, her sense of phrase like a loving whisper into an attentive ear. Debussy, at work with the poets of his time &#8211; Baudelaire and Verlaine, above all &#8211; was able to create in his songs lines of beauty seemingly fragile but actually of enormous tensile strength. I have heard them sung in more lustrous tones by singers of today &#8211; Susan Graham, for example. But listening to Teyte &#8211; the irresistible seduction of her voice and the fine resonance of Cortot&#8217;s piano splendidly restored by Naxos&#8217; Ward Marston &#8211; is to sense a unique bond rare in the annals of recorded performance. These are songs to be heard in a room otherwise quiet, because what they really do is transfigure the very nature of silence.</p>
<p>
There are other treasures on this extraordinary Naxos set: a moment from Offenbach&#8217;s <i>La Périchole</i>, Ravel&#8217;s <i>Shéhérazade</i>, two songs from Berlioz&#8217;s <i>Les Nuits d&#8217;Été</i> (abridged, alas, to accord with the original 78-rpm issue), several songs by Reynaldo Hahn, whose friendship Teyte enjoyed, and even a duet with the great Irish tenor John McCormack. Blessings again upon Naxos for keeping alive the sense that once prevailed, that records were important.</p>
<p>
Alfred Cortot shows up on other Naxos discs, as a participant in chamber performances &#8211; Haydn, Beethoven, Schubert, Mendelssohn &#8211; with equally legendary companions: the violinist Jacques Thibaud and the cellist Pablo Casals. The three had started playing together in 1905, mostly just for fun; by 1925 they were a touring ensemble, selling out concert halls throughout Europe. Their repertory was small &#8211; only one Haydn trio out of dozens, three of Beethoven&#8217;s seven trios &#8211; but their artistry was apparently enough to sell tickets whenever they showed up. Their last performance was in 1934; soon after, the old friends split apart, separated among the political currents that had swept the European landscape. On three Naxos discs, you&#8217;ll find their entire recorded repertory.</p>
<p>
Nobody plays like this anymore, and maybe someone should. On a Beethoven disc, listen to the hot insistence of Thibaud&#8217;s violin near the start of the “Archduke” Trio: the controlled but blatant romanticism of his portamento (sliding) to instill a dimension of urgency to his phrasing. Listen to the rich rubato as Cortot shapes the opening of that work, and to the Casals pizzicato like rushes of blood, later in that movement. By contemporary attitudes toward “historically informed” practice, these performances are all wrong; yet what I hear in their work &#8211; in the trio and also in the rush of passion in the Thibaud/Cortot “Kreutzer” Sonata on the same disc &#8211; is the playing of musicians so in love with their music that scholarly matters of correctitude seem beside the point.</p>
<p>
 </p>
<p>
Meanwhile, back in the 21st century: The enterprising label known as ECM, Munich-based, continues to broaden our awareness of the contemporary world with music unknown, indefinable and unforgettable. All three epithets certainly apply to a new disc of music by Valentin Silvestrov, handsomely played by the pianist Alexei Lubimov and an orchestra under Dennis Russell Davis, and &#8211; as is usual with ECM &#8211; gorgeously packaged. Silvestrov, born in Kiev in 1937, began his career as the chains had loosened around Soviet composers; already in the 1960s, his music had reached Pierre Boulez in Paris. Two big works fill the new disc: <i>Postludium</i> (a “symphonic poem”) from 1984 and <i>Metamusik</i> (a “symphony”) from 1992; both involve piano and large orchestra.</p>
<p>
This is powerful, thrilling music, for reasons that require some hard listening. Musically, the two works, which are thematically related, are all over the place: Huge, thick orchestral orations and perorations give way to robust, intensely romantic melodic outpourings. The piano tone swirls through the dense orchestra, seldom proposing any important material on its own, but serving as a chill, commenting wind, perhaps from another world. The program notes are full of pictorial suggestions, and they are quite right: “a breathing tonal web,” “a giant trajectory, like the rising and setting of the sun.” Perhaps Scriabin, if he were alive today, might be writing this kind of music.</p>
<p>
Cantaloupe is the house label of Bang on a Can, the New York–based composers&#8217; cooperative that has for several years now made some of the most adventurous music in that benighted city. The new disc offers three string quartets by Julia Wolfe, one of BOAC&#8217;s founding spirits, performed by three different ensembles. The quartets have names: <i>Dig Deep</i>, <i>Four Marys</i> and <i>Early That Summer</i>, and I am not qualified to tell you what they mean. The performing groups also have names: Ethel, the Cassatt String Quartet and the Lark Quartet.</p>
<p>
Steve Reich is one of BOAC&#8217;s guiding lights; his music appears frequently at their famous “marathon” concerts &#8211; especially his early minimalist pieces. They provide much of the motive power for these short works of Wolfe, all three of which add up to a skimpy 36 minutes and 44 seconds. The quartets are outwardly alike: big, gritty blocks of still, repeated sonority. Perhaps I have erred in not listening with my amplifier turned up to 11, as the rubrics demand at live BOAC events; prolonged exposure to BOAC&#8217;s kick-ass music making can breed discomfort, as Alex Ross noted in a recent <i>New Yorker</i> piece. Still, I found (or think I found) a sense in the last work of moving toward a release, and not a moment too soon.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Thirteen Operas in 12&#160;Days</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2003/06/thirteen-operas-in-12-days/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2003/06/thirteen-operas-in-12-days/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 26 Jun 2003 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=446</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[At the Los Angeles Opera, Don Giovanni sang his seduction music to Zerlina while escorting her toward a blood-red bed built for two. In Long Beach, cops and thugs and modern-day terrorists stalked the streets of 18th-century Peru. In San Francisco, Mephistopheles turned up in Faust&#8217;s study sporting a crimson baseball cap, and a modern [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>
At the Los Angeles Opera, Don Giovanni sang his seduction music to Zerlina while escorting her toward a blood-red bed built for two. In Long Beach, cops and thugs and modern-day terrorists stalked the streets of 18th-century Peru. In San Francisco, Mephistopheles turned up in Faust&#8217;s study sporting a crimson baseball cap, and a modern grand piano figured among the scenic elements in the 16th-century Spain of Verdi&#8217;s <i>Il Trovatore</i>. Up and down the West Coast, the gloom of June has been pierced by flashes of misguided genius, bent on imposing latter-day stage gimmickry on works far better off in their pristine conceptions &#8211; attempting to repair the unbroken.</p>
<p>
Mind you, I am under no compulsion to argue for the strict staging of operas as set down in their original librettos. Look up the old photographs of Bayreuth productions in Wagner&#8217;s day, or <i>Il Trovatore</i> as staged for Caruso; you can practically smell the dust. Contemporary stage technology enables miracles of stagecraft that set forth the dramatic values of the repertory in accordance with &#8211; or even far beyond &#8211; the dreams of composers and librettists. But the gadgetry I witnessed in two weeks of hectic opera going had nothing to do with composers&#8217; or librettists&#8217; dreams. To me they seemed more like the efforts of smart-ass producers who, having determined that the works&#8217; original dramatic values were beyond saving for contemporary audiences, decide to create their own substitutions. The worst aspects in the staging of Los Angeles&#8217; <i>Don Giovanni</i>, or San Francisco&#8217;s <i>The Damnation of Faust</i> and <i>Il Trovatore</i>, were the sense of a blatant discrepancy &#8211; call it hostility, if you will &#8211; between the looks of the productions and the drama inherent in Mozart&#8217;s and Berlioz&#8217;s and Verdi&#8217;s wonderful music.</p>
<p>
In bursts of further wacko creativity, the directors of all three productions contributed gobbets of pseudo-psych to the program booklets. “Onstage we see the huge head of a horse, a burning pyre, a grand piano . . .,” wrote <i>Il Trovatore</i>&#8216;s director Brad Dalton. “Like distorted Jungian symbols, they commingle to form a landscape of dreamy associations, as in <i>Alice in Wonderland</i>.” Very eloquent, but what, pray, does the glorious squareness of Verdi&#8217;s melodramatics have to do with Jungian dreamscapes? San Francisco also revived Jean-Pierre Ponnelle&#8217;s <i>La Cenerentola</i>, not very well sung but with Ponnelle&#8217;s antic staging left intact. And across the street, Michael Tilson Thomas and the San Francisco Symphony did a lusty <i>Flying Dutchman</i> &#8211; Mark Delavan&#8217;s Dutchman and Jane Eaglen&#8217;s Senta were probably audible all the way to Oakland &#8211; with no scenery at all. None was needed.</p>
<p>
Mozart&#8217;s incomparable score was handsomely delivered under Kent Nagano&#8217;s urgent, affectionate baton. The young (30!) bass-baritone Erwin Schrott, the Giovanni, was the evening&#8217;s find, both in stage presence and in a voice like idealized warm chocolate: a young Cesare Siepi, in other words. Andrea Rost sang a commanding Anna; Adina Nitescu, a properly frazzled Elvira; Rosendo Flores, a rather toneless Leporello but fun to watch. The production, from Warsaw&#8217;s Polish National Opera, took place in a box whose black walls changed to mirrors in one scene. The murdered Commendatore, whom Mozart&#8217;s music clearly delineates in a majestic D-minor, returned not as the “statua gentilissima” but as a moldering corpse.</p>
<p>
San Francisco&#8217;s <i>Il Trovatore</i> was also done in a black box, and that set the tone. The soldiers sang their marching song in place; the nuns &#8211; who have the opera&#8217;s prettiest music &#8211; sang onstage, not backstage as written, as part of an infernal clutter; the grand piano merely served as something to lean upon. Marco Armiliato conducted routinely, and the singers responded in kind, except for the Azucena of Dolora Zajick, superb as always. Richard Margison was the Manrico, and Marina Mescheriakova the Leonora, both of common coinage.</p>
<p>
The Berlioz <i>Damnation</i> gets a whirl this anniversary year; I suppose the fact of its not being an opera at all &#8211; merely an oratorio with no stage rubrics from composer or librettist &#8211; is the enablement for adventurous producers. San Francisco&#8217;s “adventure” was the work of two with-it Germans, longtime associates of general director Pamela Rosenberg: Jürgen Rose to design the box &#8211; white, this time &#8211; and Thomas Langhoff to move his singers around that space, both inside and out. Fedoras and trench coats were the costume of choice (as in last year&#8217;s <i>Saint François</i>); the Sylphs were done up in thongs and vinyl out of Frederick&#8217;s of Hollywood. (A post card to subscribers warned that this might offend delicate sensibilities; something like 80 people turned in their tickets, and several more requested seats farther up front.) David Kuebler was the wan-voiced Faust, Kristinn Sigmundsson the Mephistopheles, and Angela Denoke the Marguerite; all three made partial amends, as did Donald Runnicles&#8217; vivid conducting. Unaccountably, the beautiful “Minuet of the Will-o-the-Wisps,” thematically related to other moments in the work, was omitted.</p>
<p>
 </p>
<p>
Meanwhile, in Long Beach, Michael Milenski&#8217;s 25-year stewardship of the opera company he founded came to a typically Milenskian end: a marvelous variorum of seven &#8211; count &#8216;em &#8211; short pieces, some of them operas only by courtesy, and a typical David Schweizer–directed romp with &#8211; or at the expense of &#8211; Offenbach&#8217;s frothy <i>La Périchole</i>. The <i>Times</i>&#8216; Pasles did his predictable savaging of the Offenbach, thereby missing the seductive elegance of Andreas Mitisek&#8217;s conducting and the splendid ensemble work of the young cast. Mitisek will succeed Milenski as head of the company; he has proved his high qualities on the Long Beach podium since 1998 and did so this time as well.</p>
<p>
The “Seven Small Operas” once again defined the spirit and the intelligence behind this remarkable operatic venture. The only real “operas” were Darius Milhaud&#8217;s three <i>Opéras Minutes</i>, tiny (but wonderfully action-laden) settings from Greek mythology, created in 1928 for the small-opera festival in Germany that also produced Kurt Weill&#8217;s <i>Mahagonny-Songspiel</i>. What a stroke of genius, reviving these immensely wise brief pieces. Isabel Milenski did the staging “curated” by her father; Mitisek conducted the small instrumental ensemble and the six-member chorus. Unforgettable.</p>
<p>
Jeff Morrissey sang Ravel&#8217;s Don Quixote songs to middling effect with Ellen Milenski&#8217;s Dulcinea at the piano. Melissa Weaver&#8217;s “staging” of Monteverdi&#8217;s six-part madrigal <i>Tears of a Lover at the Tomb of His Beloved</i> enveloped the haunting music in simple classical dance movement. Robert Moran&#8217;s six-minute setting of some Gertrude Stein foofaraw was pure rapture; Nicholas Francis Chase&#8217;s interweaving of words by Ann Haroun went nowhere, but not without charm. You came away &#8211; or, at least I did &#8211; with the sense of having spent a couple of hours with the human brain at its most imaginative.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>“DON GIOVANNI”&#160;REVIEW</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2003/06/%e2%80%9cdon-giovanni%e2%80%9d-review/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2003/06/%e2%80%9cdon-giovanni%e2%80%9d-review/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Tue, 17 Jun 2003 22:04:13 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Opera News]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=1816</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[A staging of Don Giovanni that honored the rubrics of Lorenzo da Ponte’s dramatic outlines, and nothing more, would probably rank these days as downright retrograde. Such backward steps certainly do not figure in the 17-year history of the Los Angeles Opera. Its first production &#8212; by Jonathan Miller in 1991, all in gray on [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>A staging of <em>Don Giovanni</em> that honored the rubrics of Lorenzo da Ponte’s dramatic outlines, and nothing more, would probably rank these days as downright retrograde. Such backward steps certainly do not figure in the 17-year history of the Los Angeles Opera. Its first production &#8212; by Jonathan Miller in 1991, all in gray on Robert Israel’s Stonehenge of a set – moved Mozart’s sublime drama into a bleak region somewhere beyond the edge of the world. Now, in a second go-around that opened on May 31, bleak has been changed to black.</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">
<p class="MsoNormal">Mariusz Trelinski’s production hailed from Warsaw’s Polish National Opera, with unit set by Boris Kudlicka [‘v’ over the ‘c’] and costumes by Arkadius. Of scenery there was none; black walls, streaked with multicolored thin bands, surrounded a pit midstage. Up out of this black hole an open-sided coffin rose and fell. Into that hole toppled the murdered Commendatore in the opera’s opening scene Out of that hole emerged that Commendatore at the dénouement, quite a bit the worse for wear, not the majestic statue of Da Ponte’s script (and Mozart’s music) but a mouldered, ragged mess. A bevy of dancing trees momentarily eased the bleakness in the first-act finale. For the great Act Two sextet the walls became mirrors and the six singers became a thundering herd. For the second-act finale the Don had to make do without a dining table</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">
<p class="MsoNormal">To a kindly disposed observer, the evening added up to a display of clever but wilful stage tricks; surrounding stage action with mirror walls is as snazzy a showbiz effect as  ticket price can buy. The problem so often, and emphatically here, is the danger of ending up with a show that is merely about itself – and a show, furthermore, that insults the audience’s ability to be thrilled by the wonders in this greatest, most subtle of all classic operas. It seemed to insult as well the superior musical forces gathered for the occasion: the probing, exquisitely detailed performance led by Kent Nagano – appointed a few days before as the company’s first-ever Music Director – and a close-to-flawless young cast which, under respectful direction, might have made this <em>Don Giovanni </em>a Los Angeles milestone.</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">
<p class="MsoNormal">Erwin Schrott was the Giovanni, Uruguay-born, young (30), lithe and elegant in bearing and voice – a young Siepi, say. (Both he and the Ottavio, John Matz, are recent winners of Plácido Domingo’s Operalia, lending luster to their own names and to the competition as well.) Rosendo Flores was the burly-voiced Leporello, agile in the footwork if not always in voice. The women – the fast-rising Andrea Rost as the fearsome Anna, Adina Nitescu as an Elvira with exactly the right frazzled edge to her outbursts, Anna Christy as the milkmaid-sweet Zerlina – formed an ensemble close to flawless; Fedor Kuznetsov, was the Commendatore and James Creswell (from the company’s resident-artist training program) was the sturdy Masetto,</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">
<p class="MsoNormal">So much talent, so ill-used! More Mozart is on the Los Angeles Opera’s agenda: a <em>Figaro</em> next season (again with Schrott) and a <em>Così</em> the season after, heading toward the Mozart 250<sup>th</sup>-year celebration in 2006. Mozart remains indestructible; it would be better if people stopped trying.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>The Control Freak&#160;Decontrolled</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2003/06/the-control-freak-decontrolled/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2003/06/the-control-freak-decontrolled/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 12 Jun 2003 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=445</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[It was 41 years ago when Pierre Boulez, the newly arrived dark cloud on the New York scene, first sat down with me to discuss the future of the C-major scale and similar weighty matters. He had only recently emerged as a pulverizing presence on the musical landscape; in one famous interview, he had called [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>
It was 41 years ago when Pierre Boulez, the newly arrived dark cloud on the New York scene, first sat down with me to discuss the future of the C-major scale and similar weighty matters. He had only recently emerged as a pulverizing presence on the musical landscape; in one famous interview, he had called for the destruction of all the world&#8217;s opera houses. He had terrorized avant-garde circles with an article titled “Schoenberg Is Dead.” He had cast a menacing shadow already in Los Angeles in 1957, when his first acclaimed masterpiece, the abstruse, daunting <i>Le Marteau Sans Maître</i>,<i> </i>turned up at the Monday Evening Concerts. Robert Craft, who was trying to rehearse the work, had thrown up his hands in despair after 50 hours of struggle; Boulez, who happened to be touring the U.S. as music director of Jean-Louis Barrault&#8217;s theatrical troupe at the time, was summoned to the rescue. It became Boulez&#8217;s American debut as a concert conductor.</p>
<p>
Over coffee in a Greenwich Village café, we spoke about total control. His musical ideal, or so he proclaimed, was “to annihilate the will of the composer in favor of a predetermining system.” With electronic means, he claimed, “one could exert one more degree of control over the eventual shape and sound of his music. Gaining this control [is] a necessary step in our development.”</p>
<p>
That was the Boulez of 1962, a considerable distance from the Boulez of 2003 who last month led the Los Angeles Philharmonic &#8211; with endearing flexibility &#8211; through the out-of-control morass of a Bruckner symphony and a loose-jointed Haydn symphony in the orchestra&#8217;s final programs at the Dorothy Chandler Pavilion (and had been scheduled for even more blatant glitz, the <i>Burleske</i> of Richard Strauss, until that item was dropped). At Ojai a week later, during the QA after a revealing pre-Festival interview of Boulez by Ara Guzelimian, I asked him whether he would have deigned to conduct that work (or indeed <i>any</i> work) of Strauss back in his terrorist days, or even as recently as 10 years ago. “Of course not,” answered Pierre Boulez, and delivered an atypical Boulezian smile.</p>
<p>
The nexus of Boulez and Ojai, inscrutable on the surface, has been one of the most stimulating phenomena on the musical map; this was the seventh recurrence. Six concerts were spread over three days; every one &#8211; even the Saturday-morning “family concert” with the Armadillo Quartet in a delightful, nicely chosen gathering of bits and pieces &#8211; became memorable in its own way. First and last there were Philharmonic programs led by Boulez. On opening night the final work was Bartók&#8217;s <i>Concerto for Orchestra</i>, music I have lived with from its beginning &#8211; December 1, 1944, in fact, when I was an usher at Boston&#8217;s Symphony Hall. Still, there were orchestral details &#8211; the muted brass in the first movement, the swirls of string tone in the third &#8211; that I have never heard so clearly set forth as on this magical night at Ojai. On Sunday there was more Bartók and more swirls &#8211; the Third Piano Concerto, with the mysterious nocturnal mutterings around Hélène Grimaud&#8217;s piano.</p>
<p>
The marvelous Susan Graham was on hand, first for a master class that friends tell me I shouldn&#8217;t have missed, then for a ravishing revelation of exotic colors &#8211; and gown to match &#8211; in Ravel&#8217;s <i>Shéhérazade</i>, and finally for a solo recital nicely seconded by Brian Zeger&#8217;s piano, with a lovely range from the Brahms <i>Gypsy Songs</i> to the insinuating charm of French-operetta numbers to a free-thinking, devastatingly moving version of Gershwin&#8217;s “Summertime.” Marino Formenti &#8211; finally on his way to a deserved worldwide career, with a Lincoln Center debut and a Cleveland Orchestra gig on the books for next season &#8211; gave another of his unique, eclectic piano recitals, from a 16th-century keyboard piece to the Beethoven Opus 110 to the Boulez First Sonata to a couple of rather aimless brand-new works. Somehow I remember the Beethoven best, above all Formenti&#8217;s exhilarating capturing of the ecstasy of its final few pages.</p>
<p>
 </p>
<p>
On Saturday night, and almost into Sunday morning, there was the music of Boulez himself. It moved &#8211; and truly moved &#8211; along a 53-year timeline from the enchanting small <i>Douze Notations </i>of 1945 to solo pieces for violin and flute to the rapturous <i>Dialogue de l&#8217;Ombre Double</i> (for live clarinet immersed among its echoes on tape) to the ecstatic <i>Sur Incises</i> of 1998 that may rank as his non-vocal masterpiece.</p>
<p>
This is what I wrote at a Green Umbrella performance in 2000: “Like many of his recent works, Boulez&#8217;s <i>Sur Incises</i> builds upon (<i>Sur</i>) the 1994 piano piece <i>Incises</i>. Its performing space, a stage with three harps fronting three pianos, with three gatherings of percussion across the back wall, takes your breath away even before the music starts. The music swirls and swoops; vibrant and pulsating here, dreamlike there. You think back to the obsessive percussive clatter of Boulez&#8217;s Mallarmé settings, of the <i>Répon</i>s that fills vast spaces like an erupting volcano. This work has all those colors, but also something more: charm, ease, the urge to ingratiate that must signal a new Boulez. You had to wonder: Can anything be more beautiful than this setting?”</p>
<p>
At Ojai there was an answer: “Yes, something can,” which the birds and frogs and soft breezes confirmed.</p>
<p>
I heard my first Ojai Festival in 1981, and haven&#8217;t missed one since. This was the best. I may have written that of others, but never with more assurance. Ernest Fleischmann, who has guided its destiny in recent years, steps down now; if he needs a further monument than the one of him we already cherish in our estimation, let it be this extraordinary weekend, its triumphant proclamation of the mingled roles of music and the human spirit. The Cleveland Orchestra&#8217;s Tom Morris takes over as artistic director; next year&#8217;s musical star will be Kent Nagano. I don&#8217;t envy them the shoes they now must fill.</p>
<p>
<i>Obiter dictum:</i> There&#8217;s no space this week for the L.A. Opera&#8217;s <i>Don Giovanni</i>. If you need my yes/no vote, let it be the former. It is, to cite the critic&#8217;s favorite cop-out word, interesting. Erwin Schrott, the Giovanni himself, is worth the trip from anywhere.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Seniority</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2003/06/seniority/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2003/06/seniority/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 05 Jun 2003 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=444</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Photo by Betty Freeman Bill Kraft pushes on toward 80; Mort Subotnick has just steamed past 70. Leonard Stein&#8217;s 87th looms on the horizon. In successive Wednesday-night concerts at the County Museum in May, all three geezers were the matter at hand: Bill and Mort with major compositions performed by two of our best musical [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Photo by Betty Freeman
<p>
Bill Kraft pushes on toward 80; Mort Subotnick has just steamed past 70. Leonard Stein&#8217;s 87th looms on the horizon. In successive Wednesday-night concerts at the County Museum in May, all three geezers were the matter at hand: Bill and Mort with major compositions performed by two of our best musical adventurers, Leonard in a piano recital that became a timeline of his own decades in service to his art.</p>
<p>
There were other connections as well, if you like playing that game. Kraft&#8217;s <i>Settings From Pierrot Lunaire</i> stem from a project initiated by Stein at the Schoenberg Institute back when it was still nourished by USC. Inasmuch as Schoenberg&#8217;s <i>Pierrot Lunaire</i> used only 21 of the nearly 50 poems in Albert Giraud&#8217;s collection of spook-haunted, expressionistic poems, the Institute came up with the idea of commissioning composers to deal with the poems that Schoenberg hadn&#8217;t got to. The scoring was to be the same as Schoenberg&#8217;s &#8211; singer/speaker, piano, a couple of strings and winds, with percussion as the single new addition. The results were performed in a series of programs in the mid-1980s. Kraft then went on to create his own extended work: four of the <i>Pierrot</i> poems set to music plus instrumental interludes, the whole thing lasting about 25 minutes. His <i>Settings</i> have been recorded, on Albany. Haunting, subtle, exquisite yet intense, they form one of Kraft&#8217;s strongest works; I listen to them often. The cherishable Daisietta Kim, who doesn&#8217;t perform nearly often enough anymore, sang them magically; the ensemble we know as XTET, energized by the moonbeams from Dorothy Stone&#8217;s flute, matched her all the way.</p>
<p>
The next week the California EAR Unit, with Dorothy Stone this time at the piano, celebrated Subotnick with five works old and new, ending &#8211; no, make that “culminating” &#8211; with the 1985 <i>The Key to Songs</i>, which occupies the same place in Subotnick&#8217;s legacy as the <i>Settings</i> do in Kraft&#8217;s: an elegant, shapely work of pure imagination, stretching the credulity and rewarding the attention. There are interesting if tenuous connections between the two works. Subotnick, too, draws his inspiration from the indefinable fantasies of that unfathomable surrealist, the painter/poet Max Ernst, whose shadow falls over a number of Subotnick&#8217;s works. The inspiration here is an Ernst novel that I don&#8217;t pretend to understand, except in the moments in Subotnick&#8217;s score when, out of nowhere, quotations from a couple of Schubert songs poke into the texture. Subotnick wrote the piece for the EAR Unit as it existed at CalArts in 1985; it was recorded on New Albion and is still available.</p>
<p>
What connects these two works above all is the fact that their musical existence draws upon other music. Luciano Berio died last week, and one of the most extraordinary aspects of his life in music was the range of his ability to nourish his own music from the musical world around him. In everything I know about Berio&#8217;s music, I am charmed by where Berio has located himself in these works. In every one of his <i>Sequenze</i> for solo instruments &#8211; including the one for cello that Rohan de Saram played here recently, and emphatically in the one Berio wrote for the solo voice of his beloved Cathy Berberian &#8211; it is the voice of Berio in this music, exploring, proclaiming, filling empty spaces with the emanations from his awful cigars.</p>
<p>
The famous movement of his <i>Sinfonia</i> has Berio somewhere in the middle, attempting to listen to a favorite bit of Mahler while the whole world &#8211; perhaps at open windows in some Roman apartment complex &#8211; tries to get in his way. He spoke about his <i>A-Ronne</i>, the piece for actors, as a kind of “documentary” on the Edoardo Sanguineti poem they were trying to perform. His <i>Rendering</i>, a late work, seems to re-enact his own delight in discovering a manuscript of Schubert sketches and his burning need to share it with us. His wonderful opera <i>Un Re in Ascolto</i>, which begs for local performance, is also a “documentary,” an exploration of the several simultaneous human tragedies in Shakespeare&#8217;s <i>King Lear</i>. His music &#8211; the great works that the world now knows, and even the tiny wisp of a piano piece, <i>Interlinea</i>, that Leonard Stein played at his recital last week &#8211; has this mysterious power to take us close to itself, but also close to what it means to be in love with all music. (About Pierre Boulez&#8217;s Third Sonata, with which Leonard Stein grappled manfully, I wish I could say the same, but cannot &#8211; as yet.) With Berio the man no longer among us, it becomes even more important to hold on to that power to love that his own art radiates.</p>
<p>
Last week was not a good time for jabberwocky. At Ojai, Karen Painter &#8211; musicologist, woman of mystery, mother-to-be &#8211; began the latest festival with one of her famously convoluted speeches, this one on matters of modernism and postmodernism consistent with the presence of Pierre Boulez as this year&#8217;s musical eminence. Distracted to some degree by Dr. Painter&#8217;s stage presence &#8211; including a choreography with a rebellious sweater and a manner of delivery in the soprano register that would make KPCC&#8217;s Kitty Felde a basso profundo by contrast &#8211; I was able to glean that modernism throughout history has been followed by postmodernism, and that is what is happening today, but not as much. More on Ojai next week.</p>
<p>
At LACMA the “Conversation” with Boulez and Frank Gehry sold out at the box office in 12 minutes. That was as it should be: Two great shaping forces in the arts, in particular prominence due to current local events, should have crucial messages for an expectant arts-consuming audience. Some of this actually happened; some didn&#8217;t. The evening&#8217;s interlocutor, one Paul Holdengräber &#8211; who apparently is employed by LACMA to keep such events on track (buffered by a vaguely exotic “artistic” accent) &#8211; actually did everything in his power to derail the conversation. Rather than following the line of thought from his participants, or even doing them the courtesy of listening to them instead of playing the eye game with notables in the audience, he continually tried to break into the conversation with his own card file of irrelevant changes of subject. Only when Frank Gehry, bless &#8216;im!, finally ordered Holdengräber to shut up (in just those words) did the evening take on something worth the price of those tickets.</p>
<p>
Never underestimate, therefore, the self-importance of the unimportant.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Berkeley, Berlin,&#160;Berlioz</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2003/05/berkeley-berlin-berlioz/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2003/05/berkeley-berlin-berlioz/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 29 May 2003 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=443</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Backstage at UC Berkeley&#8217;s Zellerbach Hall &#8211; one of the world&#8217;s less-inviting concert venues &#8211; the usual day-before-the-concert chaos reigns on a Monday night in late April. The critics and the connoisseurs have come to town for the premiere of the Violin Concerto by the young Korean composer Unsuk Chin, who is currently, as they [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>
Backstage at UC Berkeley&#8217;s Zellerbach Hall &#8211; one of the world&#8217;s less-inviting concert venues &#8211; the usual day-before-the-concert chaos reigns on a Monday night in late April. The critics and the connoisseurs have come to town for the premiere of the Violin Concerto by the young Korean composer Unsuk Chin, who is currently, as they say, “hot”; now it is not going to happen. As conductor Kent Nagano will explain to a sellout crowd at tomorrow&#8217;s Berkeley Symphony Orchestra concert with his well-known soft-spoken humor, only one violinist on the planet is capable of confronting Ms. Chin&#8217;s fiendish technical demands, and that violinist, Tibor Kovac, had called in over the weekend to report the onslaught of tendinitis. Finding a proper substitute for a major new work is no easy matter &#8211; as the Los Angeles Philharmonic has also discovered several times this past season. Nagano, with a sizable assist from UC Berkeley&#8217;s electronic guru David Wessel, has concocted a reasonable substitute, a tape-only composition by Ms. Chin that will fill Zellerbach&#8217;s vast space with four-channel ersatz percussion.</p>
<p>
The crisis properly dispatched, Nagano has a few &#8211; but only a few &#8211; minutes to chat. He is just in town from concerts with his European anchor, Berlin&#8217;s Deutsches-Symphonie, which he had brought to Los Angeles last season for the memorable performance of Schoenberg&#8217;s <i>Moses und Aron</i>. After the Berkeley concert he will drop in on the Los Angeles Opera to prepare for the performance of Mozart&#8217;s <i>Don Giovanni</i> that opens this weekend and runs through June 20. By then it will be time to get to work on Hector Berlioz&#8217;s <i>The</i> <i>Damnation of Faust</i>, which Nagano will conduct at the L.A. Opera&#8217;s season opener next September. Oh, and by the way, during his stay in Los Angeles this month he will be anointed the company&#8217;s music director, the first possessor of that important title. Strong hands on the podium were not always the top priority of the company&#8217;s founder, Peter Hemmings; they have become more so under Plácido Domingo&#8217;s hegemony &#8211; even though Domingo&#8217;s own occasional podium stints have not exactly lit lights.</p>
<p>
Berlin, Los Angeles, London, Lyons, Paris: The 51-year-old Nagano certainly moves among the major gigs, yet he has also been conductor of the Berkeley Symphony for 25 years and has no plans to stop. The BSO, as it is lovingly referred to by the natives, was founded in 1969 (as the “Berkeley Promenade Orchestra”) by a hopeful maestro, Brit-trained, named Thomas Rarick; the <i>L.A. Times</i>&#8216; Mark Swed was one of the first conductors. The “Prom”&#8217;s stock-in-trade was an easygoing performing style in street clothes and a passion for overreaching. (In a performance of Mahler&#8217;s Fourth Symphony, the percussionist made up for the absence of the prescribed sleigh bells by banging his keys against a music stand.) Nagano, fresh from music studies at UC Santa Cruz, came on as conductor in 1978. He put the players in matching socks, and adopted the more formal name and a more serious programming. The first concerts were in the 750-seat First Congregational Church; in 1989 the orchestra moved to the 2,015-seat Zellerbach. (Tom Rarick, by the way, went on to become lieutenant governor of the state of Indiana.)</p>
<p>
Over takeout and iced tea in his dressing room, Nagano tries to define the ties that bind him to underdog Berkeley as well as top-dog Berlin and Los Angeles. “Actually, I regard working here as a privilege, and that&#8217;s because the players also feel that way. A good percent of the players have been here since I came, and that kind of loyalty comes to mean a lot. We have an interesting age gap in the orchestra: some who&#8217;ve retired from the San Francisco Symphony and other orchestras, plus a lot of students. It&#8217;s fascinating to watch the way the one age group has such an influence on the other. There&#8217;s a human value here, and I don&#8217;t sense it anywhere near as clearly in my other orchestras.</p>
<p>
“Beyond that, there is the chance to explore, to experiment, that I don&#8217;t find in other orchestras. Here is Berkeley; up in those hills there are scientists, Pulitzer winners, Nobel winners, radical thinkers. This affects the way I plan the season for the BSO. We give maybe six concerts a year. We do a certain portion of the standard repertory &#8211; tomorrow night we play two contemporary works plus two by Mozart. But I have the chance here to look for composers who may be making a stir somewhere. Take Unsuk Chin, for example. She has had a lot of performances in Europe, and I&#8217;m sorry you won&#8217;t hear her concerto tomorrow. We got eight curtain calls when we did it in Berlin, and we&#8217;ll bring it back here in a year or two. She was once composer in residence with my Berlin orchestra.”</p>
<p>
In a city that supports nearly a dozen full-time orchestras while fighting off the demons of poverty, Nagano has found a distinctive niche for his Deutsches-Symphonie. The orchestra&#8217;s history goes back to prewar Berlin, when it played under Wilhelm Furtwängler at the Berlin State Opera. After WWII it re-formed with American support as the Orchestra of RIAS (Radio in the American Sector), whose conductors included Ferenc Fricsay and Lorin Maazel. It kept the “radio” identity until recently; Nagano has been its conductor since 2000.</p>
<p>
“In a sense,” Nagano recalls, “the orchestra has carried on the Furtwängler mission. You think of him as a conductor of Beethoven and Brahms, but he also had a keen appetite for the new music of his time. Even so, we&#8217;ve had to bring that appetite up to date. Obviously, Schoenberg&#8217;s music would have been proscribed in earlier days, and so I organized the celebration in 2001 and &#8217;02 to celebrate the 50th anniversary of his death. <i>Moses und Aron</i> became part of that celebration; we brought it to Berlin and Vienna. Plácido wanted us to come to Los Angeles with a premiere, but giving <i>Moses und Aron</i> for the first time here was premiere enough.”</p>
<p>
 </p>
<p>
Nagano&#8217;s arrival on the operatic scene came about in a topsy-turvy manner &#8211; not the usual apprenticeship with Mozart and Rossini but through Olivier Messiaen and his daunting <i>Saint François d&#8217; Assise</i>. In 1981 Nagano had invited Messiaen to sit in on a festival of his music in Berkeley, and the venerable <i>maître</i> returned the favor by inviting him to Paris to assist Seiji Ozawa in the premiere of the opera. It was Nagano who, years later, made the first complete recording of Messiaen&#8217;s opera; by then he had also recorded a number of performances with France&#8217;s Opéra de Lyon; his delicious production of Prokofiev&#8217;s <i>Love for Three Oranges</i> copped all kinds of prizes, for the performance itself and for the video.</p>
<p>
“I could never have opera as my exclusive love,” he says. Still, the list of works he has triumphed in adds up to a declaration of hope for the future of that peculiar medium: Kaija Saariaho&#8217;s <i>L&#8217;amour de Loin</i> in its Salzburg premiere, John Adams&#8217; <i>El Niño</i> in Paris, Adams&#8217; <i>The</i> <i>Death of Klinghoffer</i> in Brussels and <i>Nixon in China</i> in Los Angeles.</p>
<p>
Where, with all that traveling, does Kent Nagano feel at home?</p>
<p>
“In California,” he says without hesitation. “My home is in San Francisco, which I love because of the weather . . . the fog. I grew up in Morro Bay, where my parents &#8211; second-generation Japanese &#8211; had a commercial farm, 300 acres of artichokes, sugar beets, strawberries. There was a refugee from Munich, Vaclav Korischelli, who persuaded the Morro Bay School District to let him teach a music class &#8211; 7:30 in the morning and again after school in the afternoon. And so, a dozen of us kids &#8211; the Los Angeles Philharmonic&#8217;s Jerry Folsom was one of us &#8211; got this real <i>Hochschule</i> music training from early on.</p>
<p>
“The Japanese identity is a little harder to hold on to, after three generations here in California, with the open, uncrowded beauty of the central coast around Morro Bay in my personal background. I&#8217;ve traveled to Japan with my orchestras, of course, but I&#8217;m not aware of any ‘returning native son&#8217; treatment in the big cities. Where I have felt that is in my ancestral home in a small village near Kumamoto, on Kyushu Island. After my grandfather emigrated to California he kept sending money back to help rebuild that city. When I first visited there, seven or eight years ago, I did get the honored-son treatment.</p>
<p>
“I do live, of course, with many identities. But if you want to know who I am, a<i>s The Mikado</i>&#8216;s song goes, ‘I am, above all, Californian.&#8217;”</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>In&#160;Between</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2003/05/in-between/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2003/05/in-between/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 22 May 2003 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=442</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Just at the moment when our ears were most in need of refreshment and a thorough cleaning out, along came MicroFest to accomplish exactly that. Month after month the gnrr had piled up in our auricular canals: all those turgidities in the Mozart piano concertos, the scary modulations that Bach drags in to frighten small [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>
Just at the moment when our ears were most in need of refreshment and a thorough cleaning out, along came MicroFest to accomplish exactly that. Month after month the <i>gnrr </i>had piled up in our auricular canals: all those turgidities in the Mozart piano concertos, the scary modulations that Bach drags in to frighten small children, the huff &#8216;n&#8217; puff in those interminable Beethoven adagios &#8211; the “dull industrial gray of a global monoculture in twelve-tone equal temperament” as Lou Harrison so aptly phrased it. Yes, sir, a couple of weeks of just intonation after all that diatonic torture may have been just what the doctor ordered. (Or maybe not.)</p>
<p>
Most major cities hold MicroFests nowadays: gatherings of musicians dedicated to preserving the various ways in which music can flourish outside the imprisoning system of 12 equally distant tones to the octave. The system is best visualized by the keys of the piano, organ and harpsichord, or the keying mechanisms of winds, which preserve the compromises &#8211; the tuning generally known as “equal temperament” &#8211; concocted by theorists around the time of Bach and Handel to sidestep the purity of the Pythagorean overtones, enable composers to work in all 24 possible major and minor keys, and modulate freely from one to another. Most American and European music composed since, say, 1720 uses equal temperament. Before these compromises, in the glory days known to true microtonal believers as “just intonation,” musical intervals and harmonies followed simple physical ratios: 2:1 for the octave, 3:2 for the perfect fifth. But this physical adherence also led to all kinds of clashes; you couldn&#8217;t, for example, modulate from G-sharp to A-flat, even though on the modern keyboard these are the same note. (I oversimplify shamelessly, mostly so that I, too, can understand what I&#8217;m trying to say.)</p>
<p>
“Microtonal,” therefore, is the catchall term for music outside equal temperament. To ears coddled in Schubert and Brahms, music in just intonation sounds &#8211; well, just weird. So does Indian music, or Indonesian gamelan, although the unfamiliar harmonies are mitigated by the exoticism of the instruments themselves. The best-known escapees from the imprisonment of equal temperament, Lou Harrison and Terry Riley &#8211; both generously represented on the MicroFest programs over the past two weeks &#8211; composed major works in just intonation, and also made enthusiastic use of the profusion of Asian scales. Another renegade, Harry Partch, postulated a scale of no fewer than 43 tones, and built his own instruments to make them possible. His music, too, was on the MicroFest roster.</p>
<p>
I got to three of this year&#8217;s five concerts. At Pasadena&#8217;s First Presbyterian Church, the Donald Brinegar Singers, an excellent small chorus, sang music by Lou Harrison &#8211; including the setting of the Mark Twain text on American imperialism that I quoted with wonderment last week. Supporting them in some works was the gamelan orchestra based at Harvey Mudd College in Claremont; in one other memorable work, Bill Alves&#8217; <i>Luminescence</i>, voices, gamelan and computer-generated tones joined in a haunting, nocturnal reverie: unearthly, far beyond the reaches of harmonic or tuning systems. At Claremont&#8217;s Lyman Hall there was further amazement, most of all in a computer reworking by Alves of a musical design by Harrison &#8211; <i>Simfony in Free Style</i> &#8211; that was purposely composed beyond the reach of human performers: an intricate working out of a contrapuntal problem that begins as a knotty tangle of ideas and ends in pure, ethereal beauty six or so minutes later. (The work, in another computerized version, is included on the disc that comes with the biography <i>Lou Harrison, Composing a World</i>, published by Oxford in 1998.)</p>
<p>
Terry Riley came down from his woodland den and had a program to himself: two big keyboard pieces, and an hourlong documentary film by Cecilia Miniucchi sporting minimalism&#8217;s all-star cast. The plan had included the West Coast premiere of Riley&#8217;s <i>A Dream</i>, for solo piano in just intonation, followed by the world premiere of his <i>Baghdad Highway</i> for electronic keyboard and voice; unfortunately, Pierce College &#8211; where the concert took place before an impressively large crowd &#8211; couldn&#8217;t come up with a piano tunable to just intonation, so the same Korg Triton Studio 88 was pressed into service for both works. That was a loss; being in Terry Riley&#8217;s company as he performs on a just-tuned real piano is one of those experiences you don&#8217;t forget.</p>
<p>
<i>Baghdad Highway</i>, however, was performed as composed: Riley intoning a haunting string of lamenting texts in a twisted skein of languages &#8211; including some bitter English reflections on humanity in travail. (Interesting that two of MicroFest&#8217;s leading lights expressed themselves during the festival in very ancient music wound around very contemporary tragedy.) The very young Riley landed in our midst some 40 years ago with music single-mindedly tied to Western diatonic harmony. <i>In C </i>was about nothing <i>but</i> C major; even if you perform it today with sitar, gamelan or Eskimo nose flute, its C-majorness remains steadfast. From this Terry Riley has come a long distance, and we can feel privileged in having been along on the route.</p>
<p>
Cecilia Miniucchi&#8217;s film captures some of this privilege. Considering the well-known outspokenness of some of the luminaries she has lured before her camera &#8211; imagine Philip Glass and Steve Reich arriving at points of agreement! &#8211; she has produced something of a document over and beyond the actual content of her excellent film. I&#8217;m only surprised that the film didn&#8217;t catch fire by itself in the can.</p>
<p>
 </p>
<p>
If you were at Ojai last summer, you&#8217;re probably still aglow from Marino Formenti&#8217;s piano concerts: the “marathon” earlier in the week and the two astonishing recitals later on. “Why hasn&#8217;t he recorded?” was a question frequently asked. He&#8217;ll be back next week, but now the question has an answer. It comes on two discs from Germany&#8217;s Col-Legno label. One is a recital of music by Germany&#8217;s quizzical, enigmatic, unfathomable Helmut Lachenmann, including the <i>Serynade</i> that Formenti had performed at Eclectic Orange earlier last season; this will take work. The other disc, more immediately accessible, is titled <i>nothing is real</i>, and has strawberries in the cover design and a piece by Alvin Lucier named after the Beatles number in question. Better yet, it includes Georg Friederich Haas&#8217; <i>Hommage à Ligeti for Two Pianos With a Quarter-Tone Difference</i>, which Formenti played &#8211; <i>alone!</i> &#8211; at Ojai. Talk about your ancient intonations and your exotic Baghdad scales! These are discs to cherish. Ojai&#8217;s people tell me that, for the moment anyhow, they have dibs for the U.S. market on these Formenti discs and will have a supply on sale during next week&#8217;s festival. Otherwise, you&#8217;re on your own: <i><a href="http://www.collegno.de">www.collegno.de</a></i>.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Minimal to the&#160;Max</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2003/05/minimal-to-the-max/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2003/05/minimal-to-the-max/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 15 May 2003 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=441</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[In March 1984 I lived through a week forever memorable. In Rome I sat in on rehearsals for Act 5 of Robert Wilson&#8217;s the CIVIL warS to Philip Glass&#8217; music, at the time when there were plans for all five acts to head for Los Angeles&#8217; Olympic Arts Festival. Then Stuttgart beckoned, where the opera [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>
<font COLOR=black>In March 1984 I lived through a week forever memorable. In Rome I sat in on rehearsals for Act 5 of Robert Wilson&#8217;s <i>the CIVIL warS </i>to Philip Glass&#8217; music, at the time when there were plans for all five acts to head for Los Angeles&#8217; Olympic Arts Festival. Then Stuttgart beckoned, where the opera <i>Akhnaten</i>, also by Glass, was having its world premiere in Achim Freyer&#8217;s magical production. In Cologne I saw Act 4 of Wilson&#8217;s <i>warS</i>, and attended the world premiere of Steve Reich&#8217;s <i>The Desert Music</i>. At the end of the week the news came that Los Angeles had scrubbed <i>the CIVIL warS</i> &#8211; through a failure of nerve, funding or both. <i>Akhnaten</i> &#8211; not the last of Glass&#8217; stage works but the last of the handful with real distinction &#8211; gets a performance now and then. <i>The Desert Music</i> abides, although last month&#8217;s performance by the Master Chorale under Grant Gershon was, if memory serves, only the second in local history. It deserves closer attention.</p>
<p>
It&#8217;s a milestone work, the last and largest of Reich&#8217;s music for concert stage, in which the buildup through extended repetition is wonderfully illuminated by changes in sonority &#8211; as he did with the women&#8217;s voices that punctuate the phrase structure in the other large masterwork, <i>Music for 18 Musicians</i>. <i>Desert Music</i> is something else again, a skillful &#8211; and, I think, successful &#8211; blend of repetitive buildup and a structural plan that is actually symphonic: thematic returns, and even an interweave of text and musical technique. “It is a principle of music to repeat the theme: repeat and repeat again, as the pace mounts”; those are William Carlos Williams&#8217; words, and Reich&#8217;s music follows them brilliantly. Chug-chug-chug goes the music with mounting insistence, and the goose bumps rise. The performance under Gershon used a new version, building out the modest orchestra with a contingent of brass. I would have liked to hear the work without Reich&#8217;s stipulation that everything be miked, but perhaps that&#8217;s a prospect for the new hall if and when.</p>
<p>
The concert began with a sampling of early Americana, contrapuntal hymns and anthems from the 18th and early 19th centuries by William Billings for the most part. The news here is not that the infant nation had bred a generation of geniuses that early in its history, but that its citizen-composers could turn out good, serious musical pieces that knew how to obey the rules. The geniuses came later. The Master Chorale&#8217;s programming serendipity remains praiseworthy; Grant Gershon has the chops for the job, and the charm as well.</p>
<p>
At the Skirball Center (and at other locales under Skirball sponsorship), there was a festival tracing Jewish influences in music &#8211; serious and not, present and past. By some distance the most interesting was a revival of Paul Wegener&#8217;s 1920 silent film <i>Der Golem</i>, the only one of several treatments of the 15th-century Jewish legend that has survived more or less intact. Beyond the film itself, the golem figure (and its close relative, Dr. Frankenstein&#8217;s creature) forms a fascinating study: the downtrodden society &#8211; the ghettos of medieval Europe, the misunderstood scientist &#8211; creating its redeeming superhero out of common clay.</p>
<p>
As the highlight of Skirball&#8217;s Beyond Bim-Bam festival, <i>The Golem</i> arrived decked out with a new score by Israel&#8217;s Betty Olivero, performed by the clarinetist Marty Krystall with the Armadillo Quartet conducted by Germany&#8217;s silent-film authority Günter A. Buchwald. The whole affair was a model of imaginative restoration: a score with exactly the right mix of ghetto folk tune and the deeply colored sadness of a grieving populace. The film itself is a marvel; the shadows of <i>Caligari</i> are everywhere apparent. The acting, with Wegener himself as the lumbering, menacing, messianic monster, is remarkably communicative. I expected a primitive <i>ur</i>-cinematic experience; I beheld instead a creation of genuine power.</p>
<p>
Lumbering, menacing, monster: Something else on the musical horizon deserves description in those terms. That would be the Third Symphony of Gustav Mahler, out of which Esa-Pekka Salonen conducted the screaming bejesus at last week&#8217;s Philharmonic concerts, Salonen&#8217;s final appearances in that house of so-so repute. History ordained the performance. The Third was Salonen&#8217;s big doorstep to fame and glory, when he stepped in for the ailing Michael Tilson Thomas at a concert in London in the fortuitously managed presence of Ernest Fleischmann. He led it here to inaugurate his career as the Philharmonic&#8217;s music director &#8211; and now this. The Mahler Third, you might say, is Salonen&#8217;s signature tune, his albatross.</p>
<p>
Arguably, it was created to be just that. Don&#8217;t get me wrong; there is a special greatness in the piece. It comes at you within minutes, as one wild, gesturesome tune after another rises out of the gloom of trombone agony, beats its wings against the chandeliers and falls back into its own spoor. It comes at you again as the jingling ditties and the brave, noble postman&#8217;s horn tell of the beauty of the sunrise. And then there is the end, as a D-major apocalypse lights the lamps farther than the human eye can perceive. To conduct the Mahler Third well &#8211; as Salonen did to deserved, thunderous acclaim &#8211; is to know how to unleash those forces, and then stand out of their way. Conducting Beethoven, or Shostakovich, demands other kinds of talent. Salonen has those too.</p>
<p>
I have to share with you something in the program for a concert I attended last week. Read the quotation first:</p>
<p>
 </p>
<p>
We have pacified some thousands of the islanders and buried them, destroyed their fields, burned their villages, and turned their widows and orphans out-of-doors; furnished heartbreak by exile to some dozens of disagreeable patriots; subjugated the remaining ten millions by Benevolent Assimilation, which is the pious new name of the musket; we have acquired property . . . and hoisted our protecting flag over that swag. And so, by these Providences of God &#8211; and the phrase is the government&#8217;s, not mine &#8211; we are a World Power.</p>
<p>
 </p>
<p>
The writer was Mark Twain, from his many writings satirizing the self-righteous imperialism of the Philippine War. It was set to music &#8211; voices and gamelan &#8211; by Lou Harrison, and performed by the Donald Brinegar Singers and the Harvey Mudd College American Gamelan at the Pasadena Presbyterian Church as part of the Southern California MicroFest now going on at several locales. I&#8217;ll write more about these concerts next week, but the Mark Twain quotation struck me as too good to delay.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Four, Five,&#160;Six</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2003/05/four-five-six/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2003/05/four-five-six/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 08 May 2003 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=440</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Illustration courtesy the Bettmann Archive, New York The Philharmonic&#8217;s celebration of Dmitri Shostakovich &#8211; all 15 symphonies performed over five years, with all 15 string quartets as a welcome supplement &#8211; is now two years along. The observance may have lacked the snazzy added attractions of the orchestra&#8217;s previous Stravinsky and Schoenberg celebrations, but the [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Illustration courtesy the Bettmann Archive, New York
<p>
The Philharmonic&#8217;s celebration of Dmitri Shostakovich &#8211; all 15 symphonies performed over five years, with all 15 string quartets as a welcome supplement &#8211; is now two years along. The observance may have lacked the snazzy added attractions of the orchestra&#8217;s previous Stravinsky and Schoenberg celebrations, but the L.A. Opera fell into the fortunate accident of being saddled with Shostakovich&#8217;s <i>Lady Macbeth of Mtsensk</i>, and that did the cause no harm. As pre-concert events we have had the quartets, one at a time, number by number. The numerical matchups didn&#8217;t quite work; none of the quartets Nos. 4, 5 or 6 &#8211; charming but lightweight works &#8211; cast any particular light on the serious matters within the like-numbered symphonies. On the other hand, the performance of the Fourth Symphony &#8211; knottiest and least-known of the 15 &#8211; came with program notes and a pre-concert talk by Laurel Fay, whose <i>Shostakovich, A Life</i> (Oxford, 2000) has been a splendid antidote to a lot of the gobbledygook that has clouded our understanding of the composer over the years. Despite his often-aired distaste for the Fifth Symphony, Esa-Pekka Salonen&#8217;s performance of the work last weekend did not spell the end of the world.</p>
<p>
Salonen had conducted No. 6, with its imponderable slow opening movement and the inexplicable ensuing rooty-tooty, early in the season; the other two came consecutively these past two weeks. Hearing the Fourth and Fifth in close order cast some light on possible reasons for the dim view a few people entertain toward the Fifth. Yes, there are good things in the work. The scherzo is short, snappy and full of giggles. The slow movement unfolds with irresistible momentum, and the climax &#8211; which Shostakovich achieves this once without the superfluous pandemonium of big brass and drums &#8211; can lift you (meaning me) out of your seat. But Salonen&#8217;s performance, nicely controlled though it was, made me sadly aware of the bare-bones architecture of the first movement and the empty vulgarity of the finale. Every tune that comes on slow and quiet later turns up fast and loud; the affectation of seriousness in the slowdown midway though the finale is purely dull. (Artur Rodzinski&#8217;s old 78-rpm recording, the first version I owned, removed a long and sad swatch from that last movement, a considerable improvement. I also cherish a tape of a Philharmonic performance led by Kurt Sanderling from the 1980s, which offered the finale uncut but solved its problems, through its judicious choice of tempos, better than any I&#8217;ve heard.)</p>
<p>
The Fourth, well-paced and -shaded under Salonen, came on as a revelation. Its story is well-known: The 28-year-old Shostakovich, riding high after the initial success of <i>Lady Macbeth</i>, was then devastated when Stalin himself saw and detested the opera. The Fourth Symphony, on the brink of its much-anticipated premiere, was ordered into nonexistence by Soviet authorities. Only a sequence of sheer luck saved the composer from the firing squad or Siberia. The Fifth Symphony was composed a year later as a kind of apologia; you could argue, in fact, that its simplistic structures were meant as a dumbing down to the level of Soviet music critics of the time. Twenty-five years would pass before the Fourth Symphony got its first hearing &#8211; in the USSR or in the outside world. It was worth the wait. Even Shostakovich, hearing its first concert performance, pronounced it his best work; he may have been right.</p>
<p>
This is big, tough music, lasting nearly an hour. Its mood changes are violent and subject to frequent tantrums. The orchestra is huge: 20 winds, 17 brass, kitchenware up the bazooty. Laurel Fay writes about its “lavish profusion of ideas.” Amazement is in order as the music executes its wide swings from a funeral march here to a waltz medley there, to a mighty blast from brass and timpani. The layout is, let&#8217;s say, weird: two movements, lasting nearly half an hour each, framing a short and mean-tempered scherzo. “Manic, turbulent, the human fate of the bruised individual,” writes UC Berkeley&#8217;s Richard Taruskin of the work; he is haunted by the work&#8217;s “incertitude, its irreducible multivalence,” and so am I. This is music of overpowering rhetoric, the more so in those violent shifts. The architecture here is anything but bare-bones; a panoramic panoply staggers the receptors. At the end the music recedes into a deep, dark distance; after a prolonged C-minor chord sustained in the strings, the celesta sounds its distant bell-like tones as an angelic echo. (The first movement of the Fifth Symphony also ends that way, but with lesser impact.) Mahler comes to mind: the final recession into sunlight in the Third Symphony, into darkness in the Ninth. The Shostakovich Fourth needs a proper recording; the available Previn and Ormandy versions will not do. Salonen&#8217;s performance unlocked most of the magic, and it needs to be preserved.</p>
<p>
Extraordinary concerto performances preceded each of the symphonies: Olli Mustonen with the Prokofiev Third Piano, Pieter Wispelwey with the miraculous Dvorák for cello. The Mustonen enigma persists; his affectations at the keyboard render him unwatchable. Yet you could argue that Prokofiev&#8217;s flash and dash are scored for all of Mustonen&#8217;s arm waving and the awesome accuracy of his dive-bombing onto exactly the right key every time. The watching this time, therefore, was almost as much fun as the hearing.</p>
<p>
Wispelwey, Netherlands-born, was enlisted to replace the scheduled but ailing Truls Mørk; New York critics in the past couple of weeks had been raving over Wispelwey&#8217;s solo performances there, and well they might. The Dvorák is every cellist&#8217;s bread and butter, and every listener&#8217;s favorite weep-along, but its wonders do not pale. Every collection worth its shelf space must have its versions by Casals, du Pré, Rostropovich (maybe half a dozen), Yo-Yo . . . And yet you wait for the message in that opening down-bow on the B natural to christen the next performance; it is one of music&#8217;s greatest single notes. It was greatly played this time. So were the ensuing notes, every one.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>A Not-So-Silent&#160;Night</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2003/05/a-not-so-silent-night/</link>
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		<pubDate>Thu, 01 May 2003 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=439</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[H.K. (as in Heinz Karl) Gruber paid us a welcome return visit last week, while memories of last year&#8217;s trumpet concerto &#8211; appropriately titled Aerial — continue their happy throb. At the season&#8217;s final Green Umbrella, he unfurled his Zeitfluren (&#8220;Timescapes&#8221;), a new piece co-commissioned by the Philharmonic&#8217;s New Music Group, along with music by [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>
<font SIZE=3>H.K. (as in Heinz Karl) Gruber paid us a welcome return visit last week, while memories of last year&#8217;s trumpet concerto &#8211; appropriately titled <i>Aerial </i>— continue their happy throb. At the season&#8217;s final Green Umbrella, he unfurled his <i>Zeitfluren</i> (&#8220;Timescapes&#8221;), a new piece co-commissioned by the Philharmonic&#8217;s New Music Group, along with music by two Viennese compatriots that made his own piece sound even better.</font></p>
<p>
<font SIZE=3>For all its musical glory &#8211; which embraces the beloved &#8220;Silent Night&#8221; by H.K.&#8217;s distant ancestor Franz &#8211; Vienna has always ranked behind other European centers as a supporter of hardcore new musical impulses. In his preconcert talk Gruber spoke of the Philharmonic&#8217;s New Music Group in tones of genuine envy &#8211; not only for its high performance qualities but also for its role as a catalyst among its colleagues to spark the full orchestra&#8217;s supportive attitude toward new music. Matters in Vienna, he said, were improving, but slowly. The city does now boast one or two decently qualified new-music ensembles, although they usually perform to half-empty halls. (I am constantly delighted at the turnout for the Green Umbrella concerts here, and at the interesting mix of listeners, some wet behind the ears and others long in the tooth.)</font></p>
<p>
<font SIZE=3>If the music chosen and conducted by Gruber for this concert sends any message, however, it is that <i>caution</i> remains the abiding Viennese watchword. First there was the <i>Verwandlungsmusik</i> (&#8220;Transformation Music&#8221;) by Kurt Schwertsik, a veritable toy box of bright-colored shards: tiny fanfares, a &#8220;little overture,&#8221; an even smaller &#8220;triumph march,&#8221; a &#8220;parade,&#8221; a &#8220;little finale,&#8221; and an &#8220;after-dance&#8221; with some attractive rhythmic craziness &#8211; all bearing the message of painless, germ-free modernity. Friedrich Cerha, best known for his completion of Alban Berg&#8217;s not-quite-finished <i>Lulu</i>, sent along his <i>Eight Movements After Hölderlin Fragments</i>, a string sextet permeated with the dense passions of Schoenberg&#8217;s <i>Transfigured Night</i> of 104 years ago and pretty much cut from the same harmonic fabric.</font></p>
<p>
<font SIZE=3>There was no problem, therefore, in recognizing Gruber&#8217;s own work as by far the evening&#8217;s strongest. Its major strength is its marvelous scoring &#8211; for an ensemble of 18 winds, brass, strings, piano and percussion &#8211; and the clarity as inner voices seem suspended in space. Wit and wisdom form an impeccable counterpoint; ordinary as some of its melodic inspiration may be at times, there is always a twist, a turn toward the unexpected. A first movement is overcast with a dark, luminous blanket of dust and shadows; a second movement emerges into a blinding light pierced with distant echoes of Vienna&#8217;s dance-band past. Overall, this is sterner stuff than Gruber&#8217;s most famous work, the hilariously endearing <i>Frankenstein!!</i> (exclamation points &#8216;n&#8217; all), but the twinkle is there all the same.</font></p>
<p>
<b>I</b><font SIZE=3>n 1948 the Louisville Orchestra, like so many other not-quite-full-time ensembles, was in financial trouble. Unlike many other communities with hopes for artistic eminence, Louisville had a mayor who was also chairman of the orchestra board, and Charlie Farnsley determined that something needed to be done. And while the two major steps he proposed might strike you as contradictory, they worked. First, he reduced the size of the orchestra from 70 to 50. Second, he created a commissioning project: The orchestra would pay for, perform and record five new works every year. 1948 was also the year of the LP, and these new works were to be recorded on this newfangled technology that had already begun to catch on. The composers chosen were world-famous; the first batch included Paul Hindemith, William Schuman, Roy Harris, Virgil Thomson and Darius Milhaud.</font></p>
<p>
<font SIZE=3>The commissioning program, with funding along the way from the Rockefeller Foundation, eventually wound down; by 1959 the Louisville Orchestra had premiered and recorded 116 works by 101 composers. Further money came along: a two-year grant from BMI, a wad from the Ford Foundation. Robert Whitney, who conducted the orchestra at the start of the program, was later replaced; among his successors was Jorge Mester, currently of the Pasadena Symphony. By 1995 the total had swelled to 158 LPs and 10 CDs, more than 400 works by 250 composers.</font></p>
<p>
<font SIZE=3>Now there is &#8220;First Edition Music,&#8221; run by the Santa Fe Music Group, with plans to reissue the entire Louisville caboodle on CD. Seven discs are at hand; eight more are planned for this year. While major producers prune their catalogs down to <i>Beethoven for Babes</i> and the like, here is a project that restores, in one grandiose gesture, a huge block of creative endeavor in the recent history of serious music. The parameters set by Farnley and his group were broad and intelligent &#8211; not just American composers, but good composers with a world-view: Hindemith, Ernst Krenek, Luigi Dallapiccola, Andrej Panufnik.</font></p>
<p>
<font SIZE=3>Not every item is of vital importance, of course. Working my way through the arm-waving, empty oratory of Roy Harris&#8217; Violin Concerto or his Fifth Symphony, I can easily understand why his music is currently out of fashion. A whole disc of John Corigliano, including the Piano Concerto of which better performances are available, ends up as 67 minutes 44 seconds of the same thing endlessly repeated. The picture-postcard exoticism of Alan Hovhaness loses its only reason for existence under Robert Whitney&#8217;s uneventful baton, with the sound in remastered mono. It needs an Ormandy and a Philadelphia sound. A whole disc of Henry Cowell&#8217;s orchestral music is full of the congenial blandness of his last years, sidestepping the truly enterprising works of earlier times.</font></p>
<p>
<font SIZE=3>But then, among this first set of reissues, there is a disc of George Crumb&#8217;s glorious, insolent orchestral inventions, including the 1968 Pulitzer-blessed <i>Echoes of Time and the River</i>. Jorge Mester is the conductor, and it&#8217;s time he performed it here in Pasadena. What grand deviltry is here! What an amazing collage of textures, as percussionists troop across the stage, string players croak out nonsense syllables, and the xylophone taps out messages in Morse code. It isn&#8217;t that nobody writes this kind of music anymore; it&#8217;s just that nobody gets to hear it. In Louisville, once upon a time, they knew what to do.</font></p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Fizzle, Puzzle,&#160;Dazzle</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2003/04/fizzle-puzzle-dazzle/</link>
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		<pubDate>Thu, 24 Apr 2003 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=438</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Gerald Levinson&#8217;s Five Fires wasted the Philharmonic&#8217;s time (and mine) two weeks ago with the same bag of aimless sound effects that afflicted his Second Symphony here eight years ago &#8211; shorter this time but no less distasteful. Both works, in fact, were apparently cut from the same cloth &#8211; or, to drag in a [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>
<font SIZE=3>Gerald Levinson&#8217;s <i>Five Fires</i> wasted the Philharmonic&#8217;s time (and mine) two weeks ago with the same bag of aimless sound effects that afflicted his Second Symphony here eight years ago &#8211; shorter this time but no less distasteful. Both works, in fact, were apparently cut from the same cloth &#8211; or, to drag in a more useful metaphor, culled from the same box of post cards collected by the composer during a sojourn in Bali. Gongs resound, chimes and cymbals whir and twitter, the roar of brass and timpani keeps everything earthbound. It&#8217;s late in the day, I should think, to sell chunks of fabricated exotica &#8211; nine minutes&#8217; worth of this new work, 37 minutes of the Second Symphony, music so truly awful that I remember every note &#8211; merely by daubing travelogue colors onto an impoverished musical design. Lou Harrison knew better how to deal with such irresistible material.</font></p>
<p>
<font SIZE=3>The Levinson piece temporarily shook my confidence in the present and future of our music; two nights later, the group known as eighth blackbird (lower case, they insist) flew into town to restore it. Six Oberlin graduates, currently resident at two fortunate Chicago universities, play new music, mostly brand-new stuff that willing composers old and young have created for this most appealing group. Their basic ensemble is that of Schoenberg&#8217;s <i>Pierrot Lunaire</i>: violin/viola, cello, piano, flute and clarinet, plus percussion. It&#8217;s a scoring that lends itself to wide possibilities. (On May 14, at LACMA, the fine local ensemble XTET performs an extended suite of Bill Kraft&#8217;s pieces for a similar &#8220;Pierrot ensemble,&#8221; and you should be there.)</font></p>
<p>
<font SIZE=3>For its concert at UCLA&#8217;s Schoenberg Hall, the blackbirds put together &#8220;Di/Verge,&#8221; a set of commissioned works by four members of New York&#8217;s Minimum Security Composers Collective, ballsy and smart composers in their early 30s (as are the &#8216;birds). Each composer &#8211; Dennis DeSantis, Roshanne Etezady, Adam Silverman and Ken Ueno &#8211; had come up with a four-movement suite; the 16 movements were then shuffled and performed as two continuous sets of eight. The players had memorized their music, and this gave them the chance to wander around the stage in an easygoing choreography. The music, too, could be counted as easygoing: small, angular conceits, sometimes breaking down into a flowing melodic line, mostly acrobatic &#8211; some jagged Hindemith here, a harmony that Ravel might recognize. It all came together as an evening of pure pleasure &#8211; modest, immensely likable, and, in its own way, original and enterprising.</font></p>
<p>
<font SIZE=3>Concord and discord: Charles Ives&#8217; Second Piano Sonata is a work apart. Purely on the strength of its size and scope, it demands to be taken seriously; those who would hack their tortuous way through its thorny convolutions stand as a band of heroes. To performer and hearer alike, the &#8220;Concord&#8221; Sonata is as daunting a task as the repertory offers. The musical challenges are murderous; blend them &#8211; as Ives demanded &#8211; with invocations of the great minds of Concord, and the task is insurmountable. At Zipper Hall last week, Susan Svrcek took on the beast as the culminating work in her Piano Spheres recital, and scored an impressive victory.</font></p>
<p>
<font SIZE=3>Is it worth the struggle? I&#8217;ve changed my mind on the matter more than once. The opening pins you to your seat; it&#8217;s a veritable tsunami of unbridled rhetoric &#8211; as much Beethovenian as Emersonian, and with an intrusive, ubiquitous quote from the Fifth Symphony &#8211; but where does it go? Soon after, the suspicion sets in that all <i>these</i> notes are busily engaged in chasing all <i>those</i> notes, that the composer has stumbled into a vast musical design, a maze, perhaps, without a clue as to how to get out. The accounts from reliable sources (Elliott Carter, for one) of Ives juicing up his score by adding &#8220;modern&#8221; dissonances long after completing the work add to my unrest. The Beethoven references are of no help; you can go da-da-da-DAH all night and the lamps remain unlit. Emerson, that eloquent logician, is of even less help; nobody has ever accused the &#8220;Concord&#8221; Sonata of logical design. You begin to suspect that Ives has brought his first movement to an end simply because he has run out of paper.</font></p>
<p>
<font SIZE=3>It gets better. Hawthorne and the Alcotts, serene and jovial presences, whisper intimations of Schubert in their respective movements, and the tensions subside. Thoreau is not quite at peace, with us or with himself, but at the end he wanders off and plays his beloved flute &#8211; as did Dorothy Stone, in Zipper&#8217;s balcony. The music doesn&#8217;t really end, as Emerson or Beethoven or Schubert might define &#8220;ending,&#8221; but &#8211; some 50 minutes after the hurly-burly of that beginning &#8211; at least it stops.</font></p>
<p>
<font SIZE=3>Morton Subotnick turned 70 last week, and CalArts gave him a small musical celebration. (The California EAR Unit does better by him at LACMA next month.) Subotnick came to CalArts in 1969, early enough in that school&#8217;s history that he ranks as a founding father. When you think of CalArts music, you think of Subotnick first. In New York in the 1960s, he had laid down his parameters for tape music, working with Donald Buchla&#8217;s synthesizer, the first gadget that brought musical electronics down to desktop size. In his time at CalArts, the computer had also arrived at desktop size, and it was Mort Subotnick who led the generations of student experimenters to postulate the interaction between electronically produced music and the means to put that music through computerized hoops of all shapes and sizes.</font></p>
<p>
<font SIZE=3>He hasn&#8217;t stopped. He still comes to CalArts (along with other destinations), and he is still obsessed with involving young musical experimenters &#8211; sometimes <i>very</i> young &#8211; in music making. I play with some of his interactive &#8220;making music&#8221; programs aimed at restoring the notion of children as active participants in the creative process; I learn a lot from them.</font></p>
<p>
<font SIZE=3>At the CalArts concert last week there were some of his full-of-beans early works for instruments and computer &#8211; <i>Axolotl</i> for solo cello and <i>After the Butterfly</i> for solo trumpet and instrumental octet. Erika Duke-Kirkpatrick was again the solo cellist, as she had been in 1981. Subotnick sat at a Mac laptop, no larger than this page, and pressed a button or two to release the feverish, ongoing energy of the tape piece <i>Until Spring</i>. The composer Nicholas Chase produced a kind of music by playing some of the old Nonesuch and Sony LPs of Subotnick&#8217;s music from way back when, and monkeying around with the turntables to create a distorted collage of some of the great moments. I&#8217;m not sure I understand this new turntable art form; if I ever do, it will probably be under Mort&#8217;s guidance. That&#8217;s the way it has always been.</font></p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Exalted, Exultant,&#160;Exhausted</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2003/04/exalted-exultant-exhausted/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2003/04/exalted-exultant-exhausted/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 17 Apr 2003 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=437</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Three unchallenged masterworks, each over 250 years old, serve civilization as the musical translation of the essence of humanness. On successive evenings over one weekend early this month, all three &#8211; the St. John and St. Matthew Passions of J.S. Bach, the Messiah of George Frideric Handel &#8211; filled and consecrated the air at UCLA&#8217;s [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>
<font SIZE=3>Three unchallenged masterworks, each over 250 years old, serve civilization as the musical translation of the essence of humanness. On successive evenings over one weekend early this month, all three &#8211; the <i>St. John</i> and <i>St. Matthew Passion</i>s of J.S. Bach, the <i>Messiah</i> of George Frideric Handel &#8211; filled and consecrated the air at UCLA&#8217;s Royce Hall. When have we earthlings proved worthy of such bounty?</font></p>
<p>
<font SIZE=3>If any music can qualify as &#8220;essential,&#8221; these works surely do. They tell basically the same story. Handel surveys a historical panorama &#8211; the coming of Jesus, the betrayal and crucifixion, the promise of redemption. Bach expands upon the central tragedy. Each of his two evangelists tell similar stories, each in different dramatic accents: John with the dark chromaticism of his own internal suffering &#8211; you hear this in the very first stabbing notes of the chorus &#8211; and Matthew in broader strokes in which the world&#8217;s entire population participates. The beauty of the music, the genius of both composers&#8217; reactions to the drama, achieves a universality beyond any narrow identity as a Christian tract. The moment of deepest personal tragedy in all three retellings &#8211; Peter&#8217;s denial of Jesus, and his immediate stab of conscience &#8211; is set to music of such poignancy (&#8220;Thy rebuke&#8221; in <i>Messiah</i>, the harrowing dissonance of the &#8220;bitter weeping&#8221; in <i>John</i> and, most of all, the aria &#8220;Erbarme dich&#8221; in <i>Matthew</i>) that just writing about it brings on the shivers. These episodes most meaningfully hold the mirror up to humanity&#8217;s vulnerable center. No composer since the time of Bach and Handel has had the effrontery to invent new music to retell the power of this ancient, vivid legend &#8211; nobody, that is, until Osvaldo Golijov in his <i>St. Mark Passion</i>, which is more like chutzpah than effrontery (and wonderful of its kind).</font></p>
<p>
<b>W</b><font SIZE=3>ord had been circulating for years about the work of Masaaki Suzuki and his Bach Collegium Japan, and here they were, starting a countrywide tour (but performing both the <i>St. John</i> and <i>St. Matthew Passion</i>s only in Los Angeles, lucky us). Born in Kobe in 1954, Suzuki began as a harpsichordist and organist, studied in the Netherlands, and returned to Japan with the single ambition of conducting Bach in historically informed performances with all that implies &#8211; gut strings, wooden woodwinds, portative organs. He and the Collegium are currently recording all 200-plus of the Bach cantatas. In a radio interview he claimed to have never conducted a &#8220;normal&#8221; orchestra. At Royce he used a chorus of 12 and an orchestra of 18 for the <i>St. John</i>, doubling those forces for the polychoric demands of the <i>St. Matthew</i> with, in that work, two of the vocal soloists substituting for the third chorus of treble voices in the opening section. Of the soloists, two were Japanese, three European. The smallest, and the loudest, was a tenor named Makoto Sakurada, and he was phenomenal.</font></p>
<p>
<font SIZE=3>So, in fact, was quite a lot else as well. Looking from the back like a ghost from early Kurosawa, his crown of pure-white hair grazing his shoulders, both his hands seeming to mold the music in midair, Suzuki drew from his mostly young orchestra sounds lithe and bright, marvelously in tune. Tempos tended toward the fast side, perhaps a shade excessively in the chorales. Gerd Türk was the Evangelist both nights, performing with remarkable dramatic intensity, particularly memorable for his hate-filled pronunciation of the name &#8220;Barabbas.&#8221; Jochen Kupfer, a Boris Godunov kind of bass, was the Jesus in <i>St. John</i>. Peter Kooij, the <i>St. Matthew</i> Jesus, performed with less voice but better style. Male alto Robin Blaze sang the &#8220;Erbarme dich&#8221; rather coldly; soprano Yukari Nonoshita sang her arias prettily, aside from a tendency to bite off the ends of phrases.</font></p>
<p>
<font SIZE=3>The miracle of these passions, one of them, anyway, is the richness in the interaction of words and harmonies. It was sheer incompetence, therefore, that the management at Royce furnished no complete printed text, and no hall lighting to read even the fragments of text that were provided. I complained to a couple of the powers that be, but UCLA&#8217;s David Sefton was too busy shaking hands, and Frank Salomon, the tour manager (and head of the distinguished Marlboro Festival), suggested that people could just listen to the music &#8211; a most unsatisfactory response. UCLA has produced some splendid music making in the past; can it be that people there have now stopped caring?</font></p>
<p>
<i><b>M</b><font SIZE=3>essiah</font></i><font SIZE=3> was part of the L.A. Chamber Orchestra&#8217;s series; that management at least knew to provide a full printed text, along with Alan Chapman&#8217;s enlightening pre-concert narrative. Grant Gershon conducted, with a small contingent from his Master Chorale; among the soloists, soprano Elissa Johnston and tenor Michael Slattery were outstanding, bass-baritone James Creswell slightly less so, and mezzo-soprano Kate Butler practically inaudible.</font></p>
<p>
<font SIZE=3>In 1789 the distinguished music patron Baron von Swieten, who was sparking a one-man baroque revival in Vienna, hired Mozart to prepare an update of Handel&#8217;s by-then-famous score; in contrast to our own history-obsessed times, an &#8220;authentic&#8221; <i>Messiah</i> in Handel&#8217;s pristine scoring would have been unthinkable to a 1789 audience. (Similarly, all the famous Bach &#8220;revivals&#8221; instigated by Felix Mendelssohn and his followers four decades later were perpetrated to heavily romanticized re-orchestrations. Heaven preserve us from some future well-intended festival of Bach cantatas re-scored for clarinets, harps and tinkling chimes as installed in the 1850s by the fine Victorian hand of Sir Joseph Barnby &#8211; best known today for his royal-purple song setting of Lord Tennyson&#8217;s &#8220;Sweet and Low.&#8221;)</font></p>
<p>
<font SIZE=3>The &#8220;Mozart&#8221; <i>Messiah</i>, used in the Royce Hall performance, was an occasion of misguided exhumation. For every new touch that might properly be linked to a Mozartian sensibility &#8211; the notion of starting some of the big choral numbers with just a vocal quartet so as to enhance the big-bang entry by the chorus later on, the timpani under the great outbursts in &#8220;For unto us a Child is born&#8221; &#8211; there were other moments in which the familiar Mozartian orchestral magic, of winds and horns in rich harmony, or of the strings dancing out a countermelody above one of Handel&#8217;s solemn tunes, were simply alien to enlightened 2003 ears. If such stiff-backed tributes to the ideals of the past must be inflicted on us, better so at least with the marvelous winds and brass of the Los Angeles Chamber Orchestra. It would be even better so, however, with the unbroken strength of Handel&#8217;s masterpiece as he himself had once dreamed it, not yet in need of fixing.</font></p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Iannis and the Big&#160;Bang</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2003/04/iannis-and-the-big-bang/</link>
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		<pubDate>Thu, 10 Apr 2003 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=436</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Iannis Xenakis&#8217; Persephassa went zooming around the inner space of Zipper Hall the other night, and for the length of that journey &#8211; half an hour, give or take &#8211; it obliged me to believe that music couldn&#8217;t get any better. The fresh air on Grand Avenue, and the gleam of Frank Gehry&#8217;s nascent monster [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>
<font SIZE=3>Iannis Xenakis&#8217; <i>Persephassa </i>went zooming around the inner space of Zipper Hall the other night, and for the length of that journey &#8211; half an hour, give or take &#8211; it obliged me to believe that music couldn&#8217;t get any better. The fresh air on Grand Avenue, and the gleam of Frank Gehry&#8217;s nascent monster across the street, restored my sense of proportion, but the sound of Xenakis&#8217; 34-year-old creation remains with me 10 days later, a welcome presence.</font></p>
<p>
<font SIZE=3>The piece is for percussion, and was the final work on the Green Umbrella program by that bang-up ensemble from UC San Diego known as &#8220;red fish blue fish&#8221; (words from another notable San Diegan, Dr. Seuss). Riding high along pathways blazed by John Cage and Lou Harrison, among others, Steven Schick&#8217;s eight-member ensemble busies itself creating, reviving and maintaining a marvelous repertory of percussion works. Music by Cage was on this program, as was Steve Reich&#8217;s exhilarating <i>Music for Mallet Instruments </i>(which also enlists the services of a vocal trio plus electronic keyboard); it fell to Xenakis, with works fore and aft, to steal the evening. I have occasionally had trouble with Xenakis and his self-proclaimed mysticism, defined in some works weighed down in latter-day mathematics and ancient symbolism; the music last week broke through and bedazzled.</font></p>
<p>
<font SIZE=3><i>Persephassa </i>dates from 1969, early in what became a huge legacy of works for unusually constituted instrumental groups. Six groups of assorted percussion instruments, one player to each group, were spread around the two side balconies at Zipper; the groups &#8220;answered&#8221; one another antiphonally across the hall, and at the end they created the sense of a continuous passage of sound from one player to the next, increasing in speed and complexity and, thus, tightening its hold on the listener. The acoustics at Zipper, which I have praised at &#8220;normally&#8221; constituted events, survived this test as well; the music &#8211; &#8220;a calamitous barrage of strident noises and powerful, unpredictable silences,&#8221; in Schick&#8217;s words &#8211; hung suspended. Initially the players struck what sounded like normal drummers&#8217; exercises; this, too, increased in complexity to match the increasing sense of movement. &#8220;Calamitous&#8221; it certainly was, also overpowering. I can still feel it as I write.</font></p>
<p>
<font SIZE=3><i>Kassandra </i>(1987) began the program: a monodrama, with words from Aeschylus, for a singer (UCSD&#8217;s remarkable Philip Larson) who must alternate between a falsetto (for the rejected Cassandra as death nears) and a bass for the commenting chorus, spurred by the insistent pounding of Schick&#8217;s percussion. The two Cage works were slighter stuff, but the <i>Inlets </i>— for players tilting water-filled conch shells to produce an enchanting (and remarkably varied) counterpoint of gurgle &#8211; became by some distance the evening&#8217;s charmer.</font></p>
<p>
A<font SIZE=3>cross the street two days earlier, the Philharmonic busied itself with the premiere of a trombone concerto by Augusta Read Thomas, written for and played by Ralph Sauer &#8211; the latest in the series of solo works commissioned by the orchestra for its principals. There are more trombone concertos around than you&#8217;d think &#8211; even one by Rimsky-Korsakov &#8211; but this agreeable newcomer may be somewhat different, perhaps even a cut above the average. In their e-mail correspondence &#8211; which is how pieces often get composed nowadays &#8211; Sauer requested a lyrical kind of piece from Thomas, specifically one with a notable absence of that most timeworn of trombone mannerisms, the glissandos familiar from burlesque-theater bands and circuses. There are, indeed, no trombone slides in Gustie Thomas&#8217; new piece, and a rather appealing amount of melody. Some of the latter teeters on the edge of jazziness, and does so quite nicely. The piece bears the title <i>Canticle Weaving</i>; I&#8217;m not sure about &#8220;Canticle,&#8221; but the &#8220;weaving,&#8221; the way the soloist moves in and out of the ensemble, I found most attractive. The <i>L.A. Times</i>&#8216; Mark Swed found that the tone of the work put him in mind of the U.N.&#8217;s Kofi Annan; maybe so, but I think I heard a little Bing Crosby, too.</font></p>
<p>
<font SIZE=3>&#8220;I hate dead music,&#8221; said the composer in her lively and informative pre-concert talk, and she should have no fears on that score from <i>Canticle Weaving</i>. Brahms&#8217; Double Concerto, which ended the program, is about as dead as any music I can name. Only four opus numbers separate it from the Fourth Symphony, which is sad and mellow and reminiscent of leaves in autumn, but not dead. The Double Concerto gives us strained and half-formed melodic shapes pushing their way through a dense and hostile orchestration. Writers whom I otherwise admire single out the slow movement as an example of unfettered and sublime melody; I find it clumsy beyond redemption, and there you are. To make any point the &#8220;Double&#8221; needs the affected arrogance of phrase that Heifetz brought to it on either of his recordings; the performance by the Philharmonic&#8217;s Bing Wang and Ben Hong was merely careful and musical and, thus, excruciating. The program began with early Richard Strauss beer-garden, the one-movement Serenade for Winds, which, being early Strauss and composed for a Mozartian ensemble, some people mistake for youthful exuberance. In any case, Augusta Read Thomas couldn&#8217;t have chosen better program mates to get her own music to kick up its heels and dance until dawn.</font></p>
<p>
H<font SIZE=3>opes for a local revival of <i>Les Troyens </i>to help celebrate the Berlioz bicentennial are probably unrealistic in these troubled times. Meanwhile there is a superb performance, from the 2000 Salzburg Festival, produced on two DVD discs on the ArtHaus label distributed by Naxos. Sylvain Cambreling was the conductor, the late Herbert Wernicke was the designer and director, Jon Villars (not to be confused, alas, with Jon Vickers but otherwise excellent) was the Aeneas, and Deborah Polaski sang the roles of Cassandra and Dido. Wernicke&#8217;s production is stark: Two walls form an angle, with open space in back that suggests the horrors of war and subsequent desolation. The best-of-all news is that the ballets, which form the dreariest aspect of any complete <i>Troyens </i>you&#8217;ve ever seen (including the one recently at the Met), have been cut. Cut. Gone.</font></p>
<p>
<font SIZE=3>Polaski is a strong, intense singer; Villars is not the ultimate hero, but his work is clean and intelligent. Cambreling, still too little known here (except for a week at the Hollywood Bowl &#8211; small change!), leads a finely proportioned performance with special eloquence from the winds and horns of his Orchestre de Paris. The chances of a live-action <i>Troyens </i>being what they are hereabouts these days, this new video is a fairer-than-fair facsimile.</font></p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>The Dutchman&#160;De-Spooked</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2003/04/the-dutchman-de-spooked/</link>
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		<pubDate>Thu, 03 Apr 2003 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=435</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Photo by Robert Millard To the accusers of deprivation in the ranks of ardent Wagnerians, the Los Angeles Opera throws a small bone now and then, the current offering being The Flying Dutchman, which runs through April 12. The shortest and goofiest score in the Wagner canon, its hints of later mastery mingled with a [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Photo by Robert Millard
<p>
<b>T</b>o the accusers of deprivation in the ranks of ardent Wagnerians, the Los Angeles Opera throws a small bone now and then, the current offering being <i>The Flying Dutchman</i>, which runs through April 12. The shortest and goofiest score in the Wagner canon, its hints of later mastery mingled with a leaning toward cute folksiness that the composer would soon outgrow, the <i>Dutchman </i>soars onto the Dorothy Chandler Pavilion stage with a comparable blend: an adequate, if not thrilling, musical performance mingled with some stage business that sometimes enhances the action and sometimes doesn&#8217;t.</p>
<p>
Julie Taymor&#8217;s production was first visited upon local audiences in September 1995, her first American operatic staging after her European <i>Magic Flute</i> and <i>Salome</i> and her Emmy-winning Kabuki-style re-creation of Stravinsky&#8217;s <i>Oedipus Rex</i>. The term &#8220;Eurotrash&#8221; had barely infiltrated the American critical vocabulary, and the nonsense Taymor inflicted upon Wagner&#8217;s first important opera &#8211; a whole &#8216;nother level at least as complex as Wagner&#8217;s own scenario &#8211; was looked upon as the work of individual kookiness. An old man chased a mobile park bench during the overture; headless dress dummies danced during the &#8220;Spinning Chorus&#8221;; a small child played with dolls and ship models to mirror the action. One good curse &#8211; Satan&#8217;s anathema against the Dutchman himself &#8211; seems to elicit another, and Taymor&#8217;s atrocity was merely the latest burden visited upon this opera soon after Jean-Pierre Ponnelle&#8217;s infamous and much-booed San Francisco version. In that one, the entire action took place during a dream by the Steersman, the opera&#8217;s most dispensable character.</p>
<p>
The current revival, &#8220;bone&#8221; though it be, has at least been stripped of most of the aforementioned gristle, and this is all the more surprising, since the director entrusted with this restaging, Vera Calábria, had also been Ponnelle&#8217;s assistant. As of the day before the performance, Calábria told me, she had not yet even met Julie Taymor &#8211; who was actually in town to stage something at the Oscars. The musical performance is not exactly deluxe, but the staging is now clean and sensible, and there is plenty of time to marvel at the one surviving masterpiece, George Tsypin&#8217;s breakaway, mobile, skeletal structure that serves both as ship and as seafarer&#8217;s cottage. His design does, however, necessitate an intermission to accomplish a set change, violating Wagner&#8217;s preference for a nonstop performance. (On opening night, the production did take on a Marxist &#8211; as in Groucho &#8211; overtone, as a small flap in the scenery got stuck, and resisted the efforts of crawling, highly visible stagehands to loosen it.)</p>
<p>
Bernd Weikl has been the Wagnerian lyric baritone of choice for rather a while, and, alas, this has begun to show; his Dutchman was a creature of only sporadic eloquence. Matti Salminen, the Daland, has been around for almost as long, but that resonant, hearty basso of his remains firmly anchored. The Senta, a Russian soprano named Mlada Khoudoley, sang both sweetly and loud; she managed some beautiful tones during the agonizingly long &#8220;Senta&#8217;s Ballad&#8221; but seemed to tire toward the end. The German-Polish conductor, Klaus Weise, seemed, on the other hand, to tire from the beginning.</p>
<p>
<b>O</b>n the one hand, the classical compact-disc industry beats a wholesale retreat from interesting repertory &#8211; new music, new performance concepts, new discoveries of ancient treasures. On the other, there is the inscrutable project known as Andante. An offshoot and namesake of the online music magazine, it zooms forward <i>prestissimo con moto</i> with a growing catalog of ancient and honorable bygone performances chosen with taste but also with the old-fashioned collectors&#8217; mania that I thought had vanished with the demise of the 78-rpm shellac &#8211; but which glows again in Tim Page&#8217;s knowledgeable, passionate program essays with each volume. The Andante collection now stands at 29 multidisc volumes; four new issues are at hand, released next Tuesday. (You can order from Andante.com, and a few stores carry them. The per-disc price, by the way, has just come down a tad.)</p>
<p>
Andante offers a set of the last three Bruckner symphonies, in performances by Karl Böhm, Herbert von Karajan and Wilhelm Furtwängler taken off Austrian radio broadcasts. All three symphonies are available in dozens upon dozens of competing performances, including studio recordings by the same three conductors; apparently there are collectors who must add yet another Furtwängler Bruckner Eighth to those already listed in Schwann, or Stravinsky conducting the <i>Symphony of Psalms </i>in a wheezy recording barely into electrical technology, to stand in humble proximity alongside the infinitely more audible later version.</p>
<p>
Yet there are treasures beyond measure. Four discs of broadcast performances by Eduard van Beinum and the Amsterdam Concertgebouw Orchestra, dating from 1940 to 1958 and therefore in mono, suggest what Los Angeles lost in the way of masterful, self-effacing music making when this conductor died after only two years here. The wisdom here is overpowering: wonderful, clear-tinted Debussy, a Beethoven Third Piano Concerto with the single-named Solomon, a Bach concerto with the visionary pianist Dinu Lipatti, Mozart with Yehudi Menuhin before he became just another fiddler.</p>
<p>
The best of these new sets is the most curious: three discs devoted to just two of Beethoven&#8217;s 10 violin sonatas in multiple performances, recorded between 1936 and 1950, and amazing in the breadth of differences from one to another. Here, for example, are four versions of the tumultuous &#8220;Kreutzer&#8221; Sonata: the sweet-toned sentiment of Fritz Kreisler, with Franz Rupp&#8217;s piano sounding as if it&#8217;s in the next room; the scholarly detachment of Germany&#8217;s Georg Kulenkampff, with the noble Wilhelm Kempff at the piano; the driving force of Adolf Busch&#8217;s violin, give or take a few squeezed notes, with the exuberant Rudolf Serkin keeping abreast. Then there is one more performance, Joseph Szigeti performing at the Library of Congress in 1940 with Bela Bartók at the piano, digging into the music at white heat, uncovering hitherto unknown suggestions that Beethoven may have had Gypsy blood, and transforming music we thought we knew pretty well into a newly minted thing of flame and cataclysm.</p>
<p>
The other sonata is the blithe, ingratiating F major, sometimes known as the &#8220;Spring,&#8221; and the performance of choice is sublime: Szymon Goldberg and Lili Kraus, recorded in 1936 in an outpouring of affectionate musical togetherness that could well stand as the full definition of chamber music. They don&#8217;t play like that anymore, and it&#8217;s great that Andante-<br />
dot-com is around to remind us of when they did.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Four Play, More or&#160;Less</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2003/03/four-play-more-or-less/</link>
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		<pubDate>Thu, 27 Mar 2003 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=434</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Photo by Cylla Von Tiedemann People have been heard to say, once in a while, that chamber music is an alien art hereabouts, that Los Angeles prefers its music loud. That might have been the case at one time &#8211; in the 1980s, say, when the Sequoia Quartet flourished and then foundered, when a brave [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Photo by Cylla Von Tiedemann
<p>
<b>People have been heard to say, once in a while, </b> that chamber music is an alien art hereabouts, that Los Angeles prefers its music loud. That might have been the case at one time &#8211; in the 1980s, say, when the Sequoia Quartet flourished and then foundered, when a brave festival called Chamber Music L.A. started out with large and friendly audiences and then lost them, when the comfort and excellent acoustics of Ambassador Auditorium were reason enough to look forward to an evening of small and subtle sounds &#8211; but not reason enough to keep it open.</p>
<p>
It would be difficult to corroborate that sentiment now, however. In the last month or so, extraordinary events have taken place in the realm of the small sound. The Kronos Quartet has been in residence at UCLA, with an agreeably messy mixed-media program that drew a big crowd to Royce Hall and, a few nights later, a collaboration with the Merce Cunningham dancers in a work by John Cage. Also at UCLA, the Pacifica Quartet gave its marathon Elliott Carter program, with music hard to like but with poised, fearless playing impossible to resist. The Ardittis came to the County Museum and, as previously noted, conquered. The Penderecki Quartet &#8211; Canadian despite its title &#8211; returned to LACMA with two thought-provoking programs. The Philharmonic&#8217;s Chamber Music Society played Ravel and John Adams at the University of Judaism&#8217;s Gindi Auditorium, and, just last week, there was a profoundly delightful program by members of the Los Angeles Chamber Orchestra &#8211; the second of three “Conversations” concerts &#8211; that drew a capacity crowd to Zipper Hall, fed them on hors d&#8217;oeuvres and then on Mozart, Mendelssohn, and bright and lively discourse.</p>
<p>
That hall &#8211; named for the distinguished Viennese conductor and teacher Herbert Zipper, survivor of Dachau and Buchenwald, who spent his last years in Los Angeles &#8211; has itself been a major cause of the chamber-music upsurge. At 416 seats, it is the perfect size for chamber concerts. The acoustics are embracing; the audience can hear the music making, and so, LACO&#8217;s Jeff Kahane reported at this concert, can the players. Last week&#8217;s concert was beautifully designed to make people fall in love with music. First there was Mozart&#8217;s Quintet for Piano and Winds, which Mozart himself claimed to love above all his works (and with good reason). Kahane&#8217;s piano for this work was a reconstructed Broadwood instrument from 1829 &#8211; already a little late for 1784 chamber music, but marvelous to hear for its clarity and definition and for the way it became part of the ensemble.</p>
<p>
Then came other music, less familiar but of comparable delight, Mendelssohn&#8217;s B-minor Quartet, for piano and strings: the composer&#8217;s Opus 3, dating from his 14th year, rambunctious and exuberant. (“Some brat!” noted Kahane in the post-concert talk.) For this the piano was Zipper&#8217;s own Fazioli supermachine. After the concert there was a spirited and extended QA that included Kahane, the participants and the man who had rebuilt the old piano. I learned a lot; nobody seemed to want to leave. The whole evening, in fact, could be reckoned a kind of chamber music. Kahane is a treasure, for the way the music warmed him and then for the way he warmed the room. The last “Conversations” program this season is on April 10.</p>
<p>
<b>Bela Bartók&#8217;s Fourth Quartet concluded the Penderecki Quartet&#8217;s</b> first program; Janácek&#8217;s Second Quartet concluded the second. Both works were composed in 1928, share some aspects and differ in others. The Bartók paints a landscape, moonlit at times, eerie and tenebrous at others; Count Dracula could be riding by, and his private corpse collection might be dancing and rattling bones. Every measure seems to contain a new way of composing for these four instruments. Janácek paints an interior landscape: the strange torments of an unfulfilled lover caught up in a ménage à trois, hopelessly dreaming of making babies with his mistress, obediently tagging along with that lady and her husband, working off the obvious frustrations in music &#8211; and in this work (subtitled “Intimate Letters”) in particular. The music invents no new sounds, as did Bartók; still, it leaves one shaken, sharing in the unrequited longings typified in the final distorted ending that actually ends nothing &#8211; except for Janácek himself, who died shortly after completing the work.</p>
<p>
The able young Pendereckis played both works with superb intensity &#8211; hair-raising, actually, in the Janácek. They began their first program with <i>Vistas</i>, a 1989 work by the Israeli-born Shulamit Ran. Its roots are clear: the augmented seconds and self-flagellating <i>geschrei</i> indigenous in the Hebraic legacy, coupled with a vibrant rhythmic pulse that may be the composer&#8217;s own. Canadian Peter Hatch&#8217;s <i>Gathered Evidence</i> bears a 2002 date, but apparently wants to resurrect the cute computer and sampler tricks of decades past; it managed to be both brief and overextended. Haydn and Brahms filled out the second program: the Haydn (Opus 3, No. 3) most ingratiating, the Brahms (Opus 67) rather glum. The program notes went into detail to prove that the first quartet was probably not actually by Haydn. Still, if some other composer created music of such charm, with so many original Haydnesque twists, wouldn&#8217;t you think there&#8217;d be a whole raft of his other great works awaiting discovery? This is the kind of stuff that musicologists buzz over hour after hour; meanwhile, we have this one beautiful work, and that should be enough.</p>
<p>
The Philharmonic&#8217;s chamber program tied into the John Adams week with the brief <i>China Gates</i> for piano at the start and the nose-thumbing charm of <i>John&#8217;s Book of Alleged Dances</i> at the end; Ravel&#8217;s A-minor Trio, again rather glumly played, came in the middle. Better than any of this, however, were the <i>Poèmes de Ronsard</i>, a pair of songs for soprano and flute by Albert Roussel, sung by Christine Brandes and by Catherine Ransom&#8217;s magic flute: elegant, graceful, intertwined melodies by a little-known French composer of neoclassic bent who&#8217;s known, if at all, for his jaunty Third Symphony.</p>
<p>
The crowd at Gindi was surprisingly sparse; these chamber concerts used to draw well, especially among the University of Judaism loyalists. Last year the Philharmonic moved the series across the freeway to the Skirball Center&#8217;s new Ahmanson Hall, an ugly and uncomfortable venue; the major conversational topic all year was the hall itself. After a year the concerts returned to Gindi, not exactly a palace for the arts, but at least a place where you could get to your seat without cracking a shinbone. Now word needs to re-circulate: Come back, o patrons; the Philharmonic needs you and chamber music needs you!</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>&#8230;And Never the Twain Shall&#160;Meet</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2003/03/and-never-the-twain-shall-meet/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2003/03/and-never-the-twain-shall-meet/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 20 Mar 2003 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=433</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[If you needed a couple of perfect lab specimens to illustrate the philosophical gap between East Coast and West Coast music, you couldn&#8217;t find worthier paradigms than the events at either end of a recent five-day stretch. At one end, Elliott Carter&#8217;s string quartets; at the other, John Adams&#8217; El Niño. Anyone who doesn&#8217;t consider [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>
<font SIZE=3><b>If you needed a couple of perfect lab specimens</b> to illustrate the philosophical gap between East Coast and West Coast music, you couldn&#8217;t find worthier paradigms than the events at either end of a recent five-day stretch. At one end, Elliott Carter&#8217;s string quartets; at the other, John Adams&#8217; <i>El Niño</i>. Anyone who doesn&#8217;t consider Adams the greatest living American composer probably thinks that of Carter; <i>vive la différence</i>.</font></p>
<p>
<font SIZE=3>Carter&#8217;s five quartets appeared from 1950 to 1995: 45 years in a life of prolific creativity in any genre you can name. Last year, at 94, he even finally got around to writing an opera &#8211; not much of one, to be sure, but an Elliott Carter opera nevertheless. New York is his power base; the Brits also accord him top dollar. Here is Britain&#8217;s Andrew Porter, writing in <i>The New Yorker</i> about Carter&#8217;s Second Quartet (1959), in prose that is, of itself, downright Cartesian:</font></p>
<p>
<font SIZE=3>&#8220;Consider the <i>Presto scherzando</i> movement of his Second Quartet, marked to be played &#8216;with rhythmic precision in all parts.&#8217; To achieve precision in the first measure, that measure of five quarter-notes (which lasts only one and seven-tenths seconds) must be divided into 60 equal parts. The first violin must enter on the counts of 20, 25 and 29; the second violin on one, 16, 31 and 46; the viola on 49 and 58 . . .&#8221;</font></p>
<p>
<font SIZE=3>Am I missing something here? Was I derelict in neglecting to take my stopwatch and slide rule to UCLA&#8217;s Schoenberg Hall on the night in early March when the Pacifica Quartet undertook not one but <i>all five</i> of these Carter works? What I heard that night was nearly three hours of music of phenomenally dense and gritty contrapuntal energy. The First Quartet began with a huge span of melody, a cello solo reaching toward far horizons; it could have been an invocation to the whole long evening. I waited in vain for other music of comparable eloquence. What was most amazing was how little change the language of the music actually went through from one work to another, one decade to the next &#8211; beyond the printed information that such and such a work was built out of two pairs of instruments performing differently and that another consisted of simultaneous mixed tempos.</font></p>
<p>
<font SIZE=3>Now and then I thought about Beethoven, about the five quartets at the end of his life, composed over the three years that also produced the <i>Missa Solemnis</i> and the Ninth Symphony, about how each of those five works seemed to invent its own language, and how each of these languages embodied a new and important message to the listener. From inside these works of Carter I got no message, beyond the news that there were wheels going &#8217;round, masterfully turned. Fine as the playing was by this remarkable young ensemble &#8211; currently in residence at Northwestern &#8211; I think that the concert did disservice, to Carter and certainly to the dwindling audience. A spot of Beethoven or of Haydn or &#8211; you name it &#8211; would have helped. During one of the intermissions, a group of concertgoers linked arms and strolled down a corridor singing &#8220;Come Back to Sorrento.&#8221; Now <i>that&#8217;s</i> what you call protest.</font></p>
<p>
<font SIZE=3><b>There were other wheels going around, leading to </b><i>El Niño</i> at the Music Center last week: a citywide series of conversations, colloquiums, musical homages, all serving to invest the main event with an aura of importance that was, this once, appropriate and deserved. The work itself is a kind of masterpiece &#8211; music not merely about itself and its metrical ratios but with a sense of vast outreach through open windows.</font></p>
<p>
<font SIZE=3>The genius of the work begins in its poetic sources, a panorama &#8211; assembled by Adams himself with the collaboration of Peter Sellars &#8211; that includes the folkish symbolism of the Apocryphal Gospels, the visions of Hildegard von Bingen, the anguished outcries of contemporary Latino witnesses, the latter-day inquisitions that mirror the horrors of Herod and his court. All this Adams has splendidly underlined with his own range of musical resource: orchestra and chorus raging in furious Handelian counterpoint, a rock bass line to propel the music at other moments, a lament over a contemporary massacre in which the breath simply stops, in the music and in the hearers as well. At the end a children&#8217;s chorus and a solo guitar return the music to the silence out of which, two hours before, the miracle of the Nativity first took musical shape. At the pre-concert talk, the pathetically ill-advised interlocutor tried to force Adams into admitting a kinship with Osvaldo Golijov&#8217;s vastly different <i>Passion Oratorio</i>. &#8220;My name is John Adams,&#8221; said John Adams, and that was that.</font></p>
<p>
<font SIZE=3>Peter Sellars&#8217; staging, which I had seen in San Francisco two years ago and later on DVD, was considerably clarified this time from the onstage gridlock that had led to a wearying sensory overload; just the expedient of placing Salonen&#8217;s orchestra in the pit made a difference. The chorus, barefoot and casually dressed, formed memorable tableaux on the bare stage floor; so did the three dancers, rising out of the vocal group; so did the three countertenor members of Paul Hillier&#8217;s Theatre of Voices, who served as annunciatory angels; so did the made-in-heaven trio &#8211; Dawn Upshaw, Lorraine Hunt Lieberson and Willard White &#8211; who have been with the work from the beginning.</font></p>
<p>
<font SIZE=3>Peter Sellars&#8217; film remains extra baggage; Adams&#8217; music will survive on its own. This time, because of the roomier stage design, I did not find the film as oppressive as I had in San Francisco; it is what it is, a visual metaphor for the dramatic intent of the music, a retelling of the musical content on less subtle terms. As a Los Angeles experience, the translation of the Nativity story into a filmed drama among recognizable young people in a recognizable habitat creates some sense of identity. Someday, assuming the continued popularity of <i>El Niño</i> as it truly deserves, the film might serve as a bridge to future performances in more modest settings where seats don&#8217;t cost the $82 of last week&#8217;s Music Center premiere, and the audience is encouraged to dress down to match the performers onstage.</font></p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>That Other &#039;70s&#160;Show</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2003/03/that-other-70s-show/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2003/03/that-other-70s-show/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 13 Mar 2003 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=432</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Having served us nobly, for the past 30 years or so, in resurrecting both the music of the distant past and its surrounding ambiance &#8211; baroque chamber music in a baroque-rip-off Pasadena mansion, say &#8211; MaryAnn Bonino&#8217;s Da Camera Society has now brought its explorations to within shooting range of nowadays. The substance on a [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>
<font SIZE=3><b>Having served us nobly, for the past 30 years or so, in </b>resurrecting both the music of the distant past and its surrounding ambiance &#8211; baroque chamber music in a baroque-rip-off Pasadena mansion, say &#8211; MaryAnn Bonino&#8217;s Da Camera Society has now brought its explorations to within shooting range of nowadays. The substance on a recent sunny Sunday was some of the musical monkeying that had been perpetrated hereabouts in and around the 1970s. The chosen venue was the reconverted railroad freight depot that now houses the anything-but-retro enclave of architectural wisdom known as SCI-Arc. For baroque gimcrackery, substitute raw concrete. The entertainment, too, was solid.</font></p>
<p>
<font SIZE=3>Ah, the &#8217;70s! In New York the movement known as Fluxus had served to rekindle the anything-goes spirit of Dada of the recent past: the topless Charlotte Moorman playing her cello (not too well); Nam June Paik mooning the audience (sparse, I&#8217;m happy to report); La Monte Young and his smashed (cheapo) violins. Something of Fluxus emigrated to CalArts in its early days, back when it was the only enclave of human habitation up on the hills above Valencia. Most of the membership of the current California E.A.R. Unit &#8211; which performed at the concert two weeks ago &#8211; were students at CalArts in those days. You could trace their Fluxus inheritance right at the start, as the group distributed the afternoon&#8217;s printed programs to the crowd in the form of paper airplanes. Later on, indeed, a violin got smashed.</font></p>
<p>
<font SIZE=3>There was greater substance in other of the afternoon&#8217;s music, but not necessarily higher excellence. There was Henry Brant, doing then what he does now, trying to enhance the impact of some basically academic note-spinning by spreading the performers around the space. There was some of Frank Zappa&#8217;s indigestible goulash, stirring half a dozen kinds of music (rock, blues, 12-tone, misunderstood Varèse) into one cacophonous proclamation that Unplayable Is Preferable. There were early pieces by composers on their way up &#8211; James Tenney, Steven Mosko, Daniel Lentz &#8211; in show-off styles they would soon disown. And there was one piece, Mel Powell&#8217;s serene, fragrant <i>Immobiles</i> for instruments delicately surrounded by electronic murmurings, that on the criterion of pure quality was worthier than anything else that day.</font></p>
<p>
<font SIZE=3>But the concert wasn&#8217;t so much about quality as spirit. Everything that was happening in the &#8217;70s &#8211; at least everything that was sampled at this one exhilarating event &#8211; seemed to be happening for the first time. Electronic music was a brand-new box of toys only recently opened. Other composers &#8211; Yannis Xenakis, for one &#8211; would invent more interesting uses for space than Henry Brant had found. Mel Powell would create a more extensive, even more beautiful legacy than this one small jewel. As the low man in the critics&#8217; hierarchy at <i>The New York Times</i>, I was assigned to most of the Fluxus events at Carnegie Recital Hall and other low-rent venues way back when, but I don&#8217;t remember any of them as being as much fun, or as loaded with as much truly smart joyousness, as the E.A.R. Unit provides these days. It was fun reliving the past for that one afternoon &#8211; and the SCI-Arc building, teeming with young, creative impulse, was surely worth the trip &#8211; but I prefer being <i>here</i>.</font></p>
<p>
<font SIZE=3><b>Later that same Sunday there was Karita Mattila&#8217;s </b>vocal recital at the Music Center, almost all of it consisting of uninteresting music lit up by radiant artistry. She is an extraordinary singer, to be sure. I haven&#8217;t heard anyone in a long time with her ability to turn notes into insinuations, to shape a musical phrase into a caress at one moment, a defiance at another, and at another, thanksgiving at the mere existence of birds, trees and iridescent dragonflies. I also haven&#8217;t heard anyone in a long time so aware of the incomparable value of working with a pianist &#8211; the irreplaceable Martin Katz &#8211; as a collaborator and not just a tag-along accompanist.</font></p>
<p>
<font SIZE=3>Yet the program was almost consistently second-rate: a wad of Henri Duparc, when the heart cried out for Debussy; a wayward mess of Sibelius, although the one about the dragonfly had its prettiness; five inferior chunks of Rachmaninoff. Dvorak&#8217;s <i>Gypsy Songs</i>, though not exactly masterworks, were lit up with Mattila&#8217;s lovely sense of warm humor; the one familiar number from the set, &#8220;Songs My Mother Taught Me,&#8221; was also the evening&#8217;s one excursion into pure, unalloyed beauty. I want her back, in Schumann and Debussy.</font></p>
<p>
<font SIZE=3>Later in the week she joined compatriot Esa-Pekka Salonen and the Philharmonic in the <i>Four Last Songs</i> of Richard Strauss, sang them gorgeously, but reminded me of how much I dislike these insipidities from the composer&#8217;s senile years. I know those words are impolite; one must genuflect before a bygone celebrity who, at 80 or so, can still hold a pen. Strauss wrote pretty songs, even attractive songs, in his early years. He also had a unique knack of composing to make the soprano voice sound ravishing beyond the strengths of the music itself, and we have the dangerously seductive <i>Rosenkavalier</i> and the unspeakable <i>Arabella</i> to bear this out. That gift remained; the <i>Four Last Songs</i> exist to melt strong hearts from the vocal sheen of an Elisabeth Schwarzkopf, perhaps a Renée Fleming. Mattila, by the same token, did not quite make them work; her performance, for all its thrust, suffered from an excess of intelligence. The audience did, of course, go gaga, as well they should.</font></p>
<p>
<font SIZE=3>The program also included Witold Lutoslawski&#8217;s Fourth Symphony, whose world premiere the Philharmonic had given in 1993. It remains a troublesome work. Here again you have to admire the aging composer, and for better reasons than for Strauss. There are wonderful sounds here; the very first measures, with the orchestra emerging from a dark hole and the winds sounding a dire imprecation, arrest the attention. But there is a disturbing disconnectedness about the piece, moments of a dead stop and a resumption somewhere else, that inspires me with the awful suspicion that this marvelous, cherishable composer had run out of energy too soon. The great works of Lutoslawski, not much before this final essay, are robust and teeming; in their shadow, this one work makes me wish it didn&#8217;t exist.</font></p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Composer From&#160;Hell</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2003/03/composer-from-hell/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2003/03/composer-from-hell/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 06 Mar 2003 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=431</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[MARK-ANTHONY TURNAGE LOOKS like a bloke and composes like a diabolical horde. He first invaded our awareness at Ojai in 2000 with Blood on the Floor, 70 minutes of exquisitely controlled mayhem. The title came from one of Francis Bacon&#8217;s lurid canvases; if ever sight and sound smashed against each other in the formation of [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>
<font SIZE=3>MARK-ANTHONY TURNAGE LOOKS like a bloke and composes like a diabolical horde. He first invaded our awareness at Ojai in 2000 with <i>Blood on the Floor</i>, 70 minutes of exquisitely controlled mayhem. The title came from one of Francis Bacon&#8217;s lurid canvases; if ever sight and sound smashed against each other in the formation of a single sensual exercise, this was it &#8211; among the crickets and woodpeckers of Ojai in the midst of a wholesale Brit invasion masterminded by Sir Simon Rattle, or at home, where the recording is my favorite means of drowning out my neighbor&#8217;s dog.</font></p>
<p>
<font SIZE=3><i>Blood on the Floor</i> was begun in 1993; <i>Your Rockaby</i>, which the Philharmonic performed under Sir Andrew Davis two weekends ago, came just before. Its title is from Samuel Beckett, a monologue by an ancient crone rocking herself to death. The two works are linked, in a sense; they both demand feats of super- (or maybe sub-) human virtuosity from a saxophone soloist &#8211; a frenzied soprano sax in <i>Rockaby</i>, several sizes in <i>Blood</i>. Britain&#8217;s Martin Robertson, who fulfills those demands, was at Ojai in 2000, was here for <i>Your Rockaby</i> and has recorded both works on Decca-Argo.</font></p>
<p>
<font SIZE=3>There is an explosiveness in Turnage&#8217;s music that seems to come from a constant sense of collision and not very much assimilation. Jazz plays an important role, but it&#8217;s a clean, driving, up-to-date kind of jazz that doesn&#8217;t want much to do with traditional sources. The edges between this new jazz &#8211; which sounds improvised at times but may, for all I know, be completely written out &#8211; and the other stuff (quite a lot of Hans Werner Henze and the marvelous, rational textures of the Better Brits like Oliver Knussen) are left raw and gritty. The connections with Francis Bacon are clear and vivid. I remember my first contact with Bacon&#8217;s work; I couldn&#8217;t get past the suspicion that someone was screaming at me. I learned to like it, but it took time and effort. I think Turnage is a powerful and important composer. Looking at that plain Midlands face, you first want to think about Yorkshire pudding. Then the music comes on.</font></p>
<p>
<font SIZE=3>Turnage and Thomas Adès have a place among the aforementioned Better Brits. Gustav Holst, whose <i>The Planets</i> shared the program with the Turnage, does not. He survives on that one piece, whose sustaining force gets an inexplicable boost from a tenuous connection with Trekkie and Jedi freaks, and from the concert promoters who invent nonexistent connections between the light-show effects of those movies and the mashed-potato turgidity of Holst&#8217;s music. Okay, the Holst gets a hearing now and then; that does no harm. The performance under Davis was just okay, even if you could notice a spot of cold brown gravy over the potatoes now and then. At the end &#8211; some of my letter writers insist that I say &#8211; many in the audience stood and cheered. There is one work by Holst that I truly admire, a half-hour choral piece called <i>The Hymn of Jesus</i>, one of those minglings of old modalities and late-romantic resonances &#8211; as also in Vaughan Williams, some of the better William Walton and the weak-tea but somehow lovable Gerald Finzi. Alas, no recording of the Holst exists, at least in my latest catalog. Forty performances of <i>The Planets</i>; not one of <i>The Hymn of Jesus</i>.</font></p>
<p>
<font SIZE=3>AT LAST WEEK&#8217;S GREEN UMBRELLA at Zipper Hall, there were more bundles from Britain. Thomas Adès&#8217; <i>Cardiac Arrest</i> rescued the flag but hardly saved the day &#8211; four jolly minutes of reworking a piece by Madness, a British ska/pop group: delightful, but too soon over. (These Brits with their titles!)</font></p>
<p>
<font SIZE=3>I try to listen to Judith Weir&#8217;s music without remembering a night at the Santa Fe Opera House that belongs beside my most painful memories, dental or otherwise: an insanely wrong-headed offering called <i>A Night at the Chinese Opera</i>, performed during one of Santa Fe&#8217;s famous monsoons before they had filled in the roof. <i>Thread!</i>, which laid claim to 20 minutes in Zipper&#8217;s drier confines, was more on the same dam fool level: a musical setting, for small orchestra and narrator, of nothing less than the Bayeux tapestry &#8211; the narrator reading off the historical account of the Norman Conquest  stitched to the top of the tapestry, the orchestra illustrating the events shown below in a bland, Silly Symphony style that seemed intent on reducing that noble artwork to rubble and ridicule. In my job I hear good music, I hear bad music.<br />
I don&#8217;t often hear music that is embarrassing &#8211; not while </font></p>
<p>
<font SIZE=3>I still<br />
have the strength to make it to the </font></p>
<p>
<font SIZE=3>exit doors. This piece was simply embarrassing; I blush to think that Ms. Weir and I are in the same line of work.</font></p>
<p>
<font SIZE=3>James MacMillan conducted, and gave over the rest of the concert to his own piece, called <i>Parthenogenesis</i> &#8211; this the same week that the anti-cloning bill cleared the House of Representatives. Yes, that&#8217;s what this piece is, I think, about: a dramatic dissertation concerning reincarnation, virgin birth and fallen angels, all set to 50 or so minutes of a blankness so featureless that I actually came to feel it as a vacuum. MacMillan is popular; his music can be fun when Evelyn Glennie is on hand to beat out the rhythms. If his piece, and that of his Scots compatriot Judith Weir, were an attempt at reconciliation with the Colonies, make mine oatmeal.</font></p>
<p>
<font SIZE=3>At Mark Robson&#8217;s Piano Spheres recital at Zipper Hall the week before, there was the rare chance to hear all 12 of Claude Debussy&#8217;s <i>Etudes</i>, his last music for piano and almost his last work in any medium. It was an extraordinary experience, an encounter with the aging, ailing Debussy, a still-living mind in a wasting body, bequeathing a view over the realm of melody, harmony and resonance comparable to the great, philosophical late works of Bach &#8211; <i>The Art of the Fugue</i> and, even more, <i>The Musical Offering</i>. They are also, of course, explorations into piano technique comparable &#8211; as Debussy admitted &#8211; to the Chopin <i>Etudes</i>, but these are bigger works altogether. They are less often heard than Debussy&#8217;s earlier works with the colorful titles; I don&#8217;t remember ever hearing the whole set at once. But they are better that way, because they do feed off one another. Robson&#8217;s performance was, as usual, immaculate, wise and loving; he has become one of our most valuable local artists.</font></p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Clouds and&#160;Cuckoos</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2003/02/clouds-and-cuckoos/</link>
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		<pubDate>Thu, 27 Feb 2003 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=430</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[FINALLY, THERE IS CLOCKS AND Clouds. I have entertained a private passion for György Ligeti&#8217;s 14-minute gathering of moonbeams and distant thunderclaps ever since Esa-Pekka Salonen performed it with the Philharmonic in 1993. It was scheduled for inclusion in Salonen&#8217;s complete Ligeti survey on Sony; the release is assigned a number in the discography in [...]]]></description>
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<font SIZE=3>FINALLY, THERE IS <i>CLOCKS AND Clouds</i>. I have entertained a private passion for György Ligeti&#8217;s 14-minute gathering of moonbeams and distant thunderclaps ever since Esa-Pekka Salonen performed it with the Philharmonic in 1993. It was scheduled for inclusion in Salonen&#8217;s complete Ligeti survey on Sony; the release is assigned a number in the discography in Paul Griffiths&#8217; splendid biography. It never happened; a new recording from other sources, out this month on Teldec, is the first ever. The new disc includes the Violin Concerto, which was also on that Salonen concert (along with Debussy, a memorable matchup). The performances are led by Reinbert de Leeuw with his Amsterdam-based Schoenberg Ensemble; Frank Peter Zimmermann is the phenomenal soloist in the Violin Concerto.</font></p>
<p>
<font SIZE=3>&#8220;Better than any other living composer,&#8221; I wrote in 1993, &#8220;Ligeti defines the full panorama of contemporary musical possibilities. At 69 [now 79] his catalog is not large, but his modest legacy embraces the thinking of a man completely in command of the grammar of music and its expressive scope . . . <i>Clocks and Clouds </i>is a work of high delight. Its basic plan sounds simple in the telling: instrumental music of meticulous, metronomic exactitude (i.e., clocks) gradually melting into a nebulous, cloudlike flow, with a superimposed line for a small women&#8217;s chorus that reverses the flow. Little side-trips along the way form a constant web of surprise . . .&#8221; The title stems from an essay by Karl Popper on the philosophy of science, but Ligeti&#8217;s setting transforms scientific images into poetic. The women&#8217;s text is notated in the International Phonetic Alphabet, and serves more to define rhythm than melody.</font></p>
<p>
<font SIZE=3>This is a small piece, compared to the 27-minute Violin Concerto, but the two share an important facet of Ligeti&#8217;s particular genius, his joy in opening his musical language to all kinds of intrusions beyond the limits of the European systems on which he was raised. In the Violin Concerto there are manic outbursts from, of all strange devices, an ensemble of ocarinas and slide whistles, instruments hooting and chortling in outer-space harmonies that have nothing to do with do-re-mi. The women&#8217;s chorus in <i>Clocks and Clouds</i> accomplishes the same, slipping and sliding into a kind of cloud-cuckoo land. Listening to this can be unsettling to ears nurtured on C major; on a tape I snuck when the work was done at the Hollywood Bowl in, I think, 1998, a yahoo in a nearby box can be heard booing his head off. Sad, how some people simply resist the process of delight.</font></p>
<p>
<font SIZE=3>I suppose it&#8217;s even possible to resist the delight in the final music on this Ligeti disc, <i>Sippal, dobbal, nádihegedüvel</i>, a set of seven tiny songs for mezzo-soprano (Katalin Károlyi) and percussion based on poems by Sándor Weöres &#8211; some of them gibberish, some folksy, some word games &#8211; but I cannot. Wonderful, serious fun, mingled with that infectious wisdom that seems built into this cherishable composer. <i>Clocks and Clouds</i> dates from 1973; the <i>Sippal</i>, etc., songs are from 2000. A sense of humor and delight can endure over 27 years only if buttressed by a sense of infinite intelligence, and that Ligeti surely possesses.</font></p>
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<font SIZE=3>THERE IS MORE LIGETI, AND MORE wise humor, on a recent disc in Deutsche Grammophon&#8217;s &#8220;Echo 20/21&#8243; series of reissues and remasterings of major landmarks from the company&#8217;s ongoing service to new music. From 1962 come the two sets of play-pieces, <i>Aventures</i> and <i>Nouvelles Aventures</i>, in which wisdom and sheer hilarity play off side by side. The language here, too, often lapses into gibberish, as three vocal soloists have at one another in conversations that rise to high expressive levels without once revealing what they&#8217;re about. &#8220;The characters,&#8221; writes Paul Griffiths, &#8220;sing, play games, charm each other, fight, and hope for some response . . . They are a little like children. They are a little like us.&#8221; Pierre Boulez conducts the performance; if, as some have, you doubt his ability to manage genuine humor, even wit, you don&#8217;t know this disc. The disc also includes Ligeti&#8217;s works for organ, performed by Gerd Zacher. If, like some (myself included), you find the idea of humorous organ music an oxymoron, this is the disc to set you straight.</font></p>
<p>
<font SIZE=3>This Deutsche Grammophon series, by the way, is one of the few remaining evidences that someone in the record industry still cares about preserving the world&#8217;s musical heritage. The catalog lists 30 items so far, including the Berio <i>Sequenze </i>I wrote about last week, Messiaen&#8217;s <i>Saint François</i>, three discs of Boulez and such inexplicable items as André Previn&#8217;s <i>Streetcar Named Desire</i>. Berio&#8217;s <i>Coro</i>, a recent issue, is one more disc I would describe as indispensable.</font></p>
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<font SIZE=3>The work was completed in 1977, written for the Cologne Radio Chorus and Orchestra, who perform it here under Berio&#8217;s direction. The name means, simply, &#8220;chorus&#8221;; it belongs among the generically named works &#8211; <i>Opera</i>, <i>Sinfonia</i>, etc. &#8211; that form pillars in Berio&#8217;s catalog. Forty chorus members sit among the same number of orchestra members, creating a sound far more homogeneous than the usual orchestra-down-front, chorus-upstage arrangement. A Pablo Neruda poem forms the backbone of the hourlong work: &#8220;The pallid day appears . . . come and see the blood in the streets.&#8221; Texts twined around Neruda&#8217;s lines are mostly drawn from primitive sources: Peruvian, Polynesian, African, Native American, Hebrew. Berio&#8217;s music reflects various native chanting techniques; the pileup of information and emotion is astonishing at times. Now and then you become aware of a German chorus struggling with other languages —&#8221;a-VAKE LAHV in dis POY&#8221; &#8211; but Berio apparently clings to his original cast. He&#8217;s entitled.</font></p>
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<font SIZE=3>On EMI there is the pulsing, throbbing, exhilarating music of Osvaldo Golijov: <i>Last Rounds </i>for nine strings, which was played here last year by the Philharmonic in an expansion for string orchestra; <i>Lullaby and Doina</i>, heard at a Green Umbrella; <i>Yiddishbuk</i>, at Ojai; and <i>The Dreams and Prayers of Isaac the Blind</i> for klezmer clarinet and strings, which the Kronos plays all over the place. It&#8217;s all irresistible stuff; the intensity is overwhelming as this composer of many backgrounds locates a vector of his Latino and Yiddish heritage (with maybe a shot of vodka to help the fire along). We&#8217;ve heard excellent performances around here, but there is something almost superhuman in the energy these guys &#8211; the St. Lawrence String Quartet, with the Ying Quartet and clarinetist Todd Palmer &#8211; bring to their work that adds this one more disc to the &#8220;essential&#8221; pile. Besides, you have to buy discs like these, to tell the folks at EMI &#8211; and Sony, and RCA, and whoever else is left &#8211; that there is still a market for important recordings, and to tell the Opera Babes to crawl back into the woodwork.</font></p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>A Cut&#160;Above</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2003/02/a-cut-above/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2003/02/a-cut-above/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 20 Feb 2003 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=429</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[BARRING A STUMBLE OR TWO, the Los Angeles Opera usually strikes gold in its forays into bel canto comic opera: Don Pasquale and L&#8217;Elisir d&#8217;Amore, La Cenerentola and The Barber of Seville. This is not, as some believe, an easy repertory; its particular demands &#8211; clarity, timing, and an exquisite balance so that every line [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>
<font SIZE=3>BARRING A STUMBLE OR TWO, the Los Angeles Opera usually strikes gold in its forays into bel canto comic opera: <i>Don Pasquale</i> and <i>L&#8217;Elisir d&#8217;Amore</i>, <i>La Cenerentola </i>and <i>The Barber of Seville</i>. This is not, as some believe, an easy repertory; its particular demands &#8211; clarity, timing, and an exquisite balance so that every line in those marvelous ensembles comes through clean and bright &#8211; are as crucial as in any other part of the repertory, perhaps more so. The company&#8217;s first <i>Barber</i> was produced as a laff riot, and therefore ruined; my only memory is of Rodney Gilfry, during his &#8220;Largo al factotum,&#8221; doing some shtick with a chamber pot. It only ran one season, and was replaced in 1997 with Michael Hampe&#8217;s intelligent, immensely lovable staging. That production has now been revived at the Music Center, and runs two more times this weekend.</font></p>
<p>
<font SIZE=3>First developed by Hampe during his tenure at the Cologne Opera (but with Mauro Pagano&#8217;s plain, serviceable sets actually created at Tokyo&#8217;s Kunitachi College of Music), the production remains wildly comic without once transcending the limits of the opera&#8217;s wise words and insidiously seductive music. Those who would transfer Mozart&#8217;s operatic actions to the far side of the moon, or Wagner&#8217;s <i>Ring</i> to the Lincoln Tunnel, are urged to observe Hampe&#8217;s demonstration of the superior strength in dramatic truth telling. Much of this strength stems from the simple, imaginative stage blocking. You get the feeling that real people, confronted with situations similar to Rossini&#8217;s antics, just might cross the stage in that same way.</font></p>
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<font SIZE=3>Aside from Vladimir Chernov&#8217;s dashing, insinuating Figaro, the cast principals are new to the company: gossamer-voiced tenor John Osborn, just a shade too pale of tone, as the amorous Almaviva; bass-baritone Bruno Pola as a Bartolo fatuous but somehow also dignified; basso Simone Alberghini somewhat underpowered as the conniving Basilio. The new Rosina, Romanian mezzo-soprano Carmen Oprisanu, is the production&#8217;s real find: a honey-voiced singer with splendid command of vocal acrobatics, graceful to watch, unerring in her comic sense and, again, never departing from the role&#8217;s innate dignity.</font></p>
<p>
<font SIZE=3>The opera was presented more or less complete, lacking only Almaviva&#8217;s big closing aria, which is cut more often than not. (It does delay the final curtain with not-quite-first-rate music.) Smaller roles were nicely dispatched, best of all by Suzanna Guzmán as the put-upon slavey Berta, and by Dietmar König, who embellished the mute role of the servant Ambrogio with a repertory of showstopping grunts &#8211; again, well within the great comic spirit of the original work. Gabriele Ferro&#8217;s conducting was convincingly paced, although there were moments when the orchestra did tend to out-shout the singers, at least on opening night. On the other hand, it made me more keenly aware than usual of the further beauty of Rossini&#8217;s scoring, the lovely small lights as oboes and clarinets add their ping to all that merriment down in the strings.</font></p>
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<font SIZE=3>I MAY BE STRETCHING A point, but hear me out: Luciano Berio&#8217;s <i>Sequenza XIV</i>, which had its U.S. premiere during the Arditti Quartet&#8217;s recent concert at LACMA, is another work as purely Italian as Rossini&#8217;s comedy, and in many of the same ways. The <i>Sequenze </i>are among my favorite works, so you&#8217;ve probably heard this all before: More than merely showoff pieces for various solo instruments (including the voice of Berio&#8217;s former wife, Cathy Berberian), they are a series of dialogues within each instrument, each of them a way of regarding the world around it and finding its specific place. The new <i>Sequenza </i>is for solo cello; it was wondrously performed by the Arditti&#8217;s Rohan de Saram. It is an extended conversation &#8211; 12 or so minutes, if memory serves &#8211; by the cello with itself, a melodic gambit played by the bow on strings, an answering phrase by the cello being knocked upon. The conversants touch on many things; by the end we know we&#8217;ve been reached by some beautiful, very mysterious wisdom. All the <i>Sequenze</i> work this way, as you can hear in the indispensable Deutsche Grammophon set of the first 13; no two of the works, of course, achieve their epiphany in exactly the same way. That, as I was saying, is the special grace of this cherishable composer.</font></p>
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<font SIZE=3>Helmut Lachenmann&#8217;s Third Quartet, subtitled <i>Grido</i> (<i>Scream</i>), was the big work &#8211; by the clock, I mean &#8211; on the Arditti&#8217;s program. Prominent people inform me that Lachenmann is the world&#8217;s greatest living composer, so naturally I must pay attention. Thus far I have heard Marino Formenti playing his <i>Syrenade</i> (at last season&#8217;s Eclectic Orange), during most of which the pianist depresses the keys without creating sound. I have purchased the discs of his &#8220;music with images,&#8221; a sort-of opera based on the sad, sad Hans Christian Andersen tale of &#8220;The Little Match-Girl,&#8221; and from the Web site I read that &#8220;Lachenmann&#8217;s multilayered music theater becomes what opera . . . always was, a reflection of exterior and inner states of being, analysis and criticism of existing conditions and their aesthetic counterpart . . .&#8221; And now I have remained awake through his new Quartet, which, the program notes informed me, is a reaction to the &#8220;exterior of our repressible &#8211; yet no less real &#8211; inner longing for liberated space for the perceptive soul of &#8216;new&#8217; music.&#8221;</font></p>
<p>
<font SIZE=3>Herr Lachenmann is a cruel taskmaster. If these intimidating words of his were to lead to something as tangible as the Berio <i>Sequenza,</i> or Beethoven&#8217;s <i>Grosse Fuge</i> &#8211; which began the Arditti&#8217;s program with its challenge delivered out of a cannon&#8217;s mouth, so &#8220;liberating&#8221; that we still cannot fully grasp the extent of the space it demands &#8211; I might react with greater pleasure to his demands. (I might, in other words, know what the hell he&#8217;s talking about.) But his Quartet turned out to be more empty space sporadically poked through by notes. Morton Feldman&#8217;s music is a little like this sometimes, but I find the four hours of Feldman&#8217;s <i>For Philip Guston</i> a marvel of concision up against Lachenmann&#8217;s half-hour near-silent scream.</font></p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Song of the&#160;Innocents</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2003/02/song-of-the-innocents/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2003/02/song-of-the-innocents/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 13 Feb 2003 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=428</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[EVEN IF WILLIAM BOLCOM&#8217;S SONGS of Innocence and of Experience were less excellent than it mostly is, it would rank as a monument to rampant artistic ambitiousness and, for that matter, sheer artistic gall. The fact that last week&#8217;s performance at Orange County&#8217;s Segerstrom Hall by the Pacific Symphony was the work&#8217;s first West Coast [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>
<font SIZE=3>EVEN IF WILLIAM BOLCOM&#8217;S <i>SONGS of Innocence and of Experience</i> were less excellent than it mostly is, it would rank as a monument to rampant artistic ambitiousness and, for that matter, sheer artistic gall. The fact that last week&#8217;s performance at Orange County&#8217;s Segerstrom Hall by the Pacific Symphony was the work&#8217;s first West Coast hearing &#8211; 22 years into its life span &#8211; should, however, surprise nobody. It isn&#8217;t easy to market a work lasting three hours (with one intermission), by a contemporary composer not yet a household name, demanding the services of an orchestra, a folk band and a rock combo, plus eight vocal soloists, two choruses and a children&#8217;s chorus. The first of two performances took place before a smattering of audience, which dwindled further as the evening wore on. None of this had anything to do with the quality of the performance under Carl St. Clair, which was extraordinary top to bottom, or the enterprise of the Pacific Symphony management for producing the work as the centerpiece in a two-week American Composers Festival. Somebody in Orange County is getting things right.</font></p>
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<font SIZE=3>In 1956 the adolescent Bolcom first became obsessed with the 46 doggerel segments of William Blake&#8217;s ironic, sardonic survey of the human condition; in 1981 the completed musical setting had become an epitome not only of Blake&#8217;s ecstasies and catastrophes but of Bolcom&#8217;s own eclectic musical physiognomy. If you know his music at all &#8211; the opera <i>A View From the Bridge</i>, recently broadcast by the Met; the slimy gorgeousness of his piano rags; the musicological zeal with which he and his wife, singer Joan Morris, have reconstructed the totality of the American song repertory; the tensile strength of his symphonic works &#8211; there should be nothing surprising in the processional over three hours of folk ballads, Handelian pomposities, rock and gut-wrenching outcry.</font></p>
<p>
<font SIZE=3>Moments stand out. A sweet, fragile setting of &#8220;The Shepherd&#8221; gives way appallingly to a shriek of orchestral pain as Bolcom and Blake go on to survey the underside of life&#8217;s meaning. For the best known of the poems, the &#8220;fearful symmetry&#8221; of Blake&#8217;s &#8220;Tyger&#8221; is framed in the menacing tone of men&#8217;s voices hurling out a growling speech-song over a roar of percussion. Near the end the poet visits London, where &#8220;the harlot&#8217;s curse blasts the newborn infant&#8217;s tear,&#8221; and Bolcom lights his steps in the glare of screaming synthesizers in &#8220;apocalyptic rock tempo.&#8221;</font></p>
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<font SIZE=3>A bit overstuffed here and there, somewhat raggedy now and then, <i>Songs of Innocence and of Experience</i> still has the feel of a masterpiece. The performance was, in a word, stupendous. Notable among the soloists were the rock vocalist Nathan Lee Graham, the uncredited harmonica virtuoso Tommy Morgan and, of course, Joan Morris, evergreen, enchanting.</font></p>
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<font SIZE=3>&#8220;I SUPPOSE IT MEANS THAT YOU don&#8217;t have to be afraid to be pretty . . .&#8221; That was Lou Harrison, on a series I produced &#8211; some 20 years ago, when KUSC still stood for adventurous radio &#8211; exploring the differences between being a composer in California and a composer anywhere else. Since Harrison had spent most of his long life creating music both beautiful and, now and then, rather pretty as well, his disarming and direct statement could be taken to heart. Now Lou has left us, but the words and the music remain.</font></p>
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<font SIZE=3>Beyond question, California&#8217;s music is different. The onshore breezes bring in exotic scents and flavors: not the fugues and sonata forms of centuries-old musical methodologies but the clangorous improv of gamelan and raga, the roar of surf, the purr of a Sierra brook. Lou helped in stipulating those differences, along with Henry Cowell, John Cage and, a little later, Robert Erickson. They worked at a time when California also served as a temporary refuge for practitioners of the far different European outlook, and it&#8217;s an interesting irony that both Cage and Harrison, the most resolutely free-spirited of West Coast composers, studied for a time with the most resolutely rigid-spirited of visiting composers, Arnold Schoenberg. They then rejected everything he had taught them.</font></p>
<p>
<font SIZE=3>The fine Lou Harrison biography &#8211; by Leta E. Miller and Fredric Lieberman, published by Oxford in 1998 &#8211; bears as its subtitle &#8220;Composing a World,&#8221; which is exactly what he did. Proof of this lies in the 73-minute-49-second compact disc slipped into the book&#8217;s back cover: bits, pieces and whole compositions culled from over 50 years of exuberant creativity. We join Harrison first at 30-something, in an all-American muscle stretcher, clearly beholden to the jagged-edge modernism of good ol&#8217; boys Charles Ives and Carl Ruggles. Around 1941 he decides that music isn&#8217;t necessarily the polite resonances of symphony orchestras. He re-defines &#8211; for himself and for a widening circle of admirers &#8211; the very nature of musical sound. He and Cage join forces to create a whole new range of sonority by banging away on junkyard salvage: brake drums, old trolley springs, metal sheets. For entertainment as well as inspiration, he spends nights at San Francisco&#8217;s Chinese opera.</font></p>
<p>
<font SIZE=3>His horizons expand; he is lured into explorations of distant times and places. He rebuilds a beat-up piano to reproduce the outlines of ancient Greek tuning systems, melding these ancient harmonies into songs whose singers must first unlearn &#8211; as Harrison himself did &#8211; everything they know about the sounds of &#8220;standard&#8221; concert repertory. A New York decade (1943­53) forms an interlude, and the few quotes from Harrison&#8217;s four years as assistant music critic to Virgil Thomson at the <i>Herald-Tribune</i> of sad memory &#8211; peppery and marvelously observant (e.g., of Leos Janácek&#8217;s <i>Sinfonietta</i>: &#8220;New Jersey with peasants added&#8221;) &#8211; whet the appetite for a full volume of his writings. I knew him then, and he told me he couldn&#8217;t wait to get back to California.</font></p>
<p>
<font SIZE=3>The thrust of Harrison&#8217;s life, and its passions, identifies him as the embodiment of the glorious fullness, and the strangeness, of the archetypal 20th-century West Coast artist. Jovial, wise, constantly delighted and delightable, Harrison composed like none other, forging grand, eloquent music that draws upon everything there is in the world, sometimes all at once: Greek poetry, say, translated into Esperanto, sung to an ensemble of American percussionists trained to imitate the exotic, hypnotic clang of an Indonesian gamelan. His best works seemed to take the shape of bridges, but they were actually rainbows &#8211; and, now and then, indeed pretty.</font></p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Mozart Off the&#160;Tracks</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2003/02/mozart-off-the-tracks/</link>
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		<pubDate>Thu, 06 Feb 2003 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=427</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Photo courtesy Opera Pacific THE FLIMSIER THE PLOT, SO IT seems, the greater the urge to meddle. Mozart&#8217;s Abduction From the Seraglio, his first real operatic smash, plays on one of the hoariest of opera plots: maiden, captured by tyrant, rescued by heroic truelove. Left to its own devices, it can add up to an [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Photo courtesy Opera Pacific
<p>
THE FLIMSIER THE PLOT, SO IT seems, the greater the urge to meddle. Mozart&#8217;s <i>Abduction From the Seraglio</i>, his first real operatic smash, plays on one of the hoariest of opera plots: maiden, captured by tyrant, rescued by heroic truelove. Left to its own devices, it can add up to an enchanted evening; a Los Angeles Opera production, not so long ago, stands as proof. The perpetrators of Opera Pacific&#8217;s production, which steamed &#8211; yes, <i>steamed</i> &#8211; into Orange County&#8217;s Performing Arts Center last month, obviously believed otherwise.</p>
<p>
This version originated last year at Houston&#8217;s Cullen Theater; by an interesting coincidence, that small Houston theater was inaugurated in 1987 by the same opera. It was set that time on a Hollywood sound stage during the filming of &#8211; you guessed it &#8211; something called <i>Abduction From the Seraglio</i>. This time, however, the action took place on a couple of cars of the Orient Express (!!), legendary conveyance of spies, murderers, and a horny Pasha and his desirable but highly resistant latest harem captive. The production was underwritten by a round robin of American opera companies; Kansas City, Denver and Minneapolis are its next stops, an itinerary the Compagnie Internationale des Wagons-Lits et des Grands Express Européens might deem <i>exotique</i>.</p>
<p>
Allen Moyer&#8217;s art-deco set was quite handsome, even if it did require squeezing the action onto a shallow stage, a problem that Sharyn Pirtle&#8217;s direction only partially solved. Through the train windows a moving cloudscape was visible on the back wall, giving the impression that the train was actually flying &#8211; probably a necessary step, since the act curtain&#8217;s mockup of an Orient Express railway map showed no trackage within miles of Paris, the announced destination. (Andrew Porter&#8217;s fluent English translation was obliged to absorb a carload of uncredited train references.)</p>
<p>
To what end, this meddling? Gottlieb Stephanie&#8217;s libretto is no literary masterpiece, but it doesn&#8217;t burden the opera-goer with a tangled mass of inconsistencies and anachronisms; it reads, even in an honorable translation, the way Mozart&#8217;s music sounds. Mozart&#8217;s music did, indeed, sound quite splendid this time, thanks to the presence on the podium of Britain&#8217;s Jane Glover in her Opera Pacific debut and the company&#8217;s first-ever woman conductor. A known authority on baroque and classical style, she made her hand immediately felt as the familiar overture bubbled enchantingly. So did the entire score, in fact, with Mozart&#8217;s wind scoring blended into string tone like some idealized chamber music writ large. It was a level of Mozart orchestral performance rarely heard in oversize opera venues, even less often heard from a freelance pit band famously underrehearsed. Trains and operas do, after all, share the need for skilled conductors.</p>
<p>
Jan Grissom was the Konstanze, bright and forthright until a few tired moments at the end of &#8220;Martern aller Arten&#8221;; Anna Christy was the Blondchen, animated sometimes to the point of chirpiness. Shawn Mathey was the clear-voiced if not exactly ardent Belmonte; American basso Kurt Link, in his company debut, was the thunderous, scene-stealing Osmin. Jeffrey Lentz, the Pedrillo, arrived on opening night weighed down with laryngitis; Chad Berlinghieri sang his music from the pit to Lentz&#8217;s miming.</p>
<p>
AT UCLA&#8217;S SCHOENBERG HALL A FEW nights later, there was an operatic production of more modest ambitions, successfully fulfilled. I often hesitate about commenting on school opera, and then I am often surprised. I wouldn&#8217;t have automatically thought that student renditions of Maurice Ravel&#8217;s two fabulously beautiful one-act operas, <i>L&#8217;Enfant et les Sortilèges </i>and <i>L&#8217;Heure Espagnole</i>, could challenge memories of professional performances &#8211; David Hockney&#8217;s <i>L&#8217;Enfant</i> at the Met, for one &#8211; and, indeed, they didn&#8217;t. Yet these modest and immensely skillful recitals, staged by Vera Calábria and conducted by the L.A. Opera&#8217;s William Vendice, made for a delightful evening. The student orchestra nicely managed the rustlings of nature and the moonlight&#8217;s gleamings in <i>L&#8217;Enfant</i>, the tricky, hard-edged rhythms in <i>L&#8217;Heure Espagnole</i>. Laura Fine&#8217;s multilevel set served both operas&#8217; needs perfectly; Ela Jo Erwin&#8217;s costumes, including a menagerie of considerable extent for <i>L&#8217;Enfant</i>, was endlessly inventive. Both performances were sung in clear, exceptionally well-trained French. Of the two casts, I saw the first; while it may be early in the lives of these young singers to predict happy futures, I would be happy to re-examine the comedic and vocal gifts of Jamie Chamberlin, who sang the Clockmaker&#8217;s mischievous wife in <i>L&#8217;Heure Espagnole</i>, anytime she passes my way.</p>
<p>
Alberto Colla&#8217;s <i>Le Rovine di Palmira</i> (<i>The Ruins of Palmyra</i>), the 12-minute tone poem that began last week&#8217;s Philharmonic program conducted by Roberto Abbado, is the kind of piece I hoped had gone out of style by now: the short, innocuous curtain raiser that enables an orchestra to add to statistics for its noble service to contemporary music but which is gone from the memory by intermission. The sense of the piece &#8211; if that doesn&#8217;t already constitute excessive praise &#8211; is a depiction of Antar, the legendary Arabian hermit who is also celebrated in the Rimsky-Korsakov symphony that bears that name. Colla, Italian-born (1968), even includes a quote from the Rimsky work as if to legitimize his own empty-headed piece of noise pollution. He made a big point, in his pre-concert talk, about the true Arab spirit in his work, the use of exotic scales and the like. All I heard in the work was an updated hoochy-kooch, with a few wrong notes thrown in.</p>
<p>
Better by several light-years was the afternoon&#8217;s concerto, the Mozart &#8220;Coronation,&#8221; with the young (born 1979) Italian pianist Gianluca Cascioli as soloist. Here, for once, is a new musician of genuine quality and, therefore, genuine promise. Serious of mien and of countenance, he did not flirt with the music or with the audience. He made the music as beautiful as it was meant to be, and did so with a genuine sense of what Mozart might have been about in this, the next to last of his miraculous run of piano concertos. He supplied his own cadenzas; these, too, were full of invention but never beyond the limits of Mozart&#8217;s own harmonic language. The give and take between his piano and Abbado&#8217;s properly cut-down orchestra was &#8211; as I was saying about Jane Glover&#8217;s <i>Seraglio </i>back there &#8211; another fine example of chamber music writ large. I note with interest but some despair that Signor Cascioli is currently studying electronic music at the Milan Conservatory. Mozart, too, needs his touch.</p>
<p>
&#8220;CHERISH THE HYBRIDS,&#8221; LOU Harrison once told me in a radio interview. &#8220;They&#8217;re all we&#8217;ve got.&#8221; The most benevolent of all hybrid composers, Lou, 85, left us last weekend &#8211; mere days before Bill Bolcom&#8217;s <i>Songs of Innocence and Experience</i>, a hybrid masterpiece if ever one was, gets its first local hearing. Strange how things work out. More next week.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Concerted&#160;Efforts</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2003/01/concerted-efforts/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2003/01/concerted-efforts/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 30 Jan 2003 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=426</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[At the Philharmonic these weeks there have been concertos: the old standbys (Tchaikovsky, Mendelssohn) hacked at by wet-behind-the-ears virtuoso wannabes, but also new stuff for new combos: works for cello, solo and multiple, under the Green Umbrella, big pieces for English horn and for massed percussion in elegant conflict with Esa-Pekka Salonen&#8217;s assembled forces. Nothing [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>At the Philharmonic these weeks there have been concertos: the old standbys (Tchaikovsky, Mendelssohn) hacked at by wet-behind-the-ears virtuoso wannabes, but also new stuff for new combos: works for cello, solo and multiple, under the Green Umbrella, big pieces for English horn and for massed percussion in elegant conflict with Esa-Pekka Salonen&#8217;s assembled forces. Nothing sounded like anything else; creative vitality, however, ran through them all.
</p>
<p>    Sellout and turn-away crowds have become the norm at the Green Umbrella concerts, ongoing proof that there is hope for us all. Next season‘s concerts will be in Disney, four times the capacity of Zipper Hall; what&#8217;ll you bet that they sell out, too? Even so, the intimacy at Zipper adds to the impact of these events (and of the newly relocated Piano Spheres concerts as well). I got home from the last Umbrella concert exhilarated but also physically exhausted in the best sense.
</p>
<p>   Anssi Karttunen &#8212; cellist, conductor and composer &#8212; was the soloist and, alongside Esa-Pekka, the co-star: another of these fabulous Finns who have moved onto the musical map in the last 10 or so years and provided it with a transfusion of vital fluids. Karttunen played his cello &#8212; in Pierre Boulez‘s Messagesquisse, which began the program, and in Salonen&#8217;s Mania, which ended it &#8212; with an insolence that suggests that technical difficulties, for him, simply don‘t exist. Until Salonen&#8217;s work the program was entirely for cellos, with nary a trace of the soggy old Villa-Lobos manner (as in his Bachianas Brasileiras) to blur the horizons: an ensemble of six cellos, plus Karttunen‘s solo, in the Boulez; eight in Karttunen&#8217;s reworking of the Magnus Lindberg Etude that Gloria Cheng had played at Piano Spheres last fall; eight in Luciano Berio‘s buzzing, deliriously obsessed Korot, which Karttunen conducted in its first U.S. hearing.
</p>
<p>   At the end there was Salonen&#8217;s Mania, a 17-minute concerto for cello and small orchestra, completed in 2001 but previously unperformed here; hear it on the Sony disc of Salonen‘s music, played by the London Sinfonietta with, of course, Karttunen as cellist. It&#8217;s a marvelous work that demonstrates above all the results of close sharing &#8212; of outlook or, simply, of aura &#8212; among supremely gifted musicians. I can imagine it eventually in other hands, and it certainly deserves a place in the repertory, but the glow of possession that came across on this occasion would be hard to duplicate. The music fulfills its title, but in a controlled manner mitigated by an overarching sense of humor, and with occasional visits from several of Salonen‘s household gods &#8212; Ravel most notably.
</p>
<p>    Two weeks ago there was William Kraft&#8217;s English Horn Concerto, composed for the Philharmonic‘s Carolyn Hove, a work of considerable attraction along with one major flaw. Kraft&#8217;s idea, as he explained in these pages, was to surround the soloist with small orchestral groups blended into the larger ensemble; the thinking was to spare the solo instrument‘s dusky, relatively small tone the need to compete with the full orchestra. It didn&#8217;t quite work; the overall effect was of two unmatched compositions making their way on the same stage simultaneously &#8212; the soft one constantly drowned by the loud one. What was needed &#8212; and call it heresy if you must &#8212; was some kind of amplification judiciously deployed. The material itself is attractive; I think of Kraft‘s basic Americanisms more as prototype than as stereotype. There are jazz harmonies and jazz rhythms and, of course &#8212; considering his background &#8212; some dazzling use of percussion. All told, I liked his concerto; after the thick, dark soup of Schumann&#8217;s “Rhenish” Symphony, which ended the program, I liked it even more. But it needs work.
</p>
<p>    Altar de Piedra (Altar of Stone) was last week‘s new music and, like the Kraft, a Philharmonic commission. Its composer, Gabriela Ortiz, was born and lives in Mexico City, and her new work &#8212; a 20-minute concerto for four percussion soloists and orchestra &#8212; underlines that information. (Another in her “Altar” series, the 1996 Altar of the Dead, has been recorded for Nonesuch by the Kronos Quartet.) Hearing it after Aaron Copland&#8217;s El Salon Mexico, which began the program, was like walking the streets of a vital, intense and joyous community after viewing a bunch of post cards. Whatever the Finns leave undone in the process of raising the musical scene out of its doldrums, our neighbors from across the border will surely complete. The Ortiz concerto is big, serious music, miles removed from Latino pop-concert cha-cha. The solo percussion group, Kroumata by name, was from Sweden, for reasons I won‘t try to explain.
</p>
<p>   The transculturation that has turned Finland&#8217;s Salonen into an advocate for the music of Mexico‘s Silvestre Revueltas is no more easily explained, nor is there need. This program&#8217;s major event was a screening of the 60-minute film called Redes (Nets), also known as The Wave, with the Revueltas score performed live under the screen. The film dates from 1935; the cinematographer was the eloquent American Paul Strand; its co-directors were Mexico‘s Emilio Gomez Muriel and the Austrian immigrant Fred Zinnemann, who, after a few years working with short films in Hollywood, would create Redes as his first feature (and move on eventually to High Noon). The film is set in a fishing village where the fishermen rebel against exploitative capitalist bosses and march toward independence. If this sounds a little like the Soviet cinematic neo-realism of the time, the look of the film &#8212; most of all Paul Strand&#8217;s haunting capturing of faces &#8212; furthers that impression. Bear in mind that the great Sergei Eisenstein had been at work in Mexico not many years before.
</p>
<p>   Revueltas‘ score is like nothing else we know from this extraordinary Mexican artist who drank himself to death at 40 &#8212; certainly nothing of the pounding euphoria in his La Noche de los Mayas that Salonen has recorded so spectacularly. There are echoes here, probably unintentional, of the weightier surges in Debussy&#8217;s La Mer. Against my better judgment, I was even dragged from time to time into thoughts of dark moments in Sibelius: the Fourth Symphony or some of the tone poems. The available print of the film is not in good shape, but its intrinsic power, plus the extraordinary richness of Revueltas‘ music as the Philharmonic played it the other day, cries out for video release.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>The&#160;Visionary</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2003/01/the-visionary/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2003/01/the-visionary/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 23 Jan 2003 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=425</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Luciano Berio was to have been among us these weeks, with his new edition of Monteverdi‘s Coronation of Poppea at the Music Center and several other performances of his music in the area planned to honor his special genius. An ongoing illness, plus injuries from a recent car crash, denied us his presence, with the [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Luciano Berio was to have been among us these weeks, with his new edition of Monteverdi‘s Coronation of Poppea at the Music Center and several other performances of his music in the area planned to honor his special genius. An ongoing illness, plus injuries from a recent car crash, denied us his presence, with the Poppea not quite finished. As an attempt at recompense, the L.A. Opera dug out a short Monteverdi vocal piece that Berio had orchestrated in 1966, and used it to open a program that was otherwise mostly trash. A remarkable vocal ensemble from Stuttgart sang Berio&#8217;s spellbinding A-Ronne at the County Museum (where his marvelous Folk Songs had been performed a few weeks ago); his Korot for an ensemble of cellos lit up last week‘s Green Umbrella at Zipper Hall. On January 27 the fearless Ardittis return to LACMA with the latest in Berio&#8217;s ongoing series of solo works &#8212; this one for cello &#8212; that he calls Sequenze; another performance of Folk Songs is listed at UCLA three days later.
</p>
<p>    A-Ronne bears Berio‘s fingerprints etched with remarkable clarity. It dates from the mid-1970s, and exists in two versions: the poetry spoken, with some musical pitches suggested, by an ensemble of five actors; the poetry sung by eight singers (originally the legendary Swingle Singers, who had also created Berio&#8217;s Sinfonia in 1968). Both versions were once recorded, but don‘t hold your breath. The poem is by Edoardo Sanguinetti, the Italian mystic who has long been one of Berio&#8217;s household gods; in three brief stanzas it consists of a musing on the notions of beginning, middle and end, in quotations from many sources in many languages. Berio‘s setting, spread in fragments among his actorsingers, repeats Sanguinetti&#8217;s words something like 20 times. You have the feeling of being inside these words as they in turn seem to dance inside one another. Berio has defined the work as a “documentary” on Sanguinetti‘s poem, which is just right.
</p>
<p>   A visionary, a documentarian, a poet, a prophet . . . Berio&#8217;s strength in his great works is the way that they seem to operate from the inside, and to end up being as much about themselves as about outer stimuli. The Sequenze &#8212; available in an essential three-disc Deutsche Grammophon box &#8212; demand from each solo musician (one of whom is a singer) a kind of internal disquisition on the nature of instruments and their respective horizons. Several of his works bear generic titles: Sinfonia, Opera, Coro &#8212; and A-Ronne, which, according to Berio, means “A-to-Z” in some archaic Italian dialect &#8212; and are as much documentaries as sublime musical experiences. Opera, which was greeted with thunderous booing and a few heartfelt cheers (including my own) at its Santa Fe premiere in 1970, rams together a story about the Titanic, a couple of other plotlines, and the entire contents of an opera company‘s scenery warehouse. The exhilarating Coro demands that each of its 40 singers be seated beside each of its 40-member orchestral players; even on the recording &#8212; another essential DG disc &#8212; the richness and changing colors of these shifting sound textures cast a remarkable illumination on the hour&#8217;s worth of poetry (Sanguinetti again, and others).
</p>
<p>   At LACMA, A-Ronne was sung at top energy &#8212; in a version that drew upon both the spoken and sung editions &#8212; by six members of Neue Vocalsolisten Stuttgart in the first of three concerts that also included Gesualdo and Monteverdi madrigals of astounding harmonic daring, microtonal fantasies by the latter-day visionary Giacinto Scelsi that seemed to draw sustenance from this ancient music and move it upward into the atomic age, and, as the final offering, Karlheinz Stockhausen‘s 75-minute Stimmung, which, this once, didn&#8217;t quite work for me: beautifully but coldly sung, lacking in aura. There is a magical moment in this work: In a long moment of a silence so deep that you can almost taste it, one voice intones in wonderment, “Diese Stille!” This time that moment merely came and went.
</p>
<p>   The group had flown over, with help from the admirable Goethe-Institut Inter Nationes, for these three concerts and these alone. Word spread quickly, and the second and third concerts drew large crowds. (It is worth repeating that LACMA‘s concerts are free to students with ID.) The concerts, plus the Philharmonic&#8217;s Green Umbrella event built around the visit of the fabulous cellist Anssi Karttunen, and the premiere of William Kraft‘s English Horn Concerto (about which more next week), plus five days of 80-degree sunshine, made for one of those weeks when the very thought of not being in Los Angeles seemed an obscene proposition.
</p>
<p>    Berio had created his edition of Monteverdi&#8217;s Il Combattimento di Tancredi e Clorinda &#8212; rewriting the string parts for modern instruments and building out the supporting music for harpsichord &#8212; for a student performance at Juilliard in connection with an anti-war rally; in this regard, at least, it fell into place to inaugurate the L.A. Opera‘s hastily concocted substitute program for the missing Poppea. There was no staging, nor was any needed; the power of Monteverdi&#8217;s “madrigals of war” is the vividness of their vocal lines, as Monteverdi sets out to create, note by note, the whole new language of musical passion. The small ensemble under Kent Nagano splendidly re-created the flying hooves and the clash of swords. Alfredo Daza sang Tancredi‘s few lines; Kresimir Spicer&#8217;s rich, fluent tenor delivered the narration; and, above all, there was Isabel Bayrakdarian‘s Clorinda, radiant and intense. She returns to us next season, as Figaro&#8217;s Susanna; count the days.
</p>
<p>    The murk and the slime of the first measures of Massenet‘s Werther, which ensued, offered sad if not conclusive evidence of opera&#8217;s plunge in the two and a half centuries after Monteverdi. Roberto Alagna made his local debut as Werther: a somewhat talented tenor and something of a heartthrob (as in his self-indulgent if somewhat squally Cavaradossi in the recent film of Tosca); as Werther‘s ladylove Charlotte, Frederica von Stade gave a compelling demonstration of an aging singer making do, with charm and intelligence but not, alas, much voice. At the end there was Alagna again, as a punk-rock-star Otello in, thank God, only one act of Verdi&#8217;s great score. I have no space to list the wrongs of his performance (against the decent if colorless Desdemona of Carmen Giannattasio); I can only wonder what must have gone through the head of Placido Domingo, officiating on the podium, as a role that he must surely still own suffered lurid degradation in such undeserving hands.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>The Site and the&#160;Sound</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2003/01/the-site-and-the-sound/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2003/01/the-site-and-the-sound/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 16 Jan 2003 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=424</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[One thing I will not do: join the procession of prognosticators whose crystal balls have already informed them, 10 months ahead of the fact, that the music in the new Disney Hall will rank among the world‘s supreme acoustical wonders. My cynicism in this regard is hard-won; memories of the sounds of inaugural gala performances [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>One thing I will not do: join the procession of prognosticators whose crystal balls have already informed them, 10 months ahead of the fact, that the music in the new Disney Hall will rank among the world‘s supreme acoustical wonders. My cynicism in this regard is hard-won; memories of the sounds of inaugural gala performances at some of the world&#8217;s most afflicted concert venues &#8212; New York‘s Avery Fisher (a.k.a. Philharmonic) Hall for starters, Vancouver&#8217;s Queen Elizabeth and San Francisco‘s Louise Davies &#8212; are not easily dispelled.
</p>
<p>    These gala openings had been preceded for months, maybe years, by claims that the acoustics in those halls would rival, if not surpass, the legendary sounds of Boston&#8217;s Symphony Hall or Vienna‘s Musikverein. It never happened. Vancouver and San Francisco have undergone improvements; the brash, bright sound of Davies these days is, in fact, a perfect mirror of Michael Tilson Thomas&#8217; music making. Everybody knows that, even after several highly publicized remakes, however, the only salvation for Avery Fisher Hall lies in the wrecker‘s ball liberally administered. Meanwhile, the news recently emerged that the owners of Pasadena&#8217;s Ambassador Auditorium, by far the most acoustically admirable of local performing-arts structures, have given up on trying to sell the hall, and have decided to demolish it. One more irony, while we‘re at it: The Philadelphia Orchestra&#8217;s new Kimmel Center, which opened last year to uniformly disastrous reviews, came to further grief a few weeks ago when the sprinkler system suddenly came on in the middle of a rehearsal, ruining priceless instruments, including two $80,000 Steinways, and adding to a yearlong saga of unremitting woe.
</p>
<p>   These were the cautionary tales that went through my head during a recent hardhat tour of Disney &#8212; not my first, but the first in which it was finally possible to make out shapes. The hall itself &#8212; the “RalphsFood 4 Less Auditorium,” it will say in modest lettering on the door handles &#8212; is close enough to completion that you can sense the intimacy of the place as compared to the Chandler Pavilion. It‘s not only a matter of smaller size; it&#8217;s the contour of the room that seems to wrap itself around you. The seats hadn‘t been installed, and people hadn&#8217;t been installed in them, so there was no point in reporting on the acoustics, even if I wanted to. The size and shape of the hall &#8212; with no proscenium, the orchestra thrust out toward the audience, which is seated in the round &#8212; may remind you of Berlin‘s Philharmonie, another acoustically superb hall. Before you take that as any kind of promissory note, however, be aware that Boston&#8217;s Symphony Hall and New York‘s Avery Fisher &#8212; at opposite ends of the excellence scale &#8212; are also alike in shape and size.
</p>
<p>   The space in the auditorium is agreeably small; at this juncture, however, the space around that one room may be the most exciting aspect of the whole project. What Frank Gehry has accomplished here, with a fair amount of prodding from, among others, the late Lily Disney, is to create a marvelous continuity of indoors and out. Mrs. Disney insisted on the allotment of surrounding space for plantings, formal gardens and outdoor amenities. Her spirit is also honored in the way the approach to the main entrance joins the lobby itself to form a single unbroken concourse. Contemporary performing-arts architecture tends to create fortresses; the three buildings at the traditional Music Center are fortresses (even surrounded by moats), perched high above the Grand Avenue foot traffic and, thus, aloof from anything else in the city. Davies Hall is a fortress; so is Ambassador. Disney Hall isn&#8217;t; it joins with MOCA and with the new cathedral in giving people in the neighborhood &#8212; from the courthouses and the office buildings &#8212; someplace to walk to. Gehry‘s stainless steel and concrete are dandy, of course, but my favorite part of Disney Hall&#8217;s exterior is the glass &#8212; the windows at street level where pedestrians (including students from the Colburn School across Grand Avenue) can look in on practicing musicians and on audiences milling and tilting elbows at intermissions.
</p>
<p>    All this visual blandishment could do much to dispel talk about music‘s elitism &#8212; maybe even more than the Philharmonic&#8217;s own rather self-conscious inclusion of jazz and world music among the Beethoven symphonies and Esa-Pekka‘s tone rows. The greatest benefit the new hall can provide in the long run &#8212; after the first year, when every concert will probably sell out, until everybody has been there at least once &#8212; is this smooth flow between inside and outside. It builds upon the intimacy in the hall itself, which comes in large measure from the absence of a proscenium. It draws people in from the city itself, gives them a place to hang out and to feel a closeness to music that might have eluded them before. Whatever its other failures, New York&#8217;s Lincoln Center has always served that purpose handsomely (and London‘s South Bank best of all). The Music Center space has been a flop in this respect: poorly lit, with the outsize fountain and its absurd sculpture taking up space where the public could have been served with better food or &#8212; dream on! &#8212; a properly stocked book-and-music store.
</p>
<p>    Granted, Lincoln Center draws upon a continual flow of foot traffic along Broadway; its lit-up buildings around a sexy fountain form a lure for passersby to visit and even loiter. Downtown Los Angeles cannot compete in the matter of foot-traffic density, and it&#8217;s late in the game to argue that the Music Center should have been built somewhere else &#8212; Westwood, say, or Santa Monica &#8212; from the start. Plans have been broached to turn Grand Avenue into a broad promenade for the arts, extending from the cathedral to MOCA and to California Plaza. If this pie in the sky should actually land, Mrs. Disney‘s wonderful gardens and the outdoor performing spaces and the cafes and restaurants could &#8212; in your lifetime, if not necessarily in mine &#8212; become a “music center” in more than just name.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Bill&#039;s Gong&#160;Show</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2003/01/bills-gong-show/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2003/01/bills-gong-show/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 16 Jan 2003 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=423</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[You want to know the history of L.A.‘s music? Ask the history makers themselves, best of all the three surviving geezers who&#8217;ve been here, done that and keep it up. David Raksin, 90 last year, came to Hollywood in 1935 to create movie music for Charles Chaplin; his later triumphs include the slithery title tune [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>You want to know the history of L.A.‘s music? Ask the history makers themselves, best of all the three surviving geezers who&#8217;ve been here, done that and keep it up. David Raksin, 90 last year, came to Hollywood in 1935 to create movie music for Charles Chaplin; his later triumphs include the slithery title tune from Laura. Also in 1935, Leonard Stein, now 86, began studies with Arnold Schoenberg, became his assistant, edited his writings, headed the Schoenberg Institute until its shotgun divorce from USC and now masterminds the adventurous Piano Spheres concerts. William Kraft, the junior member of this senior triumvirate, turns 80 this year and has probably worn the most hats: percussionist (including a stint as the Los Angeles Philharmonic‘s principal timpanist), composer, conductor and teacher. This weekend&#8217;s Philharmonic program includes the world premiere of Kraft‘s Concerto for English Horn and Orchestra, one of a series of solo vehicles commissioned by the orchestra for its first-desk players. Next month (February 7 and 9) comes another world premiere, Kraft&#8217;s first-ever opera, Red Azalea, commissioned and produced by UC Santa Barbara‘s Opera Theater.
</p>
<p>    Neither work is what you&#8217;d automatically expect from a composer best remembered as a percussionist, banging his way to fame on the glorious array of hardware that constitutes the most watchable part of a symphony orchestra. The English horn is, after all, an instrument most known for lustrous, somewhat mournful melodic lines; an opera calls for the same kind of music, produced by human throats. In his spacious ranch house tucked up against Mount Wilson, the smiling, Teletubby-shaped Kraft has easy explanations for his recent compositional byways. A concerto for English horn? “Well, I‘ve written for everything else.” An opera? “It&#8217;s the only thing I haven‘t done.”
</p>
<p>   Actually, the concerto has a touch of percussion in its ancestry. Philharmonic percussionist Raynor Carroll came back from a trip to Thailand and Indonesia a few years ago with a marvelous collection of exotic kitchenware that included several dozen tuned gongs. That inspired Kraft to compose the “garrulous but endearing” (Rich, L.A. Weekly), dauntingly named Encounters XI: The Demise of Suriyodhaya for Carolyn Hove&#8217;s English horn and Carroll‘s gongs and gadgetry; it was played at a Green Umbrella concert in March 1999. The new concerto, which runs something like 30 minutes, doesn&#8217;t really crib from the earlier piece (“except in one or two tiny places,” says Kraft), but the spirit abides. “I‘ve subtitled it &#8216;The Great Encounter,‘ and I suppose that does relate to the earlier title.”
</p>
<p>   Most of the orchestra is seated upstage. Down in front there are three smaller groups: solo violin and cello, alto flute and guitar, harp and percussion (chimes, crotales, cymbals, drums, gongs gongs gongs and down the alphabet to vibes). Soloist Hove moves across the stage, “visiting” each small group in turn. The groups hand off their music to one another and to the orchestra. The texture &#8212; solo alternating with small ensemble alternating with full orchestra &#8212; may remind you of the concerti grossi of Handel&#8217;s time, which, says Kraft, is part of the plan.
</p>
<p>   The opera sets Anchee Min‘s award-winning autobiographical account of her life in China in the final years of Mao&#8217;s “cultural revolution”; Christopher Hawes created the libretto. The work calls for a six-member vocal ensemble, eight players on Western instruments plus an erhu, that silky-toned two-string Chinese fiddle you hear a lot in Tan Dun‘s music. “The real story,” says Kraft, “is about an artist learning to get in touch with her inner conflicts. My wife, Joanie [composer Joan Huang], knew the &#8212;&#8212;&#8211;<br />
AUTHOR when they were growing up in China. When I first got the book, she got all excited and decided that she wanted to do her own opera. Wouldn&#8217;t that be something: husband and wife composing his-and-her operas on the same story? As it happened, Joanie dropped her plan; too busy.”
</p>
<p>    “Composing was always the center of my ambition,” Kraft remembers, “but there was always the problem of making a living.” Chicago-born, he immigrated to New York in the 1940s, studied composition at Columbia and percussion &#8212; with the New York Philharmonic‘s legendary Saul Goodman &#8212; at Juilliard. “I guess I had gotten into percussion first. But then I had my first epiphany. I had seen a movie &#8212; The Maltese Falcon with Bogart and all those good people. I was walking home when it suddenly hit me: The main reason I&#8217;d been so overwhelmed by that movie was the music. Something about that score &#8212; by Adolph Deutsch, who wasn‘t all that well-known &#8212; hit upon the exact nature of that film, jazzy and tragic, dark and humorous. From that moment, I became aware of music&#8217;s real power over a listener‘s imagination, as I hadn&#8217;t been aware before. From then on, I knew I could never be satisfied just pounding on things.”
</p>
<p>    As epiphanies go, this one was unusually well-timed. Serious composition for percussion had become respectable since the 1930s, with Edgard Varese‘s Ionisation and the Constructions of John Cage and Lou Harrison. Even so, Kraft spent some time wrestling with the beast. He had come to Los Angeles in 1955, when there was plenty of work for a freelance percussionist. (If you have The Soldier&#8217;s Tale from Sony Classics‘ big box of Stravinsky conducting Stravinsky, that&#8217;s Bill Kraft, in 1961, on the final rat-a-tat boom-boom.) He joined the Philharmonic‘s roster of percussionists. “It was Alfred Wallenstein&#8217;s last year as conductor, and the orchestra went to Asia on tour. We got to Thailand, Korea, Indonesia, and I heard all those drums and gongs in their native settings and had another epiphany. Either I had to start composing, I decided, or I had to get out of music altogether.”
</p>
<p>   He started composing &#8212; pure percussion stuff like the 1956 Theme and Variations and several percussion-plus-orchestra pieces of considerable extent; instrumental and vocal music, including an impressive series of settings of the Pierrot Lunaire poems that Schoenberg hadn‘t touched; The Sky&#8217;s the Limit, an electronicacoustic computerized installation for Chicago‘s O&#8217;Hare Airport; songs, chamber works and &#8212; finally &#8212; an opera.
</p>
<p>    Where, in these tightrope-walking times for any music that wants to be taken seriously or, at least, as “serious,” does Bill Kraft locate himself?
</p>
<p>    “I think that composers of my generation have wasted 10 to 15 years of our lives in trying to keep up with all the important issues from Europe. Whatever happened in Europe we felt we had to know about and had to practice. We had to show that we knew what was going on in the world. Consequently, we lost ourselves in that process and forgot who we were.”
</p>
<p>   And where does he locate himself on the American map? “There is no such thing as one American tradition, there are many. Everybody has his own approach. So it occurred to me: If we‘re going to compose, why not be ourselves? That makes a bigger problem for us. I think it was Mort Subotnick who said, &#8216;The difference between a European composer and an American composer is that the European knows where he is in history.‘ We don&#8217;t. I had thought more and more about applying it to my own output and to my teaching. It behooves us to find out who we are. My background was originally jazz. In my teens, I played a lot of jazz. I played in the rhythm section, either piano or drums. Therefore, I found that I can‘t get away from pulse. The music isn&#8217;t alive to me if it doesn‘t have pulse.
</p>
<p>   ”If there&#8217;s anything that‘s basic to my idea of composing music, it&#8217;s just loving to compose. I‘ve never had any intention of doing something for the first time, or breaking ground with anything in particular. It&#8217;s just to do what comes natural. I do have a great concern for idiom. In whatever piece I‘m writing, I&#8217;m very concerned what that piece is about. If it‘s a piece for an instrument, then I do every bit of investigation I can to see what that instrument is about. The piece ends up being for that instrument and no other instrument. In other words, there&#8217;s no universal style or concept I have that is applied to all of my music. Instead it grows out of the particulars of a given piece.“</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Turandot</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2003/01/turandot/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2003/01/turandot/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 13 Jan 2003 22:07:56 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Opera News]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=1818</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[No abandoned orphan draws such tears and frustrations as does Turandot, Puccini&#8217;s final work, left incomplete at the composer&#8217;s death in November 1924 and rushed to completion by lesser hands soon afterward. It remains a sad thought that 325 years of grand Italian opera tradition should come to its sputtering end in the merely competent [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>No abandoned orphan draws such tears and frustrations as does Turandot,<br />
Puccini&#8217;s final work, left incomplete at the composer&#8217;s death in<br />
November 1924 and rushed to completion by lesser hands soon afterward.<br />
It remains a sad thought that 325 years of grand Italian opera tradition<br />
should come to its sputtering end in the merely competent hackwork of<br />
Franco Alfano. True, the formidable Arturo Toscanini cut his performance<br />
short at the world premiere, at the point where the ailing Puccini<br />
himself had put down his pen. By doing so, the maestro had carried the<br />
most grandiose of Puccini&#8217;s operas to a crisis point but no further,<br />
relinquishing the stage to two larger-than-life monsters facing each<br />
other with daggers drawn across an unbridgeable abyss, but only fifteen<br />
minutes away from a happy ending. The intended love/hate duet that would<br />
have transported these monsters across that abyss and into each other&#8217;s<br />
arms was never composed &#8212; at least not by Puccini. On his manuscript<br />
sketch, however, he penciled indisputable evidence of the importance he<br />
attached to this climactic duet: the infinitely revealing words &#8220;poi<br />
Tristano.&#8221;<br />
The Tristan reference adds to the puzzlement. &#8220;We don&#8217;t really<br />
know what Puccini meant,&#8221; says the noted opera historian &#8212; and recent<br />
Puccini biographer &#8212; Mary Jane Phillips-Matz. &#8220;Everyone assumes<br />
he intended to close the opera with something comparable to the love-duet<br />
from Tristan; that makes sense. But that is pure speculation.&#8221;</p>
<p>The story is well-known: after Puccini&#8217;s death, Toscanini undertook to<br />
bring the work to completion in properly competent hands. Puccini had<br />
finished the opera in full score through the scene of Liù&#8217;s death midway<br />
in Act III. The Puccini family&#8217;s choice of composer, with Toscanini&#8217;s<br />
grudging acquiescence, fell upon Franco Alfano, still at the time not<br />
much more than a musical nonentity. (His one success, the 1904<br />
Risurrezione, displayed reasonable competence but little more.)<br />
Alfano delivered his commission; Toscanini rejected it furiously and<br />
ordered a rewrite. Toscanini conducted the 1926 premiere &#8212; postponed<br />
for a year from the 1925 target date &#8212; but drew the line at performing<br />
the Alfano ending. Despite his championing of numerous minor Italian<br />
composers, in his complete repertory list as compiled in Harvey Sachs&#8217;s<br />
eminently trustworthy biography, not a note of Alfano is mentioned.<br />
Alfano did recast and somewhat tighten his completion &#8212; workmanlike if<br />
workaday &#8212; shaving his original 377 measures down to 268. Whether he<br />
accomplished this self-mutilation in time for the Metropolitan Opera<br />
premiere, seven months after La Scala&#8217;s, is buried in the dust of<br />
Thirty-ninth and Broadway. What we hear today, invariably, is Alfano II.<br />
&#8220;Poor Alfano!,&#8221; says Phillips-Matz. &#8220;I don&#8217;t believe he or any of<br />
Puccini&#8217;s contemporaries could have written a satisfactory finale to the opera.&#8221;<br />
Alfano&#8217;s first version, clumsy as it may be overall, ends in a vivid<br />
blaze, with peals of brassy triumph and the lovers joining in the final<br />
music at top lung-power &#8212; the everybody-onstage sing-along version of<br />
&#8220;Nessun dorma.&#8221; For the most part, Alfano I is the more tonsil-twisting<br />
of the two versions; the tessitura lies higher, most notably at the end<br />
when the lovers join in at the climax of the &#8220;Nessun dorma&#8221; reprise with<br />
a pair of matched B-flats. (In Alfano II, the chorus goes it alone.)<br />
Turandot&#8217;s aria, &#8220;Del primo pianto,&#8221; runs seventy-nine bars in Alfano I,<br />
pared down to fifty-one in Alfano II. There is one recording of Alfano I<br />
&#8211; now deleted but worth the search: Josephine Barstow and Lando<br />
Bartolini on a Decca disc of operatic final scenes, conducted by John<br />
Mauceri. In 1992, American conductor Steven Mercurio created his own<br />
conflation of Alfano I and II for the Opera Company of Philadelphia and<br />
led it, to considerable acclaim, with Alfano&#8217;s final brass positioned<br />
high up all around Philadelphia&#8217;s Academy of Music.<br />
&#8220;I did a considerable amount of tinkering with the stuff in Alfano I<br />
to make it work better, then redivided the brass fanfares in the finale,&#8221;<br />
Mercurio told Opera News soon after his Turandot triumphs. &#8220;I didn&#8217;t<br />
recompose them &#8212; I redistributed them. I did this in Philadelphia, with<br />
great success, and repeated it in Washington. And it just tore them out<br />
of their seats every night.&#8221;</p>
<p>The latest solution to Turandot&#8217;s finale problem comes from what at<br />
first view may seem an unlikely source but actually makes strong musical<br />
sense. Luciano Berio has now tried his hand at a Turandot completion<br />
worthy of the score and its creator. It seems an unusual project for<br />
Berio, one-time avatar of Schoenbergian atonality and longtime kindred<br />
spirit to Pierre Boulez. But we should remember that Berio is not only a<br />
prolific opera composer in his own right but a passionate defender of<br />
Italy&#8217;s musical heritage all the way back to Monteverdi. His new version<br />
of Turandot has been sanctioned by the Puccini estate. After trial<br />
concert-performance runs in the Canary Islands and Amsterdam, led by<br />
Riccardo Chailly, it was staged last June by Los Angeles Opera under<br />
Kent Nagano and, two months later, conducted by Valery Gergiev at the<br />
Salzburg Festival, where it was received &#8212; if a broadcast tape can be<br />
believed &#8212; with the mix of puzzlement and ecstasy attendant on any<br />
major premiere of new and controversial musical substance.<br />
Something else among Berio&#8217;s credentials stamps him as the proper agent<br />
to bring Puccini&#8217;s near-masterpiece to a fitting conclusion: his prowess<br />
as a highly skilled tamperer. The 1968 Sinfonia, his best-known work,<br />
includes one movement in which a gathering of familiar repertory tunes<br />
(Beethoven, Berlioz, Debussy) moves in a stream-of-consciousness<br />
progression while another part of the orchestra plays Mahler and a<br />
chorus declaims activist graffiti. A recent score called Rendering<br />
subjects a folio of Schubert&#8217;s deathbed sketches &#8212; for a symphony that<br />
would have been No. 10 if completed &#8212; to a reworking that builds<br />
handsome and flexible bridges between Schubertian Romanticism and<br />
Berio&#8217;s own love of that language.<br />
Berio&#8217;s &#8220;tampering&#8221; with Puccini&#8217;s expressed wishes and actual sketches<br />
covers 307 bars, midway in length between Alfano I and II; the<br />
performance under Gergiev ran a few seconds over fifteen minutes, almost<br />
exactly the same length as the Callas recording (of Alfano II,<br />
naturally). The Adami/Simoni text undergoes two cuts: about half of<br />
Turandot&#8217;s &#8220;Del primo pianto&#8221; has gone, and so has the choral finale<br />
with the &#8220;Nessun dorma&#8221; reprise.<br />
What Berio has done, actually, is to recast the entire time-span of this<br />
final scene, to the point where his own musical fabrications impart a<br />
far more naturalistic flow to the events themselves. Small glints of<br />
Puccini&#8217;s music speed the process; Calàf delivers his crucial kiss to<br />
the music of his first response to Turandot in Act II (&#8220;Gli enigme sono<br />
tre&#8221;). Rather than the echoes of &#8220;Tristano&#8221; that Puccini might have<br />
evoked for the ensuing duet, there comes next what amounts to a small<br />
tone-poem, nearly three minutes&#8217; worth of purely orchestral music,<br />
skidding through harmonies dense and disturbing, conveying wordlessly<br />
what no ice-bound soprano need verbalize upon the tenor&#8217;s first kiss.<br />
The harmonic density may raise hackles among purists; remember, however,<br />
that Puccini&#8217;s own last years were spent largely in discovering the<br />
musical world around him &#8212; Stravinsky&#8217;s Petrouchka and Schoenberg&#8217;s<br />
Pierrot Lunaire. There&#8217;s good reason to suspect that he might have<br />
welcomed Berio&#8217;s tampering far more heartily than Alfano&#8217;s flattening.<br />
&#8220;Turandot finirà pianissimo,&#8221; wrote Puccini to librettist Adami. &#8220;This<br />
new Turandot,&#8221; said Berio to a radio interviewer, &#8220;will end exactly so.&#8221;<br />
Prince Calàf (&#8220;il principe priapico,&#8221; says Berio &#8212; the &#8220;horny Prince&#8221;)<br />
reveals his name &#8212; in a close rewrite of Alfano&#8217;s frantic crescendo on<br />
a four-note figure &#8212; and Turandot drags him off to meet his fate.<br />
&#8220;Amore!!!&#8221; they both sing on his-and-her B-flats (as in Alfano I), as<br />
faint echoes of &#8220;Nessun dorma&#8221; percolate through the orchestra. But then<br />
the music subsides; little by little, there is darkness, both visible<br />
and audible. An audience, awaiting the customary &#8220;happily ever after&#8221;<br />
choral outburst of the Turandot they&#8217;ve all known and loved, sits<br />
stunned. You hear it on the tape: a long moment in which the silence is<br />
further prolonged, then the cheers.<br />
Does it work? As music drama created by Luciano Berio &#8212; composer of the<br />
magnificent Un Re in Ascolto &#8212; it works quite well, a &#8220;rendering&#8221; of<br />
thematic fragments by Puccini to stand beside his Schubert piece. The<br />
diehards will surely have trouble with the new Turandot. There were dark<br />
mutterings after the Kent Nagano-led Los Angeles performances last June,<br />
brought on by the somber new ending and by Gian Carlo del Monaco&#8217;s murky<br />
staging. (The finale looked as if it had been staged in someone&#8217;s<br />
abandoned attic, and neither of the alternating pairs of leads was<br />
anything to sing about, so the antagonists felt obliged to bellow at one<br />
another over the abandoned corpse of hapless Liù.) Even Gergiev, who<br />
delivered a stupendous performance at Salzburg, has confessed that he<br />
will probably revert to Alfano II in future productions. As an example<br />
of a great composer&#8217;s respect for a venerable colleague and countryman,<br />
however, Puccini/Berio is definitely win/win.</p>
<p>ALAN RICH is music critic for LA Weekly and the author of several books<br />
now out of print (including the Simon &amp; Schuster Listener&#8217;s Guide to<br />
Opera).</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Thunder in Paris, Echoed&#160;Worldwide</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2003/01/thunder-in-paris-echoed-worldwide/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2003/01/thunder-in-paris-echoed-worldwide/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 09 Jan 2003 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=422</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[No two works of Hector Berlioz are in any way alike; nothing from his pen resembles anyone else‘s music. Mention of Berlioz brings on images of diabolical incantations, rattling of dry bones, and opium-induced nightmares; how, then, explain the deep, soft musical discourse of his oratorio L&#8217;Enfance du Christ, given so exquisitely by Esa-Pekka Salonen [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>No two works of Hector Berlioz are in any way alike; nothing from his pen resembles anyone else‘s music. Mention of Berlioz brings on images of diabolical incantations, rattling of dry bones, and opium-induced nightmares; how, then, explain the deep, soft musical discourse of his oratorio L&#8217;Enfance du Christ, given so exquisitely by Esa-Pekka Salonen and the Philharmonic forces here the week before Christmas? Even to his French compatriots &#8212; in his time, and in ours as well &#8212; Berlioz has always been the most unclassifiable of composers. His fame was secure in Germany, England, even Russia, long before Parisian audiences learned to sit still during his music. In Paris, in 1952, I attended a series of lectures on the history of French music, by the formidable teacher Nadia Boulanger, mother superior to generations of composers of all nationalities. From her eloquent evangelism I gleaned notable insights into the music of Rameau, Faure, Debussy, Ravel, Stravinsky (!), Milhaud; not once, however, did the name of Berlioz pass her lips.
</p>
<p>    Turn the clock back, to Paris in the 1820s. (Berlioz‘s Memoirs, collected and edited by David Cairns, sets the stage eloquently.) At age 24, driven by passions he had not yet learned to control or even to name, Berlioz shares in the mass astonishment of Parisians as &#8212; thunderclap after thunderclap &#8212; the city experiences its first full Shakespearean immersion with a British company ensconced for a season at the Odeon; the publication of its first French translation of Faust; its first hearings of the Beethoven symphonies, led by the ardent if undertalented Francois-Antoine Habeneck. At all events, one familiar sight is the fiery young Berlioz, screaming out imprecations to performers, surmounted by an unruly reddish-brown thatch against which the finest barbering has been of no avail. Berlioz gains the friendship of the even younger Franz Liszt; the two sit up night after night discussing Shakespeare, Goethe and Beethoven. Berlioz swoons under the spell of the visiting Ophelia, the Irish enchantress Harriet Smithson, and works it off by composing the Symphonie Fantastique, which earns him his first notice by the finicky Parisian public.
</p>
<p>   This year marks the bicentennial of Berlioz&#8217;s birth. The rest of the Philharmonic‘s observance doesn&#8217;t take place until early 2004, since the orchestra has all that fancy new programming to usher it into its new abode in the last weeks of 2003. Major celebrations are scheduled all over, however; the Met has a new production of Les Troyens in the works; the San Francisco Opera plans a staging of La Damnation de Faust. (Yes, I know it‘s a cantata, not a stage work, but if you want to see a really stunning if off-the-wall DamFaust staging, check out the DVD from the 1999 Salzburg Festival, on the ArtHaus label, with a Mephistopheles from Willard White that&#8217;ll curl your toes.)
</p>
<p>    The most obvious reasons for his music‘s uniqueness have to do with its sound: the four huge bands of brass and percussion that converge for the “Tuba mirum” of the Requiem; the brass, winds and gibberish-shouting chorus as Faust and his tormentors fall into the Infernal flames; the howling of winds and unseen demons as the storm overtakes Dido and Aeneas in Les Troyens and causes them to fall in love. Equally amazing are the small sounds, sometimes at the far end of audibility: the radiant “Alleluia” and the concluding “Amen” sung offstage in L&#8217;Enfance du Christ; the astonishing merging of high flutes and low trombones &#8212; with three octaves of emptiness in between that stand for a vision of Eternity &#8212; again in the Requiem; the amazing moment in the Fantastique as woodwind-playing shepherds serenade one another from distant hilltops while four timpani harmonize in menacing, soft thunder.
</p>
<p>    Paris‘ most beloved music in Berlioz&#8217;s time was nothing like any of this. Audiences who had taken slowly to the shock waves of the “Eroica” were even more reluctant to deal with the shaggy-haired new upstart. What they flocked to, instead, were the blocky orchestrations and harmonies of Luigi Cherubini‘s resolutely academic grand operas, and of Giacomo Meyerbeer&#8217;s even emptier lyrico-historico spectacles, the spaghetti Westerns of their day. This was the crowd-pleasing fare that filled seats at the Paris Opera, while Berlioz wept as his grander, far more deserving scores went a-begging &#8212; the stunning Les Troyens that has only now come into circulation, the magnificent but still-neglected Benvenuto Cellini from which only the “Roman Carnival” Overture has gained any attention.
</p>
<p>   The Berlioz harmonies, too, are like nobody else‘s. The guitar was the only instrument he truly mastered; the familiar image of a composer at a piano, working out inspirations in full, four-part harmony, doesn&#8217;t apply here. His chords often have one or two notes missing, and this produces an interesting earthiness; listen to the mountaineer‘s song in Harold in Italy. Above all, however, the wonder of Berlioz&#8217;s art lies in that supreme command of the ardent, heart-rending, long melody: Romeo‘s soliloquy in the Romeo et Juliette Symphony, the merging of that tune into the Capulets&#8217; party music and then &#8212; wonder of wonders! &#8212; the sublimity of what ensues, as the lovers meet each other among Verona‘s dark shadows. (Find the GiuliniChicago Symphony recording if you can.)
</p>
<p>   Similar marvels form the essence of the Christmas music three weeks ago that began our Berlioz observance. L&#8217;Enfance du Christ is one of Berlioz‘s smaller miracles &#8212; smaller, that is, in terms of the reduced orchestra and the disarming simplicity of much of the music. Berlioz&#8217;s text tells of the Holy Family‘s escape from Herod&#8217;s massacre and its flight to Egypt. He tells it as a folktale in simple, quasi-peasant language, similar to what John Adams and Peter Sellars have created with the same dramatic context in their El Niño, due here in March. Wonderful, quiet, disturbing music, it seems lit through candlelight and stained glass. A rich, earthy harmonic sense suffuses the entire work: the familiar (and weepily beautiful) Shepherds‘ Chorus, Mary&#8217;s Lullaby, even the charming, throwaway chamber music for flutes and harp.
</p>
<p>   The performance under Salonen was full of love and reverence, although I might have wished for a smaller contingent of Master Chorale members to match the somewhat cut-back orchestra. The solo group couldn‘t have been better: Vinson Cole&#8217;s slightly reedy (and therefore very French-sounding) narration, Susanne Mentzer‘s adoring singing as Mary, and &#8212; a newcomer, at least to me &#8212; the excellent French-Swiss baritone Gilles Cachemaille in diametrically opposite roles as the evil Herod and the Ishmaelite father who offers the Holy Family shelter, and whose few lines in the latter role might just be the world&#8217;s most comforting music.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>“TURANDOT” AND ITS NOT-SO-HAPPY&#160;ENDINGS</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2002/12/%e2%80%9cturandot%e2%80%9d-and-its-not-so-happy-endings/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2002/12/%e2%80%9cturandot%e2%80%9d-and-its-not-so-happy-endings/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 23 Dec 2002 21:20:54 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Opera News]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=1803</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Like a chipped tooth that constantly lures the tip of the tongue, a musical score left unfinished broadcasts an irresistible summons. Never mind the magnificence of Mozart’s own contribution to his Requiem; accept with gratitude the two movements (plus an aborted start at a third) of the young Schubert’s B-minor Symphony. As long as these [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Like a chipped tooth that constantly lures the tip of the tongue, a musical score left unfinished broadcasts an irresistible summons. Never mind the magnificence of Mozart’s own contribution to his <em>Requiem</em>; accept with gratitude the two movements (plus an aborted start at a third) of the young Schubert’s B-minor Symphony. As long as these magnificent torsos have survived, however, so have the attempts of other, lesser creators to fashion prosthetics out of their own  music so that these newly enabled works can walk tall among us – which they do anyway, even in their abandoned state. And then there is the matter  of <em>Turandot.</em></p>
<p class="MsoNormal">
<p class="MsoNormal">No abandoned orphan draws the tears and the frustrations as does Giacomo Puccini’s final work, left incomplete at the composer’s death  (after an unsuccessful attempt  at  throat surgery) in November, 1924 and rushed into completion by lesser hands soon afterward. True, the formidable Arturo Toscanini cut his performance short at the world premiere, at the point where the ailing Puccini himself had laid down his pen. Doing so, he had carried the most grandiose – arguably, the greatest – of all Puccini’s operas to a crisis point but no further, relinquishing the stage to two larger-than-life monsters (psychologically, I mean) facing each other with daggers drawn across an unbridgeable abyss,  but only 15 minutes away from a happy ending. The intended love/hate duet that would have transported  these monsters across that abyss and into each other’s arms was never composed, at least by Puccini. On his manuscript sketch, however, he penciled indisputable evidence of the importance he attached to this climactic duet: the  infinitely revealing words: “qui Tristano.”</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">
<p class="MsoNormal">The story is well-known, give or take a vast array of contradicting retellings. Toscanini, who held Italy’s beloved Puccini in mingled adoration and contempt, visited the composer in the summer of 1924, heard him, at the piano, perform the opera as it then stood, which may (or may not) have included his own projection of the final scene. Toscanini liked what he heard, and agreed to conduct the premiere at La Scala scheduled for the following year. At Puccini’s death Toscanini undertook to bring the work to completion in properly competent hands.  Puccini had completed his final opera in full score through the scene of Liù’s death midway in Act III. From then on to the end there remained “a 36-page draft” (says Joseph Kerman in <em>Opera as Drama</em>) or a pile of “23 scarcely legible sketches” (says Julian Budden in <em>OperaGrove</em> and in his splendid recent Puccini biography) or “13 pages of sketches, which take the final scene only to the crucial kiss” (writes Anthony Tommasini in <em>The New York Times</em>). His first choice to complete the work (says Budden) was Riccardo Zandonai; another considered possibility (says conductor John Mauceri) was the young Viennese firebrand Erich Korngold. Both were rejected  by the Puccini family as being already too illustrious. The choice, with Toscanini’s grudging acquiescence, fell upon Franco Alfano, still at the time not much more than a musical nonentity. (His one success, the 1904 <em>Risurrezione</em>, displayed a reasonable competence  if little more.)</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">
<p class="MsoNormal">Alfano delivered his commission; Toscanini rejected  it furiously, and ordered a rewrite. Toscanini conducted the 1926 premiere – postponed a year from the 1925 target date &#8211;  but drew the line at performing the Alfano score.. He conducted one single performance (says the estimable authority William Ashbrook) and then turned the work over to his assistant Ettore Panizza, or he conducted three performances (says Harold Rosenthal), or “several,” (writes Andrew Porter). Considering Toscanini’s lifelong antipathy toward music he considered inferior, plus his famous on-again off-again regard for Puccini, it seems inconceivable that he would, even once, wave his baton over what he considered Alfano’s botched job. Despite his championing of numerous other Italian composers of the – let’s say – minor leagues (Martucci, Catalani, that gang), in his complete repertory list as compiled in Harvey Sachs’ eminently trustworthy biography, not a note of Alfano occurs. Alfano did recast and somewhat tighten  his completion – workmanlike if workaday, shaving his original 377 measures down to 268. Whether he accomplished this self-mutilation in time for the Metropolitan Opera premiere – seven months after La Scala – is buried in the dust of 39<sup>th</sup> and Broadway..  What we hear today, invariably, is Alfano 2.</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">
<p class="MsoNormal">Alfano’s first version, clumsy as it may be over all, ends in a Technicolor blaze, with peals of brassy triumph and the lovers joining in the final music at top lung-power – the everybody-on-stage sing-along version of “Nessun dorma,” the opera’s obvious hit tune, comparable to similar moments in <em>La Bohème</em> and <em>Tosca</em>. There is one recording – now deleted but worth the search: Josephine Barstow and Lando Bartolini on a Decca disc of operatic final scenes, conducted by Mauceri. In 1992 the American conductor Steven Mercurio created  his own conflation of Alfano 1 and 2 for the Philadelphia Opera and led it to considerable acclaim, with Alfano’s final brass spread high up around Philadelphia’s Academy of Music. Brilliant brass or no, it still makes for a sad contemplaton, that the 325 years of the grand Italian operatic tradition should come to its sputtering end in the merely competentd  hackwork of Franco Alfano. “Finita la poesia,” sings the crowd on the last completed page of Puccini’s manuscript, and they may have been right.</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">
<p class="MsoNormal">Or maybe not. The latest solution of <em>Turandot’s</em> finale problem comes from what might seem unlikely at first view, but which actually makes strong musical sense. Luciano Berio, one-time avatar of Schoenbergian atonality and longtime kindred spirit to Pierre Boulez, prolific opera composer in his own right and – more to the point – passionate defender of Italy’s musical heritage all the way back to Monteverdi and before, has now tried his hand at a <em>Turandot</em> completion worthy of the score and its creator. His new version has been sanctioned by the Puccini estate. After trial concert-performance runs in the Canary Islands and Amsterdam, led by Riccardo Chailley, it was staged last June by the Los Angeles Opera under Kent Nagano and, two months later, at the Salzburg Festival conducted by Valery Gergiev, received – if a broadcast tape can be believed – with the mix of puzzlement and ecstasy attendant   on any major premiere of new and controversial musical substance.</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">
<p class="MsoNormal">Something else among Berio’s  credentials stamps him as the proper agent to bring Puccini’s near-masterpiece to a fitting conclusion: his prowess as a highly skilled tamperer.</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">The 1968 <em>Sinfonia</em>, his best-known work, includes one movement in which a gathering of familiar repertory tunes (Beethoven, Berlioz, Debussy, what-have-you) moves in a stream-of-consciousness progression while another part of the orchestra plays Mahler and a chorus declaims activist graffiti.  A recent score called <em>Rendering</em> subjects a folio of Schubert’s deathbed  sketches – for a symphony that would have been No. 10 if completed &#8211;  to a reworking that builds handsome and flexible bridges between Schubertian romanticism and Berio’s own love of that language.</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">
<p class="MsoNormal">Berio’s “tampering” with Puccini’s expressed wishes and actual sketches runs to 307 bars, midway in length between Alfano 1 and 2; the performance under Gergiev ran a few seconds over 15 minutes, almost exactly the same length as the recorded  Callas version (of Alfano 2, naturally). The Adami/Simoni text undergoes two cuts: about half of Turandot’s “Nel primo pianto” has gone,  and so has the choral finale with the “Nessun dorma” reprise.</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">
<p class="MsoNormal">What Berio has done, actually, has been to recast the entire time-span of this final scene, to the point where his own musical fabrications impart a far more naturalistic flow to the events themselves. Small glints of Puccini’s  music speed the process; Calaf delivers his crucial kiss to the music (“gli enigme sono tre”) of his first response to Turandot in Act II. Rather than the echoes of “Tristano” that Puccini might have evoked for the ensuing duet, there comes next what amounts to a small tone-poem,  nearly three minutes’ worth of purely orchestral music, skidding through harmonies dense and disturbing, dealing wordlessly what no ice-bound soprano need verbalize upon the tenor’s first kiss. The harmonic density may raise hackles among the oh-so-pure; remember, however, that Puccini’s own last years were largely spent in discovering the musical world around him – Stravinsky’s <em>Petrouchka</em> and, more remarkable, Schoenberg’s <em>Pierrot Lunaire</em>.. There’s good reason to suspect that he might have welcomed Berio’s tampering far more heartily than Alfano’s flattening.</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">
<p class="MsoNormal">“<em>Turandot</em> finirà pianissimo”; wrote Puccini to librettist Adami. “This new <em>Turandot</em>,” said Berio to a radio interviewer, “will end exactly so.” Prince Calaf (“il principe priapico,” says Berio, the “horny Prince”) reveals his name – in a close rewrite of Alfano’s frantic crescendo on a four-note figure – and Turandot drags him off to meet his fate. “Amore!!!” sing they both on his-and-her B-flats (as in Alfano 1) as faint echoes of “Nessun dorma” percolate through the orchestra. But then the music subsides; little by little there is darkness both visible and audible. An audience, awaiting the customary “happily ever after” choral outburst of the <em>Turandot</em> they’ve all known and loved, sits stunned. You hear it on the tape: a long moment  in which the silence is further prolonged, then the cheers.</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">
<p class="MsoNormal">Does it work? As music drama created by Luciano Berio – composer of the magnicent <em>Un Re in Ascolto</em> revived not long ago in Chicago and eminently deserving – it works quite well, a “rendering” of thematic fragments by Puccini to stand beside his Schubert piece. Old habits die hard, however, and the paradox remains. Finally, there is a proper finale – not only to Puccini’s opera but also to the 325-year reign of Italy’s sovereign lyric art, and it’s headed for tough going.. The opera-going public – the crowds who throw tomatoes in Parma and the silent sufferers at the Met – are going to have trouble with the new <em>Turandot</em>; even Gergiev, who delivered a stupendous performance at Salzburg, by the way, has confessed that he will probably revert to Alfano 2 when circumstances so ordain. As an example of a great composer’s respect for a venerable colleague and countryman, however, Puccini/Berio is definitely win/win.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Finger&#160;Food</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2002/12/finger-food/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2002/12/finger-food/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 18 Dec 2002 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=421</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Yefim Bronfman&#8217;s piano recital two weeks ago at the Music Center was everything such an event needs to be: fluff and substance, novelty and familiarity carefully compounded, played with awesome technique and admirable wisdom. As piano recitals go, it lacked the giddy adventure of Vicki Ray‘s Piano Spheres performance last month, but that whole remarkable [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Yefim Bronfman&#8217;s piano recital two weeks ago at the Music Center was everything such an event needs to be: fluff and substance, novelty and familiarity carefully compounded, played with awesome technique and admirable wisdom. As piano recitals go, it lacked the giddy adventure of Vicki Ray‘s Piano Spheres performance last month, but that whole remarkable series is a set of one-of-a-kind events, on a rarefied plateau where nary a note of Rachmaninoff can intrude. Seven Rachmaninoff Preludes on Bronfman&#8217;s program may have been one or two too many &#8212; although they didn‘t, at least, include the wretched item in C-sharp minor &#8212; but the set had its gooey charms. Prokofiev&#8217;s Seventh Sonata, music composed to be greeted with ooohs and aaahs, did so once again. Esa-Pekka Salonen‘s Dichotomie, which Gloria Cheng introduced two years ago, again generated its quotient of airy delight, nicely spangled with echoes of Ravel&#8217;s side-slipping harmonies along the way. The final encore, Chopin‘s obligatory ”Revolutionary“ Etude, sent the crowd home happy if unsurprised.
</p>
<p>    Beethoven&#8217;s D-major Sonata (Opus 10 No. 3) was the program‘s earliest work and, in many ways, the most daring. Three of its movements are reasonably predictable: the young (28) Beethoven roistering along the keyboard, pulling his by-then-famous lively rhythmic tricks and harmonic jolts. By 1798 he had found his place in Vienna&#8217;s musical society; his sonatas and chamber pieces were grabbed by eager publishers and were on everybody‘s best-sellers lists. Still, something takes place in this sonata &#8212; most of all in its slow movement &#8212; that sounds a new note in Beethoven&#8217;s musical language. The music still counts as ”early“ Beethoven, but this slow movement makes it later than you‘d think.
</p>
<p>   The movement is in D minor, which was for Beethoven a key of storms and sorrows. In 1795 he had played Mozart&#8217;s D-minor Piano Concerto (K. 466) at a concert arranged by Mozart‘s widow, and had been stirred by the music to create a long and complex cadenza, which has survived. (Mitsuko Uchida plays it on her Philips recording of the concerto.) My guess is that Mozart&#8217;s edgy, fist-shaking music taught Beethoven something about the expressive power of D minor. The slow movement of this sonata &#8212; and the slow movement of the first of the Opus 18 string quartets that followed a couple of years later, the Piano Sonata that bears the subtitle ”Tempest“ and then, finally, the Ninth Symphony, all in D minor &#8212; shares something of this stark, tragic sense, defiant at times but mournfully accepting at other times.
</p>
<p>   The slow movement of Opus 10 No. 3 starts off dank and chill; then there are outcries. A new tune seems more settled at first; it rides comfortably over arpeggios in the left hand. But the quietude doesn‘t last; the right hand moves up the scale in small fragments until, at the top, it shatters and screams for help in all but words. (That&#8217;s one of Beethoven‘s D-minor tricks, a lapsing into nonverbal recitative; it happens in the ”Tempest“ Sonata and, of course, in the Ninth.) The music grows darker; the opening chill returns, this time over a dense underbrush of piano figuration; a final sigh, and it ends. Every scholar measures Beethoven&#8217;s trajectory as a composer by certain landmarks: the ”Eroica,“ the last string quartets, the Ninth. This movement, I submit, belongs on that list. Certainly Bronfman‘s playing of the music seemed moved by that awareness.
</p>
<p>    The world does not languish for lack of Beethoven&#8217;s piano sonatas on disc. Alfred Brendel alone has produced three complete sets; my latest Schwann lists over a dozen boxed sets of all 32 sonatas, and then goes on to 14 columns of teensy print listing single discs. Despite this impractical glut, the great news is that the first-ever set of the complete Beethoven sonatas, made by Artur Schnabel in London in the early 1930s, is being reissued on low-cost CDs on Naxos. Two discs are out so far. The rich mellowness of Schnabel‘s beloved Bechstein, amazing even back in the days of the scratchy 78s, is amazing once again thanks to the miraculous audio restoration of Mark Obert-Thorn. At times like this, the self-destructive side of the record industry &#8212; drowning in its own glut &#8212; suddenly doesn&#8217;t matter.
</p>
<p>    Schnabel was what used to be called a ”musician‘s musician“; there are passing moments on these recordings when fingers weaken and musical lines go momentarily dim &#8212; especially in the murderous final fugue of the ”Hammerklavier“ Sonata and in the ”Diabelli“ Variations, which neither you nor I could play any better. Schnabel used to define his artistic preferences as a taste for music ”that was better than it could be performed“: Beethoven, Mozart, Schubert (whose sonatas he rescued from near oblivion), no Hungarian Rhapsodies, no Rachmaninoff. Even on this first disc, which contains the three sonatas of the very early Opus 2, Schnabel&#8217;s mastery is clear: the furious final movement of Opus 2 No. 1, the slow movement of Opus 2 No. 3 with its astounding Schubertian foreshadowings.
</p>
<p>   Schnabel‘s greatness was his ability to re-create music whole: not a good tune floating atop less-important left-hand figuration, but a caring for every line of the most complicated music. His playing of the aforementioned slow movement of Opus 10 No. 3, which will probably turn up on the third disc of the new Naxos series, is one of those indescribable performances that simply holds you motionless for something like an eternity. (Schnabel&#8217;s ”eternity,“ by the way, times out at 11‘46”. Compare that to Brendel&#8217;s 7‘31“ in his 1973 set and 10&#8217;28” in 1995 to realize how Beethoven‘s music remains a living, changing organism in the ears of performers and listeners alike.)
</p>
<p>   I am old enough to have seen Schnabel perform &#8212; including once from a stage seat in Chicago&#8217;s Orchestra Hall, close enough to note that the twinkle in the cheeky modulations in a Schubert sonata were exactly mirrored in the twinkle on his own countenance. Hearing him perform Beethoven &#8212; on these new CDs, or on my treasured LPs in the EMI box that also contains Eric Blom‘s marvelous program from 1932 that accompanied the original 78s and which Naxos should seriously consider reprinting &#8212; I hear a depth in the music&#8217;s textures that no other pianist in my experience has been able to match. For their content of wisdom mingled with moments of reckless energy, I will also hold on to my Brendels (all three sets); for clarity and elegant balance, I will retain Richard Goode‘s splendid Nonesuch versions. But the re-emergence of Schnabel casts a shadow over even those deserving ventures. I envy the generations of musicians and music lovers hearing his treasurable artistry for the first time.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>The Wife&#039;s Old&#160;Tales</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2002/12/the-wifes-old-tales/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2002/12/the-wifes-old-tales/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 11 Dec 2002 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=420</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[&#8220;THIS PERFORMING VERSION, conceived by Marta Domingo,&#8221; reads a program note for the Los Angeles Opera&#8217;s current Tales of Hoffmann, &#8220;is based on Michael Kaye&#8217;s variorum edition of the opera.&#8221; That may be so, in Mama Domingo&#8217;s creative imagination. But when Michael Kaye&#8217;s new version of Offenbach&#8217;s enduring fantasy opera was staged by the L.A. [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>
<font SIZE=3>&#8220;THIS PERFORMING VERSION, conceived by Marta Domingo,&#8221; reads a program note for the Los Angeles Opera&#8217;s current <i>Tales of Hoffmann</i>, &#8220;is based on Michael Kaye&#8217;s variorum edition of the opera.&#8221; That may be so, in Mama Domingo&#8217;s creative imagination. But when Michael Kaye&#8217;s new version of Offenbach&#8217;s enduring fantasy opera was staged by the L.A. Opera in 1988, the amendments to the traditional, inauthentic <i>Hoffmann</i> included the restoration of a long episode that ended the Giulietta scene in something of a bloodbath. From earlier in that scene, too, Kaye had eliminated the &#8220;Diamond&#8221; aria and the sextet-plus-chorus, since they were the work of other hands, stuck onto the opera after Offenbach&#8217;s death. Kaye replaced the spurious sung recitatives with the original spoken dialogue. He restored Offenbach&#8217;s pristine ordering of the events, with the Giulietta scene following, not preceding, the Antonia scene. Not one of these new editorial findings is observed in the <i>Hoffmann </i>currently on view (through December 21).</font></p>
<p>
<font SIZE=3>In 1988 there was Frank Corsaro&#8217;s lively staging of the Kaye edition, with Papa Domingo in the title role, Rodney Gilfry as the four villains and Julia Migenes as the four great loves of Hoffmann&#8217;s thwarted quests. It made of <i>Hoffmann</i> a creation far stronger &#8211; both dramatically and musically &#8211; than the familiar versions then in circulation. You can check this out for yourself in the Philips recording of the Michael Kaye edition, conducted by Jeffrey Tate, although Neil Shicoff&#8217;s pallid Hoffmann is not exactly an enhancement. Since the Los Angeles Opera has already proved the superiority of the Kaye edition, it seems incomprehensible that Mrs. Domingo would take it upon herself to lead the opera back to its bad old ways.</font></p>
<p>
<font SIZE=3>Otherwise &#8211; and that&#8217;s a pretty big &#8220;otherwise&#8221; &#8211; the current <i>Hoffmann </i>has its modest attractions. Marcus Haddock is the Hoffmann: a Neil Shicoff plus brains, you might say, capable of a nice lyric line delivered in a voice reedy but not unpleasant. Samuel Ramey does the villains as if to the manner born, splendidly ghastly as the evil Dr. Miracle pursuing the hapless Antonia with his armload of charms. Sumi Jo&#8217;s grossly overdirected Olympia brings down the house with her big laff numbers; the Giulietta, Milena Kitic, is barely there. The Antonia of Andrea Rost is, by some distance, the most artistically conscientious work of the evening. Emmanuel Villaume is the conductor; Giovanni Agostinucci, the designer; three days after seeing the opera, I cannot remember a single feature of their work.</font></p>
<p>
<font SIZE=3>THERE WAS ONCE AN AIRLINE &#8211; NOW defunct, I think &#8211; that advertised its service on the strength of sexier apparel for its attendants; the Philharmonic&#8217;s &#8220;casual Fridays&#8221; reminds me of this. The gimmick is that the players get to dress like people rather than penguins, and make themselves available afterward for close encounters downstairs at Otto&#8217;s. The programs on those nights are also shorter, which tells me something about management&#8217;s attitude toward musical content that I&#8217;d rather not think about.</font></p>
<p>
<font SIZE=3>On a recent Friday, the day after Thanksgiving, at least half the players wore dark-blue shirts (as<br />
did I) so that the dress (or undress) code was merely a matter of substituting one uniform for another. The other concerts that weekend listed two Respighi &#8220;Roman&#8221; tone poems; on Friday we were allotted only one, which would have been a mercy even if we had all shown up in togas. (<i>Roman Festivals</i> is my choice of the week for world&#8217;s worst music, barely edging out John Williams&#8217; <i>Harry Potter</i> score.) Miguel Harth-Bedoya, the Philharmonic&#8217;s immensely talented associate conductor, began the program with Vivaldi&#8217;s <i>The Four Seasons</i>, with each of the four concertos performed by a different member of the orchestra&#8217;s string section, an amusing and workable notion. Each of the four soloists &#8211; Michele Bovyer, Akiko Tarumoto, Stacy Wetzel and Jonathan Wei &#8211; played with a different take on what Baroque fiddling is supposed to sound like 300 years after the fact. If I had to hand out a prize, it would go to Mr. Wei, who turned the final concerto into a wild &#8211; if not very Vivaldian &#8211; winter carnival.</font></p>
<p>
<font SIZE=3>Last week at the Philharmonic there was more spellbinding, this time by the barely-out-of-his-teens pianistic whiz Lang Lang, who dealt with Tchaikovsky&#8217;s First Piano Concerto exactly as the music deserved. I have long, long been of the opinion that Nicholas Rubinstein&#8217;s famous condemnation of the work at first hearing only came about because Tchaikovsky had played it for him straight. In merely correct performances the music is as bad as Rubinstein proclaimed &#8211; shapeless, clumsy and dull. Played as it was by the angel-faced Lang &#8211; his visage turned skyward as if receiving supernal dictation from Above, his 40 or so fingers clattering through those absurd cascading octaves like some interplanetary juggernaut, with the looks of blank astonishment as conductor Zubin Mehta struggled to keep up not always successfully &#8211; the work simply eludes capture by rational criticism. It is what it is. And as long as crowds leap to their collective feet and roar their collective approval, it probably doesn&#8217;t matter all that much that the Tchaikovsky Concerto is, at heart, a gruesome betrayal of the high art that Tchaikovsky unmistakably aspired to &#8211; and often achieved elsewhere in his legacy.</font></p>
<p>
<font SIZE=3>So far Lang Lang has ridden skyward on the glitter-junk repertory: this concerto and Rach 3, Mussorgsky&#8217;s <i>Pictures</i> and Lang&#8217;s own socko version of &#8220;Stars and Stripes Forever,&#8221; which he played as his second encore. His first encore, the Liszt transcription of Schumann&#8217;s <i>Widmung</i>, was distorted almost all the way to parody. At his pre-concert talk last week he trotted out all the clichés that press agents compose for their clients. (Am I alone in having my teeth ache at the sound of &#8220;very very&#8221; &#8211; even from Lang Lang?) If this is where his career is taking him, I suppose he deserves congratulation for all the gold that lies ahead. It&#8217;s still sad, however, to think of all those fingers going to waste.</font></p>
<p>
<font SIZE=3>Funny . . . as I write this I also start thinking about Zubin Mehta, for whom the crowds also roared far too early in his career, with results audible in last week&#8217;s threadbare reading of Bartók&#8217;s <i>Concerto for Orchestra</i> and <i>Orpheus</i>, one of Liszt&#8217;s less significant symphonic poems. Mehta takes his bow these days with a kind of insolent glower; on the podium he looks half asleep; surely this was the cause of the poor balances and muffed entrances in the Bartók, one of the canniest pieces of orchestral writing the repertory possesses. I see he&#8217;s down for the Beethoven Ninth at Disney Hall next season; it&#8217;s probably not too early to head for the hills.</font></p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Bright Prospects, Even Without&#160;Havergal</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2002/11/bright-prospects-even-without-havergal/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2002/11/bright-prospects-even-without-havergal/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 27 Nov 2002 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=419</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[I was accosted at a recent concert by a well-dressed chap of a certain age. My mission, he informed me, was to throw the weight of my words behind his campaign to convince the Los Angeles Philharmonic&#8217;s management that the Gothic Symphony of Havergal Brian was, out of all the world‘s fund of musical masterpieces, [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>I was accosted at a recent concert by a well-dressed chap of a certain age. My mission, he informed me, was to throw the weight of my words behind his campaign to convince the Los Angeles Philharmonic&#8217;s management that the Gothic Symphony of Havergal Brian was, out of all the world‘s fund of musical masterpieces, the only worthy choice to inaugurate the new Disney Concert Hall. I thanked him and went on my way. Three days later the mails produced a lengthy screed from this same gentleman, reminding me of my solemn duty and declaiming his praise of Havergal Brian in terms worthy of the work itself &#8212; some two hours of grandiose foofaraw for orchestra, vocal soloists, choruses, brass band and, for all I know, an offstage choir of vacuum cleaners.
</p>
<p>    My correspondent had already exercised his powers of persuasion on the Philharmonic&#8217;s Deborah Borda, who replied that the work in question was nothing but “third-rate Elgar.” That might just be unduly unkind to Sir Edward, or perhaps a little overkind to our Havergal &#8212; who, by the way, died in 1972 at the age of 96, with 32 symphonies in the can. (All 32, by the way, are due for a new recording series on, wouldn‘t ya know, Naxos.) To rescue you from the suspense this account of mine must surely cause, let me assure you that at last week&#8217;s press conference announcing the Philharmonic‘s plans for its first season in its new hall, the name of Havergal Brian was once more &#8212; as usual &#8212; among the missing. We&#8217;ll get back to what was not missing in a paragraph or two.
</p>
<p>   The annals teem with the names of artists of modest expressive qualities but a certain talent to simulate expressivity with crudely attractive paraphernalia: the musical equivalent, perhaps, of paint-by-the-numbers. Russia‘s Nikolai Medtner was one; his perfunctory note spinning earned the adoration (and cash) of an Indian maharajah. The most prolific practitioners of the mellifluous nonentity are the Brits: eminent Victorians, eloquent Edwardians, some of recent origin. (Heard any Robert Simpson lately?) Their music seems to echo the wrenching groan of English church organs, although the textures also owe something to last week&#8217;s Yorkshire pudding re-warmed. They tend to compose symphonies, bushels of symphonies. They are the inherited burden that today‘s splendid young firebrands &#8212; Thomas Ades, Mark Turnage, those guys &#8212; must live down. They do, however, inspire wild adulation. In my indispensable copy of Don Marquis&#8217; archy and mehitabel, the cockroach archy queries a moth on why it is so fond of flying into flames. “i think he‘s nuts,” says archy, “but i wish there was something in this world i wanted as much as that moth wants to fry.”
</p>
<p>    Meanwhile, back in the real world, the Philharmonic&#8217;s announcement of its inaugural season in Disney Hall is worthy itself of orchestration for brass choirs, etc. The program is, for starters, a diplomatic masterwork, a fantastic interweave of the many ways to capture and hold an audience. Considering the fact that audiences would flock to the new hall (for the first season, anyhow) even if the programming were nothing but Nutcrackers and Messiah sing-alongs, there is a high level of courage in this planning: world premieres galore, a Green Umbrella series loaded with true grit, a grand celebration of Berlioz &#8212; who is not everybody‘s favorite Romantic, but whose Symphonie Fantastique will soar this time. The adventurous Green Umbrella concerts are in the big hall, by the way, not across the street at Zipper. That, with the lure of the new hall itself, just might widen a few horizons among the new listeners. There&#8217;s an interesting series called “First Nights,” which will present music that infuriated the critics at first &#8212; The Rite of Spring, for example &#8212; along with discussions as to why this happened.
</p>
<p>    There are labels and titles all over the place, in fact; somebody at the Philharmonic knows a thing or two about promotion. There‘s a “Creation Festival,” which obviously includes works of that name by Haydn and Milhaud but also new works by Magnus Lindberg and Liza Lim. Mahler&#8217;s Second Symphony turns up, as we all knew it would, and that work, too, has been subsumed under the “Creation” rubric.
</p>
<p>   In another sense, however, the whole season‘s outline gives off a creative aura. It was somebody&#8217;s smart idea, for example, to thread through the programs a collection of pieces about building: Morton Feldman‘s Rothko Chapel, Liza Lim&#8217;s Ecstatic Architecture, and two works, Yannis Xenakis‘ Metastaseis and Edgard Varese&#8217;s Poeme Electronique, both written specifically to mingle sounds and architectural shapes. Two series demonstrate an admirable awareness of the world outside Frank Gehry‘s shiny walls: “Sounds About Town” and “InsideOutside”; both have to do with collaborations with other music in the neighborhood &#8212; including an admirable bow to the jazz scene &#8212; and with other organizations that fight the same fights: the Getty, for example, and the enterprising Crossroads School.
</p>
<p>   I note some interesting interweaves. Michael Tilson Thomas guest-conducts the Philharmonic for the first time since 1985, when, after a series of really bratty, self-indulgent performances, Ernest Fleischmann gave him the boot. Franz Welser-Most also has a program. In both cases, Esa-Pekka Salonen will return the visit, as guest on both the San Francisco and Cleveland podiums. (Cleveland, it&#8217;s no secret, once actively wooed Salonen for the post Welser-Most now occupies.) Simon Rattle returns, this time with his own Berlin Philharmonic, to the venue where he began his ascent to international stardom. Christoph von Dohnanyi is down for a guest shot; Lorin Maazel arrives with his New York Philharmonic. That gives us a look at the Cleveland Orchestra‘s three most recent conductors; wouldn&#8217;t you trade them all for one week with George Szell?
</p>
<p>   It‘s a thrilling, exhilarating list, masterful in its counterpoint of high adventure and “something for everybody.” Can&#8217;t you just taste Alfred Brendel and Matthias Goerne at work on Schubert‘s Die Winterreise? The Berlioz Fantastique re-created with the complicity of Britain&#8217;s Theatre de Complicite? (Remember its Shostakovich at UCLA last year?) A new work &#8212; a chamber opera, no less &#8212; by the fabulously gifted Osvaldo Golijov, still riding high after this season‘s Pasion? Monteverdi&#8217;s Vespers, with his baroque brass racketing through the new, shiny spaces? Okay, master builders: It‘s your baby now, and a healthy one so far.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>TURANDOT AND ITS NOT-S0-HAPPY&#160;ENDINGS</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2002/11/turandot-and-its-not-s0-happy-endings/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2002/11/turandot-and-its-not-s0-happy-endings/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Tue, 26 Nov 2002 22:02:31 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Opera News]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=1814</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[No abandoned orphan draws the tears and the frustrations as does Turandot, Puccini’s final work, left incomplete at the composer’s death  in November, 1924 and rushed into completion by lesser hands soon afterward. True, the formidable Arturo Toscanini cut his performance short at the world premiere, at the point where the ailing Puccini himself had [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p class="MsoNormal" style="line-height:200%;">No abandoned orphan draws the tears and the frustrations as does <em>Turandot</em>, Puccini’s final work, left incomplete at the composer’s death  in November, 1924 and rushed into completion by lesser hands soon afterward. True, the formidable Arturo Toscanini cut his performance short at the world premiere, at the point where the ailing Puccini himself had put down his pen. Doing so, he had carried the most grandiose of all Puccini’s operas to a crisis point but no further, relinquishing the stage to two larger-than-life monsters  facing each other with daggers drawn across an unbridgeable abyss,  but only fifteen minutes away from a happy ending. The intended love/hate duet that would have transported  these monsters across that abyss and into each other’s arms was never composed, at least by Puccini. On his manuscript sketch, however, he penciled indisputable evidence of the importance  he attached  to this climactic duet: the  infinitely revealing words: “qui Tristano.”</p>
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<p class="MsoNormal" style="line-height:200%;">The story is well-known, give or take a vast array of contradictory  retellings. Toscanini, who held  Puccini in mingled adoration and contempt, visited the composer in the summer of 1924, heard  him, at the piano, perform the opera as it then stood, which may (or may not) have included his own projection of the final scene. Toscanini liked what he heard, and agreed to conduct the premiere  at La Scala scheduled for the following year. At Puccini’s death, Toscanini undertook to bring the work to completion in properly competent hands.  Puccini had completed his final opera in full score through the scene of Liù’s death midway in Act III. From then on to the end there  remained “a thirty-six-page draft” (says Joseph Kerman in <em>Opera as Drama</em>) or a pile of “twenty-three scarcely legible sketches” (says Julian Budden in <em>OperaGrove</em> and in his splendid recent Puccini biography) or “thirteen pages of sketches, which take the final scene only to the  crucial kiss” (writes Anthony Tommasini in <em>The New York Times</em>). Toscanini’s  first choice to complete the work (claims Budden) was Riccardo Zandonai; another considered possibility (claims conductor John Mauceri) was the young Viennese firebrand Erich Korngold. Both were rejected  by the Puccini family as being already too illustrious. The choice, with Toscanini’s grudging acquiescence,  fell upon Franco Alfano, still at the time not much more than a musical nonentity. (His one success, the 1904 <em>Risurrezione</em>, displayed a reasonable competence  if little more.)</p>
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<p class="MsoNormal" style="line-height:200%;">Alfano delivered his commission; Toscanini rejected  it furiously, and ordered a rewrite. Toscanini conducted the 1926 premiere – postponed a year from the 1925 target date &#8211;  but drew the line at performing the Alfano score.. He conducted one single performance  (says William Ashbrook) and then turned the work over to his assistant Ettore Panizza, or he conducted three performances (says Harold Rosenthal), or “several,” (writes Andrew Porter). Considering Toscanini’s lifelong antipathy toward music he considered inferior, plus his famous on-again off-again regard for Puccini, it seems inconceivable that he would, even once, wave his baton over what he considered Alfano’s botched job. Despite his championing of numerous minor Italian composers,  in his complete  repertory list as compiled in Harvey Sachs’ eminently trustworthy biography, not a note of Alfano occurs. Alfano did recast and somewhat tighten  his completion – workmanlike if workaday, shaving his original 377 measures down to 268. Whether he accomplished this self-mutilation in time for the Metropolitan Opera premiere , seven months after La Scala, is buried in the dust of Thirty-ninth and Broadway..  What we hear today, invariably, is Alfano 2.</p>
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<p class="MsoNormal" style="line-height:200%;">Alfano’s first version, clumsy as it may be over all, ends in a Technicolor blaze, with peals of brassy triumph and the lovers joining in the final music at top lung-power – the everybody-on-stage sing-along version of “Nessun dorma.” For the most part, Alfano 1 is the more tonsil-twisting of the two versions; the tessitura lies higher, most notably at the end when the lovers join in at the end of the “Nessun dorma” reprise with a pair of matched B-flats. (In Alfano 2, the chorus goes it alone.) Turandot’s aria, “Dal primo pianto” runs 79 bars in Alfano 1, pared down to 51 in Alfano 2. There is one recording – now deleted but worth the search: Josephine Barstow and Lando Bartolini on a Decca disc of operatic final scenes, conducted by Mauceri. In 1992, American  conductor Steven Mercurio created  his own conflation of Alfano 1 and 2 for the Opera Company of Philadelphia and led it to considerable  acclaim, with Alfano’s final brass spread high up around Philadelphia’s Academy of Music. Brilliant brass or no, it still makes for a sad contemplation,  that  325 years of grand Italian opera tradition should come to its sputtering end in the merely competent  hackwork of Franco Alfano. “Finita la poesia,” sings the crowd on the last completed page of Puccini’s manuscript, and they may have been right.</p>
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<p class="MsoNormal" style="line-height:200%;">Or maybe not. The latest solution of <em>Turandot’s</em> finale problem comes from what might seem unlikely at first view, but which actually makes strong musical sense. Luciano Berio, has now tried his hand at a <em>Turandot</em> completion worthy of the score and its creator. It seem an unusual project  for Berio, one-time avatar of Schoenbergian atonality and longtime kindred spirit to Pierre Boulez, to take on. But we should remember  that Berio is not only a prolific opera composer in his own right but a  passionate defender of Italy’s musical heritage all the way back to Monteverdi and before, His new version of <em>Turandot </em>has been sanctioned by the Puccini estate. After trial concert-performance  runs in the Canary Islands and Amsterdam,   led by Riccardo Chailly, it was staged last June by Los Angeles Opera under Kent Nagano and, two months later, at the Salzburg Festival conducted by Valery Gergiev, received – if a broadcast tape can be believed – with the mix of puzzlement and ecstasy attendant   on any major premiere of new and controversial musical substance.</p>
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<p class="MsoNormal" style="line-height:200%;">Something else among Berio’s  credentials stamps him as the proper agent to bring Puccini’s near-masterpiece to a fitting conclusion: his prowess as a highly skilled tamperer.</p>
<p class="MsoNormal" style="line-height:200%;">The 1968 <em>Sinfonia</em>, his best-known work, includes one movement  in which a gathering of familiar repertory tunes (Beethoven, Berlioz, Debussy) moves in a stream-of-consciousness progression while another part of the orchestra plays Mahler and a chorus declaims activist graffiti.  A recent score called <em>Rendering</em> subjects a folio of Schubert’s deathbed  sketches – for a symphony that would have been No. 10 if completed &#8211;  to a reworking that builds handsome and flexible bridges between Schubertian romanticism and Berio’s own love of that language.</p>
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<p class="MsoNormal" style="line-height:200%;">Berio’s “tampering” with Puccini’s expressed wishes and actual sketches runs to 307 bars, midway in length between Alfano 1 and 2; the performance under Gergiev ran a few seconds over fifteen minutes, almost exactly the same length as the recorded  Callas version (of Alfano 2, naturally). The Adami/Simoni text undergoes two cuts: about half of Turandot’s “Dal primo pianto” has gone,  and so has the choral finale with the “Nessun dorma” reprise.</p>
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<p class="MsoNormal" style="line-height:200%;">What Berio has done, actually, has been to recast the entire time-span of this final scene, to the point where his own musical fabrications impart a far more naturalistic flow to the events themselves. Small glints of Puccini’s  music speed the process; Calàf delivers his crucial kiss to the music (“gli enigme sono tre”) of his first response to Turandot in Act II. Rather than the echoes of “Tristano” that Puccini might have evoked for the ensuing duet, there comes next what amounts to a small tone-poem,  nearly three minutes’ worth of purely orchestral music, skidding through harmonies dense and disturbing, dealing wordlessly what no ice-bound soprano need verbalize upon the tenor’s first kiss. The harmonic density may raise hackles among  purists; remember, however, that  Puccini’s own last years were largely spent in discovering the musical world around him – Stravinsky’s <em>Petrouchka</em> and, more remarkable, Schoenberg’s <em>Pierrot Lunaire</em>.. There’s good reason to suspect that he might have welcomed Berio’s tampering far more heartily than Alfano’s flattening.</p>
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<p class="MsoNormal" style="line-height:200%;">“<em>Turandot</em> finirà pianissimo”; wrote Puccini to librettist Adami. “This new <em>Turandot</em>,” said Berio to a radio interviewer, “will end exactly so.” Prince Calaf (“il principe priapico,” says Berio, the “horny Prince”) reveals his name – in a close rewrite of Alfano’s frantic crescendo on a four-note figure – and Turandot drags him off to meet his fate. “Amore!!!” sing they both on his-and-her B-flats (as in Alfano 1) as faint echoes of “Nessun dorma” percolate through the orchestra. But then the music subsides; little by little there is darkness both visible and audible. An audience, awaiting the customary “happily ever after” choral outburst of the <em>Turandot</em> they’ve all known and loved, sits stunned. You hear it on the tape: a long moment  in which the silence is further prolonged, then the cheers.</p>
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<p class="MsoNormal" style="line-height:200%;">Does it work? As music drama created by Luciano Berio – composer of the magnificent <em>Un Re in Ascolto</em> revived not long ago in Chicago and eminently deserving – it works quite well, a “rendering” of thematic fragments by Puccini to stand beside his Schubert piece. The diehards will surely have trouble with the new <em>Turandot</em>. There were dark mutterings after the Kent Nagano-led Los Angeles performances last June – brought on by the somber new ending and by Giancarlo del Monaco’s  murky staging that obliged the antagonists  &#8212; neither alternating pair a vocal experience to sing about &#8212; to bellow at one another over the abandoned corpse of hapless Liù and to perpretate their final music in what looked like somebody’s abandoned attic.  But even  Gergiev, who delivered a stupendous performance at Salzburg, by the way, has confessed that he will probably revert to Alfano 2 when circumstances so ordain. As an example of a great composer’s respect for a venerable colleague and countryman, however, Puccini/Berio is definitely win/win.</p>
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		<title>Mixed&#160;Blessings</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2002/11/mixed-blessings/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2002/11/mixed-blessings/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 20 Nov 2002 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=418</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[It was wise local politics, if less wise music making, for the Master Chorale to deliver the first official (i.e., ticket-selling) concert at the new cathedral. It suggested the outline of a cultural enclave downtown, from the cathedral at the north end to Disney Hall at the south. Now that the map has been drawn, [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>It was wise local politics, if less wise music making, for the Master Chorale to deliver the first official (i.e., ticket-selling) concert at the new cathedral. It suggested the outline of a cultural enclave downtown, from the cathedral at the north end to Disney Hall at the south. Now that the map has been drawn, however, the better part of wisdom would be to destroy it.
</p>
<p>    As a place for music making, the new edifice is something of a disaster: a revelation all the more tragic measured against the high performance level of the inaugural program planned and executed by Grant Gershon and his excellent band of singers &#8212; at least as much of it as could be heard through the susurrus of the ventilating equipment and the harsh, dry acoustics of the space that actually seemed to suck resonance from both singers and organ. My guess is that it never occurred to the designers that there might be a time when a proper concert atmosphere &#8212; i.e., a background of silence &#8212; might be required in that vast space; under normal churchlike circumstances all that mechanical noise could conceivably stand in for the whispers of God and His angels. It was, however, an audible and highly unwelcome presence at this event.
</p>
<p>   The program was intelligently chosen, further evidence of Gershon&#8217;s status as a thinking man‘s musician: small works by Arvo Part, Henryk Gorecki and Francis Poulenc, plus just enough post-romantic organ trash to titillate admirers of that stuff and keep the rest of us from throwing up in the aisles. It took no more than a single movement from Leo Sowerby&#8217;s Organ Symphony thundered forth by the cathedral‘s own organist Samuel Soria &#8212; slithering, dense, aimless music, marked “fast and sinister” &#8212; to epitomize everything that is hateful about that awful repertory. (Fortunately, there was other music a week later to restore the digestive tract and the soul &#8212; a splendid Historic Sites vocal-cum-organ concert of Renaissance music by Dana Marsh&#8217;s new Musica Humana Oxford, with a superior instrument in the more congenial setting of the First Congregational Church.)
</p>
<p>   Last week‘s XTET concert at the County Museum sent me out into the streets, deliriously seized in a 68 pulsation from the evening&#8217;s final music, wanting it never to leave my head. The music: the last of Luciano Berio‘s Folk Songs, the portfolio of 11 tunes from all over, collected and marvelously rejiggered by the composer for his blithe-spirit wife, the late Cathy Berberian. Something about these small, perfect jewels goes beyond easy description; most of the tunes are familiar (“Black Is the Colour,” two songs from Canteloube&#8217;s Auvergne collection, etc.), but Berio‘s new seasonings endow them with magical glints. Cathy recorded these songs, inimitably. She has left us, but her specialness informs whoever else can sing the whole set properly. That includes Daisietta Kim, who is supposed to have retired from singing but who keeps returning to shine special lights with the XTET forces (who, on this occasion, actually numbered XIII).
</p>
<p>   The group was formed in 1985, out of that pool of freelancers (studios by day, real music at night) that is one of this area&#8217;s great strengths. This season they have a three-concert residency at LACMA (next, February 10). Their programming is fearless and serendipitous, which means that there can be clinkers. Two nowhere pieces by Mary Ellen Childs and Christina Viola Oorebeek fell into that category at last week‘s concert; the Berio, and a perky and trick-laden Henry Cowell string quartet, made full amends.
</p>
<p>    Alan Feinberg, whose spirit is comparably serendipitous, drew a small but responsive audience to his piano recital at UCLA&#8217;s Schoenberg Hall: a crowd mostly young, who applauded in the right places and nowhere else, and appeared to know why they were there. I could have wished for the entirety of Ives‘ “Concord” Sonata instead of the one movement (“The Alcotts,” set forth with an outpouring of warmth and humor that made you long to join those folks around their blazing home fire), but there was also other Ives to compensate. That was The Celestial Railroad, amazing music that crams into a work for solo piano the hifalutin goings-on of the orchestral works: a grab bag&#8217;s worth of found musical objects &#8212; march tunes, folk songs, a ragtime turn or two. (The music actually originated as a movement in the Fourth Symphony, which is usually performed with a couple of extra conductors to keep the events on track; imagine all that boiled down to piano-keyboard size!)
</p>
<p>    At the start there was Bach, intensely personal yet accurate renderings of some of his most appealingly strange, chromatic meanderings: small works made large (two of the Duetti, usually played on the organ but this time transformed into violent piano drama), and large works (the Chromatic Fantasy and Fugue) made even larger. Strangely but successfully interspersed into the Bach group was a set of tiny preludes by the remarkable, undefinable Russian near-genius Galina Ustvolskaya. At the end there was Chopin, chill for my taste; I could have used more of the contemporary spirit as dispensed by Ives, and &#8212; in Feinberg‘s unique, personal vision &#8212; no less by Bach.
</p>
<p>   Apropos chill: At the Philharmonic last week there was bad Grieg (the first suite of Peer Gynt music; why, in God&#8217;s name?) and worse Sibelius (the Violin Concerto, luridly tarted up in Midori‘s overnuanced reading). Esa-Pekka Salonen didn&#8217;t make it in time for the downbeat; at intermission people were swapping I-10 traffic horror stories. The Grieg was led by the Philharmonic‘s assistant conductor, the excellent Yasuo Shinozaki, but this is music you or I could conduct blindfolded. Why, as long as we&#8217;re blindfolded, are there so many bad romantic concertos in D minor? Just asking.
</p>
<p>   After intermission there came Carl Nielsen‘s Fifth Symphony, and now you know why I was there. This is music from 1922, about the same time as the Ives Celestial Railroad, and in some ways equally rambunctious. The sounds of distant battle inform the work; within the orchestra there are arguments between winds and brass, or among the brass themselves, that seem to want to tear the music apart. Out front there is, of all Ivesian touches, a solo snare drum &#8212; the Philharmonic&#8217;s Perry Dreiman beating an insistent tattoo, challenging the rest of the players to join in, responding sarcastically when they refuse. At the end the ghost of Brahms, perhaps even of Mahler, sweeps across the battlefield.
</p>
<p>   Wonderful, strange music, this. Salonen spoke briefly, wittily, about the essence of the music, its conflicts and its resolutions. When he talks about music, he almost invariably makes better sense than the official pre-concert jabberwocky upstairs. Then he conducts the music, and that, too, makes sense. This was a great performance; more Nielsen, please.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>The Slick Road&#160;Project</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2002/11/the-slick-road-project/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2002/11/the-slick-road-project/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 13 Nov 2002 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=417</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Photo by J. Henry Fair IF YO-YO MA WERE TO RE-DRAW the map of this planet, its land mass would consist of a large blob with no boundary lines. He&#8217;s a supremely gifted musician of extraordinarily broad passions, this smiling, Paris-born, Harvard-educated wizard cellist, nurtured on Bach and Beethoven. He can play their music as [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Photo by J. Henry Fair
<p>
IF YO-YO MA WERE TO RE-DRAW the map of this planet, its land mass would consist of a large blob with no boundary lines. He&#8217;s a supremely gifted musician of extraordinarily broad passions, this smiling, Paris-born, Harvard-educated wizard cellist, nurtured on Bach and Beethoven. He can play their music as well as anyone else on the planet &#8212; as he has demonstrated in concerts and recitals here more than once. He has also performed sanitized hillbilly waltzes here, in cahoots with fellow Appalachians-for-a-day like Edgar Meyer and Mark O&#8217;Connor. He&#8217;s been here with a tango band to play music by Astor Piazzolla, and that was mucho snazzy. Two weeks ago he came to UCLA&#8217;s Royce Hall with an <i>omnium gatherum</i> of performers from points north, east, south and west, and with music of similar provenance. He calls this latest cultural dabble &#8220;The Silk Road Project,&#8221; with players in old and new repertory culled from points along that old trade route, which first brought European and Asian cultures and merchandise to within handshaking proximity. Whatever else his efforts may achieve, they have turned the old camel trail into a sleek multilane highway with Big Mac drive-ins every few miles and TV-equipped rest stops in between.</p>
<p>
It&#8217;s possible to wish, as I surely do, that Yo-Yo Ma would turn up here more often to play Bach&#8217;s Cello Suites and the like; I can forgive him &#8212; just barely &#8212; for the sexy videos he allowed to be made around his Bach performances. I also have to note with some awe that of all the media stars vaguely identifiable as &#8220;classical&#8221; musicians these days, Yo-Yo Ma is one of the most entitled. You couldn&#8217;t get near Royce Hall that night; what other cellist can you name who can sell out a large hall as Yo-Yo inevitably does? (Answer: none.) The &#8220;Silk Road&#8221; program, though exasperating as a hasty sampling of too little of too much, did come up with some terrific performances. Somebody should take hold of the &#8220;Mongolian long-song singer&#8221; named Khongorzul Ganbaatar and cast her as the Turandot of everybody&#8217;s dreams.</p>
<p>
Okay, so there was Ms. Ganbaatar in one short &#8220;long song&#8221; plus an even shorter encore. There was some fabulous tabla playing by India&#8217;s Sandeep Das, in a composition of his own, and an extraordinary performance by Iranian-born Kayhan Kalhor in his brand-new  piece that set his native kemancheh (&#8220;spike fiddle&#8221;) against a Western string ensemble. The well-known pipa player Wu Man, for whom Lou Harrison and Tan Dun have composed major works, was allotted one dazzling showoff piece but nothing to show her marvelous command of soft and haunting sonorities. Yo-Yo and pianist Joel Fan played the Cello Sonata by Claude Debussy, who was the first European to fall in love with &#8212; and, therefore, to appropriate into his own music &#8212; the tinkles and the harmonies from this other world. As the final encore, the whole aggregation of Mongolian, Iranian, Indian, Chinese and East Coast freelance performers joined their dissimilar talents in a sad and mysterious Italian folk tune, something that Marco Polo &#8212; the godfather of intercontinental travel &#8211;might have heard under his window back home in Venice.</p>
<p>
Still, the whole affair was a curiously unsatisfying &#8212; if you&#8217;ll pardon the transculturation &#8212; smorgasbord of tidy but blandly spiced dishes, quickly served and quickly whisked away. Somewhere along that long and slicked-down highway I wanted to linger, to sample some of its scenery at greater length. The program was long enough &#8212; 90 minutes as noted in the printed program, more like 130 in actuality &#8212; but I left with the unshakable sense of having been shortchanged.</p>
<p>
SONY CLASSICS HAS FINALLY released Tan Dun&#8217;s <i>Water Passion After St. Matthew</i>, the last of the four settings of biblical Passion texts commissioned by the International Bach Academy, performed and recorded live at Stuttgart in the summer of 2000. (The other three, by Golijov, Gubaidulina and Rihm, are available on Hänssler-Classic.) Setting Tan&#8217;s work, with its sense of otherworldly quiet and mystery, against the exuberance and fervor of Golijov&#8217;s <i>St. Mark Passion</i> makes for a fascinating contrast: two ardent, immensely talented musical minds envisioning a similar compositional assignment from, so it seems, the opposite ends of a telescope.</p>
<p>
You can also draw interesting parallels between Tan&#8217;s work and the multicultural impulses behind Yo-Yo Ma&#8217;s &#8220;Silk Road Project.&#8221; Both are bridge-building efforts &#8212; Tan&#8217;s, between his own Chinese heritage and the Western interaction of faith and music; Yo-Yo&#8217;s, between the broad panorama of Asia&#8217;s musical aesthetics and the ears and expectations of a Western audience. Similar sounds are employed; Tan&#8217;s score also calls for the spike fiddle and ceramic flute that made some appealing racket at Royce Hall. Tan, however, builds his own &#8220;bridge&#8221; by subjecting his acoustic instruments to electronic processing.</p>
<p>
<i>Water Passion</i> calls for relatively few<br />
performers: a small chorus whose members also play Tibetan finger bells, two solo singers, solo strings and keyboard, and, as you might guess from Tan&#8217;s previous works, a gathering of percussion instruments including stones of various sizes and pitches, &#8220;water drums&#8221; (wooden salad bowls floating upside down in a water basin), a small soda bottle (for bubbling sounds), and water gongs partially immersed (an old John Cage/Lou Harrison trick). All this paraphernalia becomes a hypnotic counterpart to the words. &#8220;A sound is heard in water,&#8221; sings the chorus at the Last Supper (in Tan&#8217;s own textual embellishment of Matthew&#8217;s words). &#8220;The tears are crying for truth.&#8221;</p>
<p>
I have had my problems with some of Tan&#8217;s music in the past. His big symphonies celebrating the millennium and the annexation of Hong Kong seem as much motivated by the spirit of the Hollywood epic as by musical matters. His <i>Crouching Tiger</i> film score (with the cello of Yo-Yo Ma as a voice in the wilderness of Ang Lee&#8217;s magic forest) and its later jiggering into concert material strike me as too clever by half. This <i>Water Passion</i>, however, and the 1999 <i>Concerto for Water Percussion and Orchestra </i>&#8211; commissioned by the New York Philharmonic and recorded on that orchestra&#8217;s own label &#8212; stand for the work of a composer newly baptized; I find them both greatly appealing.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>The Adams&#160;Family</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2002/11/the-adams-family/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2002/11/the-adams-family/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 06 Nov 2002 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=416</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[There is hope for us yet. In the eight days that began with Golijov‘s St. Mark&#8217;s Passion and ended with John Adams‘ Naive and Sentimental Music, it was easy to feel good about music&#8217;s future &#8212; about the creation of new music, that is, if not always about its preservation in live performance or recording. [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>There is hope for us yet. In the eight days that began with Golijov‘s St. Mark&#8217;s Passion and ended with John Adams‘ Naive and Sentimental Music, it was easy to feel good about music&#8217;s future &#8212; about the creation of new music, that is, if not always about its preservation in live performance or recording. Those works begin my current list of reasons for optimism, and the list goes on from there: Kaija Saariaho‘s opera, the other Passion settings introduced at Stuttgart, those young Brits, Germany&#8217;s extraordinary Helmut Lachenmann . . .
</p>
<p>    Adams‘ 48-minute orchestral workout was first played here in 1999 &#8212; by Esa-Pekka Salonen and the Philharmonic, for whom it was written &#8212; and recorded for Nonesuch. What a perfect match, Salonen and this music! Hearing it again at UCLA&#8217;s Royce Hall, as the major work in the orchestra‘s first Green Umbrella concert of the season, in a performance measurably more exuberant, richer in detail and momentum &#8212; enhanced by the superior sound at Royce &#8212; you could easily accept it as a portrait of Salonen himself, the wonderful fantasy and coloristic sense he brings to music that truly engages him (including, of course, his own). I&#8217;ve written about this work before, and will continue to do so as long as it can still offer new aspects for me to discover &#8212; such as, this time, the sense of constant, immaculately controlled growth in each of the three movements, set in conflict against the music‘s irresistible garrulity. The Philharmonic takes the work to New York in March, along with Adams&#8217; El Niño. I‘ve heard New York audiences boo major works of Adams before; if they do so this time, it&#8217;ll be out of sheer envy.
</p>
<p>   The program at Royce also offered lesser Adams in his two-piano piece Hallelujah Junction, music of great charm but also a fair amount of talky-talk, tidily dispatched by Gloria Cheng and Grant Gershon. In between, for reasons I don‘t quite fathom, came Voices, a time-wasting piece for clarinet and orchestra, with the composer, Derek Bermel, as soloist and Adams conducting. The style is Smartass-Moderne: In the first movement the clarinet and orchestra ”converse“ in Silly Symphony squeaks and squawks; the slow movement affects a serious pose with a textbook-folksy tune over textbook scoring for harp and muted strings; the finale is a gruesome stab at New Orleans honky-tonk. ”Bad Lalo Schifrin,“ whispered a perceptive friend.
</p>
<p>    Then there is the other John Adams, an interesting composer (born in Mississippi, now living in Alaska) who has had to take on his middle name &#8212; as John Luther Adams &#8212; in self-defense. For his identity dilemma I have nothing but sympathy; my own namesakes, whose telephone calls I often receive, include an upholsterer, a magician and an actor born &#8212; or so he tells me &#8212; under the name of Benjamin Schultz. On the Cold Blue Music label there are three of this Adams&#8217; landscape pieces, long, sustained harmonies with puffs of arctic winds blowing the sound one way or another: minimalism that makes the other Adams‘ minimal pieces sound downright hyperactive. The music &#8212; as much snow-strewn color as sound (but pleasurable in either guise) &#8212; is beautifully played by local folk, including the Ear Unit&#8217;s Amy Knoles, Marty Walker and Robin Lorentz.
</p>
<p>    ECM‘s Arvo-Part-of-the-month calls itself Orient Occident; add an ampersand and you have the name of the best if shortest work of the three on the disc. Orient  Occident dates from 2000; it consists of a haunted, endless melodic line over a string tone with the same kind of bone-rattling harmony that makes Part&#8217;s Fratres an experience disturbing and rewarding. Sweden‘s commendable Tonu Kaljuste conducts all three works, including two for voices and orchestra, the 1984 Pilgrim&#8217;s Song for men‘s voices (mostly on a dour monotone) and strings, and a setting of Psalms 42-43 for women&#8217;s choir: somewhat chilling, but without the emotional impact of the disc‘s title music. As usual with the noble attention paid by ECM to Part&#8217;s music, the very nature of the recorded sound transports you to mysterious northern regions.
</p>
<p>   I didn‘t write about Hashirigaki after the enchanting performances at UCLA; other blithe spirits here may be better qualified to deal with the songs of the Beach Boys and the dances they seem to have inspired. To me the most fascinating music was the language: three speakersingerdancers of vastly different national origin, imparting to the Beach Boys&#8217; lyrics and Gertrude Stein‘s airborne gibberish a rainbow of coloration through the diversity of accent. For that you can refer to the art of soundman, media alchemist and, yes, composer Heiner Goebbels.
</p>
<p>   Now there&#8217;s an ECM disc of Goebbels‘ Eislermaterial, a strangely moving piece meant as an homage to Hanns Eisler, that sad, sardonic genius who once roamed the streets of Hollywood in search of new aspects of Americana to loathe and enshrine in song. Eisler was Goebbels&#8217; teacher, and his ”material“ is threaded through a dense new background &#8212; the living composer haunted by fragmentary dreams of the composer long dead. The songs are mostly from the years of Eisler‘s exile among us; the texts are by fellow exile Bertolt Brecht. They are flung in our faces &#8212; growled, howled, drenched in vitriol and vinegar &#8212; by Frankfurt&#8217;s legendary Ensemble Modern, with the German actor Josef Bierbichler, who might, from the sound of his voice, be 200 years old and possessed of 200 years of wisdom.
</p>
<p>    Mehli Mehta never seemed to mind that I always referred to him as ”the musical Mehta“; his 94 years had taught him humor and infinite forbearance, even to sharp-tongued critics who deplored the failure of son Zubin to rise to his father‘s level of eloquence. His legacy is the hundreds of players who went forth from his American Youth Symphony &#8212; junior orchestra for senior audiences &#8212; into good jobs with great orchestras in that rewarding if dangerous world.
</p>
<p>    I didn&#8217;t get to his AYS concerts as often as I wanted to; the few times I made it, I was always bowled over by the way those kids played. Last week, at the first of this season‘s Royce Hall concerts (free, kindly note), they took on the Mahler Fifth Symphony, which is hardly pablum for kiddie orchestras. It was a stunning performance; the first horn&#8217;s solos, the winds, and, in the well-known adagietto, the strings &#8212; all first-rate. Before the Mahler there was a Mozart symphony, crisp, elegant and beautifully spirited. The conducting was by Alexander Treger, who took over at Mehli‘s retirement four years ago. The smile they imparted to that music was Mehli&#8217;s own, perfectly preserved.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>“Lady Macbeth of Mtsensk” at the LA&#160;Opera</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2002/11/%e2%80%9clady-macbeth-of-mtsensk%e2%80%9d-at-the-la-opera/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2002/11/%e2%80%9clady-macbeth-of-mtsensk%e2%80%9d-at-the-la-opera/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 04 Nov 2002 21:19:22 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Opera News]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=1801</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[The hoodoos that have bedeviled Dmitri Shostakovich’s Lady Macbeth of Mtsensk almost since its premiere, performed double duty in Los Angeles this past October. As with the seesawing fortunes of the composer himself, however,  the final notes were of triumph hard-won  and deserved. Anticipation had run high for the announced third offering in the Los [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>The hoodoos that have bedeviled Dmitri Shostakovich’s <em>Lady Macbeth of Mtsensk</em> almost since its premiere, performed double duty in Los Angeles this past October. As with the seesawing fortunes of the composer himself, however,  the final notes were of triumph hard-won  and deserved.</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">Anticipation had run high for the announced third offering in the Los Angeles Opera’s 16<sup>th</sup> season, Prokofiev’s <em>War and Peace</em> in the same lallapalooza  Kirov Opera production  that had run at the Met last season – underwritten, as at the Met, from the seemingly bottomless pockets of financier/opera buff Alberto Vilar. It was not to be, however. The Los Angeles Opera encountered a $600,000 shortfall in advance expenses, which Vilar declined to meet; the Shostakovich opera,  in a 2001 Kirov production reported as costing $1 million less than the Prokofiev, was substituted.  As principal donor, Vilar’s name was replaced on the program by “a group of devoted friends of Los Angeles Opera.” Okay so far?</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">Not quite, as fate would ordain. In early October word reached the company that George Tsypin’s Kirov sets, bound  by ship from St. Petersburg to the Port of Los Angeles,  were becalmed off the California coast by a labor lockout and would be diverted instead to Tokyo (where the company was later to perform). Ten days before the scheduled October 23 opening, the company’s carpenters and stage crew, armed with a duplicate  set of  Tsypin’s blueprints (with instructions in Russian) set out to rebuild  the massive farmhouse and the ingenious sliding walls of the Russian design. The sound of hammering resounded  through the Dorothy Chandler Pavilion as late as 5p.m. on October 23; two hours later, however, the curtain’s on-time rise was greeted by relieved cheers.</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">Irina Molostova’s  staging returned the opera to the 1860-ish setting of Nikolai Leskov’s original story; not for her the automobile, refrigerator and plastic trashbags of Graham Vick’s Met updating. Hapless Katerina and her nogoodnik  Sergei went about their monkeyshines in clear silhouette behind a crimson curtain, further blatantly silhouetted by the roars and guffaws of Valery Gergiev’s 96-member Kirov Orchestra. At the final curtain, the lament of the downtrodden prisoners merged memorably into  chill vapors overhead: a stunning multimedia moment..</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">The Los Angeles engagement – seven performances in as many days, October 23-29 – necessitated multiple casting: three Katerinas, four Sergeis, one night when two  singers shared the role of the comic Police Sergeant. There were no sensational vocal discoveries and nothing disgraceful; the sense over-all was of a series of substantial but typical Kirov nights in midseason, brightly lit by the spectacular work of Gergiev’s fabulous orchestra and the equally motivated 70-member chorus.  For the last two performances (October 28,29) conductor  Maxim Shostakovich, the composer’s able son with a solid reputation on his own, took over the podium and upheld the family honor most eloquently.</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">Larissa Shevchenko was the robust Katerina on opening night; Larissa Gogolevskaya, visually more believable if given to shrillness, sang in two later performances. Vladimir Grishko’s Sergei, on October 23, was that of a substantial businessman home from the office; Oleg Balashov’s performance on the 27<sup>th</sup> was pure sexual innuendo. Vladimir Vaneev’s Boris on opening night – the mean father-in-law who gets his comeuppance in a dish of poisoned mushrooms – projected a creature of infinite menace. Nikolai Gassiev, as the drunken peasant who finds the corpse in the cellar, stole the show – as drunken peasants in Russian operas always have, and always will. – ALAN RICH</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>The Lady Is a&#160;Tramp</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2002/10/the-lady-is-a-tramp/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2002/10/the-lady-is-a-tramp/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 30 Oct 2002 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=415</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Nine years separate Dmitri Shostakovich&#8217;s start on his Lady Macbeth of Mtsensk and the completion of his Sixth Symphony; hearing them both within a week at the Music Center constituted, among other pleasures, an interesting historical overview. In those nine years (1930&#8211;39) the composer‘s official esteem rose and plummeted like an out-of-control roller coaster. The [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Nine years separate Dmitri Shostakovich&#8217;s start on his Lady Macbeth of Mtsensk and the completion of his Sixth Symphony; hearing them both within a week at the Music Center constituted, among other pleasures, an interesting historical overview. In those nine years (1930&#8211;39) the composer‘s official esteem rose and plummeted like an out-of-control roller coaster. The opera, a huge worldwide success for years after its premiere, was then shot down &#8212; for Soviet audiences and, curiously, for the outside world as well &#8212; after the famous 1936 denunciation (“muddle instead of music”) by the USSR&#8217;s most powerful music critic, Joseph Stalin, the Martin Bernheimer of his day. Eventually Shostakovich would grovel his way back into official favor with his Fifth Symphony and with the promise that the Sixth would be cast as a vast choral homage to Lenin. When that promise did not materialize, Shostakovich again found himself on shaky ground, which continued its quivering at least until Stalin‘s death in 1953 and even beyond.
</p>
<p>    Given that well-documented lifetime of political and artistic insecurity, the strengths in these two dissimilar &#8212; but, in some sense at least, musically related &#8212; works are all the more surprising. Both share the epithet “tragedy-satire” that Shostakovich himself coined for the opera. Both reach expressive depths: the opera in the stark tragedy of its final act, the symphony in its mysterious opening movement, with its intense, wordless grief voiced by solo winds sounding above the dark buzzing of slow strings, then a single stroke on the gong (as in the Tchaikovsky “Pathetique”) to chill the blood. Both tickle &#8212; but do not elate &#8212; the senses with episodes of raucous, sardonic satire that totter at the brink of hell and offer a harrowing view of what lies beyond.
</p>
<p>   The Sixth is, indeed, a curious work. As with the Fifth, the slow movement is its emotional crown, music most amazing for the way it suggests so much with such modest means. The wind solos &#8212; now a wrenching long melody for English horn, now a passage for piccolo that must be the most powerful line ever conceived for that instrument &#8212; go on and on, single flickering candles barely piercing the darkness. The end of that movement is purely beautiful, the harsh, defiant opening theme now in a lustrous, soft major-key transfiguration. Mahler is the ancestral figure: the solo winds in the final movement of Das Lied von der Erde, the grinning death-dancers in the “Burleske” parts of the Ninth Symphony. Esa-Pekka Salonen and the Philharmonic, very much at home in Mahler, brought out these similarities in their tense, spacious reading of the Shostakovich. I particularly admired his resistance to the easy laff in the final pages. Earlier on the program he had dealt most winningly with the fragrant elegances in Ravel&#8217;s Tombeau de Couperin, and not at all rewardingly in a deadpan collaboration with Peter Serkin in a Mozart piano concerto (K. 453), whose depths remained unplumbed.
</p>
<p>    Lady Macbeth still makes its way, slowly. In Shostakovich‘s later revised (i.e., watered-down) version as Katerina Ismailova, it ran at the San Francisco and New York City operas in the 1960s. In its “pure” form it came to the Met in 1994, in a staging by Graham Vick that moved the 1850 action forward to include automobile, refrigerator and plastic trash bags. Nothing of the sort transpired here; Irina Molostova&#8217;s staging remained true to the period &#8212; its lyrical spirit and its boisterousness, both.
</p>
<p>    The opera arrived, however, burdened with jinxes &#8212; from the aforementioned Stalin putdown, to the grudging substitution for the originally scheduled War and Peace, to the recent longshore shutdown that cost the Los Angeles Opera access to George Tsypin‘s sets, which may still be somewhere on the high seas as I write. The triumph of the performance is, to some extent, the beating-back of those hoodoos. The local carpenters, armed with Tsypin&#8217;s blueprints, turned out a fair copy of the original Kirov Opera sets &#8212; rustic fences, barriers and balconies for the most part, with a garish red curtain behind which the errant Katerina and her nogoodnik Sergei went about their hanky-panky silhouetted by Alan Burrett‘s realistic lighting and Shostakovich&#8217;s superrealistic music.
</p>
<p>   It was a triumph shared, of course, by the music, and by the fabulous holler set up by Valery Gergiev and his visitors from the Kirov‘s own orchestra pit. It was not a night for subtlety or elegance; Shostakovich&#8217;s score had seen to that. It was, however, a night for some glorious showing off, with an extraordinarily gifted composer in his mid-20s, as Shostakovich was at the time, taking the full measure of a prodigious mass of pure orchestral virtuosity, as Gergiev and his 96 supremely gung-ho ensemble proved themselves to be.
</p>
<p>   It is easy to fall out of love with Katerina &#8212; the lady and her opera. The sheer vulgarity of the enterprise is the all-too-common operatic mix of exhilaration and kitsch (cf. Tosca et al.), here raised to stratospheric heights. Yet there are other kinds of operatic magic here as well; with one opera already behind him (and, thanks to Stalin, no more operas still to come), Shostakovich proved himself here the master of the dramatic, all-revealing melodic line. It‘s there already in Katerina&#8217;s opening “oh-how-I‘m-bored” cavatina, and it returns. The opera is crammed with entertainment; my favorite, I think, is the Policemen&#8217;s waltz tune, a haircut off Der Rosenkavalier and worthy to stand in its company.
</p>
<p>   Understandably for a run of seven consecutive days, the company arrived with as many as four principals for the major roles. On opening night there was Larissa Shevchenko as a robust Katerina, Vladimir Grishko as a loud-aplenty Sergei, and Vladimir Vaneev as the grump-voiced old father-in-law who gets his comeuppance in a plate of poisoned mushrooms. Nothing in the voice department was spectacular, nothing abject; I imagine that a midseason night at the Kirov‘s Mariinsky Theater would produce this level of well-routined vocal performance immensely buttressed &#8212; especially if you&#8217;re there on a Gergiev night &#8212; by the kind of musical leadership that streams from Gergiev‘s podium. In later performances, Maxim Shostakovich &#8212; the composer&#8217;s son, who has had a substantial American career since requesting asylum in 1981 &#8212; took over that well-stomped-upon podium and honorably defended the family name.
</p>
<p>   Anyhow, don‘t wring your hands over the loss of War and Peace. Lady Macbeth of Mtsensk has better sex &#8212; and, for that matter, better music.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>The Prose and the&#160;Passion</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2002/10/the-prose-and-the-passion/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2002/10/the-prose-and-the-passion/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 23 Oct 2002 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=414</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Two more hearings of Osvaldo Golijov‘s La Pasion Segun San Marcos have not dimmed the slash of its colors, its power to exhilarate, to stop the breath. Last weekend&#8217;s performances, as the peak of this year‘s Eclectic Orange Festival, did not quite draw the turn-away crowds I might have hoped for, nor was there a [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Two more hearings of Osvaldo Golijov‘s La Pasion Segun San Marcos have not dimmed the slash of its colors, its power to exhilarate, to stop the breath. Last weekend&#8217;s performances, as the peak of this year‘s Eclectic Orange Festival, did not quite draw the turn-away crowds I might have hoped for, nor was there a rerun of the wild 30-minute ovations that received the work at its premiere in stodgy Stuttgart and later in comparably staid Boston; five minutes past the final “amen” and the crowd was already halfway to the garage. But this in no way undermines the magnificence of the undertaking or its importance to the quality of musical life in these troubled times. We are, after all, dealing with Orange County and its steady but slow journey toward a state of cultural grace &#8212; the pathway smoothed by the ministrations of the O.C. Philharmonic Society and its visionary leader, Dean Corey. Nobody applauded between sections on either night, at least, and only one cell phone was audible from my centrally located seat. (There was a serious glitch in the sound system on Friday night: a layer of static from the speakers audible over the strings in the orchestra. It began almost immediately in the work, and was still there at the end. By Saturday, however, it had been repaired.)
</p>
<p>    One of my colleagues has already hailed the work as “the first masterpiece of the 21st century,” which is accurate in spirit but not in math. (It dates from 2000, after all, as does that other work of comparable stature, Kaija Saariaho&#8217;s L‘Amour de Loin. Come to think of it, I have no difficulty in ascribing masterpiece stature to all four of the Passion settings commissioned by the International Bach Academy in Stuttgart and performed there that year. Quite a time for the Muses, those twilight weeks of the last century!)
</p>
<p>   I have spent a lot of time, with varying degrees of success, trying to explain &#8212; to myself and to anyone else who might care &#8212; this process of transculturation whereby such old categories as “classical” and “popular” no longer define the current state of music &#8212; or, for that matter, of any of the arts. The excellence of Golijov&#8217;s big work is largely due to the ease with which it lies across boundaries.
</p>
<p>   Its basic language is a gorgeous vernacular: the vibrant rhythms and colors of samba, tango and jazz. What is truly remarkable is the way that, in Golijov‘s hands, this trove of source material can be made to adapt to moments of grand design and, as well, other moments of lesser proportion. At any size and expanse &#8212; the violent confrontation between Jesus and Caiaphas, the celebration of the Eucharist at the Last Supper, Peter&#8217;s weeping at his own betrayal of his master (a breath-stopping aria that has already taken on a separate existence as a recital item) &#8212; he seems able to master his chosen vernacular, and to bend it to an impressive range of musical meaning, as Mozart could master the broad implications of diatonic harmony and create his own miracles within its confines, or Bach the richness of baroque counterpoint.
</p>
<p>    Already in its two-year life span the work has gotten around, with performances in Boston last season and last summer at the Tanglewood and Ravinia festivals. The performances heard in Costa Mesa marked the beginning of a tour that reunites the performers from the Stuttgart premiere (and, therefore, the live-performance recording on Hanssler Classic): the extraordinary 53-member chorus of the Schola Cantorum of Caracas under its energetic director Maria Guinand, an “Orquesta La Pasion” also assembled in Caracas but drawing upon international freelance talent &#8212; a Japanese trumpeter, for example, and a Swedish percussionist &#8212; and some splendid vocal soloists. The remarkable soprano Luciana Souza (whose throat, says Golijov, “carries Brazil‘s DNA”) had sung his music last year at a Green Umbrella concert and was again on hand. Samia Ibrahim sang Peter&#8217;s great lament “Lua descolorida” (which Dawn Upshaw had sung two summers ago at Ojai) and seemed to hold the very air of Segerstrom Hall captive to her misty magic. Among the unlisted singers, who came out of the chorus for smaller solos along the way, my ear was most gratifyingly wooed by the deep, dark contralto of Lisbeth Rojas, in her few lines of Jesus‘ agony in the Garden of Gethsemane. The tour ends at the Brooklyn Academy for three performances starting October 30. Robert Spano takes over Maria Guinand&#8217;s podium, and Dawn Upshaw comes in to sing the “Lua descolorida.” Okay, but it can‘t get any better than it was last weekend.
</p>
<p>    You have to wonder about the fate of this kind of special work &#8212; assuming, as I can easily assume, that its fame and popularity will grow. Professional or even semiprofessional choruses can be more or less easily led toward mastery of Messiah and the classical standards; it doesn&#8217;t follow, however, that they can operate as easily within a choral style that draws upon the nasality, the honks and the language quirks of the Latino street singing that punctuates Golijov‘s music. Esa-Pekka Salonen can draw convincing performances of Revueltas out of Philharmonic players, but there are wonderful outbursts of downright musical slang in Golijov&#8217;s expressive style that probably require both learning and unlearning from conservatory-trained symphonic musicians. I asked Golijov, at his pre-concert talk, about his hopes and fears for the future of the piece; he seemed diplomatically hopeful that future musicians will find it worth their while to master his unique language. Meanwhile, he is at work on a chamber opera &#8212; “something about the Middle East” &#8212; scheduled for the L.A. Philharmonic in February 2004.
</p>
<p>   Inevitably, the temptation is strong to draw comparisons between this great work of Golijov and another ambitious venture of similar intent, the John Adams&#8211;Peter Sellars El Niño that the Philharmonic has on its agenda for later this season. There are vast differences, of course, between the meticulously charted sentiment (or sentimentality, if you must) of Adams‘ music and the exuberant anarchy of the Golijov. Yet the convergences are no less striking in both works&#8217; aiming to re-express the greatest biblical narrations in the terms and the language of a vital contemporary nation-ness. Note, however, that the dramatic impact of the Golijov Pasion needs no collaborator‘s name attached. The picture it created on the stage of Costa Mesa&#8217;s Segerstrom Hall &#8212; such an ugly framework for such beauty! &#8212; was the ravishing spectacle of performers going about their art with love and, yes, passion.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Sole&#160;Possessions</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2002/10/sole-possessions/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2002/10/sole-possessions/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 16 Oct 2002 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=413</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Slim indeed was the turnout for Lorraine Hunt Lieberson‘s solo recital at Royce Hall last week; bountiful indeed were the rewards. She is every kind of phenomenal artist: majestic in stage manner, overpowering in her command of the shape of a vocal line. Just her opening phrase, a lightning bolt from Handel&#8217;s Ariodante, served notice [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Slim indeed was the turnout for Lorraine Hunt Lieberson‘s solo recital at Royce Hall last week; bountiful indeed were the rewards. She is every kind of phenomenal artist: majestic in stage manner, overpowering in her command of the shape of a vocal line. Just her opening phrase, a lightning bolt from Handel&#8217;s Ariodante, served notice that a sublime artist had taken possession of our ears and our souls; she went on from there.
</p>
<p>    It‘s interesting that she began her musical life as a violist. She still has that sound in her voice: rich, dark but infinitely variable, capable of the phrase that slashes, the phrase that woos. Her program was relatively brief, but in one sense too generous; her French group, for example, included only one song by each of five composers. After her starlit delivery of “Beau Soir,” I would have been happier with a further Debussy immersion, at the sacrifice of the lesser art of Chausson and Paladilhe, who do not flourish in the Debussy shadow. Robert Tweten&#8217;s excellent collaboration at the piano would also have justified a sturdier repertory choice.
</p>
<p>   Hunt Lieberson is the best singer around these days for the American repertory &#8212; for her command of melodic line, of course, but also for her ability to make language itself a thing of special beauty. I still have in my inner ear, from this remarkable concert, her shaping of the word “love” in one of Jane Kenyon‘s haunting last poems as set by Ricky Ian Gordon. At the end she sang songs by her husband, Peter Lieberson &#8212; son of the visionary Goddard Lieberson (whose exploration into unrecorded repertory the industry sorely lacks these days) and the airborne Vera Zorina &#8212; his settings of Rilke&#8217;s poetry at its most inscrutably expressionistic, nicely (and properly) set in a manner beholden to Hugo Wolf. At the very end she sang, of all surprising encore choices, H.T. Burleigh‘s fine old arrangement of “Deep River” &#8212; on the same stage, after all, where Thomas Quasthoff had sung “Ol&#8217; Man River” not long ago.
</p>
<p>    Gloria Cheng‘s recital, the first of this season&#8217;s “Piano Sphere” events, was also diverse, perhaps to a fault. I cannot get close to Henri Dutilleux‘s scholarly but desiccated music; I once came close to blows with Andre Previn after he had inflicted one of the old boy&#8217;s symphonies on a Philharmonic audience. I admire Dutilleux‘s longevity (86 at last count) but hear his work as a persistence from the conservatoire academicism &#8212; Vincent d&#8217;Indy and his cronies &#8212; that drove Debussy and Ravel bonkers in an earlier era in French music. Gloria Cheng inflicted four dried-out bits of Dutilleux on a crowd at Zipper Hall (the Spheres‘ new venue) that, I&#8217;ll bet my chemise, would have been far happier if the opening Takemitsu selection had been three or four works instead of the one.
</p>
<p>    It was, otherwise, a fine, colorful, therefore typically Gloriaesque program: some strong recent works by Magnus Lindberg in their first local hearing, and two exquisite small bits by Earle Brown and Melissa Hui. Chinary Ung‘s piano suite Seven Mirrors delighted me not so much: music full of the pianistic bang-bang but rather less of the atmosphere I have heard in other work by this important Cambodian-born composer. But after the Chinary Ung came another small miracle, an encore consisting of the most delicate of the posthumous variations (No. 5) in Schumann&#8217;s Symphonic Etudes. It cleared the air and seemed to re-assert the supremacy of melody and harmony deployed in the cause of great art.
</p>
<p>    Frederic Rzewski‘s music is no stranger to Piano Spheres. I remember in particular being astonished by a performance of his De Profundis some years back, with Vicki Ray delivering Oscar Wilde&#8217;s heartbreaking lines and surrounding them with her own playing of Rzewski‘s lush and deeply disturbing musical commentary. Now, in a commendable act of faith, Nonesuch has brought out a seven-disc set of Rzewski&#8217;s performances of his own piano music, which includes on its final disc that same De Profundis, this time with the composer himself as both voice and pianist.
</p>
<p>    Born in Massachusetts in 1938, Rzewski has led a variegated career. After a solid immersion in Ivy League musical ideals, he shucked it all off, moved to Rome for a time, took up the notion of music as activism, turned out enormous pieces (mostly for piano, but often with voice or other “extraneous” elements mixed in) steeped in agitprop sentiments: songs of political prisoners here and abroad, of workers oppressed by bosses, of victims of society such as Oscar Wilde. His most famous piece, by title if not by substance, is an hourlong set of variations on the Chilean workers‘ song “The People United Will Never Be Defeated.” That, too, is included in the new Nonesuch set.
</p>
<p>   Rzewski&#8217;s music embraces many musics. Folksong in its broadest sense &#8212; going back to such kiddie stuff as the one about London Bridge falling down &#8212; gets ground in with newer sounds of crushing dissonance. There are big holes here and there to allow for improv. It is not a tidy repertory, but it is damned exciting.
</p>
<p>   Two of the seven discs are devoted to The Road, a piece only 50 percent completed so far; finished, it will last five hours, in eight parts. Each part is an eight-mile segment of the completed “road”; the nature of the road itself changes, from footpath to railroad track to whatever. Listening for an uninterrupted two-plus hours to the four parts so far available, you get the sense of being in a closed room with the music in the process of being born, the pianist-composer at one end, yourself at the other. There is no sense of reaching beyond that room, of grandly proclaiming great messages in a sold-out concert hall. If ever a piece of music could bring you close to the creative process, this is it.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Commencement&#160;Exercises</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2002/10/commencement-exercises/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2002/10/commencement-exercises/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 09 Oct 2002 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=412</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[A new season begins, in this land of no seasons. Three of our local orchestras sprang into action last week: two with brand-new music, one with older music of newer outlook. The week before, the much-admired Kronos Quartet brought in some new music, in a program appropriately titled “Nuevo,” most of which was quite comfortably, [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>A new season begins, in this land of no seasons. Three of our local orchestras sprang into action last week: two with brand-new music, one with older music of newer outlook. The week before, the much-admired Kronos Quartet brought in some new music, in a program appropriately titled “Nuevo,” most of which was quite comfortably, sometimes even thrillingly, old hat. A phenomenal percussion outfit, Tambuco, out of Mexico City, wore that hat in several numbers, and sent it skyward.
</p>
<p>    Costa Mesa&#8217;s Pacific Symphony, in Carl St. Clair‘s splendid hands, offered a world premiere, sort of: Tobias Picker&#8217;s Tres Sonetos de Amor in the first hearing of their orchestral setting. (The voice-plus-piano version had been heard in Minneapolis in 2000.) Picker is a known quantity hereabouts; his Fantastic Mr. Fox remains one of the bleakest pages in the L.A. Opera‘s annals; about his new opera, Therese Raquin, on the San Diego Opera docket next March, the advance word is equally bleak. None of this slows the flow from Picker&#8217;s well-worn pen, of course; his chosen manner of expression &#8212; a tepid wash of mild chromatic harmony lit from within by flashes of old melodic shapes smilingly remembered &#8212; is the sort of thing orchestras and opera companies like to place before anxious subscribers to prove that fears of bodily attack from new music can often be groundless. An operatic setting of An American Tragedy, commissioned by the Metropolitan Opera, is currently on his worktable.
</p>
<p>   The “love sonnets” are Pablo Neruda texts, and it is apparently Picker‘s whim to devise music as far removed as possible from the sense of this warm, spiky poetry. This perversity is further underscored by a tendency to smash contrapuntal lines against one another in differing keys, a trick Stravinsky was exercising to better effect as far back as his 1911 Petrouchka. I found these songs &#8212; about 15 minutes&#8217; worth &#8212; drab beyond redemption, the more so in the chasm that yawned (an applicable word) between words and music. Nathan Gunn, a young baritone of great sensitivity (Marcello in the Bowl‘s La Boheme last summer), found more music in a brief tune from Don Giovanni, which he offered as his encore, than in anything before.
</p>
<p>   St. Clair, now in his 13th season as the PSO&#8217;s music director, has pulled the orchestra onward and upward. His programming suggests a growing respect for the ability of his audiences to countenance novelty, even in the one-spoonful-at-a-time dosage that works like these Picker songs represent. I am counting the days until William Bolcom‘s huge setting of the William Blake Songs of Innocence and Experience (all of it!) turns up next February. I like the production values at Pacific Symphony concerts, despite the abject ugliness of Segerstrom Hall itself. St. Clair talks well to his audiences, offering musical insights without condescension; in the final work on last week&#8217;s program, the descriptions of episodes in the gnarled scenario of Richard Strauss‘ Ein Heldenleben (from which I fled, as is my wont) were spelled out in supertitles in a further (if foredoomed) effort to help the work make sense.
</p>
<p>    The Los Angeles Chamber Orchestra also had a novelty of sorts, incongruously spatchcocked between Bach and Mozart at its inaugural concert: Les Espaces Infinis by the orchestra&#8217;s new composer in residence, Pierre Jalbert. New Hampshire&#8211;born (despite the name), Jalbert studied with George Crumb, information that might lead to higher expectations than this insipid 10-minute work fulfills. Its “spaces” are decidedly “finite”; it‘s the kind of piece where you know after about 10 seconds exactly where it is going and how: a thickening of the swirl, a quickening of the pace, some kind of resonant climax and then a regression to the soft glow as at the start. Wagner&#8217;s Lohengrin Prelude did it all, and better.
</p>
<p>    Better yet was the Bach, with everybody‘s favorite violinist, Hilary Hahn, as soloist in the E-major Concerto and collaborator (with LACO&#8217;s principal violin Margaret Batjer) in the D-minor Double. I worried at the start at the brisk tempos in the E-major; I needn‘t have. The give and take in the fast movements, between her solos and Jeffrey Kahane&#8217;s superb orchestra, were the stuff of high-level argumentation; the long cantilena above Bach‘s solemn, meditative orchestral foundation made of the slow movement a discourse on matters too profound for words. (Bach might disagree on this, however, since he recycled the same slow movement, plus a text for four-part chorus, in one of his cantatas.) The conversation between soloists in the Two-Violin Concerto was the discourse of two noble, loving and intensely dedicated spirits. Nobody I know of these days plays the Brahms Violin Concerto better than Hilary Hahn; very few play the Beethoven as well. Now she has a claim to stake in Bach as well, and she deserves every note.
</p>
<p>    Carl Orff&#8217;s Carmina Burana is as loathsome as any music I know &#8212; not merely ugly (as in Ein Heldenleben) but deeply offensive. The work‘s origins are part of my problem with it: an anthology of lithe, insidious medieval poetry on the varied joys of self-indulgence, dating from Germany&#8217;s golden legacy and lasciviously turned into a latter-day saturnalia for beer-slurping, marching hordes in lederhosen and white knee socks, a nation‘s heritage re-sculptured to the glorification of the fascist ideal, Albert Speer&#8217;s architecture made audible. This is music that should be kept away from small children, and from their parents as well.
</p>
<p>    The rest of my problem is that Carmina Burana, insidious in its every measure, is also irresistible. Choosing it as the major work on the Philharmonic‘s inaugural program is a matter between Esa-Pekka Salonen and his conscience; he told the audience at the Friday-night casual concert that Carmina Burana was the ABBA of classical music, and I guess that&#8217;s okay. He and his massed forces &#8212; including the soprano Harolyn Blackwell, a living wonder &#8212; played and sang the bejesus out of it. At the end the audience leaped to its feet and cheered, as did the storm troopers back in ‘37, when the work was new.
</p>
<p>   Before had come the suite from Bela Bartok&#8217;s Miraculous Mandarin, dazzling, slashing, thrilling music from a composer still young but in full command. Of all the “new” (i.e., less than a century old) music of the week, this was the one piece that made statements strong and relevant to its time, that used the orchestra‘s resources with skill and imagination, that demonstrated a willingness to take the art of music to someplace new and worth our exploration. It was, by the calendar, the oldest music of the week and, by every other criterion, the newest.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>SAN FRANCISCO OPERA&#160;REVIEW</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2002/10/san-francisco-opera-review/</link>
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		<pubDate>Sun, 06 Oct 2002 21:24:05 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Opera News]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=1806</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[For the San Francisco Opera to undertake Olivier Messiaen’s Saint François d’Assise – as the American stage première of the opera  now 19 years old – represented an act of faith several times over: above all the faith of Pamela Rosenberg’s new management that an audience coddled on easy-listening new operas (Dead Man Walking, A [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>For the San Francisco Opera to undertake Olivier Messiaen’s <em>Saint François d’Assise</em> – as the American stage première of the opera  now 19 years old – represented an act of faith several times over: above all the faith of Pamela Rosenberg’s new management that an audience coddled on easy-listening new operas (<em>Dead Man Walking</em>, <em>A Streetcar Named Desire</em>, etc.) might be lured further into unknown territory with a work genuinely one-of-a-kind and challenging. The circumstances were favorable – to a point, at least: Where better, after all, to produce an opera about Saint Francis than in the city bearing his name? Even so, the word was out and daunting, concerning a five-hour confrontation with music mostly slow, in an opera with few singing roles and little stage action. San Francisco’s September 27 premiere, the first of five performances, drew a distinguished sell-out crowd; before the long night’s end, however, blocks of empty seats were visible throughout the house.</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">The opera has fared reasonably well over the years, certainly beyond the expectations of those (this writer included) attending the helter-skelter 1983 premiere at the Paris Opéra. Productions in Berlin and Salzburg, and a DG recording under Kent Nagano’s sure baton, have eased its path. The opera is still hard to love, however. Over its vast time-scale  we are invited to observe, without much in the way of confirming incident – the healing of the Leper aside &#8212; the growth in spirit and wisdom of Assisi’s legendary saint, his rise above the lesser spirits among his co-believers,  his communion with Nature’s other creatures, most of all her birds. Birds, birds, birds: For something like forty-five minutes – one-half the length of Act Two &#8211;  the saintly Messiaen proclaims his own kinship with the saintly Francis in this matter of ornithological passion. One fidgets, vainly  waiting for the feathered, clattering, chattering hordes to get baked into a pie or, at least, to fly the coop.</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">There are few  surprises in Messiaen’s  orchestra here, except  for its sheer exuberance in the marshalling of his usual massed, apocalyptic brass, the urgent summonings of clattering mallet instruments,  and no fewer than three (<em>three</em>!) of his iconic noisemakers, the wailing, throbbing keyboards known as the Ondes Martenot, now doing service in Movieland (<em>Mad Max</em>, <em>My Left Foot</em>). Around and above all of this – and truly surprising – is the choral writing, the dense chording of semitones and microtones. In San Francisco’s extraordinary production, a congruence occurs between the deep and expansive choral texture and the visual effect of singers on a slow turntable seeming to  fill an entire world with their presence and their sound. Over-all it is texture, more than melody and harmony (which here – as elsewhere  in the Messiaen <em>oeuvre</em> – borders on the banal and, now and then, crosses the line) that earns the most admiring attention in this ecstatic yet sporadically off-putting score.</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">José van Dam had pretty much owned the title role since the 1983 premiere; ownership has now passed, in glory, to Willard White. Aside from that title role, that of an attendant Angel &#8212; set forth by Laura Aikin with irresistible, athletic charm – and some stupendous vocal athletics for Chris Merritt as the Leper, <em>Saint François</em> is not a singer’s paradise. Its strengths derive mostly from the tight interweave  of its complex  linearity. It fell to Donald Runnicles, the company’s music director and the most significant holdover from the previous administration, to bind this all together in a performance taut  and rapturous that could, at least, simulate the effect of forward motion as the music itself remains existentially still.</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">Nicolas Brieger’s production began with silent film: Assisi’s great St. Francis Basilica brutally damaged by the recent earthquake. St. Francis’ story, as he told it, unfolded in both the distant past and only yesterday.  Hans-Dieter Schaal’s stage built on the recent horror; pieces of ruined crosses lay everywhere, extending menacingly out toward the audience, with Francis’ rude cave abutting a modern three-story office building. Andrea Schmidt-Futterer’s costumes were also of no time and every time; the more earthly of the Franciscan brothers toted bookkeeping ledgers  and sported modern-day fedoras  above their priestly robes. Under Alexander Koppelmann’s  lighting a soft grey luminosity covered everything,  and the colors that pierced through – a gorgeous blue streak that resolved into the Angel (complete with sunglasses) of Francis’ dreaming – created their own astonishment.</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">This is San Francisco’s first season actually planned from  Pamela Rosenberg’s new leadership, Of the new productions on her agenda, <em>Saint François</em> has, naturally, gotten the most notice; the production team  includes colleagues from her German years.  “Animating Opera” is the title Rosenberg has concocted for the repertory for the first years of her regime, already announced through 2006. Under that rubric individual operas are further clumped and titled; the brochure reads like a college course catalog. Whether <em>Saint François</em> is, as the brochure reads, a “Seminal Work of Modern Times” is, however,  arguable; it seems more like a particularly  interesting dead end. Rosenberg’s plan, fancy titles and all, is the work of a creative general director willing to integrate serious musical thinking into the entertainment  value of the product.  Yet a question lingers: is the stature of “seminality” adequate justification for a work’s survival in the repertory? Perhaps time will tell, but the five-plus slow-moving hours of <em>Saint François d’Assise</em> constitute a potent argument to the contrary.</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">Otherwise, San Francisco’s first month offered a revival (from 1993) of David Hockney’s dazzling designs for <em>Turandot</em>, their blatant firecracker-redness a violent contrast to <em>St. Francis’ </em> prevailing  grays. Jane Eaglen was the Turandot, Patricia Racette the Liù, both predictably splendid; Alfred Reiter and Jon Villars, both in adequate but unremarkable San Francisco debuts, were the wandering father and amorous son. Runnicles’ conducting, this one time, seemed weary – understandable, perhaps, sandwiched in between the dress rehearsal and première of the Messiaen. From the Chicago Lyric came John Cox’s attractive <em>Ariadne auf Naxos</em> production, beautifully shaped under newcomer Jun Märkl’s baton, and lit by Deborah Voigt’s two-edged command as the imperious Prima Donna and the tragedy-drenched Ariadne and by the stratospheric luminosity of Laura Claycomb’s Zerbinetta.  – ALAN RICH</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Most Eloquent&#160;Banalities</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2002/10/most-eloquent-banalities/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2002/10/most-eloquent-banalities/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 02 Oct 2002 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=411</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[I left the Paris Opera, late on a cold November night in 1983, convinced of two things. One was that the opera whose world premiere I had just suffered through, Olivier Messiaen&#8217;s Saint Francois d‘Assise, had no chance whatever of earning a place in the international repertory. The other was that, if such an unthinkable [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>I left the Paris Opera, late on a cold November night in 1983, convinced of two things. One was that the opera whose world premiere I had just suffered through, Olivier Messiaen&#8217;s Saint Francois d‘Assise, had no chance whatever of earning a place in the international repertory. The other was that, if such an unthinkable circumstance were to transpire, wild horses (les chevaux sauvages) could never drag me again into its presence.
</p>
<p>    It didn&#8217;t occur to me at the time to lavish blame on someone other than the aged Messiaen for what I had found interminably dull and overextended in this, his first and only opera. Surely the inspiring surroundings of the Opera‘s Palais Garnier, and the musical leadership of the redoubtable Seiji Ozawa, were above that blame, or so one had to believe. Full awareness came only later, with the appearance two years ago of the DG recording under Kent Nagano, which honored the aspirations toward eloquence in Messiaen&#8217;s music as the Paris production had not &#8212; for the eye or for the ear. Now, following productions in Salzburg and Berlin, the work has been installed at the San Francisco Opera (through October 17) in its first American staging.
</p>
<p>   The opera is still hard to love, though easier on discs than in the flesh. Over five hours we are invited to observe, without much in the way of confirming incident &#8212; the healing of the Leper aside &#8212; the growth in spirit and wisdom of Assisi‘s legendary saint, his rise above the lesser souls among his co-believers, his communion with Nature&#8217;s other creatures, most of all her birds. Birds, birds, birds: For something like 45 minutes the saintly Messiaen proclaims his own kinship with the saintly Francis in this matter of ornithological passion. One fidgets, vainly waiting for their feathered, clattering, chattering friends to get baked into a pie or, at least, to fly the coop.
</p>
<p>   There are few surprises in Messiaen‘s orchestra here, except for its sheer exuberance in the marshaling of his usual massed, apocalyptic brass, the urgent summonings of clattering mallet instruments, and no fewer than three of his iconic noisemakers, the wailing, throbbing keyboards known as the Ondes Martenot. Around and above all of this &#8212; and truly surprising &#8212; is the choral writing, the dense chording of semitones and microtones. In San Francisco&#8217;s extraordinary production, a congruence occurs between the deep and expansive choral texture and the visual effect of singers on a slow turntable seeming to fill an entire world with their presence and their sound. Overall it is texture, more than melody and harmony (which here &#8212; as elsewhere in the Messiaen oeuvre &#8212; borders on the banal and, now and then, crosses the line), that earns the most admiring attention in this ecstatic yet sporadically off-putting score.
</p>
<p>   Jose van Dam had pretty much owned the title role since the 1983 premiere; ownership has now passed, in glory, to Willard White (the Golaud in the L.A. Opera‘s Pelleas, the St. Joseph in the Philharmonic&#8217;s upcoming El Niño, thus asserting his mastery of roles both sacred and profane). That one role and that of an attendant Angel aside &#8212; set forth by Laura Aikin with irresistible, athletic charm &#8212; Saint Francois is not a singer‘s paradise; its strengths derive mostly from the tight interweave of its complex linearity. It fell to Donald Runnicles, the company&#8217;s music director and the most significant holdover from the previous administration, to bind this all together in a performance taut and rapturous.
</p>
<p>   Nicolas Brieger‘s production begins with silent film: Assisi&#8217;s great St. Francis Basilica brutally damaged by the 1997 earthquake. St. Francis‘ story, as he tells it, unfolds in both the distant past and only yesterday. Hans-Dieter Schaal&#8217;s stage builds on the recent horror; pieces of ruined crosses lie everywhere, extending menacingly out toward the audience, and Francis‘ rude cave abuts a modern three-story office building. Andrea Schmidt-Futterer&#8217;s costumes are also of no time and every time; the more earthly of the Franciscan brothers carry around bookkeeping ledgers and sport modern-day fedoras above their priestly robes. Alexander Koppelmann‘s lighting creates its own magic; a soft gray luminosity covers everything, and the colors that pierce through &#8212; a gorgeous blue streak that resolves into the Angel (complete with sunglasses) of Francis&#8217; dreaming &#8212; create their own astonishment.
</p>
<p>    I‘m going on about the looks of this piece because, simply put, it transcends anything I have experienced in an American opera house. This is San Francisco&#8217;s first season actually planned from Pamela Rosenberg‘s new leadership. Of the new productions on her agenda, Saint Francois has, naturally, gotten the most notice; the production team includes old pals from her German years. That the opera lies on the difficult side makes her move the more courageous, and my enthusiasm for the result does not include any confidence of its success at the box office.
</p>
<p>    “Animating Opera” is the title Rosenberg has concocted for the repertory for the first years of her regime, through 2006. Under that rubric individual operas are further clumped and titled; the brochure reads like a college course catalog. Whether Saint Francois is, as the brochure reads, a “Seminal Work of Modern Times” is, however, arguable; I have similar doubts about Virgil Thomson&#8217;s The Mother of Us All, the second work on the “seminal” list (up for 2003-04); both works strike me more as interesting dead ends. (I might have thought that Wagner‘s Parsifal would be the obvious “seminal” antecedent to Saint Francois, but there isn&#8217;t much Wagner in her syllabus at all, only a Flying Dutchman for 2004-05, listed under “Fairy Tales.”) Rosenberg‘s plan, fancy titles and all, is the work of a creative general director willing to integrate serious musical thinking into the entertainment value of the product. In these dreary days on the classical-music front, she emerges as a brave visionary. Yet the question lingers: Is the stature of “seminality” adequate justification for a work&#8217;s arrival into the repertory? To the list of works of undeniable influence that are also lousy entertainment I must &#8212; with all respect to the marvelous production and in defiance of the cheering multitudes in San Francisco last week &#8212; add Saint Francois d‘Assise.
</p>
<p>   The rest of my San Francisco week, Turandot and Ariadne auf Naxos, was largely business as usual. Jane Eaglen&#8217;s Turandot blazed mightily against the obsessive redness of David Hockney‘s 1993 sets, but Runnicles&#8217; leadership this time was curiously flaccid &#8212; at times downright tired. There was also Patricia Racette‘s intensely lovable Liu; Jon Villars&#8217; sturdy, high-decibel Calaf did, alas, wander from pitch once or twice. Deborah Voigt‘s splendid Ariadne and Laura Claycomb&#8217;s stratospheric Zerbinetta sparked director John Cox‘s unexceptionable take &#8212; first seen at the Chicago Lyric in 1998 &#8212; on the Richard Strauss charmer. Two nights in a row, the fat ladies got to sing &#8212; and did they ever!</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Pistol-packin&#039; Mama and the Blockbuster&#160;Redemption</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2002/09/pistol-packin-mama-and-the-blockbuster-redemption/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2002/09/pistol-packin-mama-and-the-blockbuster-redemption/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 18 Sep 2002 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=410</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[SOONER OR LATER MOST OPERA COMPANIES get around to Nabucco. It has its historic place, as Verdi&#8217;s first triumph and for the &#8220;Va pensiero&#8221; chorus that became the anthem of oppressed Italy. (At the L.A. Opera the chorus was encored, and cheered both times.) Hebrews, virgins, Babylonians, the first of the great father-daughter duets that [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>
<font SIZE=3>SOONER OR LATER MOST OPERA COMPANIES get around to <i>Nabucco</i>. It has its historic place, as Verdi&#8217;s first triumph and for the &#8220;Va pensiero&#8221; chorus that became the anthem of oppressed Italy. (At the L.A. Opera the chorus was encored, and cheered both times.) Hebrews, virgins, Babylonians, the first of the great father-daughter duets that thread like a golden gleam through the composer&#8217;s legacy: The vintage Verdi is all there in this raw, primitive score. I&#8217;ve had my blood made to sizzle at <i>Nabucco</i> performances . . . but not this time.</font></p>
<p>
<font SIZE=3>From the pit there was the usual Lawrence Foster routine: You waited in vain for a transcendent shaping of those crude but soaring phrases. You also waited in vain for scenery and stage action to match the bronzes and brasses of the music. The program listed estimable names: Jane Greenwood&#8217;s costumes, Michael Yeargan&#8217;s sets, Elijah Moshinsky&#8217;s production and Thor Steingraber&#8217;s staging; I couldn&#8217;t bring myself to believe that any of the above were within miles of the <i>Nabucco</i> currently at the Chandler Pavilion. Greenwood&#8217;s costume design puts the Nabucco in red jammies against Alan Burrett&#8217;s red lighting and thus turned him into a floating head. Maria Guleghina, from the Met&#8217;s current stable of blockbuster sopranos, sang the bad daughter, Abigaille; Kate Aldrich was the good daughter, Fenena. As Nabucco, the Georgian (Tbilisi, not Atlanta) baritone Lado Ataneli displayed a smallish but impressively Verdian vocal line.</font></p>
<p>
<font SIZE=3>Sooner or later some companies also get around to Puccini&#8217;s spaghetti Western, but not for as good a reason. I hear less musical impulse in <i>The Girl of the Golden West</i> than in any other mature Puccini; if you left with any tune in your head, it would have to be one of the American folksongs that got co-opted here and there. The orchestration is thick and unwieldy; the usual Puccini trick of doubling the vocal line in the orchestra at a couple of octaves&#8217; distance &#8212; so elegant and touching in <i>La Bohème</i> &#8212; becomes in this work a boring, obsessive mannerism. As &#8220;Meester Johnson di Sacramento&#8221; and his ladylove, pistol-packin&#8217; Minnie, Plácido Domingo and Catherine Malfitano made a lot of noise, some of it impressive; as the love-racked &#8220;Sceriffo,&#8221; Wolfgang Brendel provided the evening&#8217;s only real vocal style. Simone Young conducted, sleepily at first, later with impressive momentum. The fight scenes were terrific, with a few Hollywood stuntmen worked into the ensemble; best of all was Burrett&#8217;s lighting, which looked as if someone had actually been up to the gold country and remembered its magic.</font></p>
<p>
<font SIZE=3>WHATEVER ELSE YOU MAY SAY ABOUT THE rumblings (backstage and out front) around the start of the Los Angeles Opera&#8217;s 17th season, the fact remains that the company did get its curtain up on time for these first two productions earlier this month. That didn&#8217;t happen last year, due to the 9/11 turmoil. Two operas, neither of them anybody&#8217;s particular favorite but both of them worth doing sometime or other, came across in a more or less recognizable state.</font></p>
<p>
<font SIZE=3>Those rumblings need our attention, of course. Two blockbuster-size ventures that figured prominently in the company&#8217;s immediate or middle-distance plans have now been dumped or at least tabled: Prokofiev&#8217;s <i>War and Peace</i>, formerly due next month, and Wagner&#8217;s <i>Ring of the Nibelung</i>, originally slated for next year and now rescheduled for God knows when. Both announcements arrived to a chorus of weeping and wailing and grave doubts as to whether opera in Los Angeles now truly lies dead in the water &#8212; as some cynics had foretold at the company&#8217;s inaugural in 1986.</font></p>
<p>
<font SIZE=3>The Prokofiev was to be a guest shot by Valery Gergiev&#8217;s Kirov Opera, a production already trundled to the Met last year, where its sheer and costly bulk created several kinds of havoc even in that huge house. As a solace, the Kirov is sending us a less pricey production, Shostakovich&#8217;s <i>Lady Macbeth of Mtsensk</i>, which is also &#8212; dare I breathe it? &#8212; a better opera all told. Yes, there are eloquent moments in <i>War and Peace</i>, along with some pretty waltzes (in the &#8220;Peace&#8221; part, of course) and some battle fireworks; there is also an earlier Kirov production that came to San Francisco several years ago, and which I praised at its video release in 1996, modest and imaginative and as clear a realization of Tolstoy&#8217;s convolutions as the eye could want. Nowadays, however, there are patrons with blockbuster bankrolls who require blockbuster productions onto which their own names are prominently plastered, which then run the risk of being stranded for lack of travel funds when the moneybags spring a leak.</font></p>
<p>
<font SIZE=3>This new blockbuster-will-save-us mentality looms even more menacingly over the whole <i>Ring</i> business, and has ever since the project was first announced &#8212; ecstatically, if you recall &#8212; at Plácido Domingo&#8217;s first major press conference, two years ago. Isn&#8217;t this a strange time for the <i>Ring</i> to bulk so large in opera companies&#8217; planning here, there and everywhere? (There are faint rumors, in fact, that Los Angeles&#8217; first <i>Ring</i> might come not from the Music Center but from a curious alliance of UCLA&#8217;s Performing Arts division and the Brooklyn Academy of Music.) From the beginning, all we&#8217;ve known about the L.A. Opera&#8217;s <i>Ring</i> is the looks of the thing: all those kazillions of dollars for George Lucas&#8217; light shows and a Valhalla worthy of Vegas. All this at a time when the world&#8217;s vocal resources can afford maybe one and a half capable casts to cope with Wagner&#8217;s blockbuster vocal writing. Does the estimable Jane Eaglen face a lifetime of a Brünnhilde one night in Minneapolis and the next night in San Diego?</font></p>
<p>
<font SIZE=3>Much as I love &#8212; or, let&#8217;s say, revere &#8212; Wagner&#8217;s stupendous game plan, it strikes me as lazy thinking, this assumption that an opera company doesn&#8217;t earn its place on the map without a <i>Ring</i> under its belt. If we must posit the list of what the L.A. Opera <i>owes</i> its audience, many items come to mind, most of them more necessary (and more practicable) than this pie-in-the-sky project. Under the Wagner rubric there is, for starters, <i>Die Meistersinger</i>, a work that could restore anyone&#8217;s faith in Wagner &#8212; and, for that matter, in opera itself. (Peter Hemmings promised it once, but then backed down.) The company owes a huge Verdi deficit: a <i>Don Carlo</i> and <i>Ballo in Maschera</i> to atone for previous misdeeds, a <i>Forza del Destino</i> long overdue, a <i>Simon Boccanegra </i>likewise. And imagine a company so lopsided on matters Russian that it can give us <i>Pique Dame</i> and <i>Lady Macbeth</i> but never yet a <i>Boris Godunov</i>. Sondheim, anyone? What a ravishing <i>A Little Night Music</i> that stage could hold! Against these problems, all this talk about <i>War and Peace</i> and the Skywalker Ranch <i>Ring</i> might strike observant outsiders as unbalanced. Some insiders, too.</font></p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Precious&#160;Stone</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2002/09/precious-stone/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2002/09/precious-stone/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 11 Sep 2002 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=409</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[CARL STONE&#8217;S MUSIC IS THE FOOD OF, well, music. It feeds on found objects &#8211; a Schubert fragment, a Tokyo street noise &#8211; and raises them to a higher level. In his hands, and through his serendipitous, madcap brain, the process of recycling becomes true art. Alone at his iBook laptop, a scarcely larger 8-track [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>
CARL STONE&#8217;S MUSIC IS THE FOOD OF, well, music. It feeds on found objects &#8211; a Schubert fragment, a Tokyo street noise &#8211; and raises them to a higher level. In his hands, and through his serendipitous, madcap brain, the process of recycling becomes true art.</p>
<p>
Alone at his iBook laptop, a scarcely larger 8-track mixer at his side, Stone can press a single key and unleash the combined might of a dozen symphony orchestras, a thousand-voice chorus or the scratch of a toothpick across a napkin &#8211; whatever his all-questing sampling software has deemed worthy of his processing. A few more keys, and these sampled sound sources collide to form a musical score with beginning, climactic middle and logical end. His music is terrifyingly new, but he&#8217;s been at it for a long time, probably half of his current 49 years.</p>
<p>
At the Schindler House in West Hollywood, designed and lived in by the illustrious architect Rudolf Schindler and now the home of the MAK Center for Art and Architecture, Stone performed some of his recent music a couple of weeks ago, and produced some of his accustomed enchantment. The crowd that turned up that Saturday night strained the capacity of Schindler&#8217;s small courtyard. The setting was not ideal, perhaps; a small plane overhead did battle with the opening drone of Stone&#8217;s <i>Nak Won</i>. Yet the history of the place justified the event. John Cage lived there for a time, and he would certainly have approved Stone&#8217;s presence there.</p>
<p>
At intermission the talk was all about gadgetry: so much sound out of so little. I would have liked more talk about the music itself, which was powerful, astonishing and gorgeous. People still haven&#8217;t made their peace with the Machine; there&#8217;s less to watch, perhaps, in the spectacle of one slight, bookish, intent figure hunched over two small pieces of electronic gear than in a stageful of orchestral musicians sawing away at their sharps and flats and associated hieroglyphics. Still, there was the sense that night of music being created, the awareness that that evening&#8217;s performance would be different from performances of music of the same name on other nights &#8211; in the same way that Esa-Pekka Salonen&#8217;s performance of a Mahler symphony, or Plácido Domingo&#8217;s of a Verdi aria, won&#8217;t be the same on any two nights. That&#8217;s why people go to live musical events in preference to collecting records &#8211; or should.</p>
<p>
I go back a long way in this matter of sounds electronically produced and turned into artistic designs. In 1961 I was at the famous concert at Columbia University where the first products of the Mark II synthesizer, built by RCA and bankrolled by Columbia and Princeton, were set before an audience. The synthesizer itself took up a fair-sized room in a warehouse near the Hudson River, and employed something like 750 vacuum tubes. It swallowed a composer&#8217;s visions in the form of stacks of punched cards, and produced its sounds a few seconds at a time. The music &#8211; the work of Milton Babbitt, Mario Davidovsky, Vladimir Ussachevsky and others in this first electronic generation &#8211; was created on that enormous machine, captured on tape and brought to Columbia&#8217;s McMillin Theater, where it was played through loudspeakers. In one or two pieces there were also live participants &#8211; a violinist, a singer. But the fear, many times expressed by that pioneering audience in response to those pioneering composers, was simply this: Will the music of the future require that an audience sit in an auditorium and stare at a bunch of loudspeakers? (The RCA Mark II, by the way, was vandalized during a break-in in 1976. There was no reason to restore it; it was already obsolete.)</p>
<p>
Eventually there would be comforting answers to the question of depersonalization. Morton Subotnick, whom I had known as a freelance clarinetist in San Francisco in the 1950s, made his entry into electronic music with large-scale, &#8220;symphonic&#8221; pieces &#8211; <i>Silver Apples of the Moon</i>, <i>The Wild Bull</i> &#8211; created on one of Donald Buchla&#8217;s synthesizers and recorded on best-selling Nonesuch LPs. A kind of musical cryogenics was at work here; when you owned the disc, you owned the composition <i>itself</i>, with no printed score or live virtuoso in the middle. By the late 1960s, at CalArts, Stanford&#8217;s CCRMA and France&#8217;s IRCAM, composers were developing means of creating interaction between music immobile on a reel of tape and technology to include the live musician as participant. At CalArts, Subotnick and his colleagues linked synthesizer, tape and computer software in what they called &#8220;ghost&#8221; electronics; by whatever name, it served to bridge the gap between the cold, impersonal loudspeakers and the sense that music was actually being created on the stage &#8211; as a pianist might create a sonata, an opera company an opera.</p>
<p>
CARL STONE WAS ONE OF SUBOTNICK&#8217;S first students at CalArts. Later he served as music director at KPFK, in the days when that station stood for something in the matter of experimentation and exploration at the outer edges of thought and creativity. He has always had his hands on knobs and dials, bells and whistles; beyond that, his works have always had the same motivating force that we listen for in great music of any time and style. We listen, after all, for the pleasure wonderful ideas afford our nerve endings, but we listen as well for the pleasure of being able to move with the music&#8217;s momentum, to sense where it is going and &#8211; above all &#8211; to sense when that journey has completed its trajectory and brought us home. I heard that in Stone&#8217;s music at Schindler that night: in the first work, <i>Nak Won</i>, which moved for about 20 minutes along a shapely and logical parabola; in the last work, <i>Darul Kabap</i>, which unfolded like a jazz jam that, again, ended exactly where it should. (For reasons he&#8217;s entitled to, Stone tends to name his works after favorite Asian restaurants or menu items.)</p>
<p>
One of my favorites among Stone&#8217;s works is <i>Shing Kee</i>, one of &#8220;Four Pieces&#8221; on the New Albion label; its material is a tiny phrase from a Schubert song, which he has sampled and reconstructed from the quiet throb of the piano at the start to the full blossoming of the phrase some 15 minutes later. What I hear in this music is two composers at work some 175 years apart: Schubert in constructing his eloquent phrase, Stone in delving deeply into the source of its eloquence. And what&#8217;s most amazing is the way those two guys get along.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Even Ludwig&#160;Nodded</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2002/08/even-ludwig-nodded/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2002/08/even-ludwig-nodded/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 28 Aug 2002 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=408</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[MY OH MY, HOW THE LETTERS HAVE poured in! &#8220;How could you?&#8221; their writers fairly scream, as if I had turned my back on motherhood, America and a hot lunch for orphans &#8212; which, by the way, I haven&#8217;t. What I did, in all innocence and, I think, all honesty, was to note my displeasure [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>
<font SIZE=3>MY OH MY, HOW THE LETTERS HAVE poured in! &#8220;How could you?&#8221; their writers fairly scream, as if I had turned my back on motherhood, America and a hot lunch for orphans &#8212; which, by the way, I haven&#8217;t. What I did, in all innocence and, I think, all honesty, was to note my displeasure at being subjected to just short of a full hour of Igor Stravinsky&#8217;s <i>The Soldier&#8217;s Tale</i>, complete with narration, dancing and what has always struck me in this work as an agonizing predilection for padding by repetition. Minus the storyline &#8212; whose garrulousness suffers in translation from the folksy French &#8212; and the music&#8217;s tendency to chew its cabbage once or twice too often, <i>The Soldier&#8217;s Tale</i> boils down to a 23-minute suite: not top-drawer Stravinsky, but bearable. At the Ford Amphitheater the cabbage was expertly sliced by Esa-Pekka Salonen and a state-of-the-art ensemble, but we still were served the whole head to try to digest.</font></p>
<p>
<font SIZE=3>This is my statement on Stravinsky, definitive as of this morning but &#8212; as with all my statements &#8212; subject to change at the drop of a downbeat. I admire above all the pleasure in his own technique that his music radiates, his own joy in the act of composition. <i>The Rite of Spring</i> remains his supreme score, most of all for the sheer arrogance that enabled its creation. It stands &#8212; beside Michelangelo&#8217;s Sistine Chapel, Beethoven&#8217;s &#8220;Eroica&#8221; and not much else &#8212; as one of the truly brave, inexplicable forward steps in the arts. Stravinsky never lost the motive power that his arrogance provided. It led him in time to the composition of other excellent scores, alongside a large repertory of intellectual flimflam that, had it not flowed from the pen of the composer of <i>The Rite</i>, would surely have languished in limbo long ago. Not since George Frederick Handel had a major composer produced so high a proportion of trash to masterworks. One of the ongoing astonishments about Stravinsky comes when you try to equate, say, the triviality of the <i>Four Norwegian Moods</i> with the fervor of the <i>Symphony of Psalms</i>, the desiccated gestures of the Violin Concerto or <i>Oedipus Rex </i>with the elegant inventions in <i>Orpheus</i>.</font></p>
<p>
<font SIZE=3>I admire his continued curiosity. <i>The Soldier&#8217;s Tale</i> came from a time, near the end of WWI, when awareness of America&#8217;s music had begun to inundate European imaginations. American ragtime caught on quickly, more so at the start in Europe than in the United States. It conquered Stravinsky early in his game; there is some of it in <i>The Soldier&#8217;s Tale</i>, and there are also two other ragtime pieces from 1918-19, both of them truly awful. In a career spanning over half a century he seemed obsessed with trying his hand, at least once, at every new musical style that came down the pike, and in those between-the-wars decades there were plenty of new styles to try.</font></p>
<p>
<font SIZE=3>The failure rate may have been high; I don&#8217;t hold much hope for the claims to eternal-masterpiece status of most of the hybrids: the pseudo-baroque works like <i>Pulcinella</i> and the chamber concertos, the pseudo-atonal works like <i>Abraham and Isaac</i>, the pseudo-medieval <i>Mass</i> or the pseudo-Tchaikovsky <i>Fairy&#8217;s Kiss</i>. About the pseudo-Donizetti <i>Rake&#8217;s Progress</i> I change my mind with every performance I witness. Yet we can read into the best of these works &#8212; or, let&#8217;s say, the least worst &#8212; the process of a vigorous, questing mind investigating the vast panorama of his chosen art and trying it all on for size. That&#8217;s a time-honored process; Bach studied his contemporaries by copying out and adapting their music, and Mozart did the same with Bach.</font></p>
<p>
<font SIZE=3>IT&#8217;S A LAZY MAN&#8217;S PROCESS, IT SEEMS to me, to assume that every work by even the most revered composers deserves a place in the active repertory. The great composers aspire to a place far ahead of the popular taste of their time; you can easily verify this by getting hold of a copy of Nicolas Slonimsky&#8217;s <i>Lexicon of Musical Invective</i>, a large collection of the attempts by critics contemporary to famous works of the past to apply the standards of their time and, thus, to demolish these works. Slonimsky&#8217;s book, by the way, has just been newly republished by W.W. Norton; it deserves a place under the pillow of every critic, amateur or employed.</font></p>
<p>
<font SIZE=3>But composers have to eat. It&#8217;s depressing to read that Beethoven&#8217;s <i>Choral Fantasy</i> and his <i>Battle Symphony</i> rode at the front of Vienna&#8217;s hit parade while their composer toiled over his last string quartets. Does this necessarily mean, however, that either of these truly terrible works &#8212; or the <i>King Stephan</i> Overture or the variations for piano on &#8220;God Save the King&#8221; &#8212; deserves a place in the contemporary repertory? Isn&#8217;t it important that we remain aware that Beethoven, like Homer, could nod now and then? (I have to admit, however, that the <i>Battle Symphony</i> goes well with the fireworks at the Hollywood Bowl.)</font></p>
<p>
<font SIZE=3>Not necessarily, I suggest, as I fondle my own list of personal detestations that ride on the coattails of their makers&#8217; better attempts. The Brahms <i>German Requiem</i>, it will surprise no regular reader to learn, rides high on that list; can this intensely gloom-ridden work, with its page upon page of clogged, aching counterpoint and its damp choral textures the consistency of last week&#8217;s Kartoffel-knödel, have flowed from the same pen that would later shape the B-flat Piano Concerto and the Clarinet Quintet? Can it be that only a year separates the wet wool of Schumann&#8217;s D-minor Symphony from the glorious exuberance of his Piano Quintet? Would Claude Debussy&#8217;s <i>Martyrdom of St. Sebastian</i> stand a chance in the repertory were its composer not also the creator of <i>La Mer</i> and <i>Pelléas</i>? Or, to reverse the tide, how is it that the Fourth Symphony of Jan Sibelius manages to survive when its six companions, and all those gooey tone poems, are cut from fabric infinitely more drab, more &#8220;indigenously Nordic&#8221; as the record blurbs read &#8212; and, thus, infinitely more popular?</font></p>
<p>
<font SIZE=3>I&#8217;m just asking. Keep the letters coming, folks.</font></p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>TAN&#160;DUN</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2002/08/tan-dun/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2002/08/tan-dun/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sun, 25 Aug 2002 22:51:29 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Musical America]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=1867</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Suddenly Tan Dun is everywhere you look, everywhere you listen. In just the past few months audiences in Lisbon and Singapore have flocked to his large-scale orchestral works. His Water Passion After St. Matthew  reached its first American audiences last July,  at the Oregon Bach Festival in Eugene; it’s listed for a Brooklyn Academy of [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Suddenly Tan Dun is everywhere you look, everywhere you listen. In just the past few months audiences in Lisbon and Singapore have flocked to his large-scale orchestral works. His Water Passion After St. Matthew  reached its first American audiences last July,  at the Oregon Bach Festival in Eugene; it’s listed for a Brooklyn Academy of Music performance this December, by which time the Sony recording (of the work’s world premiere at Stuttgart in the summer of 2000) will be in the stores. By then, too, his latest opera – bearing the terse title Tea – will have arrived at Tokyo’s Suntory Hall in a co-production with Suntory and the Netherlands Opera, and Hong Kong’s Fusion Festival will have presented a full evening of Tan’s orchestral works – including his Concerto for Pipa, which mingles in typical Tan Dun fashion the sounds of his native China with those of his adopted West. A new cello concerto, The Map , is on the agenda for Yo-Yo Ma and the Boston Symphony, with performances in Boston and New York in early 2003.<br />
And while the usual trajectory to acclaim as Musical America’s Composer of the Year can take anywhere from 30 years (in the case of Steve Reich) to half a century (Lou Harrison), the name of Tan Dun has flashed across the musical horizon in less than a decade. Now that gleam is reflected in a shelf’s worth of acclaim that includes, so far, an Oscar, a Grammy and the prestigious and lucrative Grawemeyer Award. <br />
It has only been during that time, in fact, that the possibility has materialized for a Chinese presence in the worldwide musical spectrum. Tan’s early history is shared by at least two other compatriot composers, Bright Sheng and Chen Yi. All three are in their 40s; they look back on childhood years of enforced labor under China’s hardline leadership in which such decadences as serious musical activity were harshly proscribed. Came the end of the grossly misnamed “Cultural Revolution,” and all three composers found their way through suddenly opened doors into the outside world. All three  emigrated to the U.S. in the mid-1980s, and are now well established here. (Bright Sheng’s new opera is scheduled for next summer at Santa Fe. Its subject: Madame Mao.)<br />
For young Tan the transition had been the most drastic. “I grew up in the small village of Si Mao in Hunan province,” he recalls. “We had a kind of music for our ancient rituals, but most of it was just making noise on whatever we could lay our hands on – kitchen utensils, paper that we could tear, water in bowls that we could stroke with our hands, stones that we could hit together. I was more fortunate than some in the village, however; I had learned to play the violin, and when the Beijing Opera needed players for their orchestra I was taken off farm duty and sent to join the opera company.<br />
“Then came the end of the Cultural Revolution and suddenly the doors were opened. Arriving, at 20, at  the Beijing Central Conservatory, and discovering for the first time the music of the real world, was for me a thrilling experience. But I have never lost my interest in making sounds with those primitive noisemakers from my childhood. When I came to New York I discovered that John Cage had also been making music with water, kitchenware and paper;  these devices may have seemed strange to some people, but to me they were entirely natural. That’s probably why we became good friends. ”<br />
Tan’s first major American success was the 1995 Ghost Opera, composed for the Kronos Quartet plus a solo pipa, and with the quartet members also asked to riffle their hands through nearby water basins to create distant, mysterious sounds. The Water Passion came about through the Stuttgart-based International Bach Society. Four composers – Tan, Sofia Gubaidulina, Wolfgang Rihm and Osvaldo Golijov – were commissioned to create contemporary Passion settings to honor the 250th anniversary of the death of J.S. Bach. Tan had only discovered Bach’s music and its relationship to the Christian ethic at Beijing. “I had come from a non-Christian background, but the story in the Passion wasn’t all that different from the ancient stories in my village. So many cultures use water as a metaphor: birth, creation and re-creation. The water cycle itself is the story of resurrection; the water comes to earth, and then returns to the atmosphere, and returns to the earth once more. Christian or Taoist, it all becomes the same.”<br />
Unlike the commissioned Passions by his three colleagues, which rival Bach’s own settings in their scoring demands, Tan’s work calls for relatively few performers: a small chorus whose members also play Tibetan finger bells,  two vocal soloists, solo strings and keyboard and, as you might guess, a gathering of percussion instruments including stones of various sizes and pitches, water drums (upside-down salad bowls floating in a water basin), a small soda bottle (for bubbling sounds) and water gongs partially immersed. Much of the drama – in Tan’s own paraphrase of Biblical sources – proceeds in a dark, unearthly calm in which the faint rippling of the waterworks becomes a hypnotic counterpart to the words. “A sound is heard in water,” sings the chorus at the Last Supper, “The tears are crying for truth.”<br />
For the world beyond Tan Dun’s Hunan village, the process of discovery has worked in two ways. As Tan himself finds his place in the musical realm of Bach, Beethoven and John Cage, worldwide audiences are discovering a richness in authentic Chinese musical sources that goes far beyond the sing-song choruses of Turandot and Ravel’s cracked teacup. Tan has been particularly skilful in blending authentic presences East and West without blurring their original nationalities. He has done this, furthermore, over a wide variety of musical forms: in serious operas like the 1996 Grawemeyer-winning Marco Polo  (with a text by British-born critic Paul Griffiths), the massive, hourlong “symphonies” to celebrate the unification of Hong Kong with China and to proclaim the universal meaning of the Millennium. In 1998, when Chinese authorities forbade the exportation of the traditional romantic epic Peony Pavilion Tan and director Peter Sellars created their own two-hour version, remarkably faithful to the spirit of the original work but an enchanting artwork on its own.<br />
In 1999 Kurt Masur and the New York Philharmonic, with its principal percussionist Christopher Lamb out front, offered up its own Tan Dun commission: the Concerto for Water Percussion and Orchestra in which, this time,  Tan pits a similar set of waterworks as in the Passion  against a full symphony orchestra. That work, composed in memory of Tan’s great friend and sometime mentor Toru Takemitsu, gleams brightly in the Philharmonic’s multi-disc issue of notable Masur performances.  The year 2000, which saw the premiere of the Passion before a cheering audience in Stuttgart, was also illuminated by the Oscar-blessed filmscore for compatriot Ang Lee’s Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon  (with Yo-Yo Ma’s cello a haunting voice in the wilderness of Lee’s magic forest); that score, in turn spawned the much-praised Crouching Tiger Concerto.<br />
Questions of assimilation – of a further “Americanization” of musical style and outlook – are apparently of no concern to Tan Dun. His latest opera, Tea – “a tragic love story set in the 15th century,” he explains – has as its dramatic framework three characters representing water, wind and stone, who recreate the traditional tea ceremony. “These are the elements of the shamanistic spirit in the rituals that I remember from my village,” he explains, “and they maintain their power even today. The stones can talk to the wind. The wind can talk to the water. The water can talk to the human being.”</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Reich</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2002/08/reich/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2002/08/reich/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Fri, 23 Aug 2002 22:48:15 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Musical America]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=1861</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[“it is a principle of music to repeat the theme. Repeat and repeat again, as the pace mounts. The theme is difficult but no more difficult than the fact to be resolved.” William Carlos Williams, “The Orchestra” in Steve Reich’s “The Desert Music.” A Harlem teenager testifies on police brutality, and one phrase on tape [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>“it is a principle of music<br />
to repeat the theme. Repeat<br />
and repeat again,<br />
as the pace mounts. The<br />
theme is difficult<br />
but no more difficult<br />
than the fact to be<br />
resolved.”<br />
William Carlos Williams, “The Orchestra” in Steve Reich’s “The Desert Music.”</p>
<p>A Harlem teenager testifies on police brutality, and one phrase on tape – “come out to show them” – runs over and over with the two stereo channels oozing  out of phase; the words vanish but the sound builds into a terrifying music, endlessly repeating, endlessly building. A radio reporter describes the landing and explosion of the dirigible Hindenburg, and the repetitions of a single shocked word  builds on the tape like white-hot daggers. Words, again, turn into music, and they go right through you.<br />
Some 33 years separate Steve Reich’s early experiments with tape phasing and the “Hindenburg” of 1999, visited upon a highly reactive young-in-heart crowd during San Francisco’s “American Mavericks” Festival this past June &#8212; the first panel of “Three Tales,” a multimedia triptych with his wife, media artist Beryl Korot now nearing completion. In between there is a repertory richly varied in its resource: chamber music, orchestral music, pieces for solo instruments accompanying themselves on multitrack tape, a work for nothing but two performers clapping hands, eighty minutes of ensemble drumming, a gigantic cantata, another kind of vocal work just about trains. The path from there to here has taken some curious turns now and then &#8211;  “there” being, let’s say, the audience uprising on the night in 1973 [SEDGE:ck?] when Reich’s “Four Organs” shattered the complacent air in Carnegie Hall; “here” being his recent attainment of Columbia University’s prestigious William Schuman award, not to mention his current anointing as Musical America’s Composer of the Year.<br />
Throughout this splendid repertory – celebrated in 1996 by a ten-disc retrospective box on Nonesuch Records in honor of its composer’s 60th birthday – certain constants persist. One is this matter of what the casual ear hears as repetition of small, insistent fragments &#8212; thus giving rise to the overused and misused term “minimalism” – but which is really a matter of infinitesmally slow but inexorable, breath-stopping change within a texture so that sometimes you start out at point A, arrive eventually at point B, and have no idea how or when you got there. The other is the composer’s ongoing obsession with the music that lies within the human voice, not only when singing a pretty Mozart tune but just as often in the mundane act of spoken communication. “Most people do some kind of singing when they speak,” says Reich, “more than they realize.”<br />
“Come Out” serves as proof. The boy speaks his phrase as part of a taped testimony; later Steve Reich, transfixed by that one phrase, gets in onto a stereo tape which he then plays – and plays &#8212; with one channel slightly out of phase with the other until, 13 minutes, 658 repetitions later (by rough count), the music has built to a thunderous obsession with a five-note phrase that sounds for all the world like D minor.<br />
“Come Out,” the party record in excelsis  back in the legendary days when courageous record producers still stalked music’s outer edge, crystallized for Reich the several strands of his own musical identity, above all a fascination with African drumming ensembles, the overlap of short rhythmic patterns so that downbeats never came in the same place. Drumming had been his lifetime obsession, from his Manhattan boyhood through music studies at Cornell and beyond. At Cornell the legendary prof William Austin helped organize Reich’s priorities. “In his history class we began with really early music, medieval counterpoint and the like, and then moved on to world music and experiments. Only then did he go back and deal with the familiar masters. Compared to what we had begun with, all that 50-great-masterpiece stuff was like an afterthought.”<br />
By the 1970s Reich was a throbbing presence on the new-music scene. There was “Drumming,” 80-or-so minutes of Africanized patterns breath-stoppingly ascendant; “Music for Mallet Instruments,” more of the same an octave or two higher; the dazzling, hourlong “Music for Eighteen Musicians,” a masterpiece by any measurement.<br />
In the 1980s  came the voice pieces: “Desert Music,” with William Carlos Williams;s words zooming through the orchestra, looping back on themselves, proclaiming the glory of their own music; “Different Trains,” with the spoken reminiscences of riders on trains woven into the multilayered texture of the Kronos Quartet taped several times on top of itself; the multimedia “The Cave,” with Korot, a tapestry of voices from several cultures old and new delivering a counterpoint of impressions about Abraham’s ancient cave and its contemporary significance. “By 1988,” says Reich, “I really got to concentrate on the way the human voice could work into an ensemble. With ‘Different Trains’ and ‘The Cave’ the music follows along with the text on tape, a sort of faithful scribe. Then, in ‘City Life’ I moved on; what, I wondered, would happen with no tape, with live voices, speaking and singing bits of text right off city streets, and picked up by the keyboards and sampled on the run, you might say.  Okay so far?<br />
“By the time we got to ‘Hindenburg,’ ” Reich continues, the rat-a-tat of his New York-intense exposition gathering steam, “we had not a sacred text, not any kind of poetry, but a guy, the radio announcer Herb Morris, scared off his block at what he’s witnessing. So we take that word of his, FLAME!!!! and we stretch it, run it in slow motion. The musicians get up to speed, and the disaster is running on Beryl’s screen, and the words just rain down on them. Back in 1967 I might have wanted to do things like this with a voice, but couldn’t. Now you can do it on a desktop.”<br />
“Three Tales” will run from the “Hindenburg  “visited upon a highly reactive young-in-heart crowd during San Francisco’s “American Mavericks” Festival this past June disaster into an essay on  Bikini that will seek common ground between the H-bomb testing ground and the apparel that takes its name. The final segment concerns Dolly, the cloned Scottish sheep – with, Reich promises, huge blocks of harmony built up out of the vowel sounds of scientists and other observers.<br />
A question suggests itself: “are you moving in any way toward opera?<br />
“Well,” answers Steve Reich, “I consider this to be an opera. Okay; bel-canto voices on a stage and an orchestra in the pit have zero interest for me. Zero.  That went out with the ‘Three-Penny Opera.’ ”</p>
<p>In a small hall on the Columbia campus, eighteen musicians hold an audience spellbound with an hourlong continuous outpouring, and at the end you’d have thought you’d discovered a new kind of light, blinding and deliriously audible.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>The Sound of&#160;Silence</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2002/08/the-sound-of-silence/</link>
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		<pubDate>Wed, 21 Aug 2002 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=407</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[1.34 METERS TALL, SHORT ARMS, SEVEN FINGERS &#8212; four right, three left &#8212; large, relatively well-formed head, brown eyes, distinctive lips; profession: singer &#8211; so reads, in its entirety, Thomas Quasthoff&#8217;s autobiographical entry on his Web site: a profile in courage and in whimsy. The amazement around this extraordinary figure continues; last week, in his [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>
<font SIZE=3><i>1.34 METERS TALL, SHORT ARMS, SEVEN FINGERS &#8212; four right, three left &#8212; large, relatively well-formed head, brown eyes, distinctive lips; profession: singer </i>&#8211; so reads, in its entirety, Thomas Quasthoff&#8217;s autobiographical entry on his Web site: a profile in courage and in whimsy. The amazement around this extraordinary figure continues; last week, in his first appearance at the Hollywood Bowl, Quasthoff &#8212; the man and his art &#8212; filled the space quite amply. In his previous appearances this year, with the Los Angeles Chamber Orchestra indoors, he had sung Bach, Ravel and &#8220;Ol&#8217; Man River.&#8221; This time he sang six of the dozen or so songs to texts from <i>Des Knaben Wunderhorn </i>that Gustav Mahler had written early on while girding up to take on the symphonic dragon. Six more were sung by another splendid singer, the Finnish mezzo-soprano Lilli Paasikivi, whom we had heard earlier this year in other, less-rewarding Mahler, <i>Das Klagende Lied </i>at the Music Center. Esa-Pekka Salonen and the Philharmonic clothed it all with the glowing, pliant sounds of the young Mahler&#8217;s glistening orchestrations. By the time Quasthoff had ended the cycle with the mystical shimmer of &#8220;Urlicht,&#8221; the song that Mahler would later insert into his Second Symphony (but with a mezzo as the solo singer), there was a quietness at the Bowl that held all 6,000 of us in its grip. Great art, great artists, great artistry &#8212; they determine their own size.</font></p>
<p>
<font SIZE=3>What ravishing music, these <i>Wunderhorn</i> songs! They offer us early glimpses into Mahler&#8217;s workshop, but they take us far beyond. He moved the &#8220;Urlicht&#8221; verbatim into the Second Symphony, but he also put another of the songs, the one about St. Anthony preaching to the fish, through a drastic transformation &#8212; doubled in length, with a whole new middle section &#8212; to serve as the scherzo of that same work. Seventy-five years later, Luciano Berio was to co-opt that same scherzo as a &#8220;container&#8221; for a great tangle of added paraphernalia &#8212; voices, other musical quotations, what have you &#8212; in his <i>Sinfonia</i>.</font></p>
<p>
<font SIZE=3>But the songs aren&#8217;t merely &#8220;early&#8221; works, of a composer still on the bottom rung; they are rich, deep, sometimes disturbing: raucous and grotesque at times (like the middle movements of the Ninth Symphony), harrowing in their simple beauty (like the Adagietto of the Fifth). Salonen&#8217;s Mahler is a familiar commodity; his big-time arrival was with a performance of the Third Symphony (which also contains <i>Wunderhorn</i> music). His work at the Bowl that night wasn&#8217;t merely that of accompanist to two fine singers; through those lousy loudspeakers and the noise-infested air, all three created a kind of chamber music writ simultaneously very small and very large. It made people listen, as they don&#8217;t always in that troubled venue. It may have even made people forget the overripe awfulness of Richard Strauss&#8217; <i>Zarathustra</i>, which had begun the program on some other planet.</font></p>
<p>
<font SIZE=3>IT WASN&#8217;T BILLED AS SUCH, BUT THE MUSIC THE last two weeks on both sides of the Cahuenga Pass amounted to a Salonen festival: four Philharmonic programs at the Bowl and a chamber-music event across the street at the John Anson Ford Amphitheater. A rendezvous with dentistry kept me from the last of the Bowl concerts, but the presence of Sibelius on the program softened the loss.</font></p>
<p>
<font SIZE=3>The Ford&#8217;s week of chamber music began on Monday with a guest shot from SummerFest La Jolla, Cho-Liang Lin&#8217;s annual festival in that coastal paradise. For Lin, Salonen composed <i>Lachen Verlernt</i> (&#8220;Laughing Unlearnt&#8221;), a short but well-packed piece for solo violin, moving graciously over 10 minutes from broad, contemplative melodic lines to a later outburst of good, solid old-timey virtuosity. (Are there Gypsies in Finland?) Better yet was a return visit of Salonen&#8217;s <i>Five Images After Sappho</i>, the flavorsome song cycle first sung by Laura Claycomb at Ojai in 1999, later recorded by Dawn Upshaw, and delivered last week with infinite charm by Heidi Grant Murphy. Following intermission there was Stravinsky&#8217;s <i>Soldier&#8217;s Tale</i> &#8212; all of it, alas, nearly an hour&#8217;s worth &#8212; with John Rubinstein&#8217;s high-intensity delivery of all three spoken roles, John Malashock&#8217;s choreography in case anyone missed the point of the narration, and Salonen leading a best-in-show instrumental ensemble sparked by Leila Josefowicz&#8217;s rocket-powered violin at one end of the scale and Steven Schick&#8217;s devil-driven percussion at the other end. Nothing surprised me as much as the realization of how much I disliked the piece. I must work that out over the next few days; stay tuned.</font></p>
<p>
<font SIZE=3>Wednesday&#8217;s program brought in the year-old New Hollywood String Quartet, a group formed last year and bearing the name of a much-revered ensemble from the past whose memories the new group does not evoke in the least. Like the old Hollywood, the new group is made up of studio freelancers; unlike the old Hollywood, the new group plays like studio freelancers even when it&#8217;s on a concert stage. In the Mendelssohn quartet that began its concert, the playing seemed to be about just another gig: slick, proficient and seemingly unaware of the elegant, fond curves that made up the heart of this music. Real movie music followed: a meandering, faceless piece by Don Davis (<i>The Matrix</i>) and, more bearable, some of Bernard Herrmann&#8217;s <i>North by Northwest</i> music, set for string quartet by Randy Kerber.</font></p>
<p>
<font SIZE=3>Two measures into a Haydn trio, and I knew what I had missed from the New Hollywoods. The Ahn Trio &#8212; two twins plus a sister, born in Seoul, trained at Juilliard &#8212; played their Friday program like angels on vitamins. Maybe Haydn&#8217;s E-flat Trio (No. 29, if you&#8217;re counting) was the most adventurous music on a program otherwise full of movie and movie-ish fare, but at least these kids played as if they knew what musical adventure is, or can be. For the Haydn, that meant some wonderful jolts as the harmony kept taking weird turns into the middle of next week and the rhythms did likewise. In pieces written for the group by the veterans Maurice Jarre (<i>Dr. Zhivago</i>) and Michael Nyman (<i>The Piano</i>), that meant more of an amiable saunter past the ghost of, let&#8217;s say, your favorite café composer of the 1930s; in Kenji Bunch&#8217;s <i>Swing Shift: Music for Evening Hours</i>, a suggestion might be made for shorter hours.</font></p>
<p>
<font SIZE=3>The kids are great, and you can&#8217;t begrudge them the shadow of MTV that falls over their work. Even so, there&#8217;s a grand repertory of classical trios out there, which needs all the help it can get.</font></p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Opera on&#160;High</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2002/08/opera-on-high/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2002/08/opera-on-high/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 14 Aug 2002 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=406</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Santa Fe‘s opera house is a scenery-studded 800-mile drive from Los Angeles; last week it seemed like home away from home. You ran into familiar Los Angeles faces everywhere &#8212; at the operas, and at other soul-renewing gathering places by day. John Crosby, who founded the Santa Fe Opera in 1957 and ran it until [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Santa Fe‘s opera house is a scenery-studded 800-mile drive from Los Angeles; last week it seemed like home away from home. You ran into familiar Los Angeles faces everywhere &#8212; at the operas, and at other soul-renewing gathering places by day. John Crosby, who founded the Santa Fe Opera in 1957 and ran it until two years ago, wanted it that way: an imperial entity (like Bayreuth or Salzburg) to which people made pilgrimages from beyond the mountains. When Richard Gaddes took over last year, one of his first moves was to lure the local community into discovering that, up there on the hills above town, one of the world&#8217;s great musical ventures was alive and thriving. Crosby mightn‘t have cared less.
</p>
<p>    To that end, for example, Gaddes had the supertitle system &#8212; on small screens built into the backs of the seats, as at the Met &#8212; jiggered so that, with a push of a button, the text came on in either English or Spanish. That one move, out of many community-wooings instituted by Gaddes, boosted attendance last year by something like 5,000. Before Gaddes came to Santa Fe, he had founded and run the adventurous Opera Theater of St. Louis. You could say, in fact, that Crosby and Gaddes were the co-inventors of American summer opera &#8212; not just as casual outdoor entertainment (as at the Hollywood Bowl) but as an art form with its own unique shape and impact.
</p>
<p>   I saw five operas in five nights, and was both delighted and moved on most of those nights. The season&#8217;s new work &#8212; there‘s always one &#8212; was Kaija Saariaho&#8217;s L‘Amour de Loin, about which ecstatic reports (plus a few pirated broadcast tapes) had been circulating since the work&#8217;s premiere at Salzburg in 2000. That made it the summer‘s hot-ticket item for its three scheduled performances, so much so that management was obliged to sell tickets as well to the final dress rehearsal. Reports from abroad did not exaggerate; this is a work of extraordinary power and beauty. It is a work that, furthermore, restores to the lyric stage the quality of myth and mystery, an appeal to an audience to lose itself in timeless imagery, not just the reworking of some popular movie scenario that usually passes for operatic novelty these days. It is, in other words, a genuine opera.
</p>
<p>   The text, by the Paris-based Lebanese writer Amin Maalouf, is drawn from the medieval account of the troubadour Jaufre Rudel, the Countess Clemence whom he worships from afar for her purity of heart and body, and the Pilgrim who crosses the Mediterranean as a go-between to carry messages to the separated lovers. They, at the end, are united in transfiguring death. Peter Sellars&#8217; evocative production filled the stage with water. That not only signified the gulf separating the lovers; it also cast a rippling shimmer that gorgeously reflected Saariaho‘s deep, dark, haunting music &#8212; the orchestra wondrously enhanced by subtle interspersed electronics. There is some of Debussy&#8217;s Pelleas et Melisande in the flow of the vocal lines and in the orchestral undercurrents as well. Dawn Upshaw, who has owned the role of Clemence from the beginning, gave the performance that enlarged upon everything we thought we knew about her vocal realm. Simply put, her final ironic outburst, as the dead Jaufre lies in her arms, was the stuff of sublime operatic drama.
</p>
<p>   Monica Groop &#8212; the Melisande here not many years ago &#8212; was the Pilgrim; Gerald Finley, the Troubadour; Robert Spano conducted and wove from his orchestra a fabric that you could almost feel as well as hear. In Santa Fe‘s recently rebuilt opera house, in its unreal setting high on a mountainside, one of the spectacular aspects is the sound of that orchestra in that pit. A representative from Saariaho&#8217;s publisher allowed that there would be a recording, but not right away.
</p>
<p>    On other nights there was Stephanie Blythe‘s stunning, stage-filling Isabella in a hokey but endearingly updated The Italian Girl in Algiers, with, for example, a downed airplane to replace Rossini&#8217;s shipwreck. A shapely, classical staging of Mozart‘s La Clemenza di Tito &#8212; like the Italiana, a company premiere &#8212; was brightly lit by the agile, communicative Sesto of Kristine Jepson (the Sister Helen of Opera Pacific&#8217;s hapless Dead Man Walking). Patricia Racette, the enchanting Mimi last month in the Hollywood Bowl‘s La Boheme, was similarly splendid in an otherwise ho-hum Eugene Onegin; Rodney Gilfry, who was listed as Onegin, had dropped out &#8212; a victim, perhaps, of the task of singing operatic leads at 7,500 feet above sea level; Scott Hendricks was the merely adequate replacement. Racette also filled in, on short notice but firmly in command, for the ”vocally exhausted“ Sondra Radvanovsky in a La Traviata, stodgily conducted by John Crosby with all the standard-issue cuts: the cabalettas for Alfredo and Giorgio and the second stanzas of familiar arias.
</p>
<p>    For the first time since 1977, there was no opera by Richard Strauss; the scheduled Liebe der Danae was dropped &#8212; expensive production vs. traveling caution &#8212; after 911. The loss will be atoned for next season with a revival of Intermezzo. In his 40-plus years of imperial leadership, Crosby had imposed a distinctive image on the company: Strauss up the bazooty, relatively little Verdi, even less Wagner, a generous but selective attention to latter-day repertory (Stravinsky, Henze and the American premieres of Berg&#8217;s Lulu in both the two- and three-act versions).
</p>
<p>   Gaddes‘ plans aim at even broader horizons. Next summer&#8217;s list also includes Bright Sheng‘s Madame Mao in its world premiere. There are plans to further integrate the opera company into city life with winter performances in the downtown movie theater that has become Santa Fe&#8217;s performing-arts center. Part of the pleasure in journeying to Santa Fe from beyond the mountains is the chance to watch the steady taking-shape of a music consciousness there, a nice counterpoint to the plethora of art galleries and local crafts that have always made the place unique. For this the majestic Crosby can take his share of credit. So, now, can Gaddes. Last year Mayor Larry Delgado, himself an opera lover at least as far up the scale as Carmen, proclaimed a Richard Gaddes Day. John Crosby would have been horrified.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Perfect&#160;Opera</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2002/08/perfect-opera/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2002/08/perfect-opera/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 07 Aug 2002 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=405</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[What makes an opera work? If I had to guide a friend through the devious answers to that question, my final goal would be an understanding of the human interplay with Mozart‘s music in The Marriage of Figaro, tempered with awe at the interaction of harmony and tragedy in Berg&#8217;s Wozzeck. There would be other [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>What makes an opera work? If I had to guide a friend through the devious answers to that question, my final goal would be an understanding of the human interplay with Mozart‘s music in The Marriage of Figaro, tempered with awe at the interaction of harmony and tragedy in Berg&#8217;s Wozzeck. There would be other major mileposts along our way &#8212; Verdi‘s Otello, Wagner&#8217;s Die Meistersinger and parts of the Ring, Monteverdi‘s Orfeo, Sondheim&#8217;s Sweeney Todd. We would start with La Boheme, and we would stay there for quite a while.
</p>
<p>    Hearing Puccini‘s infinitely appealing score at the Hollywood Bowl the other night, in a generally excellent performance under John Mauceri, even without scenery and with the cast &#8212; excellently led by Patricia Racette&#8217;s Mimi &#8212; in evening clothes, I found myself amazed once again (for perhaps the 500th time) at what a sure piece of dramatic workmanship it all is. Let me run through a few of the moments that tickled my fancy this latest time around:
</p>
<p>   The very opening: It takes two brief musical phrases &#8212; Marcello‘s music ill-tempered and choppy, Rodolfo&#8217;s response lyrical, soaring &#8212; and we know these two characters as well as they know each other. Later, Rodolfo‘s graceful curve of a tune will recur during his first outpouring to Mimi (”Che gelida manina . . .“).
</p>
<p>   The guys plan their outing, to spend some newfound cash downstairs at the cafe. A melody winds its way softly through the orchestra, distinctive in its antique harmonies (parallel fifths! automatic D-minus!); it might be an old Christmas carol. The same tune, more joyous and aggressive, will usher in the festivities in Act 2. It will reappear, chill and bleak, at the start of Act 3, where it will transform into a haunting tone poem about a dismal corner of wintry Paris at daybreak. I love Puccini&#8217;s atmosphere pieces, usually at the start of operatic acts: the Roman daybreak in the last act of Tosca, life along the river at the start of Il Tabarro, dawn breaking over Nagasaki near the end of Madama Butterfly, even the offstage choruses resounding through the Chinese night in Turandot, leading up to ”Nessun dorma.“
</p>
<p>   Mimi knocks and enters; soft strings fill the room with her aroma. Her radiant, quiet tune becomes her first song to Rodolfo (”Mi chiamano Mimi“); it will identify her throughout the opera, will turn sad under her farewell in Act 3, and will shatter and drift away as her life ebbs at the end. Listen, in this first encounter, as she and Rodolfo move toward each other, shyly and with broken phrases, then a more substantial vocal line as their hands touch.
</p>
<p>   The second act of La Boheme is surely Puccini‘s shortest: under 18 minutes in my favorite recording (Tebaldi-Bergonzi). It&#8217;s amazing how much takes place, with the interplay among the ”Bohemians“ down front, the biz with Musetta and her sugar daddy, the street kids and their balloons, the panorama of surging Paris life, including parading tin soldiers, on Christmas Eve. It‘s all like cinematic writing before its time, and you can&#8217;t resist.
</p>
<p>   It‘s easy enough to poke holes in Puccini&#8217;s art, and heaven knows that I‘ve done my share. I saw the new movie of Tosca, fell in love with Angela Gheorghiu in the title role, and still came home with the empty feeling of having wasted two hours on music that constantly must strain for its dramatic effect, whose harmonies curdle the senses with their drab insistence, whose characters derive no life from their music and remain cardboard even in moments of high passion. La Boheme is different; it teems with life, it reaches out in its youthful urgency and pulls you in. It survives restaging, as in the not-bad Baz Luhrmann updating now available on video and supposedly Broadway-bound. Its storyline outlives generation gaps, but its music retains its appeal even more fiercely. There is a moment in the last act, after the mortally ill Mimi is brought back to the garret to die, wherein if I&#8217;ve heard it 500 times I have wept real tears 500 times. The forgiveness scene at the end of Figaro also affects me that way, as does the moment in Die Walkure when the doors blow open and moonlight pours in; if this one masterpiece off Puccini‘s workbench reaches me on that level, then Puccini can&#8217;t be all that bad.
</p>
<p>    Mozart can‘t be all that bad, either, but you may need to remind yourself of that after the Bowl concert two nights later. I&#8217;m sorry, but I just don‘t get what people see in Gerard Schwarz&#8217;s conducting, and probably never will. When I arrived in Los Angeles in 1980, he was leading the L.A. Chamber Orchestra on a downward path, betraying that ensemble‘s whole valuable purpose by taking on the symphonic repertory. In New York I heard Mostly Mozart programs led with no grace, no sense of the lovely rise and fall of the classical line in sovereign scores. From Seattle I hear recordings by Schwarz of bygone American symphonic repertory &#8212; conservative, lumbering pieces by George Chadwick, Howard Hanson, David Diamond &#8212; whose existence in our history probably justifies their place (but not by much). I remember the recordings Schwarz once made of old-timey trumpet and cornet repertory, two cherishable discs on Nonesuch that are worth your search. And I wonder why he abandoned that repertory, which still represents the best in his artistry.
</p>
<p>    At the Bowl he led Mozart, ending with the wonderful ”Linz“ Symphony, with its remarkable scoring for trumpets and horns buried in orchestral imbalance. A young pianist named Stewart Goodyear produced all the notes but came nowhere close to the passion and fantasy in the D-minor Piano Concerto. And if you didn&#8217;t think it possible to flatten out the grace and affection in Eine Kleine Nachtmusik, that only means you weren‘t there that night. Through some curious circumstance that nobody at the Philharmonic has yet been able to explain, the program was given twice, on Tuesday and Thursday nights. Believe me, once was enough.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Mozart, and Then&#160;Some</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2002/07/mozart-and-then-some/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2002/07/mozart-and-then-some/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 31 Jul 2002 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=404</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[San Luis Obispo, known affectionately to its residents as ”SLO,“ has had its own Mozart Festival for 31 years. The genial and capable Clifton Swanson, who teaches conducting at Cal Poly &#8212; the town&#8217;s major school and its major industry as well &#8212; was the festival‘s co-founder and is still its musical bright light. I [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>San Luis Obispo, known affectionately to its residents as ”SLO,“ has had its own Mozart Festival for 31 years. The genial and capable Clifton Swanson, who teaches conducting at Cal Poly &#8212; the town&#8217;s major school and its major industry as well &#8212; was the festival‘s co-founder and is still its musical bright light. I heard this summer&#8217;s opening concert: an early Mozart symphony, Beethoven‘s ”Eroica,“ and Frank Martin&#8217;s Concerto for Seven Wind Instruments, Percussion and Strings. I hear early Mozart all the time, especially if I stray too close to KUSC; the ”Eroica“ was still in my ears from the superb performance at the Hollywood Bowl a few days before; the Martinconcerto, therefore, stays with me the longest from that program. It called to mind an excellent composer (1890&#8211;1974) whom the world seems to be ignoring nowadays.
</p>
<p>    Martin was Swiss, and if you want to entertain images of clockwork and obsessive tidiness in connection with his music, you won‘t be far off. Karlheinz Stockhausen was one of his pupils, but your guess is as good as mine as to what that unruly visionary might have gleaned from this orderly, Calvinist neoclassicist. Martin&#8217;s most played work, at least in his lifetime, was the witty, charming Petite Symphonie Concertante of 1945; his most admired work currently &#8212; among those few who keep his name alive at all &#8212; is the oratorio Le Vin Herbe, a profound and intense setting of poetry about the Tristan and Isolde legend; it needs revival.
</p>
<p>   Despite its title, the SLO Mozart Festival‘s programming ranges far and wide, and the Martin concerto has been performed at least four times before this summer. Why not? It is a terrifically attractive piece; its exchanges among the solo instruments have a kind of Mozartian passion; its dissonances bristle but do not sting. At the end the timpani and percussion have their licks, and their outburst is both dazzling and hilarious. Overall, I felt myself really drawn to the piece; its interplay turns the entire orchestra into an argle-bargle through a wide emotional range. There was a good recording on Deutsche Grammophon by Thierry Fischer and the Chamber Orchestra of Europe, which you might find in the used-disc shops; a recent one by Mathias Bamert isn&#8217;t quite as high-spirited.
</p>
<p>   The concert took place in the excellent acoustics of SLO‘s new Performing Arts Center on the Cal Poly campus, a masterwork of the Hideous-Moderne that looms over the town like a stranded spaceship. Other concerts are given in local churches, the SLO Mission and in less formal venues; over two weeks the whole area is immersed in serious music making. The orchestra is recruited partly from local folk, but draws on both Los Angeles and the Bay Area as well. (If you wonder what has happened to Ralph Morrison, who glares over the 110 freeway downtown in the Los Angeles Chamber Orchestra mural but no longer plays in that orchestra, he&#8217;s the SLO Festival Orchestra‘s concertmaster.) Under Swanson&#8217;s strong direction, the Mozart Symphony No. 32 went like the wind; the ”Eroica“ was similarly brisk and shapely, but, as I was saying, my ears that night belonged to another. That afternoon one of the Cal Poly profs, Craig Russell by name, lectured on &#8212; no, actually, acted out &#8212; some of Beethoven‘s sketches for the ”Eroica“: falling on the floor to illustrate the changes to the ”wrong“ key, doing an Elektra triumphal dance at the final vanquishment of the D-flat invaders, that sort of thing. (Whatever happened to Robert Winter?)
</p>
<p>    Meanwhile, back at the Pass . . . Leila Josefowicz was reason enough to spend an evening at the Bowl the night before SLO&#8217;s opening concert; she had laid me low, along with all of London, with her performance of John Adams‘ Violin Concerto during his big weekend there last January. But this time she was up against a more formidable obstacle, that decrepit hulk of a once respectable musician named Jaime Laredo, who was listed as the evening&#8217;s conductor and also as Josefowicz‘s partner in glorious works from the past that involve two string instruments in profound conversation with each other and with the orchestra behind them.
</p>
<p>    In Bach&#8217;s D-minor Concerto for Two Violins, and in Mozart‘s E-flat Sinfonia Concertante for Violin and Viola, the marvel is the depth and extent of those conversations, the tensions that build and then resolve as Violin One states a proposition, Violin Two (or Viola) answers but carries the argument forward by a subtle variation of the original line, and the orchestra comes in to refute or to praise what has just been said. In the Mozart especially, the depth of the discourse must move us all; the slow movement &#8212; which Mozart himself describes in a letter as ”a lovers&#8217; dialogue“ &#8212; has always seemed to me the turning point in his own rise to expressive mastery. It is interesting, by the way, to compare Mozart‘s two historically adjacent works heard on successive classical concerts that week: the elegant, classically serene Two-Piano Concerto, No. 365 in Ludwig Kochel&#8217;s more or less chronological catalog, and this passionate, disturbing Sinfonia Concertante listed as K. 364.
</p>
<p>   Apparently, the evening‘s soloists chose different languages for their discourse on both K. 364 and the Bach Concerto: the sweet, beautifully contained yet human tones of Josefowicz&#8217;s violin against Laredo‘s groaning, self-indulgent overphrasing in both works &#8212; as if he had chosen on purpose to ignore everything his talented partner had to say. In between Bach and Mozart had come Mendelssohn&#8217;s ”Italian“ Symphony, conducted by Laredo also in an unwelcoming, thudding manner &#8212; with the prescribed repeats overlooked and the enchanting interplay between winds and strings made hoarse and drab. I once held Laredo‘s musicianship in reasonably high regard, but if this concert suggests the current level of that quality, I think it&#8217;s time to end inflicting himself &#8212; on the music and on us.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Eyezapoppin</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2002/07/eyezapoppin/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2002/07/eyezapoppin/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 31 Jul 2002 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=403</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[For better or for worse, director Benoit Jacquot has dealt with Giacomo Puccini&#8217;s Tosca &#8212; ”that shabby little shocker,“ in critic Joseph Kerman‘s immortal words &#8212; pretty much as the opera deserves. Nobody has ever mistaken the work for a subtle, life-size drama of heartbreak and redemption, and neither do Jacquot and his generally superior [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>For better or for worse, director Benoit Jacquot has dealt with Giacomo Puccini&#8217;s Tosca &#8212; ”that shabby little shocker,“ in critic Joseph Kerman‘s immortal words &#8212; pretty much as the opera deserves. Nobody has ever mistaken the work for a subtle, life-size drama of heartbreak and redemption, and neither do Jacquot and his generally superior cast. The opera was designed for scenery chewing, eyeball popping and all the rest of the cornball melodrama vocabulary. If Puccini, and the playwright Victorien Sardou, whose stage drama served as source, didn&#8217;t design their respective Toscas from the first as high-pitched wide-screen surround-sound fodder, that can only be ascribed to the incidental fact that the medium was still in its infancy. You can say, therefore, that Jacquot‘s film of the opera elevates it to its rightful place.
</p>
<p>    Or might have, if it weren&#8217;t for various accompanying nuisances. Producer Daniel Toscan du Plantier, or so the handout goes, persuaded Jacquot to try his hand at Tosca even though, says Jacquot, ”Italian opera is not my cup of tea.“ Since du Plantier‘s escutcheon had already been soiled by the Joseph Losey Don Giovanni he produced in 1979 (a real mess of nuisances, including weird day-to-night lighting changes and hokey staging, plus cuts in that most uncuttable of scores), some of what goes wrong this time should probably be laid at his door.
</p>
<p>   There is, for one thing, a strange sense of distrust &#8212; of the medium of opera, or film, or both. Uncut, as here, Tosca runs a paltry two hours, yet its fluent course is continually intercut with segments of a ”making of“ black-and-white documentary: conductor Antonio Pappano wildly gesticulating during the recording session, surely more for the cameras than for the expert players of London&#8217;s Royal Opera House Orchestra, soloists and choristers in street clothes (a great saving in costume costs for the ”Te Deum“ scene). These interruptions document nothing; they merely intrude.
</p>
<p>   So does the curious practice &#8212; even, of all places, in the very pretty Act 1 love duet &#8212; of destroying vocal lines as singers move from song to orchestra-accompanied speech. So does the strange sense of visual disconnectedness, with some of the settings real (the three places in Rome where the action occurs), some of them rebuilt on sound stages (with Cavaradossi‘s completed painting &#8212; of a woman he&#8217;d only seen the day before! &#8212; billboard-size), some of them flashed in as a series of fuzzy photographs of places mentioned. Might this be the first-ever ”Annotated Tosca“?
</p>
<p>   Angela Gheorghiu is the Tosca, and she is spectacularly good &#8212; to hear and to see. She looks right, her dark eyes flashing love, jealousy and desperation. She sounds right, her voice a ravishing song of pain and ecstasy finished off with a dusky sheen that has opera nuts whispering ”Callas.“ What she manages most of all, in her scenes in the opera itself and even in the black-and-white backstage shots, is a projection that seems to merge Tosca‘s fire-etched passion and Gheorghiu&#8217;s own love of the act of performance. Her Cavaradossi, real-life husband Roberto Alagna, though reasonably fair of face and forthright of voice, is not quite her equal. She, for one thing, has the knack of looking as though she‘s singing even when lip-synched; he does not. Nor does the veteran (61) Ruggero Raimondi, the closed-mouth, stolid Scarpia.
</p>
<p>    Opera on film, even more than opera on video (which has its own problems), has its built-in, probably insurmountable drawbacks. One of the most basic is the fact that the human mouth when singing in close-up is simply not beautiful. (This should have been clear at least as far back as Ingmar Bergman&#8217;s Magic Flute.) I tire, after two hours, of watching Gheorghiu‘s dentition, no matter how nearly perfect; Alagna&#8217;s one out-of-line tooth up front; Raimondi‘s clenched jaws; even the orthodontia of James Savage-Hanford, who sings the Shepherd Boy in the last act. This filmed Tosca &#8212; not the first, by the way &#8212; is a pretty good job, if it&#8217;s filmed Tosca that you want. I‘ll stay with the stage versions, however, which bite cleaner, and deeper.
</p>
<p>    TOSCA | Directed by BENOIT JACQUOT | Music by GIACOMO PUCCINI | Libretto by GIUSEPPE GIACOSA and LUIGI ILLICA, from the play by VICTORIEN SARDOU | At Laemmle&#8217;s Music Hall, Laemmle‘s Playhouse 7</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Magic Time at the&#160;Bowl</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2002/07/magic-time-at-the-bowl/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2002/07/magic-time-at-the-bowl/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 24 Jul 2002 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=402</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[At about 8:10 on the night of July 16, the sky above the Hollywood Bowl was dappled with small puffs of cloud, turned a soft pink in the rays of the setting sun. At the same moment, the sound came off the stage in similar puffs of string tone, dappled with flashes of audible light [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>At about 8:10 on the night of July 16, the sky above the Hollywood Bowl was dappled with small puffs of cloud, turned a soft pink in the rays of the setting sun. At the same moment, the sound came off the stage in similar puffs of string tone, dappled with flashes of audible light (also pink, if you wanted it to be) from a solo harp: a small piece called Guardian Angel by Karen Tanaka. This was music of great charm if no great consequence, but the coincidence of sight and sound turned into one of those moments &#8212; rare, alas &#8212; when music at the Bowl becomes like nothing else on Earth.
</p>
<p>    The Bowl season is upon us, and with it the usual outpouring of published wisdom as to why the place should be shut down or turned into condos and multiplexes. At the opening concert of the ”classical“ concert series two weeks ago, proclaimed as festive by the release of captive balloons but turned drab with an agonizing evening of Brahms inflicted upon the captive audience, it was easy enough for even the staunchest defender of these summer concerts to join the ranks of the naysayers. The music was soggy, the playing (under Paavo Jarvi, with Lars Vogt at the piano) coarse and self-indulgent. What kind of managerial thinking can it be to start off a season &#8212; indoor or outdoor, festive or routine &#8212; with the Brahms D-minor Piano Concerto, beginning as it does with the death howl of a wounded mastodon and ending on a similar note nearly an hour later?
</p>
<p>   But then came last week&#8217;s concert, turned noble not only by the sunset over Tanaka‘s pretty piece, but by some terrific music making under the Philharmonic&#8217;s new assistant conductor, Yasuo Shinozaki, whose praises I had sung once before when he took over Hans Vonk‘s scheduled Beethoven program during the winter season. This time Shinozaki conducted the Beethoven ”Eroica,“ and was joined by Emanuel Ax and his wife, Yoko Nozaki, in the unadulterated bliss of Mozart&#8217;s Two-Piano Concerto: a lot of E-flat major for one evening, but a notable concert on any level. In its own eloquent way, however, this event pointed up what could very well be wrong about the whole concept of these Bowl programs, at least the TuesdayThursday series that constitute the classical (once known as ”Symphonies Under the Stars“) side of the operation.
</p>
<p>   The plan &#8212; two programs a week under guest conductors, some of them previously unknown to the orchestra and most of them granted a mere three or four hours of rehearsal on the morning of the concert to make the acquaintance of the orchestra and make them acquainted with the music &#8212; is what is most wrong about the Bowl, far more so than the informal atmosphere, the picnicking and the copters overhead. The attendance may be paltry compared to the weekend programs of show tunes and fireworks, but it still often reaches two or three times the capacity of any indoor hall. It‘s a family crowd with plenty of youngsters, the very people the Philharmonic should be trying hardest to reach if it is ever going to supplant the Thursday-night and Friday-matinee walking dead during the winter season. For that reason, among many, these are the people who should be getting absolutely superb, involving, thrilling music making, on the level of the Salonen programs still to come, or on the level of Shinozaki&#8217;s Beethoven last week. That performance, by the way, drew cheers. Even at the maligned Bowl, some people can be counted on to know what they‘re hearing.
</p>
<p>    Shinozaki, 30, is a find. My spies in the orchestra tell me that he is well-liked and well-admired. His contract with the Philharmonic runs only another year; his career &#8212; concerts in his native Japan and also in Finland, where Salonen has been beating his drum &#8212; is nicely taking shape. He came to this one concert &#8212; why only one? &#8212; with the advantage over most of the season&#8217;s guest-conducting roster in that he knew the players and they him. That showed, even through the Bowl‘s still-primitive amplifying system; this was poised, eloquent playing, exuberant but well-mannered, and when the brass section took up for the last time the grand tune of the ”Eroica“ finale, you couldn&#8217;t help wanting to stand up and sing along.
</p>
<p>    What a work, that ”Eroica“! The best performances &#8212; and this was one &#8212; respond most of all to the incredible momentum of the piece, the rising dramatic curve that is differently shaped in each of the four movements, but produces each time a breathless tension. The first movement sounds that famous dissonance &#8212; an intruding C-sharp in an E-flat context &#8212; and requires an enormous time scale to set matters straight; we‘re something like 15 minutes into that movement before we even learn the full shape of the opening theme. The slow movement guides us to the brink of tragedy, shines an occasional shaft of C-major white light through the gloom, but ordains howls of pain from the trumpets as the music simply shatters, there in the thin, chill air. The finale takes us at first all the way back to Square One, and builds its new tune, one note at a time, from muttered fragments. The same thing happens, more famously, in the Ninth Symphony; here, in the Third, Beethoven had already achieved his mastery of music as drama. Eventually the finale achieves some kind of epiphany, with the last outpouring that &#8212; even more than the famous chorale in that other masterwork six symphonies later &#8212; sounds an anthem of redemption for all mankind.
</p>
<p>   The great performances send you home exhilarated, with nothing but the ”Eroica“ on your mind for hours and days to come. As I was saying, this was one.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>A Loss of&#160;Originality</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2002/07/a-loss-of-originality/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2002/07/a-loss-of-originality/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 17 Jul 2002 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=401</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[The passing in recent weeks of Ralph Shapey (at 81) and Earle Brown (at 75) &#8212; strong-willed American composers, originals both, unalike in style but comparable in stature &#8212; inundated me in another wave of the nostalgia that is one of the more benevolent afflictions of old age. Musical New York in the 1960s &#8212; [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>The passing in recent weeks of Ralph Shapey (at 81) and Earle Brown (at 75) &#8212; strong-willed American composers, originals both, unalike in style but comparable in stature &#8212; inundated me in another wave of the nostalgia that is one of the more benevolent afflictions of old age. Musical New York in the 1960s &#8212; when both men were casting long shadows, and mine was considerably shorter &#8212; was wonderfully astir. New names carried new hopes: Pierre Boulez, Lincoln Center, the National Endowment. Every month, or so it seemed, there was something new from Shapey, most of it for small groups performing at the New School or Carnegie Recital Hall: bristling, fierce, ill-tempered pieces (like the man, who described himself as a ”radical traditionalist“). In 1969 he came to the conclusion that the world didn‘t deserve his music, and he withdrew it all from circulation in what turned out to be a seven-year embargo. There was lots of it on records at that time, however. Now thereisn&#8217;t nearly enough.
</p>
<p>    Earle Brown in those years was best known as a John Cage co-conspirator, part of that marvelous mutuality known as the New York School, in which composers and artists &#8212; Cage, Morton Feldman, Christian Wolff, Robert Rauschenberg &#8212; shared ideas and inventions. Brown‘s music had begun to circulate worldwide. In 1964, Leonard Bernstein and the New York Philharmonic embarked on an ”Avant-Garde Festival“ with which neither he nor the orchestra was capable of coping; Brown&#8217;s Available Forms II, an ”open-form“ work using chance operations and two conductors, was on one program, cynically introduced by Bernstein and miserably performed. ”Mr. Bernstein tried everything short of a Flit gun to kill off the avant-garde movement in music . . .“ was the way I began my review in the (sob!) Herald-Tribune the next day.
</p>
<p>   Bernstein‘s Philharmonic had little to offer the cause of musical progress, as did the other components of the slick supermarket for the arts that Lincoln Center soon became. (After Boulez acceded to Bernstein&#8217;s podium, his most adventurous programming took place when he moved the performances to other, less formal venues in the Village and elsewhere.) Shapey had come to New York (from his native Philadelphia) in 1945; like Brown, he fell in with the forward-moving crowd that included artists as well as musicians; Willem de Kooning was a close friend. So was Stefan Wolpe, the expatriate self-willed iconoclast who took Schoenberg‘s 12-tone methods into strange, intensely emotional regions.
</p>
<p>   Shapey&#8217;s music from the start seemed to reflect that same combination of high passion and harmonic abstruseness. The music I most remember from those years was pretty scary stuff, jabbing and restless, with a powerful oratorical sense, especially in the music he wrote to celebrate the Israeli nationhood. Later on he moved to Chicago, where for his last 27 years he led a chamber ensemble devoted to new music, and taught composition &#8212; memorably, according to students I‘ve spoken to. He never lost the power to make waves.
</p>
<p>   That was conclusively proved in 1992, and it spawned a tidal wave of responses and commentaries in newspapers throughout the country. The Pulitzer Prize music jury &#8212; George Perle, Roger Reynolds and Harvey Sollberger &#8212; unanimously chose Shapey&#8217;s Concerto Fantastique for that year‘s award. However, the Pulitzer board rejected that recommendation, choosing instead the jury&#8217;s second choice, The Face of the Night, the Heart of the Dark by Wayne Peterson &#8212; whom you‘ve never since heard of, and neither have I. The music jury responded with a public statement avowing that they had not been consulted and that the board was not professionally qualified to make such a decision. The board responded that ”The Pulitzers are enhanced by having, in addition to the professional&#8217;s point of view, the layman‘s or consumer&#8217;s point of view.“ The board did not rescind its decision.
</p>
<p>   (You can, if you wish, invoke that event to date the start of the whole dumbing-down process that has now spread through the classical-music industry. It was recently manifested at the Hollywood Bowl, by the way, when John Williams led the Los Angeles Philharmonic in what was listed &#8212; and described in program notes &#8212; as Copland‘s Lincoln Portrait but which actually consisted of only the last five minutes of that 15-minute piece.)
</p>
<p>    Brown, already a strong-minded, innovative composer with a background as well in jazz and mathematics, was invited by Cage to join the New York circle in 1952. Jackson Pollock&#8217;s painting methods had also been an early influence; throughout his career, Brown worked in a complex of attitudes toward musical freedom vs. musical discipline. Like Cage, he became fascinated with alternative forms of musical notation; both men produced manuscripts that deserve regard as artworks in themselves. Unlike some of Cage‘s works, however, Brown&#8217;s musical notation &#8212; squares, graphs, squiggles and actual notes &#8212; gave the performers specific information about pitch and rhythm, as well as information about when to ignore that kind of information and take off on their own.
</p>
<p>    Everything fascinated him. As a teenager he fell in love with Charles Ives‘ Concord Sonata and wore out the one copy available at the local shop; studying engineering and math at college in Boston, he played trumpet with big bands on weekends and later befriended the legendary Zoot Sims. Every early experience seemed to find its place in his own art later on: the Abstract Expressionist painters, Merce Cunningham&#8217;s choreography, Gertrude Stein‘s poetry, Henri Bergson&#8217;s philosophy. In 1980 he was at CalArts &#8212; for one of several visits &#8212; and oversaw a performance of his Calder Piece, extraordinary pan-sensual music for percussionists beating the bejesus out of 100 instruments that included a sculpture created by Calder for the occasion. Hearing it contributed to my own decision to remain in California.
</p>
<p>   If Cage‘s impact on the avant-garde community was basically philosophical, Brown seemed to recognize the need for contact with the outside world. To this end he founded the remarkable if short-lived label Time-Mainstream, whose 18 LPs gave American record buyers their first hearings of the music of the new Europeans Nono, Maderna, Kagel and Boulez, along with several Americans, in definitive performances. As president of the Fromm Music Foundation, he commissioned works by almost every major American composer you&#8217;d want to name.
</p>
<p>   Skier, tennis whiz, aviation buff, collector of Porsches and first editions of Gertrude Stein, Earle Brown remained restless and joyous, even as poor health clouded his last few years. As with Shapey, too little of his music is readily at hand: a piano collection on New Albion and a valuable disc on Newport Classic covering 25 years of music for small ensemble &#8212; elegant, iridescent, not immediately friendly but generous at repaying the effort. Conflict note: I wrote the program booklet. But I didn‘t write the music.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Dim Future, Bright&#160;Past</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2002/07/dim-future-bright-past/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2002/07/dim-future-bright-past/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 10 Jul 2002 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=400</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Clouds of gloom thicken around the classical-music landscape, and around classical recording most of all. The major labels have so cut back their activities in this area that the few important releases in recent months &#8212; Simon Rattle&#8217;s Gurrelieder on EMI, say, or Martha Argerich‘s Schumann (of which more later) or the Emersons&#8217; set of [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Clouds of gloom thicken around the classical-music landscape, and around classical recording most of all. The major labels have so cut back their activities in this area that the few important releases in recent months &#8212; Simon Rattle&#8217;s Gurrelieder on EMI, say, or Martha Argerich‘s Schumann (of which more later) or the Emersons&#8217; set of the Shostakovich quartets on DG &#8212; seem more like lucky accidents than evidence of an ongoing caring about the serious repertory. Only the smaller labels &#8212; ECM, Nonesuch, Bridge, New Albion &#8212; operate as if such caring were still possible; I note with pleasure that none of those labels include in their catalogs such redundancies as yet another Beethoven Nine.
</p>
<p>    The future is bleak, but the past survives gloriously. The remarkable Naxos label, which began life as a purveyor of standard repertory in bargain-basement performances at bargain-basement prices, now devotes a fair portion of its monthly releases to reissues of old repertory, some from the very dawn of electrical recording. The basic Naxos price has moved up a couple of notches &#8212; to $7.99 from an initial $5.99 &#8212; but the stuff available in its ”historical“ catalog is truly remarkable. Recent releases include several concertos by the legendary (and much revered) British pianist who went under the single name of Solomon: the Tchaikovsky First, the Beethoven Third, a not-all-that-dreary effort by Sir Arthur Bliss, along with Solomon‘s performance of the F-minor Fantasy that may be my all-time favorite recorded Chopin. On Naxos, too, there is a garland of lighter stuff: two whole discs of Britain&#8217;s beloved belter Gracie Fields, a disc of the real Ivor Novello to fill you in on the character in Gosford Park, and, best of all, a disc by the Comedian Harmonists, the mythic German vocal group disbanded by Hitler. Until you‘ve heard the Harmonists in their all-vocal rendition of the Barber of Seville Overture, your musical education is not yet complete.
</p>
<p>   On Naxos, too, there are operas: the first generation of complete electrical recordings turned out in Italian recording studios around 1930 under the workmanlike leadership of the likes of Lorenzo Molajoli and Carlo Sabajno, remarkably restored by another of music&#8217;s authentic heroes, the blind American tonmeister Ward Marston, whose program notes describing his ”rescues“ of ancient sounds imprisoned on scratchy old 78-rpm discs read like tales of high adventure.
</p>
<p>   I spent an evening recently with two sets of Verdi‘s Il Trovatore: the new Sony release from La Scala, apparently rushed out because its tenor, Salvatore Licitra, is the ”hot“ new guy who stood in for Pavarotti at the Met a few weeks ago; and the Naxos set from La Scala in 1930 whose tenor, Francesco Merli, had a solid if unremarkable career in several houses here and abroad. The two performances, recorded quality aside, sound like two completely different operas. Here is Merli battering his way through ”Di quella pira,“ holding onto the high notes like there&#8217;s no tomorrow (but transposing the aria down to B from the written C), the voice a thing of sweat and gristle and even, for all anyone can tell, a few spurts of blood; Molajoli‘s orchestra stumbling and wheezing, with the chorus off in, perhaps, Sardinia.
</p>
<p>   This is the old, traditional Verdi of the people&#8217;s theater, and maybe anyone who tried that style today would be booed off the stage. What we have instead is the admirably correct young Licitra, in C major as written, joined by Riccardo Muti‘s orchestra in all the notes that Verdi wrote and none that he didn&#8217;t. The new performance sounds good and probably is good, but there is something that pours off that ancient Naxos set &#8212; and the Ballo in Maschera with Beniamino Gigli, and the Forza del Destino with nobody in particular &#8212; that may deny us the dimension of digital stereo recording but adds another unwritten dimension that, I contend, belongs to Verdi‘s music along with all those correct notes. And this, I remind you, at eight bucks a shot.
</p>
<p>    For quite a few dollars more, there is Andante.com and its growing ”boutique“ of reissues &#8212; a serendipitous assemblage of bygone recordings and radio broadcasts &#8212; nicely packaged in three- or four-disc albums at $18 per disc, available through the Internet. Again, as with Naxos&#8217; Verdi, some of the interest here is the preservation of bygone performance attitudes: depressingly bloated Bach performances under Willem Mengelberg, Leopold Stokowski and Serge Koussevitzky, framed by performances under Adolf Busch (with Rudolf Serkin at the piano) that represent early stirrings of the move toward historically informed musicianship. Another set, of performances by the mercurial Mengelberg and his Concertgebouw Orchestra of Amsterdam, is a trove of ecstatic overstatement &#8212; the greatest Les Preludes ever, with the Concertgebouw Orchestra‘s 1929 brass section storming the heavens; the Tchaikovsky Fifth with blatant cuts in the finale that actually improve that sprawling movement. Ernest Bloch&#8217;s music, teetering these days on the brink of obscurity, is handsomely remembered in two separate sets: the Violin Concerto in a collection of Joseph Szigeti performances and the Piano Quintet in an album celebrating the legendary Pro Arte String Quartet, with the great Alfredo Casella as pianist in this one work.
</p>
<p>    Some of the choices are, let‘s say, strange; a Stravinsky-led set includes the wobbly, watery Paris recordings (Les Noces, Pulcinella, the Octet) that he would redo in better sound later on. A set from the Vienna Philharmonic wastes two discs on a 1957 Herbert von Karajan Bruckner Eighth to join his three performances already available. A ”Schubert Chamber Music“ set doesn&#8217;t contain a single string quartet. Most curious is a Schumann miscellany that includes two oddly mannered performances of Carnaval (Serge Rachmaninoff and Leopold Godowsky), Alfred Cortot‘s immensely poetic Papillons, and a preponderance of the playing of lesser Schumanniacs Claudio Arrau and Yves Nat.
</p>
<p>   Better than any of the above is a wonderful Schumann program on a new EMI disc preserving a concert that took place in Nijmigen, the Netherlands, in 1994, involving Martha Argerich and several instrumentalists in a heart-to-heart program. It includes the Piano Quintet, the B-flat Variations and other chamber works. Argerich is, of course, the enkindling spirit, and it burns bright on this occasion. The peculiar mix of fantasy and benevolent discipline, which shines forth in the Piano Quintet above all of Schumann&#8217;s instrumental music, is exactly mirrored in the Argerich sensibility &#8212; here, and in her other recorded Schumann. As with those old opera singers transfigured by Verdi, Argerich and Schumann come together in an annealing fire.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Not With a Bang but a&#160;Whisper</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2002/07/not-with-a-bang-but-a-whisper-2/</link>
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		<pubDate>Wed, 03 Jul 2002 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=399</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Tchaikovsky here, Turandot there: The music season soared toward its final days at full volume, on grand, swooping wings. At the close, however, there was exquisite quietude. Sitting last weekend in the courtyard of that architectural wonder, the Rudolf Schindler house in West Hollywood, with Schindler&#8217;s stark, simple structural lines dwarfed by trees and tall [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Tchaikovsky here, Turandot there: The music season soared toward its final days at full volume, on grand, swooping wings. At the close, however, there was exquisite quietude. Sitting last weekend in the courtyard of that architectural wonder, the Rudolf Schindler house in West Hollywood, with Schindler&#8217;s stark, simple structural lines dwarfed by trees and tall bamboo, you could imagine yourself in some remote, moonlit forest, with the sounds of John Cage‘s Sonatas and Interludes for prepared piano resounding like a gamelan off in the next village.
</p>
<p>    I am not always sure that listening to Cage&#8217;s music is the best way to grasp his unique and important art. There are times when the sounds that emerge from, say, packing boxes lightly tapped, or carrots in a food processor, or a solo violin playing music so convoluted that Cage himself needed a computer to explain it &#8212; ”the sound of lettuce wilting,“ said a friend, of the Freeman Etudes &#8212; are less enchanting in themselves than the pronouncements of the man who demanded their place in the musical firmament. Yet there is a body of music from Cage‘s 50-plus years as music&#8217;s irritant and guiding spirit that is simply, directly and truly beautiful, and this hourlong set from the early years (1946&#8211;48) &#8212; a single monument formed out of 20 small, lapidary, perfectly formed pieces &#8212; hung in the night air at Schindler like an epiphany, a benevolence. James Tenney, a onetime Cage disciple and now at CalArts, preceded his elegant performance with Cage‘s most famous single piece, the 4&#8217;33” &#8212; not a silent work, as some believe, but a work for silent pianist and the surrounding audible ambiance. The repertory of “involuntary” sounds this time included a crying baby and a Spanish-language TV close by and a small plane up above &#8212; a foretaste of the Hollywood Bowl concerts that kick off a new music season as you read these words.
</p>
<p>    By the most common measurements, the mix this season has been the usual hope, revelation and exasperation. Under its new artistic management, the Los Angeles Opera was stunningly reborn in early September: reborn in the orchestra pit under Valery Gergiev and &#8212; a couple of days delayed by 911 &#8212; the company‘s new principal conductor, Kent Nagano; reborn in repertory &#8212; finally a Russian opera, Wagner, Schoenberg, even Bach; reborn in newly funded security resting in part upon Albert Vilar&#8217;s zillions. Not everything went as planned, of course; it never does. Reports of Vilar‘s dwindling fortunes continue to circulate; the pie-in-the-sky George Lucas&#8211; designed Ring, originally slated for next year, has been put off until Wotan knows when; the 2002-03 season is upon us without a sure director announced for either opening or closing nights. Still, the splendid Nagano-led performances &#8212; Lohengrin, the Berlin visitors with Schoenberg&#8217;s Moses und Aron, and the closing BartokPuccini double bill &#8212; were enough to offset Achim Freyer‘s lurid misconception of Bach&#8217;s B-minor Mass, or the wretched pairs of principals that made it impossible to judge the new ending Luciano Berio had fashioned for Nagano‘sTurandot.
</p>
<p>    The Opera&#8217;s Moses und Aron was actually the season‘s major Schoenberg event, even though the anniversary celebration (50 years dead) was nominally motivated by the Philharmonic. That visionary organization, however, backed away from the grittier atonal repertory (Erwartung, for example, or the Variations for Orchestra, the Violin Concerto or larger chamber works like the Serenade) and wasted everybody&#8217;s time with the hopeless early Pelleas und Melisande. The best of the Philharmonic‘s Schoenberg celebration was actually the Green Umbrella concert, culminating in Esa-Pekka Salonen&#8217;s rapturous reading of the First Chamber Symphony. The concomitant Shostakovich event, which promises all 15 symphonies, under Salonen, is likely &#8212; strange to relate &#8212; to prove more revelatory. It will be interesting to note Salonen‘s take next season on the Fifth (May 2), which he once swore to conduct only over his own dead body.
</p>
<p>   Three string quartets visiting the County Museum&#8217;s Monday Evening series brought strong programs and played them beautifully: the Parisii with Schoenberg‘s Third Quartet, the Artemis and Penderecki with each of Ligeti&#8217;s two quartets apiece, the Penderecki also with the deep, convoluted, elegant Second Quartet of Szymanowski, which I must get to know better. Jeff Kahane‘s L.A. Chamber Orchestra delivered the best performance of a Haydn Symphony (No. 102) that I&#8217;ve heard in years, and the soloist that night was the astonishing Thomas Quasthoff. I followed that program from Glendale‘s Alex Theater to Manhattan&#8217;s Carnegie Hall and was delighted by the performance level both times. (Before you get ready to look down your nose at this summer‘s Bowl programs, note that Quasthoff is due to sing Mahler there, with Salonen and the Philharmonic, on August 13.)
</p>
<p>    And next season? An amazing tome dropped on my desk last week, listing upcoming events at UCLA &#8212; at Royce Hall, Schoenberg Hall and points in between. After a couple of so-so seasons, the school&#8217;s Performing Arts Department seems to have zoomed into orbit, with a phenomenal agenda that includes theater &#8212; a Robert Wilson&#8211;directed Woyzeck (!) with Tom Waits‘ music (December 4) &#8212; dance galore and a fabulous musical array. From a quick glance at promised music, I noted a recital (October 9) by the powerful mezzo Lorraine Hunt Lieberson (who will also sing in John Adams&#8217; El Niño with the Philharmonic in March), the superb American conductor David Robertson (Santa Monica&#8211;born) leading his Orchestre National de Lyon (February 2), the new Steve Reich&#8211;Beryl Korot multimedia work (February 27-28), and both Bach passions (April 4-5) with Masaaki Suzuki and his Bach Collegium&#8211;Japan, whose fame already approaches legendary status.
</p>
<p>    Will this leave time to cruise down to Costa Mesa when the Eclectic Orange Festival comes up with Osvaldo Golijov‘s Pasion Segun San Marco in October? Or to the L.A. Opera&#8217;s War and Peace later that month? Or the Master Chorale (also reborn under Grant Gershon‘s leadership) singing Poulenc, Gorecki and Arvo Part in the newly consecrated Cathedral of Our Lady of the Angels in November? Or Reich&#8217;s spellbinding The Desert Music later in the season? Or Pierre Boulez and Mitsuko Uchida at the Philharmonic‘s final Dorothy Chandler Pavilion subscription concert in May? Or their visit the following week to the Ojai Festival?
</p>
<p>   Ho-hum, a well-known local critic once remarked; nothing ever happens in this cultural desert of a plastic lotus of a La-La Land. And where is he now?</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Sir Donald and His Ideal&#160;Listener</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2002/06/sir-donald-and-his-ideal-listener/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2002/06/sir-donald-and-his-ideal-listener/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 26 Jun 2002 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=398</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Sir Donald Francis Tovey changed my life &#8212; for the better, I like to think. I was 20, as hapless a premed as ever walked along ivied walls. Somebody in physics lab showed me a slim volume he‘d just acquired: Essays in Musical Analysis by Sir Donald Francis Tovey. The title was forbidding; the prose [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Sir Donald Francis Tovey changed my life &#8212; for the better, I like to think.
</p>
<p>    I was 20, as hapless a premed as ever walked along ivied walls. Somebody in physics lab showed me a slim volume he‘d just acquired: Essays in Musical Analysis by Sir Donald Francis Tovey. The title was forbidding; the prose was warm, welcoming and congenial. They weren&#8217;t ”musical analyses“ as I understood the term &#8212; first movement in the tonic, modulating to the dominant via enharmonic bridge, etc. They were, instead, program notes about specific pieces that Sir Donald would conduct with his Reid Orchestra in Edinburgh. ”This is what I plan to conduct,“ they told his good Scots readers, ”and these are my thoughts to take the music closer.“ In my friend‘s book (one volume of a set of six), I read about Antonin Dvorak&#8217;s particular kind of sublimity, ”which trails clouds of glory not only with the outlook of the child but with the solemnity of the kitten running after its tail.“ I read about one of the crabby tunes in the Cesar Franck Symphony ”striding grandly, in its white confirmation dress.“ I read, spellbound, through 45 pages of glowing, adoring prose about why Beethoven‘s Ninth Symphony is what it is. This, I decided, is what I want to do, and to hell with ”my son the doctor.“
</p>
<p>   What Tovey wrote about was not only the structure of a piece of music; his focus was on the aura that forms in and around a piece of music after it leaves the printed page and makes contact with the listener out front. His ideal listener, he proclaimed time and again, was the person not necessarily trained in music, but endowed with a willing ear to accept a musical experience and examine the results. He enlisted the dangerous allies of simile and metaphor to make and to illustrate his points, but he used them as convincingly as any writer about music before or since his time, including &#8212; dare I say it? &#8212; our own Lenny. To my dying day, perhaps beyond, I will not get past a certain spot in the Beethoven Ninth without hearing Tovey&#8217;s ”flashes of red light“ from the trumpets. They‘re there.
</p>
<p>   And now, 62 years after Tovey&#8217;s death, he is with us again in astonishing plenitude, in The Classics of Music, a volume huge in girth (864 pages) and in price ($95), a treasury of never-before-published Tovey: more Essays in Musical Analysis, formal lectures, radio talks, reviews, even an account of a newfangled piano that could play quarter-tones. An editor at Oxford University Press, Michael Tilmouth, persuaded the Tovey archive at the University of Edinburgh to make its contents available for publication; after Tilmouth‘s death, his work was completed by David Kimbell and Roger Savage. The result is a compendium so wise, so friendly, so essential as to heap further disgrace on the sorry pile that has in recent years come to clutter the far corner of my worktable &#8212; ghastly small tomes with titles like Who&#8217;s Afraid of Classical Music, or Getting Opera. On every page, amid essays on Haydn Quartets, Mozart arias and Tovey‘s own piano concerto, amid a set of Beethoven lectures and another set with the prickly title ”Music in Being,“ and a broadcast talk called ”Music and the Ordinary Listener,“ Tovey&#8217;s importance lies in his wise love of his art and his uncanny skill at sharing it.
</p>
<p>    Tovey (1875&#8211;1940) composed, and enjoyed a fair career as a pianist. His A-major Piano Concerto (available on Hyperion) isn‘t a bad academic exercise, and there&#8217;s a clarinet sonata that‘s even prettier. By 1905 his writing career had taken hold, and he was asked to contribute major articles &#8212; including one, extraordinary, called ”Music“ &#8212; to the great 11th edition of Encyclopaedia Britannica. These have been published by Oxford from time to time but are probably no longer easy to find. (The good news here is that the entire 11th Britannica is now available for download: <a href="http://www.1911encyclopedia.org.">www.1911encyclopedia.org.</a>)
</p>
<p>    From Tovey I learned to bear blatant prejudices as a badge of honor. The violinist Joseph Joachim was his close friend, and certainly shaped Tovey&#8217;s strong bias toward the music of Brahms and, consequently, away from the Wagnerian camp. On a single page among the ”Essays,“ Tovey manages to demolish the whole line &#8212; Wagner to Bruckner to Mahler &#8212; with a couple of pen strokes. There follow eight pages of kindly encomium vested upon two orchestral ”poems“ &#8212; The Riders of the Sidhe and Springtime on Tweed &#8212; by a certain William Beatton Moonie, on whom obscurity has cast its pall. Then come some 30 pages of exquisite insights into the inner workings of a sheaf of Mozart works in which at least two &#8212; the last piano concerto and the violinviola concertante &#8212; are dealt with briefly but with heartwarming insight; ”galloping at his laziest,“ we read, ”Mozart never allows his square rhythms to fall into monotony.“
</p>
<p>   Tovey the critic fought the same battles that we fight today, with only the names changed. Before the legendary Arthur Nikisch, the glam conductor of his time, Tovey stands forth in mingled admiration and horror: ”a splendid interpreter of all that is obviously dramatic, his mind is almost a blank on matters of quiet poetic intensity of feeling.“ He wrestles mightily with the looming specter of the upstart Richard Strauss. ”There is nothing unusual,“ he grieves, upon the advent of Ein Heldenleben, ”in the spectacle of a man of genius associating his own finest art with all that is pretentious and undignified.“
</p>
<p>   As befalls every observer of the cultural scene, Tovey witnessed an occasional cloud across his crystal ball. Visiting the inventor Emanuel Moor to observe the ”duplex-coupler“ piano that could switch between tunings, Tovey ventured the prophecy that ”the ordinary pianoforte will be extinct as the Dodo in ten years.“ On the other hand, a report on the problems of maintaining a symphony orchestra (his own Edinburgh ensemble) &#8212; funding, adequate rehearsal time, the livelihood of the players &#8212; might have appeared in yesterday‘s headlines.
</p>
<p>   So, for that matter, could the very spirit that infuses this remarkable, indispensable, unaffordable musical ”witness for the defense“ (his words). The introduction to the first volume of Tovey&#8217;s Essays, the book that caused my pathway to swerve nearly six decades ago, ends with a statement of faith: ”While the listener must not expect to hear the whole contents of a piece of music at once, nothing concerns him that will not ultimately reach his ear either as a directly audible fact or as a cumulative satisfaction in things of which the hidden foundations are well and truly laid.“ Funny, but I still believe that.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>The Little Company that&#160;Can</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2002/06/the-little-company-that-can/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2002/06/the-little-company-that-can/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 19 Jun 2002 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=397</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[IT HAPPENED AGAIN. TWO WEEKENDS AGO, while the Los Angeles Opera was showing off the buying power of million-dollar budgets in its oversize Music Center playground, a few miles to the south there was the Long Beach Opera, the little company that could, demonstrating with equal impact &#8212; in a college auditorium a third the [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>
<font SIZE=3>IT HAPPENED AGAIN. TWO WEEKENDS AGO, while the Los Angeles Opera was showing off the buying power of million-dollar budgets in its oversize Music Center playground, a few miles to the south there was the Long Beach Opera, the little company that could, demonstrating with equal impact &#8212; in a college auditorium a third the size of the Dorothy Chandler Pavilion &#8212; the superior power of brains over brawn. That&#8217;s the dichotomy &#8212; David vs. Goliath, Mutt vs. Jeff, whatever &#8212; that enlivens the operatic scene hereabouts.</font></p>
<p>
<font SIZE=3>This year&#8217;s Long Beach opera was <i>Jenufa</i>, Leos Janácek&#8217;s 1903 weeper firmly rooted in the category of masterpieces too seldom broached; in anyone&#8217;s memory this may, indeed, have been the opera&#8217;s first professional staging in Southern California. The performance was recognizably Long Beach. The young, attractive lead singers, and the veterans in the character roles as well, behaved as if they were actually singing and listening to one another. (Compare this to the leads in the L.A. Opera&#8217;s <i>Turandot</i>, mostly engaged in serenading the second balcony.) Isabel Milenski (daughter of Michael, the company&#8217;s founder and general director) made intelligent use of the single, spacious set to create a forced perspective in tune with the sense of the plot. The sounds from the pit may have overpowered the singers from time to time, but the orchestral accents seemed very much in tune with Janácek&#8217;s own hard-edged, folklike, subtle language. On the way out I stopped, as I usually do, to arrange a return visit.</font></p>
<p>
<font SIZE=3>Call it experimental, call it conceptual, deconstructive or simply off-the-wall, the Long Beach Opera has in its 24 years learned to walk tightropes and hover on brinks of chasms unique among American companies. The very unpredictability of its offerings has earned it label acceptance. Walk out of an L.A. Opera performance and you&#8217;re bound to hear somebody grumbling about not renewing next year. Walk out of a Long Beach performance, in the company&#8217;s current home at the Carpenter Center at Cal State Long Beach, and the first thing you sense is a kind of wonderment mixed with delight.</font></p>
<p>
<font SIZE=3>Wonderment: It comes in all shapes and sizes at Long Beach. At the recent <i>Jenufa</i>, part of the novelty was that the production was actually set in the time and place &#8212; rural Bohemia circa 1890 &#8212; specified in the score. Compare that with last year&#8217;s <i>Elektra</i>, with Richard Strauss&#8217; loudmouthed dysfunctionals transported from ancient Crete to a beach house in, maybe, Malibu. Or with the 1999 <i>Bluebeard&#8217;s Castle</i>, set not in the L.A. Opera&#8217;s recent murky grotto but in a well-lit but seedy urban tenement. Or with the 1986 <i>Tales of Hoffmann</i>, relocated in a druggie den in Manhattan&#8217;s East Village.</font></p>
<p>
<font SIZE=3>To these adventurous heights the Long Beach Opera has ascended in slow and easy stages. Michael Milenski produced his first opera, <i>Madama Butterfly</i>, at 13, back home in Cortez, Colorado, and &#8220;knew from then on that that was what I wanted to do. Even my high school yearbook predicted I would end up directing the fleas in a circus.&#8221; He almost fulfilled that prophecy, in fact, landing a job after college as part of the apprenticeship network backstage at the San Francisco Opera, &#8220;driving a truck, typing and helping to put opera performances onto a stage.&#8221; From San Francisco, Milenski moved southward, where he collaborated with the San Jose Symphony on several operatic stagings.</font></p>
<p>
<font SIZE=3>Long Beach beckoned; a few civic leaders had, by the mid-1970s, sensed the value in some homegrown culture. After a few seasons of square opera for the folks of squaresville, however, it was time to face more distant horizons. In San Jose, Milenski had worked with a pair of iconoclastic stage directors who also happened to be twin brothers: Christopher and David Alden. In 1981, Christopher Alden came aboard as Long Beach&#8217;s director of production. The association bore its first fruit two years later; Alden&#8217;s production of Benjamin Britten&#8217;s <i>Death in Venice</i>, done in the small Center Theater in downtown Long Beach with almost no scenery but copious imagination, counts as the rebirth of the company. Both Aldens have used Long Beach to try out their brand of operatic hip, usually to excellent advantage. David returns next year to direct Handel&#8217;s <i>Ariadne in Crete</i>. You&#8217;ve never heard of it? Neither have I.</font></p>
<p>
<font SIZE=3>IN THE RUSTIC STUDIO BEHIND THE RAMbling Long Beach home that serves as office, Milenski, 60 &#8212; lightly bearded in the Don Johnson manner, his words a rich baritone that might serve as Oracle in some baroque fantasy &#8212; reminisces about financial crises, lousy reviews, diva walkouts: the usual hair shirt worn by opera impresarios the world over. He speaks confidently of another 25 years and then another. He describes the Long Beach Opera phenomenon as a kind of chain reaction.</font></p>
<p>
<font SIZE=3>&#8220;Choosing a repertory is actually fairly easy. We look at each other, think it&#8217;s weird, and then think it&#8217;s right. Roy Rallo, who began with us carrying coffee, directed the <i>Bluebeard</i> three years ago, and then he came to me with the idea of doing <i>Elektra</i>, which somehow seemed feasible. I&#8217;d never have done <i>Jenufa</i> if we hadn&#8217;t made good with <i>Elektra</i>; they&#8217;re both from about the same period, after all. It&#8217;s right for us to do Janácek operas; I felt ripped off when the L.A. Opera did <i>The Makropoulos Case</i>, because we could have done it so much better. The difference is between an opera that becomes one of nine in a big company&#8217;s season, and one of one when we can really focus on it. I wish we were doing <i>The Flying Dutchman</i> instead of L.A., because that&#8217;s the kind of story we can tell really well. The big companies are better off with <i>Lohengrin</i> or the<i> Ring</i>.&#8221;</font></p>
<p>
<font SIZE=3>Lisa Willson was the Jenufa, in a performance especially remarkable for her naturalness as a country girl in love but in trouble. Daniel Cafiero was the Steva, who had gotten her into the trouble; Roy Cornelius Smith was the loving Laca, who marries her anyway. All of them were new to Long Beach. Where did they come from?</font></p>
<p>
<font SIZE=3>&#8220;When you&#8217;ve been around as long as Long Beach Opera,&#8221; Milenski responds, &#8220;you&#8217;ve got spies. Rich Cordova, who conducted here in 1985, knew that I was looking for the right Jenufa for our stage, young and beautiful and able to act as well as sing. She and Rich were working in an <i>Ariadne auf Naxos</i> in Sarasota, so I flew down to Florida and there she was. We&#8217;re in good standing with the Herbert Barrett office in New York, one of the top concert managers; there&#8217;s always someone there who digs the kind of stuff we do, and so he found us the ideal Steva. Then somebody at Barrett remembered a young tenor in Chicago, so we got him on a plane at 7 p.m., and at 9:45 we got him into a rehearsal studio in New York &#8212; had to kick out a yoga class to make room &#8212; and I had my Laca.</font></p>
<p>
<font SIZE=3>&#8220;We also got our conductor, Andreas Mitisek, through the spy system. Peter Kazaras, who was in our <i>Eugene Onegin</i> years ago, met a young conductor in Vienna who had started an opera theater that was a lot like ours, and Peter got us together. Andreas and I found we shared a lot of the same thought process. Besides, he was willing to take on our <i>Indian Queen</i> &#8212; Purcell in a high-camp mariachi festival, as over-the-top as anything we&#8217;ve ever done. <i>Jenufa</i> was his fifth production for us, so we now think of him as part of the mix. We don&#8217;t agree on everything, of course; he likes Stravinsky, which I can&#8217;t abide. But we get along.&#8221;</font></p>
<p>
<font SIZE=3>One other thing Milenski talks of as not abiding is the current passion for supertitles to guide readers through the plots &#8212; even when the opera is in English. &#8220;There&#8217;s a constant struggle &#8212; word versus music. We do almost all our operas in English, and the ability to sing clear English is one of our criteria in casting. Why should you glue your attention on every single word ticker-taping across above the stage, when your real response should be what the music is doing with and to those words? That, after all, is what opera is about . . . or should be.&#8221;</font></p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>LONG BEACH OPERA&#160;REVIEW</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2002/06/long-beach-opera-review/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2002/06/long-beach-opera-review/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 17 Jun 2002 21:17:39 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Opera News]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=1799</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Aside from a couple of college-based productions of distant memory, Leos Janacek’s Jenufa has remained a history-book entry in the Los Angeles area, but little more. That, of course, makes it ideal fodder for the intrepid explorative force known as the Long Beach Opera. In two performances in mid-June and in  typical Long Beach style, [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Aside from a couple of college-based productions of distant memory, Leos Janacek’s <em>Jenufa</em> has remained a history-book entry in the Los Angeles area, but little more. That, of course, makes it ideal fodder for the intrepid explorative force known as the Long Beach Opera. In two performances in mid-June and in  typical Long Beach style, Janacek’s postromantic heartwarmer surged and glowed on the company’s small stage – the John and Karen Carpenter Center at Cal State Long Beach – reinforcing the reputation of Michael Milenski’s remarkable enterprise. By some distance the oldest active company in its area, Long Beach Opera now approaches its 25<sup>th</sup> year as the little company that could, and did, and does.</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">This year’s novelty – for a company that has after all  brought forth an <em>Elektra</em> set on the Malibu shore and a <em>Tales of Hoffmann</em> among East-Village druggies – was to locate this <em>Jenufa</em> exactly as specified in the libretto (and clearly defined in the rich folk accents of Janacek’s music). With Darcy Scanlin’s remarkable set – two farm buildings lying on their sides, with smoke-belching chimneys facing outward – the audience was obliged, in Isabel Milenski’s resourceful staging, to consider the action from two perspectives simultaneously.</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">In between, the indoor-outdoor performing space was further framed by sporadic faces at the farmhouse windows; the result was a kind of constant visible nervousness that accorded nicely with the twitches, the percussive outbursts, in Janacek’s wonderful score. Stage director Isabel Milenski, by the way, is the daughter of founder and general director Michael; this was her second production for the company. Whispers of nepotism, a common cross-current in Southern California operatic circles, can this time be stilled by the high intelligence of her work.</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">Lisa Willson was the Jenufa, in a performance especially remarkable for her naturalness as a country girl in love but in trouble. Daniel Cafiero was the Steva, who had gotten her into the trouble; Roy Cornelius Smith was the loving Laca, who marries her anyway. All three impressive young singers were new to Long Beach; Milenski’s efficient spy system had spotted them all at the Sarasota Opera. Katherine Ciesinski sang the stepmother Kostelnicka, and Kathryn Day, the Grandmother Buryja; both are company veterans. All shared an approach rare in big-time opera but ingrained at Long Beach: a convincing sincerity that made it actually look as if they were listening and singing to one another, not just to the seats out front.</p>
<p class="MsoPlainText"><span style="font-family:Palatino; font-size:12.0pt; "> Out front also was the splendid pit orchestra – sometimes overpowering if truth be told, but remarkably well-balanced in the way Southern California freelancers uniquely seem to manage even on a shoestring rehearsal schedule. Andreas Mitisek conducted, his fifth time out with the company. Another acquisition from Milenski’s spy network, Mitisek leads his own Vienna Opera Theater along ideals similar to those at Long Beach. </span></p>
<p class="MsoPlainText"><span style="font-family:Palatino; font-size:12.0pt; "> Brian Gantner’s English translation was employed, eloquent insofar as it could be heard above the torrents from the pit. Supertitles are, to Michael Milenski, a dirty word.</span> “<span style="font-family:Palatino; font-size:12.0pt; ">Why should you glue your attention on every single word ticker-taping across above the stage,” he says, “when your real response should be what the music is doing with and to those words? That, after all, is what opera is about…or should be.” He may have a point, and the work of his own company bears him out. </span></p>
<p class="MsoPlainText"><span style="font-family:Palatino; font-size:12.0pt; ">ALAN RICH</span></p>
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		<title>LOS ANGELES OPERA&#160;REVIEW</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2002/06/los-angeles-opera-review/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2002/06/los-angeles-opera-review/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Fri, 14 Jun 2002 21:14:52 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Opera News]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=1794</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Given the geographic proximity of the Los Angeles Music Center to the region’s other major cultural industry, you’d expect a close working relationship between the Los Angeles Opera and the surviving shards of the film industry. You’d be wrong, however; in the company’s seventeen years of operation, memories only of Herbert Ross’ spunky La Bohème [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Given the geographic proximity of the Los Angeles Music Center to the region’s other major cultural industry, you’d expect a close working relationship between the Los Angeles Opera and the surviving shards of the film industry. You’d be wrong, however; in the company’s seventeen years of operation, memories only of Herbert Ross’ spunky <em>La Bohème</em> and Bruce Beresford’s lurid, Hollywood-ized <em>Rigoletto</em> celebrate what should be an ongoing performing-arts entente.</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">At season’s end the ranks were memorably joined by William Friedkin (of <em>The Exorcist</em> and <em>The French Connection</em> acclaim) in a oddly-coupled odd couple of one-act operas: Bartók’s moody, mysterious <em>Bluebeard’s Castle</em> and Puccini’s deliriously wise <em>Gianni Schicchi</em>. Odd though the coupling may seem, Friedkin and designer Gottfried Pilz even reached out to proclaim both works cut from the same cloth. Both, after all, had had their premieres in 1918; both include – the Bartók at the start, the Puccini at the close – a spoken exhortation meant to be delivered in the language of the audience.</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">Samuel Ramey sang both title roles, vividly and with great intelligence; Kent Nagano conducted both operas in like virtue. Ths stage sets, too, were of a piece, cleverly so. A chandelier in the Bartók, collapsed on the ground with arms outstretched like a tarantula about to strike, gleamed in its proper place during the Puccini. A spiral staircase, a seeming passage between heaven and hell in the Bartók, became a handsome frame for Dante’s Florence later on (with the Signoria tower still  abuilding on the skyline, a pardonable anachronism to the modern dress onstage).  One of the ghosts of Bluebeard’s wives – airborne, uninhabited nighties actually – stayed on after intermission to fly once again as the departing spirit of old Buoso Donati breathing his last.</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">Mixture though it was, it proved one of the company’s best evenings, stirring, provocative and delightful. Bartók’s phantoms were mostly handled by Paul Pyant’s brilliant lighting designs – a dazzling wash of blood-red and gold, a chilling whiteness as Judith looked upon a lake of tears, an almost palpable blackness at the end as Judith walks to her doom and – a nice Friedkin touch – Bluebeard returns to the scene with yet another wife. Life, as well as death, goes on. A thread of sorrow, or perhaps regret, lent added color to Ramey’s lines; as the doomed Judith Denyce Graves mingled her usually mellow tones with a rather tentative delivery of the Hungarian text.</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">Visual anachronisms aside, the <em>Gianni Schicchi </em>was a wonderful amalgam of Italian roughhouse comedy (think <em>Big Deal on Madonna St.</em>) and loving wisdom – the latter most of all in Ramey’s richly comic subtlety. Danielle de Niese sang to her “Babbino” most prettily; as her suitor Rinuccio Rolando Villazon contributed a fine array of acrobatics both physical and vocal; the Zita was, of all people, the veteran Rosalind Elias, well into her second half-century in opera and sounding very well indeed.</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">Sharing the company’s final weeks was its first-ever stab at <em>Turandot</em> – a premiere, in fact, in more ways than one. Dissatisfaction with the opera’s final moments – fashioned by Franco Alfano, at Arturo Toscanini’s urging, after Puccini’s death – have dogged the work since its 1926 premiere. Solutions over the years have ranged from  grimly accepting Alfano as better than nothing, a pious obeisance to Puccini by ending where he had at the death of Liù, and various dodges in between.</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">Now, however, a rescue has been attempted by a more considerable force, the formidable, innovative composer Luciano Berio, whose new completion of <em>Turandot</em> received its first U.S. staging at these performances. In Berio’s estimate, based on certain inconsistencies in Puccini’s own notes as he struggled against terminal throat cancer to complete the score, Alfano’s ultimate error was to impose a kind of all-purpose grand-operatic cheesiness on both Puccini’s designs and those of his librettists, ending with the opera’s hit tune – the bit out of “Nessun dorma,” need you ask – blown up to Radio City-sized proportions.</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">While respecting the outlines of the Giuseppe Adami/Renato Simoni text, Berio has elected to lead the opera toward a subtler conclusion. Over a complex orchestral exegesis that includes brief memories of music previously heard, but moves them toward a complex orchestral summing-up comparable in place and purpose to the final interlude in Berg’s <em>Wozzeck</em>, the icy Princess melts and the Prince waxes warmer.  The music deepens in tone; Calaf’s ultimate revelation of his real name becomes, for Turandot, a moment of epiphany full of wonderment. The opera ends, for once in Puccini – and, perhaps, as an envoi to the composer dead too soon – somberly, quietly, with the choral exultations off in the distance.</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">It could work; it didn’t in Los Angeles through no fault of Berio’s. Gian-Carlo del Monaco’s direction (of a work in which his father had once held the stage), was a thing of darkness and slithering choruses. Just the look of the final scene – in a murky palace chamber that could have been someone’s attic –was enough to compromise the new music. In the two sets of principals only the Liù – Hei-Kyung Hong at first, then Svetla Vassileva – showed any reaction to the beauty of the role. Neither pair  of combatting lovers – Audrey Stottler and Franco Farina, Nina Warren and Ian de Nolfo – rose notably above the old-timey lurch’n’clutch yell’em down manner, seemingly unaware of the brave efforts of Kent Nagano’s out-shouted orchestra off in the distance.</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">Under the circumstances, judgment of Berio’s contribution to the stature of <em>Turandot</em>, an effort the world surely needs, should be deferred.  – ALAN RICH</p>
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		<title>Odd Couple Oddly&#160;Coupled</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2002/06/odd-couple-oddly-coupled/</link>
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		<pubDate>Wed, 12 Jun 2002 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=396</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[The on-again, off-again romance between the Los Angeles Opera and the other local industry &#8212; which sagged a while back as Hollywood&#8217;s Bruce Beresford turned Rigoletto into a lumpy hash &#8212; has now moved forward a couple of notches. William Friedkin‘s take on the double bill of one-acters currently at the Dorothy Chandler Pavilion &#8212; [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>The on-again, off-again romance between the Los Angeles Opera and the other local industry &#8212; which sagged a while back as Hollywood&#8217;s Bruce Beresford turned Rigoletto into a lumpy hash &#8212; has now moved forward a couple of notches. William Friedkin‘s take on the double bill of one-acters currently at the Dorothy Chandler Pavilion &#8212; running in repertory with Turandot, both offerings ending this weekend &#8212; may contain a trick or two too many, but the entertainment value overall is high. I had a good time there, and so should you.
</p>
<p>    It&#8217;s a strange pairing, Bartok‘s dark, restless psychodrama about the tormented Bluebeard and his latest wife, and Puccini&#8217;s delirious fleshing-out of Dante‘s mendacious rogue of a Gianni Schicchi. Friedkin has devised a hilarious sight gag to link the two. One of the ectoplasms of Bluebeard&#8217;s former wives &#8212; uninhabited airborne nighties right out of Disneyland‘s Haunted House &#8212; stays on past intermission as the dying Buoso Donati gives up the ghost at the start of Puccini&#8217;s opera. To end the Bartok, Friedkin has another marvelous device: As the bride Judith takes her place among the ghosts of the past, Bluebeard comes on the scene one more time with yet another bride. Life goes on, and so does death.
</p>
<p>   Gottfried Pilz‘s set for Duke Bluebeard&#8217;s Castle &#8212; a handsome spiral staircase and a collapsed chandelier that resembles a tarantula about to strike &#8212; serves the Gianni Schicchi as well, the staircase framing a view of Dante‘s Florence (with Giotto&#8217;s campanile still abuilding even though the costuming is more up-to-date) and the chandelier now properly hung. (Another built-in coincidence: The Bartok begins, and the Puccini ends, with spoken exhortations meant by each composer to be delivered in the language of the audience.)
</p>
<p>   Samuel Ramey‘s performances in the title roles of both operas greatly strengthen the coupling, as does Kent Nagano&#8217;s splendid musical leadership. Bartok‘s score grows in my own esteem; it has gradually made its way into the repertory, with recent performances hereabouts by the Long Beach Opera (set in a seedy urban tenement) and by Pierre Boulez and the Philharmonic in concert form. It is full of gorgeous musical events, even when its elements do not entirely fuse. By 1911 Bartok had come to share in the widespread (if not unanimous) adoration of Debussy&#8217;s Pelleas et Melisande; the declamation in his own opera &#8212; particularly the way the very shape of the vocal lines defines the conflicting personalities of its two characters &#8212; confirms his debt to the nine-years-older work. There is Debussy, too, in the surging orchestration, mingled with Bartok‘s growing mastery over the harsh, bright colors of his own Eastern European background. Ramey and Nagano, each in his own way, seemed wonderfully at home in both the verbal and musical language of this extraordinary work; less so Denyce Graves, who made nice sounds as the doomed Judith but had a way of making the language itself both flat and harsh.
</p>
<p>   The Gianni Schicchi &#8212; Puccini for people who don&#8217;t like Puccini &#8212; might have done with fewer pratfalls. Against the cavorting, galumphing Rinuccio of Rolando Villazon &#8212; hardly worthy of the Lauretta (Danielle De Niese) who had sung ”O mio babbino caro“ so prettily &#8212; there was Ramey‘s comic, beautifully modulated Schicchi. The excessive biz aside, Friedkin did a fine job in welding together a delightful unit. Among them, as the dowager Zita, there was of all people the veteran Rosalind Elias, 50-plus years into her singing career and no less lively now than when I heard her at the Met in the 1950s. Life, indeed, goes on.
</p>
<p>   Since I had felt that the first principals in the company&#8217;s new Turandot had somewhat compromised the production, and especially Luciano Berio‘s much-touted new ending for Puccini&#8217;s unfinished score, I stopped by last weekend to see if the second team might have done better. Different, perhaps, but hardly better: not so much the lurch ‘n&#8217; clutch of the first night‘s Audrey Stottler and Franco Farina; now the gasp &#8216;n‘ gargle of Nina Warren and Ian De Nolfo. Lordy, what sheer out-of-focus vocal ugliness expended on such promising dramatic substance! Again the Liu, also new this time, stole the show: Svetla Vassileva, small and utterly winning. I begin to suspect that this one role, above all else in an imperfect but potentially stirring opera, has the show-stealing capacity built in.
</p>
<p>    Thus ended the first year of the L.A. Opera as conceived and planned by Placido Domingo. Beyond question, it has been a step forward in repertory: the company&#8217;s first Russian opera, its first truly distinguished Wagner, a timid but commendable handshake to Schoenberg, the present double bill. Even some of the mistakes had their noteworthy sides: The hideous staging of Bach‘s B-minor Mass at least brought the legendary Achim Freyer to town, and the blatantly misconceived and bloated Merry Widow had its blameless side in Rodney Gilfry&#8217;s Danilo. The new connection with Berio could be significant; it will prove more so if it brings us some of his own past operatic successes, most of all Il Re in Ascolto, one of the great, wise, truly beautiful stage works of the past half-century.
</p>
<p>    There are problems on the horizon. One worries that too much hope has been pinned to the deep pockets of superpatron Alberto Vilar, in view of his own famous capriciousness, not to mention the uncertainty of the market since 911. The promised Lucas-designed Ring, which sounded too good to be true when it was first announced for 2003, now appears to be just that; the announcement of its delay (to 2006, was it?) came with the kind of backing-and-filling double talk that always sows distrust. Marta Domingo continues to cast her diminutive shadow; she will stage next season‘s Tales of Hoffmann, which will, at least, use Michael Kaye&#8217;s interesting new edition last seen here in 1988. If I had to pinpoint the most horrible operatic experience from the past season, it would be Ermanno Wolf-Ferrari‘s Sly, which the Metropolitan Opera dug out for Domingo: depressingly low-grade music, stupidly staged (by Marta Domingo) without even the most rudimentary sense of blocking or dramatic design. Does it loom on our horizon? Our only safeguard is that the winds generally blow from west to east.
</p>
<p>   Still, the more immediate horizon has Monteverdi&#8217;s Poppea to offer (again, in a Berio reworking), and our first-ever look at Prokofiev‘s War and Peace, with Russian performing forces by the gazillion occupying the territory at First and Grand, financed by Vilar and marshaled under Valery Gergiev&#8217;s baton. To start off, there‘s more Puccini, his Girl of the Golden West too long away, with the very promising Simone Young on the podium and Domingo as ”Meester Johnson of Sacramento.“ It couldn&#8217;t be all bad.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Terminations and&#160;Renewals</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2002/06/terminations-and-renewals/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2002/06/terminations-and-renewals/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 05 Jun 2002 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=395</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[The story of Terezin‘s music is well known: Hitler&#8217;s Nazis maintaining this one prison camp &#8212; Theresienstadt in German, Terezin in its native Czech &#8212; as a cultural showcase, composers and other artistic spirits encouraged to create and perform for a time and then dragged off to the killing chambers at Auschwitz. Some of the [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>The story of Terezin‘s music is well known: Hitler&#8217;s Nazis maintaining this one prison camp &#8212; Theresienstadt in German, Terezin in its native Czech &#8212; as a cultural showcase, composers and other artistic spirits encouraged to create and perform for a time and then dragged off to the killing chambers at Auschwitz. Some of the Terezin music was smuggled out in manuscript, survived, and has now been published, performed and recorded. It has also, of course, been celebrated in many Holocaust observances, but this has sometimes had the effect of reducing the actual stature of the music to sentimental objects that must be loved and honored for their very existence. I confess that I have on occasion been led to look on the Terezin repertory in this way &#8212; until the amazing Wednesday-night concert that began last week‘s 56th annual Ojai Music Festival.
</p>
<p>    That event was a “marathon” piano recital by the formidable Marino Formenti: four hours of astonishing music astonishingly played, ranging from Beethoven at 8 o&#8217;clock, Schubert shortly afterward, through three works from the Terezin repertory, to the 80 minutes of Morton Feldman‘s For Bunita Marcus, the airy mix of notes (few) and silences (many) that sent the exhausted crowd home shortly after midnight. The concert took place in the cramped precincts of Ojai&#8217;s Art Center; of the capacity crowd of 180 or so, perhaps half a dozen walked out during the Feldman. Formenti later reported that when he played the work in Vienna a smaller percentage left before the end. “But there were only 35 people there at the start,” he explained.
</p>
<p>   Two of the three Terezin works, the Sonata by Gideon Klein and the Sixth Sonata by Viktor Ullmann, were actually composed during imprisonment; Pavel Haas‘ Opus 13 Suite had been published a few years before its composer was sent to the camp. All three works were strong, forceful, beautifully shaped and teeming with imagination. Formenti performed them for what they were, not relics but real music. Hearing them played this way &#8212; the mingling of violence and sardonic humor in Ullmann&#8217;s Sonata, the clear and radiant slow movement of the Klein &#8212; it suddenly hit me that this music marked a point of termination in more ways than one. It was music whose composers were to be shortly marked for death. It was music whose style had also come to a deadly, if not dead, end.
</p>
<p>   That style is a dense, contrapuntal manner, still within the bounds of tonality but drawing a spiritual restlessness from a striking inner density. Contrapuntal lines come and go, and draw blood by colliding with one another. Quiet moments abound: a long melody of agonizing beauty in Gideon Klein‘s Sonata, floating high above a disturbed harmonic pinning. No composer of any consequence &#8212; none, at least, that I can name &#8212; carried this style forward. A few months after these three Terezin inmates met their deaths, the war ended, and composers apparently sensed the need for a new beginning. Soon there would be electronic music, musique concrete, total serialism, the computer. By the time the Terezin music came to light, it was already old-fashioned. The timing for a re-evaluation may be just right; Formenti&#8217;s performances showed the way. I told him of my surprise that so important a musician, putting forward so striking a repertory, goes unrecorded. “I‘m just as surprised,” was his answer.
</p>
<p>    Sunday morning&#8217;s concert, traditionally at Ojai a time for lighter fare, was taken over by the blatant pretense of Ute Lemper‘s cabaret-songs act (complete with barstool and wineglass to underscore the point) and Eliot Fisk&#8217;s guitar of similar motivation. The Emerson Quartet, performing in three concerts the final five quartets of Beethoven and the final three of Shostakovich, had this year‘s top billing, and they were indeed as splendid at their work as everybody knew they would be. Formenti&#8217;s three appearances were even more spectacular, if only because he was far less known to the crowd. In addition to the “marathon,” he gave a “family concert” of “Today‘s Music for Today&#8217;s Kids”: four brand-new works full of electronic trickery and, in the case of Georg Haas‘ wonderully resonant Hommage a Ligeti, of two pianos side by side, one of them tuned a quarter-tone lower than the other, on which Formenti performed simultaneously (!). (He had done the same with another spellbinding work in his debut concerts at LACMA two years ago.) He then repeated that program, with additions, at a grown-ups concert that afternoon. At the morning event he had invited the kids in the audience to come onstage and look at the gadgetry close up; the look of the slender, diminutive Formenti playing paterfamilias to a surging juvenile horde remains fixed as one of the festival&#8217;s visual astonishments.
</p>
<p>    Formenti is a consummate artist, whose scope expands at every new viewing. He hadn‘t delved into the established repertory before this visit. Now we have his Beethoven and Schubert to add to our estimation: the former&#8217;s fiery, cheekily capricious Opus 126 Bagatelles and the deep purple of Schubert‘s last sonata, composed mere weeks before his death. The latter work became, with Formenti, virtually a tone poem about fate and death: the left-hand trills like dark portents, a pronounced but controlled rubato in the first movement, as a weakened body fending off blows. The incredible moment in the slow movement where the mournful music in C-sharp minor sideslips to our amazement into a C-major far side of the moon seemed to stop everyone&#8217;s breath, the cherishable Formenti no less than the rest of us.
</p>
<p>   To close the weekend, the Emersons drew from the shadows the dark chills of Shostakovich‘s final quartet, the work the group had played last spring at UCLA at the core of the remarkable Noise of Time theatrical event. Even alone onstage, the work is pure theater: deep, pained melodic utterances that well up from a profound impulse beyond reckoning; a sculpture formed at the edge of silence. At the end these four marvelous musicians held the audience in a long time of responsorial silence, and the birds of Ojai framed the moment with their own golden thread. Then we all piled into our cars and made it back to reality.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Schickele&#160;Mix</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2002/05/schickele-mix/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2002/05/schickele-mix/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 29 May 2002 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=394</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[COMPOSER, PERFORMER, MEDIA HOST, writer and musicological avatar to the immortal P.D.Q. Bach: The marvel of Peter Schickele is not only the variety of his parts but also how well they all fit, the one to another. Composer/performers are a dime a dozen these days, judging from the press handouts and homemade CDs in my [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>
COMPOSER, PERFORMER, MEDIA HOST, writer and musicological avatar to the immortal P.D.Q. Bach: The marvel of Peter Schickele is not only the variety of his parts but also how well they all fit, the one to another. Composer/performers are a dime a dozen these days, judging from the press handouts and homemade CDs in my daily mail. What propels Schickele out to the front of the crowd is the awareness of music&#8217;s past, present and plausible future on which his multifarious activities rest.<br />
Last week&#8217;s concert at Zipper Hall, with Schickele participating &#8212; alongside the local-based Armadillo String Quartet and a clutch of soloists in a program of his music, including a couple of world premieres &#8212; was full of delight. More important, it was full of wisdom.</p>
<p>
It takes an exceptionally wise composer to offer, on a single evening, his own music drawn from influences as diverse as the Renaissance master Orlando di Lasso and the playing of country fiddlers near Schickele&#8217;s own home in upstate New York. A piece called <i>Delta Jukebox</i> merged the sounds of two bassoons and piano into a delicious Dixieland takeoff; a string quartet subtitled &#8220;A Year in the Country&#8221; became an engaging blend of love of nature (a deserving shelf-mate to Beethoven&#8217;s &#8220;Pastoral&#8221; Symphony) and solid Juilliard academe. Best of all was the <i>Serenade for Six</i>, created for the scoring of Schubert&#8217;s &#8220;Trout&#8221; Quintet plus bassoon, music that seeks to re-express the pure, blithe beauty of that bygone work and comes admirably close.</p>
<p>
Schickele&#8217;s music goes down easily, and stays put. Its outside sources are easy to spot; its easygoing charms are not beyond a touch of slickness. His spoken program notes are given to garrulity, and there are moments when the ghost of P.D.Q. peeks out between the &#8220;serious&#8221; lines. Next season Schickele has a residency with the Pasadena Symphony, whose conductor Jorge Mester has been a longtime participant in the comic programs; the many sides of his creative persona will be on view &#8212; glorious, hilarious and most welcome.</p>
<p>
The Philharmonic&#8217;s Chamber Music Society programs had ended the week before, up at the Skirball Center&#8217;s misdesigned and uncomfortable Ahmanson Hall. Bartók&#8217;s Second Quartet was the evening&#8217;s major work, in a taut, gripping performance by violinists Elizabeth Baker and Stacy Wetzel, violist John Hayhurst, and cellist David Garrett. I missed the sublime unity and manic drive the Penderecki Quartet had given the work at LACMA last month, but that would be asking too much from players assembled for this one occasion. The program was otherwise merely pleasant: Dohnanyi&#8217;s Serenade for string trio and, at the end, Dvorák&#8217;s G-major Quintet but without the &#8220;Notturno&#8221; movement that is the work&#8217;s highlight. The setting was merely unpleasant; I will attend future concerts at this venue only with the greatest reluctance. Just the problem of getting to one&#8217;s seat requires the skill of a tightrope walker. I overheard comparable ill will expressed by a number of longtime subscribers around me.</p>
<p>
WHAT IS THE WORST PIECE OF MUSIC in general circulation? I keep changing my mind, but after last week&#8217;s visit to Costa Mesa&#8217;s Performing Arts Center I think I&#8217;ll stick with Richard Strauss&#8217; <i>Alpine Symphony</i> for the time being. Carl St. Clair led his Pacific Symphony on a level of eloquence that the music itself never once attained; this, in case you haven&#8217;t heard, is an extremely good orchestra these days, under extremely good leadership. Seldom, however, has so much nobility of purpose been squandered on such ignoble merchandise.</p>
<p>
On a not-unrelated matter, the Los Angeles Opera finally has its <i>Turandot</i>, if anyone cares, its arrival last weekend enhanced by word of Luciano Berio&#8217;s much-touted new musical setting for the final scene (the icy Princess, raped by the unnamed Prince, learns to like it) for which the text exists but not Puccini&#8217;s music. Berio knows the Puccini manner; he has turned up the harmony one or two notches and created an orchestral summation<br />
in which some bits previously heard are worked into a complex new texture &#8212; comparable to the final exegesis in <i>Wozzeck</i> &#8212; and during which, on Saturday night at least, the two almost-in-love antagonists faced off, paid their obeisances to the body of the dead Liù, brandished daggers at one another and contrived to look busy as best they could. That might work with proper singing actors; Saturday&#8217;s audience, however, was obliged to countenance two<br />
oversize (but thunderously endowed in the voice department) opera singers doing the old clutch &#8216;n&#8217; lurch at each other. That, alas, was just plain silly, to the point that Berio&#8217;s contribution &#8212; clearly superior to Franco Alfano&#8217;s finale in common use up to now &#8212; was seriously compromised.</p>
<p>
Kent Nagano&#8217;s conducting was of his usual high standard; it is clearly a new era at the L.A. Opera when a conductor earns cheers before conducting a single note. The production &#8212; by Gian-Carlo del Monaco on Michael Scott&#8217;s massive, dark sets &#8212; doesn&#8217;t offend the eye until the last scene, in a drab and dreary throne room with choir stalls left empty while the chorus sings offstage. That chorus had been far more watchable crawling on its collective belly during the great moonrise music in Act 1. Audrey Stottler was the unwieldy Turandot; Franco Farina, a Calaf of comparable grace. Hei-Kyung Hong, the Liù, stole the show &#8212; an easy steal under the circumstances.</p>
<p>
The cheers that greeted Esa-Pekka Salonen&#8217;s <i>Foreign Bodies</i> in its Philharmonic premiere almost reached me in southern Indiana. There, in a town about the size of this page, I was taking in a sanity-restoring festival of old-timey hillbilly music marvelously played, and Purcell (the improbably silly but endearing <i>King Arthur</i>) at BLEMF, the Bloomington Early-Music Festival. After a couple of days with Salonen&#8217;s score, abetted by a recording a friend had snuck at the performance, I can understand the cheers, and await the work&#8217;s inevitable next time around. Immediately amazing is the detail, the intricate and exact placement of instruments as minutely specified on the printed page; this is the work of a composer with an astounding ear for sonority, rivaled in our time perhaps only by Pierre Boulez. On this incomplete evidence, I would still value Salonen&#8217;s <i>LA Variations</i> above this new piece, most of all for the way the former&#8217;s propulsion stems from the unfolding of the material itself rather than the  motoric energy that in the new work seems to be applied from outside. That, however, is an incomplete evaluation that time and further acquaintance will surely amend.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>When Fa Joins Mi . .&#160;.</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2002/05/when-fa-joins-mi/</link>
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		<pubDate>Wed, 22 May 2002 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=393</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[. . . the faithful flee: So goes the rhyme in support of equal temperament. Music, your old prof surely had you believe, draws its strength from its harmonic progressions, and they derive their strength from the set of falsities and compromises worked out in Bach&#8217;s time to enable composers to create cadences and chromaticisms [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>. . . the faithful flee: So goes the rhyme in support of equal temperament. Music, your old prof surely had you believe, draws its strength from its harmonic progressions, and they derive their strength from the set of falsities and compromises worked out in Bach&#8217;s time to enable composers to create cadences and chromaticisms in all 24 keys. There are, however, holdouts. Harry Partch used to proclaim that music started going wrong about A.D. 1000, and built his own instruments to rescue the art from the tamperers. Lou Harrison‘s music draws much of its strength from his flirtations with Asian scales. Anybody with access to a couple of transistors can prove that the 12 tones of the familiar chromatic scale are the mere base of the mountain, whose electronically attained peak is, as they say, outta sight.
</p>
<p>    You can&#8217;t drop in on new-music events nowadays without encountering some kind of challenge to the old, set-in-stone principles. Microfest 2002, the latest installment of an annual celebration of notes-between-notes, began on May 10 and continues in various venues through May 26, with Harrison himself, a birthday boy at 85, attending the May 25th event at Pierce College. At the County Museum the resident California EAR Unit dubbed its seasonal finale “Brownout” and trooped blithely across the audible spectrum. Five days later, on the same stage, the phenomenal Stefano Scodanibbio played spellbinding music on his string bass, the one instrument in the “traditional” family that rebels most clamorously against the captivity of “correct” tuning. As surcease the Philharmonic performed a whole program in D major &#8211;Brahms and Mahler &#8212; as if to proclaim that life persists in the realm of major, minor and the dominant-seventh chord. But there, too &#8212; in the slow movement of the Mahler First &#8212; the music draws delight from its tightrope acts, its purposeful “sour” notes on the edge of tonality.
</p>
<p>    Music of inequal temperament &#8212; and here I also include the whole range of the pre-Bach repertory in “historically informed” performance &#8212; does, of course, breed problems, for the ears of hearers and, I should think, players as well. Our Western ears (“Western” as in “civilization”) are conditioned from an early age to recognize the pull of a dominant chord resolving to a tonic; it‘s when that resolution is kicked out of context (as in Mozart&#8217;s glorious deceptive cadences) that great music thrives on its power to hold the attention, even to shock. The problems are surmountable, of course. I cherish my five-CD set (now, alas, out of print) of La Monte Young‘s Well-Tuned Piano, because rhythm and &#8212; yes &#8212; melody hold the attention by sheer energy during five hours of suspended, indeterminate harmony. Scodanibbio&#8217;s concert began with his Oltracuidansa, an hourlong piece for bass and prerecorded tape, which reached me because the spiky, dark forms wrapped around one another generated an infectious aggressiveness that accorded nicely with my usual expectations in hearing a new piece.
</p>
<p>    The EAR Unit concert was, again, full of noble if sometimes strenuous invention. The best piece &#8212; on first hearing, that is &#8212; was Nick Chase‘s OPUS, which sought to integrate the newly coined gadgetry of turntable manipulation into the familiar textures of the EAR&#8217;s madcap percussionists. The turntable stuff, which Chase himself played, wasn‘t just the needle-scratch torture I&#8217;ve heard (and unhappily endured) in a lot of hip-hop; these were recordings of recognizable music (didn‘t I hear one of the Liszt Etudes?) speeded up and slowed down by hand and fed into the surrounding brouhaha like a running series of musical puns. Laetitia Sonami&#8217;s A Blind Ride and Anna Rubin‘s Landmine were sound-process works, with samplings electronically manipulated; Sonami&#8217;s work achieved its effects via a glove embedded with sensors, which made the work as much fun to watch as to hear. Every little bit helps.
</p>
<p>   Out at Claremont College the first Microfest concert wandered widely over the map of contemporary possibility. This year‘s Microfest &#8212; five events in all &#8212; is all about “Global Tunings”; the first event drew upon the excellent studentfaculty gamelan maintained by Claremont&#8217;s Harvey Mudd College and led by Bill Alves, composer and faculty member of that school. The program drew a large if not full house; the sounds were handsome. (I would extend that accolade even to Tom Flaherty‘s antic Bowling Bells, which used a surrogate “gamelan” of kitchen bowls of various sizes and states of emptiness, played with a variety of implements including combs, toothbrushes and you-name-it.)
</p>
<p>   Some of the music, including three brief, shapely works by Alves himself, drew upon traditional Indonesian gamelan techniques, extended exercises in resonant stasis. One work, however, Masashi Ito&#8217;s Water Drops, imposed a more Western design onto the sonorities of the gamelan: melodic lines over a throbbing accompaniment and, near the end, an infusion of solid, academic counterpoint. It proved a valid venture in bridge building. Kipling‘s dictum to the contrary, East needn&#8217;t always be East.
</p>
<p>    Meanwhile, back in D major . . . I emerged from the aforementioned Philharmonic concert twice drunk: first from Hilary Hahn‘s extraordinary performance of Brahms&#8217; Violin Concerto, then from Esa-Pekka Salonen‘s wild ride through Mahler&#8217;s First Symphony. Of these two inebriating experiences, Salonen‘s success with the Mahler might have been easier to predict. Even so, his detailing of the work&#8217;s loopy mood-swings, the sardonic cackle in the gallows-humorous third movement, the apocalyptic visions at the end (with eight &#8212; count ‘em &#8212; eight hornists standing erect, the better to challenge the celestial powers) was the stuff of wonderment.
</p>
<p>    A few weeks ago someone on our Letters page accused me of the critic&#8217;s cardinal sin, predictability; I wish he‘d been with me that night. (No, I don&#8217;t, really.) I have used my space here more than once to proclaim my allergies to a) nubile violinists still in, or recently out of, their teens and b) that particular work and most of its companions in the Brahms catalog. The 22-year-old Hilary Hahn redeemed both those hang-ups that night with a performance elegant, eloquent and suffused with a degree of lyrical intensity that, for at least the 39 minutes of its duration, made it the masterwork that had pretty much eluded my recognition over the past, let‘s say, 65 years. The sheer insistence of her tone production might even have elevated a lesser work that night; what it accomplished for Brahms is somewhat beyond belief. That incredible buildup of melodic persuasion that ends the concerto&#8217;s first movement echoes in my skull as I write these words 10 days later. Who could have predicted?</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Many&#160;Threads</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2002/05/many-threads/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2002/05/many-threads/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 15 May 2002 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=392</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[One special image comes to mind when Toru Takemitsu&#8217;s music is at hand. It is the final moment in Akira Kurosawa‘s Ran, for which Takemitsu composed the score that is one of film music&#8217;s supreme achievements. The film is Kurosawa‘s gloss on Shakespeare&#8217;s Lear, and its final shot is of a lone figure, blind and [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>One special image comes to mind when Toru Takemitsu&#8217;s music is at hand. It is the final moment in Akira Kurosawa‘s Ran, for which Takemitsu composed the score that is one of film music&#8217;s supreme achievements. The film is Kurosawa‘s gloss on Shakespeare&#8217;s Lear, and its final shot is of a lone figure, blind and abandoned (Edgar? The Fool? Gloucester?) playing his flute at the edge of a precipice over which he will surely fall. A solitary figure, a solitary line of music: I cannot think of another brief moment in film where sight and sound are so inextricably meshed. It haunted me in absentia throughout the Philharmonic‘s marvelous Takemitsu concert at Royce Hall last week.
</p>
<p>    “The song I would like to sing,” Takemitsu remarked in the 1990s, “is not a simple lyric line but more than this &#8212; a narrative line intertwined with many threads . . .” Many threads were twined around Takemitsu&#8217;s own musical life as well. Largely self-taught in his native Japan, he studied &#8212; “devoured,” more to the point &#8212; Debussy‘s half-tints, Messiaen&#8217;s pantheistic ecstasies, Cage‘s artistic libertarianism. He also devoured the visual world, most of all through cinema; he claimed to have seen something like 300 films a year. More than any previous composer who made a public fuss about music combining the senses &#8212; Scriabin, Richard Strauss &#8212; Takemitsu wrote music that demands being thought of as pansensual. Only Messiaen, whose music Takemitsu adored, attempted anything comparable; on Esa-Pekka Salonen&#8217;s Royce Hall program there was the wise inclusion of Messiaen‘s brief Un Sourire, a journey through smiling quasi-Mozart interrupted by delighted outbursts from vast flocks of garrulous birds.
</p>
<p>   It was an evening of loving homage. The British pianist Paul Crossley was on hand to perform a couple of Takemitsu&#8217;s brightly colored short solo pieces and, with the orchestra, the Philharmonic-commissioned (in 1984) riverrun. What a wonderful score! Beyond its title &#8212; the first word of Finnegans Wake &#8212; this is music of darts and flows, of surges and bends. In his excellent program note, Paul Chihara writes of its “overall texture of ravishing transparency, not unlike the subtle brush strokes of Asian calligraphy,” and that is part of the truth here. The rest of the truth is the sense of sheer exuberance that comes through in the best of Takemitsu‘s music, the revel in the splashes and bursts that constantly proclaim the oneness of the senses.
</p>
<p>   I&#8217;ve read a fair amount of nonsense about Takemitsu‘s music, most of it reaction to the timeworn cliches about Japaneseness rather than to his artistic visions. “His music is tranquil to the point of somnolence,” writes the grossly and chronically misguided Norman Lebrecht in his Companion to 20th Century Music. “There is a sameness about each new piece,” etc. etc. There are recordings to underline the fallacy of such judgments, and a fine Takemitsu video in Sony&#8217;s “Music for Movies” series. Salonen‘s program ended with Three Film Scores, a suite Takemitsu arranged for string orchestra from his music for three early films noirs: astonishing essays in projecting maximum sinew and menace through purposely reduced means &#8212; and, thus, another remarkable joining of black-and-white sight and sound.
</p>
<p>    Figaro tells Rosina that she must write a note to her mysterious wooer confirming her interest in his importuning. Rosina reaches into her whatever and produces the note, already written. They then join voices in a lively duet in praise of womanly wiles. That moment adds little to the onward progress of Rossini&#8217;s Barber of Seville, but sung as it was at the Irvine Barclay Theater the other night it becomes an irresistible affirmation of the power of music to make singers and audience rejoice in each other‘s presence.
</p>
<p>    Opera Pacific&#8217;s Barber happened not in the company‘s usual unwelcoming venue at Costa Mesa&#8217;s Segerstrom Hall but in the smaller, friendlier Irvine Barclay. The orchestra was reduced; the first notes out of the Barclay‘s pit, and everything after that, had a richness and a warmth of sound that you just don&#8217;t hear at Segerstrom. Canada‘s Robert Tweten, in his company debut, led a performance fleet and affectionate, with the ensembles &#8212; including the hurly-burly that ends the first act &#8212; nicely balanced. Linda Brovsky&#8217;s direction was a comedic delight, not merely from a bunch of funny individuals but from a beautiful integration of stage trickery that offered up the illusion of an ensemble that had worked together for years.
</p>
<p>   John Packard was an agile con man of a Figaro, fresh from his title role in Dead Man Walking and finally granted real music to sing; John Osborn, if you overlook a bit of squall on his top notes, was the dashing Almaviva. (His big final aria, “Cessa di Piu Resistere,” was dropped, as it usually is: probably the better part of valor.) Lynette Tapia, his real-life wife, was the enchanting Rosina, working the role in the canary, or Lili Pons, register rather than the more authentic clarinet, or Marilyn Horne, version, and tossing off a small but right-on top “D” in the “Lesson Scene.” Andrew Fernando, the Bartolo, and Christopher Scott Feigum, the Basilio in a company debut, made a comic pair to the manner born.
</p>
<p>   An Opera Pacific representative tells me there are no plans at the moment for future productions at the Barclay. Granted that Segerstrom has many more seats &#8212; close to a 4-to-1 ratio &#8212; there was something uniquely endearing about this opera in this place, as there was with Mark Adamo‘s Little Women last year &#8212; and as there always is with the Long Beach Opera, in a hall of comparable size.
</p>
<p>   That sad thing known as Morimur, if lucky you have already forgotten, came about to illustrate a German musicologist&#8217;s whacked-out theory that Bach‘s sublime D-minor Partita for solo violin was a kind of memorial offering to his departed first wife, and that the theory can be supported by imposing a number of conveniently morose chorale tunes between movements of the Partita and atop a performance of the final great Chaconne. In order to make this work, some of the chorales had to be transposed to fit the D-minorness of the Partita. That in itself violates an important baroque principle, wherein particular keys take on particular personalities. Don&#8217;t get me going on this or I‘ll put you all to sleep.
</p>
<p>   Anyhow, the Morimur gig at Schoenberg Hall last month was above all deadly dull, with violinist Christopher Poppen playing like a stick and the Hilliard Ensemble (with one personnel change since the recording) sounding as tired as the enterprise itself. After their position high up on the classical and crossover charts last fall, the people who perpetrated that mess of a pseudo-baroque excursion, recorded on ECM, drew only a half-full house at UCLA&#8217;s small Schoenberg Hall. There is hope for us yet.#</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Going With the&#160;Flow</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2002/05/going-with-the-flow/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2002/05/going-with-the-flow/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 08 May 2002 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=391</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Within a week in late April the Los Angeles Chamber Orchestra played in two local venues, at Glendale‘s Alex Theater and UCLA&#8217;s Royce Hall, and three on the East Coast, Portland, Hartford and at Manhattan‘s Carnegie Hall. I heard the first and the last. Thomas Quasthoff was soloist in all five concerts: Bach&#8217;s “Kreuzstab” Cantata [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Within a week in late April the Los Angeles Chamber Orchestra played in two local venues, at Glendale‘s Alex Theater and UCLA&#8217;s Royce Hall, and three on the East Coast, Portland, Hartford and at Manhattan‘s Carnegie Hall. I heard the first and the last. Thomas Quasthoff was soloist in all five concerts: Bach&#8217;s “Kreuzstab” Cantata (known in enlightened circles as “Gladly, the Cross-Eyed Bear”) and Ravel‘s Don Quichotte a Dulcinee in the local events, two Bach cantatas in the others. At all concerts this phenomenal &#8212; and phenomenally charming &#8212; singer obliged the tumultuous audience response with the same encore, Jerome Kern&#8217;s “Ol‘ Man River.”
</p>
<p>    Noble and moving as was the Bach, deliciously insinuating as was the Ravel cycle, that encore was even more amazing. It came across not merely as a fine realization of Kern&#8217;s rolling, stirring lyrical line; it was like a reinvention of the song, and an installation of it as a cornerstone of an entire American theatrical language. Never mind that the words this time bore the ever-so-slight tinge of a Germanic enunciation; never mind the unlikelihood of this particular singer ever having to “tote that barge, lift that bale.” To hear this music shaped with such conviction by a singer whose Bach, Mozart and Schubert &#8212; not to mention his indispensable new Deutsche Grammophon disc of German comic-opera arias &#8212; rank among music‘s treasures is to suggest a rethinking of the place and history of America&#8217;s musical theater. As it happens, I‘d heard rather a lot of American attempts at opera composition these past few weeks, which I&#8217;ll get back to in a minute. Quasthoff‘s singing of “Ol&#8217; Man River” set them all adrift.
</p>
<p>   Haydn‘s Symphony No. 102 began the Chamber Orchestra&#8217;s programs, superior music even among that composer‘s sublime final works, astounding in the solemn beauty of its sinuous slow-movement theme, captivating for the jokey scoring of the finale. It made for a superb visiting-orchestra piece, for the fine balance in Jeffrey Kahane&#8217;s pacing and for the elegance of Allan Vogel‘s oboe solos and Kenneth Munday&#8217;s recounting of the Great Bassoon Joke in the finale. At the end came Ginastera‘s Variaciones Concertantes, another showoff piece but of lesser substance (and a decided downer after the Quasthoff solos). At the Alex the performance had at least been sprightly; at Carnegie, even in the air space of that acoustical marvel, it sounded decidedly tired &#8212; proving that if you&#8217;re going to play the same music five times in a week it had better be good.
</p>
<p>    American opera took a wrong turn not long after “Ol‘ Man River.” Porgy and Bess was polluted at the start by its dreams of grandeur, its reaching out toward Wagnerian &#8212; or, at least, Puccinian &#8212; models; the later, slimmed-down version with spoken dialogue instead of recitative is far more moving. After WWII there was American opera by the carload, much of it financed by ill-considered foundation grants, almost all of it in a further attempt to recapture Puccini as one of our own. Robert Ward&#8217;s The Crucible, commissioned in 1961 by the New York City Opera, was that kind of beast: Arthur Miller‘s powerful drama (Joseph McCarthy&#8217;s inquisitors thinly disguised as Salem‘s witch-hunters) diluted and overperfumed by its sweet, modern-but-not-so-bad music. Speaking at USC before last month&#8217;s production by the USC Thornton Opera Workshop at the Flora L. Thornton School of Music in cooperation with the USC Thornton Chamber Orchestra &#8212; doesn‘t this get a tad ridiculous, or at least thorny? &#8212; the beaming, white-maned Ward was every bit the Central Casting paragon of the distinguished elder creator of the artistically bland. An adept young cast, under Timothy Lindberg&#8217;s musical direction, had been gulled into learning the music‘s banalities. If this constitutes a learning experience, it&#8217;s only the study of how easily great dramatic material can be turned into mush when the price is right.
</p>
<p>    At the Metropolitan there was more mush: John Harbison‘s short-of-the-mark stab at turning The Great Gatsby into opera, brought back for a second run after two years. On the operatic stage there is no more of the shape of Gatsby than in the various attempts to capture its essence on film. The power of F. Scott Fitzgerald&#8217;s novel is its very novelistic perfection; its characters are so fully formed on the page, and live so completely within us when we set the book down, that any further attempt to give them flesh becomes an exercise in redundancy. Jay Gatsby is only reduced in the person of Alan Ladd or Robert Redford &#8212; and the more fatally disintegrated in the drabness (sight and sound, both) of the Met‘s Jerry Hadley. So &#8212; and this I report with some incredulity &#8212; is the otherwise adored person of Dawn Upshaw, her earthbound girlishness at odds with the disembodied, green-lit Daisy of Fitzgerald&#8217;s fantasy. James Levine, who conducted, is said to hold Gatsby in high regard. His work, Upshaw‘s loveliness even when miscast as here &#8212; and two brief scenes in which Lorraine Hunt-Lieberson, as the tragic Myrtle Wilson, did indeed set the stage ablaze &#8212; were reasons enough for frittering away a New York evening at Gatsby. When those participants move on, as they someday must, I hold little hope for the opera.
</p>
<p>   Better than either of these &#8212; but clobbered by the predatory New York press &#8212; was Stephen Paulus&#8217; taut, elegant retelling of Heloise and Abelard, for which Frank Corsaro provided the libretto and directed the Juilliard Opera Theater production (with, of all people, our own Miguel Harth-Bedoya on the podium). This is Paulus‘ eighth opera; The Postman Always Rings Twice is his best-known. The new work is real opera: memorable, even heart-rending ensembles, characters nicely drawn, scenes shaped with a dramatist&#8217;s hand and not a moment too long, vocal lines the work of a composer who knows the voice and what it can do. Perhaps I liked it so well on Saturday night because of the monstrosity that afternoon, but I came home from New York with this work out front in my memory.
</p>
<p>   The “monstrosity” was Sly, Ermanno Wolf-Ferrari‘s unendurable pastiche of thirdhand Puccini and a whiff of Stravinsky badly comprehended. The Domingos have taken it on. Placido gets a couple of loud, squally arias; Marta gets to try more of her misblocked, clumsy stage direction. The production, which Placido is said to own outright, mirrors the drabness of the score and adds a few visual insults along the way. No announcement has yet surfaced as to the future of this abomination &#8212; which originated at Domingo&#8217;s own Washington Opera &#8212; but I don‘t think it&#8217;s too soon to man the battlements.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Present and Future&#160;Shock</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2002/05/present-and-future-shock/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2002/05/present-and-future-shock/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 01 May 2002 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=390</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Photo by Christine Alicino WHERE MUSIC CAME FROM, WHERE music stands today, where music is going: lovely questions, these, that nobly sustain motor-mouth moderators of pre-concert &#8220;symposiums&#8221; and writers of program notes. They were more easily answerable in my younger days. I grew up in an age of definition (or so it seemed): sonata form, [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Photo by Christine Alicino
<p>
WHERE MUSIC CAME FROM, WHERE music stands today, where music is going: lovely questions, these, that nobly sustain motor-mouth moderators of pre-concert &#8220;symposiums&#8221; and writers of program notes. They were more easily answerable in my younger days. I grew up in an age of definition (or so it seemed): sonata form, rondo form, modulation to the dominant, pop, classical. When my best friend, pianist Normy, showed me he could play boogie-woogie as well as Grieg&#8217;s Piano Concerto, I felt him the traitor and myself betrayed.</p>
<p>
Last night &#8212; driving out to Glendale to hear the Los Angeles Chamber Orchestra, with Thomas Quasthoff singing Bach and Jeffrey Kahane conducting Haydn, in a concert I will try to remember always &#8212; I had John Adams&#8217; <i>Naïve and Sentimental Music </i>on the car stereo: a surging, complex interweaving of past and present. This morning I listened over coffee to &#8220;Morning Bell,&#8221; a cut from <i>Amnesiac</i>, Radiohead&#8217;s latest album, no less complex, its interweaving accomplished electronically rather than by spreading its wealth through the players in a large symphony orchestra, yet beholden to the past in the way its major/minor fluidity seems to echo, say, Mahler. In younger days I would have assumed the need for a cultural wall between the one kind of music and the other. Now I am no longer sure. I am not as qualified to write about Radiohead &#8212; or Moby (whose <i>Play</i> is also in my car stereo player) or Diana Krall, whom I have come to adore &#8212; as I am about John Adams. But I am delighted to discover that, at least, the wall is down.</p>
<p>
<i>Naïve and Sentimental Music </i>was introduced by Salonen and the Philharmonic three years ago and recorded for Nonesuch at the time; that recording has finally been released. At 48 minutes&#8217; duration, it remains Adams&#8217; most extended non-vocal work. After its premiere my words included such adjectives as dazzling, brutal and wrenching. &#8220;All three movements,&#8221; I wrote in 1999 and have no reason to retract, &#8220;work their way toward intense climaxes through powerful gatherings of resources. The slow movement is deeply dark and inward, and the outer movements rattle your bones with the splendor of huge performing forces wondrously deployed.&#8221; The accumulative power at the beginning, the solo flute out in orchestral darkness and the progression from that solo to the massive outburst several minutes later, grabs you and won&#8217;t let go; it is not &#8212; as I discovered the other night &#8212; conducive to careful driving on the Glendale Freeway.</p>
<p>
A YEAR LATER ADAMS PRODUCED <i>EL </i><i>Niño</i>; that work, too, has been released &#8212; the audio version on Nonesuch, the video on the ArtHaus label distributed by Naxos. (Both <i>Naïve and Sentimental</i> and <i>El Niño</i> are scheduled for the Philharmonic&#8217;s 2002-03 season.) Both recordings date from the work&#8217;s December 2000 premiere at the Châtelet in Paris under Kent Nagano&#8217;s splendid direction. I saw the San Francisco performance a couple of months later.</p>
<p>
There are problems here, not so much of Adams&#8217; doing, but of a certain ponderousness in the weight of the whole project. The work&#8217;s premise is to recount the Nativity story as a folktale with contemporary resonances &#8212; most of all its relation to barrio life among impoverished Latinos; poetry by modern Spanish-language writers is interspersed with texts from ancient sources, including narratives from the Apocrypha and other legends about the infant (&#8220;El Niño&#8221;) Jesus and the Holy Family in flight. Peter Sellars&#8217; staging, and his accompanying film, picks up on this, with East L.A. standing in for old Bethlehem and the surrounding desert filled with the rocks and flora of Joshua Tree. On the stage the result was a severe sensory overload; on video the two-dimensional screen reduces the problem somewhat but not completely. The haunting, poignant singing of Dawn Upshaw, Lorraine Hunt-Lieberson and Willard White &#8212; whose faces in close-up do carry the drama forward &#8212; are painfully undercut by segues to scenes in latter-day tenement kitchens and rooftops.</p>
<p>
I am, therefore, torn. It&#8217;s nice to have the expressive art of those singers, and of the handsome young members of Paul Hillier&#8217;s Theatre of Voices impersonating annunciating angels and the like, as close as my TV set, but <i>El Niño</i> on video is basically unwatchable. The deep, rich lyricism of Adams&#8217; music, however, its eclecticism spread wide but beautifully balanced, makes either version &#8212; with both the CD and the DVD almost identically priced, by the way &#8212; a privilege to own.</p>
<p>
The resemblance is coincidental and fascinating: Adams&#8217; accounting of Christianity&#8217;s central epic in terms of Latino-tinged words and music; Osvaldo Golijov doing the same &#8212; in a somewhat more extroverted stage piece &#8212; in his <i>Passion According to Saint Mark</i>, about which I have also previously waxed ecstatic. (That extraordinary work comes to Costa Mesa&#8217;s Eclectic Orange Festival October 18 and 19; you don&#8217;t dare not to be there.) By way of teaser, three of its arias ended the last Green Umbrella concert at the Zipper, with the radiant Brazilian mezzo-soprano Luciana Souza on hand to repeat her performance from the work&#8217;s premiere, joined by soprano Jessica Rivera and the Philharmonic&#8217;s New Music Group under Yasuo Shinozaki.</p>
<p>
Moment by moment, thanks to the recording (on Hänssler) and word of mouth, this music becomes familiar without losing its unique impact. There was other Golijov on the Umbrella program as well, including a <i>Lullaby and Doina</i> for a small ensemble that spun forth 10 minutes of simple beauty, profound and altogether memorable. There was also Marijn Simons, Dutch-born violinist and composer, age 19, who started things off with a half-hour violin concerto called <i>Secret Notes</i>. Who had ever heard of him before? Not you, not I, only the sharp-eared and -eyed Christopher Hailey, who spotted him in Europe and brought him to the Philharmonic&#8217;s attention.</p>
<p>
Wow. Young Marijn puts on a terrific show, with music to match. Someone has groomed him well in the arts of stage flirtation &#8212; with audience and with orchestra. His concerto, three movements with funny names, is all a 19-year-old&#8217;s showoff piece, but the dazzle is infectious and may even be genuine. You could think back to the cocky young Lenny and write off this newcomer, but you also have to think of the other recent almost-adolescent Thomas Adès, with his <i>Asyla</i> composed at about the same age; that, too, is all prickle and hot sparks, and an undeniable sense of arrogant mastery under it all. The definitions, as I was saying, no longer apply.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>The Substitute&#160;Soundtrack</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2002/04/the-substitute-soundtrack/</link>
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		<pubDate>Wed, 24 Apr 2002 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=389</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[THE PERPETRATORS OF DEAD MAN WALKING &#8211; the opera inflicted upon the stage of Costa Mesa&#8217;s Segerstrom Hall these past few nights &#8212; have gone to some lengths to distance themselves from Tim Robbins&#8217; 1995 film of the same name and derivation. Their source, or so they would have us believe, has been Sister Helen [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>
<font SIZE=3>THE PERPETRATORS OF <i>DEAD MAN WALKING </i>&#8211; the opera inflicted upon the stage of Costa Mesa&#8217;s Segerstrom Hall these past few nights &#8212; have gone to some lengths to distance themselves from Tim Robbins&#8217; 1995 film of the same name and derivation. Their source, or so they would have us believe, has been Sister Helen Prejean&#8217;s original book, her harrowing death-row memoir &#8212; even though its central character has undergone a change of name from &#8220;Matt&#8221; to the more singable &#8220;Joe.&#8221; It was Sister Helen, not Tim Robbins or any of his commendable collaborators on that film, who joined the Opera Pacific cast in the curtain calls at Segerstrom. You can assume, therefore, that this strong and compassionate woman has acquiesced in the turning of her brave words into the unfocused, stumbling product that has earned the unfathomable cheers of misguided multitudes &#8212; two seasons ago at the San Francisco Opera, now here, onward and upward to a date with destiny at the New York City Opera next September.</font></p>
<p>
<font SIZE=3>Go back and see the film, its outpouring of moral outrage &#8212; against capital punishment and against those who wrongly set their minds against the powers of salvation &#8212; so memorably caught in the haunted, troubled eyes of Susan Sarandon&#8217;s Sister Helen and the insidious cynicism of Sean Penn&#8217;s Matt Poncelet. They are further echoed in the composite track of Nusrat Fateh Ali Khan&#8217;s songs twined around the slash of Eddie Vedder&#8217;s and Ry Cooder&#8217;s music and even the dull ache of Bruce Springsteen&#8217;s version of the title song under the final credits. Set this consummate workmanship against the opera: stick figures of Terrence McNally&#8217;s sudsy libretto set to Jake Heggie&#8217;s appallingly second-rate assemblage of musical gestures. <i>Dead Man Walking</i> in its reality has turned out as abject a disaster as it first appeared on paper.</font></p>
<p>
<font SIZE=3>Opera Pacific&#8217;s production was actually the work&#8217;s second; those unlucky souls who have seen both tell me the San Francisco version, larger and trickier, was even more of a mess. The new one, with Michael McGarty&#8217;s skeletal sets &#8212; its up-and-down panels suggesting a chorus of unmanned guillotines &#8212; is slimmed down for travel. John DeMain conducted, as he also will in New York; although I am disinclined to delve deeply into differences between his version and that of San Francisco&#8217;s Patrick Summers &#8212; now available on Erato discs, if you care &#8212; I am sure it was strong and good. Kristine Jepson sang the Sister Helen, richly and caringly, although Susan Graham&#8217;s singing nun on disc has superior frazzle. Frederica von Stade, for whom Jake Heggie has become house composer, was once again the killer&#8217;s mother, as in San Francisco, a killer role that deserved killer music but got none.</font></p>
<p>
<font SIZE=3>THE PHILHARMONIC HAS GIVEN US MOZART these past two weeks, but with intrusions. Andreas Delfs, currently of the Milwaukee Symphony, led the first program, delivering a Mozart stiff and hasty, ending with the 40th Symphony, the prescribed repeats unaccountably (and inexcusably) omitted. Andrea Rost &#8212; the lovable Pamina in the L.A. Opera&#8217;s recent <i>Magic Flute</i> &#8212; sang two concert arias most appealingly. The intruder, a presence on the program beyond sense or value, was the 17 minutes of <i>Chambers </i>(as in Street), a sort of symphonic memoir of Lower Manhattan pre-9/11, co-commissioned by the Philharmonic and the St. Paul Chamber Orchestra and given here in its world premiere. Its composer, Theodore Shapiro (sha-PIE-ro, he insists), works in films, with <i>State and Main</i> his most recent score. Since that music made no impression on me the first time, I went back to check; it made no impression the second time, either. Neither did <i>Chambers</i>, bland and burbling. Secondhand Bernstein can only mean, after all, third- or fourth-hand everybody else.</font></p>
<p>
<font SIZE=3>Fond memories of Christian Zacharias&#8217; Philharmonic visit in 2000 &#8212; as both-at-once conductor and pianist &#8212; brought an uncommonly large crowd to his return to lead the second Mozart week. The intruders this time were more welcome: fist-shaking Sturm-und-Drang symphonies by Joseph Martin Kraus and Haydn, bookending two Mozart concertos, rapturously beautiful and rapturously played. Kraus&#8217; dates (1756­1792) are almost the same as Mozart&#8217;s. His C-minor Symphony, which Haydn is said to have admired, is a slice of run-of-the-mill classical writing: dark-toned, minor harmonies that never quite coalesce into real tunes; brave exercises in counterpoint that never quite turn into genuine fugues; unadventurous scoring (including, in this case, four horns instead of the usual two to provide a thick, thudding bass) that points up the inadequacy of whatever orchestral forces the composer could draw upon.</font></p>
<p>
<font SIZE=3>It&#8217;s good to hear this music, if only to realize the ways in which Mozart and Haydn rose above the mere craftsmen &#8212; the Jake Heggies and Theodore Shapiros &#8212; of their time. Ten measures into the grand, forthright opening of Mozart&#8217;s D-major Piano Concerto (K. 451), or 10 measures out of the first movement of Haydn&#8217;s Symphony No. 80 &#8212; with his giggling little subsidiary tune popping up in different keys all over the place, punctuated by trick silences &#8212; and you know where the likes of Joseph Martin Kraus fit into the picture. At the keyboard or out in front, Zacharias charmed utterly. Best of all was his re-creation of the essence of Mozart&#8217;s piano concertos, the warm-hearted, loving, intensely intelligent conversations between piano and orchestra.</font></p>
<p>
<font SIZE=3>I KEEP NOT HAVING THE SPACE TO REMEMBER one more concert of recent weeks, the County Museum&#8217;s program by the Toronto-based Penderecki String Quartet &#8212; another of those fearless ensembles that thrive unfazed on daunting new music and perform it with joy and intelligence commingled. Their program this time consisted of second quartets &#8212; Szymanowski, Bartók, Ligeti. As an encore, rather than the expected tidbit from<br />
somewhere or other, they threw in another<br />
whole work, the Second of their namesake Penderecki &#8212; phenomenal, complex music infused with great spirit. At the end, after nearly two hours of music that carried both technique and expression to far horizons, they<br />
invited the audience &#8212; pleasantly large, as these events go &#8212; to come onstage, look at their music and ask questions.</font></p>
<p>
<font SIZE=3>It was a lovely event, the chance to hang out for nearly an extra hour with splendid,<br />
dedicated young musicians and hear them out on, for example, what it takes to coordinate an ensemble where one performer has, say, 16 notes to play in time with another&#8217;s 15. Nobody seemed anxious to leave, and when we did it was with the sense of having been brought unexpectedly, delightfully close to some challenging creativity. More of this sort of thing should happen &#8212; not the jabberwocky of the &#8220;symposium&#8221; on the meaning of genius that preceded the Zacharias concert at the Music Center last Thursday night, but something that puts into simple, meaningful language what it is that keeps us involved in the musical world as that world crumbles around us bit by bit, and why we bother.</font></p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Epiphanies</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2002/04/epiphanies/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2002/04/epiphanies/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 17 Apr 2002 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=388</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[“Schubert&#8217;s dynamics,” asserts the Isabelle Huppert character in Michael Haneke‘s gut-wrenching new film The Piano Teacher, “range from scream to whisper, not loud to soft.” Her student-victim is struggling with the slow movement of the A-major Sonata, one of the three extraordinary works in the genre that Schubert created during his last year. In a [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>“Schubert&#8217;s dynamics,” asserts the Isabelle Huppert character in Michael Haneke‘s gut-wrenching new film The Piano Teacher, “range from scream to whisper, not loud to soft.” Her student-victim is struggling with the slow movement of the A-major Sonata, one of the three extraordinary works in the genre that Schubert created during his last year. In a month that has also seen the reissue of Milos Forman&#8217;s Amadeus with 20 more minutes of psychobabbling gobbledygook tacked onto that mendacious epic, Haneke‘s film stands out, among other reasons, for its success in telling the truth about serious music. And when it comes to detailing the workings of that particular slow movement, the script is dead-on accurate.
</p>
<p>    By coincidence &#8212; or perhaps not &#8212; Murray Perahia&#8217;s piano recital at Royce Hall two weeks ago had the same sonata as its centerpiece, and his journey through the slow movement accomplished in notes and tone color and dynamics exactly what the words expressed in the film. That slow movement, which follows the forthright, larger-than-life statements that begin the sonata, oozes into our awareness with an elegiac, disturbed theme of few but poignant notes that do, indeed, whisper of tragedy beyond words. But then the tragedy deepens and Schubert screams aloud. Himself on the brink of death, he escorts us, too, toward that brink; if ever a solo piano has painted a vision of infernal regions, it is here. But then Schubert pulls us back and, in a couple of bars of just single notes spaced out, almost but not quite restores the quietude of the movement‘s opening. As the elegiac melody resumes, the turmoil of that interruption remains as a distant rumble; it chastens our memories as we return to reality. (A similar sequence of events, by the way, takes place in Schubert&#8217;s C-major String Quintet, another miraculous work from that same final year.)
</p>
<p>   Perahia is a superb romantic pianist; on records and in concert he still grows in depth and generosity of spirit. His latest Sony disc, completing his set of the Bach keyboard concertos, offers everything you need to know about the meaning of eloquence. His concert at Royce &#8212; Beethoven‘s laconic, ill-tempered C-minor Variations at the start, Chopin full of stardust, including a lavish assortment of encores, at the end &#8212; drew a large and happy crowd, despite the fact that Alfred Brendel was performing, a few miles away at the Music Center, the same night.
</p>
<p>    By good fortune &#8212; for the local pianomanes, at least &#8212; Brendel repeated his program two nights later, and in a better venue, the intimate Barclay Theater at UC Irvine. He, too, played variations, the astonishing “Diabelli” set that Beethoven fashioned simultaneously with the Ninth Symphony. Perhaps “played” is too slight a word; what Brendel accomplished that night was a closer penetration than I can remember ever hearing into Beethoven&#8217;s clear intent in this hourlong extravaganza, his sardonic glee in his own power to transform Diabelli‘s insipid little waltz-tune into the scaffolding for a huge, profound musical structure.
</p>
<p>    There&#8217;s nothing else in music quite like the Diabellis, with their blend of haunting, stirring musical inventions into a compelling demonstration of the pure joy of composition. The very fact of its stop-and-go form &#8212; 33 separate dissertations on the power within that dopey little theme, culminating in a dazzling double fugue that then subsides into a deliciously anticlimactic, smiling epilogue &#8212; makes its expressive impact the more remarkable.
</p>
<p>   All of this became revelatory last week in the totally immersed figure of Brendel, hunched over his piano as if trying to swallow it whole, fudging a note here and there &#8212; as he‘s entitled &#8212; but delivering Beethoven&#8217;s own fantasizing vivid and intense. True, Brendel‘s much-publicized agonies over audience coughing and similar misbehavior &#8212; which he has now even celebrated by writing a poem about it &#8212; can make listeners at his concerts as nervous as he claims to be. Optimally silent to fulfill his ideal, an audience would then have to countenance his own repertory of moans &#8216;n‘ groans. It works both ways.
</p>
<p>    Magnus Lindberg came to town recently, with his wonderfully convoluted Cello Concerto that fellow Finn Esa-Pekka Salonen had conducted at Ojai in 1999 (with the amazing Anssi Karttunen as soloist), and a new work, Parada. That splendid music also appears next month on a Sony disc &#8212; led by Salonen but with London&#8217;s Philharmonia &#8212; with the Cello Concerto and two other orchestral works.
</p>
<p>    Lindberg, the same age as Salonen plus three days, grows into a world-class musical figure, strengthening his country‘s newly minted musical hegemony (with Kaija Saariaho to complete the triumvirate). From his early work called Kraft &#8212; with its musicians scattered around the playing area and its array of junk percussion &#8212; I might not have predicted his growth to such expressive mastery. He now tells me that Kraft was merely his shot across the bow, the kind of sensation-seeking music young composers have to write to proclaim their arrival on the scene. “There could never be a Kraft II,” he claims, “any more than there could ever be a Rite of Spring II.”
</p>
<p>   Parada is part of a trilogy of works bearing Spanish names &#8212; Cantigas, on the new Sony disc, and Feria, previously recorded, complete the set. Like Debussy&#8217;s Iberia, Lindberg says, the parts can be performed separately or as a suite lasting about 40 minutes. They aren‘t all that Spanish in sound or harmony, however. Whatever its derivation, Parada is a gorgeous 12 minutes of dark, resonant orchestral sound, beginning and ending with a progression (or “parade,” if you wish) of oozing, dusky harmonies. Here and there Stravinsky pops in; so does Debussy.
</p>
<p>   Alongside the Lindberg works at the Philharmonic there was Brahms &#8212; like chocolate sauce over herring. People perform those two early serenades, I suppose, because they&#8217;re Brahms &#8212; certainly not because they‘re any good. The A-major Serenade, which Salonen performed, is scored without violins and puts the winds up front, and it quacks a lot; you&#8217;d think that Brahms might have looked at a little Mozart to learn some basic wind usage. The performance was jaunty enough, I suppose, but Salonen‘s warm and flexible reading of the “Haydn” Variations, at the end, had a lot more to say. So, of course, did the music.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Ending at the&#160;Beginning</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2002/04/ending-at-the-beginning/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2002/04/ending-at-the-beginning/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 10 Apr 2002 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=387</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[TIMIDLY PLANNED, HANDSOMELY EXECUTED, the Philharmonic&#8217;s &#8220;Schoenberg Prism&#8221; ended a couple of weeks ago with the one work most likely to draw cheers, the early Transfigured Night &#8211; originally a sextet but later expanded by the composer for string orchestra. To these ears, the music makes a stronger impact in the original chamber version, the [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>
TIMIDLY PLANNED, HANDSOMELY EXECUTED, the Philharmonic&#8217;s &#8220;Schoenberg Prism&#8221; ended a couple of weeks ago with the one work most likely to draw cheers, the early <i>Transfigured Night </i>&#8211; originally a sextet but later expanded by the composer for string<br />
orchestra. To these ears, the music makes a stronger impact in the original chamber version, the more so if you consider the Richard Dehmel poem &#8212; two lovers in self-confession mode on a moonlit landscape &#8212; that inspired it. (Join me in mourning the passing of the marvelous old Hollywood String Quartet­Plus recording, available until recently on the Testament label.) Esa-Pekka Salonen&#8217;s performance, with the Philharmonic&#8217;s full string complement, was moving enough, even if the moonbeams seemed to come from high-voltage transformers &#8212; as did John de Lancie&#8217;s feverish, overstressed reading of the Dehmel poem (with &#8220;SHOWN-berg&#8221; mispronounced in his intro) before the music began. From Martin Chalifour&#8217;s solo violin and Evan Wilson&#8217;s viola, however, you could hear genuine moonlight.</p>
<p>
Pre-Schoenberg Schoenberg, pre-Mahler Mahler: I don&#8217;t know if this was the impulse in planning the program, but it made an interesting juxtaposition. Mahler&#8217;s <i>Das klagende Lied</i> was given complete, music begun at the tender age of 18, later drastically cut back, then partially restored, here presented in a conflation of first, second and third thoughts as edited by Reinhold Kubik and first performed in 1997. Mahler&#8217;s text is vintage German folk tale both grisly and Grimm &#8212; murder, betrayal, revenge, the works. Held captive in my seat for its hourlong duration &#8212; lacking center aisles, the Dorothy Chandler Pavilion is virtually escape-proof &#8212; I heard the work as a progression of embryonic Mahlerisms, and longed for an editor&#8217;s pencil to correct clunky turns of phrase that the composer, in his time of later greatness, would himself have suppressed.</p>
<p>
Yet some purpose is served, I suppose,<br />
in rubbing the noses of mature composers in the deeds of their youth. However wide the gap between the 25-year-old Schoenberg&#8217;s <i>Transfigured Night</i> of 1899 and, say, his Fourth Quartet of 37 years later, we learn from the earlier work that its composer landed in the musical world on both feet, as Mahler did not. Yet the Mahler, with Salonen&#8217;s yeoman feat in marshaling its massed chorus, oversize orchestra (including a whole &#8216;nother band out in the corridor) and enough vocal soloists to staff a fair-size opera company, did in its own elephantine way offer some prophecy of future greatness. Among the soloists there were two small members of the Tölzer Boys&#8217; Choir, Masters Philipp Nowotny and Peter Mair, who sang the music of the flute that has been made of the bone of the murdered brother who &#8212; you get the idea &#8212; with such strength and right-on accuracy that after the concert I was surprised to find the building&#8217;s masonry still intact.</p>
<p>
NO MASONRY IS SAFE, FOR THAT MATTER, in the presence of Evelyn Glennie, who came to the Philharmonic a week later to unleash her familiar bang-up skills on Joseph Schwantner&#8217;s 1992 Percussion Concerto. She&#8217;s an incredible sight, this barefoot Scots lass, dashing up- and downstage from one pile of hardware to another, whomping here, jiggling there. She&#8217;s a press agent&#8217;s dream, for her show-biz virtuosity and also for the way her well-known affliction &#8212; profound deafness since childhood &#8212; is dealt with on her Web site in double talk that both admits and refutes. She&#8217;s real, a media miracle . . .</p>
<p>
. . . or would be, but for one problem. For all her claims to a place in the serious-concert world &#8212; commissioned scores including (!) 43 concertos, Grammys up the bazooty, TV documentaries and symposiums &#8212; I haven&#8217;t yet come across anything from her percussion-plus-orchestra repertory that justifies these claims. The Schwantner concerto is a case in point. At its core there&#8217;s a 20-minute, serviceable, not unattractive three-movement score for full orchestra, out of the same academic bone yard as John Harbison&#8217;s <i>The Most Often Used Chords</i>, which preceded it on the program here. On the edge, almost as a separate piece to be played simultaneously, there&#8217;s this ongoing hullabaloo for the percussionist, which serves mostly to distract the attention from the less-interesting other stuff. I hear this same dichotomy throughout the Glennie repertory, including the James MacMillan <i>Veni, Veni Emmanuel</i> that she played here a few years ago, with its extra layer of affected religiosity. Music for percussion &#8212; alone, or at least out front &#8212; has its place, and there are works by Bartók, Harrison, Cage and other blithe spirits to prove that. Glennie&#8217;s place &#8212; and I wish her all the fun she can find there &#8212; is outside this mainstream, a greatly attractive diversion to take your mind off the matter at hand. But dammit, she&#8217;s <i>such</i> fun to watch!</p>
<p>
Miguel Harth-Bedoya, who conducted, had his moment after intermission, in an altogether splendid performance of Dvorák&#8217;s Seventh Symphony. You&#8217;ve probably read me on this work before; it is, I&#8217;ll admit, an obsession. Its forebear is basic Brahms, but the setting &#8212; the wonderful orchestral language with the soft shimmer of strings and the glistening winds and solo horn that pierce the Middle European murk; the shifts of harmony (at the end of the slow movement, for one instance of many) that turn your bones to jelly &#8212; stands apart, and above, anything in the Brahmsian orchestral legacy. The sublime conductor of this music, in my time anyhow, was Carlo Maria Giulini; my bones still quiver from a performance he gave, same orchestra, same stage, in the early 1980s. (The older Giulini recording, with the London Philharmonic on EMI, captures this sublimity but with a lesser orchestra; his later one, with Amsterdam&#8217;s Royal Concertgebouw, is afflicted with an excess of the solemnity of his late years.) Harth-Bedoya came admirably close to the Giulini spirit. I had not heard him in European repertory before, but hope to soon again.</p>
<p>
Some double talk from CalArts&#8217; dean of music, David Rosenboom, attempted to locate that school&#8217;s Green Umbrella program within the citywide Schoenberg celebration: Olga Neuwirth because she hails from Schoenberg&#8217;s Vienna, John Cage despite Schoenberg&#8217;s refusal to teach him, Henry Brant for no discernible reason. The program ranged from unconscionable to unendurable: 50 minutes of Cage&#8217;s <i>Sixteen Dances</i> tentatively played and abominably danced in smart-aleck choreography by members of the school&#8217;s dance department, some contrapuntal chaos by Neuwirth, a depressingly blah song cycle by Earl Kim (who had at least worked with Schoenberg, but also with Roger Sessions and Milton Babbitt). It was already past 10 o&#8217;clock when the 89-year-old Henry Brant came on to lead &#8212; with his zany pantomime manner of conducting &#8212; groups of music makers spotted throughout the hall, some wandering and some stationary, in one of the spatial pieces that are his particular shtick in trade. As with Glennie, the music may not have been much, but the watching was glorious.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>The Magic&#160;Abides</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2002/04/the-magic-abides/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2002/04/the-magic-abides/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 03 Apr 2002 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=386</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Pity the deprived soul whose spinal column cannot vibrate to the way Mozart uses clarinets and trombones in The Magic Flute. Shed a tear for the misguided misanthrope who fails to find the presence of God &#8212; by whatever name &#8212; in the music for Sarastro in that opera. Bemoan the unreconstructible rationalist who howls [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Pity the deprived soul whose spinal column cannot vibrate to the way Mozart uses clarinets and trombones in The Magic Flute. Shed a tear for the misguided misanthrope who fails to find the presence of God &#8212; by whatever name &#8212; in the music for Sarastro in that opera. Bemoan the unreconstructible rationalist who howls in horror as Schikaneder‘s plotline twists, this way now and that way then, as villains turn noble and heroines turn treacherous.
</p>
<p>    The current Los Angeles Opera production has made that last point, over which scholars have spilled ink by the tank load since the opera was new, particularly solemn and stirring. Tamino has come to Sarastro&#8217;s palace to rescue Pamina, who, he has been led to believe, has been kidnapped by Sarastro and held in durance vile. He is met at the entrance by one of Sarastro‘s priests, who queries him on his purpose and informs him that everything he has been led to believe is black is actually white, and that it will take some effort on his &#8212; Tamino&#8217;s &#8212; part to prove worthy of that knowledge. “When can I achieve this goal?” asks the impatient Tamino. The priest &#8212; who is identified in the score as “Speaker” although he only sings &#8212; answers, and on his sublime last line, a solemn cadence in the key of A minor, the entire plot pivots. “As soon as friendship‘s loving hand,” he sings, “leads you to our sacred band.” That line of music is repeated twice by an offstage chorus. Soft chords in the trombones enhance the solemnity. Within less than 90 seconds we have been confronted with a new plotline, and a new kind of music. It is a wrenching, extraordinary moment.
</p>
<p>   This revival of the company&#8217;s Flute &#8212; first seen in 1993, again in 1998 &#8212; is altogether successful; it runs through April 14. The Gerald Scarfe stage designs have lost none of their madcap luster. On the first night, Michael Schade &#8212; who had only a few hours previously stepped into the Philharmonic‘s performance of Mahler&#8217;s Das klagende Lied and taken on the tenor‘s tonsil-twisting music in that weird escapade &#8212; was the splendid Tamino. Rodney Gilfry&#8217;s Papageno has ripened into rich comic invention, Reinhard Hagen‘s Sarastro is worthy of his music, and the new Pamina, Andrea Rost, is a doll. Lawrence Foster&#8217;s conducting is, as is his norm, highly okay. The music that stayed with me the longest on opening night were those lines for the Speaker, eloquently sung by James Creswell, one of the company‘s resident artists and, obviously, a promising one.
</p>
<p>    That A-minor cadence demands your attention. Mozart had almost never composed in that key; never in the orchestral works or quartets, only once in an early piano sonata. Feverishly struggling in this last year of his life, he apparently reserved his foray into these dark and unfamiliar harmonic precincts for this simple yet intensely moving moment in his sublimely silly, wise comedy, with its still-argued-about mingling of the high-minded and the low-.
</p>
<p>    Every one of Mozart&#8217;s mature operas finds some new way to violate the practice of his time, whereby comedies should be funny and tragedies sad. The miraculous resolution at the end of The Marriage of Figaro, a sacred chorale in all but name, is the more astonishing for the comic hurly-burly just before; Fiordiligi‘s lovelorn confusion near the end of Cosi Fan Tutte, as she totters on the brink of infidelity, draws its tragic tone from the contrast with the ludicrous amorous entanglement that brings it on. But the circumstances of The Magic Flute &#8212; as an entertainment at Emanuel Schikaneder&#8217;s house of folk comedy, as opposed to the grander operas unfurled before higher-paying audiences &#8212; make its contrasts of tone even more jolting. A single night‘s entertainment that embraces Mr. and Mrs. Papageno feathering their nest, Sarastro&#8217;s invocation (fit for the mouth of God, wrote Bernard Shaw) and the heartbreak of Pamina‘s “Ach, ich fuhl&#8217;s” (Mozart‘s greatest aria, writes the scholarly Joseph Kerman) thus embraces a range of delectable jolts that no other single work, of Mozart&#8217;s time or of ours, can readily offer.
</p>
<p>   What, then, is The Magic Flute about? Part of its power lies in its multiplicity of answers. To Kerman, whose 1988 Opera as Drama remains obligatory reading, the change of direction “can be explained very simply and very happily on the assumption that Mozart himself insisted on it.” Whatever Mozart‘s original motivation in turning out a new titillation for his billiards buddy and fellow Freemason, something in his conscience pushed him to the realization that even Schikaneder&#8217;s crowd-pleasing plot deserved his best shot. That aforementioned small miracle, the A-minor cadence that diverts Tamino‘s path toward godly goals, launches the opera itself toward multitudinous kinds of greatness. “All the diversities,” writes Kerman, “of musical style, action, tone and mood are perfectly controlled to a single dramatic end.”
</p>
<p>   Every character is filled out with a full set of weaknesses as well as strengths. The saintly Sarastro maintains slaves and punishes their transgressions cruelly. Papageno, the sweet innocent, tells bare-faced lies, but still gets to share with Pamina a high-minded, philosophical duet on the meaning of love. For all his newly acquired bravery, Tamino must lean on Pamina for guidance through the trials of fire and water.
</p>
<p>   The Magic Flute fits the category of maiden-in-despair-heroically-rescued opera popular in its time both comically and seriously treated. Alongside this, we must also countenance the none-too-subtle allegory on the concerns and travails of the Freemason movement, which at the time was far more of a political force than it would later become. The psychoanalysts have had their day with the Flute as well: the interaction of Tamino and Pamina explainable in Jungian terms, the animus reaching out to the anima. Much can be made of the fact that Tamino&#8217;s at-first-sight passion for Pamina is motivated by a mere portrait &#8212; which, furthermore, ends up in the possession of Papageno when the two seekers actually reach Sarastro‘s palace. Musical scholars have grappled for centuries with the paradox that Schikaneder&#8217;s cobbled-together, endearing mess of a plot follows upon the opera‘s impeccably tidy and beautifully organized overture &#8212; which, in true Mozartian fashion, was composed only at the last minute, after the rest of the work was already on the performers&#8217; music stands.
</p>
<p>   The abiding and most important genius of the work, however, is that none of this matters. As the beasts in the forest succumb to the enchantment of Tamino‘s magic flute, so do we all to Mozart&#8217;s. At the Music Center as well, Gerald Scarfe‘s nifty beasts are wonderfully in tune.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>88 Times&#160;Infinity</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2002/03/88-times-infinity/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2002/03/88-times-infinity/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 27 Mar 2002 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=385</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Here come the pianists; it&#8217;s odd how events tend to clump sometimes. Two weeks ago Peter Serkin and Marino Formenti played interesting, out-of-the-ordinary programs. This week hordes of pianists vie for Rachmaninoff Prize money in Pasadena, with mostly ordinary programs to be judged by mostly ordinary judges, as befits the time-honored rules of the piano-competition [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Here come the pianists; it&#8217;s odd how events tend to clump sometimes. Two weeks ago Peter Serkin and Marino Formenti played interesting, out-of-the-ordinary programs. This week hordes of pianists vie for Rachmaninoff Prize money in Pasadena, with mostly ordinary programs to be judged by mostly ordinary judges, as befits the time-honored rules of the piano-competition arena. Next week Murray Perahia and Alfred Brendel give recitals on the same night &#8212; an agonizing choice, but made easier because Brendel repeats his program in Irvine two nights later.
</p>
<p>    The last local major piano competition was also in Pasadena, at (sob!) Ambassador in 1993. It bore the name but also the faulty leadership of Ivo Pogorelich; at least the repertory was interesting and so was the roster of judges. But the winners: Where are they now &#8212; Michael Kieran Harvey? Edith Chen?
</p>
<p>   Now pushing 55, Peter remains ”the young Serkin“ so long as memories and recordings of father Rudolf‘s playing remain to warm the heart. In repertory Peter is very much his own man; his services to new music elevate him to honored status. Even so, I detected some of the elder Rudolf in the soft, pliant and warm-hearted Schoenberg half of Peter&#8217;s recent recital; the echoes of Brahms were underlined and hovered most audibly in the Opus 11 pieces; there was a shadowing of the French rococo in the witty, dry-point delivery of the Opus 25 Suite. Oddly, however, the Beethoven half could have used Rudolf‘s touch; the ethereal variations that end the Opus 109 Sonata were, in young Peter&#8217;s hands, chill, calculated &#8212; Schoenbergian, in fact.
</p>
<p>   Formenti remains uniquely ours; he has yet to appear as soloist anywhere else in the U.S. He came here first in 1998, with the excellent Klangforum Wien in the off-the-wall Resistance Fluctuations festival, gave spellbinding recitals at LACMA the next two years, participated in last year‘s Eclectic Orange, and returns in May as a major attraction at Ojai (and, would you believe, as assistant conductor for the L.A. Opera&#8217;s final double bill). Earlier this month he played at that implausible but ambitious venue, the Cerritos Center for the Performing Arts, where serious music-making alternates with Las Vegas, and where fire burns welcomingly in the lobby on even the warmest nights. The fare was lighter than Formenti‘s usual, and included his own elegant piano versions of songs from Kurt Weill&#8217;s The Threepenny Opera. Most surprising was the First Piano Sonata of Shostakovich, a work almost completely unknown &#8212; there are two recordings, on obscure labels &#8212; and thus an interesting corollary to the Philharmonic‘s current observance of that composer and, as well, to other Shostakovian activities hereabouts. The Sonata dates from 1926, which places it between the piss-and-vinegar of the First Symphony and the rowdy-dow of the Second (which it more resembles); its one movement lasts about 18 minutes and teems with activism, most of it brutal.
</p>
<p>    Brutal and Shostakovich: The two seem mutually referential. The recent evening at UCLA&#8217;s Freud Playhouse that celebrated them both left me &#8212; and everyone I spoke to later &#8212; exhilarated and devastated. The 15th Quartet &#8212; dark, angry, morose &#8212; served as receptacle. The Emerson Quartet‘s gesture, as if to begin the work in normal chamber-concert configuration, merged immediately into a theatrical exegesis on Shostakovich&#8217;s struggle to maintain his artistic franchise, interwoven with the broader miasma vented upon the entire Soviet nation under Stalin. (Thus the Sonata that Formenti played had, for anyone fortunate enough to be at both events, somewhat set the stage: the vitality of a young nation‘s artistic aspirations so soon to be trammeled.)
</p>
<p>    Britain&#8217;s remarkable Theater of Complicity had joined the Emerson in creating this eveninglong interweaving of all the senses toward an overpowering end. One tends not to breathe even during ”normal“ performances of this work, Shostakovich‘s last quartet, music from his final illness composed in hospital. This collage, blending three decades of radio sound bites, taped reminiscences (including loving words from the great Rostropovich) and news reports, extended the power of the music as if no boundary existed among the spoken and musical messages gathered into an obsessive new stage work. At the end the Emersons returned and performed the Quartet complete &#8212; standing, even the cellist, as if in memoriam &#8212; and the music segued into darkness and silence. The Ojai Festival will end with that same music by the same performers. I would suggest you don&#8217;t try to drive home immediately afterward.
</p>
<p>    New music by Esa-Pekka Salonen, his two choral settings of poetry by Ann Jaderlund created for the Swedish Radio, formed the solid center of the Master Chorale‘s otherwise helter-skelter latest program. Rich, romantic music, these a cappella vignettes are ravishing especially in their resonant chording; Salonen&#8217;s first music for chorus already shows the hand of a master orchestrator. The pair of songs lasted some 12 minutes; they should have been performed twice.
</p>
<p>    Grant Gershon‘s overall programming idea was admirable enough: ”Expressions of Love“ through music of Schubert, Schumann, Poulenc and the tragically short-lived Lili Boulanger, sister of Nadia, using a smaller-than-usual ensemble and only Vicki Ray&#8217;s piano for substantial support. But three of Schubert‘s love-permeated men&#8217;s choruses were overpowered anyhow; this is music for a few warm-hearted guys around a piano, not a chorus on ramps, and the difference was audible. At the end came Poulenc‘s settings of old French songs, and these, too, were drained of intimacy and charm by too many singers standing stiffly and singing likewise. The printed program was a disaster: the wrong dates for Schubert (”1899&#8211;1963“!!!), a wrong poem among the song texts, the interweaving of the original texts and English translations so that neither was readable in the dimmed-out hall, typos galore. Those 12 minutes of Salonen&#8217;s new works aside (on which the major amount of rehearsal time had obviously been lavished), the evening was a sad deviation from the Master Chorale‘s newly reborn professionalism. Let&#8217;s just forget the whole thing.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Any&#160;Lengths</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2002/03/any-lengths-2/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2002/03/any-lengths-2/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 20 Mar 2002 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=384</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Anton Bruckner&#8217;s Eighth Symphony, played by the Vienna Philharmonic at Orange County‘s Segerstrom Hall last week, oozed along its murky path for almost exactly 90 minutes. Any one of Arnold Schoenberg&#8217;s piano pieces, at the Dorothy Chandler Pavilion four nights later, engaged Peter Serkin‘s mind and fingers for something like two minutes. Try to convince [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Anton Bruckner&#8217;s Eighth Symphony, played by the Vienna Philharmonic at Orange County‘s Segerstrom Hall last week, oozed along its murky path for almost exactly 90 minutes. Any one of Arnold Schoenberg&#8217;s piano pieces, at the Dorothy Chandler Pavilion four nights later, engaged Peter Serkin‘s mind and fingers for something like two minutes. Try to convince me that Bruckner&#8217;s maudlin meanderings contained 45 times the musical value of the Schoenberg, and I will counterpropose an ear exam or perhaps a brain scan.
</p>
<p>    This Bruckner stuff: It reaches out as if the Book of Revelation could somehow achieve translation into the mere mortality of a symphony orchestra. Its only revelation, however, is of self-importance at its least potent. In Vienna he is still revered; I have been to performances there where the ultimate tribute was for the audience to exit in silence. Yes, the Vienna Philharmonic, with its golden horns and its strings of purest silk, may have been ordained by God and his angels to transmute these textbook orchestrations and elementary exercises in invertible counterpoint into something resembling music. There is one 10-second purple patch in the slow movement of the Eighth &#8212; a rising scale crowned at the top by some celestial harp biz &#8212; that does provide momentary shivers for all of its six-bar duration. It hardly compensates for the other 89-plus minutes of agonizing boredom and &#8212; worse &#8212; predictability.
</p>
<p>   Even in Segerstrom‘s bland acoustical setting, the touted Vienna sound was immediately recognizable. All the better on the second of its three nights, when the orchestra&#8217;s awareness of the hall was more firmly fixed and the music at hand &#8212; Mozart, Schubert, Berg &#8212; more deserving of the care being lavished. Bernard Haitink is a serious, trustworthy leader. His management of the Schubert Ninth filled both time and space with caressing, propulsive, immensely lovable sounds &#8212; 53 minutes (even without the prescribed first- and last-movement repeats), and every one of them precious. The Mozart ”Haffner“ Symphony, however, was somewhat compromised by an overlarge string contingent that muddied the work‘s chamber-music balance.
</p>
<p>   Alban Berg&#8217;s Opus 6 orchestral pieces &#8212; ”Berg‘s confessions to Dr. Freud,“ as Esa-Pekka Salonen described them last year in a pre-concert talk &#8212; came over in wondrous clarity. At the end there was booing; Segerstrom&#8217;s drab acoustics may damage the sound from the stage, but the noises out in the hall &#8212; cell phones, candy wrappers, audience reactions &#8212; carry all too well. With Orange County‘s recent cultural advances, largely due to the Philharmonic Society&#8217;s enlightened bookings, of which the Vienna stint was one, there remain pockets of resistance to the artworks of the just-concluded century, even to Berg‘s pre-atonal music of 1915. (There are evidently pockets of resistance to the 19th century as well; the O.C. Register&#8217;s Tim Mangan has sent along a reader‘s letter grousing about the Berg pieces and then also finding the ”Shubert [sic] very long and really tiresome.“) The clouds of war persist.
</p>
<p>    From Vienna, too, there came H.K. (Heinz Karl) Gruber, who claims the Franz Gruber of ”Silent Night“ as ancestor, and whose twinkling, nose-thumbing music lies far more in the Viennese lineage of Schubert than that of Bruckner. Frankenstein is his best-known work, although the EMI recording under Franz Welser-Most is no longer listed: a weirdly captivating half-hour pastiche of pop and serious with a ”chansonnier“ reading kiddie poetry about monsters and an orchestra of toy and adult instruments. Aerial is Gruber&#8217;s 22-minute trumpet concerto from 1999, and however you take its title, you‘d probably be right. He wrote it for the airborne talents of the phenomenal Swedish trumpeter Hakan Hardenberger, who performed it here &#8212; and how! &#8212; with Daniel Harding and the Los Angeles Philharmonic. This piece is also something of a pastiche. Its outside influences include Emily Dickinson&#8217;s poetry and Fred and Ginger‘s dancing; the soloist gets to do some fancy switching through an array of sophisticated trumpets of various sizes plus a kind of Swedish folk trumpet fashioned from a cow&#8217;s horn and sounding not unlike a cow‘s moo. (As an encore, Hardenberger played a solo on that instrument alone.)
</p>
<p>    Aerial is all over the place, delightfully so. The trumpeter gets to sing along with his playing; his solos bend away from ”normal“ tonalities. I haven&#8217;t heard a new piece in a long time that so reflected its composer‘s sheer joy in creating it, nor its soloist&#8217;s exhilaration in his own virtuosity. The piece is full of tricks, but also full of music. Charles Ives‘ Central Park in the Dark preceded it on the program, a splendid programming touch &#8212; two pieces composed 90 years apart, each driven by the abrasive power of its off-kilter creative energy. The well-worn awfulness of Strauss&#8217; Ein Heldenleben finally brought the evening back to Earth, but not enough to erase memories of the high flying that had happened before.
</p>
<p>   High flying . . . the California EAR Unit has been doing just that for 20 years as of now. Last week‘s concert at LACMA celebrated its anniversary in a procession through the hall with kazoos and flashing lights and a retrospective program of typical EAR Unit pieces. Former EARfolk Jim, Art and Gloria were on hand to join Dorothy, Marty, Robin, Erika, Vicki and Amy; neither they nor their music seems to have aged much. An old sampler film of the group&#8217;s music making, back when Amy‘s hair was long and Dorothy&#8217;s was short, proved the longevity of their spirit.
</p>
<p>   The EAR Unit‘s activities assert, above all, that inventive new music can, if properly nurtured, maintain the power to pound the emotions and tickle the ear, sometimes simultaneously. Fred Rzewski&#8217;s 1971 Coming Together, the program‘s earliest piece, bore out that premise: an insistent work that knits phrases from a letter by an Attica Prison inmate (who would later be martyred) into a shattering instrumental background. So did the most recent, the 1998 Girlfriend by Bang-on-a-Can&#8217;s Julia Wolfe, an interweave of dirgelike instrumental music and horrifying sounds of traffic accidents. The crowd at LACMA that night was not as large as it should have been, but that‘s a constant problem at the museum, with its zero promotional budget. It&#8217;s a source of amazement and joy that these concerts &#8212; and groups like the EAR Unit itself &#8212; survive at all.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Friends to&#160;Franz</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2002/03/friends-to-franz-2/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2002/03/friends-to-franz-2/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 13 Mar 2002 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=383</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Franz Schubert&#8217;s G-Major String Quartet haunts me once again. It‘s never far from my thoughts, but last week&#8217;s performance &#8212; by the Philharmonia Quartett Berlin in the “Historic Site” of the Queen Mary‘s gorgeous Grand Salon (a historic sight) &#8212; brings it to the front of my skull. What amazing music! It dates from June [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Franz Schubert&#8217;s G-Major String Quartet haunts me once again. It‘s never far from my thoughts, but last week&#8217;s performance &#8212; by the Philharmonia Quartett Berlin in the “Historic Site” of the Queen Mary‘s gorgeous Grand Salon (a historic sight) &#8212; brings it to the front of my skull. What amazing music!
</p>
<p>    It dates from June 1826, the start of Schubert&#8217;s final two-year creative rush that we can marvel at but never fully understand. Its immediate contemporaries include another huge, inscrutable G-major work &#8212; the so-called “Fantaisie-Sonata” &#8212; and the two trios for piano, violin and cello. Any one of these gives the lie to the old bromide about Schubert‘s mastery of melody at the expense of logical structure; the G-major Quartet, however, looks the furthest ahead, toward other musical languages of composers who were not even born in 1826.
</p>
<p>   Just the opening couple of minutes, for example, with the one tiny melodic nugget sliding down sequentially from G to F to C, prefigures the way Anton Bruckner, six decades later, would use the same device as an obsession ad nauseam. The tremolos, which build the sound of four strings out into a terrifying quasi-orchestral shiver, will also resonate throughout the Brucknerian canon; check out the opening measures of nearly every one of his symphonies.
</p>
<p>   Even more amazing to my ears is the richness and variety of Schubert&#8217;s harmonic language here, and the way it creates the structure that sustains the music‘s grand design &#8212; 45 minutes the other night, even without the specified first-movement repeat. Again, the premise is spelled out in the first measures, the opening G-major chord that swells out to a fortissimo G minor. One of my favorite moments in all music comes in the way that passage returns at the recapitulation 12 or so minutes later. Now the major-minor order is reversed, and played this time in a distant, mystery-laden pianissimo, with a soft new melody for the first violin that wraps itself with a benevolent smile around the proceedings.
</p>
<p>   That majorminor vacillation becomes, in fact, the principal obsession throughout. Each of the four movements is built around the device, each time differently, each time unmistakably. No composer before had tried, or even felt the need, to unify a multimovement work in this way. Beethoven&#8217;s C-sharp minor Quartet (also composed in 1826, by the way) achieves a kind of unity by running the movements together and by including quotations from the first movement in the finale. Schubert‘s method here is more organic, with the unifying element embedded in all four movements.
</p>
<p>   It isn&#8217;t the formal practices that elevate this G-major quartet, however; leave that for the thesis writers (including my own from UC, 1952). It‘s the fearsome energy of the piece, the clash among the varieties of its melodic devices &#8212; now bristling in the shrieks of pain in the slow movement, now soothingly Schubertian (you might say) midway in the scherzo. It holds you captive throughout its enormous length, an expanse made necessary by the many things the music has to say, the many ways Schubert has devised for saying them, and the sheer &#8212; if sometimes forbidding &#8212; beauty of the work as a whole. The Berliners, all members of that city&#8217;s Philharmonic, reacted to all of this at full strength. Their program also included other masterpieces large and small: the first of Mozart‘s quartets dedicated to Haydn and the darling little Italian Serenade of Hugo Wolf &#8212; both also in G major, as it happened, but each with something different on its mind.
</p>
<p>    Another Austrian Franz has been heard from recently, Herr Welser-Most of Linz, who guest-conducted the Philharmonic the week before, and had me biting my tongue all the way home for the mean things I&#8217;ve said and written all my life about Jan Sibelius‘ First Symphony. There was a cute irony in operation here, although it doesn&#8217;t really matter. Welser-Most takes over the Cleveland Orchestra next fall, in a post that Cleveland‘s management had been openly but vainly wooing Esa-Pekka Salonen to accept. So now he, Cleveland&#8217;s second choice, comes to town with a typical Salonen program &#8212; Sibelius, Haydn, Kaija Saariaho &#8212; and makes it work. (He and Salonen are scheduled to swap podiums &#8212; for one week only &#8212; two seasons from now.)
</p>
<p>    The Sibelius got what you might call a Viennese-classic performance, immensely spirited, its dynamic contrasts honed to a cutting edge, the orchestral balance tilted so that thematic material emerged clear and bright, with the underlying murk nicely under control, the spooky opening clarinet solo played by Michele Zukovsky as if from another planet. Herbert von Karajan, echt Austrian, used to conduct Sibelius that way at the start of his career, although the Viennese I knew as a student there considered it a sacrilege that he played that music at all. But he was able to make sense out of it, and now Welser-Most comes along with, apparently, the same ability.
</p>
<p>   Saariaho‘s Du Cristal was first played here under Salonen (and recorded on Finland&#8217;s Ondine label) in 1990. She wrote it while at UC San Diego, rubbing shoulders with composers Brian Ferneyhough and Roger Reynolds, whose stark, unyielding academicism the piece somewhat reflects. Its glassy, crystalline sounds are wonderful in themselves; compared, however, to the music Saariaho now writes &#8212; the three compositions led by Salonen on the recent Sony disc and the haunting harmonies of the opera L‘Amour de Loin, which Santa Fe will produce next summer &#8212; there is something not quite lovely about this music.
</p>
<p>   Andrew Shulman, the Philharmonic&#8217;s about-to-leave principal cellist, was soloist in Haydn‘s D-major Concerto. I am bored by this work, as I am by little else of Haydn; Shulman played it as if he shared my feelings. The concerto has too little “cello” sound; the solos all lie too high to capture the eloquence that Beethoven was able to bring forth from the instrument in his sonatas of 25 years later. The finale sings of “gathering nuts in May,” and that&#8217;s rather pretty. It‘s a long time in coming, however.
</p>
<p>   If you were confused by the title of last week&#8217;s article, so was I. I wrote about Tchaikovsky and called it “The Grim Weeper,” not “Reaper” as printed. Where was Elmer Fudd when we needed him?</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>The Grim&#160;Weeper</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2002/03/the-grim-weeper-2/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2002/03/the-grim-weeper-2/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 06 Mar 2002 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=382</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[There used to be a music critic in town who could never write about the music of Piotr Ilitch (“Pete”) Tchaikovsky without throwing in the pet epithet “slush pump.” It rendered the critic predictable, which is the worst fate that can befall anyone in this line of work. It was also unfair. In the last [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>
There used to be a music critic in town who could never write about the music of Piotr Ilitch (“Pete”) Tchaikovsky without throwing in the pet epithet “slush pump.” It rendered the critic predictable, which is the worst fate that can befall anyone in this line of work. It was also unfair. In the last couple of weeks we&#8217;ve had our share of Tchaikovsky &#8211; the Sixth Symphony at the Philharmonic and <i>Eugene Onegin</i> at Opera Pacific in Costa Mesa &#8211; and in neither work could I detect even enough slush to prime a pump, let alone set it into full gushing activity.</p>
<p>
<i>Eugene Onegin</i> stands alone. Alexander Pushkin&#8217;s soaring verses virtually invented<br />
romantic Russian-ness; Tchaikovsky&#8217;s music<br />
enhanced their melancholic, lyric shape and served as a bridge to the intense humanness of Chekhov&#8217;s dramas. The young Onegin, tampering at will and without remorse with the lives of those around him, will age under Chekhov&#8217;s all-knowing pen into the Trigorin of <i>The Seagull</i>; Pushkin&#8217;s lovelorn Tatyana pulls herself out of her funk after Onegin&#8217;s rejection, as Chekhov&#8217;s Nina cannot.</p>
<p>
Nor, unfortunately, could the earnest forces at Opera Pacific, whose courageous lunge at the high passions and the subtle shadings of Tchaikovsky&#8217;s marvelous opera -<br />
the first full-scale staging of the work in this area, unless memory deceives, in many a decade &#8211; fell fatally wide of the mark. A program note by Colin Graham, who directed and whose dossier is long and distinguished, reflected his awareness of the opera&#8217;s antecedents, of Tchaikovsky&#8217;s efforts to frame the insecurities of his characters by casting the opera with students, of the efforts of the great Stanislavsky to preserve in his production the very overtones in the work that the staging in Costa Mesa willfully ignores. I had to think back to the small-scale, rather slapdash <i>Onegin</i> that a touring company from St. Petersburg brought to the Cerritos Center last season, with its handful of scenery and its eager, young, not-quite-ready cast; that hapless evening, it now seems in retrospect, was actually a more accurate rendering of those overtones than Opera Pacific&#8217;s elephantine escapade.</p>
<p>
There was little of Pushkin/Tchaikovsky&#8217;s “cold dandy” in Lucio Gallo&#8217;s tremolo-ridden Onegin, who stalked the stage in a diabolical manner more likely to send maidens to hide<br />
under the bed than to pen love letters. Hugh Smith&#8217;s hulking loppus of a Lensky was hardly the amorous adolescent of Tchaikovsky&#8217;s ideals, although he hit some brave high notes in his big aria and drew the evening&#8217;s largest hand. Mary Mills was a pretty if passionless Tatyana, who sang her moving “letter aria” as if composing it on a word processor. Guest conductor Stephen Lord&#8217;s uneventful leadership was a step or two down from the standards Opera Pacific has been lately setting under John DeMain; Pier Luigi Samaritani&#8217;s sets would serve dozens of heavy, melodramatic operas but encapsulated little of the bittersweet elegance of this one special masterpiece. The opera was said to be sung in Russian, as it may indeed have been. Some bits from Pushkin&#8217;s poetry were flashed on the scrim between scenes, reduced to English doggerel; that, in fact, somewhat epitomized the treatment accorded the entire work.</p>
<p>
When Bernard Rands taught composition at UC San Diego, his music was frequently performed hereabouts; the recent revival of his <i>Canti del Sole</i> reminded us of what we&#8217;ve been missing. There is a special magic about anthology pieces &#8211; Britten&#8217;s Serenade, Berio&#8217;s Coro come to mind &#8211; as the composers&#8217; choice of texts and the way their inner music becomes outwardly musicked evokes the poetic impulse on two levels. Rands&#8217; cycle of three such works &#8211; sun, moon and eclipse &#8211; each involve a solo voice against an ensemble; each seems flung out into limitless, mysterious, resonant space.</p>
<p>
Maybe the “sun” songs are the best of the set, although that could be only because I&#8217;ve heard them most recently &#8211; at last week&#8217;s Green Umbrella concert, in fact. The shivery opening owes something to Ravel&#8217;s <i>Daphnis et Chloë</i> sunrise, but the happenings in the lustrous, insinuating music are as widespread as the dozen or so poems that are its substance. Small glints of light seem to dance through the work, some from the 11-member instrumental ensemble, some from the solo singer, some from the ring of the poetry &#8211; Baudelaire, Montale, D.H. Lawrence, Dylan Thomas and more. These were elegantly sung by the indestructible Jonathan Mack, surrounded by<br />
audible sunshine from the players of USC&#8217;s Thornton Contemporary Music Ensemble led by Donald Crockett.</p>
<p>
Music for an ensemble of eight cellos, and nothing more, may suggest an expanse of creaks and groans; works on this program by Kaija Saariaho and Augusta Read Thomas &#8211; both inspired by the look and feel of snow &#8211; delivered far more. Saariaho&#8217;s <i>Neiges</i> told of vast, fog-dappled snowscapes; the <i>Blizzard in Paradise</i> of Thomas (wife of Bernard Rands, if it matters) brought the weather somewhat closer, with gusts of stinging snow buffeting the hardy voyager. USC&#8217;s music department, apparently, abounds in fearless cellists.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>SANTA FE&#160;OPERA</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2002/02/santa-fe-opera/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2002/02/santa-fe-opera/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 28 Feb 2002 21:52:16 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Opera News]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=1809</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Think of a place in the high desert, a mile and a half above sea level. Oxygen is scarce at that altitude; it takes extra effort to climb  stairs or sing a cadenza. Water is scarce; maintaining a garden is a high-risk project. A single glass of wine has the kick of a double martini [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Think of a place in the high desert, a mile and a half above sea level. Oxygen is scarce at that altitude; it takes extra effort to climb  stairs or sing a cadenza. Water is scarce; maintaining a garden is a high-risk project. A single glass of wine has the kick of a double martini at sea level. In summer the hot desert sun keeps the temperature in the high nineties; wintertime readings down to zero are not uncommon. (The low humidity, however, makes both extremes more bearable than in, say, Manhattan.) Is this the ideal kind of place for starting an opera company? “No,” you’d think, but according to John Crosby you’d be wrong.</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">Crosby, New York-born (1926), operatic coach and conductor at various East-Coast enterprises, visited New Mexico in the 1950s and seems to have immediately been seized by a vision of opera thriving on a 76-acre ranch property that he had purchased in the hills north of Santa Fe. With a visionary’s zeal and a visionary’s gall, he mapped out an inaugural seven-week season: <em> Butterfly</em>, <em>Così</em> and <em>The Barber</em> to draw the crowds, <em>Ariadne auf Naxos</em> to indulge his passion for Richard Strauss, the world premiere of Marvin David Levy’s <em>The Tower</em> to prove his loyalty to opera’s present and future.</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">Further safeguarding that future, Crosby installed an apprentice program – the first of its kind to earn the full support of AGMA from the beginning. Most daring of all, he scheduled Igor  Stravinsky’s <em>The Rake’s Progress</em>, and had the consummate gall to invite the august composer himself to officiate at rehearsals. In a rickety 480-seat performing space open to the skies, the capacity opening-night crowd on July 3, 1957 made it clear that the Santa Fe Opera was off to a good start. The ensuing  45 years have proved them right.</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">Crosby stepped down as general director at the end of the 2000 season, while maintaining hold of his baton. Over the years he conducted most of the performances of his beloved Strauss; this summer he leads <em>La Traviata</em>.  He has, however, swapped deserts, and spends most of his time in his new home in California’s Palm Springs.</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">“Trying to imagine the courage of that man is still a staggering task,” says Richard Gaddes, who stepped into Crosby’s general-director shoes last year. A genial and affable Brit, sixtyish, Gaddes had served the company before as artistic administrator, and left in 1976 to found the Opera Theater of St. Louis. “Think of what it must have taken to convince Stravinsky to commit time to an opera theater that hadn’t even yet  been built.  Still, Stravinsky not only came that summer; he came back several times, and became what you might call the company’s mascot. Tomorrow, when we go up to the opera house, you’ll see the new Stravinsky Terrace, where the audience can linger over drinks at intermission.”</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">
<p class="MsoNormal">Santa Fe is special. Its downtown Plaza still preserves the city’s plan at its founding in 1610. Try to build even a gas station downtown in any but the traditional Spanish-Pueblo-Indian architectural style, and you get tromped on by the City’s planning board. Before opera it was already a haven for a scattering of painters, drawn there by the gorgeous purity of air and light (and by the hospitality of the legendary Mabel Dodge Luhan, who collected artists at her home up the road in Taos as you or I might collect stamps). Now you won’t find a foot of empty space between the art galleries jammed together along Canyon Road, and the city’s Mayor, Larry Delgado, delightedly pins blame on the Opera. “Some people complain at too many galleries, but I don’t agree. It’s Canyon Road that separates Santa Fe from anywhere else; after all, it could have gone to condos. I don’t want this to be any-old-city-USA. John Crosby saved us from that, and the people after him save us as well.” An operagoer when time allows, and a lapsed trumpet-player, Delgado fingers <em>Carmen</em> as his favorite</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">Santa Fe in winter, when I looked in to talk to some of its movers, has its own crystalline beauty, and is a lot more manageable besides; you can lunch on The Shed’s outstanding blue-corn burritos without a couple of hours on the waiting line. Eight miles north on I-25, Gaddes guides me through the rebuilt Opera House, the fourth structure in that space. No. 2 had burned to the ground late one night during the 1967 season – without, however, costing the company a single performance date. No. 3, with its split roof and open sides, was a heavenly place under  balmy summer skies but a windswept, watery hell on the not-infrequent monsoon nights. No. 4, which seats 2,128.  has a full roof and, again, open sides, but with, at least, some buffers to slow down potential sidewise gusts. As we visit workmen are finishing off a sound-wall to block out the sound of braking semis on the Interstate. Beside the Opera House stands the brand-new Stieren Orchestra Hall, an acoustical state-of-the-art rehearsal space (and possible recital hall) that enables orchestral and stage rehearsals to go on separately and simultaneously.</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">In the hall itself, Gaddes points to another improvement of considerable consequence, consoles for supertitles built into each seat-back, each consisting of a screen and a small red button. That button, Gaddes explains, does more than merely turning the titles on and off (as at the Met); it also offers the choice of titles in English and Spanish, and therein, in that small square of red plastic, is potent proof of the Santa Fe Opera’s new and vital direction.</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">“John’s vision of opera was wholly imperial,” says Gaddes. “He seemed to pride himself on the fact that the vast majority of his audience came to Santa Fe from out of state. He saw the Santa Fe Opera as the American Glyndebourne or Bayreuth, and didn’t concern himself much with whether  or how the local community regarded it. My concern, therefore, was to find a way to bring that community, with its preponderant Hispanic population,  into the picture. Last year we upgraded the supertitle system, so that pushing the red  button allowed the choice of English or Spanish. At the same time we announced that anyone who hadn’t been to the Santa Fe Opera in five years could now buy tickets for fifty percent off.</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">“Those two things made an enormous difference; they were the main reason that last season’s ticket sales were up 7,000 over the year before. You could look around the hall and spot whole Hispanic families. One night, after a performance that had Spanish supertitles, we went around to check to see which language had been left on the consoles. Twelve percent were set for Spanish. More and more people started coming early with picnic suppers. They came to the pre-performance lectures. This year we’ll have an extra set of lectures at six o’clock before a nine o’clock performance, to allow more time for picnicking. Last year we only provided Spanish supertitles for two operas; this year we’ll do all five.  Another thing: last year we let the city use our theater for a Mariachi festival. John would have been horrified, of course, but that event also let a lot of people discover that mysterious place on the hill that they had never seen before.”</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">
<p class="MsoNormal">On a nearby hill  the spacious home of Regina Safarty Rickless faces a staggering panorama up into the Sangre de Cristo Mountains.   As just plain Regina Safarty she had  had a distinguished career as mezzo-soprano with the New York City Opera and in several European houses. In the Santa Fe Opera’s first year she was <em>Madama Butterfly</em>’s Suzuki – “at $100 a week,” she remembers &#8212; and then made her way up life’s ladder as Carmen and Baba the Turk. Now she directs the company’s apprentice program which, like the company itself, has grown in both size and stature. In 1959 came the first apprentice-run concert. In 1960 a grant from the Mellon Foundation enabled the hiring of a voice coach.</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">Sarfaty hands me a list of graduates from the program since it began in 1957. David Gockley and Lotfi Mansouri, both eminent administrators on their own, came out of the management-training program; the singers’ roster includes James Morris, Samuel Ramey, Sally Wolf, Neil Shicoff…an impressive aggregation. Twenty-three former apprentices in the technicians’ training program moved on to professional posts at the Santa Fe Opera itself. At the end of the season the apprentices do their own show, recitals of operatic scenes. These draw large crowds.</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">“Out of 800 applicants a year more or less,” she tells me, “we end up with, maybe, 36. Here they train for specific roles, small parts, chorus, or as a cover. They get a small weekly wage, set in the AGMA contract and, of course, room and board. We give them generalized role study, voice lessons, master classes. We guide them through the problems of singing opera at 7,500 feet. Drink lots of water, I tell them,  but watch the booze, because a little goes a long way. Don’t move too much at first. We haven’t lost anyone to altitude…not yet.</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">“The greater problem is losing people to wrong decisions or too much ambition. To combat this we invite agents to come to Santa Fe, check out the apprentice talent, and also make themselves available for advice on career choices and repertory. Most important is for a young singer to learn to say ‘no.’ You have to learn to turn down an offer that goes beyond what you’re ready for. The agent may not call again, but you get to keep your voice.</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">“What’s interesting here,” Sarfaty concludes, “is the age spread. In the ‘50s and ‘60s almost all of our apprentices were in the 21-25 range. Now there are some as old as 34. That means that they stay in school longer, and come into life better prepared. It <em>can</em> mean that, at least.”</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">
<p class="MsoNormal">A glance over the Santa Fe Opera’s 45 years produces the impression of John Crosby’s skewed but distinctive repertory, a list as remarkable for its omissions as its entries. The Verdi pickings are slim: <em>La Traviata</em> averaging five performances each over eleven seasons, <em>Falstaff</em> in four seasons, three of <em>Rigoletto</em> and one of <em>Don Carlo</em> . Of Wagner there is only a <em>Dutchman</em>, performed in three seasons. Mozart fares well, with 15 seasons of <em>Figaro</em> best of all. So does Stravinsky, with the <em>Rake</em> turning up in seven seasons and <em>Le Rossignol</em> in five. Six operas of Hans Werner Henze have received American premieres in Santa Fe, although it may be significant that none of them returned for a second season. And then there is Strauss: five seasons of  <em>Rosenkavalier</em>, nine of <em>Salome</em> and thirteen other operas – lacking only <em>Guntram</em> and <em>Die Frau ohne Schatten</em> to complete the collection.</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">Will things change? This summer, the absence of Richard Strauss for the first time since 1977 may count as the season’s novelty; an even greater one, however, is the American premiere of <em>L’Amour de Loin</em>, the opera by Kaija Saariaho that has already garnered – in Salzburg and Paris &#8212; a round of critical ecstasy unique for any serious-minded opera in these times. As we speak Richard Gaddes is obsessed with that opera’s problems: director Peter Sellars’ demand for towers that may impinge on the orchestra pit, and the need to attend to Dawn Upshaw’s comfort as she lies in a pool of water in the final moments. (“Perhaps we should try a few of those immersion heaters you use for coffee,” he wonders aloud.) The 2002 season also lists <em>Eugene Onegin</em>, <em>La Traviata</em> and the company’s first <em>La Clemenza di Tito</em> and <em>L’Italiana in Algeri</em>.</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">“Of course things will change,” Gaddes continues, “if only because of the vast differences in style between John – who ran a magnificent opera company close to his vest – and my own, let’s say, community-minded approach. Specifically, I’m looking at American works. We have Bright Sheng on the list for 2003; we’re talking to Aaron Kernis and to Theodore Shapiro. Tobias Picker’s <em>Emmeline</em> had its world premiere here in 1996 and has done well since then; it’s musically lightweight, perhaps, but it’s a good evening in the theater. We will do better. We’ve begun to reach out to the community that actually lives here, with an <em>HMS Pinafore</em> this past winter in a great old downtown movie theater, the Lensic, that’s been magnificently restored. We’ve done  <em>Noah’s Flood</em> and <em>The Beggar’s Opera</em> in schools and churches. The next step will be to look into Spanish opera – not merely because it’s Spanish, but because it’s good. What do you know about <em>Goyescas</em>?”</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">
<p class="MsoNormal">Over a splendid burrito on a blindingly sunlit February day, Opera Board President Carole Ely adds to the perspective. “The amazing thing about John,” she says, “was the equilibrium he managed to maintain between artistic excellence and the balance sheet. Richard adds community consciousness to the mix. With John, what happened on the main stage mattered the most. He would have burst an artery before he’d bring that Mariachi festival onto that stage. But Richard did. People have to wonder how September 11 affects our company. Actually, it hasn’t affected us very much. New Mexico has relatively few large corporations, so most of our support comes from a vast list of individuals or smaller corporations – a few thousand here and there.</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">“Opera has made this community what it is,” she concluded. “Before there were artists, but then there was John Crosby, in this hidden gem of a town in the Southwest.”</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">
<p class="MsoNormal">Like many Santa Feans, David and Kay Ingalls moved there from somewhere else: specifically, from Los Angeles, where David ran a prestigious bookshop and both had lent their names to a sheaf of cultural agencies. “We moved to Santa Fe,” says Kay, “just to get away from running things.” Now David chairs the Santa Fe Opera Board, and he and Kay are both heavy movers at the Santa Fe Chamber Music Festival, which runs concurrent to the opera season and does its own sell-out business.</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">“We came here summer after summer,” says Kay, “to ride horses and swim and go to the opera. Then we came once in the winter, just to try things out. That did it; we bought a lot at the edge of town, and then we decided on this great old house right in town. We walk over to The Subscription every morning, have coffee, read the papers and rub shoulders with Nobel winners, people in the sciences and in the arts. When we lived in Pasadena the ride to the Los Angeles airport was always a mess of traffic. Here the Albuquerque airport may be farther away, but it’s a lot easier to get to.”</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">“It’s an easy place to live,” says David.</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">“Yes, and it’s an easy place to love,” says Kay.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>An Offering You Can&#039;t&#160;Refuse</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2002/02/an-offering-you-cant-refuse/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2002/02/an-offering-you-cant-refuse/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 27 Feb 2002 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=381</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Photo by Mats LundquistFinally, and not a moment too soon, the Philharmonic has gotten around to Sofia Gubaidulina. Her Offertorium &#8211; composed in 1980, twice revised since then, dedicated to Gidon Kremer, who also made the first recording &#8211; remains one of the brainiest and most challenging works of our time. Guest conductor Alan Gilbert [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Photo by Mats LundquistFinally, and not a moment too soon,  the Philharmonic has  gotten around to Sofia Gubaidulina. Her <i>Offertorium</i> &#8211; composed in 1980, twice revised since then, dedicated to Gidon Kremer, who also made the first recording &#8211; remains one of the brainiest and most challenging works of our time. Guest conductor Alan Gilbert led a performance best described as heroic; Philharmonic concertmaster Martin Chalifour&#8217;s execution of the solo violin part was of like quality. The audience last Thursday night didn&#8217;t quite get it; the  applause was sporadic and paltry. This is music that needs to be lived with and  puzzled over.</p>
<p>
It makes a fascinating study. Bach&#8217;s <i>Musical Offering</i> provided the theme and the title; it was smart of Gilbert to preface the performance with Anton Webern&#8217;s reworking of some of the same music. The theme itself, legend has it, was furnished to Bach by Prussia&#8217;s King Frederick II. Legend or not, those 20 notes, with their dissonant downward leap balanced by an elegant chromatic resolution, are a fountainhead of musical inspiration, as Bach, Webern and Gubaidulina handsomely demonstrate. Gubaidulina&#8217;s way with those notes is by some distance the most savage.</p>
<p>
At first hearing, she stops just short of completion. Over the next 40 or so minutes the theme is further reduced, torn apart, swirled through a huge orchestra that includes a vast battery of percussion. Through all this brutal fragmentation, one unifying factor remains, that dissonant downward leap; it serves as a DNA that maintains the tortured face of Bach visible through the cataclysm. Now and then &#8211; but not often &#8211; we are allowed a breath or two, as the music recedes and the solo violinist takes flight in wild cadenzas. For the most part, we hang on as best we can, faced with this torrent that manages at once to be both obsessive and rhapsodic.</p>
<p>
I wrote about Gubaidulina last November, as several recordings of her music appeared simultaneously. Kremer&#8217;s recording of <i>Offertorium</i> is still available, on Deutsche Grammophon, and I urge it upon you, as a piece of wonderfully stirring &#8211; and, yes, irritating &#8211; music, but also as a fascinating study on the way a composer, in the course of establishing herself as a contemporary voice, learns to profit by the living relics of the past. If I were running a school for composers &#8211; no thanks, however &#8211; I would assign every student the task of carving some kind of new music out of Bach&#8217;s (or King Frederick&#8217;s) pregnant theme.</p>
<p>
For the 35-year-old Gilbert the concert marked a triumphant return; he had previously stood in for the ailing Roger Norrington in May 1998. On the podium he is immensely likable: his beat strong and clear, his manner free from gadgetry. The Tchaikovsky “Pathétique” &#8211; made clear-headed, strong and agreeably drool-free &#8211; ended the program, and drew the deserved cheers that the Gubaidulina had been denied. I want to write more about Tchaikovsky next week, after Opera Pacific&#8217;s <i>Eugene Onegin</i>.</p>
<p>
Arvo Pärt&#8217;s <i>Te Deum</i>, which filled the air of UCLA&#8217;s Royce Hall the next night with mysterious shimmer and shimmering mystery, dates from about the same time as <i>Offertorium</i>. Both are by composers oppressed by the yoke of Soviet censorship who achieved their current high regard only after leaving their respective homelands. I would not belabor any further similarities, but hearing those two overpowering works on successive nights has been beneficial to my outlook on life, not to mention my metabolism. The <i>Te Deum</i> came after two big choral pieces by Vivaldi, and rounded out an evening of spellbinding music-making by the Estonian Philharmonic Chamber Choir and the Tallinn Chamber Orchestra under Tönu Kaljuste. They have been here before, but not nearly often enough.</p>
<p>
Pärt has written about his music as comparable to “white light, which contains all colors,” with the “spirit of the listener” as prism. This Te Deum is, indeed, a creation fashioned out of color. It emerges from a darkness dimly perceived; its harmonies go on for  minutes as a kind of bleached-out gray, pierced now and then by a single diatonic chord like a flash of gold. There is a swatch of dark red now and then, but not often and not for long. At the end a small group of voices intones a threefold “Sanctus,” many times repeated ever more softly, fading finally to silence; if there is a more beautiful ending in all music it doesn&#8217;t come immediately to mind. (The Gubaidulina also ends extraor dinarily, by the way, like a sudden halt at the brink of a precipice.)</p>
<p>
The Estonians are a marvelous performing force, as their many discs &#8211; including the <i>Te Deum</i> on ECM &#8211; emphatically prove. The Pärt work called for a string orchestra with a prepared piano and with a deep bass note &#8211; on tape, played on an Aeolian wind-harp &#8211; serving as ground zero; two Vivaldi psalm settings used the chorus and orchestra (with a couple of winds and a small portative organ) split into two answering groups, with vocal soloists drawn from the 28-member chorus. I always think of Estonia&#8217;s flag &#8211; white, black and a particularly clean, cold blue &#8211; when I hear that country&#8217;s music: slightly cool, efficient, modest. I must go there sometime.</p>
<p>
Meanwhile, back at the Philharmonic . . . The orchestra has a splendid addition in its recently appointed assistant conductor Yasuo Shinozaki, who had his innings the previous week as replacement for the ailing Hans Vonk in an all-Beethoven program. Short and not quite sylphlike, Shinozaki cuts a dynamic figure on the podium, including a tendency toward jumping at moments of high enthusiasm. He conducted a terrific program: a big, hair-raising <i>Leonore</i> No. 3 that whipped up a fair amount of tension leading to the “rescuing” offstage trumpet call; a final “Pastoral” Symphony nicely paced and, again, remarkably propulsive toward its great, stormy climax. André Watts&#8217; unevenful saunter through the Fourth Piano Concerto was the evening&#8217;s only disappointment. At a mere 55, with so much of an illustrious career in his résumé, he should not yet be mangling as many notes, and missing as much of the poetry in this music, as he did that night.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Time&#160;Traveling</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2002/02/time-traveling/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2002/02/time-traveling/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 20 Feb 2002 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=380</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Happily adrift in the enchanting pseudo-Renaissance fakery of UCLA&#8217;s Powell Library, my ears coddled and cajoled by the authentic Renaissance harmonies of Francesco Landini‘s music interspersed with the raptures of Dante&#8217;s poetry, I beheld my own kind of vision. It revealed to me the golden message that some things very old in years are actually [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Happily adrift in the enchanting pseudo-Renaissance fakery of UCLA&#8217;s Powell Library, my ears coddled and cajoled by the authentic Renaissance harmonies of Francesco Landini‘s music interspersed with the raptures of Dante&#8217;s poetry, I beheld my own kind of vision. It revealed to me the golden message that some things very old in years are actually very new in spirit. The next day, in the humdrum realism of the Dorothy Chandler Pavilion at the Music Center, that same vision showed itself in reverse, as the very new music of Henryk Gorecki proffered the message that some things never change.
</p>
<p>    Landini and Dante, the musician-poet and the poet-musician: The one reached beyond the agony of blindness to shape musical forms exactly the color of their poetry; the other translated the agony of love‘s rejection into words as close to music as words ever get. Anonymous 4, in one of the Da Camera Society&#8217;s bewitching “Historic Sites” events, filled the evening with the high art of their time: 15 of Landini‘s ballate &#8212; songs mostly about love&#8217;s joys, love‘s torments &#8212; alternating with short readings from La Vita Nuova, Dante&#8217;s account of his early love for the fragile and unattainable Beatrice. Perhaps neither composer nor poet envisioned his words and his music sung by four women to large audiences, in rhythms and pitches exactly fixed by serious musicology and with a vibrance that accomplished a blend of the antiquarian and the high-spirited contemporary; their times didn‘t always call for optimism. The best early-music ensembles of today, to which Anonymous 4 definitely belongs, make of their chosen fields an entertainment so joyous, so contemporary &#8212; and yet so “honest” in the best sense &#8212; that years and dates and footnotes in dusty tomes no longer matter.
</p>
<p>   A great wave swept through the music of the 14th century. Composers in the cathedrals had found ways to enhance the chants of the liturgy with all kinds of interesting harmonic devices: two or three lines sung simultaneously but with different texts, or the almost dancelike virtuosity of the counterpoints composed at Notre-Dame in Paris. Then the pope had stamped his papal foot, church music was ordered back to its pristine one-line-at-a-time chastity, and even the most devout composers went over to the secular side. The 150 or so surviving love songs of Landini (c. 1335&#8211;1397) detail the shape of that wave, from the austere expanse of the first works to what we begin to recognize as the early stirrings of classical harmonies in the mature songs. Dante instilled the human heart into his poetry; Van Eyck&#8217;s Adoration revealed the way to create human perspective on a flat painted surface; Landini‘s harmonies brought passion into music. Early or late, for a single voice or four voices intertwined, what still amazes us in Landini&#8217;s wonderful repertory is the closeness in mood between the tunes and the poetry they enhance &#8212; most of it by &#8212;&#8212;&#8211;<br />
AUTHORs whose names no longer exist. Half a millennium before the flowering of art song in the hands of Schubert, that same sensitivity had guided another pen to other kinds of music. Anonymous 4, by the way, has recorded this Landini garland on a Harmonia Mundi disc called The Second Circle.
</p>
<p>    Even more years separate this music from Gorecki‘s Miserere, the amazing work for unaccompanied chorus that began the Master Chorale concert a day later. Here also, however, was music put together with ages-old techniques. As the composers around Notre-Dame created their massive musical designs out of melodic lines piled atop one another and sung simultaneously, Gorecki carries the process to a gut-busting climax. The lowest men&#8217;s choral voices begin the chant, in solemn, measured tones, outlining a sense of some deep, grievous minor key. At the point where their chant seems wrung out of passion, the next-higher voices enter, their chant paralleling the first but in some other key. One by one, section by section, the chorus takes up the chant, and their simultaneity becomes less a line and more an aura. Out in the audience &#8212; in the ears of this audience member, at least &#8212; the effect is of a huge screw implacably tightened. Twenty minutes later, when the full chorus has been engaged, the full text of the Miserere prayer bursts forth; the screw, which, you‘d have thought, had been given its final wrench, continues to turn.
</p>
<p>    The work dates from 1981. Its inspiration was the oppression by the Polish Communist government of the Solidarity labor movement; it was suppressed in Poland until 1987. Its performance here, on a program that also included Mozart&#8217;s Requiem, as noted last week, is further reason to rejoice in the Master Chorale‘s new lease on life under Grant Gershon&#8217;s leadership. Every major city has some kind of resident chorus, good for an occasional Messiah or a Ninth. It seems as though the Master Chorale now aims higher, with a repertory old and new comparable to the breadth the Philharmonic‘s programming attains (or should). Esa-Pekka Salonen has written a piece for the group&#8217;s next concert (March 16), which will also be recorded on its own label. The age of enlightenment may not be so far off.
</p>
<p>    Last week‘s piano music came in kibbles: 60 &#8212; count &#8216;em, 60 &#8212; piano works by that many composers, none more than 60 seconds long, played by Guy Livingston at LACMA in a concert more agreeable than my description suggests; and small pieces by Hungarian composers played by Mark Robson at a “Piano Spheres” concert in Pasadena titled, alas, “Ligeti Split.”
</p>
<p>    Livingston also has his “serious” side as a pianist; Chopin‘s “Minute” Waltz, as the sole encore, suggested as much. Most of these short pieces, each commissioned and paid for by a bottle of Jack Daniel&#8217;s, subsided into a pleasant haze. A couple of parody pieces &#8212; Bill Bolcom of Tchaikovsky, Anders Jallen of Webern &#8212; rose above the horizon; so did Moritz Eggert‘s Hammerklavier XI, a collage of 60 pieces one second long; so did Pierre Boulez&#8217;s letter of rejection, which Livingston set to his own music. What made the concert more than bearable, however, was Livingston‘s own welcoming manner, including brief chats from an easy chair after every 10 pieces. You can&#8217;t run down a concert in which the performer is so adept at projecting his own pleasure at what he‘s doing.
</p>
<p>   Robson&#8217;s offerings were sterner stuff but equally fragmentary: sets of tiny pieces by Gyorgy Kurtag and Bela Bartok; three of Gyorgy Ligeti‘s fantastic Etudes and the tiny, whimsical movements of his Musica Ricercata; Zoltan Kodaly&#8217;s 1918 Piano Pieces (more interesting than anything else I know by this Hungarian also-ran); and, of course, some Liszt. Robson earns his daily bread as rehearsal coach for the L.A. Opera and his ticket to heaven in his uncommonly interesting recital programming; his performance last season of Messiaen‘s Vingt Regards merits a worthy place in local annals. So, of course, does the entire “Piano Spheres” series, the brainchild of the venerable Leonard Stein, the father of us all.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>RE: SAN FRANCISCO&#160;OPERA</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2002/02/re-san-francisco-opera/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2002/02/re-san-francisco-opera/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Fri, 15 Feb 2002 22:00:53 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Opera News]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=1812</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[San Francisco’s ardent Wagnerites, well-served by their opera company’s previous managements, now have reasons for some concern. Only one work by the object of their affection – and that the early and relatively brief Der fliegende Holländer – figures on the announced five-year programming of incoming general director Pamela Rosenberg. They had reasons, therefore, to [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>San Francisco’s ardent Wagnerites, well-served by their opera company’s previous managements, now have reasons for some concern. Only one work by the object of their affection – and that the early and relatively brief <em>Der fliegende Holländer</em> – figures on the announced five-year programming of incoming general director Pamela Rosenberg. They had reasons, therefore, to cling to this season’s <em>Die Meistersinger</em>, given seven times during October, as a pre-famine feast. Most of those reasons, as it happened, were good.</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">Barring a questionable detail here and there, John Coyne’s sets could easily have passed for snapshots of medieval Nürnberg – best of all the spacious, beautifully colored church interior for Act One and the broad and uncluttered riverbank for the final songfest. Neither Coyne nor director Hans-Peter Lehmann, however, could quite untangle the glorious tangle of activity throughout Act Two, with performers disappearing and re-emerging from behind free-standing scrims and a towering upstage vertical that bore uncomfortable resemblance to a destroyed structure of recent tragic memory. The great contrapuntal brouhaha that ended that act became more mess than mélée; Sachs’ rescue of Walther at the end had to be taken pretty much on faith. The opera’s final moment, the apotheosis of artist over critic, was cluttered beyond Wagnerian intent  by having the disgraced Beckmesser return to the fold and deliver a penitent hug to the triumphant Sachs. (Sorry, folks, but music critics don’t work that way.)</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">James Morris sang his first Sachs &#8212; out-of-town preparation, he freely admitted, for assuming the role at the Met a month later. For reasons good and otherwise, his performance (heard on October 13, the second night) was pure, unsurprising, all-purpose Morris: the voice nicely colored, the intonation pure, the stage presence noble, the words immaculately shaped – and the drama, the rich throb of humanness that elevates this role above any you can easily name, sadly understated. That human throb came through more tellingly in René Pape’s eloquent, loving Pogner (also Met-bound).  Thomas Allen’s Beckmesser came across as an even greater surprise, with a thread of pain under the comedic shenanigans that provided a further dimension to a personage too often relegated to slapstick status.</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">Robert Dean Smith  &#8211; Kansas-born but in his U.S. operatic debut &#8212; was the Walther; Janice Watson, the Eva: an appealing, bright-voiced pair who, for once, looked and sounded as young as they were supposed to. (Jay Hunter Morris and Elisabeth-Maria Wachutka were slated to replace them in the last two performances, with Robert Orth as Beckmesser.) As David and his Magdalene, Michael Schade and Catherine Keen were no less splendid, and contributed especially elegant support in the great Act Three Quintet.</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">But that wondrous ensemble – and, indeed, everything about the texture of Wagner’s irresistible comedy that makes transcendant and all-too-brief  its five hours in the opera house – owed the most to the musical leadership of the company’s music director Donald Runnicles. Half-a-minute into the much-loved and thrice-familiar Prelude, with every orchestral detail fixed into place and the music’s spirit surging forward, and you could suspect something remarkable was taking shape. Give or take small details here and there, you’d be right. ALAN RICH</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Wolfgang and the D-Minor&#160;Demons</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2002/02/wolfgang-and-the-d-minor-demons/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2002/02/wolfgang-and-the-d-minor-demons/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 13 Feb 2002 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=379</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Photo Courtesy Opera PacificI had harsh words a few weeks ago about the key of D minor, as exploited in singularly unappealing works by Brahms and Schoenberg. But then came Mozart in that key: the demons rampant through Don Giovanni at Opera Pacific in Costa Mesa, the Requiem as sung by the Master Chorale at [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Photo Courtesy Opera PacificI had harsh words a few weeks ago about the key of D minor, as exploited in singularly unappealing works by Brahms and Schoenberg. But then came Mozart in that key: the demons rampant through <i>Don Giovanni</i> at Opera Pacific in Costa Mesa, the <i>Requiem</i> as sung by the Master Chorale at the Music Center &#8211; music familiar and beloved, packed with new things to be discovered at each new hearing.</p>
<p>
Keys mattered in Mozart&#8217;s time, for reasons both practical and ethical. Wind and brass instruments were tuned to particular keys. Mozart wrote a concerto and quintet for a solo clarinet tuned to A, and there is an A-major episode for clarinets, in the slow movement of the K. 488 piano concerto, that could break your heart. The martial majesty of the “Jupiter” Symphony and the “Elvira Madigan” Piano Concerto is enhanced by the trumpets in C. Beyond that, composers attached expressive aspects to certain keys. In Haydn&#8217;s string quartets the slow movements with complex key signatures &#8211; F-sharp major in Opus 76 No. 5, for example &#8211; always seem unusually profound. (My local Trader Joe&#8217;s has that movement on its in-store music, so I tend to linger when shopping.)</p>
<p>
The sweep that begins <i>Don Giovanni</i> &#8211; the overture, the servant Leporello&#8217;s monologue, Donna Anna&#8217;s pursuit and the Don&#8217;s murder of the Commandant, an unbroken sequence like nothing in any opera before its time &#8211; revolves around D minor (with a small diversion into D major for the goodhearted, un-profound servingman); when the Commandant&#8217;s ghost returns to extract vengeance at the end, the music is once again in D minor. During the nearly three intervening hours, Mozart has carefully avoided the key, so that its return enhances the shock of that final scene.</p>
<p>
You may think that you don&#8217;t notice matters like key changes and key returns; believe me, you do. You also shiver a little &#8211; you do, fess up! &#8211; at the violence in Mozart&#8217;s mastery of the sudden harmonic shift: the moment in Act 2 when Leporello throws off his disguise, and the music for the others (who have cornered him in the belief that he&#8217;s the Don) takes a sudden lurch into the “wrong” key. You shiver once again during the <i>Requiem</i>, when the chorus at the end of “Confutatis” sounds a series of wrenching, dissonant chords that form a ladder up to the infinitely sad D minor of the “Lacrimosa.” The realization that you&#8217;re hearing the notes and harmonies from Mozart&#8217;s last hours on his deathbed only deepens the poignancy of those measures. Minutes before that extraordinarily moving music, you have been hammered upon by the “Dies irae,” the most harrowing unleashing I know of the demons who haunt the key of D minor.</p>
<p>
Costa Mesa&#8217;s <i>Don Giovanni</i> had its virtues, plus a few minor vices. It struck me as sheer willfulness for director Thor Steingraber to have his Giovanni pull out a pistol to finish off the Commandant, while Mozart&#8217;s orchestra clearly defines the whiplash thrusts of dueling swords. Small bits like that through the evening did put my teeth on edge. But there were Christine Goerke&#8217;s agonized, smoldering Anna to make amends, and a few comic touches in Pamela Armstrong&#8217;s Elvira to soften the proto-Freudian hysteria of that role. William Shimell&#8217;s Giovanni was<br />
somewhat stiff, while Kyle Ketelsen&#8217;s young, handsome and infinitely insinuating Leporello made one wish that he and his master had swapped roles in Act 2, not merely cloaks. Best of all was John DeMain&#8217;s musical leadership, fleet in momentum and with the crucial ensemble work beautifully balanced. Opera Pacific grows apace.</p>
<p>
So does the Master Chorale under the born-again leadership of Grant Gershon. Henryk Górecki&#8217;s <i>Miserere</i> began the program, a stunning piece stunningly performed and worth more space than a mere afterthought in a Mozart outpouring.</p>
<p>
(Sit tight; there&#8217;s always next week.) The <i>Requiem</i> was capitally performed: dark, menacing and powerful. The “Dies irae” lifted me out of my seat; those aforementioned harmonies in the “Confutatis” sent the requisite shivers; William Booth&#8217;s solo trombone in the “Tuba mirum,” meant by Mozart to waken the dead, could have done just that. The edition was that of Robert Levin, who has clarified many orchestral passages in Franz Süssmayr&#8217;s flawed completion of his master&#8217;s unfinished score. Most striking is Levin&#8217;s addition of a fugal peroration &#8211; found in some other Mozart manuscript &#8211; to bring the “Lacrimosa” to a far more shapely ending.</p>
<p>
Robert Levin himself had been in town the week before, to perform Mozart&#8217;s C-minor Piano Concerto (K. 491) with the Los Angeles Chamber Orchestra, and to Do His Thing. He is a recognized authority on 18th-century performance practice, especially on the matter of a performer&#8217;s improvisation on a composer&#8217;s written-down notes in the body of, say, a concerto, and most of all in the cadenza at the end of a movement where the soloist is expected to pick up the substance of that movement and run with it. Levin&#8217;s cadenzas for K. 491 were full of the right kinds of tricks; the one for the first movement did run on a bit, but apparently orchestras in Mozart&#8217;s day didn&#8217;t get to think about overtime. (Lars Vogt also played &#8211; or should I say punched out &#8211; K. 491 with the Philharmonic at a recent concert under Yakov Kreizberg, in a performance more dutiful than beautiful.)</p>
<p>
Levin is also given to lecturing, and to demonstrating his findings and theories; his ranking among scholars, I am told, is high. Now, however, he has also decided to go public with his act. The audience at the LACO concert was given slips of music paper and asked to write down themes that Levin would pick out and improvise upon in the manner that had brought fame and fortune to Mozart and, later, to Beethoven. This was all fun as far as it went, but that was too far. For a performer today to indulge in an improv à la Mozart is something of a cheat; there is too much of the Mozartian language in common circulation to expect something new and original from this kind of act. After all, Mozart and Beethoven were improvising from their awareness of the music of their own time; the counterpart would be for Levin, or you or me, to improvise à la John Adams or Boulez. Mr. Levin&#8217;s deserved acclaim has, I fear, left him rather full of himself, and that distracted from his stage presence all evening &#8211; although less so in the final work, the marvelous Two-Piano Concerto (K. 365) that he performed with Jeffrey Kahane, and for which Mozart had written down every note, cadenzas included.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Dimitri&#160;Rising</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2002/02/dimitri-rising/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2002/02/dimitri-rising/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 06 Feb 2002 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=378</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[“Pretty wild stuff,” said Esa-Pekka Salonen of the two early Shostakovich symphonies that formed the substance of the Philharmonic program two weeks ago, and pretty wild stuff they proved to be . . . wild, unruly and awful. If ever there were a case of inferior music surviving on the strength of its creator‘s eventual [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>“Pretty wild stuff,” said Esa-Pekka Salonen of the two early Shostakovich symphonies that formed the substance of the Philharmonic program two weeks ago, and pretty wild stuff they proved to be . . . wild, unruly and awful. If ever there were a case of inferior music surviving on the strength of its creator‘s eventual renown, the second and third symphonies form the perfect paradigm.
</p>
<p>    Yet there is a thread through these works that is worth our attention, and which the Philharmonic&#8217;s current journey along the Shostakovich legacy &#8212; which began with the First Symphony and the first three string quartets earlier last month (which I missed while wallowing in London‘s John Adams festival) &#8212; fills in the outline of an artist&#8217;s life unique for its interplay of light and darkness. Whether you accept the contrived “memoir” of Solomon Volkov‘s much-challenged Testimony &#8212; and I do not &#8212; the rises and falls of Shostakovich&#8217;s life as an artist are powerfully sketched in the music itself. It first takes shape with the cheeky energy and lyric power of the amazing First Symphony of the 19-year-old schoolboy, music as unbeholden to tradition or environment as, say, the song literature of Franz Schubert‘s adolescence. Then Russia is swept into a vortex of political optimism and creative energy: Pudovkin and Eisenstein&#8217;s films, Mayakovsky‘s poetry, the still-young Shostakovich. The next two symphonies virtually explode on the stage, with an undigested mass of naive patriotism and ambitious but clumsy dissonant counterpoint. The young composer has heard the music from the West &#8212; Schoenberg, jazz, Hindemith &#8212; and wants it all for himself as well.
</p>
<p>   Both symphonies had previously lain untouched by the Philharmonic, understandably so. Next should come the Fourth, which the orchestra has played (twice in my time here), but that has been postponed until next year. There is awfulness in this work, too &#8212; at twice the length of the Second or Third &#8212; but it is mitigated by a far firmer control of momentum; it will be worth revisiting. The popular Fifth turns up on February 20: presented not by Salonen, who has publicly declared his distaste for the work, but by a visiting Russian orchestra under Philharmonic auspices.
</p>
<p>   The First String Quartet dates from 1935, the year of the Fourth Symphony, but the Second came only 10 years later. Along with Alan Chapman&#8217;s splendid talk before the two symphonies, four Philharmonic members played the Second Quartet, an impossibly dreary work with an interminable set of academic variations as its finale. There, as with the symphonies, Shostakovich still had far to go. The last of the 15 quartets, consisting of nothing but slow movements breathing in and out with accents of pain and resignation, turns up at UCLA next month (March 20&#8211;23): the Emerson Quartet, with Britain‘s performance-art ensemble Complicite, in a complicity titled “Noise of Time.”
</p>
<p>   All this adds up to a rewarding excursion into the creative mind of one of the past century&#8217;s towering figures, whose greatest works still challenge our own imagination as they once did his. The memory of Shostakovich disturbs us all; what remains beyond challenge is this: In a country beset by turmoil, and during a time of further turmoil and redefinition worldwide, one composer chose to work within musical boundaries &#8212; symphony, string quartet, concerto &#8212; established generations before his time, and found new ways to give them meaning. However timid the Philharmonic planners may have been in the matter of Schoenberg, the Shostakovich inundation should be a sequence of delighted rediscoveries.
</p>
<p>    The Philharmonic‘s Green Umbrella concerts turned 20 last week, and two of their founders &#8212; Ernest Fleischmann, who started them and later dreamed up the cute title, and Bill Kraft, who led the first few years of concerts &#8212; were on hand at Zipper to bask in deserved applause. Later dignitaries &#8212; former composers-in-residence John Harbison and Steven Stucky and current superstar Esa-Pekka Salonen &#8212; were there as well, and all four composers conducted music of their own. What&#8217;s remarkable about these concerts isn‘t merely the strength of their service to important new music, although the program booklet&#8217;s five-page, double-column, fine-print list of repertory is itself staggering; it‘s the fact that they still exist. Other orchestras &#8212; the New York Philharmonic and Boston Symphony most notably &#8212; have tried similar ventures and closed them down within a year or two.
</p>
<p>    There was an interesting subtext to last week&#8217;s concert. Bill Kraft‘s Double Trio of 1966 was the earliest music on the program, and also the most abrasive &#8212; beautifully made out of interrelations between dissimilar groups of instruments, but gritty and unwelcoming even so. Harbison&#8217;s 1997 Concerto, in which oboe and clarinet wound silken ribbons around each other and around a string ensemble, tended by comparison to sit on your lap and tickle your ears. So did Stucky‘s brand-new Etudes for, of all things, solo recorder and ensemble, with Michala Petri&#8217;s burbling solos the kind of music you never want to end. Finally there was Salonen‘s Five Images After Sappho, already familiar from previous performances and the new Sony recording, its long lyric lines sung, once again, by the exquisite Laura Claycomb. I won&#8217;t finger this one program as proof that all music is heading toward a state of C major; all four works included, among their other graces, a high regard for a listener‘s intelligence. So much was this the case, in fact, that the memory of that night still lingers.
</p>
<p>    Curious indeed is the Los Angeles Opera&#8217;s latest offering, which runs through this weekend: Bach‘s B-minor Mass, sublime in its very abstractness, and the staging (!) designed and directed by Germany&#8217;s Achim Freyer in what is listed as his American debut. (Not quite; he designed, but did not direct, the New York City Opera‘s Moses und Aron of 1990, whose ravishment also lingers in the memory.) The music, performed by just-okay German soloists with the L.A. Opera&#8217;s own orchestra and chorus, is conducted by Peter Schreier. The staging is vintage Freyer: shadows and silhouettes surrounded by scrims on which various graffiti &#8212; Leonardo here, Saul Steinberg there &#8212; come and go. The nine members of the “Achim Freyer Ensemble” move through shadows, and occasionally interlock arms and legs to create optical tricks &#8212; mostly very slow. The counterpoint between light and dark is lovely to behold; the counterpoint between what you see and what you hear is something you have to work out for yourselves. There are concurrences now and then, but not often: the “Crucifixus,” as a line of slowly slogging figures is engulfed by darkness; the “Et resurrexit,” as a stage full of supine figures rise slowly and in obvious pain against the dancing exuberance of the music.
</p>
<p>    Robert Wilson does this sort of staging too, and has had practically no recognition  for it in this country &#8212; least of all in Los Angeles. Yet here is Freyer, brought over with great hoopla. I love some of his work: the Philip Glass Akhnaten that I saw in Stuttgart and his Satyagraha on video, and a thrilling Der Freischutz on video that he will re-create in San Francisco two years from now. This one doesn‘t work.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Klinghoffer&#160;Reborn</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2002/01/klinghoffer-reborn/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2002/01/klinghoffer-reborn/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 30 Jan 2002 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=377</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[On September 11 John Adams was in London, rehearsing vocal forces for his 10-year-old opera The Death of Klinghoffer, which the BBC was preparing for its first-ever British hearing. “The news arrived in early afternoon,” Adams remembered last week, back in London for the actual performance. “I walked out into the lobby, and there was [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>
On September 11 John Adams was in London, rehearsing vocal forces for his 10-year-old opera <i>The Death of Klinghoffer</i>, which the BBC was preparing for its first-ever British hearing. “The news arrived in early afternoon,” Adams remembered last week, back in London for the actual performance. “I walked out into the lobby, and there was all this television about the World Trade Center catastrophe. It only took a few seconds to realize that my opera had suddenly developed some built-in problems.</p>
<p>
“Later that afternoon I met with the cast and the chorus to talk about whether we should cancel the performance or move on. Their message, and I think it was unanimous, was that they wanted to go on, that the opposition of inflammatory messages in Alice Goodman&#8217;s libretto actually offered a special kind of solace. After all, <i>Klinghoffer</i> has lived on the edge of the cliff since its first performances in 1991. There were people then who hated it enough to want to kill it. Now I imagine they wish they had tried harder.”</p>
<p>
Like the earlier <i>Nixon in China</i>, the first collaboration by Adams, Goodman and the high-flying stage director Peter Sellars, <i>The Death of Klinghoffer</i> was a venture in turning actual headlines into an operatic commodity &#8211; “CNN Opera,” as the genre soon became dubbed. Its action was the hijacking of the Italian cruise liner <i>Achille Lauro</i> by Palestinian terrorists in the summer of 1985 and the gratuitous murder of an American, Jewish, wheelchair-bound tourist, Leon Klinghoffer. The opera surrounds the event with a series of deeply emotional elegiac choruses in which hypothetical groups of exiles, Arab and Israeli, give personal voice to the conflicts and atrocities that divided their lands then and still do. Those thoughts are<br />
further echoed by participants in the<br />
drama &#8211; the confused, undermotivated Palestinians most of all. “America,” snarls one of them, “is one big Jew.”</p>
<p>
The major sin of the opera, as detractors have been trumpeting for 10 years, now more loudly than ever, is that Adams&#8217; music and Goodman&#8217;s words &#8211; many of them lifted straight from biblical lamentations &#8211; give the personages on both sides of a murderous conflict a genuine, lyrical personality. That wasn&#8217;t always<br />
the plan, however. “Peter&#8217;s scenario,” Goodman recalled, “was to tell the Klinghoffer story in the first act and then turn the tone into satire. We realized early on that this wouldn&#8217;t work. In a sense, you could say that John and I hijacked the opera away from Peter.” (Beaming as usual, Sellars was in London to hear his onetime baby. “I wouldn&#8217;t have missed it for the world,” he chortled.)</p>
<p>
<i>Klinghoffer</i>&#8216;s would-be killers at the start included most of the East Coast press. I&#8217;ll never forget the hot words during the bus ride back from the Brooklyn Academy after the premiere; another couple of blocks and there might have been a re-enactment of the murder itself. Both the San Francisco and Los Angeles operas were among the co-commissioners. The San Francisco performance in 1992 drew pickets from a Jewish information center; the Los Angeles performance never happened. By the time the Nonesuch recording came out, the opera was, by all accounts, already dead. Michael Steinberg&#8217;s liner notes for the recording contained an ironically prophetic message: “On whichever date you read these words,” he wrote concerning the tragedy of Leon Klinghoffer, “there will be a new installment in the morning paper.”</p>
<p>
Came September 11, Steinberg&#8217;s words took on a new impact. So did the opera. In early October Mark Swed eloquently wrote, in a Calendar cover story in the <i>Los Angeles Times</i>, that the work had assumed an enhanced relevance that ordained a revival. A month later, however, the Boston Symphony Orchestra backed out of a performance of the inflammatory choruses &#8211; scheduled, of course, long before 9/11 &#8211; for reasons diametrically opposite to the impulse of the London singers. On December 9, <i>The New York Times</i> carried a verbose polemic by the firebrand/musicologist &#8211; if that isn&#8217;t a contradiction in terms &#8211; Richard Taruskin, to the effect that it would have shown “reprehensible contempt” for the victims if the Boston Symphony had fulfilled its commitment. Back and forth flashed the letters of praise and condemnation; they still do. The BBC Symphony&#8217;s concert performance at the Barbican Centre last weekend, triumphantly sung and powerfully led by Leonard Slatkin to begin a spellbinding three-day bash of Adams&#8217; music, was London&#8217;s hottest ticket. On the same weekend the opera was also being performed in Italy, at the Communale in Ferrara, in an English-language staging slated to make it to video. There, too, protesters had gathered outside the first performance. For the moment, <i>The Death of Klinghoffer</i> has become the world&#8217;s most important opera.</p>
<p>
In the years since <i>Klinghoffer</i>&#8216;s early travails, Alice Goodman has abandoned her Jewish upbringing, been ordained as â an Anglican minister and now preaches to a largely Palestinian congregation at a church in London&#8217;s outskirts. Adams, too, has moved explosively ahead, as London&#8217;s weekend emphatically demonstrated. Still, the apparent resuscitation of his “problem” opera has brought on memories, which he enlarged upon in a breath-catching moment during his wall-to-wall celebration. “We knew we had a difficult subject,” he recalled. “Alice immersed herself in the Koran &#8211; in English, of course &#8211; which isn&#8217;t what nice Jewish girls in Chicago naturally do. Like most American non-Jews, I had a vague idea about Jewish history. In the bookstores there was plenty to read on the subject from a Jewish point of view. Except for the writings of Edward Said, a powerful writer of Palestinian background, there was almost nothing from the other side. We read essays on the conflict, but we resolved to stay away from television and all the stereotyped interviews. What we wanted to do most of all &#8211; and this is where we had to part company from Peter&#8217;s conception &#8211; was to give those terrorist hijackers inner lives, through music and words. But that was enough to turn me into an anti-Semite in the eyes of very many people.”</p>
<p>
In some of my very old copies of Britain&#8217;s <i>The Gramophone</i> there are reviews of American composers &#8211; Bernstein, Copland &#8211; that ridicule the very oxymoron. How dare these upstart colonials, wrote the august Compton MacKenzie and his confreres, aspire to the sacred realm of composition, and demand space alongside our beloved Elgar? Even within the last decade, the noted and notable film documentarian Tony Palmer (he of the nine-hour <i>Wagner</i>) was refused BBC support for an Adams documentary that eventually became the superb, privately funded <i>Hail Bop!</i> Times have, apparently, changed; the look of the crowds that pushed into the convoluted precincts of the Barbican and stood in long queues in hopes (usually dashed) of turned-back tickets for concerts, even for pre-concert lectures, was widely spread from collegian to codger. If John Adams is any proof, the American composer has in British eyes advanced from curiosity to superstar.</p>
<p>
Adams, 54, is, of course, a special case, a product of great creative skill and exquisite timing. Tarred with the academic rectitude of a Harvard education, he seemed to know when to walk away, and when to blend the sounds of the real world into his acquired rigid Schoenbergian precepts. Academic purity was still the air of choice around 1971, but Adams had already learned to pollute it with alien accents: rock, jazz and the freedoms as preached by John Cage. The 1977 <i>Phrygian Gates</i>, the first music he acknowledges, is also his archetypal minimalist work: 25 minutes of richly colored throb all in one place, broken only near the end by a wrenching shift to somewhere else.</p>
<p>
“Minimalism was, for me,” Adams reminisced, “the greatest restorative force from the structures and the abstruse language of, say, Elliott Carter and the tone-row people who were holding music in a death-embrace. It had that freshness, and it was listenable. At the same time, there was this stasis in early Philip Glass and Steve Reich. The music never went anywhere, and I wanted momentum.” That, indeed, is what begins to happen in Adams&#8217; meteoric career: the great swoop down from a holding pattern into a gut-busting outbreak of E-flat in the <i>Grand Pianola Music</i>, which drew boos at its 1983 New York premiere but survives as an early career landmark; the energy explosively uncoiling in twists and turns in the 1992 <i>Chamber Symphony</i>; the great hootenanny that takes over at the end of <i>Hallelujah Junction</i>, the glorious two-piano romp that Adams fashioned in 1998 as a gift to Ernest Fleischmann.</p>
<p>
The marvel of Adams &#8211; splendidly, exhaustively (and, I have to confess, exhaustingly) surveyed in the Beeb&#8217;s 30-hours-plus of music, film and enlightened discussion &#8211; is his astonishing gift for<br />
combinations, for blending a broad musical vernacular into a bristling newness. It<br />
doesn&#8217;t always work, of course.<i> Guide to Strange Places</i>, a brand-new 24-minute BBC commission (inspired by a travel book) that ended the weekend, came off as a somewhat drier reworking of the <i>Chamber Symphony</i>&#8216;s manic convolutions. <i>Century Rolls</i>, the piano concerto for Emanuel Ax that was played in Los Angeles last season, does tend to roll off the edge.</p>
<p>
The Adams outpouring honored a BBC tradition: a weekend in January given over to a single composer, with everything broadcast (most of it live). Last year&#8217;s honoree was Alfred Schnittke; Kurt Weill was celebrated the year before. Think of just that for a minute: a nation&#8217;s prime radio facility given over to an in-depth exploration of important contemporary creativity. (Could, or would, KUSC? NPR?)</p>
<p>
The BBC Symphony is neither a superbly tuned nor an accident-proof orchestra; yet under Slatkin and, in the final concert, Adams himself, it sent some brave and forthright playing out into the acoustically tricky Barbican Hall. And, while I blush for entertaining such thoughts in a hall where Peter Sellars also sat, I found the <i>Klinghoffer</i> as a concert performance, with the chorus delivering its mighty and stirring invocations full-face, a more profound experience than when staged.</p>
<p>
Mighty and stirring, to be sure; yet I don&#8217;t think I am the only one to carry away and cherish memories as well of smaller sounds during the Barbican&#8217;s Adams immersion: the wistful plangence of the clarinet concerto called <i>Gnarly Buttons</i> in Michael Collins&#8217; wonderfully colored performance; the phenomenal depths in Leila Josefowicz&#8217;s playing of the Violin Concerto; the deep, lush sorrows in <i>The Wound-Dresser</i>, the haunting Whitman poetry sung by Christopher Maltman; pianist Rolf Hind&#8217;s staggering delivery of <i>Phrygian Gates</i>.</p>
<p>
One more memory. This one is of the composer before a capacity crowd at a pre-concert talk &#8211; dealing, as I remember, with the basic question of what music is, or ought to be:</p>
<p>
“Something beautiful,” said John Adams, “that tells the truth.”</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Slow&#160;Start</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2002/01/slow-start-2/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2002/01/slow-start-2/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 23 Jan 2002 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=376</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[If the Philharmonic&#8217;s first-of-2002 concert should be remembered at all &#8212; and I see no special reason why &#8212; it ought to be tagged in the index as “D-minor Turgid.” D minor is a dangerous key anyhow: icy and menacing. (The immortal Nigel of Spinal Tap pegged it exactly: “The saddest chord known to man, [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>If the Philharmonic&#8217;s first-of-2002 concert should be remembered at all &#8212; and I see no special reason why &#8212; it ought to be tagged in the index as “D-minor Turgid.” D minor is a dangerous key anyhow: icy and menacing. (The immortal Nigel of Spinal Tap pegged it exactly: “The saddest chord known to man, it sends everybody instantly to weeping.”) Beethoven rescued us all by steering his Ninth Symphony finally into D major‘s sunnier climes. Schoenberg was not so kind, and Brahms&#8217; halfhearted salvation was rendered murky by the, well, Brahmsian orchestration.
</p>
<p>    Would Brahms‘ First Piano Concerto claim our attention today if its composer hadn&#8217;t also composed the Clarinet Quintet and the Fourth Symphony (to cite my own choice as the least unbearable of his works)? Would Schoenberg‘s Pelleas und Melisande still be performed today if its composer hadn&#8217;t gone on to Pierrot Lunaire and the Third String Quartet? Musicology needs a comparative study, with built-in trash can, to save mature composers from their early indiscretions. And the Philharmonic needs something similar, to prevent these two indigestible lumps from appearing on the same program and thus beclouding an otherwise warm and sunny afternoon.
</p>
<p>   Schoenberg‘s exasperating exercise runs nearly 45 minutes. His first and (Gott sei Dank) last attempt at large-scale descriptive orchestral writing, Pelleas assigns recognizable themes to the characters in Maeterlinck&#8217;s haunting, symbolic drama, and to some of the concepts as well. They mix in a steady stream of clotted counterpoint, out of which some sense of dramatic narrative may be discernible. The model seems to be the Heldenleben of Richard Strauss, who befriended and helped the young Schoenberg upon his arrival in Berlin. If you believe, as I once did, that Ein Heldenleben is the ugliest of all major orchestral works, you don‘t know Schoenberg&#8217;s Pelleas. Its apologists point out that Schoenberg had not heard Debussy‘s operatic setting, and that he should not be judged against that great score. Unacceptable: Schoenberg may not have known the opera &#8212; which had had its Paris premiere shortly before he began work on the tone poem &#8212; but he must have known the play itself, enough not to betray its spirit in his music.
</p>
<p>   I am perhaps unduly irritated by the time wasted &#8212; the orchestra&#8217;s, Esa-Pekka Salonen‘s and mine &#8212; by this inferior addition to the current Schoenberg observance. The Philharmonic may have initiated the celebration, inevitable given the fact of Schoenberg&#8217;s residence and his death here 50 years ago. But its contribution, as I have noted before, has been strangely skewed toward a preponderance of the early works, which has had the perverse effect of leaving no real clues as to why we‘re bothering to celebrate him at all. To justify this attention we would need at least the Violin Concerto, the Variations for Orchestra and even the Music for a Film Scene &#8212; plus a Chamber Music Society concert including the Serenade andor the Suite. We did get the Piano Concerto, another great work, but if you recall, it came gift-wrapped in spoken assurance &#8212; by performers and management &#8212; that it wasn&#8217;t going to hurt a bit. You have to wonder whether that hasn‘t been the attitude behind this entire venture. None of this happened during last season&#8217;s Stravinsky festival, which also included some fairly scary music (along with some deadly dull).
</p>
<p>    Some of the major holes in the Philharmonic‘s “Schoenberg Prism” have been filled in by other local organizations. The Villa Aurora, that storybook palace in the Palisades where Lion and Marta Feuchtwanger once lived, has sponsored talks and symposiums, including a celebration of Schoenberg&#8217;s onetime assistant Leonard Stein on his 85th birthday. Stein himself braved &#8212; with 85-year-old fingers, to be sure &#8212; the whole of Schoenberg‘s piano music at one of the “Piano Spheres” concerts he helped to organize. The Los Angeles Opera brought over Berlin&#8217;s Moses und Aron, praiseworthy in both motivation and performance. Southwest Chamber Music has helped fill in the list with the quartets and late works, including the String Trio and the Violin Phantasy. Unfortunately, many caring concertgoers have lost confidence in the group‘s performing standards &#8212; a shame, in view of the enterprise of its programming.
</p>
<p>    The most recent Monday Evening Concert at the County Museum formed what I would consider the crown of the Schoenberg celebration &#8212; prismatic or otherwise. The excellent Parisii Quartet performed, somewhat changed in personnel from their last performance at LACMA, but no less marvelous in their control of both sound and impulse. They played the Schoenberg Third Quartet, Anton Webern&#8217;s Five Movements and Alban Berg‘s Lyric Suite: the excelsis of the master&#8217;s expressive manner and its extraordinary echoings in the work of his most prominent disciples.
</p>
<p>   To my thinking, the Third Quartet represents Schoenberg compleat, the ultimate demonstration of the potential of his dangerous musical theories. The work is pure 12-tone; yet from the very start, the solo for first violin that wraps caressingly around the agitated figuration by the other three players, you sense a melodic process &#8212; as you might in a Haydn Quartet from 150 years before. You hear themes, hear them broken up in a developmental way, and recognize them as they return. The music is appealingly vivacious, even at times witty. The slow movement, the long lines tracing patterns of pure if chilling beauty, holds you spellbound. Everything works, and, before you have the chance to check your watch, it achieves a logical, satisfactory ending.
</p>
<p>   Webern and Berg took their master‘s teaching in almost exactly opposite directions: Webern to the extreme of compression where a single turn of phrase, even a single note played pianissimo, can send up incendiary showers; Berg with occasional strayings from the strictness of The System in the cause of exuberance and romantic outpourings. All three composers, each in his own way and at his own pace, arrived at beauty; the young Parisians of last week&#8217;s splendid ensemble joined them there. That spectacularly good concert furnished the justification we had been needing for the current piling up of honors in this Schoenberg retrospective. It was a long time in coming.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Time Spent With&#160;Morty</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2002/01/time-spent-with-morty/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2002/01/time-spent-with-morty/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 16 Jan 2002 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=375</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[At the County Museum last week, a fair-size crowd sat through Morton Feldman‘s Crippled Symmetry with remarkable attentiveness, the near silence in the auditorium blending into the near silence on the stage. Two or three people left before the end. I counted six coughs &#8212; of which three were mine. The piece was listed to [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>At the County Museum last week, a fair-size crowd sat through Morton Feldman‘s Crippled Symmetry with remarkable attentiveness, the near silence in the auditorium blending into the near silence on the stage. Two or three people left before the end. I counted six coughs &#8212; of which three were mine. The piece was listed to run 90 minutes; it ran close to 110. I heard no complaints. Three members of the EAR Unit &#8212; Amy Knoles on glockenspiel and vibes, Dorothy Stone with her two flutes, Vicki Ray at piano and celesta &#8212; performed in such a way that “heroic” would be only the beginning of the deserved praise.
</p>
<p>    I&#8217;m never sure what to say, or even think, about Feldman. For anyone who once knew him, the discrepancy between the sound of him (deepest Bronx) and the eloquence of his written perceptions &#8212; not to mention his music, which is mostly fashioned out of air &#8212; is an unsurmountable mismatch. His essay also called Crippled Symmetry runs 14 large pages; when I‘ve struggled through it (trying as hard as I can to keep the sound of Morty himself out of my ears), I find myself agonizingly overinformed in matters including Webern, Cage, the “crippled symmetries” of certain Middle Eastern rug patterns and the mathematical formulas they may &#8212; or may not &#8212; generate. Does the music called Crippled Symmetry depend on my assimilating all this writing of the same name? I&#8217;m not sure.
</p>
<p>   I ask because the music itself, even without recourse to patterns and formulas, is so extraordinarily beautiful. It hovers; it sends out flickers of light; its three players engage in discourse far removed from the reality of a drab museum auditorium, or from the fact of 8:30 on a Wednesday night. Given the fluidity of the music, its way of casting silvery strands across silences, I am always amazed at the exactitude of Feldman‘s scores &#8212; this piece, and also his For Philip Guston, which calls for the same instruments but runs twice as long.
</p>
<p>   A Feldman experience, 14 years after his death, is as close to an act of communion as any music I can think of from Western civilization. The recordings, even the ones garnished with my program notes, simply don&#8217;t make it. It demands live performers and live listeners sharing the same air.
</p>
<p>    January‘s entry on the Los Angeles Opera schedule originally called for three performances of a Spanish-language version of Lehar&#8217;s The Merry Widow, to follow the English-language production that had thudded across the Music Center stage the month before. As the better part of valor, La Viuda Alegre gave way instead to a concert program of zarzuela excerpts &#8212; which in turn gave way to a one-shot half-zarzuela&#8211;half-Viennese-operetta evening. This is what actually transpired last week, which is not the same as saying that it should have. Some of the Widow‘s English-language cast, who had also been scheduled for the Spanish version, now found themselves singing Lehar&#8217;s bits and pieces in the original German. Never question the inscrutability of opera and its world.
</p>
<p>    The resultant confusion of tongues made for an evening somewhat less than zippy. You didn‘t need your Spanish lessons to recognize where the loyalties lay that night, onstage and out front as well. The Viennese stuff started well enough: John DeMain guiding the orchestra through a nicely nuanced, insinuating Fledermaus Overture. From there, however, it was downhill: Julia Migenes in an unequal struggle with a showoff number from Countess Maritza, Placido in a graceless “Dein ist mein ganzes Herz,” Virginia Tola and Charles Castronovo reprising their Merry Widow duet (but this time in a hesitant German), and a helter-skelter dash through Fledermaus&#8217; enchanting “Duidu, duidu” ensemble.
</p>
<p>   Came the zarzuela half, and the temperature in the hall rose noticeably. Tola repeated her steamy “Cancion Española” that had won hearts during the Domingo-sponsored “Operalia”; she and Domingo sang the big duet from El Gato Montes (not exactly a zarzuela, however) that the L.A. Opera had produced in 1994. Migenes, though part Puerto Rican, sang exactly nada in the Spanish half. The grand restoration of the zarzuela repertory, promised by Domingo year after year as a potentially valuable bridge builder to the Latino community, remains unbroached.
</p>
<p>    A program note dedicated the above proceedings to the memory of Peter Hemmings, the Los Angeles Opera‘s founding general director, who had died the week before. Where others had failed, or succeeded only halfway, Hemmings planted the operatic seed in the Los Angeles cultural desert and nursed it into full bloom. Determinedly ignoring a chorus of naysayers, charming a support structure into existence by dint of soft-spoken earnestness and elegant British tailoring, Hemmings came to Los Angeles with the mission of founding that city&#8217;s first-ever world-class opera company, and fulfilled that mission with surprising ease. Even the ultimate omen &#8212; the curtain that stuck halfway up at the opening-night Otello &#8212; did not block his upward path. When he retired in June 2000 &#8212; yielding his place to his hand-picked company superstar and logical successor, Placido Domingo &#8212; his 14-year-old Los Angeles Opera had long shaken off its initial omens and challenges.
</p>
<p>    He moved wisely and well. Installing Domingo as resident superstar gave out word that the Los Angeles Opera would rise above the city‘s boondocks reputation. A fine mix of repertory and exotic items &#8212; Otello, Butterfly, Fiery Angel, Wozzeck, Mahagonny, Don Giovanni, the complete Les Troyens &#8212; enhanced that reputation. So did some enlightened backstage choices: Goetz Friedrich to stage Otello and Janacek, David Hockney to design Tristan und Isolde, Peter Sellars to move Pelleas et Melisande to a Malibu beachfront, Simon Rattle to conduct Wozzeck. As in the case of any company afflicted with high ambitions, there were duds here and there; we local critics could count on a couple of yearly one-on-one confrontations, over a splendid lunch, to defend (with score sheets and full documentation) this inadequate conductor or that tottering diva.
</p>
<p>   From the start, Hemmings appended an active Resident Artist apprenticeship program to the company&#8217;s operations, out of which several major artists have emerged &#8212; baritone Rodney Gilfry for one, a walk-on in the company‘s first night and now a worldwide star. Hemmings&#8217; final Los Angeles production was a triumphant Billy Budd with Gilfry as Billy. Like that star, the Los Angeles Opera had grown impressively &#8212; from a 22-performance first season to well over 60, most of them sold out, in Hemmings‘ final year.
</p>
<p>   In 1998 Hemmings was awarded the title of Officer of the Order of the British Empire. He returned to England in the summer of 2000 and, after a brief bout with cancer, died at his home in Dorset, survived by his wife, Jane, and five children.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>PETER&#160;HEMMINGS</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2002/01/peter-hemmings/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2002/01/peter-hemmings/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 10 Jan 2002 21:16:41 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Opera News]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=1797</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[PETER HEMMINGS, Enfield, Middx, England, April 10, 1934 – Dorset, England, January 4, 2002 Where others had failed, or succeeded only halfway, Hemmings planted the operatic seed in the Los Angeles cultural desert and nursed it into full bloom. Determinedly ignoring a chorus of naysayers, charming a support structure into existence by dint of soft-spoken [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>PETER HEMMINGS, Enfield, Middx, England, April 10, 1934 – Dorset, England, January 4, 2002</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">Where others had failed, or succeeded only halfway, Hemmings planted the operatic seed in the Los Angeles cultural desert and nursed it into full bloom. Determinedly ignoring a chorus of naysayers, charming a support structure into existence by dint of soft-spoken earnestness and elegant British tailoring, Hemmings came to Los Angeles with the mission of founding that city’s first-ever world-class opera company, and fulfilled that mission with surprising ease. Even the ultimate omen – the curtain stuck halfway up at the opening-night <em>Otello</em> &#8212; did not block his upward path. When he retired in June, 2000 – yielding his place to his hand-picked company superstar and logical successor Plácido Domingo &#8212; his 14-year-old Los Angeles Opera had long shaken off its initial omens and challenges.</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">Hemmings’ lifetime was almost entirely operatic. At Cambridge he headed the University Opera Group and aimed  briefly at a singer’s career. Instead he moved into music management at London’s prestigious Harold Holt Ltd., from there to a personal assistant’s post to the manager of the Sadler’s Wells Opera and from there, in 1962,  to run the newly formed Scottish National Opera, which he built over 15 years into one of Britain’s most adventurous companies..</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">A stint at Sydney’s Australian Opera, where Hemmings groomed the company to make the most of the newly-won reputation engendered by  its glamorous new hall, was cut short by political infighting. In 1979 he strayed outside opera to manage the London Symphony. Five years later, however, the call came from the Los Angeles Music Center; it was high time, it said in so many words, to create a place in the operatic firmament for that famously nonoperatic city.</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">Los Angeles’ operatic desires had previously been feebly fanned by visits from the San Francisco Opera (in the notorious acoustic horror, the 6000-seat Shrine Auditorium) and occasional one-shots in the Music Center’s early days. In 1984, a three-production stint by London’s Royal Opera (including a <em>Turandot</em> with Domingo) sparked an outcry for a local company of Los Angeles’ own and Hemmings was tapped as founder-director.</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">He moved wisely and well. Installing Domingo  as resident superstar gave out word that the Los Angeles Opera would rise above the city’s boondocks reputation. A fine mix of repertory and exotic items – <em>Otello, Butterfly, Fiery Angel, Wozzeck, Mahagonny, Don Giovanni</em>, the complete <em>Les Troyens </em>– enhanced that reputation. So did some enlightened backstage choices: Goetz Friedrich to stage <em>Otello</em> and Janácek, David Hockney to design <em>Tristan und Isolde</em>, Peter Sellars to move <em>Pelléas et Mélisande</em> to a Malibu beachfront, Simon Rattle to conduct <em>Wozzeck</em>. As with any company afflicted with high ambitions, there were duds here and there; local critics could count on one or two yearly one-on-one confrontations, over a splendid lunch, for Hemmings to defend (with scoresheets and full documentation) this inadequate conductor or that tottering diva.</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">From the start, Hemmings appended an active Resident Artist apprenticeship program to the company’s operations, out of which several major artists have emerged –- baritone Rodney Gilfry for one, a walk-on in that opening-night <em>Otello </em>now a worldwide star. Hemmings’ final Los Angeles production was a triumphant <em>Billy Budd</em> with Gilfry as Billy. Like its star, the Los Angeles Opera had grown impressively – from a 22-performance first season to well over 60 performances, most of them sold out, in Hemmings’ final year.</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">In 1998 Hemmings was awarded the title of Officer of the Order of the British Empire. He returned to England in the summer of 2000 and, after a brief bout with cancer, died at his home in Dorset, survived by his wife Jane and five children.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>In the&#160;Beginning</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2002/01/in-the-beginning/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2002/01/in-the-beginning/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 09 Jan 2002 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=374</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[As is proper, we start a new year with Genesis. In 1943 the notion befell a modestly endowed but immodestly ambitious Hollywood music man, Nathaniel Shilkret (born Schuldkraut, uncle of the late Wayne), to turn nothing less than the Book of Genesis into music worthy of its words. He enlisted six European composers then refugees [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>As is proper, we start a new year with Genesis. In 1943 the notion befell a modestly endowed but immodestly ambitious Hollywood music man, Nathaniel Shilkret (born Schuldkraut, uncle of the late Wayne), to turn nothing less than the Book of Genesis into music worthy of its words. He enlisted six European composers then refugees in California &#8212; Arnold Schoenberg, Igor Stravinsky, Mario Castelnuovo-Tedesco, Alexandre Tansman, Darius Milhaud and Ernst Toch &#8212; added his own name to the list with becoming modesty, and set them all to creating a seven-movement Genesis Suite, which was duly performed and issued on six 78-rpm discs on the Artist label. The last thing anyone could have dreamed of would be to have this curious if naive venture in self-aggrandizement turn up again on discs.
</p>
<p>    Yet there it is on a new Angel CD, the old performance conducted by Werner Janssen, with a Hollywood pickup orchestra that raises the concept of sloppy to expressive heights, with the verses intoned by the trombone-voiced Edward Arnold. The music is as bad as you might imagine, with Stravinsky handing off a few pages of Firebird discards, Tansman, Shilkret and Toch rekindling the opening-credits style that kept them fed in their Hollywood years, Milhaud‘s “Cain  Abel” section appallingly unable. Schoenberg, however, apparently incapable of creating authentic trash, sent along a taut, beautifully organized canonic piece &#8212; for the section titled “The Earth was without form . . .” (!) The whole suite lasts nearly 50 minutes without form or reason, yet it belongs among the documents of bygone California culture now being trotted out for local delectation &#8212; or, in some cases, embarrassment.
</p>
<p>    Further notes on a lingering death: Billboard&#8217;s latest “top classical” chart lists three Bocellis and two Yo-Yos among its first 10, with nary a Beethoven symphony or anything else of comparable substance. (In fairness, I should note that Murray Perahia‘s Goldberg Variations comes in as No. 11.) If a blind tenor can make it that big, you&#8217;d think there‘d be room for a deaf composer; obviously Ludwig&#8217;s greatest handicap was the failure of impulse in his management.
</p>
<p>    More dire are the rumors from the mysterious East, that The New York Times may be entering into a dumbing-down policy in its serious-music coverage. Arts and Leisure editor John Rockwell, who brought to the paper a lively ecumenical view &#8212; that music‘s many faces were equally deserving of coverage, that music in lofts and clubs was as worthy of notice as Lincoln Center &#8212; has left (“jumped before he was pushed,” says one trustworthy source). The talk at the paper is that “elitism” is on the way out, pop culture is on the rise, and that other major papers around the country are taking heed. I look into the mirror these days and see an avatar of a dying breed, a dinosaur. Mark Swed, Dick Dyer, Alex Ross, yrs trly: interesting, how many surviving music critics are four-letter words.
</p>
<p>    Ned Rorem endures. Composers try to write; writers sometimes try to compose; what&#8217;s special in Rorem‘s case is the mingled lights his command of one art sheds upon the other. On a recent Naxos release, Carole Farley sings, and wonderfully, an hour&#8217;s worth of Rorem songs, 32 settings of texts mostly American &#8212; Whitman, Stein, Frost, Roethke, et al. &#8212; and what first comes across is the absolute grace in the way music and words curl around one another. (Rorem‘s presence at the piano is a further enhancement.) Listen, and then pick up A Ned Rorem Reader (Yale University Press), a culling &#8212; skillfully chosen by J.D. McClatchy &#8212; from writings over half a century.
</p>
<p>    What amazes here, and warms the heart and raises the hackles, is the further light these essays, diary entries and interview snippets cast on a composer endowed with the insights to winnow out the music in those poems. The adolescent loner in Chicago&#8217;s cruising parks and New York gay baths, the slowly ripening Adonis handed around the Parisian salons, the emerging wisdom of the mature musician &#8212; with a 1977 essay on Debussy‘s Pelleas et Melisande that always makes me weep &#8212; you meet these in the book, and meet them in the music as well. Rorem&#8217;s previous books contain some of what‘s here, but this small, artful epitome, the right size for air travel or bed, goes with you and stays with you.
</p>
</p>
<p>   Inevitably, there must be start-of-the-year lists. Memorable 2001 events: Handel&#8217;s Giulio Cesare in the last L.A. Opera season planned by the late Peter Hemmings, to ensure continued fond memories of his leadership; Wagner‘s Lohengrin in the new regime&#8217;s first flight, to mend in one glorious outing many previous inadequacies. The Philharmonic‘s Stravinsky and Schoenberg celebrations, not only for the Music Center concerts, but for the ancillary events all over town, including, above all, Esa-Pekka Salonen&#8217;s sizzling Green Umbrella performances of Stravinsky‘s Octet and Schoenberg&#8217;s First Chamber Symphony. Marino Formenti‘s two sets of new-piano-music concerts: at LACMA in February and at Eclectic Orange in October, with the Jean Barraque Sonata again receiving the jaw-dropping performance it had the year before. Exquisite French Christmas liturgy, at Irvine and Royce Hall, elegantly produced by Paris&#8217; Les Arts Florissants. Composer Osvaldo Golijov, at Ojai last summer, at the Philharmonic in the fall and, on disc (Hanssler Classic), in the exhilarating Passion According to St. Mark &#8212; proving the possibility of re-expressing the Bach spirit without the process of diminution favored in other circles (e.g., the misguided but inexplicably popular Morimur, also recently on the charts).
</p>
<p>    Significant recordings: John Adams‘ El Niño on Nonesuch, a retelling of the Nativity story even better without the Peter Sellars visuals that cluttered the live performances; Salonen&#8217;s own music on Sony, with his LA Variations more skillful and witty on each rehearing; Ernst Krenek‘s Karl V on MDG-Gold, the first complete recording of the other great atonal opera (alongside Moses und Aron and Lulu).
</p>
<p>   Insignificant recordings: The rash &#8212; by now an epidemic &#8212; of extraordinary no-talents, doe-eyed and doughy-voiced, elevated with virtuosic press-agentry into some kind of cloud-cuckoo musical prestige. Bocelli began it, Church and Watson moved it upward and onward. The latest arrival &#8212; via full-page ads, a Web site, PR like the Voice in the Wilderness &#8212; goes by the name of Josh Groban, age 20, with a high C indistinguishable from the mating call of a rusty file. Yet, at a visit to a local record shop last week, I witnessed not one but three dowagers of assorted ages pawing through the racks with manic esurience in search of aforementioned Grobiana. The bleat goes on.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>REVIEW: SAN FRANCISCO&#160;OPERA</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2001/12/review-san-francisco-opera/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2001/12/review-san-francisco-opera/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Tue, 25 Dec 2001 21:10:50 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Opera News]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=1788</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[The chimera of the long-forgotten masterwork, languishing in history’s dustbin then rediscovered and newly acclaimed, fires any opera producer’s hopes and ambitions. Surely no opera has accumulated a thicker coat of dust – at least in the world annals – than Tigran Chukhadjian’s Arshak II, which had its world premiere (sort of) during the opening [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>The chimera of the long-forgotten masterwork, languishing in history’s dustbin then rediscovered and newly acclaimed, fires any opera producer’s hopes and ambitions. Surely no opera has accumulated a thicker coat of dust – at least in the world annals – than Tigran Chukhadjian’s <em>Arshak II</em>, which had its world premiere (sort of) during the opening weekend of San Francisco Opera’s 79<sup>th</sup> season. And surely no opera in recent memory, accorded so handsome an opportunity to state its case, has failed more abjectly to live up to expectations. <strong><span style="font-family:'BlairMdITC TT-Medium'; "> </span></strong></p>
<p class="MsoNormal">Chukhadjian (1837-1898) – the latest <em>Grove</em> reverses prior practice and appends an initial “T,” while San Francisco’s program literature had it both ways – was born in Turkey of Armenian parentage and studied in Milan (where he apparently listened well). Settling later in Armenia he composed prolifically, turning out a repertory of light operas with such arresting titles as <em>Hor-Hor, the Chick-Pea Seller</em> and <em>The Balding Elder</em>, works which went some distance toward establishing an indigenous Armenian repertory. His most ambitious opera, composed in 1868, was, however, to an Italian text; it  bore the title <em>Arsace II</em>, with libretto  by Tovmas (or Tommaso) Tersian, and concerned the exploits, treachery and death of the title character, the 4<sup>th</sup>-century Armenian tyrant Arshak the Second.  Only excerpts were performed in the composer’s lifetime; in the 1940s the score was rediscovered among the papers of Chukhadjian’s widow. It was then extensively revised and outfitted with a new Armenian text by a certain Armen Goulakian, in which the historic tyrant had metamorphosed into a proto-Stalinist superhero. That version still circulates in Armenia. Okay so far?</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">San Francisco’s <em>Arshak II</em> was, however, not very much of the above. There is in Paris, if you’re ready, a “Dikran Tchouhadjian [<em>sic</em>] Research Centre” which, in 1998, persuaded general manager Lotfi Mansouri to graft the original <em>Arsace/Arshak </em> onto roots it never really possessed, by commissioning  a translation of Versian’s Italian libretto into Armenian – a process comparable, say, to “restoring” <em>Lucia di Lammermoor</em> into Gaelic. This neo-<em>Arshak</em>, as translated and edited by latter-day Chukhadjianists Haig Avakian and Gerald Papasian, is what had its world premiere in San Francisco on September 8.</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">How did it get there? Armenian violinist Gerard Svazlian, who had played in the opera at the National Theater in Yerevan, brought his enthusiasms to his present post in San Francisco’s opera orchestra, raised a seven-figure bundle among Armenian communities nationwide toward an eventual performance. He then got Mansouri – himself from the neighboring country of Iran – to look beyond the matter of special-interest groups buying into cultural resources, and accord <em>Arshak II</em> place of preference as the final novelty of his stewardship.</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">Why did it get there? That, alas, is not so readily answered. For all the hopes raised by the possible rediscovery of a grandly conceived historico-socio pageant by a composer concerned with nationalistic opera – and 1868 was also, after all, the year of <em>Boris Godunov </em> &#8212; the actual result of all this dedicated research and restoration is just one more workmanlike product of the mid-century Italian opera factory that chugged along in Verdi’s shadow.  The plotline is solid enough: black-hearted tyrant rejects loving wife, murders brother, lusts after sister-in-law, repents too late. At the final bloodbath the crown lies onstage, unclaimed. Armenia’s crown? Scotland’s? Tasmania’s? Little in the score defines place or ethnicity. A neutral wash of Bellinian harmony beguiles the ear at times, but the music seems fatally mired. It doesn’t move, in either the physical or emotional sense. The composer, we read, was variously described in the press of his time as “the Armenian Verdi” or “the Armenian Offenbach,”  but his <em>Arshak II</em> &#8212; at least in its considerably (and considerately)  cut  San Francisco incarnation – seldom rises to the level of, say, an Armenian Mercadante.</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">Even so, the work drew masterpiece treatment under Loris Tjeknavorian’s sturdy baton. On John Coyne’s set, a series of rotating piled-up rough-cut pieces, Francesca Zambello’s staging was your basic good, solid epic-opera biz: chorus left, chorus right, bodies down front; heroine in a prison cage up above. Among the Armenian vocal contingent, soprano Hasmik Papian radiated convincing intensity as the rejected Queen Olimpia; the impressive bass Tigran Martirossian was the high-priest Nerses.  As the evil Arshak, Christopher Robertson cut a striking figure not quite matched by a rather voiceless delivery; Armenia’s Anooshah Golesorkhi is slated to assume the role in later performances. As the scheming sister-in-law Paransema France’s Nora Gubisch got to steal scenes in the way mezzo-sopranos in romantic operas are meant to.</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">San Francisco’s opening-night <em>Rigoletto</em> was, by comparison, mostly business-as-usual, in the 1997 Mark Lamos production on Michael Yeargan’s splendid Chirico-esque forced-perspective unit set. The young (24) Sicilian soprano Désirée Rancatore was the winsome new Gilda in her U.S. opera debut, charming and adept if somewhat small of voice for this oversized house. Frank Lopardo was the dashing, resonant Duke; Stephan Pyatnychko the merely adequate Rigoletto. Marco Armiliato conducted, observing none of the cuts that used to disfigure this wondrous opera in less enlightened times. From her highly visible first-tier box, the company’s new general director Pamela Rosenberg beamed at the well-dressed crowd. It wasn’t really her night as yet; her own programming won’t fall into place for another year. That, too, promises enlightenment.    ALAN RICH</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Courage Beyond the&#160;Call</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2001/12/courage-beyond-the-call/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2001/12/courage-beyond-the-call/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 19 Dec 2001 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=373</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[The Philharmonic&#8217;s ongoing ”Schoenberg Prism,“ the long-overdue tribute to the resident who endured only limited celebrity status here in his lifetime, leans with undue caution toward the composer‘s more ”accessible“ side &#8212; the post-romantic works like Transfigured Night, Pelleas and Melisande and the chamber symphonies. Other organizations in town &#8212; the County Museum and Southwest [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>The Philharmonic&#8217;s ongoing ”Schoenberg Prism,“ the long-overdue tribute to the resident who endured only limited celebrity status here in his lifetime, leans with undue caution toward the composer‘s more ”accessible“ side &#8212; the post-romantic works like Transfigured Night, Pelleas and Melisande and the chamber symphonies. Other organizations in town &#8212; the County Museum and Southwest Chamber &#8212; are braving the sterner stuff, the last quartets and the String Trio. And the most substantial contribution to our awareness of the stature of this towering if forbidding seminal force in contemporary music came, unimaginably, from the Los Angeles Opera. This most unlikely of all agencies, for one unforgettable night, imported to our midst the forces to honor the least understood and least understandable of all Schoenberg&#8217;s scores, the opera Moses und Aron, in its first-ever local hearing. Given the aura of information (not to mention misinformation) surrounding the work, you can well imagine that the opera management approached the project with some trepidation; a couple of weeks before the performance, in fact, there were rumors in high places that it was to be canceled. Measure that against the 2,444 ticket holders &#8212; not a full house at the Chandler Pavilion but a greater figure than the capacity of the world‘s more sensibly designed houses &#8212; most of whom cheered themselves hoarse at the end.
</p>
<p>    You cannot argue the fact that Moses und Aron is a score difficult to love. I&#8217;m not at all sure that Schoenberg, even if he had found the time and support to complete the work beyond its finished two (of three) acts, meant it to be loved. The MGM episode in his early Los Angeles days &#8212; Schoenberg proposing a score for The Good Earth that would all be intoned in the speech-song that Moses uses in the opera, and for a reimbursement of $50,000 in 1935 dollars &#8212; suggests that his view of the purpose of sung drama was little related to such realities as happy movie audiences or producers. Moses und Aron, even unfinished, is a vast speculative work on the nature of faith and the faithful; like the grotesques in the margins of medieval writings, the pagan outbursts in Act 2 establish the dialogue. What astounds us in Moses und Aron is the virtuosity in its creation; derived from a single tone row, but with the richness of language to hold the attention over two hours, it was to become for Schoenberg the ultimate proof of his musical methods as they serve his art &#8212; and also as they serve his God. It is the strength of his arguments, and ultimately of his proof, that holds an audience spellbound in the presence, however unfulfilled, of Moses und Aron.
</p>
<p>   That presence was stunningly created here by the forces from Berlin: the Rundfunk (Radio) Choir, the Deutsches Symphonie-Orchester, the veteran bass-baritone Franz Mazura, who sang-spoke the words of Moses, and the American tenor Donald Kaasch, who handsomely managed Aron‘s visionary coloratura. There was no staging, beyond that of vocal soloists in smaller roles being spotted here and there through the orchestra and offstage. I have seen three settings &#8212; the U.S. premiere in Boston, Achim Freyer&#8217;s marvelous production at the New York City Opera and the Met‘s of two seasons ago; I have never been more fully overwhelmed by the work than this time under Kent Nagano&#8217;s conducting. I have also never, on any stage, heard a large chorus perform challenging music with the thrilling, astounding clarity of that Berlin ensemble.
</p>
<p>    It‘s quite the town, you gotta admit, where in a single week on the same stage there can transpire two operas as unalike as Moses und Aron and The Merry Widow and performances &#8212; on separate programs &#8212; of not one but two of Edward Elgar&#8217;s elephantine monstrosities. For Elgar‘s First Symphony I have no praise whatever. It&#8217;s not only that he drags our patience across the torturer‘s rack trying to figure out how to end the damn thing; he doesn&#8217;t even seem to know how to begin it. It‘s as though we opened a door by accident on some pompous and ancient baronet wallowing in a mud bath from which he has lost the power to emerge. Fifty minutes later, he&#8217;s still there. Even after Joshua Bell‘s showoff performance of Leonard Bernstein&#8217;s pretentious and desiccated Serenade, and even in David Zinman‘s obviously devoted performance, the Elgar First groaned along its painful path. Must such things be?
</p>
<p>    But the Violin Concerto, a few days later, is another story; this is equally terrible music, and I love every bar. It takes 45 minutes to say absolutely nothing, but does so with such earnestness, grabbing your lapels and shaking you into submission, that you have to give in. Melodic substance is lacking; the First Symphony is a veritable Blue Danube by comparison. The soloist traces circles and ovals around the vast gulps of air where the tunes ought to be. At the end the orchestral strings jiggle their fingers across the instruments to make a soft, distant roar over which the soloist goes up, down and across in an utter void. You sit there, enthralled that someone might have the gall to pass this off as a legitimate concert experience, yet when the Elgar Violin Concerto eventually gurgles its last, something inside &#8212; the ache of disbelief, perhaps &#8212; makes you want to hear it all again.
</p>
<p>   And so I sat through Pinchas Zukerman&#8217;s amiable saunter through the music, wondering at times what he, Zubin Mehta and I were doing in that hall at that time, yet consumed with eagerness to rush home and listen again, this time on the EMI disc of Nigel Kennedy‘s sizzling version with Simon Rattle. My trajectory was slowed by the Mehta Rite of Spring, with its exaggerated dynamics and Straussian ritards, which ended the program. The year that began with Salonen&#8217;s exhilarating dash through Stravinsky‘s Technicolored thickets thus lurched to its inglorious conclusion. Oh well, it made the Kennedy Elgar, at home, all the better.
</p>
<p>   The Moses und Aron made it impossible to hear the second half of Jeffrey Kahane&#8217;s survey of the Beethoven piano concertos with his Los Angeles Chamber Orchestra, and also makes it impossible to find space to write about what I did hear (concertos 2, 3 and 4) in language of proper effulgence. Simply put, this was some of the most beautiful solo and orchestral playing I have heard all year.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>SAN FRANCISCO OPERA&#160;REPORT</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2001/12/san-francisco-opera-report/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2001/12/san-francisco-opera-report/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Tue, 18 Dec 2001 21:03:35 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Opera News]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=1782</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Within five minutes of the opening skirmish in the San Francisco Opera’s jihad against The Merry Widow, its new script had touched upon such non-Pontevedrian matters as rolling blackouts and mutual funds. Such were the with-it fancies of contemporary playwright Wendy Wasserstein, brought in to tin-plate the spoken dialogue in the Victor Léon/Leo Stein libretto [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p class="MsoNormal">Within five minutes of the opening skirmish in the San Francisco Opera’s jihad against <em>The Merry Widow</em>, its new script had touched upon such non-Pontevedrian matters as rolling blackouts and mutual funds. Such were the with-it fancies of contemporary playwright Wendy Wasserstein, brought in to tin-plate the spoken dialogue in the Victor Léon/Leo Stein libretto with a contemporary gleam. The songs themselves were left alone; in this context their sweet verses – in Christopher Hassall’s serviceable 1958 Englishing &#8211;  came across with a positively Shakespearian resonance.</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">Director Lotfi Mansouri, in collaboration with Richard Bonynge had created this version of the <em>Widow</em>, with Hassall’s text,  in 1981 as a vehicle for Joan Sutherland, padding out the 80-plus minutes of its already generous score with borrowings from elsewhere in the Léhar canon – an interminable ballet to a medley from  <em>The Count of Luxembourg,</em> a bland final piece from <em>Paganini</em> and a comic aria (for the flunky Njegus) that Léhar had tacked onto the <em>Widow</em> later in its history. All told, San Francisco’s <em>Widow</em>, in Mansouri’s restaging intended as his company farewell,  held its audience – depressingly paltry as witnessed on December 5 &#8212; captive (if not exactly captivated) a near-Wagnerian 3-1/2 hours. The Los Angeles Opera production, first staged by the Utah Opera in May, 2000 – running simultaneously in the same version with the same director and designers but without the trendy-Wendy lugubriously unfunny text – zoomed past at 20 minutes shorter.</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">Michael Yeargan’s sets  &#8212; as nearly identical on both California stages as never mind &#8212; filled the eye with a pastiche of Art-Nouveau Paris, including the swirls and squiggles of Hector Guimard’s subway entrances; Thierry Bosquet’s fin-de-siècle costumes seemed to float free of gravity’s constraints,  At the Widow’s first entrance –  sheathed in blazing  red atop a staircase engulfed by white-tied admirers – you had to wonder if another<em> Dolly</em> had been cloned. On the podium, in his San Francisco Opera debut, Erich Kunzel’s presence should, you might think, guarantee the proper accents for congenial musical theater. But no, not in this lumbering, joyless pageant of merriment betrayed.</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">Australia’s Yvonne Kenny had those accents, however: the wisdom, the cynicism, the lustrous voice. So did Austria’s Angelika Kirchschlager – surprisingly, a light mezzo in a soubrette role – and so did the ardent Camille de Rosillon of America’s Gregory Turay, a young tenor clearly on the rise. But Danish baritone Bo Skovhus’ Danilo was mostly huff, a far cry from Los Angeles’ airborne Danilo, Rodney Gilfry – slated to take on the role in San Francisco’s later performances &#8212; who sang and danced rings around Carol Vaness’ Widow.</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">Less – far less – might have been more.</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">Tones of greater delight, and greater dramatic honesty, had filled San Francisco’s opera house in preceding weeks. The 1985 <em>Falstaff </em>abides as one of Jean-Pierre Ponnelle’s most endearing creations, and so it was in its November revival (seen on November 18), staged by former Ponnelle assistant Vera Lúcia Calábria, with the <em>immenso</em> , sonorous mountain of a John Del Carlo in the title role, Nancy Gustafson as the wise, endearing Alicia and a hilarious ragtag of comics – Doug Jones’ Bardolfo, Stanislaw Schwets’ Pistola and Jonathan Boyd’s Caius – nicely welded under Calábria’s direction. Donald Runnicles’ musical leadership – as in his <em>Meistersinger</em> weeks before, restated the sometimes-forgotten principle largely ignored in the aforementioned <em>Merry Widow</em>: that the essence of truly comedic music lies deep within the notes themselves.</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">Leos Janacek’s <em>Jenufa</em> made its overdue return to San Francisco’s repertory on November 19, in a modest, handsome production from the Dallas Opera. Francesca Zambello’s staging traced the stark, bleak lines and scary empty spaces of Allison Chitty’s design,  in which warmth and communicativeness seemed perpetually lost. Patricia Racette’s tense, desperate Jenufa had its dramatic foil in Kathryn Harries’ overpowering recreation of stepmother Kostelnicka and drew fitful warmth from the sympathetic but troubled Laca of Richard Berkeley-Steele. (Harries and Berkeley-Steele, both Brits, were making their San Francisco debuts.) Veteran soprano Helga Dernesch, a San Francisco love object since her debut there in 1981, sang Grandmother Buryjovka, small role to grand applause.  Jiri Kout conducted the serious, intense performance.</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Minimal&#160;Merriment</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2001/12/minimal-merriment/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2001/12/minimal-merriment/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 12 Dec 2001 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=372</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[The Merry Widow here, The Merry Widow there: twice in four days, and twice betrayed. Shouldn&#8217;t there be a Purple Heart for critics? Having found much to deplore in the San Francisco Opera‘s current jihad against Franz Lehar&#8217;s endearing and enduring theater piece, my colleague Mark Swed ventured the assurance that the Los Angeles Opera‘s [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>The Merry Widow here, The Merry Widow there: twice in four days, and twice betrayed. Shouldn&#8217;t there be a Purple Heart for critics?
</p>
<p>    Having found much to deplore in the San Francisco Opera‘s current jihad against Franz Lehar&#8217;s endearing and enduring theater piece, my colleague Mark Swed ventured the assurance that the Los Angeles Opera‘s staging &#8212; same performing version, same set and costume designer, same stage director &#8212; would still, somehow, rise above the disasters up north. In one respect his confidence was justified; audiences at the Music Center have, at least, been spared the ludicrous update that trendy Wendy Wasserstein was engaged by San Francisco to inflict upon Christopher Hassall&#8217;s bland but serviceable 1958 Englishing. Within five minutes of the curtain‘s rise at San Francisco&#8217;s Opera House, the audience &#8212; rather sparse, in fact, the night I went &#8212; was beguiled by cute jokes about mutual funds and rolling blackouts.
</p>
<p>   Otherwise, it breaks my heart to relate, I find little reason to extol one performance over the other. Both use the overstuffed, waterlogged performing edition that was dreamed up in 1981 by San Francisco‘s Lotfi Mansouri and Richard Bonynge as a showcase for Mrs. Bonynge, the eminent Joan Sutherland. To Lehar&#8217;s generous 80-or-so minutes of music were added an interminable ballet and a big choral number from elsewhere in the Lehar canon &#8212; from the operettas The Count of Luxembourg and Paganini, to be exact. With these encumbrances plus the Wasserstein script, San Francisco‘s production clocked in at a near-Wagnerian three and one-half hours. Even without the spurious new text, the Los Angeles version, a mere 20 minutes shorter, doesn&#8217;t exactly zoom. The Los Angeles Widow is a borrowed production produced last year at the Utah Opera; San Francisco‘s is newly built. Both use Michael Yeargan set designs, Thierry Bosquet costumes and Mansouri&#8217;s directorial hand; they are as nearly identical as never mind. Was everybody paid twice?
</p>
<p>   Yeargan‘s sets fill the eye with a pastiche of Art Nouveau Paris, including the swirls and squiggles of Hector Guimard&#8217;s subway entrances; Bosquet‘s fin-de-siecle costumes float free of gravity&#8217;s constraints. At the Widow‘s first entrance &#8212; sheathed in blazing red atop a staircase and surrounded by white-tied admirers &#8212; you had to wonder if another Dolly had been cloned. On San Francisco&#8217;s podium there is Erich Kunzel; here there is John DeMain; either presence should, you‘d think, guarantee the proper style for congenial musical theater. But no, not in this cluttered, lumbering, joyless pageant.
</p>
<p>   In San Francisco, Australia&#8217;s Yvonne Kenny has some sense of this style: the wisdom, the cynicism, the lustrous voice; I hear little of that from Los Angeles‘ Carol Vaness, the latest sad instance &#8212; of which we&#8217;ve had several &#8212; of this fine singer unsuitably cast. By far the best performance in either cast is Rodney Gilfry‘s sly, insinuating Danilo, dancing such alluring rings around Vaness&#8217; woodenness as to make her look positively airborne. Next month Gilfry takes on the Danilo for San Francisco‘s later performances, to Flicka von Stade&#8217;s Widow. Now that might be worth the trip. ”Might,“ I said.
</p>
<p>    For a couple of weeks last month, Jean-Yves Thibaudet was all over town: a couple of pop-classic concertos with the Philharmonic, chamber music at Skirball‘s Ahmanson Hall, jazz (or so it was billed) at the Knitting Factory, a visit to a public school, a master class at Zipper Hall, all gathered under the Philharmonic&#8217;s new artist-in-residency program. He‘s a handsome fellow and infinitely charming, and his manner suggests full awareness of those attributes. As he made his way through the prickles of Poulenc&#8217;s garrulous, blithely tongue-in-cheek Sextet (with Philharmonic members, at Ahmanson), you could hear the piece as a self-portrait, of composer and performer alike.
</p>
<p>    The Knitting Factory gig ruffled a few feathers, however. Abetted by a motormouth stooge named Joel Silbermann, Thibaudet tossed off some simplistic, nay patronizing, insights about jazz that suggested little awareness beyond what you get from record-album notes. His playing &#8212; of arrangements of arrangements of Bill Evans and Ellington arrangements &#8212; was tidy and spiritless, with none of the suave, blithe rhythmic command that had lit up his Ravel, Poulenc and Gershwin. So, for that matter, was the sense of the whole event, which played down to a distinguished and savvy audience that had come to celebrate the coolth of a Philharmonic event in a Hollywood rock club.
</p>
<p>   The master class at Zipper made amends. For over an hour, Thibaudet listened with great care as five young Colburn School students went through their offerings. His comments, in all cases, went to the cores of problems, the mechanics of playing and the rewards that come with mastery. I‘ve been to master classes that turned into ego trips for the visiting artists and had no value (beyond intimidation) to the students. Thibaudet&#8217;s was different; in his reaching out to these youngsters I sensed the presence of a caring musician.
</p>
<p>    Les Arts Florissants (”The Arts a-Blooming“) takes its name and its inspira-tion from a work by the prolific Marc-Antoine Charpentier (1643&#8211;1704), who ended his years as organist at the Sainte-Chapelle. If you can summon visual memories of that extraordinary space, with Parisian sunlight pouring through its floor-to-ceiling stained glass, you‘ll get a fair likeness both of Charpentier&#8217;s own music and of the sounds of the ensemble that honors his name. William Christie, who founded the Paris-based group in 1979, actually hails from Buffalo, but that doesn‘t seem to have undermined his success in revealing to French audiences a part of their own musical glory.
</p>
<p>    At Irvine&#8217;s Barclay Theater (and the next night at UCLA‘s Royce Hall), the group &#8212; 20 singers, 27 players &#8212; sang Charpentier&#8217;s holiday music: an Advent antiphon, a small Christmas oratorio, and the well-known Midnight Mass, in which old French carols form the substance for an actual Mass celebration. ”Exquisite“ comes most readily to mind, yet there was nothing of the prissy or timid in the performances under Christie, as that term can sometimes imply. The whole evening, not a moment too long, became a transport back to a part of music‘s lustrous past, its vivid colors newly, honestly restored.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>The Passion According to&#160;Sofia</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2001/11/the-passion-according-to-sofia/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2001/11/the-passion-according-to-sofia/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 28 Nov 2001 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=371</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[In 1989 a group of Soviet composers brought their music to Boston, most of it for its first American hearings. There were some familiar names among the group; music by Schnittke, Shchedrin and Kancheli had already leaked out of the Soviet Union in those early days of glasnost. One name, however, was completely unknown. A [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>In 1989 a group of Soviet composers brought their music to Boston, most of it for its first American hearings. There were some familiar names among the group; music by Schnittke, Shchedrin and Kancheli had already leaked out of the Soviet Union in those early days of glasnost. One name, however, was completely unknown. A Soviet information agency had set up a listening room where critics could sample discs and tapes, and the music that proved the most astounding was by Sofia Gubaidulina: a huge violin concerto called Offertorium that was built around a gloss on J.S. Bach‘s A Musical Offering, and a weird virtuoso romp for nothing but solo bassoon and an orchestra of low strings. Gubaidulina was at the conference: a small, dour figure in her late 50s, presiding over further revelations of her strange, distinctive musical outlooks in which such diverse elements as folk songs from her Tatar ancestry, Schoenbergian atonality and American jazz and pop clashed delightfully. Discovering her and her music was, for many of us in Boston that week, the most memorable event.
</p>
<p>    Now Gubaidulina is better known, and recent photographs suggest that she has learned to smile. The Kronos plays and records her music. The Offertorium is on the Philharmonic schedule for late February, with concertmaster Martin Chalifour as soloist. Some of her best discs, including two versions of the Bassoon Concerto, have already come and gone, but just this month there are three new recordings of major works, sharing in common a kind of dark, elegiac ecstasy and the power to raise goose bumps.
</p>
<p>   One is the product of the unique commissioning program wherein the Stuttgart-based International Bach Academy elicited four full-evening settings, from four composers of diverse backgrounds, of the Passion narratives (Matthew, Mark, Luke and John) as a celebration of last year&#8217;s Bach anniversary. All were recorded at their Stuttgart premieres, and I‘ve already written about Wolfgang Rihm&#8217;s Luke and Osvaldo Golijov‘s Mark &#8212; both, like the Gubaidulina Johannes-Passion, on Germany&#8217;s Hanssler-Classic label and, I‘m sorry to say, easier to find via Internet mail order than at your neighborhood record store (Tan Dun&#8217;s Matthew is due out on Sony, whenever). However you may bemoan the fate of contemporary serious music, this celebration of the continuity of the spirit of Bach, as evidenced in these commissions dreamed up by the Bach-Akademie‘s Helmuth Rilling, constitutes a repertory of reassurance.
</p>
<p>   Like Golijov&#8217;s Latino-Hebraic Mark, Gubaidulina‘s John draws from her own mingled ethnicities &#8212; Tatar, Russian Orthodox, Jewish. Her text is the account of Jesus&#8217; trial and crucifixion in John‘s Gospel &#8212; tragic and mystical, as we know from Bach&#8217;s setting of the same words. Into this, however, she has also spliced John‘s words from Revelation, the close-to-pagan evocation of the Day of Judgment. Her music swings back and forth from these extremes. The solo basso and the low voices from the chorus evoke the sounds we know as Russian liturgical &#8212; from Rachmaninoff&#8217;s Vesper Service and the old Don Cossack Choir records; then there are huge drums, brass and bells to inundate the senses with fear and exultation. The 91 minutes of music holds you tight: the splendor of the halo, the agony of the nails. Valery Gergiev conducts forces from St. Petersburg, and a basso named Genady Bezzubenkov will sing holes into your skull.
</p>
<p>   On EMI Classics there is Gubaidulina‘s 1997Canticle of the Sun, music inspired by two levels of ecstasy: the visionary poetry of St. Francis of Assisi and the soaring trajectory of Mstislav Rostropovich&#8217;s cello. The two ecstasies mingle; a small chorus (Terry Edwards‘ London Voices) hints at some of the saintly words, but it is Rostropovich who completes their thoughts, with a small ensemble of percussion and celesta. After the dark of the Johannes-Passion, the pure bright light of this marvelous work might even blind you. Light and shadow also jostle each other in the companion work, the 1994 Music for Flute, Strings and Percussion. Here a string orchestra, led by Rostropovich, is divided into two parts tuned a quarter-tone apart; the solo flutist &#8212; the remarkable Emmanuel Pahud &#8212; uses two instruments to accord with both groups. Elegant, featherweight glissandos seem to swaddle the music in shimmering gift-wrapping.
</p>
<p>   Gubaidulina&#8217;s Two Paths: Music for Two Solo Violas and Symphony Orchestra dates from 1999, commissioned by the New York Philharmonic and released in a recent 10-disc set of archive recordings under the about-to-retire Kurt Masur. Wonderful, lush music this, cannily devised as a set of variations in which the solo violas (first-desk players Cynthia Phelps and Rebecca Young) follow intersecting paths &#8212; one up, one down, more of the light-vs.-shadow motivation that often guides the composer‘s pen. Ten discs of Masur, including several more new works (Henze, Kancheli, Tan) plus the Bach and Beethoven that you surely have in less noncommittal performances, may be a stretch, but I do find myself returning to this one 25-minute work of Gubaidulina, for its greatness of spirit and the eloquence of its language.
</p>
<p>    Ever since I sold my 78s and left home unencumbered, one of the albums that I&#8217;ve most often longed to hear again has been RCA-Victor M-193, Smetana‘s The Bartered Bride, complete on 15 shellacs, in a performance &#8212; by the Prague National Opera under Ottakar Ostrcil &#8212; that seemed at the time as pure an essence of romantic comedy as ever was. Now, I report with practically gurgling joy, it still does. Naxos, that most unpredictable of all labels, has reissued that performance on two little silvery discs that weigh about 1200 of the pristine weight, in a remastering by restorer Ward Marston, priced at far fewer 2001 dollars ($12) than the original sold for in 1933 dollars ($22.50).
</p>
<p>    After its unthrilling start as a purveyor of standard repertory in performances of dubious provenance, Naxos has now moved into territory abandoned by the majors, as preserver of the industry&#8217;s legendary past: not only complete operas but also forgotten unforgettable soloists. Marston and his crew create minor miracles in rescuing ancient sounds in their original &#8212; not beefed-up &#8212; resonance. And when Emil Pollert, the marriage broker in this newold, glorious, best-of-all Bartered Brides, sings out his “A chalupu a chalupu,” I laugh myself silly once again, and the years fall away.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Ludwig the&#160;Eternal</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2001/11/ludwig-the-eternal/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2001/11/ludwig-the-eternal/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 21 Nov 2001 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=370</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[The Philharmonic‘s admirable chamber-music series has moved to a new home, the recently completed Ahmanson Hall at the Skirball Center, across the freeway from the former site at the University of Judaism&#8217;s Gindi Auditorium. Neither is a satisfactory venue for chamber music. Both are too wide, undermining any sense of intimacy with the music. Ahmanson, [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>The Philharmonic‘s admirable chamber-music series has moved to a new home, the recently completed Ahmanson Hall at the Skirball Center, across the freeway from the former site at the University of Judaism&#8217;s Gindi Auditorium. Neither is a satisfactory venue for chamber music. Both are too wide, undermining any sense of intimacy with the music. Ahmanson, furthermore, is uncomfortable in the extreme; the spaces between rows are hostile to knees, and threading one‘s way though them is downright precarious &#8212; especially since chamber-music aficionados tend to be of a certain age.
</p>
<p>    Nevertheless, the opening concert two weeks ago had its delights. The two big chamber works of Osvaldo Golijov, both tinged by the Yiddish side of the composer&#8217;s multifaceted background, drew the major interest and constituted such a long first half (especially after a helter-skelter series of introductory remarks) that many in the crowd left at intermission. They missed a short conceit by Heitor Villa-Lobos &#8212; a garrulous little Bachianas Brasileiras for flute and bassoon. Even more to the point, they missed a chance to revisit a work that everybody claims to know but probably hasn‘t paid attention to in years, the F-major String Quartet of Beethoven, the first of the Opus 18 series that really tied down its composer&#8217;s conquest of the musical world.
</p>
<p>   What a work! It comes on with a whiplash, a fragment of a tune that will rattle 104 times in this first movement, play off against itself in crushing dissonance, break loose and chase itself into cadences in the wrong key. Then comes an even more profound miracle, a slow movement that takes shape as an elegy of intense poignance lit as by a sliver of moonlight through clouds, and then sends those clouds, ever darkening, like ghosts across the landscape. Beethoven claimed the Tomb Scene from Romeo and Juliet as his inspiration. Another slow movement from these early years &#8212; the Largo from the Piano Sonata, Opus 10 No. 3 &#8212; pours forth the same harrowing beauty. These two movements &#8212; both in the same key, D minor &#8212; announce the arrival of a master of bone-chilling musical expression such as the world had not yet encountered. People often dismiss everything in Beethoven up to the “Eroica,” say, as derivative stuff learned at Haydn‘s knee; this work, however, clearly lets you know that it&#8217;s later than you think.
</p>
<p>    We heard Golijov‘s Yiddishbuk at Ojai last summer, in an edgier, more profound reading by the Cuarteto Latinoamericano; the Philharmonic quartet, led by violinist Mischa Lefkowitz, gave the music a more solemn sense that also worked. This is strange, powerful music; its soul lies in a set of short poems and notations by Franz Kafka inspired by his readings of Hebrew lamentations. From that source, Golijov has worked in more contemporary references, from verses by children in Nazi internment to a personal lament for Leonard Bernstein. The music is deep and dark; it cries out, and it also cries out for rehearing.
</p>
<p>    The Dreams and Prayers of Isaac the Blind is better known; the Kronos has recorded it (on Nonesuch) and plays it often. It too is deep and dark, but is so mostly to serve as ground zero for a high-flying solo clarinet that floats over the somber scene like a Chagall ghost. The ecstatic, sometimes manic music of klezmer is a major source here, not the toe-tappers of Fiddler on the Roof, more the wrenching chants that sing of six millennia of Jewish persecution and redemption. Michele Zukovsky&#8217;s clarinets &#8212; from soprano to bass &#8212; caught the down-and-dirty outcry, verging at times on outright hysteria; the Philharmonic string players, with Mark Kashper leading, followed ecstatically.
</p>
<p>   At the Music Center the previous weekend, the Philharmonic‘s Miguel Harth-Bedoya began his stint leading Golijov&#8217;s Last Round, wonderful, biting music from another side of its composer‘s multinational background. Its two movements deal with two kinds of tango and, thus, deal with the exhilaration of the young Golijov under the spell of Astor Piazzolla&#8217;s playing in Buenos Aires. Two string ensembles play at opposite sides of the stage; at the start, the first-desk players play standing up, lunging and kicking into their music and raising goose bumps on their hearers as well. Gradually the music subsides into the politer, social kind of tango. This is large-scale music; it needs a better place on orchestral programs than merely as a 14-minute curtain raiser. I told Golijov it needs a third movement; he promised to think about it.
</p>
<p>   Harth-Bedoya grows, in talent and in value to the local orchestra. Surrounding Alicia De Larrocha‘s rather tired ramble through Manuel de Falla&#8217;s Nights in the Gardens of Spain, he drew splendid, glinting colors from the orchestra. For his musical strengths as well as his obvious value to the Philharmonic‘s community, he should be locked behind bars and required to linger among us. Instead, the world bids for his services &#8212; the Fort Worth Symphony, most recently. If they ever get around to legalizing cloning, he&#8217;ll be a prime candidate.
</p>
<p>    Trash comes in many sizes, many grades. At the Philharmonic last week, the high-grade trash littered the drab, murky measures of the Brahms First Symphony; the low-grade trash lay amid the modest charms of the Wieniawski D-minor Violin Concerto. By certain public measurements, the former is generally reckoned as the greater work. By my private measurements, the Wieniawski was infinitely more agreeable. One of its moments, the bridge over which the solo clarinet (Zukovsky again) transports us from the first to the second movement, is lovelier by far than any moment in the excruciating 45 minutes of pompous oratory by which Brahms secured his foothold in the world of the romantic symphony.
</p>
<p>    Emmanuel Krivine conducted an honorable, spirited rendition; the Philharmonic‘s own Alexander Treger tossed off the concerto as the airy kitsch it truly is. Krivine, a frequent visitor, has been saddled with the two least-adventurous programs of the entire Philharmonic season, last week and this; he has been allotted more substantial fare even in his Hollywood Bowl appearances in the past. He deserves as much.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>LONG BEACH OPERA “POWDER HER&#160;FACE”</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2001/11/long-beach-opera-%e2%80%9cpowder-her-face%e2%80%9d/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2001/11/long-beach-opera-%e2%80%9cpowder-her-face%e2%80%9d/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 15 Nov 2001 21:08:35 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Opera News]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=1785</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[“I go to bed early,” says Margaret, Duchess of Argyll to a gossip-columnist snoop, “and often.” That said, however, you need to know that Powder Her Face, the opera by Thomas Adès that in six years has blazed a trail of adulation worldwide, from Aspen to Zagreb, is not exactly your basic bedtime story. What [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>“I go to bed early,” says Margaret, Duchess of Argyll to a gossip-columnist snoop, “and often.” That said, however, you need to know that <em>Powder Her Face</em>, the opera by Thomas Adès that in six years has blazed a trail of adulation worldwide, from Aspen to Zagreb, is not exactly your basic bedtime story.</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">What it is, in fact, may not be so easy to relate in a family-oriented publication, but it’s worth the try in the wake of its sensationally successful staging (November 9-18) by California’s undauntable Long Beach Opera. You have to know first that its central character, although made out as the latest in a long line of implausible operatic monsters alongside Lulu, Salome and the Queen of the Night, is this time quite real. Born Margaret Whigham, later the “Mrs. Sweeny” catalogued in Cole Porter’s “You’re the Top,” finally the infamous Duchess whose sexual appetites made headlines in a 1963 scandal that almost scuttled Britain’s Tory government, she died in 1993 at 81, in poverty and ignominy.</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">Only two years later <em>Powder Her Face</em>, with its deliciously scabrous libretto by Philip Hensher and its defiantly eclectic score, made its own headlines and rocketed its composer – a stripling of 24 at the time – into the underpopulated ranks of true originals among serious composers. The work was first staged, and recorded on EMI Classics,  by London’s Almeida Opera; the Long Beach production was the first professional American staging. Most intervening performances, for reasons that will be clear in a minute, have been in concert or “semi-staged.”</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">The opera hurtles forward in eight brief scenes, starting and ending in 1990 as the impecunious Duchess gets the heave-ho from the hotel manager, and flashing back to early triumph as the “Debutante of the Year” awaits the Duke’s proposal, then to their elegant marriage reception, then downward as the marriage disintegrates and the Duchess must seek fulfillment elsewhere. A hotel waiter cooperates in this regard;  as he pours out his, er, heart, the outpouring is received with gurgling concupiscence. (The Duke, meanwhile, also turns a trick or two.) A judge seals the divorce verdict, detailing the Duchess’ “intimate knowledge of perversions which few of us can credit.”</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">Besides the Duchess &#8212; killer music for the fearless dramatic soprano that Irena Sylya almost was save for occasional diction problems &#8212; an economical cast takes on multiple roles: a high soprano (the phenomenal Catherine Ireland) as maid, reporter and call-girl, an agile tenor (James Schaffner, a splendid, graceful newcomer)  as waiter, bellhop and lounge lizard, a bass (the stentorian Donald Sherrill) as Duke, hotel manager and judge. The orchestra numbers 15, heavy on winds and brass, spangled with whirring, bustling percussion including several fishing reels for a clickety-clack evocation of some down-and-dirty tango. The music throbs, grates and, on occasion, bellows bravely; after the opera’s scant two hours, you get the sense that you’ve heard one each of every kind of music in the books. It’s just that sense of omniscience, in fact, that contributes to the work’s irresistible thrust. “Never a dull moment” may overstate the case, but not by much.</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">For a company whose last time out was a modern-dress <em>Elektra</em> in a California beach house, the off-the-wall excesses of <em>Powder Her Face</em> seemed made-to-order, and so they proved. On a blocked-off portion of the stage at Cal State-Long Beach’s Carpenter Center, Andrew Lieberman’s designs accomodated both opera and audience – the latter perched on bleachers against the back wall. Against a side wall, Neal Stulberg’s crack little orchestra seethed and throbbed and drenched the premises in audible color. Geoff Korf’s lighting added much, with its dancing shadows conducting a whole ‘nother orgy out on the sidelines. An ornate glassed-in mobile structure served both as hotel room and museum display-case; in David Schweizer’s staging one was never sure whether the Duchess was genuine or stuffed – until, that is, the very end. Then the Duchess, broke and alone, made her slow exit into the empty theater &#8212; up and out, very fragile, very human &#8212; and suddenly the whole extravaganza of the past two hours took on another, unforgettable dimension.  ALAN RICH</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Going to Bed, Early and&#160;Often</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2001/11/going-to-bed-early-and-often/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2001/11/going-to-bed-early-and-often/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 14 Nov 2001 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=369</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[The big guys had their Verdi last week: the Music Center‘s La Traviata ending its run (not a moment too soon!) at one end of I-405; Opera Pacific&#8217;s Rigoletto starting its shorter run (in happier estate) at the other. Midway there was the little opera company that could (and did): Michael Milenski‘s undauntable Long Beach [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>The big guys had their Verdi last week: the Music Center‘s La Traviata ending its run (not a moment too soon!) at one end of I-405; Opera Pacific&#8217;s Rigoletto starting its shorter run (in happier estate) at the other. Midway there was the little opera company that could (and did): Michael Milenski‘s undauntable Long Beach Opera, fearlessly striding through the kitsch and commotion of Thomas Ades&#8217; Powder Her Face, emerging triumphant beyond all hopes and expectations. One performance remains as these words reach you, Sunday the 18th at 2 p.m. in a 250-seat space at the Carpenter Center at Cal State Long Beach; I urge you to beg, borrow or steal your way in.
</p>
<p>    Powder Her Face is pure brat &#8212; Brit brat at that: music and drama that could only cascade from the creative mind of the preternaturally gifted 24-year-old its composer was at its time. In one sense its Duchess of Argyll belongs to the great operatic-monster tradition, from Mozart‘s Queen of the Night to Strauss&#8217; Elektra and Berg‘s Lulu. Unlike them, however, the owner of this powdered face, memorably captured in Philip Hensher&#8217;s libretto, is a creature out of yesterday‘s headlines. Unlike them, too, both librettist and composer have filled out this monstrosity with something you could almost mistake for human dimensions.
</p>
<p>   Scotland&#8217;s Margaret Whigham (1912&#8211; 1993) became Margaret Sweeny (the Mrs. Sweeny cataloged in Cole Porter‘s “You&#8217;re the Top”) in her first marriage, and Duchess of Argyll in her second. As such, she passed a colorful lifetime fornicating her way upward through London‘s nobility and downward through its working classes into eventual penniless ignominy. (Apparently the Duke succeeded in matching her trick for trick.) With a command of musical coloration that borders on the awesome, Ades shakes this tragic, horrendous sacred monster into violent, brimming life. His music has a captivating insolent slanginess; it captures her vile, lethal breath and blends it into a range of perfumes both ethereal and stinkpot.
</p>
<p>   Neal Stulberg&#8217;s expert small orchestra &#8212; winds and percussion mostly, with occasional strings just for a touch of the slinky &#8212; worms its way in and out of the fetid atmosphere around its central character. Much of the score is beholden to the language of tango at its rudest, down-and-dirtiest. Four singers &#8212; impersonating many more characters &#8212; carry the action breathlessly forward: hotel bellhops eagerly available, chambermaids, hangers-on giggling with the latest gossip, servicing the Duchess‘ amorous needs and occasionally being serviced in return. As the Duchess, Irena Sylya&#8217;s management of Hensher‘s fleet, intricate declamation is only approximate, but the venom is vividly apparent even so. The opera&#8217;s two hours race by like the wind.
</p>
<p>   Some of my happiest Long Beach Opera memories concern the way its several stage directors have employed empty space: a flat stage floor ringed with TV monitors for Britten‘s Death in Venice; more empty space for the Mediterranean that Monteverdi&#8217;s Ulysses must cross. Long Beach‘s Powder Her Face &#8212; in its first American professional staging, by the way, after concert-style performances in Brooklyn and Berkeley &#8212; is ingeniously (if not exactly comfortably) set on a blocked-off area on the Carpenter stage, with the audience on bleachers on one side. Director David Schweizer fills the empty spaces with spooky dancing shadows. A mobile, glass-enclosed booth stands in the middle of nowhere, pushed here and there, a jeweled, cluttered museum showcase, perhaps, with the Duchess inside, possibly dead but also poisonously alive. One bellhop (James Schaffner) catches her eye, and proves a considerable mouthful. High above the action, perched atop a towering ladder up near God, a judge (the stentorian Donald Sherrill) sends down thunderbolts of condemnation. A journalist (Catherine Ireland in one of her five roles) pries into secrets and confessions. “I go to bed early,” the Duchess informs her, “and often.”
</p>
<p>    If Rigoletto isn&#8217;t broken, why does everybody try to fix it? For an opera so perfectly proportioned, its dramatic unfolding so devastating, its fund of deep, disturbed humanness so keenly set forth, the history of maltreatments ventured upon Verdi‘s first operatic masterpiece makes for a rather depressing bundle. Bruce Beresford&#8217;s Hollywoodized recasting, imposed upon the L.A. Opera two seasons ago and now up for revival on the San Diego Opera‘s agenda come January, may be the most blatant perversion yet to come down the pike, but it hardly stands alone; the English National Opera&#8217;s famous rewrite job, in English and set among lower-Manhattan Mafiosi, was still available on video the last time I looked.
</p>
<p>    Opera Pacific‘s new Rigoletto arrives from Sydney&#8217;s Opera Australia. First the good news: Almost all of the traditional cuts have been opened, with only the second verse of the Duke‘s “Possente amor” excised; the performance I heard, with the first of the two alternating casts, was close to first-rate &#8212; riding on the shoulders (strong and getting stronger) of John DeMain&#8217;s conducting; it was given, as the composer intended, in three acts, not the four that ruin dramatic continuity.
</p>
<p>   Elijah Moshinsky‘s production, with sets and costumes by Michael Yeargan, moves the action up to a time vaguely present, which gives us the Mantuan courtesans in tux and sunglasses dancing Verdi&#8217;s elegant minuet &#8212; and with the dance band not onstage as prescribed but in the pit. Rigoletto and Gilda sing their sad first duet at a kitchen table with red-checked cloth, in a tidy suburban house. Sparafucile‘s tavern is your basic American waterfront dive, at which Rigoletto and Gilda arrive by small car, probably a Rent-a-Wreck Fiat. The result, as is the case far more often than not, does nothing to clarify the story or bring it any closer; on the contrary, it comes off as a ridiculous confusion of tongues.
</p>
<p>   Christopher Robertson, the Rigoletto, was singing through an announced cold but sounded fine, nicely resonant and far more at ease than as San Francisco&#8217;s Arshak II, which we both suffered through in September. Elena Kelessidi was the pert, diminutive Gilda, and Andrew Richards, the Duke, looked for once like the handsome tenor his music attempts to embody and seldom does.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Is There Sex After&#160;Bach?</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2001/11/is-there-sex-after-bach/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2001/11/is-there-sex-after-bach/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 07 Nov 2001 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=368</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Morimur is up there on the charts, the latest implausible release from ECM, one of the few remaining labels to turn implausibility into solid musical virtue &#8212; and perhaps into a few deutschemarks along the way. The title is something Latin about dying, and the message from the disc is that thoughts about dying were [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Morimur is up there on the charts, the latest implausible release from ECM, one of the few remaining labels to turn implausibility into solid musical virtue &#8212; and perhaps into a few deutschemarks along the way. The title is something Latin about dying, and the message from the disc is that thoughts about dying were the principal fuel for J.S. Bach‘s phenomenal creative energy. A German scholar named Helga Thoene has discovered tunes &#8212; or, let&#8217;s say, melodic turns of phrase &#8212; in Bach‘s secular music that also turn up in his sacred chorales. Dr. Thoene would have us believe that some of these secular works, specifically the famous D-minor Partita for solo violin with its implausibly beautiful chaconne, fairly bristle with secret messages. This partita, she points out, was published in 1720, the year that Bach&#8217;s first wife, Maria Barbara, died. Therefore, we must regard the work as some kind of elegy. We must, of course, look beyond the fact that other works in that same published set of solo violin are downright jolly.
</p>
<p>    On the new disc, the violinist Christoph Poppen delivers the chaconne in a rather juicy manner that might set proponents of historically informed performances to dark mutterings. Then the Hilliard Ensemble, the British quartet of astonishingly wide repertory, sings a selection of Bach‘s chorale settings, including the poignant “Christ lag in Todesbanden” from a Good Friday cantata; these are interspersed with Poppen&#8217;s playing of the other movements from the partita. Then we get the chaconne again, this time with chorale melodies woven into &#8212; or perhaps pushed up against &#8212; the violin solos. The whole thing is very sad, very deep and, I have to admit, damned irresistible; the acoustical setting, in an echoey Austrian monastery, enhances the effect.
</p>
<p>   It is also, I regret to inform you, very fraudulent. Perhaps it doesn‘t seem that way in the context of its companions on the aforementioned charts: Andrea Bocelli, Charlotte Church and a newcomer (to me, at least), Russell Watson, whose vibrato nearly knocked my stereo off the shelf. The process of imposing veils of sexy, romantic sadness across well-meaning baroque creations goes way back: the Pachelbel Canon (a legitimate small piece made morose in unscrupulous performances), the “Albinoni Adagio” (latter-day pseudo-archaic fakery by a certain Remo Giazotto), and, of course, all the rainbow bridges from Bach to Wagner created by Leopold Stokowski&#8217;s orchestrations of organ works, choruses, even the long-suffering chaconne.
</p>
<p>   Yes, there are points of resemblance between some of the minor-key chorales and articulations in the chaconne and countless other instrumental works. Tune detectives can have a fine time tracking these down from one work to another, and when they‘ve finished they can link arms with the people who find the face of Jesus in the burn marks on tortillas. There was a vocabulary of turns of phrase in Bach&#8217;s time, as in Mozart‘s and beyond; composers knew them, and the best composers knew what to do with them. At violinist Andrew Manze&#8217;s splendid recital last week, one of the Historic Sites events, a Bach sonata began with a close relative of the “Erbarme dich” melody from the St. Matthew Passion. Bach ripping off Bach? Secret message? Or merely a sublime composer drawing upon the musical language of his own time and celebrating its infinite variety?
</p>
<p>    Two recent discs allay, at least for the moment, my fears that the record industry has retreated into the arms of Bocelli, Watson and company &#8212; although neither disc is what you‘d call a potent chart candidate. Both contain new American works by important young &#8212; i.e., this side of 50 &#8212; composers; both, even more surprising, are on major labels. On RCA there is Steven Mackey&#8217;s Tuck and Roll, delightfully rowdy, an omnium-gatherum of new-music tricks and attitudes on both sides of that fence which used to separate “serious” and “pop” and which has now been trampled down by music like this. For all its wild, eclectic stabs, this is very assured music, and its cockiness is just right in the hands of Michael Tilson Thomas, who leads his young New World Symphony. Two other Mackey works, almost as interesting, fill out the disc; the 32 minutes of Tuck and Roll do the most to proclaim the 45-year-old Mackey as a major composer.
</p>
<p>    We already know that about Aaron Kernis, 41, whose music commands a sizable chunk of type in the latest Schwann catalog. On a recent Virgin disc, Truls Mork is the soloist, with Eiji Oue and the Minnesota Orchestra, in Kernis‘ Colored Field, originally a concerto for English horn, now recast for cello and, in the process, transformed into a far deeper work, somber at times and wildly ecstatic at others. Kernis amazes me; his growth from a sassy, try-anything wise guy to a composer of genuine profundity &#8212; and a genuine skill in commanding and inventing orchestral sonorities &#8212; should be a matter of considerable national importance. Even the Pulitzer people seem to have recognized his high quality, not exactly typical behavior for that august if often misguided body.
</p>
<p>    Finally, Der Protagonist comes to disc. Kurt Weill&#8217;s first opera was composed in 1926 to a text by Georg Kaiser, hailed with hats in the air a year before Weill‘s first collaboration with Bertolt Brecht. The work comes crusted with legend, most of it Lotte Lenya&#8217;s charming invention: She and Weill did, or didn‘t, first meet when she was the Kaisers&#8217; au pair and he was at work on the opera. That doesn‘t matter.
</p>
<p>    It matters that this is a strong, vivid and startling work. It is full of 1920s Berlin: the hard, sardonic dissonances of the young Paul Hindemith, the bits of jazz that were sweeping the city at the time, the lingering romanticism from Weill&#8217;s studies with Ferruccio Busoni. Add the slash that Brecht‘s cynicism brought to the mix a few months later, and you have the compleat Weill of Mahagonny and Three-Penny; its roots are already here in this violent tale of jealousy and murder, tinged with Expressionist accents: Pagliacci plus Caligari, perhaps. The performance, on the Los Angeles&#8211;based Capriccio label, is from Berlin, conducted by our own John Mauceri, with Robert Worle as the leader (protagonist) of a theatrical troupe and Amanda Halgrimson as the sister he loves and then murders. It runs just over an hour, and doesn&#8217;t waste a note along the way.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Sweet Sound of&#160;Success</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2001/11/sweet-sound-of-success/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2001/11/sweet-sound-of-success/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 07 Nov 2001 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=367</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[It‘s now 50 years since Elmer Bernstein composed his first Hollywood film score &#8212; a forgettable college-football number called Saturday&#8217;s Hero. Now pushing 80, he‘s still at it. Thus, the celebration of his work that begins tonight at the Los Angeles County Museum &#8212; a dozen films over four weeks (see Film Calendar) &#8212; must [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>It‘s now 50 years since Elmer Bernstein composed his first Hollywood film score &#8212; a forgettable college-football number called Saturday&#8217;s Hero. Now pushing 80, he‘s still at it. Thus, the celebration of his work that begins tonight at the Los Angeles County Museum &#8212; a dozen films over four weeks (see Film Calendar) &#8212; must be reckoned as both a retrospective and a salute to a career in progress. Gangs of New York, now in the works, will be his seventh collaboration with Martin Scorsese.
</p>
<p>    Those 50 years cover a lot of history, for Bernstein himself, for film music and for the industry. He came to Hollywood from his native New York with credentials in order: composition at Juilliard, a fling at a concert career, some 80 scores for Army Air Corps Radio Shows and for Norman Corwin documentaries. He came in as the contingent of European-refugee composers &#8212; Steiner, Korngold, Waxman &#8212; was slowly giving way to an American generation: Bernstein, David Raksin, Leonard Rosenman and the subsequent hordes. The LACMA series, which covers the spectrum from the 1956 The Man With the Golden Arm &#8212; generally regarded as the first major beachhead of jazz into the film-music vocabulary &#8212; to 1993&#8242;s The Age of Innocence, with Bernstein and Scorsese in period mode, honors above all the full range of what a truly savvy music man can accomplish even within the machine. These are included, along with the Oscar-winning Thoroughly Modern Millie, The Magnificent Seven and everybody‘s favorite heartwarmer, To Kill a Mockingbird.
</p>
<p>   Now, white-haired and twinkly, Bernstein sits in his sun-drenched Santa Monica studio, and radiates a sense of high approval of the way things have gone over that half-century.
</p>
<p>   L.A. WEEKLY: The first time your name really stuck with me was sometime in the 1950s, for a short film you made with Charles Eames about toy trains. It was exquisite, especially for the scoring &#8212; solo winds, like Mozart.
</p>
<p>   ELMER BERNSTEIN: Yes, Toccata for Toy Trains. [Still available on video and DVD in an Eames collection, still delightful.] I did about 30 films with Eames, the closest to genius of anyone I ever worked with. He had made some films with Franz Waxman, one of the last of the German colony, and Waxman suggested me. A film I had made, Sudden Fear with Joan Crawford, had made some noise because I had done some interesting orchestrations: solo woodwinds, and a real concerto for two pianos and orchestra to accompany a car chase. You could do that sort of thing back then, because every studio had its own orchestra, and you could work with orchestrators and bring in all kinds of unusual combinations.
</p>
<p>   But you had also had all that classical training in New York before you moved out here: composition with Roger Sessions and Stefan Wolpe, a debut piano recital at Town Hall with not-bad reviews . . .
</p>
<p>   I never intended to become a “classical” composer, beyond learning a few essentials. And the Town Hall recital got the usual kiss-off reviews: “He&#8217;s young, let‘s watch him . . .” Dime a dozen! Besides, there was enough Bernstein on the New York scene. Lenny and I became good friends, and we decided between us that he would be Bern-STINE and I would be Bern-STEEN. Even so, when he died, my daughter&#8217;s teacher at school asked if she would like the day off.
</p>
<p>   The one thing everybody seems to know about film composing is that matter of the straitjacket, of the director telling you that such and such a scene would last exactly so many seconds, and that you had to compose to fit.
</p>
<p>   You know, I never ran into that, at least not at first, not as long as the studios had full music staffs. That, by the way, was as close to heaven as I ever expect to get. Take one example, Sweet Smell of Success. That was the movie where I really worked to create a synthesis with several levels of jazz and all the other stuff. There was the big, loud New York jazz and the sneaky chamber jazz of Chico Hamilton‘s Quintet in the club . . .
</p>
<p>   There was also that beautiful sad farewell scene, with the solo clarinet.
</p>
<p>   Oh, thanks. Well, I cannot remember ever having to discuss music cues with Sandy [director Alexander Mackendrick] or anyone else. What we discussed was New York energy.
</p>
<p>   The one exception was when I did [1956's] The Ten Commandments with Cecil B. De Mille. Now there was a director really obsessed with control: every word, every scene change, every shading. What he wanted from me was some kind of Wagner: a distinct musical motif for every character and every state of mind. But I knew all this going into the job, and I knew that if De Mille thought he knew everybody‘s job better than everybody else did, he was probably right.
</p>
<p>   One piece of advice stuck with me, however. It was from Morris Stoloff, who was music director at Columbia. He reminded me that the major difference between composing for concerts and for films was that the film audience had to get your music the first time. Nobody is going back to see the movie just to figure out your music. Now, of course, they can, with video, but Morris was basically right even so.
</p>
<p>   And now?
</p>
<p>   Now . . . yecch! Two things brought an end to that movie-studio heaven I was talking about, besides of course the end of studio orchestras and musical staffs. The first was commerce, the discovery that a film score had commercial value outside of the film. That meant that suddenly a film composer had to face a whole new question: how that score will sell &#8212; on three-minute 78-rpm records, on LP and now on CD. That has had a very bad effect on film music.
</p>
<p>   The second thing that happened was the rise of the auteur, the director who thinks he knows everything and integrates every aspect of the film into some kind of concept. The director who has to know what you&#8217;re doing, piece by piece by piece . . . that can be very inhibiting. Instead of concentrating on your own grand plan &#8212; as composer, or designer, or whatever &#8212; you have to be concerned with what the director is going to think two days from now about what you did today.
</p>
<p>   There are exceptions, of course. Scorsese does know everything, and so does Coppola. Here‘s what I did with Scorsese for Age of Innocence. We talked about the period of the piece: 1870, say. We talked about musical models: Brahms, say. Then I went to London, recorded a few themes with a small orchestra. Marty liked some of them, didn&#8217;t like some of them. But he took the themes he liked, and started to cut the film around the music. That‘s the ideal way to work, and that&#8217;s why Marty and I have done seven films together.
</p>
<p>   Every director is different, of course. Producers, too. With Alan Pakula on To Kill a Mockingbird, we did a lot of preliminary talking. We talked through every character at enormous length before I sat down to compose. But again, we weren‘t talking about seconds and minutes and feet of film; we were talking about the people who were going to live in that film.
</p>
<p>   Any favorite among those 200 film and television scores?
</p>
<p>   Oh, Mockingbird, I guess. It&#8217;s such fun to listen to, even if I did write it. I don‘t just listen to movie scores, of course. I saw the L.A. Opera&#8217;s Lohengrin, and thought it was just fine, really well staged and performed.
</p>
<p>   Did you also see La Traviata last month?
</p>
<p>   [Long pause.] It‘s a great opera, though, isn&#8217;t it?</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Five Not-So-Easy&#160;Pieces</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2001/10/five-not-so-easy-pieces/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2001/10/five-not-so-easy-pieces/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 31 Oct 2001 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=366</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[The Philharmonic‘s presentation around Schoenberg&#8217;s Five Pieces for Orchestra was a distinguished event worthy of the music &#8212; as the treatment accorded the Piano Concerto three weeks before had not been. Bold to the point of insolence, gorgeously color-splashed, this suite from 1909 (revised, but not diminished in the 1949 revision) had been substituted for [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>The Philharmonic‘s presentation around Schoenberg&#8217;s Five Pieces for Orchestra was a distinguished event worthy of the music &#8212; as the treatment accorded the Piano Concerto three weeks before had not been. Bold to the point of insolence, gorgeously color-splashed, this suite from 1909 (revised, but not diminished in the 1949 revision) had been substituted for the Violin Concerto, which tilts the Schoenberg content in the current celebration excessively toward the non-serial and formative works. Even so, the Five Pieces is wonderful music too seldom performed &#8212; and even less often performed as well as it was last week. The talk this time was also serious and stimulating. In the pre-concert discussion, former pupils Natalie Limonick and Leonard Stein reminisced about Schoenberg‘s classroom and private teaching. Onstage, Esa-Pekka Salonen took us through the music itself, genially and intelligently, with the orchestra demonstrating points along the way. Left to his own devices, Salonen handles this kind of chalk talk very well. (At a sold-out gathering at LACMA the night before, with Salonen and The New Yorker&#8217;s Alex Ross, the talk was less enlightened, because a pretentious and timid interlocutor seemed either afraid or unwilling to guide the conversation toward actual musical matters.) Mozart filled out the program &#8212; a rowdy but exhilarating “Jupiter” Symphony at the end, and the early G-major Violin Concerto in a larger-than-life reading by Viktoria Mullova (with a couple of real nut-case cadenzas inserted here and there).
</p>
<p>    I get the feeling that Salonen, in his heart of hearts, doesn‘t really care for Schoenberg&#8217;s music all that much, early works or late. Something about his own music, the intensity of its outreach and the exuberance of its fantasy, resounds from a different planet. (And by the way, the Sony disc that includes his fabulous L.A. Variations is now out, and who knows for how long?) All the more credit, then, for the finely motivated, richly hued reading Salonen gave of the Five Pieces, and for the deep intelligence in his explanation of the music. It will be even more interesting to hear his take in the upcoming complete survey of Shostakovich, whose music he has publicly dissed more than once.
</p>
<p>   You gotta do these things sometimes: Like a penitent in a hair shirt, I betook myself a couple of weeks earlier to the Philharmonic‘s Rachmaninoff-Sibelius program, sure that I would hate every moment but still curious as to why. Steven Stucky&#8217;s 1988 Son et Lumiere, which began the program, helped explain; it was the only music that night that took any cognizance of a symphony orchestra‘s power to create varied, arresting sounds. Otherwise there was the murky orchestral blanket around Leif Ove Andsnes&#8217; clattering piano in Rach 3 and the agonizing buzz-buzz of Sibelius‘ Second Symphony, dispelled only by the pompous oratory of the anthem-wannabe stuff at the end.
</p>
<p>    After its sensational opening weeks, which offered much and promised even more, the local opera company returned to the old business-as-usual. First seen in February 1999 (and not exactly beloved then), its creaky, quirky La Traviata only sporadically honors the sad sorrowings of Verdi&#8217;s near-perfect musical drama. Again there‘s the willful, gimmick-ridden staging of Marta Domingo, with principal singers cavorting athletically on Giovanni Agostinucci&#8217;s stifling, resolutely retro set designs that have less to do with romantic operatic tragedy than with tickling the folks out front. From the podium there is the decent competence of Placido Domingo‘s leadership, but one misses the elegant lyrical impulse he had once brought to this opera &#8212; and probably still can &#8212; as its leading tenor.
</p>
<p>    Instead there is the squally, unfocused Alfredo of Rolando Villazon, whose stage manner furthermore constitutes a virtual parody of a scenery-chewing superstar of the old school. Ana Maria Martinez is the Violetta, her voice nicely colored by the role&#8217;s tragic overtones, but undercut by a tendency to push sustained notes toward sharpness. As the burly, harsh-voiced Papa Germont, Jorge Lagunes wields his cane like a drum major‘s baton, poised at any moment to thrash Violetta senseless.
</p>
<p>   To the Cerritos Center for the Performing Arts &#8212; a haven, apparently, for touring opera companies with oversize ambitions (remember that Aida?) &#8212; came the St. Petersburg Opera, with a repertory that bore some resemblance to Tchaikovsky&#8217;s Eugene Onegin and Mussorgsky‘s Boris Godunov. Both operas are relative rarities hereabouts, although Opera Pacific lists an Onegin for next February. The Boris, furthermore, was performed in the “first &#8212;&#8212;&#8211;<br />
AUTHOR&#8217;s edition,” minus the clutter of “improvements” &#8212; including the Polish Scene &#8212; that less adventurous souls advised Mussorgsky to add later on. (The Cerritos program book, however, contained the synopsis for the later version.)
</p>
<p>   The St. Petersburg company struggles for recognition in the shadow of the neighboring Kirov; Yuri Alexandrov, its director, has worked at both houses. He brought his troupe here with a couple of dribs of rudimentary scenery, a few buckets of plastic snowflakes and a 40-member orchestra mostly young, for a tour as far east as Phoenix. In the rather slapdash Onegin, I was taken by Olga Kovaleva‘s lithe, winsome Tatyana; her Onegin, Dimitry Taneev, looked and sounded like Pushkin&#8217;s and Tchaikovsky‘s romantic hero the way I look and sound like Luciano Pavarotti. The Boris Godunov the next day was far better &#8212; again with not much stuff onstage but with a lusty, folkish edge to both sight and sound that went well with the rough edges of Mussorgsky&#8217;s pristine score. The Boris himself, Edem Umerov, sang the role at both afternoon and evening performances, with admirable clarity if no particular eloquence. Best of all was the imposing, deep-throated Elena Eremeeva, who sang small roles in both operas in the great Russian mezzo-soprano tradition and got the biggest ovation both nights.
</p>
<p>   At LACMA‘s first Monday Evening Concert, our wondrously off-the-wall EAR Unit did music with film, ending with Jeff Rona&#8217;s exceptional new score for that 1928 silent surrealist classic, James Sibley Watson Jr.‘s The Fall of the House of Usher, music that poked with high imagination into the angles and corners of that famous old cult favorite. At Royce Hall a week later, the Philip Glass Ensemble played his music for several short films, draining the air out of the hall with sounds of crushing diatonic sameness, which some people &#8212; present company excluded &#8212; seem to think they can tell from one another. This was the first program in a week of Glass-blown film. I did like the final work, Godfrey Reggio&#8217;s Anima Mundi, with its neat-o animal shots, but there was nothing there that Disney‘s Living Desert hadn&#8217;t accomplished with square-dancing scorpions in 1953, when Glass was still waiting tables.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>SEATTLE’S&#160;RING</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2001/10/seattle%e2%80%99s-ring/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2001/10/seattle%e2%80%99s-ring/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 24 Oct 2001 21:01:27 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Opera News]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=1780</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Land of strong lumberjacks and even stronger coffee, Seattle moves ever onward toward its unlikely transmogrification into the Bayreuth of the West.  In little more than a quarter-century, the city’s intrepid operagoers have had  three separate and distinct versions of  Ring des Nibelungen set before them, unalike in appearance and conception, triumphant in audience acclaim. [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p class="MsoNormal">Land of strong lumberjacks and even stronger coffee, Seattle moves ever onward toward its unlikely transmogrification into the Bayreuth of the West.  In little more than a quarter-century, the city’s intrepid operagoers have had  three separate and distinct versions of  <em>Ring des Nibelungen</em> set before them, unalike in appearance and conception, triumphant in audience acclaim. In a summer in which Seattle’s other hot-ticket item, its baseball Mariners, were running roughshod over the competition in both leagues, there was enough local glory left over  to consecrate this third <em>Ring</em> as the Seattle Opera’s best-yet realization of Wagner’s stupendous design.</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">It had been a brave, perhaps foolhardy, venture in 1975 for Glynn Ross to arm his fledgling company, a mere dozen years old, for its first Wagnerian ascent; the results, tradition-based if a patchwork at times and with alternating performances in English and German, were hardly disgraceful. Speight Jenkins, who succeeded Ross as general director in 1983, presided over the last years of that production. In 1986 he instituted a second <em>Ring</em> , a new staging by François Rochaix in a new conception: the postmodern look that was all the rage at the time, with the Valkyries riding on carrousel horses and an Erector-set Fafner. Version Number Three, which presented the cycle three times – each within six days – during this past August, and which had sold out at the box-office exactly one year before, was neither of the above.</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">It was, as insistently described by Jenkins and stage director Stephen Wadsworth, a “Green” <em>Ring</em>. Designer Thomas Lynch’s  forest of tall conifers, among which the Gods laid their malicious plans, Siegmund courted Sieglinde and Wotan bickered with Fricka – and which returned at the very end to honor the perpetuity of life and love – could have been any glorious woodland within a few miles of Seattle. (Time and again in the frequent speech-giving at which he is a virtuoso, Jenkins has insisted that this <em>Ring</em> is not up for borrowing, that it is Seattle’s alone.) Two rugged, rocky crags framed the scene of Siegmund’s murder in <em>Die Walküre</em>; the same structure, more heavily forested, served as Fafner’s habitat in <em>Siegfried</em> and, with its greenery in autumnal decay, as the scene of Siegfried’s fall under Hagen’s spear in <em>Götterdämmerung</em> – all aglow in Peter Kaczorowski’s wondrously naturalistic lighting designs.</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">If the settings were grand, the gadgetry was no less so: the trick lighting that rendered Alberich instantly invisible and transformed Loge into tongues of flame, the Rhine-Maidens as highly skilled trapeze artists at the cycle’s beginning and end, a realistic Forest Bird hopping from branch to branch and, above all, the stage-filling Fafner, a Velociraptor out of <em>Jurassic Park</em>, at once terrifying and adorable.</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">Director Stephen Wadsworth, who bestrides both opera house and theater in his burgeoning career – including a previous <em>Lohengrin</em> and <em>Dutchman</em> for Seattle – had most recently won plaudits for his staging of Aeschylus’ <em>Oresteia</em> in San Francisco, thus confirming his <em>Ring</em> qualifications with his insight into dysfunctional families.   In the light of contemporary stage interpretations imposed upon the <em>Ring</em> &#8212; with a George Lucas treatment for the Los Angeles Opera on the not-too-distant horizon  &#8212; Wadsworth’s Seattle production, with enlightened support from his design and tech crew, could be considered downright retro, but in the best sense.  The Valkyries sported winged helmets, as they did at Wagner’s Bayreuth. Valhalla’s  Gods lumbered around in Martin Pakledinaz’s all-purpose, all-century robes familiar from any opera you’ve ever seen.  Siegfried’s</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">immortal howler, “dass ist kein Mann!” got the audience laughter that it has since its ink was wet.</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">Some small deviations from the Wagnerian writ did occur, and they made sense – or, at least, captured the interest. Wotan and Fricka held their <em>Die Walküre </em>confrontation outside Hunding’s recently violated home – the scene of the crime, in other words &#8212; rather than up at Valhalla. The <em>Rheingold</em> Erda made her entrance from behind a rock, and, in her <em>Siegfried</em> reincarnation, from a cleft in a rock wall – all because Seattle’s stage lacks the trap door to her subterranean abode. (There will be one in the remodeled house, which will be opened in time for the next <em>Ring</em>-around.) The Siegfried-disguised-as-Gunther outside Brünnhilde’s cave in <em>Götterdämmerung</em> was sung this time by the actual Gunther rather than the prescribed Siegfried, clarifying a moment that has baffled more than one audience in the past. Confronted with the carnage around her near the end of it all, Gutrune also conveniently killed herself, thus resolving a persistent one-survivor-too-many problem.  And the final scene, in Wadsworth’s reimagining, turns from the prescribed Valhalla burnup to a joyous family reunion at the bottom of the Rhine: Brünnhilde back in Wotan’s arms,  the Siegmunds, parents and son, standing by, the Rhinemaidens cavorting overhead (where they remained, by the way, through the curtain calls).</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">
<p class="MsoNormal">Seattle had mounted the first two <em>Ring</em> operas in Wadsworth’s staging in the summer of 2000 as a kind of sneak preview, and most of the musical forces remained as before – including conductor Franz Vote, who had stepped in last season to replace the indisposed Armin Jordan. Born in Los Angeles, Vote has conducted at the Met and at Bayreuth and at other European companies. At the head of a full-size Wagnerian orchestral contingent drawn from Seattle Symphony ranks, &#8212; but not above an occasional bad-horn moment &#8212;  he delivered a performance best described as workmanlike: a fine, steady orchestral flow but with some of the most-awaited moments – Siegmund’s withdrawal of the Sword for one – somewhat undernourished.</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">Jane Eaglen was her usual glorious Brünnhilde, reaffirming her current ownership of the role on both American coasts and at points in between. There were no surprises; you got what you paid for, and in brimming abundance – a dramatic intensity conveyed entirely though the steely glint of one of the era’s great, gleaming voices, a command of phrase so natural as to seem instinctive, a stage presence uncluttered by further information requiring visual delivery. As Fricka in the <em>Rheingold</em> and <em>Walküre</em> and as the Second Norn in <em>Götterdämmerung</em>, mezzo-soprano Stephanie Blythe was little less exhilarating: a huge, rich voice and, again, an acting presence rudimentary but honorable.  Margaret Jane Wray was the immensely appealing Sieglinde; Marie Plette, the Freia and Gutrune, small of voice but tidily stageworthy; even more noteworthy among the lesser women’s roles was the uncommonly vivid Forest Bird and Woglinde of Lisa Saffer, best known as an ardent explorer of out-of-the-way repertory in New York and elsewhere.</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">The greater problems occurred among the male contingent. One day before the first <em>Siegfried </em>Canadian tenor Alan Woodrow took a fall while working out, and severed a leg muscle. Considering the roistering, galumphing, teenage Siegfried of Stephen Wadsworth’s action plan, Woodrow’s appearance on the stage was unthinkable. To the rescue, however, came the enterprising Speight Jenkins. British tenor Richard Berkeley-Steele, who was covering the role, had learned the action but hadn’t yet had vocal rehearsals, was sent out to lip-synch, with the crippled but vocally agile Woodrow singing from a chair at stage right. (Despite successful surgery, Woodrow bowed out following the first week’s <em>Ring</em>-, replaced by Berkeley-Steele in sound as well as sight.)</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">Mark Baker’s Siegmund was of solid coinage; a stronger hand at the podium might have reinforced the gleam at the great moments in the role. About the ensemble of  the lower men’s voices &#8212; that dark and fragrant ground in which the organism that is the <em>Ring</em> is most firmly rooted – the report must be mixed. Philip Joll, Welsh-born and mostly active in European houses (although he was a Met Donner in 1988) was the hard-voiced Wotan, toneless in the role’s heartbreaking moments, clearly motivated by the drama but just as clearly outclassed by the resonance of its music. From the rich eloquence of Richard Paul Fink as the adversial Alberich, ironically enough, one heard the sound of a potential, magisterial Wotan; such a feat of lip-synch was, alas, not to be. Denmark’s Stephen Milling was the Fasolt in <em>Das Rheingold</em> and <em>Die Walküre</em>’s Hunding, a stunning young bass, a Sarastro, a Philip II and, in Seattle’s announced <em>Parsifal</em>, surely a Gurnemanz for all seasons.</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">
<p class="MsoNormal">Like its <em>Ring</em>, Seattle’s Opera House has had its share of incarnations. Built as a flat-floored civic auditorium in 1927, it was totally remodeled, within its original shell, in 1962, the time of Seattle’s World’s Fair; that provided the impetus for Glynn Ross to start up the company the next year. For an audience of 3,017, it provides reasonably good acoustics and benevolent sight-lines; backstage it is more a disaster area, with cramped rehearsal and storage space, wretched dressing rooms and the aforementioned lack of a trapdoor on stage. Now the house shuts down on January 1, 2002, for another total remake that will correct present deficiencies and forestall new ones – with a small loss of seating but even better sightlines. The company will move a few feet eastward, where another performance space – stage, pit and raked seating – is being built into an adjacent sports arena. Plans for the Opera House reopening, in the summer of 2003,  are already in place: <em>Parsifal</em>,  in a staging by François Rochaix (of the previous, hi-tech <em>Ring</em>), the one major Wagner work the company has not yet tackled and, thus, the completion of the collection.</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">And the <em>Ring</em>? As a latter-day Erda, but without her overlay of doom’n’gloom, the affable Jenkins has that future well in focus: repeat performances at four-year intervals – 2005, 2009, 2013. The way things move among Seattle’s true Wagnerian believers, the box-office line is probably already in place.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>The Jewish&#160;Gaucho</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2001/10/the-jewish-gaucho/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2001/10/the-jewish-gaucho/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 24 Oct 2001 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=365</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[They&#8217;re still talking about it in Stuttgart &#8212; about the night, just over a year ago, when a capacity audience in that normally strait-laced metropolis went berserk for nearly half an hour at the world premiere of a 90-minute choral work from an unknown pen. ”Was Madonna in the hall?“ asked one local paper; ”or [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>They&#8217;re still talking about it in Stuttgart &#8212; about the night, just over a year ago, when a capacity audience in that normally strait-laced metropolis went berserk for nearly half an hour at the world premiere of a 90-minute choral work from an unknown pen. ”Was Madonna in the hall?“ asked one local paper; ”or Michael Jackson?“ queried another. It was neither of the above, however; the music at hand bore the title The Passion According to Saint Mark. Its composer was a slender, Argentine-born Jewish-American composer named Osvaldo Golijov who, he tells me, was just as exhilarated and astonished as anyone at the ovation in Stuttgart‘s spacious Liederhalle that night. And if the name Osvaldo Golijov (GO-lee-ov) still seems strange, cherish the news that he&#8217;s on his way here to help fill in the blanks, beginning with the L.A. premiere of Last Round for string orchestra this weekend, continuing with the Chamber Music Society‘s program at the Skirball Center on November 5 and going on from there.
</p>
<p>    It&#8217;s interesting enough that a musician raised in the tradition of Yiddishkeit, in a backwoods enclave deep in the heart of Catholic Argentina, would come to grips with a biblical tragedy best known among music people as inspiration for generations of German Lutheran composers. (Golijov tells me that when the commission came, he had to run out and buy a copy of the New Testament.) For this you can thank Helmuth Rilling, distinguished conductor of Bach and, more to the point, head of the Stuttgart-based International Bach Society. It was Rilling who dreamed up the notion of dispatching four composers to create contemporary settings of the Passion narrative from the four Gospels, to honor Bach &#8212; who himself had gotten around to completing only two &#8212; on the 250th anniversary of his death. All four settings &#8212; the others are by Tan Dun, Wolfgang Rihm and Sofia Gubaidulina &#8212; were performed in the summer of 2000. Three have already been released on the Hanssler label; Tan Dun‘s reworking of the St. Luke text is due out, any year now, on Sony.
</p>
<p>   Assume that all four composers took it upon themselves to assimilate the ancient texts &#8212; and their awareness of what Bach had accomplished with the words of Matthew and John &#8212; into their own backgrounds; by just that assumption the eclecticism of Golijov&#8217;s heritage is the force that kindles his amazing work. On the phone from his home outside Boston, where he teaches composition on several local faculties, he compared his own approach to the task with what Bach himself must have reasoned. ”His way was to take something in music that belonged to everyone &#8212; the Lutheran chorales that everybody sang in church &#8212; and create something transcendent around it. If he could take the DNA of his own world and translate it into his music of, say, 1730, I can do the same with the DNA of my own world. The only difference is that Bach‘s world was very narrow, and mine has been very wide.“
</p>
<p>    And it&#8217;s that breadth of focus that sends this Pasion Segun San Marcos skyward: an extraordinary mirror into which the sublime sensibility of Bach gets stirred into the exuberance of a Latino street festival. It grabs you, it holds you tight, and at the end &#8212; as the stricken Jesus filters into our sensibility to the throb of mambo rhythms while the Hebrew Kaddish sweeps over the ensemble as if from another world &#8212; you find yourself uplifted and drained. Golijov‘s score calls for orchestra and chorus, plus a fabulous array of Latin percussion. His chorus, in Stuttgart and on the recording, is the formidable Schola Cantorum of Caracas led by Maria Guinand, astounding in its ability to flip from neo-baroque complexity to the full-throated outcry of a populace in pain. At Stuttgart &#8212; and at a reprise in Boston last February &#8212; a stage-filling dance-and-mime ensemble added to the wonderment; the whole indigenous ensemble comes together next year for a national tour, including a stop at Costa Mesa&#8217;s Eclectic Orange festival.
</p>
<p>    This isn‘t the only kind of music the 40-year-old Osvaldo Golijov has turned out to enrich our lives; his catalog displays a gratifying versatility. At Ojai last summer, Dawn Upshaw sang a dark, wrenching aria that Golijov had composed for her in 1999; that work, too, has now been incorporated into the Pasion. His best-known work to date, commissioned and recorded by the Kronos Quartet, is on next week&#8217;s program at Skirball: Dreams and Prayers of Isaac the Blind; this, too, blends &#8212; no, rams &#8212; unlikely cultures into one another, a Latin throb in the string quartet, the manic coloratura of a klezmer clarinet. On the drawing board: a violin concerto for Pamela Frank, to be performed in Minneapolis next winter.
</p>
<p>   ”Certain works have to define where you come from,“ he says. ”I come from a small Jewish colony surrounded by Catholic Argentina. Almost 100 years ago a certain Baron Hirsch made it possible for a group of shtetl Jews to escape persecution by the czar and his Cossacks and set up farms in an unsettled region of Argentina. These gauchos Judeos, as they were called &#8212; ‘Jewish gauchos&#8217; &#8212; never really assimilated. They held onto their Yiddishkeit, but they got along all right. My mother was a pianist, and she took me to Buenos Aires to hear opera and also to hear Astor Piazzolla‘s tangos. She sang to me in Yiddish, but she also got me to listen to Bach. Somehow, it all came together.“</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Metamorphoses</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2001/10/metamorphoses/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2001/10/metamorphoses/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 17 Oct 2001 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=364</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[It will be interesting to see whether the efforts of our major cultural managements will succeed in turning Arnold Schoenberg into a media hero, as they did Igor Stravinsky last season. Schoenberg himself never made it, and the account of his attempting to divert the direction of Hollywood studio music is an amusing small episode [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>It will be interesting to see whether the efforts of our major cultural managements will succeed in turning Arnold Schoenberg into a media hero, as they did Igor Stravinsky last season. Schoenberg himself never made it, and the account of his attempting to divert the direction of Hollywood studio music is an amusing small episode in the Los Angeles phase of his career. The Philharmonic&#8217;s observance of its “Schoenberg Prism,” honoring the 50th anniversary of his death, began early this month, with Emanuel Ax as soloist in the 1942 Piano Concerto.
</p>
<p>    Before the concert, Schoenberg‘s two sons Lawrence and Ronald, both distinguished local citizens, chatted with KUSC&#8217;s Alan Chapman about Arnold as dad and as reg‘lar feller, including reminiscences of after-dinner walks around the block and pop music on the Victrola. Before the Concerto, Esa-Pekka Salonen and Manny Ax discussed the work itself, how painless &#8212; downright Brahmsian &#8212; a piece it could be if you controlled your fears. “I often sing its tunes in the shower,” Salonen confessed.
</p>
<p>   During a QA after the concert with Ax and Philharmonic honcha Deborah Borda, Salonen further gloated about the rightness of combining Schoenberg and Beethoven on this program, leaving unaddressed whether the upcoming Haydn-Mozart-Schoenberg and Brahms-Schoenberg programs would also qualify as marriages made in heaven. The Stravinsky concerts of February and March had been nicely preceded by video clips with the old boy himself at his most ingratiating. This time there was a scratchy, close-to-unlistenable audio of Schoenberg molding an abstruse tangle of metaphors into a speech he had planned for some kind of award.
</p>
<p>   Why bother? The Piano Concerto is a great work on its own, and Ax and Salonen gave it a beautifully shaded, spirited performance that earned a proper round of cheers. But it is a secretive work, as is most of Schoenberg&#8217;s late music, and it‘s pointless to pretend that reassurances that it won&#8217;t hurt a bit are going to elevate it onto the charts. Concertos by Bartok and Berg reach out and seem to be about something beyond their music; Schoenberg‘s is, brilliantly and disturbingly, about itself. (The Philharmonic&#8217;s Schoenberg celebration skimps on the late works, by the way. The Violin Concerto, originally on for next week, has been dropped, and the Opus 31 Variations, his orchestral masterpiece, bypassed altogether.)
</p>
<p>   I had heard strong and intelligent talk from Salonen a few days before the concert, in the first of a series of celebrity get-togethers at the Santa Monica Museum of Art sponsored by Sony and the Crossroads School. More talk on this brainpower level, perhaps with musical examples, would have actually guided the audience through the thickets of the Piano Concerto. Instead, the plan seemed to be to double-talk the rare experience of hearing the work played so well down to the level of easy listening. Two days before, at the season-opening gala concert, Salonen and the Philharmonic had inflicted some of the same treatment on music by Duke Ellington &#8212; this time not playing it at all well, adding the haze of a full symphonic background to works that, of all the wonderful music in the world, needed it the least. Schoenberg‘s music had been falsified in word; Ellington&#8217;s in deed.
</p>
<p>   The Master Chorale has a new leader and, thus, a new lease on life. He is Grant Gershon, familiar from earlier days as one of the Philharmonic‘s assistant conductors and a total charmer leading the orchestra&#8217;s kiddie concerts. His opening program &#8212; Thomas Tallis‘ famous 40-part motet Spem in alium, Bruckner&#8217;s Te Deum and Philip Glass‘ Itaipu &#8212; was in itself a statement: three big works, no family-oriented fluff. The Tallis, with parts of the chorus spread through the hall answering a massed ensemble onstage, made the further statement that already, in his brief time on the new job, Gershon has found a richness of tone and a strength of phrasing that could launch the Chorale onto a new tier of musical importance. That performance level prevailed throughout the most rewarding evening, even as the level of musical quality did not. “Chug-chug,” went the Glass; “Bye-bye,” went your scribe.
</p>
<p>    The third run of Orange County&#8217;s “Eclectic Orange” began with a celebration of scope: delectable baroque opera followed mere hours later by gut-racking piano music of our own time and beyond. I have run into reservations and objections about the Mark Morris production of Rameau‘s Platee on opening night; I have none. The Prologue set in a contemporary barroom was, I&#8217;ll admit, disconcerting, but prologues to baroque operas are often set in venues different from those of the opera itself. For all his reputation as a free hand on the classic stage, Morris has stuck surprisingly close to the outlines of Rameau‘s bizarre, sometimes even cruel, danced comedy; the hot licks he allows his large and skillful cast arise nearly always from the ancient plotting of the surprisingly vicious satirical original.
</p>
<p>    The Isaac Mizrahi costumes struck a mingled note of lunacy and rococo splendor; James Ingalls&#8217; lighting seemed to bury the whole action in a jeweled overlay. What was even more glorious was the chance to hear this kind of music, the elegant and tres French rhythms of Rameau‘s prosody, so gorgeously handled by the extraordinary singing ensemble, and the exquisite, airborne realizations of the musical ornamentations by the cast and by Nicholas McGegan&#8217;s Philharmonia Baroque Orchestra. Now we‘ve restored Handel&#8217;s operas to their proper place; it‘s time for Rameau.
</p>
<p>   Marino Formenti&#8217;s recital was set in Segerstrom Hall‘s small Founders Hall, which may be the best piano room in all of Southern California. Works by Helmut Lachenmann (tone clusters atop tone clusters) and John Adams (the spellbinding Phrygian Gates, by now classic) began it; once again, as at Formenti&#8217;s local debut (at LACMA two years ago), the killer attraction was Jean Barraque‘s Sonata. It came in this time at just under 23 minutes &#8212; as compared to 46:23 for the estimable Herbert Henck performance on ECM (which Formenti, in a post-concert QA, confessed to not liking). An aura of suspicion surrounds the work, and has since Andre Hodeir&#8217;s ecstatic exegesis in his long-out-of-print Since Debussy. Now I find myself lingering at Hodeir‘s doorstep; the Sonata is, I come to realize, a work like nothing else in the galaxy: a fusillade in which every shot moves in its own orbit. Formenti&#8217;s first performance left me awestruck by the playing; this time the music itself held us all in its grip &#8212; all 200 or so of us in a room rendered magical. A single encore, the slow movement from Mozart‘s K. 332, was like a swallow of the best wine you&#8217;ve ever tasted.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>A Sad Symphony With a Happy&#160;Ending</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2001/10/a-sad-symphony-with-a-happy-ending/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2001/10/a-sad-symphony-with-a-happy-ending/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 03 Oct 2001 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=363</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[CLASSICAL MUSIC IS DEAD ONCE AGAIN, AND ITS CORPSE HAS never been livelier. The villains have been variously identified, and the saviors as well. Audiences dwindle. One faction says the defection has to do with too much worn-out, familiar repertory. Elsewhere, the defection is blamed on an overdose of 12-tone, electronic, minimal, Stravinsky. Musicians, too, [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>
<font SIZE=3>CLASSICAL MUSIC IS DEAD ONCE AGAIN, AND ITS CORPSE HAS never been livelier. The villains have been variously identified, and the saviors as well.</font></p>
<p>
<font SIZE=3>Audiences dwindle. One faction says the defection has to do with too much worn-out, familiar repertory. Elsewhere, the defection is blamed on an overdose of 12-tone, electronic, minimal, Stravinsky. Musicians, too, are on the wane &#8212; or so we&#8217;re told now and then. Illustrious string players, extolled for their Bach and Beethoven, defect to the ranks of Appalachian fiddlers. Distinguished performing organizations curtail their valuable services as audiences and, therefore, funds dwindle. The Los Angeles Opera, buoyed through the beneficence of zillionaire opera buff Alberto Vilar, has barely squeaked out of a deficit &#8212; reported as close to $2.5 million &#8212; bequeathed by the previous management. Typical recent casualty: The small but worthy Los Angeles Mozart Orchestra, obliged to cancel programs last spring, starts up again this season but with a drastically cut-back schedule.</font></p>
<p>
<font SIZE=3>Bad enough? Consider this: Police officials in Seattle recently devised a method for clearing public spaces of gatherings of undesirables (druggies, homeless, composers, etc.). They set up loudspeakers and play <i>classical </i>music at high volume. The news item (NPR, August 14) didn&#8217;t say <i>what </i>music, although Beethoven was mentioned as a generic term for &#8220;classical.&#8221; It did say that the areas cleared <i>presto con moto</i>. So there we go: classical music as surrogate for the fire hose.</font></p>
<p>
<font SIZE=3>Still, not so bad: Well beyond 10,000 listeners poured into the Hollywood Bowl the week I wrote these words, not for show tunes or Rachmaninoff, but for all-Beethoven. The Los Angeles Philharmonic, after a couple of lean years, reports a 15 percent rise in ticket sales last season over the season before. The reborn and fizzy Orange County Philharmonic Society, with its daring programs full of adventure, nevertheless ended its last season with that rare arts commodity, a six-figure surplus. While record companies here and abroad pull back their activities on behalf of classical music, a recent survey by the RAND Corp. turns up the news that opera, considered by many the most unapproachable of all classical arts, currently boasts the highest attendance gain of any entertainment category. Best of times, worst of times: Ol&#8217; Charles Dickens had it right.</font></p>
<p>
<font SIZE=3>Death and rebirth: It was ever so. On my desk is a recent screed from England&#8217;s <i>Daily Telegraph</i>, wherein Norman Lebrecht, possibly music&#8217;s most voluble proclaimer of gloom &#8216;n&#8217; doom, celebrates his &#8220;Requiem for the Classical Record.&#8221; That goes on the shelf next to the same &#8212;&#8212;&#8211;<br />
AUTHOR&#8217;s <i>Who Killed Classical Music?</i> (1998), Tim Page&#8217;s Pulitzer-winning <i>The Way the Music Dies </i>(1996), a sheaf of reviews from the premiere of Stravinsky&#8217;s <i>Le Sacre du Printemps</i> . . . all the way back to <i>Onos Lyras</i> (&#8220;When the ass hears the lyre&#8221;), an eloquent defense of music against its naysayers penned by one Marcus Terentius Varro sometime in the first century B.C. &#8220;The death of classical music,&#8221; writes the pianist/scholar Charles Rosen, &#8220;is perhaps its oldest continuing tradition.&#8221;</font></p>
<p>
<font SIZE=3>Is the death rattle louder this time? Maybe so; certainly the roster of destructive forces is longer and more fearsome.</font></p>
<p>
<font SIZE=3><b>The record biz:</b> Once a seemingly indestructible archive of everything noble in our musical culture, the industry that proclaimed and preserved the art of Caruso, Heifetz, Toscanini and Lenny totters on the cusp of self-destruction. With deadly, biblical accuracy, the fat years have led to the lean years. When a prospective customer is faced with some 80 Beethoven Fifths &#8212; including 10 by the same conductor, Wilhelm Furtwängler &#8212; it&#8217;s easy to understand why he might retire in confusion. It&#8217;s just as easy to understand why major retailers &#8212; most famously Tower, with its 229 stores in 17 countries &#8212; are currently beating a retreat from the full-catalog inventory on which their customers once relied. Major producers &#8212; including the once-noble RCA (now BMG) of Caruso and Toscanini fame &#8212; cut back their recording activities to next to nil. Tower &#8212; with others sure to follow &#8212; reduces its stock of the small independent labels that once made a visit to a record store a voyage of discovery. Blame some of this on the deadly competition from that amorphous monster known as the Internet, where some customers are transformed into armchair shoppers with access to the web of mail-order dot-coms, and others are lured, via Web browser and desktop CD-burner, into downloading mere abstract content, bypassing the traditional thrill of material possession.</font></p>
<p>
<font SIZE=3><b>The edifice complex:</b> Music&#8217;s managements project grand new temples to house their product but must distribute free tickets by the ream to paper the old temples it already owns. The prevailing marketing philosophy, since New York&#8217;s Lincoln Center opened in 1962 &#8212; followed two years later by the Dorothy Chandler Pavilion, the first component of the Los Angeles Music Center &#8212; has been to sell music by the container rather than the content. The resulting paradox is that the grand new buildings, most of them too large, create a cold, unwelcoming atmosphere. The Music Center is a case in point: a glum spot, badly lit, with lousy, inadequate food places, and the absurd design that  elevates the whole site above Grand Avenue and stifles any possibility of street life in the area. Walk along the Grand Avenue block that borders the Music Center, and you might as well be on Skid Row for all the cultural emanations you detect. The same sterility obtains at the fancy new performing-arts center in Costa Mesa, which has no sense of site at all, only buildings separated by grass. The same at UCLA, where Royce Hall is miles from any food except the overpriced pastry they sell inside and the nearby vending machines. All this stifles the joy in music-going, and also stifles the chance to drive to one place, park, eat (or even dine), then hear some music, and then hang out and schmooze afterward. (You want emanations? You want schmooze? Try Manhattan&#8217;s Broadway alongside Lincoln Center and eat yer heart out.)</font></p>
<p>
<font SIZE=3><b>Bloat:</b> Our concert halls and opera houses are too big, compared to the European counterparts they pretend to copy, and compared to the dimensions of the best music they are meant to house. Mozart&#8217;s <i>Don Giovanni</i> was first performed, in Prague&#8217;s largest theater, to a capacity audience of 750. The Music Center&#8217;s Dorothy Chandler Pavilion, like comparable houses in San Francisco and New York, seats over 3,000. Slickly confident that if they build it we will come, management tells us little about the new kinds of music, or the new performance values, that will inundate the new halls with the sense of their own century &#8212; not merely the cultural values of bygone centuries superficially modernized. Will there be new music for new audiences in the new halls &#8212; in the Music Center&#8217;s Walt Disney Concert Hall now beginning to gleam in the afternoon sun, in the other new one a-building in Costa Mesa, in the soon-to-be-gutted-and-rebuilt Avery Fisher Hall at Lincoln Center? And will that new music be, as it deserves to be, newly defined? No news is bad news.</font></p>
<p>
<font SIZE=3><b>The failure of the media:</b> Between the magnificence of our musical culture past and present, and the outside world that might seek admission to its mysteries, a vast information gap looms. Two radio stations pretend to serve the classical-music &#8220;needs&#8221; (their word, not mine) of this area: one listener- and tax-supported, the other commercial. Both are alike in the narrowness of their definition of audience tastes; both recoil from the notion of broadcasting music of less than mass appeal: no modern dissonance, no arcane medieval motets (or anything else vocal aside from a single paltry serving of opera once a week), a no-brain kibble in which masterpieces are often boiled down to single movements and Boccherini outpoints Boulez. One of the two stations, at least, generously supports local cultural activities with preview programs and informational talks. The other ignores its community, rejects the idea of arousing interest in, say, the Philharmonic&#8217;s weekly programs with free spot announcements and previews, and, indeed, originates much of its programming at out-of-town affiliate stations as far distant as Denver and Boise. You might think that the first of these would be KUSC, the local public-radio station, and the second would be KMZT, the citadel of crass commercialism. Actually, it&#8217;s just the opposite.</font></p>
<p>
<font SIZE=3><b>On the labor front:</b> It can&#8217;t be the shortage of good performing talent that leaves time and space on our stages for the likes of David Helfgott, Andrea Bocelli and Charlotte Church; something in the panorama of performance-arts audience passions is drawn to the physical or psychological anomaly that these misguided practitioners embody, and so tickets get sold. But the situation among orchestras in the past few years, especially on the East Coast, points up an even more anomalous situation: the inability of the most prestigious, famous and high-paying orchestras to attract and hold on to the conductors they and their audiences deserve. The New York Philharmonic has made the most ludicrous choice in hiring the 70-plus, aloof, only moderately musically interesting Lorin Maazel as the latest accessor to the podium of Mahler, Toscanini, Walter and Boulez. The Philadelphia, badly in need of a little flamboyance in the successor to the solid, stolid Wolfgang Sawallisch, chose instead the solid, stolid Christoph Eschenbach. And Boston, where Seiji Ozawa has overstayed his welcome by 25 years minimum, appears headed to settle for a fraction of James Levine&#8217;s corporate loyalty while he also remains at the Metropolitan Opera and the Munich Philharmonic. One promising new conductor &#8212; an <i>American</i>, for God&#8217;s sake &#8212; came over from Paris (where he is an authentic culture hero), made a series of debuts with East Coast orchestras, was seen and was lavishly praised: the exceptionally smart, charming and imaginative David Robertson. He deserved any one (if not all three) of those podiums, but he returned to Paris empty-handed. Out here, Esa-Pekka Salonen comes on strong, and so does Michael Tilson Thomas. It&#8217;s getting so I have a waiting list for my guest sofa, as do my friends in San Francisco, for East Coast refugees starved for the sound of a symphony orchestra under exciting and musically honorable leadership.</font></p>
<p ALIGN="CENTER">
<font SIZE=3>*   *   *</font></p>
<p>
<font SIZE=3><i>Music is designed to express feelings. These are the sole subject of its communication, the only inner reality it deals with. And the difference between one state of feeling and another, as expressed in music, is largely a matter of shape &#8212; shape of melody and shape of larger form . . .</i></font></p>
<p ALIGN="RIGHT">
<font SIZE=3>&#8211;Virgil Thomson, 1961</font></p>
<p>
<font SIZE=3><b>The product:</b> The wisdom holds, in the calm of Beethoven&#8217;s pastoral countryside, in the exuberance of a rapper&#8217;s romance with the power of words. &#8220;Feelings,&#8221; &#8220;communication&#8221;: Thus far, at least, the performing arts are alike.</font></p>
<p>
<font SIZE=3>There is no definition of &#8220;classical&#8221; music that comes from within the music itself. The term is confusing. It can refer to music from a specific period &#8212; the &#8220;classical&#8221; era in which a revival of fascination with the designs of classic architecture permeated the other arts as well &#8212; or, more generally, to music become &#8220;classic&#8221; through familiarity, meant to be heard politely by a silent audience conditioned to applaud only in the right places. It is music written down by its composer, and therefore meant to be performed within its given outlines every time, give or take the enterprise of a specific performer. It is music that is marketed by being surrounded in a cloud of mystery. Descriptions of it are meant to be read with heavy emphasis on its foreign terms,  preferably with an affected tone. Practitioners include radio&#8217;s Karl Haas with his prissy overpronunciations, Mona Golabek (currently into your headphones on American Airlines widebodies) with her honeyed purr that wraps TLC around artsy blather, and &#8212; remember? &#8212; the immortal Milton J. Cross, master of the singsong rhetorical plush at the Metropolitan Opera broadcasts in their gaseous heyday. Being performed in expensive, overlarge halls perpetuates the inscrutable aura that keeps the helots at bay and welds believers into a secret fellowship.</font></p>
<p>
<font SIZE=3>It is the one art, above all, that involves the outside world as participants in its very existence. It involves the performer, who contributes a level of virtuosity (of intellect, of fingers, of the throat) as an overlay to the work itself. And it involves the rest of us, the listeners, and it sets the ground rules of that involvement. You can walk past a painting, or take in the architectural details of a building, at any speed you choose. You can&#8217;t do that with music &#8212; not with classical music, anyway. More important, it involves us &#8212; at least to the extent of the indulgence we are willing to volunteer &#8212; in its process.</font></p>
<p>
<font SIZE=3>It&#8217;s that process, the composer&#8217;s stipulations on the placement of landmarks along the predetermined time frame of a piece, that sets classical music apart from &#8212; you&#8217;ll notice that I didn&#8217;t say &#8220;above&#8221; &#8212; the other kinds of music with which our universe throbs. Classical music &#8212; a Bach fugue, Schubert&#8217;s &#8220;Unfinished&#8221; Symphony, a Pierre Boulez electronic escapade suspended in both time and space &#8212; takes up time, in carefully measured segments. The components within that time frame seem to move &#8212; toward us, away from us, perhaps both &#8212; in a sequence of statement, contrast, tension, relaxation. A three-minute fugue from Bach&#8217;s <i>Well-Tempered Clavier</i> states its subject, plays it off against itself in counterpoint that increases in complexity, and resolves the process comfortably and with high imagination. Some of the same process occurs in the first movement of Schubert&#8217;s &#8220;Unfinished&#8221; at four times the duration: a mysterious buzzing, a solo horn call as if from a distant planet, a new tune as beautiful as human mind has ever fashioned, an alternation of these contrasting elements, a resolution. Our reaction along the way &#8212; the interplay of tension, surprise, delight, release, more tension, more release &#8212; represents our participation in the process. There are different landmarks in the progress from death to resurrection over the 90 minutes of Mahler&#8217;s Second Symphony, and in the passage from void to cataclysm over the 17-plus hours of Wagner&#8217;s <i>Ring</i>. We may bristle at the abrasive interplay in a contemporary masterwork like Pierre Boulez&#8217;s <i>Répons</i> (see box), but we still can&#8217;t avoid the wonder of its communicative process, and we know after its 42-minute expanse that we&#8217;ve been somewhere, and have returned.</font></p>
<p>
<font SIZE=3>The process, the interaction of hearer and creator, remains the same, Bach to Boulez and beyond. What makes this kind of music &#8220;classical&#8221; is that the interplay of substance and structure has usually been laid out in advance. The great jazz people make their music new every time, and that, too, is wonderful.</font></p>
<p ALIGN="CENTER">
<font SIZE=3>*   *   *</font></p>
<p>
<font SIZE=3><b>Who listens? </b>The public concert space where ticket buyers assemble to hear music performed is a fairly recent arrival: 220 years, more or less, out of the millennium or so of music we think of as accessible. Before, say, 1780, there were the patrons, the duke or prince with a music room for invited guests, a cathedral to support a choirmaster and in Italy first, and spreading northward &#8212; the opera theater with its flocks of prima donnas of all genders and its flocks of aficionados likewise. By Beethoven&#8217;s time &#8212; 1825, say &#8212; the new leisure class demanded larger halls and larger orchestras making louder noises in longer symphonies. For the next century and more, a community&#8217;s prestige was defined by its musical amenities. In the Boston of my youth, almost everybody knew at least two things: where the Red Sox stood in the league, and what the Boston Symphony was performing that week. (They also knew that the concerts were invariably sold out.) Even if you didn&#8217;t have a ticket to a live concert, you knew to anchor your weekly plans around the Met&#8217;s opera broadcasts on Saturday and the New York Philharmonic&#8217;s on Sunday.</font></p>
<p>
<font SIZE=3>Then came movies, then television, the LP, the CD, the Walkman, MP3, then everything else in the way of agreeably distracting alternatives to the notion of sitting well-dressed in a formal concert hall respectfully absorbing the message from onstage. The gray generations that filled Boston&#8217;s Symphony Hall in its golden days &#8212; and bustled out in anger at the first strains of Stravinsky or Shostakovich &#8212; gave way to the newcomers who pegged their musical territory to embrace Dylan along with Mahler, Machaut alongside the Stones, and who found the proscenium arch an unseemly barrier between them and us. (Some of the best news about Walt Disney Hall, by the way, is the in-the-round plan for the performance space.)</font></p>
<p>
<font SIZE=3>However splendid the musical offering, the fact remains that the public concert is an exercise in artificiality. A pianist performing Bach&#8217;s &#8220;Goldberg&#8221; Variations on the Music Center stage &#8212; to a full house of 3,000, if it&#8217;s Murray Perahia &#8212; is still caught up in music meant for a single harpsichordist playing for an audience of one. A gritty new orchestral piece spatchcocked between the overture and the romantic concerto on a symphony night is taking up space in a room designed for music of a far different time and place. It is, of course, good that these things happen. Murray Perahia deserves his sold-out houses, and the new composer deserves the chance to fight his way toward recognition for his originality, or to flop in full view for his banality.</font></p>
<p>
<font SIZE=3>Our concert halls are too large for the expectation of ticket sales, and too large for the shape of the music even in a sold-out house. (More of the good news about Walt Disney Hall is that there are roughly 1,000 fewer seats than at the Pavilion. But that&#8217;s still larger than most of the best European halls.) Since it&#8217;s a given that no major musical event breaks even from box-office receipts, even at the disgraceful $148 top for some of last season&#8217;s threadbare L.A. Opera offerings, it makes no sense to belabor the equation that seat sales equal profits. The one local exception, of course, is the Philharmonic&#8217;s Hollywood Bowl, whose nearly 18,000 seats serve as cash cow for the orchestra&#8217;s indoor activities. Nobody suggests, of course, that the concert format at the Bowl could also serve as the way things might run in Disney; you have to admit, however, that even on a slow night in Cahuenga Pass, with the expanse of empty seats big enough to accommodate the Indy 500, the 5,000 who do show up could drive an indoor-concert manager green with envy.</font></p>
<p ALIGN="CENTER">
<font SIZE=3>*   *   *</font></p>
<p>
<font SIZE=3><b>Music matters:</b> Classical music&#8217;s major encumbrance is its reputation as highbrow and inaccessible. The evidence is all around, just in its language: <i>andante con moto</i>, <i>rondo capriccioso</i>. The older audience uses this erudition as a shield against nonbelievers. The younger audience, when it gains access to the sanctum, is viewed with alarm. Its members are not always well-trained, by the standards of their elders; they applaud in the wrong places, and even cheer. The elders scowl as the opera houses install screens to project translations of opera texts, crippling the out-of-reach reputation of what Samuel Johnson once referred to as &#8220;an exotic and irrational entertainment.&#8221; Yet the installation of supertitles, even at the Met, where they were opposed the longest, has brought on a huge boost in opera-going and, more to the point, opera-understanding. In the aforementioned RAND report on the state of the performing arts (theater, dance, opera, classical, other), opera was the only category that showed an income upswing over the past several years.</font></p>
<p>
<font SIZE=3>The highbrow thing is on the wane. If the last century began as a time of defiance and invention &#8212; Schoenberg, Stravinsky, those guys &#8212; our present and our future seem engulfed in a new wave of synthesis. Classical composition at its most abstruse crested about 1980, in the gnarled working-out of complex puzzle making as propounded by Elliott Carter and Milton Babbitt. Even as this style seems to have subsided in favor of the born-again tonality of John Adams and Philip Glass, I detect some of that old-timey complexity still hanging on, not among the latest graduates of Princeton and CalArts, but in the advanced workmanship of some of the newer rockers &#8212; Radiohead, Sonic Youth, back to the well-nigh unplayable patterns of Frank Zappa. On this side of the bridge, the best music by a so-called &#8220;serious&#8221; (useless term!) composer I&#8217;ve heard in recent months is the <i>Passion According to St. Mark</i> by the Argentine/American/Jewish Osvaldo Golijov, in which one of the archetypal musical forms &#8212; the Passion oratorio of Bach and before &#8212; is merged into a wildly exuberant Latino street celebration. Classical? Pop? Highbrow? Lowbrow? All of the above?</font></p>
<p>
<font SIZE=3>John Seabrook came up with a pretty good answer in his latest book&#8217;s title, <i>Nobrow</i>. Seabrook, a leading light among <i>New Yorker </i>staffers, is thus in a position to witness the process he so rightly names from close-up, as his own publication retreats from its famous nose-in-the-air stance and becomes more relevant in the process. But &#8220;nobrow&#8221; as practiced at <i>The New Yorker</i> isn&#8217;t the same as the dumbing-down that also afflicts the classical scene, the evil wrought by those who would speed the transition from high- to no- at an unseemly rate. Exhibit A, the lurid marketing circus called <i>The Three Tenors</i>, is followed close on by the blatant falsification of the classical life in movies like <i>Shine</i>, and in the exploitation, bordering on cruelty, of such sideshow creatures as <i>Shine</i>&#8216;s David Helfgott and the pretty-voiced but hopelessly adrift Andrea Bocelli. The dumbing-down process even spawns its own literature, tomes with names like <i>Who&#8217;s Afraid of Classical Music</i> and <i>It Isn&#8217;t As Bad As It Sounds</i> offering assurance to the tone-deaf-by-choice among us that their number is legion.</font></p>
<p>
<font SIZE=3>Music will survive as long as people want to listen to it. There are ways that this can be made to happen, and they all come under the heading of Making Music Matter, also known as Making People Care. The Philharmonic&#8217;s Stravinsky Festival last February triumphantly demonstrated the process. For a full month, awareness of Stravinsky&#8217;s achievements and importance were deeply impressed on the local consciousness. Museums and universities participated. Banners flew. At the Dorothy Chandler Pavilion, video footage of Stravinsky unfurled before each concert, almost as though the old boy himself were there to welcome us. It helped, of course, that Esa-Pekka Salonen wields a strong baton on Stravinsky&#8217;s behalf. Major critics from New York and overseas knew enough to come by for these events, and they now do so regularly. The term &#8220;cultural desert,&#8221; once regarded as synonymous with Los Angeles music, seems to have vanished from the vocabulary. Local newspaper criticism is no longer the trapeze act of virtuoso negativism it once was, and I don&#8217;t need to name names.</font></p>
<p>
<font SIZE=3>Down in Orange County, territory once looked upon by highbrow Angelenos as dumdum land, the O.C. Philharmonic Society&#8217;s &#8220;Eclectic Orange&#8221; Festival, about to start its third run, has proved itself hugely adventurous and, thus, hugely successful. You may have squirmed a bit at the Philip Glass Fifth Symphony last year, but it took bravery beyond the call to bring the work in soon after its headline-making premiere. (The Golijov Passion, by the way, is on next season&#8217;s agenda.) The operative word in both instances is, of course, &#8220;festival.&#8221; It&#8217;s anybody&#8217;s guess whether the magic will rub off on another of our local heroes, Arnold Schoenberg, whose music is being &#8220;festivalized&#8221; by both the Philharmonic and the Opera this season. If it doesn&#8217;t happen, it won&#8217;t be for lack of trying.</font></p>
<p>
<font SIZE=3>The corpse, in other words, continues to twitch.</font></p>
<p>
<font SIZE=5>On the Cover</font></p>
<p>
<font SIZE=3>Located a few short steps off Cahuenga Boulevard and remarkably soundproofed from the whir of traffic is the elegant oasis known as Robert Cauer Violins. (See &#8220;<a href="http://www.laweekly.com/ink/01/46/cover-rich2.shtml">Ten Who Care</a>.&#8221;) Clients are greeted in a Victorian-furnished waiting area, and the adjoining rooms are lined with neatly ordered stringed instruments. The few privileged enough to see the guts of this operation enter an extensive back area in which the needs of restoration and repair sprawl into several specialized rooms. It is here that Cauer and his staff coax impossible tangles of twisted strings and wood like the one pictured on the cover back to musical life.</font></p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>A Contemporary&#160;Landmark</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2001/10/a-contemporary-landmark/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2001/10/a-contemporary-landmark/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 03 Oct 2001 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=362</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Pierre Boulez brought his Répons here for its first &#8212; and, so far, last &#8212; hearing in the spring of 1986. It took another 14 years for a recording of the work to appear, in Deutsche Grammophon&#8217;s 20/21 Series, which, the way things look now, might be the last significant project in an industry bent [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>
Pierre Boulez brought his <i>Répons</i> here for its first &#8212; and, so far, last &#8212; hearing in the spring of 1986. It took another 14 years for a recording of the work to appear, in Deutsche Grammophon&#8217;s 20/21 Series, which, the way things look now, might be the last significant project in an industry bent on phasing itself out of relevance. Two performances took place, in a basketball gym on the UCLA campus, because this is not music designed for a concert hall, with an audience facing performers through the invisible proscenium wall. It is music to be engulfed in; it tells you to let your spirits wander through its vast spaces, and beguiles those spirits with the sounds of a new world, a new millennium. From the recording, even in a room properly set up for &#8220;surround,&#8221; that dimensionality doesn&#8217;t quite happen, although the miking has been done with care and imagination. If you&#8217;re waiting for the next live performance, don&#8217;t hang by your thumbs.</p>
<p>
Like many of Boulez&#8217;s later works, <i>Répons</i> went through many gestations, first revealed as a work of 17 minutes, gradually growing to its current (not necessarily final) 42:31. The basic plan has remained. The music is flung into a large performing space from sources set around that space &#8212; pianos, harp, vibes, xylophone, all computer-processed in real time. These &#8220;respond&#8221; to a larger, unprocessed ensemble (Boulez&#8217;s great Ensemble Intercontemporain from IRCAM, his Paris-based electronic lab) in the middle. The &#8220;response&#8221; idea happens on several other levels, the interaction of musical textures not unlike the events in a Bach fugue, the interplay of contrasting thematic material similar to that which Beethoven or Schubert might employ. Some of this is fairly abstruse; nobody has ever accused Boulez of easy listenin&#8217;; what it all comes to, however, is an exhilarating sweep of sound, much of it a glorious jangle, all of it a vast sonic panorama. Some of this music is thrilling beyond words: the opening minutes, for example, which build relentlessly ahead through a hair-raising sequence of trills, culminating in the gut-grabbing first entry of the electronic forces. At UCLA, that moment just lifted you out of your seat; the marvel of the recording is that it happens there, too. In New York, on the same tour, the <i>Times</i> found it &#8220;a tired set of ideas in a shiny new box . . . from IRCAM&#8217;s electronic Cuisinart.&#8221; Oh well . . .</p>
<p>
The masterpiece by, arguably, the dominant musical figure of the last 50 years, <i>Répons</i> belongs in that small company of between-centuries works that loom as both summation and beginning. It deals in equal and, therefore, encouraging proportion with the expressive potency of &#8220;pure&#8221; music and the horizons portended by the facilitations of technology. If not <i>the</i> music of the future, it is certainly one of them.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Ten Who&#160;Care</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2001/10/ten-who-care/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2001/10/ten-who-care/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 03 Oct 2001 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=361</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[MaryAnn Bonino‘s Chamber Music in Historic Sites brings in superb small entertainments from around the world &#8212; chamber music, early music, solo recitals &#8212; and plunks them down in enhancing architectural settings &#8212; churches, mansions, classic lobbies. You hear a Haydn quartet in the music room of, say, a Pasadena Greene Greene, and you&#8217;re finally [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>MaryAnn Bonino‘s Chamber Music in Historic Sites brings in superb small entertainments from around the world &#8212; chamber music, early music, solo recitals &#8212; and plunks them down in enhancing architectural settings &#8212; churches, mansions, classic lobbies. You hear a Haydn quartet in the music room of, say, a Pasadena Greene  Greene, and you&#8217;re finally hearing that music restored to its proper venue: a classy class act if ever one was.
</p>
<p>   Robert Cauer sells and repairs fine instruments in his shop around the corner from the Hollywood Bowl; visit as he places a precious old violin in the hands of a shiny-eyed teenager, and you‘ll know what it is to be in love with music. Cauer&#8217;s own love affair leads him to produce and publish a yearly ”Cauer Calendar“ that gathers together an entire musical season in an intelligently compiled and accurate listing of great and unique value. By doing so, he accomplishes what the rest of you all hanker for: He tells the critics where they can go.
</p>
<p>   Dean Corey took over the Philharmonic Society in sleepy, conservative, well-heeled Orange County, and invented ”Eclectic Orange,“ a few weeks of challenging musical and theatrical events from all over. The range this season, for example, is amazing, from a Mark Morris staging of a baroque opera, to the Berlin Philharmonic playing Beethoven, to the Italian pianist Marino Formenti performing Jean Barraque‘s Sonata, the Great White Shark of piano music.
</p>
<p>   Ernest Fleischmann, in 29 years as the Los Angeles Philharmonic&#8217;s executive director, reinvented the place of an orchestra in its community, as a guardian of masterpieces, a cultural force reaching out to a new audience, and a champion of new-music invention and presentation. Currently he heads the Ojai Festival, but his name is still in fine print at the Music Center, which is tantamount to burying a bomb on the premises. Strong-willed and phenomenally inventive, he proved such a hard act to follow at the Philharmonic that his successor lasted only 15 months.
</p>
<p>   Betty Freeman, a model of enlightened arts patronage, is enamored with the very act of creativity and uses her family fortune to make sure it keeps on happening, with a list of recipients (John Cage, John Adams, Virgil Thomson, you name ‘em) that stands for the thriving center of new-music activity. Uncommon among even the most enlightened patrons, she works hard to keep her name off the things she so handsomely supports.
</p>
<p>   Michael Milenski&#8217;s Long Beach Opera metamorphosed, some 20 years ago, from ordinary to extraordinary, taking on 400 years of operatic repertory and restaging each work &#8212; respectfully but with madcap originality &#8212; into something new and stimulating. Among his innovations: Monteverdi gone Mafioso and Richard Strauss‘ Elektra in a beachside motel. What&#8217;s more, they worked!
</p>
<p>   Dorrance Stalvey runs the concert programs at the County Museum with next to no budget but with a roster of participants that represents the elite of contemporary performance &#8212; including the resident California EAR Unit and major ensembles from the East Coast and beyond. His recent programming, which has included an extensive ”Focus on California“ series and the discovery of the incredible Italian pianist Marino Formenti, provides a valuable leavening to the local new-music scene.
</p>
<p>   Leonard Stein has been in on the creation of Los Angeles‘ new-music life since the 1930s: onetime assistant to Arnold Schoenberg and evangelist for his music, organizer and participant in the enterprising Piano Spheres concert series. A walking history of new-music awareness in Southern California, he can still &#8212; in his late 80s &#8212; perform Schoenberg&#8217;s piano music with an eloquence that few newcomers can match.
</p>
<p>   Steven Stucky is a composer, faculty member at Cornell, but also a frequent participant in Los Angeles musical life as the Philharmonic‘s new-music adviser and an organizer of the excellent Green Umbrella series. He sits in on the Philharmonic&#8217;s new-music planning, conducts pre-concert chats before each Umbrella concert and concocts program notes of cherishable wisdom. After all, with a name like Stucky, he has to be good.
</p>
<p>   Jim Svejda is planner and host (eloquent, controversial) of the evening classical-music programs on KUSC and, in that sea of blandness, an island of awareness that music can be listened to for intellectual pleasure, not merely as a branch of the wallpaper industry. Driven by deep but interesting prejudices, especially in favor of his Czech countrymen, his is one of the last radio voices around that make one believe he really loves the stuff.
</p>
<p>   &#8211;A.R.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>The&#160;Difference</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2001/10/the-difference/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2001/10/the-difference/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 03 Oct 2001 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=360</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[It didn‘t take too much gift of prophecy to recognize the fates that brought Esa-Pekka Salonen and the Los Angeles Philharmonic to a merger of their destinies. People still talk about his debut here (November 29, 1984) &#8212; a fair-haired conqueror from an exotic land, bearing an abrasive new hitherto-unknown symphony (the Lutoslawski Third). Credit [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>It didn‘t take too much gift of prophecy to recognize the fates that brought Esa-Pekka Salonen and the Los Angeles Philharmonic to a merger of their destinies. People still talk about his debut here (November 29, 1984) &#8212; a fair-haired conqueror from an exotic land, bearing an abrasive new hitherto-unknown symphony (the Lutoslawski Third). Credit Ernest Fleischmann &#8212; who ”just happened“ to be in London when Salonen ”just happened“ to be available to stand in for the ailing Michael Tilson Thomas &#8212; for his accustomed skill at fate-twisting to transform Salonen&#8217;s one-shot triumph into a fully realized career.
</p>
<p>    You need some history to realize the extent of Salonen‘s accomplishment as he begins his 10th year as music director. He took on an orchestra demoralized after the fiasco of the Andre Previn years, in a city that had to be taught all over again to care about its cultural amenities. The boyish good looks helped, but the musical qualities helped even more. Not every orchestra member was immediately pleased &#8212; the stick technique took getting used to; so did the strictly business rehearsal manner; so, of course, did some of the repertory choices. When the New York reviews came in after the touring began, and when the recording engineers from Sony came to call, Los Angeles became sold on its newly acquired treasure.
</p>
<p>   Salonen&#8217;s success here has registered with the folks back home as well. If nobody paid much attention to the musical life around the Baltic &#8212; Finland, mostly, but Estonia not far behind &#8212; they do now. At the very time when the old middle-European ways seem at their dreariest &#8212; as witness the conductor situation with East Coast and Midwest orchestras &#8212; here come the blond Baltics with their funny names and their dazzling music making: Salonen first, closely followed by the likes of Saraste, Mustonen, Hynninen, Lindberg and who‘s that new guy in Minneapolis? I asked Salonen recently about this sudden invasion from the North.
</p>
<p>   ”There are several explanations,“ he said, ”each of them rather simple. The Finnish government established a system of communal music schools about 30 years ago, and this is now the harvesting time. Every little town has a music school; if a student can&#8217;t pay tuition or buy an instrument, those are provided free. A capable student moves on from the small music school to a bigger one. The best are taken to the Sibelius Academy in Helsinki. Whatever quality there is, is found; you can‘t hide talent.
</p>
<p>   “Then there is this matter of Sibelius. For 600 years, Finland was under Swedish rule, and the Finnish language was spoken only by peasants. From 1809, under Russian rule, the Finnish identity was even more endangered. In came Sibelius. He spoke Swedish, but he was chasing a girl whose parents were fanatical Finnish speakers, so he learned Finnish. He composed, and the patriotic messages in Finlandia and the Second Symphony became symbols of a Finnish identity. The Russians could cross out dangerous lines in political writing, but you can&#8217;t censor musical phrases. Sibelius became a monument, which killed his creativity but gave birth to his country. Finland‘s classical music has always been the best way to tell the world we exist.”</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Answering&#160;Back</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2001/09/answering-back/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2001/09/answering-back/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 26 Sep 2001 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=359</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Large events demand large gestures. At the Hollywood Bowl, where Wynton Marsalis&#8217; “joyous, affirmative” All Rise was already on the schedule, some oratory by Marsalis and Esa-Pekka Salonen refocused the work as a response to the horrible tragedies of two days before. The Los Angeles Chamber Orchestra rushed the Beethoven “Eroica” onto its opening program. [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[</p>
<p>    Large events demand large gestures. At the Hollywood Bowl, where Wynton Marsalis&#8217; “joyous, affirmative” All Rise was already on the schedule, some oratory by Marsalis and Esa-Pekka Salonen refocused the work as a response to the horrible tragedies of two days before. The Los Angeles Chamber Orchestra rushed the Beethoven “Eroica” onto its opening program. The New York Philharmonic scheduled the Brahms Requiem onto its nationwide telecast, turning it into Dead From Lincoln Center, where a re-assertion of life might have been preferable. At the Bowl, at the Opera, probably at all public events, the moment of silence followed by “The Star-Spangled Banner” in full solemnity was the order of the day, and the more singable “God Bless America” has also been taken on as surrogate anthem.
</p>
<p>    Marsalis‘ two-hour oratorio, which calls for vocal soloists, chorus, jazz ensemble and symphony orchestra, was commissioned by the New York Philharmonic and performed by them two years ago. It came here because here is where Sony has been recording it &#8212; possibly on the money it saved by dropping its complete-works-of-Ligeti project midway. Its ancestry, writes Marsalis in a program note, is the blues; to prove its kinship to that powerful, assertive 12-bar musical form, it contains 12 movements. (Shakespeare&#8217;s Fluellen, that avatar of everything pedantic, proves the relationship between Henry V and Alexander the Great by pointing out that both were born in states containing rivers.)
</p>
<p>   Nothing I know claiming a blues background, not even Gershwin‘s Rhapsody, strays so far and so aimlessly from its source as the excruciatingly ponderous wanderings in this piece. If you watched Marsalis in his slick, cliche-ridden contributions to the Ken Burns jazz documentary on PBS, perhaps the pretensions of All Rise won&#8217;t surprise you. Marsalis is an exciting jazz trumpeter, and it‘s strange that his new piece accords him so little time in the spotlight. Most of the time, instead, we are confronted with his other side, the o&#8217;erleaping ambitions (Shakespeare, again) of the multifaceted public image he has created for himself. He was also, once, an exciting presenter of music for young audiences, and evidence of his good works exists on videos.
</p>
<p>   But his talents stop short of omnipotence, and the churnings and posturings in this latest work, the self-conscious extensions of uninteresting material, prolong what might have worked in 20 minutes into two-plus hours of racking boredom. I hate to invoke odious similarities, but the work I kept thinking about during this long, painful evening was Leonard Bernstein‘s Mass. At least Marsalis was savvy enough to end the piece with a rooty-tooty gospel number that invites the audience to hand-clap along and then to keep on clapping. That&#8217;s show biz for you. And the rules of show biz also compel me to note that participants in the event included Marsalis‘ Lincoln Center Jazz Orchestra, the Morgan State University Choir, and several choruses from Cal State Northridge under Dr. Paul Smith. A fine, dark-voiced contralto named Cynthia Hardy deserved far more solo passages than she was allotted. Salonen and the Philharmonic did what they had to, but left me with suspicions that the weight of the huge orchestra &#8212; for all the “masterpiece” aura it contributed &#8212; was exactly what was wrong with the piece, that a lot less might have been a lot more.
</p>
<p>    The Chamber Orchestra&#8217;s opening-night program began delightfully, if that‘s the right word: Jeffrey Kahane and Lang Lang launching into “The Star-Spangled Banner” as a piano duet with the orchestra joining in. This led to Samuel Barber&#8217;s Adagio for Strings, played as movingly as I can ever remember, with the harrowing beauty of its long interwoven melodic lines extending toward infinity and the audience observing the requested silence. There followed a brief Kahane solo, an improv on “America, the Beautiful” that gave shape to this small, elegant celebration. At concert‘s end there was Kahane&#8217;s take on the “Eroica”: brash, somewhat short of breath, the angry thrusts in the “Funeral March” quite dazzling, some of the rest &#8212; the onrush of dissonance in the first movement and the resolution later in that movement &#8212; blurred by excessive speeds and some balance problems that allowed horns and bassoons to overpower the rest of the ensemble.
</p>
<p>    In between came Lang Lang and Chopin‘s E-Minor Concerto, music of consummate prettiness that can become a gooey mess if played merely correctly. Not so this young (19) Chinese phenom, who not only played the bejesus out of the music but acted it out as well. I am not always a devotee of excessive calisthenics by performing artists at work, and you can check me out on the subject in my files on Olli Mustonen, among others. Yet I got the sense from this immensely talented youngster that he not only knows his Chopin backward and forward, but also knows how silly some of it can be. He played the work marvelously, with great regard for its broad tunes and for spaces in between, but played it also as if sharing a splendid joke with all of us out front. The crowd loved it, I loved it, and at the end everybody seemed to know that the only possible encore would be a 50-finger transcription of “The Stars and Stripes Forever.” That&#8217;s what we got. Woo-eee!
</p>
<p>    If the recent disasters kept you from flying up for the San Francisco Opera‘s Arshak II, count your blessings. Aside from the questionable circumstance of an outside group buying its way onto a tax-supported stage &#8212; the well-heeled Armenian community nationwide, which pungled up a seven-figure sum to persuade the departing general manager, Lotfi Mansouri, to stage this opera of dubious provenance &#8212; the other question must also be asked: Confronted with this piece of tepid Italianate factory-made note-spinning from 1868, without even any Armenian identity in its music, who could have seen the work as stage-worthy for one of this country&#8217;s most distinguished companies? If this is the bundle Mansouri left on his successor‘s doorstep, he needs to answer to Sanitation.
</p>
<p>    The composer, Tigran Chukhadjian, composed the opera as Arsace II, to an Italian libretto; its central figure is, indeed, Armenia&#8217;s fourth-century tyrant leader, and the plot concerns his overthrow. In 1998 a Chukhadjian research center in Paris got Mansouri to commission an Armenian translation of the original Italian, an act comparable, say, to translating Verdi‘s Nabucco into Babylonian. This new translation is the commodity touted as a “world premiere” by the San Francisco Opera. (There is, actually, another Armenian-language version, created by Soviet Armenians and still performed in Yerevan and other cities; it turns the villain Arshak into a Stalinesque superhero.)
</p>
<p>   That&#8217;s more than you want to know, I‘ll bet, about ArsaceArshak II, except to note that 1868, the year of its composition, was also the year of Boris Godunov. Priorities?</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>REVISE</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2001/09/revise/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2001/09/revise/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 20 Sep 2001 22:52:21 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Musical America]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=1869</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[In the summer of 1979, in a madcap decision that I still don’t regret, I succumbed to the urge to go bicoastal. (The term, I think, had just been invented.) New York Magazine, whose music critic I had been from its founding, had just cloned itself on the West Coast, and I thought it might [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>In the summer of 1979, in a madcap decision that I still don’t regret, I succumbed to the urge to go bicoastal. (The term, I think, had just been invented.) New York Magazine, whose music critic I had been from its founding, had just cloned itself on the West Coast, and I thought it might be interesting to cover – and, perhaps,  even compare – the musical life on both coasts; the plan was to commute for a year and then turn the Western territory over to an eager recruit and return to the relative sanity of a power job in the seat of all power.<br />
It’s twenty-two years later. The aforementioned clone is now a distant memory,  but I long ago accepted the reality of myself as a dug-in resident of the West Coast. That’s okay as long as I have the carfare for an occasional visit back to the real world past the mountains. Friends on both coasts still ask: what do I miss the most.  My only answer strikes me as somewhat superficial. I miss the energy around  a New York performance: getting there by bus or subway or on foot, finding some acceptable food within a block or two, hanging around to schmooze over a drink or coffee afterwards. You can’t do that here.<br />
The comparisons are, indeed, deep-seated and fascinating. In California people drive their cars to concerts, park close to the halls in relatively cheap (by New York standards, at least), accessible garages. After concerts or operas, they drive straight home; late-night dining, where people gather and discuss the music they’d just heard, was then, and is now, an arcane practice. The benign climate has an interesting effect on the way people dress for musical events. Even on classier occasions – an operatic opening night, a symphony-orchestra benefit – you can always spot a sport jacket or two amid the black ties, perhaps even a patch of denim.<br />
I find this agreeable. The way the casualness infiltrates some of the music-making also makes its points. The phenomenon of the Hollywood Bowl, the Los Angeles Philharmonic’s famous cash cow and local landmark, probably couldn’t be duplicated anywhere else on earth. The fare:  eleven weeks of concerts, from July to mid-September, with two programs a week given over to substantial classical repertory, one program of showtunes and lighter classics, given twice to near-capacity crowds often culminating in a sensational fireworks display, a jazz night and other programs ranging from full-length opera to third-world folk – all in a space whose 18,000 seats are filled as often as not &#8212; in an outdoor area for dining in styles ranging from Glyndebourne to Yankee Stadium. Again, the benign climate makes it possible; in my 22 years here I remember only one rainout.<br />
And this all takes place, mind you,  not in the sylvan reaches of a West-Coast Tanglewood, but in an urban enclave easily reachable by car or public transit, walking distance from, say, Grauman’s “Chinese” Theater with its famous footprints, not far from where major freeways intersect. There are things wrong with Hollywood Bowl, as the more curmudgeonly of local critics sometimes delight in pointing out. A wine bottle will sometime roll down a concrete stairway; an LAPD  ‘copter  will intrude overhead. You couldn’t mistake the ambiance for an all-Beethoven night at Carnegie Hall, or at the Dorothy Chandler Pavilion of the Los Angeles Music Center for that matter, but the fact remains that Beethoven nights (or Tchaikovsky, or Rachmaninoff) at the Hollywood Bowl can draw an audience the size of four Carnegies – even more when the program includes, as it often does, a dramatization of the “Battle Symphony” complete with marching bands and fireworks.<br />
I decided to remain.<br />
SPACE<br />
The Continental Divide is an invisible line that snakes across Rocky Mountain peaks, south through American deserts and into Mexico. On one side of the line, rivers flow east toward the Mississippi and beyond; on the other, they head toward the Pacific. Something similar to this dividing line, if not so exactly positioned, exists in music as well. There is New York, facing (or, perhaps, glaring) eastward toward Europe, its musical history firmly implanted and  its outlooks shaped by the European generations from Charles Pachelbel (son on the Canon guy, who organized concerts of  chamber music in Lower Manhattan in 1736) to Kurt Masur, (who performed Beethoven only yesterday). There is California, facing west, its major composers as likely inspired by the exotic scales and rituals of Japan and Indonesia as by the academic precepts carried in across the  Europeans who braved the Sierra barrier. You can still, of course, invoke a time when California’s musical roster numbered such notable Old Country expatriates as Arnold Schoenberg and Igor Stravinsky. Yet two of the West’s most indigenous creative spirits – the Los Angeles-born John Cage and Oregon’s Lou Harrison – studied briefly with Schoenberg and then rejected everything he had taught them.<br />
California’s music began to shake itself free from old-masterdom on the day in 1912 when the 15-year-old Henry Cowell scandalized a San Francisco audience with his music that involved whomping down on a keyboard with full forearm or fists. Not much later, Cowell proclaimed the one uniquely Californian message: forget Europe, forget sonata form and tonal structures and all that classical history. At Cowell’s urging, Harrison and Cage  rummaged around in San Francisco junkyards to find new kinds of resonance: brake drums and old trolley-car springs that could be grouped into percussion orchestras. Even as California became home for great Europeans chased from their native lands by Nazi ideologies, California’s musical originals stood firm.<br />
Something of that cussedness, that sense of freedom, abides. It is the spirit behind a remarkable educational project – funded, would you believe, by Walt Disney out of his long-standing secret passion for creative originality. Founded in 1971 on what was then an isolated hilltop in the middle of nowhere – suburbia, alas, has caught up – the California Institute of the Arts (aka CalArts) guides its students through the brand-new mysteries of electronic music, multimedia blendings of sound and video and, above all, the interweave of Third-World, Pacific Rim and you-name-it into a new, composite musical language. To the south, the San Diego branch of the University of California has, at one time or another, encouraged young composers to fashion serious new music out of natural sounds – waves crashing on the Pacific shore, a gurgling stream in the  Sierra.<br />
That need to challenge the accepted definitions, to astonish, to move far afield – that spirit that was born with Cowell and Cage  and lives on in Lou Harrison – remains the prime spirit in California music. It’s the spirit that moved a gathering of young composers up north, in the early 1960s,  to form the San Francisco Tape Music Center, to explore the complex possibilities of the newly-devised electronic apparatus and to see how it might translate into genuine music. One member, the young Terry Riley, dreamed up a piece, which he called In C, where any number of players could follow its small, repetitive patterns any number of times and transport an audience into something close to a trance state.  From In C came the music we know as “minimalism.” One of its most successful practitioners, John Adams, was moved to migrate  to California from his native New England after reading the writings of John Cage, thus bringing the California spirit around full circle.<br />
And yet…when one of Adams’ most ingratiating works, the burbling, euphoric Grand Pianola Music had its New York premiere in 1983, you couldn’t hear the music for the booing. If there’s any shape to the musical divide, it’s the obsession in New York’s musical circles to take its serious music seriously. Is it a matter of crowding? The tensions in the ongoing battle on either side of the Fourteenth Street dividing line? The surfeit of critics, some of them employed on make-or-break publications, that stills the creative impulse and strikes fear? Morton Subotnick, electronic guru and one of the founders of both the San Francisco Tape Music Center and CalArts, put it this way not long ago. “It’s easier to try to be original in California,” he said, “because nothing out here matters.”<br />
SPACE<br />
Something out here, however, matters a lot. Behind the cutting edge, there is a solid musical structure that seems to expand exponentially – like the creeping urbanization that bids fair to transform the entire coastline into a single mall, but far more rewarding. At the northern end there is Seattle, home of strong lumberjacks and stronger coffee, now also metamorphosing into an American Bayreuth with its hot-ticket stagings of the Ring cycle. At the southern end, an hour south of Los Angeles,  there is the extraordinary rebirth of Orange County, long the butt of right-wing japes, now harboring the high-adventure “Eclectic Orange” festival plus a splendidly born-again opera company. In between there is the rejuvenated San Francisco Symphony under the exuberant leadership of Michael Tilson Thomas – an extraordinary and rare instance of the exactly right fellow in the right job in the right place. Across the street there is the San Francisco Opera, probably the most traditional of all West-Coast musical amenities, but now headed for an interesting shakeup under new management. And then there is Los Angeles.<br />
“What could you find to do there, in that cultural desert?” my New York friends asked when I made my foolhardy move 22 years ago. As they asked, the great Carlo Maria Giulini had taken over leadership of the Los Angeles Philharmonic, offering music-making of legendary eloquence at the time when his predecessor,  Zubin Mehta was launched into alienating most of New York. Giulini’s stay was short, but it served to awaken Los Angeles to what it meant to have a major orchestra in its midst. Ernest Fleischmann, the Philharmonic’s general director of comparably legendary status, guided his audiences as well toward the new-music adventuring in the energetic “Green Umbrella” series, chamber-orchestra performances of cutting-edge repertory. While the New York Philharmonic’s similar series, “Horizons,” petered out after a couple of years, the “Green Umbrella,” at 20, still sells out most of the time.  Now, too, there is a Los Angeles Opera worth taking seriously; I write these words still aglow from the start of the company’s 16th season, its first under the leadership of Plácido Domingo.<br />
All these adornments to the West Coast cultural life have their counterparts back East, to be sure. You can hear Plácido, after all, in practically every opera house in the world; there are major symphonies in every city on the map. Yet there is something out West that matters. New York’s musical calendar is so crowded that it doesn’t really matter that its Philharmonic signs on the aging and not-very-important Loren Maazel; people will wait for some other orchestra to come to town and just go there instead.<br />
In San Francisco and Los Angeles, that condition hasn’t set in. Perhaps it will in another fifty years, but for now Esa-Pekka Salonen matters a great deal to Los Angeles, and Michael Tilson Thomas to San Francisco. In Long Beach, down the coast from Los Angeles, there’s a shoestring opera company that has earned a loyal following for productions that shouldn’t pan out as well as they do, but always do – Elektra in a Malibu beach house, most recently. Up in the hills near Santa Barbara, an easy hour’s drive from Los Angeles, the little Ojai Festival has been doing sell-out business for over half a century, making music in a bandstand in a park. The music is, and always has been, new; Ojai’s gods are Boulez, Stravinsky, Copland, even Cage. It thrives because its music-making is so good, but that’s not always enough to keep an enterprise afloat. It thrives, because people have learned to care – enough to endure rough park benches and noisy crickets and insistent birds – enough, just so there’s music.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>BILLY BUDD REVIEW (aka This Budd’s for&#160;You)</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2001/09/billy-budd-review-aka-this-budd%e2%80%99s-for-you/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2001/09/billy-budd-review-aka-this-budd%e2%80%99s-for-you/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 19 Sep 2001 22:41:53 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Musical America]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=1849</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[“Billy Budd” was the appropriate finale for the Los Angeles Opera’s 14th season, a reminder that of all repertories sampled by departing founder and general director Peter Hemmings during his tenure, the operas of Benjamin Britten have consistently earned highest acclaim. This was the fourth work to be heard; “Peter Grimes,” scheduled for next October, [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>“Billy Budd” was the appropriate finale for the Los Angeles Opera’s 14th season, a reminder that of all repertories sampled by departing founder and general director Peter Hemmings during his tenure, the operas of Benjamin Britten have consistently earned highest acclaim. This was the fourth work to be heard; “Peter Grimes,” scheduled for next October, will extend the list. “Billy Budd” runs at the Dorothy Chandler Pavilion through June 17<br />
History abounds. The Billy is Rodney Gilfry, who has come far since he sang the Herald in the company’s inaugural “Otello” in October, ’86; much of his rise has been nurtured by Hemmings’ benevolent regard for young artists. Roderick Brydon is on the podium, as he has been for nearly all the company’s Britten ventures. (Robert Duerr led the “Midsummer Night’s Dream” the first time around; Brydon, the revival.) The production,  from London’s Royal Opera, is directed by Francesca Zambello, also now an international celebrity, whose off-the-wall “Les Troyens” for Hemmings in ’91 was one of the company’s most illustrious fiascos. And Richard Stilwell, the Billy in the Metropolitan Opera’s premiere in ’78, is on hand in Los Angeles, older and wiser, as First Lieutenant Redburn.<br />
All told, L.A.’s “Billy Budd” constitutes a distinguished sendoff, both for Hemmings (who returns to the England he never really abandoned at least in spirit) and for the company’s  1999/2000 season, a bumpy journey for the most part. Alison Chitty’s stage designs nearly steal the show; the several decks of Herman Melville&#8217;s &#8220;HMS Indomitable&#8221; rise and fall, opening vistas of endless starry skies at one point, and crowding down onto the climactic scene of murder and recrimination as if to trap its principals &#8211; the saintly Billy, the insanely lovelorn Master-at-Arms  Claggart and the benevolent but catatonic Captain Vere &#8212; in a psychological prison of their own making.<br />
The stage designs capture as well the multileveled symbolism of Melville&#8217;s parable, over which scholars will forever haggle. E.M. Forster&#8217;s libretto, while taming some of Melville&#8217;s visionary prose, neatly touches up its unspoken homoerotic undercurrents. (The similarity to Thomas Mann&#8217;s &#8220;Death in Venice,&#8221; which Britten also successfully set as his final opera, is made inescapable in Forster&#8217;s prose setting.) Similarly, Zambello&#8217;s propensity for freeze-framing Rodney Gilfry&#8217;s Billy in a succession of tableaux worthy of any Sunday-school calendar, turned celestial in Alan Burrett&#8217;s ecstatic lighting, gaudily highlights another of the fable&#8217;s disturbing, captivating undercurrents.<br />
Gilfry now owns the role of Billy worldwide: brilliantly in command of the clear, poignant eloquence for the final haunting ballad, as well as the physical ease in climbing foretops and ladders. As his antagonist and ultimate victim, Jeffrey Wells creates a hulking, horrific Claggart; Robert Tear&#8217;s Captain is exactly right in its tone of incertitude blended into nobility. The great “Billy Budd” performances – the John Dexter staging at the Met, for one – triumph ultimately in their creation of a taut, rough-edged, howling ensemble out of a huge all-male cast whose dark tone colors are furthered by the pounding drums and brass of the orchestra. Peter Hemmings’ song of farewell belongs in this company.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>LOS ANGELES OPERA&#160;OPENING</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2001/09/los-angeles-opera-opening/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2001/09/los-angeles-opera-opening/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 19 Sep 2001 20:56:11 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Opera News]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=1778</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Nobody has ever suggested that running an opera company – let alone two companies the width of  a continent apart – might be for Plácido Domingo an easygoing diversion. Nobody need be all that startled, therefore, at the few dark rumblings around the edges of the glory at the start of the Domingo era at [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Nobody has ever suggested that running an opera company – let alone two companies the width of  a continent apart – might be for Plácido Domingo an easygoing diversion. Nobody need be all that startled, therefore, at the few dark rumblings around the edges of the glory at the start of the Domingo era at the Los Angeles Opera. True, the two operas that inaugurated that era – the company’s first-ever Pique Dame on September 4 and <em>Lohengrin</em> eleven days later – did indeed rank as spectacular achievements, as fine as anything in recent memory on the Music Center’s Dorothy Chandler Pavilion stage. Yet, there were rumblings.</p>
<p>On September 9 the London Sunday Times ran a doom’n’gloom article on the company’s financial woes, specifically on the enormous outlay – some $45 million, it was intimated – it would take to realize Domingo’s dream project, the George Lucas-designed <em>Ring</em> slated for the 2003/04 season. The company’s directors, the article claimed, were up in arms, a not unfamiliar stance by the famously conservative Board. “Nonsense,” responded a company spokesman in a protesting letter, but three days later another bomb was dropped, the resignation of executive director Ian White-Thomson after only a year on the job. Against this background, the New York tragedy and its aftermath had cast a further shadow, obliging the company to shuffle and reschedule. The first <em>Lohengrin</em>, scheduled for a black-tie premiere on September 12, was  pushed forward to a dress-Californian matinee on the  15th.</p>
<p>Even so, the shape of the company’s triumphant rebirth was easy to discern. In the fifteen years of Peter Hemmings’ leadership there had been no Russian-language opera. (A <em>Pique Dame</em> had been announced for 1990 but dropped.) Aside from a <em>Tristan</em> memorable more for the David Hockney designs than on musical grounds and Julie Taymor’s gimmicky Dutchman, Wagner had been given short shrift. Several of Hemmings’ bravest ventures had been undercut by impoverished leadership from the podium.  Here, then, was a new beginning in which three previous major deficiencies were dramatically erased. The best news of all was that the two conductors involved – Valery Gergiev and Kent Nagano – now have long-term commitments to the company: Gergiev for an annual visit, Nagano in the newly created post of Principal Conductor.</p>
<p>Domingo’s madman-hero was familiar coin from the Met’s <em>Pique Dame</em> of 1999; so was Gergiev’s urgent, fiery leadership. (Gegam Gregorian – the Gherman on the Gergiev-led video of the opera &#8212; assumed the role in later performances; Gianandrea Noseda took over the podium.)  On opening night Domingo’s  60-year-old pipes were still in remarkable condition, his stage presence the woolly-bear galumphing that passes for acting throughout his vast repertory. Galina Gorchakova was his Lisa as at the Met, impassioned if somewhat soft of voice. Sergei Leiferkus was the robust Tomsky; Vladimir Chernov, the Yeletzky; Susanna Poretzky, winner of one of Domingo’s recent “Operalia” competitions, had her few lustrous moments as Pauline. The evening’s loudest cheers, however, rang for the 64-year-old Elena Obraztsova as the Countess; in the role in all opera with the fewest notes and the most powerful impact, just the sound of her dropped cane in the silence surrounding her death haunts the memory.</p>
<p>German designer/director Gottfried Pilz dispensed with Tchaikovskys scenic suggestions and devised instead a single performing space, a huge room raked left to right serving as park, ballroom, bedroom and gaming house, with a dark space down front that served as a kind of limbo for the madman-hero to contemplate his demons. Everything moved, often feverishly; more than once a chorus burst into the scene like a flood from a broken dam. More than once, also, another kind of deluge – the insistent onrush of dark resonance from the orchestra under Gergiev – left little chance to catch one’s breath, on stage or out front.</p>
<p>A closer rapport with the neighboring movie industry is also on Domingo’s promised agenda; to that end the grand old Maximilian Schell came on to stage the company’s first <em>Lohengrin</em>. With set designs based on paintings that the late Yevgeny Lysyk had originally created for the Mariinsky – including an extraordinary Act Two backdrop like a dozen Cologne Cathedrals interwoven – Schell came up with a conception timeless in the best sense. A huge sculpture, a kind of winged obelisk, served as both Swan and Tree of Wisdom, wondrously lit by Alan Burrett’s stark searchlights at the end as the lost prince Gottfried emerged from its folds. Dirk Hofacker’s costumes were of no time and all time: soldiers’ helmets out of World War I, swords and shields out of Van Eyck, Elsa in a nightie worthy of Dior. The opera was given virtually uncut, minus one short scene for Elsa near the end. The splendor and shimmer of Kent Nagano’s orchestra and the sturdy rightness of his pacing made the minutes whiz past.</p>
<p>Sweden’s Gösta Winbergh was the Lohengrin, his tone steely and commanding at first, softening down to a most appealing tenderness later on. Canadian soprano Adrianne Pieczonka was the endearing Elsa, again spanning a wonderful range from the dreamy “Euch, Luften”  to her insistent cajoling in the Bridal Chamber scene that brings on her downfall. Tom Fox’s Telramund exuded his usual masterful menace.  Eva Marton’s Ortrud was the one major disappointment, not the stipulated mezzo-soprano with her death-dealing tones of darkness and thrust, but an aging soprano scooping her way toward pitches she can no longer command. Lucinda Childs – Einstein on the Beach, remember?  &#8212; was credited with the “choreography”: not so much “ballet” as an imaginative stylization of slow moving, especially among Elsa’s entourage. This was one more remarkable aspect in an over-all conception that generated marvelous refreshment for the eye and the ear. Mark it, then, as a giant step upward for opera in Los Angeles… something beyond price-tag.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Off and Running,&#160;Maybe</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2001/09/off-and-running-maybe/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2001/09/off-and-running-maybe/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 19 Sep 2001 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=358</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Photo by Ken Howard Nobody said it would be easy. Barely into its season of reincarnation, the L.A. Opera has already found its path strewn with boulders. The New York tragedy contributed; the Lohengrin opening, on the Wednesday after the Tuesday, had to be postponed. (A makeup performance is scheduled for October 1.) The opera&#8217;s [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Photo by Ken Howard
<p>
Nobody said it would be easy. Barely into its season of reincarnation, the L.A. Opera has already found its path strewn with boulders. The New York tragedy contributed; the <i>Lohengrin</i> opening, on the Wednesday after the Tuesday, had to be postponed. (A makeup performance is scheduled for October 1.) The opera&#8217;s conductor, Kent Nagano, whose appearance signals a new era in which strong conducting assumes a higher priority than before, was marooned in Germany. His return in time for the second <i>Lohengrin</i> &#8211; which in the light of shuffled schedules had become the premiere &#8211; was accomplished via a hairbreadth flight to Mexico before arriving in town.</p>
<p>
The other glitch in the opening-week festivities may take longer to untangle. The September 9 London <i>Sunday</i> <i>Times</i> carried a scattershot end-of-the-world piece to the effect that the Los Angeles Opera was in the process of self-immolation. The blame, claimed the L.A.-based writer John Harlow, fell largely on Plácido Domingo&#8217;s extravagant planning &#8211; most of all the George Lucas–designed <i>Ring</i>, which Harlow pegged as bankrolled at some $45 million, twice the whole of last season&#8217;s revenue &#8211; and that board members were up in arms. An answering letter from the L.A. Opera&#8217;s publicist poked the article full of holes, yet later that same week the company&#8217;s executive director, Ian White-Thomson, sent in his resignation after little more than a year on the job. The board chairman, Leonard Green, will hold the fort while the search goes forward for a replacement, but the company&#8217;s history since Peter Hemmings&#8217; early days has been a pitched battle between management&#8217;s adventure and the board&#8217;s parsimony. I can only pray that board members can be otherwise entertained on the <i>Moses und Aron</i> night.</p>
<p>
Meanwhile, we&#8217;ve had terrific opera these past couple of weeks: terrific performances and also terrific forward steps in mending some of the holes in previous seasons&#8217; programming. Both operas &#8211; the opening-night <i>Queen of Spades</i> and the ensuing <i>Lohengrin</i> &#8211; were endowed with leadership from the podium stronger than anything I can remember since the Simon Rattle <i>Wozzeck</i> or the Salonen <i>Pelléas</i>. What&#8217;s more, both conductors &#8211; Valery Gergiev and Kent Nagano &#8211; bear long-term commitments to the company. <i>The Queen of Spades</i> represented the company&#8217;s first-ever and long-overdue venture into the Russian-language repertory; the <i>Lohengrin</i> was only the company&#8217;s third Wagnerian enterprise in 15 years. Somebody at the drawing board apparently knows where to put the dots.</p>
<p>
<i>The</i> <i>Queen of Spades</i> had been promised once before, in 1990, but was canceled in favor of Verdi&#8217;s <i>Don Carlo</i> with Domingo plus an otherwise forgettable, mostly Russian cast. Of the two Tchaikovsky operas that linger in the repertory, <i>Eugene Onegin</i> may be the more digestible for its thread of human-size emotion; <i>The</i> <i>Queen</i> is by some odds the more powerful and complex. The opera dates from the time of the Fifth Symphony; its music has that work&#8217;s deep mellowness from clarinets and horns. There is also, surprisingly and delightfully, quite a lot of Mozart, in masterful pastiche: the long orchestral prelude to Act 2, and the ensuing delicious, lightweight pastorale. Between those moments and the others where the hero&#8217;s madness drives the music toward dissonance and grinding counterpoints, this opera may be Tchaikovsky&#8217;s most daring score.</p>
<p>
And “daring” is, as well, the word for the treatment accorded the work. German designer-director Gottfried Pilz dispenses with the libretto&#8217;s scenic suggestions. Pilz has instead created a single performing space, a huge room raked from right to left, dominated overhead by a huge crystal chandelier. A dark area down front at stage level serves as a kind of limbo where the madman-hero Herman, a mere wraith in the darkness, contemplates his demons. The one space serves as park, ballroom, the Countess&#8217; bedroom and &#8211; with shadows eerily projected onto the rear wall &#8211; gaming house. Everything moves, usually at feverish pace; more than once a chorus bursts into the scene like a flood from a broken dam; the crowds literally dance to Gustavo Llano&#8217;s whirlwind choreography.</p>
<p>
And so does the opera itself, under Gergiev&#8217;s propulsive leadership, with the frazzled bedazzlement of Plácido Domingo&#8217;s Herman, his 60-year-old pipes in near-pristine estate. Russian soprano Galina Gorchakova, her smallish voice nicely colored toward the dark side, was the touching Lisa; mezzo-soprano Susanna Poretsky, a recent winner in the Domingo-sponsored Operalia competition, offered a charming take on her one big aria. The evening&#8217;s loudest, longest cheers, however, went to the veteran Elena Obraztsova, who had little actually to sing about but whose silent enactment of her moment of death &#8211; punctuated in Pilz&#8217;s production only by the fall of her cane onto the resonant floor &#8211; was one of the evening&#8217;s breath-stopping moments.</p>
<p>
The soft shimmer of <i>Lohengrin</i>&#8216;s opening A-major chord filled the house last Saturday with comfort and promise. Amazement was in the air. I have to go back one more time (at least) to see the magic of Alan Burrett&#8217;s soft gray-to-violet lighting across Maximilian Schell&#8217;s dynamic chorus groupings in the first act, the collage of Yevgeny Lysyk&#8217;s paintings of Gothic architecture projected across the whole stage &#8211; like a dozen Cologne Cathedrals interwoven &#8211; in the second act; the Act 3 soldiers with their strange but effective see-through cloaks and shields that allowed the eerie gray lighting to flood the stage with passion and menace near the end. I wasn&#8217;t sure about Nagano&#8217;s Wagnerian identity, but I needn&#8217;t have worried. This was the sound of Romantic Wagner: resonant, beautifully balanced, even to the great squashy mass of offstage brass tone here and there, and &#8211; alas, for those given to a posteriori judgments &#8211; uncut and splendidly broad.</p>
<p>
Sweden&#8217;s Gösta Winbergh was the Lohengrin, his tone steely and commanding at first, softening down to a most appealing tenderness later on. Canadian soprano Adrianne Pieczonka&#8217;s Elsa was as endearing as any I can remember, again spanning a wonderful range, from the dreamy “Song to the Breezes” to the nagging insistence in the “Bridal Chamber” scene that brings on her downfall. Tom Fox&#8217;s Telramund exuded his usual gut-twisting menace. Eva Marton&#8217;s Ortrud was the one major disappointment, not the stipulated mezzo-soprano with her death-dealing tones of darkness and thrust, but an aging soprano scooping her way toward pitches she can no longer command. Lucinda Childs <i>— Einstein on the Beach</i>, remember? &#8211; was credited with the “choreography.” That didn&#8217;t exactly mean “ballet” this time, but rather an imaginative stylization of slow moving, especially among Elsa&#8217;s entourage. This was one more remarkable aspect in an overall conception that generated marvelous refreshment for the eye and the ear. It appears that local opera has finally achieved its deserved firm foundation. And that, good friends of opera, is something beyond price tag.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>LOHENGRIN&#160;REVIEW</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2001/09/lohengrin-review/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2001/09/lohengrin-review/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sun, 16 Sep 2001 22:36:25 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Musical America]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=1839</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[If anyone ever advised Plácido Domingo that running an opera company might be an easy and well-oiled undertaking, last week’s events around his West Coast branch – also known as Los Angeles Opera – were surely enough to set him straight. His new season, his first actually as the company’s head and decision-maker, began smoothly [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>If anyone ever advised Plácido Domingo that running an opera company might be an easy and well-oiled undertaking, last week’s events around his West Coast branch – also known as Los Angeles Opera – were surely enough to set him straight. His new season, his first actually as the company’s head and decision-maker, began smoothly enough, with the triumphant Pique Dame as previously noted. Then the skies opened.<br />
On September 9 the London Sunday Times ran a doom’n’gloom article about the company’s future, citing unrest among the notoriously parsimonious board of directors over Domingo’s exuberant spending – specifically the George Lucas–designed Ring slated for 2003 and rumored with a $45 million budget encumbrance. “Not true,” responded a company spokesman, but the clouds thickened the following Wednesday  with the sudden resignation of executive director Ian White-Thomson after little more than a year on the job.<br />
That act was curiously timed; it came a day after New York City’s terrorist attack, whose impact included a wholesale shuffling of performing schedules worldwide. The company’s first Lohengrin was scheduled for that Wednesday but cancelled; Kent Nagano, the company’s incoming principal conductor, was marooned in Berlin. By Saturday, when the Lohengrin actually took place, Nagano had made his way back to Los Angeles in a zigzag trajectory by plane and car, and the opera company’s board chairman had picked up the dropped reins pending a search for a replacement.<br />
Eventually, however, the skies cleared; the new Lohengrin – only the third Wagnerian foray in the company’s 16 years –also became its first real triumph in that repertory. The best news of all was that the glory belonged in large measure to Nagano’s firm hand in his newly created post. Wagner’s music had previously been accorded short shrift in the local repertory, and the lack of a firm conducting hand had frequently foredoomed some of the best-intended productions in the past. Both problems have been resonantly renounced in the company’s first mountings in the new Placido Domingo regime.</p>
<p>Everything worked. Immensely aided by Alan Burrett’s stark, intense lighting, In his company debut, actor/stage director Maximilian Schell deployed his onstage forces in a a mounting dramatic line of terror, menace and ultimate redemption. Painter Yevgeny Lysyk’s projected designs, seen previously at St. Petersburg’s Mariinsky Theater, created a haunting if eclectic atmosphere, medieval with arresting contemporary overtones, as if half a dozen Cologne Cathedral facades had somehow become woven into a neon factory. Lohengrin’s famous Swan, a stumbling block to many stage designers in the past, this time took the form of a gigantic birdlike construction midstage, bathed in fantastical, dazzling light.<br />
Swedish tenor Gosta Winbergh was the Lohengrin, clarion-voiced and acceptably heroic in stature; Canadian soprano Adrianne Pieczonka was an Elsa of heartbreaking purity and melancholy; as Telramund, baritone Tom Fox added one more item to his impressive scrapbook of villains. Only the veteran Eva Marton, an aging soprano cast in a role where the dark menace of a true mezzo-soprano is ordained, seemed outclassed by her writhing, slithering music.<br />
It didn’t take much beyond the first shimmering chords of Wagner’s much-beloved opera to sense the company launched into a new era in orchestral discipline and tone control. Throughout the famously broad and eloquent – if occasionally posterior-threatening &#8211;  expanse of Wagnerian rhetoric the strength of Nagano’s command was clearly apparent. At the final curtain calls, even among the generally splendid singers and the beaming Max Schell, Nagano earned  &#8212; and deserved &#8211;  the most tumultuous cheers.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Pick&#160;Dam</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2001/09/pick-dam/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2001/09/pick-dam/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 05 Sep 2001 22:47:08 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Musical America]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=1859</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[The Placido Domingo era at the Los Angeles Opera got off to a sensational start this week, and how! In press conference after press conference, the incoming artistic director/tenorissimo had promised that attention would be paid in areas where scant attention formerly existed. The opening-night “Pique Dame” marked the start of the fulfillment of those [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>The Placido Domingo era at the Los Angeles Opera got off to a sensational start this week, and how! In press conference after press conference, the incoming artistic director/tenorissimo had promised that attention would be paid in areas where scant attention formerly existed. The opening-night “Pique Dame” marked the start of the fulfillment of those promises – in, as they say, spades.<br />
It was, for one thing, the company’s first-ever dip into Russian opera. This has been accomplished now in high style, under the probing, propulsive baton of migratory Russian superconductor Valery Gergiev and with a mostly-Russian cast. The innovative German director/designer Gottfried Pilz has come on in both capacities, to design and execute a terrific piece of contemporary musical theater. All that bodes well for the future of opera in Los Angeles; neither strong conducting nor daring stagecraft had hitherto been the norm under Peter Hemmings’ cautious leadership.<br />
And “daring” is, indeed, the word for the treatment accorded the work before a cheering full house on Tuesday. Gottfried Pilz dispenses with the libretto’s scenic suggestions (which are, by the way, nicely fulfilled in the video of the opera from the St. Petersburg Kirov, also under Gergiev). He has, instead, created a single performing space, a huge room raked from right to left, dominated overhead by a huge crystal chandelier. A dark area down front at stage level serves as a kind of limbo where the hero, a mere wraith in the darkness, contemplates his personal demons and eavesdrops on everyone else. The one main space serves as park, ballroom, the Countess’ bedroom and – with shadows eerily projected onto the rear wall &#8212; gaming house. Everything moves, usually at feverish pace; more than once a chorus bursts into the scene like a flood from a broken dam; the crowds literally dance to Gustavo Llano’s whirlwind choreography.<br />
And so, in fact, does the opera itself, under Gergiev’s propulsive leadership, with the frazzled bedazzlement of Domingo’s 60-year-old pipes in near-pristine condition. Russian soprano Galina Gorchakova, her smallish voice nicely colored toward the dark side, was the touching Lisa; soprano Suzanna Poretzky, a recent winner in the Domingo-sponsored Operalia competition, offered a delightful take on her one big aria. The evening’s loudest, longest cheers, however, went to the veteran (64) Elena Obraztsova, who is allotted little actually to sing about in the opera  but whose silent enactment of her death scene – starkly punctuated in Pilz’s production by the fall of her cane onto the resonant floor – was one of the evening’s breath-stopping moments.<br />
A brilliant beginning, therefore, and a promising one.The season continues with next week’s “Lohengrin” – again, healing the company’s previous short shrift accorded to Wagner – and moves onward through an admirable variety of offerings. The musical range is spectacular, from the seductive strains of Lehar’s evergreen “Merry Widow” to the twelve-tone asperities of Schoenberg’s “Moses und Aron” to the curious phenomenon of a staged version of Bach’s churchly B-Minor Mass.  So far, so good.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>The Annual Mozart Love&#160;Letter</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2001/09/the-annual-mozart-love-letter/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2001/09/the-annual-mozart-love-letter/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 05 Sep 2001 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=357</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Mozart&#8217;s music didn‘t merely fill the Hollywood Bowl last week; it fulfilled it. The vast space, in which the banalities of Rachmaninoff, etc., rattled around (to the delight of some) on other weeks this summer, seemed exactly the right size for the two programs of profuse small miracles conducted by Peter Oundjian. The Philharmonic itself [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Mozart&#8217;s music didn‘t merely fill the Hollywood Bowl last week; it fulfilled it. The vast space, in which the banalities of Rachmaninoff, etc., rattled around (to the delight of some) on other weeks this summer, seemed exactly the right size for the two programs of profuse small miracles conducted by Peter Oundjian. The Philharmonic itself was reduced to proper Mozartian size; the empty spaces on the stage where trombones, bass drum and cymbals are deployed in repertory of &#8212; I want to say lesser here, but that would stir up the letter writers &#8212; different states of mind were filled for these two concerts with a row of potted greenery, very nice. Both concerts drew audiences in the seven-thousands, considerably above the average on ”classical“ nights at the Bowl. There&#8217;s hope for us yet.
</p>
<p>    Oundjian, the second Canadian conductor at the Bowl in two weeks, is best-known for his many years as first violinist with the Tokyo String Quartet; now he has caught the baton bug, and the years of chamber music, of attending to the give-and-take and all the other subtleties associated with that repertory, came through in his orchestral leadership as well. Some poor microphoning &#8212; a common affliction this summer at almost every Bowl concert I‘ve attended &#8212; undermined the small-scale effects he was obviously trying for, although the balance on the second concert was distinctly better. Also to Oundjian&#8217;s credit was his faithful attention to Mozart‘s prescribed repeats in the sonata-form movements of the three symphonies he conducted &#8212; Nos. 29 and 38 (”The Prague“) on Tuesday, No. 41 (”The Jupiter“) on Thursday. Helene Grimaud was the tense, wonderfully driven soloist in the D-minor Piano Concerto on Tuesday. Julia Fischer, the latest in an apparently inexhaustible inventory of teenage violinists from here and abroad, skated across the notes, but not the music, of the Fourth Violin Concerto on Thursday.
</p>
<p>   Miracles; I&#8217;ve used the word, and I‘ll stay with it. In a lifetime with Mozart&#8217;s music I am still surprised, shaken, momentarily ashiver at those moments when the heavens seem to part and revelations fill the sky. There is one in the slow movement of the concerto that Grimaud played, when the pianist, alone over a quiet accompanying throb, plays a one-finger melody: pure, radiant, lovable, the song that Susanna might sing once her marriage to Figaro is finally assured. Another comes only three or four minutes later, when the fearsome outburst that suddenly erupted subsides just as suddenly. Mozart has tightened the emotional screws; now the momentum gradually slackens and the tune itself seems to disintegrate. Like a race-car driver downshifting, the notes gradually lengthen; 16ths become eighths become quarters, and then we‘re somewhere else in the music. Very slippery, wonderfully imaginative.
</p>
<p>    The Symphony No. 29 began the Tuesday concert, music from Mozart&#8217;s feisty adolescence but with its own share of strange and wonderful events that the Bowl performance nicely brought forward. There‘s a manic quality in the orchestration; it comes mostly from the way Mozart uses the horns. In A major, the key of this work, the horns spend a lot of time on the red-hot high E, the dominant note. This is the same curdling note that Beethoven later used, to the same effect, in his Seventh Symphony (which is also in A major); Mozart, with splendid help last week from the Philharmonic&#8217;s Jerry Folsom, got there first.
</p>
<p>    Two nights later came ”The Jupiter,“ with its own catalog of miracles. Just the opening is astounding enough, the ”him and her“ conversation that constitutes the opening theme, the great bluster as the full orchestra takes over, a reprise of that initial conversation but now subdued, wistful, wound around with gorgeous commentary from the winds. Has anyone done an accurate count of the number of separate tunes in that first movement, strung out in nonstop concatenation, rising, falling, capturing our ability to breathe? To me, however, the apocalyptic moment in ”The Jupiter“ comes somewhat later, just beyond the midpoint of the sublime, deeply affecting slow movement. The ever-so-slightly disturbed opening music has been explored and turned upon itself; its harmonies, moving with some sense of terror through minor keys, lead us finally to the point where we might expect the return of the first theme to round out the grand design. Mozart provides an extraordinary bridge to that expected return; flute and oboe twist around one another, creating harmonies so poignant as to cause actual pain. It‘s a small moment; it goes by quickly, so that you experience it in a kind of double take. Once you&#8217;ve absorbed ”The Jupiter“ into your own bloodstream, you learn to wait for that moment, and to experience the pain every time.
</p>
<p>    Three years after Mozart‘s death, his widow, Constanze, arranged a memorial concert, and the 24-year-old Ludwig van Beethoven, newly arrived in Vienna and already launched as music&#8217;s latest conqueror, was invited to perform the D-minor Concerto. It apparently affected him strongly; it doesn‘t stretch a point to suggest that the D-minor clouds and murk that open Mozart&#8217;s concerto may have foreshadowed the D-minor clouds and murk at the start of Beethoven‘s Ninth Symphony 30 years later. At the concerto performance, Beethoven had improvised a cadenza; he later wrote it down and presented it to Constanze. It consists of five minutes of extraordinary, disturbing, difficult, revelatory music, and its further value is, of course, as a document of one supreme composer&#8217;s take on another. On my rather large Mozart shelf, the only recording of that concerto that uses Beethoven‘s cadenza &#8212; and it&#8217;s a superb one &#8212; is by Mitsuko Uchida.
</p>
<p>    Grimaud used that cadenza in her Bowl performance; it accorded very well with her overall conception of the work: strong, forthright, dramatic, fully responsive to the music‘s D-minorness &#8212; the key, after all, of Don Giovanni&#8217;s descent to Hell. Grimaud‘s last appearance at the Bowl had been sabotaged by video cameramen wandering around onstage and distracting her (as the screen clearly showed). This time she &#8212; and Mozart &#8212; were fully in charge.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Fiddler and the&#160;Goof</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2001/08/fiddler-and-the-goof/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2001/08/fiddler-and-the-goof/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 29 Aug 2001 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=356</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[If you had asked me to dream up 100 truly atrocious ideas for a new piece of music, I still wouldn&#8217;t have come up with last week&#8217;s Hollywood Bowl catastrophe. Some things are beyond the realm of the conceivable, and in their number I would place the idea of turning Leonard Bernstein&#8217;s music from West [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>
If you had asked me to dream up 100 truly atrocious ideas for a new piece of music, I still wouldn&#8217;t have come up with last week&#8217;s Hollywood Bowl catastrophe. Some things are beyond the realm of<br />
the conceivable, and in their number I would place the idea of turning Leonard Bernstein&#8217;s music from <i>West Side Story</i> into an exercise for solo violin and orchestra, tarted up with the ruffles and flourishes &#8211; or should I say “bowings and scrapings”? &#8211; of 19th-century virtuoso schlock. A certain William David Brohn is the perpetrator, imposing onto the one score that confirms beyond argument Bernstein&#8217;s claim to immortality a process of flagrant down-dumbing that sucks from the great music everything that gives it breath and vitality.</p>
<p>
Why has this one score, the one unchallengeable masterwork out of all the uneven Bernstein legacy, been subjected to such blatant misrepresentation over the years? Jerome Robbins first staged the work in 1957, and devised for it an extraordinary language of rhythm and movement; every musical phrase was endowed with overpowering kinetic force. Some, but not all, of that quality endured into the movie, and into restagings under Robbins&#8217; watchful eye through the 1970s. Bernstein himself, however, lost track of the score. Dig out the TV documentary of the 1985 Deutsche Grammophon recording sessions, with ludicrously miscast opera singers in the major roles &#8211; Dame Kiri as Maria, for God&#8217;s sake! &#8211; and Bernstein conducting with Mahlerian turgidity; that sorry commodity could stand as a milepost in the journey of <i>West Side Story</i> to its current disgraceful rebirth as Wieniawski redux.</p>
<p>
In an album note for that DG recording, Bernstein reminisced about the “kid quality” of the 1957 original, the very quality that the meddlers since that time, Bernstein included, have managed to subvert. The new <i>West Side Story Suite</i> was inflicted upon the small but ardent Tuesday-night audience by Joshua Bell, an appealing and facile fiddler who has always functioned at the gateway to excellence without often stepping across, and who, at 33 &#8211; reckoning from his recent publicity handouts and magazine-cover appearances &#8211; is also apparently being marketed for the “kid quality.” You have to wonder, sometimes, whether the music world mightn&#8217;t be better off if people stopped kidding one another &#8211; or, for that matter, themselves.</p>
<p>
Canada&#8217;s Keri-Lynn Wilson, 34, was the conductor that night, saddled with the Bernstein stuff in the first half, on her own in the second. Maybe it was following Bernstein that made the Brahms Second Symphony sound so good this time, but I think there was more to it than that. Tall and reed-slender, with a stick technique so clear that even a deaf person could follow her music, Wilson delivered a strong, clean account of this most ingratiating of the Brahms four; for once I was actually sorry that she left out the first-movement repeat. With a long list of past and future gigs from Hong Kong to Verona, Wilson is clearly on her way. It would be nice if that “way” included a return visit here &#8211; with a whole program of important music rather than merely half.</p>
<p>
At 1735 Micheltorena St. in Silver Lake there still stands the modest house with the significant history: the onetime home of Peter Yates, with Rudolf Schindler&#8217;s rooftop studio where the “Evenings on the Roof” concerts &#8211; ancestors of the current Monday Evening Concerts at LACMA &#8211; were born in 1939. The studio could accommodate about 100 listeners, at 50 cents a pop; the concerts afforded Los Angeles its first hearings of Bartók, Ives, Schoenberg and the growing list of Europeans whom Mr. Hitler had sent to our shores. Yates moved on in the 1960s, and the people who bought the house turned the studio into a rental apartment. When Dorothy Crawford, whose <i>Evenings on and off the Roof</i> tells of the origin of new-music awareness in Los Angeles, asked the then-owners if she could see the house and the studio, she was denied admission.</p>
<p>
Now a pleasanter man, named Thom Andersen, owns the house, and with his forbearance the Friends of the Schindler House returned music to the upstairs studio for the first time in over half a century. A fair-sized audience paid a good deal more than 50 cents, but got wine and designer water, plus a little extra entertainment in the form of a highly audible street fair on Sunset Boulevard just below. The local composer Daniel Rothman arranged an evening that included new works for cello by Austrian composers performed by the excellent Michael Moser, and two by America&#8217;s own Alvin Lucier, scratched and banged out by the indefatigable Art Jarvinen and yet another cellist, Lynn Angebranndt.</p>
<p>
It was, I am sorry to inform you, a rather awful concert, all the worse if &#8211; like me and the great Leonard Stein and a few other venerables in the audience &#8211; you remembered Peter Yates and his missionary zeal. A half-hour of Jarvinen banging ding-ding-ding on an oversize triangle as the first of the Lucier pieces, and Peter would have put his house on the market a lot sooner than he did. Forty-five minutes of Angebranndt&#8217;s raspy electronic cello oozing upward over two octaves in the second Lucier, and Peter would have halved the asking price. The room, its outlines simple, with its sloping roof designed to copy the angle of an open piano lid, seemed to possess remarkable acoustics, but with almost everything coming out of loudspeakers, that really didn&#8217;t matter. I want another concert at that house, with the great, substantial music that is still being composed that reflects back on the heritage of Ives and Bartók and Stravinsky and Boulez and Elliott Carter, whose music once thrived in the light of “Roof” and “Monday Evening.” After that, Thom Andersen can have his house back.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>A Distaste for&#160;Trash</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2001/08/a-distaste-for-trash/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2001/08/a-distaste-for-trash/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 22 Aug 2001 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=355</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[There&#8217;s nothing wrong with an occasional wallow in the lower depths. I go to Norm&#8217;s for lunch now and then; I own two pairs of Doc Martens; I&#8217;ve been known to watch a soap or two. But gee whiz, folks, there&#8217;s a limit, and a week at the Hollywood Bowl wherein the offerings included Lalo&#8217;s [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>
There&#8217;s nothing wrong with an occasional wallow in the lower depths. I go to Norm&#8217;s for lunch now and then; I own two pairs of Doc Martens; I&#8217;ve been known to watch a soap or two. But gee whiz, folks, there&#8217;s a limit, and a week at the Hollywood Bowl wherein the offerings included Lalo&#8217;s turgid, gesturesome <i>Symphonie Espagnole</i> on Tuesday and the spineless First Piano Concerto of Rachmaninoff two days later should, by rights, have pulled down the wrath of the Environmental Protection Agency.</p>
<p>
If ever a work, once popular, has outlived its utility, surely Lalo&#8217;s tired pastiche of Hispanic phrase turns &#8211; with nary a memorable melody to justify its half-hour-plus duration &#8211; must be it. Its presence was, I suppose, considered an enhancement to the first of Miguel Harth-Bedoya&#8217;s two Latino programs by proving that even French composers can venture past the Pyrenees in search of inspiration. The rest of the program, with music by Ravel and Chabrier, proved that point. The performance of Ravel&#8217;s <i>Rapsodie Espagnole</i>, even through mikes and speakers, came across a glorious wash of color. Christian Tetzlaff, a fine violinist who has given us Beethoven and Berg in previous visits here, played the Lalo &#8211; overmiked as if he were offering a batch of show tunes &#8211; seemingly unreached by any idea of what he was doing in that piece or that locale. That made two of us.</p>
<p>
Impertinent question: Would anyone bother with the Rach 1 if it weren&#8217;t for the Rach 2 (and, if you insist, 3)? Here is a straggling, shambling piece of work that can only injure its composer&#8217;s reputation by existing. Put it forward, in a land where it is hitherto unknown, as a parody of the bad Rach manner (as with Mozart&#8217;s <i>Musical Joke</i>) and you might get somewhere. Young Vardan Mamikonian played a lot of notes, but got nowhere. Harth-Bedoya was again in charge, demonstrating with his slap-&#8217;em-silly performance of Rimsky-Korsakov&#8217;s <i>Capriccio Espagnol</i> the superiority of Ravel&#8217;s traversal of the same territory.</p>
<p>
I like Harth-Bedoya&#8217;s work, the quality of his music making and the nice atmosphere he creates around it with his ingratiating (and blessedly to-the-point) spoken intros. He is on a roll lately, as he deserves, with podiums in New Zealand and Texas and guest shots all over the map. I don&#8217;t need to spell out his special value to this highly varied community, underscored with the Latino content in his programming (including his next Music Center date in November). I&#8217;ll bet he steps outside that frame in Texas and New Zealand, though, and he should do that here as well. (He will, with Dvorák&#8217;s Seventh Symphony, next March.)</p>
<p>
In Seattle earlier this month there were simultaneous Siegfrieds &#8211; one who sang and another who lip-synched. Fafner the Dragon filled the stage, both terrifying and adorable, a velociraptor right out of <i>Jurassic Park</i>. Rhine Maidens cavorted on the flying trapeze, singing all the while. This was the Seattle Opera&#8217;s third production of Wagner&#8217;s <i>Der Ring des Nibelungen</i> since 1975, when the company launched its campaign to transform itself into America&#8217;s Bayreuth. It comes ever closer. Its main competition this summer has been Seattle&#8217;s Mariners, who dominate the percentages like Wotan at Valhalla, and whose tickets are as hard to come by as the Rhine&#8217;s Gold.</p>
<p>
The Mariners lost the night I went; the <i>Ring</i>, by and large, triumphed. Stephen Wadsworth&#8217;s concept was revolutionarily retro, a “return to nature” that even Rousseau might approve. The tall conifers of Thomas Lynch&#8217;s Rhineland forest, bearded with moss and in garments green, might have been rooted anywhere in Western Washington; Speight Jenkins, Seattle Opera&#8217;s voluble, Texas-born honcho, allowed as how the production neither could nor would ever be borrowed by another company. Revivals are set for 2005, 2009 and 2013; if I know Seattle&#8217;s Wagnerites, the box-office lines are already forming.</p>
<p>
Wadsworth&#8217;s plan of action pretty much followed the book; his Valkyries even sported the old-fashioned winged helmets that you see in all the parodies. One nice touch: Rather than the wholesale burn-up at the end, the curtain fell on a happy family reunion &#8211; Wotan and Brünnhilde with the Siegmund family, all smoochy at the bottom of the Rhine. Jane Eaglen, on whose, er, broad shoulders the role of Brünnhilde currently rests in many major houses, became more profound, more thrilling night after night. Stephanie Blythe, a mezzo-soprano of comparable proportion, was a stupendous Fricka. Alan Woodrow, whose Siegfried was to be the summer&#8217;s major debut, tore a quadriceps muscle the day before and sang from a stool at the side of the stage, lip-synched &#8211; more or less satisfactorily &#8211; by the understudy, Richard Berkeley-Steele. (In the two ensuing performances of the cycle, Berkeley-Steele had the role to himself in both sight and sound.) Denmark&#8217;s Stephen Milling was the Hunding, a hugely resonant bass; I would kill to hear his Sarastro somewhere, sometime. The dry-voiced Phillip Joll was the inadequate Wotan; as his adversary Alberich, Richard Paul Fink sang with far greater eloquence. Franz Vote&#8217;s conducting was, shall we say, okay; I missed having my throat clutched at by Siegmund&#8217;s capture of the sword and by the collapse of Valhalla at the end.</p>
<p>
Like Bayreuth, Seattle at <i>Ring</i>-time is an object of pilgrimage, of addiction if you prefer. Wagner societies thrive in many cities &#8211; there&#8217;s one here and another in San Francisco &#8211; and their devout members migrate from one shrine to the next. I dined one night with representatives from several branches, and when I confessed that I&#8217;d never been to Bayreuth, the reaction was as horrified as when Tannhäuser sings his obscene song at the Wartburg. Wagner T-shirts sell like Freia&#8217;s apples at the Opera House&#8217;s shop, and some people &#8211; not many, I&#8217;m happy to say &#8211; showed up at performances in Valkyrie helmets and similar gadgetry, as people at rock events sometimes dress as the performers.</p>
<p>
Apropos gadgetry: It did no harm that the neighborhood industry, Microsoft, was on hand to help with high-tech lighting and stage-design graphics. It&#8217;s interesting, in fact, that after all the recent <i>Ring</i> productions in futuristic, industrial-age or punk-bar settings, contemporary technology has made it possible to return the work to Wagner&#8217;s own vision of forests, fairy-tale monsters and winged helmets. George Lucas, already at work on Los Angeles&#8217; upcoming <i>Ring</i>, will probably agree.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>The Accordion in Her&#160;Life</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2001/08/the-accordion-in-her-life/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2001/08/the-accordion-in-her-life/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 15 Aug 2001 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=354</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[A couple of Saturdays ago, several of us, in a corner of the performance space at the Schindler House in West Hollywood, watched as a small spider did what spiders do best. She had anchored her new web between two lightbulbs on an overhead cable. From there she swung down on a strand of web, [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>
A couple of Saturdays ago, several of us, in a corner of the performance space at the Schindler House in West Hollywood, watched as a small spider did what spiders do best. She had anchored her new web between two lightbulbs on an overhead cable. From there she swung down on a strand of web, curving her trajectory to clear the heads of people in the front row, and then made her way back up on another strand, then down again, then up. All the while, the silky moans of Pauline Oliveros&#8217; accordion filled the space with sound, gently guiding the crowd toward an experience of what she calls “deep listening.” Somehow the bond took shape, between the intricate design imposed onto the surrounding air by the spider and her web and by the sounds of Oliveros&#8217; music. Later that evening came another kind of bonding, no less satisfying: Oliveros and shakuhachi player Philip Gelb drawing each other out in over a half-hour of serene improvised “conversation,” full of deep if wordless meanings. By then the spider was lost in darkness, but you could still feel her presence.</p>
<p>
Deep Listening: In Oliveros&#8217; world it suggests that charting the course of a classical symphonic movement or a romantic virtuoso exercise, however lavish their rewards, is still the base of the mountain. Up on the slopes are the infinitesimal sounds of spiders at their weaving, the rustlings and breathings in the room around John Cage&#8217;s famous “silent” piece, the slow drone of Oliveros&#8217; accordion, tuned to harmonies that break clear of our well-tempered scale. Her instrument engulfs her body as it engulfs our senses; the only picture I can summon up comparable to watching her playing is the memory of Segovia wrapped around his guitar; he, too, could so transport an enthralled audience to the brink of silence, even in the 3,000-seat expanse of Carnegie Hall, as to command a kind of deep listening. Friends who have been there tell me that listening to music in India, where families with small children partake of the experience without abandoning their own sounds and rhythms &#8211; so that the world itself creates a part of the experience &#8211; also demands a way of listening far different from the artificial attentiveness we sometimes have to manufacture at the Dorothy Chandler Pavilion. (Please do not, however, take this as extending a welcome to cell phones as a component to the process of listening deeply at the Philharmonic.)</p>
<p>
The Schindler House, with its marvelous flow from indoor to outdoor space, generates its own kind of music, and always has; it currently houses the MAK Center for Art and Architecture. In April 1935, the very young John Cage and his mentor, Henry Cowell, presented some Japanese visitors in a concert of <i>gagaku</i> &#8211; at that time a most exotic and unfamiliar art &#8211; at the House; the venture earned a net profit of $13. Three years later Rudolf Schindler designed a small performance studio on the roof of Peter Yates&#8217; home at 1735 Micheltorena St. in Silver Lake, where Yates &#8211; a self-taught aficionado whose adoration of the compositional process shines a bright light in the annals of music consumership &#8211; invited musicians to perform new music for select audiences. His concerts, then known as Evenings on the Roof and later renamed the Monday Evening Concerts, still go on (at LACMA) and still challenge. The studio also still exists, and there will be music there &#8211; new, of course &#8211; this very weekend: two concerts under MAK Center auspices on Saturday, August 18.</p>
<p>
Morton Feldman&#8217;s music also demands deep listening; the four hours on the edge of silence in his <i>For Philip Guston</i> do not reveal their secrets the first time around. His series of four pieces collectively titled <i>The Viola in My Life</i> provides a more accessible entrée; I would call the last of these &#8211; at hand on a new disc on the EMF (Electronic Music Foundation) label &#8211; truly beautiful.</p>
<p>
The solo viola spins its web: short melodic curves swooping down and up, against bursts of orchestral commentary. I don&#8217;t want to belabor the spider analogy, but the sense of dimension in this work, of forces in motion in the near and far distance, and &#8211; as in all of Feldman&#8217;s work &#8211; of the shards of silence alternating with soft, mysterious sounds can hold you spellbound over a 20-minute span (as in this work) or over the four hours of <i>Guston</i>. Feldman&#8217;s <i>Instruments II</i>, also on the disc, similarly seeks to weld sounds and silences into a consistent linear experience but does so, to these ears, less successfully. It&#8217;s the viola that connects the dots and weaves the exhilaration in the first work &#8211; in Feldman&#8217;s life and, through him, in ours.</p>
<p>
The performances are from David Felder&#8217;s excellent June in Buffalo Festival, with Jesse Levine the solo violist and an orchestra assembled from the new-music performing nobility worldwide. Felder, formerly of UC San Diego, has two short pieces<b> </b> on this disc as well &#8211; aggressive, intense music that forms glistening, rounded surfaces, where Feldman aims toward flat planes. Heard together, these four works -– the two by Felder interspersed with the two by Feldman &#8211; form an absorbing display of great contemporary spirits at work.</p>
<p>
For a similar blending of near and far distances, listen to three works by Ingram Marshall on a new Nonesuch disc<i>, Fog Tropes II</i>. Marshall has a fascinating way of reaching out beyond the “normal” musical spectrum; previous works have included the clanking of iron prison doors on Alcatraz Island and the foghorns on San Francisco Bay; the new disc once again mingles the Bay Area&#8217;s marine layer into the playing of the Kronos Quartet. I find Marshall&#8217;s <i>Kingdom Come</i> even more attractive; into the playing of the American Composers Orchestra Marshall has blended the rough sounds from a taped panorama of folkways: a Croatian church choir in a dirgelike hymn, bells and solo chanting from other churches in the region and an ancient recording of a Bosnian Muslim chant. (The motivation here is the death of a close relative of Marshall&#8217;s, killed by a land mine in Bosnia in 1994.)</p>
<p>
The element of personal involvement aside, this is powerful, extraordinarily deep-hued music. So is the third work on the disc, <i>Hymnodic Delays</i>, in which members of Paul Hillier&#8217;s Theater of Voices sing old American hymn tunes with their singing processed and tape-delayed to create a texture both old and new. This, too, is dark, rather sad music, but the happy overtone here is the presence of a talented American composer constantly in search for new materials, and with a pretty good set of ideas about how to use them. </p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Ludwig&#039;s&#160;Rhinoceros</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2001/08/ludwigs-rhinoceros/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2001/08/ludwigs-rhinoceros/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 01 Aug 2001 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=353</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[A superb performance of Beethoven&#8217;s Ninth Symphony, such as Matthias Bamert led last week at the Hollywood Bowl, carries a huge array of incidental baggage. Like a rhinoceros at a tea party, the Ninth lumbered onto the musical scene in 1824, trampled upon even the most liberal-minded of artistic expectations, sent critics back to their [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>
A superb performance of Beethoven&#8217;s Ninth Symphony, such as Matthias Bamert led last week at the Hollywood Bowl, carries a huge array of incidental baggage. Like a rhinoceros at a tea party, the Ninth lumbered onto the musical scene in 1824, trampled upon even the most liberal-minded of artistic expectations, sent critics back to their ink pots to rummage for new modes of imprecation and invective. The ink on its first printing was scarcely dry when it reached deeply into the soul of the teenage Richard Wagner, who on his own set about creating a transcription of the work for piano solo &#8211; that, in pre-stereo days, being the manner in which a listener at home might make the acquaintance of the repertory. He offered his manuscript to Schott, Beethoven&#8217;s publisher, who rejected it but rewarded the young firebrand with a bound copy of another Beethoven score, the <i>Missa Solemnis</i>.</p>
<p>
Wagner and the Ninth: This was more than a chance encounter. It was Wagner, above any other figure, who shaped the shadow cast by Beethoven&#8217;s unruly masterwork over everything in music after its time. Of all the obsessions that played across Wagner&#8217;s fevered brow, his worship of this one work served him the best. Essay after essay poured from his pen; in a vast Dionysian stew the names of Homer, Socrates and Beethoven floated freely. When Wagner&#8217;s pen faltered, Friedrich Nietzsche took it up, and added the name of Wagner himself to the mix. The reopening of Wagner&#8217;s Bayreuth after WWII was signalized not by a <i>Ring</i> newly staged, but by a consecrational performance of the Beethoven Ninth led by Wilhelm Furtwängler; it&#8217;s one of the six performances of the Ninth by that conductor currently available on CD. Note the irony: If the government of Israel were to maintain its absurd proscription of Wagner in its music halls and opera houses with any consistency, the Ninth would be added to the no-no list.</p>
<p>
In the public view, the bringing in of voices in the finale &#8211; with the tune that every schoolboy now knows &#8211; is the work&#8217;s major innovation, along with the extended length that this elaborate finale requires. (Be glad, by the way, that Beethoven&#8217;s quite-long-enough finale makes do with only three of the eight stanzas in Schiller&#8217;s “An die Freude.”) From Mendelssohn to Liszt to Mahler, the notion of a finale with voices as apotheosis to a grand symphonic design became one of the prime romantic gambits. But the very opening of the Ninth was to cast an even longer shadow over succeeding musical structures: The first sounds might be off in some distant cloud, their harmonies purposely undefined, out of which &#8211; a veritable thunderclap in Beethoven&#8217;s case &#8211; a theme takes shape. Think of a century of cloudy, from-out-of-nowhere beginnings: the five minutes of dark swirl of Rhine waters under a sustained, ambiguous single chord that starts Wagner&#8217;s <i>Ring</i>; the distant quiver that begins every Bruckner symphony and the Mahler First; Vaughan Williams&#8217; <i>London Symphony</i>; the voice in the wilderness at the start of <i>Le</i> <i>Sacre du Printemps</i> (an ancestry that Stravinsky would vigorously disown).</p>
<p>
Given the Bowl&#8217;s iffy sound system, and the realities of the one-concert–one-rehearsal scheduling, Bamert, Swiss-born (1942), delivered a Ninth remarkable for its direct, no-nonsense power. (To note that he was for many years assistant to George Szell at the Cleveland Orchestra goes some distance to define his qualities.) His tempos were brisk &#8211; probably fairly close to Beethoven&#8217;s own famously unworkable metronome markings &#8211; but not, for today&#8217;s ears, trivializing (as they are in some so-called “historically informed” recordings). He obeyed all of Beethoven&#8217;s repeat signs, which Bowl conductors are wont to ignore, and also observed Beethoven&#8217;s curious stricture calling for a quick segue from slow movement to finale. Above all I admired the clarity of his performance, the fine balance in the gnarled counterpoints in the first movement and the halo spun by the winds in the slow movement. The chorus &#8211; John Alexander&#8217;s Pacific Chorale &#8211; sang its words cleanly, even passionately; the soloists formed a well-balanced, if somewhat underpowered, vocal quartet.</p>
<p>
The night was a triumph for Bamert and, thus, for Beethoven. Two nights later there was more of the same, a Fifth Symphony of similar strength and intensity, and a lovely, warm reading by Andreas Haefliger of the Third Piano Concerto. On Friday, with Eri Klas conducting, the goofier Beethoven came to the fore: the <i>Choral Fantasy</i> and the “Battle” Symphony &#8211; the latter with the fireworks that the Bowl does better than any other place around.</p>
<p>
What are we supposed to make of that <i>Choral Fantasy</i>? That it was a work hastily composed and hastily rushed into print doesn&#8217;t quite explain its awfulness; lesser composers have been known to disown better works. That its principal tune, arrived at after long spells of meaningless noodle-noodle, has something to do with “the” melody in the Ninth is not interesting enough to justify the unconscionable empty spaces in the work both before and after the tune arrives. There is one moment worth noting, however; it anticipates a major event in the Ninth where the chorus screams itself toward a deceptive cadence on “Und der Cherub steht vor Gott!” In the Ninth it happens once, and it&#8217;s hair-raising. In the <i>Choral Fantasy</i> it&#8217;s just something else that happens, and since it happens twice it becomes meaningless. All the empty piano figuration that starts the work, which Norman Krieger dispatched as well as needed, is supposed to represent Beethoven&#8217;s style at improv; apparently it was written down <i>post facto</i> by a student. Beethoven should sue.</p>
<p>
But there&#8217;s nothing better than the <i>Choral Fantasy</i> to make the “Battle” Symphony, which ensued, resound like a masterpiece. Reportedly the Beethoven work most popular with audiences during his lifetime &#8211; and, thus, a cause of untold weeping all the way to the bank &#8211; it is at least amusing enough to stand as a paradigm of all the second-rate composing of the time. (Mozart&#8217;s <i>Musical Joke</i> served the same purpose, even more hilariously, a quarter-century before.) Actually, there are a few great patches in the work, right at the end as Nelson&#8217;s Brits stand triumphant and the strains of “God Save the King” wind through some startling harmonic and contrapuntal challenges. Unfortunately, at the Bowl this came during the climax of those astonishing fireworks, so that the music incurred some competition. I&#8217;ll take that over helicopters, however, anytime.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Behemoths&#160;Assembled</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2001/07/behemoths-assembled/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2001/07/behemoths-assembled/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 25 Jul 2001 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=352</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[For better or worse, we tend to associate the so-called ”serious“ side of the Hollywood Bowl&#8217;s musical smorgasbord (i.e., the ”classical,“ or TuesdayThursday, programming) with a gathering of old friends. A succession of Rachmaninoff toe-tappers with their hit tunes that come and go, a swirl of a Tchaikovsky pas de deux, a tinkle of Ravel [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>For better or worse, we tend to associate the so-called ”serious“ side of the Hollywood Bowl&#8217;s musical smorgasbord (i.e., the ”classical,“ or TuesdayThursday, programming) with a gathering of old friends. A succession of Rachmaninoff toe-tappers with their hit tunes that come and go, a swirl of a Tchaikovsky pas de deux, a tinkle of Ravel and Saint-Saens: All of these will soothe the savage beast without offering any sort of challenge to the attention span. Symphonies lasting an hour or more, you might think, belong in the more lordly air of the Music Center in midwinter. Yet three successive classical programs, last week and this, have been dominated by symphonic behemoths: the Shostakovich 10th, Berlioz‘s ”Fantastique“ and &#8212; past deadline, stay tuned &#8212; the Beethoven Ninth.
</p>
<p>    Interesting sidelight: All three works are colored, to some degree at least, with the idea of chaos, a struggle to emerge victorious, and some kind of apotheosis. Beethoven&#8217;s triumphant final tune shakes itself free from an orchestral argle-bargle in which three other alternatives are presented and shouted down. Berlioz and his ladylove, unable to achieve earthly consummation, mount their his-and-her broomsticks and ride off toward an infernal eternity. Shostakovich assumes his own identity late in the 10th Symphony and pounds his mortal enemy &#8212; the dreaded Stalin &#8212; into nothingness. That‘s a lot of dramatic involvement to inflict on a picnicking Bowl audience, but the turnout for Shostakovich and Berlioz was reasonable (something like three Dorothy Chandler Pavilionfuls overall), and the responses were enthusiastic.
</p>
<p>   I have not always, I confess, approached the Shostakovich 10th Symphony with eager anticipation; last week&#8217;s performance, under the excellent young (31) Dutch conductor Lawrence Renes, was ardent and well-paced, and it turned me for once into a believer. Its story is well-known. Shostakovich, again in the doghouse in the late 1940s after his lightweight Ninth Symphony failed to deliver the Stalinist tosh the authorities had been promised, withheld the more substantial and complex 10th, which he knew would incur even greater wrath. In 1953 Stalin lay obligingly dead, and the new symphony, at last out of the closet, celebrated that fact in its final minutes on a note of triumph: the theme of Shostakovich himself out-shouting the menacing Stalin tune. Before that had come nearly an hour of richly scored, spacious, important music. Some of it reworked previous ideas &#8212; the eerie stretches in the Sixth Symphony with a single instrument seemingly lost in space, the sweet folksiness of the Ninth. Even with the familiar Bowl acoustical drawbacks, I heard this work as what others have claimed for it: the most consequential of the Shostakovich symphonies, and the one that guides us most closely toward the heartbeat of this fascinating and troubled musician.
</p>
<p>    Last week the Bowl management, striving intrepidly toward the cutting edge of the arts and the sciences, set up a new visual experiment for one week only: video screens flanking the Bowl structure on both sides, and another pair halfway up the hill to improve the view for the folks in the one-buck seats near the Nebraska border. The onstage goings-on were captured by several cameras beside and behind the performers, plus a few up front. Having smaller screens on the sides, rather than the usual big screen hung at center stage, made not watching somewhat easier &#8212; no harder, say, than abstaining from a bowl of potato chips within reach. Ironically, the installation coincided with the institution of an earlier starting time for the classical concerts &#8212; 8 o‘clock instead of 8:30 &#8212; so that the first half-hour or so was dimmed by conflicting daylight. Questionnaire forms &#8212; enhancement? distraction? &#8212; were handed out; the ultimate fate of the new system, known as IMAG, rests in the hands of the voting public. (Absentee ballots will not count; you had to be there.)
</p>
<p>    I vote a qualified negative. On Tuesday night we saw quite a lot of suffering, in the tortured face of violin soloist Kyoko Takezawa, locked in unequal combat with the Tchaikovsky Concerto. On Thursday we were vouchsafed less than 10 seconds to look upon the face of pianist Louis Lortie as he jiggety-jogged through Rachmaninoff&#8217;s Rhapsody on a Theme of Paganini; it would have been worth knowing whether he himself was as wreathed in smiles as was his playing. We did get to watch a lot of his finger work, including a couple of neato montage shots of 20 fingers at work at once. Also on Thursday, the cameras took in an irritating amount of conductor Emmanuel Villaume‘s mugging and arm waving &#8212; familiar from the L.A. Opera&#8217;s abject La Rondine last year &#8212; although his antics produced results in well-balanced performances of Berlioz: the ”Fantastique“ and the ”Royal Hunt and Storm“ music from Les Troyens.
</p>
<p>   On both nights there was sporadic evidence of properly rehearsed camera cues, but equal evidence of shots taken at random. The sweet face of Tamara Thweatt matched the sweet voice of her piccolo at several junctures in Tuesday‘s Shostakovich. On Thursday we saw the four timpanists in the ”Fantastique“ close up, and Carolyn Hove&#8217;s poignant English horn, but not the bass drum and not, in the ”Witches‘ Sabbath,“ the violins playing col legno to depict the rattling of dry bones. Friday night&#8217;s event, with the terminally cute, execrably untalented Charlotte Church as soloist with every dimple aglow, had the orchestral sections nicely in focus during Britten‘s A Young Person&#8217;s Guide to the Orchestra. Elsewhere on the program &#8212; on the half, that is, that I could bear &#8212; the cameras mostly aimed in a hit-or-miss relationship to events in the music. Why, in other words, bother?
</p>
<p>   I suppose you can say that the video setup underscores the theory that music at the Bowl deserves to be taken seriously, not merely as Muzak for food, wine and cell phones. So does the new series of pre-concert talks (titled ”Backbeat Live“ to contrast with the ”Upbeat Live“ talks at the Music Center), which take place in the Gehry-designed roofed-over picnic space between the museum and the box office &#8212; and where there is also a small but good barbecue menu. I detect another irony here, however: Does making a Bowl concert resemble more closely a night at home, with the teevee and the barbie, outweigh the hassle of parking and the guy with the cell phone two seats over? Just asking; I‘ll still take the Bowl.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Slow&#160;Start</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2001/07/slow-start/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2001/07/slow-start/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 18 Jul 2001 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=351</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[The big picture-book history of the Hollywood Bowl &#8212; Tales of Summer Nights &#8212; is full of happy memories. In times long gone there were stage spectacles: A Midsummer Night‘s Dream with Mickey Rooney as Puck, Die Walkure with the Valkyries riding their horses down the surrounding hillsides, a Carmen billed as ”The World&#8217;s Greatest [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>The big picture-book history of the Hollywood Bowl &#8212; Tales of Summer Nights &#8212; is full of happy memories. In times long gone there were stage spectacles: A Midsummer Night‘s Dream with Mickey Rooney as Puck, Die Walkure with the Valkyries riding their horses down the surrounding hillsides, a Carmen billed as ”The World&#8217;s Greatest Production“ (possibly true). Last week‘s Aida was, alas, none of the above.
</p>
<p>    The cast, in evening clothes, lined up along the front of the stage. The only authentic touch was the Aida, Alessandra Marc, who is constructed along lines comparable to Egypt&#8217;s pyramids. Behind the singers, out of any eye contact with them, John Mauceri conducted the Hollywood Bowl Orchestra and the Pacific Chorale. That‘s not the same as saying that he conducted the opera. It&#8217;s also not the same as saying that any degree of justice was done to Verdi, who depends not only on good solo singing but on a sizzling sense of ensemble in which all parts make up a splendid whole. It struck me as strange, in fact, that at the Gala Concert for the Hollywood Bowl Hall of Fame, two nights later, there was quite a good use of live television projection on a big screen above the stage, so that when Marilyn Horne sang ”Over the Rainbow“ &#8212; which, so help me, she did &#8212; you could hear her resonant tones and watch the tonsils that were producing them.
</p>
<p>   I don‘t necessarily want to watch tonsils during an opera at the Bowl (or anywhere else). It seems to me, however, that if the management could send out visual thrills with Carmen or Walkure long before the days of the TV camera, it is shortchanging audiences now (at up to $100 a pop on this particular night) with the sad sight of a lot of singers in white tie wandering at loose ends on that big stage with the approximate sounds of grand opera somewhere behind them. Of dynamic balance between solo singers and the forces under Mauceri there was none discernible; it was almost as if every soloist had an individual volume control, with license to twiddle the knobs ad lib. It all turned out to be a good argument for staying at home with the records; it&#8217;s bad news when a live performance produces that as its final impression.
</p>
<p>   The performance itself wasn‘t all that much to sing about, for that matter. The lower voices carried the night: Catherine Keen as a gutsy Amneris, Philip Skinner as the Chief Priest Ramfis, and the veteran Donnie Ray Albert &#8212; a splendid Porgy in his day &#8212; as Amonasro. Richard Margison, the Radames, maintained an even dynamic level, somewhere between loud and louder, throughout the evening.
</p>
<p>   Saddest of all was the performance of Alessandra Marc in the title role. Like most people who were blown away by her sheer force &#8212; ”volume,“ if you prefer &#8212; when she first came on the scene in the mid-&#8217;80s, I found her not only exciting but excitingly promising. In New York I heard her in an interesting repertory &#8212; the Shostakovich 14th Symphony, for example, and some oddball Richard Strauss operas that nobody else wanted to bother with. Then she seems to have caught the fancy of that coterie of opera-going creeps who yell themselves hoarse over sacred monsters and choose to ignore such minor matters as musicianship. The worst of this, in Marc‘s case, is that at a relatively young 43 she has become the careless &#8212; nay, the slovenly &#8212; singer that you expect to hear, very far down the line, from aging divas fighting off reality. No major artist, as Marc once was, should have allowed herself the squallings, the lumpy phrasings, the wanderings from pitch that she bestowed on this audience.
</p>
<p>   From his podium, Mauceri delivered congenial, witty but deadly accurate plot summaries before each act. Alan Chapman delivered more wit and information in the first of the pre-concert talks that are now scheduled before most of the Bowl&#8217;s classical programs. Add to this the printed notes by the bright young John Mangum, one of the Philharmonic‘s excellent freelancers. Verdi&#8217;s marvelous opera may have suffered in the actuality, but it was, at least, flawlessly documented.
</p>
<p>    By that curious marketing mumbo jumbo that nobody has ever plausibly explained, the Bowl‘s real opening night came two days later. (You knew it was the real opening because of the great spray of balloons &#8212; biodegradable, we were assured &#8212; that was released just before the concert.) That, alas, turned out to be the evening&#8217;s liveliest event. Emmanuel Krivine conducted, starting with the most ”serious“ performance of Gershwin‘s An American in Paris I&#8217;ve ever heard &#8212; meticulous but joyless and, despite the music‘s immense fund of invention, more than somewhat dull. The pall was then prolonged as Susanne Mentzer came on to take a misdirected stab at three Gershwin songs. Denyce Graves, who was listed as soloist &#8212; and who would have known exactly what to do with these songs &#8212; had dropped out for reasons of health. Surely Mentzer, the substitute singer, could have come up with a substitute selection &#8212; as she did after intermission with an elegant traversal of Ravel&#8217;s Sheherazade songs.
</p>
<p>    Does this all sound as if I‘ve had a lousy time at the Bowl so far? Maybe so, but not entirely. At the aforementioned Hall of Fame Gala there were pre-fireworks fireworks in a closing set by the indestructible Stevie Wonder. And in the first of the Wednesday-night jazz concerts &#8212; another ”opening night,“ you might say &#8212; I let myself be introduced to the extraordinary bass playing and band leadership of the Cuba-born, New York&#8211;based legendary Cachao, for some 90 minutes&#8217; worth of pure, incendiary musical joy. On such occasions you know what the Bowl stands for in this city. Besides, next week they‘re doing the Beethoven Ninth.
</p>
<p>   Obiter dictum: For once there is good news from the ailing record industry. The Sony disc of music by Kaija Saariaho, conducted by Esa-Pekka Salonen and with Dawn Upshaw and Gidon Kremer among the soloists, over which I waxed ecstatic some months ago (from the promotional pre-release disc), was then delayed due to copyright disputes concerning the printed text. Those matters have now been settled, and the disc is due in late August.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>An Ounce of&#160;Otello</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2001/07/an-ounce-of-otello/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2001/07/an-ounce-of-otello/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 11 Jul 2001 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=350</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[My first recording of Verdi&#8217;s Otello came in a fat album &#8211; 20 pounds&#8217; worth of 78-rpm discs. My latest recording comes on a five-inch silver disc weighing less than an ounce. It contains not only the sounds of Verdi&#8217;s magnificent score &#8211; their clarity and resonance far beyond the reach of engineers in the [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>
My first recording of Verdi&#8217;s <i>Otello</i> came in a fat album &#8211; 20 pounds&#8217; worth of 78-rpm discs. My latest recording comes on a five-inch silver disc weighing less than an ounce. It contains not only the sounds of Verdi&#8217;s magnificent score &#8211; their clarity and resonance far beyond the reach of engineers in the olden days of the 78 &#8211; but the sights of a stunning performance as well. The stupendous opening pages play off in a hurly-burly so realistic as to give you the shivers; it&#8217;s only after several replayings that you realize that Otello&#8217;s storm-tossed ship comes from stock footage, and that invisible stagehands armed with buckets of water are creating the havoc onshore.</p>
<p>
You also realize, perhaps a tad less joyously, that a slight but noticeable gap exists between what you see and what you hear &#8211; that the sound of Jon Vickers&#8217; stirring “Esultate” doesn&#8217;t exactly match the lip movements of Verdi&#8217;s tragic hero onscreen. And then you decide, and hold to that decision over the next two hours or so, that the impact of the performance &#8211; Vickers, Peter Glossop&#8217;s richly probed Iago, Mirella Freni&#8217;s heartbreaking Desdemona and the leadership of Herbert von Karajan both as conductor and director &#8211; outweighs by some distance the awareness that the dubious art of the lip-synch still falls somewhere this side of perfection. (The EMI release of the Simon Rattle–led <i>Porgy and Bess</i>, if anyone&#8217;s interested, consists of the 1988 audio recording plus a 1992 mime and lip-synch job by mostly &#8211; but not entirely &#8211; the same cast. Go figure.)</p>
<p>
Suddenly there is opera on DVD, and the pickings are already lavish. Some of the current catalog has been reprocessed from the previous laser-disc format of fond memory: Karajan&#8217;s <i>Otello</i> on Deutsche Grammophon, for example, and his <i>Don Giovanni</i> on Sony, James Levine&#8217;s <i>Ring </i>from the Met (only the <i>Walküre</i> so far, but the rest sure to come), Carlos Kleiber on the Strausses, Ingmar Bergman&#8217;s miraculous <i>The Magic Flute</i>. There&#8217;s also a lot more. European opera houses and festival managements are far more likely than their American counterparts to sell their wares to television producers. Some smart DVD producers, probably realizing that this new format has zoomed in the American market far beyond laser discs, have cast their nets wide. The German company ArtHaus, distributed here by Naxos, has picked up some worthy material from several festival resources, from lordly Salzburg down to<br />
tiny Ludwigsburg; another label, Image Entertainment (based right up the block in Chatsworth), has also been building an interesting catalog. Most of the performances are recorded live, with a small concomitant glitch here and there, but at least they&#8217;re not lip-sunk.</p>
<p>
Let&#8217;s browse. A recent release from ArtHaus includes three Mozarts in three widely different performance attitudes. From Stuttgart comes <i>The</i> <i>Abduction From the Seraglio</i> in one of those high-concept productions, like the fare at the Long Beach Opera, that either works brilliantly or goes splaat. We start with Belmonte&#8217;s first aria, he in Mafioso duds, shadowed by a doppelgänger in similar getup. Then the tattooed and garishly clad Osmin does his number, while pulling from a large chest first a severed head, then another, then several other limbs. Hans Neuenfels is the stage director, famous (I&#8217;m told) for innovative stage work; he also has rewritten the dialog. Splaat.</p>
<p>
A <i>Così Fan Tutte </i>from Zurich looks a lot more promising. Cecilia Bartoli is the Fiordiligi; in a previous audio recording she&#8217;s the Dorabella; her debut at the Met was as Despina. (Surely there exists technology<br />
for an all-Bartoli <i>Così</i>? Splaat.)There is splendid music-making here, under Nikolaus Harnoncourt&#8217;s enlivening baton, even on an almost bare and poorly lit stage. But Bartoli&#8217;s Fiordiligi is all wrong; the high notes don&#8217;t jab against Agnes Baltsa&#8217;s mellower Dorabella, and you have to look hard at times to find out who is singing which. One nice touch, however, which most of the DVD operas haven&#8217;t gotten around to yet: There&#8217;s a 20-minute “behind the scenes” addendum, with Harnoncourt&#8217;s wise comments a real bonus.</p>
<p>
A <i>Magic Flute</i> from Ludwigsburg, on a tiny stage in a small jewel of a theater, shouldn&#8217;t<br />
be as good as it is, but I find it delightful: simple props deployed with great wit, a cast with no spectacular voices but none less than charming, a folk-opera staging in which an element often lost in more deluxe productions is restored. I could not forgo the Bergman version (on Criterion), but I&#8217;ll keep this one, too.</p>
<p>
More high-concept stuff, both on ArtHaus: <i>Der</i> <i>Freischütz</i> from Hamburg is robbed of all sense by Peter Konwitschny&#8217;s staging (modern dress, TV screens, etc.) despite the fine conducting of Ingo Metzmacher and Albert Dohmen&#8217;s and Jorma Silvasti&#8217;s strong work as villain and hero. A staging of <i>La Damnation de Faust</i> from Salzburg, on the other hand, opens out Berlioz&#8217;s uneven oratorio with lighting effects and other splendid <i>diableries</i>, all around the stunning Méphistophélès of Willard White and the demonically inspired conducting of Sylvain Cambreling. Also from Cambreling at Salzburg (but this time on Image) there&#8217;s a modern-dress, deliciously askew <i>Rake&#8217;s Progress</i> that makes as much sense of Stravinsky&#8217;s enigmatic fable as any version I&#8217;ve seen. It dates from the summer of 1996, three months before &#8211; and, would you believe, even better than &#8211; the Sellars/Salonen production in Paris. Dawn Upshaw sang the Anne in both: virtuoso quick-change artistry if ever there was.</p>
<p>
Above all, I treasure Carlos Kleiber on the Strausses: <i>Die Fledermaus</i> of Johann; <i>Der</i> <i>Rosenkavalier</i> of Richard &#8211; both on DG. Something about this elusive, unique figure bursts right through the video screen; his work in the pit, occasionally glimpsed on the videos, is an act of communication as much as of leadership. Molding a waltz tune by Johann, or the sublime final trio by Richard, he seems to be guiding every one of us &#8211; out front, in the pit, on the stage &#8211; into a sense of closeness with the music that sets him apart from any other musician I&#8217;ve experienced, even the greatest. If this doesn&#8217;t make sense, so be it. I was hypnotized once by Kleiber in person; I am hypnotized twice by these discs.</p>
<p>
I recognize all the arguments against<b><br />
</b>scaling the grandeur of opera down to TV-set size. Opera on audio may be an imperfect<br />
commodity, but it leaves room at least for the visual imagination to work, in a way that a close-up of Bartoli&#8217;s dimples or Siegmund&#8217;s swordplay merely stifles. But then these Kleiber performances come along, or Ingmar Bergman&#8217;s little girl held spellbound by <i>The Magic Flute </i>(even in the wrong language), and you give in.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Carrying On at the Atreus&#160;Motel</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2001/06/carrying-on-at-the-atreus-motel/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2001/06/carrying-on-at-the-atreus-motel/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 27 Jun 2001 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=349</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[The House of Atreus, immortalized by Sophocles some 2,400 years back, has become a beachfront motel complete with pool, perhaps in latter-day Long Beach. Elektra, her sister Chrysothemis, their mother, Clytemnestra, and her lover, Aegisthus, have rooms there, in the care of five chamber-maids and their boss. Elektra has it in for Clytemnestra, whom she [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>The House of Atreus, immortalized by Sophocles some 2,400 years back, has become a beachfront motel complete with pool, perhaps in latter-day Long Beach. Elektra, her sister Chrysothemis, their mother, Clytemnestra, and her lover, Aegisthus, have rooms there, in the care of five chamber-maids and their boss. Elektra has it in for Clytemnestra, whom she suspects of having killed her father as he relaxed in his Jacuzzi 10 years before. She has spent those years sulking in her messy bedroom, nuzzling her stuffed Snoopy. Later her long-lost brother, Orestes, turns up, a beach bum. When Orestes&#8217; pal hands him a switchblade, he knows what it‘s for. He goes up to Clytemnestra&#8217;s room and exacts filial revenge on both Mom and her paramour. Meanwhile, Chrysothemis, who‘s been cowering in her room with her stuffed panda, has slipped into a baby-blue nightie; when Orestes emerges, his T-shirt a bloody mess, she delivers a sisterly hug and they go off for some post-opera hanky-panky. Elektra, meanwhile, has returned to her room. She crams some stuff (including Snoopy) into a suitcase and strolls off &#8212; possibly in search of more close relatives to hate.
</p>
<p>    Not much of this is in the libretto Hugo von Hofmannsthal furnished Richard Strauss for his Elektra, but &#8212; as Roy Rallo&#8217;s staging for the Long Beach Opera proved beyond doubt two weeks ago &#8212; it should be. (Hofmannsthal, and Sophocles before him, have Elektra dancing herself to death, but I‘ve never understood how a girl healthy enough to handle the vocal lines in the opera could then drop dead, done in by a trashy Viennese waltz celebrating the one happy event that&#8217;s come her way in the last 10 years.)
</p>
<p>   You‘ve heard this from me before, I know, but it happened again: The Long Beach Opera remains the blithest of all local innovative spirits. It put on a terrific Elektra in its splendid home in the Carpenter Center of CSULB. Andreas Mitisek&#8217;s pit orchestra may have been on the small side for a Straussian blockbuster, but the playing was resonant and nicely balanced &#8212; far better, for example, than the coarse roars and groans at the Music Center‘s recent Tosca. The cast looked great and sounded equally great, with the icy daggers of Susan Marie Pierson&#8217;s Elektra pinning the crowd to its collective seats and John Packard‘s remarkably young-sounding Orestes investing that role with a whole &#8216;nother dimension that aging baritones with other companies seldom attain.
</p>
<p>   And yes, there were some liberties with the visuals. Overtones of incest and lesbianism, which may or may not be embedded among the howls of the Straussian orchestration, were made specific in Rallo‘s staging; Mama Clytemnestra&#8217;s imagined demons were epitomized in her clutched bourbon bottle. That‘s typical Long Beach Opera, after all: high on concept, and realities be damned. It has been that way since 1983, when the company emerged from just another provincial purveyor of Butterflys and Traviatas and started taking chances &#8212; daring chances, crackpot chances, but always interesting chances. It serves the local operatic scene as a conscience, the way the New York City Opera served the Met in its early days. And &#8212; gas prices or no &#8212; its audiences include Los Angeles loyalists as well as proud locals. Settling into the agreeably intimate (1,079-seat) Carpenter Center was a smart move; the hall has good sound and no sightline problems.
</p>
<p>   Its performing space is, however, small, and demands high imagination. Elektra really banged on those walls. Marsha Ginsberg&#8217;s set extended out to the stage apron; the action was all out front: loud in sound and in color range as well. For its two-hour duration, the production screamed forth the notion that opera can‘t get any better. And for those two hours, at least, it might have been right.
</p>
<p>    In my last column I wrote with high praise about the composer Osvaldo Golijov and his recent oratorio Passion According to St. Mark, one of four large-scale works setting the Gospel retellings of the Passion and Crucifixion, commissioned by the International Bach Academy and performed and recorded in Stuttgart during the summer of 2000, each lasting something close to 90 minutes. The composers were chosen to represent diverse cultures, with the idea that these backgrounds would represent the universality of religious faith. Wolfgang Rihm fashions his setting of the St. Luke Gospel from his German background as a latter-day Bach; Sofia Gubaidulina&#8217;s St. John setting is deeply rooted in her Russian Orthodox faith; Golijov‘s work draws upon his own eclectic background &#8212; Russian, Jewish, Argentine, sometime minimalist; Tan Dun&#8217;s Water Passion After Saint Matthew sets that text &#8212; familiar from Bach‘s timeless masterpiece &#8212; into an all-inclusive, mystical aura. All four works will be available on disc: Tan Dun&#8217;s on Sony, the others on Germany‘s Hanssler. Wolfgang Rihm&#8217;s Deus Passus is at hand; the Golijov is due in September.
</p>
<p>    Rihm, born in 1952, is the least known of the four; the Kronos used to play one of his quartets, and the Arditti has recorded three. The new work is strong and dense, dark and spellbinding, not easy but rewarding listening. As its big choruses unwind, they pass by points of correspondence with Bach‘s great Passion oratorios; the effect is like a heavily clouded sky with intermittent shafts of colored light. The text tells of the Crucifixion in straightforward terms, but Rihm has woven in other poetic material &#8212; the medieval “Stabat Mater” poem as well as contemporary words by Paul Celan. Helmuth Rilling, the guiding light behind the Passions project and many other noble achievements in the name and spirit of Bach, conducts his Gachinger Chorus and Bach Collegium; the soloists include the marvelous soprano Juliane Banse, with whom I first fell in love at Rilling&#8217;s Oregon Bach Festival last summer.
</p>
<p>   What do we make of this sudden surge of large-scale choral composition &#8212; these oratorios and John Adams‘ El Niño (whose recording, by the way, is also due in September, from Nonesuch)? Perhaps it&#8217;s just that composers who want to write serious, original, dramatic music have to stand by helpless while opera houses put on Jake Heggie and Carlisle Floyd. Whatever the reason, we are greatly enriched by this new work of Wolfgang Rihm, and the others on the way. Just pray that the record industry &#8212; manufacturing and retail both &#8212; holds together long enough to get these treasures onto its shelves, and yours.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Piercing the&#160;Gloom</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2001/06/piercing-the-gloom/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2001/06/piercing-the-gloom/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 13 Jun 2001 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=348</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[The June gloom settled over Ojai for most of the Festival weekend; the skies remained gray, the air downright chilly. What light and heat there was came from the stage, in the usual admirable abundance. Have I ever not had a good time at the Ojai Music Festival? Unimaginable! This was the 55th running of [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>The June gloom settled over Ojai for most of the Festival weekend; the skies remained gray, the air downright chilly. What light and heat there was came from the stage, in the usual admirable abundance. Have I ever not had a good time at the Ojai Music Festival? Unimaginable!
</p>
<p>    This was the 55th running of this festival-like-no-other. The current brave and enterprising honcho, Ernest Fleischmann, expanded the agenda from the customary three days to four, Thursday through Sunday &#8212; or five, if you include Dawn Upshaw‘s master class in Santa Barbara the preceding Wednesday. The theme, on the handouts at least, was iden-tified as ”Music of and About the Americas,“ but if that strikes you as any kind of limitation, you don&#8217;t know Fleischmann‘s unique gift for stretching definitions beyond reality. France&#8217;s Olivier Messiaen figured among the un-Americans crammed into this year‘s rubric, as did Japan&#8217;s Toru Takemitsu and, in a brief encore piece, England‘s Ralph Vaughan Williams.
</p>
<p>   Still, the major energy was generated along the north-south axis. Osvaldo Golijov (GO-lee-ov) was on hand, an ingratiating young chap, Argentine by birth, Jewish by descent, Bostonian by residence. A year ago he set the world abuzz with his Saint Mark Passion, one in a series of settings of passion texts commissioned by the International Bach Academy, performed in Stuttgart and later in Boston, a dazzling, sizzling piece &#8212; someone snuck me a tape &#8212; mingling baroque and Latino elements. (A recording, on the Hanssler label, is imminent.) At Ojai the Cuarteto Latino Americano played Golijov&#8217;s Yiddishbuk, a tense, compact 12 minutes honoring past upholders of the faith, not only with Hebraic laments but with an international tragic outcry, brief and spellbinding; Dawn Upshaw sang an aria from his Saint Mark, to which the same applies. Keep an eye &#8212; and an ear &#8212; on this Golijov.
</p>
<p>   The Messaien, if not of America, was at least about: From the Canyons to the Stars, a travelogue piece (with, of course, Messiaen‘s usual gatherings of birds) depicting Utah&#8217;s scenic wonders. It‘s basic Messiaen, with heavenly voices grappling for our souls through polytonal pileups while a hearer&#8217;s posterior is sorely tried over some 100 minutes on Ojai‘s unforgiving benches. British pianist Paul Crossley made his contribution to the general clatter, as did Esa-Pekka Salonen and his hardy band. But Salonen&#8217;s real lollapalooza came a night later, a romp through Silvestre Revueltas‘ La Noche de las Mayas to speed the homeward-bound exhilarated in spirit if rattled in every bone.
</p>
<p>   Upshaw&#8217;s all-American song recital included familiar fare (John Harbison‘s Mirabai Songs, which she virtually owns), a nice sampling of new songs by younger composers (Michael Torke, John Musto, etc.) and two extraordinary pieces by Ruth Crawford Seeger, who moves ever so slowly toward deserved acclaim as one of her country&#8217;s great composers at midcentury. On the orchestral concert, Upshaw sang the Golijov, a harrowing aria from John Adams‘ El Niño and a haunting short prayer by Cuba&#8217;s Tania Leon. Her command of vocal color, from one occasion to the other, is one of her great skills: her girlish, slangy delivery of a Charles Ives conceit in her recital one night, her horror-stricken account of innocents massacred (in Bethlehem, in Mexico City) in the Adams excerpt two nights later.
</p>
<p>   The Sunday-morning pop or jazz concerts, abandoned in recent years, were reinstated. First I thought of not going to this ”Tribute to Antonio Carlos Jobim,“ then I thought of not wanting it to end. The great guitarist Oscar Castro-Neves was the star, surrounded by a small combo that included an enchanting wisp of a singer, Gretchen Parlato, and a wonderful in-your-face violinist, Karen Briggs. The music rolled, rollicked and exulted; ”The Girl From Ipanema“ was notable only in its absence. A power failure midway through the program (eventually mended) would surely have elicited boos and ill will at a symphony concert or opera; this time it generated a jovial social event. Such was the power of this music.
</p>
<p>    At the Los Angeles Opera‘s Tosca I prayed for a power failure; the evening was beset by failures equally drastic. Four times now this befuddlement of a production &#8212; John Gunter&#8217;s claustrophobic and wobbly sets, Liz da Costa‘s costumes that update the action by a century despite textual references to historic events &#8212; has been sprung on a hapless public. Ian Judge, who created the production in 1989, has returned to restage it, and delivers a couple of pretty good wrestling matches &#8212; Tosca and Cavaradossi in the first act, Tosca and Scarpia in the second. Maria Ewing had been the Tosca the first two times out; Placido Domingo was her Cavaradossi in 1992; they are missed. Neither the Tosca of Carol Vaness (in 1996) nor that of Catherine Malfitano (currently) gives off anything like the trapped, desperate lyricism that can make the role work. Both Malfitano, who at least looks terrific, and Richard Leech, who doesn&#8217;t (a sad comedown from Domingo), labor under the delusion that loud equals passionate, which is not quite true. Tom Fox, the current Scarpia, projects none of the penny-dreadful malice that I remember from Justino Diaz, even with his aging voice, in 1996; Fox, more than anyone, is betrayed by the bland suavity of his Edwardian costume. Everything, furthermore, rides on Richard Buckley‘s drab, murky musical leadership, and the ride is &#8212; shall we say &#8212; bumpy.
</p>
<p>    Over last weekend the center of operatic gravity shifted south to Long Beach, with a brave but lamebrained double bill by the newly formed Downtown Opera at the tiny Edison Theater, followed two days later by the L.B. Opera&#8217;s Elektra &#8212; better than you‘re prepared to believe, not to be missed &#8212; at the Carpenter Center. (More on that in our next visit.) Martin Herman conducted both short operas at the Edison and composed one of them; you may remember, probably with a shudder, his The Scarlet Letter at Carpenter some years ago. Orlando, his latest, is similarly insipid, trick-laden &#8212; Virginia Woolf&#8217;s characters tromping around shooting off Polaroid cameras &#8212; and marginally appealing for the singing of Jacqueline Bobak in the title role. Sharing the bill &#8212; which, like Elektra, runs through this weekend &#8212; is William Houston‘s Consumer&#8217;s Paradise, five minutes‘ worth of skit about brand-name hang-ups and the passion to possess, unconscionably stretched to an hour&#8217;s agony, with music that sounds as if squeezed from a toothpaste tube. Near the end the cast joins in a litany, ”vacuity, perpetuity“; this could be the first-ever opera to include its own review.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Not With a Whimper, but a&#160;Bang</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2001/06/not-with-a-whimper-but-a-bang/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2001/06/not-with-a-whimper-but-a-bang/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 06 Jun 2001 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=347</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Who would have believed it? On February 29, 1988, England&#8217;s Arditti Quartet played its usual killer new-music program in its first-ever Los Angeles concert, and lured a gathering of some 20 people to LACMA‘s Bing Theater. Last week the Arditti&#8217;s program, even more challenging if anything, filled LACMA‘s plaza with something closer to 300 hopeful [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Who would have believed it? On February 29, 1988, England&#8217;s Arditti Quartet played its usual killer new-music program in its first-ever Los Angeles concert, and lured a gathering of some 20 people to LACMA‘s Bing Theater. Last week the Arditti&#8217;s program, even more challenging if anything, filled LACMA‘s plaza with something closer to 300 hopeful ticket buyers, swamping the box-office staff and forcing a half-hour delay in starting the concert. Tell me, therefore, about no audiences for challenging cultural fare.
</p>
<p>    The concert itself was extraordinary, most of all in the 35 minutes of the mystical near silences of Luigi Nono&#8217;s Fragmenti Stille that seemed to transfigure the very air in the hall. The double-bass wizard Stefano Scodanibbio &#8212; who had drawn a substantial crowd with his solo recital at LACMA the week before &#8212; joined the Ardittis in the final work, Julio Estrada‘s bouncy mix of sophisticated and aboriginal with an unpronounceable name. Then we all jammed into the Bing&#8217;s lobby for wine and wonderment at hardcore music‘s ongoing power to pull in a crowd, even on a Monday of a holiday weekend.
</p>
<p>   My ticket box is now empty, which is one way of determining that the ”season“ is nearly over. (Not quite over, however; there remain Ojai and Tosca &#8212; an unlikely mix &#8212; to report on next week, and not-to-be-missed opera in Long Beach a week later.) The merry month of May this year has been phenomenal: not the usual subsidence of activity, but a pileup of attractions that left us overworked journalists with agonizing choices between competing events on several nights. How could it happen, for example, that world-class tributes to two major, if unalike, American innovators &#8212; David Tudor, Harry Partch &#8212; could nudge one another merely a week apart? That two of the world&#8217;s most treasurable pianists should turn up at the Philharmonic in the same month &#8212; Stephen Kovacevich at the start, Mitsuko Uchida at the end?
</p>
<p>   Uchida played the first and least-known of Bartok‘s three concertos, an early and formative work full of flexing of muscles if not the richness of the later composer. Never mind; Uchida wrapped into her music making &#8212; Bartok or even just C-major scales &#8212; becomes an emanation, a magnetic presence; the give and take with Salonen added to the magic. The program went on to murkier matters, a suite from Hans Werner Henze&#8217;s Undine, leaving questions as to who dragged this sorry item &#8212; egregiously lacking in the snap and sizzle of the composer‘s better works &#8212; onto a program otherwise so rewarding. There were further rewards in Ravel&#8217;s well-worn Daphnis et Chloe, nicely set forth under Salonen and gorgeously delivered by the orchestra.
</p>
<p>   There was another Philharmonic program after this &#8212; the worst by far of the Rach concertos (No. 4), the shrill awfulness of Scriabin aflame, and some pop Rimsky. If you had heard that Daphnis, however, you‘d understand why I was happy to let the season end right there.
</p>
<p>    It was, all told, a superior musical season, particularly ennobled by the sense of nostalgia, as if the area&#8217;s musical presenters had come to a realization that this state and this nation possessed a history that was now ripe for recognition. The Aaron Copland centennial was nicely attended to, with a chamber-music program at LACMA from New York‘s Copland House, and, better yet, with an imaginative venture into orchestral and film music by the Pacific Symphony in Costa Mesa. At LACMA there was also an excellent series of ”made in California“ programs, celebrating the emigres that fed off the movie industry down here, and the electronic experimenters of San Francisco&#8217;s Tape Music Center: a better representation, in fact, of the vitality and variety of California at midcentury than the companion visual exhibition elsewhere in the museum. Attention was finally paid to one living legend, Lou Harrison, with major works at Philharmonic, LACMA and Green Umbrella events. I guess you could also call the Philharmonic‘s John Adams program a ”nostalgia“ event, with a revival of an hour&#8217;s worth &#8212; not nearly enough &#8212; of his breakthrough stage masterpiece, now 14 years old, Nixon in China.
</p>
<p>    That work, at least, still teemed with vital juices. Not so the season‘s most touted premiere, the Fifth Symphony of Philip Glass, which made it to Orange County on wings of critical ecstasy and reports of Salzburg audiences virtually on their knees &#8212; a portentous tosh of protracted empty gesture, above all dull to the point of wrenching cruelty. A far more hopeful sign of music&#8217;s ongoing power to reach and uplift, if on a far more modest scale, was Opera Pacific‘s end-of-season importation (from the Houston Opera) of the enchanting, intimate opera that Mark Adamo fashioned from the evergreen novel Little Women.
</p>
<p>    These things I can still remember at season&#8217;s end: spellbinding Wagner from Placido Domingo and Valery Gergiev, not so much on purely musical grounds as for the promise it embodied of the L.A. Opera‘s musical future; that company&#8217;s spectacular stagings of Britten‘s Peter Grimes and Handel&#8217;s Giulio Cesare, both productions brought in from somewhere else but serving to extend operatic horizons here at home; the voice of Elizabeth Futral and the dazzling thrust of Bejun Mehta in the Handel opera; the radiance of Ian Bostridge‘s immensely likable, intelligent singing in an art-song program in Costa Mesa; Britten&#8217;s War Requiem at the Music Center; and &#8212; even better &#8212; Vaughan Williams‘ On Wenlock Edge, a work I had never expected to like, at the Philharmonic&#8217;s Chamber Music Society.
</p>
<p>    More pianists: the spectacular Marino Formenti, brought back to LACMA for three killer new-music adventures; Murray Perahia, conducting and performing Bach and Mozart, with the Academy of St. Martin-in-the-Fields, at Cerritos; Andras Schiff, conducting and performing Bach and Beethoven, with the Philharmonic; two spectacular, virtuosic newcomers onto the fingerbustin‘ scene: Arcadi Volodos at the Music Center, Lang Lang (all of 18) at Schoenberg Hall.
</p>
<p>   And yet . . . the Los Angeles Mozart Orchestra dropped its last two programs; in San Francisco, the Women&#8217;s Philharmonic has canceled its next season. Beyond all the brightness, the clouds gather.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Tuning In, Tuning&#160;Out</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2001/05/tuning-in-tuning-out/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2001/05/tuning-in-tuning-out/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 30 May 2001 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=346</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Toward the end of a recent symposium celebrating hardcore musical creativity, someone asked what seemed to be a sensible and important question: How can a listener, confronted with an abstruse piece of new music, recognize what‘s going on? How do we,in other words, determine from our ears&#8217; evidence whether this is a piece of chance [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Toward the end of a recent symposium celebrating hardcore musical creativity, someone asked what seemed to be a sensible and important question: How can a listener, confronted with an abstruse piece of new music, recognize what‘s going on? How do we,in other words, determine from our ears&#8217; evidence whether this is a piece of chance composition, an open-form work, 12-tone or, for that matter, a latter-day update of one of the time-honored classical forms?
</p>
<p>    Nobody had an answer. Nobody, in that distinguished aggregation of composers, scholars, educators, electronic aficionados and a critic or two &#8212; gathered together under the auspices of the Getty Institute and CalArts to celebrate the legacy of the legendary pianistcomposerguru David Tudor on the occasion of the Getty‘s acquiring Tudor&#8217;s archives &#8212; seemed to attach much importance to whether the music and musicianship under examination was ever intended to be received, understood and welcomed into the worldwide repertory of masterpieces. Those works in that repertory, from the past or even the recent present, survive on an audience‘s ability to recognize their mix of inspiration and process: not only the beauty of the theme of Bach&#8217;s ”Goldberg“ Variations, say, but the adventures that theme undergoes; not only the shape of the tone row in Schoenberg‘s Fourth String Quartet, but the power of its unfolding. Sometimes it takes a generation or two for the world to catch up with the works of a particular creative genius, but it eventually happens. At the Getty I was assaulted and appalled by Tudor&#8217;s 29-year-old electronic work called (or uncalled) Untitled. What disturbed me wasn‘t just the aggressive ugliness of the piece; in my line I encounter plenty of that. What disturbed me more was that the work &#8212; whose 20 minutes could have been 20 hours &#8212; seemed to be only about itself, closed off and impenetrable.
</p>
<p>   There&#8217;s an irony here, because, a couple of nights before at CalArts, there was another Tudor creation from about the same time that was most of all about reaching and involving an audience. Rainforest IV invites the crowd to wander through a roomful of gadgetry &#8212; an old car door, a sculpture of toilet floats, an inverted barrel, you name it, all wired and vibrating, all adding up to a three-dimensional experience exhilarating in its own wacko way. Here, too, was a creation that was basically about itself, but with the extra dimension of sharing that was denied to the beset audience sitting still in the Getty‘s darkened auditorium. The Getty concert &#8212; Tudor and his orbit, including John Cage and Morton Feldman &#8212; had its moments, however, above all Vicki Ray&#8217;s exquisite reading of some of Feldman‘s small piano works. Here there was sharing, inviting a listener to lean toward the music to savor every near-silent detail, as we do with the ”Goldbergs“ and with Schoenberg&#8217;s Fourth Quartet.
</p>
<p>    You couldn‘t name two American originals further apart in style and outlook than Tudor and Harry Partch, yet within 10 days both were handsomely celebrated in local halls: Tudor for his archives, Partch for the upcoming centennial of his birth (June 24, 1901). Over 12 hours last Saturday at UCLA&#8217;s Schoenberg Hall there was Partch on film, Partch in photographs on walls, Partch manuscripts (extraordinary, the elegance and exactitude of his notation, of music that strayed so enchantingly beyond the limitations of mere written notes!) and, finally, Partch‘s music on the stage. John Schneider &#8212; guitarist, composer, baritone, microtonal guru (and host of KPFK&#8217;s Global Village) &#8212; put together a concert mostly of works Partch composed early on for himself to, er, sing, and delivered a pretty good facsimile of the old boy‘s stentorian growl. Some of Partch&#8217;s instruments were on hand: originals, re-creations and, in one case, a keyboard programmed to reproduce the 43-tone scale of the original Chromelodeon; the performers, members of Schneider‘s ”Just Strings,“ managed their exotic gadgetry with appealing skill. On video there was larger, later Partch as well: the dance piece Delusion of the Fury and Betty Freeman&#8217;s short documentary on The Dreamer That Remains. Arriving home, I played something in C major, and it was startling.
</p>
<p>    Nobody cared more than Partch about reaching an audience. In Freeman‘s film he talks about the need for his players to look good &#8212; ”not like a bunch of California prune pickers“ &#8212; and move well on the stage. At the afternoon&#8217;s symposium there was talk of producing more copies of the instruments Partch himself designed and built to manage his one-man tuning revolution &#8212; whose originals are now in the care of composer Dean Drummond in New Jersey &#8212; to enable more widespread hearings of the music. That is certainly preferable to recent attempts to hand the works over to ”normal“ players, as a recent stab at Partch‘s Barstow by Philharmonic players at a ”Green Umbrella“ concert (even with Schneider&#8217;s recitation) sadly proved.
</p>
<p>   Yet there is a dead end here, similar to what I sensed at some of the Tudor discussions. The music Partch wrote for his strange and fascinating array of instruments &#8212; some two dozen, originally &#8212; stands as the audible emanation of one whole ornery, cantankerous, innovative spirit. The instruments provide the visible counterpart. Nobody else in his right mind could compose for these instruments without cloning that whole spirit. As long as there are John Schneiders to re-create passably the sounds of Partch &#8212; like all those jazz bands around claiming to rekindle the sounds of Ellington &#8212; we‘ll have a tenuous grip on this unique byway in the annals of American innovation. But Partch remains inimitable, in both the best and the worst sense.
</p>
<p>   Betty Freeman remains inimitable, too: a sublime local spirit whose money has gone to making new music happen &#8212; from a list of beneficiaries that includes such names as Harry Partch and John Cage, Philip Glass and John Adams, Virgil Thomson and practically anyone else who matters in new-music circles. At her insistence, there is no Betty Freeman Concert Hall, no endowed front-row seat at the Music Center, no bronze plaques or banners. Still, she couldn&#8217;t prevent Esa-Pekka Salonen and the Philharmonic from a weekend of short tributes on the eve of her 80th birthday: a new piano piece by Harrison Birtwistle that Mitsuko Uchida performed on one night, a jolly short orchestral zoom by Salonen on another, and a ”Song for Betty“ by Kaija Saariaho on the third, music eminently deserving of a place among the evidence that serious new music can still break hearts with its pure, simple beauty.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Four&#160;Play</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2001/05/four-play-2/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2001/05/four-play-2/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 23 May 2001 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=345</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Before there was Scrabble, there was the string quartet. The dinner dishes were cleared, and the company retired to the music room to try out the latest chamber-music delectation from the busy presses in Berlin, Vienna or Paris. Music for four &#8212; the “Divertimento a Quattro,” as it was first called &#8212; was the medium [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Before there was Scrabble, there was the string quartet. The dinner dishes were cleared, and the company retired to the music room to try out the latest chamber-music delectation from the busy presses in Berlin, Vienna or Paris. Music for four &#8212; the “Divertimento a Quattro,” as it was first called &#8212; was the medium of choice: two violins to sing the main melodies in sweet harmonies, or to argue them in polite counterpoint; the viola to inject a soberer tone; the cello to supply a firm foundation. In or around 1760, the young provincial composer Joseph Haydn, shortly before assuming the position at the Esterhazy palace that would keep him busy for most of his lifetime, knocked out a set of compositions for the summer quartet parties of the Viennese aristocrat Baron Furnberg. They were admired and published as his opuses 1 and 2. Over the next four decades their numbers would grow; more than any other medium in which he worked with astonishing prodigality, Haydn‘s 68 quartets represent a compelling document: of his own growth as a composer, of the growth and enrichment of the musical language we know &#8212; not entirely accurately &#8212; as “classical,” and of the taste and wisdom of a musical public that could recognize and support Haydn&#8217;s unique genius.
</p>
<p>    Working your way through the 21 discs that contain this legacy on a treasurable new Philips release, you can‘t miss that sense of unfolding, in Haydn&#8217;s own abilities and also in the world around him. Prince Esterhazy furnished him with a superlative orchestra, affording Haydn the chance to use its individual members as a laboratory for his own progressive ideas. Beyond that, the prince himself and his entourage became for Haydn the kind of audience today‘s composer would kill for: receptive to experiments and to attempts to expand the boundaries of the established musical forms of the time.
</p>
<p>   The quartets of his first decade at Esterhazy, published as opuses 9, 17 and 20 &#8212; with six quartets in each opus &#8212; celebrate that growth in 18 daring forward steps. The four voices take on a distinctive personality; the cello is no longer merely the oompah support, but contributes its own voice. Several of the Opus 20 works end with fugues, intense and passionate, far removed from the earlier sense of “Divertimento a Quattro.” Opus 20 No. 5, in the stark, rarely used key of F minor, ends with a fugue subject that would later turn up as the “Kyrie” in Mozart&#8217;s Requiem.
</p>
<p>   The strength grows; so does the mix of daring progressiveness and superb entertainment in these works. Haydn himself described his Opus 33 quartets as composed in “a completely new and special way,” and that can mean any number of things. These were the six quartets that Mozart claimed as inspiration for his own great set that he dedicated to Haydn; for both sublime composers, they served as a declaration of principle, the right of the genius to experiment and to get away with it. The second in Haydn‘s series has come to be known as “The Joke,” for reasons clear to anyone who has applauded prematurely in the trick silences near the end; the third is “The Bird,” for reasons set forth in the enchanting twittering at the start. Not all, however, is airy persiflage; the first in the Opus 33 series, in the passionate key of B minor, uneasily compresses a tense and personal outcry no less dramatic for its lack of words.
</p>
<p>   An even greater work among these “middle period” quartets, although not as well-known, is Opus 54 No. 2, music in which everything goes against the formulas of the time in the creation of its own new rules. The slow movement is like nothing else in chamber music of any time: a passionate, rhapsodic solo for the first violin &#8212; a reflection, perhaps, of Haydn&#8217;s own part-Gypsy heritage &#8212; that floats like gusts of steam over a somber landscape. Then comes the minuet, hardly an elegant dance this time, with its crashing, dissonant outcries. And then the finale: not the expected, rollicking rondo but another slow movement, its profound melody briefly interrupted by a skittering intrusion but ending in a vision of infinite, starlit heavens.
</p>
<p>    The best known of the quartets are the six of Opus 76. They come late in Haydn‘s life, after the two trips to London, after the last of the symphonies. They share much of the eloquence of the orchestral works. The slow movement of No. 5 is again in one of the “difficult” keys &#8212; F-sharp major, six sharps &#8212; which in Haydn always implies a special profundity; its power to stop the breath links it, perhaps, to its counterpart in the Symphony No. 98. The slow movement of the last of Opus 76 is possibly the most amazing of all. It is, again, in a rare tonality &#8212; B major, five sharps &#8212; but its harmonic wanderings, chromatic and capricious, are so complex that Haydn withholds a key signature until the end, when the music comes to rest in a final burst of pride in its own power to surprise and delight.
</p>
<p>    The new recording crowns our own Angeles String Quartet&#8217;s Haydn project, which has been taking shape in a concert series at LACMA over the past several years, with one personnel change along the way &#8212; second violinist Sara Parkins replacing Steven Miller in 16 of the works. The set lists for $142, although I‘ve seen it online for $126; since the one competition, the Naxos set by the Kodaly Quartet &#8212; which also includes Haydn&#8217;s quartet version of The Seven Last Words of Christ &#8212; lists for $120, the price differential is relatively minor. The Angeles performances are suave, beautifully thought out and altogether creditable, although I do admire the extra intensity of the Kodaly‘s Attila Falvay in rhapsodic passages such as the aforementioned 542. At a time when concern is rising over the future, if any, of serious classical recording, the appearance of this altogether distinguished venture comes as momentary solace.
</p>
<p>   Obiter dictum: There is less solace, however, in a recent note from Sony. The disc of the music of Kaija Saariaho &#8212; conducted by Esa-Pekka Salonen with Dawn Upshaw and Gidon Kremer among the soloists &#8212; which I reviewed with some ecstasy a few weeks ago to coincide with the announced release date, has now been “indefinitely withheld” from its U.S. release. The reasons, a Sony rep informs me, consist of “problems still to be resolved.” I reviewed the disc from the usual pre-release copy sent to all the press at least two months before I wrote; it&#8217;s hard to believe in “problems” showing up this late &#8212; especially given the full-page ads for the disc in British journals &#8212; except for possible problems among Sony executives concerning serious and challenging new music. To those hopeful buyers &#8212; quite a few, I‘m told &#8212; who have searched in vain for this marvelous disc, my sympathies: temporary, I hope, but don&#8217;t hang by your thumbs.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Felix the&#160;Felicitous</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2001/05/felix-the-felicitous/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2001/05/felix-the-felicitous/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 16 May 2001 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=344</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Felix Mendelssohn&#8217;s Violin Concerto is so immediately lovable that we can forget what an original and important work it really is. It can bring out the best in a performer, as it did for Sarah Chang in her Philharmonic appearance last week. It can also bring out the worst, as it did for Bulldozer Nadja [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>
Felix Mendelssohn&#8217;s Violin Concerto is so immediately lovable that we can forget what an original and important work it really is. It can bring out the best in a performer, as it did for Sarah Chang in her Philharmonic appearance last week. It can also bring out the worst, as it did for Bulldozer Nadja at the Bowl a couple of summers ago, a performance I wish I could get out of my head.</p>
<p>
For its time &#8211; 1844, three years before the composer&#8217;s death &#8211; it was a new kind of concerto. Rather than the customary long orchestral preamble, its soloist enters immediately to tell us the matter at hand, a matter of great intensity but set into a shapely frame &#8211; not a note too many, nor a gesture wasted. Beethoven had allowed his soloist an early entry in his last two piano concertos, but only as a quick-tease preview. Mendelssohn&#8217;s soloist comes at us from center stage. All kind of things happen in the work that hadn&#8217;t happened in concertos before &#8211; not, at least, in<br />
any music worth preserving. The cadenza comes in the “wrong” place, at the moment of highest tension in the dramatic plan rather than, as in Mozart or Beethoven, in the peroration. There is no break between movements; the mark of a good performance, in fact, is the successful transit over the flimsy bridge that connects the first and second movements &#8211; a single held note on the bassoon &#8211; without audience reaction beyond the proper silent awe. (That almost happened at the Music Center on Thursday, as a single “brava” got choked off in midsyllable.)</p>
<p>
Mendelssohn&#8217;s place in the pantheon isn&#8217;t easily assessed. His legacy is studded with serene and novel almost-masterworks of high order -– the Octet and <i>Midsummer Night&#8217;s Dream</i> music from his teens, this concerto and the “Scottish” Symphony from his 30s, remarkable patches in between. At LACMA, the night before the Philharmonic concert, the Angeles String Quartet performed the D-major Quartet (Opus 44 No. 1) from six years before the concerto, music of considerable energy but also hobbled by contrapuntal churning and by an amount of clumsy tune spinning that you don&#8217;t usually expect from that airborne pen. The counterpoint in the Violin Concerto is wonderful stuff &#8211; for one instance, the gorgeous free-flying tune that floats over the giggling main theme of the finale. We hear it as the magic nobody else could (or, at least, did) create. Measure that, however, against the vast exercises in turgid contrapuntal writing<br />
in the oratorios and even in some of the chamber pieces, and you wonder if all of Mendelssohn&#8217;s noble work in restoring Bach&#8217;s <i>St. Matthew Passion </i>rubbed off on his own music the wrong way.</p>
<p>
(More about the Angeles Quartet anon; I am spending this week in the company of their new recording of all of Haydn&#8217;s string quartets &#8211; 21 discs on Philips. I&#8217;ll report next week, if I get back to Earth in time.)</p>
<p>
The Philharmonic&#8217;s program was actually a celebration of Joaquin Rodrigo&#8217;s centenary, with Mendelssohn&#8217;s concerto stuck in as leavening &#8211; a welcome alternative to the more obvious but far less worthy choice, Lalo&#8217;s <i>Symphonie Espagnole</i>. There was a relationship here that the more demented observer might notice. Rodrigo, too, lives on through a clutch<br />
of attractive and elegant (neo-Mendelssohnian, perhaps?) concertos, most but not all for guitar, which aspire to a favored place in the repertory &#8211; and, apparently, a fair amount of stuff of lesser appeal. The works on last week&#8217;s program, which received lively, careful and loving performances under Miguel Harth-Bedoya, were in the latter enclave: three pieces for large orchestra composed between 1923 and 1978, including one about Don Quixote&#8217;s Dulcinea that called for voices, all of it well-wrought without very much distinction in tone &#8211; or, for that matter, traits of style identifiable as Rodrigo or any other of<br />
his compatriots. The composer&#8217;s daughter Cecilia lent a charming presence to the pre-concert talk, but didn&#8217;t cast further light on why this should all be taking place.</p>
<p>
Mark Adamo&#8217;s <i>Little Women</i> runs at the Irvine Barclay Theater through May 20, brought here by Opera Pacific in the work&#8217;s acclaimed first production by the Houston Opera Studio. I urge you to see it, to assure yourself that beautifully proportioned small-scale American opera can still work if serious intelligences are involved. Adamo did his own libretto, and set it to vital, shapely music that, for once in the troubled annals of new opera, doesn&#8217;t sound cribbed from half a dozen soundtracks. Not having made my way through Louisa May Alcott&#8217;s enduring novel at any time in recent decades, I still get from this lithe and enormously attractive stage work a sense of closeness to the interlock of personalities that I missed in, for example, the recent Winona Ryder film. Adamo writes arias, lots of them, and they really identify the people singing them. Better yet, he writes ensemble pieces with genuine operatic counterpoint. In this he is aided by Peter Webster&#8217;s stage direction, which places characters in dramatic contrast, in and out of time and focus, on Christopher McCollum&#8217;s wonderfully cluttered, multilevel stage set.</p>
<p>
The cast, mostly young and not yet well-known, couldn&#8217;t be better: a strong, frazzled Jo from Kirsten Chávez played off against the fragile, vulnerable Laurie of Jeffrey Lentz; Katherine Ciesinski&#8217;s glorious harridan of an Aunt March; Christina<br />
Suh, Natalie Taormina and Stephanie Woodling as the other March sisters; Andrew Fernando as Friedrich Bhaer, scene-stealing with high bravado in his rendition of a Goethe ballad. Christopher Larkin, who conducted the Houston performances, does so again. His orchestra is small: 11 strings, single winds; it&#8217;s all you need to project this rich, pliant score.</p>
<p>
For a first opera, by a composer still in his 30s, I would reckon <i>Little Women </i>a happy, even astonishing success. Its presence here is the first entry in Opera Pacific&#8217;s new program highlighting recent American operas. Jake Heggie&#8217;s <i>Dead Man Walking</i><br />
is the announced second entry. You can&#8217;t win &#8216;em all.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Fulfillment at the&#160;Close</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2001/05/fulfillment-at-the-close/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2001/05/fulfillment-at-the-close/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 09 May 2001 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=343</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[I would like to live long enough to see this happen: A pianist&#8217;s recital ends with Opus 111, the last of Beethoven‘s 32 sonatas; as its final cadence &#8212; music touched by an angel &#8212; merges into the surrounding silence, the audience shares that silence for some minutes and then, in silence, leaves the hall. [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>I would like to live long enough to see this happen: A pianist&#8217;s recital ends with Opus 111, the last of Beethoven‘s 32 sonatas; as its final cadence &#8212; music touched by an angel &#8212; merges into the surrounding silence, the audience shares that silence for some minutes and then, in silence, leaves the hall. As often as I&#8217;ve wanted this to happen &#8212; after performances by Schnabel, Pollini, Brendel and a few others in the galaxy &#8212; it never has; sooner or later some undeserving helot out front, endowed with itchy palms, assumes the right to break the spell and open the floodgates. That happened again the other night at the end of Stephen Kovacevich‘s all-Beethoven recital at the Music Center, after a performance as close enough as never mind to meriting membership in that galaxy.
</p>
<p>    Scholars, program-note writers, even novelists, have haggled for years about Opus 111, specifically about why Beethoven cut off the work at the knees after only two movements. (The other two-movement sonatas among the ”32“ are of slighter substance.) Simultaneously hard at work on the Ninth Symphony, he is supposed to have snapped ”I don&#8217;t have the time“ to his friend Anton Schindler &#8212; who then, naturally, bestowed immortality upon the remark by including it in his Beethoven biography. Some of the most turgid pages in Thomas Mann‘s Doctor Faustus describe the struggles of the pedant Kretschmar to ”explain“ Beethoven&#8217;s decision.
</p>
<p>   There is no more convincing explanation, however, than the one Beethoven has provided in the music itself &#8212; in, for that matter, just the final three notes of its 18-or-so-minute second movement. The kernel of this movement is a three-note figure, heard at the outset and then built upon, a questioning motif whose answer will be long withheld. The music blossoms outward in many ways: first in a series of variations which become so complex that the printed page turns black from the abundance of notes; then in a recession toward barrenness, to a point where right and left hands play one-finger tunes at opposite ends of the keyboard. At no point in this progression is there any real ”answer“ to that three-note ”question“ &#8212; until, that is, the closing bar, soft and sunlit, where a perfect C-major cadence, again a single breath of but three notes, fulfills the music‘s long-unanswered question and moves us onto some other plane. Neither applause nor further music is the logical consequence of such an ending. Neither Beethoven nor Kovacevich could control the former; Beethoven controlled the latter in the best way possible. (Kovacevich did reward his ovation with one assuaging Beethoven Bagatelle, but only after the tumult had fully destroyed the serenity of the preceding moments.)
</p>
<p>   Kovacevich is part of that other galaxy, along with Murray Perahia and Richard Goode: American pianists on one or the other side of 60, brainy, dedicated and admirably resistant to notions of quick crowd wooing via Rach 3 and Mussorgsky. As a cocky teenager in Berkeley, he told me of his planned stairway to eminence through studies with the formidable Myra Hess; I advised him not to quit his day job, or words to that effect. Now he&#8217;s exactly where he planned to be (and neither of us has a day job).
</p>
<p>   His Beethoven program last week was full of interesting correspondences. As in Opus 111, the last movement of Opus 101 builds a rich and varied structure &#8212; angular and sharp-edged rather than seraphic and serene &#8212; out of a tiny fragment of a theme (only two notes, this time). In both works you are held in a tension that borders on agony as the music unfolds. In both works the final resolution carries you to a state close to ecstasy. You have to wonder at the composer‘s control over his inner demons &#8212; with a body in which deafness was probably the least painful of his chronic afflictions &#8212; that could produce the sublime substance of such music and, even more, the shaping of that substance into the vast time structures that hold us all in its grip. The truly brainy among pianists know to penetrate the notes of this music and also the spirit behind them; this is what I heard from Kovacevich the other night, to his credit and my pleasure.
</p>
<p>    By coincidence or design, last week&#8217;s Philharmonic program included two great works also cut off at the knees. The first was the two surviving movements &#8212; miraculous in every bar &#8212; of the B-minor Symphony that Schubert abandoned short of completion, for reasons we will never understand. The other was the tense and disturbing Adagio completed by Gustav Mahler for a projected 10th Symphony that he did not live to finish. (The entire work, completed by other hands from surviving sketches, was performed by the Philharmonic earlier this season, conducted by James DePriest.) In between came more of Kovacevich‘s Beethoven, a spirited tear through the early C-major Piano Concerto.
</p>
<p>    Heinrich Schiff was on the podium: extraordinary cellist, extraordinary conductor. (I had missed his cello concertos the week before. Rachmaninoff&#8217;s Second Symphony was also on that program, a work that &#8212; after 57 years of professional writing &#8212; I have earned the right to abjure.) His conducting of Schubert and Mahler had a cellist‘s touch, the remarkable warmth of tone that came from a fine control over balance. The tunes in the ”Unfinished“ are so captivating that we can overlook another of the work&#8217;s compelling qualities: the scoring, most of all the romantic use of trombones that Schubert can be said to have invented &#8212; in this work, the Rosamunde music and the Ninth Symphony.
</p>
<p>   The ”Unfinished“ is one of those works easily dismissed with an ”oh no, not that again“ shrug, until an exceptional performance grabs us by the ears and obliges our rediscovery. From the opening whisper of the cellos (even though joined on Friday &#8212; aaargh! &#8212; by the electronic squeal of cell phone or hearing aid that blights our concert life nowadays) it was obvious that Schiff and the orchestra had something new to tell us about this work &#8211;and, therefore, that Schubert did, too.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Passionate and&#160;Preposterous</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2001/04/passionate-and-preposterous/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2001/04/passionate-and-preposterous/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 25 Apr 2001 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=342</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[You could write a history of musical consumerism around the varied positions that Bach‘s St. Matthew Passion has held on the scene in the quarter-millennium of its existence. You start with the century of neglect, then the rediscovery and reconstruction in the squishy harmonies to endow the work with proper Victorian manners. Then came the [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>You could write a history of musical consumerism around the varied positions that Bach‘s St. Matthew Passion has held on the scene in the quarter-millennium of its existence. You start with the century of neglect, then the rediscovery and reconstruction in the squishy harmonies to endow the work with proper Victorian manners. Then came the further inflation to college-glee-club proportions, then the purification back to the ”what the composer might have heard“ proportions in the 1950s&#8217; ”authenticity“ groundswell. These many sizes are all &#8212; or at least once were &#8212; available on recordings. In my days as a schoolboy collector, the one available St. Matthew seemed to suffice, the glee-club-size English-language mayhem wrought by Serge Koussevitzky and the Boston Symphony on 27 &#8212; count ‘em &#8212; 78-rpm discs. Now, in this era of ludicrous overabundance, I&#8217;ve received three new versions just in the last few months.
</p>
<p>    One of these is by Helmuth Rilling, who as head of the International Bach Academy in Stuttgart is overseeing the complete 172-disc Bach project on Hanssler and who conducted the work with the Philharmonic and assembled vocal forces here last week. I am one of Rilling‘s staunch admirers &#8212; defenders, even, when necessary &#8212; whose praises I have often sung after performances here and at the Oregon Bach Festival. I would describe his Bach as middle-of-the-road modern. His forces at the Music Center were larger than the authenticity nuts might countenance: the 75 or so members of the USC Thornton Choral Artists plus the 29 boys and (horror!) girls of the Paulist Choristers of California; the Philharmonic players in similar numbers. He did not hesitate to add an occasional expressive ritard at the end of arias and chorales. Matthias Goerne, who delivered the words of Jesus, was allowed enough vibrato to transmute his singing into pure heartbreak. So was the orchestra&#8217;s concertmaster, Martin Chalifour, whose solo violin around Ingeborg Danz‘s ”Erbarme dich“ haunts me still. So was the tenor Christopher Cock, a last-minute replacement, who sang the narration as a disembodied onlooking angel &#8212; inauthentically, perhaps, but to extraordinary effect.
</p>
<p>   Even within the secular confines of Mrs. Chandler&#8217;s Pavilion, with the outside bustle clearly audible and the extra music from the disc peddlers during intermission &#8212; am I the only one who finds this an intrusion? &#8212; the work made its impact, the Hand of God in every glorious detail.
</p>
<p>    In one of those coincidences that keep the planning of this column from ever turning routine, there were other forces at work at USC last week to provide other music that told a similar story and with similar impact. Francis Poulenc‘s Dialogues of the Carmelites retells the Passion and Crucifixion in another but comparable setting: the murder by guillotine of Carmelite nuns clinging to their faith during France&#8217;s Reign of Terror. Poulenc‘s opera, which dates from the 1950s, is quiet on its surface but turbulent within, its disturbance captured in the swirl of half-tinted harmonies.
</p>
<p>    It was an act of bravery for USC&#8217;s Thornton Opera Workshop to take on this work &#8212; not for the first time, by the way. Timothy Lindberg‘s not-bad orchestra fared reasonably well with Poulenc&#8217;s pastels; Nicola Bowie‘s directorial hand moved the action convincingly, and there were a few voices that I will gladly hear again when some more seasoning has set in. The only thing wrong, in fact, was the English translation, which was extremely wrong. It is by the late Joseph Machlis, &#8212;&#8212;&#8211;<br />
AUTHOR of the most condescending &#8212; and most lucrative &#8212; of all college music-appreciation texts, who also headed a one-man translation factory capable of transforming librettos in any foreign language into verbal fudge. And so the subtle glints of Georges Bernanos&#8217; French words were turned lumpy and percussive in the thudding of Machlis‘ consonants, and by that margin of error it would have been better if USC&#8217;s efforts simply hadn‘t taken place.
</p>
<p>    Late last month, yet another student ensemble from USC, led by the fearless Donald Crockett, had taken over one of the Philharmonic&#8217;s Green Umbrella concerts, in a program of important and difficult music by Louis Andriessen and Morton Feldman. Both the Times‘ Mark Swed and I praised the enterprise but suggested &#8212; each of us in a single, somewhat wistful sentence &#8212; that the young performing forces may have been in over their collective heads.
</p>
<p>    Ka-booom! A week later the Times published a fulminating response to Swed&#8217;s review by Stephen Hartke, a composer on the USC faculty who has also worked for the Philharmonic as a pre-concert lecturer and program annotator, and who had at this very concert taken credit for its planning. Unearthing just about every cliche in the eternal cat-vs.-dog between the creative and the critical community, and shooting himself in the foot at every turn, Hartke proclaimed that musicians and critics ”view each other with morbid fascination.“ Criticism is ”forever earthbound, mired in the banal necessity of making the nonverbal verbal.“ Swed‘s single sentence becomes a copious flow of venom, directed at a ”rare and stunning performance that a large and diverse audience had responded to with prolonged enthusiasm.“
</p>
<p>   Aside from several layers of conflict of interest involved &#8212; Hartke does, after all, glean a few bucks from the Philharmonic in the banal process of making the nonverbal verbal &#8212; he glides rather glibly over the fact that, sure, the cheers rang out in Zipper Hall that night, from a clearly partisan audience of USC classmates. The worst aspect of Hartke&#8217;s blatantly self-serving letter, in fact, is its subtext: the factionalism that instills deep divisions with-in the new-music scene. The USC crowd hangs together and yells its collective self hoarse at each other‘s accomplishments; so does the UCLA crowd; so does the CalArts crowd; they travel with their own cheering sections. (Last week&#8217;s EAR Unit concert came well-equipped with CalArts cheerleaders, but I looked in vain for faculty members from other schools, even though USC‘s Crockett was among the performers.) The Los Angeles area is one of the most active new-music venues in the country, and every event should ideally nourish and stimulate the entire community. Actions like Stephen Hartke&#8217;s preposterous letter can only slow the process.
</p>
<p>   And by the way, I make the necessity of making the nonverbal verbal my most rewarding challenge &#8212; and not a bit banal.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>LOTFI</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2001/04/lotfi/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2001/04/lotfi/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sun, 22 Apr 2001 21:12:58 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Opera News]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=1791</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Half a century ago almost to the day, a 21-year-old  dollar-a-gig super in an Otello in Los Angeles’ cavernous Shrine Auditorium was so bitten by the operatic bug that he chucked his pre-medical studies forthwith. Fifty years later, on the telephone from his general director’s office at the San Francisco Opera – back from a [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Half a century ago almost to the day, a 21-year-old  dollar-a-gig super in an <em>Otello</em> in Los Angeles’ cavernous Shrine Auditorium was so bitten by the operatic bug that he chucked his pre-medical studies forthwith. Fifty years later, on the telephone from his general director’s office at the San Francisco Opera – back from a bit of moonlighting, staging Mozart’s <em>Idomeneo</em> for the San Diego Opera – Lotfi Mansouri accounts for those past years in his usual voluble exuberance. “My life has all been spent in interesting places at interesting times. Back home in Iran after college, I worked at the Shah’s opera house just before he was overthrown. Later there were the thirteen years as head of the Canadian Opera in Toronto, struggling to get a proper opera house built – which didn’t happen and still hasn’t – but otherwise watching the city explode from a provincial nowhere to a major cultural venue. Then the fourteen years in San Francisco, including an earthquake, an orchestra strike, a struggle to get this proper opera house put back together – which, thank God, did happen.”</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">Those San Francisco years end &#8212; officially at least &#8212; this summer, as Mansouri vacates his office to Pamela Rosenberg, the company’s fifth general director in its 78-year history and its first native Californian. His name may be off the door, but the traces remain. He owes the company one more production, a <em>Merry Widow</em> scheduled for December. “I had thought to make my exit quietly, on the Marschallin’s arm at the end of <em>Der Rosenkavalier</em>,” he says. “Now I’ll waltz my way out the door to a bit of Lehár instead, arm-in-arm with Flicka von Stade.” One of his future projects involves a book – not the name-dropping tell-all memoir that retired opera impresarios have been known to write, but “something about the growth of opera as an art form in my lifetime.”</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">His contributions to that growth – and, more to the point, to the growth of operatic consumership in his time – are indeed impressive. It was during his stewardship in Toronto that he dreamed up the notion of English-language “supertitles” (simply from watching an opera on TV and applying a little common sense). If any development has most drastically changed the sight and sound of opera, and the breadth of its appeal, in Mansouri’s quarter-century, it would be this rupture of the language barrier – opposed by some managements at first (famously, by the Met), now a worldwide fact of life.</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">It doesn’t stop with the supertitles, however. Even San Francisco’s 1989 earthquake had its operatic up side. “The house was damaged,” he remembers, “enough so that some of the board members thought we should just shut down for two years during the seismic retrofitting. I managed to convince them that that approach could be fatal.” What the company did instead was to broaden the venue. In the cavernous Civic Auditorium, in-the-round performances played to thousands more seats than at the main house, and attracted thousands more young operagoers. In another daring move, Mansouri moved the company into a downtown movie theater for a run of <em>La Bohème</em> with several casts – not just the five or six performances of a regular opera season but upwards of thirty. “We sold over 45,000 tickets,” Mansouri gloatingly recalls, “and when the Opera House reopened, a lot of these new people came back with us.”</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">Some there are, of course, who recoil in horror at what they discern as “rank populism” under Mansouri’s years – compared, say, to the iron-fist elitism of Kurt Herbert Adler, the predecessor once removed. Even the company’s forays into commissioning new opera, it has been claimed, bear the taint of movieland – easy-listening works such as Conrad Susa’s <em>Dangerous Liaisons</em>, André Previn’s  <em>A Streetcar Named Desire</em> and last season’s <em>Dead Man Walking</em> by the relatively unknown Jake Heggie. Mansouri points out that Alban Berg’s <em>Lulu</em> needed a quarter-century to make its way into the repertory, but that <em>Streetcar</em> sold out its opening night and <em>Dead Man</em> warranted an additional performance.</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">“Of what am I the most proud?” he wonders aloud. “It’s the work I have done to spread the notion that opera is for everyone. People thought I was crazy to run <em>La Bohème</em> for thirty performances in a movie theater, but now Baz Luhrman is bringing his production to Broadway next season. Perhaps my directing hasn’t all that experimental, but at least I’ve shown opera as musical theater – as a very long MTV if you prefer.</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">“There will be plenty of my work on view here in San Francisco for several years. My 1997 <em>Tosca </em>returns next season, and there will be more of me at least through 2004. No, I won’t be here for the stagings. A friend gave me some good advice.</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">“ ‘Don’t ooze out,’ he said. ‘GET out.’ ”</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>The Generation&#160;Gap</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2001/04/the-generation-gap/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2001/04/the-generation-gap/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 18 Apr 2001 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=341</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Dirty old man gets hots for sweet young thing, ends up with egg on face. A week that began with Der Rosenkavalier in Costa Mesa and moved on to Don Pasquale at the Music Center bore reminders of how much of the realm of operatic comedy rests on that one plot device, and of how [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Dirty old man gets hots for sweet young thing, ends up with egg on face. A week that began with Der Rosenkavalier in Costa Mesa and moved on to Don Pasquale at the Music Center bore reminders of how much of the realm of operatic comedy rests on that one plot device, and of how many changes can, indeed, be rung on it. The Figaro operas, Verdi&#8217;s and Nicolai‘s Falstaff, Die Meistersinger . . . the list goes on.
</p>
<p>    It&#8217;s a treacherous repertory. Musical ensembles are difficult to balance, all the more so when the matter is a duet between a fat, loud basso profundo, tossing off torrents of words, and a chirpy soubrette kicking back, and when the action proceeds lickety-split. The ideal comic-opera audience is denied much time to breathe. I checked what I‘d written about the L.A. Opera&#8217;s first Don Pasquale &#8212; the same Jean-Pierre Ponnelle production, staged by the same Stephen Lawless &#8212; in March 1995: exquisite set, audiences limp with helpless laughter, no gimmicks, only the comic spirit at its most vibrant. Last week, six years later, I saw a dusty old set wobbling in every breeze, an audience (this member, at least) limp with helpless boredom, a production loaded with stage gadgetry &#8212; the Norina in a floor-length formal ball gown, inexplicably hanging out the wash on a rooftop &#8212; the comic spirit vibrating in its death throes. When all goes well, Don Pasquale is short, snappy and brilliantly to the point. All didn‘t go so well on opening night, however, when some of the scene changes took up almost as much time as the scenes themselves.
</p>
<p>   Oh yes, there were moments. One in particular, which I always wait for, sounds a sudden note of seriousness for about three and one-half memorable seconds. Foolish old Pasquale has been tricked into marriage with the disguised Norina, who quickly turns vixen. At the height of their squabbling she slaps him, but immediately realizes that perhaps she has gone too far. The music slows and drops into a minor key; there is a breath-catching moment of self-examination. Ruth Ann Swenson, the Norina this time, went through this small bit in winsome pantomime, a memory I was happy to take home. My other fave moment comes soon after, the hilarious patter duet between the bassos &#8212; first the one, then the other, then both in a prodigy of sync. Claudio Desderi and Rodney Gilfry had all but stopped the show in 1995, but Simone Alaimo and Thomas Allen barely got the words out, against the flabby backdrop of Emmanuel Joel&#8217;s orchestra. Greg Fedderly was the Ernesto as in 1995, sporting an announced sinus condition to no audible detriment. But I had to go home and restore my faith in this masterpiece: the complete 1932 performance with Tito Schipa heading an inspired cast, still listed in Schwann, one of the genuine wonders of recorded opera. They don‘t make &#8216;em like that anymore.
</p>
<p>    Opera Pacific‘s Der Rosenkavalier cut no corners. Other productions of this wise and bittersweet comedy (the one self-indulgence my dietitian allows) have gotten by with a few judicious cuts here and there &#8212; the lecherous Baron Ochs&#8217; interminable first-act disquisition on bedroom politics, for one. Artistic director John DeMain‘s decision was to ignore the time clock, both by opening all cuts and by opting for tempos so spacious that even the opera&#8217;s most caloric segments &#8212; which, let‘s face it, are numerous &#8212; seemed downright healthful. The opera&#8217;s defining moment, the final trio in which possession of the heart and soul of the young Rose-Cavalier passes from the aging Marschallin to the ardent adolescent Sophie, flowed like the purest Viennese Schlagobers under the star-studded sky of Bruno Schwengl‘s garden set.
</p>
<p>    Texas-born Helen Donath, a longtime Opera Pacific stalwart, was the wise if somewhat soft-spoken Marschallin; Patricia Risley, in her company debut, was an athletic, scene-stealing, thoroughly believable Octavian; Nancy Allen Lundy was the sweet-voiced if rather pallid Sophie. German bass Markus Hollop was the woolly-voiced Ochs. Best of all was James Maddalena &#8212; remembered as the Tricky Dick of Nixon in China when DeMain conducted the Houston world premiere &#8212; as the nouveau riche Faninal.
</p>
<p>   Above any of these individual contributions, the essence of this Rosenkavalier lay in the shaping force of DeMain&#8217;s musical leadership, plus the luminescence of his orchestra on an admirably good horn night. Jay Lesenger‘s direction was a further positive force; the last-act hijinks, the farce played on the hapless Ochs, unrolled with a rare antic wisdom. The many hours moved swiftly forward.
</p>
<p>    Onto another planet there came Harry Christophers&#8217; vocal ensemble called The Sixteen, filling the acoustically splendid Precious Blood Church with Holy Week music by Tomas Luis de Victoria &#8212; presented, need I add, by the Da Camera Society‘s Chamber Music in Historic Sites. The Spanish-born Victoria (1549&#8211;1611) worked in Rome, at a time when the fabulous counterpoints of the High Renaissance music were becoming “polluted” with the dissonances and passionate melodic lines of the early baroque. A full evening of Victoria&#8217;s Lamentations for Thursday, Friday and Saturday, the dark days leading to Easter, became a stirring, heartrending experience &#8212; as would that other sublime masterwork meant for the same time of year, Bach‘s St. Matthew Passion (about which more next week), 150 years later. Christophers&#8217; superb vocal group, like their compatriots the Tallis Scholars, have moved some distance from the oh-so-pure attitudes that bleached out the first years of Britain‘s early-music revival. They have corrupted their ranks by admitting (horror!) women. They sing with the awareness that their music is beautiful, which it overwhelmingly, powerfully is.
</p>
<p>    By interesting coincidence, the next night found the Los Angeles Chamber Orchestra at Royce Hall, under guest conductor and early-music authority Bernard Labadie of Quebec, performing the two early Haydn symphonies that bear subtitles relating to Holy Week observance (Nos. 26, “Lamentation,” and 49, “Passion”), vivid Sturm-und-Drang pieces teeming &#8212; as had the Victoria works &#8212; with dissonance and outcry. Pergolesi&#8217;s Stabat Mater shared the program, also appropriate for the season, but otherwise one of music‘s droopier landmarks.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Scores To&#160;Settle</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2001/04/scores-to-settle/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2001/04/scores-to-settle/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 04 Apr 2001 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=340</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Sometimes you have to ask yourself: Does the world deserve me, or vice versa? ”My opinion is correct; therefore, your opinion must be wrong“; so &#8212; in so many words &#8212; writes a self-appointed protector of Stravinsky on last week‘s Letters page. ”Natter natter,“ says a man no longer young, seated behind me at last [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Sometimes you have to ask yourself: Does the world deserve me, or vice versa?
</p>
<p>    ”My opinion is correct; therefore, your opinion must be wrong“; so &#8212; in so many words &#8212; writes a self-appointed protector of Stravinsky on last week‘s Letters page.
</p>
<p>   ”Natter natter,“ says a man no longer young, seated behind me at last week&#8217;s Richard Goode recital: ”Left-hand rhythms, natter, Horowitz, chatter, Rubinstein, clatter“ &#8212; all in the voice of authority clearly aimed at edifying the several rows around us. Later I learn, as I had guessed, that he‘s a pianist not yet recognized.
</p>
<p>   At a press conference, a disheveled type pushes toward me. ”I hope you live long enough to take back everything you&#8217;ve ever written about Leonard Bernstein,“ he growls, and shoves off before I can answer. If I took back everything, the ratio of yea to nay would probably be exactly what it is now. Some people have selective memories. And I always weep buckets at the end of West Side Story.
</p>
<p>   Changing my mind, through the discovery of new evidence against a long-held prejudice or simply through a sudden realignment of the gray cells, is one of my favorite exercises, even when &#8212; as recently, alas &#8212; it proves futile. It got me to the Philharmonic‘s final Stravinsky program, the Green Umbrella event at Zipper Hall three weeks ago, despite my previous words of displeasure toward the dry-point music of the composer&#8217;s late years. It got me to the full orchestral concert last week, in hopes of re-examining my often-expressed distaste for the sound and substance of Sibelius. Among my fellow Sibeliophobes, after all, the Seventh Symphony holds a place of honor because of its brevity.
</p>
<p>   Abraham and Isaac was the major novelty on the Stravinsky program, a setting by the octogenarian composer of biblical verses, set to what I still hear as random zigzag lines vaguely related to 12-tone techniques Stravinsky attempted to swallow in his late years. The considerable power this time lay in Sanford Sylvan‘s eloquent delivery, from memory, of the Hebrew text. By far the best of the concert was the Octet from four decades previous; that work is also fashioned out of jagged lines, but they are so ordered that each one becomes a lightning stroke. The performance under Esa-Pekka Salonen, in my admittedly warped opinion, was the best thing in the entire Stravinsky festival.
</p>
<p>   A Sibeliophile friend up north, with whom I have argued for over half a century, wrote that Salonen&#8217;s performance of the Seventh, which he had heard during the Philharmonic‘s recent Bay Area visit, was not to be missed. Maybe so, but in the performance at the Music Center last week, I heard what I always hear in this work: tortured, gesturesome oratory buried down deep inside an orchestration murky and impenetrable. It probably did sound better in the intense, bright acoustics of San Francisco&#8217;s Davies Symphony Hall; at the Dorothy Chandler Pavilion, little came off the stage. When Walt Disney Concert Hall is finished, this is the music they should use for sound check, but I can‘t think of any other reason for performing it.
</p>
<p>    Music very old and very new: Among recent musical events, two concerts also projected the always-fascinating interaction of sight and sound. Jordi Savall came to Royce Hall with Hesperion &#8220;I, his early-music ensemble (its title newly updated, as befits the new century), in a program from the Sephardic Diaspora, 700 years old plus or minus, in a cultural swath from Spain to the Middle East. A remarkable and most lovable force majeure, this Savall, whom we admire from recordings (the Bach Suites on Astree, the ”Eroica“ on Fontalis), the one-of-a-kind film Tous les Matins du Monde and, better yet, these explorations into a particularly color-drenched region of ancient musical history. Listening to his splendid players in dances, chants, love songs and ecstatic religious outbursts &#8212; most of it improvised or leached out of manuscript fragments &#8212; you can&#8217;t help entertaining visions of mosaics and frescoes spangled with glints of gold. In a world blessed with dozens of early-music specialists and ensembles, Savall‘s group has settled into a niche peculiarly &#8212; and wonderfully &#8211;its own.
</p>
<p>    By an interesting coincidence, this Sunday afternoon concert at Royce was followed, a short stroll away, by more ancient Mediterranean music: the players, singers and whirling dervishes of the Damascus-based Al-Kindi Ensemble in a program that seemed to pick up from Hesperion&#8217;s music and transport it farther to the east. To a nonbeliever the music bordered on the interminable, the ecstatic whirling somewhat strange in a concert-hall setting but exhilarating nonetheless. Both concerts, by the way, were unnecessarily amplified.
</p>
<p>   At last week‘s Green Umbrella, Donald Crockett brought the USC Thornton Contemporary Music Ensemble and Chamber Choir into a brush with two widely differing recent painting-inspired works: Louis Andriessen&#8217;s 1985 Mondrian tribute De Stijl and Morton Feldman‘s 1971 Rothko Chapel. You couldn&#8217;t find two works further apart in sound and substance &#8212; Andriessen‘s exuberant incursion into Piet Mondrian&#8217;s own mingled passions for geometry and boogie-woogie, Feldman‘s capturing in near silence the deep and poignant mystery of the small building in Houston that houses Rothko&#8217;s last work. Memorable, the courage (almost but not entirely rewarded) that would entrust these two killer masterworks to student forces; memorable also the chance to experience them side by side.
</p>
<p>   There had been good things along the way in Richard Goode‘s well-attended Music Center concert, but his management of the inexorable rise and fall and rise again of the emotion in the concluding Beethoven sonata was by some distance the evening&#8217;s highlight. I‘ve already used the word ecstatic twice, but I&#8217;ve also never found a better way to describe the final five minutes of this work, Beethoven‘s next-to-last sonata, the A-flat Opus 110. The fugue, its theme about as simple as a cohesive musical idea can be, is halted for a moment by a slow intrusion. It struggles, shakes itself free and resumes its inexorable forward momentum. Higher and higher it climbs, and the harmony intensifies like the slow turning of a screw. Like the aforementioned Bernstein bit, it&#8217;s music I can‘t think about without going bananas.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>The Gadfly in the&#160;Grove</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2001/03/the-gadfly-in-the-grove/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2001/03/the-gadfly-in-the-grove/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 28 Mar 2001 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=339</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[George Grove, lighthouse builder Precious words abide. In 1986, I turned up in one of the Grove dictionaries as “an unpredictable gadfly”; now, in the latest Grove, I still am. At least they spelled my name right, both times. The latest arrival is the second edition of The New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>George Grove, lighthouse builder
</p>
<p>    Precious words abide. In 1986, I turned up in one of the Grove dictionaries as “an unpredictable gadfly”; now, in the latest Grove, I still am. At least they spelled my name right, both times.
</p>
<p>    The latest arrival is the second edition of The New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians (hereafter NewGroveII). In the 21 years since NewGroveI the noble and time-honored lexicon has proliferated; the family now includes AmeriGrove, OperaGrove, JazzGrove and SheGrove (women composers). In its print version, NewGroveII consists of 29 volumes (up from the 20 of NewGroveI ); there‘s an index volume, for the first time since 1890; there are 29,000 articles, for a total of 25 million words (their count, not mine); nearly 9,000 of the articles are newly commissioned; 2,000 articles are on world music, compared to a mere 1,000 in NewGroveI. There is also an online edition, already available if still making its way toward completion; you get a few messages about such-and-such a file still being “under development.” The accompanying literature promises updates four times a year. At the moment, however, making your way through NewGroveII.com is a little like taking a hard-hat tour. The asking price is $4,850 for the print edition, and $295 per year for the online version. You could always wait for the movie.
</p>
<p>   Perhaps I shouldn&#8217;t strike so lightheaded a note about the most prestigious publication in any field of the arts, for this latest Grove, like every one of its predecessors, is exactly that. Few publications in any language challenge its awesome inclusiveness. Take an overview of the way the Grove editors have defined “inclusiveness” in every succeeding edition and you end up with a fascinating map with consistently expanding borders, a study in the evolution of musical taste. Take just one example, comparing the content of NewGroveI and NewGroveII: In the 1980 edition the alphabetical sequence went from “Raoux” to “Rapeguero”; in the NewGroveII the sequence is “Raoux” to “Rap” to “Rapeguero,” with David Toop‘s piece on rap decked out with an impressive bibliography.
</p>
<p>    George Grove (1820&#8211;1900) was the kind of dedicated connoisseur the English have always been particularly good at breeding. His father was a fishmonger at Charing Cross; young George studied engineering, and built cast-iron lighthouses in Jamaica and Bermuda. Somehow he got from there to a secretaryship at London&#8217;s Crystal Palace, where he wrote program notes for concerts. An admiring George Bernard Shaw noted that Grove “fed on Beethoven‘s symphonies as the gods in Das Rheingold fed on the apples of Freia.” With his friend Arthur Sullivan (of “Gilbert-and-” fame) he played a huge role in unearthing Schubert manuscripts that had been scattered among collections all over Europe. In 1873 he joined the publishing firm of Macmillan to edit their new Dictionary of Music and Musicians; the first of four volumes appeared in 1879. His own articles on Beethoven, Schubert and Mendelssohn were included in the first three editions, although their content of passion extended them far out of proportion to other articles &#8212; 57 pages for Mendelssohn against 12 for Bach. (Grove&#8217;s three articles were eventually dropped, and published in a separate volume in 1951 &#8212; worth the search.)
</p>
<p>    Bach and Mendelssohn had regained their proper size long before NewGroveII, but something of Grove himself persists. Along with such later avatars as England‘s Donald Tovey and our own Nicolas Slonimsky, Grove was a special breed of compiler, clearly descended from the archetypal Samuel Johnson, with his own Dictionary of 100 years before. Unlike the straight-arrow collaborators on Germany&#8217;s Musik in Geschichte und Gegenwart &#8212; the only effort comparable in size and splendor &#8212; Grove‘s people always seem to emulate the master in dispensing incontestable information with one hand and an unmistakable passion for their subjects with the other. Whether you land at Toop&#8217;s well-documented pieces on rap, gangsta and hip-hop, or Robert Winters‘ new Schubert study, with all the recently discovered and re-evaluated big works in proper perspective, the old sense I&#8217;ve always gotten from Grove &#8212; the strange but lovable mix of deep research and deep feeling &#8212; remains in place in this new edition. (I did find it disheartening, though, to discover in the Schubert article two song titles misspelled on the same line: “Liebesbotschat” for “Liebesbotschaft” and “Standcher” for “Standchen.”)
</p>
<p>   There are, of course, other nits to pick, as in any 25-million-word undertaking. We are reminded once again that our overseas colleagues still haven‘t accepted the notion of cultural possibilities this far from Big Ben; this shows up in an ongoing tendency to allot Los Angeles &#8212; and everything else west of the Alleghenies &#8212; only the shortest of shrift. The first version of the current Los Angeles article appeared in 1980, returned in the 1986 AmeriGrove, expanded ever so slightly for the 1992 OperaGrove and now has shrunk back for its current incarnation. It is the work of the venerable UCLA scholar Robert Stevenson. It takes the Los Angeles Opera (under its former, now-obsolete title) up to its 1986 opening night and no further, ignores entirely any new-music developments and, in short, writes off as unimportant the nearly two decades of growth that have defined this area.
</p>
<p>    Okay, it&#8217;s a small matter &#8212; if not as small as Dr. Stevenson and his editors would have the world believe. Here is something of greater concern. In considering with awe and admiration this new blockbuster compilation of everything in music worth knowing, you may stop to wonder where it all fits in the currently troubled world of serious musical thinking. Will all that knowledge &#8212; about Schubert, or hip-hop, or Duke Ellington (with Andre Hodeir‘s original article eloquently expanded by Gunther Schuller) &#8212; create a new generation of music consumer adept in the use of ears and in processing the information they harvest?
</p>
<p>    Several weeks ago one of our serious-music radio stations, one without commercials and therefore, you want to believe, free to explore interesting cultural byways, canceled a popular weekly program devoted to music before Bach. When confronted with complaints, an executive explained that the station preferred to concentrate on “significant” composers &#8212; thus relegating to “insignificance” such nonentities as Purcell, Monteverdi, Palestrina, Dufay, Machaut or Hildegard von Bingen. I don&#8217;t know what musical treatises grace the bookshelves of KUSC‘s Brenda Barnes, if any, but if you had to guess which &#8212; the 29 volumes of NewGroveII or one of the dozens of current sleazeball tomes with names like Mozart for Idiots and Who&#8217;s Afraid of Classical Music? &#8212; you wouldn‘t need my help. Whatever its greatness, the indispensible new Grove just might become, against today&#8217;s cultural realities, an insignificant other.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>As Good As It&#160;Gets</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2001/03/as-good-as-it-gets/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2001/03/as-good-as-it-gets/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 21 Mar 2001 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=338</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Murray Perahia‘s concert at the Cerritos Center last week strengthened my conviction that he is the most satisfactory, the most honorable, American pianist. Watching him at work, you are touched by his sublime confidence. He knows what he&#8217;s good at, and he tells you that what he‘s good at is also what he loves. He [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Murray Perahia‘s concert at the Cerritos Center last week strengthened my conviction that he is the most satisfactory, the most honorable, American pianist. Watching him at work, you are touched by his sublime confidence. He knows what he&#8217;s good at, and he tells you that what he‘s good at is also what he loves. He has little to do with the knock-&#8217;em-down repertory that serves other pianists as hobbyhorses; Bach dines well at his table, but not Rach. At Cerritos he shared the stage and the program with the much-loved small British ensemble the Academy of St. Martin&#8211;in-the-Fields; he performed concertos by Bach and Mozart, conducting from the keyboard, then stood to lead Mozart‘s 40th Symphony. He has often led his own concerto performances; now he is branching into standup conducting as well. Wish him well; his performance of that troubled, overpowering masterwork among Mozart&#8217;s symphonies was forthright and beautifully proportioned. Using a work of that seriousness to end a concert, instead of tucking it in as a curtain raiser as some conductors do with Mozart, was further proof of Perahia‘s high intelligence.
</p>
<p>    What&#8217;s my favorite Mozart piano concerto? people feel the need to ask. “The last one I‘ve heard,” is my standard reply. Right now, therefore, it&#8217;s the G-major, K. 453, which Perahia played last week. It‘s one of the more lighthearted on the list, a creation of light and air and even &#8212; as Mozart himself confessed &#8212; bird song. In most of his mature concertos, special miracles happen when Mozart brings the orchestra&#8217;s woodwinds forward to mingle their own dreams with those of the pianist. In this concerto there is such a passage midway in the first movement, at the start of the development: flute, oboes and bassoons melding into a mellow dialogue about nothing in particular, up and down the scale, as the piano‘s triplets surround them in flickering soft lights. This is chamber music at its most enlightened, a conversation among equals who know how to blend without losing individuality. A virtuoso pianist in a large-scale performance &#8212; the noble Rubinstein, say, or the elder Serkin &#8212; backed at full volume by a symphony orchestra, can miss the whole point of this quiet miracle, and I have the discs to prove it. At Cerritos, even through cough-ridden air as if a siege of black lung had settled in, that mysterious moment became magic, and so did the moments around it.
</p>
<p>   Then there was Bach, the same D-minor Concerto whose powers and eloquence Andras Schiff had convincingly demonstrated with the Philharmonic last November. Yet there were new things to discover, above all the way Perahia shaped the flexible, rhapsodic one-finger melody that hangs in the air like a meditation, a benediction, above the gruff, stentorian, repeated bass line in the slow movement. You talk about Bach as the monarch of musical squareness; go listen to that remarkable movement &#8212; on Perahia&#8217;s new Sony disc, or the Schiff, or the crazy-wonderful Glenn Gould &#8212; and find your horizons broadened, your estimates of “square” shattered.
</p>
<p>   It was, in case all this gush hasn‘t gotten through, a marvelous concert, one of two extraordinary, uplifting, unforgettable events so far this season.
</p>
<p>    The other was, of course, the Orange County Philharmonic Society&#8217;s Vivaldi program at Costa Mesa, with the incomparable Cecilia Bartoli and the lively, enterprising small ensemble called Il Giardino Armonico, who together provided a garden of harmonies such as only the serenest angels might provide. It‘s tempting to draw parallels between the two supreme artists whose praises I sing herewith. They share an off-the-wall definition of appropriate repertory. As Perahia&#8217;s abjuring the Rach 3, so Bartoli‘s abstaining from Carmen or Amneris; yet the one plays Mozart and Bach, and the other sings Vivaldi.
</p>
<p>    She sang &#8212; a varied and generous program fattened with a garland of encores that cantilevered well past quitting time &#8212; and each new number was a further revelation of how little we know about this revolutionary Italian composer who taught young girls most of his life and composed music of a depth of passion such that no young girl then or now should be allowed to hear unchaperoned. The arias sang of love requited, and of the unrequited itch. A mother&#8217;s blood turns icy at her dead son‘s ghost, and the stillness is wrenched by turns of harmony that Mahler, two centuries later, might countenance. The breezes tell the shepherdess of love, and we must giggle along. The repertory, still too little known, is rich and glorious; what has happened in the Handel rediscovery must now take place for Vivaldi.
</p>
<p>   What is amazing above all is the care and wisdom that Bartoli has come to lavish on this music; you don&#8217;t expect that much explorative zeal from an operatic superstar at the height of her career. (Read Manuela Hoelterhoff‘s Bartoli book, Cinderella  Company, the best revelation there is on what it&#8217;s like to be a diva in operadom‘s daily snake pit, and you&#8217;ll glean more reasons to respect Bartoli‘s high art.) Her technique, above all her command of divisions in the coloratura singing &#8212; four notes in the space of one, then eight, then 16 &#8212; was close to awesome that night; pushing on toward 11 p.m., it was as fresh and lovable as at 8:30. She has really worked her way into the repertory; unlike the typical tour date, when the diva comes out and sings through her latest album, only two or three of her numbers were also on her Vivaldi disc (on Decca). Are there discernible horizons for an artist of that much skill and intelligence and the power to make strong-willed music critics weak in her presence? Why should there be?
</p>
<p>   I had entertained a few qualms about the Giardino Armonico, brought on by an overly cute TV promo of a few years back that smacked of Vivaldi vandalism &#8212; but no. Either the group has grown up or I have; their work with Bartoli, and in a couple of concertos nicely interspersed to give the diva some breathing time, became an honorable part of the love feast that night. I am not ordinarily given to superlatives (or “faves,” as one thuggish acquaintance calls them), but if I have ever attended a better vocal recital than this, it would have to be in some other incarnation, on some other planet.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Divine&#160;Madness</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2001/03/divine-madness/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2001/03/divine-madness/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 14 Mar 2001 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=337</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Leonard Bernstein, the story goes, once described Olivier Messiaen as ”God‘s cocktail pianist.“ Cute and to the point, I guess, but I wonder how many of His bar patrons would hang out, ordering refills, with Messiaen at the keyboard walloping away on his Vingt Regards sur l&#8217;Enfant-Jesus. One or two of these ”contemplations“ at a [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Leonard Bernstein, the story goes, once described Olivier Messiaen as ”God‘s cocktail pianist.“ Cute and to the point, I guess, but I wonder how many of His bar patrons would hang out, ordering refills, with Messiaen at the keyboard walloping away on his Vingt Regards sur l&#8217;Enfant-Jesus. One or two of these ”contemplations“ at a time, more-earthly pianists have found, can go a long way. At Pasadena‘s Neighborhood Church, where Mark Robson played the entire 20 as the latest program in the excellent ”Piano Spheres“ series, there were empty seats after intermission, and the fault was surely not Robson&#8217;s. The concert ran close to two and a half hours; it was a heroic, distinguished event.
</p>
<p>    I seem to be undergoing an epiphany of my own with Messiaen. His opera on St. Francis, which I had squirmed through in bafflement and boredom at the 1983 Paris premiere, turns out thrilling on the DG recording under Kent Nagano, as noted here a while back. And after expending some effort over the years dodging the Vingt Regards in live performance or disc, I found last week‘s hearing enthralling &#8212; exasperating, yes; hilarious at times, yes; monumentally overextended, yes beyond doubt &#8212; yet irresistible. There is some kind of human essence here, making itself known only after a journey beset by extreme and perilous torture.
</p>
<p>   Stirred though I am by the sheer impact of this music, I could not, of course, imagine myself or anyone else being converted to Messiaen&#8217;s exuberant Catholic piety just from hearing it, even as the composer draws the curtain back 20 separate times on the full repertory of the miracles of faith. He doesn‘t offer the personal shivers that we get all the way through the Bach Passions or in the last moments of Parsifal. He skips all the good storytelling in the Bible and takes us directly to Revelation, which he doesn&#8217;t so much explain as paint over its outlines with a full, wet brush.
</p>
<p>   The music‘s ancestry is easy to fathom: Liszt at his most flamboyant, Scriabin at his most crazed, the ecstatic visions of the much-undervalued Szymanowski. Add to this Messiaen&#8217;s apparent fascination with high-class trash: the parallel ninths and added-sixth chords of a particularly greasy jazz style itself descended from Ravel; some Gershwin (but not enough). What is truly great in this music, and it was enough to sustain quite a few people in Pasadena that night, is the range of color, resonance and sonority &#8212; that, and the act of faith and pure physical strength that the music demands from anyone foolhardy enough to take it on. I don‘t know whether I was made to care about Messiaen himself any more after the performance than I usually do; it was the process of turning his certifiably mad visions into dazzling piano music that made the evening memorable.
</p>
<p>    In their way, Mozart&#8217;s piano concertos are also visionary works; they offer as much proof as anyone needs of the existence of Higher Powers. Every so often the clouds part &#8212; at the end of the slow movement of K. 482, in the clarinet duet in the slow movement of K. 488 or the F-major episode in the finale of K. 503 &#8212; and God smiles down in joyous amazement. I had missed the Hollywood Bowl debut of the young Korean pianist Seung-Un Ha in 1998; her performance of K. 503 with Jeffrey Kahane and his Los Angeles Chamber Orchestra at Royce Hall last Friday bore eloquence and promise. Tall in stature and long of arm, with hair nearly as long as Kahane is tall, she writhed her way prettily through the work‘s majestic measures, reacting beautifully to the expressive high points, seconded by Kahane&#8217;s properly large-scale shaping of this extraordinary &#8212; if still too little-known &#8212; masterwork from Mozart‘s maturity.
</p>
<p>    Benjamin Britten&#8217;s Variations on a Theme of Frank Bridge was further adornment to a lively program, music we usually greet with an ”Oh no, not that again“ and then don‘t really listen. I listened this time; LACO&#8217;s gleaming string tone made it pleasurable. It‘s an exceptional work, Britten at 23, twisting his old teacher&#8217;s quite ordinary tune into a complex, fascinating compositional adventure: not merely ”variations“ in the classic sense but a whole series of twitchings and tweakings and, toward the end, rhapsodic excursions of piercing beauty. Arvo Part‘s Cantus in Memory of Benjamin Britten, 10 or so minutes of a single held breath, and Witold Lutoslawski&#8217;s early Dance Preludes, trivial against his later achievements but nicely tootled by LACO‘s clarinetist Gary Gray, rounded out the evening.
</p>
<p>    To end the third orchestral program in the Philharmonic&#8217;s admirable Stravinsky cycle, Esa-Pekka Salonen brilliantly delivered his by-now-familiar wingding version of the complete Firebird. As in the past, however, he did not convince me that the entire 44-minute span &#8212; with quite a lot of time-marking music running on and on, with, to be sure, gorgeous fairy-tale orchestration before the big numbers hit &#8212; is the right way to transplant this score from the dance stage to the concert hall. The prevailing belief &#8212; that the greater the stature of a composer, the more precious every note of the music &#8212; is threatened by historical realities; it would not surprise me someday to find the first 25 minutes of The Firebird in the same discard pile with, say, Beethoven‘s Variations on ”God Save the King“ and Wagner&#8217;s C-major Symphony.
</p>
<p>    Olli Mustonen was the alert soloist in Stravinsky‘s three works for piano and orchestra, his fingers kept so busy-busy in all three that he had less time than usual for the arm-windmill antics that make his playing hard to watch. Of these works, the two from the neoclassical 1920s &#8212; the Concerto for Piano and Winds, a masterpiece, and the Capriccio, modest and bubbly &#8212; were worth the effort. The third, the 1959 Movements, is short but awful, Stravinsky keeping up with the guys (Boulez and Berio, mostly), affecting the air of modernism that ends up as gross parody. Stravinsky biographer Stephen Walsh made a nice point in his pre-concert talk. The greatest dread of the modernist, he said, is that people won&#8217;t think you‘re modern enough. It certainly applies to the tatters that survive from Stravinsky&#8217;s pathetic last years. Movements put me in mind of a movie I once saw, with the senile Picasso quickly daubing his signature on small porcelain plates and handing them off to be sold. How sad.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Father of&#160;Reinvention</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2001/03/father-of-reinvention/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2001/03/father-of-reinvention/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 07 Mar 2001 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=336</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[The Philharmonic&#8217;s Stravinsky Festival is at its midpoint as I write. That the performances have been splendid is, of course, a given; something in Esa-Pekka Salonen&#8217;s own lively curiosity, his way of reacting to musical adventure of high audacity, the clear long-range vision that enables him to command the cumulative growth of a piece, are [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>
The Philharmonic&#8217;s Stravinsky Festival is at its midpoint as I write. That the performances have been splendid is, of course, a given; something in Esa-Pekka Salonen&#8217;s own lively curiosity, his way of reacting to musical adventure of high audacity, the clear long-range vision that enables him to command the cumulative growth of a piece, are marvelously engaged by Stravinsky&#8217;s own art. (That same control over developing line, which at times in the past has been challenged in Salonen&#8217;s forays into the earlier repertory, made his previous week&#8217;s performance of the Beethoven Seventh Symphony an exhilarating surprise.)</p>
<p>
The festival has been nicely planned; someone in the Philharmonic management obviously clings to the belief that a thinking audience still exists. Stravinsky&#8217;s own presence in Los Angeles has been explored in some depth, in discussions at several venues. Nobody has thought to revive any of Stravinsky&#8217;s unhappy run-ins with the movie machine &#8211; an insignificant effort from 1934 called <i>The Firebird</i>, which helped itself to some of that music; <i>Le Sacre du Printemps</i>, hacked to bits to assuage Disney&#8217;s dinosaurs in <i>Fantasia</i>; the planned score for <i>The Song of Bernadette</i> that ended up instead in the <i>Symphony in Three Movements</i> &#8211; and it&#8217;s just as well. Instead, we got to meet people who worked with Stravinsky&#8217;s music on happier projects. Bill Kraft, former Philharmonic percussionist, let loose some vivid memories at the first pre-concert program. The second program was even more vivid; dancers John Clifford, who had danced in <i>Agon</i> under George Balanchine, and Carole Valleskey, the Chosen One in the Joffrey Ballet&#8217;s restoration of the original <i>Le Sacre</i> choreography, re-enacted some of their steps in a space about the size of this page. Then we all went into the hall and heard <i>Agon</i> and <i>Le Sacre</i> with ears and eyes newly refreshed.</p>
<p>
In the hall there were other amenities: film with old Igor &#8211; always the congenial ham anywhere near a camera &#8211; abetting Nicolas Nabokov in killing a bottle of scotch; and with the teacher and earth mother Nadia Boulanger proclaiming a place for Stravinsky in the musical<i><br />
</i>firmament. There was also “The Star-Spangled Banner,” in the cockeyed re-harmonization that Stravinsky had created here in 1941 and offered as a kind of bribe to the U.S. in anticipation of his citizenship application. (Ah, memories, memories; I was an usher in Boston&#8217;s Symphony Hall the night in 1944 when the cops arrived, primed for action should Stravinsky again perpetrate this “tampering with national property,” as he had at his concert the day before. He didn&#8217;t.)</p>
<p>
At one of the pre-concert gatherings, the composer Stephen Hartke spoke of Stravinsky&#8217;s ability to “reinvent” himself &#8211; the transitions, for example, from the brutalism of <i>Le Sacre </i>to the austere neoclassicism of <i>Perséphone</i> to the dabbling in 12-tone writing, of which <i>Agon</i> was an early example. It&#8217;s a valid way of looking at his work, certainly; if you try to trace a musical genealogy from, say, <i>Le Sacre</i> of 1913 to the Octet of 1923, or from the airy diatonicism of the 1934 <i>Perséphone</i> to the jaunty banishments of tonality in the 1953 <i>Agon</i>, you might need to imagine some drastic DNA shifts along the way. Yet there are shreds of connective tissue: the hard, clean edges and delicious rhythmic quirks in <i>Les Noces</i> help bridge one gap; the ecstatic, floating harmonies in the Balanchine ballet <i>Orpheus</i> &#8211; music eminently deserving of a life in the concert hall &#8211; do the same later on. Some things remain constant, above all Stravinsky&#8217;s immaculate awareness of the nature of movement within any given moment, or in the maintaining of a taut line of progress in a work from start to finish.</p>
<p>
My real problem with Stravinsky &#8211; and I had better admit right now that I do have problems &#8211; is the demand his music exerts that I as listener, too, must endure a similar process of self-reinvention. At Salonen&#8217;s first Stravinsky program, the 1930 <i>Symphony of Psalms</i> left me exalted, fulfilled; it is music that I see as well as hear: see as dark stained glass shot through with streaks of dusky gold, hear as a celebration of humanness defying inhuman powers and emerging in triumph ringed in resounding alleluias. (Ah, memories, memories; I am driven to confess, for the first time ever, that in 1948 I reviewed those final pages &#8211; for <i>The American Record Guide</i>, when it used to be worth reading &#8211; as “mawkish.” <i>Ingemisco, tamquam reus . . .</i>)</p>
<p>
There followed, however, the <i>Perséphone</i> of 1934: André Gide&#8217;s other kind of rite of spring set to Stravinsky in his cerulean-purity mode. Music that suspends time is not of itself boring: Schubert&#8217;s G-major Piano Sonata, Messiaen&#8217;s <i>Quartet for the End of Time</i>. <i>Perséphone</i> is; you have to wonder at its survival, however sporadic: Is it Stravinsky, or merely something else <i>by</i> Stravinsky, a routine reinvention undeserving of its patent? And then you have to reinvent yourself as listener, cast out the spell of the <i>Psalms </i>and its barbaric insinuations, and enter into a less happy image of an inventing machine subsisting for the moment on its own whir. And perhaps the occasion reinvented itself, too, into a more noncommittal kind of performance, with inferior soloists (Holland Taylor narrating in a hoarse, inappropriate English; John Aler&#8217;s bland, unmusical French) and the Master Chorale suggesting that it had worked harder and with greater pleasure on the <i>Psalms</i>.</p>
<p>
Stravinsky on this diatonic plateau &#8211; this work, plus the Violin Concerto and the other pieces for the shaky fiddling of Samuel Dushkin, plus the desiccated twitchings of the <i>Jeu de Cartes</i> ballet &#8211; seems to me a reinventor in a creative lull. These things happen, and they do not detract from the huge shadow cast by this tiny elf with, as the movies show, the too-many teeth. Composers who point to Stravinsky as a defining figure, of his own century and continuing into ours, usually cannot pinpoint any specific influence from his pen to theirs. He created no school and left no followers, as did Schoenberg and the Second-Wieners. That doesn&#8217;t matter. What matters most is the creative energy he brought to the world around him. More than anyone else in his century, he continued the notion that music was important, that it merited attention and the license to survive. You can&#8217;t patent that; it&#8217;s too precious.</font></p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>L.A. STRAVINSKY&#160;FESTIVAL</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2001/03/la-stravinsky-festival/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2001/03/la-stravinsky-festival/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sun, 04 Mar 2001 22:50:42 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Musical America]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=1865</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Operating on the brave but often-challenged principle that an audience still exists for, and cares about, the music of the recent past, the Los Angeles Philharmonic’s current “Focus on Igor Stravinsky” festival focusses broadly. Over four weeks ending March 12, there have been orchestral concerts, chamber-music events, discussions, symposiums and art shows; following the final [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Operating on the brave but often-challenged principle that an audience still exists for, and cares about, the music of the recent past, the Los Angeles Philharmonic’s current “Focus on Igor Stravinsky” festival focusses broadly. Over four weeks ending March 12, there have been orchestral concerts, chamber-music events, discussions, symposiums and art shows; following the final event the performing ensemble moves on to New York’s Lincoln Center, for a cut-down reprise over the weekend March 16-19.<br />
There is no anniversary date involved; in Los Angeles, none is needed. Stravinsky was a vivid presence there for over 30 years, longer than at any of his other adopted hometowns. People who were involved in his music are readily available to reminisce, even to reenact. (A tribute to Stravinsky’s sad run-ins with the Hollywood movie machine is, understandably, missing from the current tribute.) At one Philharmonic pre-concert gathering John Clifford, who had danced in George Balanchine’s choreography of “Agon,” and Carole Valleskey, the Chosen Maiden in the Joffrey Ballet’s restoration of the original “Rite of Spring,” recreated some of their movements on a small stage; the crowd could then hear Esa-Pekka Salonen’s performances of those works with refreshed eye and ear.<br />
Salonen is a marvelous conductor of Stravinsky’s quirks and brainy adventures; something jells, and there are records to prove it. The “Agon” performance was a revelling in icy pinpoints, with the cheeky imitations of antique dancing subtly colored and the music’s momentum nicely proportioned. Salonen’s familiar take on the “Rite” on the same program is, simply put, one of the great performances of anything, by anybody, in our time – not merely for the “what-hit-me?” impact of its final “Danse sacrale” but for its projection of mounting terror that makes that opening bassoon solo as much a dire prophesy as an instrumental trick.<br />
Alongside the expected “Firebird” and “Rite,” the Los Angeles planners have ventured somewhat afield, if not always successfully. Between “Agon” and the “Rite” came “Mavra,” a delicious trifle of a comic Russian folk-opera, sung with high gusto by visitors from the Kirov Opera. On opening night the “Symphony of Psalms” was magnificently set forth, with the Los Angeles Master Chorale superbly prepared by its conductor-designate Grant Gershon – a rebirth for that venerable institution. But this was followed by the seldom-heard “Perséphone,” a work from that Stravinskian plateau of the mid-1930s dotted with works diatonic and, if truth be told, rather bland. A narration (in English by a husky-voiced Holland Taylor) and the labored French of John Aler’s tenor solos did little for this revival of André Gide’s mystical text (a kind of “rite of spring” on Olympus’ slopes).<br />
The final orchestral program, to be repeated in New York, lists pianist Olli Mustonen in Stravinsky’s three short piano-plus-orchestra works, including the wondrous Concerto for Piano and Winds, eminently deserving of the revival zeal that has sparked this whole event. The final chamber program, also slated for New York, includes such bracing early fare as the neo-classic Octet and the “Dunbarton Oaks” concerto. And whatever the ups and downs of Stravinsky’s reputation over his long lifetime and into recent years, the Philharmonic’s festival has been drawing capacity crowds. Somebody must be doing something right.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Cleopatra Takes a&#160;Bath</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2001/02/cleopatra-takes-a-bath/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2001/02/cleopatra-takes-a-bath/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 28 Feb 2001 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=335</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[In 48 B.C. or thereabouts, some kind of hanky-panky may or may not have occurred between Julius Caesar, conqueror of Egypt, and Cleopatra, claimant to that country‘s throne. Caesar was 52 at the time; Cleopatra was 20. Several centuries later, George Bernard Shaw, and after him Cecil B. De Mille, dealt with that liaison in [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>In 48 B.C. or thereabouts, some kind of hanky-panky may or may not have occurred between Julius Caesar, conqueror of Egypt, and Cleopatra, claimant to that country‘s throne. Caesar was 52 at the time; Cleopatra was 20. Several centuries later, George Bernard Shaw, and after him Cecil B. De Mille, dealt with that liaison in realistic terms: a paternal Caesar holding a kittenish Cleopatra at arm&#8217;s length. Not so, however, Nicola Francisco Haym, whose libretto for George Frideric Handel‘s Giulio Cesare in Egitto deals with, among other matters, the burning desire of both principals to make their way toward a shared bed. Handel&#8217;s music for Caesar, written for an ardent, young-sounding castrato rather than a lordly baritone, suspends historical verities in favor of romance.
</p>
<p>    One charming similitude exists between the Cleopatra of De Mille‘s 1934 epic and the character of that name onstage at the Music Center in Handel&#8217;s opera these nights. Both take baths. Claudette Colbert is, of course, demurely depicted; in her tub of asses‘ milk she could, for all one sees, be wearing a suit of armor. In Francesco Negrin&#8217;s version of the opera, brought in from Opera Australia and here through March 10, Elizabeth Futral strips down to the altogether behind a decorously deployed but rather flimsy towel, descends to her bath with a few anatomical details in clear and titillating view, kicks up soapsuds with a well-turned ankle &#8212; while singing her big Act 2 aria, ”Bella venere,“ an invocation, naturally enough, to the Goddess of Love.
</p>
<p>   As Handel‘s operas arrive at their deserved estate &#8212; they now bejewel the repertory of virtually all major houses &#8212; most of the bromides attached to them can be discarded. They are long, yes, and repetitious, yes, but singers with proper intelligence have learned how to make repetitions less repetitious and, thus, lengths less long. The singers involved in this Cesare do fine, agile tricks with repeats; furthermore, they are guided by the splendid musical imagination of the conductor, Britain&#8217;s Harry Bicket (well known from recordings) to realize the motive power of this intensely dramatic music.
</p>
<p>   Yes, there are three (counter)tenors, and the press-release people have had a field day over that. (There were also three countertenors in John Adams‘ El Niño, which I reported on recently, if anyone cares.) They belong; Handel put them there, and it isn&#8217;t often that a company is lucky enough to corral so spectacular a trio. David Daniels is the burly Cesare, buzz-cut and sporting a Don Johnson growth of beard, somewhat soft of voice for a 3,000-plus-seat auditorium if truth be told, but remarkable for the sensitivity and pure beauty of his singing. Bejun Mehta (related to Zubin over several degrees of separation) is the villainous Tolomeo, his icy-pure singing cutting through Handel‘s orchestra like an extension of the sword he artfully wields. In the smaller role of the weasely go-between Nireno, David Walker manages a delightful and compelling squeak. Our two local mezzo-sopranos &#8212; Suzanna Guzman, the Cornelia, and Paula Rasmussen, the Sesto &#8212; figure among the worthy participants.
</p>
<p>   And then there is Elizabeth Futral&#8217;s Cleopatra, on an even higher level than any of the above. She was the Stella in Andre Previn‘s hapless A Streetcar Named Desire at the San Francisco Opera, and an enchanting Violetta last season in a Traviata at Orange County&#8217;s Opera Pacific. Her Cleopatra &#8212; the voice radiantly pure over a phenomenal range, the acrobatic coloratura immaculately dispatched &#8212; proclaims her an artist with no discernible limitations. You could well wonder, as she and Daniels sang their final music out on a runway practically in the audience‘s lap, whether Handel himself, with all the legendary blather about his menagerie of singers, ever had it that good.
</p>
<p>   I also had to think back to Beverly Sills, whose career skyrocketed after her Cleopatra in 1966 &#8212; as Futral&#8217;s surely will now. I had to realize how far we‘ve come toward a realization of what these Handel operas are all about. The New York City Opera&#8217;s Julius Caesar &#8212; its first professional American staging &#8212; was hailed as a revelation, and I suppose it was. It was also wrong. The title role was transposed down so that the bass-baritone Norman Treigle, even with his vocal splendor, projected nothing of the fantasy &#8212; the moment, for example, when Caesar and the orchestra‘s first horn play around on the same pitch. The score was chopped to bits; music from other operas was inserted. Over the resultant mellifluous, gorgeous-sounding mess, we critics raved and raved. We, too, have come a long way.
</p>
<p>   Have I suggested with any of this that the Giulio Cesare currently downtown ranks as entertainment exhilarating, delectable and not to be missed? I hope so, because it does. The new production is great, good fun: high imagination and astounding music gloriously conjoined. Never have four hours seemed so short.
</p>
<p>    Against my usual broodings on the imperfections of the work itself, Opera Pacific&#8217;s Carmen also turned out to be time well spent. Credit, once again, befalls music director John DeMain for a sizzling pacing sparked with some enlightened decision making: Use the original version with spoken dialogue, thus losing about a quarter-hour of bad, time-wasting music; ditch the Act 4 ballet, ditto.
</p>
<p>    Irina Mishura was the rich-voiced, vivid Carmen, captivating while singing, not so much while dancing or wielding the castanets. Mark Baker was the Jose, Jeffrey Wells the Escamillo, both a point or two above adequate. Robin Follman‘s shrill, vibrato-ridden Micaela merely reminded me once again that this is opera&#8217;s most expendable role. The village scenes in the first and fourth act were full of life and color, and the kiddie chorus actually had interesting biz now and then. Again &#8212; as in the Handel, as in almost everything these days &#8212; the updating gremlins were at work; sets and costumes by Riccardo Hernandez and Constance Hoffman dragged the look of things into something vaguely 1940-ish. Mostly, however, it worked.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>“GIULIO CESARE” AT THE L.A.&#160;OPERA</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2001/02/%e2%80%9cgiulio-cesare%e2%80%9d-at-the-la-opera/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2001/02/%e2%80%9cgiulio-cesare%e2%80%9d-at-the-la-opera/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sat, 24 Feb 2001 22:32:23 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Musical America]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=1831</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Handel has earned his place &#8211;  a century late, perhaps, but decisively. The most convincing of the old arguments, that a world enlightened by more benign attitudes toward surgery had therefore cut itself off from the requisite singers for this repertory, has been laid to rest. Promotion for the Los Angeles Opera’s “Giulio Cesare” made [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Handel has earned his place &#8211;  a century late, perhaps, but decisively. The most convincing of the old arguments, that a world enlightened by more benign attitudes toward surgery had therefore cut itself off from the requisite singers for this repertory, has been laid to rest. Promotion for the Los Angeles Opera’s “Giulio Cesare” made merry with the fact that the cast would boast that magic parlay of three, count ‘em, countertenors; the entertainment last Friday on the Music Center stage (which runs through March 10) had nothing to do with Pavarotti-etc., and everything to do with extraordinary performing skills, in the proper vocal registers, applied to sublime musical drama. The four hours of “Cesare,” as near to uncut as never mind, whiz happily by.<br />
Yes, there are three countertenors and yes, they are wonderful. (They never sing together, by the way.) David Daniels is the Caesar, burly, buzz-cut and sporting a Don Johnson almost-beard. His voice doesn’t quite attain the far reaches of a 3085-seat operatic venue, but what there is is extraordinary in beauty and agility. Bejun Mehta &#8212; who in the bloom of a phenomenal career need not ride on his second-cousinhood to Zubin – is the evil Ptolemy, his hard-as-ice stainless-steel tones match the sword he wields. David Walker is the slimy go-between Nirenus, a delightful squeak in a smaller role. Suzanna Guzmán is the Cornelia, Paula Rasmussen the Sesto, both estimable mezzo-sopranos whose current nationwide careers were launched as members of the L.A. Opera’s training program.<br />
Above any of these, however, is the Cleopatra of Elizabeth Futral – the Stella in André Previn’s “Streetcar” in 1999, an even more touching Violetta in last season’s “Traviata” in Orange County – and now beyond doubt a newly arrived star of blazing distinction. Her voice is radiantly pure over a phenomenal range, her command of coloratura immaculate. On opening night  she delivered the kind of career-building Cleopatra that Beverly Sills delivered at the New York City Opera in 1966, with the difference that nowadays people sing this music with greater awareness of the rubrics of Handelian vocal style. Oh yes, there was one other difference as well; during her second-act seduction aria “Venere bella” she stripped down to the altogether (behind a decorously draped bath towel, of course) and stepped down into her bath, kicking up a few suds and singing all the while.<br />
Handel’s 1724 audience might not have countenanced such shenanigans; what is remarkable about the current Handelian revival, aside from the satisfactory supply of singers, is the growing realization that “authenticity” in performance values need not clash with adventure in production. The “Cesare” production comes in from Sydney’s Opera Australia; Anthony Baker is the designer, Francesco Negroni the director, and the anachronisms are copious and delightful. The set is a series of slabs that slide around and create performing spaces large and small; Caesar and Cleopatra act out some of their hot business on a runway downstage from the orchestra pit. Caesar’s booted legions could pass for headwaiters at a shashlik joint; Cleopatra’s gowns would have gotten her into the Grammies.<br />
Purists of bygone generations, when Handel operas were regarded either as fodder for connoisseurs of the dry-as-dust or fair game for the rewrite crew, might have climbed walls at the notion that four hours of Handelian opera seria might pass for delightful, but the evidence is here. For a company whose season so far has included a snore-packed “Aida” and a “Bohème” almost unimaginably dreary, this “Giulio Cesare” is just that, a major step toward enlightened opera.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Brain&#160;Waves</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2001/02/brain-waves/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2001/02/brain-waves/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 21 Feb 2001 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=334</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[When Marino Formenti gave his first piano recital at LACMA&#8217;s Bing Theater last April, there were something like 50 people scattered through the 600-seat hall &#8212; the usual turnout, in other words, for a new-music program at the Museum. Two weeks ago, for the first of Formenti‘s three concerts this year, the hall was nearly [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>When Marino Formenti gave his first piano recital at LACMA&#8217;s Bing Theater last April, there were something like 50 people scattered through the 600-seat hall &#8212; the usual turnout, in other words, for a new-music program at the Museum. Two weeks ago, for the first of Formenti‘s three concerts this year, the hall was nearly full. Before the third concert, LACMA&#8217;s music director, Dorrance Stalvey, blinked unbelieving at the half-dozen remaining empty seats and congratulated the audience for its good taste and for the power of word of mouth. Congratulations are due Stalvey himself as well; he had picked up on Formenti when he was here with the “Resistance Fluctuations” concerts in 1998. (I must have heard him then, too, but you‘d never know from my review.) In yet another shrewd concert-management capture, Formenti returns next season (October 2) to terrorize an Eclectic Orange Festival audience with Jean Barraque&#8217;s Sonata, his incendiary calling card at LACMA last year.
</p>
<p>    For his programs this year, Formenti laid out a personal, perhaps not always workable, plan: “The Gods,” “The Heroes” and “The Men,” spanning the last century from Scriabin in 1907 to Jo Kondo in 1996. Rather than a dry-as-dust chronology, there were interesting byways that proved valuable. The tortuous reachings in a set of Etudes by Russia‘s Nikolai Roslavets, which began the first program, made the tortuous reachings in Scriabin&#8217;s Fifth Sonata, later on the same program, into something almost mistakable for musical sense. Framing the third program were two remarkable exercises in enhanced piano sonority: some small pieces by Helmut Lachenmann at the start that drew resonances out of piano keys held but not sounded; at the end an Alvin Lucier piece for piano and “amplified sonorous vessels” that created some of the same effects electronically. (And, therefore, easier? Less artistic? Formenti provided his own answer, a Debussy Prelude &#8212; Feux d‘Artifice &#8212; as encore that, eons earlier, had made some of the same sounds.)
</p>
<p>   It was this element of wit, of program building with imaginative juxtapositions, that invited an audience to retrace Formenti&#8217;s own voyages of discovery, that made these concerts memorable even beyond the awesome skill of his performances. As an interpreter he is his own man; beside the visionary heat of his Scriabin Fifth Sonata, the famous Horowitz recording may observe the markings more precisely but sounds like dry bones; in a group of Messiaen pieces in the second program, you could almost believe that Formenti had co-opted Messiaen‘s ecstasies as well as his notes. I love the intelligence in his playing, and his respect for mine; in even the most agonizing of his inscrutable choices &#8212; a pair of manic sonatas by Galina Ustvolskaya, let&#8217;s say, scored for fists and forearms &#8212; he gave off the sense of having resolved the madness as well as the music.
</p>
<p>   What kind of pianist is this Formenti, outside the specialized atmosphere of the present and immediate past? We don‘t know yet, although he dropped a tiny hint, offering a Schubert “Moment Musical” &#8212; nice and dry and immaculately shaped &#8212; as the encore at the second concert. Do we need to know? Not so long as there is music making up his sleeve similar to what he brought along this time. These were extraordinary concerts, the more so for the multitudes who came along to share.
</p>
<p>    Upstairs in the Dorothy Chandler Pavilion, John Kennedy gave last week&#8217;s Philharmonic pre-concert talk, a tangle of irrelevances, goof-strewn and clumsily delivered. “Just listen carefully” was his litany of advice for Franco Donatoni‘s Esa (In Cauda V) in its world premiere. Were we, then, to listen only casually to Radu Lupu&#8217;s eloquent, beautifully spacious reading of Schumann‘s Piano Concerto, or Esa-Pekka Salonen&#8217;s exhilarating delivery of the Beethoven Seventh &#8212; works of which careful listening reveals important newnesses every time? Downstairs in the hall, Salonen gave another talk, which set matters in better perspective.
</p>
<p>    Donatoni, he said, had been the most influential of his teachers; he composed the work in the hospital where he would die soon thereafter, at 73 last August 17; its title and its dedication bear Salonen‘s name. How, then, could he conduct in public so private a work? The answer, Salonen continued, lay in the work itself, its affirmation and its joyousness. Donatoni, whose fame rests on a small legacy of intricate, abstruse works little known outside his native Italy, has created in this one short score a glorious orchestral romp.
</p>
<p>   Its harmonies are not easily untangled on first hearing; it&#8217;s the spectrum of sound, the manic clatter of xylophone and chimes, the menacing, dark oratory of an oversize brass contingent (six horns, four trumpets, four trombones and tuba) that prove immediately winning. The other complexities will await future &#8212; and surely deserved &#8212; hearings. (What would it take, pray, to include a replay of such a work, only 11 minutes long after all, at the end of a concert, allowing the audience the option to go or stay?) In its final measures, a handful of instruments slide down the scale and out into silence: a presentiment of Donatoni‘s imminent end and, said Salonen, “the best of all possible ways to go.”
</p>
<p>    I&#8217;ve always admired the promotional skills of Southwest Chamber Music, if not always their music making, and if someone suggests that the group arranged this month‘s asteroid landing to promote its latest concert, I won&#8217;t argue. I earned early fame with my review (“a star-studded egg” in the New York Herald-Tribune) of John Cage‘s Atlas Eclipticalis at its 1964 New York premiere, and nothing would do but that I had to check it out again, as the Southwest people brought it to Zipper Hall to tie in with Pasadena&#8217;s “Universe” celebration. Cage and I had, in the meantime, become friends, which is not the same as each of us knowing what the other was about. Atlas Eclipticalis is built out of fascinating premises on paper; I just don‘t understand why it has to be performed.
</p>
<p>    The piece, by the way, comes with options, other works of Cage that can be added on by choice. The Leonard Bernstein performance I reviewed ran eight minutes; James Levine&#8217;s recording on DG runs 14; Southwest‘s Jeff von der Schmidt announced his as 40-plus, with the ensemble bolstered by young players from Pasadena&#8217;s John Muir High School. At Zipper, the second of two performances, they didn‘t quite make it. At about 32 minutes there was a sudden crash onstage, and a young percussionist named Jonathan Miller keeled over in a faint. He was soon revived, but the piece ended at that point. You try standing on an overlit stage, making sense out of abstruse counting derived from star maps, the I Ching and, for all I know, the downtown telephone book. Anyhow, John Cage would surely have approved.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Loving&#160;Ludwig</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2001/02/loving-ludwig/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2001/02/loving-ludwig/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 14 Feb 2001 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=333</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[On a rainy night last week I fell in love with Beethoven&#8217;s Violin Concerto. Really, I mean, in love. I heard the first drumbeats as if they came from my own throbbing temples; the opening music for winds was smooth, elegant, angelic. (Has anyone written a book about Beethoven‘s use of the bassoon? Someone should.) [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>On a rainy night last week I fell in love with Beethoven&#8217;s Violin Concerto. Really, I mean, in love. I heard the first drumbeats as if they came from my own throbbing temples; the opening music for winds was smooth, elegant, angelic. (Has anyone written a book about Beethoven‘s use of the bassoon? Someone should.) The soloist, the Austrian violinist Thomas Zehetmair, did some odd things that weren&#8217;t in Beethoven‘s score, but they made sense.
</p>
<p>    Offhand, I would guess that I&#8217;ve listened to the Beethoven Violin Concerto &#8212; listened, that is, as opposed to just being in someone‘s house with the radio on &#8212; some 400 times, in various stages of rapture. What made the difference this time, in the Philharmonic&#8217;s program at the Music Center, was the contrast with the music that had come just before, which made Beethoven‘s drumbeats and those first woodwind chords seem, let&#8217;s say for the sake of simile, like the driest, most sublime martini, with the gin distilled by the hand of God.
</p>
<p>   That preceding music was the remains of the 11th Symphony by Eduard Tubin; this was its American premiere, with Paavo Jarvi conducting. It arrived surrounded by the kind of news that orchestra managements hope will attract box-office lines (with, however, only middling success at the Friday night concert). There was the exotic appeal: You don‘t hear music by an Estonian composer every day, especially when led by an Estonian conductor. There was the human-interest appeal: Tubin (1905&#8211;1982) died while at work on this symphony; only the first movement survived, with the orchestration completed by yet another Estonian, Kaljo Raid. And there was the stop-the-presses appeal: a first-ever American performance.
</p>
<p>   Given these exhilarating circumstances, perhaps it doesn&#8217;t matter that the music was not very good, but it should. Tubin‘s fame rests on his being famous, and on his stature as elder statesman to a generation of younger and better Estonians &#8212; Erkki-Sven Tuur, for one, and the late Lepo Sumera. Most of his symphonies have been recorded, on Sweden&#8217;s BIS label conducted by Neeme Jarvi, father of Paavo. It‘s good, solid late-romantic stuff, but you&#8217;ve heard it all before. Mahler lurks, as does Strauss and, in the more daring moments, Stravinsky. The woolly blanket of sound that smothered the music (and the listener) at the Music Center may have been the fault of the orchestrator, but what I heard in the work as content was also mostly gesture and cliche. (It too, pace Beethoven, begins with drumbeats.) Would it attract attention as the work of some minor Rhinelander circa 1911? Don‘t bet on it.
</p>
<p>    What got my back up about this insignificant time-waster was an article by Edward Rothstein in last Saturday&#8217;s New York Times that spoke directly to the current dark clouds over all of music, but over symphony orchestras in particular. His concern, in brief, is a growing lack of concern. It is no longer important, as it once was, for the nation‘s major orchestras to choose distinctive and adventurous leadership. The New York Philharmonic, which once had entrusted its bully pulpit to Leonard Bernstein and then to Pierre Boulez, has sunk to the hiring of Lorin Maazel, a move too inexplicable even to be explained away as “safe.” (Maazel is not only 70, conservative in programming taste and blandly efficient in quality of performance, but his history of inspiring unrest among players is vast and famous. Zubin Mehta was finally brought down by the New York Philharmonic&#8217;s failure to sell his recordings; who do you know who ever bought a Lorin Maazel disc?)
</p>
<p>    The sense of “cultural irrelevance,” says Rothstein, grows out of a lack of brilliant young talent, and out of a decline of orchestral attention to new music; the one, of course, feeds the other. A survey of patrons conducted in 1993 by the American Symphony Orchestra League produced the news that orchestras could attract new support by, among other things, redecorating their halls. That being so, the prospects should be bright in Cleveland (where the made-over Severance Hall reopened last month), Philadelphia (whose new orchestra hall opens next fall), New York (where plans for a rebuild of Lincoln Center were recently announced) and, of course, Los Angeles. But where are the announced plans, from any of those edifices present and future, for a rebuilding of cultural attitudes, for demonstrating a caring for music still awaiting creation in our new millennium &#8212; or, for that matter, of bringing awareness of the music around us up from its present circa-1915 level to, at least, the day before yesterday? The specious “novelty” of a symphony by Eduard Tubin doesn‘t go very far toward answering that question.
</p>
<p>   Esa-Pekka Salonen in Los Angeles, Michael Tilson Thomas in San Francisco &#8212; by that margin, the major West Coast orchestras are a few notches up from Ed Rothstein&#8217;s dour outlook. A festival of Stravinsky‘s music here in the upcoming weeks, or in San Francisco two summers ago, may not exactly advance the dateline. What is significant, however, about these events past and present is this: They have been planned (“packaged,” if you prefer) as if to offer a lot more than just a bath in some great music, as if an audience still exists for interactive programming &#8212; one work reflecting on another &#8212; along with talks and discussions.
</p>
<p>    Oh yes, about the Beethoven. It&#8217;s about time Thomas Zehetmair showed up here; his discs (especially several on ECM, of all labels the one most hospitable to the free of spirit) proclaim him one of a small band of trustworthy originals. His Beethoven bore this out not only in the goodies-laden cadenzas, but in the body of the work as well: the thread of pure, lustrous silk he fashioned in the heart-stopping G-minor episode in the first movement, and again throughout the slow movement.
</p>
<p>    The first-movement cadenza was a hoot and a half. From Beethoven‘s alternate piano version of the concerto, Zehetmair lifted the idea of inviting the timpani to join the solo violinist; he then took both instruments on a fabulous joy ride. Another escapade of similar high imagination linked the slow movement and finale, again with no harm done. Lovable though it be, Beethoven&#8217;s Violin Concerto needs a boost here and there, which it got this time &#8212; and how!
</p>
<p>   Jarvi, now 38, moves up in his world; he was a trainee back in the glory days of the Los Angeles Philharmonic Institute under Leonard Bernstein. He takes over the Cincinnati Symphony next September, an act of high bravery considering that the orchestra‘s great old hall confronts him with 3,417 seats to fill. To end last week&#8217;s concert he offered a goofy, pulverized version of Schumann‘s “Spring” Symphony, punctuated with tempo changes and huge timpani outbursts. At least it was interesting; this too is music that needs all the help it can get.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Adams the&#160;Accessible</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2001/02/adams-the-accessible/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2001/02/adams-the-accessible/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 07 Feb 2001 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=332</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Threaded like a litany though the recent writing about John Adams &#8212; of which there has been considerable, local and national &#8212; is the proclamation of him as the most “accessible” of contemporary composers. Surely the term has the ring of truth, along with an undertone of danger. “Accessibility” is often confused with “easy listening,” [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Threaded like a litany though the recent writing about John Adams &#8212; of which there has been considerable, local and national &#8212; is the proclamation of him as the most “accessible” of contemporary composers. Surely the term has the ring of truth, along with an undertone of danger.
</p>
<p>    “Accessibility” is often confused with “easy listening,” the domain of “good music” radio and its fellow combatants against the deadly peril of the 12-tone row and comparable atrocities. It may be true &#8212; although I haven&#8217;t actually checked &#8212; that John Adams has not yet inflicted a tone row on his public, but this has little bearing on his current accessibility. I think of a piece as accessible when it fulfills the function of letting me know where I am in the music at any moment, and whether it‘s worth my time to keep on being there. I would need quite a few semesters to teach the many ways music can accomplish this (and, by the way, I&#8217;m available). In case you‘re wondering, however, I can state that, yes, I found last week&#8217;s all-Adams program, which he conducted at the Philharmonic, most satisfyingly accessible, as I did his operatically leaning oratorio El Niño in San Francisco last month.
</p>
<p>   Let me go on a bit more about this accessibility thing. The fact that I happily tar John Adams with that brush has nothing to do with his predilection for composing real and memorable tunes in triadic harmony, with an orchestral palette that Richard Strauss might have gladly sanctioned, in rhythms that set the toes to tapping (but with an extra beat thrown in now and then for glorious obfuscation). Esa-Pekka Salonen‘s LA Variations, his great orchestral work of a couple of years ago, doesn&#8217;t display any of those predilections; I found it immediately accessible (as did a cheering crowd at the Philharmonic premiere) because it told us at every moment, in masterful, convincing terms, what it was about and where it was going.
</p>
<p>   A composer‘s chosen language &#8212; conservative, modernist, neo-this or post-that &#8212; is an inadequate criterion for a listener&#8217;s like or dislike. What matters far more is what the music is trying to say, and whether it actually says it. Arnold Schoenberg‘s Fourth String Quartet, one of those deadly perilous tone-row pieces you&#8217;re not likely to hear on local radio, strikes me as accessible because of the remarkable way its constructional genius makes itself heard. My problem with the music of Brahms, which I acknowledge as an obsession running through some 50 years of professional writing, stems from the conflict between recognizing where I am in, say, his First Piano Concerto or the Piano Quintet &#8212; to cite two particular bogeys &#8212; and my desperate desire to escape.
</p>
<p>   Adams‘ local program began with relatively new music, the piano concerto Century Rolls, composed for and played by the scholarly, classic-minded Emanuel Ax, who seemed freshly vitalized by the work. And why not? The music trips along blithely, enchantingly. Its title has to do with performance styles on old pianola rolls. More to the point, the benevolent shadow of Ravel &#8212; his Piano Concerto, most of all &#8212; falls across the work, to its great enlightenment. It dates from 1997, two years before Adams&#8217; extraordinary Naive and Sentimental Music, with a lot less on its mind, perhaps, but with a lovely small message lovingly delivered.
</p>
<p>   Then came Nixon in China &#8212; in the portable version whimsically re-titled The Nixon Tapes &#8212; its stature so forcefully declared that you have to wonder why the opera hasn‘t, in its 14-year existence, become a repertory fixture alongside, say, Tosca. (It hasn&#8217;t done badly, in fact. I‘ve seen it in Helsinki; the English National Opera produced it last year; and let me point out that John DeMain, who led the world premiere in Houston in 1987, is now a local hero as head of Opera Pacific. How about it?) Adams&#8217; luggage was lightly packed: the big arias for Dick (“News, news, news . . .”) and Pat (“This is prophetic”) and the banquet speech for Chou with the woozy chorus; I‘d have happily stayed longer for Madame Mao&#8217;s glorious aria, but that, alas, got left behind. James Maddalena was the Tricky Dick as before; I would hazard the guess that the operatic image of Nixon is by now, at least for the happy 3,000 who yelled themselves hoarse at the Music Center last Friday night, far more vivid than the dreary blur in the history books. Susan Narucki, a newcomer to the role of Pat, staked out an unchallengeable claim.
</p>
<p>    Kent Nagano led the bedazzlement of El Niño at San Francisco‘s Davies Hall, with radiant singing by Dawn Upshaw, Lorraine Hunt Lieberson and Willard White to confirm the power of Adams&#8217; Nativity oratorio. There were, however, problems. The temptation for all-out production was probably irresistible, and the musical work will surely outlive Peter Sellars‘ visuals, which made for an uncomfortable sensory overload. These included an excess of operatic staging down front, plus a film that transported agonizingly predictable images of suffering, birth and transfiguration into a Los Angeles barrio &#8212; a ludicrous companion, in other words, to Sellars&#8217; relocated Magic Flute (on the L.A. freeways, for Glyndebourne), Rake‘s Progress (at an LAPD jailhouse, for Le Chatelet in Paris) and Pelleas et Melisande (in Malibu, for the L.A. Opera). The 100-minute score, deep and rich, draws upon haunting contemporary Latino poetry, interspersed with strange and folklike imagery from several Apocryphal texts &#8212; an exercise in eclecticism on Adams&#8217; part so sharply superior to the helter-skelter provenance of the visuals that you had to wonder at their being under the same roof, in the service of the same masterful, accessible music.
</p>
<p>    Salonen and the Los Angeles Philharmonic have scheduled El Niño for a performance in 2003 shortly after the opening of Disney Hall. The work was recorded by Nonesuch at the Paris premiere in December, and is being rushed into production while it‘s still, in the language of the record industry, “hot.” Naive and Sentimental, also regarded as a “hot” score two years ago at its premiere under Salonen, was recorded here at the time, also by Nonesuch. That release, however, has been postponed until God knows when. Go figure.
</p>
<p>   Ease of access is not what comes first to mind in considering the music of Yannis Xenakis, who died in Paris last week, at 78. I think first of ferocious energy, of outbursts of sheer kinetic power &#8212; propelled in his early works by madcap percussion ensembles, and later by extraordinary, intricate interaction of live and computer-driven forces. I also think of his stature in the world of the arts, the way his expertise at music and at architecture have worked in some pieces to create something truly larger than their parts. Architecture, wrote Goethe, is frozen music; Xenakis applied the blowtorch.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Things&#160;Past</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2001/01/things-past/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2001/01/things-past/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 31 Jan 2001 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=331</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Reviving Peter Maxwell Davies&#8217; Eight Songs for a Mad King was the latest of XTET‘s many good deeds. Perhaps this hardy band of local freelance players, founded in 1986, should have been renamed “IXTET Plus Conductor and Stage DirectorDesigner” for its major work on last week&#8217;s Monday Evening Concert at the County Museum, but its [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Reviving Peter Maxwell Davies&#8217; Eight Songs for a Mad King was the latest of XTET‘s many good deeds. Perhaps this hardy band of local freelance players, founded in 1986, should have been renamed “IXTET Plus Conductor and Stage DirectorDesigner” for its major work on last week&#8217;s Monday Evening Concert at the County Museum, but its value over the years is beyond mere counting. More people should have been there &#8212; out front, I mean.
</p>
<p>    Fashions change. I remember two performances of Max Davies‘ (as he prefers to be known) expressionist shocker in my first year in California: one at CalArts and one concocted by Rhonda Kess, an ambitious local mover of fond memory. Now the work has faded from the repertory, and that&#8217;s too bad. Could it be that music about madness &#8212; as opposed to merely mad music &#8212; has become something of a redundancy?
</p>
<p>   Donald Crockett led the vivid performance at LACMA, with the remarkable John Duykers as the mad George III in bedraggled nightie, howling and keening, galumphing around the stage as he cajoles his imagined pet birds to sing along. There is nothing in the world quite like this lurid fantasy; Schoenberg‘s Pierrot Lunaire figures in its ancestry, as does Boulez&#8217;s Le Marteau Sans Maitre, as do all representations of operatic madness from Monteverdi onward. The wit in this piece is devastating; who else but Davies would vouchsafe a foxtrot version of an aria from Handel‘s Messiah? And get away with it? There is also nothing in the world quite like John Duykers, an actorsinger of awesome versatility, from a magnificent command of Baroque drama to Philip Glass&#8217; next opera still on the worktable. (He was also the Mao Tse-tung in John Adams‘ Nixon in China, but, alas, that role doesn&#8217;t appear in the set of excerpts that Adams conducts at the Philharmonic this week.)
</p>
<p>    On the next night, at Susan Svrcek‘s “Piano Spheres” recital at Pasadena&#8217;s Neighborhood Church &#8212; beautifully played, well attended &#8212; it was deja vu all over again, most of all in the ambitious final work, Frederick Lesemann‘s Concerto for Piano and Electronic Tape. The work dates from 1980, commissioned by USC to celebrate its centennial. I heard it then, and found fascination in the interplay between the solo instrument (performed on that occasion by Leonard Stein) and the accompanying tape full of the whiz and whir and bloop-bleep that outsiders at that time referred to as “Star Wars music.” That, we were all sure, was going to be the music of the fertile and rosy future. You could even buy a gadget at Radio Shack, for a mere $500, that could create a believable repertory of those sounds to go along with your live music making. (I had one, and ditched it after about a week.)
</p>
<p>    Lesemann&#8217;s piece was no less strong and imaginative at last week‘s hearing, but it was a relic even so. Electronic music has come far. It&#8217;s no longer merely a clever accompaniment that you can peel away from live performance; the magic word nowadays is interaction. To a surprising degree, this work rattled the same bones as two other major scores on Svrcek‘s program: Ferruccio Busoni&#8217;s overstuffed, dry-as-dust Fantasia nach Johann Sebastian Bach of 1909, and a Sonata from 1923 by the painfully misguided Russian pseudo-modernist Nikolai Roslavets, a wretched pastiche of Scriabin‘s worst mannerisms. Never mind; a bit of really bad music now and then can do wonders in clearing the air.
</p>
<p>    It cleared the air, in this case, for an even larger chunk of authentic Scriabin later in the week, a wad of 10 &#8212; count &#8216;em &#8212; Piano Etudes, performed in what sounded like one breath by the singular young pianist with the singular name of Lang Lang. I was drawn to his UCLA concert, despite the threat of all that Scriabin, by the remarkably listenable way he had delivered a similar horror, the notorious Rach 3, at the Hollywood Bowl last summer.
</p>
<p>    There‘s something of a musician here, I suspect. It lies hidden at the moment behind a scrim of acquired affectations: the grimaces and winsome smiles, the between-the-notes hand gestures. It hides as well behind a style of music making applied onto the notes from the outside: Chopin&#8217;s B-minor Sonata with new dynamics for every phrase, the Brahms G-minor Rhapsody (as encore) pounded to a pulp. At 18, he has much to learn and, apparently, a fair amount to unlearn as well. But the technique is there, and &#8212; in the bull-roarings of the Scriabin D-sharp minor Etude and the Balakirev Islamey &#8212; you had to stop breathing for a minute or two to take it all in. In the age when freak performers with clever managements can go platinum, it‘s reassuring to be bowled over by some genuine musical promise once in a while.
</p>
<p>    Terry Riley&#8217;s Requiem for Adam, which ended the Kronos Quartet‘s concert at UCLA the weekend before last, is a strong, distinguished work that also represents something of a new direction for Riley. It lasts about 40 minutes, and the second of its three movements is on Kronos Caravan, the group&#8217;s latest CD. The Adam is the 16-year-old son of the Kronos‘ David Harrington, who died on Easter Sunday, 1995, while mountain climbing on Mount Diablo. The music &#8212; immensely sad and, above all, loving &#8212; rises to a frenzied funeral march but settles again to a serene vision. There is a sense of continuity here, stronger than anything else of Riley&#8217;s that I know. The first movement unfolds as a set of variations over a simple theme. The progression becomes inexorable; the Bach Chaconne comes inescapably to mind.
</p>
<p>    The ensuing movements bring on a new jolt; the “Dies Irae” chant mixes into what might be a New Orleans funeral, and the persistent dance rhythms seem as much a celebration of a radiant 16-year-old‘s life as a lament at its termination. At the end I felt wrung out; can brand-new music really have this power?
</p>
<p>   Yes, it can.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Galore If Not&#160;Gala</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2001/01/galore-if-not-gala/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2001/01/galore-if-not-gala/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 24 Jan 2001 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=330</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[A week that offers both The Marriage of Figaro and Don Giovanni is twice blessed; this happened last week not in Vienna or London, but right here. There were noticeable dissimilarities between the L.A. Opera&#8217;s Figaro at the Music Center and UCLA Opera‘s Big Game offering, but not so much as you might think, and [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>A week that offers both The Marriage of Figaro and Don Giovanni is twice blessed; this happened last week not in Vienna or London, but right here. There were noticeable dissimilarities between the L.A. Opera&#8217;s Figaro at the Music Center and UCLA Opera‘s Big Game offering, but not so much as you might think, and certainly not so much as the difference in ticket price &#8212; $148 vs. $25 &#8212; might suggest.
</p>
<p>    This is the fourth time around for the L.A. Opera&#8217;s production, created by Sir Peter Hall, which the company shares with the Chicago Lyric and which runs here through February 3. Conductor Marco Guidarini delivered the score on opening night in a tidy, nicely balanced, fleet performance. Susanna and the Count and Countess &#8212; Maria Bayo, Claudio Otelli and Pamela Armstrong &#8212; are newcomers. Richard Bernstein‘s Figaro dates from the 1994 and 1997 revivals, and gets better every time, lithe and witty and remarkably responsive to both the anger and whimsy in the role; he pretty much ran the show on opening night. Bayo&#8217;s Susanna, with her big, clear and flexible voice welling up out of her tiny, beguiling presence, would have stolen the show from anyone else.
</p>
<p>   Armstrong‘s Countess was also a lovely presence, although her ”Porgi amor“ lacked the stab of pain that others have delivered. Otelli&#8217;s Count, awash in unpleasantly visible spittle, was something of a stick. The gawky but likable Cherubino was Megan Dey-Toth, who, like Bernstein, is a product of the L.A. Opera‘s apprentice program, one of the company&#8217;s most creditable operations. Jonathan Mack, Jamie Offenbach and Cynthia Jansen were their eminently trustworthy selves in minor roles; John Atkins, another company stalwart, takes over as the Count in the last two performances. The two makeweight fourth-act arias for Marcellina and Basilio, which had been included in previous company revivals, were dropped this time, at no loss.
</p>
<p>    I saw the first of UCLA‘s two Don Giovanni performances, nicely staged on Tom Giamario&#8217;s complex set, which included some nifty hellfire at the end. The program book proclaimed a lot of gobbledygook by director Frans Boerlage, to the effect that his production would seek to restore the comedic side of Mozart‘s imponderable masterwork and downplay the tragic. Fortunately, nobody in the cast seemed to have read this or, at least, to have taken it to heart. There was some tampering, however. Elvira&#8217;s big aria, ”Mi tradi,“ was moved from late in the opera, where it belongs, to right after Leporello‘s ”Catalogue“ aria, where it made no dramatic sense. (Yes, I know that librettist Lorenzo da Ponte sanctioned that move in his late years, but he was wrong, too.) Boerlage also saw fit to restore the inept comic duet for Leporello and Zerlina, ”Per queste tue manine,“ which Mozart had later tossed in to titillate the Viennese crowd, a blemish on his divinity.
</p>
<p>    Aside from a bit of horseplay in Act Two that could have taken place on the doorstep of Animal House, the young cast delivered a spirited performance, properly moving at times, well-paced under William Vendice&#8217;s musical leadership &#8212; a step upward from his bloodless La Boheme at the Music Center last November. I usually hesitate at singling out individual members of student casts, but I will not be surprised to encounter the names of In Joon Jang, the Giovanni, or Duana Demus, the Anna, in future operagoing. My compliments also to Bong-won Kye, the Ottavio, who attempted to emulate John McCormack‘s legendary feat of delivering the cadenzas in ”Il mio tesoro“ in single breaths, and came pretty damn close.
</p>
<p>    Opera Pacific&#8217;s Macbeth, which came between the two Mozart treasures, served to open the Verdi centennial celebration, and did so with distinction, not quite perfect but good enough to pass.
</p>
<p>    Shakespeare was Verdi‘s dramatic idol and his passion; Macbeth, first created in 1847 and extensively revised 18 years later, was his first requiting of that passion. The extraordinary musical insights of his Otello and Falstaff were not yet at his command; the brassy oom-pahs of his early style take over now and then (notably in the cornball measures as Duncan and his retinue march to their doom, and the big choral numbers wherein Shakespeare&#8217;s mere three Witches become a stage-filling chorus). Both the 1847 and 1865 versions have their flaws, and wiser music directors concoct a kind of pastiche from both.
</p>
<p>   That was John DeMain‘s decision in his Macbeth for Costa Mesa; it wisely did away with the Witches&#8217; ballet, the worst of their scenes, but retained the final music of Macbeth‘s defeat and death from the early version. As happens frequently at Opera Pacific since his accession as artistic director in 1998, DeMain was the evening&#8217;s true hero, laying out a spirited, richly colored performance to honor the exuberance of Verdi‘s art while maintaining respect for the composer&#8217;s honorable evocation of Shakespeare‘s tragic accents.
</p>
<p>   In a prevailingly young cast, Richard Paul Fink delivered a resonant portrait of Shakespeare&#8217;s doomed hero, although his dramatic baritone seemed occasionally awash in its own juiciness. Cynthia Lawrence had a few shrill moments as his Lady, but exited most appealingly on the famous high D-flat of her ”Sleepwalking“ aria. Eric Owens‘ Banquo and the ringing challenge of Andrew Richards&#8217; Macduff figured among the evening‘s modest stock of genuine vocal treasures. Colin Graham&#8217;s production, created originally for Chile‘s Santiago Opera, moved smoothly amid the mobile big black blocks strewn with skeletal bones and other spookeries in Ramon Lopez&#8217;s stage designs. The luxuriant tatters of Joel Berlin‘s Witches&#8217; costumes looked just off the boat from Hell, another positive enhancement.
</p>
<p>   My operatic inundation had actually begun the previous weekend. In San Francisco for John Adams‘ astonishing new El Niño, about which more in a couple of weeks, I also dropped in on the Lamplighters and their current The Gondoliers, sheer delight despite the unaccountable omission of the ”Spark of a swindle“ duet, a most farsighted takeoff on celebrity product endorsements. Tamperings or no, the Lamplighters &#8212; now rounding out their 48th season &#8212; offer the best Gilbert and Sullivan available in this country. Monroe Kanouse is their music director, whom I last knew half a century ago as a promising Berkeley undergrad; his Gondoliers had the ensemble elegance and clarity of Mozart. The crowd had the expected preponderance of aged-in-wood Savoyards, among whom I reckon myself; still, there were enough smooth young faces in attendance to suggest that this cherishable repertory has a few more years of life &#8212; as do we all.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Lou, At&#160;Last</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2001/01/lou-at-last/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2001/01/lou-at-last/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 17 Jan 2001 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=329</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[The Philharmonic&#8217;s final con-cert of the old year began with Lou Harrison‘s Suite for Violin, Piano and Small Orchestra, magic made audible. James DePreist conducted, replacing the indisposed Franz Welser-Most; Robert McDuffie and Christopher Taylor were the soloists. The 10-member performing ensemble looked lost on the stage of the Dorothy Chandler Pavilion &#8212; before, that [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>The Philharmonic&#8217;s final con-cert of the old year began with Lou Harrison‘s Suite for Violin, Piano and Small Orchestra, magic made audible. James DePreist conducted, replacing the indisposed Franz Welser-Most; Robert McDuffie and Christopher Taylor were the soloists. The 10-member performing ensemble looked lost on the stage of the Dorothy Chandler Pavilion &#8212; before, that is, the music. Then everything became very grand, as Harrison&#8217;s music usually does.
</p>
<p>    This was the first music of Harrison ever to appear on the orchestra‘s regular subscription series: recognition overdue for a much-loved composer, now 83, who has served California&#8217;s musical life as long and as graciously as anyone you can name. The suite is early Harrison, written at 34, but the seeds of the later creator are already there: the world-view, the eloquence of simple things simply put and, most of all, the radiant beauty. In a radio series on West Coast music that I concocted in 1981, Harrison was the first one to speak; when I asked him what it meant to be a California composer, he answered, disarmingly and directly, “I suppose it means that you don‘t have to be afraid to be pretty.”
</p>
<p>   There&#8217;s a special kind of beauty in Harrison‘s music, and it goes beyond what mere “prettiness” implies. The best of it meanders on and on, as someone might make up a very personal tune to fill a big empty space &#8212; on a mountaintop, say. Matters of greater artifice &#8212; regular phrase structure, or the notion of beginning and ending in the same key &#8212; assume relatively minor importance. Music and listener become extremely close; a simply harmonized melody, naive at first, has a way of ensnaring you almost before you notice.
</p>
<p>   The music seems to come at you from everywhere. “Cherish the hybrids” is another famous Harrison watchword. The suite was composed long before Harrison&#8217;s first delighted journey to Asia, so its exoticisms &#8212; the two movements subtitled “Gamelan,” for example &#8212; have a made-up, storybook quality compared to the deeply observed Asianisms of his later works. “A honeyed thunder” is Harrison‘s own description of this haunting, teasing music; at the end, as the final Chorale trails off toward silence, you might also suspect the presence of fireflies.
</p>
<p>   The Harrison suite shone a beacon light in the celebration of California&#8217;s state of the arts that has gone on for the past few months, most notably at the County Museum. I‘ve already dealt with the first two concerts in the museum&#8217;s “Focus on California” series, planned with great resource by LACMA‘s music director, Dorrance Stalvey, and, praise be, attended by crowds almost as big as they deserved. The last two in the series, which ended on January 8, were no less interesting and drew equally large turnouts.
</p>
<p>   December&#8217;s program offered a look back on the goings-on at the lively and influential San Francisco Tape Music Center of the 1960s, a creative swirl half-hidden in a creaky old building on Divisadero Street, where fantastic experiments in electronic music, abstract filmmaking, dance and poetry &#8212; separate, or sometimes combined &#8212; served to draw a timeline across the century. Nothing after the Tape Center was in any way like anything before. On his first visit to S.F. in 1957, Pierre Boulez had brought along the new 10-inch DG LP of Karlheinz Stockhausen‘s Song of the Youths. For a couple of weeks I programmed it several times a day on KPFA. Inflamed by these first tricklings from the electronic studios of West Germany, composers (Morton Subotnick, Ramon Sender and Pauline Oliveros), video artists (Tony Martin and the single-named superstar Pablo) and their colleagues set about inventing an entire new artistic language, strange in its sound-sources, wonderfully rich in its lines of juncture. Multimedia was born at the Tape Center; later ventures in combining the arts, including New York&#8217;s Electric Circus and Walt Disney‘s wacko dream that eventuated as CalArts, were the direct descendants.
</p>
<p>    Inevitably, the Tape Center program at LACMA &#8212; consisting of multimedia works that had toured to astonished audiences across the U.S. in 1964 &#8212; had a touch of the archaic about it, like a display of a wind-up Victrola. But the energy was there, and when all eyes were captured by the video of a younger, svelter Pauline Oliveros meditating into her accordion &#8212; the same thing the present-day Pauline did a few months ago in the new-music festival at Beyond Baroque &#8212; some message about the timelessness of important art came triumphantly across. Eventually, the spirit of the Tape Center dwindled, not for the reason of poverty that usually besets noble experiments, but because of a big-money foundation grant that required its absorption into aca-deme. Its wings clipped, it oozed into Oakland&#8217;s Mills College, where its echoes still resound.
</p>
<p>    Last week‘s final program captured some of those echoes, since both the performing group &#8212; that local icon known as the California EAR Unit &#8212; and most of the composers have been entwined with CalArts for part of their respective careers. There was lots of prettiness that night, and also some genuine beauty. Flutes live (Dorothy Stone) and on tape blended in Rand Steiger&#8217;s haunting memorial piece For Marnie Dilling; in her Blind Window, Robin Lorentz‘s soft, distanced solo violin melted along with small percussion and Angie Bray&#8217;s wisps of video to create a kind of Japanese twilight; Steven Hoey‘s Coloratura, living up to its name, involved the EAR Unit in the whoopee they do better than anyone I know. At the end there was Paul Dresher &#8212; not of CalArts, not of the Tape Center, but of kindred spirit as his lush, throbbing Chorale Times Two hovered on the edge of many kinds of music, led this way and that by the urging of his own electric guitar.
</p>
<p>   “This way and that”: It&#8217;s as good a description of California‘s music as you could want.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Picking Up the&#160;Pieces</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2001/01/picking-up-the-pieces/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2001/01/picking-up-the-pieces/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 10 Jan 2001 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=328</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[The year ended with fitting resonance. At Westwood&#8217;s St. Paul the Apostle Church, Dana Marsh was back for a last time to lead his boys, men, soloists and Michael Eagan‘s Musica Angelica in one more superb Messiah before embarking for broader horizons; he will be missed. One soloist needs special, ecstatic mention: soprano Alice Gribbin, [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>The year ended with fitting resonance. At Westwood&#8217;s St. Paul the Apostle Church, Dana Marsh was back for a last time to lead his boys, men, soloists and Michael Eagan‘s Musica Angelica in one more superb Messiah before embarking for broader horizons; he will be missed. One soloist needs special, ecstatic mention: soprano Alice Gribbin, half-Brithalf-angel. At UCLA&#8217;s Royce Hall, Jeffrey Kahane and his L.A. Chamber Orchestra ended the Bach year with a creditable B-minor Mass. I particularly liked his idea of alternating small and large ensembles in some of the big choruses, enhancing both drama and clarity. Other fine noises filled the air at Royce a few days later, as the winners from Placido Domingo‘s Operalia returned for a gala concert to prove that wise judges still exist somewhere in the world, and that opera has nothing to fear from any immediate singer shortage.
</p>
<p>    The year began and ended with Esa-Pekka Salonen: one Green Umbrella concert of his music in January, to speed him into his sabbatical year, and another in December to reveal the fruits of his labors during that year. The two works &#8212; the grit of the orchestral L.A. Variations and the wit of the new piano workout Dichotomie &#8212; declare the variety of expressive manner and the versatility of our resident maestro, and, as well, of resident virtuosa Gloria Cheng, who dispatched the latter work in an awesome gloves-on gloves-off performance. In the months between those events, the steelwork went up at the Disney Hall site, substantial assurance of what we in journalism know as ”MORE TK.“
</p>
<p>   Absent Salonen, the Philharmonic&#8217;s year left fewer than usual lingering memories. A succession of Brits lingers the most vividly: the splendid Mark Elder to lead two programs, including a Verdi Requiem eloquent, noble and roof-raising; and the Ojai Festival under Simon Rattle, with rapturous new music by Thomas Ades and Mark Anthony Turnage. In October, there was Benjamin Britten‘s War Requiem, memorably led by Antonio Pappano, with the extraordinary British tenor Ian Bostridge in his local debut. (By the way, I&#8217;m about halfway through Bostridge‘s doctoral thesis, Witchcraft and Its Transformations, published by Oxford. It&#8217;s not as much fun as the Harry Potter books, but no less informative.) On the other hand, Sir Roger Norrington‘s revival of Michael Tippett&#8217;s oratorio A Child of Our Time, music praised around 1940 for its agitprop bravery, merely proclaimed the greater wisdom in according sleeping dogs a wide berth.
</p>
<p>    The Los Angeles Opera, in its changing-of-the-guard year, also fared well on Britten‘s shores, with a Billy Budd as a seaworthy ending to Peter Hemmings&#8217; reign and a Peter Grimes among the first bright lights of the Domingo era. The long-overdue Aida, which began that era, went only partway toward ending the famine, while the recent drab revival of La Boheme underlined the fact that new managements can‘t always change things overnight. The best of opera last year lay more in the portents than the actuality: smashing news from the Domingo camp about the future (a George Lucas Ring, superpatron Alberto Vilar&#8217;s millions, the names of Kent Nagano and Valery Gergiev aglow on the conductors‘ roster, the wealth of promise among the Operalia singers). There was grand opera elsewhere as well, an Ariadne auf Naxos at Marilyn Horne&#8217;s Music Academy of the West in Santa Barbara, and the Long Beach Opera‘s exhumations of opera old and almost-new: Jacopo Peri&#8217;s Euridice of 1600 and Luigi Dallapiccola‘s Volo di Notte of 1940.
</p>
<p>    To the County Museum, out of Italy, came a hitherto unknown pianist named Marino Formenti, for whom four killer 20th-century programs &#8212; including Jean Barraque&#8217;s Sonata, the Great White Shark of piano music &#8212; held no terrors. (He returns for three more programs next month.) George Crumb, whose music for no sensible reason languishes half-forgotten nowadays, was properly honored at a Green Umbrella concert, and got to charm another large audience at one of the Philharmonic‘s valuable but now discontinued (why?) Sunday-morning QA-plus-pastry sessions. Philip Glass&#8217; Symphony No. 5 &#8212; a work hailed in some quarters as the cat‘s pajamas of all apocalypses, but in others as the kind of thing that gives self-indulgence a bad name &#8212; opened the Orange County Philharmonic&#8217;s Eclectic Orange festival. The Orange folk found better ways to affix their much-maligned county to the cultural map: Bostridge in a Schubert-Wolf program in exactly the right small space for lieder recitals; Mikel Rouse in another of his multimedia almost-operas; and, earlier in the year, a Bach program conducted by Jordi Savall, as satisfying as any entry in that composer‘s anniversary year.
</p>
<p>    Of all the movers and shakers I&#8217;ve had to deal with, Teresa (”Tracey“) Sterne was the one I found it hardest to say ”no“ to. The last time I tried (and failed) was in New York on January 31, 1986; I remember the date because it was Schubert‘s birthday. Tracey cajoled me into coming to a Schubert program at Symphony Space to hear some new singer she&#8217;d discovered. The singer was Dawn Upshaw. Fifteen years later, I can still hear every note of that concert.
</p>
<p>    Tracey died last month, after years of battle with the one enemy, Lou Gehrig‘s disease, she couldn&#8217;t outtalk. In her great years she headed &#8212; no, actually, she invented &#8212; Nonesuch Records, a label that gave us new music (Cage, Crumb, Babbitt, Subotnick), old music lovingly restored (American ballroom songs, ragtime, Stephen Foster), world music recorded at the site, Bach cantatas led by unknowns (the excellent Karl Ristenpart). The artwork was worth hanging on the wall; the jacket notes assumed that you‘d be listening with brains as well as hormones. While other LPs sold for $5.95, Nonesuch went for $2.98.
</p>
<p>   Every record company has someone in charge who watches sales charts and sees to it that the slow items &#8212; chamber music, say, or Cage &#8212; get dropped at the end of the month. A very few in the annals of recording seem to understand, and work to preserve, the artistic value of their product. Goddard Lieberson at Columbia showed the way in the &#8217;50s; today‘s small list of survivors includes Manfred Eicher, the ”E“ of ECM; Bob Hurwitz, who still keeps the Nonesuch name flying above its corporate ownership; and brave souls at hole-in-the-wall ventures like New Albion, Mode and Bridge. Lieberson recorded new American music in the 1950s and financed that side of his catalog with Kostelanetz and show tunes; Tracey Sterne came on the scene in 1965. The two-disc Nonesuch tribute that Hurwitz put together in time for Tracey to know about it has some of her not-bad performances as a teenage pianist, and a sampling of her achievements as a record producer. Most of the latter remains in the catalog, reprocessed to CD. Her monument endures.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>The Barefoot Boy at&#160;50</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2000/12/the-barefoot-boy-at-50/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2000/12/the-barefoot-boy-at-50/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 27 Dec 2000 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=327</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Paul Dresher turns 50 on January 8 and plans to celebrate in his favorite way, surrounded by other musicians on a stage. Specifically, he will join the California EAR Unit at LACMA, in the last of the museum‘s “Focus on California” concerts, to take part in his Chorale Times Two on a program that also [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Paul Dresher turns 50 on January 8 and plans to celebrate in his favorite way, surrounded by other musicians on a stage. Specifically, he will join the California EAR Unit at LACMA, in the last of the museum‘s “Focus on California” concerts, to take part in his Chorale Times Two on a program that also includes music by composers Steve Hoey, Michael Fink, Nick Chase, Rand Steiger and Amy Knoles.
</p>
<p>    Fifty! It seems like only yesterday &#8212; but obviously wasn&#8217;t &#8212; that the lanky kid from the Palisades sat in the cockpit of an electronic console of his own devising, working the keyboards, taking an occasional whack at an electric guitar and wandering barefoot over the pedals. Liquid and Stellar Music was his big solo piece in 1981, and he took it around the world: passionate great globs of sound, wonderful to hear and to watch. The minimalists were riding high in those days: Glass, Reich and Adams. Was Dresher part of that scene?
</p>
<p>   “Think of me more as a pre-maximalist,” he says.
</p>
<p>   A few wrinkles and a few pounds later, Dresher escorts me with pride through his last few years and through his studio-workshop in a made-over West Oakland warehouse, near where the grass now grows on the site of the 1989 freeway collapse. His piece for LACMA is actually the second part of a longer work for solo violin and “electro-acoustic band”; the EAR Unit‘s Robin Lorentz will be soloist. Dresher will also participate, not on one of his famous electronic inventions, but on a good old down-to-earth electric guitar.
</p>
<p>   Dresher&#8217;s best-known music has been involved with theater, in one way or another, starting with his multimedia collaborations with George Coates (seeHear and areare, with their fabulous light-show effects) and moving on to his work with the unique performance artist Rinde Eckert. Slow Fire, the best-known of the Eckert pieces (available on video), maintains its energy, a chilling pageant of post-Vietnam Middle American values and the mindless terrorists they can produce. So do the later theatrical pieces, most of them produced here at Royce Hall over the years, e.g., Power Failure, a bitter satire, and Pioneer, which, says Dresher, “contains something here and there to offend almost everyone.”
</p>
<p>   Chorale Times Two represents something of a new direction for Dresher. “Most of my music up to now has been contrapuntal, in one way or another,” he says. “But recently I‘ve been re-studying Bach&#8217;s chorale harmonizations, which produce marvelous harmonic progressions while the inner voices move contrapuntally. This new piece doesn‘t sound like Bach, of course, but its big melodic arches take shape over a continuous unfolding harmony, and that&#8217;s something new for me. I‘ve been thinking a lot about the human voice and how to use its real singing power, something you don&#8217;t find much in my old theater pieces.
</p>
<p>   ”From there I‘ve also been thinking about music for solo instruments. [San Francisco violinist] David Abel has had a big influence on me, the way his instrument sings and the meticulousness with which he prepares everything. He warned me against composing real concertos for a soloist and orchestra, because symphony orchestras never get the time to rehearse new music, so I wrote this new piece for violinist and my own Paul Dresher Ensemble. Now I&#8217;m working on a cello concerto for Joan Jeanrenaud, who‘s had a busy life since she left the Kronos Quartet. But that&#8217;ll also be with the Ensemble; we‘ll do it at Stanford in February.“
</p>
<p>    The workshop is a vast room permeated with the spirit of invention. Dresher directs me first to a flat strung instrument resting on sawhorses. In elementary physics you learn about the monochord, a single stretched string perhaps 2 feet long and mounted on a frame, which can be divided in exact ratios to demonstrate the overtone series. Dresher&#8217;s ”quadrachord“ is 14 feet long, and there are four strings instead of one: two of steel, two of phosphor bronze. A bass pickup sits next to both bridges, to feed their sound into amplification. ”With strings this long,“ says Dresher, ”I can divide them so exactly that I can produce up to the 24th overtone, instead of the seventh or eighth.“ He goes at the strings with a bass-viol bow; the whole room resonates. We are in the realm of ”pure“ intonation, not the set of compromises that form the normal tuning of familiar Western music. The effect is weird and unsettling, but more and more composers are devising ways of using these sounds. ”What I can do with this,“ says Dresher, ”is allow composers to come here, sample these harmonies and work with them at home, without having to lug 14-foot instruments around.“
</p>
<p>    He has another trick. He inserts two lengths of threaded half-inch steel rod across the strings and strikes them with a small steel rod. Wow! The sound is overpowering, huge and rich. Dresher walks over to the opposite wall, where other strings are stretched over 55 feet. Again, it‘s not the sort of instrument you&#8217;d carry to a gig; once again, however, the sounds themselves are portable via sampling, and they‘ll shake your spine. They end up in a tube amplifier that Dresher picked up at a yard sale for $10. The controls are dirty, and the static roars until the tubes warm up, but, as Dresher or any other sound aficionado will tell you, the tones are pure.
</p>
<p>   At one end of the room looms a giant A-shaped structure, 18 feet high, with a platform about halfway up as the crossbar of the ”A.“ A frame is attached to the lower end of the ”A,“ with several strings running vertically from tuning pegs. In front of all this hangs a 17-foot pendulum, a metal tube in several sections, attached to a pivot on top and with a weight at the bottom. Dresher pulls up the pendulum and releases it; there&#8217;s a plectrum on the back of it that strums across the strings. For the next 10 minutes or so, the pendulum‘s arc ever so gradually lessens, with the ostinato of plucked-string tone also slowing imperceptibly. Even in that messed-up workroom the effect is spellbinding; in a performance space it would surely be even more so.
</p>
<p>   ”The beauty of this whatever-you-want-to-call-it,“ says Dresher, ”is the way it becomes its own kind of theater. There&#8217;s the pendulum, for starters. Then there are these platforms. You could, for instance, have a bass clarinetist standing halfway up &#8212; that, by the way, has become my favorite acoustic instrument, for its amazing variety of tone &#8212; or a dancer; they could work with the rhythm of the pendulum, or against it. Also, this whole thing breaks down, so you can get it onto a truck with no problem. I‘ll be taking it to Minneapolis for the premiere of a new piece, Soundstage, in June.
</p>
<p>   “When I was studying at UC San Diego in the 1970s, Harry Partch&#8217;s instruments were still around, and Harry too, in spirit anyhow. I was amazed by the audacity of this man, building the instruments that freed him from all the harmonic traditions of Western music. Then I worked with Bob Erickson, who was also always inventing. Those stroked steel rods that he used, for example; are they still around? People should be composing for them all the time.
</p>
<p>   ”For me, music and theater have always been the same. All my life, I‘ve been dreaming up instruments and then building them. I build the instruments first, and then I find the music that&#8217;s in them and help it escape.“</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Franz Among&#160;Friends</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2000/12/franz-among-friends/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2000/12/franz-among-friends/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 20 Dec 2000 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=326</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[It&#8217;s not pleasant, witnessing the gradual retreat of the classical-record industry from artistic significance to blandness and the spread of the notion that serious music won‘t hurt you if you don&#8217;t listen too hard. Retreads predominate: Romantico Domingo, The Ultimate Mozart Album, The Greatest Classical Show on Earth. Promising projects are begun, then abandoned midway: [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>It&#8217;s not pleasant, witnessing the gradual retreat of the classical-record industry from artistic significance to blandness and the spread of the notion that serious music won‘t hurt you if you don&#8217;t listen too hard. Retreads predominate: Romantico Domingo, The Ultimate Mozart Album, The Greatest Classical Show on Earth. Promising projects are begun, then abandoned midway: Sony‘s Ligeti project with Esa-Pekka Salonen, for example.
</p>
<p>    It&#8217;s a privilege as well as a shock to report, therefore, the completion of one project that, on its own, suggests that it‘s still possible to take the recording industry seriously, and to suspect that, in some corners, there remains a belief in a buying public with taste, brains and curiosity. A couple of months ago, the British label Hyperion, whose products are distributed in this country by Harmonia Mundi, completed its recording of the entire song literature of Franz Schubert. Volume 37, the final disc, is devoted to songs of Schubert&#8217;s last year, but that doesn‘t mean that the entire series, consisting of over 750 separate entries, runs in chronological order. One of the remarkable aspects of the series, in fact, is the variety of intelligence expended in organizing each disc. You may not want to spend something like 50 consecutive hours with Schubert&#8217;s total song output, but if you did you would not be bored.
</p>
<p>   The intelligence is that of Graham Johnson, who organized the order of events, chose the appropriate singers (Brits mostly, but not entirely) for each song, accompanied every performance at the piano, and wrote 37 sets of exhaustive program notes &#8212; in booklets running as long as 100 pages each &#8212; that, by themselves, constitute a landmark of writing about music out of love, scholarship and evangelical ardor. (A Schubert scholar myself, with a thesis to prove it, I write those last words out of awe and undisguised envy.) Several of the volumes run chronologically &#8212; ”The Young Schubert,“ ”The Final Year,“ etc. Some attempt to re-create the ”Schubertiades,“ the famous informal gatherings of Schubert adorers where poets gathered, songs were sung, and intelligent conversation ran thick and fast. The series includes an ”1815 Schubertiade“ and a ”Goethe Schubertiade,“ although the great poet-philosopher never attended one in person. (In the final set of notes, Johnson wittily imagines a mutual-admiration meeting between composer and poet. It takes place a few years after Schubert‘s actual death and shortly before Goethe&#8217;s.) Most rewarding are the volumes arranged around themes: a collection of water songs, a nocturnal set, and one about visions of Death and Heaven that begins with the harrowing ”Tod und das Madchen“ and ends with a serene, angelic ”Seligkeit“ that sends you off onto your own Cloud Nine.
</p>
<p>    Schubert‘s reputation is on the rise. The rediscovered, reconstructed ”deathbed“ symphony (No. 10 in some reckonings), with its haunting, bleak slow movement, heightens the sense of loss in his death at 31. Mitsuko Uchida&#8217;s new Philips recordings of his sonatas and impromptus are awesomely beautiful. I envy anyone first discovering &#8212; preferably in the Emersons‘ recording on DG &#8212; the astonishing icy grandeur of the G-major, the last of the string quartets. Even so, it is the songs that define Schubert the best, and can move us the most by our just thinking about them. As the church cantatas for Bach, as the late piano concertos for Mozart, the confluence of Schubert and poetry &#8212; even bad poetry so long as it also possessed a soul &#8212; produced an art whose closeness to humanness leaves mere verbal description futile. Something happens inside all of us when the Boy cries out in terror at the Erlking&#8217;s caress; when the Young Nun finds solace in a glimpse of heaven; when, across the still landscape of Night and Dreams, the harmony suddenly drops to some other realm and we lose a breath.
</p>
<p>    Johnson‘s zeal fills these discs remarkably well. Everything is here: fragments of songs left unfinished for one reason or another; poems that Schubert set more than once, sometimes years apart; part songs for several voices with piano; interesting oddities. A set of pretty, wordless vocal exercises bears witness that Schubert earned a few shillings now and then giving voice lessons. A bullying letter from the poet Matthaus Collin to his cousin Joseph Spaun (”Why do you never write . . .?“) is transformed by Schubert into a parody of Italian operatic recitative. ”Der Hochzeitbraten“ for three voices with piano accompaniment is a hilarious small scene celebrating a rural wedding feast. A duet for soprano and bass by the 17-year-old Schubert, to a text from Goethe&#8217;s Faust, points toward a career in opera that, alas, never got off the ground.
</p>
<p>   Not all of Johnson‘s singers are elegant vocal technicians, but most are; the list includes such luminaries as Thomas Hampson, Elly Ameling, Lucia Popp and Thomas Allen. Even among the ever-so-slightly-lesser lights, the level is remarkably high, and it&#8217;s obvious through the entire ensemble that Johnson‘s presence at the piano becomes the major shaping force. And there are wonderful performances: Ian Bostridge, participating at the very start of his career, will wring your heart with Die schone Mullerin, which gleans an extra thread of gold as the veteran Dietrich Fischer-Dieskau, who owned this music in his time, comes on to read the verses. Among the German singers, Matthias Goerne&#8217;s Winterreise is superb, and the great tenor Peter Schreier delivers one of my favorite less-known songs, ”Auf der Bruck,“ with glorious hammer strokes. Brigitte Fassbaender has the entire ”Death and Heaven“ disc to herself, and delivers a devastating ”Tod und das Madchen“ at the start. One disappointment: That delightful piece with the clarinet and the yodeling, ”Der Hirt auf dem Felsen,“ should have been on the ”Last Years“ collection. It had, however, been sung by Arleen Auger, rather heavily, on an earlier disc.
</p>
<p>   The series began with Janet Baker‘s singing of ”Der Jungling am Bache,“ a song from Schubert&#8217;s 15th year &#8212; full of ”youthful ardor and innocence,“ says Graham Johnson‘s note. It ends with Anthony Rolfe Johnson&#8217;s singing of ”Die Taubenpost“ from 16 years later. ”This blend of happiness and wistfulness,“ writes Graham Johnson, ”sets the seal, gently and without ceremony, on a composer‘s entire songwriting career, indeed his entire creative life.“ It is generally reckoned as Schubert&#8217;s last song, completed in October 1828. One month later, its composer was dead.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Roll&#160;Call</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2000/12/roll-call/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2000/12/roll-call/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 13 Dec 2000 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=325</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Over two recent weeks I heard 14 works by composers of the century just ended (or just ending, if you&#8217;re one of those), spread through six programs. Herewith, a slightly out-of-breath report on these concerts, in reverse chronological order. December 7: Peter Serkin is soloist, with Christoph Eschenbach and the Philharmonic, in Peter Lieberson‘s The [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Over two recent weeks I heard 14 works by composers of the century just ended (or just ending, if you&#8217;re one of those), spread through six programs. Herewith, a slightly out-of-breath report on these concerts, in reverse chronological order.
</p>
<p>    December 7: Peter Serkin is soloist, with Christoph Eschenbach and the Philharmonic, in Peter Lieberson‘s The Red Garuda, a 25-minute piano concerto, tone poem with piano, neither or both, named after a bird in Buddhist mythology that flies and never stops. I want to like it, if only because Lieberson&#8217;s father, record producer Goddard, was one of the industry‘s true heroes, but I cannot. Turgid in texture, its emotion delivered as a kind of screeching (think bad Scriabin), the work needed (and, fortunately, got) a Mozart concerto afterward to clear the air. Guess which deserved, and drew, the most applause.
</p>
<p>   December 5: Donald Crockett&#8217;s excellent Thornton Contemporary Music Ensemble at USC introduces Naomi Sekiya‘s nicely energetic Arachnid Dance for guitar and strings, two works by Uzbekistan-born Australian Elena Kats-Chernin, and some time-wasting stuff by Gerald Levinson (whose deplorable Second Symphony, played here in 1995, left scars not yet healed). Kats-Chernin&#8217;s Clocks runs a fantastic array of audible color (percussion, brass, a saxophone) over an insistent metronomic banging; even better are some of her ragtime pieces that Vicki Ray played at the last ”Piano Spheres“ concert.
</p>
<p>   December 4: Esa-Pekka Salonen‘s Dichotomie, one of the products of his sabbatical from the Philharmonic podium, draws a capacity crowd to Zipper for the season&#8217;s second ”Green Umbrella,“ but Jonathan Harvey‘s Song Offerings is even more worth the trip: settings of misty Tagore poetry with a solo voice (the marvelous Elissa Johnston) engulfed in radiance from the Steven Stucky&#8211;led chamber ensemble&#8217;s microtones and distant showers of sparks. Salonen‘s 19-minute piece, two movements of pianistic glitter &#8212; Ravel here, John Adams&#8217; Phrygian Gates there &#8212; is slight of substance against, say, the L.A. Variations, but enormously attractive, and is gorgeously played by Gloria Cheng (using half-gloves some of the time to enable palm-of-the-hand glissandos). Lou Harrison‘s Grand Duo, which began the program, would have given off more charm at half the length. Harry Partch&#8217;s Barstow gained nothing from string players and baritone John Schneider in hobo attire: the wrong music in the wrong setting.
</p>
<p>   November 30, December 3: In an interesting coincidence, the two works that bracket Kurt Weill‘s mid-career crisis are given here back to back, the ballet-with-song The Seven Deadly Sins of 1934 &#8212; his last European work (and his last collaboration with Bertolt Brecht) &#8212; and The Eternal Road, the biblicalpolitical pageant that brought him to New York to work on Max Reinhardt&#8217;s 1937 Broadway production. Still afizz from their Mahler the week before, Zubin Mehta and the Philharmonic deliver the Sins in a smashing, eloquent reading of Weill‘s purple orchestration, with the winds playing &#8212; as required &#8212; as if with garlic on their breath. Sheri Greenawald&#8217;s in-your-face delivery is a little overwrought for Brecht‘s slashing satire, but the guys of the Hudson Shad Quartet steal the show. Pre-concert, they had sung, enchantingly, a half-hour of Weill&#8217;s theater music.
</p>
<p>   At Brentwood‘s University Synagogue, with its iffy acoustics, the enterprising Noreen Green and her Los Angeles Jewish Symphony produce more than an hour&#8217;s worth of Weill‘s hauntingly beautiful Eternal Road music, its first hearing here since a Hollywood Bowl performance led by Franz Waxman over 50 years ago. It comes over despite some woolly work from an overlarge chorus and despite Green&#8217;s own not-quite-eloquent translation of Franz Werfel‘s German text. (Among the LAJS&#8217;s previous accomplishments, I‘m told: Handel&#8217;s Judas Maccabeus in Yiddish.) Onstage as between-the-scenes narrator there‘s the veteran actor Dick Van Patten, who as Dickie Van Patten had played the boy Isaac in the 1937 original: a nice existential touch.
</p>
<p>   November 27: LACMA&#8217;s second ”Focus on California“ concert honors the refugees who turned the area into a German cultural colony (complete with its own pastry shop, Benes on West Third, which endures). There was nothing the least bit warmed by the local sun in Hanns Eisler‘s 1943 Third Piano Sonata, which Leonard Stein played earnestly; how could there be, when Eisler&#8217;s only truly California-inspired work was a set of songs vividly detailing his hatred for the place? Schoenberg‘s String Trio of 1945, his last major 12-tone work and as eloquent a statement as any of the expressive power of that style, could have taken shape in pre-Hitler Berlin. Ernst Krenek&#8217;s Aulokithara of 1971, originally composed for oboe, harp and orchestra, and dolled up a year later by transferring the orchestral accompaniment to what passed for electronic sounds (”whoosh-whoosh, plink-plank“) at the time, could have been anyone‘s overextended academic exercise, anywhere in the world, anytime from 1930 on. That leaves Ingolf Dahl&#8217;s 1946 Concerto a Tre as the evening‘s one unmitigated charmer, as though old Benes himself had been standing at the door handing out his renowned Apfelstrudel. Another delight is the high quality of performance, from the iconic Stein; the string players Maiko Kawabata, David Walther and William Skeen; David Sherr (ambulating through Krenek&#8217;s prescribed stageful of oboes in a vain search for interesting music); harpist Amy Wilkins; and the smiling clarinetist Gary Gray, whose smile rubs off onto Dahl‘s piece and becomes a positive gleam.
</p>
<p>    Meanwhile, back on Bunker Hill: An audience&#8217;s collective tear ducts in the fourth act are the sure-fire litmus for any La Boheme performance; on opening night, from a well-located seat in the Dorothy Chandler Pavilion, I detect nary a sniffle. The Herbert Ross production, first seen in 1993, is especially admirable for the way it leaves room for a properly chosen cast to behave as recognizable human participants in a human drama. No such luck this time, however. The idea may have been a good one, to cast the opera with young unknowns, but we get a shrill, squally Rodolfo in Aquiles Machado, tenor-shaped in the blobby, old-fashioned way so that Herb Ross‘ plan for his fourth-act entrance, riding a bicycle, is out of the question. (He merely pushes it on.)
</p>
<p>    Leontina Vaduva&#8217;s Mimi lacks spirit, tone or even proper respect for pitch &#8212; fashioned, in other words, from the same tattered fabric as her Marguerite in last season‘s Faust. Earle Patriarco&#8217;s Marcello, a company debut, also seems cut from common cloth; Eric Owens‘ Colline and Malcolm MacKenzie&#8217;s Schaunard are, so to speak, just there. That leaves Inva Mula‘s Musetta to steal hearts and, indeed, the whole show &#8212; as she had in the 1997 revival &#8212; during her few moments onstage, and to make at least those moments worth the $148 that the company believes such second-rate entertainment should be garnering at the box office. On the podium is William Vendice, the company&#8217;s chorus master and head of musical staff &#8212; but hardly the torchbearer to make these proceedings burst into flame. Placido Domingo, an old and trustworthy Boheme hand, will conduct this weekend‘s performance (December 16 matinee). That has to be an improvement.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Pianissimo</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2000/11/pianissimo/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2000/11/pianissimo/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 29 Nov 2000 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=324</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[AndrAs Schiff began his recent Philharmonic stint with Bach‘s D-minor Concerto, seated at the keyboard of a 9-foot concert grand piano with the lid removed, conducting a properly small contingent of string players. I&#8217;ve been around long enough to remember when Bach on the concert grand was seen as an unpardonable anachronism. That it is [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>AndrAs Schiff began his recent Philharmonic stint with Bach‘s D-minor Concerto, seated at the keyboard of a 9-foot concert grand piano with the lid removed, conducting a properly small contingent of string players. I&#8217;ve been around long enough to remember when Bach on the concert grand was seen as an unpardonable anachronism. That it is no longer the case stands as testimony to the sublime intelligence of today‘s generation of Bach performers &#8212; Schiff and Murray Perahia above all &#8212; and, of course, to their immediate ancestor, Glenn Gould. It also stands as further proof of the constantly growing awareness that the overwhelming strengths in Bach&#8217;s music transcend their time and speak eloquently into today‘s ears.
</p>
<p>    I&#8217;ve lost count of the number of times I‘ve heard this particular concerto, in its various metamorphoses. It exists in the familiar version for harpsichord, in a speculative reconstruction to bolster the theory that it was originally a work for violin, and &#8212; most amazing &#8212; in Bach&#8217;s own recycling of the first two movements as part of his Cantata No. 146 (”Wir mussen durch viel Trubsal“), where the already-complex slow movement, in a broader orchestration including organ solo, serves as accompaniment to an added-on four-part chorus. It‘s an extraordinary work in any form, an ongoing dialogue between soloist and orchestra, starting out in each of the three movements with separate and distinctive melodic material and eventually arriving at a convincing compromise. This is the same kind of wordless drama that you find in the slow movement of Beethoven&#8217;s Fourth Piano Concerto; Bach, some 80 years before, works the trick not once but three times. Hearing the work with piano, in Schiff‘s nicely paced, eloquent, balanced performance, made us aware of this relationship, and by doing so added a further measure to our wonderment at the self-regenerative power of Bach&#8217;s music.
</p>
<p>   Bach on the piano goes far back in history. Franz Liszt and Ferruccio Busoni rewrote many of the keyboard works to the taste of the romantic-minded pianist, with octave doublings to bring the sonorities up to a sexy roar. Even after Wanda Landowska‘s efforts to restore the ”authentic“ sound of the harpsichord &#8212; which she accomplished on an oversize, overclangorous instrument and with a rubato that Chopin might have admired &#8212; there were responsible, scholarly pianists, Artur Schnabel and Edwin Fischer notably, who honored the timelessness of Bach&#8217;s music by performing it on their chosen instrument.
</p>
<p>   Fischer‘s performance of the complete Well-Tempered Clavier, recorded in England in 1933-34, is now available as part of a large-scale and admirable reissue program, on Naxos and therefore dirt-cheap. A landmark in its time (yes, I was there) and obviously stemming from the noblest intentions, Fischer&#8217;s Bach recordings strike me today as anachronistic in a way similar to Landowska‘s. He is obviously aware that he is playing the ”wrong“ instrument, and seems reluctant to allow his piano to identify itself. This I hear as an objectivity that dulls the edge of some of the most powerful parts of this amazing compendium: the C-sharp minor Fugue in Book I, or the E-flat minor Prelude a few pages later. Now there is a Schiff recording of the WTC; as with his Bach performance here with the Philharmonic, it fulfills the music.
</p>
<p>   Schiff&#8217;s program included the Beethoven ”Emperor“ Concerto, also conducted from the keyboard facing into the orchestra. This was not as successful; it bore witness to Schiff as a great pianist in the process of metamorphosing into a conductor, but not there yet. Conducting the ”Emperor“ requires a lot more reaching out toward the orchestra than leaning into Bach‘s modest string ensemble, and some of Schiff&#8217;s gesticulations were slightly on the ludicrous side. His Teldec recording, with Bernard Haitink conducting, has a lot more to say about this grand score.
</p>
<p>   In between came Haydn‘s Symphony No. 95, with Schiff erect, standing on the podium with this splendid, quirky, surprise-filled music fully in hand. Why is this one symphony, from among the magnificent final 12, so seldom played? Does its being in a minor key &#8212; the same key as the Mahler Second &#8212; frighten small children (see below)? The tricks are plentiful, and they are vintage Haydn: the sudden, jagged silences in the first movement and again in the third; the bits of concerto here and there, especially the cello solos in the minuet. It&#8217;s all marvelous music, as Schiff seemed to agree.
</p>
<p>    That annual big bang known as Mehta‘s Mahler rattled the rafters in Mrs. Chandler&#8217;s Pavilion this past weekend, and a mostly rapturous crowd countered noise with noise at the end. The Mahler Second is one of music‘s great playgrounds: swings, merry-go-rounds, seesaws, a jungle gym and a lively zoo. Lenny showed us the way in; Zubi is the current groundskeeper.
</p>
<p>    You can, of course, put over the Mahler Second as serious music; Bruno Walter&#8217;s old recording does pretty well at that, and so do the performances under Haitink and Klaus Tennstedt, both currently out of print. But why bother when the LennyZubi approach, with Mahler‘s wide mood swings made wider, and the second movement&#8217;s whipped cream turned into a veritable slurp fest, can sweep a crowd to its feet? Ideally, the Second belongs outdoors; I‘ll never believe that Mahler, most prescient of composers, didn&#8217;t actually have the Hollywood Bowl in mind when he wrote the thing back in 1894. All that offstage brass and timpani in the last movement, which resounds so wondrously among the trees in Cahuenga Pass, sounded lost backstage in the Pavilion.
</p>
<p>   Seriously, Mehta‘s Mahler wasn&#8217;t all that bad this time around. He started off in an onslaught that could strike fear into small children &#8212; and which did exactly that on Friday night, until the little screamer (seated, would you believe, in the front row) was forcibly removed after the third or fourth howl. Mehta whipped the second-movement cream to just the right consistency, with a nice control over sliding strings and burbling winds. Mezzo-soprano Mary Phillips got a fine, dark tone into her fourth-movement solo; Heidi Grant Murphy‘s brief soprano solos were truly radiant, and I could have sworn that I actually picked out a word or two in the Master Chorale&#8217;s final chorus. Maybe, however, it was simply the gods of no-brain music, assuring me it would soon be over.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>All-American</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2000/11/all-american/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2000/11/all-american/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 22 Nov 2000 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=323</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[By accident or design, the past few days‘ musical offerings added up to an impressive sweep through a varied American music &#8212; a festival in everything but name. Famous antagonists &#8212; Aaron Copland and John Cage, say &#8212; came onto programs within hissing distance of one another. Henry Cowell and Terry Riley held hands across [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>By accident or design, the past few days‘ musical offerings added up to an impressive sweep through a varied American music &#8212; a festival in everything but name. Famous antagonists &#8212; Aaron Copland and John Cage, say &#8212; came onto programs within hissing distance of one another. Henry Cowell and Terry Riley held hands across the decades. A nation that could spawn In C and A Lincoln Portrait has to command respect.
</p>
<p>    There was Copland aplenty around the actual date (November 14) of his centennial, and a Pacific Symphony concert at the Orange County Performing Arts Center suggested that there were entries still to be discovered in the legacy of this greatly admired American icon. One of these was the score to a forgotten (and forgettable) 1939 film, produced for the New York World&#8217;s Fair, called The City &#8212; one of those better-life-is-yet-to-come documentaries indigenous to world‘s fairs &#8212; in which a bloviating narration went tsk-tsk across scenes of urban blight and foretold a glowing future with grassy expanses and geometrically perfect housing clusters resembling nothing so much as present-day Irvine. At Costa Mesa the original track was suppressed, the narration done live (by Dakin Matthews, an expert bloviator), and the score delivered in excellent sync by Carl St. Clair and the orchestra. I don&#8217;t see a shred of this music listed in Schwann, but it is a rich, strong half-hour of prime Copland, with a nice sardonic undertone that suggests that Copland, if obliged to live in an Irvine tract, would have spent time longing for the old days in the Brooklyn slums.
</p>
<p>   The Pacific Symphony program also had the grand old William Warfield to deliver the words of the Lincoln Portrait, reminder of a time when presidential eloquence had a heartfelt throb that might shame any current practitioner, with Copland‘s music familiar but no less stirring for that. Two nights later the Long Beach Symphony took on the Third Symphony, Copland&#8217;s most expansive nonvocal work, lumpy at times &#8212; which the wise and bouncy performance under David Loebel did not completely hide &#8212; but truly grandiose in its final pages. Loebel is one of this year‘s roster of hopeful conductors ”auditioning“ for the Long Beach podium: a worthy contender and, by the way, a superb pre-concert speaker. This program also included the Khachaturian Violin Concerto, manfully grappled with by the young Howard Zhang but a work long overdue at the dumpster.
</p>
<p>    Once again, as a year ago, the smartly conceived Eclectic Orange program included one of the hard-to-define, almost-operatic, close-to-magnificent stage works of near genius Mikel Rouse. Failing Kansas is actually the first of the trilogy of multimedia works of which Dennis Cleveland, heard here last season, is the second. This time Rouse was alone in the enveloping black box of Costa Mesa&#8217;s Founders Hall. On the screen was Cliff Baldwin‘s collage of images: themes of travel, fugitives on the lam, crime and punishment somehow interwoven to relate to Truman Capote&#8217;s ”nonfiction novel“ In Cold Blood. Out front Rouse sang, spoke, played his harmonica, all in near darkness; a further collage of voices moved in and out. Somehow, you grasped the shape of a tormented drama unfolding with irresistible force. Leaving, you passed the Performing Arts Center‘s main hall, where Mozart&#8217;s Magic Flute held the stage &#8212; delightfully, I‘m told. That work, too, demands a certain suspension of disbelief. Both works bring together sight, sound, music and words, and arrive onto an artistic level far beyond any of its parts.
</p>
<p>    Meanwhile, back up north, the County Museum&#8217;s Monday Evening series was made further irresistible by a visit from Steven Schick‘s UC San Diego percussion ensemble that calls itself red fish blue fish and can whale the daylights out of a stageful of noisemaking apparatus like you never heard. They brought an ancestral program: Henry Cowell&#8217;s amazing Ostinato Pianissimo of 1934, from whose steady, soft tick-tock dozens of later composers gleaned sustenance; the first of John Cage‘s ”Construction“ pieces, from five years later, deriving music out of thunder sheets, brake drums and the like; and a Lou Harrison concerto from 1959, in which a very European-sounding violin solo (played by Janos Negyesy as if in a Budapest cafe) rides above a very Indonesian-sounding percussion ensemble. At the end there came Terry Riley&#8217;s In C of 1964 &#8212; progenitor of and, somehow, participant in everything in music since its time. The performance ran 55 minutes, beautifully paced and &#8212; in the way changes of timbre seemed to highlight major divisions &#8212; unusually successful in projecting a sense of overall structure. I heard the work this time, as I haven‘t always, more as a masterpiece than as merely a trick.
</p>
<p>   At UCLA&#8217;s Schoenberg Hall (as it is once again known, after the school‘s wacko renaming excursion), Boston&#8217;s excellent young Borromeo String Quartet brought in Steve Mackey‘s Ars Moriendi, nine connected movements dealing in an abstract sense with dying, brought into being by Mackey&#8217;s own experience at his dying father‘s bedside. Such circumstances should disarm criticism, I suppose, but cannot in this case. Mackey&#8217;s 25-minute work, with all its evocative movement titles and with all the benevolence that may have actually guided his pen, is horrendously, offensively dull. So dull it was, in fact, that the murk and turgidity of the ensuing work, Brahms‘ F-minor Piano Quintet, with Christopher O&#8217;Riley as the fifth wheel, seemed like a Maypole dance by contrast.
</p>
<p>   Then there was Peter Schickele‘s new Cello Concerto, bearing the subtitle ”In Memoriam FDR“ and commissioned by the New Heritage Music Foundation, whose aim is to create a repertory of works in the spirit of major American figures or events. Paul Tobias, the foundation&#8217;s head and an excellent cellist, was the soloist; Jorge Mester, a longtime collaborator under both the P.D.Q. Bach and Schickele-the-Serious hats, conducted his excellent Pasadena Symphony. Roosevelt himself is a minor player in the work, which is probably just as well, since ”Home on the Range“ was reported to be his favorite tune. Instead, Schickele has created an audible counterpart of a Thomas Hart Benton mural, a brightly colored collage of sounds and tunes from the Roosevelt era, ranging as far afield as Richard Rodgers‘ ”Bewitched, Bothered and Bewildered“ and the mood cut short with a final funeral march. Academic and determinedly middle-road, Schickele&#8217;s serious music is out to please and does so nicely. Those who deplore the recent downgrading of his activities under his other hat can take solace in the news Schickele slipped to me at lunch that the illustrious P.D.Q. has composed a string quartet, whose world premiere is imminent. Watch the skies.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Birthday&#160;Boy</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2000/11/birthday-boy/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2000/11/birthday-boy/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 15 Nov 2000 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=322</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Conventional wisdom about Aaron Copland is that he is America‘s best “serious” composer so far. Already, however, we&#8217;re in trouble; that term “serious” is part of the arts vocabulary rendered meaningless by contemporary realities. What, for example, is the current workable antonym of “serious,” at a time when the music of Gershwin, Ellington &#8212; even [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Conventional wisdom about Aaron Copland is that he is America‘s best “serious” composer so far. Already, however, we&#8217;re in trouble; that term “serious” is part of the arts vocabulary rendered meaningless by contemporary realities. What, for example, is the current workable antonym of “serious,” at a time when the music of Gershwin, Ellington &#8212; even Bernstein, Coltrane and the Beatles &#8212; shows up in scholarly articles and Ph.D. seminars? Let‘s leave it at this, however shaky the ground: Aaron Copland has composed the best American music (so far, please remember) principally aimed at performance in concert halls and opera houses where audiences listen in silence and applaud (or cheer, or boo) only at the end. You notice I didn&#8217;t say “greatest.”
</p>
<p>    He is very much of a presence these days, since his 100th birthday occurs this week. (Among this year‘s anniversary guys, Bach has also fared well; Ernst Krenek and Kurt Weill less well.) Before last week&#8217;s Philharmonic concert &#8212; an event rendered vivid by the leadership of associate conductor Miguel Harth-Bedoya &#8212; there was a panel on Copland‘s music in which all the familiar terms were trotted out: modernist, populist, atonal, crossover. Attempts were made to cram Copland&#8217;s 70 or so creative years into pigeonholes: the Americana stuff of the ‘40s as retribution for the dissonances of earlier days, the 12-tone stuff of the &#8217;60s as the forgivable sins of old age.
</p>
<p>   It doesn‘t quite work that way. Part of the marvel of Copland is the central body of style he developed in his early days, built upon with the inventions and insights of later times but never consciously abandoned. The Philharmonic concert included the Symphonic Ode, which Copland composed in 1927&#8211;29 and cleaned up in a few orchestral details in 1955: a big work in several sections, for large orchestra. It is generally regarded as a relic of Copland&#8217;s bad-boy early days, although other works from the time, the jazz-permeated Piano Concerto and Music for the Theatre &#8212; which I‘ll get to in a minute &#8212; are anything but bad. The Ode is not, in truth, a work on a level with those two masterpieces; it is, among other things, too long for its length. What struck me, however, was how full this journeyman work was of later, better-known Copland: the throbbing strings and syncopated explosions, for example, that clearly foreshadowed a most unlikely progeny, El Salon Mexico.
</p>
<p>   The Philharmonic program also included smaller, later Copland: a suite of excerpts from his film scores, wispy until the final segment, the “Threshing Machines” episode from Of Mice and Men, which is what everyone who remembers the film at all remembers best; and five of the Old American Songs nicely sung by Grant Youngblood without the cuteness some singers feel obliged to invoke (e.g., at the Hollywood Bowl last summer). It ended with Appalachian Spring &#8212; not the 35-minute ballet in its original scoring for the 15-member pit band that was all Martha Graham could afford at the time, but the 22-minute orchestral suite that Copland, in his wisdom, drew from the whole work and refashioned for concert use. If there is other music that better translates simple, unsophisticated joyousness, I haven&#8217;t come across it. If there is a more convincing testimonial to the power of pure diatonic harmony to bring tears to the eyes of a hard-boiled critic, sitting among cell phones and a heavy-breathing concert audience, than the final minutes of this music, I haven‘t come across that, either.
</p>
<p>    I had forgotten, I have to confess, about Music for the Theatre &#8212; what a vital, exuberant work it was. Perhaps I never knew, in fact, since I grew up with the old Howard Hanson recording that had nothing of the raw energy and the sheer delight of the performance under Harth-Bedoya that concluded last week&#8217;s Green Umbrella concert (the first of the season‘s series, by the way, which have now been cut back from seven to six to a paltry five). Here is the 25-year-old Copland, just back from his years at the Boulangerie, full of bright new knowledge of what was making the musical world go around in 1925 &#8212; jazz, Kurt Weill, Schoenberg, Stravinsky &#8212; and bursting to put it all to use. In this one stunning work &#8212; huge ideas beautifully shaped for a 20-piece theater-size orchestra &#8212; he did just that. No composer ever announced his own arrival as vividly, as arrogantly, as Copland in this piece; the glorious reading at Zipper Auditorium (the Umbrella&#8217;s new home) proclaimed that all those initial strengths remain undiminished.
</p>
<p>    They remain undiminished, as well, in the work that began the program, the Sextet that Copland had fashioned from his 1933 Short Symphony after the formidable Stokowski and Koussevitzky had given up trying to cope with its rhythms &#8212; kid stuff to today‘s conductors, as the recent Michael Tilson Thomas recording easily proves. This is muscle-flexing music, its pristine arrogance still intact after 60-plus years. I must say, I prefer the Sextet version, through which cold, bracing breezes blow unimpeded by drums and brasses. David Howard&#8217;s eloquent clarinet the other night was probably what seduced me into feeling that way.
</p>
<p>   At the County Museum a couple of weeks before, that precious series known as the Monday Evening Concerts also began with Copland, with performers from the Copland House &#8212; the composer‘s home in the Hudson Valley, now maintained as a study center &#8212; in an elegant program of chamber music including the Piano Quartet, most successful of the “atonal” works, and the searing Vitebsk Trio, a tribute to its creator&#8217;s ancestry. Pianist Michael Boriskin and flutist Paul Lustig Dunkel, the center‘s co-directors, were among the players, obviously collaborating in a labor of love, in music that deserved no less.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>An Energetic, Electric, Eclectic&#160;Orange</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2000/11/an-energetic-electric-eclectic-orange/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2000/11/an-energetic-electric-eclectic-orange/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Tue, 14 Nov 2000 22:43:34 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Musical America]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=1853</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[COSTA MESA, Calif. &#8212; When last we visited California’s Orange County, that high-property-value enclave just to the south (and far to the right) of Los Angeles, the Orange County Philharmonic Society’s first &#8220;Eclectic Orange&#8221; Festival had run its course. Local audiences may have seemed surprised at their having survived (and even derived a certain prickly [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>COSTA MESA, Calif. &#8212; When last we visited California’s Orange County, that high-property-value enclave just to the south (and far to the right) of Los Angeles, the Orange County Philharmonic Society’s first &#8220;Eclectic Orange&#8221; Festival had run its course. Local audiences may have seemed surprised at their having survived (and even derived a certain prickly pleasure) from a month’s exposure to music very old and very new, experimental, and challenging, but the best news is that they came back for more.</p>
<p>The second run began with high decibels on Oct. 13 (Philip Glass’s new Fifth Symphony in its West Coast premiere [see previous review]) and ends on a similar volume level with worthier fare (Mahler’s Second), on Dec.1. In between there has been something for everyone, at least for everyone endowed with proper tolerance for horizon-stretching and high musical adventure.</p>
<p>By accident or design, &#8220;Eclectic Orange 2000&#8243; bore striking resemblances to its predecessor. Once again, there was one long and useless evening-filling symphony (the reconstructed Elgar Third last year, the Glass Fifth this year). The marvelous early-music ensemble Anonymous 4 joined forces with instruments in a new venture into spiritual affectation (last year’s &#8220;Voices of Light,&#8221; this year a new commissioned work by England’s Sir John Tavener). Downtown New York composer Mikel Rouse, whose astounding media opera &#8220;Dennis Cleveland&#8221; drew cheers last year, drew more of same this time with another new work, &#8220;Failing Kansas.&#8221;</p>
<p>Like “Cleveland,” &#8220;Failing Kansas&#8221; is an opera mostly because its composer says so. Its story line is the famous murder of a Kansas family in the 1950s, the capture and execution of its perpetrators, as retold in Truman Capote’s &#8220;In Cold Blood.&#8221; One live performer, Rouse himself, speaks and sings material relevant to the story; other voices on tape create a panoramic collage of ordinary lives invaded by horror. On screen, Cliff Baldwin’s films invest the drama with a visual counterpart. Why it works is not easily explained, why the power, the tragedy &#8212; even the beauty &#8212; combine for a compelling 75-minute drama. But it does.</p>
<p>The term &#8220;more of same&#8221; also applies, alas, to the new Tavener piece for Anonymous 4 and the Chilingirian String Quartet, co-commissioned by the Philharmonic Society: 20-or-so minutes of Tavener’s familiar juicily harmonized syllabic chug-chug as a setting of the parable of the Wise and Foolish Virgins &#8212; which Bach turned to better use in his &#8220;Wachet auf!&#8221; cantata.</p>
<p>Far more stimulating, if poorly attended, was one other of the festival’s excursions into current creativity, a splendid duo-piano evening by Ursula Oppens and Aki Takahashi, demonstrating Richard Teitlebaum’s creation of super-pianos through electronic processing. Boston’s splendid young Borromeo String Quartet introduced Steve Mackey’s &#8220;Ars Moriendi&#8221; in its world premiere: nine movements, 23 minutes of soft (if, at times, rather spongy) death-meditation.</p>
<p>Not everything at Eclectic Orange turned out all that eclectic, or that fresh-out-of-the-box. Pianist Andras Schiff’s wonderful take on the &#8220;Goldberg Variations&#8221; served to establish Bach, as if anyone still doubted, as a composer for all centuries. And, as the ultimate demonstration of music’s power to move the immovable and draw the tears of the hardest of heart, there came the Southern California recital debut of the miraculously gifted young tenor Ian Bostridge, in a Schubert-Wolf song program given, as proper, in the kind of improvised small space where this music belongs.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Eclectic&#160;Orange</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2000/11/eclectic-orange/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2000/11/eclectic-orange/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 13 Nov 2000 22:31:27 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Musical America]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=1829</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[When last we visited California’s Orange County, that high-property-value enclave just to the south – and far to the right – of Los Angeles, the OC Philharmonic Society’s first “Eclectic Orange” Festival had run its course. Local audiences may have seemed surprised at their having survived (and even derived a certain prickly pleasure) from a [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>When last we visited California’s Orange County, that high-property-value enclave just to the south – and far to the right – of Los Angeles, the OC Philharmonic Society’s first “Eclectic Orange” Festival had run its course. Local audiences may have seemed surprised at their having survived (and even derived a certain prickly pleasure) from a month’s exposure to music very old and very new, experimental and challenging, but the best news is that they came back for more. The second run began with high decibels on October 13 (Philip Glass’ new Fifth Symphony in its West Coast premiere) and ends on a similar volume level with worthier fare (Mahler’s Second), on December 1; in between there was something for everyone, at least for everyone endowed with proper tolerance for horizon-stretching and high musical adventure.<br />
By accident or design, “Eclectic Orange 2000” bore striking resemblances to its predecessor. Once again, there was one long and useless evening-filling symphony (the reconstructed Elgar Third last year, the Glass Fifth this year). The marvelous early-music ensemble Anonymous 4 joined forces with instruments in a new venture into spiritual affectation (last year’s “Voices of Light,” this year a new commissioned work by England’s Sir John Tavener).  Downtown New York composer Mikel Rouse, whose astounding media opera “Dennis Cleveland” drew cheers last year, drew more of same with another work, “Failing Kansas.”<br />
Like “Cleveland,” “Failing Kansas” is an opera mostly because its composer says so. Its story line is the famous murder of a Kansas family in the 1950s, the capture and execution of its perpetrators, as retold in Truman Capote’s “In Cold Blood.” One live performer, Rouse himself, speaks and sings material relevant to the story; other voices on tape create a panoramic collage of ordinary lives invaded by horror; on screen, Cliff Baldwin’s films invest the drama with a visual counterpart. Why it works is not easily explained, why the power, the tragedy – and even the beauty – combine for a compelling 75-minute drama. But it does.<br />
“More of same” also applies, alas, to the new Tavener piece for Anonymous 4 and the Chilingirian String Quartet, co-commissioned by the Philharmonic Society: 20-or-so minutes of Tavener’s familiar juicily harmonized syllabic chug-chug as a setting of the parable of the Wise and Foolish Virgins – which Bach turned to better use in his “Wachet auf!” cantata. Far more stimulating, if poorly attended, was one other of the festival’s excursions into current creativity, a splendid duo-piano evening by Ursula Oppens and Aki Takahashi, demonstrating Richard Teitlebaum’s creation of super-pianos through electronic processing. Boston’s splendid young Borromeo String Quartet introduced Steve Mackey’s “Ars Moriendi” in its world premiere, nine movements, 23 minutes of soft (if, at times, rather spongy) death-meditation.<br />
Not everything at Eclectic Orange turned out all that eclectic, or that fresh-out-of-the-box. Pianist Andras Schiff’s wonderful take on the “Goldberg Variations” served to establish Bach, as if anyone still doubted, as a composer for all centuries. And, as the ultimate demonstration of music’s power to move the immovable and draw the tears of the hardest of heart, there came the Southern California recital debut of the miraculously gifted young tenor Ian Bostridge, in a Schubert-Wolf song program given, as proper, in the kind of improvised small space where this music belongs.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Time&#160;Capsules</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2000/11/time-capsules/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2000/11/time-capsules/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 08 Nov 2000 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=321</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Bertrand Desprez Five years ago I used some of this space to exult over my discovery of the French composer Pascal Dusapin at his first appearance on disc &#8211; a pseudo-operatic gloss on the Medea legend in a Harmonia Mundi release conducted by Philippe Herreweghe. I can&#8217;t claim that my words at that time have [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Bertrand Desprez
<p>
Five years ago I used some of this space to exult over my discovery of the French composer Pascal Dusapin at his first appearance on disc &#8211; a pseudo-operatic gloss on the Medea legend in a Harmonia Mundi release conducted by Philippe Herreweghe. I can&#8217;t claim that my words at that time have elevated Dusapin to hit-parade status, but a new work of his, <i>Granum Sinapis</i>, performed last week at UCLA&#8217;s Schoenberg Hall (and recently released on France&#8217;s Naïve label, also distributed by Harmonia Mundi), reinforced my high regard for his music.</p>
<p>
<i>Granum Sinapis</i>, as I surely don&#8217;t have to tell you, is drawn from the speculative writings &#8211; God, the soul, etc. &#8211; of Meister Eckhart, the 14th-century German mystic, 20 minutes of mystery-drenched singing for a cappella choir, much of it hovering at the brink of silence until a final whammo declaration comes over like the fires of Creation. It was composed for and sung here by the 32-member French chorus called Accentus, founded in 1991 and led by Laurence Equilbey, another of those courageous ensembles that take on the most daunting demands today&#8217;s composers can dream up. In Dusapin&#8217;s case, those demands include an intricate interplay of several levels of <i>pianississimo </i>and a willingness to deal with microtones, polyrhythms, the works. The results, deeply stirring, were like a revelation of a huge and complex soundscape of silence. At<br />
UCLA, the problems for the audience &#8211; largely Francophone, and considerably diminished after intermission &#8211; were compounded by the total omission in the program book of<br />
information about the evening&#8217;s composers (Schoenberg and Poulenc alongside Dusapin), the music or the sung texts. That&#8217;s no way to run a concert, especially one as challenging &#8211; and, despite the odds, rewarding &#8211; as this.</p>
<p>
By one of those coincidences that seem to come about without any help from Above, last week was a time of music very old (the Sequentia concert at UCLA and the better half of an Eclectic Orange event in Irvine) and very new (Les Percussions de Strasbourg at<br />
LACMA, the Dusapin and the lesser half of Eclectic Orange). Founded in 1977 by the Americans Benjamin Bagby and the late Barbara Thornton but based in Cologne, Sequentia ranks among the noblest and most active of the very-early-music performing groups. What I admire most about them is their willingness to apply a certain amount of contemporary imagination to the objects of their exhumations, their assumption of the license to fill in between the dots in ancient manuscripts when necessary. Their work trumpets the belief, in other words, that oldness doesn&#8217;t have to mean dullness. I&#8217;m not sure the world cries out for all eight CDs of their “complete” perusal of the music of Hildegard von Bingen (with a ninth disc on the way), but their performance zeal almost makes me believe I can tell one of her songs from another.</p>
<p>
Four members of Sequentia showed up at Schoenberg Hall this time, including Bagby as a congenial host, in a program of secular music from the 10th and 11th centuries: love songs, philosophical songs, a bit of ribaldry now and then, their passions laid bare in the elegance of their melodic lines and the pungency of the parallel fourths and fifths of their harmonies. Strangest and, in many ways, most provocative was an 11th-century Icelandic recitative detailing an episode from the Nibelung saga that would later find its way across time to Wagner and, more specifically, to the great Fritz Lang silent cycle. A splendid evening, all told, of music to revel in &#8211; and to think about.</p>
<p>
The Irvine program, at St. Paul&#8217;s Greek Orthodox Church &#8211; with its huge, brand-new mosaics that will need a few centuries&#8217; accretions before they can challenge Ravenna&#8217;s &#8211; looked good on paper: Anonymous 4 and the Chilingirian String Quartet in an “End of Time” concert of music old and new. “Old,” however, won by an impressive margin. “New” was another slice off the ambling, purring musical rhetoric of England&#8217;s Sir John Tavener, a piece called <i>The Bridegroom</i> co-commissioned by Eclectic Orange, and not much different from Tavener&#8217;s last piece or the one before: Philip Glass plus incense but, at least, shorter. The text &#8211; the symbolism of Christ-as-bridegroom better deployed in Bach&#8217;s <i>Wachet auf!</i><br />
cantata &#8211; rolls along, chokingly perfumed in Tavener&#8217;s redolent harmonies. Arvo Pärt&#8217;s <i>Fratres</i>, also on the program in the string-quartet version, speaks the same language of spiritual minimalism but manages exactly what Tavener&#8217;s doesn&#8217;t: It moves &#8211; as music and as a message of and to the spirit.</p>
<p>
By themselves, Anonymous 4 began the program all aglow, in passages from their latest CD, a Mass dating from, give or take, A.D. 1000, delivered in that cherishable Anonymous 4 manner that manages at once to sound both pure and wondrously rich, that makes everything they sing sound newly composed. Starting a program with music on that level inevitably imposed a burden on the music that ensued &#8211; the Tavener, a reworking of Britten&#8217;s lightweight Missa Brevis (originally for boys and organ), and Stravinsky&#8217;s spicy, short string-quartet pieces.</p>
<p>
The Strasbourg six, strong of arm and fleet of foot, almost didn&#8217;t make it to LACMA; their journey south from their previous gig in Vancouver was intercepted by a trigger-happy customs bureaucrat who chose to ignore thoroughly-in-order documents and had to be called off at the last minute through the intervention of Senator Barbara Boxer. The delayed arrival necessitated a program change, but no real loss. François-Bernard Mâche&#8217;s <i>Aera</i><br />
began it, a marvelous, airy piece filling seemingly infinite spaces with the whispers of Thai gongs, bells, marimbas and soft timpani rolls. Iannis Xenakis&#8217; heaven-storming <i>Pléiades</i> &#8211; composed in 1979 for the city of Strasbourg and for this ensemble &#8211; ended it, a work (said the program) about “multiplicity and undefinability” but also (to these ears) about the raw power of music&#8217;s elementals to inspire . . . maybe not love, but at least awe.</p>
<p>
What an extraordinary work this is: nearly 45 minutes of proclamation and exploration into the way banged-upon instruments can<br />
uplift and exhilarate. The Strasbourg six have recorded it, on Denon: a must-have item. The sounds are amazing, even when they don&#8217;t pound you into submission; some of them come from the <i>sixxen</i>, newly invented for this work (<i>six </i>+<i>Xen</i>a.kis), a glorious spook of an instrument made up of metal plates played with a keyboard and wailing like a banshee. Who else but Xenakis could devise such exquisite torture? I only wish the guy from customs had been there, bound and gagged in the front row.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Witchcraft</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2000/11/witchcraft/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2000/11/witchcraft/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 01 Nov 2000 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=320</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[I had forgotten &#8212; if, indeed, I ever knew &#8212; the somber, deep beauties of On Wenlock Edge. Nothing of Ralph Vaughan Williams&#8217; music, I must confess, has been a boon companion the past few years, perhaps as my expiation for a youthful crush on a couple of his early symphonies. Ian Bostridge‘s singing of [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>I had forgotten &#8212; if, indeed, I ever knew &#8212; the somber, deep beauties of On Wenlock Edge. Nothing of Ralph Vaughan Williams&#8217; music, I must confess, has been a boon companion the past few years, perhaps as my expiation for a youthful crush on a couple of his early symphonies. Ian Bostridge‘s singing of this song cycle, to end last week&#8217;s magical program by the Philharmonic‘s Chamber Music Society at Gindi Auditorium, was a double exhilaration &#8212; the power of the music and the extraordinary quality of the performance.
</p>
<p>    The songs date from 1909: six poems from A.E. Housman&#8217;s A Shropshire Lad, composed for and first sung by the English tenor Gervase Elwes, whose 1917 recording of the cycle remains in Schwann; the only other listed recording is by Bostridge, with full orchestra. Last week, however, Bostridge sang it as written, with string quartet and piano, and the results were exquisite: the small, lean sounds of four Philharmonic string players perfectly matched to the gleam of this wonderful young singer‘s pure yet intense re-creation of Housman&#8217;s gales and fogs and distant bells, all riding on the dark billows from Julius Drake‘s supporting piano.
</p>
<p>   Someone from the Philharmonic told me that subscribers to the chamber-music series, and perhaps to the orchestral series downtown as well, don&#8217;t like it when vocal music is mixed into the programs; this attitude is echoed by the managements of our two ”serious“ (ha-ha) radio stations, which strive mightily to keep their prime hours free of human intrusion. If there is a more ravishing sound anywhere in music than the singing of Bostridge that night (in the Vaughan Williams and in Faure‘s equally enchanting La Bonne Chanson), or two nights later at Costa Mesa&#8217;s Eclectic Orange festival (in songs of Schubert and Wolf), it could only be from some other human throat: Renee Fleming as Dvorak‘s Russalka, perhaps, or Thomas Quasthoff&#8217;s Mozart. Beside any of this, the most beautiful instrument in the world remains what it basically is, a machine.
</p>
<p>   Bostridge, 35-ish, is amazing, and so is his story: a singer endowed with an intelligence that penetrates deeply into the nature of songs and of the way to sing them &#8212; all emerging fully formed, to start a full-time career on the run no more than five years ago. Before that he had earned his doctorate in history and philosophy; you can order his thesis, Witchcraft and Its Transformations 1650&#8211;1750 (Oxford), from your favorite dot-com. My colleagues have exhausted the metaphors warehouse in describing his stage manner, which seems to be no manner at all except an earnestness of presentation aimed more at the music than the audience. At Costa Mesa, in the intimate and agreeably improv setting of the Performing Arts Center‘s Founders Hall, he had a different way of sharing his Schubert from his way with the more extroverted Hugo Wolf group; in neither case was there anything about his performance that didn&#8217;t relate clearly to the music. Onstage he is the winsome but eager postgrad; I kept thinking of Alec Guinness in his white suit. But neither Guinness nor anyone else you can name could summon the witchcraft to transmute Schubert‘s ”Nacht und Traume“ into the ethereal presence that it became that night in Costa Mesa. I returned home, took down Bostridge&#8217;s Schubert disc on EMI, and died happy, more than once.
</p>
<p>    Between these sublime events there came Gidon Kremer and his Kremerata Baltica. Perhaps it was the chronology, perhaps not, but I found myself among the few who remained unenchanted in the almost-full Dorothy Chandler Pavilion that night. Something about Eight Seasons, Kremer‘s new project, recorded on Nonesuch and much-hyped, spanning the centuries to blend the spirits of Antonio Vivaldi and Astor Piazzolla into a single, highly seasoned concoction, just doesn&#8217;t work for me. Yes, both Vivaldi and Piazzolla composed sets of pieces celebrating the passage of the four seasons, in Venice and in Buenos Aires. At the Hollywood Bowl two summers ago, Kremer and his attractive young ensemble from Baltic lands showed off a nice, bright way of energizing Vivaldi‘s delirious set of fantasies that blew away the detritus of overfamiliarity. Now, however, they play the piece zebra-fashion, with Piazzolla&#8217;s less familiar but also charming set interspersed between Vivaldi‘s, and with a few licks stuck onto the music in Kremer&#8217;s re-fashioning to simulate some kind of  relation between the two. Well, I‘ve lived a long time with Vivaldi, and not yet long enough with the Piazzolla; at home I can program my player to hear all of one or the other. In concert, however interesting the music, it came over as a sequence of jolts.
</p>
<p>    A suite of bits from Bernard Herrmann&#8217;s score for Hitchcock‘s Psycho began the program; Alfred Schnittke&#8217;s Sixth Concerto Grosso came midway and became by some distance the evening‘s most powerful music. Someone &#8212; perhaps Esa-Pekka or someone else that good &#8212; needs to take Herrmann&#8217;s acid-drenched score and work it into a continuous piece; as a series of short bits, none over two minutes, separated by pauses &#8212; as at Kremer‘s concert and as on Salonen&#8217;s admirable Sony disc of Herrmann‘s music &#8212; it also seemed like a sequence of jolts.
</p>
<p>    In a remote land called Springdale, Utah, there live two citizens whose lives intertwine. One is Garland Hirschi, an old codger who raises cows. The other is Phillip Kent Bimstein, a younger codger who raises money by composing. ”You wanna know a little bit about my cows?“ said Garland Hirschi into ”Flip“ Bimstein&#8217;s microphone, and Bimstein took the tape and processed it, along with copious cow sounds recorded live or synthesized, into a tone poem in three ”moo-vements“ (his word, not mine), and while my description mightn‘t sound that way, the results are delightful. Garland Hirschi&#8217;s Cows exists on a Starkland CD, and it was the kickoff work at the California EAR Unit‘s latest concert at the County Museum. It set a tone for the entire concert, which was full of hijinks, high energy and, for the most part, high quality.
</p>
<p>    Most of the program kept the group&#8217;s percussion contingent &#8212; Dan Kennedy and Amy Knoles, the god and goddess of the big bang &#8212; particularly busy. I was least taken by Steven Mackey‘s new Micro-Concerto for Percussion and Five Instruments, excessively long (despite its title) for what it had to say. There were also tidy, short works by David Lang and the much-missed Jacob Druckman, a marvelous, atmospheric new piece by Ching-Wen Chao and, best of all, a gloriously complex piece by master percussionist John Bergamo &#8212; dating from 1986, the oldest music on the program, and the youngest at heart.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Rage, RAGE Against the&#160;Dying</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2000/10/rage-rage-against-the-dying/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2000/10/rage-rage-against-the-dying/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 25 Oct 2000 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=319</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Only 16 years (1945&#8211;1961) separate Benjamin Britten‘s Peter Grimes from his War Requiem; they are alike in many ways but different in many more. Hearing them both on the same day, last Saturday at the Dorothy Chandler Pavilion, underlined their common bond and their differences. Both are the works of a deeply reactive man with [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Only 16 years (1945&#8211;1961) separate Benjamin Britten‘s Peter Grimes from his War Requiem; they are alike in many ways but different in many more. Hearing them both on the same day, last Saturday at the Dorothy Chandler Pavilion, underlined their common bond and their differences.
</p>
<p>    Both are the works of a deeply reactive man with his own nerves rubbed raw from society-imposed frictions: Britten the pacifist, Britten the homosexual, Britten the artist defining a distinctive personality within an area of style that he was obliged to invent work by work. In his magnificent legacy, these two works stand together as the ones motivated by concerns deepest within his own personality. They are the two, out of all the splendor of Britten&#8217;s bequeathal, in whose presence it is the most difficult to remain unmoved.
</p>
<p>   They are works drenched in rage. The misanthropic Grimes is rendered catatonic by the narrow-minded misjudgments of his villagers. The rage in the War Requiem is on a far broader scale, as the bitter cynicism of Wilfred Owen‘s poetry, interspersed among the texts of the Latin Requiem, snarls at those classic verses and mocks them into meaninglessness. Both scores become curdling experiences, because their composer is close behind each of them, revealing his own pangs in the only way society would permit, through these intensely personal analogies.
</p>
<p>   Within their century, they are also terminal works. The genre of the grand, romantic opera, set into a time and place remote from our own, whose populace turns its realities into artifice by forming itself into a chorus, with characters etched by their own music and by goings-on in a large orchestra, came to its end with Peter Grimes; Britten himself later worked with smaller models superb in different ways. I can&#8217;t name a later opera comparable to Grimes in size and shape that belongs on the same shelf: not Gatsby; not The Ghosts of Versailles; possibly Dialogues des Carmelites; what else? In the same way, there are no large-scale choral works after the War Requiem aimed at reaching out to a hearer‘s conscience; this work ends the cycle that began with Handel, was variously nourished for the next two centuries, and, after Britten, fizzled ignominiously with the Paul McCartney Liverpool Oratorio and its unworthy clones.
</p>
<p>   Not everybody looks to Britten as one of his century&#8217;s prime innovators. Some things, to be sure, he did better than anyone else before or since, most of all demonstrating his marvelous insight into the nature of English words, their rhythms and their resonances. Dig into his music anywhere, into my own favorites &#8212; which include the Tennyson moment (”the splendor falls“) in the Serenade, Grimes‘ ”Now the Great Bear and Pleiades“ or almost any line in The Rape of Lucretia &#8212; or any hundred thousand other choices, and you are in thrall to one of the greatest vocal composers ever to try to transmute English language into high art.
</p>
<p>    It is this mastery of language, of course, that lends a special thread to any group of performers once they have mastered the pitfalls and potholes of English words. One of the amazements in this splendid glut of Britten these past few days was the consistent high level of declamation &#8212; from the Brits (Philip Langridge&#8217;s Grimes, and the sounding brass of Owen‘s defiant words as sung by the remarkable Ian Bostridge, about whom more next week) but from the non-Brits as well (Richard Stilwell&#8217;s sturdy Balstrode and Suzanna Guzman‘s delicious Sedley in Peter Grimes, the excellent German baritone Thomas Mohr in the War Requiem). One other Brit, film director John Schlesinger, staged a violent, edgy Grimes on Luciana Arrighi&#8217;s ade-quate but rather stodgy sets. Richard Armstrong‘s conducting committed no egregious errors but contributed no egregious momentum either.
</p>
<p>    The L.A. Opera has more than held its own in its adventures into the Britten repertory over the years, and this latest &#8212; co-produced with the Washington Opera and La Scala &#8212; counts as a distinguished addition. Antonio Pappano, who takes over the Royal Opera&#8217;s podium season after next and who has visited the Los Angeles Philharmonic before with variable results, did everything needed to turn the War Requiem into a memorable occasion, with strong work from a huge Master Chorale contingent and, as one miscalculation, the children‘s choir placed somewhere offstage almost to the point of inaudibility.
</p>
<p>    On the night before my Britten immersion, within the same walls, I found myself listening to Tchaikovsky&#8217;s Violin Concerto with more pleasure than I had believed possible, discovering delight in small moments (e.g., the winds‘ soft reprise of the main tune after the first-movement cadenza and the kicky off-the-beat accents in the finale). Part of my reaction came from hearing an orchestra gainfully employed once again, after the dreary monochrome exercises of Philip Glass&#8217; Symphony No. 5, Etc. in Costa Mesa the week before. Part of it was the serene, elegant, intelligent performance by Midori, whose playing I seem to enjoy every other time I hear her and deplore the times in between. Intelligent playing of the Tchaikovsky Violin Concerto? An oxymoron, I know; you had to be there.
</p>
<p>    Sharing the stage that night was the visiting NDR Symphony from Hamburg, with its conductor, Christoph Eschenbach, whom every orchestra in the world seems anxious to kidnap for its own these days. As near as I could tell from a one-shot hearing &#8212; a process complicated when the woman in J-31 smuggled her drink into the hall and chewed ice all through the Tchaikovsky (and you thought idiots only brought in cell phones!) &#8212; the NDR is a solid, clean, precise ensemble, and is thus a fair mirror of Eschenbach‘s own strengths.
</p>
<p>   Unfortunately the program also included a work I dislike far more than the Tchaikovsky, Arnold Schoenberg&#8217;s worthless orchestration of the Brahms G-minor Piano Quartet: an overstuffed monstrosity imposed upon a work that, in its original condition, is one of the less-unlistenable of Brahms‘ chamber works. What Schoenberg has done &#8212; most likely to attach his name to a piece that might pass for pretty and thus earn performances &#8212; is to inflate to one further stage the worst aspects of Brahms&#8217; own orchestral writing. How bad the latter can be was nicely underlined in the dances by Dvorak and Smetana that the NDR played as encores: beautifully shaped, mellow orchestrations full of built-in smiles. The orchestra was scheduled to play a better program the next night in Costa Mesa, but Britten beckoned.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Benjamin&#160;Britten</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2000/10/benjamin-britten/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2000/10/benjamin-britten/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sun, 22 Oct 2000 22:29:13 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Musical America]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=1825</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[By accident or by design, two of Los Angeles’ major musical organizations have taken on Benjamin Britten simultaneously this month. If you were at the Performing Arts Center of Los Angeles County – the mouthful of a new name for the former perfectly well-named Music Center – last Saturday (October 21),  you could have bathed [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>By accident or by design, two of Los Angeles’ major musical organizations have taken on Benjamin Britten simultaneously this month. If you were at the Performing Arts Center of Los Angeles County – the mouthful of a new name for the former perfectly well-named Music Center – last Saturday (October 21),  you could have bathed in Britten practically nonstop: the L.A. Opera’s “Peter Grimes” in the afternoon, the Philharmonic’s “War Requiem” at night.<br />
The experience, I can personally vouch, would have left you exalted and exhausted. Nothing in the Britten canon cuts closer to the bone than these two extraordinary scores, sixteen years apart and yet alike in their quotient of violent outcry and pure rage. It has taken the quarter-century since Britten’s early death (at 63, in 1976) to assess the balance between the man and his music. Pacifist, unruly and sometimes unquestioning advocate of leftwing causes, homosexual – and citizen of a troubled nation at a time when any or all these attitudes constituted actionable offenses – Britten let his music speak for his soul, its joys and its torments. “Peter Grimes,” in its anatomical dissection of its hero driven to suicide by the misunderstanding of his fellow villagers; the “War Requiem,” in its setting the sardonic, nihilistic verses of the martyred Wilfred Owen in among the acceptances preached by the classic Latin service – both these on a single day under Los Angeles’ serene skies made for an experience not easily forgotten.<br />
Britten has fared well at the L.A. Opera, from  “A Midsummer Night’s Dream” in the company’s second season to this year’s triumphant “Billy Budd.” For “Grimes” the company brought in Hollywood’s (but Brit-born) master director John Schlesinger, augmenting a relationship with the other neighborhood industry too feebly pursued in previous years. On designer Luciana Arrighi’s workaday sets – she had worked with him on “Sunday, Bloody Sunday” – Schlesinger devised a powerful, raw unfolding of Britten’s tale, one in which the huge chorus was particularly successful in standing in as a village of flesh-and-blood residents. All breathing stopped out front in that devastating moment in Act 3, as that chorus, transformed into a lynch mob, rushed downstage and screams out its “PE-TER GRIMES!!!!” at the footlights; you’d have thought the waves from an actual North Sea tempest were battering out into the hall.<br />
Scottish Opera’s Richard Armstrong conducted, solidly if unspectacularly. Philip Langridge was the Grimes, the role he inherited from Peter Pears and Jon Vickers and now owns; Nancy Gustafson, looking somewhat young for a widowed schoolmarm, was the sweet-voiced Ellen; Richard Stillwell was the sympathetic Balstrode, proving that an American can hold his own among Brits.<br />
Antonio Pappano, soon to take on the Royal Opera’s music directorship, conducted a splendid reading of the Requiem, with L.A.’s Master Chorale and its splendid Paulist Boychoir (the latter located, alas, far backstage and not fully audible).Britain’s other great tenor of the moment, the young former Oxford Don and authority on baroque witchcraft Ian Bostridge, made his Southern California debut in the “War Requiem,” and that, too, was an extraordinary experience. His was the brunt and his the thread of gold, in his recreation of  Owen’s harrowing condemnations, the sardonic twists to the retelling of the Abraham-and-Isaac fable, the hollow horror as the dead British soldier encounters “the enemy you killed, my friend.” German baritone Thomas Mohr was an eloquent partner; as the two joined voices at the end, and the boys’ voices sounded a distant “requiem aeternam,” you got the sense of how overpowering a musical experience can be under proper circumstances. These were.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Shards</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2000/10/shards/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2000/10/shards/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 11 Oct 2000 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=318</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[There is comfort in the news that millenniums don‘t occur very often. The accumulated ”Year 2000“ observances already loom large, and there is no guarantee that the year 2001 &#8212; which some sticklers insist is the real turning point &#8212; won&#8217;t produce a comparable pileup. Add to that this year‘s Bach stuff, the 250th anniversary [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>There is comfort in the news that millenniums don‘t occur very often. The accumulated ”Year 2000“ observances already loom large, and there is no guarantee that the year 2001 &#8212; which some sticklers insist is the real turning point &#8212; won&#8217;t produce a comparable pileup. Add to that this year‘s Bach stuff, the 250th anniversary of his death, which can hardly be said to have passed unnoticed. One composer, the former rice planter and current culture assimilator Tan Dun, has made a cottage industry of churning out big, eclectic, ecumenical anniversary pieces, starting with his Symphony 1997, Heaven, Earth, Mankind for China&#8217;s annexing of Hong Kong. For this year‘s celebrations he has produced two major scores: the millennial ”world symphony“ 2000 Today, which was aired on PBS over last New Year&#8217;s celebrations and is now at hand on a Sony release, and one of the four big ”Passion“ settings introduced in Germany this past summer for the Bach 250th. If I read the omens correctly, this is also headed for the recording studios and the charts.
</p>
<p>    But you also can‘t have a millennium without Philip Glass. Now, trailing its own clouds of hoo-hah, comes the Fifth Symphony &#8212; or, to note its full title, Symphony No. 5, Requiem, Bardo, Nirmanakaya &#8212; unveiled before cheering throngs at the 1999 Salzburg Festival, recorded on a two-disc Nonesuch set released two weeks ago, slated to inaugurate Orange County&#8217;s Eclectic Orange Festival in Costa Mesa this very weekend. Mark Swed‘s words from his review of the Salzburg premiere, ”. . . glorious, inspiring . . .,“ fly high on the promotional banners. The very title is calculatedly awesome; if you read the press releases, and the composer&#8217;s own invocation, the urge to kneel while listening becomes virtually irresistible. Resistance, however, might be worth the effort.
</p>
<p>   First, those words: Requiem we already know; Bardo and Nirmanakaya are the Buddhist in-between state and the state of enlightened spiritual rebirth, respectively. In its 12 movements, running just under 100 minutes, a chorus, a children‘s chorus, five vocal soloists and a large orchestra deal with a vast assortment of text fragments from, among other sources, the Tibetan Book of the Dead, aboriginal and African chants, Greek, Hebrew, Sanskrit and indigenous languages, tracing the trajectory of life from pre-Creation to the Apocalypse and beyond. The text reads wonderfully: an amorous fragrance that spans the passions of Hebrew and Bengali, or a Greek vision of Paradise blending into the Hindi. Everything is translated into English, which is the first mistake; it turns a multicolored text into doggerel.
</p>
<p>   And everything is translated into music by Philip Glass, which is the second mistake. It all melts, alas, into the steady, lukewarm flow of cloying, diatonic harmonic sequences, riding above the obsessive throb of the hemiolas (da-DAH-DAH-da) that are by now the Glassiest of all his tired devices. I have sat enthralled through five complete performances of Einstein on the Beach (at the Met and the Brooklyn Academy) and would gladly do another five; the strength &#8212; and, above all, the variety &#8212; of this music was and remains spellbinding. Twenty-five years later I hear from Glass &#8212; in this new work and in most of his recent output &#8212; only tired formulas, undeniably pretty but also pretty blah. There are a few strong moments in this Fifth Symphony, when the solo vocalists rise above the choral muck and provide a momentary wave of contrapuntal energy; one or two of the solo songs might enjoy a life on their own, but they don&#8217;t last long. Believe me, I have nothing but envy for those blessed with the power to derive their own Nirmanakaya from this greatly hyped, splendidly packaged new product from the Glass assembly line.
</p>
<p>    I have nothing but envy, as well, for the sharers of communal ecstasy at Royce Hall Sunday before last, the sellout crowd that whooped and hollered and cheered at the playing of Evgeny Kissin, demanding and being granted encores up the bazooty, probably cheering still. It was 10 years, almost to the day, since the dour Russian with the major hair, then 18, electrified his first American audience at Carnegie Hall &#8212; and if he hasn‘t fulfilled the extravagant expectations of that time, he hasn&#8217;t wilted away, either, like all those Cliburn contest winners. Who among pianists packs ‘em in these days? Perahia, Pollini, Argerich maybe, Volodos any day now &#8212; and Kissin: slim pickings against the current overstock of machine-made teenage violinists.
</p>
<p>    The fingers were all there that night, and the piano &#8212; not Kissin&#8217;s much-publicized instrument, not UCLA‘s own, but a local rental &#8212; was properly responsive and resonant. But responsive &#8212; that&#8217;s what I missed through long stretches at this concert. It doesn‘t bother me all that much that Kissin&#8217;s way of greeting an audience is to glower like a headwaiter at a client who‘s just requested ketchup. What matters more is the suspicion that he greets his music in the same manner. Beethoven&#8217;s ”Tempest“ Sonata went past like the wind; there was none of the fantasy in the first movement, where the piano seems almost to speak in coherent and passionate sentences. I heard impressive fingerwork in Schumann‘s Carnaval, but waited in vain for the smaller portraits in the work &#8212; Chiarina, Estrella or Coquette &#8212; to wink out at me as Schumann meant them to do. The Brahms F-minor Sonata, its four gnarled, cranky movements clustered around the one exquisite Andante, served Kissin, as expected, as a five-course banquet, and at the end there were bonbons for one and all: Liszt, Chopin, an Albeniz tango and the pure marzipan of half a dozen Johann Strauss waltzes played simultaneously.
</p>
<p>   Next morning I succumbed to the urge to rerun Richter, the Enigma, Bruno Monsaingeon&#8217;s marvelous film (on Warner Music Vision) about Kissin‘s illustrious countryman, the late Sviatoslav Richter, full of wisdom both in the great pianist&#8217;s playing and in his reminiscences. I thought back to hearing Richter at Carnegie Hall in 1960, his first time in New York, where, like Kissin 30 years later, he had arrived preceded by ecstatic word of mouth and long lines at the box office. Will Kissin grow into the kind of poetic insights that established Richter as a supremely wise and cherishable musician? Or will he be content to let his fingers do the walking, as they do so remarkably already? Man or machine? For all its irresistible flash, Kissin‘s concert was about wheels going around, which &#8212; as in the somewhat similar case of Philip Glass&#8217; new symphony, come to think of it &#8212; is not exactly what I think of as music.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>The Moon and the&#160;Stars</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2000/10/the-moon-and-the-stars/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2000/10/the-moon-and-the-stars/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 04 Oct 2000 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=317</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Certain performances go beyond mere greatness; they serve to define both the music and the act of perceiving it. This is, of course, a personal matter; you cherish your list of defining events, and I cherish mine. I can never hear Mahler‘s Das Lied von der Erde without the remembered presence of Kathleen Ferrier as [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Certain performances go beyond mere greatness; they serve to define both the music and the act of perceiving it. This is, of course, a personal matter; you cherish your list of defining events, and I cherish mine. I can never hear Mahler‘s Das Lied von der Erde without the remembered presence of Kathleen Ferrier as she sang it at Carnegie Hall in her American debut in January 1948. The Seventh Symphony of Dvorak is, for me, forever anchored to Carlo Maria Giulini&#8217;s performance with the Los Angeles Philharmonic in the Dorothy Chandler Pavilion on a Sunday afternoon in October 1979. I can‘t imagine any time in the future when I will hear Schoenberg&#8217;s Pierrot Lunaire without the memory of the way Phyllis Bryn-Julson performed it on the Southwest Chamber Music program at the Norton Simon Museum Theater two weekends ago.
</p>
<p>    That Bryn-Julson is of that hardy band of new-music conquerors is, of course, no longer news. Recordings &#8212; Boulez, Schoenberg, but not nearly enough &#8212; confirm her awesome gifts. Like Jan De Gaetani and Phyllis Curtin before her, and alongside today‘s remarkable Susan Narucki, she has that marvelous ability to find and project the melodic shape in the most fearsome, jagged vocal line; to vest that melody, furthermore, with stunning immediacy through a flawless command of the rare art of vocal insinuation. In addition to the aforementioned heroines, another of Bryn-Julson&#8217;s companions in my personal pantheon has to be the gloriously insinuating Ella Fitzgerald.
</p>
<p>   Schoenberg‘s moonstruck masterpiece retains its newness. Bryn-Julson didn&#8217;t so much sing the music &#8212; with its dazzling, intricate intermix of speech, song and the infinity of gradations in between &#8212; as carry it into a whole new dimension. She became the moon-possessed idiot of the haunted poetry, her whole body agonized within the ”thrice-seven“ straitjackets of Albert Giraud‘s obsessive versifications. The five Southwest players bathed her remarkable presence in an ethereal wash of color: now the moonlight-silver of Dorothy Stone&#8217;s flute, now the blood-red of Jim Foschia‘s bass clarinet. Eighty-eight years after it scared the daylights out of its first audience, Pierrot Lunaire in a superior performance can still be a transforming experience; this one was.
</p>
<p>   Southwest is one of our more curious musical assets. Its programs &#8212; nine this season &#8212; are adventurous, a nice blend of familiar and middle-distance challenging. This year&#8217;s concerts are in the small, charming, newly restored theater at the Norton Simon &#8212; unused since William Kraft put on new-music concerts there 25 years ago &#8212; and at the Colburn School‘s Zipper Auditorium, which has turned into one of the city&#8217;s best places to hear small-scale music. Southwest has brought out a 12-CD box of its new-music performances, including 25 world premieres, and the list of names is impressive.
</p>
<p>   But Southwest has also been known to overreach, and I‘ve heard performances &#8212; standard repertory and new &#8212; that should never have been wished on a paying audience. This first program began with Darius Milhaud&#8217;s own smaller version (strings and piano) of his fragrant, jazz-drenched La Creation du Monde, which in this reduced version can still be made to fizz, but which the players this time turned into minor-league Faure. A charming trifle by Kraft made partial amends, and the Pierrot Lunaire, of course, saved the show. Southwest evenings haven‘t always been that lucky.
</p>
<p>    The new season zooms into shape. Just around the corner from the Norton Simon at Pasadena&#8217;s attractive Neighborhood Church, Gloria Cheng began the seventh season of Piano Spheres a few days before in a replay of the fabulous recital she gave at Ojai last summer. Music by Olivier Messiaen was at its core: short character pieces with a veritable impasto of piano color. Around them was music claiming Messiaen as ancestor and spiritual essence: works by France‘s Tristan Murail and by England&#8217;s enfant terrible (and enfant merveilleux) Thomas Ades. At the end came Jonathan Harvey‘s remarkable Tombeau de Messiaen, for piano and tape, which seemed to extend Messiaen&#8217;s already lavish color spectrum into another dimension. Wonderful, ecstatic playing it was, of music that itself touched upon ecstasy and communicated much of same to the large, ecstatic crowd.
</p>
<p>    The next night, across town in the Bing Theater at the County Museum, the Italian flutist Roberto Fabbriciani played music by compatriots, most of it for flute involved in one way or another with electronic enhancement. Like his countryman the great bassist Stefano Scodanibbio (another frequent participant in the County Museum‘s music making), Fabbriciani has earned his fame dreaming up new contexts for his old instrument; the playing was phenomenal, even when the uses to which it was put were less so. One of the composers, Nicola Sani, was also listed as ”sound director.“ One or two of the works really did intermingle the live flute with its electronic surroundings: the Passacaglia by Aldo Clementi in which the soloist seemed to sink into a writhing mass of flute sounds and then emerge for a sporadic blast; and a gloriously rich late work by Luigi Nono in which bass flute and processed sound were participants in each other&#8217;s music making. In other works, including a dizzying Cadenza by Ennio Morricone, the separation between live flute here and tape sounds there came off more like an updated version of those old Music Minus One discs.
</p>
<p>   The audience was the usual new-music-at-LACMA size: far too small. The lineup for this season teems with promise. It includes a retrospective of California-based creativity including remembrances of the early years before ”Evenings on the Roof“ became the ”Monday Evening Concerts,“ and of that hotbed up north, the San Francisco Tape Music Center. Scodanibbio will be back; so will the astonishing pianist Marino Formenti, for three concerts. I‘ve probably told you all this before, but you need reminding: these LACMA concerts are as beckoning as any musical events in this part of the planet, and God knows the price is right: a paltry $15, even less for us dodderers. Even the time is right; too many people showed up late for the 7:30 start time, so they&#8217;re back to 8. Be there.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>The Power of&#160;9</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2000/10/the-power-of-9/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2000/10/the-power-of-9/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 04 Oct 2000 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=316</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[In Japan, an estimable guidebook informs us, Beethoven&#8217;s Ninth Symphony is the end-of-the-year music of choice, even ahead of “Auld Lang Syne” in public affection. “Concert performances are held everywhere,” we are told, “and many amateur singers look forward to singing in these choruses. This can probably be a phenomenon peculiar to Japan.” I would [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>
In Japan, an estimable guidebook informs us, Beethoven&#8217;s Ninth Symphony is the end-of-the-year music of choice, even ahead of “Auld Lang Syne” in public affection. “Concert performances are held everywhere,” we are told, “and many amateur singers look forward to singing in these choruses. This can probably be a phenomenon peculiar to Japan.”</p>
<p>
I would hope so. Considering the implacable demands the choral writing in the fourth movement of Beethoven&#8217;s Ninth Symphony imposes upon its singers &#8211; the curdling chromatic lines for tenors at the start, the sopranos cranked up for 10 throat-stretching bars of repeated high A&#8217;s later on &#8211; a worldwide outbreak of amateur-society Ninths around New Year&#8217;s Day (or any other time) could only result in an epidemic of nosebleeds. Shed a tear, furthermore, for the agony visited upon parents of all those amateur singers shanghaied into attending in this avalanche of holiday Ninths. They sit there for nearly 50 minutes of Beethoven&#8217;s fist-shaking orchestral music before their loved ones onstage ever get to open their mouths for Beethoven&#8217;s famous tune. Is that any way to share the joys of the New Year&#8217;s holiday? (Strange, isn&#8217;t it, how many of classical music&#8217;s Top 10 &#8211; <i>Messiah</i>, Tchaikovsky&#8217;s First Piano Concerto, <i>Also Sprach Zarathustra</i> and the Beethoven Ninth, say<i> </i>— derive their fame from episodes that take up only a tiny percentage of their full length.)</p>
<p>
Yet the Ninth deserves its place in the pantheon of music&#8217;s most honored icons. Its appearance on an orchestra&#8217;s schedule is almost always as a special event: the start of the season &#8211; as with the Los Angeles Philharmonic this weekend &#8211; or a reflection of a larger event. A year ago, having been accorded honorary sacredness for the day, it shared the Hollywood Bowl stage with the Dalai Lama in the “Festival of Sacred Music.” Its mighty brass served as Joshua&#8217;s trumpets to help blow down the Berlin Wall, with a new text for the vocal forces in the finale concocted by a latter-day Joshua, Leonard Bernstein.</p>
<p>
At the movies it has underscored one hero&#8217;s madness (in <i>A Clockwork Orange</i>) and another hero&#8217;s victory over terrorists (in <i>Die Hard</i>). It may be one of music&#8217;s great liberating forces, but it has been an intimidating force as well. Anton Bruckner died working on his Ninth Symphony. Gustav Mahler, music&#8217;s most illustrious hypochondriac, was so terrified of embarking on his own Ninth Symphony that he tried to bamboozle the gods by giving it another name &#8211; <i>The Song of the Earth</i>. Its shadow even falls upon modern audio technology: The planners of the compact disc, so the story goes, took an 80-minute Wilhelm Furtwängler recording of the Ninth as the optimum length for the new product. (Be glad it wasn&#8217;t the Benjamin Zander recording, which clocks in at 58.)</p>
<p>
<i>Beethoven, the Man Who Freed Music . . . Beethoven and the Voice of God . . . Beethoven, Life of a Conqueror</i> . . . The bookshelves bulge with salivating adulations. Anyone familiar with Bach&#8217;s <i>St. Matthew</i> or <i>St. John Passion</i>, the <i>Messiah</i> or Mozart&#8217;s <i>Don Giovanni</i> might question the notion that music lay in some kind of bondage awaiting Beethoven&#8217;s liberating hand. Even so, just the contrast between the real-life antisocial alcoholic Beethoven and the genius Beethoven whose inner voices penetrated his deafness and produced the Ninth Symphony &#8211; and its eight predecessors (plus quartets, sonatas, etc.) &#8211; has raised a monumental accumulation of fact and fantasy that must needs resound in larger-than-life language: thus, “liberator,” “messiah,” “conqueror.” Now approaching its own two-century mark, the Beethoven foofaraw remains grander and noisier than a comparable encrustation around any other figure in the arts before or since (Elvis possibly excepted). An early surviving review describes the Second Symphony as “a crass monster, a hideously writhing wounded dragon.” It dates from 1804, and we might as well hail its uncredited Viennese &#8212;&#8212;&#8211;<br />
AUTHOR as the founder of a Beethoven industry that has continued uninterrupted ever since.</p>
<p>
None of the above is meant, of course, as belittlement; even when winnowed out from the centuries of superheated music-appreciationese, the Ninth is one of those imponderable acts of daring that light up the artistic landscape all too seldom, sharing the top shelf with such other imponderables as Piero della Francesca&#8217;s <i>Resurrection, </i>Shakespeare&#8217;s <i>King Lear</i> and, yes, Beethoven&#8217;s own <i>Eroica</i>. A liberating force? That can be argued; yet I don&#8217;t know another work of art that so vigorously flings open a window of possibility for all the art that was to follow. The greatest testimony to the stature of the Beethoven Ninth resounds in the galaxy of later works, some of them masterpieces and some not, whose direction was clearly affected by occurrences in this work.</p>
<p>
Start at the beginning. According to the Classical ideal, exemplified in 104 different ways by that many Haydn symphonies, or 41 ways by Mozart, a proper symphonic first movement begins with a clear and memorable theme in a clearly defined key. Beethoven&#8217;s Eighth Symphony hits you immediately with the F-majorness of its first grand, swinging tune. The Ninth, however, starts on a distant planet: a faint throbbing that could be in any number of keys, with a theme that takes shape somewhere out in space, one note at a time. Long after Beethoven, that way of starting a big piece of music &#8211; out in Nowhere-land, mystery-drenched, rumbling into shape only gradually &#8211; became entrenched in the language of high Romanticism: most of Mahler, all of Bruckner, Wagner&#8217;s <i>Ring</i>.</p>
<p>
Beethoven&#8217;s first theme is its own kind of miracle. It crashes in on you, out of the mists of uncertainty, like the <i>Titanic</i>&#8216;s iceberg, massive and gruff. Later, it splits apart in wondrous ways: now halting and melancholy, now a horn solo like a distant benediction. Midway in the first movement, its fragments knock against one another and, with terrific energy, coalesce once more in a recapitulation both sardonic and triumphant. The interweave of counterpoints &#8211; close at hand, in the middle distance and afar &#8211; is staggering; time and again you have to remind yourself that all this incredible detail is the fashioning of a mortal totally and tragically deaf. At the movement&#8217;s end, Beethoven&#8217;s incomparable theme pulls itself once more out of a mumbling, eerie blackness and hurls itself against us, against the gods.</p>
<p>
In that multilayered, deliriously pregnant theme, so classic and so suggestive, lies the first of the Ninth&#8217;s many greatnesses. During its creation, Beethoven toyed with another last movement, a purely orchestral “tragedy” that later became the finale of the A-minor String Quartet. The epic challenges of the first movement, he eventually realized, and their continuation in the demon dances of the second movement and the fragile serenities of the third, demanded another kind of resolution. While the chorus still cools its heels onstage, another fierce battle rages in the orchestra as, among themselves, the players review, discuss and reject everything they have performed in the last 50 or so minutes. It&#8217;s a strange drama; confronted with, and having rejected, the fragmented reminders of the symphony&#8217;s terrific opening, the demonic scherzo and the seraphic slow movement, the orchestra falls in instead behind the simple, folkish D-major tune that, to many admirers, <i>is</i> the Beethoven Ninth, the way the “Tonight We Love” tune <i>is</i> the Tchaikovsky Concerto.</p>
<p>
“Enough of this,” the solo baritone proclaims (in words by Beethoven himself), and everybody joins in a final 20 minutes of joyous, declarative, tonsil-wrecking working out of the sweet little tune. By itself this final movement &#8211; the most famous part of the Beethoven Ninth, the part all the folks have been waiting for &#8211; is an overcomposed, clumsy essay in variation technique whose most delicious moment happens when the music stops &#8211; the colossal fart from the contrabassoon out of darkness, just before the tenor solo, after the chorus has yelled itself hoarse in the first of several climactic anticlimaxes.</p>
<p>
If this finale deserves exceptional acclaim, it has been so ordained by what came before. In those first three movements, longer by themselves than any of Beethoven&#8217;s earlier complete symphonies, a challenge has been thrown down: to what must then happen to bring this one work safely home, and to the directions music might take in its future. Both ways, the challenge has been handsomely met.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Plácidalia: The Empire Strikes&#160;Ahead</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2000/09/placidalia-the-empire-strikes-ahead/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2000/09/placidalia-the-empire-strikes-ahead/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 27 Sep 2000 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=315</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Photo by Peter Mountain First there was the promise: “Operalia,” Plácido Domingo&#8217;s contest teeming with enough spectacular young singing talent to run half a dozen opera companies. Then there was fulfillment: Aïda at long last, imperfectly sung but strongly led; Wagner at long last, heaven-sent. Then came the reward: big money allocated by philanthropist Alberto [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Photo by Peter Mountain
<p>
First there was the promise: “Operalia,” Plácido Domingo&#8217;s contest teeming with enough spectacular young singing talent to run half a dozen opera companies. Then there was fulfillment: <i>Aïda</i> at long last, imperfectly sung but strongly led; Wagner at long last, heaven-sent. Then came the reward: big money allocated by philanthropist Alberto Vilar with wisdom and enthusiasm, lavish enough to stand as a declaration of restored faith in an art where crises of faith have become a way of life. This all happened in little more than a week, earlier this month, during which Domingo staked out the Los Angeles Opera as his empire grand beyond expectations &#8211; even beyond hopes. Peter Hemmings had laid the company&#8217;s foundations 15 years ago, and, even with a wobble here and there, they have held firm. Now they have been spectacularly built upon.</p>
<p>
There had been reasons to question the L.A. Opera&#8217;s destiny under its new artistic director, and some of them have been expressed on this page from time to time. History has not been kind to superstar performers recast in management roles, in opera and in other fields as well. Domingo&#8217;s first major moves here since taking office, as noted in not one but two press conferences a couple of weeks ago, have been particularly shrewd in addressing some of the most-discussed company weaknesses in the Hemmings years. One concerns holes in the repertory, and so the 2001-02 season starts by filling two of them: the company&#8217;s first-ever Russian opera, Tchaikovsky&#8217;s <i>Pique Dame</i>, once before promised but dropped, followed a week later by <i>Lohengrin</i> to cancel out a hitherto inadequate attention to Wagner&#8217;s music dramas. Another concerns the lack of a consistently strong podium; and so superconductor Valery Gergiev, czar of St. Petersburg&#8217;s Mariinsky (a.k.a. Kirov) Opera and of points west, will lead the Tchaikovsky opera, and the splendid Kent Nagano &#8211; the company&#8217;s new principal conductor &#8211; will lead the Wagner.</p>
<p>
On the whole, the next season as announced, and the snippets of ensuing seasons that have been allowed to leak out, promise a higher measure of enterprise than in the recent past &#8211; in some ways better balanced than the high-adventure programming of the first years under Hemmings, and in some ways not. (Where&#8217;s the Janácek?) Credit Domingo with the awareness that his own starry presence &#8211; on the stage, on the podium, or on the rostrum at fund-raisers &#8211; will enable a certain amount of innovation, even if taken one step at a time, as in the one-performance-only <i>Moses und Aron</i> on next year&#8217;s agenda.</p>
<p>
Inevitably, the majority of the upcoming repertory is in shared productions with companies in Madrid, the Kirov, Paris, Berlin, wherever. This is one of opera&#8217;s current realities; no house, not even the Met or La Scala, can survive without sharing. But if one announced production, the George Lucas–designed <i>Ring of the Nibelung </i>planned for 2003-04, comes in as spectacular as it promises, it will define the uniqueness of Los Angeles opera for all time. Why else do the <i>Ring</i>, in these times of only so-so singing talent, unless from the hands of Lucas and his Industrial Light and Magic wizards? Isn&#8217;t this the final proof of what we already suspect, that the whole of <i>Star Wars</i> is basically the reaffirmation of Wagner&#8217;s grandiose creation, and of the legends that guided his hand? Eat your hearts out, Seattle and Bayreuth; this is where the <i>Ring</i> belongs, where the “total artwork” of Wagner&#8217;s dreams took shape on storyboard and sound stage.</p>
<p>
The Kirov connection is fascinating. It was baptized in no uncertain terms in the Wagner concert that capped the first week of local opera: complete acts from <i>Die Walküre</i> and <i>Parsifal</i> with Domingo as both Siegmund and Parsifal, respectable supporting casts, and Gergiev&#8217;s wild and wonderful Kirov Orchestra brought over for the event, its bronzed resonance a virtual mirror of the state of Domingo&#8217;s voice these days. Domingo has edged into Wagner for several years; his German vowels have a decidedly Mediterranean cast, but the ardor in both roles &#8211; opera&#8217;s most illustrious nincompoops &#8211; was genuine and moving. No casts have yet been announced for next season, but I wouldn&#8217;t count on Domingo&#8217;s <i>not</i> taking on a Lohengrin or two. He&#8217;s entitled.</p>
<p>
Both Los Angeles and St. Petersburg will bask in Alberto Vilar&#8217;s fabulous benefice: $24 million to underwrite new productions &#8211; opera and, for the Kirov, ballet &#8211; as well as touring and young-artist training programs. Vilar is 59, of Cuban-American background, founder and head of New York&#8217;s Amerindo Investment Advisors, an arts patron on a scale that I thought had gone out of style, benefactor of nearly every opera company you can name plus the Vilar Center for the Arts in Beaver Creek, Colorado. An eyebrow or two might be raised at the notion of two major performing forces on opposite sides of the planet being heavily bankrolled from funds out of somewhere midway between the two. I would hope that one result of this magnanimity would be an increase in local support, as the L.A. Opera&#8217;s cultural relevance is strengthened under its new management. It&#8217;s fun to read reviews of brand-new operas at Salzburg financed by the Los Angeles patron Betty Freeman; it would be even more fun to read that the L.A. Opera&#8217;s newfound enterprise might also merit her support. It has never made sense to me, furthermore, how little, or how misguidedly, the Hollywood crowd has participated in opera production over the years. With a Lucas <i>Ring</i> on the far horizon, plus William Friedkin and Maximilian Schell among next season&#8217;s announced directors, some kind of entente might well be in the works.</p>
<p>
Domingo cornered me one day, during a break in the “Operalia” competition. My negativism toward some of his moves with the company had hurt, he said; it was time to start thinking positively. Well, okay; but Domingo doesn&#8217;t need the critics to write his publicity, and I still think last season&#8217;s <i>La Rondine</i> was a mistake, and a scary one at that. Right now my positive feelings toward the company &#8211; after the far horizons revealed by this month&#8217;s announcements, the extraordinary level of talent displayed by the top contenders at “Operalia” (the best of them, by the way, clustered around age 26 and therefore well enough along to rank as finished artists rather than merely promising kids) and the brassy-bronze glories of Gergiev&#8217;s conducting &#8211; have raised my hopes as high as at any time since the company started. A few months ago I was lunched by Edgar Baitzel, the company&#8217;s artistic administrator, who tickled my expectations with promises of a <i>Ring</i> and <i>Moses und Aron</i> and Gergiev. I wrote it off at the time as pie in the sky. Now that pie is on the table, à la mode.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>The Grandeur That Was (Or Might Have Been)&#160;Egypt</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2000/09/the-grandeur-that-was-or-might-have-been-egypt/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2000/09/the-grandeur-that-was-or-might-have-been-egypt/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 13 Sep 2000 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=314</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Finally Aida, worth the wait if not quite worth the weight. The auspices are splendid: the 15th opening night for a company that some had predicted wouldn&#8217;t reach its second; the inaugural effort for a new artistic director, and, for him at least, an unqualified success. Aida is not the grandest of Verdi‘s grandissimo operas; [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Finally Aida, worth the wait if not quite worth the weight. The auspices are splendid: the 15th opening night for a company that some had predicted wouldn&#8217;t reach its second; the inaugural effort for a new artistic director, and, for him at least, an unqualified success.
</p>
<p>    Aida is not the grandest of Verdi‘s grandissimo operas; I hold Un Ballo in Maschera as worthier of that acclaim. Still, it has a certain iconic quality above the rest: the archetypal Italian romantic opera, the one that promises both love duet and elephants. In Los Angeles it has been buffeted by the fates to a ludicrous degree since its last real performance here (by the San Francisco Opera in 1964). Often announced, just as often canceled, it has been the toy project of hopeful but hopeless producers. I still have the T-shirt from one press conference announcing an upcoming Aida at the Coliseum; it was held, logically enough, at the Egyptian Theater, and there were a live camel, an elephant and, if memory serves, a giraffe tethered outside.
</p>
<p>   Our new Aida contents itself with plastic elephants, proscenium-high. The production comes in from Houston, where I saw it in 1987 at the opening of that city&#8217;s Wortham Opera Center (followed the next night by the world premiere of Nixon in China &#8212; some weekend!). It shows its age in a tattered seam here and there, but it is nicely lit, and the Nile Scene remains a thing of extraordinary beauty. It is the work of Pier-Luigi Pizzi, the first setting by him to show here; the stark, monumental lines and the imaginative use of verticality are representative of the great Pizzi settings I‘ve seen elsewhere.
</p>
<p>   Unfortunately, these designs are not well-used at the Dorothy Chandler Pavilion. Perhaps they couldn&#8217;t be; given the pair of cubically overendowed leading singers that has been wished upon him, it is probably the better part of valor for director Stephen Pickover to fall back on the old stand-and-deliver blocking that once passed for operatic acting. It does, however, inject a note of dreariness into surroundings that deserve better. Daniel Pelzig‘s choreography fulfills the hootchy-kootch that Verdi&#8217;s music, alas, demands (I can never witness an Aida ballet without summoning the name of Albertina Rasch from my earliest moviegoing memories). But this time, at least, there was also a terrific acrobatic moment in the Triumphal Scene, with swords and leaps and gold-lame boxer shorts.
</p>
<p>   And, oh yes, there is also the singing. I have had reason to admire Deborah Voigt in the past &#8212; her Sieglinde last year in San Francisco, her new EMI disc of Wagner duets with Placido Domingo. But there was no Aida in her voice the other night, no throb or heartbreak, none of the seduction in her duet with Radames that could get people to listen rather than look: loud and pretty in tone, but not the tragic heroine, one of Verdi‘s most powerful creations, whom we have known and been made to love in the past. Her Radames, South Africa&#8217;s Johan Botha, was of similar volume (audible and visible). The night was carried, however, by the impressive Amneris of Nina Terentieva &#8212; although, as with her Azucena two years ago, she took a scene or two to find the proper pitch &#8212; and the eloquent Amonasro of Simon Estes.
</p>
<p>   Eloquent, too, is the word for Domingo‘s musical guidance throughout the long evening &#8212; the best conducting I have yet heard from his baton, a shaping and a pacing formed out of regard for the music itself and for its singers. If Domingo has, indeed, outgrown his splendid Radames of times past &#8212; a role he truly owned not so long ago &#8212; he proved in this most promising performance on the podium that he still has something to contribute to the work itself.
</p>
<p>    Two nights later came La Cenerentola, opera neither grand nor iconic, but standing tall in its own class and, more to the point, a sheer delight. As Rossini&#8217;s comedies go, perhaps The Barber of Seville is subtler, and The Italian Girl in Algiers juicier, but this delirious gloss on the Cinderella story has more bubbles, and the fizz at last week‘s performance was everywhere apparent. I can see purists climbing the walls and screaming “heresy” at Thor Steingraber&#8217;s production, and beside his splendid Figaro and CapuletsMontagues, this one is something of a mess &#8212; but an endearing one. The time is everytime; Cinderella‘s rotten sisters sport their Victorian ball gowns around a kitchen table right out of IKEA (perhaps bearing the label “schlumpf”); the chorus, apparently determined to get in everybody&#8217;s way, comes bounding out of closets and from under banquet tables. The lighting cues shift constantly, sometimes with every downbeat. Perhaps someone at the L.A. Opera believes in overkill as the way to produce Rossinian comedies; at least compared to the 1996 Italian Girl, this one is positively monastic. In any case, I laughed a lot.
</p>
<p>    Jennifer Larmore is the Cinderella, splendidly in command of the bristling difficulties that are the delight and the terror of this music. I do find her work somewhat cold; I‘m spoiled by Cecilia Bartoli, who has the command plus the power to enchant. What I miss mostly in Larmore is whatever is encompassed by the term “winsome.” In the mostly American cast, baritones Richard Bernstein and Rodney Gilfry walk off with the honors, as they usually do; tenor Kurt Streit, a little dry of voice, is close behind. The Italian basso buffo Simone Alaimo brings in an alien element in more ways than one; his eyeball-rolling, lip-smacking delivery of his big patter songs is of the old school, where singing the notes as written is of minor importance. Gabriele Ferro&#8217;s conducting is merely okay.
</p>
<p>   So are Riccardo Hernandez‘s sets: a hovel for Cinderella and family, angled like something out of Caligari&#8217;s cabinet, a ballroom into which snow is falling &#8212; while the chorus sings of birds. Never mind; Rossini‘s marvelous music transcends mere earthly frailties. I had a ball.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Domingo/Wagner</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2000/09/domingowagner/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2000/09/domingowagner/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 11 Sep 2000 22:30:20 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Musical America]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=1827</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Los Angeles, September 11. To the small but ardent hordes of compleat Wagnerites hereabouts, denied sustenance over the years – a mere two productions in 14 seasons &#8211;  by the Los Angeles Opera’s favoring glances toward other repertories, this past few days’ activities have come as a mingling of manna from heaven and redemption here [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Los Angeles, September 11. To the small but ardent hordes of compleat Wagnerites hereabouts, denied sustenance over the years – a mere two productions in 14 seasons &#8211;  by the Los Angeles Opera’s favoring glances toward other repertories, this past few days’ activities have come as a mingling of manna from heaven and redemption here on earth. First there was Sunday night’s all-Wagner concert under the company’s banner, with supertenor, superconductor, super-orchestra and super music: complete acts from “Die Walküre” and “Parsifal” with Plácido Domingo as the Siegmund and the Parsifal, excellent supporting casts and master conductor Valery Gergiev drawing torrential and glorious noises from his Kirov Orchestra visiting from its St. Petersburg home base. At next morning’s press conference, it turned out that the concert was only a teaser for what’s to come: the company’s first “Lohengrin” slated for September, 2001 and, more wondrous yet, a brand new “Ring of the Nibelung” cycle, with designs from George Lucas’ Industrial Light and Magic, birthplace of “Star Wars” and, thus, the logical inheritor of Wagner’s grandiose visions of 135 years ago.<br />
For Domingo, the company’s newly anointed director, the concert capped a week of empire building: his sensationally successful “Operalia” vocal competition, his excellent leadership of the opening-night “Aïda” and now, all the Wagner. Actually, Domingo has been systematically moving into Wagner territory for several years, while maintaining his ability to knock ‘em dead in the Italian repertory. This past summer his Siegmund at Bayreuth was greatly admired, and in Los Angeles these days – the concert repeats on the 13th and 15th – he demonstrates why. Never mind that his German diction is vividly colored by Mediterranean vowel-values; he proved this time that he still has the role’s tragedy-tinged ardor well in hand, and in voice as well.<br />
The circumstances were irresistible: the pure, dark-hued velvet of the magnificent Kirov players, the surging insistence of Gergiev leadership. The silvery-voiced Danish soprano Eva Johansson was the passionate Sieglinde in the “Walküre” love music; American soprano Linda Watson was a fearsome Kundry in the “Parsifal” garden scene – where the ring of Domingo’s tenor, however, was occasionally buried by the Kirov’s volcanic brasses. The smaller bass roles were well managed by Fyodor Kuznetsov, the Hunding in “Die Walküre” and Alan Held, the Klingsor in the “Parsifal.”<br />
Adding to his strongholds in St. Petersburg and at the Met, Gergiev has been setting down new roots in Los Angeles as well. He will conduct next season’s opening-night “Pique Dame,” and the 2003/04 season’s “Love for Three Oranges,” both co-productions by the L.A. and Kirov Operas. The “Lohengrin” will be staged by actor/director Maximilian Schell, led by the company’s newly anointed principal conductor, Kent Nagano. Other productions for next season, announced at Monday’s press conference, include a “Merry Widow” presented both in English and Spanish (with Domingo as the Spanish-language Danilo), a Nagano-conducted concert performance of Schoenberg’s “Moses und Aron,” a staging by German director/designer Achim Freyer of Bach’s B-minor Mass, the company’s first “Turandot,” also conducted by Nagano, and a double-bill of Bartók’s “Duke Bluebeard’s Castle” and Puccini’s “Gianni Schicchi,” also conducted by Nagano and staged by Hollywood filmmaker William Friedkin. Revivals of the company’s “La Traviata” and “The Magic Flute” round out the season, the first to show the planning hand of Domingo himself, an impressive start.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>LA OPERA&#160;“AIDA”</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2000/09/la-opera-%e2%80%9caida%e2%80%9d/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2000/09/la-opera-%e2%80%9caida%e2%80%9d/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 07 Sep 2000 22:26:38 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Musical America]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=1821</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Any opera company worth its music stands, or so you’d think, would honor  “Aida” as a the crown jewel in its repertory; no other opera, after all, so fully epitomizes everything embraced under the term “operatic.” Still, it has taken the Los Angeles Opera all the years from its shaky start in 1986 until this [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Any opera company worth its music stands, or so you’d think, would honor  “Aida” as a the crown jewel in its repertory; no other opera, after all, so fully epitomizes everything embraced under the term “operatic.” Still, it has taken the Los Angeles Opera all the years from its shaky start in 1986 until this week to take the measure of Verdi’s glorious pageant of love and betrayal beside the Nile. Has it been worth the wait? Yes, somewhat.<br />
In his time, Plácido Domingo has owned his share of the opera; no tenor was ever more clearly born with the music of Radames in his soul and his tonsils. For his inaugural outing since coming on as the L.A. Opera’s artistic administrator, Domingo appeared under another of his hats, conducting  a beautifully paced, neatly balanced reading, by some distance the most eloquent piece of musical leadership he has yet displayed here. Would, alas, that the cast assembled under his baton were worthy of its place.  On opening night, at least, there were problems.<br />
American soprano Deborah Voigt was the Aida, South African tenor Johan Botha, the Radames, both in their company debuts, both well matched at least physically and both, alas, equally worthy of one another’s audible deficiencies. For all her eloquence as a Wagnerian – including her recent duet disc with Domingo on BMG – Voigt seemed little more than a singer with a pretty voice outclassed by the grand melodic line, the throb of heartache and torn loyalties that turn Verdi’s heroine passionate and memorable. Nothing in Botha’s performance came across as anything but a hard-edged, uninvolved delivery, impressively loud with a few gulped tones here and there.<br />
What vocal gold there was on opening night was mined by the Amneris of Russian mezzo Nina Terentieva and the Amonasro of Simon Estes: she with a fiery onslaught that took a scene or two to settle onto accurate pitch, he with a thread of eloquence still wound around a voice that has been around for a while. Smaller roles were adequately managed by Louis Lebherz, Jaako Ryhänen, Cynthia Jansen and, as the Messenger, Bruce Sledge who, a day before, had been a finalist in Domingo’s Operalia competition.<br />
Better than any of its cast was the production itself, the first local viewing of the work of Italian stage designer Pier-Luigi Pizzi, beautifully showing off Pizzi’s flair for etched, monumental lines and forms, handsomely highlighted in sharply contrasting colors, with a couple of proscenium-high elephants for extra laffs. First built in 1987 to inaugurate Houston’s Wortham Opera Center, the production has had some use over the years, and a seam or two attests to that; as starkly defined in Alan Burrett’s lighting designs, however, this was a handsome, up-to-date “Aida” setting, free of overstuffed traditional encrustations.<br />
Those latter qualities were, alas, abundantly evident in Stephen Pickover’s blocky staging, and in the traditional hootchy-kootch of Daniel Pelzig’s choreography of the opera’s oversupply of dance episodes – except, that is, for one terrific acrobatic number in the Act-Two celebrations. Given an Aida of, shall we say, less-than-sylphide proportions, and a Radames of matching ponderosity, Pickover may have had no choice but to limit his stage movements to the old-timey stand-and-deliver manner; still, the discrepancy was hard to ignore, between Pizzi’s handsome sets and the stage biz that filled them.<br />
Never mind; the big news for “Aida”-starved Los Angeles operagoers – tantalized over the years by a ludicrous number of announced and then cancelled  productions by several equally ludicrous producer-wannabes – was that the opera of choice has arrived, that it sounds pretty good, and looks like a million dollars. That, at L.A. Opera’s current $148 ticket top, almost sounds like a bargain.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>OPERALIA&#160;2000</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2000/09/operalia-2000/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2000/09/operalia-2000/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 06 Sep 2000 22:46:10 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Musical America]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=1857</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Along about nine o’clock on Tuesday night, a slender young soprano with the tongue-twisting name of Isabel Bayrakdarian – Lebanese-born, now Canadian &#8212; came onto the stage at UCLA’s Royce Hall, wrapped her honey-textured voice around the equally tongue-twisting divisions in Rossini’s killer aria “Bel raggio lusinghier” (from “Semiramide”) and gave off the star quality [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Along about nine o’clock on Tuesday night, a slender young soprano with the tongue-twisting name of Isabel Bayrakdarian – Lebanese-born, now Canadian &#8212; came onto the stage at UCLA’s Royce Hall, wrapped her honey-textured voice around the equally tongue-twisting divisions in Rossini’s killer aria “Bel raggio lusinghier” (from “Semiramide”) and gave off the star quality that would be confirmed a couple of hours later – that she had earned and deserved top spot in the latest running of Placido Domingo’s “Operalia.” Domingo concocted his young-singers’ competition in 1993; previous turns had been in Paris, Mexico City, Tokyo, Hamburg, Madrid, Bordeaux and San Juan, The scuttlebutt this week has it that the event will now stay put in Los Angeles; this, after all, would jibe with the establishment of the latest outpost of Domingo’s empire (“Placidalia”?), this week’s opening of his inaugural season as the L.A. Opera’s artistic director following the departure of founder/honcho Peter Hemmings.<br />
Forty-one hopeful singers, ranging in age from 19 to 30, came to Los Angeles to endure the peeling-off process through several days of quarters and semis, dealing out some of opera’s well-roasted chestnuts (with disturbingly few novelties) with piano accompaniment. One of the accompanists was Larissa Gergieva, the sister of Russian superstar conductor Valery Gergiev; she also sent along three of her vocal students to join with ten other Russians (plus two Ukrainians and one Armenian) in a somewhat overweighted list. Seven Russians survived to the finals; only one, however, made it to the winners’ circle: tenor Daniil {cq} Shtoda, who tied for second with Chinese soprano He Hui.<br />
In their seven years, the Operalias have done their bit toward rekindling an operatic golden age. Soprano Elizabeth Futral, the Stella in Andre Previn’s “Streetcar Named Desire” got a boost from a previous running; so did tenor José Cura, the Alfredo in the recent PBS “La Traviata,” and so did the remarkable Los Angeles-born countertenor Brian Asawa, whose career extends worldwide. They have also pulled in some prestigious support; philanthropist and opera-fanatic Albert Vilar, who has been with the project from the start, Los Angeles meat-tenderizer tycoon Lloyd Rigler, and such corporate names as Rolex Watches U.S.A. and Grand Marnier. Just the prize-money budget for this year’s outing came to nearly $200,000.<br />
That included a $50,000 first-prize check to Isabel Bayrakdarian, $25,000 checks to both second-prize winners, and $15,000 each to third-prize winners, The Ukraine’s tenor Konstyantin Andreyev and Canadian bass Robert Pomakov. Lloyd Rigler donated a separate $10,000 prize to a stage-burning Argentinian soprano Virginia Tola, who had earned the loudest cheers at each of her stints during the week, and who also took a “people’s prize” in that amount, determined by paper ballots from the Royce Hall audience and e-mail from listeners to the broadcast event. No finalist went home empty-handed, in fact, thanks to a $5,000 across-the-board handout.<br />
The ten-member judges’ panel included the singer Marilyn Horne, herself greatly dedicated to training young singers at her Santa Barbara-based Music Academy of the West. Other panelists included heads of opera companies in Britain, France, Spain, Germany, Mexico and the U.S. Among them was Eva Wagner Pasquier, currently artistic consultant to France’s reborn Aix-en-Provence Festival and one of the several Wagnerians now in the fray to head their ancestor’s Bayreuth Festival  &#8212; and, thus, no stranger to the world of operatic competition.<br />
And at the end, pushing toward midnight, singers, judges, donors, Marta and Placido Domingo and L.A. mayor Richard Riordan joined forces with the L.A. Chamber Orchestra – which had provided the requisite oom-pa-pahs under Domingo’s baton for the long evening of opera’s greatest hits –in the granddaddy of operatic anthems, the “Va, pensiero” chorus from Verdi’s “Nabucco,” confirming once again that, when all is said and sung, there’s nothing like a grand tune to make opera worth the sweat, the tears, and the cash.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Fourth&#160;Right</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2000/09/fourth-right/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2000/09/fourth-right/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 06 Sep 2000 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=313</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[By late August, most of my crack-pot enthusiasm about the Hollywood Bowl and its contents has worn pretty thin. On Tuesday of last week, for example, I took it as a reprieve that the day of Tchaikovsky&#8217;s Fourth Symphony dawned chill and rainy; could the Powers That Be have read my mind on the subject, [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>By late August, most of my crack-pot enthusiasm about the Hollywood Bowl and its contents has worn pretty thin. On Tuesday of last week, for example, I took it as a reprieve that the day of Tchaikovsky&#8217;s Fourth Symphony dawned chill and rainy; could the Powers That Be have read my mind on the subject, lavished their watery benefice upon my unwatered rosebush and granted my overwatered ears a night‘s surcease? But no; despite my impassioned rain dances and the pleading from my parched Rosa mutabilis, the clouds were gone by teatime, duty sounded its usual summons, and I found myself by day&#8217;s end making the customary common cause with 5,200 or so of the faithful.
</p>
<p>    Here, however, my sad tale takes a curious twist, because the music makers of the Los Angeles Philharmonic delivered one helluva Fourth to those aforementioned burdened ears of mine that night, a performance &#8212; under the knowing baton of visiting conductor Leonid Grin &#8212; that turned Tchaikovsky‘s spavined warhorse into a flashing, swift steed, dazzling in color and power. It was the kind of restorative (of the music and its hearers) that, without anything changed or distorted in this well-worn score, caused familiar moments to resound like first-time discoveries, turned simpering tunesmanship into outpourings from the heart, and whipped up a fine brass-tinted froth at the end that made my few remaining hair roots positively tingle. The first-desk wind players &#8212; oboist David Weiss, clarinetist Michele Zukovsky and bassoonist David Breidenthal &#8212; translated their many solos into something close to poetry. And while it sounds like adolescent gush, one of the hoariest cliches in the critic&#8217;s phrase book, I had the feeling that I was hearing the Tchaikovsky Fourth, if not for the first time, at least for the first time in a new way. (I have to note that one of the lesser scribes from the Times in attendance that night was of a different mind &#8212; if mind isn‘t too strong a word &#8212; but that&#8217;s his problem.)
</p>
<p>   Leonid Grin has been here before: last year as a replacement at an indoor Philharmonic concert, where he took on and mastered a tough assignment &#8212; the Shostakovich 15th, which he was learning at first sight &#8212; and in the early 1980s as one of the conducting fellows in the much-mourned Philharmonic Institute. He currently heads the San Jose Symphony, where, I am told, he is doing just fine. My words last year for his Shostakovich performance &#8212; solid, properly proportioned, beautifully balanced &#8212; are appropriate once again. His program this time also included Shostakovich: the first of the two violin concertos, with the orchestra‘s concertmaster, Martin Chalifour, as the reserved but eloquent soloist; and the delightfully trashy Festival Overture, music designed to gladden Stalin&#8217;s heart, but which worked pretty well on mine as well. (I hope, by the way, that you caught the Sunday New York Times of August 20, with Irina Shostakovich‘s earnest and passionate refutation of Solomon Volkov&#8217;s Testimony, his highly suspect concocted ”memoir“ of her tormented husband‘s struggles against the Stalinist oppression that continued long after Stalin&#8217;s death.)
</p>
<p>    The much-loved Kurt Sanderling, who guest-led the Philharmonic many times during the 1980s, had been close to Shostakovich, and delivered a performance here of the Fifth Symphony that remains, on a deviously obtained tape, my favorite way of hearing this well-worn score. Sanderling‘s son Stefan, another alumnus of the Philharmonic Institute and a fast-rising figure on the European orchestral landscape, had taken on the preceding week&#8217;s Bowl concerts, and I can‘t entirely blame him for my feeling that neither concert challenged the best he could offer.
</p>
<p>    If ever a piece has outlived its usefulness, Gustav Holst&#8217;s The Planets is surely that piece. In simpler, happier times, when there were still new planets to be found within our solar system, and H.G. Wells was inventing his genteel brand of sci-fi fantasy, a pretty orchestral celebration of the spirit of interplanetary exploration might have scored points, especially with Holst‘s wordless chorus mysticus to intone celestial evocations at the end. Along came Star Wars, and smart promoters &#8212; our own Zubi among them &#8212; invented clever light-show productions to go along with Holst&#8217;s score, indoors and out, that could take people‘s minds off the dreariness of the music. At the Bowl, however, without any such visual props to buttress the mystical otherworldly warblings, The Planets of Gustav Holst added up to an hour dull beyond redemption. Before, on this first of Sanderling&#8217;s two concerts, had come Elgar‘s Cello Concerto, a work with far more to say (in half the time) and with the Philharmonic&#8217;s recently retired principal cellist Ron Leonard to say it simply, elegantly and beautifully.
</p>
<p>   Two nights later there was neither elegance nor beauty, in a program that called out for those qualities above all: waltzes and waltz songs by several composers named Strauss, related or not, plus one named Lehar, deflated by the orchestra and flung forth by the evening‘s soloist with all the lightness of a collapsed souffle. A suite of orchestral bits from nonrelated Richard Strauss&#8217; Der Rosenkavalier began it, an overextended, leaden affair in which most of the opera‘s best waltz tunes (e.g., the ”Breakfast Waltz“ of Act 1 and the ”Nein, nein . . .“ waltzes of Act 3) had been omitted in favor of a few unsung orchestral versions of vocal numbers.
</p>
<p>   Then came the evening&#8217;s soloist, the Korean soprano Sumi Jo, whose presence had brought out a huge compatriot crowd but who serenaded those admirers with singing cold, inflexible and just plain unloving &#8212; this in such lovable material as the ”Vilja-Song“ from The Merry Widow and the ”Laughing Song“ from Die Fledermaus. At the L.A. Opera, I admired Sumi Jo for her Queen of the Night but deplored her lack of identity as Lucy of Lammermoor. This time neither she, nor Sanderling‘s frequent resorting to shifts of tempo in a vain attempt to simulate the famous Viennese lilt, came within miles of the high-class schmaltz the program had promised on paper. By intermission&#8217;s end, for the first time in many seasons, I too was no longer within miles &#8212; of the Bowl, that is.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Bach, Brubeck and the&#160;Bridge</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2000/08/bach-brubeck-and-the-bridge/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2000/08/bach-brubeck-and-the-bridge/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 30 Aug 2000 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=312</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[To my generation of budding musicologists, ardently perusing the heavily footnoted scholarly literature on Bach and Before, Dave Brubeck was the bridge to What Lay Beyond, the first jazz performer we could listen to and still preserve our self-respect. Himself a composer with serious credentials, a prize student of the formidable Darius Milhaud in the [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>To my generation of budding musicologists, ardently perusing the heavily footnoted scholarly literature on Bach and Before, Dave Brubeck was the bridge to What Lay Beyond, the first jazz performer we could listen to and still preserve our self-respect. Himself a composer with serious credentials, a prize student of the formidable Darius Milhaud in the 1940s at Oakland&#8217;s Mills College, Brubeck composed and proposed a new kind of jazz, respectable as none of the popular arts had been hitherto. It had &#8212; for God‘s sake! &#8212; counterpoint. It snaked along in rhythms and meters that only the most abstruse masters had practiced. It even Took Five, and bragged about it in its title. Milhaud himself, decades before, when jazz was the latest thing on the block, had broached the notion of dolling up the new arrival in matching socks and escorting it over the bridge to the “serious” side; his jazz-infused “ballet negre,” La Creation du Monde, remains one of the 20th century&#8217;s seminal works, as much for its quality as for the alliance across the bridge that it implied.
</p>
<p>    One year Milhaud‘s composition seminar consisted of eight students; they first called themselves the Jazz Workshop Ensemble, but in 1949 they recorded on the Fantasy label as the Dave Brubeck Octet. By the mid-&#8217;50s, out beyond the walls of academe, the Octet had shrunk to its enduring classical shape, as the Dave Brubeck Quartet &#8212; Brubeck on piano, Paul Desmond on alto, drummer Joe Morello and bassist Eugene Wright; they played college towns for the most part, and on most nights you couldn‘t get near the place. When Brubeck came to the Hollywood Bowl a couple of weeks ago with his latest quartet, Eugene Wright also sat in on a couple of numbers, and the years just fell away.
</p>
<p>   Never mind that the very smartness of Brubeck&#8217;s music (much of it actually Desmond‘s music) raised suspicious eyebrows in the realm of “pure” jazz; he also carried the curse of West Coast&#8211;ness, while the East Coast nurtured its own jazz intelligentsia &#8212; the MJQ. Gary Giddins&#8217; recent Visions of Jazz, the best jazz overview I know, brackets Brubeck with the “popularizers” Wynton Marsalis and Paul Whiteman &#8212; thereby also handing out lumps to Gunther Schuller‘s scholarly Early Jazz, whose hero by and large seems to be Whiteman. Giddens may be right; I only write about what I like.
</p>
<p>   All I know is that Brubeck&#8217;s half of that Hollywood Bowl program, with the old boy just a few months short of 80, was more than just beautiful; it had the kind of inventive freedom and vitality that had hooked me on his music nearly half a century ago. Its strength was all the more appealing after the program‘s first half, in which the Bowl&#8217;s resident Clayton-Hamilton Jazz Orchestra delivered tidy, dead musical packages that even the trick virtuosity of guest trumpetertrombonist flugelhornist (sometimes all at once) James Morrison couldn‘t bring to life. Brubeck&#8217;s current group &#8212; with drummer Randy Jones, bassist Alec Dankworth (John and Cleo‘s kid), Bobby Militello on winds &#8212; offered a fine, varied program, including a couple of new pieces not yet named and, at the end, a great zoom through Paul Desmond&#8217;s “Take Five” with Eugene Wright also onboard. One of my vivid memories from that night, however, was the simple, elegant beauty of Brubeck‘s piano in a sentimental old standard called “All My Love,” floating, floating under a full moon, conquering the noise-afflicted air of Cahuenga Pass not with noise but with near silence.
</p>
<p>    New on the job, Esa-Pekka Salonen confessed to me several years ago, on these very pages, that the music of J.S. Bach was still for him a dark area awaiting discovery. A new Sony CD with the Los Angeles Philharmonic suggests that he has entered this territory, but along a strange and tortuous path: via the orchestral transcriptions inflicted upon several of Bach&#8217;s works &#8212; for keyboard or chamber ensemble &#8212; by self-proclaimed if misguided Bachmeisters of generations past. Salonen‘s program, some of which figured in a Bowl concert a year or so ago, includes the inevitable orchestral bacchanale &#8212; Leopold Stokowski&#8217;s version of the D-minor Toccata and Fugue (of Fantasia fame) &#8212; along with Arnold Schoenberg‘s well-intentioned but ponderous take on the “St. Anne” Prelude and Fugue, Anton Webern&#8217;s dissection of the Ricercar from the Musical Offering, and a curious hodgepodge of movements from two of the Orchestral Suites, rescored and cobbled together by Gustav Mahler as a single work. One further travesty that‘s missing, but which I hope somebody digs out someday, is Sir Henry J. Wood&#8217;s version of the D-minor TF, with full percussion section &#8212; which that other dedicated Bachian, Arturo Toscanini, used to perform but which needs recording of the quality that Sony‘s engineers have accorded Salonen on his new disc.
</p>
<p>    As a documentation of Bach envisioned by bygone musicians, Salonen&#8217;s disc has its value, and his performances are clear and properly robust. Surely we are inundated these days with Bach-anniversary recordings from all imaginable points along the authenticity spectrum. My latest favorite, by the way, is John Eliot Gardiner‘s Archiv disc of two cantatas for Easter, Nos. 6 and 66, performed by Gardiner&#8217;s own group the Monteverdi Choir and English Baroque Soloists. There is an astounding moment in the opening chorus of No. 66, a chromatic, twisting setting of the words “mourning, fear and timorous hesitation,” that‘ll knock your socks off; an equally strange duet later on, for countertenor and tenor, gives the ultimate lie to the image of stodgy old Bach in his dusty organ loft. I&#8217;m not always fond of Gardiner‘s slick, dancing phrasing, but this new disc is close to heavenly.
</p>
<p>   Sony has also been kibbling, remastering and reissuing its own particular Bach treasure, the legacy of Glenn Gould performances recorded over the span from the 1955 “Goldberg” Variations to the same work 26 years later. The latest issue, a two-disc “best of” collection consisting mostly of kibbles and bits, would be unworthy of notice except that the second disc also contains about half an hour of CD-ROM (Mac or PC) featuring Gould at work on several sections of The Art of the Fugue not included on the previous laserdisc release. This is truly fascinating: the fingers, the massive, troubled countenance and, of course, the groaning accompaniment from deep inside, drawing out of the uncomplaining piano a full range of wisdom and fantasy, surging upward from both the music and the musician.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Island of&#160;Bliss</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2000/08/island-of-bliss/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2000/08/island-of-bliss/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 23 Aug 2000 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=311</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[The best operatic performance I&#8217;ve seen this year took place not in Los Angeles, Long Beach or Costa Mesa, but in Santa Barbara. There, since 1947, the Music Academy of the West has topped its summer festival with some kind of staged production involving the services of the Academy‘s students, faculty and an occasional guest. [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>The best operatic performance I&#8217;ve seen this year took place not in Los Angeles, Long Beach or Costa Mesa, but in Santa Barbara. There, since 1947, the Music Academy of the West has topped its summer festival with some kind of staged production involving the services of the Academy‘s students, faculty and an occasional guest. I didn&#8217;t think I‘d ever enjoy opera more than at last summer&#8217;s production of Handel‘s Rodelinda, and perhaps I won&#8217;t. But the Ariadne auf Naxos two weekends ago came close.
</p>
<p>    Richard Strauss for people who don‘t like Richard Strauss: Ariadne is a treacherous bag of tricks, a series of stylistic collisions that plays for laughs but also touches upon profound matters of artistic conscience. Read the history of great artworks purposefully mutilated to gain public acceptance &#8212; Mozart adding laff numbers to Don Giovanni to appease the Viennese; Orson Welles acquiescing to murderous cuts in his Magnificent Ambersons &#8212; and you know the miseries visited on the Composer in the Prologue, who must make room in his Ariadne tragedy for the troupe of comedians the patron has also engaged. In Hugo von Hofmannsthal&#8217;s libretto, the Composer appears only in the Prologue, but in Santa Barbara, stage director Chas Rader-Shieber had the good idea of leaving him onstage during the ensuing opera as well, silently delighting in the tragic moments, tortured during the rest: a small point perhaps, but an intelligent and likable touch.
</p>
<p>   The production was on the cheap but blissfully adequate &#8212; no rocky and cavernous Island of Naxos itself, merely what might have been the rich patron‘s own parlor, with enough doors and mirror panels to allow for entrances and exits. Randall Behr, whose take on other Strauss operas I have been known to deplore, led a beautifully balanced performance, reaching deep into Strauss&#8217; iridescent score to shape lovely, soaring melodic lines, pacing the work so that even the final Bacchus-Ariadne duet, which can be torture, didn‘t overstay its welcome this once. Liesel Fedkenheuer was the passionate, extraordinarily moving Composer; Karen Wierzba sailed with remarkable ease in the stratosphere of Zerbinetta&#8217;s music; Heidi Bieber‘s Ariadne, with a couple of slightly strained moments, was only one or two points below this level. And old Heinz Blankenburg, whose fan I have been since his 1957 Harlequin in a San Francisco Opera Ariadne, vested the spoken role of the Major-Domo with exactly the right insidious mix of sleaze and pomposity.
</p>
<p>    Apropos sleaze . . . Only a couple of choked phrases from under Zubin Mehta&#8217;s baton and you know that in PBS‘s new video of La Traviata, which turns up Sunday night on KCET, the eloquent Verdian breath is going to be in short supply. This is another of those gadgety productions, like the Roman travelogue in the Tosca of a couple of years ago or the Aida filmed at the pyramids. This one takes place all over Paris: four scenes, four venues; I can&#8217;t wait for a Fidelio on Alcatraz. Heroine and father-in-law do their big scene while chasing each other through the woods around Versailles; the party scenes are so populated with ephebes that you expect Oscar and Bosie to show up in matching bath towels.
</p>
<p>    Argentinean tenor Jose Cura is the splendid Alfredo, a role ideal for the smooth, elegant middle of his voice. Russia‘s Eteri Gvazava, the Violetta, comes in under the pitch now and then, but I like the somewhat dark quality that works particularly well in her scenes with the elder Germont. He, alas, is the veteran Italian baritone Rolando Panerai, now 76, given to eyeball rolling to cover the notes he no longer commands. His Act 2 cabaletta has been excised, the better part of wisdom in this case. One of the two verses of Alfredo&#8217;s often-cut “Oh mio rimorso” has been left in, filmed with the camera about two inches from his nose. Has it never occurred to camerafolk that the human mouth while singing is seldom if ever a thing of beauty?
</p>
<p>   Do we need another Don Giovanni? Well, yes; I suppose that in one sense we do and always will. Even so, my current Schwann lists 20, and the one I most often retire to is the earliest of these, Glyndebourne 1936.
</p>
<p>   The latest, on Virgin Classics, is a live recording from last year‘s Aix-en-Provence festival, staged &#8212; for what that information can be worth on an audio release &#8212; by Peter Brook. Daniel Harding, the very young &#8212; 23 at the time &#8212; conductor, who has been here with the Philharmonic and at Ojai, leads what comes over as a 23-year-old&#8217;s performance. The music zips by; the singers &#8212; Peter Mattei as the Don, Veronique Gens as Elvira, Mark Padmore as Ottavio &#8212; look very young in their head shots, although no bios are included. But, as they say, speed kills, and there are times &#8212; the concerted moments most of all &#8212; when the subtlety of Mozart‘s miraculous settings of Lorenzo da Ponte&#8217;s words becomes gibberish. I have the feeling that everyone involved in this undeniably high-spirited enterprise will beg on their knees, five years from now, for another go at Don Giovanni. The question will be, will Virgin, or any other record company, still be around to grant that chance?
</p>
<p>    Meanwhile, back at the Pass: In 1993 I wrote of Enrique Diemecke, after a regular Philharmonic subscription concert, as a “flashy but self-indulgent conductor, out to establish his individuality with fancy effects and distortions unrelated to the music,” and his latest Latino program at the Hollywood Bowl didn‘t inspire me to eat those words. And now, I hear, he&#8217;s up for consideration for the Long Beach Symphony job.
</p>
<p>    Smitten with what we might as well call Virus Mauceri (except that John Mauceri‘s audience pep talks are far better), Diemecke felt called upon to slather nearly every one of the works on his program &#8212; including Revueltas&#8217; substantial and serious Homage to Garcia Lorca &#8212; with a smear of “Look, Ma” cutenesses that included mucho jabberwock (some of it factually erroneous as well) and, during one piece, some deep knee bends that just looked stupid on a middle-aged conductor in formal getup. If there was anything noteworthy about his stint from a musical point of view, it was simply his remarkable feat in making Ravel‘s Bolero dull. Where were those helicopters when we needed them?</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Meat and Potatoes by the&#160;Bowlful</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2000/08/meat-and-potatoes-by-the-bowlful/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2000/08/meat-and-potatoes-by-the-bowlful/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 16 Aug 2000 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=310</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Phopto by Christian Steiner There is a magical moment &#8211; one of many, actually &#8211; midway in the first movement of Beethoven&#8217;s “Eroica” Symphony. The orchestra has come through a furious battle punctuated by shrieks and howls, horrendous offbeat accents and a whole new tune that has dared to intrude in an outrageously “wrong” key [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Phopto by Christian Steiner
<p>
There is a magical moment &#8211; one of many, actually &#8211; midway in the first movement of Beethoven&#8217;s “Eroica” Symphony. The orchestra has come through a furious battle punctuated by shrieks and howls, horrendous offbeat accents and a whole new tune that has dared to intrude in an outrageously “wrong” key (E minor &#8211; horror! &#8211; for a movement in E flat). Now, their energy spent, the players seem to rock back and forth on their heels for a moment of near silence. But a horn player grows impatient at the sudden calm, and bursts in with the main theme four bars too soon. (Beethoven&#8217;s assistant, at the first rehearsal, tried to “correct” this premature intrusion, and earned from Beethoven a stern rebuke.) It&#8217;s a glorious moment, still startling 197 years after the fact.</p>
<p>
I have to tell you all this because, if you were at the Hollywood Bowl last week when Hans Vonk and the Los Angeles Phiharmonic gave their greatly respectable version of the “Eroica,” you didn&#8217;t hear it. With awesomely accurate timing, a small airplane cut a diagonal trajectory across the Bowl and exactly across the time frame of Beethoven&#8217;s startling innovation, obliterating that one sublime moment. Now, I defer to nobody in my rejoicing at the existence of the Hollywood Bowl. I have, in my 20 years on the local scene, smiled tolerantly at those who would applaud between movements &#8211; it&#8217;s preferable to snoring, after all &#8211; and at the occasional descent of a happily emptied wine bottle down the concrete steps. I have even been known to shrug off the intrusions into the Bowl&#8217;s air space &#8211; at least on Rachmaninoff or Richard Strauss nights &#8211; assuming that the brave souls in the LAPD&#8217;s copter squadron were hot in pursuit of desperadoes that deserved to be caught, drawn and quartered. That night, however, I was angry.</p>
<p>
I fear that my tolerance toward the flawed amenities of Bowl-going is showing signs of wear. Some years ago the Bowl management gave me a guided tour of its battle stations: hot-line telephones to Aviation Central, radar, sworn promises from local airports <i>in writing</i> to warn pilots away from the area. There are searchlights that define the Bowl space, although their gleam seems to vanish into the marine layer on some nights. I haven&#8217;t checked to discover whether these fortifications are still in place; they didn&#8217;t work all that well then, and they surely don&#8217;t now. One consequence of all our lovely prosperity that I hear about in the media is that more people own planes now than ever before. Who are we, therefore, to deny all these new tycoons the pleasure of an early-evening airborne jaunt to witness the lights of Los Angeles, including the stage lights up in Cahuenga Pass? Only a gathering of cranky music lovers, numerous enough on some nights to fill three Dorothy Chandler Pavilions, in seats priced up to a hundred bucks, that&#8217;s who.</p>
<p>
Otherwise, it&#8217;s been a superior Bowl season in the good-conduct department: Paul Daniel and Junichi Hirokami, whose praises have already graced this page; Thomas Dausgaard and Hans Vonk more recently, both particularly admirable in the meat-and-potatoes stuff. Dausgaard, a great but not at all melancholy Dane, led a knockout Brahms First on the second of his two programs: rawboned and large-scale. Just the opening salvo &#8211; fast, hard-driving, inexorable &#8211; was enough to make even the most devout anti-Brahmsian sit up straight and pay attention. The young Canadian James Ehnes delivered a tidy account of the Beethoven Violin Concerto; what I liked even more than his clean, elegant playing was the lovely blend of woodwind tone that Dausgaard had fashioned with the orchestra. His first program, I&#8217;m told, included the woeful César Franck symphony, but since my medical benefits don&#8217;t include a sanity clause, I sat that one out.</p>
<p>
The Netherlands&#8217; and the St. Louis Symphony&#8217;s Vonk had conducted the Philharmonic indoors in April 1999; I admired him then, and I did again last week. He cuts an ungainly figure on the podium; he looks to be on stilts not completely under control. But he makes marvelous music, a kind of throwback to the solid, European-based musicianship for which words like <i>probity </i>were invented. He gave us two Beethoven symphonies (the “Eroica” and, two nights later, the “Pastoral”) in exceedingly attractive, warm-hearted readings &#8211; but, alas, without the first-movement repeats that help define the stature of both works. There were amplification problems both nights that created particular pitfalls for Beethoven&#8217;s wonderful scoring: the horns overmiked, the winds poorly balanced. Worse yet, the Great Bassoon Joke in the third movement of the “Pastoral” was totally inaudible both times around.</p>
<p>
Jaime Laredo played the Bruch G minor Concerto at Vonk&#8217;s first concert, suggesting only that both violinist and concerto cry out for pasture. Someone at the controls turned up the volume on Laredo&#8217;s violin about halfway through; that made it louder but not better. On Thursday came the inevitable, the Tchaikovsky First Piano Concerto, with a merely okay &#8211; and far from note-perfect &#8211; delivery by Jean-Yves Thibaudet.</p>
<p>
Back East the arrival of the seed catalogs in midwinter announces the prospect of warmer weather ahead. Out here the arrival of the Da Camera Society&#8217;s Chamber Music in Historic Sites brochure in midsummer announces the prospect of cooler weather ahead. Both publications bear the message that this is, or is trying to be, the best of worlds.</p>
<p>
Once again, founder, artistic director and blithe spirit MaryAnn Bonino has put together an alluring parlay: 28 events &#8211; string quartets, early-music groups, jazz, Bach, kid stuff &#8211; each one in a setting as if God and the architects had first heard the music and then done the designs. There&#8217;s Union Station for jazz, the <i>Queen Mary </i>for a chamber orchestra, churches all over town, the glorious rotunda at the Doheny Mansion for a whole series of enchanted Fridays. Next time a visitor from beyond the mountains starts in about Los Angeles&#8217; lack of class in the arts, MaryAnn&#8217;s brochure is what you brandish. Ask for one at (310) 954-4300, and prepare to salivate.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Timeless and&#160;Timely</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2000/08/timeless-and-timely/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2000/08/timeless-and-timely/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 09 Aug 2000 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=309</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Anyone who attended the Glynde-bourne Festival Opera‘s 1996 production of Handel&#8217;s Theodora is probably still talking about it; the event has assumed the stature of legend. Now we all can sample its splendors; the complete performance is finally available on two cassettes from Kultur Video, priced at a heartwarmingly low 30 bucks. Its release at [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Anyone who attended the Glynde-bourne Festival Opera‘s 1996 production of Handel&#8217;s Theodora is probably still talking about it; the event has assumed the stature of legend. Now we all can sample its splendors; the complete performance is finally available on two cassettes from Kultur Video, priced at a heartwarmingly low 30 bucks. Its release at this time is weirdly appropriate.
</p>
<p>   Peter Sellars directed, redeeming himself with Glyndebourne‘s implacable audience after his, let&#8217;s say, curious Magic Flute set on a Los Angeles freeway. Not that Sellars set his Theodora as written, in the fourth-century pagan Rome of Thomas Morell‘s libretto; his Christian heroine and her lover Didymus suffer martyrdom in a 21st-century America where orthodoxy is defined by a right-wing militarist society and heresy is any act of believing otherwise. His thought-police march in bomber jackets and latter-day patriotic insignia, and they indulge in strange calisthenics of some unidentified significance that are, at least, fun to watch. The simple set, a row of oversize urns of undefined provenance and age, adds to the message: The tyranny and persecution that the fourth-century Romans employed to clear their streets of nonbelievers are timeless phenomena.
</p>
<p>   You couldn&#8217;t dream up a finer performing group, almost all American, by the way. William Christie conducts the elegant small ensemble known &#8212; deservedly &#8212; as the Orchestra of the Age of Enlightenment. Dawn Upshaw is the Theodora, noble, pure and immensely moving; Lorraine Hunt (now Hunt-Lieberson), her companion Irene; the spectacularly gifted countertenor David Daniels is Didymus. (On the Harmonia Mundi Theodora conducted by Nicholas McGegan, Lorraine Hunt sings the title role; the experience of hearing this one-of-a-kind dramatic artist in both major roles transforms the extravagance of owning both versions into a privilege.)
</p>
<p>   The fluidity and fervor of Handel‘s great score, one of his last works and his only overtly ”Christian“ oratorio besides the Messiah, justifies the work&#8217;s being staged at all, plumbed for its eternal message and set forth at Glyndebourne as fiery, passionate human drama. Opera on video is inevitably a half-a-loaf proposition, and Theodora, be warned, runs 206 minutes. Give it to yourself, and give yourself to it.
</p>
<p>   And while we‘re on the subject of compassionate conservatism &#8212; which, in a sense, we are &#8212; consider Ned Rorem, whose music I consider paradigmatic in proving that a composer&#8217;s chosen style means less than the uses to which it is put &#8212; or, in other words, that paradigms don‘t always work. More Than a Day, the song cycle he wrote in 1995 for the Los Angeles Chamber Orchestra on a Betty Freeman commission, has now found its way to disc; countertenor Brian Asawa is again the eloquent singer, as he was at the premiere here; Jeffrey Kahane conducts. Jack Larson&#8217;s poetry, love songs to his companion, filmmaker James Bridges, takes on a new beauty in Rorem‘s setting as a memorial after Bridges&#8217; death. If ever ”compassion“ could take shape as music, it would be here. (With all the talk these days about major producers abandoning classical recording, this RCA disc may be another kind of memorial as well.)
</p>
<p>   Among journalists and other list makers who endure anxiety pangs when confronted with unlabeled merchandise, Rorem counts as a conservative; that can be taken to mean that his music tends not to frighten small children as do the works of the fearsome Webern or Stockhausen. Once in a while, we can rest assured, we might even come across something in his music that sounds like something else we‘ve heard. Another recent disc, on Erato, offers Susan Graham&#8217;s singing of 32 Rorem songs, settings of poems of Whitman, Tennyson, Stein, Yeats &#8212; a veritable anthology of the lyric impulse, each poet differently and memorably colored in iridescent music. The collection then becomes no less a portrait of Rorem himself, a sublimely reactive artist in a world that may not entirely deserve him.
</p>
<p>   Heiner Goebbels‘ Surrogate Cities, newly out in ECM&#8217;s usual handsome black-and-white packaging, counts as unlabeled merchandise, and all the better; I find it exhilarating, on a purely gut-grabbing level. Commissioned to celebrate the 1,200th birthday of Frankfurt, and given its first American performance at Charleston‘s Spoleto Festival last June, it is truly a work about cities. If Surrogate Cities is about anything else &#8212; and I&#8217;m still working on that &#8212; it‘s about its own energy, pounding, uncoiling, as bleak as the empty cityscape on the jacket, somehow irresistible.
</p>
<p>   An opening ”Suite for Sampler and Orchestra“ blends hard urban noises (Berlin, New York, Tokyo) into a collage of recorded voices &#8212; including one of an ancient Jewish cantor in the coloratura-falsetto manner long out of style and thus sounding as if from another world. The vocalists, David Moss and Jocelyn B. Smith, mostly sing songs about murder and the madness of cities. Peter Rundel conducts the Junge Deutsche Philharmonie, with the percussion practically in your lap. The very denseness of the work&#8217;s content develops an explosive energy; you want to seek shelter, or at least stand back. It lasts about 70 minutes. When it‘s over, you&#8217;re going to need some Schubert.
</p>
<p>   Franz Schubert‘s F-minor Fantasy for piano duet was another product of that inexplicable flowering of expressive genius in his last year. My amazed discovery of that work as a student in Berkeley gave me the thesis topic of my dreams; I still cannot hear, or even think about, that F-major modulation on the third page without going all shivers. In Sunshine, one of this summer&#8217;s more commendable films, Schubert‘s Fantasy is the recurrent icon, although the actors who perform the work never make it to the man-eating fugue at the end (nor do I). But the director, Istvan Szabo, does the right thing by that modulation; it occurs only at the film&#8217;s end, when the sun truly shines.
</p>
<p>   In Time Regained, another of the summer‘s superior films, the music is truly bad, and that, too, is exactly right. Scholars usually assume that the composer Vinteuil in Proust&#8217;s Remembrance of Things Past is based on Saint-Saens; maybe so, in terms of the character‘s glib opportunism and prodigious musical output. But Jorge Arriagada&#8217;s film score is all slither and the rustle of silks, beyond the reach of the perpetrator of Samson et Dalila. It comes to its climax as Vinteuil‘s latest violin sonata is introduced at a belle-epoque gathering: a keenly observed, absolutely right-on parody of the worst piece of salon bathos ever to flow from the pens of the Messrs. Hahn, Samazeuilh, Duparc and their ilk. Go from that splendid film to your stereo; put on some chamber music by, say, Ernest Chausson, and try to keep a straight face. I&#8217;ll bet you can‘t.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Multimedia, 1500&#160;Style</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2000/08/multimedia-1500-style/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2000/08/multimedia-1500-style/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 02 Aug 2000 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=308</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[The concert at the Getty Center two weekends ago, the second of three events this summer tied into museum exhibits, came as close to perfection as any since . . . well, since the last time I saw Michael Eagan&#8217;s Musica Angelica in performance there (Handel‘s Acis and Galatea two summers ago). Eagan and his [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>The concert at the Getty Center two weekends ago, the second of three events this summer tied into museum exhibits, came as close to perfection as any since . . . well, since the last time I saw Michael Eagan&#8217;s Musica Angelica in performance there (Handel‘s Acis and Galatea two summers ago). Eagan and his forces were again the stars, and it was one of those nights when you could lose yourself in sensual seduction; you wanted it not to stop, ever &#8212; even if it meant missing the Getty&#8217;s last tram.
</p>
<p>    The tie-in this time was the museum‘s exhibit of illuminated pages from an early Renaissance Book of Hours, honoring the Gualenghi-d&#8217;Este, a noble family of rulers and art patrons based in Ferrara. That handsome walled city &#8212; whose inhabitants swear by salama da sugo, a curious dish of boiled salami that you eat with a spoon, a favorite of Lucrezia Borgia &#8212; had become by 1500 a major arts center rivaled only by Florence. Its composers were the greatest masters of their time, Guillaume Dufay and Josquin des Prez. At the Getty the plain-Jane Harold M. Williams Auditorium was made magical with slide projections of the art from the Gualenghi-d‘Este Hours, and with music mostly by those composers, elegantly sung by an eight-member ensemble, supported by a few instruments including Eagan&#8217;s lute and a lovely small organ.
</p>
<p>   Juxtaposing the music and the art of a certain period doesn‘t always work. (What artwork could you add to Beethoven&#8217;s ”Eroica“ that could in any way ”explain“ that self-sufficient music? Music, Mirror of the Arts, my book on that subject, is, I‘m happy to report, out of print.) This time it did. The fantasy in those illuminations &#8212; the tiny world of warriors, minstrels, demons and beasties wound around an initial letter in a text, spilling as doodles onto the margins of every page and ”illuminated“ with splotches of gold leaf &#8212; was exactly mirrored in the sinuous contrapuntal lines in a four-part Dufay rondeau, its harmonies on a fascinating cusp between the archaic and the tonal. At the end came the famous ”Hercules“ Mass of Josquin, which shows up in every music-history textbook because of Josquin&#8217;s trick of creating a repeating cantus firmus from the vowels of the name of Ferrara‘s Duke Hercules. It was music to float in, half an hour of radiant, devotional beauty.
</p>
<p>   Last weekend&#8217;s concert, the series‘ finale, attempted a similar tie-in, this time with the Getty&#8217;s display of Albrecht Durer‘s exquisite stained-glass designs. That, however, came nowhere close. Lucidarium, a Basel-based early-music group, turned up with a solid program of Reformation-inspired music, both secular and sacred, some of it interestingly intricate &#8212; e.g., three tunes with three texts sung simultaneously &#8212; but with the intricacy of the cuckoo clock rather than the astounding rich detail of Durer&#8217;s designs. A tendency toward stiffness, with the tenor of the ensemble conducting the whole group eins, zwei, drei, vier, merely underlined the squareness of the music itself. After an evening of sauerbraten-mit-potatoes, I found myself actually longing for more of that Ferrarese boiled salami.
</p>
<p>    This seems to be my penitential summer at the Hollywood Bowl, and my hair shirt is beginning to itch: Ein Heldenleben one week, the Rach Three the next. Pianist Lang Lang, despite his rather unpromising name, made some difference in Rachmaninoff‘s murky opus; he&#8217;s 17, still a student &#8212; but aren‘t we all? &#8212; and his lollapalooza reading deserved and earned cheers. On the podium, Junichi Hirokami shared the honors. Among the work&#8217;s many problems is its thick orchestral kasha; getting the sound of a piano through that ponderous goop needs the strength of a tractor driver no less than the skill of a 20-fingered virtuoso. With all the problems in the Bowl‘s merciless rehearsal restrictions, however, this really sounded more like a performance than a chance meeting. On his own, furthermore, the young Lang delivered a knockout performance of the first-movement cadenza; he had me wanting to listen.
</p>
<p>    No such favorable auspices were attendant on Andre Watts&#8217; stint at the Bowl two nights before. At the relatively tender age of 54, Watts has already begun to sound depressingly like a pianist over the hill &#8212; this time, and in several recent appearances. One has to wonder: Was he ever any better, and has the cuteness and the dreamy PR of his early years simply worn off? I could not expect profound revelations from Cesar Franck‘s dopey Symphonic Variations or the Liszt Second Concerto, the two works &#8212; similar in form and musical language to the point of redundancy &#8212; that he struggled with that night. I could, however, expect some awareness that all those handfuls of notes have some relation one to another; this, despite some brave prodding from Hirokami&#8217;s eloquent baton, was nowhere evident.
</p>
<p>    I‘ve spoken my piece on Hirokami before, and happily do so again. Nowadays he&#8217;s my favorite conductor to watch, with that marvelous left arm that seems to draw the exact lines of the music in midair. Before and after the Watts performances he led the two best-known Strauss tone poems, an eager, intense Don Juan and a Till Eulenspiegel full of high-energy scamper, though both were somewhat clipped in flight on a bad horn night in the orchestra. After the Rachmaninoff was the Tchaikovsky Fifth, with the horn department recovered: a beautifully formed performance, honest if somewhat sober. We need to hear Hirokami in other repertory &#8212; a German classic or two &#8212; to fill in the picture, but so far I think of him as one of the age‘s truly good conductors.
</p>
<p>    I came to the opening night of Beyond Baroque&#8217;s Sound Festival III a stranger in a strange land, but I‘m getting used to that. The content was beyond reproach even when baffling. The space &#8212; filled on this night with the kind of all-knowing, participating, mostly young audience that opera companies and symphony orchestras dream of attracting (or should) &#8212; is one of the most valuable active arts venues in the area. That&#8217;s what Ferrara might have been like in 1500.
</p>
<p>    I wasn‘t quite all-knowing, but Lord knows I tried. Something called the Joe ColleyCrawl Unit was beyond me: a tall guy wrapped around his tableful of gadgetry, sending out audible daggers and bulldozers, never sparing an outward glance at his presumed targets. (Were we even there? Were we needed there? What about music as communication?) Kraig Grady&#8217;s retuned mallet instruments wrapped the room in a soft gossamer of indeterminate (and, alas, interminable) almost-harmony. Germany‘s Achim Wollscheid had wired the space with a network of small microphones and speakers, so that every audience move &#8212; words, breathing, perhaps a snore &#8212; got processed and sent around the room: John Cage&#8217;s 4‘33” in other words, writ large.
</p>
<p>   At the end Pauline Oliveros sat with her great zillion-button accordion, drawing out long, oozing chords that transformed the entire space, both as sight and sound, into a kind of breathing, which I could identify &#8212; for the first time, that night &#8212; as music.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Second  Wind, First&#160;String</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2000/07/second-wind-first-string/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2000/07/second-wind-first-string/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 26 Jul 2000 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=307</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Well, that was more like it. Two nights of Paul Daniel‘s conducting at the Hollywood Bowl last week were enough to bring the Philharmonic out of its opening-week funk, back to the major orchestra it can be under the right breezes. Orchestras are tricky beasts. Gatherings as they are of highly skilled and well-paid professionals, [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Well, that was more like it. Two nights of Paul Daniel‘s conducting at the Hollywood Bowl last week were enough to bring the Philharmonic out of its opening-week funk, back to the major orchestra it can be under the right breezes.
</p>
<p>    Orchestras are tricky beasts. Gatherings as they are of highly skilled and well-paid professionals, they represent the ironic image of a well-oiled machine constantly on the brink of breakdown &#8212; of mutiny, even. Put someone on the podium who, however skilled in the fine art of relating to the public and radiating unchallengeable mastery over certain corners of the repertory, fails to interest the players in the works on their music stands, and the finest orchestra money can buy will still play like the sophomore class at Pinole High. Some few orchestras &#8212; in Vienna, Berlin, Amsterdam and, not so long ago, Cleveland &#8212; have become so famous for the quality of their playing that they will maintain that standard even with the board chairman&#8217;s brother-in-law on the podium. Most, however, will not, and even the best of them can, once the leash goes slack, sound the way the Philharmonic did under Leonard Slatkin two weeks ago.
</p>
<p>   It may be that the crisp, meticulous, vivid playing the Philharmonic gave Paul Daniel, starting with Mozart‘s Figaro overture on the first of his two concerts last week, was partially intended to prove a point; in any case, it was a balm for the ears. Daniel is 42; he&#8217;s music director of London‘s lively English National Opera, where he recently conducted a much-praised production of John Adams&#8217; Nixon in China. Tall and slender, with arms that seem to encompass the whole Bowl stage, he is great fun to watch. Robert Levin was soloist on the first night, in Mozart‘s astonishing C-major Piano Concerto No. 25 (K. 503), a fine, inventive performance that turned the vastness of the Bowl, on a balmy night, with the Big Dipper clearly in view overhead, into a setting that was exactly the right size for Mozart. (That would, of course, make it the wrong size for Richard Strauss&#8217; Ein Heldenleben, which ensued, but actually there is no place on Earth, only in the netherworld, suitable for that excruciating work.)
</p>
<p>   ”Astonishing“? You can say that, of course, about any of the dozen or so piano concertos Mozart produced during his last 10 years. K. 503 comes late in that series, when Mozart‘s works in that form had become so challenging and subtle for Vienna&#8217;s frivolous tastes &#8212; the heartbreaking slow movement of the A-major, K. 488, for example, or the stern drama of the C-minor, K. 491 &#8212; that audiences had begun to dwindle. Just the opening of K. 503 is a step forward: the blocky, C-major, festive opening chords followed by the dark shadows of a minor-mode scurrying in the strings. That dichotomy, between brilliant and somber, major and minor, dominates throughout; I get the picture of a huge statue that weeps. And that magical, unexpected moment in the finale, the deeply comforting F-major tune that comes out of nowhere and then vanishes, is in a sense a resolution for the entire work. It always gives me the shivers. What I particularly admire about Levin‘s way with Mozart is the mix he has achieved of ”authentic“ performance practice &#8212; improvised embellishments to enhance the melodic line and the sense he projects that a cadenza can actually be a creative venture &#8212; and a recognition that the beauty of the music transcends the boundaries of its time.
</p>
<p>   Ursula Oppens was the soloist two nights later, not in the craggy contemporary piano repertory that is her acclaimed specialty &#8212; she is the East Coast&#8217;s Gloria Cheng and Vicki Ray &#8212; but in Beethoven‘s ”Emperor“ Concerto, where she seemed a little less at home: nothing wrong, just not very much right. Again, Daniel and the Philharmonic shared the glory.
</p>
<p>   Bartok&#8217;s Concerto for Orchestra shared the evening. It‘s hard to believe, but this extraordinarily vibrant, rich music from 1943 is the latest large-scale orchestral work of its century to find a permanent place in the repertory. (I can still feel the pressure of Bartok&#8217;s handshake backstage at Boston‘s Symphony Hall, at the world premiere.) Daniel&#8217;s performance was as fine as any I remember, splendidly attentive to the wonderful details in the music‘s iridescent orchestration, and in balancing the solos within the orchestra &#8212; especially in the first and third movements, which people tend to undervalue &#8212; against the full orchestra. Was the amplification somewhat turned down? From my seat, about halfway back, the orchestral tone seemed exceptionally &#8212; let&#8217;s say &#8212; orchestral.
</p>
<p>   The extraneous roar from air traffic, however, was unusually brutal that night and, as usual, keenly timed to the music‘s softest moments. Also, for what may have been musically the most rewarding program of the summer, the attendance fell below 6,000 for the first time this season.
</p>
<p>    At the Getty this summer, the evening concerts have been moved indoors to the Harold M. Williams Auditorium, an overdue realization that the outdoor stage was unworkable for reasons climatic and acoustic. Last weekend&#8217;s concert was French, tied to Eugene Atget‘s wonderful photographs of turn-of-the-century Paris on view at the Museum. Karen Benjamin, an endearing and resourceful singer, romped her way through French songs &#8212; cabaret, Debussy, what have you, many of them un peu bleu; the L.A. Opera&#8217;s Greg (newly ”Gregory“) Fedderly did likewise; Robert Winter played piano, and talked and talked. But that was only half the evening. The other half was a clutch of 19th-century bits &#8212; Saint-Saens, Wagner, Berlioz &#8212; in wind-band arrangements such as might have resounded on Atget‘s streets. But Paris, as any Conservatoire refugee will attest, is the city that makes a fetish of perfect pitch and impeccable bandsmanship. Perpetrators of the kind of wobbly, tentative playing inflicted on a $22-a-ticket audience at the Getty by the UCLA Wind Ensemble would probably have been marched off to the guillotine, and not a moment too soon.
</p>
<p>    Late-breaking news: The second Getty concert (of three) was an improvement by several thousand percent. Watch this space.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Dust&#160;Bowl</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2000/07/dust-bowl/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2000/07/dust-bowl/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 19 Jul 2000 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=306</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[The week began with Madama Butterfly, not my favorite opera. Four days later came Mussorgsky&#8217;s Pictures at an Exhibition, which I had successfully avoided for several years. In between, on the Tuesday-night concert that, two weeks into the season, is always billed as the official “opening night” at the Hollywood Bowl &#8211; meaning, actually, the [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>
<font COLOR=black>The week began with<i> Madama Butterfly</i>, not my favorite opera. Four days later came Mussorgsky&#8217;s <i>Pictures at an Exhibition</i>, which I had successfully avoided for several years. In between, on the Tuesday-night concert that, two weeks into the season, is always billed as the official “opening night” at the Hollywood Bowl &#8211; meaning, actually, the night on which the press gets bought off for the summer with<br />
free food and drink, and on which the Philharmonic returns to take up its residence at this home-not-very-far-away-from-home &#8211; Frederica von Stade came out onstage and persuaded an elegant, seductive Offenbach aria to nestle in that honey-textured voice of hers. For those few minutes I knew, or thought I knew, that the Bowl could do no wrong.</p>
<p>
There were, alas, only a few such minutes in the first “classical” week at the Bowl. Leonard Slatkin, a local boy now making good worldwide &#8211; head of the National Symphony Orchestra, son of two founding members of the Hollywood String Quartet of glowing memory &#8211; seemed<br />
unable, or at least unwilling, to energize<br />
the Philharmonic&#8217;s players after their month&#8217;s vacation. The orchestral work was mostly blaaah, despite Carolyn Hove&#8217;s elegant English-horn solo in Berlioz&#8217;s <i>Roman Carnival</i> Overture and Donald Green&#8217;s ditto trumpet work in Copland&#8217;s <i>An</i> <i>Outdoor Overture</i>. Better than either of these was the four-minute span of <i>Walking the Dog</i>, which George Gershwin fashioned from his score to the Astaire-Rogers <i>Shall We Dance</i>, with Lorin Levee&#8217;s solo clarinet providing the evening&#8217;s best solo singing by some distance.</p>
<p>
“Flicka” von Stade and Sam Ramey sang; I have admired them both, sometimes to distraction, for years, but “years” was the operative word this night. They sang “Là, ci darem la mano,” the seduction duet from <i>Don Giovanni</i>, as what they were: two middle-aged singers fulfilling an assignment, and trying without success to keep time with the orchestra. (Did they rehearse this? Does such tired, slack work deserve airing before a 7,102-member audience in seats costing up to $83?) Slatkin&#8217;s much-advertised forte is his attention to American music; how could he, then,<br />
allow his two soloists to turn five of Aaron Copland&#8217;s <i>Old American Songs</i> into an exercise in terminal cutes? Yes, Ramey had his moments, especially in the diabolical “Ecco il mondo” from Boïto&#8217;s <i>Mefistofele</i>, and von Stade&#8217;s encore, Stephen Sondheim&#8217;s “Send in the Clowns,” brought something like tears. (But that song does it for me every time, anyhow.)</p>
<p>
Two nights later, Slatkin perpetrated something even more bizarre: a traversal of Mussorgsky&#8217;s <i>Pictures</i>, not in Maurice Ravel&#8217;s familiar and perfectly adequate orchestration from 1922, but as a pastiche: the 16 pieces in the hands of nine different orchestrators, from Mikhail Tushmalov&#8217;s first version in 1891 to Vladimir Ashkenazy&#8217;s extraneous effort from the 1970s. Slatkin prefaced his bland if efficient performance with a congenial chat, orchestra members demonstrating the fine points of the<br />
various embellishments imposed onto Mussorgsky&#8217;s piano originals. All told,<br />
however, it was an exercise in futility; whatever individuality one arranger&#8217;s version might have over another &#8211; Ravel&#8217;s<br />
saxophone vs. the trumpet of Sergei Gorchakov&#8217;s take on “The Old Castle,”<br />
for example &#8211; was nullified by the Bowl&#8217;s amplification system, adequate of its kind but hardly an appropriate medium for examining orchestrational subtleties. If the <i>Pictures</i> deserve a conductor&#8217;s attention at all, which I will dispute, why not at least preserve the integrity of a single orchestrator? The Ravel version, brought in for the final two sections, including the “Great Gate at Kiev,” rose far above everything that had come before. (I did, however, like the cowbells in Sir Henry J. Wood&#8217;s “Oxcart.”) Where were Emerson, Lake and Palmer when we needed them?</p>
<p>
Korea&#8217;s Han-Na Chang, all of 17,<br />
got through Tchaikovsky&#8217;s “Rococo” Variations okay, all the notes in place but the music somewhere else, proving nothing except that she can play the cello. In any case, I&#8217;m afraid I&#8217;m developing an allergy to teenage string players from either side of the Pacific (Hilary Hahn alone excepted). Slatkin&#8217;s program began with a suite from Shostakovich&#8217;s satiric <i>Age of Gold</i> music. The audience, which applauded loudly after the long and dreary first movement, didn&#8217;t crack so much as a yuk at the antics in the Polka, something I ascribe not to the music (which is genuinely funny), but to the sleepy way it was performed.</p>
<p>
Before all this, and better than any of it, came Sunday night&#8217;s <i>Butterfly</i>, a happy return for John Mauceri as an opera<br />
conductor after the fiasco of the <i>Turandot</i> cancellation two years ago. There was no scenery, and no real attempt to simulate a visual performance (except for the fancy stage lighting, which did a nice sunrise to begin the last scene, followed by a blood-red finale). The hills around the Bowl, down which Wagner&#8217;s Valkyries once swooped and whooped in outdoor opera&#8217;s happier days, are now taken up with condos.</p>
<p>
Never mind. Russian soprano Natalia Dercho, the Butterfly, sang with rich, powerful tone better suited to a Tosca, perhaps, but nicely reflective of the passion &#8211; if not the girlish innocence &#8211; in this Puccini weeper as well. Mexico&#8217;s Alfredo Portilla, the Pinkerton, squalled some and sang some; Louis Otey was the sturdy Consul Sharpless, and Zheng Cao, the Suzuki, gets better all the time at scene-stealing. The real hero, however, was the Hollywood Bowl Orchestra, whose presence on the stage (rather than in an orchestra pit) gave Puccini&#8217;s orchestral effects &#8211; the tinkling small bells, the whiplash percussion outbursts, the tendency of strings to wrap themselves sexily around the vocal lines &#8211; a considerable profile. If there must be <i>Butterfly </i>— which, again, I will dispute &#8211; let it be like this.</font></p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Hollywood Bowl&#160;Opener</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2000/07/hollywood-bowl-opener/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2000/07/hollywood-bowl-opener/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Fri, 14 Jul 2000 22:33:17 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Musical America]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=1833</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[There are two ways of regarding the Hollywood Bowl, that vast unroofed monument to the senses that looms large above the unreality of its hometown and beguiles visitors over a 14-week stretch each summer &#8211; and which finally got down to business in its 79th season earlier this week with the last of two weeks&#8217; [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>There are two ways of regarding the Hollywood Bowl, that vast unroofed monument to the senses that looms large above the unreality of its hometown and beguiles visitors over a 14-week stretch each summer &#8211; and which finally got down to business in its 79th season earlier this week with the last of two weeks&#8217; worth of  &#8220;opening nights.&#8221; One way is to deplore the fact that a mere 7,500 of the 17,900 seats get filled on a classical-music night &#8212; the weekend pops-plus-fireworks events draw better &#8211; leaving enough empty space in the stands to stage road races. The other is to marvel that, in a city which still chafes under its long-outmoded title of &#8220;cultural desert,&#8221; serious music-making at the Bowl can still attract the capacity of three or more indoor concert halls.<br />
This final &#8220;opening night&#8221; &#8211; following upon the &#8220;opening gala,&#8221; the &#8220;opening family night&#8221; and &#8220;opening jazz&#8221; &#8211; marked the return of the Los Angeles Philharmonic to its summertime home-not-too-far-away-from-home. Until then, the venue&#8217;s other band, the Hollywood Bowl Orchestra &#8211; a tidy assemblage with a not-quite-permanent membership drawn from the area&#8217;s lavish pool of studio freelancers &#8211; had held sway, in events ranging from a backup for country singers Garth Brooks and Glen Campbell to a complete if unstaged &#8220;Madama Butterfly&#8221; &#8211; splendidly led by HBO&#8217;s permanent conductor, John Mauceri.<br />
Tuesday&#8217;s opening Philharmonic concert &#8211; let&#8217;s see how to put it mildly &#8211; fell somewhat short of the standards often if not always attained in previous seasons. Local boy Leonard Slatkin &#8211; whose parents were the founders of the legendary Hollywood String Quartet &#8211; conducted a ragtag program: short orchestral works and vocal selections ranging from Mozart to Sondheim. Frederica von Stade and Samuel Ramey were the soloists, eminent artists in their day but, on this occasion, providing the sad spectacle of former eminences struggling against the ravages of time.<br />
The evening had begun promisingly: von Stade curling her honeyed tones around a couple of Offenbach arias (from &#8220;The Grand Duchess of Gerolstein&#8221;) that have been her personal domain since her cherishable LP. The spell didn&#8217;t last, however. Ramey&#8217;s delivery of the &#8220;Catalogue Aria&#8221; from &#8220;Don Giovanni&#8221; was a routine affair, and the singers&#8217; collaboration on &#8220;La, ci darem la mano&#8221; seemed like nothing more than a couple of middle-aged performers struggling, with little interest, against an orchestra headed in its own direction.<br />
Matters hardly improved. Slatkin, who has rung up a good reputation for service to American music, seemingly acquiesced as von Stade and Ramey turned a brace of Copland&#8217;s &#8220;Old American Songs&#8221; into a display of the cutes. Actually, Slatkin&#8217;s most successful contribution to an otherwise below-par evening was the five-minute orchestral piece called &#8220;Walking the Dog,&#8221; fashioned from George Gershwin&#8217;s film score for the Astaire-Rogers &#8220;Shall We Dance.&#8221; Nothing else, alas, danced.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Ruling&#160;Passions</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2000/07/ruling-passions/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2000/07/ruling-passions/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 12 Jul 2000 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=305</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Up north, Good Friday came late this year. Three daunting artworks translate Christendom&#8217;s central tragedy into music that churns in the hearer&#8217;s gut. Bach wrote two of them, the St. Matthew and St. John Passions, works that surround the telling of Jesus&#8217; trial and crucifixion from the respective Gospels with music that stands in for [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>
Up north, Good Friday came late this year. Three daunting artworks translate Christendom&#8217;s central tragedy into music that churns in the hearer&#8217;s gut. Bach wrote two of them, the <i>St. Matthew</i> and <i>St. John</i> <i>Passions</i>, works that surround the telling of Jesus&#8217; trial and crucifixion from the respective Gospels with music that stands in for us all, the awed and shocked witnesses to the drama. The third, Wagner&#8217;s <i>Parsifal</i>, forms a symbol-laden gloss around that drama and carries us further toward a promise of Resurrection. All three works take up a lot of time and demand comfortable seating; you can reckon your own arrival at a musical state of grace from the moment when none of them seems a minute too long. They didn&#8217;t to my ears, a couple of weeks ago: not one but both <i>Passions</i> at the Oregon Bach Festival in Eugene, <i>Parsifal</i> at the San Francisco Opera.</p>
<p>
Oregon&#8217;s Bach Festival has just ended its 31st year: 55 events spread over 20 days, in the tidy little Beall Concert Hall on the University of Oregon campus and the 2,430-seat Hult Center downtown. I remember a visit in the early<br />
&#8217;70s, with conductor Helmuth Rilling using what seemed like occult powers to draw fond and loving renditions of Bach cantatas out of performing forces mostly regional, enthusiastic but only semiproficient. Royce Saltzman, a local educator and Bach nut, had lured the then-little-known Rilling from Stuttgart with the chance to start a festival as bait; it was one of those lovely, rare instances of the right idea in the right place at the right time. Now Rilling, 67, commutes between Eugene and Stuttgart (with stopovers in Los Angeles, where he has been a regular guest with the L.A. Chamber Orchestra and will take the <i>St. Matthew</i> to the Philharmonic next April) and has made his mark worldwide.<br />
In Stuttgart he heads the Internationale Bachakademie and masterminded the 172-disc Hänssler release of the compleat Bach.</p>
<p>
Snugly secure under the protecting aegis of the U.O.&#8217;s enterprising School of Music, the so-called Bach Festival has expanded far beyond its boundaries. Bach maintained his<br />
centrality, only proper in this anniversary year. Rilling&#8217;s <i>St. Matthew</i> struck a nice balance<br />
between the old-timey Big Noise &#8211; with a chorus half again too large &#8211; and a latter-day respect for momentum and overall shape. The B-minor Mass (Rilling again) was also on the agenda, as were Jeffrey Kahane&#8217;s playing of the <i>Goldberg</i>s, Robert Levin discoursing and playing parts of the <i>Well-Tempered Clavier</i>, and an ensemble version of<i> Musical Offering</i>. The <i>St. John</i> was made the project for a conducting master class, given complete but piecemeal over four afternoon concerts, each session preceded by Rilling&#8217;s beautifully thought-out spoken program notes.</p>
<p>
Visiting choruses from Israel, Sweden, Uganda and Cuba serenaded audiences in concerts large and small, and joined conductor Miguel Harth-Bedoya (whose many hats include conducting the Eugene Symphony) in the Beethoven Ninth. Other major events included Mendelssohn&#8217;s <i>Elijah</i> (which is, after all, <i>sort</i> of Bach) and an all-day “Composers Symposium” with Third Angle, a new-music group from Portland, playing some works from a student-composer master class and some big pieces by wise old Lou Harrison, onstage beaming his approval. Add to these wonders a couple of evenings with the astonishing art of Thomas Quasthoff: a song recital of Mozart and Debussy &#8211; shared with a marvelous German new-<br />
comer, soprano Juliane Banse, and with Justus Zeyen&#8217;s shrewd and loving piano collaboration &#8211; and another kind of recital that included a Sinatra tribute and some solid, loving jazz with a combo.</p>
<p>
Rilling had brought Quasthoff to Eugene in 1995 for his American debut, and he has returned nearly every year. This was his workaholic summer: the aforementioned recitals plus the Ninth, the <i>St. Matthew</i>, the B-minor Mass and <i>Elijah</i>. In the <i>St. Matthew</i> he sang the bass arias, rising to full stature with every note, wrapping every phrase in the mantle of heartbreak; then he found an entirely different voice for the bitter words of Pontius Pilate. We chatted briefly; he spoke of singing Amfortas in a Simon Rattle–led <i>Parsifal</i> at Salzburg in 2002. I don&#8217;t recall speaking to another artist so completely at peace with himself and with music, and this irresistible eloquence is what comes through in his art.</p>
<p>
San Francisco&#8217;s <i>Parsifal</i> was excel-<br />
lently led by Donald Runnicles, the company&#8217;s music director, who wove something close to gold out of the tatters of his pit orchestra. (Surely he, not to mention that gorgeous Opera House, deserves better!) The new production was<br />
by Nikolaus Lehnhoff, who had created San Francisco&#8217;s <i>Ring </i>in 1985. I&#8217;m not willing to swear that it might be possible to stage an “authentic” <i>Parsifal</i>; the productions I remember best -<br />
the Hans-Jürgen Syberberg film, Robert Wilson&#8217;s staging in Houston &#8211; strayed rather far from Wagner&#8217;s rubrics. So, to lesser effect, did Lehnhoff&#8217;s. Raimund Bauer&#8217;s unit set, a curved wall pierced here and there with window holes of various sizes, lit mostly in a flat gray, didn&#8217;t become truly offensive until the third act, when out from the lower hole came a segment of railroad track ending in dust: the Knights of the Grail at the end of the line. There were no springtime colors for the Good Friday music; go look at the Syberberg movie for the perfect visual translation of that music. At the end, rather than<br />
finding her release in death as ordained, Kundry trudges back down the train track, followed dutifully by Parsifal &#8211; on their way, perhaps, to the domestic bliss that will someday produce the baby Lohengrin.</p>
<p>
Britain&#8217;s Christopher Ventris, the Parsifal, came on like Tarzan and sang with a clear<br />
but somewhat harsh bright tenor. Catherine Malfitano, in her first Kundry, sang well enough but was hampered in the second act by designer Andrea Schmidt-Futterer&#8217;s ludicrous layered costume that she was obliged to shed, piece by piece, like the pupal stages of some monstrous insect out to put the sting on Parsifal&#8217;s innocence. Better than any of this, as you might expect, was the Gurnemanz of Kurt Moll, a<br />
spectacularly wise and knowing artist, no longer young perhaps but &#8211; as above &#8211; irresistibly eloquent.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>OREGON BACH&#160;FESTIVAL</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2000/07/oregon-bach-festival/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2000/07/oregon-bach-festival/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 05 Jul 2000 22:42:42 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Musical America]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=1851</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[In the fertile soil of Oregon, the natives obsessively proclaim, everything grows better than anywhere else: tomatoes, strawberries, tall corn and music. Nothing better confirms the thesis than the Oregon Bach Festival, whose 31st season concludes this weekend [July 9] after three weeks, 55 events, joyously devoted to the music of  Bach and far beyond. [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>In the fertile soil of Oregon, the natives obsessively proclaim, everything grows better than anywhere else: tomatoes, strawberries, tall corn and music. Nothing better confirms the thesis than the Oregon Bach Festival, whose 31st season concludes this weekend [July 9] after three weeks, 55 events, joyously devoted to the music of  Bach and far beyond. From its modest beginnings &#8211; in 1970, when University of Oregon educator and enthusiast Royce Saltzman persuaded the then-little-known German conductor Helmuth Rilling to join him in building a festival from scratch in the idyllic college town of Eugene &#8211; the Festival has flourished mightily.<br />
Rilling, 67, has been from the beginning the Festival&#8217;s benevolent spirit; Oregon has been as good to him as he to it. The growing fame of the Bach Festival has sparked Eugene&#8217;s year-round musical awareness, including the building of the 2430-seat Hult Center to house the city&#8217;s fast-growing symphony and opera company. Stuttgart remains Rilling&#8217;s &#8220;other&#8221; home, where he now heads the International Bachakademie and is currently masterminding (and, for the most part, conducting) a 170-disc Haenssler release of Bach compleat. For previous Bach Festivals at Eugene Rilling has also commissioned and performed major new scores by Krzysztof Penderecki and Arvo Part.<br />
Bach maintains his summertime centrality at Eugene, especially so in this 250th-anniversary year when the agenda included both of the great Passions plus the B-minor Mass. But the festival bore the subtitle &#8220;Music Beyond Boundaries,&#8221; and that regard, too, became a driving force. Visiting choruses brought in music from the pre-Bach centuries; a new-music group down from Portland played works with their ink still wet. And while the &#8220;Saint Matthew Passion&#8221; received the full treatment in a stunning, harrowing reading under Rilling, the &#8220;Saint John&#8221; was also at hand, given over as the project for a young conductors&#8217; master class and then performed piecemeal over four &#8220;Discovery&#8221; afternoons. <br />
The phenomenal bass-baritone Thomas Quasthoff first came to the U.S. at Rilling&#8217;s behest for the 1995 Festival, and has been a regular performer there ever since as his worldwide fame has grown. His body drastically foreshortened by his mother&#8217;s pre-natal use of Thalidomide, he rises to full stature in every sung phrase, his voice both powerful and velvety. In the &#8220;Saint Matthew&#8221; he wrapped the bass arias in a mantle of heartbreak, then found an entirely different voice for the bitter words of Pontius Pilate. Something of a workaholic, in weeks at Eugene Quasthoff also sang the bass solos in Bach&#8217;s B-minor Mass, shared a song program with the splendid German soprano Juliane Banse, took on the title role in Mendelssohn&#8217;s &#8220;Elijah&#8221; and also delighted another sell-out audience in an evening of Sinatra songs and some strong and heartfelt American jazz.<br />
An all-day &#8220;Composer&#8217;s Symposium&#8221; gathered young composers to  sit at the feet of much-loved innovator Lou Harrison and to hear their music played by Portland&#8217;s adept ensemble &#8220;Third Angle.&#8221; Visiting choruses from Cuba, Uganda, Israel and Sweden serenaded audiences in Eugene and surrounding small towns, and joined forces with Eugene Symphony Orchestra conductor Miguel Harth-Bedoya in the inaugural Beethoven Ninth (again with Quasthoff among the soloists).<br />
The Festival&#8217;s origins comprise one of music&#8217;s great right-thing/right-time/right-place phenomena, tucked from the start under the supporting aegis of the University of Oregon&#8217;s enterprising School of Music. Early concerts drew upon nearby talent, as Rilling managed with sublime insinuation to convince local forces to play and sing far over their heads in what were virtually sightreading performances of Bach cantatas and major choral works. Major soloists came, including the late, great American soprano Arleen Auger who &#8211; like Quasthoff in later years &#8211; earned her first American plaudits in Eugene after a European beginning. The excellent chorus and orchestra, many rungs up from the tentative forces of 31 years ago, draws professional performers from all over, including a large contingent from the splendid Los Angeles Chamber Orchestra. As one violinist of 20 years&#8217; experience at Eugene noted, over a plateful of Oregon&#8217;s matchless veggies, &#8220;It&#8217;s like summer camp. Only better.&#8221;</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Something for (Nearly)&#160;Everyone</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2000/07/something-for-nearly-everyone/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2000/07/something-for-nearly-everyone/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 05 Jul 2000 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=304</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[”Someday we shall all be free,“ Garth Brooks sang at the end of his stint at the Hollywood Bowl the other night, and the crowd of 11,000 or so sang along. The great entertainers do that: create a community around their art, whether Mitsuko Uchida holding a silent audience enraptured in a Schubert slow movement [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>”Someday we shall all be free,“ Garth Brooks sang at the end of his stint at the Hollywood Bowl the other night, and the crowd of 11,000 or so sang along. The great entertainers do that: create a community around their art, whether Mitsuko Uchida holding a silent audience enraptured in a Schubert slow movement at the Dorothy Chandler Pavilion, or Garth Brooks in a cornball song anachronistically accompanied by a symphony-size orchestra. Going to the Garth Brooks concert wasn‘t a part of my regular beat, which is defined by the no-longer-workable term ”classical music.“ But I&#8217;m glad I went to the ”Opening Night Gala“ &#8212; in which Brooks and John Williams were inducted into the Hollywood Bowl Hall of Fame &#8212; because of that moment of togetherness near the end, which reminded me of the uniqueness of hearing music, any music, at the Bowl. The fireworks were pretty swell, too. (Don‘t go looking for the ”Hollywood Bowl Hall of Fame,“ however. It&#8217;s not a building, like baseball‘s at Cooperstown; ”fame“ out here, as East Coast newspapers delight in pointing out, is fleeting.)
</p>
<p>    Under my so-called ”classical“ hat, I&#8217;m supposed to look down on the Bowl, and I have to admit that that‘s easily done. I&#8217;m willing to bet that Martin Bernheimer left the L.A. Times because he‘d run out of nasty ways of describing the Bowl experience &#8212; e.g., ”slushpump“ as the catchall word for Russian Romanticism. The problems remain: the hazards of hearing music through outdoor amplification no matter how state-of-the-art, the air traffic, the bottles rolling down concrete steps, and now the cell phones &#8212; which have lately become an indoor hazard as well. It&#8217;s ironic, sort of, that these days, when the only chance of hearing music free of outside interference is on the stereo at home, the classical-record industry is drifting toward oblivion.
</p>
<p>   Okay, so it isn‘t easy to love the Bowl wholeheartedly. Love it at least partially, however, and you should be able to derive some heartsease in what lies ahead. Let&#8217;s examine the schedule. Four Beethoven symphonies (Nos. 3, 6, 8 and 9)! That‘s one more than we got during the entire winter season downtown, and don&#8217;t try to tell me that any performance of a Beethoven symphony isn‘t an event. A great and too-seldom-heard Mozart piano concerto (K. 503)! The Bartok Concerto for Orchestra: Do you think that counts as ”light summer listening“? Or the Dvorak Eighth? Or what about a complete Madama Butterfly, this very weekend?
</p>
<p>   No, Madama Butterfly isn&#8217;t my favorite opera, and maybe it isn‘t yours. But look at the fine print. John Mauceri will conduct, with the Hollywood Bowl Orchestra that was formed as his personal plaything nine years ago. Mauceri is known as a major opera conductor the world over, has led performances as close as Costa Mesa and San Diego, but not in Los Angeles. Two years ago he had a Turandot scheduled for the Bowl, but was obliged to cancel it when the Philharmonic&#8217;s incoming-and-now-outgone managing director, Willem Wijnbergen, determined (wrongly) that the Hollywood Bowl Orchestra wasn‘t up to performing complete operas. For that reason alone (and there will surely be others), this Butterfly is certainly worth your attention. Besides, where else can you hear live Italian opera set in Japan, while dining on sushi or pasta at the same time?
</p>
<p>    I like this summer&#8217;s list of guest conductors. We start with Leonard Slatkin, a hometown boy now world-famous. I wish he were doing more serious American music, which is his forte. I wish he weren‘t doing Pictures at an Exhibition &#8212; music I&#8217;m just plain tired of hearing; but at least he‘s doing his own version of Mussorgsky&#8217;s album of chromos. Paul Daniel, who conducts the second week, is new here, but he has recorded a lot (for Naxos and Decca) and is music director of the English National Opera. Robert Levin, a marvelous Mozart player, will be soloist in the aforementioned K. 503 on the Tuesday program (July 18). On Thursday &#8212; solid concert programming &#8212; Ursula Oppens, heroine of piano music new and old, will play Beethoven‘s ”Emperor“ Concerto, and Daniel will end the program with the Bartok Concerto.
</p>
<p>    Junichi Hirokami, the remarkable, diminutive Japanese conductor who has inspired rave notices from me in the past, indoors and out, takes over in the third week. His repertory for both Tuesday and Thursday is somewhat on the slushpump side (including, alas, the Rach 3, by a pianist with the interesting and appropriate name of Lang Lang), but I&#8217;ll bet Hirokami will make the Tchaikovsky Fifth sit up and dance if anyone can. Bring binoculars; he has the most expressive left hand in the business.
</p>
<p>   Denmark‘s Thomas Dausgaard conducts Cesar Franck&#8217;s D-minor Symphony on August 1: noisy pretentiousness that seems to have dropped out of favor in the repertory but might be worth hearing just once more, especially with the excellent Louis Lortie to render an antidote via Chopin‘s F-minor Piano Concerto later in the program. Dausgaard himself makes amends the next Thursday with Beethoven and Brahms; the landscape around the Bowl, with its many ”secret“ places, affords the perfect hiding place for the offstage trumpet in the Third Leonore Overture. The Netherlands&#8217; Hans Vonk, currently head of the St. Louis Symphony and, therefore, a man to conjure with, begins his stint on August 8. Vonk made a fine debut here a few months ago; I would expect eloquent readings of the Beethoven ”Eroica“ on Tuesday and the ”Pastoral“ two days later.
</p>
<p>   And so it goes. Mexico‘s Enrique Diemecke, who has been here before, gets one Latino program (including the inevitable Bolero) and one pure slushpump; guess at which one you&#8217;ll see me. The roster of incoming conductors also embraces Stefan Sanderling, son of the much-loved Kurt; the San Jose Symphony‘s Leonid Grin, who stepped in for the ailing Franz Welser-Most two seasons ago; and Zdenek Macal, who has built the New Jersey Symphony into an important organization in recent years. And finally &#8212; as if he needed another string on his bow &#8212; none other than Itzhak Perlman turns up for the Bowl&#8217;s last classical week, conducting and playing, and surely imbuing both aspects of his work with the robust romanticism that is his musical signature.
</p>
<p>   All this and not a single preteen fiddle-sawing moppet on the horizon; the prospect up in Cahuenga Pass looks, well, passable. Bring on the copters, bring on the emptys; I‘m ready, and you should be, too.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Dieties of the Big&#160;Bang</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2000/06/dieties-of-the-big-bang/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2000/06/dieties-of-the-big-bang/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 21 Jun 2000 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=303</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[”We were playing in Fargo,“ Amy Knoles remembers, ”and there was this old woman in the front row who wasn‘t very happy with what she was hearing &#8212; it was Art Jarvinen&#8217;s Sextet for Amplified Handcuffs. And so she yelled out, ‘Where&#8217;s the music?‘“ Well might she ask. The ”we“ of that dark and stormy [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>”We were playing in Fargo,“ Amy Knoles remembers, ”and there was this old woman in the front row who wasn‘t very happy with what she was hearing &#8212; it was Art Jarvinen&#8217;s Sextet for Amplified Handcuffs. And so she yelled out, ‘Where&#8217;s the music?‘“
</p>
<p>    Well might she ask. The ”we“ of that dark and stormy Fargo night was the California E.A.R. Unit, whose percussion contingent lists Knoles as a charter member, and this is one of those special ensembles flourishing (sort of) across the landscape whose aim in life is to challenge notions of what constitutes a piece of music, and to lay down an infinite range of possibilities for redefining it. Founded &#8212; by a process of osmosis, you might say &#8212; at the California Institute of the Arts in the early 1980s, the E.A.R. Unit joins such similarly intentioned groups as New York&#8217;s Bang on a Can, Philadelphia‘s Ensemble Relache and Germany&#8217;s Ensemble Modern &#8212; or, in fact, that country‘s Quartett Avance, which performed at the County Museum during the recent ”Resistance Fluctuations“ minifestival &#8212; in the ongoing campaign to shatter accepted musical boundaries and plunge onward toward a resounding if undefined future.
</p>
<p>   There&#8217;s nothing all that novel in the fact of composers and performers pushing past previously accepted limitations. Monteverdi‘s operas constituted a major breakthrough; Mozart and Haydn kicked out against the ”correct“ practices, and Beethoven demolished them. So did Wagner, Charlie Parker, Miles Davis, Stockhausen.
</p>
<p>   Things move faster these days. Six and seven decades ago, when John Cage and Edgard Varese broke through by creating whole pieces for nothing but an ensemble of percussion, those pieces needed a stageful of drums, gongs, cymbals and assorted hardware. When Amy Knoles played her multimedia percussion piece TwoXTenXTenXTen+One (=2,001) at the L.A. Theater Center a couple of weeks ago, she began with a thwack on an actual ashcan, a kind of tribute to the avant-garde spirit of time immemorial. But mostly she got her fantastic range and variety of sound by banging with small sticks on an unimposing, boxy gadget on a table in front of her, ”K.A.T. MIDI Mallet“ by name, that had been preprogrammed to send forth a galaxy of sounds beyond the reach of ”normal“ instruments, infinitely variable, infinitely fascinating, made all the more magical by puffs of stage smoke, and by a video display that included some fancy dance steps by Amy&#8217;s pet cockatiel Fu Fo Shit Shit (honest!). Where was the music this time? All around, it was, and you‘d better get used to it.
</p>
<p>   Knoles &#8212; this slender, blond Diana of the Big Bang &#8212; remains a mainstay of the E.A.R. Unit while building a couple of parallel careers on her own. One of those involves teaching; I spent a rewarding day with her not long ago at Chino State Prison, where she had guided an eager group of prisoners into building their own instruments and composing on them. She has performed with Bang on a Can, and has recorded Varese&#8217;s Ionisation, a cornerstone of the percussion repertory, with the Ensemble Modern &#8212; unreleased so far, for reasons somewhat baffling. Her solo disc on Echograph, Men in the Cities, is a collection of works written for performance with various multimedia installations, including the Robert Longo exhibition at the County Museum that gives the disc its name.
</p>
<p>    The E.A.R. Unit grew out of a larger new-music group at CalArts, the Twentieth Century Players. ”We worked really hard,“ Knoles remembers, ”the way you do when you‘re a student and having a ball. When we came up to graduation in 1982, some of us decided that it just felt right to stay together, so we did. When it came to a name, we decided on EAR, but then we found that another group up north, the East Area Rapists, had already taken that name, so we added the periods. We never decided what it meant. When we gave that concert in Fargo, the critic decided we were Evil Alien Robots, and maybe we were.“
</p>
<p>    The group started out under the CalArts umbrella, since most of its members had moved on to faculty jobs. ”Those were great times,“ says Knoles. ”Mort Subotnick was working with filmmakers on multimedia pieces, and there were great composers coming through that we could hang out with for a couple of weeks at a time &#8212; Steve Reich, Mauricio Kagel, Morty Feldman. Steve Lavine came to one of our concerts, before he became president of CalArts, and I remember him saying, &#8216;If you can do that here, I belong here.‘ People still think of us as CalArts; some of us &#8212; [cellist] Erika Duke, for example &#8212; still teach there. We&#8217;ve continued to work with Mort, a on  his Key to Songs and on the interactive CD-ROM All My Hummingbirds Have Alibis.“ Nevertheless, CalArts eventually saw fit to cut the group adrift, and in 1987 E.A.R. became the resident ensemble at LACMA &#8212; a strange but fruitful marriage between the most experimental musicians and the deadest painters.
</p>
<p>   The group has remained remarkably consistent: Amy, Erika, percussionist Dave Johnson, violinist Robin Lorentz, flutist Dorothy Stone, pianist Vicki Ray. Just this month pianist Lorna Eder dropped to part-time to attend cantorial school, and percussionist Art Jarvinen has recently departed to compose full-time. ”He‘s decided he doesn&#8217;t like other people‘s music,“ Knoles reports.
</p>
<p>   What holds the group together? ”Mostly,“ says Knoles, ”we&#8217;ve managed to remain each other‘s best friends. When we&#8217;re together, rehearsing, it‘s like a party. When we began, &#8216;Lucky‘ [Steven] Mosko was the leader, and he had a way of making us care. We&#8217;ve held on to that pretty much, and Lucky does come back fairly often. The other thing that holds us together is the fact that music is changing so fast. We never get onto the treadmill that you get with dead composers. There‘s always something new and interesting. Techniques and circuitry that someone might have used five years ago may be obsolete by now &#8212; unless, of course, the music itself is good. Over the years, we&#8217;ve built a kind of repertory; there are works we‘ve played before that we go back to. We&#8217;d love to do more revivals. That rain-forest piece, Amazonia, with Rachel Rosenthal &#8212; wasn‘t that a hoot?
</p>
<p>   “But there&#8217;s so much new stuff; a lot of notes to learn for a job that still isn‘t full-time and certainly doesn&#8217;t pay full-time. In Frankfurt, Ensemble Modern earns a yearly salary. In New York, Bang on a Can is run by its three composers, but they also have an office staff and a connection to Sony Records. We tried working with a management for a while, but they ran us into the ground and we were never able to explain our repertory to them. Now Dorothy and I pretty much run the group; we handle the bookings, and we produce the ads, the post cards, the faxes. We keep busy, but a lot of our bookings are hectic: not enough long tours, too many one-shot runouts to Kiev, Reykjavik.”
</p>
<p>   Next season promises more of the same &#8212; the same spirit of exploration, that is, not the same music. Electronic performance artist Paul Dresher comes down for an all-technology bash; live-processing performer Mark Gray will put on the MIDI-gloves; one entire evening will feature an accordionist, lying on the stage, seen in profile &#8212; or so Amy Knoles would have us know.
</p>
<p>   “Let me tell you one more thing that holds us together,” says Amy. “You know how hard it is for a composer, especially an experimenter, to get performances these days &#8212; even here in Los Angeles, where the Philharmonic‘s service to new music is above average. It may sound corny, but we really, sincerely believe that we are making history with what we play, even the bad stuff. If you want me to define what we do, it&#8217;s really very simple: We play music by living composers. The new music that we play isn‘t any one thing; it&#8217;s always different, according to who‘s writing it. We&#8217;re here to go along with those differences.”</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Shipshape</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2000/06/shipshape/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2000/06/shipshape/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 14 Jun 2000 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=302</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[The Motherland reclaimed some of its territory these last few weeks: Benjamin Britten rampant at the L.A. Opera and some magnificent noises from two of his younger compatriots at the 54th running of the Ojai Festival. Britannia rules &#8212; or comes closer, at any rate. Britten‘s operas have been a triumphant thread through the local [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>The Motherland reclaimed some of its territory these last few weeks: Benjamin Britten rampant at the L.A. Opera and some magnificent noises from two of his younger compatriots at the 54th running of the Ojai Festival. Britannia rules &#8212; or comes closer, at any rate.
</p>
<p>    Britten‘s operas have been a triumphant thread through the local company&#8217;s 14 years under their compatriot Peter Hemmings: four operas to date, and Peter Grimes on the agenda next fall, all splendidly staged and, under Roderick Brydon‘s earnest if unspectacular musical leadership, honorably performed. (Robert Duerr conducted the first Midsummer Night&#8217;s Dream, Brydon the revival.) The Billy Budd comes from London‘s Royal Opera, in Francesca Zambello&#8217;s smashing production. On Alison Chitty‘s set, the decks of the HMS Indomitable rise, fall and tilt, revealing a starry infinity at one juncture, and cramping down to form an imprisonment of its principals, both physical and psychological, at another: the saintly Billy, the desperately lovelorn Claggart and the benevolent but catatonic Captain Vere.
</p>
<p>   By so doing, designer and director have given the interlock of symbols in Melville&#8217;s agonized parable &#8212; over whose exact meanings scholars will forever haggle &#8212; a compelling and convincing shape. E.M. Forster‘s libretto, while taming Melville&#8217;s visionary prose, touches up its unspoken homoerotic undercurrents in word-painting sharply defined. (The similarity to Thomas Mann‘s Death in Venice, which Britten turned into his final opera, is made inescapable in Forster&#8217;s setting.) Zambello‘s propensity for freeze-framing Rodney Gilfry&#8217;s Billy in a set of tableaux worthy of any Sunday-school calendar, rendered celestial in Alan Burrett‘s ecstatic lighting, does, however, project a rather gaudy illumination at times onto another of the story&#8217;s disturbing, captivating undercurrents.
</p>
<p>   Rodney Gilfry, whose career has been nurtured from the L.A. Opera‘s start-up &#8212; a walk-on as the Herald in the inaugural-night Otello &#8212; now owns the role of Billy worldwide: brilliantly in command of the heartbreaking poignance of his final haunting ballad, as well as the physical ease in climbing foretops and ladders. As his antagonist and ultimate victim, Jeffrey Wells creates a hulking, horrific Claggart, his inner ambiguities constantly gnawing at his ironclad exterior; Robert Tear&#8217;s Captain is exactly right in its tone of incertitude blended into nobility. Among his cohorts, the character of Mr. Redburn, sung by veteran baritone Richard Stilwell &#8212; the Metropolitan Opera‘s first Billy Budd and still an eloquent figure on deck 22 years later &#8212; is worthy of particular notice. And so, for that matter, is all of this new Billy Budd, a distinguished note of departure for Peter Hemmings, proof of the potential that, when circumstances permit, can be glowingly fulfilled on our local operatic stage. It runs through June 17.
</p>
<p>    The newly minted Brit eminence exploded in everyone&#8217;s eardrums during the extraordinary Ojai weekend, not once but repeatedly, with the presence and the works of two young (or at least young-at-heart) composers, Thomas Ades, 29, and Mark-Anthony Turnage, 40, under the curatorial aegis of their 45-year-old compatriot Sir Simon Rattle, his rise to world-master status sealed by his recent appointment to lead the Berlin Philharmonic. Under Rattle‘s exuberant leadership, huge new works by both composers howled and sizzled in Ojai&#8217;s sublime evening air. Both works, incidentally, are available in recent recordings on the EMI and Argo labels.
</p>
<p>    Of the two, Ades‘ Asyla has, in its three-year existence, piled up the greater reputation, ranging from horror to ecstasy: a hugely affirmative four-movement almost-symphony, running some 20 breath-stopping minutes, bristling with positive energy, not above a dig or two at music&#8217;s past &#8212; or do I just imagine those Brahmsian bits growling their way through the first movement? &#8212; fearless in its demands upon performers and listeners. Turnage‘s Blood on the Floor, its title from a Francis Bacon canvas, ranges, if anything, even further &#8212; wildly, unevenly perhaps, but with an eagerness to get it all out front that can hold you spellbound if you let it. (Even the recording, which arrived only a few days before Ojai, is a shattering experience.)
</p>
<p>   Running just over 70 minutes, in nine movements ranging from rowdy-dowdy to intense eloquence, Turnage&#8217;s score enlisted a jazz combo (guitarist Mike Miller and, from the recording, drummer Peter Erskine and Martin Robertson on soprano sax made harrowingly beautiful) on a raised platform above the full Los Angeles Philharmonic on an already crowded stage, mingling abrasive modernist orchestral outbursts with the composer‘s acknowledged adoration for the jazz of Miles Davis. One other Turnage work, Kai, a 10-minute cello concerto (again with jazz combo), began the Festival&#8217;s first evening event: dark, rumbling lyricism, its solo lines rhapsodically delivered by the Philharmonic‘s Ben Hong. As ear balm there was sublime surcease in two short French works from earlier days, in concert performances led by Rattle: Ravel&#8217;s The Child and the Magic Spell rerun from the downtown performance the week before, and the delicious nose-thumbing of Francis Poulenc‘s The Breasts of Tiresias, to Guillaume Apollinaire&#8217;s surrealist, pun-drenched text on the joys of procreation. Even without stage setting &#8212; aside from what Ojai‘s sylvan scenery provides on its own &#8212; both works radiated enchantment. Once again the Ravel&#8217;s delights included Israeli mezzo-soprano Rinat Shaham as the Child; in the Poulenc, Heidi Grant Murphy was a sheer delight as the feminist who gives up bust and motherhood in the cause of women‘s lib.
</p>
<p>   The four young men of New York&#8217;s Flux Quartet brought on a fascinating program of experimental chamber music, including a collage work for strings and tape by first violinist Tom Chiu and a curiosity by none other than Benjamin Franklin; pianist Gloria Cheng, the Los Angeles treasure, tied the Festival to-gether with a solo recital of music by French and British composers; Japanese-born, USC-trained composer Naomi Sekiya‘s Deluge, winner of Ojai&#8217;s new ”Music for Tomorrow“ award, gave pianist Vicki Ray and the Philharmonic a bracing 10-minute workout. For the young of any age, a ”family program“ offered Saint-Saens‘ familiar Carnival of the Animals led by Rachael Worby, with sprightly 13-year-old pianists Jessica Ou and Valerie Lau, and actor Peter Bellwood delivering clever narrative verses created by Stephanie Fleischmann, daughter of Festival director Ernest. A true ”family“ program, in other words.
</p>
<p>   By any measurement, then, it was a full and wondrous weekend. Next year promises an all-American sweep, including music by Harry Partch, the most original of all homegrown mavericks, with the Philharmonic&#8217;s own Esa-Pekka Salonen in charge. And next year‘s prospects at the Opera have also suddenly turned glowing, with the appointment of Kent Nagano as principal conductor, a position much needed where none existed before. Onward!
</p>
<p>    There&#8217;s no space to deal with the Long Beach Opera‘s latest production &#8212; a double bill of Italian one-acters by Puccini and, better yet, Luigi Dallapiccola&#8217;s Volo di Notte &#8212; but I‘ll do so in a week or two. There&#8217;s one more performance, Saturday, June 17, at the Carpenter Center at Cal State Long Beach, and I urge you to make tracks. Even by this brave company‘s usual high standards, this is a terrific accomplishment.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Notes in the Key of&#160;H</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2000/06/notes-in-the-key-of-h/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2000/06/notes-in-the-key-of-h/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 14 Jun 2000 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=301</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[A London coal dealer named Thomas Britton had a loft above his shop, reachable by ladder, where, for several decades starting around 1680, hired musicians gave weekly instrumental concerts for a paying audience. Britton&#8217;s concerts were a hot ticket; the illustrious George Frederick Handel was often in attendance. More important, they marked a turning point [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>A London coal dealer named Thomas Britton had a loft above his shop, reachable by ladder, where, for several decades starting around 1680, hired musicians gave weekly instrumental concerts for a paying audience. Britton&#8217;s concerts were a hot ticket; the illustrious George Frederick Handel was often in attendance. More important, they marked a turning point in the history of music consumership. Never before had concerts &#8212; the diversions until then of invited elite audiences in a nobleman‘s estate &#8212; been made accessible to anyone with the price of a ticket. Never before had composers been cast into a direct relationship with a public that would pay if they thought the music would be good and would stay home if they didn&#8217;t.
</p>
<p>    Three hundred years later, the situation remains basically unchanged; now comes Michael Chanan‘s From Handel to Hendrix to trace the occasional joys and frequent sorrows in that relationship. His title plays on the coincidence that the great Handel and the sublime Jimi Hendrix, centuries apart, occupied adjacent London digs &#8212; Nos. 23 and 25 Brook Street. (Hendrix, Chanan reports, was obviously aware of the stature of his erstwhile neighbor. He regarded Handel&#8217;s music, he once said, as ”a homework type of thing.“) Separated by centuries, their worlds still often touched. Some of Handel‘s best tunes, including religious pieces, were quickly co-opted into Britain&#8217;s music-hall repertory. And that adventurous contemporary concert ensemble, the Kronos Quartet, has been known to inject one or two of their own Hendrix arrangements, best of all ”Purple Haze,“ between the more formidable works on their programs &#8212; again effecting an at-least-momentary sealing of the gap between the ”serious“ and ”popular“ arts.
</p>
<p>   A London-based filmmaker, writer and teacher, Chanan has applied himself in previous volumes &#8212; Musica Practica and Repeated Takes most notably &#8212; to the ”social history“ of music both in concert and on recordings heard at home. His purpose in this new book is to survey the damage perpetrated &#8212; by three centuries of dealing with the reality of the marketplace &#8212; upon the psyche (and the purse) of the composers of classical music, purveyors of unreality at its most dangerously evanescent. His findings, one gratefully notes, are not entirely downbeat; compared with the lubricious mendacity of Norman Lebrecht‘s Who Killed Classical Music? of two years ago, From Handel to Hendrix peals forth like a paean of thanksgiving.
</p>
<p>   The world is well-supplied with histories of music in many shapes and lengths, most of them variants on the Bach-begat-Beethoven-begat-Brahms leitmotif. Chanan takes another tack, with eloquence and a welcome lack of academic ologies. He applies his ax to a few myths old and new: the old one about Mozart&#8217;s dire poverty (perpetuated in the loathsome Amadeus, which Chanan rightly impales); the notion unfurled by the new breed of sexist-musicologists that the imputed homosexual leanings of Handel in the 18th century, or of Schubert and Chopin (ahhh, those feminine phrase-endings!!!) in the 19th, had any bearing on their music. What is more significant in the Schubert instance is his reluctance to attend or even acknowledge those few occasions where his music was publicly performed. Whatever the scenarists might have us believe, there were other reasons for composing music than the need for the public ego massage.
</p>
<p>   Chanan‘s span is vast, from the paltry gatherings in Thomas Britton&#8217;s loft to the staggering plenitude listed in Bill Schwann‘s CD catalog. And some bridges remain standing. Right here in Los Angeles, Britton&#8217;s accomplishment achieved a resonance 250 years later, when a local hero named Peter Yates built a studio atop his house and staged the ”Evenings on the Roof“ concerts &#8212; where, as in 1680, small paying audiences heard the day‘s latest music. (The ”Roof“ concerts continue today, renamed the Monday Evening Concerts, at the County Museum.) The emergence of music into public awareness, precisely and warmly detailed in Chanan&#8217;s splendid, valuable study &#8212; with, however, a depressingly hit-or-miss index &#8212; gave that public something new to think about and, more to the point, obliged the fashioners of that music to readjust their own sense of purpose.
</p>
<p>   Schubert‘s diffidence aside, that sense also included an awareness of image. What Jimi Hendrix stood for in his shenanigans at Monterey and Woodstock, Niccolo Paganini also stood for a century and more before in the concert halls of Paris and Vienna; and so did the preening male sopranos of Handel&#8217;s operas a century before that. Caught up in the spell of music, the most mystery-laden of all the fine arts, audiences could always easily swallow the notion that derangements of any sort &#8212; the singer with his supersonic screech, the fiddler with his Mach 4 runs and scales, the rock star who smashes guitars and turns ”The Star-Spangled Banner“ into a freak show &#8212; somehow signalized some kind of demonic possession. It sold tickets in Handel‘s time and in Hendrix&#8217;s. It still does.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Nagano-san</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2000/06/nagano-san/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2000/06/nagano-san/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Fri, 09 Jun 2000 22:40:43 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Musical America]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=1847</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[With the announcement of Kent Nagano’s appointment as principal conductor, the Los Angeles Opera’s new leadership took a major step toward rounding out its team. The announcement was made Thursday (June by incoming artistic director Plácido Domingo; Nagano joins incoming artistic administrator (=dramaturg) Edgar Baitzel and executive director Ian White-Thompson to command the direction of [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>With the announcement of Kent Nagano’s appointment as principal conductor, the Los Angeles Opera’s new leadership took a major step toward rounding out its team. The announcement was made Thursday (June <img src='http://www.soiveheard.com/wp-includes/images/smilies/icon_cool.gif' alt='8)' class='wp-smiley' /> by incoming artistic director Plácido Domingo; Nagano joins incoming artistic administrator (=dramaturg) Edgar Baitzel and executive director Ian White-Thompson to command the direction of the company following the departure of its founder and general director Peter Hemmings, O.B.E., who returns to England shortly.<br />
Nagano, 48, was born in California of Japanese ancestry. A one-time protégé of Seiji Ozawa, he enjoyed his first acclaim as director of the Berkeley (CA) Symphony, turning a small, church-based semi-pro orchestra into a hot-ticket innovative ensemble. He understudied Ozawa at the Paris Opera for the 1983 premiere of Olivier Messiaen’s “Saint Francis” and conducted some of the performances, and developed a relationship with the venerable composer during his last years. He holds the conducting post at Britain’s Halle Orchestra, which he will leave next season, and is slated to take charge of Berlin’s Deutsche Symphonie this fall; in 1998 he resigned as music director of the Lyon Opera, with which he made several recordings. He had also been reported in line to take on Berlin’s Deutsche Oper, but dropped that prospect in favor of Los Angeles.<br />
Nagano takes on the Los Angeles post on July 1, 2001. In his first season, according to an L.A. Opera spokesperson, he will conduct from 35-40 percent of all performances. Currently the company mounts eight productions each season, and presents six to eight performances of each. Those figures will increase when the company takes sole command of the 3000-seat Dorothy Chandler Pavilion, following the completion (slated for 2002) of the Disney Symphony Hall which will house the Los Angeles Philharmonic – the Opera’s current hall-mate.</p>
<p>Nagano began piano studies at age 4, graduating from the University of California at Santa Cruz somewhat later with degrees in sociology and music, followed by a master’s degree from San Francisco State University. His career skyrocketed in the manner now regarded as traditional, when in 1984 he conducted the Boston Symphony Orchestra in a Mahler symphony on one day’s notice. He currently lives in San Francisco, with his wife, pianist Mari Kodama and daughter Karin Kei, now pushing two.<br />
Nagano’s position with the Los Angeles Opera is newly fashioned; the company has not had a principal conductor in its 14-year existence. Despite sporadic appearances by celebrity guests on the podium – Charles Dutoit, Zubin Mehta, Simon Rattle and Esa-Pekka Salonen for one production each – the company has encountered frequent criticism for its reliance on, let’s say, middle-of-the-road musical leadership. An upgrade in that regard is, therefore, long overdue.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Not With a Bang but a&#160;Whisper</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2000/06/not-with-a-bang-but-a-whisper/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2000/06/not-with-a-bang-but-a-whisper/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 07 Jun 2000 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=300</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[The quiet blessing that ends Mahler&#8217;s Fourth Symphony receded into silence, and the Philharmonic&#8217;s season was over. The last weeks were glorious. A few days earlier, in the final concert of the orchestra&#8217;s “Green Umbrella” series, splendidly dispatched by Markus Stenz (who had led the Kurtág Stele with the full Philharmonic the week before), there [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>
The quiet blessing that ends Mahler&#8217;s Fourth Symphony receded into silence, and the Philharmonic&#8217;s season was over. The last weeks were glorious. A few days earlier, in the final concert of the orchestra&#8217;s “Green Umbrella” series, splendidly dispatched by Markus Stenz (who had led the Kurtág <i>Stele</i> with the full Philharmonic the week before), there had been glowing, grinning, glinting new noises from the often big and bad &#8211; but this time benevolent &#8211; Pierre Boulez, apparently turned mellow in the process of arriving at 75. (I know the feeling.) Then came Mitsuko Uchida in a Philharmonic-sponsored solo concert, drawing her own kind of magic from the piano, earthbound only at the moment when, among the divine whispers of ethereal Chopin, there came the ghastly clangor of not one but two summoning cell phones. (Has anyone considered issuing firearms to ushers?) And then came Sir (<i>must</i> I?) Simon Rattle, once boy prodigy, now world master, drawing from the Philharmonic and a band of helpful singing angels noises sublime and profound like nothing heard since &#8211; well, since Esa-Pekka Salonen began his sabbatical.</p>
<p>
Like many of his recent works, Boulez&#8217;s <i>sur Incises</i> builds upon (<i>sur</i>) the 1994 piano piece <i>Incises</i>. Its performing space, a stage with three harps fronting three pianos, with three gatherings of percussion across the back wall, took your breath away even before the music started. You had to wonder: Can anything be more beautiful than this visual setting? The music answered: Yes, something can. The music swirls and swoops: vibrant and pulsating here, dreamlike there. You think back to the obsessive percussive clatter of the Mallarmé settings, of the <i>Répons</i> that fills vast spaces like an erupting volcano; this new work has all those colors, but also something more: charm, ease, the urge to ingratiate that must signal a new Boulez. Earlier on the program there was music by Brett Dean, Australian composer and violist, performing a solo piece and beaming at his <i>Carlo</i> led by Stenz, a collage of sampled fragments of vocal lines culled from the eminent Renaissance composer/murderer Carlo Gesualdo imaginatively worked into a shifting, disturbing contemporary context. I wanted to hold on to it for more than merely an intermission&#8217;s length, but the Boulez swept all before it.</p>
<p>
There&#8217;s nobody quite like Uchida<br />
anymore (Martha Argerich perhaps excepted), a musician miraculously able to convey a love of what she&#8217;s doing in a way that seems to unite serenity and hysteria. I&#8217;d never heard her Chopin before; there&#8217;s nothing on disc, at least not currently. I couldn&#8217;t imagine her at home among the waltzes or the nocturnes, but I&#8217;d give a lot to hear her taking on the B-flat minor Scherzo. She tore into the Sonata in B-flat minor with hurricane force, stupendous but amazingly in control; the finale, which is nothing <i>but</i> hot wind, left me gasping. Yet the crown of this extraordinary performance was the serene midsection of the Funeral March, with its one-finger melody like a stream of starlight surrounded by deep, black quiet &#8211; until, alas, the cell phone very nearly ruined the moment. Could its owner be the same brute who schedules the helicopters during slow movements at the Hollywood Bowl?</p>
<p>
Later on the program came Anton Webern&#8217;s Variations: softer, dark points of light in an even darker void; then, in a moment of endearing wisdom, Uchida simply segued into the B-minor Adagio, darkest and most mysterious of all of Mozart&#8217;s piano works. Schubert&#8217;s D-major Sonata filled the second half; it, too, is a mysterious piece, with its first movement an almost-<br />
successful homage to the Beethoven “Hammerklavier” and its slow movement inflamed with urgent passions that stop just short of words. For dessert there was Bach and another dab of Mozart, and I left with the sense that Uchida had, all evening, expressed not only her happiness in being privileged to play the piano so well, but her respect for the intelligence of her listeners. Back home I revisited the Philips video of Uchida explaining, then performing, six Debussy Etudes: the warmest, wisest capturing of the art and the joy of music making that I know. I wish I knew her, but think I do.</p>
<p>
Childhood, it has often been<br />
noted, is an excellence wasted upon the young. Yet the meeting of minds that produced <i>L&#8217;Enfant et les Sortilèges</i> &#8211; the music of Maurice Ravel, the fantasy and the words of Colette &#8211; hands off the essence of childhood as if to share the elixir of youthfulness with hearers of any age. Just the wonder of Ravel&#8217;s orchestra as realized under Rattle&#8217;s leadership &#8211; the dragonflies in the enchanted garden, the wind sighing through trees, the breath of olden days in the pastorale of the shepherds &#8211; had to instill the tears of delight that make us all start life over. The work in concert may have lacked the ultimate magic of, say, the David Hockney staging at the Metropolitan Opera or the Balanchine on video, yet Simon Rattle&#8217;s cast on the Philharmonic&#8217;s concert stage succeeded remarkably in suggesting the visions in the work. (Ravel had expressed the hope that Walt Disney would take it up &#8211; the fresh, lively Disney, that is, of the early 1930s.)</p>
<p>
Rinat Shaham, whose Cherubino I had adored in Opera Pacific&#8217;s <i>Figaro</i>, carried that same rich and bubbling spirit as Ravel&#8217;s Child; a dream cast also included Marietta Simpson as the Mother and the Teacup, Christine Brandes dispensing coloratura enchantment as the Fire and the Nightingale, Cynthia Clarey as the White Cat, and François Le Roux as the amorous Black Cat. I write these words on the eve of Ojai, where this work will be reprised under a new moon and the blessing of starry skies. I only hope the woodpecker is back on his usual sycamore to join in.</p>
<p>
The Mahler Fourth was the inspired finale; I can&#8217;t think of another work that could sound so right after <i>L&#8217;Enfant</i>. Rattle moves toward coronation as the new century&#8217;s first great conductor of Mahler. Like Salonen, he sees the Fourth whole and pure; they both observe the extreme tempo flexibilities throughout &#8211; metronome changes sometimes every eight bars &#8211; and understand how Mahler meant these changes as a way to create a uniquely lithe and supple melodic line. Rattle has, I think, a surer vision of the work&#8217;s folksiness: the slides in the strings delicious but ever so slightly obscene, the winds in the scherzo delightfully ill-mannered. Heidi Grant Murphy, the Princess in the Ravel, was the  angelic visionary in the fourth movement. The orchestral sound throughout the evening was, well, “sublime” will do for starters.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Family&#160;Picnic</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2000/05/family-picnic/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2000/05/family-picnic/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 31 May 2000 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=299</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[It was billed as a “gala”; the ticket prices bespoke “gala,” and so, I&#8217;m told, did the fancy sit-down dinner upstairs after the music ran out. The farewell entertainment concocted by the Los Angeles Opera last week to wish Godspeed to its founder/honcho Peter Hemmings turned out, to its credit, less of a “gala” in [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>
<font COLOR=black>It was billed as a “gala”; the ticket prices bespoke “gala,” and so, I&#8217;m told, did the fancy sit-down dinner upstairs after the music ran out. The farewell entertainment concocted by the Los Angeles Opera last week to wish Godspeed to its founder/honcho Peter Hemmings turned out, to its credit, less of a “gala” in the sense of the typical all-star international assemblage of entertainment tidbits that run on and on until the wee hours, and more of a modest and serious family celebration, short and snappy, relatively free of verifiable trash. Above all, it added up to a remarkably accurate portrait of the company that Hemmings has created here in his 14 years &#8211; strengths, weaknesses, warts &#8216;n&#8217; all.</p>
<p>
One of his major accomplishments goes beyond the company itself, in the creation of a heightened operatic consciousness throughout Southern California. When I came here in 1979 there was, to be sure, the beginning of an awareness. Tito Capobianco&#8217;s San Diego Opera had launched a project to do all the Verdi operas, but that stopped short when Tito was lured away to darkest Pittsburgh. (Mrs. Capobianco, a.k.a. Gigi Denda, trod upon a few toes in San Diego with her ambitions as designer/director, in a manner not uncommon among spouses of opera impresarios. So what else is new?) The Long Beach Opera in its early days ground out a few re-warmed repertory chestnuts with minor-league casts. The opera “season” in Los Angeles consisted of a month of the New York City Opera squeezed into the Philharmonic season, a situation detested quite publicly by the Music Center management and which ended precipitously not much later with a short, sharp shock from executive hatchet man Tom Wachtell, the limits of whose operatic wisdom were broadcast with his famous putdown of Plácido Domin.go: “Well, after all, he&#8217;s no Pavarotti.”</p>
<p>
Even without Pavarotti (whose career in staged opera hereabouts consists of one <i>La Bohème</i> at the Hollywood Bowl in days of yore), the Hemmings years have seen the area&#8217;s emergence as an operatic beehive. Costa Mesa&#8217;s Opera Pacific, the same age as the L.A. Opera, started off as a farm club for David Di Chiera&#8217;s companies in Dayton and Detroit, went off-key for a time, and is now admirably resurrected on its own. Michael Milenski&#8217;s Long Beach Opera, dangling at the end of a shoestring for as long as anyone remembers, miraculously pulls itself together year after year with fringe repertory chosen and staged with resource and sheer gall. (Check it out on June 11: Luigi Dallapiccolla&#8217;s <i>Volo di Notte</i>.) San Diego seems in good shape; I don&#8217;t get down there often enough, but the sound of Renée Fleming&#8217;s Russalka is still in my ears.</p>
<p>
The operatic underbrush flourishes; I write these words a few hours after a lively, imaginative <i>Magic Flute</i>, the inaugural offering of Opera Nova, with young voices, a surprisingly capable orchestra, and a make-do but adequate staging in a dowdy school auditorium in Santa Monica. You can&#8217;t write off their ambition; they promise a <i>Marriage of Figaro</i> next season. Ambition, in fact, blossoms all over town. I&#8217;ll be sorry to miss <i>La Gioconda</i> at the deliciously unreal Casa Italiana this weekend, but Ojai beckons. USC&#8217;s opera workshop has become a local necessity; UCLA&#8217;s <i>Susannah</i> this season, for a school with a drastically understaffed voice program, gave the opera better than it deserved.</p>
<p>
You can&#8217;t hang all this activity on Hemmings, yet the presence of his company, and the particular scope of its activity, has to be some kind of catalyst. The example of Rodney Gilfry, Richard Bernstein, Suzanna Guzmán and Greg Fedderly, all of them distinguished alumni of Hemmings&#8217; resident-artist program and now active worldwide, looms large on the horizons of the young singers in that <i>Magic Flute</i>. The Tamino and Sarastro, in fact, already have their toehold, via membership in the L.A. Opera&#8217;s permanent chorus. You gotta start <i>somewhere</i>.</p>
<p>
As much as anything, the Hemmings “gala” honored the high level attained by those “graduates,” with Guzmán blatantly stealing the show. It also bore sadder testimony to the company&#8217;s real failing over the years: its inability &#8211; or unwillingness, if you prefer &#8211; to build a major operatic production around the musical leadership it deserved. Sure, there were exceptions: Simon Rattle&#8217;s <i>Wozzeck</i>, Zubin Mehta&#8217;s (yes, Mehta&#8217;s) <i>Tristan</i>, Charles Dutoit&#8217;s <i>Les Troyens</i>, Esa-Pekka Salonen&#8217;s <i>Pelléas</i>, Julius Rudel&#8217;s <i>Seraglio</i>. For every new conductor of genuine merit turned up during the Hemmings administration &#8211; Evelino Pidò comes first, and perhaps only, to mind &#8211; there was the sad string of time-beaters, many of whom figured in last week&#8217;s celebration. How do you honor the head of an opera company who entrusted <i>Die Frau ohne Schatten</i> to a Randall Behr? a <i>Tristan</i> revival to a Richard Armstrong? or, for that matter, the company&#8217;s inaugural <i>Otello</i> to a Lawrence Foster?</p>
<p>
Edgar Baitzel summoned me to lunch a few weeks ago, shortly after I had expressed terminal displeasure at the company&#8217;s <i>Rigoletto</i> and <i>La Rondine</i>. Baitzel is the company&#8217;s new artistic administrator, a post newly created as, perhaps, an admission of the limits of Plácido Domingo&#8217;s horizons; in Europe he&#8217;d be known as a <i>Dramaturg</i>. He has held that post with several European companies, and worked for a time with the late, great (if greatly controversial) stage director Jean-Pierre Ponnelle. He&#8217;s a man of consummate charm, with an impeccable talent for handing out bits of information that any arts consumer surely <i>wants</i> to be true. Among the hors d&#8217;oeuvres was a recitation of Marta Domingo&#8217;s considerable achievements as an opera director, spiced with frequent references to Plácido&#8217;s long-standing friendship with superconductor Valery Gergiev. Dessert consisted of pie in the sky: a complete <i>Ring</i> in the spring and summer of 2003; <i>Moses und Aron</i>. There might have been more, but I&#8217;m dieting.</p>
<p>
I&#8217;ll miss the other lunches. Back in the days of open warfare, Hemmings used to subpoena me to lunch once or twice each season to hand me my latest report card. He had graded Martin Bernheimer&#8217;s and my reviews according to an intricate numerical system. Sometimes Martin would win, sometimes I would. I never cared that much about the figures; what stayed with me was the knowledge that a mover in the musical world took my writings (yes, and Martin&#8217;s too, if you insist) seriously enough to concoct that kind of numbers game. Without my ever once singing a note on his (or anyone else&#8217;s) opera stage or standing on a podium, Peter Hemmings regarded me as important. May his tribe increase.</font></p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>The Notes Between the&#160;Notes</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2000/05/the-notes-between-the-notes/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2000/05/the-notes-between-the-notes/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 24 May 2000 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=298</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[I‘m still obsessed with memories of Marino Formenti&#8217;s piano concerts at LACMA; you would be, too, if you‘d been there. On the third concert, he pulled off an acrobatic marvel, performing simultaneously on two pianos, tuned a quarter-tone apart, set at right angles behind him. The music itself was no mere trick: a big, clangorous [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>I‘m still obsessed with memories of Marino Formenti&#8217;s piano concerts at LACMA; you would be, too, if you‘d been there. On the third concert, he pulled off an acrobatic marvel, performing simultaneously on two pianos, tuned a quarter-tone apart, set at right angles behind him. The music itself was no mere trick: a big, clangorous piece called Hommage a Gyorgy Ligeti by the Austrian composer Georg Friedrich Haas, consisting of a rat-a-tat of repeated notes in huge clusters that seemed to fade in and out around one another, with the tuning difference creating a fascinating new sound, part gamelan and part Martian, that gradually became its own language. The object of the ”hommage“ was well-chosen; Ligeti himself has experimented with all kinds of microtonal composition, from re-tuned pianos to the banshee wails of an ensemble of ocarinas set among the players of a ”serious“ symphony orchestra in his Violin Concerto. And by the way, back in 1923 our own Charlie Ives wrote a set of pieces for two pianos a quarter-tone apart (but for two performers).
</p>
<p>    There are those who protest that music&#8217;s downward path began with the adoption of equal temperament around the time of Bach &#8212; a series of compromises so that all 12 tones of the scale could be the same distance apart, enabling composers to compose for keyboard instruments in all keys and to drive their music forward on the interaction of harmonic consonance and dissonance. These protesters would ”free“ music from such tyranny and return to the earlier system of ”just“ intonation, which derived its tones from the mathematical logic of the overtone series as propounded by Pythagoras and his pals. With just intonation you end up with an infinity of notes, not the paltry 12-chromatic-tone scale of piano or harpsichord. The seventh overtone, counting upward from, say, a C, comes out to something like a too-flat B-flat, and that note would not exist on a scale starting from, say, D. Singers and players of string instruments can easily ”bend“ toward these microscopically varied tones. Keyboard and wind-instrument players cannot. Bach‘s Well-Tempered Clavier, besides containing some wonderful music, is a celebration of the newly won right to play B-flats in the key of D.
</p>
<p>   Digression here. It&#8217;s this ability or unwillingness to ”bend“ a note ever so slightly, to distinguish between, say, a G-sharp and an A-flat, that adds the emotional coloration to one performance, and not to another. When Viktoria Mullova performed the Brahms Violin Concerto with the Philharmonic a couple of weeks ago, the chill around her performance came to a large degree from the dead-on but deadening accuracy of her intonation; she might as well have been playing a xylophone. Listen to the 1926 recording of Mendelssohn‘s Violin Concerto, just reissued on Naxos, in which Fritz Kreisler&#8217;s willingness to bend &#8212; or obsession with bending, as some purists would have it &#8212; transforms the solo line into a loving message into your ears and mine and, or so it seems, ours alone. Or listen to Elisabeth Schwarzkopf singing the Four Last Songs of Richard Strauss (in the first of her two EMI versions) as if seated on your lap. That‘s what just an infinitesimal bending of the pitch can do.
</p>
<p>    Okay so far? The Haas work that Formenti played has nothing to do with overtones, of course; it was the controlled clash of two pianos meticulously tuned in equal temperament but out of tune with each other. The sound was wondrous strange, but nothing you&#8217;d want to live with. It did prepare my ears, however, for an entire evening of notes-between-notes later that same week.
</p>
<p>    This was the second event (of four) in MicroFest 2000, the latest in the annual series run by composerguitaristteacherKPFK commentatorimpresario John Schneider, exploring the many ways in which music can shake clear of the bonds of equal temperament and tantalize (or irritate) the ear in the mysterious realm that lies between the notes. Harry Partch was on the program, the rebellious autodidact who built his own instruments, with his own tuning systems, to assist in music‘s great escape. Lou Harrison, whose hand was guided by the intricate harmonic systems of Indonesia and India, sent along a new sonata for a harpsichord tuned to just intonation. But the sublime was touched even more firmly in the four works by Ben Johnston that filled the second half of the program.
</p>
<p>   Johnston, described by one perceptive writer as ”one of the best non-famous composers this country has to offer,“ was born in 1926. Along the way he studied with Partch and with John Cage, absorbed and then rejected Anton Webern&#8217;s strict organizational principles, and since 1970 has worked with the ”purer“ tunings of just intonation. That, of course, suggests an easy path to non-fame, but if the beguiling and totally beautiful Suite for Microtonal Piano, which Phillip Bush performed on this MicroFest concert (in the comfortable small music hall at Pierce College in Woodland Hills) is any criterion, Ben Johnston‘s music needs &#8212; no, demands &#8212; your greater attention. The Suite, plus a craggier but no less fascinating Sonata and an earlier work in ”normal“ tuning and duller for that, are on a Koch International disc, played by the excellent Bush. And from that disc you can then graduate to just intonation&#8217;s true masterwork, LaMonte Young‘s five-CD The Well-Tuned Piano, on Gramavision, five hours, not a moment dull, hard to find but worth the search.
</p>
<p>    Gyorgy Kurtag&#8217;s Stele, which began Markus Stenz‘s recent stint on the Philharmonic podium, begins with a gleaming chord on G that, for its first couple of seconds, could pass for early Beethoven. Then it suddenly, fascinatingly darkens; there are glissandos across its surface that pull it out of ”normal“ tuning and into mystery. The rest of the work&#8217;s 14-or-so-minute length deepens the mystery. Kurtag demands strange instruments and puts them to strange uses: Four Wagner tubas on one side of the stage challenge, and are answered by, four trombones on the other side; the subtle difference in the intonations of these instruments sets up a clash. So do the infinitesimal discrepancies in the antiphony of grand piano, upright piano, celesta and cimbalom. The sounds pile up; ”stele“ is Greek for ”pillar.“ Then they disintegrate; the piece holds you in its grip, but is soon over. That‘s Kurtag&#8217;s way: the aphorism that sweeps quickly across your horizon, and then lingers to haunt you later on.
</p>
<p>    The Brahms Violin Concerto followed, the aforementioned performance with Mullova. Hearing this work is never one of my more cherished experiences, with its orchestration the texture of last week‘s brown gravy (the winds in the slow movement excepted) and its soloist yammering hysterically into your face at close range. But I don&#8217;t remember when I less wanted to hear it than this time, while still under the spell cast by Kurtag.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>It Took a&#160;Weill</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2000/05/it-took-a-weill/</link>
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		<pubDate>Wed, 17 May 2000 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=297</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[One hundred years after his birth, 50 years after his death, Kurt Weill can finally be measured. Against all the news about the abandonment of serious music by the giants of the recording industry, EMI Classics has produced the first-ever recording of Weill&#8217;s grandest, most ambitious stage work, Die Bürgschaft, in a performance worthy of [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>
<font COLOR=black>One hundred years after his birth, 50 years after his death, Kurt Weill can finally be measured. Against all the news about the abandonment of serious music by the giants of the recording industry, EMI Classics has produced the first-ever recording of Weill&#8217;s grandest, most ambitious stage work, <i>Die Bürgschaft</i>, in a performance worthy of the score. If you think you know the stature of Weill&#8217;s legacy from <i>The Threepenny Opera</i>, <i>Mahagonny</i> and the richness of his later works for Broadway, you will need to adjust your estimate upward to include this huge newcomer to the list, an opera exhilarating in its musical sweep, exasperating in the imponderables of its plot, extraordinary in the sheer beauty of its many great moments.</p>
<p>
<i>Die Bürgschaft</i> (The Pledge) dates from 1932. Weill&#8217;s collaboration with Bertolt Brecht had run its course, although they would join forces once again, as exiles in Paris two years later, in <i>The Seven Deadly Sins</i>. Caspar Neher created the libretto, a Marxist-existential-morality mishmash drawn from a parable by Johann Gottfried von Herder that, in turn, was based on a passage from the Talmud &#8211; all adding up to the message that money destroys rich and poor alike. That, of course, wasn&#8217;t so different from the sermons propounded<br />
by the lowlifes in both <i>Threepenny</i> and <i>Mahagonny</i>. This time, however, Weill was on different ground: not the arse-kicking Brechtian satire with music to match, but a broad and tragic panorama of suffering and self-destruction.</p>
<p>
The music is rich and dark, with turns of harmony that send shivers down your spine and turns of melody that can trouble your dreams for days after. There is music like this in the <i>Sins</i>; the opera, however, with its large cast and orchestra, and its complex choral writing that involves not only participants in the plot but also a separate ensemble that comments on the action, drew from Weill the most extensive dramatic writing he would ever attempt.</p>
<p>
<i>Die Bürgschaft</i> had a few performances in 1932. Then came Hitler. Aside from a couple of truncated radio presentations, it remained in limbo until 1998, when it was taken up by brave operatic forces<br />
in the small German city of Bielefeld. The recording is of the American premiere at the Spoleto Festival in Charleston, South Carolina, in the spring of 1999, under the warm and knowing leadership of Julius Rudel and with a cast led by Frederick Burchinal and Dale Travis as the two friends whose financial indebtedness ends in murder, Margaret Thompson as a suffering wife, and Ann Panagulias as a daughter driven to prostitution.</p>
<p>
I won&#8217;t hang by my thumbs in hopes of seeing <i>Die Bürgschaft</i> on any local stage; however gripping the music, the drama bends under the weight of middle-European symbolism. Even so, I am baffled that so powerful a work, crucial to our understanding of one of the truly original masters of his time, has suffered complete neglect for so long. Kim Kowalke, head of the Kurt Weill Foundation and co-producer of this recording, suggests in his notes that since the opera had no role for Weill&#8217;s wife, Lotte Lenya, it didn&#8217;t make the agenda when the widowed Lenya embarked on her mission to hunt down and record (however inauthentically, with her haunting but aging vocal powers) the repertory of “lost” Weill.</p>
<p>
One more “lost” work of Weill cries out for similar splendid restoration, the pageant piece <i>Der Weg der Verheissung</i> that the legendary director Max Reinhardt staged in New York in 1937 (as <i>The Eternal Road</i>), to a text by Franz Werfel that mingles a re-enactment of the biblical story of Abraham and Isaac into the contemporary travails of a threatened Jewish community. As in Bielefeld with <i>Die Bürgschaft</i>, <i>Der Weg</i> was restored last year in a small German city, Chemnitz, with John Mauceri conducting. That production, in German, then came to the Brooklyn Academy of Music. I&#8217;ve seen the video from Chemnitz; the Weill score alternates with long spoken episodes, but the music, as in <i>Die Bürgschaft</i>, has a rolling, solemn eloquence that couldn&#8217;t be by any other composer. It needs a new English translation, and an editor&#8217;s scissors on the dialogue. Join me in praying that this may someday happen.</p>
<p>
While you wait, linger among the pages of David Farneth&#8217;s <i>Kurt Weill: A Life in Pictures and Documents</i> (Overlook Press), handsome, expensive and invaluable, as close a reproduction of the sound and spirit of this troubled musical visionary as a printed page can afford. It joins previous Foundation-sponsored projects &#8211; a Lenya volume, handsomely packaged with CDs of every note she ever recorded, and <i>Speak Low</i>, the letters of Weill and Lenya, a throbbing and powerful memento.</p>
<p>
The pickings are rather slim so far for any local celebration of the Weill<br />
anniversary. The <i>Happy End</i> at MOCA, partly underwritten by Krispy Kreme doughnuts and similar in texture, shouldn&#8217;t have happened. Audra McDonald sings the <i>Sins</i> with the Philharmonic next season. When I moved here in 1979, Los Angeles offered more. The East-West Players, in their little dive of a theater in Silver Lake, did several of the theater pieces, including a memorable <i>Happy End</i>. Ron Sossi&#8217;s Odyssey Theater produced a smashing version of <i>Johnny Johnson</i>, Weill&#8217;s first fully American theater work. There were still survivors here from Weill&#8217;s Berlin, most of them with memories intact and delighted to recount them into my tape recorder. Kim Kowalke was on the Occidental faculty at the time, and helped me put my interviews, and his own European tapes of music still little known back then, into a radio series for KUSC in its adventurous days now past.</p>
<p>
Margot Aufricht, widow of the producer of the first <i>Threepenny</i>, sat in her Beverly Hills living room and talked enchantingly about the delirious infighting among that masterwork&#8217;s first cast, in Berlin, 1928. Felix Jackson, the Hollywood writer who married Deanna Durbin and did the script for <i>Destry Rides Again</i>, was formerly Felix Joachimson, and in 1926 had written the libretto for a Weill opera, <i>Na Und?,</i> that has been completely lost. He, therefore, was the last surviving link to that work. Hans Heinsheimer, who was Weill&#8217;s publisher at Universal Edition, claimed to be the one who ordered Weill to toss <i>Na Und? </i>into the Danube. In Santa Barbara, the wonderful Maurice Abravanel, who had studied with Weill in Berlin and later conducted his music on Broadway, talked and talked. In New York there was Lenya, with her home-cooked legend about the nonstop lovey-dovey life with Kurt, soaring free of such earthly matters as divorce, reconciliation and fornication.</p>
<p>
They&#8217;re gone now, all those old people with the vivid memories and equally vivid fictions. They might put up a fuss now that so little Weill is happening here in this centennial year. Somebody should.</font></p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Good, Bad, Beautiful, Ugly,&#160;Etc.</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2000/05/good-bad-beautiful-ugly-etc/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2000/05/good-bad-beautiful-ugly-etc/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 10 May 2000 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=296</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[There was chamber music in town last week, the wrong pieces beautifully played. On Wednesday, three delightfully earnest and talented young musicians from overseas &#8212; the violinist Christian Tetzlaff, his younger sister the cellist Tanja, and the pianist Leif Ove Andsnes &#8212; played an evening‘s worth of lesser Schumann. On Friday, the estimable Emanuel Ax [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>There was chamber music in town last week, the wrong pieces beautifully played. On Wednesday, three delightfully earnest and talented young musicians from overseas &#8212; the violinist Christian Tetzlaff, his younger sister the cellist Tanja, and the pianist Leif Ove Andsnes &#8212; played an evening‘s worth of lesser Schumann. On Friday, the estimable Emanuel Ax joined Philharmonic members in “other” Mendelssohn and Dvorak: not the former&#8217;s lustrous, familiar D-minor Trio but the inferior, lumpier C-minor; not the latter‘s radiant Piano Quintet &#8212; chamber music at its most feelgood &#8212; but his E-flat Piano Quartet, its poorer imitation. Even the venues were wrong. The soft, melancholic strains of Schumann&#8217;s last two piano trios became faint and distant voices on Wednesday in the vast space of the Dorothy Chandler Pavilion; the crowd was fair-sized, but its collective heart would have been better warmed in the intimate space of the Zipper Concert Hall down the street. At Zipper on Friday, Manny Ax played with the piano lid fully open, seriously outshouting the brave voices of the participating string players: a grand noise on its own, perhaps, but only distantly related to chamber music &#8212; performances, in other words, on a Pavilion-size scale.
</p>
<p>    What makes a piece of music “better” or “lesser,” at least in this one pair of ears that happens to be attached to a word processor? One easy criterion: “Better” works tend to get even better on repeated hearings. I could never conceive a time when I would not welcome a hearing of the one truly unchallengeable work in Schumann‘s considerable chamber-music legacy, the E-flat Piano Quintet. It dates from 1842, a happy time in the Schumann household. It is, in fact, one of Schumann&#8217;s strongest works in any medium. Its opening, the dialogues between the jagged angular and the suavely lyrical, grabs your attention and holds it. The music plays wonderful tricks; themes once heard keep popping up unexpectedly later on. The momentum is breathtaking; that element, above all, is peculiarly lacking in the later works. No matter that Schumann derived the template for the Quintet from Schubert‘s equally great E-flat Trio; the two works, side by side on a program, would not be a redundancy.
</p>
<p>   But I hear little of this strength in any of the three piano trios &#8212; the last two so eloquently pleaded by Tetzlaff and his colleagues, or the more familiar No. 1. Schumann&#8217;s hand is immediately recognizable not in any detectable originality in the music, but from the constant reminders of his well-known earlier works, including a few of the songs &#8212; a harmony here, a turn of phrase there, a patchwork of old friends. You have to wonder what in this music could attract such bright and valuable young players, who rank among the strongest portents of a splendid future for the great repertory of the past &#8212; Christian Tetzlaff for his Bach, Andsnes for a Beethoven Fourth Concerto here a couple of years ago that still resounds. Ending their concert, there was one encore, a single movement from Beethoven‘s adolescence. In five minutes it delivered a prophecy of mastery still to come, as the hour of Schumann had delivered a regretful nostalgia for mastery fast fading.
</p>
<p>    George Antheil&#8217;s Sonata Sauvage, which Marino Formenti included on the last of his four instantly legendary piano recitals at the County Museum, inspired another kind of nostalgia: a search in vain for memories of ever hearing a worse piece of music by anyone, anywhere. It conjures a sad picture: its 22-year-old composer, incomparably fair of face, petted and curried and journeying through between-wars European salon society as that new exotic toy, an American composer. His amateurish but startling clatter-and-bang doesn‘t mask the music&#8217;s appalling lack of content; enough that it fulfills the saloniste view of America. He is the Noble Savage redux, and a “Savage Sonata” serves as his calling card. Ezra Pound even devoted an entire book to Antheil‘s pre-eminence among composers of the day: pound-foolishness, if ever there was.
</p>
<p>    This final program, all-American, included far better music, of course. Charles Ives&#8217; Three-Page Sonata was well worth reviving, with its first movement full of the same uncoiling, chromatic energy that fills the “Emerson” segment of the Concord Sonata with amazement. (The piece is not trivial, despite its title; the “pages,” the program note explained, are actually large manuscripts.) Framing the extraordinary evening were works of John Cage and Morton Feldman, music of notes and silences, of room exactly measured but with space into which you and I must enter. Without actually counting, I would guess that there are more notes in any 10 seconds of Antheil‘s infantile savagery than in the 20 minutes of Feldman&#8217;s Piano, and I have no difficulty deciding which package of notes constitutes music, and which lunatic noise.
</p>
<p>   I have had reason more than once to extol the work of the Minnesota-based American Composers Forum, notably for its Innova discs that honor a broad range of experimental music and for its particular attention &#8212; on disc, video and an impressive published documentary volume &#8212; to the music of Harry Partch. Beyond this, the ACF fulfills the “forum” aspect by helping composers in as many of their needs as limited funding can allow. There are ACF chapters in several cities, and the Los Angeles branch is officially launched next week, run by Heidi Lesemann, who shepherded the long-departed Arnold Schoenberg Institute during its happier days at USC. (Reach them at <a href="mailto:lacomposersforum@aol.com.)">lacomposersforum@aol.com.)</a> One crucial need, it has long seemed to me, is a way of circulating information; the last thing most new-music presenters (including, most emphatically, the County Museum) can afford is any kind of advertising budget. That‘s why there were fewer than 50 people at Formenti&#8217;s first concert here, and more only after word of mouth got around. To address this, the ACF plans to issue New Music L.A., a monthly calendar of new-music events covering the area from Orange to Santa Barbara counties. The first issue (MayJune) should be available at classical counters at Tower and Virgin next week. Even in this “doldrums” part of the music season, you‘ll be amazed at how much is going on.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Legalized&#160;Violence</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2000/05/legalized-violence/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2000/05/legalized-violence/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 03 May 2000 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=295</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[A gap of 166 years separates the C-minor Piano Concerto of Mozart (K. 491) from the Piano Sonata of Jean Barraqué, but they share at least this: the ability to wreak sheer violence upon an audience, to numb the ears into disbelief by the power of innovation. Not all pianists are smart enough to recognize [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>
<font COLOR=black>A gap of 166 years separates the C-minor Piano Concerto of Mozart (K. 491) from the Piano Sonata of Jean Barraqué, but they share at least this: the ability to wreak sheer violence upon an audience, to numb the ears into disbelief by the power of innovation. Not all pianists are smart enough to recognize this in the Mozart, although the very opening notes &#8211; the jagged theme that pushes upward and further upward, not at all the shapely “classic” outline but rather something of a shriek &#8211; reveal the plan. Unlike any but a couple of other works in his huge output, Mozart chooses to end both first and last movements in the same minor key that they had begun, again turning his back on the classic ideal of a “happy ending.”</p>
<p>
Christian Zacharias was smart enough; his performance with the Philharmonic, conducting from the piano, in the second week of a splendid guest stint, was outsized, rawboned, truly dramatic. Again, as in the previous week, he did something really interesting in the first-movement cadenza; recognizing this as the most richly scored of all the concertos, he turned what is usually a solo improv into another dialogue between piano and orchestra, going on brilliantly from what Mozart surely had in mind. Two Haydn symphonies framed the Mozart: No. 83, which also begins with a jagged, upward theme, and No. 103, in a performance larger than life and just right. He&#8217;s a find, this Zacharias.</p>
<p>
As long as composers compose, critics criticize; seldom the twain do meet. Four centuries ago the critic G.M. Artusi turned his vitriol-laden pen upon the innovations of Claudio Monteverdi, and his fame clings to that slender thread of happenstance. In my own century I didn&#8217;t happen upon Constant Lambert&#8217;s 1934 <i>Music Ho! A Study of Music in Decline</i> until I was old enough to winnow out the baloney. Two books by the late Henry Pleasants &#8211; the 1955 <i>The Agony of Modern Music</i> and the 1961 <i>Death of Music?</i> &#8211; struck me in their time as owners&#8217; manuals for ulcer patients, while Norman Lebrecht&#8217;s 1997 <i>Who Killed Classical Music? </i>comes over as low-grade sci-fi.</p>
<p>
There was another book in 1961 that also raised a fair amount of dust, and which a recent event has inspired me to dig out from under its own layer of dust on my back shelves. Its title is <i>Since Debussy, A View of Contemporary Music</i>, by André Hodeir, a performer and critic better known on the jazz side of the fence but obviously at home on this side as well. (It is currently out of print, listed on the amazon.com hierarchy-of-sales list as No. 1,057,652.) Most of the aforementioned broadsides assume a conservative stance against any and all abominations in the cause of advancing music&#8217;s frontiers. Hodeir&#8217;s household deities, however, included the young Boulez and Stockhausen, the elder statesmen Schoenberg and Messiaen, and one further figure who at 33 had still only produced a small body of work not yet very well known but whom Hodeir &#8211; and apparently Hodeir alone &#8211; recognized as “the only one great 20th-century disciple of Beethoven.” That emergent savior was Jean Barraqué &#8211; who died at a mere 45, leaving Hodeir&#8217;s prophesy unfulfilled &#8211; and it was the Piano Sonata of Barraqué, performed at the County Museum by Marino Formenti on the first of his four programs of 20th-century piano music, that left me in a state of exhilaration beyond any experience this season. And I&#8217;ve had some doozers.</p>
<p>
I have to note here that Formenti&#8217;s performance may not have been exactly what Barraqué had in mind. It lasted about 25 minutes, while a recent and superlative recording on ECM, by Herbert Henck, runs 46; other performances, friends tell me, have run as long as 55. The work is in two movements, of which the second is meant to proceed at a pace preternaturally slow, its great misshapen sound blocks set apart by silences whose actual length the performer must decide. Henck&#8217;s decisions, which in his extended program note he links to the example of John Cage, run long; his projection of the entire work, thrilling in its way, is of an otherworld landscape, with vistas of vast crags gradually spaced out toward nothingness. “No music of this density,” Hodeir writes, “has been composed since [Beethoven's] <i>Great Fugue</i>; that fact alone should suggest the kind of shock it can produce at first hearing.”</p>
<p>
Formenti&#8217;s version was all about momentum, extraordinarily under control. The sheer power pinned you to your seat (“you” being the 50 or so brave souls spread through LACMA&#8217;s 600-seat Bing Theater that night), yet there was never a moment when the coiled-spring complexity of Barraqué&#8217;s writing, the interweave of gnarled, surging atonal lines, was in any way blurred or diminished. Of silence there was little; the ending &#8211; the sudden fall of the music&#8217;s curtain, as Barraqué gives us the bare notes of his tone row, slowly, one by one, resounding out of dark nothingness &#8211; was no less shocking than the mountainous pileups that had gone before. The two performances &#8211; insofar as any recorded performance can compare to the impact of reality stunningly delivered &#8211; are so unalike that you would need to own both to come at all close to this one-of-a-kind work.</p>
<p>
Formenti, 34, northern Italian by birth, now lives in Vienna; he was here two years ago with the Klangforum Wien at the surprise-laden Resistance Fluctuations festival. The Barraqué ended a French program that also included all 12 of Boulez&#8217;s exquisite <i>Notations</i> and the superheated thunder of several parts of Messiaen&#8217;s <i>Twenty Regards on the Child Jesus</i>. Formenti plays with fingers, but also with brains; after the jillion notes of the Barraqué, the single encore was the air-clearing emptiness of Debussy&#8217;s <i>Footsteps on the Snow</i>. The second program, Italian, included the rich, dark fantasy of Luigi Nono&#8217;s <i>. . . Sofferte Onde Serene . . . </i>for piano and tape, and also Luigi Dallapiccola&#8217;s <i>Quaderno Musicale di Annalibera</i>, deep, fragrant music by a composer now unjustly neglected. (His <i>Volo di Notte</i> comes to the Long Beach Opera next month, and is not to be missed.) Formenti is an amazing pianist; all praise to the LACMA management that brought him here (and here alone) for four marvelously planned century&#8217;s-end programs. On the day this paper hits the stands, May 4, you have time to rush to LACMA for his final concert.</p>
<p>
<i>Confession:</i> I wrote last week about Stockhausen&#8217;s <i>Helicopter Quartet</i> on the basis of information on the Internet. Now I&#8217;ve heard the Auvidis recording &#8211; the Ardittis sawing away in their flying machines, calling out the cues (“eins, zwei, drei . . .”), and the engines themselves, soaring, roaring and beautifully subsiding at the end. It may only be a studio mix; for the real thing you have to pay $55 to Stockhausen&#8217;s own company. It is also extremely beautiful, in ways you probably wouldn&#8217;t believe, so I won&#8217;t try. I&#8217;ve been playing it all week, alternating with the Barraqué Sonata, and I think I too am flying.</font></p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Phantoms of the&#160;Opera</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2000/04/phantoms-of-the-opera/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2000/04/phantoms-of-the-opera/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 26 Apr 2000 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=294</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Will American opera audiences ever see the Light? I wouldn‘t count on it, not while the Mmes. Butterfly and Tosca fatten their lead in the audience polls, on Momma Domingo&#8217;s cooking. The Light I refer to is the collective title of the formidable cycle of seven operas, now nearing completion, out of which we were [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Will American opera audiences ever see the Light? I wouldn‘t count on it, not while the Mmes. Butterfly and Tosca fatten their lead in the audience polls, on Momma Domingo&#8217;s cooking.
</p>
<p>    The Light I refer to is the collective title of the formidable cycle of seven operas, now nearing completion, out of which we were vouchsafed about an hour‘s worth of teaser at the County Museum&#8217;s most recent Monday Evening Concert. Karlheinz Stockhausen began the project in 1977: seven operas named for days of the week, each the length of one of Wagner‘s Ring dramas and purporting &#8212; on a scale that dwarfs even Wagner&#8217;s scenario &#8212; to encapsulate the import of music, the several worldwide conceptions of the nature of divinity, mankind‘s ultimate strengths and weaknesses, and, for all anyone knows, the fluctuating price of tea in China. The operas themselves are less about singing, more about an integration of song, nonvocal sound both instrumental and electronic, stage spectacle and gesture. Stockhausen&#8217;s written scores detail not only the music but the most explicit intricacies of stage design, movement and choreography &#8212; the culmination of his lifetime obsession with total serial organization that makes Wagner‘s Gesamtkunstwerk seem like random dabbling. The music itself is a complex concept in which exact melodic formulas are attached to the dramatic and spiritual aspects of Stockhausen&#8217;s scenario; it, too, is a vast compendium into which elements of strict 12-tone composition, Buddhist chant, jazz ‘n&#8217; rock and public hoopla are stirred. (The score for Saturday involves an American college marching band among the participants.) The word beautiful doesn‘t always come first to mind in this music; hypnotic does.
</p>
<p>   Most of the cycle has so far been produced in Milan &#8212; at La Scala or, in the case of Saturday, in a sports palace. There&#8217;s a fascinating video documentary on preparations for Monday, the first opera of the cycle, in the 1988 production at La Scala. A huge statue of Eve dominates the stage; she gives birth to 14 grotesque creatures who ride around to a ”Baby-Buggie Boogie“ but are ordered back into the womb by Lucifer. The womb is impregnated again by a grand piano (playing Stockhausen‘s Klavierstuck XIV, music originally written for Pierre Boulez&#8217;s 60th birthday). This time seven proper babies emerge, and their singing is converted to birdsong, etc. Get the idea?
</p>
<p>   Any or all of this might add up to a case for its creator as certifiably mad, except for one thing: the rich, intense power of the music. At LACMA, Markus Stockhausen, a phenomenal brass player who has also obviously inherited his father‘s showmanship genes, played the 27-minute ”Pieta,“ the solo ”aria“ for tape plus a tampered-with flugelhorn capable of quarter-tones, from Tuesday; he then joined Stefano Scodanibbio, the spellbinding double-bass magician whose frequent appearances here have won him a deserved cult following, in a long segment from Thursday. For almost an hour, in near-total darkness, the museum&#8217;s drab Bing Theater throbbed to the discourse of superhuman musical entities, set free in outer space. You got the impression, for the moment anyhow, that all the other music in the world has been trying to attain the condition of Stockhausen. Then the lights came on, and the planet reassumed its shape.
</p>
<p>   Stockhausen‘s star appears to be waning, at least in the marketplace. His entry in the latest Schwann catalog contains only nine compositions, down from 13 in the previous issue; there are probably more available from the Stockhausen Verlag in Germany, at higher prices. Resist his music if it pleases you, but listen at least to the distillation of pure sound into pure silence that makes up the hourlong essence of Stimmung, in the magical performance on Hyperion by a group that includes Paul Hillier. The Ardittis have been playing his ”Helicopter“ Quartet (from Wednesday), which is exactly what its name implies: four players sky-high in separate conveyances, cued by heaven-knows-what. A natural choice, you&#8217;d think, for the Hollywood Bowl this summer, but no such luck.
</p>
<p>    You didn‘t, of course, have to journey all the way to Stockhausen-land for operas on not-quite-rational subjects. At Costa Mesa&#8217;s Performing Arts Center there was Offenbach‘s The Tales of Hoffmann, the final offering in what has been, by some distance, Opera Pacific&#8217;s finest season. Music director John DeMain conducted with understandable pride; Vinson Cole, hobbling through his evening‘s chores with an injured knee and, therefore, a cane, was the splendid Hoffmann; Richard Bernstein sang the four avatars of Nemesis with slithery insinuation; Jan Grissom sang the four ladyloves of Hoffmann&#8217;s tormented existence, a little shrill for the tormented Antonia, perhaps, but kooky in her Marilyn getup as the mechanical doll Olympia. Ian Judge‘s staging, on a set magically and swiftly transformable, was a trove of smart ideas.
</p>
<p>    Hoffmann runs rather long nowadays. Recent scholarship, mostly by the editor Fritz Oeser, has restored some valuable music that for one reason or another had been dropped over the years. If you know the opera from, say, the wonderful old Michael Powell&#8211;Emeric Pressburger movie conducted by Sir Thomas Beecham &#8212; as indeed you should &#8212; the new version runs nearly an hour longer. It includes a lot of rediscovered music for Hoffmann&#8217;s companion Nicklausse that provides a whole ‘nother psychological dimension. One problem concerns the traditional ”Diamond Aria“ and big Septet, both in the Venice scene; they were not by Offenbach at all and, in the interests of ”authenticity,“ might well be dropped &#8212; except that they are also very good. At Opera Pacific, they were kept: enlightened tampering, a different species altogether from the sorry events detailed here last week.
</p>
<p>    On successive nights there were adjacent Mozart piano concertos, both led from the piano and performed in ways remarkably far apart. In No. 22 (K. 482), at the Philharmonic, Christian Zacharias seemed melted and made amorous by the miraculous songs welling up from Mozart&#8217;s winds; he even invited their soft singing into the first-movement cadenza he himself had devised. Next night, however, in No. 21 (K. 467) with the Los Angeles Chamber Orchestra at Royce Hall, Jeffrey Kahane seemed determined to withstand the blandishments even of the divine slow movement‘s endless melody. It was a steely sort of performance he gave, with tempos in the outer movements that blurred passagework now and then and left crucial melodic turns somewhat unfulfilled. I kept thinking of the late Robert Casadesus, whose crystalline, tinkly Mozart some people admired, others did not.
</p>
<p>    I have heard better Mozart from Kahane, and hope to again. In any case, his program also had French hornist Richard Todd in a romp through that sublime giggle, the First Concerto from Richard Strauss&#8217; days of youth: glorious, restorative music by a composer who was soon to go astray but hadn‘t yet.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Mom Domingo Gets It&#160;Wrong</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2000/04/mom-domingo-gets-it-wrong/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2000/04/mom-domingo-gets-it-wrong/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 19 Apr 2000 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=293</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[I have seen the operatic future &#8212; part of it, anyhow &#8212; and it makes me nervous. I view the L.A. Opera under the Domingo dynasty as a grandiose mom ‘n&#8217; pop operation. Pop Placido nurses his aging voice, transposing the arias downward when necessary, and keeps his right arm in shape with a little [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>I have seen the operatic future &#8212; part of it, anyhow &#8212; and it makes me nervous. I view the L.A. Opera under the Domingo dynasty as a grandiose mom ‘n&#8217; pop operation. Pop Placido nurses his aging voice, transposing the arias downward when necessary, and keeps his right arm in shape with a little stick-waving that might pass for conducting if you don‘t listen too carefully. Mom Marta, whose career as a professional stage director only goes back to 1991, makes up for lost time by rewriting and then restaging the repertory classics, tacking happy endings onto the tragedies and death scenes onto the comedies.
</p>
<p>    We have ample chance to sample the perfectly adequate ordinariness of Placido&#8217;s conducting over the years; it fits into the pattern of podium mediocrity that has haunted the company from the start. (His announced Aida next fall looks from here like more of the same.) Right now it‘s the diminutive Marta who looms large, in the colossally misguided version of Puccini&#8217;s three-legged puppy of an almost-operetta, La Rondine, currently sullying the air at the Dorothy Chandler Pavilion, that she not only directs but has also extensively revised in the name of correcting faults that she (and she alone) has detected in the standard version.
</p>
<p>   Puccini himself had his troubles with La Rondine. In one early version, never performed and later disowned, the reformed prostitute Magda, denounced by tenor Ruggero as he learns The Truth, faces the wreckage of her one true love ”alone and abandoned“ at the final curtain. It‘s not hard to understand why the final version, with the parting of the mismatched lovers both wistful and inevitable &#8212; as in Der Rosenkavalier, which Puccini admired &#8212; harmonizes far better with the rest of the work. Marta Domingo, however, has chosen to impose her own gloss onto the rejected version; her Magda, more Joan Crawford than Strauss&#8217; Marschallin, walks out into a handy nearby ocean and sinks out of sight. Designer Michael Scott has provided a terrific tidal wave.
</p>
<p>   Marta‘s editorial hand falls elsewhere as well. Like a fond momma scattering tchotchkes, she has littered Puccini&#8217;s perfectly respectable score with useless bits: a scrap of text from Godknowswhere stuck onto an orchestral passage, a newly contrived add-on to a duet for Magda and her sugar daddy there. From another Puccini reject she has exhumed a first-act tenor aria, with a gut-busting high some-note-or-other at the end on which tenor Marcus Haddock foundered most ignobly. One should be polite about people unfortunately named, but Mr. Haddock‘s Ruggero was decidedly cold fish. And so was the Magda of Carol Vaness &#8212; wreathed in whore-frost, you might say &#8212; as a soprano still admirable in the classic repertory tries once again (as in her previous Violetta and Tosca here) to remake herself as an Italian romantic. Greg Fedderly and Sari Gruber managed the juvenile roles with charm and ease; newcomer conductor Emmanuel Villaume did some furious arm-waving that was fun to watch without significantly mitigating the overall gloom, the unshakable sense that none of this should really be allowed to happen &#8212; least of all at a $146 top ticket.
</p>
<p>    On this matter of wrong-head-edness, you might want to rummage around in your imagination&#8217;s darkest reaches in search of other deplorable musical ideas. A rewrite of Aida with a new score by Elton John? A parcel of Bob Dylan lyrics newly set to the typically shiny, slick, faceless music of John Corigliano? Neck and neck for wrong-headedness, wouldn‘t you say?
</p>
<p>    Well, the new-fangled Aida is doing okay, if not great, on Broadway, and the much-admired American soprano Sylvia McNair is traipsin&#8217; the countryside with Mr. Tambourine Man: Seven Poems of Bob Dylan, its attraction not at all impeded by its composer‘s recent Oscar (for more of the same typically shiny etc. music for The Red Violin). The crowd at McNair&#8217;s recent Dorothy Chandler Pavilion recital was on the paltry side, smaller than the splendor of McNair‘s proven artistry deserves, larger than the prospect of the evening&#8217;s major work held forth. Word does, after all, get around.
</p>
<p>   Corigliano‘s program note has it that he hadn&#8217;t heard a note of Dylan‘s songs until the Carnegie Hall commission (awarded to McNair for a song cycle, who then chose the composer) came his way; that, for a red-blooded American born in 1938, getting his own name around New York in the very time of Dylan&#8217;s glory days there, takes some doing. Whether from ignorance or malice, he has been keenly successful in circumventing the Dylan essence, the gritty insinuation that goes out from all the great lyrics to shape an inescapable, elementary kind of melody, simplistic but insistent. He has chosen his texts well: ”Mr. Tambourine Man,“ ”Blowin‘ in the Wind,“ ”All Along the Watchtower,“ all faves, and stifled them all under a suffocating blanket of Art.
</p>
<p>    The earth didn&#8217;t move very far under the Japan America Theater during the most recent Green Umbrella concert, but it quivered agreeably in place even so. Donald Crockett led his USC Contemporary Music Ensemble in a nicely varied program that included intricate, responsible music by Crockett himself and his faculty colleague Stephen Hartke. There was, as well, a nicely designed, exceptionally attractive work called Labyrinth by another academic not yet known here but obviously deserving: Indiana University‘s David Dzubay; remember the name. At the end came Randall Woolf&#8217;s Motown-tinged Shakedown, the kind of easygoing modernness you put at the end of a new-music program to reassure audiences that they haven‘t been witnessing the end of the world. The three major music compositional outlooks hereabouts are easily distinguishable: UCLA for its marketable blandness, CalArts for its winnowing of art forms out of chaos and the avoidance of marketable blandness at any cost, USC for its academic solidity. Taken together, they offer fair reassurance that music will be around for a while.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>CARLISLE FLOYD&#039;S &quot;COLD SASSY&#160;TREE&quot;</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2000/04/carlisle-floyds-cold-sassy-tree/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2000/04/carlisle-floyds-cold-sassy-tree/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 17 Apr 2000 22:38:57 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Musical America]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=1843</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[(Premiere: Houston Grand Opera, Brown Theater, Wortham Theater Center, April 14, 2000. Future performances: April 16 (m), 19, 22, 25,28, 30 (m), May 6.) Life goes on, and so does Carlisle Floyd. &#8220;Cold Sassy Tree,&#8221; which brought a clearly  delighted audience to its feet at Houston&#8217;s Wortham Theater Center last Friday, is the fourth of [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>(Premiere: Houston Grand Opera, Brown Theater, Wortham Theater Center, April 14, 2000. Future performances: April 16 (m), 19, 22, 25,28, 30 (m), May 6.)</p>
<p>Life goes on, and so does Carlisle Floyd. &#8220;Cold Sassy Tree,&#8221; which brought a clearly  delighted audience to its feet at Houston&#8217;s Wortham Theater Center last Friday, is the fourth of his big works &#8211; of more than a dozen over-all &#8212; to be commissioned and premiered by David Gockley&#8217;s Houston Grand Opera; it is also the 25th brand-new work by anyone  nurtured into being by the company during Gockley&#8217;s leadership. It was a performance in Seattle of Floyd&#8217;s operatic setting of Steinbeck&#8217;s &#8220;Of Mice and Men,&#8221; says Gockley, that determined him to launch his own company with the avowed passion &#8211; 28 years&#8217; worth so far, and counting &#8211; for new and newer operas that has given it a unique position among worldwide opera companies.<br />
New and newer? That may need a little backing down in Floyd&#8217;s case. His first major score, &#8220;Susannah,&#8221; pushes on toward the half-century mark. A canny distillation of Pucciniesque bathos and grass-roots Americana; it lifted a burden of concern from audiences terrorized by &#8220;Wozzeck,&#8221; and announced that opera could, once again, be the people&#8217;s friend. So successful was (and is) this initial foray that the need for further stylistic development seems never to have occurred to Floyd. There are no surprises in &#8220;Cold Sassy Tree&#8221;; its composer, now 74, was born full-panoplied.<br />
As is his wont, Floyd wrote his own libretto, a free gloss on the late Olive Ann Burns&#8217; deliciously garrulous folk-portrait of life in the north Georgia village (hard by Floyd&#8217;s own South Carolina hometown) where once the sassafras trees turned cold. His own words well capture the novel&#8217;s brimming talky-talk; his own musical craftiness shows. He has changed the name of the book&#8217;s leading character from Blakeslee to Lattimore. It makes for a better rhythm.<br />
Floyd&#8217;s &#8220;Cold Sassy Tree&#8221; is, then, a work of sureness and craft. Of eloquence there is far less. In between the big choral numbers in a manner little changed since &#8220;Floradora&#8221; the action moves in a kind of parlando, now and then cresting in a shapely cadence, then subsiding. There are splendid happenings; old Rucker Lattimore, implausibly married to Love Simpson half his age, finds the love in her after all. Shunned by the town&#8217;s uppity churchgoers, the old codger conducts a hellfire sermon at home. Grandson Will tells his sweetie what&#8217;s inside him,  but it runs cold in its music, and not a bit sassy.<br />
The opera runs long , an unconscionable 3 1/4 hours on opening night; whole scenes could easily be lost, except for the impression you get that Floyd has promised a Big Aria to every cast member of whatever worth. There is good work: a glorious roar or two from Dean Peterson as old Rucker, Patricia Racette&#8217;s appealing Love Simpson. John McVeigh, attractively light-voiced the way Broadway juveniles used to sound before body mikes, carries forward the bulk of the narrative, spoken and sung.  Patrick Summers&#8217;s conducting delivers a fine load of sass; Michael Yeargan&#8217;s sets and costumes radiate authenticity and charm. Australia&#8217;s Bruce Beresford, whose &#8220;Driving Miss Daisy&#8221; proved his surefootedness in the rural South, continues his invasion of the operatic world &#8211; with results a fair piece more commendable than his Hollywoodized &#8220;Rigoletto&#8221; in Los Angeles last month.<br />
Okay, it&#8217;s another Carlisle Floyd opera, no better and probably no worse. It wants terribly to be loved, and there&#8217;s nothing about it that you can&#8217;t at least like. It will make the rounds, and folks will stand and cheer and decide that modern opera isn&#8217;t so bad after all. And Wonder will keep on making bread.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>“LA RONDINE”&#160;REVIEW</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2000/04/%e2%80%9cla-rondine%e2%80%9d-review/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2000/04/%e2%80%9cla-rondine%e2%80%9d-review/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sun, 16 Apr 2000 22:49:20 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Musical America]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=1863</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Times were, when a serious opera was considered properly staged when the time-and-place coincided with the libretto’s stipulation, and the words and music coincided with the composer’s final view of the work. Consider, now, these three productions by the Los Angeles Opera during its current season: a “Hansel and Gretel” with the moppets at large [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Times were, when a serious opera was considered properly staged when the time-and-place coincided with the libretto’s stipulation, and the words and music coincided with the composer’s final view of the work. Consider, now, these three productions by the Los Angeles Opera during its current season: a “Hansel and Gretel” with the moppets at large in New York’s Central Park; a “Rigoletto” set among Hollywood studio execs, with the title character identified as “an agent”; and now, a distortion of Puccini’s “La Rondine” in which Magda, the reformed-prostitute heroine, denounced by her one true lover upon his learning The Awful Truth, no longer faces up sadly but acceptingly  to life’s ironies but instead drowns herself in a convenient nearby ocean. If you want to guess whether the company’s final seasonal offing, Britten’s “Billy Budd” will take place, as proper, on the HMS Indomitable or the Starship Enterprise, you’re on your own.<br />
This redux “Rondine” is the concoction of Marta Domingo, about to assume her place as dynasty den-mother when husband Plácido assumes command of the L.A. Opera in June. The production was first seen at the Bonn Opera in 1995, and moved thence to the Washington Opera, the other outpost in the Domingo domain. In a published statement Marta Domingo avows a certain disquiet about the opera’s ending – which Puccini himself had struggled to achieve, to his ultimate satisfaction, after a couple of sidetracks. Rummaging in Puccini’s discards, she found an earlier ending that does include the scene of denunciation; the suicide, however, is her own gloss, and designer Michael Scott has given her a dandy tidal wave.<br />
Marta’s diggings also turned up a discarded first-act aria for Ruggero, the romantic hero, which she spatchcocked into the performance although it lies out of range of tenor Marcus Haddock, and some scraps of insignificant duet material for Magda and her most recent sugar-daddy. The questions, therefore, are these: at what point in the creation of a performance are the producers exempt from the composer’s final intentions? and does marriage to an eminent tenor/impresario serve to qualify an ambitious spouse (with less than a decade’s directorial experience and no particular identity as a Puccini musicologist) to superimpose herself upon those intentions? Otherwise put, does the Los Angeles Opera, upon the departure of Peter Hemmings on June 1, turn into a mom’n’pop operation for the Domingos?<br />
Marcus Haddock, as noted, had his problems (although he had sung the role in Washington). Carol Vaness has used the L.A. Opera on other occasions to practice taking on romantic Italian roles &#8212; for which she is unsuited by both voice and temperament – and did so once again. Emmanuel Villaume’s podium gyrations were great fun to watch, but lent little to the air of dispiritedness that overhung the evening. “La Rondine” may be the three-legged puppy among Puccini’s operas, but its charms can grow warm and lovable under proper treatment. This, alas, it did not receive in Los Angeles this past weekend.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Fiddlers&#160;Free</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2000/04/fiddlers-free/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2000/04/fiddlers-free/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 12 Apr 2000 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=292</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[In common regard, the violin concertos &#8212; even the last three, which are the most often played &#8212; are a violinist‘s throwaway pieces, the easy music at the start of the program before getting down to serious stuff. Last week, Hilary Hahn played No. 4, with Jeffrey Kahane and his Los Angeles Chamber Orchestra, at [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>In common regard, the violin concertos &#8212; even the last three, which are the most often played &#8212; are a violinist‘s throwaway pieces, the easy music at the start of the program before getting down to serious stuff. Last week, Hilary Hahn played No. 4, with Jeffrey Kahane and his Los Angeles Chamber Orchestra, at Royce Hall, as a teaser before Edgar Meyer&#8217;s louder, longer new concerto. Two nights later, Vladimir Spivakov played and conducted No. 5 at the Dorothy Chandler Pavilion with his Moscow Virtuosi, as curtain raiser for a mostly-Mozart program. In both cases I took home happier memories of these concertos than of anything else on either program. (They also made it harder to preserve any kind memories at all of Max Bruch‘s G-minor Concerto, despite Martin Chalifour&#8217;s honorable performance with Miguel Harth-Bedoya and the Philharmonic, which came between the other two programs and merely illustrated the sad state that violin concertos were to sink to in the century after Mozart.)
</p>
<p>   Common regard, however, risks our missing some miraculous happenings in these two concertos, which last week‘s performances drove home. The tricks right at the start of both works are astounding. No. 4 begins, like thousands of other works of its time, with a tune that&#8217;s nothing more than a fanfare, a D-major arpeggio up and down the scale that immediately &#8212; like far fewer works of its time &#8212; turns reflective, almost winsome. No. 5 also starts with an arpeggio, A-major this time, that later on turns out to be the accompaniment for the striding, grandiose real theme. Both concertos begin their slow movements with a Mozartian gambit that remained an earmark in later works as well: a theme that begins out in thin air as an unsupported single line, with the harmony kicking in only at the end of the phrase. (Listen to the opening of the K. 453 piano concerto for a wonderful late example.) The finale of No. 5 is famous, with its glorious intrusion of a ”Turkish“ episode that has the orchestral string players tapping out the rhythm with the wood of the bow; the last movement of No. 4 is no less remarkable, with its main theme broken into a real argument among players that never quite gets resolved. Both concertos end enchantingly: not with the expected big bang but with a final smile and a tiptoe offstage. So much for your ”throwaway“ Mozart.
</p>
<p>    Spivakov‘s program drew a large Russian-speaking crowd, most of it a ringer for your Aunt Minnie from Minsk and all of it apparently upset by the one contemporary work, the violin concerto (plus harpsichord) that Alfred Schnittke had fashioned out of one of his sonatas: strange, unsettling music with fascinating wide swings between mellow C-major triads and grinding dissonances. There was also more worthwhile early Mozart, but the wonderful A-major Symphony (No. 29, K. 201) was ruined by the conductor&#8217;s disinclination to honor the repeats or to mute the strings, as specified, in the slow movement. Isn‘t it late in the day to ignore such obvious guideposts in performing this kind of music?
</p>
<p>    Sooner or later someone will create for Hilary Hahn the concerto she deserves as the remarkably intelligent, dedicated violinist she has already, at 20, become. Edgar Meyer&#8217;s concerto, which Hahn has recorded and which &#8212; since she played it from memory &#8212; she has obviously been persuaded by whatever powers that be to take into her repertory, is not that work. Meyer is an admirable musical entertainer; he proved as much here the week before, with his pals Mark O‘Connor and Yo-Yo Ma, in another time-around in a sold-out Royce Hall of his country-fiddlin&#8217; wingding. (He has also proved even more honorable credentials, as has O‘Connor, in sit-ins with the Chamber Society of Lincoln Center.)
</p>
<p>   But the Appalachian stuff (Waltz the first time and, now, Journey) is already hybrid, Meyer&#8217;s proof of his ability to absorb the figurations and the manic pizzazz of the country-fiddling style (itself a hybrid into which old-timey Brit and Irish jig-time is stirred along with an occasional Latin dip). The technique is familiar, but the revered Aaron Copland of Rodeo and Appalachian Spring puts it to shame; the wrong notes of vintage fiddling clash with the wrong notes that Meyer throws in to establish his originality. By all odds, it‘s Yo-Yo, perhaps the greatest string player among us today, who sells the tickets, and we can&#8217;t deny him that. You get the feeling that he could be playing Appalachian hoedowns with one hand and Bach suites with the other.
</p>
<p>   Meyer‘s Violin Concerto, as did his Double Concerto (for cello and bass) last year, aims higher and plummets further. Its tunesmithing is of the almost-French-wistful-modal stamp; names like Gerald Finzi come to mind, hardly a role model. It goes down easily; alas, it stays down. On the new Sony disc it is paired with the Barber Concerto, which has never sounded stronger.
</p>
<p>   Give Meyer credit, at least; he knows how to write for the violin, and how to make violinists happy. And Wonder knows how to make bread.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Bach and&#160;Forth</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2000/03/bach-and-forth/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2000/03/bach-and-forth/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 29 Mar 2000 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=291</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[In another 75 years I might &#8212; just might &#8212; run out of things to say about Johann Sebastian Bach. Then again, I might not. The evidence is at hand that the Bach of 75 years ago &#8212; the Bach, say, of the footloose orchestral transcriptions by Leopold Stokowski and, for that matter, Arnold Schoenberg; [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>In another 75 years I might &#8212; just might &#8212; run out of things to say about Johann Sebastian Bach. Then again, I might not. The evidence is at hand that the Bach of 75 years ago &#8212; the Bach, say, of the footloose orchestral transcriptions by Leopold Stokowski and, for that matter, Arnold Schoenberg; of the lumbering, groaning sounds that passed for spiritual encounters in Albert Schweitzer‘s organ playing; the prissy rhythmic vagaries in Wanda Landowska&#8217;s performances on her oversize monster of an inauthentic harpsichord &#8212; existed on a different expressive plane from the Bach of Trevor Pinnock‘s ”Brandenburgs“ as delivered at UCLA&#8217;s Royce Hall last weekend. I also note with some trepidation that a ”world premiere“ recording now exists of the St. Matthew Passion in its form as it was first returned to the world, after a century of neglect, in the famous revival under Felix Mendelssohn: with a chorus of 400, re-orchestrated, cut to ribbons and otherwise romanticized to convince the Berlin burghers of 1829 that Bach was of their number. Have the record companies truly run out of music? Firmly ensconced in his unchallenged place in the cosmos, Bach moves back and forth in time.
</p>
<p>    This year we celebrate the anniversary of Bach‘s death (July 28, 1750), but last week&#8217;s birthday (March 21, 1685) sparked a busy few days as well. I was sorry to have missed the annual Bach Festival at the First Congregational Church, but not so sorry as I might have been if I hadn‘t attended the climactic event of last year&#8217;s festival and left midway in considerable anguish. (”When fa joins mi,“ a wise man wrote, ”the faithful flee.“)
</p>
<p>   The handsome domed space of the Second Church of Christ Scientist just north of USC &#8212; its paint flaking, its floorboards creaking &#8212; cries out for physical restoration to masterpiece status. It achieved that status, at least audibly, on a recent Saturday, with the Da Camera Society‘s ”Historic Sites“ presentation of the New York&#8211;based baroque ensemble called Rebel (accent on second syllable, named after an obscure French composer only now turning up on disc), which did great service to J.S. Bach by playing some of his own good music and some really bad music by others of his time. Included in the latter category was a comic piece by son Carl Philipp Emmanuel in which violinists ”Sanguineus“ and ”Melancholicus“ played weird and silly comic tunes at one another, and a ”Suite No. 5,“ clumsily written almost to the point of parody but which, however, some misguided scholars have attempted to ascribe to the good Sebastian. Two works by the ”authentic“ Bach, including the miraculous Suite No. 2, delivered the ultimate judgment on the preceding music. The flute solos, nicely played by Matthias Maute, circled like small, pure angels to bestow benediction on the vast surrounding space.
</p>
<p>   A day later, Trevor Pinnock and his English ”Concert“ (a legitimate variant, apparently, of the more customary ”Consort“) needed no sanctified ground to deliver their familiar benedictions: Bach&#8217;s ”Brandenburgs,“ all six, hovering endearingly in the Royce Hall air purified by their presence. All praise to the Brits &#8212; to Pinnock, and Roger Norrington, Andrew Parrott, the Tallis Scholars, etc. &#8212; for setting the sounds right in the world‘s vast and wondrous musical heritage. But is there something too clean, perhaps even bloodless, in the sheer exactitude of this meticulous, historically informed playing? One longs now and then for a little juice, for the oboe to sigh with audible pain over those miraculous dissonances in the First Brandenburg, for the flutes in the Fourth to giggle just a bit as they pace off their airy measures. (In a concession to acoustic problems, Jeff Kahane and the L.A. Chamber Orchestra had used the louder transverse flutes in their performance of No. 4 earlier this season; Pinnock used the stipulated softer recorders, and something was lost. Bach, after all, had no 1,829-seat house to deal with.) I had the feeling at times, in this generously laden afternoon&#8217;s worth of some of the best feel-good music the world has to offer, of being handed clean but empty pages, onto which I then must inscribe the wholeness of my own receptivity. Most performances at least provide hints. The ”Brandenburgs“ being what they are, however, I couldn‘t really begrudge the added task.
</p>
<p>    One further danger with these well-scrubbed, shiny-faced British performances is the impression they leave of an art form self-contained. Yet the overpowering strength of Bach, despite the neglect andor misrepresentation from ensuing generations, is the continuing hold his music has exerted throughout history and still does. No composer, not even Beethoven, challenges the strength of that hold. On Bach&#8217;s actual birthday last week, Leonard Stein took to the piano in the latest event in his ”Piano Spheres“ concerts to drive home just that fact. Two great works served to anchor his program, of almost exactly the same age but galaxies apart in style &#8212; the Sonata of Stravinsky and the Suite of Schoenberg &#8212; each a work of its time (the mid-1920s) and both throbbing with an inner Bach. In the Stravinsky you couldn‘t miss the crystalline, terse clarity of one of the keyboard toccatas; Schoenberg offered his homage to any of those haunting slow arias where the wayward right-hand melody floats toward infinity above the insistent left. There was all that on Leonard Stein&#8217;s program to engage (mostly with success) the pianist‘s 83-year-old fingers, along with diversions by Shostakovich, Birtwistle and the madcap Conlon Nancarrow, and, as final benediction, the Chromatic Fantasy and Fugue, in which Bach addresses his world in language more profound than it will ever fully comprehend.
</p>
<p>    The Piano Spheres series has been a distinguished addition to our concert life: five pianists every year, each in programs challenging and dangerous, including several commissioned works, in the lovely setting of Pasadena&#8217;s small Neighborhood Church, enhanced further by splendid Fazioli pianos brought over each time by the noble David Abell. Now David has given up the Fazioli franchise, which included cartage costs, and the loss of that sum is enough to put the concert series in jeopardy. Once again, virtue is in desperate need of reward.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>On My Mind, In My&#160;Face</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2000/03/on-my-mind-in-my-face/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2000/03/on-my-mind-in-my-face/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 22 Mar 2000 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=290</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[It is quite possible that I was the only unhappy soul, among 3,000 or so ecstatic well-wishers, who failed to recognize the San Francisco Symphony&#8217;s recent appearance at the Dorothy Chandler Pavilion &#8211; a.k.a. The MTT Homecoming &#8211; as a conflation of the Apocalypse, the Return of the Prodigal and a ninth-inning unassisted triple play [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>
<font COLOR=black>It is quite possible that I was the only unhappy soul, among 3,000 or so ecstatic well-wishers, who failed to recognize the San Francisco Symphony&#8217;s recent appearance<br />
at the Dorothy Chandler Pavilion &#8211; a.k.a.<br />
The MTT Homecoming &#8211; as a conflation of the Apocalypse, the Return of the Prodigal and a ninth-inning unassisted triple play at Dodger Stadium. Sure, the noises that night were pretty terrific &#8211; onstage and, at the end, among the helots out front. What any of this had to do with music, however, is the question I was obliged to face that night, and haven&#8217;t yet resolved.</p>
<p>
It had been 16 years, give or take a couple of weeks, since Michael Tilson Thomas had last led a concert at the Pavilion. In 1984 he was the Los Angeles Philharmonic&#8217;s principal guest conductor, while also playing footsie with other orchestras around the world. His legend in this, the city of his nativity, was already overpowering, dating back to the days when, as a beardless USC undergrad, he served as spark plug to the Monday Evening Concerts; he seemed to have a hand in every progressive musical activity in town. He was our Lenny, in other words; his career, like that of Bernstein, had skyrocketed on the fact of his having stepped in for an ailing conductor (William Steinberg, of the Boston Symphony) at a big-time New York concert. By 1984 there were no limits to his horizon . . .</p>
<p>
Except, that is, among a few unreconstructed grumblers who clung to the notion that great music making included a sense of respect for great music. Philharmonic honcho Ernest Fleischmann was one of these. During a guest-conducting stint here in the winter of &#8217;84, Tilson Thomas seemed driven by strange demons; there was a performance of the Beethoven “Eroica” that I&#8217;d like to forget but can&#8217;t, grossly distorted, showoffish, bratty. When it was over, so was MTT&#8217;s career with the Los Angeles Philharmonic.</p>
<p>
The Philharmonic survived, and so did MTT. The forces of destiny ordained the San Francisco Symphony connection, and it flourishes. Even the muse of architecture has smiled on the union; the rebuilding of Davies Symphony Hall, coincidental with MTT&#8217;s arrival, has endowed the orchestra with an acoustic setting of fearsome efficiency. Every whisper on the stage comes out smack into the audience&#8217;s face; there&#8217;s none of the usual leakage of sound into the wings. An in-your-face sound for an in-your-face conductor: Talk about marriages made in heaven!</p>
<p>
The Los Angeles gig suffered, as do all orchestras&#8217; tour performances, from the Pavilion&#8217;s less-friendly acoustics, but not by much. The program here was pure in-your-face MTT. Beethoven&#8217;s Fifth Symphony was the centerpiece, the requisite offering to the gods of respectability, in a reading full of impressive brass orgasms but curiously devoid of the inner energy that should create the breathless onrush in the first movement, and terrify the hearer with spooks and mutterings in the amazing third. (Much as I hate the thought of bracketing these two podium panjandrums, this kind of static, shapeless performance<br />
is also exactly the way Zubi conducts Beethoven.) Aaron Copland&#8217;s <i>Inscape </i>began the evening; John Adams&#8217; <i>Harmonielehre </i>ended it. Neither work particularly enhances its composer&#8217;s stature; both offer a conductor the chance, handsomely exploited by MTT that night, to raise the roof.</p>
<p>
Copland&#8217;s brief (13-minute) score also provided MTT the chance to chat up the crowd &#8211; at the pre-concert talk and again from the podium &#8211; with “Aaron &#8216;n&#8217; me” anecdotes. <i>Inscape</i>, dating from 1967, has Copland in a sad final attempt to come to grips with 12-tone writing and turning out &#8211; as in the previous <i>Connotations </i>and the <i>Piano Fantasy</i> &#8211; an academic exercise in managing a technique for which he had little real sympathy. Why did he bother? Better Copland exists, and better Adams as well. <i>Harmonielehre </i>dates from 1985. Since then Adams has deepened and enriched his style to the point where this 40-minute “Great Prairie of Non-Event” (Adams&#8217; words) seems like a canvas about to receive its first paint. Its orchestral noises are impressive, but we have heard them &#8211; better used, it breaks my heart to admit &#8211; in otherwise unrewarding works by Strauss and Sibelius. Why did MTT bother?</p>
<p>
The papers and the slicks want us to believe that the future of the symphony orchestra lies along MTT&#8217;s paths, and he has in fact accomplished a fair amount to rekindle the love affair of city and orchestra that I remember from when I bused glasses in the Opera House bar in return for standing room at concerts led by Pierre Monteux. But the current talk of the dearth (or death) of great conducting &#8211; the notion that salvation lies only in the slick surfaces of MTT&#8217;s musical visions, however high the stack of Grammys &#8211; seems premature, to say the least.</p>
<p>
Esa-Pekka Salonen will return soon enough; meanwhile, there is much to admire in the orchestra&#8217;s associate conductor Miguel Harth-Bedoya. Two weeks ago I heard strong, beautifully balanced performances &#8211; best of all the Dvorák Eighth Symphony &#8211; under Mark Elder, in a program that, by some quirk of scheduling, was given only once. Last week Franz Welser-Möst managed to keep me awake and interested in the full span of the Bruckner Sixth; I also admired the crisp, nicely balanced sounds he drew from the cut-down orchestra behind young Till Fellner&#8217;s bright, sensible reading of Beethoven&#8217;s First Piano Concerto. Earlier in the season I heard splendid music making under David Robertson and Yakov Kreizberg, and a ravishing account of the <i>Fledermaus </i>Overture (no easy work, that) under Manfred Honeck. Ingo Metzmacher and Adám Fischer come to the Philharmonic later this season. The phenomenal small dynamo Junichi Hirokami is listed among this summer&#8217;s conductors at the Hollywood Bowl. All this, in my book, counts as conduct becoming.</p>
<p>
IN SELF DEFENSE: Last week some words by me &#8211; not in this publication &#8211; were quoted out of context in <i>The New York Times </i>and made into a rave review of the L.A. Opera&#8217;s <i>Rigoletto</i>, and my phone has been ringing with “How could you?” calls ever since. I couldn&#8217;t, and I didn&#8217;t. In my day at <i>The New York Times</i>, we had to learn to read before they let us write.</font></p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Faceless&#160;Defacement</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2000/03/faceless-defacement/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2000/03/faceless-defacement/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 15 Mar 2000 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=289</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[The greatest of the romantic operas &#8212; the panoramas of lovehate, deceptionredemption, hearts broken and hearts aflame that drew the sellout crowds in Verdi&#8217;s time and sent them home singing the tunes &#8212; gleaned their life force from one basic plotline, the ages-old struggle between love and conscience. The slavey Aida casts goo-goo eyes at [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>The greatest of the romantic operas &#8212; the panoramas of lovehate, deceptionredemption, hearts broken and hearts aflame that drew the sellout crowds in Verdi&#8217;s time and sent them home singing the tunes &#8212; gleaned their life force from one basic plotline, the ages-old struggle between love and conscience. The slavey Aida casts goo-goo eyes at the warrior-general sworn to eliminate her father and his people. Spain‘s Queen Elizabeth struggles against the hots for her former lover, Don Carlos, who has now become her stepson. The jester Rigoletto collects his paycheck from the aristocratic philanderer he both abets and loathes. Time and place &#8212; plus considerable help from their music &#8212; make these conflicts plausible, so that in worthy performances we find ourselves sharing the very breaths of the stricken heroes and heroines.
</p>
<p>    We are separated from the Mantua of Verdi&#8217;s Rigoletto by hundreds of years; Bruce Beresford, in his first directing stint on the Los Angeles Opera‘s stage, may imagine that by transporting its characters and story to the contemporary fairyland of Hollywood&#8217;s movie industry he has brought the opera closer to today‘s audiences. He has actually done just the opposite. His recent interview in the Orange County Register reveals, probably more clearly than he intended, the fallacy behind his approach. “If you presented the same films to the public year after year, you&#8217;d soon be out of business. But the same operas keep getting produced . . . and directors feel obliged to reinterpret them somewhat.”
</p>
<p>   Therewith, the difference between the John Wayne rerun and the lasting majesty of Verdi, and between the couch potato and the opera-goer who realizes that the commanding passions in past masterpieces, when respectfully revived, will always have something new to reveal. “Bruce Beresford Transforms Verdi‘s Rigoletto” screams a headline in the program book, but the baloney he has created is an insult to the opera itself and to its potential audience. He asks us to accept as an act of responsible transformation the notion that partygoers at one of the Duke of Mantua&#8217;s (excuse me, “Duke Mantua”‘s) bashes will drop everything (Armani-designed pants included) to the strains of a sweet Verdian minuet; that calling the paid assassin Sparafucile a “stuntman” actually makes him one (although he performs no stunts and does commit a murder for hire); that even though the title character laments his life as jester and procurer, true to Verdi&#8217;s text, the scenario lists him as “an agent,” assuming that this will strengthen the bond between him and us yahoos out front.
</p>
<p>   Don‘t take this as a blanket dismissal of the practice of operatic updating. In 1984 the English National Opera brought over its English-language Rigoletto &#8212; first to Texas, later to New York &#8212; for which Jonathan Miller had devised a setting among Manhattan mafiosi that had the consistency that the Beresford version lacks. (Mark Elder was the conductor, by the way; more about him later.) Peter Sellars relocated Don Giovanni in a New York slum, and translated convincingly into contemporary visuals the impact that opera must have had on its first audiences. Both attempts damaged the works and betrayed their pristine creative impulse, but there were minds at work that had probed the vital juices in the original scores and reacted intelligently to those findings. I see no such quality in the mindless tinkering currently (through this weekend) on display at the Dorothy Chandler Pavilion.
</p>
<p>   What joy this Rigoletto affords rings clear and beautiful in the ear, even through Richard Hickox&#8217;s workaday conducting: the crystalline beauty of Inva Mula‘s Gilda (including a moment of sheer enchantment as she acted out her newfound infatuation, just before her gorgeously sung “Caro nome,” with sweet little girlish steps), the decent clarity of Frank Lopardo&#8217;s Duke, the occasional strengths &#8212; in between some disconcerting slips &#8212; of Haijing Fu‘s Rigoletto.
</p>
<p>    This wasn&#8217;t the only Rigoletto in town of late; on a recent Sunday afternoon I joined some 300 aficionados at the Casa Italiana (on Broadway just north of Chinatown) for a sensual reward that included a hi-cal sit-down dinner, raffles and door prizes (with impresario Mario Leonetti peddling tapes of his own singing, circa 1970) and, finally, something that called itself Rigoletto and occasionally came close. Maybe the opera can be sung and played more opulently; maybe a few more rehearsals and a few more strings in the orchestra could have pulled the enterprise back from constantly looming chaos. I have the feeling, however, that for every overpriced production at Rome or La Scala, there are dozens like this one across the Italian landscape, preserving their country‘s great lyric heritage as a sing-along folk art. You go for the pleasure of being part of a genuinely happy crowd, and every so often something else emerges, like a nightingale in the hen house, to make the trip even more worthwhile. The Duke in this mostly shreds-and-patches Rigoletto was a young tenor of elegant voice and superior musical sense with the unfortunate name of Donald Squillace (look it up). His remarkable performance included &#8212; for the first time in my experience &#8212; both stanzas of the murderous Act 2 cabaletta “Possente amor,” which most companies either omit altogether or cut in half.
</p>
<p>    Next: La Gioconda, June 4.
</p>
<p>    By one of those coincidences that defy explaining, another Verdi masterwork was in town that week, the Requiem, in a performance beautifully conceived and controlled in all but one respect under Mark Elder&#8217;s vibrant leadership, with the Master Chorale getting the words out with more than their usual proficiency and the Philharmonic &#8212; its strings properly seated for once (fiddles down front) &#8212; depicting the flames of Verdi‘s inferno burning high and bright. Three of the vocal soloists performed with zeal, brilliance of voice and intelligence of spirit: Metropolitan Opera mezzo Stephanie Blythe, tenor Marcello Giordani (the L.A. Opera&#8217;s splendid recent Faust) and Denis Sedov, new to these ears, an astounding 7-foot-or-so Russian bass.
</p>
<p>    The fourth, alas, was the soprano Alessandra Marc, beloved sacred monster to an addlepated few, enigma to the rest, who howled and screeched her glorious music, violated any sense of ensemble with the other singers and, near the end, belted out, fortissimo, squillace, the pianissimo, diminuendo high B-flat that should float like a final benediction over the 85 minutes of hair-raising drama that Verdi has unfurled into our welcoming ears. By what standard can such brainless performance values claim a place in the firmament of lyric art? (I‘m told Marc had not sung out at all during rehearsals, so that her antics must have shocked the conductor no less than the rest of us.) Did she entertain the barest conjecture of where she was that night, or what singing?
</p>
<p>   I rushed home and dug out my treasured GiuliniSchwarzkopf to reassure my offended ears. Eventually, sanity returned.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>The Uncle of Us&#160;All</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2000/03/the-uncle-of-us-all/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2000/03/the-uncle-of-us-all/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 08 Mar 2000 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=288</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[I smoked my first joint to the Beatles‘ Sgt. Pepper, and my second to George Crumb&#8217;s Ancient Voices of Children. The year was 1970 or thereabouts, and I was already pushing 50; I had been slow to ripen. These two works &#8212; the Beatles‘ urgency to inject their exuberant art into every cranny of the [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>I smoked my first joint to the Beatles‘ Sgt. Pepper, and my second to George Crumb&#8217;s Ancient Voices of Children. The year was 1970 or thereabouts, and I was already pushing 50; I had been slow to ripen. These two works &#8212; the Beatles‘ urgency to inject their exuberant art into every cranny of the hearer&#8217;s head; the small, still notes of Crumb, spread like star trails through vast and uncharted space &#8212; defined their time and still do, as Beethoven‘s ”Eroica“ and Stravinsky&#8217;s Rite of Spring define theirs.
</p>
<p>    George Crumb was in town late last month for three Philharmonic events &#8212; two concerts and a Sunday-morning QA with more music &#8212; to celebrate his 70th birthday (which had actually occurred last October). His onetime pupil Steven Stucky, who is now the Philharmonic‘s new-music adviser, surely had a hand in arranging the event. The crowds &#8212; gratifyingly, surprisingly large &#8212; seemed to include old codgers with memories contemporary with mine, and a fair number of younger codgers as well. I say ”surprisingly“ only because Crumb hasn&#8217;t produced much new music in the last few years and might have receded somewhat into the shadows. But the Kronos Quartet had performed Black Angels &#8212; their iconic work &#8212; here not long ago, and Dawn Upshaw had sung Ancient Voices; and so people remembered.
</p>
<p>   He‘s a phenomenon, this beaming figure in the tattered cardigan with the easygoing West Virginia twang, looking more like a favorite uncle just in from puttering in the barn than the sophisticated innovator who names Bartok, Ligeti, the poetry of Garcia Lorca and the ”singing“ of humpback whales among his inspirations. One of his big new pieces, the 1994 Quest for guitar and small ensemble (performed at the last of the Crumb concerts), weaves fragments of ”Amazing Grace“ into a texture that is otherwise wondrously, typically Crumb: the iridescences and delightful divergences that often hover at the edge of silence. Even more recent, and on a different scale altogether, is the precious little Mundus Canis, for a junk-instruments percussionist (Crumb himself at these concerts and on disc) and solo guitar, a set of portraits of Crumb family dogs past and present (four dachshunds and a bichon frise).
</p>
<p>   No composer I can think of, not even Webern, has been as adept as Crumb in devising ways of decorating silence. The ensemble for Ancient Voices includes a toy piano and a set of tuned stones; one movement of Music for a Summer Evening starts off with a contrapuntal exercise for two dime-store slide whistles. He has no qualms, however, about visiting the other end of the spectrum. One truly mighty piece, Star Child, enlists a huge orchestra requiring four conductors, with the strings seated away from the others for antiphonal effects, a speaking men&#8217;s chorus, a singing children‘s chorus and a soprano soloist, all delivering a ferocious trope that blends the ”Dies Irae“ chant into a retelling of the Massacre of the Holy Innocents. The four players of Black Angels &#8212; amplified string quartet plus a battery of gadgets to bang on &#8212; whip up an even greater racket, in tune with the sense of this 1970 work as an abrasive personal condemnation of the Vietnam War.
</p>
<p>   In the 40 years since formulating his stylistic decisions, Crumb&#8217;s musical language has remained remarkably consistent; he does not, in his words, ”see the need some composers have to redefine oneself with every new piece.“ Even so, there were no blatant repeats on the Philharmonic programs, with pianists Vicki Ray and Lorna Eder on hand to create an enchanted Summer Evening, and visiting guitaristproducer David Starobin for Quest and the doggy pieces. (His company, Bridge Records, has just released those two works plus Star Child.) The Philharmonic‘s Barry Socher led three colleagues in a Black Angels properly terrifying. Neither Ancient Voices nor any of Crumb&#8217;s other vocal works were included, but the miraculous Nonesuch version of the former work (plus Summer Evening) remains: music I regard as essential &#8212; an evaluation I would also extend to its composer.
</p>
<p>    Somewhere between expectation and actuality, some marzipan apparently got sprinkled over Anne-Sophie Mutter‘s Royce Hall recital program, and ended up with sweetness but not the expected light. Mutter, a violinist of sovereign skill and taste, has earned high praise from critics in New York and elsewhere on her current American tour for service to contemporary music. She has, indeed, inspired a number of important composers to create for her over the years, with results as close at hand as your nearest record store. Her Royce program two weeks ago was to include one of these, Krzysztof Penderecki&#8217;s Metamorphosen. It did not, however; the sunny-tempered but depressingly bland D-major Sonata of Prokofiev, simmered down from the flute-and-piano original, took its place, prettily played but so what? Before that had come an even worse case of simmering-down, the Suite Italienne that violinist Samuel Dushkin had fashioned for his own, not-quite-first-rate talents out of Stravinsky‘s Pulcinella. Arvo Part&#8217;s ubiquitous Fratres began things, its mysterious surface barely touched in the excessive gleam from Mutter and her colleague, the usually trustworthy Lambert Orkis. That left Shostakovich‘s Second Trio to provide the evening&#8217;s substance, with Orkis and the promising young cellist Daniel Muller-Schott, but with Mutter performing standing up and thus betraying the chamber-music balance musically, visually and psychologically.
</p>
<p>    Downtown at the Colburn School‘s Zipper Concert Hall &#8212; and have I told you what a fine small room this has turned out to be? &#8212; there was music-making last week more modest than the above, and in many ways more rewarding: the first of three programs by the violinist Margaret Batjer and the pianist Jeffrey Kahane, surveying Beethoven&#8217;s 10 violin-piano sonatas. (The others: March 15, 30.) Even by itself this first program constituted a survey: the very young Beethoven in his Opus 12, grinding out music bouncy but predictable; the master fully arrived in the Opus 47 ”Kreutzer,“ dazzling &#8212; perhaps even terrorizing &#8212; players and listeners with music of wild turns and mood changes. There was no high-salaried virtuosity here, but a sense of dedication to the music‘s own kinds of adventure. Kahane leads the L.A. Chamber Orchestra; Batjer is the current concertmaster. Together &#8212; as well as separately, on other occasions &#8212; they spell out some of the reasons this crack little orchestra is in such splendid shape.
</p>
<p>   Obiter Dictum: Rigoletto also happened, not once but twice; more next week. If you must have advance word on the L.A. Opera&#8217;s version, it‘s this: Go, but take along something to read.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>The Bear That Plays Like a&#160;Man</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2000/02/the-bear-that-plays-like-a-man/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2000/02/the-bear-that-plays-like-a-man/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 16 Feb 2000 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=287</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Hotshot gangster meets pure-at-heart Salvation Army lass; they kiss, they sing, they fall in love; at the curtain, the gang vows to abandon its evil ways. Guys and Dolls? Yes, but no. Twenty-one years before Frank Loesser&#8217;s snazzy musical won the delighted hearts of its first Broadway audience, another item, called Happy End, the fashioning [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Hotshot gangster meets pure-at-heart Salvation Army lass; they kiss, they sing, they fall in love; at the curtain, the gang vows to abandon its evil ways. Guys and Dolls? Yes, but no. Twenty-one years before Frank Loesser&#8217;s snazzy musical won the delighted hearts of its first Broadway audience, another item, called Happy End, the fashioning of the agitprop dramatist Bertolt Brecht and the multitalented composer Kurt Weill, suffered a somewhat less happy end: a mere three-day run at the same Berlin theater where their Threepenny Opera had taken off like gangbusters a year before. Why? Weill‘s songs were (and are) wonderful; the book (despite Brecht&#8217;s attempt to repudiate his work and to use the pseudonym ”Dorothy Lane“) not all that bad. Find out for yourselves when Happy End starts a two-week run in the galleries of MOCA‘s Geffen Contemporary, a lively kickoff to this year&#8217;s celebration of the Weill centenary.
</p>
<p>    No, it was the times themselves that wiped out any hopes of a happy ending for Happy End in its 1929 incarnation. Passionately in love with the Chicago of Al Capone and his gangsters, Brecht set the action in that toddlin‘ town; Weill&#8217;s music managed a fascinating synthesis of jazz and old-timey American hymn tunes. Did it matter that neither of the two had yet set foot in this land? Not a bit. In a Germany stirring to a demagogue‘s call for a regained nationality, a surfeit of American icons did not make for happy theater.
</p>
<p>   Worse yet, at the final curtain on opening night, the actress Helene Weigel, star of the show and Brecht&#8217;s wife, pulled a paper out of her pocket and started reading a full-blast, down-with-everything communist tract. The audience rioted; in a land fearful in the deepening shadow of Hitler‘s gangsters, there was less and less room for the freethinking Brecht or the eclecticism of Weill&#8217;s musical mastery. A couple of the show‘s songs &#8212; the heart-rending ”Surabaya Johnny“ for one, which more than a few trustworthy critics have dubbed the greatest of all theater ballads &#8212; were sneaked into print and recorded in 1929 by Weill&#8217;s wife, the legendary Lotte Lenya (who was never actually in the show). Happy End gathered dust until, thanks to the admirable proselytizing by the widowed Lenya to restore her husband‘s fame, Weill&#8217;s old publisher, Universal Edition, finally issued the score that had sat in its vaults since 1929. Lenya &#8212; her voice by her own admission ”two octaves below laryngitis“ &#8212; recorded the complete score that year, and the world found itself possessed of a brand-new wacko masterpiece.
</p>
<p>   Happy End had its American premiere in 1972, in Michael Feingold‘s splendid Englishing, an unerring mix of elegance and slang that exactly matches the substance of both words and music. That translation will also be used at MOCA, in a production that foretells mucho snazz: puppets intermingling with live actors and filmed cameo appearances by Mayor Richard Riordan and the one-and-only Angelyne (you know, the car). Sets, promises director Randee Trabitz, will move around to fill the entire 18,000-square-foot gallery space. Under music director Joseph Berardi, the Eastside Sinfonietta &#8212; formed in 1998 for the Brecht centenary &#8212; will be augmented this time with brass and piano. Soprano Weba Garretson gets to sing three wonderful BrechtWeill songs (”Lieutenants of the Lord“ and ”Sailor&#8217;s Tango,“ plus ”Surabaya“); actors Dan Gerrity, Elizabeth Ruscio and Chris Wells head the ensemble.
</p>
<p>   For more Brecht-Weill, the Museum of Television  Radio presents ”Threepennies and a Touch of Venus: The World of Kurt Weill,“ a screening series of selected American and European productions of their work, including Happy End, through March 19. See Museum listings for details.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>All&#039;s Well That Ends&#160;Well</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2000/02/alls-well-that-ends-well/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2000/02/alls-well-that-ends-well/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 16 Feb 2000 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=286</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[photo by Fredrik Nilsen Daniel Marlos HOTSHOT GANGSTER MEETS PURE-AT-HEART SALVATION Army lass; they kiss, they sing, they fall in love; at the curtain, the gang vows to abandon its evil ways. Guys and Dolls? Yes, but no. Twenty-one years before Frank Loesser&#8217;s snazzy musical won the delighted hearts of its first Broadway audience, another [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>photo by Fredrik Nilsen   Daniel Marlos
<p>
HOTSHOT GANGSTER MEETS PURE-AT-HEART SALVATION Army lass; they kiss, they sing, they fall in love; at the curtain, the gang vows to abandon its evil ways. <i>Guys and Dolls</i>? Yes, but no. Twenty-one years before Frank Loesser&#8217;s snazzy musical won the delighted hearts of its first Broadway audience, another item, called <i>Happy End</i>, the fashioning of the agitprop dramatist Bertolt Brecht and the multitalented composer Kurt Weill, suffered a somewhat less happy end: a mere three-day run at the same Berlin theater where their <i>Threepenny Opera </i>had taken off like gangbusters a year before. Why? Weill&#8217;s songs were (and are) wonderful; the book (despite Brecht&#8217;s attempt to repudiate his work and to use the pseudonym &#8220;Dorothy Lane&#8221;) not all that bad. Find out for yourselves when <i>Happy End </i>starts a two-week run in the galleries of MOCA&#8217;s Geffen Contemporary, a lively kickoff to this year&#8217;s celebration of the Weill centenary.</p>
<p>
No, it was the times themselves that wiped out any hopes of a happy ending for <i>Happy End </i>in its 1929 incarnation. Passionately in love with the Chicago of Al Capone and his gangsters, Brecht set the action in that toddlin&#8217; town; Weill&#8217;s music managed a fascinating synthesis of jazz and old-timey American hymn tunes. Did it matter that neither of the two had yet set foot in this land? Not a bit. In a Germany stirring to a demagogue&#8217;s call for a regained nationality, a surfeit of American icons did not make for happy theater.</p>
<p>
Worse yet, at the final curtain on opening night, the actress Helene Weigel, star of the show and Brecht&#8217;s wife, pulled a paper out of her pocket and started reading a full-blast, down-with-everything communist tract. The audience rioted; in a land fearful in the deepening shadow of Hitler&#8217;s gangsters, there was less and less room for the freethinking Brecht or the eclecticism of Weill&#8217;s musical mastery. A couple of the show&#8217;s songs &#8212; the heart-rending &#8220;Surabaya Johnny&#8221; for one, which more than a few trustworthy critics have dubbed the greatest of all theater ballads &#8212; were sneaked into print and recorded in 1929 by Weill&#8217;s wife, the legendary Lotte Lenya (who was never actually in the show). <i>Happy End</i> gathered dust until, thanks to the admirable proselytizing by the widowed Lenya to restore her husband&#8217;s fame, Weill&#8217;s old publisher, Universal Edition, finally issued the score that had sat in its vaults since 1929. Lenya &#8212; her voice by her own admission &#8220;two octaves below laryngitis&#8221; &#8212; recorded the complete score that year, and the world found itself possessed of a brand-new wacko masterpiece.</p>
<p>
<i>Happy End </i>had its American premiere in 1972, in Michael Feingold&#8217;s splendid Englishing, an unerring mix of elegance and slang that exactly matches the substance of both words and music. That translation will also be used at MOCA, in a production that foretells mucho snazz: puppets intermingling with live actors and filmed cameo appearances by Mayor Richard Riordan and the one-and-only Angelyne (you know, the car). Sets, promises director Randee Trabitz, will move around to fill the entire 18,000-square-foot gallery space. Under music director Joseph Berardi, the Eastside Sinfonietta &#8212; formed in 1998 for the Brecht centenary &#8212; will be augmented this time with brass and piano. Soprano Weba Garretson gets to sing three wonderful Brecht/Weill songs (&#8220;Lieutenants of the Lord&#8221; and &#8220;Sailor&#8217;s Tango,&#8221; plus &#8220;Surabaya&#8221;); actors Dan Gerrity, Elizabeth Ruscio and Chris Wells head the ensemble.</p>
<p>
 </p>
<p>
<i>For more Brecht-Weill, the Museum of Television  Radio presents &#8220;Threepennies and a Touch of Venus: The World of Kurt Weill,&#8221; a screening series of selected American and European productions of their work, including </i>Happy End<i>, through March 19. See Museum listings for details.</i></p>
<p>
<b>HAPPY END</b> | At MOCA&#8217;s GEFFEN CONTEMPORARY,<br />
152 N. Central Ave., Little Tokyo | February 23­27, March 1­5</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<item>
		<title>Heavenly&#160;Length</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2000/02/heavenly-length/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2000/02/heavenly-length/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 09 Feb 2000 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=285</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[I left the Paris Opera on a damp November night in 1983, bored out of my gourd. I made it to the last Metro with only seconds to spare, determined to spend the rest of my time on Earth avoiding any further contact with Olivier Messiaen‘s Saint Francois d&#8217;Assise, whose world premiere I had just [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>I left the Paris Opera on a damp November night in 1983, bored out of my gourd. I made it to the last Metro with only seconds to spare, determined to spend the rest of my time on Earth avoiding any further contact with Olivier Messiaen‘s Saint Francois d&#8217;Assise, whose world premiere I had just endured at considerable cost to both patience and posterior. Now a complete recording is available &#8212; four CDs on Deutsche Grammophon of a live performance from the 1998 Salzburg Festival &#8212; and with surprise and delight I find myself under the spell of every one of its 235 minutes of piercing, almost painful beauty.
</p>
<p>    Messiaen, at 75, had never before composed an opera. Even though Parisians were not exactly whistling his abstruse, convoluted music in the streets, he had attained regard as a revered and popular figure in a way that no American composer of similar stature &#8212; Elliott Carter, say &#8212; ever could. The press had conferred Major Event status on the new opera; it had become front-page stuff even in the tabloids. At the bar near my hotel, I was surrounded by people wanting a firsthand report, and I struggled to contrive polite answers.
</p>
<p>   Now I no longer struggle. In Paris, the spacious contemplations in Messiaen‘s loving pageant of moments in the life of the most human of all saints seemed to float unconnected to the drab staging accorded the work at the Opera&#8217;s Palais Garnier, with Seiji Ozawa conducting what sounded like a sight-reading orchestra. Peter Sellars created the 1992 Salzburg production, his staging consisting mostly of a vast array of video monitors; Esa-Pekka Salonen and the Los Angeles Philharmonic served as the pit band, and people who were there still rave about it. Kent Nagano and Britain‘s Halle Orchestra took over for the 1998 revival; the photographs in DG&#8217;s lavish booklet suggest that the Sellars staging was retained, although his name nowhere appears.
</p>
<p>   Whatever its look onstage, the full impact of Messiaen‘s opera lies in its music, and this the new recording splendidly serves, in the orchestral performance under Nagano and the presence of Jose van Dam (who has owned the role since the beginning) as St. Francis and Dawn Upshaw as the Angel &#8212; singing best described as saintly and angelic. From the recording you glean the extraordinary range of Messiaen&#8217;s unique blending of ancient chant into his own convoluted melodic manner, the diatonic simplicity of much of his harmonic practice, and the way in which a simple progression of old-fashioned major and minor triads takes on a blinding radiance from the flickers and glints in the orchestration. I remember the Paris audience stirring uncomfortably, with some booing mixed in, during the 45 minutes of Francis‘ sermon to the birds, the chirring woodwinds, an array of percussion culled worldwide and, worse yet, the keening of not one but three Ondes Martenots (the pre-synthesizer synthesizer that Messiaen favored to distraction). On home stereo the sounds are dazzling, the scene not a second too long.
</p>
<p>   I am not alone in deriving a certain discomfort from much of Messiaen&#8217;s music over the years, above all the mix of divine afflatus and human flatulence in the gesturing of much of his sacred stuff. Yet the composer of the Quartet for the End of Time and the orchestral Chronochromie &#8212; the one an affirmation of the purity of simple beauty, the other a demonstration of the expressive potential in pure complexity &#8212; cannot be set aside. It‘s tempting to look at Saint Francois as a summing-up for Messiaen: a 75-year-old creative spirit, far more acclaimed than damned, daring to assume a kinship with the noblest of all the saints who have trod the planet. It&#8217;s not an easy-listening kind of opera; Wagner‘s Parsifal, to which it is often linked, is downright frisky by comparison. Don&#8217;t wait for Saint Francois to show up at the Los Angeles Opera; the work is now at hand, at least, in the best conceivable format. It is magnificently served, and so are we.
</p>
<p>    Alexander Scriabin died in 1915, at 43; the world was thus spared his completion of the work he had dreamed about and tinkered with over his last dozen years. Mysterium, or so the work had been modestly called, was to unfurl over a week‘s time, part of a mystical ceremony that would elevate mankind to a higher consciousness. The performance would take place in a grand new temple to be built in northern India, with bells hung on nearby mountains. Death&#8217;s hand &#8212; in the form of an infected pimple that turned septic &#8212; stilled the project. All that remained were 58 unnumbered pages of sketches, some little more than doodles; if you think, however, that this paltry legacy has rescued the world from Mysterium, you don‘t know about Beethoven&#8217;s 10th Symphony, the Elgar Third or the uncomposed finale of the Bruckner Ninth.
</p>
<p>    Enter Alexander Nemtin (1936&#8211;1999), Russian composer of minor legacy, who came across Scriabin‘s bits and pieces in 1970 and immediately envisioned a glory of his own from the process of piecing them together, adding a considerable amount of his own glue over 25 years of ardent labor. The result, nearly three hours of a work that Nemtin titled Preparation for the Final Mystery &#8212; in three movements modestly titled ”Universe,“ ”Mankind“ and ”Transfiguration“ and enlisting the services of pianist, organist, solo soprano, mixed chorus (singing wordlessly) and orchestra &#8212; forms ”a single organism that lives and breathes, like an ocean.“ (These, at least, are the words of Julia Makarova, Nemtin&#8217;s widow, who collaborated on program notes for the new three-disc LondonDecca recording.)
</p>
<p>   Strange to relate, the results &#8212; with Vladimir Ashkenazy conducting the massed hordes and the pianist Alexei Lubimov (who has performed more interesting programs here) &#8212; turn out better than you or I might have feared. Up against the familiar horrors of Scriabin‘s own ”Poems“ (of Ecstasy or of Fire), some of this music is downright pretty, right up there with some of the better scores from movie music&#8217;s glory days. All the right things seem to happen: the rumblings of far-off phenomena, the cataclysmic outbursts as the Universe is hammered into shape by Forces far beyond, the ending as a single note (Scriabin‘s ”favorite“ F-sharp) hangs alone, amid distant bells. I cannot imagine sitting down and paying close attention to three hours of this golden glop, but in a world that supports the fraudulent virtuosity of a Yanni, and pays homage to the classical aspirations of a Paul McCartney, this kind of honest pretension takes on the gleam of a masterpiece.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Vintage Volts, Future&#160;Sound</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2000/02/vintage-volts-future-sound/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2000/02/vintage-volts-future-sound/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 09 Feb 2000 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=284</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Down in the depths of Lower Manhattan there stands the Knitting Factory, a dilapidated four-story walkup where Avon Products once stored its lipsticks and bubble baths, and, since 1987, a shrine where aficionados of multimedia now keep tabs on the arts of tomorrow and the day after. Affectionately and accurately thought of as ”the backstage [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Down in the depths of Lower Manhattan there stands the Knitting Factory, a dilapidated four-story walkup where Avon Products once stored its lipsticks and bubble baths, and, since 1987, a shrine where aficionados of multimedia now keep tabs on the arts of tomorrow and the day after. Affectionately and accurately thought of as ”the backstage of cyberspace,“ the Knitting Factory is where you go to hear music whose ink is not quite dry, and to marvel at the purposeful blur of the video image not quite in focus. A West Coast outpost is slated for a Hollywood opening come May.
</p>
<p>    On one night last month, however, the Knitting Factory‘s premises turned positively retro, with what was announced as a festival of ”classic“ electronic music. Composers on hand included such wired-music pioneers as Pauline Oliveros and Morton Subotnick, along with minimalist Tony Conrad &#8212; whose place in the experimental-music firmament has already been secure for three decades and more.
</p>
<p>   ”It was amazing,“ said Subotnick into his telephone a day or two after the concert. ”The crowd was the usual gathering of 20- and 30-year-olds, and I expected to be greeted with a little quiet respect as one of the new-music gray eminences. Instead, there were cheers. Dozens of people had brought some of my oldest music for me to autograph &#8212; Silver Apples of the Moon, for example &#8212; and not just the CD reissues. Most of them had the original Nonesuch LPs, in what looked like brand-new copies. Talking to some of them, I got the impression that lots of people these days are actually listening to this pristine electronic music for its content: not for drugs, not for Madison Avenue chic &#8212; just sober listening, the way we might listen to Brahms. This concert made me realize that electronic music has, in fact, been around long enough that we can talk about there being a history, a lore, a repertory of &#8216;classics.‘“
</p>
<p>   A recent anthology disc, Early Modulations: Vintage Volts on the New York&#8211;based Caipirinha label, offers a quick sweep though the wonderfully varied early years of the medium: from 1953 (a spray of bloops and bleeps from the Columbia-Princeton Electronic Music Center, whose equipment took up a whole warehouse on Manhattan&#8217;s West Side) through the musique concrete experiments in Paris, a John Cage ”Imaginary Landscape,“ past a delicious bit of the sampled voice of Max Mathews (clear progenitor of the creature on the phone who gives you the menu of push buttons), and ending in 1967 with an extended excerpt from Subotnick‘s Silver Apples of the Moon, an authentic 20th-century milestone.
</p>
<p>   By the time of Silver Apples, Subotnick was already an eager player in the fast-evolving electronic language. In 1961, he had joined hands with composers (Oliveros and Ramon Sender), dancers, filmmakers and beat poets to found the San Francisco Tape Music Center, the prototype of latter-day experimental beehives like Pierre Boulez&#8217;s IRCAM in Paris and anti-establishment performance spaces like the Knitting Factory. Programs at the Tape Music Center‘s cramped quarters on Divisadero Street became hot-ticket events. ”We had to swear everybody to secrecy,“ Subotnick remembers, ”so that the police would never know our address. We were sure they suspected us of doing drugs, which, by the way, we weren&#8217;t.“
</p>
<p>   The toy of choice at the Tape Music Center was Donald Buchla‘s ”Electric Music Box,“ an amazing package of circuitry that managed to squeeze the potential of the old monster synthesizer into a portable apparatus not much larger than a suitcase, that could be played live on the stage and could sit on a table in a composer&#8217;s lab. In 1966, Subotnick was commissioned by Nonesuch Records &#8212; then as now a model of enlightened programming and marketing &#8212; to create on the Buchla box music of symphonic scope. Silver Apples was the first result, followed soon after by The Wild Bull, both among the world‘s most acclaimed ear-openers. (Both works have been reissued complete on Germany&#8217;s Wergo label. True believers, however, prefer the Nonesuch LPs.)
</p>
<p>   To Subotnick, the fact that each LP disc of these works represented the totality of a musical composition, with no piano soloist or symphony orchestra acting as intermediary, demanded a drastic redefinition of the nature of music. ”If you picked up a recording of one of my pieces,“ he says, ”what you‘d have isn&#8217;t a recording of someone‘s performance; it&#8217;s the work itself, unadulterated, untouched by human hands until you tear off the wrapper.“ The next step for Subotnick, however, was to reverse direction and blend some kind of human element into this self-contained musical unity. The mechanism that made this both possible and practical was another miracle of space-squeezing: Apple‘s Macintosh, which came onto the scene in the early 1980s, replaced the room-filling mainframe computer now deemed prehistoric, and remains the handiest musical tool since the invention of middle C.
</p>
<p>   At California Institute of the Arts, where he had founded one of the world&#8217;s first electronic-music teaching facilities, Subotnick set the Mac to work to humanize the splendid spectrum of new electronic sounds he had fashioned. Among his colleagues at CalArts was the new generation of fearless performers &#8212; people like cellist Erika Duke, flutist Dorothy Stone and percussionist Amy Knoles, who still perform together as part of the California EAR Unit; with them he worked out a series of elaborate, throbbing ”ghost“ pieces in which live performance and taped electronic sounds would interact in relationships controlled by a computerized program. ”I used to think of myself as the Wizard of Oz,“ Subotnick says. ”There‘d be all this musical activity out in front, lines of counterpoint, tremendous virtuosity, but if anybody looked behind the curtain, there I&#8217;d be, alone with my computer, making it all take shape.“
</p>
<p>    Trying to keep track of Subotnick these days also demands a kind of virtuosity. Santa Fe is his home base; so is New York, and he has been known to look in on activities here as well. The best of his music has to do with combinations: computer-generated sounds interacting with live performers via ”intelligent“ software. His Key to Songs blends a live chamber ensemble into MIDI technology, and grabs at a Schubert melody for further leavening. His All My Hummingbirds Have Alibis, produced on a CD-ROM by the Voyager Company, surrounds one of Max Ernst‘s Surrealist collage works with a MIDI score and changes in sight and sound that the consumer can control at the computer. Two other computer programs produced for Voyager, Making Music and Making More Music, are ostensibly designed for children but have been known to enthrall certain older types as well (present company by no means excluded); you compose, you orchestrate, you mess around with harmonies, you work out convoluted counterpoints, you stay up late and miss deadlines.
</p>
<p>    You can think of these do-it-yourself programs, in fact, as a kind of return to the sense of those early LPs as a self-contained musical experience, but with a difference. Subotnick&#8217;s latest project is a software program whose working title is Gestures; the whole purpose of my words, in fact, is to get you to the bookstore at MOCA on Thursday, February 17, at 6:30 p.m., when he will be demonstrating his work-in-progress. ”Those early electronic pieces,“ he says, ”particularly Silver Apples, I see as a kind of chamber-music package for the home. Now I‘ll be getting back to that idea, but with all the extras that the computer allows. Now we can unwrap the package.
</p>
<p>   “Here&#8217;s how it works. The program will come on a DVD-ROM disc, which every computer will eventually be able to play, and which holds a fantastic amount of music, much more than a CD. You play the music, but you use your mouse to control what you‘re actually hearing. With your mouse you can change the location of the music in the space of the room. You can change the speed. You can change the relative intensity of the sounds, the way a conductor can change the emphasis of different instruments within a symphony orchestra. The computer can read your gestures, the way you&#8217;re actually using the mouse, and these gestures also affect the way the music occurs. On the screen, the animated story will also change as it relates to your own gestures. Every piece, therefore, and every image can become an infinite number of pieces and images.
</p>
<p>   ”My God, I just realized,“ says Subotnick, ”the Wizard of Oz has become a mouse!“
</p></p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Forgive and&#160;Forget</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2000/02/forgive-and-forget/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2000/02/forgive-and-forget/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 02 Feb 2000 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=283</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[THERE&#8217;S SOMETHING TO BE SAID &#8212; although I&#8217;m not sure exactly what &#8212; for the process of confronting the spirits of eminent dead composers with the less-than-eminent works that they themselves disowned or at least surpassed. Some will argue that latter-day stagings (whatever the cost) of Verdi&#8217;s early versions of, say, Macbeth or Don Carlos [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>THERE&#8217;S SOMETHING TO BE SAID &#8212; although I&#8217;m not sure exactly what &#8212; for the process of confronting the spirits of eminent dead composers with the less-than-eminent works that they themselves disowned or at least surpassed. Some will argue that latter-day stagings (whatever the cost) of Verdi&#8217;s early versions of, say, <i>Macbeth</i> or <i>Don Carlos</i> help us assess the stature of his later revisions. We cannot be truly moved by the Beethoven Ninth, others will claim, until we digest the banalities in his Triple Concerto. Sir Michael Tippett reaped his share of acclaim for the music he composed a decade or two after his early choral piece <i>A Child of Our Time</i>; therefore, to some musical minds at least, that justifies resurrection of the terribly earnest but hopelessly clumsy early work that sprawled across most of the Phil­<br />
harmonic program a couple of weeks ago, in a presentation as misguided as the work itself. Last weekend the Pasadena Symphony dug down into the mothballs and dragged out the 11th Symphony of Shostakovich, a blotch on the composer&#8217;s memory that would serve him far better unexhumed. That sorry excuse for a symphony, at least, fared better under Jorge Mester&#8217;s probing baton than Tippett&#8217;s mournful exercise had at the Dorothy Chandler Pavilion.</p>
<p>
You cannot question the impulse behind either work. On the one hand there is Tippett at 34 &#8212; card-carrying pacifist, deeply shocked by the rise of Nazism and specifically the &#8220;Kristallnacht&#8221; pogroms perpetrated in 1938 to avenge a young Jew&#8217;s murder of a minor Nazi official &#8212; moved to fashion a broad, humanitarian statement, an oratorio with Bach and Handel as role models but addressed to its own time and, therefore, drawing upon languages of contemporary tragedy: spirituals, Hebrew chant, blues. Then there is Shostakovich, older and battle-scarred from his struggles for self-fulfillment against official Soviet repression, his hand now strengthened by the death of his nemesis Stalin, cutting loose with this unruly venture, the worst by far of his symphonies before or after, a 65-uninterrupted-minute glob of orchestral poster art to honor the memory of a similar atrocity, the 1905 massacre of civilians by the czar&#8217;s legions at the Winter Palace in St. Petersburg.</p>
<p>
Okay, so both works (of exactly the same length, by the way) &#8212; and a long list of similarly undeserving revenants that I may get around to deploring one of these days &#8212; give off a certain aura that might pass for historic allure. The Tippett is a one-of-a-kind hybrid that seeks to mingle the accents of black gospel singing with Britain&#8217;s long-standing fetish for big, blocky choral music by the truckload; surely the possibility of mining multicultural gold occurred to whichever of the Philharmonic&#8217;s recent managements dreamed up the event. Two things got in the way. One was the prissy prosody in Tippett&#8217;s own attempt to re-create a gospel-singing style from an ocean away &#8212; as Virgil Thomson had managed so well, on more congenial turf, in his <i>Four Saints in Three Acts</i>. The other was the Philharmonic&#8217;s egregious goof in not booking an authentic, roof-raising gospel choir to sing along with Sir Roger Norrington and the folks onstage, perhaps energizing their music making a tad. Instead we got the polite, ecumenical accents of flat-out concert singers, the Gwen Wyatt Chorale, which blended seamlessly into the familiar mush of the Master Chorale and which, on its own, gave half a program of hit tunes about as authentically gospel as the Mormon Tabernacle Choir is baroque. Later in his career, by the way &#8212; best of all in his opera <i>The Knot Garden</i>, with its distinctive infiltrations of American and Afro pop and blues &#8212; Tippett achieved a far more artful reconciliation with the many musics of his world. <i>A Child of Our Time</i>, however, was not yet of his time.</p>
<p>
 </p>
<p>
THE SHOSTAKOVICH 11TH DESERVES SHELF<br />
space, I suppose, simply to avoid a possible blank in the numbering &#8212; although the symphonies of Schubert have survived a similar fate. I find the work just this side of hideous, its quotations of folk material positively lurid, its tendency to whiz past logical ending places arrogant and brainless. Its actual ending, of course, is unerringly designed for bringing down houses, and so it did: brass and the big drums up the bazooty, and everything else up to &#8212; and, for all I know, including &#8212; the panoply of white doves, Roman candles and the banners of the Four Freedoms. Jorge Mester and his Pasadena Symphony loom large among our most capable noisemakers; I came away on Saturday night with eardrums tingling, if somewhat bent.</p>
<p>
That was not, however, the week&#8217;s only Shostakovich. Two days before, we had the Ninth, infinitely cuter at less than half the length. Nobody has yet fully explained &#8212; and nobody needs to &#8212; the rationale of the work, with its sweet skitterings surrounding the fragile eloquence of its two slow movements, a curious follow-up to the blunderbuss-size (&#8220;large bore,&#8221; says Webster&#8217;s) Seventh and Eighth. Guest conductor Yakov Kreizberg &#8212; an impressive young guy with a clean, sharply defined podium manner that is also great fun to watch &#8212; shaped a nicely balanced performance of this work, and also of a brief, beautiful Cantabile for strings by Latvia&#8217;s Péteris Vasks, an interesting recent arrival on the scene and worth further investigation. (The Kronos Quartet has recorded some of his music.)</p>
<p>
Better than any of the above, however, was that program&#8217;s opening work, the Beethoven Violin Concerto in the hands of Hilary Hahn: a performance so wise, so beautifully proportioned, so immaculately delivered that I had to rethink all the sad thoughts I once entertained about this work (the blandness, the stretched-out slow movement, the trivial tunes in the finale). At her last season&#8217;s Philharmonic appearance, Hahn had also obliged me to rethink and upgrade my take on the Brahms Concerto, a work I have been known to deplore even more vehemently than the Beethoven. If it&#8217;s possible to repeat a revelation, that&#8217;s what this performance achieved. She&#8217;s a mere 20, this handsome, cool, wonderfully communicative musician who can explain with a stroke of her bow, better than all the tomes about music that you and I can read or write, the matchless joy of going to concerts.</p>
<p>
Do I gush? Find out for yourself on Wednesday, April 5: Hilary Hahn with the Los Angeles Chamber Orchestra at UCLA&#8217;s Royce Hall, with concertos by Mozart and Edgar Meyer. Top ticket $100 and, I&#8217;ll bet you, worth every cent.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Opera&#160;Velveeta</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2000/01/opera-velveeta/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2000/01/opera-velveeta/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 26 Jan 2000 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=282</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Comes a time when even the youngest at heart among the critical confraternity simply runs out of new ways of expressing the awfulness of Gounod‘s Faust &#8212; the drabness of its musical invention, its lurid insult to Goethe&#8217;s great poetry it purports to honor, its sheer arrogance in holding an audience captive for hour upon [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Comes a time when even the youngest at heart among the critical confraternity simply runs out of new ways of expressing the awfulness of Gounod‘s Faust &#8212; the drabness of its musical invention, its lurid insult to Goethe&#8217;s great poetry it purports to honor, its sheer arrogance in holding an audience captive for hour upon hour. My colleague and onetime protege Tim Mangan, now calling the shots at the Orange County Register, got it exactly right. ”If Gounod‘s opera were food,“ he wrote, ”we&#8217;d spray it from a can onto crackers.“
</p>
<p>    You have to admit, however, that a Faust snazzily produced, with lots of scenery and lung power, can be one Devil of a show, and on this premise you might like the current Los Angeles Opera revival, a production co-owned by the Chicago Lyric Opera and first seen here in 1994 &#8212; if, of course, that‘s the sort of thing you like. Christopher Harlan has staged a respectful revival of Frank Corsaro&#8217;s original production; it runs (if that‘s the word) through February 5. Never a man to shy away from the chance to seduce an audience with an overdose of stage biz, Corsaro loads his larger-than-life Faust with light-and-shadow tricks, prop tricks, people-props and people-prop tricks, all deployed around Franco Colavecchia&#8217;s larger-than-life scenery.
</p>
<p>   Then there‘s the Mephistopheles of Samuel Ramey, who currently and deservedly owns just about every diabolical role in the repertory &#8212; most of them far more interesting musically than Gounod&#8217;s tawdry tunesmithing. Marcello Giordani is the Faust, Leontina Vaduva the Marguerite, both (along with Ramey) in their L.A. Opera debuts, both capably loud, neither above an occasional wandering off the pitch, at least on opening night. The lively, appealing Siebel was Megan Dey-Toth, a member of the L.A. Opera‘s Resident Artist program; even her good work, however, couldn&#8217;t justify the restoration of her second aria, a pallid affair that any sensible producer would have cut and buried. At least we were spared the dreadful ”Walpurgis“ ballet; praise be for small favors. Philippe Auguin conducted, in his American debut, a nicely shaded, propulsive performance in, alas, a hopeless cause.
</p>
<p>    You don‘t, of course, need an immersion in Faust to point up the sublimity of The Marriage of Figaro. Still, experiencing both works on successive nights &#8212; I saw the second Figaro of four &#8212; demonstrated the vastness of the realm of opera. (And the visiting Beijing Kunju Opera Theater, which I had seen and thrilled to the previous weekend, extended that vastness beyond measure.)
</p>
<p>    Figaro was the latest in a growing list of great good deeds that have marked the development of Orange County&#8217;s Opera Pacific since the accession of John DeMain as artistic director and principal conductor two years ago. On a modest set dwarfed by the Segerstrom Hall stage, and with an orchestra similarly dwarfed in the pit, DeMain shaped a performance beautifully integrated, an evening of idealized chamber music without a single loose end or false note. Richard Bernstein, the Figaro, grows in strength and assurance every time he comes around. (He‘s next season&#8217;s Figaro, as well, with the L.A. Opera.) John Hancock was a forceful if somewhat young-looking Count. Christine Brandes was a twinkly delight as Susanna; Marie Plette‘s Countess was just a smidge below full color; the Cherubino of Rinat Shaham, hilariously agile and gorgeously responsive to the throbbing, adolescent passions of the role, won everybody&#8217;s heart.
</p>
<p>   I hope Orange County realizes what‘s happening in its midst: the emergence of an opera company for which no geographical apologies are necessary; the resident orchestra, the Pacific Symphony, also moving up; and a concert management &#8212; the O.C. Philharmonic Society &#8212; with the bravery and enterprise to bring in Chinese opera, contemporary chamber music, a whole range of new and old. From what I pick up in conversations around me, at Segerstrom and at the smaller Irvine Barclay Theater, where some of the high-adventure programming takes place, the old image of Orange County as a place for conservative dodos sequined and suited seems to be crumbling. There&#8217;s still work to be done &#8212; to discourage the white-haired matron who crumpled cellophane in Row L during the exquisite, ethereal ending of Susanna‘s ”Deh, vieni,“ and the depressingly large number who, during the heartrending forgiveness music at the opera&#8217;s end, found laff-provocation in the supertitles.
</p>
<p>   Oh well, you gotta start somewhere.
</p>
<p>    At the Irvine Barclay, the Beijing troupe performed a ”hits of the show“ program of scenes from a repertory that extends back four and more centuries: not the same as the enthralling, 18-hour Peony Pavilion that seems to have seeped out of its native turf despite official reluctance, but a wonderful foretaste. The ”orchestra“ of seven players banged and tootled on the side; the sets were simple and, when the drama demanded, transformable as if by magic. The acrobatics were, as expected, breathtaking, from the hurtling, tumbling opening moment through an evening far too short for its stock of the wondrous. The garish splendors captured in films like Farewell My Concubine were missing; the female roles were sung by women, not the tradition-ordained male falsettos and boys. Rather than rekindling memories of that splendid film, this troupe brought back something even more glorious, the visit here of Ariane Mnouchkine‘s Theatre du Soleil during the 1984 Olympic Arts Festival, and its performances of Shakespeare in Asian theatrical styles.
</p>
<p>    Will we ever see their like? Miracles can happen; after all, the Los Angeles Opera has announced, to open its next season, that most-often-announced, most-often-canceled of all great operas, Verdi&#8217;s Aida. See what a little faith can do?</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>A Complex&#160;Edifice</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2000/01/a-complex-edifice/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2000/01/a-complex-edifice/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 19 Jan 2000 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=281</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[By the end of the first millennium &#8212; around 999, say &#8212; California could boast a “politically stable, sedentary and conservative” population (Encyclopaedia Britannica, Volume 13, Page 327), with a strong sense of community that included avid cultivation of the arts. These early Californians built apartment complexes where several families lived in adjoining spaces, and [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>By the end of the first millennium &#8212; around 999, say &#8212; California could boast a “politically stable, sedentary and conservative” population (Encyclopaedia Britannica, Volume 13, Page 327), with a strong sense of community that included avid cultivation of the arts. These early Californians built apartment complexes where several families lived in adjoining spaces, and “sweat houses,” earth-covered proto-saunas that the males frequented daily. They also built communal, ceremonial performance spaces, holding several hundred participants who sang songs &#8212; some short, some lasting several days &#8212; about victories in battle and in lovemaking, accompanied by rattles, whistles and drums. The men and women managing these rituals functioned as a power elite, whose white deerskin clothes, adorned with such showoff items as hand-chipped obsidian knife blades, affirmed their social rank. In their lands near the present Santa Barbara, the nation of Esseles could have feasted on wild peccary, and so could the Salinans. (You can look it up.) According to theories as yet unconfirmed, they later underwent minor spelling changes and migrated to Los Angeles via Finland.
</p>
<p>    Some things changed over the next thousand years; some things didn&#8217;t. Today‘s ceremonial spaces are known as “performing arts centers”; while the music performed there seldom lasts several days, it often seems to. The aggregation of “rattles, whistles and drums” has evolved into the symphony orchestra, and while some will argue that this is an improvement, some will not. Communal ceremonies continue, notably in the annual “Messiah Sing-Along.” The place of performing-arts ensembles in society, the prestige assumed by their board chairpersons, and the skins and blades they employ to proclaim that prestige, remain about the same.
</p>
<p>    Construction began on the Disney Concert Hall last month: a link between millennia, forged in masonry and stainless steel. Its firm foundation is more than just a parking garage; its walls remain upright (or at whatever angle is prescribed in Frank Gehry&#8217;s marvelous design), bolstered by the widespread understanding that the arts are a good thing in the abstract, and an even better thing when expressed in structures tangible and visible.
</p>
<p>    The communal need for Disney Hall was never expressed in the abstract. Were there kinds of music that needed a different physical configuration than what the Dorothy Chandler Pavilion afforded? Will they be better off in Disney, which for all its imaginative design still preserves the implicit boundary line between performer and audience? (A real chamber-music hall, which the city does need, came and went rather early in Gehry‘s plans.) Were the Pavilion&#8217;s acoustical problems &#8212; not horrible, merely rather drab &#8212; so far beyond solving as to necessitate a new hall? (The relatively minor readjustment of the stage area, accomplished last summer, has already brought about noticeable improvement in the hall‘s sound. Perhaps more could have been accomplished along those lines, but no: Build We Must!)
</p>
<p>   Does Los Angeles need, want or even deserve a full-time opera house, which the Pavilion could now become? (Think back to the recent Hansel und Gretel, and a depressing parade of ailing shows prior to that one, and ask yourself whether this city&#8217;s fondest cultural aspiration is for more of the same, in a hall to contain it twice the proper capacity. The most interesting thing that happens in opera these days is the risk-taking in the way of imaginative stagings of repertory beyond the sing-along masterpieces. Even if the company‘s incoming management displays a passion for experiment so far undetected, how do you take risks with 3,000-plus seats to fill?)
</p>
<p>   The city is excited about the new hall, and should be. Gehry&#8217;s design &#8212; even if the final decision is to surface it in Grape Nuts &#8212; will draw crowds, which will include a fair number of ticket buyers, and that‘s all swell. But where are the announcements of the new works, the commissions (which surely should have gone out by now) to create an inaugural blast that will define how the new tenants regard their new playing field? What is to be their message of hope and cheer for an innovative future, as an orchestra, now hailed and envied worldwide, anoints a new century with its own dedication to adventure and integrity &#8212; and as classical music&#8217;s most sanguine supporters fight to save their art from the twin monsters of bankruptcy and banality? (Yes, banality. Read the reports of the two grandiose large-scale symphonies, by reputable young American composers, recently commissioned by Disney for &#8212; and played by &#8212; the New York Philharmonic, and you may want to keep your life preserver handy.)
</p>
<p>   Acoustic design being the variant of Russian roulette it has proved more than once, you may also check the lifeboats as the predictions of sonic splendor ricochet even before the cornerstone is laid. Right now is a good time to check out the history of Lincoln Center‘s early days. Philharmonic Hall, the first building to open (in 1962), confounded the prognosticators of acoustic glory by turning out a disaster; several make-overs have only brought the sound in the hall up to not-quite-disgraceful. The fiasco was the first intimation that Lincoln Center might actually be founded on clay &#8212; that a corporation boasting a couple of Rockefellers among its exalted ranks could actually falter in the realm of acoustic prediction. Within a couple of years practically every component of the cultural complex had been riven by firings, resignations, recriminations . . . whatever battle formats that the cultural elite, in white deerskin or white tie, indulge in when faced with matters that threaten their assumed immaculate powers. The saving grace was the fact that Carnegie Hall, which had been adjudged redundant as soon as Lincoln Center was conceived, escaped the wreckers&#8217; ball and survived triumphant &#8212; as, some four decades later, it remains.
</p>
<p>    I have no reason to doubt the projections of Disney Hall as a sonic marvel to match the splendor of its design, but I cradle my ancient ears in cotton every night to keep them in shape for “Judgment Day, the Disney Version.” I don‘t, in any case, envision the Dorothy Chandler Pavilion as a triumphant survivor. The recent sale of the Ambassador College campus does provide a glimmer of hope &#8212; however faint &#8212; for its long-lamented, acoustically splendid auditorium. But the buyer, Legacy Partners of Orange County, is in the realty business, not an enlightened concert management. It cannot have escaped its notice that the Ambassador campus &#8212; a handsome property handy to freeways, thriving Old Pasadena, museums, etc. &#8212; is a real estate bonanza like few others. Does an altruistic soul still exist, willing to maintain that fine performing space in its merited glory, rather than as a pile of condos?
</p>
<p>    Don&#8217;t hang by your thumbs on that one.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Boys and Girls&#160;Together</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/2000/01/boys-and-girls-together/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/2000/01/boys-and-girls-together/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 12 Jan 2000 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=280</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Robert Beaser isn&#8217;t what you‘d call a sublime composer, but in that one tiny scene at least he seems to suggest that he knows what opera is all about. His opera is the final part of Central Park, a trilogy of short operas by American composers &#8212; Deborah Drattell and Michael Torke are the first [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Robert Beaser isn&#8217;t what you‘d call a sublime composer, but in that one tiny scene at least he seems to suggest that he knows what opera is all about. His opera is the final part of Central Park, a trilogy of short operas by American composers &#8212; Deborah Drattell and Michael Torke are the first two &#8212; produced last summer by the enterprising Glimmerglass Opera in upstate New York, later by the New York City Opera in Lincoln Center, and now, in performances videotaped at Glimmerglass, scheduled for KCET next Wednesday (January 19). McNally, Wendy Wasserstein and A.R. Gurney provided the librettos. Drattell Wasserstein&#8217;s The Festival of Regrets reunites a mother and her estranged daughter during a Rosh Hashana ritual at the park‘s Bethesda Fountain; the TorkeGurney Strawberry Fields has a fantasy-possessed old woman finding sympathetic resonance among younger fantasists at the John Lennon memorial. Professionalism is everywhere; the idea &#8212; three contrasting works sharing a common and famous Manhattan setting &#8212; is clever enough. The presence of two remarkable singers particularly adept at portraying unhinged women at any age &#8212; Lauren Flanigan and Joyce Castle &#8212; wraps the venture in cloth of gold.
</p>
<p>   All that&#8217;s missing &#8212; but, alas, it‘s an indispensable ingredient &#8212; is the music that draws the listener into the drama of human interaction that opera can be, from Figaro and Susanna exchanging smoochy-poo to Isolde pouring Tristan the fateful mickey. All three of these operas build toward some kind of climax involving a lot of people singing at the same time. Only in Beaser&#8217;s work, however, is there any sense of using attractively varied dramatic material &#8212; a small crowd standing in as a cross section of typical springtime Central Park visitors &#8212; as subject matter for a convincing musical portrait. At that, the rest of Beaser‘s music, here and in other works I&#8217;ve stumbled across &#8212; he is, would you believe, head of composition at Juilliard &#8212; comes up as a sequence of punch-card tune-formulas. The whole trilogy, in fact, running a painless two hours, seems designed to assure an audience that it may be modern but it won‘t bite. The assurance works; Central Park was the New York City Opera&#8217;s hottest ticket last fall. Since the alternative next Wednesday night is Faust at the Los Angeles Opera, you might as well tune in.
</p>
<p>    You can‘t deny, however, that new American opera is hot stuff these days. At the Metropolitan Opera there was John Harbison&#8217;s musicking of Fitzgerald‘s The Great Gatsby, higher in cleverness level than the paltry trio across the Lincoln Center Plaza, but afflicted with the same syndrome of the impersonal tune-formula that gets us from A to B with little sense of how we got there or why. There is a streak of splendor in Harbison&#8217;s works; his Mirabai Songs, as Dawn Upshaw sings them on Nonesuch, have the enchanting, intense lyrical flow that I waited in vain to hear on the Met‘s Gatsby broadcast. There is an undeniable ingenuity in Harbison&#8217;s blending of unalike idioms: the jazzy bits that sound from afar, even from a prop radio, during the party scenes; the kicky way Harbison has fragmented Mendelssohn‘s “Wedding March” into the Plaza Hotel episode. Upshaw&#8217;s Daisy came over as a wondrous synthesis of Violetta and Salome; Lorraine Hunt-Lieberson, in her long-overdue Met debut, found the resource &#8212; not in the pallid tunes but within the magic of her own voice &#8212; to transmute the Myrtle Wilson character into towering tragedy.
</p>
<p>    For now, at least, Gatsby has its fling; next season it goes to Chicago‘s Lyric, in a swap for William Bolcom&#8217;s A View From the Bridge, which I wish I‘d heard and will someday. But then what? I discern a rather large trash bin, with its accumulation of tinsel and sawdust growing ever higher. Will anyone ever bother again with Corigliano&#8217;s Ghosts of Versailles, without the expensive glitz of its Met premiere? What happens to Previn‘s Streetcar as the initial fame fades and there is no longer a Renee Fleming for a larger-than-life Blanche? Has hope vanished &#8212; as it should &#8212; for the ghastly Fantastic Mr. Fox that our own company got saddled with last millennium?
</p>
<p>   Meanwhile, there were Jane Eaglen and Ben Heppner for the Met&#8217;s unforgettable Tristan broadcast, followed not much later by PBS‘s Marriage of Figaro telecast made miraculous not only by Cecilia Bartoli&#8217;s playing the eye game but also by Dwayne Croft‘s wonderfully urgent Almaviva. Such bygone treasures gleam ever brighter in the dusk of these contemporary befuddlements.
</p>
<p>    A year ago I listed Esa-Pekka Salonen&#8217;s LA Variations as music to be revisited during the next century; last week‘s “Green Umbrella” concert proved me right &#8212; the music itself, and its continued power to drive an audience (in Mark Swed&#8217;s matchless choice of word) bananas. Local pride may play a part; still, I don‘t know another new piece in which a complex musical language, masterful in its choice of “resting” points (a tuneful moment as plateau) but basically challenging to ear and intellect, can simultaneously engage a hearer&#8217;s emotions.
</p>
<p>    The program &#8212; all Salonen, including the enchanting Five Images After Sappho, sung by Laura Claycomb as first heard at Ojai last summer &#8212; was an extraordinary affirmation of the treasure we possess in Salonen  family, and the civic urgency in continuing their happiness here. The Philharmonic in Royce Hall, by the way, sounded like a million dollars. Why can‘t we just move that splendid building downtown and save a few Disney dollars in the process?</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Passion and&#160;Probity</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/1999/12/passion-and-probity/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/1999/12/passion-and-probity/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 22 Dec 1999 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=279</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Something in the air at holiday time impels me to write about Bach, and why not? Any one of his choruses shames the fraudulent warblings of the carolers on Muzak at the Mall. Any single fugue from his reams of keyboard music proclaims respect for the hearer&#8217;s brain that violates the primeval pap of the [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Something in the air at holiday time impels me to write about Bach, and why not? Any one of his choruses shames the fraudulent warblings of the carolers on Muzak at the Mall. Any single fugue from his reams of keyboard music proclaims respect for the hearer&#8217;s brain that violates the primeval pap of the ad writers and the telemarketers. Any triumphal blast from one of his orchestral adventures betrays the falsity of the glitz and gimmickry and the fear-peddling exploitations of the Y2K bogeyman that haunts the air around us these days. We need Bach &#8212; every day, but never more than now.
</p>
<p>    Alongside the Y2K trepidations is the awareness that 2000 &#8212; provided, of course, that we get there &#8212; is a Bach year: the 250th anniversary of his death, coming so soon after 1985 (the 300th of his birth), and 1950, 1935, etc. In 1935 the company we knew then as Victor Records issued a single Bach anniversary album (M-243, all you collectors out there!), a gathering of Leopold Stokowski‘s Wagner-size re-orchestrations of various Greatest Hits. The 2000 celebrations loom larger: The flood of complete box sets from several companies, bearing such solemnly simplistic titles as The Bach Edition, will probably require your adding another room to premises already burdened with such encyclopedic surveys as the 180-disc Mozart set from his last anniversary or the more recent mastodon releases of Artur Rubinstein&#8217;s Every Note on RCA and Philips‘ homage to everyone else in the pianistic realm. A massive pile of Bach from Germany&#8217;s Hanssler label, under the distinguished and watchful eye of Helmut Rilling, has already taken shape. France‘s Erato promises comparable mountainous rewards under Ton Koopman&#8217;s supervision. That country‘s Harmonia Mundi sends along a handsome down payment, a treasury of choral performances led by Belgium&#8217;s Philippe Herreweghe that includes the St. Matthew Passion and two box sets containing two dozen cantatas, plus one other disc which by itself epitomizes the triumphant joining of the summit of musical art of the past with the radiant enabling of contemporary technology.
</p>
<p>   That disc is a CD-ROM (French: cederom &#8212; don‘t you love it?) that comes as a bonus with Herreweghe&#8217;s new recording (his second) of Matthew. Slip it onto your computer (PC only, alas), and set out on an “interactive journey” through the life of Bach, the life of the Germany of his time, including musical matters in both the Catholic and Lutheran churches, a probing examination of the words of this one work &#8212; Bach‘s choice of biblical passages, and their cementing into a continuous text by Christian Friedrich Henrici alias Picander &#8212; and, most important, a “Visit Into the Heart of the Work.” By some technological wizardry far beyond my comprehension, the entire 161 minutes of Bach&#8217;s masterpiece, which in the rest of the album lies across three CDs, has here been squeezed onto this single disc, in such a way that you can instantly call up and compare specific passages from anywhere in the score &#8212; not quite in the spacious stereo of the full recording, but close enough. One chapter takes you through all the Evangelist‘s recitatives, so that you can trace the expressive outgrowth of Ian Bostridge&#8217;s miraculous, haunting performance. Another enables you to explore Bach‘s instrumentation from the inside: the interplay between the two choruses and orchestras. You want to hear some individual number &#8212; countertenor Andreas Scholl&#8217;s “Erbarme dich,” for example, which will surely break your heart? The music plays, and the words scroll &#8212; in three languages &#8212; across one of the disc‘s gorgeously designed screens. At the end, Herreweghe himself delivers a long, detailed and fascinating talk on the stylistic vagaries of Bach performance over the decades and, more to the point, the emergence of Herreweghe&#8217;s own attitudes: his 1993 Matthew, in which the concept of phrasing largely derived from the way the instruments played, and his 1999 version, where he has altered his thinking to accord with vocal techniques. His new greater sense of legato, he claims, comes about from his closer association with singers.
</p>
<p>   This disc forms an extraordinary appendage to a performance no less extraordinary. More to the point, the creation of such a program &#8212; like Harmonia Mundi‘s similar CD-ROM for Cosi Fan Tutte &#8212; assumes the continued existence of a public dedicated to the listening experience as participation, not merely a bath in sound. It&#8217;s the same assumption that goes into the best of those movie DVDs, with their outtakes and director‘s interviews and the chance, any day now, to hear John Wayne speaking French.
</p>
<p>    Herreweghe makes his American debut next summer at Lincoln Center&#8217;s “Mostly Mozart” series; his Harmonia Mundi discography is vast and mostly wonderful, ranging over the choral literature from Monteverdi to Faure and venturing as far afield as a Beethoven Ninth, sober and sensible. His take on Bach does, indeed, suggest a new emergence, a step beyond (or, perhaps, back from) the bristling clarity of performances we once hailed as “authentic” &#8212; Trevor Pinnock, Gustav Leonhardt, et al. The two boxes of cantatas (nine discs, priced as five) include the one work &#8212; No. 8, “Liebster Gott, wann werd‘ ich sterben” &#8212; that I gushed over a year ago (and will gladly do again anytime); it now comes in a box called Les Plus Belles Cantates, and it certainly belongs there. The set also includes a superb performance of No. 35, with Markus Markl&#8217;s winged playing of the great organ solo and Andreas Scholl for the vocal solos. And then there‘s the Cantata No. 78, with its duet for high voices that comes as close to out-loud giggling as anything in Bach. These aren&#8217;t “all the Bach cantatas you‘ll ever need,” to quote some recent promotional garbage, but they&#8217;re an excellent beginning.
</p>
<p>    We haven‘t exactly suffered choral deprivation hereabouts lately. Helmut Rilling, frequent Los Angeles Chamber Orchestra guest conductor, brought us Haydn&#8217;s The Creation in a lusty reading to stir the soul, abetted by a chorus of young voices from USC who sang as if they believed what they were singing. The even-younger voices of the Paulist Boys participated in the annual Messiah at Westwood‘s St. Paul the Apostle, with regular conductor Dana Marsh off on sabbatical and Martin Neary, recently of Westminster Abbey, standing in. The sounds were, as usual, resplendent; the reading, if more Westminster solidity than Westwood bright lights, still illuminated the power and the glory of Music&#8217;s Greatest Hit.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Grimm and&#160;Ghastly</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/1999/12/grimm-and-ghastly/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/1999/12/grimm-and-ghastly/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 15 Dec 1999 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=278</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[BY RIGHTS, HANSEL UND GRETEL SHOULD have been cast onto the discard pile generations ago. The opera simply doesn&#8217;t work. Some of the tunes by Engelbert Humperdinck (the First) are pretty enough to blend into shopping-mall Muzak; on the opera stage, however, they clash with the characters themselves, and clash more fatally with the fetid, [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><font SIZE=2>BY RIGHTS, <i>HANSEL UND GRETEL</i> SHOULD </font><font SIZE=2>have been cast onto the discard pile generations ago. The opera simply doesn&#8217;t work. Some of the tunes by Engelbert Humperdinck (the First) are pretty enough to blend into shopping-mall Muzak; on the opera stage, however, they clash with the characters themselves, and clash more fatally with the fetid, Wagner-tinged orchestration. The opera survives on its presumed appeal &#8212; open to question in this day and age &#8212; as a work for children. Yet the custom, observed to ghastly extent in the current Los Angeles Opera production, is to weigh the work down with extraneous &#8220;adult&#8221; gimmickry, starting with the transmogrification of the Witch into a drag queen &#8212; Judith Christin in the present version, Ragnar Ulfung the last time around at the Music Center, Anna Russell in a New York staging of fonder memory. A better idea, I should think, would be to hand the name roles over to singers of Wagnerian proportion &#8212; the cast of the Met&#8217;s current <i>Tristan und Isolde</i>, for example; then, at least, there could be some matchup between the characters and the orchestra.</font></p>
<p>
<font SIZE=2>At the Music Center &#8212; oops, I forgot; it&#8217;s now the Performing Arts Center of Los Angeles County, henceforth PACOLAC (take two at bedtime) &#8212; the Grimm Brothers&#8217; forest is now New York&#8217;s Central Park, in a pretty set like <i>Citizen Kane</i>&#8216;s snow globe. The &#8220;14 angels&#8221; are done up like guests on their way to a Jay Gatsby lawn party; the homeless Sandman has so far eluded Mayor Giuliani&#8217;s cops; the Witch&#8217;s cottage could pass for the Dakota Apartments, with an oven Julia Child might envy.</font></p>
<p>
<font SIZE=2>Okay so far? It gets worse. Everybody converses in English, then lapses into German for the tunes, or at least so we are told. Aside from Paula Rasmussen&#8217;s Hansel, who deserves better surroundings, the singing might as well be in middle-high Urdu. Are the kiddie audiences expected to crane their dear little necks to follow the supertitles, projected as they are high above the stage and difficult enough even for aging music critics? The company might be advised to install a few resident chiropractors for the rest of the run.</font></p>
<p>
<font SIZE=2>Enough; it&#8217;s a lousy show, riddled with poor judgments, soggily staged and conducted, a disgrace at a $146 top ticket. A couple of days before, I had taken in some far superior operatic merchandise: the USC Opera Workshop&#8217;s staging of Johann Strauss&#8217; <i>Die Fledermaus</i>, charming, delightfully directed, nicely sung in a comprehensible English translation, admirably faithful to the sight, sound and comic spirit of the original work &#8212; with tickets at a $10 top.</font></p>
<p>
<font SIZE=2>SCHUBERT LOOMED LARGE LAST WEEK: </font><font SIZE=2>the String Quintet in a stupendous performance on Monday, and the little-known chamber chorus <i>Gesang der Geister über den Wassern</i> on Zubin Mehta&#8217;s Philharmonic program on Thursday. The choral work, a setting of a Goethe poem lasting about 12 minutes and scored for eight male singers and a quintet of low strings, suffered from being triply inflated to fit the proportions of a symphonic program, and suffered even more as a group from the Master Chorale sang with the texture of a wet paper towel. Still, the remarkable shape of the music, with its chains of sideslipping key changes to mirror the dark chills of Goethe&#8217;s poetry, was an interesting addition to an interesting program that I&#8217;ll get back to in a minute.</font></p>
<p>
<font SIZE=2>The quintet, performed by four Philharmonic members, plus Lynn Harrell sitting in at first cello, was the week&#8217;s &#8212; or the month&#8217;s, or the year&#8217;s &#8212; miracle. The impact of this work, as I realized more than ever this time, is from its scoring for the two cellos: the throb as they restate and enrich the opening theme, their fierce drive through the development until the first theme&#8217;s return becomes an apocalypse, and the flashes of dusky flame as their pizzicatos surround the unstoppable flow of melody &#8212; sorrow and ecstasy improbably melded &#8212; that holds an audience breathless at the start of the slow movement. Harrell&#8217;s playing &#8212; and no less that of his partner, the young Ben Hong, whose every gesture mirrored his capture by his music, and of Martin Chalifour, Lyndon Johnston Taylor and Evan N. Wilson right alongside &#8212; shaped the drama and the passion as completely as any reading I have ever heard or could conceive. And that, from someone who once sat enthralled as this music was set forth by the Hollywood Quartet, is no small tribute.</font></p>
<p>
<font SIZE=2>This was the first of the Philharmonic&#8217;s new chamber-music series in the Zipper Concert Hall at the Colburn School of the Performing Arts, catty-corner to PACOLAC on Grand Avenue, which will alternate with the ongoing concerts at the University of Judaism&#8217;s Gindi Auditorium. Zipper &#8212; named after Herbert, the late, much-loved conductor and teacher &#8212; seats about 400, the right size for a chamber hall. The surroundings are handsome if you don&#8217;t look at all the busyness on the ceiling; more important, the sound is warm, friendly and clear, especially when they wheel out the school&#8217;s gorgeously resonant Fazioli piano. A hall this size has been badly needed; there was originally one in the Disney Hall plans. It&#8217;s good news that Zipper has already been heavily booked.</font></p>
<p>
<font SIZE=2>MEHTA&#8217;S PHILHARMONIC PROGRAM BE</font><font SIZE=2>gan with the notes (but not much else) of Beethoven&#8217;s Second <i>Leonore</i> Overture, went on to embrace the rich radiance of Anna Larsson&#8217;s singing of some expendable Brahms (the Alto Rhapsody) and wound up with the heaven-storming whoopee of Sergei Prokofiev&#8217;s <i>Alexander Nevsky</i> cantata, again with Larsson&#8217;s lovely delivery of the work&#8217;s one solo movement. <i>Nevsky</i>, I realize more all the time, is a one-of-a-kind piece. Many movie scores over the years have been reshaped into concert pieces, among them William Walton&#8217;s music for Sir Laurence Olivier&#8217;s <i>Henry V</i>, clearly influenced by Prokofiev. But the genius of Sergei Eisenstein and Prokofiev produced in this one work a confluence like nothing else in film and very little else in music. Even if you don&#8217;t know the film, the remarkable pictorialism embedded in the music becomes a multidimensional experience. Buy the video (laser disc, preferably) with the score newly reconstructed, and you&#8217;ll derive even more from this remarkable interweaving, which transcends the poster propaganda of the film itself and creates an artistic entity unique unto itself.</font></p>
<p>
<font SIZE=2>I don&#8217;t get to the movies nearly enough, but two recent films out of Hollywood caught my attention on musical grounds, a rare experience. One is <i>American Beauty</i>, with Thomas Newman&#8217;s score uncommonly participatory in the twisted emotional fabric of the film. The other is <i>The Insider</i>, whose score moves in and out of cognizance in a remarkable way, involving an array of pop tunes from here and there, but also music that I&#8217;ve recently raved about, with the saxophonist Jan Garbarek in some of his brain-rattling improv and participating with singers in music by, among others, Arvo Pärt. Somebody out there has been working with cleaned-out ears, and it shows.</font></p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>The Big Bang at the&#160;Bing</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/1999/12/the-big-bang-at-the-bing/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/1999/12/the-big-bang-at-the-bing/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 08 Dec 1999 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=277</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[THE FIRST THING TO KNOW ABOUT SOLO percussion concerts is that they are fascinating to watch, in ways that piano-virtuoso displays or trained-dog acts couldn&#8217;t begin to approach. The stage for Steven Schick&#8217;s three-concert &#8220;minifestival&#8221; in the County Museum&#8217;s Leo S. Bing Theater last week was a glorious display of noisemaking hardware, from the lordly [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><font SIZE=2>THE FIRST THING TO KNOW ABOUT SOLO percussion concerts is that they are fascinating to watch, in ways that piano-virtuoso displays or trained-dog acts couldn&#8217;t begin to approach. The stage for Steven Schick&#8217;s three-concert &#8220;minifestival&#8221; in the County Museum&#8217;s Leo S. Bing Theater last week was a glorious display of noisemaking hardware, from the lordly copper-and-brass circumferences of a quartet of matched kettledrums, to a gathering of wooden boxes and small ding-dingers set at rakish angles atop high poles, to a couple of small cacti that gave off feathery tones when stroked, to the bare chest of Schick himself, which, under skillfully massaging hands (his own), became all the orchestra needed for one whole composition. Composers of percussion music have to be skilled choreographers as well. It&#8217;s one thing to fill a stage with a gorgeous array of kitchenware; then you have to know how to move your performer from one gadget to the next without losing a beat. Schick&#8217;s concerts at LACMA proved that his awesome abilities include mastery of some very fancy footwork.</font></p>
<p>
<font SIZE=2>Music for percussion-and-nothing-but is relatively new to the Western concert repertory. Most of our music, after all, hangs on melodies and harmonies that enable listeners to find their place during the course of a composition, and to whistle what they&#8217;ve heard on their way home. Earlier percussion solos &#8212; the stupendous dialogue between chorus and timpani at the start of Bach&#8217;s <i>Christmas Oratorio</i> or the big bangs in the scherzo of Beethoven&#8217;s Ninth &#8212; made their stunning momentary impact, but real percussion music began in the hands of the American pioneers Henry Cowell, John Cage and Lou Harrison, whose inspiration came from their thrilled discovery of indigenous music of the Far East and whose tools consisted of resonant ironware (trolley-car springs, brake drums and the like) unearthed from California junkyards. That all happened around, say, the 1940s; now, finally, composers here and in Europe are building a broad and eclectic repertory. Schick has said that when he gave his first solo recital, in 1978, he could choose from just about a dozen solo works. Now the 18 compositions that he performed on these programs stand for a mere fragment of the available repertory. Schick &#8212; Iowa-born, early-40-ish, phenomenally talented and delightfully communicative &#8212; has been a strong catalyst, as have our own local heroes Amy Knoles and Art Jarvinen, luminaries of the EAR Unit.</font></p>
<p>
<font SIZE=2>I heard the first two of the three concerts; the prospect of a live performance of Schubert&#8217;s C-major Quintet further downtown proved an irresistible alternative to the last in the series. What I found especially fascinating in the two programs I heard was the distinction between the dabblers and the dedicated. There was Elliott Carter in the 1950s, for example, clearly fascinated by the newly proclaimed legitimacy of the new medium, trying his hand at short pieces for four timpani and turning out a couple of amusingly no-brain, predictable exercises in hootchy-kootchy rhythms at odds with everything else we know from this master of complexity. There was the 1995 <i>Watershed I</i> by Roger Reynolds, obviously delighted with a much more diverse collection of noisemakers, but putting them to paltry use in an agonizing half-hour of disconnected sound effects.</font></p>
<p>
<font SIZE=2>Better than either of these were two works of Iannis Xenakis &#8212; the <i>Psappha</i> of 1975 and the <i>Rebonds</i> of 1989 &#8212; which suggest that for this composer of fiercely driven, intricately structured music the move into writing for percussion was an act of liberation. Kaija Saariaho&#8217;s <i>Six Japanese Gardens</i>, delectable, quiet pieces that Schick had also performed at Ojai in 1997, proclaimed once again the wondrous spectrum of soft beguilements that lies deep in percussion&#8217;s world. And then there were the works of the enlightened madcap Vinko Globokar &#8212; the 1985<i>?Corporel</i>, which explores the resonant capabilities of the human body as self-sufficient percussion instrument, and the 1972 <i>Toucher</i>, delightful for reasons almost beyond the reach of words. Let me try some words, however: It&#8217;s a recitation &#8212; live, by Schick, in French (!), delivered in what you might call an elegant <i>hippe-hoppe</i> &#8212; of lines from Bertolt Brecht&#8217;s <i>Galileo</i>, including stage directions, accompanied &#8212; nay, illuminated to a blinding glow &#8212; by a full panoply of percussion. Any juggling act you may ever have seen pales to butterfingers against the magic of this live event.</font></p>
<p>
<font SIZE=2>Let it be noted, furthermore, that in a wise and unprecedented stroke of managerial enlightenment, these three concerts were free to anyone with legitimate student ID; the hall, therefore, was properly full. I do not advocate economic suicide as a lifestyle; still, considering the depressing size of the crowds at some of the best of the County Museum&#8217;s new-music offerings, installing this free-to-students policy as standard practice &#8212; for a year or two, say &#8212; might be a wise investment.</font></p>
<p>
<font SIZE=2>STUDENT-RUSH TICKETS FOR PHILharmonic concerts, on the other hand, have recently been pushed up to an unconscionable $15 (from the previous $10 that was already too high). A strong new management team takes over at the Philharmonic next month; building (or repairing) bridges to the student-age audience should take high priority. Surely last week&#8217;s concert, by some distance the season&#8217;s most imaginative and forward-looking program, should with proper managerial insights have done turn-away business with the same young-in-heart audience that had turned up at the museum concerts.</font></p>
<p>
<font SIZE=2>David Robertson &#8212; Santa Monica­born, Paris-based, ecstatically remembered for his concert here last season with the Ensemble Intercontemporain &#8212; conducted. His program was entirely drawn from this century but greatly varied even so: Charles Ives&#8217; <i>Three Places in New England</i> (the usual mix of radiant-beauty-plus-hokum); Witold Lutoslawski&#8217;s Cello Concerto with Lynn Harrell (arrogant, prickly, sheer genius); Leos Janácek&#8217;s Sinfonietta (genial, brassy bluster, but perhaps better off in Dodger Stadium than indoors); and one total stranger, the short Sinfonia by the late Netherlands composer Tristan Keuris, full of other people&#8217;s music &#8212; Ravel, mostly &#8212; with not much, at first hearing at least, to arouse interest in Keuris himself.</font></p>
<p>
<font SIZE=2>A program, in other words, for listeners with two ears and something in between, something to stay awake during and to discuss afterward, infinite refreshment after, say, the dank blanket of the Shostakovich Eighth as defused by Paavo Berglund two weeks before. Robertson on the podium is a bright, enkindling presence; at the pre-concert lecture he afforded some memorable insights into the thinking of a musician devoted to cutting-edge repertory. He and Steven Stucky carried those insights further at one of the Philharmonic&#8217;s valuable Sunday-morning &#8220;Surprising Encounters&#8221; at the Zipper Hall in the Colburn School &#8212; free three-hour talk fests including a buffet breakfast donated by heroic man-of-all-food Joachim Splichal. Again, however, the turnout was disappointing: a crowd of reasonable size but dwindling drastically after the first break, and noticeably deficient in the young ears that should be reached by the music of their own time &#8212; and who constitute our only assurance that a concern for today&#8217;s and tomorrow&#8217;s music deserves a place on the symphonic agenda.</font></p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>That&#039;s&#160;Entertainment</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/1999/12/thats-entertainment/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/1999/12/thats-entertainment/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 01 Dec 1999 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=276</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[A MILELONG TOY SHOP, A SELF-REFILLING box of Godiva chocolates, an entertainment both profound and giddy: Each of the above can pass as an accurate metaphor for any one of the half-dozen orchestral concertos by J.S. Bach generally but inaccurately known as the &#8220;Brandenburgs.&#8221; Compound that estimate by six, and you&#8217;ll come close to the [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><font SIZE=2>A MILELONG TOY SHOP, A SELF-REFILLING box of Godiva chocolates, an entertainment both profound and giddy: Each of the above can pass as an accurate metaphor for any one of the half-dozen orchestral concertos by J.S. Bach generally but inaccurately known as the &#8220;Brandenburgs.&#8221; Compound that estimate by six, and you&#8217;ll come close to the impact of hearing all of these magical exercises at a single sitting &#8212; the very miracle that transpired at Royce Hall a few nights ago, handed off in the able ministrations of the Los Angeles Chamber Orchestra and its multitalented, near-genius leader, Jeffrey Kahane.</font></p>
<p>
<font SIZE=2>Something not easily defined sets these concertos apart from the dozens of other orchestral works created at various times in Bach&#8217;s career. There&#8217;s a joyousness, an outpouring of inventive fantasy that leads to seemingly implausible sound combinations: one whole work scored only for low strings, another built around a pairing of a piercing high trumpet and the mild-mannered burble of an alto recorder. We tend to shy away from attributing an element of daring to Bach; he stands in the annals as the stick-in-the-mud who wrote in the accepted manner of his time, only better. Yet every one of these six concertos is some kind of step into unexplored shapes and sonorities; No. 5, for example, is the world&#8217;s first-ever keyboard concerto &#8212; the ancestor at some remove, in other words, of the Rach 3 and <i>Rhapsody in Blue</i>.</font></p>
<p>
<font SIZE=2>We don&#8217;t know the particulars of these works, beyond the information that they figure among the voluminous music Bach composed for his virtuoso orchestra in the court of Prince Leopold of Anhalt-Cöthen sometime before 1720, and that in 1721 he made a fair handwritten copy of these six works and sent it off to Christian Ludwig, Margrave of Brandenburg, in hopes of getting a better job at that illustrious court. The Margrave never acknowledged the offering; chances are that his own band wouldn&#8217;t have been up to the music&#8217;s demands. Later there were legends: that the music ended up as a butcher&#8217;s wrapping paper, or that the Margrave&#8217;s entire library was sold for 24 groschen; these stories belong on the shelf next to Georgie Washington&#8217;s cherry tree. Bach himself held on to his original copies, and even recycled some choice passages. If you think of the first movement of No. 3 as a fascinating study in string-ensemble busyness, check out its later version in the Cantata No. 174 (&#8220;Ich liebe den Höchsten&#8221;), where Bach has crammed horns and oboes in among the strings to create a texture busy to the point of explosiveness.</font></p>
<p>
<font SIZE=2>&#8220;Brandenburgs&#8221; come today in staggering profusion &#8212; nearly three pages of small print in Schwann &#8212; and in all sizes: full symphony orchestra, authentic baroque ensemble, even (shudder!) Max Reger&#8217;s version for piano duet. The version I grew up on (because there was no other) is still listed: Adolf Busch&#8217;s eloquent leadership from the concertmaster&#8217;s chair, modern winds, Rudolf Serkin&#8217;s piano. Jeffrey Kahane&#8217;s version incorporated wise compromises, including modern flutes in Nos. 2 and 4 in a room where recorders mightn&#8217;t carry. Tempos were on the brisk side, but such sublime moments as the exchange of dissonances between Margaret Batjer&#8217;s violin and Allan Vogel&#8217;s oboe, in the slow movement of No. 1, were granted time to raise goose bumps &#8212; as was Kahane himself, at a splendidly resonant harpsichord, in the astonishing cadenzas in No. 5. The sense, through all this rewarding evening, was of being present at the creation &#8212; not to be confused with being present at Haydn&#8217;s <i>The Creation</i>, which happens to be the next program offering by this valuable, cherishable ensemble.</font></p>
<p>
<font SIZE=2>AMONG MOZART&#8217;S 30 OR SO SONATAS for piano and violin there are childhood ventures of negligible worth and mature works large-scale and eloquent. In between comes one great work that I had forgotten about until a recent performance at one of MaryAnn Bonino&#8217;s &#8220;Historic Sites&#8221; concerts: a two-movement work in E minor (K. 304), terse and devastating. The music dates from 1779, the time of the death of Mozart&#8217;s mother and of the remarkable Sinfonia Concertante (K. 364) with its tortured, prophetic slow movement. Its key, E minor, bespeaks an elegiac state of mind; I cannot think of another E-minor work by Mozart, and only one by Haydn. Even its ending is unusual; minor-key works by classical composers usually swing around to the major at the end; this doesn&#8217;t.</font></p>
<p>
<font SIZE=2>In a room that seemed put on Earth to house loving and authentic performances of Mozart sonatas &#8212; Pasadena&#8217;s Le Petit Trianon &#8212; Stanley Ritchie and Steven Lubin, two-thirds of the splendid trio known as the Mozartean Players, turned Mozart&#8217;s tragic tensions into a chilling experience I cannot get out of my head. The program was altogether fine; cellist Myron Lutzke joined his colleagues for two Mozart trios. But it was that E-minor Sonata, tracing dark matters of the heart whose outlines we can only surmise, that remains with me these many weeks.</font></p>
<p>
<font SIZE=2>PAUL HILLIER EXPLAINS HIS CHOSEN title for his &#8220;Theatre of Voices&#8221; as a way to &#8220;explore the notion of a &#8216;theatre&#8217; where the scenery is the sound of voices and the action consists of words.&#8221; Good enough, and at the group&#8217;s recent concert at UCLA&#8217;s Schoenberg Hall, much of the amazement stemmed from just that &#8220;action,&#8221; the way, for example, the 14th-century Johannes Ciconia constructed his craggy, mystical-sounding vocal pieces out of the clash of words &#8212; of one text in spaced-out long notes doing battle with a troping, explanatory text zooming along at a rapid pace.</font></p>
<p>
<font SIZE=2>A stupendous concert, built out of music full of that kind of inner conflict, and then with musical styles clashing on another level of conflict: some amusing John Cage seguing into a couple of 12th-century bits, Arvo Pärt and Russian Orthodox chant conjoined, or John Tavener with Guillaume Dufay though 500 years apart. Hillier &#8212; who with most of his six-member ensemble is currently based at Indiana University &#8212; is an extraordinary musician on his own whose works are crowned with an adventurous spirit that delights especially in crossing uncrossable boundaries and making unworkable relationships work. All the world&#8217;s his stage.</font></p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>The Right&#160;Stuff</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/1999/11/the-right-stuff/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/1999/11/the-right-stuff/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 24 Nov 1999 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=275</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[While maintaining his official residence in the frozen wastes of Cornell University, Steven Stucky remains one of the major shaping forces in our local new-music scene. He served as the Los Angeles Philharmonic‘s composer-in-residence starting in 1988; four years later he became the orchestra&#8217;s new-music adviser. He has composed commissioned works for this orchestra and [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>While maintaining his official residence in the frozen wastes of Cornell University, Steven Stucky remains one of the major shaping forces in our local new-music scene. He served as the Los Angeles Philharmonic‘s composer-in-residence starting in 1988; four years later he became the orchestra&#8217;s new-music adviser. He has composed commissioned works for this orchestra and several others. Alongside Esa-Pekka Salonen he has planned, programmed and produced the “Green Umbrella” concerts, whose continued popularity most other orchestras might well envy; he emcees the pre-concert discussions with the visiting composers, and does yeoman work in keeping those talks sane and informative. His essays in the program books on the content of specific concerts, blended into more general thoughts on what it‘s like to play a part in the endangered world of the contemporary arts, need to be gathered into a book.
</p>
<p>    Stucky turned 50 on November 7, and received the deserved tribute from the Philharmonic: American Muse, a commissioned new work for baritone and orchestra, and a “Green Umbrella” program that included two works by Stucky and three others by composers close to his heart &#8212; his teacher, the late Witold Lutoslawski; a current student at Cornell, Joseph Phibbs; and one of the last scores by the late Jacob Druckman, a close friend and fellow prime mover.
</p>
<p>   There was a time when I found myself trapped in the mental set whereby the term “conservative,” in reference to a composer&#8217;s chosen musical style, was tantamount to the Mark of Cain. My duty, or so I once saw it, was to preach the gospel of liberation whereby the only right moves were steps into the unknown, and the greatest of sins would be to repeat what you or someone else had done once before &#8212; even if as recently as last week. I have come to realize &#8212; and Stucky‘s music was an important aid toward that awareness &#8212; that a composer&#8217;s chosen language is far less important than what that language is made to express. I like to invoke the criterion I found in Virgil Thomson‘s essay on judging a new work: “Is this merely a piece of clockwork, or does it also tell time?”
</p>
<p>   Stucky&#8217;s American Muse is, by accepted judgmental standards, a conservative work. He takes four American poems &#8212; by John Berryman, e.e. cummings, A.R. Ammons and, inevitably, Walt Whitman &#8212; each of them a precious small scene painted in elegant words, and transfigures those paintings up one level into suave, gracefully persuasive lyric lines for a singer (Sanford Sylvan) with a special gift for turning the English language into spun gold. Never merely a supporting accompaniment, Stucky‘s orchestra becomes a participant, a panorama of color onto which the words may dance. One trick might strike you as obvious: In the setting of Whitman&#8217;s “I Hear America Singing,” each of America‘s singers gets a distinctive instrument to sing along with. Any five composers might have come up with this trick; it is Stucky&#8217;s gift to carry it off with fresh surprise and delight at every twist. Never mind about “conservative” or “liberal,” “left” or “right”; this is music that tells time.
</p>
<p>    It had better be made clear right off that the King Arthur that brought Orange County‘s “Eclectic Orange” to a triumphant close last week has nothing to do with Lancelot, Guinevere or the Knights of the Round Table. John Dryden (1631&#8211;1700) served as poet laureate at a time when Britons needed reaffirmation of their national heritage after the turmoil years of the plague, Cromwell and the Restoration. His Arthur wanders through a world of staggering beauty, gorgeously reflected in Henry Purcell&#8217;s music. At the end the clouds part, the British shore is revealed, and Venus proclaims the work‘s best-known aria, “Fairest isle, of all isles excelling.” Obviously, Dryden earned his royal salary.
</p>
<p>    Purcell&#8217;s incidental scores for several of Dryden‘s plays are the only reason to attend to such jingoistic foofaraw; two years ago the Long Beach Opera dressed the PurcellDryden Indian Queen in mariachi drag, and that was all right. In the rickety old auditorium of Santa Ana High School, William Christie&#8217;s Les Arts Florissants, in their first-ever Southern California visit, did something different with King Arthur, but also exactly right, dispensing with most of Dryden‘s verbiage, substituting a paraphrase narration by Jeremy Sams, and offering the two hours of Purcell&#8217;s rich and fancy-laden music more or less intact but without scenery or costumes. A nine-member vocal ensemble, informally dressed, shared the dozens of roles, bolstered by a 16-member instrumental ensemble led from the harpsichord by Christie. Oh Lordy, it was beautiful; you had to be there.
</p>
<p>    Every operatic soprano makes her own kind of peace with the music of Giuseppe Verdi. Far rarer and more precious, however, is the singer with the innate, essential Verdi in her voice: the throb, the marvelous iridescence as the simplest, purest melodic line whose accents of heartbreak transfigure the stage and the audience as well. There was Licia Albanese in her prime, Leontyne Price, Maria Callas . . . who else? As Elizabeth Futral sang Violetta‘s spare, devastating lines of surrender and resignation in La Traviata&#8217;s sublime Act 2 duet two weeks ago with Opera Pacific at Orange County‘s Performing Arts Center, some tingling in my neck hairs told me that another singer had come to join those ranks.
</p>
<p>    Elizabeth Futral: In less than a decade the young American soprano&#8217;s career has ranged far and wide. Last season she was the Stella in Andre Previn‘s A Streetcar Named Desire at its San Francisco premiere, a role of high drama but musical impoverishment. This was her first Violetta, but she fulfilled the opera as though she&#8217;d lived in it all her life. Opera Pacific‘s Costa Mesa audiences are only slowly overcoming the Orange County image of cultural reluctance, but the crowd this time knew to stand and cheer.
</p>
<p>   On a handsome production borrowed from the San Francisco Opera, Linda Brovsky created a lively and genuinely provocative staging, from the crossed lines of social hostility among guests in the opening party scene to the chill grayness of the final scene. David Miller, the handsome, believable Alfredo, sang with a young-sounding voice if not yet fully supported; Louis Otey was the elder Germont, hearty of voice and sympathetic of manner. Best of all, the performance fairly glowed under the baton of John Mauceri, whose shaping of the opening prelude, even with an undernourished pit orchestra, gave notice of a careful, loving exposition of Verdi&#8217;s wondrous score. Traditional cuts &#8212; the second-act cabalettas for Alfredo and Germont &#8212; were opened, at least one of two stanzas each; the first-act backstage music was played backstage, as is proper but doesn‘t always happen.
</p>
<p>   As the Los Angeles Opera faces its iffy future under incoming leadership, 50 miles down the interstate there are signs of some healthy competition from the reborn Opera Pacific. So far, at least, so good.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>&quot;LA TRAVIATA&quot; AT OPERA&#160;PACIFIC</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/1999/11/la-traviata-at-opera-pacific/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/1999/11/la-traviata-at-opera-pacific/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Fri, 19 Nov 1999 22:45:14 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Musical America]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=1855</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Every operatic soprano makes her own kind of peace with the music of Verdi. Far rarer and more precious, however, is the singer with the innate, essential Verdi in her voice: the throb, the marvelous iridescence as the simplest, purest melodic line whose accents of heartbreak transfigure the stage and the audience as well. Licia [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Every operatic soprano makes her own kind of peace with the music of Verdi. Far rarer and more precious, however, is the singer with the innate, essential Verdi in her voice: the throb, the marvelous iridescence as the simplest, purest melodic line whose accents of heartbreak transfigure the stage and the audience as well. Licia Albanese had that command in her prime; Leontyne Price, Maria Callas&#8230; who else? As Elizabeth Futral sang Violetta&#8217;s spare, devastating lines of surrender and resignation in &#8220;La Traviata&#8221; &#8216;s sublime Act Two duet this past Thursday night at Orange County&#8217;s Performing Arts Center, one could easily recognize this radiant newcomer to the exalted ranks.<br />
Elizabeth Futral: in less than a decade the young American soprano&#8217;s career has ranged far and wide. Last season she was the Stella in Andre Previn&#8217;s &#8220;A Streetcar Named Desire&#8221; at its San Francisco career, a role of high drama but musical impoverishment; she has sung Lucia at the Met to considerable acclaim, taken on major roles in Chicago, Geneva and Munich, braved some of Philip Glass&#8217; dippiest music in his &#8220;Hydrogen Jukebox.&#8221; This was her first Violetta, but she fulfilled the opera as though she&#8217;d lived in it all her life. Opera Pacific&#8217;s Costa Mesa audiences are only slowly overcoming the Orange County image of cultural reluctance, but the crowd last week knew to stand and cheer.<br />
The company, founded in 1986 as something to occupy impresario David Di Chiera&#8217;s left hand while he ran Detroit&#8217;s Michigan Opera with his right, had slumped somewhat in recent years since its founder&#8217;s departure, but came to life late last season as newly anointed music director John DeMain (formerly the musical stalwart at Houston Grand Opera) came on with a spellbinding &#8220;Flying Dutchman.&#8221;<br />
The &#8220;Traviata,&#8221; which ushers in a fairly safe 1999/2000 playbill &#8212; with &#8220;Figaro,&#8221; &#8220;Manon Lescaut&#8221; and &#8220;Hoffmann&#8221; still to come &#8211; was anything but merely a routine go at a well-roasted chestnut. On a handsome production borrowed from the San Francisco Opera, Linda Brovsky created a lively and genuinely provocative staging, from the crossed lines of social hostility among guests in the opening party scene to the devasting grayness of the final scene. David Miller, the handsome, believable Alfredo, sang with a young-sounding voice if not yet fully supported; Louis Otey was the elder Germont, hearty of voice and sympathetic of manner.<br />
Best of all, the performance fairly glowed under the shaping baton of John Mauceri, whose shaping of the opening Prelude, even with an undernourished pit orchestra, gave notice of a careful, loving exposition of Verdi&#8217;s wondrous score. Traditional cuts &#8211; the second-act cabalettas for Alfredo and Germont &#8211; were opened, at least one of two stanzas each; the first-act backstage music was played, as is proper, backstage.<br />
As the Los Angeles Opera faces its iffy future under incoming leadership, fifty miles down the Interstate there are signs of some healthy competition from the reborn Opera Pacific. So far, at least, so good.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Noodle-Noodle&#160;Soup</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/1999/11/noodle-noodle-soup/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/1999/11/noodle-noodle-soup/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 10 Nov 1999 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=274</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Between the movie screen and the concert stage, traffic moves in both directions. During the month of October you could have watched two great bygone film classics, Carl Dreyer‘s 1928 silent The Passion of Joan of Arc and Tod Browning&#8217;s 1931 Dracula, being weighed down with latter-day musical concoctions by Richard Einhorn and Philip Glass. [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[</p>
<p>    Between the movie screen and the concert stage, traffic moves in both directions. During the month of October you could have watched two great bygone film classics, Carl Dreyer‘s 1928 silent The Passion of Joan of Arc and Tod Browning&#8217;s 1931 Dracula, being weighed down with latter-day musical concoctions by Richard Einhorn and Philip Glass. At the Music Center you could have heard that excellent aggregation of freelance musicians, John Mauceri‘s Hollywood Bowl Orchestra, playing indoors and unmicrophoned for the first time locally, in an evening&#8217;s worth of music from various Alfred Hitchcock masterworks.
</p>
<p>    The Einhorn score, which carries its own title and credentials &#8212; Voices of Light, an ”operaoratorio“ recorded in 1995 on Sony &#8212; has been given here before with Dreyer‘s film, at the John Anson Ford Amphitheater and also at UCLA. It turned up again last month in Costa Mesa as part of ”Eclectic Orange,“ the extraordinary and ambitious &#8212; if wildly variable &#8212; entertainment package, still going on, put together by the Orange County Philharmonic Society. I had seen the previous performances, along with the recently released DVD, and took this as license to forgo the mixed pleasures of I-405 at rush hour this time around. I find the whole thing distasteful, up to the borderline of sacrilege; you have only to watch the film in silence, capitulating to the staggering emotionality in just the face of Maria Falconetti&#8217;s Joan, to realize the redundancy of any kind of accompanying music, and certainly of the Technicolor pseudo-piety of Einhorn‘s gaudy creation. Dreyer himself had recognized the self-sufficiency of his film in silence, but reluctantly allowed that Gregorian chant might serve as the one permissible musical background.
</p>
<p>   Yet this perversion could pass for high and noble art compared to the goings-on at UCLA&#8217;s Royce Hall, the bloodletting inflicted upon Dracula, which Philip Glass has managed to convert from a fine old Transylvanian goulash to warmed-over noodle soup. ”Noodle-noodle-noodle“ went the strings of the Kronos Quartet (its first time here with its newcomer cellist, Jennifer Culp), with the composer at the piano &#8212; visible behind the screen and, thus, intrusive to the eye and the ear &#8212; as the warmed-over arpeggios and gurgles wound their way up and down the scale: generic Glass, only minimally responsive to the action onscreen. Browning‘s original shocker managed its bloodcurdling biz with no music except the mellifluous Transylvanian purrings of Bela Lugosi in the leading role. This latter-day upgrade only proves the rightness of Browning&#8217;s decision. At least the new DVD release, slated for December, gives listeners the option of turning off the music. The crowd at Royce Hall on Halloween night, caught up in the appropriateness of the celebration (and dressed for the occasion), wasn‘t so lucky.
</p>
<p>   At John Mauceri&#8217;s Music Center concert three nights before, the 10 minutes of his own arrangement of Bernard Herrmann‘s music from Psycho, preserving the eeriness of Herrmann&#8217;s scoring for muted strings alone, needed no onscreen help in scaring the bejesus out of everyone present. Arguably, Herrmann‘s collaborations &#8212; with Hitchcock, Orson Welles and Martin Scorsese &#8212; took Hollywood&#8217;s music to a level of seriousness, complexity and emotional intensity beyond the reach of his talented but more humdrum colleagues. Certainly Mauceri‘s program, with its share of corn and goo by Franz Waxman and Dimitri Tiomkin, offered no refutation to that argument &#8212; nor, for all its gesturesome rhetoric, did the deliriously awful Spellbound Concerto of Miklos Rozsa, despite the eager championing of pianist Scott Dunn. The orchestra &#8212; which, of course, isn&#8217;t an orchestra at all, but an ad hoc gathering to demonstrate the collective talents of the local freelance pool &#8212; sounded just fine. I know of a few so-called ”major“ orchestras that could profitably study the energy level of our locals.
</p>
<p>    The notion of a cultural kinship between the phenomena of serious opera and television talk show may not readily occur to the dedicated operaphile or couch potato, yet the considerable and delightful triumph of Mikel Rouse‘s Dennis Cleveland &#8212; most adventurous of all the ”Eclectic Orange“ offerings &#8212; is in the cementing of just such a relationship. Originally produced &#8212; and greatly acclaimed &#8212; in 1996 at the Kitchen, lower Manhattan&#8217;s shrine to the far-beyond, Cleveland‘s five-night run at the Orange County Performing Arts Center was enough in itself to transform that traditionally cautious venue into a hotbed of arts exploration.
</p>
<p>    Designer John Jesurun converted the Center&#8217;s small Founders Hall into a believable TV studio, festooned with monitors and logos, in which talk-show host Dennis Cleveland (Rouse himself) welcomed four couples of lovelorn misfits and set them to bickering among themselves in a dense, explosive counterpoint. Cleveland, meanwhile, moseyed around through the audience, several of which were also cast members, cued to cast further aspersions on the guests onstage and, in the process, to spill some of their guts into the studio monitors and out to the presumed-spellbound nationwide audience.
</p>
<p>   Maybe it‘s an opera, maybe something else for which no name has yet been coined; whatever, I found the sheer energy in Cleveland irresistible, exhilarating. The vocal lines &#8212; sung, spoken, sometimes yelled &#8212; ride on a throbbing, bubbling taped underpinning of hip-hop. The cast, each in hisher own way phenomenally adept at acrobatics both verbal and bodily, carried out their special battles in wildly veering rap-style ”arias.“ One of the planted audience members, Japanese performance artist Ryuji Noda, communicated not with words but with his harmonica, a nice musical touch, a gleaming, floating descant.
</p>
<p>   This season&#8217;s ”Eclectic Orange“ playbill has offered such diverse elements as Stravinsky‘s Oedipus Rex blended into the seductive doublethink of a filmed Leonard Bernstein lecture on that work, visiting orchestras from Moscow and Washington, a bluegrassclassical mix titled Short Trip Home, an evening of theater melding Canadian and Italian talent into a pageant on nothing less than the History of Mankind, and &#8212; still due, on November 16 &#8212; a first-ever local visit from Les Arts Florissants, the hot-ticket Paris-based baroque-opera troupe. The event&#8217;s sponsors, with media artist and impresario Dean Corey as spark plug, have their eyes on Brooklyn‘s multifaceted and greatly successful ”Next Wave“ festival as inspiration; so far, so good.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Past&#160;Presence</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/1999/11/past-presence/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/1999/11/past-presence/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 03 Nov 1999 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=273</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Mnemosyne is the Goddess of Memory, the mother (by Zeus) of the nine Muses, and the title of a magical two-disc release on ECM that might persuade you to discard all your other CDs and stay with this album alone. The performers are the four Brits of the Hilliard Ensemble plus the saxophonist Jan Garbarek [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Mnemosyne is the Goddess of Memory, the mother (by Zeus) of the nine Muses, and the title of a magical two-disc release on ECM that might persuade you to discard all your other CDs and stay with this album alone. The performers are the four Brits of the Hilliard Ensemble plus the saxophonist Jan Garbarek &#8212; those wonderful people who brought you Officium a few years ago, now back with more of the same and equally wondrous. The repertory this time is broader than on the previous disc, a haunting mix of ancient liturgy &#8212; Greek ritual, Hildegard von Bingen, Thomas Tallis &#8212; and music from folk sources as diverse as Estonian and Iroquois. Some manic genius has arranged the order of these pieces, which last anywhere from two minutes to 11, so that totally unalike music juxtaposed can seem to arise from a single unifying impulse. The abiding sense is not so much what you‘re listening to but how you&#8217;re listening &#8212; with your ears, with your gut and with everything in between.
</p>
<p>    Am I making complete sense? Probably not; I just played the set again, and so I‘m writing under hypnosis. Just a few seconds into the first disc, and you could already be hooked. A distant, throbbing harmony among the four voices resounds among the stones and pillars of an ancient monastery (Austria&#8217;s Propstei St. Gerold), whose ambiance the sound engineers have miraculously captured. Then, like a shaft of sunlight through a high window, Garbarek‘s sax proclaims an ecstatic descant, and this is answered in turn in a solo line by the ensemble&#8217;s countertenor David James. The music is a fragment from a Peruvian folk song, obviously created on a mountaintop, although the program note doesn‘t say so. (The booklet &#8212; handsome, in the usual ECM manner &#8212; delivers a higher level of relevant information, in the form of stills of seascapes and vast distances from Ingmar Bergman&#8217;s The Seventh Seal.) Much of the music consists of mere fragments from larger works, chosen and improvised around on the spot: five guys miraculously in tune with one another, journeying through a timeless treasury amassed out of many musics, ending up not so much merely shaking the dust from the music as entering into enlightened conversation with it.
</p>
<p>   I cannot, of course, proclaim that the one-of-a-kind performance art on these discs tears the veil of time from these ancient repertoires; you still need the Tallis Scholars and Anonymous 4, along with the Hilliards‘ many other discs, for the straight historical skinny on Hildegard and her pals. Mnemosyne is all about a latter-day state of mind toward an important part of our musical past, the state of mind that guided the hands of Hieronymous Bosch and the makers of those marginal grotesques in ancient prayer books, perhaps even the state of mind that brought the picket lines to the Brooklyn Museum last month: the timeless power of ancient art to generate new art.
</p>
<p>    Some other music performed recently hereabouts also relates to this timeless power. Two of the four works at the County Museum on the Monday Evening Concert by Xtet, that splendid group of local freelancers &#8212; IX regulars or XIII with guests &#8212; turned out to be attractive new paraphrases of very old music: Eve Beglarian&#8217;s Machaut in the Machine Age twisted a few new contrapuntal lines through the gnarled texture of a 14th-century chanson, a congenial trifle. Stephen Hartke‘s Wulfstan at the Millennium, a work of greater length and substance, used the outlines of liturgical pieces by the Anglo-Saxon cleric Wulfstan, of just about a millennium ago, as frames for new music that somehow manages to stay interestingly close to its ancient inspiration &#8212; in, for example, the antiphonal back-and-forth answerings in several sections. A lovely concert all told; it also included a wonderful work from the recent past too seldom revived: Vicki Ray as soloist in Manuel de Falla&#8217;s crisp, jaunty Harpsichord Concerto, with its slow movement that, secular in intent, nevertheless showed the hand of God.
</p>
<p>    Morten Lauridsen‘s Lux Aeterna began the Master Chorale&#8217;s concert at the Music Center, and rendered the ensuing Brahms Requiem redundant. Lauridsen, who teaches at USC, is what you would call in today‘s lingo a compassionate conservative. His best music, most of it choral, holds no more terrors than that great clod of Brahmsian turgidity and makes its points with far greater ease. Out front, it goes down smoothly; it&#8217;s also probably fun to sing &#8212; as the Brahms, I know from experience, is not. Much of the vital organism in Lauridsen‘s 25-or-so-minute piece is grafted onto old roots: bygone harmonic modes, an occasional cantus firmus of Gregorian origin, long passages in that archaic harmonic style known as faux bourdon that always makes you think of spires and domes and eternal light through stained glass. Its performance demands are modest, which serves the purpose of Paul Salamunovich&#8217;s pretty-good chorus and his only-fair pickup orchestra, for which it was composed.
</p>
<p>    If the Hilliards‘ and Lauridsen&#8217;s music evokes models from a millennium or so ago, those are the new kids on the block compared to the amazements concocted by Harry Partch, who came to the conclusion early on that music had taken a wrong turn around 1000 A.D., and that the only salvation lay in restoring the elaborate but eminently logical principles preached and practiced by the ancient Greeks. It mattered not, of course, that these principles have survived only as speculation; what mattered far more was that Partch went on to invent what he imagined as an evocation of the old ways &#8212; including a scale with a possible 43 tones as opposed to the familiar 12 &#8212; built his glorious instruments (out of glass, bamboo, tuned stones and assorted found objects) to perform his imaginings, and put them to work in music wacko perhaps but also irresistible beyond belief. His stupendous stage work Delusion of the Fury was first performed at UCLA in 1969 under the benevolence of the noble patron Betty Freeman, and recorded at the time by Columbia Records. Now that recording, unavailable for years, has been reissued on the Minnesota-based Innova label as part of its ongoing series of Partch discs, books and videos. Hallelujah!
</p>
<p>    Partch concocted his Delusion from a couple of folk legends, acted out on stage by dancers with occasional chanting, with his fantastic “orchestra” led by his longtime associate Danlee Mitchell. The sounds range from sozzled gamelan to boiler factory to the swoopings of great predatory birds; what holds the work together is its exuberant rhythmic sweep. If the music of Mnemosyne transports you into a happy trance, Partch makes you want to fly. Both recordings, it seems to me, are essential.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Grand&#160;Delusion</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/1999/10/grand-delusion/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/1999/10/grand-delusion/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 27 Oct 1999 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=272</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Around me at the Music Center, the crowd stomped and cheered. The forces onstage had aimed a dazzling rocket into their midst, and the sparks flew. Whatever the more substantial virtues (if any) of the composer Rodion Shchedrin, whose Fifth Piano Concerto got its first-ever performance at last week‘s Philharmonic all-Russian bash, or the pianist [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Around me at the Music Center, the crowd stomped and cheered. The forces onstage had aimed a dazzling rocket into their midst, and the sparks flew. Whatever the more substantial virtues (if any) of the composer Rodion Shchedrin, whose Fifth Piano Concerto got its first-ever performance at last week‘s Philharmonic all-Russian bash, or the pianist Olli Mustonen, the work&#8217;s dedicatee and soloist, they proved themselves masters beyond challenge in the art of crowd zapping. Think back to the concerto‘s final movement: 10 or so minutes of nonstop perpetuum mobile, jillions upon jillions of notes zooming dizzily up and down the keyboard, the pianist&#8217;s hands and arms weaving to and fro as if fashioning a batch of invisible taffy in midair; could anyone resist participating in the leaps and the whoops that greeted the perpetrators of this glittering slab of ear- and eye candy? What stunning reassurance was doled out that night!: that music by a living composer &#8212; the fearsome commodity &#8212; could uncoil its dreaded measures but still leave its hearers unscarred, even exhilarated, at the end.
</p>
<p>    Those familiar with Shchedrin‘s reputation as a composer of relatively unpresumptuous stature beside the musical giants of today&#8217;s Russia &#8212; not to mention the past masters Borodin and Stravinsky, splendidly conducted that night by Esa-Pekka Salonen as compatriot companions &#8212; should not, of course, have entertained qualms about this new work. Those who have raised an eyebrow (let‘s say) or downright deplored (more to the point) the overwrought musical and visual antics of Olli Mustonen on his previous visits might have readily surmised that this pianist and this composer were put on Earth to make music with each other. The new concerto is an occasionally appealing bag of tricks, many of them familiar but some worth repeating. The opening is Prokofiev redux, the thudding tread of the Love for Three Oranges music or the Second Piano Concerto, but nowhere the lyric elegance of, say, the violin concertos or the ballets. The slow movement struck me on first hearing as a turgid, gray wash; nothing in a later perusal of the score changed that estimate. But that finale &#8212; oh boy! There is music in the grand tradition of audience seduction, empty but masterful virtuosic rhetoric; it leaves you no time to catch a breath, or to realize the emptiness of it all. Being of a certain age, I let my mind wander back to a Friday afternoon at Boston&#8217;s Symphony Hall &#8212; 1943, wasn‘t it? &#8212; when a then-unknown young pianist named William Kapell stormed the barricades with a then-unknown piano concerto by a certain Khachaturian and, with music of comparable glitter and deficiency of brainpower, wrung cheers from that grandmotherly audience. The Messrs. Shchedrin and Mustonen delivered their massage to the same nerve endings.
</p>
<p>    From the Philharmonic&#8217;s new score I expected no more; from Laurie Anderson‘s night at UCLA&#8217;s Royce Hall I expected much more and was let down. I cannot dispute her life mission, which has always been to explain America to itself in selected bits and pieces, chosen and grouped with genuine wit and love and set to music of wonderful, broad fantasy. She has attempted exactly that in her Songs and Stories From Moby Dick, brought it off on a stage drenched in sea-swept imagery, but weakened its impact in music that is, for her endearing talent, a backward step. Just the beginning, a projected ocean backdrop where birds fly toward one another, then collide and disappear into the seam between the screens, is pure Melville, and that spell holds through 90-plus intermissionless minutes. But the songs ruin things; they are not the dark, cynical lyrics of the great early stage works, but a long list of short, pretty pop tunes, a musical gloss that actually conflicts with the terrific visuals of her piece. Last year at Royce, in a simpler but more profound solo work called The Speed of Darkness, Anderson redefined the role of the contemporary artist as that of “content provider.” To those who love her work, her new piece casts her as a provider of discontent.
</p>
<p>    I was repulsed by my first hearing of Meredith Monk in the 1970s, astonished by the sheer chutzpah of her tuneless gibberish, baffled by the outpourings of adoration in the capacity crowd around me. Since then she has waxed even mightier, composed operas, transfixed audiences worldwide. In the forlorn belief that I must be missing something, I keep going to hear her. Her concert at the Getty Center, given &#8212; for God‘s sake &#8212; as a part of the World Festival of (!) Sacred Music, again drew the usual pilgrimage, who provided the usual measure of adulation. I hated every minute. Someone please tell me what I&#8217;m missing.
</p>
<p>   At Glendale‘s Alex Theater, however, I heard some truly stunning singing from another musician, in her local debut: Pamela Helen Stephen, performing one of Benjamin Britten&#8217;s last works, the cantata Phaedra, with the Los Angeles Chamber Orchestra under guest conductor Richard Hickox (who just happens to be the singer‘s husband). This is strong, eloquent music; the text, from Racine&#8217;s drama translated by Robert Lowell, demands no less: to illuminate the tragic heroine‘s final rumination on her fate before her suicide. Janet Baker, who inspired the work, sang it here in the 1980s under Carlo Maria Giulini; Stephen&#8217;s impassioned, beautifully colored performance challenged those memories. She sings the Maddalena in the Los Angeles Opera‘s Rigoletto next March, again with Hickox conducting, a role far too small for the artist I heard at this concert.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Oprah as&#160;Opera</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/1999/10/oprah-as-opera/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/1999/10/oprah-as-opera/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 27 Oct 1999 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=271</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[AT 8, MICHAEL ROUSE CHANGED HIS FIRST NAME TO &#8220;Mikel&#8221; because, he says, he liked the spelling. At 15, he ran away from home &#8212; in the &#8220;boot-heel&#8221; area of southwestern Missouri &#8212; and joined a carnival. &#8220;I did all kinds of odd jobs,&#8221; he remembers. &#8220;I ran the carny tricks, handled the fake hoops, [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><font SIZE=2>AT 8, MICHAEL ROUSE CHANGED HIS FIRST NAME TO </font><font SIZE=2>&#8220;Mikel&#8221; because, he says, he liked the spelling. At 15, he ran away from home &#8212; in the &#8220;boot-heel&#8221; area of southwestern Missouri &#8212; and joined a carnival. &#8220;I did all kinds of odd jobs,&#8221; he remembers. &#8220;I ran the carny tricks, handled the fake hoops, painted, worked out front once in a while. It wasn&#8217;t the traditional kind of work, and when I decided to become a composer, I didn&#8217;t do that traditionally, either.&#8221;</font></p>
<p>
<font SIZE=2>How untraditional? That will easily be proved next week (November 2­6) in the Founders Hall of Costa Mesa&#8217;s Performing Arts Center when, as one of the highlights of the Orange County Philharmonic Society&#8217;s Eclectic Orange Festival, Rouse&#8217;s opera <i>Dennis Cleveland</i> gets its first West Coast performance. It&#8217;s an opera, says Rouse, &#8220;because you can&#8217;t call it anything else.&#8221; Actually, it&#8217;s an operatic takeoff on another indigenous, entrenched art form, the television talk show &#8212; yes, <i>talk show</i>, as in Oprah, Sally or Jerry.</font></p>
<p>
<font SIZE=2>And why not? After all, wrote the astute Peter G. Davis in <i>New York</i> magazine after Rouse&#8217;s opera had a well-received run at Manhattan&#8217;s The Kitchen, &#8220;The whole talk-show ritual, with its aggressive confrontations and confessional aria-and-ensemble format, is already operatic by nature.&#8221; In <i>Dennis Cleveland</i>, the invited &#8220;guests&#8221; form an eight-member chorus onstage, while the eponymous host, played by Rouse himself, talks to the bank of video cameras, which then project his image onto the various monitors and screens in the &#8220;studio.&#8221; Dennis roams the aisles and spars with other cast members spotted through the audience who stand and hurl challenges at the guests. One member, a Japanese tourist, antagonizes the crowd by insisting on playing his harmonica. Tension mounts; the guests onstage bare their souls-in-torment; the whole audience hankers to join in, and some do. Haven&#8217;t you ever wanted to stand up and vent your spleen at Don Giovanni&#8217;s duplicity, or perform some CPR to save Aida and Radamès from death by suffocation?</font></p>
<p>
<font SIZE=2>It&#8217;s more than just talk, of course; Rouse&#8217;s jack-of-all-trades music keeps participants on edge, and could do the same for you. To the background of a rock combo heavy on percussion, the four onstage couples, all of them trapped in an assortment of emotional crises, set their voices into conflict in a complex and tortured ongoing counterpoint. At many points Dennis himself, not quite the master of his destiny, joins them in soul-searching arioso. At the end, as his guests hail their 90 minutes of salvation through the privilege of purging their innards on camera, Dennis is driven to confess that televised reality, shallow though it be, is reality enough for most people. &#8220;And the line that I walk is just to calibrate/all the time I spend alone and out of date . . .&#8221;</font></p>
<p>
<font SIZE=2>OVER SAVORY NOODLES IN WEST L.A.&#8217;S &#8220;LITTLER </font><font SIZE=2>Tokyo,&#8221; the 42-year-old Rouse &#8212; neatly shirted, shod and necktied, strange getup for a composer known to be most at home among the shaggy hordes of Lower Manhattan &#8212; ticks off his own musical origins, which are widespread. &#8220;I&#8217;ve been everywhere, at least briefly: Thelonious and Miles certainly at the start. Then there was Stravinsky. Then, John Cage &#8212; not so much for the music, which nobody can imitate, but for the permission to do anything, everything. Rap has been a definite influence. I would go so far as to claim hip-hop as the most interesting of all music right now. I&#8217;ve never been what you&#8217;d call a minimalist &#8212; I think my music is too complex harmonically &#8212; but Steve Reich&#8217;s music also had a big effect on me, the way he can use rhythm as a structural base for even a long piece.&#8221;</font></p>
<p>
<font SIZE=2>The son of a Missouri state trooper, Rouse followed his carny career with studies in music and art in Kansas City, formed a band, moved to New York in 1979, studied African drumming and the controversial, math-based compositional methods of Joseph Schillinger (who had also taught George Gershwin). In the mid-1980s his new ensemble, known as the Mikel Rouse Broken Consort (keyboard, bass, drums, and lead guitar or MIDI saxophone), had become a staple of the downtown scene, a strangely suave but exhilarating conflation of Schillinger, atonality and rock. By 1991, Rouse had begun to stir poetry &#8212; his own, of course &#8212; into the mix.</font></p>
<p>
<font SIZE=2>The renegade Robert Ashley had by then demonstrated that the term &#8220;opera&#8221; could signify other things than fat sopranos and large orchestras; some of his abrasive scores involved little more than a reading with tape and a few miscellaneous voices. For Rouse, these vocal philosophies became a role model; <i>Dennis Cleveland</i> is dedicated to Ashley. The work is actually the second in a trilogy, each of the three short &#8220;operas&#8221; set into a frame that reflects the miasmic spread of media madness. <i>Failing Kansas</i>, the first, is based on the true story, novelized in Truman Capote&#8217;s <i>In Cold Blood</i>, of the senseless murder of a small-town Kansas family, and the tracking-down, capture and execution of the perpetrators. The work is performed by Rouse alone, assuming the roles of the two murderers and the society around them, reading his convoluted, tortured &#8220;counterpoetry&#8221; (his own description) on a multitrack tape against a taped counterpoint of unpitched voices intoning a jumble of images, all to a film by Cliff Baldwin projected in a multidimensional environment.</font></p>
<p>
<font SIZE=2><i>Dennis Cleveland</i> advances the anti-media attack through the addition of &#8220;live&#8221; technology, the video cameras grouped on designer John Jesurun&#8217;s TV-studio set, which transmute the flesh-and-blood of the human participants into media-ese. &#8220;What I&#8217;m trying to show here,&#8221; says Rouse, &#8220;is the way television has become the kind of ceremony we once associated with religion. You could say, in fact, that television <i>is</i> the closest thing to religion that we have today.&#8221;</font></p>
<p>
<font SIZE=2><i>The End of Cinematics</i>, the final work in the trilogy, slated for performance in 2001 as part of the Brooklyn Academy of Music&#8217;s Next Wave Festival, is set in an idealized movie theater, and again the line between performers and audience is dimly defined. The participants witness a live performance, actually a number of simultaneous performances taking place, but all of these elements are being filmed and fed onto a large movie screen, blended into other, prerecorded images to create a counterpoint of violent contrasts, of conflicting images that somehow relate to the same action.</font></p>
<p>
<font SIZE=2>The future? &#8220;When we talk about technology,&#8221; Rouse says, &#8220;most people think &#8216;computers&#8217; or &#8216;the Internet.&#8217; As with television, the medium takes precedence over the message. In rushing to claim the latest innovation, too often these days what you see is only the technology at work. If it&#8217;s a good painting, you shouldn&#8217;t notice the paint . . .</font></p>
<p>
<font SIZE=2>&#8220;There&#8217;s always some kind of breakthrough, to bring music back to life,&#8221; he continues. &#8220;Jazz did it; jazz proved that you could have serious musical aspirations and still attract an audience. Minimalism did it; so-called &#8216;serious&#8217; music was strangling on its own complexity, and the minimalists returned music to simplicity and made it work. In both cases, the timing was just right. Now there&#8217;s technology, and I&#8217;ve come to regard my recording studio as a musical instrument by itself. Just recently I took a set of string quartets that I composed in 1985, and I sampled them on the computer and recast them as whole new pieces &#8212; investigating my own past, you might say.</font></p>
<p>
<font SIZE=2>&#8220;There&#8217;ll always be concert halls and opera houses, functioning as museums. For me, though, the only valid music is what I can do myself. I come from a background of playing my own music. Now, with my studio, I can go one step further and record my own music. My music is my world, and I live in the middle of it. If I can take it out on tour, as I&#8217;m doing now, that&#8217;s fine. But the other way, handing the music off to someone else to perform and relinquishing my own role as performer &#8212; I would find that pretty exasperating.&#8221;</font></p>
<p>
<font SIZE=2>&#8220;Isn&#8217;t that a kind of isolationism?&#8221; I wonder.</font></p>
<p>
<font SIZE=2>&#8220;Maybe it is for now,&#8221; says Mikel Rouse, &#8220;but I&#8217;m still young &#8212; for a composer, that is. There&#8217;s plenty of time.&#8221;</font></p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Star-Crossed and Sweetly&#160;Sung</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/1999/10/star-crossed-and-sweetly-sung/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/1999/10/star-crossed-and-sweetly-sung/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 20 Oct 1999 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=270</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[You could arrive at the Los Angeles Opera‘s latest offering with a personal list, rather long, of the works still undeservedly neglected by the company: Verdi&#8217;s Forza for starters, Wagner‘s Meistersinger, the two Manons, and on and on. You&#8217;d be pretty far down the list before you arrived at Vincenzo Bellini‘s The Capulets and the [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>You could arrive at the Los Angeles Opera‘s latest offering with a personal list, rather long, of the works still undeservedly neglected by the company: Verdi&#8217;s Forza for starters, Wagner‘s Meistersinger, the two Manons, and on and on. You&#8217;d be pretty far down the list before you arrived at Vincenzo Bellini‘s The Capulets and the Montagues. (I&#8217;ll spare you the unpronounceable Italian.) Surprise and delight would then attend your arrival; the local guys have reached deep into the repertory of the forgotten, accorded Bellini‘s fluent, elegant score the treatment worthy of a masterpiece, and demonstrated that it deserves no less.
</p>
<p>    Getting to that realization does, of course, take a little work. You have to get Shakespeare off your back, and Prokofiev and Bernstein as well. Felice Romani&#8217;s workaday libretto harks back to the obscure Italian novel that Shakespeare probably also knew but greatly expanded; his lovers, somewhat longer in the tooth, have already bedded down at curtain‘s rise, and Romeo has asked Papa Capulet for Juliet&#8217;s hand. But Romeo is also the leader of the Montague family forces, which are trying to unseat the entrenched Capulets in Verona, and Juliet is caught between love and filial loyalty. The tragic ending, however, is the same. (Since the current production updates the action to around 1910, however, you have to wonder how the presumed-dead Juliet gets dumped into the family tomb without the benefit of embalming.) Oh yes, and Bellini, honoring the old bel canto custom, has written his Romeo for a mezzo-soprano. Any teenage moviegoer with throbbing heart will attest that the notion of an androgynous Romeo isn‘t all that novel these days.
</p>
<p>   By the time the first act (of two) floats blissfully to its close, however, your every pore should be tingling from the sheer spun-sugar incandescence of Bellini&#8217;s music for the lovers, and the way Laura Claycomb (the Juliet) and Susanne Mentzer (the Romeo), singly or in duets of rapturous togetherness, send this music skyward, a pairing fashioned in vocal heaven. Never mind director Thor Steingraber‘s off-the-wall update, with the Capulets done up in black tie rather than splendid Renaissance robes and the warring factions having at one another with swords, daggers and (!) handguns. Never mind that the lovers are also given alter egos, who dance out the torments of love during Bellini&#8217;s long orchestral intros. Never mind that Robert Israel‘s handsome, skeletal scenic pieces actually relate to no time and all time. Nobody goes to a bel canto opera for the dancing or scenery.
</p>
<p>   Actually, there&#8217;s more to the opera than the lovers‘ gorgeous music. Act 1 ends with an extended ensemble, the five major characters each confronting a separate dramatic problem, the music surging forward toward a tremendous climax. In 1835, five years after The Capulets, Gaetano Donizetti fashioned the same kind of knockout ensemble, for six singers, at the turning point of his Lucia di Lammermoor and did so no better than Bellini here. What Bellini was good at &#8212; the long melodic lines like human breathing transfigured above the orchestra&#8217;s gentle prodding that distills the harmony into the texture of idealized honey &#8212; no other composer of his time could equal.
</p>
<p>   The Capulets runs through October 31; it is one of the company‘s truly sublime offerings. The cast &#8212; all Americans, by the way &#8212; is uniformly good: a newcomer, Eric Halfvarson, as a powerful, resonant Papa Capulet, and Malcolm MacKenzie as the sympathetic Lorenzo (Shakespeare&#8217;s Friar Laurence, but here a doctor). Britain‘s Richard Hickox conducts, cleanly if with no prodigies of energy. (Hickox was also the admirable guest conductor of last weekend&#8217;s Los Angeles Chamber Orchestra concert, a superlative event that I‘ll try to discuss next week.)
</p>
<p>    In the month since the Hollywood Bowl season, the Philharmonic gave two concerts in Mexico and three in local neighborhoods; sent a bus-and-truck production of Peter Sellars&#8217; madcap, messy version of Stravinsky‘s A Soldier&#8217;s Tale to three local parks; delivered a delightful benefit concert of Shakespeare-plus-Mendelssohn‘s A Midsummer Night&#8217;s Dream with the likes of Peter Hemmings, Gordon Davidson and Rosie Perez in speaking roles and the aforementioned Laura Claycomb enchantingly singing of ”spotted snakes“; and donated a Beethoven‘s Ninth to the World Festival of Sacred Music jamboree at the Bowl. By Thursday night&#8217;s all-Mahler ”opening concert“ at the Music Center, therefore, the orchestra had already attained midseason form, as witnessed by the concert‘s first note, a soft blooper from the first horn, followed soon after by a beeper somewhere in the hall. Oh, well.
</p>
<p>    The important news, and it&#8217;s good, is that the hall‘s new acoustical adjustments seem to work. The stage floor has been raised somewhat, and extended out 16 feet; the setup is easily removed and replaced to free the pit for opera. Obviously the players need time to get used to the changes; some balances last Thursday were only approximately good. But the string tone had a greater sense of thrust out in the hall, and there seemed to be more air on the stage itself. The long, ethereal opening of the Mahler First seemed to hang in midair, and pizzicatos from cellos and basses sounded more than usually resonant. The new arrangement does create some seats with a limited view of the stage, a few of them in the posh Founders Circle. (The Philharmonic has allowed subscribers in the afflicted areas to change locations.) In all, the changes have reduced the total number of seats to 3,086 (from 3,200), with 378 ”obstructed“ and another 80 ”slightly obstructed“ &#8212; a total of 2,628 unproblematic seats, some 400 more than are projected for Disney Hall.
</p>
<p>   The program began with the early Blumine, a little squeeze of syrup that Mahler had once wrapped into the First Symphony and later dropped. The five songs to Friedrich Ruckert texts came next, music from 18 years later, encapsulating the composer&#8217;s extraordinary growth in eloquence since early days, and made miraculous in the rich rhetoric of Jose van Dam‘s plangent, overwhelming delivery.
</p>
<p>   At the Bowl last summer I had found Salonen&#8217;s Mahler First both interesting and disturbing in the matter of excessive slowdowns and speedups &#8212; even though some of this is lightly suggested in the score. (The Salonen recording of the Fourth is, similarly, rather rubato-ridden.) Has he, in only a month‘s time, rethought the work &#8212; or have I? The momentum in Thursday&#8217;s performance was steady and staggering: a breathtaking, narrative sweep that stormed the heavens, a transfiguration of the young Mahler‘s wondrous, arrogant power, a prefiguration of the eloquence he would soon fully master. The hall sounded great, the Mahler sounded great. Wow!</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Elephant, Bull,&#160;Whatever</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/1999/10/elephant-bull-whatever/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/1999/10/elephant-bull-whatever/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 13 Oct 1999 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=269</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Photo by Lisa KohlerDRIVING INTO TOWN TO MEET PHILharmonic honcho-designate Deborah Borda at her first L.A. press conference, I found solace and sadness on KPCC&#8217;s Talk of the City, host Linda Othenin-Girard&#8217;s valiant daily attempt to elicit intelligent phoned-in comment from concerned citizens. The morning&#8217;s topic was the exhibition by young British artists at the [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Photo by Lisa KohlerDRIVING INTO TOWN TO MEET PHILharmonic honcho-designate Deborah Borda at her first L.A. press conference, I found solace and sadness on KPCC&#8217;s <i>Talk of the City</i>, host Linda Othenin-Girard&#8217;s valiant daily attempt to elicit intelligent phoned-in comment from concerned citizens. The morning&#8217;s topic was the exhibition by young British artists at the Brooklyn Museum of Art, and the outpouring of municipal hostility engendered by some of its contents. Incensed by one work in particular &#8212; a collage that surrounded a portrait of the Virgin Mary with tributary images legitimately honored by some faiths (e.g., a dollop of elephant dung, a ritual symbol in the artist&#8217;s native Africa) but deemed offensive by some of New York&#8217;s religious spokesfolk &#8212; Mayor Giuliani and his pals among the city&#8217;s traditionally uptight Catholic leadership have stomped down hard on the Museum, threatening both funding cutoffs and eviction from its handsome and newly renovated premises.</p>
<p>
Echoes of traditional run-ins between governments and creative artists have been resounding far and near, all the way from the &#8220;Degenerate&#8221; art shows in Mr. Hitler&#8217;s palmy days to Harry Truman&#8217;s threat to punch out a Washington music critic for panning his daughter Margaret. They invariably produce bonanzas in the wrong places: a boost for Mayor Giuliani&#8217;s presumed senatorial ambitions; sellout crowds at the Brooklyn Museum (with a concomitant rise in the value of the artworks themselves, on which the auction house of Christie has dibs), fame far beyond merit for Washington critic Paul Hume.</p>
<p>
Up to my arrival at the Music Center, the votes on KPCC were running well in favor of cutting the Brooklyn Museum adrift, along with its &#8220;obscene&#8221; and &#8220;revolting&#8221; artwork (none of which, of course, the callers had seen). To Linette, the situation called for &#8220;a whole &#8216;nother set of values.&#8221; Terry offered a capsule history of art, which &#8220;kept getting better and better until the 1800s, and then started to fall off again.&#8221; Linda, horrified at the thought of public support for the arts, called for the election of new officials to shut down all funding. Only Candice, bless &#8216;er, seemed willing to grant the young Brits some benefit of the doubt; the value of all art, she nobly proclaimed, lies in its power to mystify, to suggest &#8220;something more.&#8221;</p>
<p>
I wish this were all as funny as it ought to be. The sad fact is that the arts have been in trouble ever since the invention of the democratic process. The absolute monarchs and aristocrats &#8212; the Medicis, Haydn&#8217;s boss Count Esterhazy, Wagner&#8217;s pal Ludwig of Bavaria &#8212; nurtured the arts as their private privilege, and hand-picked their audiences from among their own circles. Once there were public concert halls and museums open to ticket buyers, the elephant dung hit the fan. The mission of the arts to direct an observer&#8217;s mind toward the &#8220;something more&#8221; defined by one of KPCC&#8217;s callers gave way to the notion of the arts as the public&#8217;s pal, soothing and accessible. The yahoo politicos build impregnable fortresses by constantly trumpeting to their constituents that the insults perpetrated by degenerate painters and composers of tuneless cacophonies are supported by public taxes. On the few occasions when the arts have made some degree of inroads toward popular acceptance, they have done so on the basis of externals: fancy new buildings, expressive ideals watered down to easy-listening kitsch, the perversions heaped upon the very nature of the artist so that David Helfgott&#8217;s brainless murder of pop tidbits outdraws Alfred Brendel&#8217;s wise discourses on Beethoven or Schubert sonatas.</p>
<p>
We have been given to believe, and were so again at last week&#8217;s Philharmonic press conference, that salvation for a large chunk of Los Angeles&#8217; artistic life rests upon the building of the Disney Concert Hall. It could even be true; given the appropriate drenching in hype, any new public edifice can be counted upon for sellout business in its first few months. As a fledgling critic, I watched Lincoln Center go up, building by building, in New York in the 1960s; I listened to the predictions of acoustic splendor at Philharmonic (now Avery Fisher) Hall almost from the placing of the cornerstone; I shared my colleagues&#8217; disappointment verging on contempt as, remake after remake, the sound of the hall remained flawed (as it still is). I remember that neither the New York Philharmonic &#8212; the hall&#8217;s main tenant &#8212; nor any of the regular visiting attractions showed any notable sign in their first-year offerings that the hall signified the outlay of new concepts in programming, in reaching new audiences, in stimulating new thinking among composers young and old. I also remember, of course, that Philharmonic Hall&#8217;s first year was New York&#8217;s hot ticket, that on most nights you couldn&#8217;t get near the place.</p>
<p>
EVERYBODY KNEW THAT ERNEST Fleischmann would be a hard act to follow as the Los Angeles Philharmonic&#8217;s artistic administrator; indeed, it had taken nearly two years for a Philharmonic search committee to find a successor willing to walk in his shoes. It took only a few weeks to lure Deborah Borda away from the New York Philharmonic to walk in Willem Wijnbergen&#8217;s shoes. Wisely, she made it clear at our first get-together that it was too early to reveal &#8212; or, probably, even to formulate &#8212; plans. Everybody in the room was on best behavior; nobody had the bad manners to ask about the well-publicized and long-enduring feud between Borda and New York&#8217;s peppery maestro Kurt Masur; the photographers snapped many hugs between her and the comparatively benign Esa-Pekka Salonen.</p>
<p>
Masur or not, Borda did an important job in New York. Her change in concert formats, instituting series of shorter concerts at rush hour to lure commuters, was a good move nicely tuned to New York rhythms. Maybe it would work here, maybe not. A woman, an American: It could be an unbeatable parlay. Barring a Richter 9.1, she&#8217;ll get the new hall built.</p>
<p>
Then, of course, she&#8217;ll have to face the softly voiced but widely held conviction that the Music Center concept is wrong and was from the start, that the whole complex sits in a barren, audience-hostile area, remote from anywhere else, its car access &#8212; bad enough on Dodger nights &#8212; about to be further threatened by the Staples Center sports arena a few blocks to the south. One day, in a nostalgic mood, she&#8217;ll remember the crowds strolling past Lincoln Center night and day, the array of nearby restaurants, the welcoming lighting in the Plaza, the great hangout area around the fountain, the allure of the artwork that gleams from the Metropolitan Opera House (second-rate Chagall though it be). Then she&#8217;ll stroll through the gloomy, ill-lit, unwelcoming space at the Music Center, dodge if she can the inane ventriloquist who howls into his dummy, search in vain for refreshment worthy to be thought of as food, and wonder about the many empty seats at the Dorothy Chandler Pavilion night after night. That&#8217;s part of your new job, Deborah Borda. Won&#8217;t you miss Mayor Giuliani, even a little bit?</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>What Moses&#160;Imposes</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/1999/10/what-moses-imposes/</link>
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		<pubDate>Wed, 06 Oct 1999 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=268</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[MOSES UND ARON IS ON MY CONSCIENCE. Arnold Schoenberg&#8217;s opera, imposing even in its unfinished state, accorded unquestioned masterpiece recognition on the strength of its composer&#8217;s own eminence, is still &#8212; after 65 years &#8212; so seldom performed that its few revivals stand as major events. It made its belated first appearance at New York&#8217;s [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><font SIZE=2><i>MOSES UND ARON </i>IS ON MY CONSCIENCE. Arnold Schoenberg&#8217;s opera, imposing even in its unfinished state, accorded unquestioned masterpiece recognition on the strength of its composer&#8217;s own eminence, is still &#8212; after 65 years &#8212; so seldom performed that its <br />
few revivals stand as major events. It made its belated first appearance at New York&#8217;s Metropolitan Opera last season, and was revived there (as the first of a scheduled supercautious mere three performances) last week. The audience was sparse, but all the right people attended, and the cheering at the end was long and loud. The crowd also included an unusually large contingent of teenagers, there &#8212; as several told me &#8212; on their grandparents&#8217; subscription tickets. Schoenberg&#8217;s music may have lost its innovative edge over the years, but not its power to strike terror into the hearts of grandparents.</font></p>
<p>
<font SIZE=2>This was my third staged <i>Moses</i>, after the American premiere under Sarah Caldwell in 1966 (which I described in print as &#8220;live Cinerama&#8221;) and Achim Freyer&#8217;s stunning production (all in desert colors) at the New York City Opera in 1990. The work holds no terrors for me, and I have no problems with its stature, the power of Schoenberg&#8217;s conception and the intensity of its thinking, the impact of its raw theatricality. Try as I might, however, I cannot love it. I am not reached by the gruff speech-song of the Moses character (as I am, for example, by the same device in the 20-years-earlier <i>Pierrot Lunaire</i>). I hear no lyric strength in Aron&#8217;s rhapsodizing (as I do in the last two string quartets, roughly contemporaneous with the opera). Nothing in the protracted orgy music tells me about the profane passions of that scene, not even its sour waltz-parodies; Richard Strauss&#8217; dance for Salome, lousier music but one-third the length, does the job with greater efficiency.</font></p>
<p>
<font SIZE=2>Against all that I value in Schoenberg &#8212; the integrity of his musical mind, the greatness of much of his music &#8212; I am troubled by my admire-but-don&#8217;t-like take on this one monumental score. The subject matter of <i>Moses und Aron</i> is not the biblical yarn so nicely projected in Cecil B. De Mille­style epics; it is a discourse on the nature of faith, of Jewishness in crisis &#8212; matters of great concern in the conscience of the Jewish-turned-Protestant Schoenberg in a Germany already wracked by the war cries of Hitler&#8217;s thugs. Could it be that musical considerations, in this work, seemed of less consequence to Schoenberg than text? Could it even be that his failure to compose the music for the third act, while allowing publication of his complete text, reflected his own priorities?</font></p>
<p>
<font SIZE=2>No opera company undertakes a <i>Moses und Aron</i> without some strong ideas on production; it is to the Met&#8217;s credit that, having decided to risk inevitable empty seats, it has given the work a staging of comparable brilliance and innovation. On a stage slashed with broad color bands, Graham Vick has created huge living modules of singers (principals and chorus) in taut clusters, dressed in contemporary Hassidic Orthodoxy: grungy black suits and hats, decrepit footwear, proclaiming the timelessness of suffering and bondage. John Tomlinson intoned the blunt, brutal lines of Moses; Philip Langridge, the sly, sinuous music of Aron. A large cast was involved, including six singers in modern black tie on chairs downstage, as the Voice of God. And through it all rang the resonance of the Met&#8217;s orchestra under James Levine, pleading the cause of Schoenberg&#8217;s troubled opera with stunning eloquence.</font></p>
<p>
<font SIZE=2>ACROSS LINCOLN CENTER&#8217;S PLAZA, THE New York City Opera proved to me on two occasions the exceptional current good health of the company. Paul Kellogg, who is also head of the Glimmerglass Opera in upstate New York, has parlayed the work of both companies onto an artistic level greater than its parts. On one happy night at the City Opera, I saw the company&#8217;s first-ever <i>Il Viaggio a Reims</i>, Rossini&#8217;s curious occasion-piece with its almost-nonexistent plot and its glorious music that includes ensembles that tickle every rib within earshot. Rossini had composed the work for a star-studded Parisian company; the City Opera ensemble wasn&#8217;t quite that, but the precision of its quicksilver vocal work, under George Manahan&#8217;s leadership, still made for a delightful evening. In the excellent cast I spotted our own Paula Rasmussen, of many L.A. Opera triumphs, singing enchantingly as a man-eating Polish countess.</font></p>
<p>
<font SIZE=2>The City Opera continues its good services toward new opera; a triple bill of short operas by three composers, all of them set in Central Park, got critical raves at Glimmerglass this summer and is already sold out at the New York State Theater for later this season. Surprisingly, the company has also emerged as a force for Handel operas: two seasons ago with Stephen Wadsworth&#8217;s production of <i>Xerxes</i> that showed in Los Angeles, last season with <i>Partenope</i>, and last week with <i>Ariodante</i>.</font></p>
<p>
<font SIZE=2>The City Opera Handel is not quite the purist versions enshrined on the Harmonia Mundi discs, but it also doesn&#8217;t stray so far as the 1966 <i>Giulio Cesare</i> that made stars out of Beverly Sills and Norman Treigle at drastic cost to historical integrity. For the <i>Ariodante</i>, Jane Glover led an ensemble of contemporary strings, winds and brass with harpsichord in an elegantly phrased, impeccably balanced performance. There were a few cuts, mostly repeats and da capos. The cast, splendidly integrated, sang with intelligent awareness of the style, but with enough latter-day vibrance to make dramatic sense out of the deceptions, reconciliations and lovemaking of the drama. Britain&#8217;s Sarah Connolly sang the title role marvelously, but the day&#8217;s star, as the villainous Polinesso, was the same countertenor, Bejun Mehta, who triumphed so magnificently in another Handel in Santa Barbara this summer. Mehta&#8217;s program bio listed him as the Tolomeo in a Los Angeles Opera <i>Giulio Cesare</i> at some unspecified future date. Pray it&#8217;s not a typo.</font></p>
<p>
<font SIZE=2>Some ink has been spilled over the new electronic equipment recently installed in the State Theater to correct certain long-standing acoustic problems. Management has taken great care to describe the installation not as &#8220;amplification&#8221; (a four-letter word in critical circles, more appropriate to the brutally cranked-up sound in Broadway theaters) but as &#8220;enhancement.&#8221; So far the response has ranged from &#8220;okay&#8221; to &#8220;can&#8217;t hear the difference.&#8221; Having no memories of State Theater acoustics for the past few years, I can only report that the sounds I heard in Handel and Rossini were bright, clear and nicely balanced between stage and pit. One chorus in the Handel was sung offstage and piped into the hall; it sounded canned, as indeed it was. Everything else in the performance sounded alive and fresh, as indeed it was.</font></p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Fingers and&#160;Brains</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/1999/09/fingers-and-brains/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/1999/09/fingers-and-brains/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 22 Sep 1999 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=267</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Photo by Diane AlancraigTHE INDOOR CONCERT SEASON DIDN&#8217;T begin with the customary orchestral spectacular at the Music Center or Royce, but with charm and intelligent small-scale music making in a friendly and informal setting: Gloria Cheng-Cochran&#8217;s recital at Pasadena&#8217;s Neighborhood Church to begin the sixth run of the valuable series known as &#8220;Piano Spheres.&#8221; The [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Photo by Diane AlancraigTHE INDOOR CONCERT SEASON DIDN&#8217;T begin with the customary orchestral spectacular at the Music Center or Royce, but with charm and intelligent small-scale music making in a friendly and informal setting: Gloria Cheng-Cochran&#8217;s recital at Pasadena&#8217;s Neighborhood Church to begin the sixth run of the valuable series known as &#8220;Piano Spheres.&#8221; The program promised much and gave even more: a spread of 23 short pieces composed between 1902 and 1999, each of them some kind of dance, grouped not chronologically but in such a way that each piece cast a light on its neighbor &#8212; not as a random smorgasbord, in other words, but as one of those carefully arranged &#8220;tasting menus&#8221; in a great and unaffordable restaurant.</p>
<p>
Cheng-Cochran, I don&#8217;t think I need to reiterate, is one of our local treasures; so, for that matter, is the concert series of mostly new and very new music that she and four other pianists put together each year (next: Susan Svrcek on November 23). Inevitably, her program had its share of clunks &#8212; an inane, paint-by-numbers waltz by Philip Glass, an Igor Stravinsky tango from 1940 that surely ranks as an embarrassment to his legacy &#8212; but they were far outweighed by the charmers and the discoveries. Among them was the &#8220;Shimmy&#8221; from Paul Hindemith&#8217;s <i>Suite 1922</i> (which Cheng-Cochran had played complete last year): music with an amazing power of observation, a document of a Europe in the first throes of its discovery of jazz. Henry Cowell&#8217;s <i>Lilt of the Reel</i>, also from the 1920s, was fascinating to hear &#8212; bristling, nose-thumbing music from a legacy that cries out to be rediscovered. Among the brand-new works, I especially admired Joan Huang&#8217;s <i>Red Ribbon Dance</i>, a mingling of ethnicities beautifully blended. Altogether, an all-too-short sweep through intriguing music, full of fine thinking, wonderfully played, enhanced by the resonance of one of the Faziolis from the benevolent David Abell&#8217;s piano showroom, which he sends over for each of these valuable events.</p>
<p>
THE MYSTIQUE OF THE PIANO AND ITS virtuosos past and present does not always engage my undivided attention; piano nuts lag only slightly behind dramatic-soprano nuts in my catalog of the irrational. But the panorama is broad, with room at one end for David Helfgott &#8212; who seems, however, to have disappeared again, thus proving the existence of God &#8212; and, somewhere else along the path, for those enlightened souls with the powers of imagination to<br />
regard the piano as a thinking instrument. There is some remarkable brain and finger power at work on a new two-disc set, out next week on ECM, that excellent, high-adventure label. Two of the clearest thinkers among today&#8217;s pianists, Peter Serkin and András Schiff, are deeply involved in two-piano works by Mozart, Reger and Busoni, including the latter composer&#8217;s spellbinding <i>Fantasia Contrappuntistica</i>, one of music&#8217;s authentically unscalable peaks.</p>
<p>
Talk about brain music! Busoni&#8217;s<br />
half-hour horizon-expanding masterpiece arose from his obsession with J.S. Bach&#8217;s <i>Art of the Fugue</i>, specifically with the final fugue, left unfinished at Bach&#8217;s death,<br />
with its foreshadowings of an even grander complexity than anything in the work up to the breaking-off. Busoni&#8217;s intent was not merely to &#8220;finish&#8221; Bach&#8217;s final fugue, but to use it as a launching point into his own vast speculations on Bach&#8217;s musical world in 1750 and on his own world 170 years later &#8212; and, thus, to extend Bach&#8217;s own speculations on the expressive horizons of the art of counterpoint. Gnarled, crabbed, yet explosive, the work is no less murderous to hear than to perform. I once had the privilege of turning pages for the late Egon Petri, a onetime Busoni pupil, who braved the solo version in the studio at KPFA (in a happier time), but the full realization of the music&#8217;s amazing strength reaches me first with this sublime performance by Serkin and Schiff.</p>
<p>
The set also includes Mozart&#8217;s Two-Piano Sonata, to which I composed a love letter in these pages about a year ago. This is the work that&#8217;s gotten a lot of publicity from a psychologist&#8217;s findings about its power to raise hearers&#8217; IQ. Well and good, and if I give you a long list of other works that have the same effect, they&#8217;ll probably all be by Mozart. But there is, indeed, something special about this sonata, and the wise, loving performance by Serkin and Schiff brings it out. Mozart, in putting together the slow movement, follows a &#8220;normal&#8221; classical pattern: opening theme, change of key, second theme, development, etc. There is a concept mathematicians call an &#8220;elegant solution,&#8221; a way of solving a problem not only accurately but with an extra dollop of imagination. What I hear, time and again, in this slow movement is that kind of elegance: the way Mozart, in his orderly progression from A to B, takes a quick detour to sample a particularly beautiful flower in bloom over at C. A really splendid performance of this music, the one that&#8217;ll take your IQ right up to the Einstein level (for a couple of minutes, anyhow), has to be infused with the majesty of A and B, but also the fragrance of C. These guys get it right.</p>
<p>
Despite sentiments expressed a few lines above, I am not entirely unreachable by the &#8220;purer&#8221; kind of piano virtuosity, and Sony&#8217;s forthcoming release of Russia&#8217;s 26-year-old whiz-bang Arcadi Volodos&#8217; 1998 Carnegie Hall recital would knock the socks off a marble statue. The music itself &#8212; showoff pieces by Liszt and Rachmaninoff, Scriabin&#8217;s 10th Sonata and assorted tidbits, a set of Schumann miniatures &#8212; won&#8217;t do much to raise your IQ, but it&#8217;ll definitely drop your jaw. There is an exhilaration here, a torrent of virtuosity of the kind that you associate with certain no-brain Russians of bygone times. Nothing here, or on other Volodos recordings I&#8217;ve heard, tells me anything about his<br />
ability to assume the burden of thought; he comes to the Philharmonic next February with the Tchaikovsky, which won&#8217;t tell us much more. But I wouldn&#8217;t miss it for worlds.</p>
<p>
LAST SATURDAY&#8217;S PAPERS &#8212; <i>THE </i><i>New York</i> and <i>Los Angeles Times</i>, respectively &#8212; ran statements from heads of classical-music radio stations worth considering as the millennium hurtles toward us. Says Bill Campbell of Boston&#8217;s WCRB, which has discontinued the Metropolitan Opera broadcasts: &#8220;The popular operas are fine, like <i>La Traviata</i> and <i>La Bohème</i>. People recognize them and are happy to hear them every year. Then comes along a five-hour Wagner feature, and I&#8217;ve got to tell you, that is an acquired taste.&#8221; Says KKGO&#8217;s Saul Levine, answering Mark Swed&#8217;s call for livelier, up-to-date programming: &#8220;We present a balanced selection . . . that fits our mainstream approach. We do not air the works of John Cage or similar-sounding [sic] composers.&#8221;</p>
<p>
Is this what they mean by &#8220;static&#8221;?</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>The Domingo&#160;Principle</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/1999/09/the-domingo-principle/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/1999/09/the-domingo-principle/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 15 Sep 1999 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=266</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[This was the week of Los Angeles&#8217; annual identity crisis. On Tuesday and Thursday, in shorts and T-shirt, I loaded the picnic basket and made it to the Hollywood Bowl. On Wednesday I fished out my matching socks and headed downtown to the Music Center, where the Los Angeles Opera began its season with the [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>This was the week of Los Angeles&#8217; annual identity crisis. On Tuesday and Thursday, in shorts and T-shirt, I loaded the picnic basket and made it to the Hollywood Bowl. On Wednesday I fished out my matching socks and headed downtown to the Music Center, where the Los Angeles Opera began its season with the usual opening-night gala. The intermingling takes getting used to, all the more so since the musical level of Camille Saint-Saens‘ Samson et Dalila, which kicked off the opera season, is a lot closer to the typical Bowl fare than is Ravel&#8217;s subtle Sheherazade, which Dawn Upshaw had sung enchantingly at the Bowl the night before.
</p>
<p>    Samson marked the start of the L.A. Opera‘s 14th season, the last for outgoing founder and general director Peter Hemmings; it served as well to trumpet the presence, however brief, of incoming artistic director Placido Domingo (with the rest of the new administrative team as yet unannounced). In a sense, the Samson also celebrated the sweep of history within the company. Lawrence Foster, who conducted the inaugural Otello (with Domingo) in October 1986, was again on the podium, as he has often been in the intervening years. Domingo was the Samson; he has sung opening-night leads in nine of 14 seasons, and conducted two others. Two singers in lesser roles, Richard Bernstein as the Abimelech and Louis Lebherz as the Old Hebrew, are alumni of the company&#8217;s training program and well along in world-class careers.
</p>
<p>   Tattered baggage though it be, Samson et Dalila maintains its place in the repertory on the strength of its glittering surface. Sure, it has only one tune worth remembering. Its ballet is the ancestor of all operatic hootchy-kootch. Given a fair serving of charismatic lung power in its two name roles, however, and a stage setting evocative of the Loew‘s Babylon lobby of everybody&#8217;s imagining &#8212; all of which it got at the Music Center on Wednesday &#8212; it can still dupe an undemanding audience into believing itself some kind of masterpiece.
</p>
<p>   Credit composer Saint-Saens as the opera‘s adept string-puller; his hand here, as in all his voluminous legacy, is more shrewd than inspired. Samson is a role fashioned in tenor heaven, from his first lurching onstage with his mighty battle cry to his heart-rending laments in Philistine captivity. Does it matter that neither of these musical commodities nor most of what Samson gets to sing in between these two big numbers remains in the memory? No; what remains is the sound, if not the shape, of Placido Domingo&#8217;s white-hot outbursts: opera at its most elemental. (After this weekend, however, Domingo hands off his lion skin and curls to replacement tenor Gary Lakes, and heads east to serenade the sequins and tiaras on opening night at the Metropolitan Opera.)
</p>
<p>   Dalila is fashioned out of friendlier stuff. She has the opera‘s one Tune, in the Act 2 lovehate duet, but it&#8217;s a long time in coming. Denyce Graves, apparently put on Earth to take over and inflame all of opera‘s bad-girl mezzo-soprano roles (of which there are many), with flashing eyes that could seduce any tenor within miles to abandon home, hearth and hairdo, was sensational, lavishly endowed in voice and in everything else as well. (She even tried a few dance steps during the Bacchanale, a welcome contrast to choreographer Daniel Pelzig&#8217;s Muscle Beach stuff.) Gregory Yurisich sang the High Priest‘s music without vocal color or dramatic sense: his third major role with the company, his third fizzle.
</p>
<p>   Douglas Schmidt&#8217;s production from the San Francisco Opera 1981 neatly matched the music‘s garish ponderosity: a heavy impasto of burnished color, as from watching 10 Gustave Moreau paintings at once, and for the final temple scene a jumble of pseudo-Oriental statuary lacking only a popcorn stand. Nicolas Joel&#8217;s staging, tidy and unremarkable, at least nicely accomplished the final catastrophe that everyone eagerly awaits; it brought down the house.
</p>
<p>    Donizetti‘s L&#8217;Elisir d‘Amore, three nights later, proved a lot easier to love, in a lively and flexible reading under newcomer John Keenan&#8217;s baton. Ramon Vargas was again the smooth, immensely likable Nemorino that he was when Stephen Lawless‘ production first came here in April 1996; Thomas Allen, now a “Sir,” repeated his Dulcamara: loud and somewhat bluff, without much of the endearing vocal biz others have brought to the role. (Anyone else remember Salvatore Baccaloni?) As the philandering Belcore, Rodney Gilfry brought his own neat comic gestures, with voice to match. The final 15 or so minutes &#8212; Nemorino&#8217;s “Una furtiva lagrima” and Adina‘s answering aria that evoked my own furtive tears &#8212; were as beautiful as anything you could want to hear in an opera. The Adina, Ruth Ann Swenson in her first role with the company, sang the music out full, with none of the chirping that lesser singers have imposed on bel canto comedy, her voice radiant, pure and immensely winning. Lawless&#8217; staging, as before, suffered from an excess of fidgets: too many doors opening and closing, too much busywork among furniture movers and grain-bag schleppers. Again, however, what remains in the memory is the staging of that final scene, in a vacant field lit by a full moon and by those two wonderful voices.
</p>
<p>   A final Bowl echo for the season: My negative note on the intrusive video projections of the concerts onto a screen overhead &#8212; simulcast in reverse, you might say &#8212; has brought on the accusation of spoilsport, which perish forfend. A second try last week worked somewhat better; there were no roving camerafolk onstage, and the solo shots were better coordinated to actual performances. It was ravishing to watch Dawn Upshaw close-up, her face lit as much by the radiance of her music as by the spotlights. But the big screen still imposes itself on the attention; I would prefer smaller screens to the sides, affording the choice of whether to watch a concert live or canned. I would also hope for even better coordination: picking up on a solo player not a couple of beats into the solo but in the few seconds before it starts, as the link between conductor and performer is forged, and the beauty of the live performance takes shape.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>HOLLYWOOD BOWL&#160;PIECE</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/1999/09/hollywood-bowl-piece/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/1999/09/hollywood-bowl-piece/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sun, 12 Sep 1999 22:34:12 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Musical America]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=1835</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[With the grand, brassy rhetoric that ends Johannes Brahms&#8217; First Symphony, Esa-Pekka Salonen and the Los Angeles Philharmonic also sounded the final notes last Thursday for the 78th season of &#8220;Symphonies Under the Stars&#8221; at that one-of-a-kind piece of real estate known as the Hollywood Bowl. There was more to come at the Bowl: two [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>With the grand, brassy rhetoric that ends Johannes Brahms&#8217; First Symphony, Esa-Pekka Salonen and the Los Angeles Philharmonic also sounded the final notes last Thursday for the 78th season of &#8220;Symphonies Under the Stars&#8221; at that one-of-a-kind piece of real estate known as the Hollywood Bowl. There was more to come at the Bowl: two weekends of pop-concert fare ending in splendid fireworks displays, and a night of jazz &#8211; what you&#8217;d expect, in other words, in a town known as a world-renowned shrine to terminal titillation. But the ten-week Bowl season had, as usual, included twenty programs of solid classical stuff, much of it actually challenging. The crowds had numbered anywhere from six to ten thousand, small potatoes in the 18,000-seat expanse that usually fills to capacity for the weekend pop, but impressive by symphonic standards.<br />
There&#8217;s nothing quite like the Bowl: a summertime outdoor venue within the boundaries of a large city, reachable by public transportation, comfortable and even, given the proper attitude, delightful, offering a panorama of musical events night after night, some of them even worthwhile. The area itself bestows its benefits; the air above Cahuenga Pass cools down to a benign 65-or-so as the evening breezes blow the smog out to sea. Rain is virtually nonexistent. &#8220;Under the stars&#8221; may, however, be overly hopeful on most nights.<br />
It&#8217;s possible to have a lousy time at the Bowl, and there are those who pridefully assert that they wouldn&#8217;t be caught dead in the place. A picknicker&#8217;s dropped wine bottle can clank down half-a-mile-or-so of concrete steps; an L.A.P.D. helicopter can choose the symphony&#8217;s most solemn slow movement to stake out a claim directly overhead; the sound quality even on high-quality outdoor amplification is no better than anywhere else; on several nights this season a resident skunk made clear its own criticism of proceedings. It&#8217;s also true that concert planning for the Bowl season tends to skirt much that smacks of hard-core in favor of more familiar fare.<br />
Yet this summer&#8217;s take on the &#8220;familiar&#8221; had its own sense of adventure. The &#8220;oh, no, not Tchaikovsky again&#8221; crowd might have noted that there was only one of that master&#8217;s symphonies listed &#8211; and that the relatively unfamiliar Second. No apologies are needed for programming that included all five of Beethoven&#8217;s Piano Concertos, the long and gritty First Violin Concerto of Shostakovich (spectacularly played by Vadim Repin), over an hour&#8217;s worth of Prokofiev&#8217;s music for &#8220;Ivan the Terrible&#8221; with excerpts from Sergei Eisenstein&#8217;s masterful movie flung onto the big screen overhead. After a parade of guest conductors &#8211; among them the excellent Indonesian Jahja Ling and France&#8217;s Emmanuel Krivine, plus others less worthy of mention &#8212; and a one-week stand by the touring Russian National Orchestra, Salonen himself led the last six programs; they included his first-time-ever knockout performance of the Mahler First (an out-of-town tryout, you might say, for his Music Center performance next month), a Bach program offering a clutch of &#8220;authentic&#8221; performance plus half a program of the great, bloated orchestrations (one by Mahler, two by Stokowski), a keen reminiscence of what used to pass for Bach in times past. For those who proclaim that sheer exquisiteness has no place in the vastness of Cahuenga Pass, there was Dawn Upshaw&#8217;s radiant singing of Ravel&#8217;s &#8220;Shéhérazade&#8221; that seemed to encapsulate the very essence of the evening air.<br />
One further entry during Salonen&#8217;s stint did, indeed, stretch the &#8220;something for everyone&#8221; Bowl philosophy: a multimedia program devised with the connivance of Los Angeles&#8217; resident madcap Peter Sellars. The list was scary enough: Stravinsky (the abrasive little cantata &#8220;King of the Stars&#8221;), Scriabin&#8217;s &#8220;Prometheus,&#8221; Ligeti&#8217;s enchanting little tick-tock piece &#8220;Clocks and Clouds,&#8221; and Edgard Varèse&#8217;s orchestra-plus-electronics &#8220;Déserts.&#8221; As visuals for the Scriabin (which was originally designed to go with color projections) Sellars had made the weird choice of Edward Curtis&#8217; 1914 black-and-white documentary of Vancouver Indian rituals; for the Varèse, the local video artist Bill Viola had created a far more appropriate counterpart which actually earned cheers at the end. But the Ligeti work, 14 minutes of spun gossamer performed with no visual meddling,  really got the crowd&#8217;s collective back up. There were boos, then cheers, then both at once; it might have been Paris on the &#8220;Rite of Spring&#8221; premiere. Cynics who tend to dismiss the Bowl&#8217;s offerings as no more than music to picnic by should have been there that night as this cherishable piece of real estate turned into a living, fire-breathing, roofless concert hall.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>LA Opera&#160;Samson</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/1999/09/la-opera-samson/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/1999/09/la-opera-samson/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 09 Sep 1999 22:35:25 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Musical America]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=1837</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[This is the week of Los Angeles&#8217; annual identity crisis. On Tuesday and Thursday, in shorts and tee-shirt, I load the picnic basket and head for the Hollywood Bowl. On Wednesday I fish out a pair of matching socks and head downtown to the Music Center, where the Los Angeles Opera starts off its season [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>This is the week of Los Angeles&#8217; annual identity crisis. On Tuesday and Thursday, in shorts and tee-shirt, I load the picnic basket and head for the Hollywood Bowl. On Wednesday I fish out a pair of matching socks and head downtown to the Music Center, where the Los Angeles Opera starts off its season with the usual opening-night gala. At neither venue is the dress code absolute; in with the black tie and sequins there were jeans and Nikes at the opera on Wednesday, and you can occasionally spot a suit at the Bowl. But this week&#8217;s intermingling takes getting used to: all the more so since Saint-Saens&#8217; &#8220;Samson et Dalila,&#8221; which kicked off the opera season on Wednesday, is a lot closer in level of thought to the typical Bowl fare than is Ravel&#8217;s subtle, exquisite &#8220;Sheherazade,&#8221; which Dawn Upshaw sang enchantingly at the Bowl the night before.<br />
&#8220;Samson&#8221; marked the start of the L.A. Opera&#8217;s 14th season, the last for outgoing founder and general director Peter Hemmings; it served as well to trumpet the imminent arrival of incoming artistic director Plácido Domingo (with the rest of the new administrative team as yet unannounced).  In a sense, the &#8220;Samson&#8221; also celebrated the sweep of history within the company. Lawrence Foster, who conducted the inaugural &#8220;Otello&#8221; (with Domingo) in October, 1986, was again on the podium, as he has often been in the intervening years.  Domingo was the Samson; he has sung opening-night leads in nine of 14 season, and conducted two others. Two singers in lesser roles, Richard Bernstein the Abimelech and Louis Lebherz the Old Hebrew, are alumni of the company&#8217;s training program now well along in world-class careers.<br />
Tattered baggage though it be, &#8220;Samson et Dalila&#8221; maintains its place in the repertory on the strength of its glittering surface. Sure, it has only its one tune worth remembering; its ballet is the ancestor of all operatic hootchy-kootch. Given a fair serving of charismatic lung-power in its two name roles, however, and a stage setting evocative of the imagined Loew&#8217;s Babylon lobby of everybody&#8217;s dreams &#8212; all of which it got at the Music Center on Wednesday &#8211; it can still dupe an undemanding audience into an illusion of witnessing some kind of masterpiece.<br />
Credit composer Camille Saint-Saens as the opera&#8217;s masterful string-puller. Samson is a role fashioned in tenor heaven, from his first lurching onstage with his mighty battle-cry to his heartrending laments in Philistine captivity. Does it matter that neither musical substance, or anything in between, remains in the memory once the song is sung? No; what remains is the sound, if not the shape, of Plácido Domingo&#8217;s white-hot outbursts: opera at its most elemental.<br />
Dalila is fashioned out of friendlier stuff; she has her one great tune in the Act Two love/hate duet, although it&#8217;s a long time in coming. Denyce Graves, apparently put on earth to take over and inflame all of opera&#8217;s bad-girl mezzo-soprano roles (of which there are many), with flashing eyes that could seduce any tenor within miles to abandon home, hearth and hairdo, was, in a word, sensational: lavishly endowed in voice and in everything else as well. (She even tried a few dance steps during the Bacchanale, a welcome contrast to choreographer Daniel Pelzig&#8217;s Muscle-Beach stuff.)<br />
Douglas Schmidt&#8217;s production, on loan from the San Francisco Opera &#8212; garishly lit by Kurt Landisman from Thomas E. Munn&#8217;s original design &#8212; nicely matched the music&#8217;s tendency toward the ponderous overstatement: a heavy impasto of burnished color, as from watching ten Gustave Moreau paintings at once, and, for the final temple scene a terrific jumble of pseudo-Oriental statuary where you&#8217;re tempted to seek out the  popcorn stand. Nicolas Joël&#8217;s staging, tidy and unremarkable, at least nicely accomplished the final catastrophe that everyone sits still for; it brought down the house.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Bacchanale</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/1999/09/bacchanale/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/1999/09/bacchanale/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 08 Sep 1999 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=265</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[“I still don&#8217;t know much about early music, Monteverdi, or even Bach,” said Esa-Pekka Salonen in May 1996, in an interview in these pages. Apparently he‘s a fast learner; his all-Bach program at the Hollywood Bowl last week was a fascinating essay in the variety of approaches to the music, and in the sociology of [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>“I still don&#8217;t know much about early music, Monteverdi, or even Bach,” said Esa-Pekka Salonen in May 1996, in an interview in these pages. Apparently he‘s a fast learner; his all-Bach program at the Hollywood Bowl last week was a fascinating essay in the variety of approaches to the music, and in the sociology of these approaches as well. No composer&#8217;s legacy has undergone so vast an assortment of performance styles, from the mellifluous padding of the Victorian orchestrators to the enchanting scat of the Swingle Singers and the “switched-on” electronic escapades of WendyWalter Carlos in later times. No composer‘s legacy has better demonstrated such sublime and indomitable powers of survival under crushing odds.
</p>
<p>   As it happened, Salonen&#8217;s program included none of the aforementioned ventures in Bachian perversion. We got others instead: two of Leopold Stokowski‘s garish reworkings of famous organ works, and a footloose venture by Gustav Mahler drawn from two of Bach&#8217;s orchestral suites with a heavy wash of Mahlerian counterpoint stirred in to subvert the texture into last week‘s kartoffel-kugel. Earlier there had come a couple of brave attempts on Salonen&#8217;s part to deliver the First “Brandenburg” and the two-violin concertos in something like pristine proportions. I have to confess that the transcriptions were a lot more fun than the “straight” performances, in which the overriding impact of this glorious music &#8212; most of all the tense, hair-raising dissonances in the slow movement of the First “Brandenburg” &#8212; were concealed under an overlay of excessive carefulness. But that was no fault of Bach‘s.
</p>
<p>   Such considerations lead us inevitably to that pervasive and familiar bugaboo, the business of “authentic” performance, of the right sounds produced by the right number of players in the right venue and at the right tempos, dynamic shadings and the like. Common sense would seem to dictate that Bach&#8217;s well-worn D-minor Toccata and Fugue, our old pal from Disney‘s Fantasia, fits better into the spaces of Cahuenga Pass in Stokowski&#8217;s mammoth orchestral setting than in the paler resonances of an 18th-century organ loft. Yet there have been Bach-size Bach performances at the Bowl that have fit the surroundings far better than Salonen‘s the other night; I can&#8217;t easily forget a St. Matthew Passion under Christopher Hogwood in 1985, done with forces of “authentic” size and thrillingly audible &#8212; at least until a car alarm broke in exactly at the moment of Jesus‘ crucifixion.
</p>
<p>   Stokowski was himself an organist, and there&#8217;s no reason to doubt his word that his dozens of Bach orchestrations were sincerely motivated by a desire to expand the public for this music &#8212; or even his theory that Bach, if alive, would surely be composing for similar orchestral forces. His D-minor Toccata is, indeed, a keen psychoanalysis-through-sound of Bach‘s design, the sheer bravado in the capricious mood shifts in the Toccata and the clear separation of lines of counterpoint in the Fugue achieved by handing them off to contrasting groups of instruments. Salonen&#8217;s performance went further than Stokowski‘s own recordings in a broad panorama of tempo changes, but this, too, seemed right for the music. Some of that same flexibility, in fact, would have helped the two concertos earlier in the program.
</p>
<p>   The Mahler “Suite” was by some distance the greater perversion of Bach&#8217;s design: a gathering of movements from the second and third orchestral suites, the scoring considerably thickened with added instruments and an organ, Bach‘s clean counterpoints tangled up with new lines, the ethereal “Air on the G-String” turned into audible molasses. The work dates from 1910. Much of the public notion of Bach at that time was based on the Romantic rescorings of the orchestral works &#8212; by, among others, the proper Brit Joseph Barnby, who also enriched the world&#8217;s musical treasury with the lullaby “Sweet and Low” &#8212; and the Mahler transcription was hardly the greatest sin of the time. Beside the falsities in this work, however, Stokowski‘s version was the soul of purity.
</p>
<p>   The dealers&#8217; shelves groan under the weight of recorded keyboard Bach, on 9-foot concert grand piano, laptop clavichord, tabletop synthesizer and harpsichords of all sizes. Tucked into Philips‘ mountainous “Great Pianists of the 20th Century” series there is, inevitably, Rosalyn Tureck&#8217;s “Goldberg” Variations, recorded in 1957 and thus the earliest (and least insufferable) of her three recorded performances. Tureck has been, by her own proclamation (and that of a few others as well), the high priestess of Bach on piano, and it is just that affectation of priestliness &#8212; the mock solemnity right at the start that turns the basic theme from the Sarabande to a funereal threnody, the childlike clatter in some of the faster variations &#8212; that I find offensive in her playing and always have. Bach on the piano does not offend me, nor do I require the iconoclasm of a Glenn Gould, however convincing, to make the music work on this “anachronistic” instrument. (Andras Schiff‘s London recordings are all superb, and I suspect &#8212; after hearing his recital at UCLA last spring &#8212; that Murray Perahia is the world&#8217;s next great Bach pianist.)
</p>
<p>   Annoyed by what I was hearing (and not hearing) in the recently acquired Tureck recording, I sought solace in print, and found it in a passage by Henry David Thoreau. Hang it on your wall:
</p>
<p>   “The living fact commemorates itself. Why look in the dark for light? Critical acumen is exerted in vain to recover the past; the past cannot be presented; we cannot know what we are not. But one veil hangs over past, present and future; and it is the province of the historian to find out not what was, but what is. Where a battle has been fought, you will find nothing but the bones of men and beasts; where a battle is being fought, there are hearts beating.”</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>To Boo or Not To&#160;Boo</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/1999/09/to-boo-or-not-to-boo/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/1999/09/to-boo-or-not-to-boo/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 01 Sep 1999 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=264</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Sellars, Kevin Higa; Grimaud, J. Henry FairFINALLY, THERE WERE SIGNS OF LIFE AT the Hollywood Bowl &#8212; onstage, and in the audience as well. Esa-Pekka Salonen returned to his rightful podium to kick off his three weeks in the Tuesday/Thursday &#8220;classical&#8221; series that brings the season to a close. His first program was a daredevil [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Sellars, Kevin Higa; Grimaud, J. Henry FairFINALLY, THERE WERE SIGNS OF LIFE AT the Hollywood Bowl &#8212; onstage, and in the audience as well. Esa-Pekka Salonen returned to his rightful podium to kick off his three weeks in the Tuesday/Thursday &#8220;classical&#8221; series that brings the season to a close. His first program was a daredevil affair, made the more so by the visual concept on the big overhead screen concocted by Peter Sellars, who came onstage in his red pajamas before every number to Explain It All in vast sprays of high-flown verbiage just to make sure all 8,000 of us got the point. The music was lively, and so were the performances. The crowd was livelier still; at the end of György Ligeti&#8217;s <i>Clocks and Clouds</i>, there came a chorus of boos from a gathering of naysayers. That, in turn, energized an answering section of cheering yeasayers. You should have been there; it was like <i>The Rite of Spring</i> in Paris in 1913 all over again &#8212; and in the proletarian surroundings of the Bowl, where, according to the more cynical among us, nobody listens.</p>
<p>
There is a fine art to the elegantly voiced boo, and to the judgment of its appropriate place. Professional critics are assumed to be above the practice, since they can boo to heart&#8217;s content on the printed page. In 20 years at the Bowl I have been moved to boo only once &#8212; at a Lukas Foss atrocity that subjected some excellent Bach to a garish rewrite &#8212; but I didn&#8217;t have a writing job of my own at the time. Booing belongs as the proper reaction to presumption, as response to a creative act that oversteps artistic common sense and insults a hearer&#8217;s intelligence. If I had been in a booing mood that night last week, I would have responded to Sellars&#8217; inappropriate take on Scriabin&#8217;s <i>Prometheus</i>, onto whose color-besotted measures he had spatchcocked his strange choice of visuals: a 1914 black-and-white Edward Curtis documentary of Vancouver Indian rituals. Scriabin himself had specified visuals for this work, projections from a &#8220;color organ&#8221; he himself designed, with hues wedded to the &#8220;spiritual&#8221; content of specific notes and harmonies. If this music must be performed at all, a premise I might challenge with a vehemence just short of the full-throated boo, I would far prefer humoring the composer&#8217;s own view rather than the willful caprice of the madcap (and often, if not this time, startlingly right-on) Peter Sellars.</p>
<p>
The booing at the Bowl came not after the Scriabin but after the Ligeti, which had been offered with no visual meddling at all, music I had been longing to hear again since Salonen&#8217;s first performance here in 1993. (It was slated for release as part of Sony&#8217;s complete Ligeti series, and even assigned a number &#8212; SK 62317. But that project now appears to be scuttled while Sony busies itself with its Leonard Bernstein repackagings.) The music had first taken shape, writes Paul Griffiths in his excellent Ligeti biography, as the score for a projected comic-strip opera about Oedipus. What strange, magical fantasy is here! Flutes and clarinets in groups of five chortle around a women&#8217;s chorus with their clouds of made-up syllables; lower instruments act as clockwork. Some sounds are familiar: the buzzing from the other Ligeti works appropriated by Kubrick for <i>2001</i>. Whether the music belonged in Bowl programming, where mind-stretching experiences are not exactly standard procedure, the joining of music and the balmy evening air of Cahuenga Pass was without seam.</p>
<p>
At the end of this dazzling, one-of-a-kind event, there was the <i>Déserts</i> of Edgard Varèse, not quite &#8220;the ugliest piece of music ever written&#8221; of Sellars&#8217; introduction, as if echoes of Scriabin&#8217;s atrocity were not still lingering, but a curio from the late days of one of music&#8217;s fearless innovators. Here the visuals &#8212; Bill Viola&#8217;s desertscapes and mindscapes &#8212; surrounded and exalted the music, smoothed the tentative transitions from orchestral to primitive electronic sounds, turned the whole complex into something far more gratifying than the music itself. At the end there were cheers.</p>
<p>
TWO NIGHTS LATER IT WAS MANAGEment that perpetrated the boo-boo, the harebrained notion to turn video cameras loose on the music &#8212; Salonen conducting the Mahler First Symphony and, with Hélène Grimaud, Beethoven&#8217;s Fourth Piano Concerto &#8212; and project the performance on the big screen still in place from the previous event. It was a ghastly mistake: cameramen roaming the stage, seldom if ever focusing on the right players in solo passages, repeating over and again certain stock shots, and &#8212; worst of all &#8212; creating a distracting, larger-than-life image on the screen whereby the actual live performance down below became accompaniment to a TV show. Granted, the music at Bowl concerts is amplified and fed into loudspeakers; that still doesn&#8217;t justify turning a concert into a studio production.</p>
<p>
One irony: The notion of projecting concerts onto a TV screen had been advanced by the now-deposed Willem Wijnbergen early in his time here, and then dropped as impractical. Philharmonic people told me after this week&#8217;s concert that there had been &#8220;problems&#8221; with the cameras&#8217; not being able to reach the right spots, and that the decision to shoot had been made only three days before. A defective commodity, in other words, was knowingly handed off to a live audience, at a $75 top ticket. There are plans under consideration to rethink the process for next summer&#8217;s concerts, with screens better placed so as not to distract from the live performance. Wouldn&#8217;t free binoculars be an even better solution?</p>
<p>
It was also, by lousy luck, one of the worst evenings this summer for airborne interference. On the screen you could see Grimaud looking up as helicopters hovered again and again to disrupt her concentration. The performance that had begun spacious and profound cannot, in all fairness, be reviewed. Salonen&#8217;s Mahler managed to outshout the competition at times; it was, I think, a tremendous performance.</p>
<p>
Salonen&#8217;s Mahler has become a very personal conception. He observes quite literally the music&#8217;s frequent changes of pace and invitations to rubato; it takes getting used to, but it creates a fascinating, stretchy melodic line. Driving home after the concert I heard, via KKGO, Salonen&#8217;s Mahler Fourth, one of his first Los Angeles recordings. That, too, is remarkable most of all for its flexibility. With no interference aside from a few semis on 101 &#8212; mere whisperers after the massed might of LAPD&#8217;s helicopter squadrons &#8212; it sounded almost like a performance.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>A Bowl of Cherries, Some With&#160;Pits</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/1999/08/a-bowl-of-cherries-some-with-pits/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/1999/08/a-bowl-of-cherries-some-with-pits/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 25 Aug 1999 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=263</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Harth-Bedoya photo by Christian SteinerSERGEI PROKOFIEV&#8217;S FIFTH SYMPHONY dates from 1944, but it is the latest large-scale orchestral work to achieve permanence in the standard repertory. Some two dozen recordings are listed in the latest Schwann; at least that many more have come and gone. Until the performance at the Hollywood Bowl a couple of [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Harth-Bedoya photo by Christian SteinerSERGEI PROKOFIEV&#8217;S FIFTH SYMPHONY dates from 1944, but it is the latest large-scale orchestral work to achieve permanence in the standard repertory. Some two dozen recordings are listed in the latest Schwann; at least that many more have come and gone. Until the performance at the Hollywood Bowl a couple of weeks ago, with the visiting Russian National Orchestra under its associate conductor, Andrey Boreyko, I don&#8217;t think I&#8217;d ever heard the work set forth with its emotional proportions as well balanced, its range of color so handsomely preserved.</p>
<p>
It&#8217;s a big, tricky work, running 40 minutes more or less. Its two fast movements have the ring of the familiar Prokofiev: the sassy sudden jumps from one key to somewhere in the middle of next week, the glistening orchestration with its insolent brassy blats, and, in the middle of the scherzo, the wailing tune &#8212; inane but delicious &#8212; that suggests a visit from <i>Boris Godunov</i>&#8216;s Fool. The slow movements &#8212; the first and third &#8212; play the most tricks; they start off with long, sweeping tunes which then turn bitter. Boreyko&#8217;s reading with the Russians underlined the truly mean-tempered, sardonic qualities in the first movement that I had somehow failed to notice in perhaps half-a-hundred previous hearings. And he delivered the third movement, which others have made sentimental and trivial, in a dry-eyed manner that restored this splendid music to its rightful place as the emotional crown of the entire work.</p>
<p>
As the hordes of Russian orchestras come a-calling to garner a few dollars, it becomes harder to tell them apart. Despite its name, the Russian National is privately, not governmentally, supported; it was founded in 1990 by the much-admired pianist and conductor Mikhail Pletnev. He, however, suffered a foot injury while hiking just before his Bowl engagement, and therefore turned over the Bowl concerts to his two assistants. I missed the first, Dmitri Liss; Boreyko&#8217;s program had the more substantial music. Even from what I could tell from the Bowl&#8217;s sound system &#8212; which has been unusually iffy all summer &#8212; this is a remarkably sleek ensemble, deep and resonant in the way we always think of as &#8220;Russian.&#8221; They employ the classic seating, with first and second violins downstage; even through microphones, it makes the difference of a brighter string tone. The difference was even more audible in Beethoven&#8217;s <i>Egmont </i>Overture and Third Piano Concerto, although the latter was marred by the solo performance &#8212; most kindly described as doddering &#8212; by Vitaly Margulis, who is actually a local resident and on the UCLA piano faculty but who has never, for reasons not beyond deciphering, previously performed at the Bowl. (Has Russia suddenly run out of pianists?) Better yet, conductor and players went through an elaborate tune-up procedure before the concert, section by section &#8212; standard operating procedure with this orchestra, I am told. That, too, made a highly audible difference.</p>
<p>
BACK IN PLACE AFTER A WEEK OFF, THE Philharmonic also placed itself in the hands of its assistant conductors last week, and I placed my ears in the hands of Andrew Robinson for an evening of Italian stuff with singers, and Miguel Harth-Bedoya for Latin diversions far more diverting. Harth-Bedoya, by the way, has just been upgraded to associate conductor and, from last week&#8217;s evidence, deserves the promotion.</p>
<p>
The peculiar appeal of Alessandra Marc continues to elude me. Among a certain clique of opera fanatics she is the reigning Sacred Monster, and the grotesqueness of her appearance onstage (think docking supertanker) adds to her brownie points in that regard. But in achieving her current &#8212; er &#8212; stature, she has wasted, it seems to me, a precious resource. The incompatibility of stunning vocal equipment and utter carelessness in its use &#8212; notes bumped, breath out of control, passage work blurred and edgy &#8212; has to rank as a major tragedy. That evening at the Bowl, she sailed with mighty sound-blasts through the notes of Cilea, Puccini and Verdi, but never the music. In a <i>Tosca </i>duet, the excellent Mexican tenor Fernando de la Mora seemed anxious (and well-qualified) to help her shape her volcano of sound into something identifiable as melody, but to little avail. Nor did Andrew Robinson&#8217;s conducting &#8212; oddly enough, both flaccid and unyielding &#8212; help much, in the vocal selections or, on his own, in the lurid poster art of Respighi&#8217;s <i>The Pines of Rome</i>. He also needs some training in podium manners; no matter how rotten your soloist may be, you have to hug, shake hands or otherwise acknowledge her presence after the performance.</p>
<p>
The program at Friday&#8217;s &#8220;Latin Spectac-ular&#8221; was lighter in weight, but not by much. Astor Piazzolla&#8217;s Bandonéon Concerto is a subtle, complex work full of deep undercurrents, wonderfully laid out for the plangent, throbbing solo instrument and nicely set against the small orchestra. Argentina&#8217;s Horacio Romo delivered the captivating, insinuating music with his own brand of mastery.</p>
<p>
Fernando de la Mora was back for a varied collection of Latino ballads, not all of them the <i>castañas </i>of the repertory. I like his voice, clear and ringing; more than one other singer in the land could profitably study his clean, unforced delivery, and the lack of the affectations &#8212; the sobs, the gargles &#8212; that some find necessary to put over simple, ingratiating melodic material. Young (31) Harth-Bedoya, Peruvian-born and also recently appointed conductor of the Eugene Symphony, led the proceedings with zip and, one might assume, pride; he also chatted up the audience between numbers, just possibly to excess. Oh, how I wish that musical hosts given to verbal program notes could retire the &#8220;journey&#8221; metaphor for a year, or two. Or 10.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Handel, With&#160;Care</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/1999/08/handel-with-care/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/1999/08/handel-with-care/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 18 Aug 1999 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=262</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[IN THE ASTOUNDING LEGACY OF HANDEL operas that now, at long last, assumes its rightful place on world stages, Rodelinda stands apart. It deals not with gods, magicians and philandering Roman generals but with humans subject to human-size emotions. Its characters fall in and out of love, even as you and I, and they sing [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><font SIZE=2>IN THE ASTOUNDING LEGACY OF HANDEL operas that now, at long last, assumes its rightful place on world stages, <i>Rodelinda</i> stands apart. It deals not with gods, magicians and philandering Roman generals but with humans subject to human-size emotions. Its characters fall in and out of love, even as you and I, and they sing to one another in love music more poignant, more unbearably beautiful, than you or I could ever fashion. Some of their behavior seems irrational at times: Why would the deposed King Bertarido leave his wife and child in the hands of his enemies while roaming around incognito plotting his return to power? But behavior irrational by 1999 standards may not have been so in its own time; try to straighten out the scenario of, say, Shakespeare&#8217;s <i>Measure for Measure</i> and you&#8217;ll see what I mean.</font></p>
<p>
<font SIZE=2><i>Rodelinda</i> dates from 1725, the glory days of Handel&#8217;s reign over London opera; the soprano Cuzzoni and the castrato Senesino sang the principal roles &#8212; the Callas and Pavarotti of their time. A performance at Smith College in 1931 is generally credited with awakening American awareness of Handel&#8217;s operas in anything close to authentic versions; the production that capped the Music Academy of the West&#8217;s summer festival two weekends ago seems to have had the same effect on Santa Barbarians. In the small and comfortable Lobero Theater, surprise and delight were everywhere apparent.</font></p>
<p>
<font SIZE=2>Founded in 1947 by legendary soprano Lotte Lehmann, Santa Barbara&#8217;s Music Academy of the West has since then produced a summer workshop and festival, ever growing and ever more cherishable. And while Lehmann herself is said to have had little use for operas composed before the time of her beloved Mozart, her place has now been taken by Marilyn Horne, that walking volcano on whose broad shoulders Handel&#8217;s operas have ridden to their present high estate.</font></p>
<p>
<font SIZE=2>For Santa Barbara&#8217;s first-ever Handelian excursion, director Christopher Mattaliano created a setting elegant but simple, marked especially by an easy managing of exits and entrances to offset the episodic nature of most baroque opera. His villains smoked cigarettes; heroes and villains brandished up-to-date handguns. James Scott&#8217;s all-purpose costumes &#8212; military getup and plain gowns &#8212; bespoke no particular time or place. And despite Randall Behr&#8217;s expectedly poky pacing in the pit, his expert small orchestral ensemble, backed by a properly placed harpsichord, gave out a fair approximation of the sounds of a Handelian orchestra.</font></p>
<p>
<font SIZE=2>Casts for Santa Barbara&#8217;s one-per-summer operas are drawn from young professionals, assembled to absorb wisdom from the Academy&#8217;s voice-program director Horne and her illustrious faculty. Nevertheless, this summer&#8217;s group included an authentic star, and a sensational one. Attention focused on Bejun Mehta &#8212; cast in two of the three performances as long-lost husband Bertarido &#8212; who as recently as 1997, at 30 and with a happy career as a boy soprano far behind him, decided to transform himself into a countertenor and has done so with spectacular success.</font></p>
<p>
<font SIZE=2>Related to conductor Zubin only through distant cousins, Mehta pealed forth his tonsil-twisting melodic lines with an ease and honeyed smoothness over an enormous range that belied the brevity of his career so far. Baroque opera&#8217;s musical insinuations can easily be taken as an invitation to clutch-&#8217;n'-lurch, yet Mehta onstage created a character as overpowering visually as vocally. In a cast with no one less than highly skilled, with Karen Wierzba&#8217;s Rodelinda handily outlasting a couple of inevitable one-note disasters in a killer role, Mehta&#8217;s work came across as pure show-stealing. He may next hone his arts of grand thievery on September 26, in the New York City Opera&#8217;s first-ever production of Handel&#8217;s <i>Ariodante</i>. The world suffers famine in the realms of adequate romantic tenors and Wagnerian sopranos; in the countertenor department &#8212; with Mehta alongside Americans Brian Asawa and David Daniels &#8212; the ranks are brimming and golden.</font></p>
<p>
<font SIZE=2>A VISION CAME TO ME LAST SATURDAY night at the John Anson Ford Amphitheater during the mostly superb performance of Mozart&#8217;s <i>The Magic Flute</i>. I saw a splendid small theater for Mozart operas and other works of similar proportion, here in Los Angeles, with no more than 800 seats, a proper orchestra pit and simple, adequate stage machinery &#8212; something like Glyndebourne, or even like Santa Barbara&#8217;s clunky old Lobero (which seats 680). The cast at the Ford, nicely backed by Lucinda Carver and her L.A. Mozart Orchestra, was almost all local freelance singers, not all of them young but most of them terrific. For this one-time-only performance, they had merged into a smooth and elegant ensemble, backed by the small chorus that goes by the interesting name of Zephyr: Voices Unbound. My vision included holding on to these fine people as the nucleus for an adventurous repertory company, the kind of project that is clearly not in the cards for the heavy spenders at the Music Center.</font></p>
<p>
<font SIZE=2>The performance space at the Ford has been tested in past years and proved unworkable for stage productions; the <i>Flute</i> was given in concert form, with the singers in black tie apparently encouraged to gesticulate and make faces. The fireworks from the nearby Hollywood Bowl went off exactly during the &#8220;trial by fire and water&#8221; scene. The singing was in German, the spoken dialogue (nicely pared down) was in English, an intelligent touch. More puzzling were the other cuts: a duet, a trio and the Priests&#8217; March from Act 2. The singers were heavily miked, almost but not quite drowning out the mellow wind playing in Carver&#8217;s small orchestra. In my ideal, as-yet-unbuilt opera theater, the marvelously resonant Sarastro of Ron Li-Paz and the almost-right-on high F&#8217;s of Rebecca Sherburn&#8217;s Queen of the Night would need no help from the sound guys; the venerable but still valuable Jonathan Mack could tend to the last threads of his once-mellow tenor without going all red in the face. Lucinda Carver would be on the podium; this was, by some distance, the best work I have heard from her.</font></p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>They Don&#039;t Make &#039;Em Like That&#160;Anymore</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/1999/08/they-dont-make-em-like-that-anymore/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/1999/08/they-dont-make-em-like-that-anymore/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 11 Aug 1999 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=261</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[THANKS TO MR. TURNER&#8217;S GOOD OFFICES, Deception dropped into my satellite dish a few weeks ago, reminding me once again of the current glum treatment visited by moviemakers upon the noble art I so valiantly struggle to serve. You can have your Australian nut cases driven mad by the Rach 3; you can have your [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><font SIZE=2>THANKS TO MR. TURNER&#8217;S GOOD OFFICES, </font><font SIZE=2><i>Deception </i>dropped into my satellite dish a few weeks ago, reminding me once again of the current glum treatment visited by moviemakers upon the noble art I so valiantly struggle to serve. You can have your Australian nut cases driven mad by the Rach 3; you can have your romantic egomaniacs performing simultaneously on nubile wenches and a discolored violin. Just leave me Bette Davis, taking deadly aim at the World&#8217;s Greatest Composer on the staircase of his jillion-dollar Manhattan apartment while, a few blocks away, the true love of her life fills worldwide ears with that composer&#8217;s new cello concerto &#8212; which he had contrived only to blackmail her into fessing up to the cellist that she and the composer . . . oh, never mind.</font></p>
<p>
<font SIZE=2>Delicious nonsense, this; without half trying &#8212; and without the almighty carry-on (I steal Pauline Kael&#8217;s immortal phrase) of such latter-day fabrications as <i>Amadeus</i>, <i>Shine </i>and, lately, <i>The Red Violin</i> &#8212; director Irving Rapper&#8217;s 1946 class-act soap opera digs deep into the unreality that besets classical music and makes life worth living for its innumerable slaves. I love the opening sequence: Cellist Paul Henreid, managing his bow as if trying to swat flies, saws his way through the finale of Haydn&#8217;s D-major Concerto, then meets his admirers backstage. The local critic (from <i>The Daily Bugle</i>, yet!), complete with horn-rims and pipe, filled to flood stage with his own knowledge, blasts through the crowd to make his presence known. &#8220;From now on, Mr. Novak,&#8221; he declares, in tones normally reserved for the Sermon on the Mount, &#8220;you&#8217;re my cellist.&#8221; Can&#8217;t you just hear me (or Mark Swed, for that matter) backstage at the Music Center? &#8220;From now on, Esa-Pekka, you&#8217;re my conductor.&#8221;</font></p>
<p>
<font SIZE=2>Claude Rains plays the composer in question: Alexander Hollenius, &#8220;who combines the melody of the past with the rhythm of today&#8221; and whose fees have vouchsafed him an abode for which a Rockefeller mansion might serve as guest cottage &#8212; plus another venue nearly as grand, where paramour Bette can practice on a piano as large as some counties (and explain to suspicious true love Paul that she bought it with Green Stamps or some such). With Erich Korngold guiding the pen, he turns out three or so minutes of a competent enough cello concerto, full of the swoops and sweeps that apparently passed as Hollywood&#8217;s notion of new music in 1946 &#8212; and, alas, still does. (Korngold&#8217;s concerto was completed and recorded, if you care: no worse a hackwork than the &#8220;Spellbound&#8221; or &#8220;Warsaw&#8221; concertos of similar provenance.)</font></p>
<p>
<font SIZE=2>Old movies about music and musicians come clothed in a pretension unashamed and joyous. Claude Rains&#8217; Hollenius is an ogre beyond conceivable proportion. So is the Beethoven of Abel Gance&#8217;s colossal 1936 prevarication, beside whom the twit of <i>Immortal Beloved </i>is a zoo animal not worth feeding. The acclaim compiled by the dreadful <i>Amadeus </i>seems to have become license to pass off the old-fashioned lies about music as immortal truths. <i>The Red Violin</i>&#8216;s acrobatic fornications are no more fun (and no less) than the threesomes in <i>Farinelli</i>. The lie-telling in both films strikes me as insulting both to music and to an intelligent moviegoer &#8212; or is that, these days, a contradiction in terms?</font></p>
<p>
<font SIZE=2>There is a musical quotient in <i>Violin </i>that is being passed off by the PR folk as worth serious attention: Joshua Bell&#8217;s solos over Esa-Pekka&#8217;s leadership of a John Corigliano score. Did I miss something? I hear a Main Theme ripped off from the old standard &#8220;Love Is a Many-Splendored Thing&#8221; laid onto a bland orchestral throbbing, with the solos nicely intoned &#8212; but so what? In E. Annie Proulx&#8217;s wonderful new novel, <i>Accordion Crimes</i>, a green accordion gets handed across generations and around the world, in a story shapely and elegantly told; <i>The Red Violin </i>traces a similar journey with nothing mistakable for shape or elegance. Besides, a local instrument maker tells me that the violin&#8217;s &#8220;secret&#8221; reddening ingredient would have turned black within days.</font></p>
<p>
<font SIZE=2>BETTER PLAYING OF THE VIOLIN &#8212; STU</font><font SIZE=2>pendous, in fact &#8212; took place at the Hollywood Bowl last week: Vadim Repin&#8217;s account of the first of Shostakovich&#8217;s two violin concertos, with the Philharmonic handily managed by Eri Klas. Composed in 1948 for David Oistrakh, and kept under wraps until 1955 with Stalin safely out of earshot, this is powerful, intense music from a composer whose stature looms ever taller. The humor bites viciously; quiet passages disturb rather than calm. The work is, by some distance, the most farseeing music yet heard at the Bowl this summer; only the Salonen concert upcoming on August 24 offers any significant challenge. Repin, who has delivered dazzling performances here of repertory concertos (Brahms and Tchaikovsky) &#8212; and a fair number of discs, mostly on Erato, including some remarkably convincing excursions into the junk repertory &#8212; soared even higher to the challenging crags of this extraordinary work.</font></p>
<p>
<font SIZE=2>Conductors are expected to possess particular insights into the music of their native lands, but that is often easily disproved. Adam Fischer&#8217;s Kodály at the Bowl&#8217;s opening classical concert disproved the thesis quite adequately. So did Klas&#8217; dreary slog through the Second Symphony by his almost-countryman Sibelius &#8212; Estonia being a mere stone&#8217;s throw across the water from Finland. I have to admit: I&#8217;ve never understood the peculiar power this horrendously overstuffed music has on minds both young and old. I hear it as disconnected wisps of drab melodic shapes pushing through a dense, ponderously gray orchestral buzz-buzz; of lurching to sudden stops as the inspiration simply sputters (a device possibly cribbed from Bruckner); of an oratorical tune in the finale that wears thin on repetitions. Even so, I have been reached by the brute force of some performances; I did, after all, grow up in Serge Koussevitzky&#8217;s Boston. The performance under Klas was, I am told, more respectful of the composer&#8217;s markings, an element that Koussie was famous for ignoring. As with all those movies, respect for truth doesn&#8217;t always make for the best entertainment.</font></p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Good, Bad, Beautiful,&#160;Etc.</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/1999/08/good-bad-beautiful-etc/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/1999/08/good-bad-beautiful-etc/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 04 Aug 1999 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=260</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[FELIX MENDELSSOHN HAS FARED poorly on local hillsides this summer. At the Hollywood Bowl, in the Cahuenga Pass, Nadja Salerno-Sonnenberg was her usual bratty self, turning the Violin Concerto into personal showoff. At the Getty Center, high above Sepulveda Pass, sour notes masquerading as authentic performance practice turned a couple of well-known orchestral masterpieces into [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><font SIZE=2>FELIX MENDELSSOHN HAS FARED </font><font SIZE=2>poorly on local hillsides this summer. At the Hollywood Bowl, in the Cahuenga Pass, Nadja Salerno-Sonnenberg was her usual bratty self, turning the Violin Concerto into personal showoff. At the Getty Center, high above Sepulveda Pass, sour notes masquerading as authentic performance practice turned a couple of well-known orchestral masterpieces into something close to torture.</font></p>
<p>
<font SIZE=2>Mendelssohn takes a bad rap now and then. His music ambles along elegant pathways; its utter lack of rough edges is seen by some as a fatal flaw, an affliction also shared by music of far lesser stature. (Patience; we&#8217;ll get to Saint-Saëns in a minute.) Pomposities abound; the peroration tacked onto the &#8220;Scottish&#8221; Symphony is one of music&#8217;s most endearing absurdities. (In his assemblage of Mendelssohniana as the soundtrack for the great old Max Reinhardt movie of A Midsummer Night&#8217;s Dream &#8212; the one with Mickey Rooney as Puck &#8212; Erich Korngold turned that passage into a big choral number.) But the Violin Concerto, like its close companion Schumann&#8217;s Piano Concerto, is a perfect work. Its soloist speaks in long, lithe, appealing lines of melody far beyond any need for words. At one moment the violin, virtually on its knees, begs for our credence and love; at another, it summons our giggling delight at its airy tracery high atop the orchestra&#8217;s pretty tune spinning. It is exactly the right length for what it has to say, and it says exactly the right thing at the right time. It goes straight to an audience&#8217;s heart and elicits everybody&#8217;s finest impulses &#8212; so much so that all 6,930 people at this concert knew not to applaud at the magical link between the first and second movements. Above all, it doesn&#8217;t need the look-ma-I&#8217;m-sexy kind of swoops and slowdowns accorded it at the Bowl by Salerno-Sonnenberg, a violinist of undeniable technical accomplishment and a deplorable set of musical instincts. The Philharmonic, under the excellent Jahja Ling, supported her nobly; Ling &#8212; a product of the Bowl&#8217;s Summer Institute of fond memory &#8212; achieved a fine balance despite the ongoing amplification problems that have plagued this summer&#8217;s concerts.</font></p>
<p>
<font SIZE=2>At the Getty, this summer&#8217;s series ties in with several of the current exhibits. Robert Winter, musicology&#8217;s Lord High Everything Else, is in charge, so you can expect lots of programming imagination and lots, lots, lots of prefatory words. The last program I attended honored the show of old photographs from Scotland, so that Mendelssohn&#8217;s Hebrides Overture and the &#8220;Scottish&#8221; Symphony became audible post cards &#8212; if rather tattered. Greg Maldonado&#8217;s Los Angeles Baroque Orchestra, augmented with a large contingent of outsiders to manage the long-beyond-Baroque scoring, handled the unfamiliar repertory bravely but not wisely; conductor and orchestra were in far over their collective heads, with little benefit either to Mendelssohn&#8217;s rhapsodic scoring or to the music&#8217;s deep, dark beauties. Despite the composer&#8217;s prescription that the four movements be played without break, there were continuity-disturbing pauses for tuning up and chats from the podium throughout &#8212; that from an orchestra ostensibly devoted to &#8220;authenticity.&#8221;</font></p>
<p>
<font SIZE=2>Before all this, a clutch of Haydn and Beethoven settings of Scots poetry, potboilers created for an Edinburgh publisher, got tryout performances by soprano Kris Gould and tenor Daniel Plaster in what sounded like sight-readings. (Betcha didn&#8217;t know that the words and tune of &#8220;Auld Lang Syne&#8221; turn up, almost intact, in one of Beethoven&#8217;s songs.) I had hoped that the Getty folk might have learned from the acoustical disasters in last year&#8217;s series, but no; on the same stage improvised on the chilled and windswept courtyard, backed by a nonresonant stone wall, the sounds came over diffuse and lifeless. Happier memories of summer events at the old Getty remain undispelled.</font></p>
<p>
<font SIZE=2>For hours after Jean-Philippe Collard had left Camille Saint-Saëns&#8217; Fifth Piano Concerto a pile of shards on the Hollywood Bowl stage, I racked my brain trying &#8212; without success, as it happened &#8212; to think of a worse piece of music by a composer of renown. There are, I admit, many kinds of bad music, and some of it can be fun. (I own up to a passion for late-Romantic showpiece concertos, with the E-major of Moszkowski heading the list.) But this &#8220;Egyptian&#8221; Concerto, so-called because a gooey tune midway through the slow movement was tagged by the composer as of Nubian origin, brings up a shaky rear. Not an idea lingers in the memory &#8212; not even the opening, which comes across as a gross travesty of the sturdy tune that ended the previous concerto. The craftsmanship is clumsy, the overall shape grotesque. Writers about Saint-Saëns in his own time &#8212; Romain Rolland, for one, whose Jean-Christophe your grandmother surely read &#8212; exulted over his &#8220;happy grace . . . an elegance that cannot be put into words . . . [sharing with Mendelssohn] a common purity of taste.&#8221; Baloney!</font></p>
<p>
<font SIZE=2>There is bad music that I like (the aforementioned Moszkowski) and good music that I don&#8217;t; life is funny that way. My life, in fact, is a constant round of trying to make peace with the enemy, and sometimes I succeed. I did a couple of nights later, in fact, when the excellent Emmanuel Krivine (who had also participated in the Saint-Saëns two nights before, but never mind) drew from the Philharmonic a strong, immensely emphatic performance of the Brahms Second Symphony, conveying from its first deep, ruddy growlings the message that this, for once, might be a Brahms worth staying awake for &#8212; as, indeed, it was.</font></p>
<p>
<font SIZE=2>Both Ling and Krivine, in fact, have delivered admirable accounts of themselves at the Bowl this summer, lending further evidence to the notion that all this weeping over conductor shortages may be premature. Under Ling the orchestra had delivered a nicely paced, warm-hearted reading of the Dvorák Eighth, a work which &#8212; unlike the fabulous Seventh &#8212; needs a firm hand in patching a few holes and retying a couple of frayed knots. This hand the young Ling handsomely provided. Krivine, who had also led the Philharmonic indoors last April, shaped a beautiful reading of the Berlioz Symphonie Fantastique: not only impressively loud in the proper loud spots, but also wonderfully airborne in the pastoral episode. Neither conductor&#8217;s stage manner was what you&#8217;d call a fireball in full blaze. Both struck me as strong, deeply satisfying musicians who could be with us for the long haul &#8212; if the long haul, indeed, is music&#8217;s destiny.</font></p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Teamwork</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/1999/07/teamwork/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/1999/07/teamwork/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 28 Jul 1999 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=259</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[YOU WILL FIND MORE USEFUL TRUTHS about music in the dozen or so comic operas of the Sirs W.S. Gilbert and Arthur Sullivan than in all 20 volumes of Grove&#8217;s Dictionary. The irresistible beauty of their tunes and counterpoints compound the miracle; their deadly accuracy in holding up for ridicule the absurdities that underlie some [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><font SIZE=2>YOU WILL FIND MORE USEFUL TRUTHS about music in the dozen or so comic operas of the Sirs W.S. Gilbert and Arthur Sullivan than in all 20 volumes of Grove&#8217;s Dictionary. The irresistible beauty of their tunes and counterpoints compound the miracle; their deadly accuracy in holding up for ridicule the absurdities that underlie some of music&#8217;s most sacred principles serves the art as stern and unforgiving conscience. Their wisdom is both utilitarian and eternal.</font></p>
<p>
<font SIZE=2>What, then, accounts for the current scarce representation of these cherishable artworks in our landscape? Fear of being confronted too overtly with evidence of our own foibles? A growing disregard for the wondrous power of language, brought on by excessive reliance on computers with built-in grammar-correcting programs? The D&#8217;Oyly Carte Opera Company, immutable guardians of the Savoyard flame in the creators&#8217; own time and for decades thereafter, recedes into memory. We suffer from Gilbert-and-Sullivan deprivation on live stages; most surviving companies play for cutes rather than content. Fortunately, some solace resides in the treasures still at hand on disc, and a few bright patches on the video shelves as well &#8212; including a 1939 movie <i>The Mikado</i> with Kenny Baker (onetime tenor on the Jack Benny radio show) as Nanki-Poo but also with the D&#8217;Oyly Carte standard-bearers Martyn Green and Sydney Granville in other top roles.</font></p>
<p>
<font SIZE=2>The latest arrival is from Telarc: five of the operas conducted by Sir Charles Mackerras, with the splendid chorus and orchestra of the Welsh National Opera and a mostly superb cast, recorded between 1992 and &#8217;95, formerly available separately and now gathered in a five-disc midprice box. The discs will not tempt ardent Savoyards to discard their older recordings of these works, but they are worthy, fine-sounding companions. The early electrical recordings by the D&#8217;Oyly Cartes, first issued on RCA Victor 78s, later reprocessed on Arabesque CDs, preserved a few vintage voices from Sullivan&#8217;s own ensemble &#8212; among them, Sir Henry Lytton&#8217;s memorable rasp, beyond question the single most hilarious sound ever recorded. The London LP series from the 1950s offered a later D&#8217;Oyly Carte company with voices younger but with the company&#8217;s earmark style &#8212; its impeccable clarity of diction and elegance of ensemble &#8212; already in decline. (Some sets also included the spoken dialogue, delivered in a lifted-pinky style that distracted rather than enhanced.) Only one or two performances from Sir Malcolm Sargent&#8217;s series on Angel-EMI, with wonderful singers including Richard Lewis and Geraint Evans &#8212; recorded with Glyndebourne Opera personnel after the D&#8217;Oyly Carte franchise had expired &#8212; are currently available, if I can believe the latest Schwann. Any society that denies itself the lyric splendor of Lewis&#8217; &#8220;Is Life a Boon?&#8221; endangers its right to be considered civilized.</font></p>
<p>
<font SIZE=2>The Telarc series boasts a few known singers. The veteran Donald Adams is a properly bellowing Mikado and Pirate King; Thomas Allen is the <i>Pinafore</i>&#8216;s captain, and also takes on one of Lytton&#8217;s great roles, Dick Deadeye in <i>H.M.S. Pinafore</i>. Alwyn Mellor is an endearing Elsie in <i>The Yeomen of the Guard</i>; Richard Suart, her Jack Point, doesn&#8217;t quite erase memories of Geraint Evans in that role, but nobody could. There are cuts, mostly unimportant; the overtures to <i>The Pirates of Penzance</i> and <i>The Mikado</i> are only someone else&#8217;s cobbled-together pastiches, and omitting them gets the works onto single discs. Less admirable: One verse of Ko-Ko&#8217;s &#8220;little list&#8221; is missing, presumably to solve Gilbert&#8217;s &#8220;nigger serenader&#8221; problem by tossing out both baby and bath water.</font></p>
<p>
<font SIZE=2>The major advantage in these new recordings is Mackerras, who supplies the ensemble sense that ennobles his Mozart, and the remarkable feeling for orchestral balance that makes his Janácek so vivid. His strong organizing force obviously underlines a high regard for these splendiferous works &#8212; as wise, probing comic creations, as documents of a bygone way of life worth remembering, and, above all, as superlative creations by an awesomely talented words-and-music team that succeeded, as only one other comparable pairing ever has, in bringing out each other&#8217;s high genius. I can only hope that the remaining works in the GS canon &#8212; above all, <i>The Gondoliers</i>, <i>Iolanthe</i> and <i>Patience</i> &#8212; are on the Mackerras agenda.</font></p>
<p>
<font SIZE=2>WE ARE BETTER SUPPLIED WITH THE artifacts from the genius of that other words-and-music team, but discoveries still await. <i>Così Fan Tutte</i> was the last of Mozart&#8217;s miraculous collaborations with Lorenzo da Ponte. Its dubious moral tone, even though reportedly based on an actual incident, bothered audiences for decades; its cynical views toward womanly virtue raise hackles even now. Its first Metropolitan Opera performance wasn&#8217;t until 1952, 162 years late.</font></p>
<p>
<font SIZE=2>That performance was recorded and has just been reissued on a two-disc Sony set. Fritz Stiedry conducts, stiff and prissy, deleting about 40 minutes of music. Against Eleanor Steber&#8217;s knowing and intense Fiordiligi there is Blanche Thebom&#8217;s pale Dorabella and Roberta Peters&#8217; chirpy Despina. Worst of all, there is Richard Tucker&#8217;s Ferrando, an absurd attempt to throttle down his full-blown Italianisms to Mozartian proportions. The singing is in English, or tries to be; Ruth and Thomas Martin&#8217;s cutesy text is a clear holdover from the way people used to regard Mozart.</font></p>
<p>
<font SIZE=2>Measure that dim effort against the latest recorded <i>Così</i>, a hot-blooded performance led by René Jacobs on Harmonia Mundi &#8212; uncut and in the proper Italian, I needn&#8217;t add &#8212; which amounts to a whole new rethinking of this one-of-a-kind, subtle score. On first hearing I found it startling, the slashing accents, the passions brought to the surface in Jacobs&#8217; flexible tempos, the service of the small orchestra &#8212; Concerto Köln &#8212; as a fluent, deeply engaged commentator on the action. Surely these are the passions both Mozart and da Ponte imagined in the work, and when Véronique Gens, the Fiordiligi, and Werner Güra, the Ferrando, start their amazing Act 2 duet (&#8220;Fra gli amplessi&#8221;) at arm&#8217;s length and gradually, desperately fall in love, only the hardest of heart could fail to succumb along with them.</font></p>
<p>
<font SIZE=2>The three-disc set also comes with an extra CD-ROM that enables you (on Mac or PC) to plunge into the score and the lives of its creators, examine the opera historically, analytically and anecdotally, and get some of Jacobs&#8217; own answers to his distinctive approach to Mozart. In a truly enlightened society, every recording above the &#8220;Bach for Babies&#8221; level would come with this kind of documentation, to the world&#8217;s incomparable betterment.</font></p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>TGIF at the&#160;Bowl</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/1999/07/tgif-at-the-bowl/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/1999/07/tgif-at-the-bowl/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 21 Jul 1999 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=258</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[CLASSICAL SNOBS, WHOSE COMPANY I seldom cherish, tend to look down upon the Friday/Saturday concerts at the Hollywood Bowl as some form of lowlife entertainment to be swept under the nearest rug. What can you expect, they sneer, from a pickup orchestra whose personnel changes from week to week, with soloists booked from the ranks [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><font SIZE=2>CLASSICAL SNOBS, WHOSE COMPANY</font><font SIZE=2> I seldom cherish, tend to look down upon the Friday/Saturday concerts at the Hollywood Bowl as some form of lowlife entertainment to be swept under the nearest rug. What can you expect, they sneer,<br />
from a pickup orchestra whose personnel changes from week to week, with soloists booked from the ranks of show biz rather than high-culture management, with programs made up of tidbits rather than nicely padded hourlong symphonies?</font></p>
<p>
<font SIZE=2>Maybe so, but maybe no. Sure, the Hollywood Bowl Orchestra, an assemblage of studio freelancers with shifts of personnel from week to week &#8212; and even shifts of names, whereby string players Patricia and Timothy on the July 9 list turn up as Pat and Tim a week later &#8212; cannot be defined<br />
on the same basis as the set-in-stone Los Angeles Philharmonic. Sure, the HBO seldom if ever gets a hearing without intervening microphones and outdoor sound systems of varying and dubious quality.<br />
(A rare &#8220;indoor&#8221; hearing, presumably unmiked, is slated for the Music Center next October.) Such a situation in, say, Cleveland would certainly spell disaster. It doesn&#8217;t in Los Angeles, thanks to its large roster of studio musicians extraordinarily adept at<br />
landing on both feet in any kind of musical terrain. It was a pickup ensemble that (as the Columbia Symphony) once recorded Beethoven and Mahler under Bruno Walter; it&#8217;s a pickup ensemble that marches, in time and in tune, to John Mauceri&#8217;s probing baton weekend after weekend at the Bowl.</font></p>
<p>
<font SIZE=2>I write these benevolent words in a glow after last Friday&#8217;s concert. It had ended with a knockout performance &#8212; as<br />
near as I could tell, filtered through bombs bursting in midair &#8212; of Ravel&#8217;s <i>Boléro</i>. Ravel had perceived the work, Mauceri told the crowd in his well-honed, charm-drenched manner, as a musical distillation of a factory in full operation. Sure enough, when the music&#8217;s obsessive design swung into its final chaos (the collective brass blaring out their blooie-blooie in several tonalities at once), the fireworks of Gene Evans&#8217; PyroSpectaculars took on the glisten of those gasworks down near Carson with their gusts of insidious orange flame and the blankets of white-hot stars sent sky-high. I am always suckered by the Bowl&#8217;s fireworks, but I can&#8217;t remember a time when sight and sound so convincingly merged. My sympathies that moment went out to the aforementioned absent snobs, who will never know what they missed.</font></p>
<p>
<font SIZE=2>That was reason enough to preserve fond memories of last Friday&#8217;s concert, but there was more. There was the orchestra&#8217;s lustrous, soft performance of Ravel&#8217;s <i>Pavane for a Dead Princess</i>, small music and not quite a masterpiece, but an aura that seemed to float free in the caressing breezes of Cahuenga Pass. Some of Mauceri&#8217;s admirable reconstruction work on film music turned up, the seductive waltz from Miklós Rózsa&#8217;s score for <i>Madame Bovary</i>. There was another cherishable presence, the venerable mime Marcel Marceau, on hand<br />
because the program boasted a &#8220;Vive la France!&#8221; theme as a two-days-late celebration of Bastille Day. Never before at the Bowl, and never before performing with a full symphony orchestra, this greatest of all great impersonators &#8212; as wise and as limber as we all should hope to be at 76 &#8212; brought along his familiar, wondrous one-man troupe: the cowardly lion tamer, the human octopus, the man of many ages. Video cameras caught the small image center-stage and sent it to the big screen overhead. You could forget the vast reaches of the Bowl, with its 18,000 seats (more than half of them filled); the art of Marcel Marceau made it all seem small and enchanted.</font></p>
<p>
<font SIZE=2>THE DOUBLE TALK CONTINUES; THE </font><font SIZE=2>questions remain unanswered. Neither the interviews in Saturday&#8217;s <i>Times</i> nor an hour of <i>Which Way L.A.</i> on KCRW did more than express the faith that the Tooth Fairy would somehow pull the Philharmonic out of its management crisis. Only Mark Swed, on the broadcast, expressed any awareness that a serious situation existed, and might turn deadly.</font></p>
<p>
<font SIZE=2>The other crisis, which besets the orchestral scene worldwide, is even further from resolution: Where and how do we find, or invent, the talent to take over the growing number of vacant podiums here and abroad? Most of what I read doesn&#8217;t even address the problem correctly; it&#8217;s not a matter of &#8220;Where can Boston find another Seiji Ozawa?&#8221; but &#8220;Where can Boston (and New York, and Philadelphia, and Houston, and wherever) find leadership of talent, integrity, imagination and, if the gods so ordain, personal magnetism, to bring about the needed redefinition of orchestras that can stanch the leakage of ticket buyers and still maintain a proper balance of past, present and future?&#8221;</font></p>
<p>
<font SIZE=2>There are no more Ozawas; he &#8212; along with his unsteady clone Zubin Mehta &#8212; was already a throwback to an obsolete breed that preserved podium pizzazz and to hell with musical honesty. The few firebrand types that survive &#8212; Simon Rattle, Valery Gergiev, Yuri Temirkhanov and, yes, Esa-Pekka Salonen &#8212; look great on podiums but don&#8217;t need to hide the fact that they are also musically wise. The other extreme, the musically solid citizen (New York&#8217;s Kurt Masur, Philadelphia&#8217;s Wolfgang Sawallisch), bred in the German classics and shakier on the fields of adventure, is also on the<br />
way out; the new Germanics (Christian Thielmann, Ivan Fischer, St. Louis&#8217; Hans Vonk, perhaps Cleveland&#8217;s Franz Welser-Möst someday) seem a livelier bunch.</font></p>
<p>
<font SIZE=2>I don&#8217;t think we&#8217;re running out of conductors. Donald Runnicles&#8217; <i>Ring</i> in San Francisco had me plotting ways to kidnap him for a stint down here. Among visitors here in the past couple of years I&#8217;ve been impressed by Fischer (at the Bowl last season, with his own orchestra), and at the Philharmonic by Vonk and Gergiev, by the extraordinary tiny Japanese demon Junichi Hirokami, and by yet another splendid Finn, Sakari Oramo. Among local heroes I number Pasadena&#8217;s Jorge Mester, and wonder why so inventive and widely capable a figure doesn&#8217;t have a full-time orchestra somewhere. In a relatively short time, Jeffrey Kahane (on the podium, at<br />
the piano or both) has greatly enhanced the excitement around the L.A. Chamber Orchestra&#8217;s activities. I also admire Kahane&#8217;s continued loyalty to his excellent minor-league orchestra in Santa Rosa (as I admire Kent Nagano&#8217;s loyalty to his Berkeley Symphony despite the rising of his star all over Europe).</font></p>
<p>
<font SIZE=2>Meanwhile, back at the Music Center . . . It&#8217;s ironic, sort of &#8212; lots of solid, respectable performing talent around, but nobody to run things, sign the checks, keep the stage swept, the stuff of management&#8217;s job. Labor negotiations loom on the near horizon; we also scan that horizon for signs of concrete being poured atop Mrs. Disney&#8217;s parking garage. Esa-Pekka&#8217;s contract runs into the next millennium; what there&#8217;ll be for him to conduct, and where &#8212; an orchestra, a program, a stage &#8212; adds up to one helluva big question. The public &#8212; ticket-buying, taxpaying,<br />
music-loving, tone-row-deploring, some or all of the above &#8212; deserves a better answer than the present cloud of double talk. The time is up for the Tooth Fairy.</font></p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Sour&#160;Notes</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/1999/07/sour-notes/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/1999/07/sour-notes/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 14 Jul 1999 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=257</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Photo by Greg GormanOPENING NIGHT OF THE CLASSICAL-music series at the Hollywood Bowl &#8211; not to be confused with the &#8220;Beatles Music Spectacular Opening Night Gala&#8221; of two weeks before, or the &#8220;Fourth of July Fireworks Spectacular&#8221; that filled three nights in between &#8212; offered the members of the press the customary pre-concert spread; it [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Photo by Greg GormanOPENING NIGHT OF THE CLASSICAL-music series at the Hollywood Bowl &#8211;<br />
not to be confused with the &#8220;Beatles Music Spectacular Opening Night Gala&#8221; of two weeks before, or the &#8220;Fourth of July Fireworks Spectacular&#8221; that filled three nights in between &#8212; offered the members of the press the customary pre-concert spread; it may have been harder to digest than usual, but that had nothing to do with the food. The air of mystery &#8212; generated by the unanswered questions around the Philharmonic&#8217;s current management crisis brought on by the departure of managing director Willem Wijnbergen under still-<br />
undefined circumstances &#8212; was lit up by<br />
flashes of rumor: reports, for example, of Willem sightings around town. Barry Sanders, president of the board and every inch the archetypal slick, unflappable CEO, went from table to table with The Speech. All that really matters about the Philharmonic, he proclaimed in so many words, is the music, which, as we would soon hear, is in great shape.</p>
<p>
If that&#8217;s the case, our orchestra is in deeper doo-doo than we&#8217;ve guessed, because the concert &#8212; as much of it as I cared to endure &#8212; was truly awful. The conductor was Hungary&#8217;s Adam Fischer &#8212; younger brother of Ivan, who had triumphed at the Bowl last summer. Adam had had a stint with the Philharmonic indoors in January 1998 in a program that included his countryman Zoltán Kodály&#8217;s <i>Háry János</i> Suite that I remember as at least okay. No such luck with the same work this time around, however; the sound was flaccid and colorless, the microphone balances so distorted that the incidental cimbalom obbligatos drowned out everything else, the audience reaction (from a not-bad attendance of just under 10,000) so tepid that it didn&#8217;t even allow time for Teresa Diamond, the cimbalist or whatever it&#8217;s called, to take a solo bow. (One audience member familiar from recent years, however, summoned up the proper reaction: our old friend the Cahuenga Pass Skunk, a most noticeable presence. Critics nowadays come in all sizes, shapes and<br />
flavors.) The much-touted Sarah Chang noodled her way through the dusty measures of the Bruch Violin Concerto as though the music meant nothing to her (an understandable reaction). At intermission the prospect of an <i>Also Sprach Zarathustra</i> from these performing forces evoked instincts of self-preservation. I got to my car just as KKGO had started a tape from abroad: Schumann&#8217;s Piano Concerto with Mitsuko Uchida, Bernard Haitink and the Vienna Philharmonic. By the time I reached home, my faith in music had been restored.</p>
<p>
Matters improved two nights later, as Fischer and the local forces found considerably more happiness in an all-Mozart program: the two G-minor symphonies &#8212; one early, one late, both masterworks beyond fathoming &#8212; and the divinely beautiful G-major Violin Concerto (this time with a soloist, Julian Rachlin, to whom the music seemed to mean quite a lot), and again with a not-bad crowd (of 7,200). For reasons I don&#8217;t completely understand, Mozart always sounds better at the Bowl than any of the more often played big-band stuff. The miking was still not right, however; the horns tended to out-shout the rest of the orchestra &#8212; which, however, in these particular symphonies with their stark, intense drama, wasn&#8217;t all bad. The strings, and most of all the give and take between strings and winds in the slow movements of both works, blended exquisitely into the unusually heavy night air. Alas, there isn&#8217;t much Mozart on the<br />
agenda for the rest of the Bowl season, only one very short symphony.</p>
<p>
 </p>
<p>
THE <i>TIMES</i> RAN A LETTER, SAD AND DIScouraging, on last week&#8217;s Counterpunch page, wherein a chap from Long Beach deplored the tendency of the Philharmonic to enrage its subscribers by serenading them with music they&#8217;ve never heard before and &#8212; according to the writer, one Brent L. Trafton &#8212; shouldn&#8217;t have to hear now either. He is up in arms at having to shell out $55 to endure such &#8220;atonal experiments&#8221; (his words) as Debussy&#8217;s <i>The Martyrdom of Saint Sebastian</i>. Apparently he has been doing some market research, since he states that this kind of programming has &#8220;been building resentment with subscribers.&#8221; He finds Esa-Pekka Salonen a &#8220;lousy conductor&#8221; of, among others, Mozart and Tchaikovsky, obviously having been otherwise engaged this past season during the wondrous weeks of the Mozart C-minor Mass and the &#8220;Pathétique.&#8221; His advice to the Philharmonic board is to &#8220;put aside the selfish &#8216;interests and needs&#8217; of its music director&#8221; and install a more comforting old-timey program. What is most depressing in the letter is that Mr. Trafton identifies himself, at 38, as one of the orchestra&#8217;s youngest subscribers. Oh dear, and I thought all Esa-Pekka had to do was to wait out the demise of all the old fogies on the subscriber list and get down to full-time atonal experimentation.</p>
<p>
You could (and should) laugh off letters, except that this one, coming during a time of rumor and uncertainty, could stir up a lot of nut-case support for the wrong reasons. Classical-music organizations survive, if they do at all, despite a proverbially complex tangle of relationships at the top echelons brought on by the nature of the commodity and the high tensions of its practitioners. Even so, it&#8217;s not easy to surmise the reasons behind so drastic a move as Wijnbergen&#8217;s departure. His marketing innovations have been expensive, including some very fancy brochures for the Bowl and the 1999-2000 Philharmonic season and his many personnel changes, yet only weeks ago the board voted its confidence in all the new spending. If not money, then, what? The most credible guesswork<br />
has some kind of head-on between the visionary Salonen and the market-minded Wijnbergen.</p>
<p>
Salonen&#8217;s visions have to do with updating the balance between the wallowing in the tried and true so cherished by Mr. Trafton and an honorable and friendly attempt to broaden an audience&#8217;s horizons. He has ventured interestingly into new territory, not only with &#8220;atonal experiments&#8221; but also with admirable gestures toward film music and the Latino repertory. His enterprise has already elevated the Los Angeles Philharmonic to a place of envy among American orchestras. Yes, ticket sales are somewhat down, as they are worldwide. At a San Francisco Symphony concert last month, I heard an inferior orchestra led by a conductor with a shallow musical grasp; despite this,<br />
however, Michael Tilson Thomas&#8217; slick, in-your-face manner apparently sells tickets. I&#8217;d hate to think that this kind of music making, however sexy, is the only salvation for a symphony orchestra. Salvation here in Los Angeles will surely be helped along once Disney Hall is built, even if the results come only halfway up to the prognostications. Then we can start to do battle with the letter writers.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Episode&#160;Zero</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/1999/07/episode-zero/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/1999/07/episode-zero/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 07 Jul 1999 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=256</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[THE TIMING WAS PERFECT: &#8220;EPISODE I&#8221; of the Bay Area&#8217;s own George Lucas&#8217; Star Wars packing the movie palaces worldwide; Richard Wagner&#8217;s Ring of the Nibelung as the San Francisco Opera&#8217;s hot-ticket item for most of last month at the War Memorial Opera House. Can such occurrences be mere coincidence? The overlap of plot gadgetry [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><font SIZE=2>THE TIMING WAS PERFECT: &#8220;EPISODE I&#8221; </font><font SIZE=2>of the Bay Area&#8217;s own George Lucas&#8217; <i>Star Wars</i> packing the movie palaces worldwide; Richard Wagner&#8217;s <i>Ring of the Nibelung</i> as the San Francisco Opera&#8217;s hot-ticket item for most of last month at the War Memorial Opera House. Can such occurrences be mere coincidence?</font></p>
<p>
<font SIZE=2>The overlap of plot gadgetry should surprise nobody. It&#8217;s not that Lucas has shamelessly cribbed from Wagner&#8217;s own shamelessly cribbed rip-off of a tangle of mythic archetypes. What Wagner accomplished within the vast reaches of his stupendous panorama comes down to us, in all its throat-clutching sublimity and almighty bluster, as Romanticism writ large, the epitome of an era when giants roamed and mortals aspired toward immortality. The Lucas version &#8212; the aspiration to own the world&#8217;s greatest toy shop and other toy shops as yet unbuilt &#8212; may be different, but its hordes of operatives are strikingly similar. That Siegfried (&#8220;very young, very handsome, very stupid,&#8221; in the words of that other Wagnerian immortal, Anna Russell) serves as exact avatar to Luke Skywalker needs no proof from this corner. Nor do the ultimate confrontation between Siegfried/Luke and Wotan/Darth, the business with hero and heroine as twins (all-purpose gimmick in many mythologies), the hero/heroine&#8217;s eternal sleep on the rock (Han Solo actually <i>becomes</i> a rock) &#8212; and, in the latest episode, the evil emperor turning up as a phantom (as does Alberich in <i>Götterdämmerung</i>) with his army of clattering Nibelungs/Droids. Both cycles, from a list that also embraces the Homeric epics, Finland&#8217;s <i>Kalevala</i>, <i>Beowulf</i>, and on and on, plumb the resonances on which the world has always turned and always will.</font></p>
<p>
<font SIZE=2>It is in the matter of titillation, however, that Wagner and Lucas are most easily told apart. John Williams&#8217; <i>Star Wars</i> music is a model of efficiency, admirable on its own nitwit level. There are tunes happy, sad, triumphant and heroic, and they come back often enough, unchanged in size and shape, so that even if you&#8217;ve ducked out for popcorn you won&#8217;t lose your place in the story. Wagner is different; even the Valkyries&#8217; famous &#8220;Ride,&#8221; in which the two composers might be thought shaking hands, is a marvel of orchestral subtlety beyond anything in the Williams vocabulary. Hearing the <i>Ring</i> in San Francisco &#8212; the four parts in a mere six days &#8212; brought on the awareness, stronger than in any of my previous dozen or so immersions, of the music&#8217;s cumulative power, unlike anything else in the operatic world, more like the tensile strengths within a Beethoven symphony. Plunge in anywhere, follow any line of dramatic unfolding, from the murky depths in <i>Das Rheingold</i> to the blazing catastrophe 15 hours later; the screw turns until you could pardonably want to scream. I had thought it might be a good idea, after a confrontation with all that splendid urgency, to do a little ear cleaning on the homeward drive; I brought along the tapes of Mozart&#8217;s <i>Figaro</i> for the purpose. Instead, I could not clear my head, at any time during seven hours on the 101, of the overpowering dissonance as the leitmotif of Wotan&#8217;s Valhalla &#8212; so lean and triumphant as the great castle is first built, so heartbreaking as Sieglinde tells of the unknown guest at her wedding, so weedy and dust-covered as the sad, aged Wotan wanders the world asking questions &#8212; crashes into the incandescence of Brünnhilde&#8217;s funeral pyre and leaves a spellbound audience to choke on magnificence beyond words.</font></p>
<p>
<font SIZE=2>EVEN WITH THE WELL-KNOWN CURRENT </font><font SIZE=2>paucity of singers comparable to the luminaries of the past &#8212; Flagstad and Melchior once, Nilsson and Vickers later &#8212; the <i>Ring</i> has never been more popular. In the 1970s the Seattle Opera joined hands with an airline and a swath of local merchants to surround a wretchedly staged and poorly performed production with a sense that the city had turned into both Bayreuth and Valhalla; Wagner T-shirts, scores and albums were everywhere on view. Poor as it was &#8212; it was later replaced by superior goods &#8212; Seattle&#8217;s <i>Ring</i> turned the work into news, and into an inevitable repertory item even where forbearance might have been a wiser course.</font></p>
<p>
<font SIZE=2>Despite its few genuine peaks, the San Francisco revival of its <i>Ring</i>, first given complete in 1985 and revived in 1990, falls under that latter rubric. The cycle was given four times, with two casts and conductors. The first cycle had the magic fire of Jane Eaglen&#8217;s Brünnhilde and the overwhelming, vulnerable eloquence of James Morris&#8217; Wotan (as in 1985), with the company&#8217;s supremely able music director, Donald Runnicles, to stir the company&#8217;s so-so orchestra into a semblance of majesty. Deborah Voigt was the eloquent, moving Sieglinde in both casts, but the second ensemble bore the affliction of the gruff, nearly unlistenable Siegfried of George Gray, Frances Ginzer&#8217;s intelligent but small-scale Brünnhilde and, worst of all, Michael Boder&#8217;s featureless conducting under which the orchestra sounded as if playing in its sleep, snores and all. Andrei Serban, madcap man-of-many-stages, had come on to update director Nikolaus Lehnhoff&#8217;s original plan, which I remember as adequate but unremarkable. There were no atrocities this time around, either; I liked (but many didn&#8217;t) the idea of ending the cycle with the surviving Alberich posed like some enormous pink rat atop the ruined Valhalla, thereby suggesting the possibility of another 15-hour go-around. Are you there, George Lucas?</font></p>
<p>
<font SIZE=2>IN BETWEEN CAME THE FINAL EVENT IN </font><font SIZE=2>the San Francisco Symphony&#8217;s Stravinsky Festival, a program mostly of sacred works (plus the <i>Symphonies of Wind Instruments</i>) given in the echo-infested Grace Cathedral, whose booming, reflecting surfaces dulled the iridescent orchestration in the <i>Canticum Sacrum</i> and the vast, elegant spaciousness in the <i>Symphony of Psalms</i> (the evening&#8217;s one masterpiece). San Francisco&#8217;s idyll with its beloved MTT goes on unabated; I can&#8217;t think of a better instance of the right conductor for the right town. He wooed the crowd (capacity, need I add) with saccharine &#8220;Stravinsky-&#8217;n'-Me&#8221; verbal pomposities; with his approximately 10-foot-long fingers he made you think he was conducting, personally and individually, every member of chorus, orchestra and audience. The music came out hard, clean and &#8212; if such can be imagined for Stravinsky at his most dry-point &#8212; sexy. I knew it was all wrong, and I tried hard to hate it, but I couldn&#8217;t.</font></p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Long&#160;Reach</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/1999/06/long-reach/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/1999/06/long-reach/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 30 Jun 1999 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=255</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[AS THE HEAVY-SPENDING LOS ANGELES Opera veers ever more sadly toward innocuous irrelevance, the threadbare neighbor down the road looks better all the time. Not that every venture by the Long Beach Opera &#8212; the area&#8217;s senior company, after all, 21 years to the local guys&#8217; 13 &#8212; can count as opera-making par excellence. But [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><font SIZE=2>AS THE HEAVY-SPENDING LOS ANGELES</font><font SIZE=2> Opera veers ever more sadly toward innocuous irrelevance, the threadbare neighbor down the road looks better all the time. Not that every venture by the Long Beach Opera &#8212; the area&#8217;s senior company, after all, 21 years to the local guys&#8217; 13 &#8212; can count as opera-making par excellence. But interesting failures usually come about from interesting attempts, and what I have always found gratifying in the efforts of founder and general director Michael Milenski and his shoestring operation is a discernible richness in quality of mind. I defy anyone to identify that quality in, say, the Los Angeles Opera&#8217;s recent <i>Lucia di Lammermoor</i> &#8212; or much else during the company&#8217;s recent years.</font></p>
<p>
<font SIZE=2>Adventurous, exasperating, illuminating and just plain off-the-wall: The saga of the Long Beach Opera has been all of these and more. Some memories stick in the craw: a <i>Boris Godunov</i> done in street clothes with only a bureaucratic desk as scenery; a lurid rewrite of <i>Carmen</i>. Others persist in glory: a <i>Death in Venice</i> with TV monitors as scenery; Monteverdi&#8217;s <i>Coronation of Poppea</i> set amid a motorcycle gang. Milenski&#8217;s bravery has earned the company a cult following in the Los Angeles area, eager to deplore and cherish, forgive and forget.</font></p>
<p>
<font SIZE=2>This year&#8217;s two offerings, produced in mid-June for two performances each in the 1,100-seat Carpenter Performing Arts Center on the Long Beach campus of California State University, called for a lot of the above. One &#8212; the Molière comedy-ballet <i>The Imaginary Invalid</i>, with the play done complete, including the danced interludes to music composed by Marc Antoine Charpentier for the 1673 premiere &#8212; wasn&#8217;t an opera at all; the other was a small (but very large) operatic masterpiece, Béla Bartók&#8217;s one-act <i>Duke Bluebeard&#8217;s Castle</i>.</font></p>
<p>
<font SIZE=2>Long Beach and the baroque repertory have long been a fruitful marriage; the company <br />
can boast acclaimed stagings of all three of Monteverdi&#8217;s surviving operas; last year, Purcell&#8217;s <i>The Indian Queen</i> was blown up into an incongruous but irresistible Mexican fiesta. Purists who complained may have been placated by the treatment accorded this season to the Molière/Charpentier parlay: both play and music done straight and, alas, uncut, cantilevering far, far into the night. Matthew Maguire&#8217;s staging, on the clean designs of Craig Hodgetts&#8217; futuristic set, leaned heavily on laff content; his large cast, led by Victor Talmadge&#8217;s Invalid, got out the words of Donald Frame&#8217;s translation, but without the tripping-on-the-tongue that can make easy work of ancient artifice. Susan Mosakowski&#8217;s choreography, lightly honoring the manner of 17th-century French court dance and backed by the delectable playing of the Musica Angelica Baroque Orchestra, provided the only fresh air during a long and otherwise stifling evening.</font></p>
<p>
<font SIZE=2>No such problems afflicted Bartók&#8217;s intense, gorgeously orchestrated 50-minute setting of Béla Balász&#8217;s symbol-laden gloss on the ancient legend of the amorous but uxoricidal Bluebeard, sung in Long Beach in Chester Kallman&#8217;s elegant translation. If a discernible &#8220;Long Beach Method&#8221; has been fashioned over the years, this was a prime example: a staging (by company stalwart Roy Rallo) that probed deep into the work&#8217;s inner voices while <br />
projecting them into a modern milieu (as with Monteverdi in leather, Britten on TV). Marsha Ginsberg&#8217;s stage setting &#8212; tattered wallpaper as if in an abandoned apartment building the day before the wrecking ball, a few spotlights cleverly deployed, an incongruous onstage movie projector sending forth psychological designs &#8212; exactly complemented the Bluebeard (Pavlo Hunka) in a modern business suit and his Judith (Kathleen Broderick) in plain black sheath.</font></p>
<p>
<font SIZE=2>Hunka, a tremendous young bass in his American debut, may have more resembled Henry Kissinger than the Bluebeard of legend, but his singing, throbbing from the intensity of both poem and music, became a part of Bartók&#8217;s dark psychodrama. Broderick&#8217;s Judith captured the other worldliness of the lovelorn woman who deserts her marital bed for a life (and death) as Bluebeard&#8217;s love-slave; her diction, however, showed a few patches of incomprehensibility. A further hero of both performances was conductor Andreas Mitisek, who presided at the harpsichord in the Molière, and drew the full-color spectrum from an undersized but alert freelance orchestra in <br />
the Bartók. More than any of the excellent participants, it was Mitisek&#8217;s inspired leadership that, once again, put the Long Beach Opera on a sound basis.</font></p>
<p>
<font SIZE=2> </font></p>
<p>
<font SIZE=2>AT THE GETTY ON JUNE 18 THERE WAS</font><font SIZE=2> more baroque opera: Handel&#8217;s <i>Orlando</i> of 1733, arguably his masterpiece in the genre, its splendor nicely boiled down to fit a concert ensemble of two singers &#8212; countertenor Jeffrey Gall as the love-crazed Orlando, soprano Sharon Baker as his loved-and-lost Angelica &#8212; and an instrumental quintet. The work was given to buttress the Getty&#8217;s &#8220;Scholar Year,&#8221; dedicated to the representation of the Passions in the arts; <i>Orlando</i>, with its extensive playbill of deceptions, rejections, delusions, illusions &#8212; plus a full-fledged mad scene for the hero &#8212; was an elegant choice. Elegant goes as well for the production, with the splendid Elizabeth Blumenstock (of Philharmonia Baroque and Musica Angelica fame) as first violinist and the solid support of Mary Springfels&#8217; viola da gamba (she of Chicago&#8217;s Newberry Consort), heroines of the best early-music performance anywhere these days. Arias for the other principals, including a magician named Zoroaster, were neatly made over into instrumental solos &#8212; at some loss, of course. Still, enough remained of Handel&#8217;s ravishing designs to honor the work&#8217;s grandeur, and to whet the appetite for more of the same.</font></p>
<p>
<font SIZE=2>And if full-scale performances of Handel operas aren&#8217;t easily come by, think of the even sadder fate of <i>La Púrpura de la Rosa</i>, the historic entertainment that recently lured me to Indiana for what was billed as its North American premiere: the first opera composed and performed in the New World, created in 1659, then lost, then re-created in 1701 in Lima to celebrate the birthday of the 17-year-old Spanish monarch Felipe V. The history of the work is muddled; the 1659 music to Pedro Calderón de la Barca&#8217;s play has been lost, and the 1701 music is the work of Tomás de Torrejón y Velasco, chapelmaster of the Lima cathedral. This music, nicely staged by baroque-theater scholar James Middleton as the crown of this year&#8217;s Bloomington Early Music Festival (known locally as BLEMF), was worth the trip. Calderón&#8217;s story interprets the legend of Venus and Adonis, with later additions to wrench the plot toward a simpering obeisance to Spain&#8217;s Felipe (who is symbolized in the plot as Mars, a belligerent ladykiller). The music, light-textured Spanish songs of the utmost charm, is lovely, well worth someone&#8217;s further attention; the Bloomington production &#8212; with gorgeous and authentically cut costumes on a cute but provincial stage &#8212; bore out what everybody hears about Indiana University as a place for superb musicmaking. As with all of southern Indiana in springtime, I found the work irresistible.</font></p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<item>
		<title>A Choir of&#160;Angels</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/1999/06/a-choir-of-angels/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/1999/06/a-choir-of-angels/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 23 Jun 1999 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=254</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[In 1979, I laughed out loud at a job offer from Los Angeles. I was at the time music critic at New York magazine, a job that offered both comfort and prominence in the only city in America worth the attention of anyone involved in serious music &#8211; or so a few million people believed, [...]]]></description>
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<p>In 1979, I laughed out loud at a job offer from Los Angeles. I was at the time music critic at <i>New York</i> magazine, a job that offered both comfort and prominence in the only city in America worth the attention of anyone involved in serious music &#8211; or so a few million people believed, myself included. Leave that behind for the gilded beguilements of some outpost in a cultural desert? Ha ha.</p>
<p>A year later I was gainfully employed in Los Angeles, writing about music. In the intervening year I had made a couple of trips west, and learned a thing or two about the state of matters musical here in Southern California. I heard some remarkable musical inventiveness in stopping places along Interstate 5, from CalArts in the north to UC San Diego in the south &#8211; electronic stuff opening onto a world new to me, music (by Lou Harrison and many others) that leaned out across the <i>other</i> ocean to shake hands with Indonesia, India and Japan. I heard the rebirth of reverence for the symphonic classics, at Los Angeles Philharmonic concerts under Carlo Maria Giulini. I talked about musical ideals and ambitions with students and young musicians determined to make a name for themselves right here in Los Angeles. I had come out for one year, to help the fledgling <i>New West</i>, a clone of <i>New York</i> &#8211; ill-considered, as it transpired &#8211; gain a voice on the musical scene; I was to find a qualified writer, turn over the keys to the kingdom, and return to my power base in New York. Something beyond naming led me to a different destiny. Even an accident on Figueroa at the end of my first year here, during which I was pulled unconscious from a burning car, didn&#8217;t strike me as a message worth heeding. <i>New West</i> is no longer here, but I am. ç</p>
<p>Twenty years later, I know why. Giulini&#8217;s time with the Philharmonic ended too soon, but the memories remained. There was one memorable week in the spring of 1982 when management allowed me to sit in on his rehearsals of Beethoven&#8217;s Fifth &#8211; the world&#8217;s best-known symphony, but one he hadn&#8217;t touched in 16 years. At lunch we studied the score together as if its ink was still wet; I discovered what it means to invite music into your soul, a wisdom I still cherish.</p>
<p>Giulini&#8217;s magic gave way to André Previn&#8217;s humdrum; the orchestra fell apart. Honcho Ernest Fleischmann pulled it back from the brink, with the help of two exceptional young men he had happened upon in Europe, and another very old. Nobody as youthful in appearance as the curly-topped Simon Rattle or the apple-cheeked, dimpled Esa-Pekka Salonen had any business attempting to galvanize a demoralized, half-asleep orchestra into a reborn ensemble, but those kids did. To cast a further golden thread of wisdom around the reawakened Philharmonic, Fleischmann also brought over the venerable Kurt Sanderling, who conducted Shostakovich with the authority of a one-time friend (which he was) and the Beethoven symphonies with the poetic insights of a direct descendant (which he wasn&#8217;t, but no matter). Sanderling no longer visits, but Rattle does, and Salonen is ours. Fleischmann brought them all, and the Philharmonic&#8217;s current relevance rests most of all on his broad but weighed-down shoulders &#8211; on which the orchestra rode for years. That Fleischmann&#8217;s managerial skills have been a hard act to follow registers clearly in the recent news that his successor, Willem <br />
Wijnbergen, who raised a new set of high hopes with his innovative gadgetry in both programming and marketing, has now bowed out after a mere 15 months of trying to walk in the Fleischmann brogans.</p>
<p>There have been losses. In Pasadena, the Ambassador Auditorium was lost to a fiasco of mismanagement within the controlling powers; luridly decked out as it was, it still had the best sound of any local auditorium and, at 1,200-plus seats, the best size. The lustrous sound of the Amsterdam Concertgebouw Orchestra in that hall on one night, and Cecilia Bartoli on another, remain. A smaller loss, no less sad, was the &#8220;Chamber Music L.A.&#8221; series that just snuck away from its home in Little Tokyo and vanished. There was to be a small chamber-music hall in the new Disney Symphony Hall, but it seems to have dropped off the drawing board. Neither Zipper Hall in the new Colburn School downtown, nor the vast and bland spaces of the Japan America Theater and the University of Judaism&#8217;s Gindi Auditorium, possess that quality of welcoming that can endow the experience of chamber music with the proper glow. New performing-arts centers have sprung up like mushrooms after a storm &#8211; in Woodland Hills, Cerritos, Costa Mesa &#8211; and the acoustics in these halls give &#8220;mush-room&#8221; new meaning. Readers of omens predict acoustical excellence in Disney Hall even before the cornerstone is laid.</p>
<p>And there have been gains &#8211; huge and turbulent, small and cherishable. Opera in Los Angeles in 1979 consisted of a run in the Music Center by the New York City Opera in something less than pristine condition, the squeezed-together three-week timing inconvenient for both the opera company and the dispossessed Philharmonic. Down the coast, a struggling Long Beach Opera made do with below-standard stars in standard repertory. Seven years later, the city had its own L.A. Opera; Long Beach had cast aside its Triviatas and begun to stick its nose into splendid rarities old and new. Why consider living in New York when a shoestring opera company right here can come up with all three of the surviving operas of Claudio Monteverdi, from whose flaming essence the very art of opera was first forged?</p>
<p>Okay, New York has its operas and symphonies; so do Boston, Seattle and, most likely, Podunk. Part of what holds me in Los Angeles&#8217; grip &#8211; 20 years after I could just as easily have returned to the real world of Zubin Mehta and Luciano Pavarotti and recommenced paying $20 to park at Lincoln Center &#8211; is the serendipity, the way our musical treasures, in many sizes, are scattered all around the jillion square miles that make up this place. The ongoing symphony orchestras in Long Beach, Pasadena, Glendale and Costa Mesa bear witness to the huge population of freelance musicians who earn their big bucks in the studios by day and their ticket to heaven playing symphonies at night. MaryAnn Bonino&#8217;s Chamber Music in Historic Sites series is a serendipitous masterpiece; I defy any other city on the planet to come up with anything like her wise, resourceful list of stupendous musical entertainments sublimely matched to their surroundings and delivered with the subtext that hope exists for the world after all. On a smaller scale, the five best pianists who reside in this area have formed the consortium called Piano Spheres and play a series of high-adventure concerts (mostly new music, some world premieres) in an intimate, elegant Pasadena church. At least two excellent instrumental ensembles deserve our valuable time with concerts of baroque and early-classical music in church settings: Greg Maldonado&#8217;s L.A. Baroque Orchestra and Michael Eagan&#8217;s Musica Angelica.</p>
<p>&#8220;So what do you find to do out there in the desert?&#8221; one or two of my unreconstructed East Coast friends still ask when I pass their way. Funny they should ask. I wish I had enough free time to construct a proper answer, but I don&#8217;t.</p>
<p></font></p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Whither&#160;Willem?</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/1999/06/whither-willem/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/1999/06/whither-willem/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 23 Jun 1999 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=253</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[THIS BEING THE SEASON OF SMOG IN the Los Angeles basin, the haze of uncertainty that descended upon the Dorothy Chandler Pavilion this past week seemed apt. Willem Wijnbergen, executive vice president and managing director of the Los Angeles Philharmonic, was departing after a mere 15 months in office. Did he resign? Was he pushed? [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>THIS BEING THE SEASON OF SMOG IN the Los Angeles basin, the haze of uncertainty that descended upon the Dorothy Chandler Pavilion this past week seemed apt. Willem Wijnbergen, executive vice president and managing director of the Los Angeles Philharmonic, was departing after a mere 15 months in office.</p>
<p>
Did he resign? Was he pushed? Neither? Both? From his native Amsterdam, where he is vacationing, Wijnbergen told the <i>L.A. Times </i>that his Los Angeles lawyer, Howard Rosen, had delivered to Barry Sanders, president of the Philharmonic Association, a letter pointing out problem areas in their relationship &#8212; areas that Wijnbergen has so far declined to identify. The letter, Wijnbergen claims, did not contain the word <i>resignation</i> as such, but noted the presence of difficulties that had the potential to activate a &#8220;termination with good reason&#8221; clause in his contract. The board, however, accepted the letter as a resignation &#8212; effective immediately.</p>
<p>
&#8220;This is no dismissal,&#8221; Sanders stressed early last week. &#8220;We would very much like him to stay.&#8221; On KCRW&#8217;s <i>Which Way L.A.</i>, Sanders assured the world that everything is in place and unchanged for a superb Hollywood Bowl season and further glories beyond. But his final words on that program may have told more than he intended: &#8220;We know how to execute.&#8221;</p>
<p>
The wisdom in Philharmonic circles is that the controversial, visionary Wijnbergen, who arrived on the scene last year with a briefcase full of changes in the orchestra&#8217;s physiognomy &#8212; which involved many firings, many hirings, a flurry of job reshufflings, even at one point a plan (now deferred) to move the whole Philharmonic management out of its Music Center offices to a more distant vantage point &#8212; had come up against the resistance of a board famous for its fear of novelty on both the management and artistic side.</p>
<p>
Discernible through the uncertainty was the sturdy figure of Ernest Fleischmann, Wijnbergen&#8217;s predecessor, whose 29-year tenure redefined the role &#8212; social as well as artistic &#8212; of symphony orchestras for all time. Insiders have for months advanced the theory that Fleischmann&#8217;s act would be hard &#8212; nay, impossible &#8212; to follow; now there&#8217;s proof: Wijnbergen has been done in by the impotence of not being Ernest. While it&#8217;s unlikely that Fleischmann, now pushing 75, might be lured back to his old job (currently in the hands of chief financial and administrative officer Gene Pasquarelli), he hasn&#8217;t exactly been invisible around the Philharmonic in the past year. (Interestingly, Fleischmann, Wijnbergen and conductor Esa-Pekka Salonen were all out of the country last week.)</p>
<p>
Wijnbergen, an adept musical amateur but basically more businessman than impresario (with a dossier that included time as brand manager for Procter  Gamble&#8217;s Rotterdam office), arrived here convinced that business &#8212; dealing with deficits, devising new marketing gadgetry, streamlining operations in both artistic and money regions &#8212; ranked first on the agenda. He came to the Philharmonic from a comparable position at Amsterdam&#8217;s legendary Royal Concertgebouw Orchestra, which his managerial skills had pulled out of red ink in the early &#8217;90s. He was virtually unknown in the U.S., although Salonen had conducted Wijnbergen&#8217;s orchestra and had endorsed his coming to Los Angeles. (Unnamed sources with the Philharmonic indicated last week that Salonen&#8217;s enthusiasm toward Wijnbergen had noticeably cooled in recent months.) In any case, Wijnbergen arrived on the job with a winning smile and an obsession for change that was bound to trample many toes at the Music Center. It may well be that he acted upon some of them with undue haste &#8212; the precipitous firing of the popular and able Hollywood Bowl manager Anne Parsons mere weeks after his arrival, for one.</p>
<p>
The intelligence among Philharmonic â staffers after Wijnbergen&#8217;s announcement combined shock with a minimum of surprise; it seems apparent that a collision between the new managerial blood and the fuddy-duddy intractability of the board was bound to happen. The miracle of the equally strong-minded and innovative Fleischmann&#8217;s 29-year survival looms ever less understandable. Crusty and wily, monstrously ungifted as platform speaker, not above coddling favorites, Fleischmann still demonstrated the classic gifts for charming his way toward his great goals &#8212; gifts the indisputably able Wijnbergen simply lacked.</p>
<p>
Even so, Wijnbergen&#8217;s impact on the orchestra, and its community, was considerable. The overall image is much improved &#8212; partly through his quick and easy overtures to civic leaders in many fields, and also thanks to his role in motivating the <i>L. A. Times&#8217; </i>long overdue decision to give classical music more lines of newsprint than it had previously enjoyed.</p>
<p>
Wijnbergen is due back in Los Angeles on July 9. He seems to hold out hope &#8212; or at least he says he does &#8212; that the differences can be worked out. Most Philharmonic watchers, however, are betting he won&#8217;t put in another appearance at the Music Center. If that&#8217;s the case, he, too, will be a hard act to follow.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>So Far, Still&#160;Good</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/1999/06/so-far-still-good/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/1999/06/so-far-still-good/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 16 Jun 1999 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=252</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Art by Robert GrossmanAT 75, GIUSEPPE VERDI WAS CLIPPING rave reviews for his Otello and toying with an opera about Falstaff. At 75, Igor Stravinsky produced Agon, a major step forward in his compositional outlook. At 75 &#8212; as of yesterday, please omit flowers &#8212; I sit here in a pink cloud of self-congratulation, examining [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Art by Robert GrossmanAT 75, GIUSEPPE VERDI WAS CLIPPING rave reviews for his <i>Otello</i> and toying with an opera about Falstaff. At 75, Igor Stravinsky produced <i>Agon</i>, a major step forward in his compositional outlook. At 75 &#8212; as of yesterday, please omit flowers &#8212; I sit here in a pink cloud of self-congratulation, examining navel lint and figuring how to get into words my reasons for justifying the title of this small essay in terminal smugness. Critics, after all, don&#8217;t usually deserve the major-birthday tributes earned by operatic sopranos and middle-of-the-road composers. The only music critic I can think of whose name lives on is the late Alfred Frankenstein of San Francisco, and he was born lucky.</p>
<p>
<i>A knock on the door; the wispy, willowy interviewer arrives. &#8220;How did it start?&#8221; is the correct first question.</i></p>
<p>
It almost didn&#8217;t. At 6 I could pick out on the piano the tune the cleaning lady sang &#8212; &#8220;A little rosewood casket&#8221; &#8212; well enough to convince my mother of my musical potential. A maiden-lady piano teacher was convinced otherwise, even though I had triumphantly delivered &#8220;The Cricket and the Bumblebee&#8221; at her annual student recital. We parted company soon after. At 9 I was sent to bed with rheumatic fever (no antibiotics yet), where for the next four years the only music that spoke to my soul was the Ray Noble recording of &#8220;Isle of Capri&#8221; on my bedside radio.</p>
<p>
<i>But how, then . . .?</i></p>
<p>
In high school (Boston Latin, &#8217;41) I got into dangerous company. My friend Eddie collected symphonies on discs you could get with newspaper coupons. He played them on a turntable you hooked up to the radio, using needles that were actually cactus thorns that you sharpened after every side. I blame Eddie for everything that has happened to me since. (He got in touch again a few years ago, after 50 years, but the friendship was doomed. All he wanted to talk about was Sibelius.)</p>
<p>
Shortly after I discovered music, I discovered writing about music. It happened in the physics lab at Harvard (where I had gone to metamorphose into My Son the Doctor as filial duty ordained); the guy at the next desk had a copy of Donald Tovey&#8217;s <i>Essays in Musical Analysis</i> and was doubled up laughing over a description of a moment in Beethoven&#8217;s Ninth Symphony with &#8220;flashes of red light from the trumpets.&#8221; I borrowed the book, read it all night, and awoke in another world. A week later I sent off a zippy letter to Rudy Elie, the <i>Boston Herald</i>&#8216;s music critic, fussing over a minor point he&#8217;d made about Mozart&#8217;s K. 364, couched in the pomposities that are the lingua franca of Harvard sophomores. He wrote back offering me a job &#8212; stringer at $3 per review. Bye-bye, My Son the Doctor. (After maybe 300 hearings of Beethoven&#8217;s Ninth, I still hear those trumpets as flashes of red light.)</p>
<p>
<i>Okay, speed it up, baby, we&#8217;ve only got this page.</i></p>
<p>
The little bundle of <i>Herald</i> clippings got me into UC Berkeley as a grad student in music. Some profs were horrified that I planned to turn all their revered teaching into a career as a (shudder!) critic; some weren&#8217;t. I helped found KPFA, the first public radio station, where I got to hurl weekly thunderbolts at the San Francisco Symphony in its pathetic days under Enrique Jordà. Then back in New York &#8212; where KPFA had dispatched me, as Paul to the Corinthians, to bring its newly acquired WBAI into the fold. Print beckoned. By 1963 I was at the helm of the sinking ship known as the <i>New York Herald Tribune</i>; it had just given birth to a Sunday supplement called <i>New York</i>, which has long outlived its parent. There was no Lincoln Center then (nor Kennedy Center, nor Los Angeles Music Center), no National Endowment, no operas on videotape. Leonard Bernstein was riding high, but Beverly Sills was singing small roles at the New York City Opera and Pavarotti might have been delivering pizzas for all anyone knew.</p>
<p>
In 1979 I moved back to Los Angeles, intending to stay a year to help <i>New York</i> misguidedly clone itself as <i>New West</i>. That year became two, then forever. Out here I&#8217;ve written for weeklies on slick paper, for monthlies on even slicker paper, and, since 1992, on the paper you now hold, suitable for wrapping chicken parts. I&#8217;ve done quickie radio commentaries and extended series; people claim to have found me on the Internet. But I did my first writing, 55 years ago, on newsprint, and that remains my medium of choice. Writing weekly, furthermore, remains my rhythm of choice.</p>
<p>
<i>Is it a life?</i></p>
<p>
It&#8217;s a good life, and I say that in the present tense. For lousy but adequate pay I get to make my own choices in what to hear and what to avoid; most of the time, the concerts and operas I attend for my column are events I&#8217;d go to even as a civilian. (Most of the time, I said.) In my seven years here I haven&#8217;t once attended an event so uninteresting that I took away nothing worth writing about. At home I listen only on purpose: the slow movements of Mozart&#8217;s G-minor Quintet and Schubert&#8217;s in C-major for proof of God&#8217;s hand; the basses&#8217; duet from <i>Don Pasquale</i> instead of Prozac; Stockhausen&#8217;s <i>Kurzwellen</i> in place of a cold shower. I know many people &#8212; perhaps you&#8217;re one of them &#8212; who use music as wallpaper. I think they&#8217;re nuts, and I also pity what they&#8217;re missing: that chill when Mozart takes his first violin up to a high D and we forget to breathe, and when Schubert pins us against the wall with the intense radiance of his closing measures.</p>
<p>
<i>And for posterity?</i></p>
<p>
If I have any advice for hopeful critics, it&#8217;s simply to write as much as you can, and spend your study time learning about music as an art. I never took a writing course; if my job is to write about the things I know and feel, I don&#8217;t need anyone to tell me how to do it. The actual writing is the easy part, although it helps to have an editor to protect you from ravaging fact checkers.</p>
<p>
So far, I think I&#8217;ve done all right. At least I&#8217;ve learned to stop lying about my age.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>OPERA&#160;REVIEW</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/1999/06/opera-review/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/1999/06/opera-review/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 14 Jun 1999 22:38:01 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Musical America]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=1841</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Adventurous, exasperating, illuminating and just plain off-the-wall: the 21-year saga of the Long Beach Opera has been all of these and more. Its operation is strictly shoestring; its stagings over the years have included a &#8220;Boris Godunov&#8221; done in street clothes around a large bureaucratic desk, and a &#8220;Death in Venice&#8221; whose only scenery was [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Adventurous, exasperating, illuminating and just plain off-the-wall: the 21-year saga of the Long Beach Opera has been all of these and more. Its operation is strictly shoestring; its stagings over the years have included a &#8220;Boris Godunov&#8221; done in street clothes around a large bureaucratic desk, and a &#8220;Death in Venice&#8221; whose only scenery was a television monitor. The bravery of its founder/general director Michael Milenski has earned it a cult following in the Los Angeles area, eager to deplore and forgive, cherish and forget.<br />
This year&#8217;s two offerings, produced last weekend in the 1100-seat Carpenter Arts Center on the Long Beach campus of California State University spanned a vast difference in music and style. One wasn&#8217;t an opera at all: the Molière comedy-ballet &#8220;The Imaginary Invalid,&#8221; with the play done complete including the danced interludes to music by Marc&#8217;Antoine Charpentier; the other was a small (but very large) operatic masterpiece, Béla Bartók&#8217;s one-act &#8220;Duke Bluebeard&#8217;s Castle.&#8221;<br />
Long Beach and the Baroque repertory have long been a fruitful marriage; the company can boast acclaimed stagings of all three of Monteverdi&#8217;s surviving operas; last year Purcell&#8217;s &#8220;Indian Queen&#8221; was blown up into an incongruous but irresistible Mexican fiesta. Purists who complained last year may have been placated by this season&#8217;s treatment accorded the Molière/Charpentier parlay: both play and music done straight and, alas, uncut, cantilevering far, far into the night.<br />
Matthew Maguire&#8217;s staging, on the clean designs of Craig Hodgetts&#8217;  futuristic set, leaned heavily on laff content. Susan Mosakowski&#8217;s choreography, lightly honoring the manner of seventeenth-century French court dance and backed by the delectable playing of the Musica Angelica Baroque Orchestra, provided the only fresh air during a long and otherwise stifling evening.<br />
No such problems afflicted Bartók&#8217;s intense, gorgeously orchestrated 50-minute setting of Béla Balász&#8217; symbol-laden gloss on the ancient legend of the amorous but uxoricidal Bluebeard &#8211; sung in Long Beach in Chester Kallman&#8217;s elegant translation. Marsha Ginsberg&#8217;s stage setting &#8211; wall-size panels seemingly ripped from wrecked buildings, a few spotlights cleverly deployed, an onstage movie projector sending forth psychological designs &#8211; exactly complimented the Bluebeard (Pavlo Hunka), in a modern business suit and his Judith (Kathleen Broderick) in plain black sheath.<br />
Hunka, a tremendous young bass in his American debut, may have more resembled Henry Kissinger than the renowned ladykiller, but his singing, throbbing from the intensity of both poem and music, became a part of Bartók&#8217;s dark psychodrama. Broderick&#8217;s Judith also captured the other-worldliness of the lovelorn woman who deserts her marital bed for the life (and death) of Bluebeard&#8217;s love-slave; her diction, however, showed a few patches of incomprehensibility. A further hero of both performances was conductor Andreas Mitisek, who presided at the harpsichord in the Molière, and drew the full color spectrum from a freelance orchestra in the Bartók. More than any of the excellent participants, it was Mitisek&#8217;s inspired leadership that, once again, put the Long Beach Opera on a sound basis.<br />
Alan Rich</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Finnish&#160;Touches</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/1999/06/finnish-touches/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/1999/06/finnish-touches/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 09 Jun 1999 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=251</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[BETWEEN OJAI&#8217;S VERDANT VALLEY AND the dour woodlands of Finland, some distance intervenes. For a time last weekend, however &#8212; the occasion of the 53rd Ojai Music Festival &#8212; you could have sworn that miles had shrunk to inches. The Finns came, wonderful musicians bearing remarkable music; they charmed and they conquered. Here in Los [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><font SIZE=2>BETWEEN OJAI&#8217;S VERDANT VALLEY AND </font><font SIZE=2>the dour woodlands of Finland, some distance intervenes. For a time last weekend, however &#8212; the occasion of the 53rd Ojai Music Festival &#8212; you could have sworn that miles had shrunk to inches. The Finns came, wonderful musicians bearing remarkable music; they charmed and they conquered.</font></p>
<p>
<font SIZE=2>Here in Los Angeles we live with testimony, in the presence of Esa-Pekka Salonen, of Finland&#8217;s emergence in the last couple of decades as a major musical power. Not only has Salonen&#8217;s conducting created an aura around the Los Angeles Philharmonic that currently crowns it the most irresistible of American orchestras, he has added to that glow the work of a composer of extraordinary gifts for whom no limits are easily discernible. At Ojai there was music by Salonen, and by two near contemporaries, all three onetime classmates at Helsinki&#8217;s Sibelius Academy &#8212; all three, for what the information is worth, currently living outside Finland.</font></p>
<p>
<font SIZE=2>Sibelius&#8217; music is, and will remain, the rock on which Finland&#8217;s eminence rests; his music, of necessity, maintains an obligatory presence at any celebration of that country&#8217;s music. The music that opens his First Symphony, the clarinet solo off in the chill grayness over muffled drums &#8212; which Salonen, the Philharmonic and the irreplaceable Michele Zukovsky performed at Ojai&#8217;s first concert on Friday &#8212; is some kind of magical mood-painting which nothing that ensues in this logy, overstuffed sofa of a symphony ever again matches. After Sibelius there was a generation, perhaps two, of composers apparently content to labor in his shadow, conservatives like Einojohani Rautawaara &#8212; the excellent Sakari Oramo performed a short work of his with the Philharmonic last month &#8212; and Aulis Sallinen, whose opera <i>Kullervo</i> had its world premiere here in 1992. Then came a vastly different generation, students at Helsinki around 1980: Salonen, Magnus Lindberg and Kaija Saariaho, all by now familiar here through the efforts of Salonen and the Philharmonic, and represented at Ojai by works either brand-new or at least new to American ears.</font></p>
<p>
<font SIZE=2>A weekend of new music from Finland cannot answer all questions about the musical state of that land; the Finnish government is also remarkably supportive of new opera, and there was none of that at Ojai. What there was, however, if any generalities can be spun, was music strongly narrative, bristling with jagged, deeply coloristic masses that often seemed to jar against one another: Saariaho&#8217;s <i>Amers</i>, for one, with its prominent cello solo set against the gently rackety orchestra. The weekend&#8217;s most sensational work was Lindberg&#8217;s <i>Kraft</i>, composed and recorded (on Finlandia) in 1985 but never before performed in the U.S. Outbursts of brutal, crushing blows on gongs spread around the audience area, moments of ethereal calm as a gathering of twittering piccolos seemed to make common cause with Ojai&#8217;s resident avian population: This is a nihilistic masterpiece, wonderfully scored (including an assortment of auto parts and old railway-car springs to enhance the percussion). The piece seemed exactly fashioned for Ojai, where performers (including Lindberg himself) could easily hurtle from onstage noisemakers to more gadgetry among the trees that ring the audience area.</font></p>
<p>
<font SIZE=2>Salonen&#8217;s own new work bore another kind of beauty, profound and luminous. His <i>Five Images After Sappho</i> sets fragments of several Sapphic love poems (in translations by Paul Roche) to music of fluid, plangent grace. Some passages in the small orchestra take on the urgent purling of, say, the Daybreak music from Ravel&#8217;s <i>Daphnis et Chloë</i>; the richness and easy flow of the melodic line suggest a mastery of vocal writing that should make anyone impatient for the opera that will soon occupy Salonen&#8217;s full attention.</font></p>
<p>
<font SIZE=2>IF THE MUSIC WAS EXTRAORDINARY, THE </font><font SIZE=2>performances &#8212; discounting one precipitous exception &#8212; were even more so. Salonen had composed his songs for Dawn Upshaw, who then had to cancel for emergency spinal surgery, and another American soprano, not yet as well-known, sang the music as if her own. Remember her name: Laura Claycomb; she&#8217;s the Juliet in the L.A. Opera&#8217;s <i>The Capulets and the Montagues</i> next October. By some distance, however, the weekend&#8217;s performance laurels were earned by Toimii, the seven-member utterly fearless new-music ensemble founded in Helsinki in 1981 by Salonen and Lindberg, and often led by Salonen on recordings. Individual members of the group were prominent on almost all the concerts: the supremely gifted cellist Anssi Karttunen (the way those Finns waste letters!) making his unerring way through a Lindberg concerto and the Saariaho; and the delightful clarinetist-sprite Kari Kriikku.</font></p>
<p>
<font SIZE=2>No less impressive was Toimii&#8217;s morning &#8220;family&#8221; program in which all members joined forces to eradicate the institution of opera once and for all through a boisterous and mettlesome spoof that even included a high note or two from the august Salonen himself. Our own L.A. Philharmonic New Music Group, founded the same year as Toimii, was also on hand, in a program that ended with a reminder of what a solid, beautifully planned work is John Adams&#8217; <i>Chamber Symphony</i>. One more Finn, the pianist Olli Mustonen, who has brought his affected, self-indulgent pianistic and musical mannerisms here before (and been castigated on this page more than once), offered a program whose basic idea was not bad &#8212; alternating preludes and fugues by Bach and Shostakovich &#8212; but whose execution in an overshaded, falsely accentuated old-timey salon style (the worst Bach playing I can remember since Rosalyn Tureck) was by all counts the low point of this Ojai Festival and several previous.</font></p>
<p>
<font SIZE=2>Things are happening at Ojai. Ernest Fleischmann&#8217;s first year as artistic director brought changes, including an expansion via three short &#8220;Sundowner&#8221; concerts earlier in the week. There is to be a yearly young-composer competition, financed by a local foundation, with the first winner included in the 2000 season program. Next year&#8217;s conductor, by the way, is Sir Simon Rattle, and the solo list includes the incomparable Lorraine Hunt. It&#8217;s not too early to reserve.</font></p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>OJAI FESTIVAL&#160;REVIEW</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/1999/06/ojai-festival-review/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/1999/06/ojai-festival-review/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Tue, 08 Jun 1999 22:28:11 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Musical America]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=1823</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Tucked into a valley northeast of Ventura (which served filmmaker Frank Capra as site for the original version of &#8220;Lost Horizon,&#8221;) the town of Ojai (pop. 7500) is no more than a 90-minute drive from downtown Los Angeles. One weekend a year, however, as this rural enclave of horse farms and orange groves houses one [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Tucked into a valley northeast of Ventura (which<br />
served filmmaker Frank Capra as site for the original version of<br />
&#8220;Lost Horizon,&#8221;) the town of Ojai (pop. 7500) is no more than a<br />
90-minute drive from downtown Los Angeles. One weekend a year,<br />
however, as this rural enclave of horse farms and orange groves<br />
houses one of the world&#8217;s most sophisticated and adventurous<br />
music festivals, it might as well be the far side of the moon.</p>
<p>This past weekend was one such time. Founded in 1947, the<br />
Ojai Festival has from its inception concentrated on the<br />
cutting-edge musical repertory more grandiose European festivals<br />
would fear to touch. Innovative composer/movers Aaron Copland,<br />
Igor Stravinsky and Pierre Boulez have been frequent Ojai<br />
luminaries, to the extent that they are now household names among<br />
veteran festival attendees. Ojai thrives on true grit.This year&#8217;s<br />
offerings, consisted of an extraordinary (and spectacularly<br />
successful) feat of bridge-building: America meets Finland, and<br />
finds much in common.<br />
In Southern California, of course, that is no longer news.<br />
Esa-Pekka Salonen has made the Los Angeles Philharmonic one of<br />
the world’s most irresistible orchestras, and a sounding board as<br />
well for the hard-edged, bristling, intensely energetic music of<br />
a generation of Finnish composers who, apparently, work without<br />
fear – and (for what the information is worth) choose to live<br />
outside Finland. For his first-ever Ojai stint, Salonen brought<br />
over the intrepid new-music ensemble called Toimii, which he and<br />
Magnus Lindberg had founded in Helsinki in 1981; Toimii, in turn,<br />
brought over a week’s worth of new music mostly stupendous: music<br />
by Salonen himself and his two near-contemporaries Lindberg and<br />
Kaija Saariaho. They also brought an hour’s worth of delicious<br />
operatic spoof for a morning &#8220;family concert&#8221; whose catalog of<br />
delectables included the rare spectacle of Salonen himself, in a<br />
Bunny costume, screeching out a few notes in the soprano<br />
stratosphere while leaping after invisible butterflies.<br />
Of the new works Lindberg’s 30-minute &#8220;Kraft&#8221; sent the<br />
crowd most immediately woozy: a huge sound panorama enlisting<br />
both the Toimii membership and the L.A. Philharmonic in full<br />
panoply, much of it techno-derived enlisting percussion galore<br />
(including a gathering of banged-upon auto parts worthy of early<br />
John Cage), with musicians dashing to improvised performance<br />
spaces all around the audience area, with twittering piccolos<br />
serenading (and being serenaded by) Ojai’s regular avian<br />
contingent. The work dates from 1985 (and was recorded on the<br />
Finlandia label two years later); this was its U.S. premiere, and<br />
the ground at Ojai may still be shaking.<br />
Lindberg’s music made a lot of noise at Ojai; it also<br />
included a cello concerto that showcased the phenomenal talent of<br />
Toimii’s cellist Anssi Karttunen – who was kept busy the next<br />
night by another killer solo work, the &#8220;Amers&#8221; by Saariaho. A new<br />
work by Salonen himself, his &#8220;Five Images After Sappho,&#8221; won<br />
hearts with subtler means: music of elegant, long melodic flow,<br />
set for soprano and small ensemble and – since Salonen is about<br />
to start work on a large-scale opera – encouragingly responsive<br />
to the mysterious art of writing for voice. Salonen had composed<br />
the cycle for Dawn Upshaw, but that most lovable of singers<br />
underwent emergency spine surgery and was replaced by another<br />
American soprano less well known but eminently capable, Laura<br />
Claycomb. Remember her name.<br />
A program by the Philharmonic’s own New Music Ensemble<br />
(also founded in 1981) had the aspect of an east-meets-west<br />
confrontation: John Adams’ &#8220;Chamber Symphony,&#8221; much of it<br />
vibrating with a quasi-European contrapuntal intricacy, as close<br />
to a &#8220;bridge-building&#8221; work as anything of Adams. A program by<br />
Finnish pianist Olli Mustonen, Bach and Shostakovich Preludes and<br />
Fugues interwoven, was Ojai’s one expendable item; the young (and<br />
terminally cute) pianist works with an absurd range of stage<br />
mannerisms, which have now begun to permeate the sounds he makes:<br />
false shadings, mannered accentuations, the old-time style – more<br />
salon than Salonen – that one had thought (hoped, even) was a<br />
thing of the  past.<br />
Ojai’s fortunes are obviously on the rise; in this<br />
second summer of leadership by former L.A. Philharmonic honcho<br />
Ernest Fleischmann, most events drew sellout crowds to the small<br />
amphitheater in Ojai’s Libbey Park and to the lawn areas behind<br />
(Tanglewood-in-miniature). There was even  a pre-festival<br />
festival: three &#8220;Sundowner&#8221; concerts earlier in the week, of<br />
considerable scope and virtuosity. Next year’s star conductor<br />
will be Simon Rattle, and the soloists include the irreplaceable<br />
Lorraine Hunt. It’s not too early to reserve.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>An Absentee&#160;Lucia</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/1999/06/an-absentee-lucia/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/1999/06/an-absentee-lucia/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 02 Jun 1999 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=250</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[POOR, SWEET, PUT-UPON LUCIA OF LAMMERMOOR. BOTH the opera and its heroine have been far more sinned against than sinning, burdened with evils of the spirit and flesh. The debatable notion prevails here and there in opera-buffdom that underneath Donizetti&#8217;s fragile, romantic weeper there bubble deep psychological currents that call for prodigies of a producer&#8217;s [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><font SIZE=2>POOR, SWEET, PUT-UPON LUCIA OF LAMMERMOOR. BOTH </font><font SIZE=2>the opera and its heroine have been far more sinned against than sinning, burdened with evils of the spirit and flesh. The debatable notion prevails here and there in opera-buffdom that underneath Donizetti&#8217;s fragile, romantic weeper there bubble deep psychological currents that call for prodigies of a producer&#8217;s invention. Memories of the L.A. Opera&#8217;s 1993 version persist, with June Anderson climbing the outsides of buildings and Andrei Serban&#8217;s stage cluttered with dancing slabs of scenery. Earlier that season I had stumbled upon the Metropolitan Opera&#8217;s new production, the Francesca Zambello number with the coffins that was booed and lasted only one season. (I hear from New York that the Met&#8217;s latest <i>Lucia</i> also had the critics recycling the adjectives &#8212; &#8220;abominable,&#8221; for one &#8212; that had served them well seven years before.)</font></p>
<p>
<font SIZE=2>Jonathan Alver&#8217;s production currently at the Music Center, brought up from Opera New Zealand, imposes on neither patience nor credulity; it looks the way it sounds. That way is full of artifice and hokum, but I wasn&#8217;t disturbed until the Mad Scene, which had the chorus cavorting around the forlorn Lucia and eventually massed into a Hi-De-Ho formation like an MGM minstrel show, and the ending, which had the saintly Scottish Presbyterians assembled in a churchyard backed by a projected fiery-red cloudscape straight from hell.</font></p>
<p>
<font SIZE=2>Sumi Jo, pretty and graceful, has no business singing Lucia at this stage in her career, if her fuzzy, unfocused and painfully out-of-tune first-night performance means anything. Worse, you never had the feeling that she owned the stage, and without an inadequate Lucia there&#8217;s no <i>Lucia</i>. Her Edgardo, Frank Lopardo, yelled a lot, but at least did so in tune. Gino Quilico&#8217;s Enrico also had its shrill moments, but he is an exciting young singer new to the company, and his work endowed the opera. There was certainly no stability in the flabby conducting of Richard Bonynge: the sad spectacle of a onetime expert follower (of his now-retired ex-wife, Joan Sutherland) now with nobody to follow.</font></p>
<p>
<font SIZE=2>IT IS 13 SEASONS SINCE THE CURTAIN FIRST ROSE (SHAKILY, </font><font SIZE=2>if you remember) on the newborn Los Angeles Opera. By managerial standards &#8212; the kind expressed in dollars and cents, red and black ink &#8212; the company is fabulously successful. It has won an enviable place in the community, serving young and minority audiences with valuable educational programs. Once a season, on the average, it comes up with an event that draws press and opera honchos from out of town to add to the local luster. Occasionally it justifies all that junketing with something operatically worthwhile: the &#8217;97 season&#8217;s <i>Return of Ulysses</i>, for example. Sometimes it doesn&#8217;t; I can&#8217;t think of a more flagrant fiasco in all Operaland, in terms of pre-performance hype vs. abject final product, than last December&#8217;s <i>Fantastic Mr. Fox</i>. In this past season I would have proudly escorted a discriminating out-of-town visitor to only one of the eight productions, the revival of the Jonathan Miller/Robert Israel <i>Don Giovanni</i>. When that production was new, in October 1991, it shared a season with Berlioz&#8217;s <i>Les Troyens</i>, the world premiere of Sallinen&#8217;s <i>Kullervo</i>, and Britten&#8217;s <i>Albert Herring</i>, along with a couple of more standard crowd-pleasers. This year it shone its single light in the gray morass of the tried-and-true along with the never-should-have-been.</font></p>
<p>
<font SIZE=2>In the days when he used to meet regularly with the musical press &#8212; as he hasn&#8217;t now for over a year (nor would I in his tromped-on shoes) &#8212; Peter Hemmings was quite open about the reason for the company&#8217;s regression from the adventurous to the safe and familiar: his need to put the most well-heeled of his patrons at their ease. He tended to sidestep the fact that the company&#8217;s clear claim to success was already established in the years of <i>Wozzeck</i>, <i>The Fiery Angel</i> and <i>Katya Kabanova</i>. You can&#8217;t refute his motivation, even as the ranks of elderly, well-heeled devotees of <i>Madama Butterfly</i> grow ever thinner. The Philharmonic, by the way, under its former and its present management, refutes it very well. But operas cost more to produce than symphony concerts.</font></p>
<p>
<font SIZE=2>From the start, the company has projected a bifurcated, self-contradictory image. Operating in a 3,100-seat luxury venue, it was obliged to affect the air of a grand-opera company on a level with the Met, Chicago and San Francisco. Its roster was anchored on one supernova, Plácido Domingo (as he sounded in 1986), who went on to serve the company on a semiresident basis and soon &#8212; with prospects one may justifiably question &#8212; assumes leadership. Around Domingo at the start were a few other luminaries who welcomed the chance to practice new repertory in the boonies (just kidding, folks) before taking it to the real world: Maria Ewing, for one; Carol Vaness, with lesser success &#8212; and whatever happened to Carol Neblett? At the same time, the company came on as a mirror of the best qualities in the New York City Opera: a unit of young singers enlisted in on-the-job training, working their way up if they had the stuff, or out if they didn&#8217;t. If you heard Richard Bernstein&#8217;s Figaro at the Met, or Rodney Gilfry sing the opening exhortation in the finale of Beethoven&#8217;s Ninth with the visiting Brits at Costa Mesa last week, you were in the presence of careers in full blossom whose roots reached back to their time at the Music Center. (Gilfry was the Herald in <i>Otello</i> on that fateful opening night in 1986.)</font></p>
<p>
<font SIZE=2>Somewhere along the line, the images blurred. The typical L.A. Opera night seems compounded of a sure-fire high-style opera inadequately cast, tentatively staged and, as often as not, indifferently conducted: this season&#8217;s <i>Carmen</i>, <i>Falstaff</i> and <i>La Traviata</i> as prime examples. Can we expect better from next season&#8217;s <i>Rigoletto</i>, <i>Faust</i> or <i>La Rondine</i>?</font></p>
<p>
<font SIZE=2>It&#8217;s not my place to answer that question &#8212; yet. Next season also offers our first-ever <i>Billy Budd</i>, an authentic masterpiece; a return of the delectable production of <i>The Elixir of Love</i>; <i>The Capulets and the Montagues</i>, Bellini&#8217;s curious gloss on the RJ script; <i>Hansel and Gretel</i>, which in the realm of kiddie opera looms over <i>Mr. Fox</i> like <i>Tristan und Isolde </i>&#8211; and, for starters, <i>Samson et Dalila</i>. That one is sure to bring down the house.</font></p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>The Product,&#160;Triumphant</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/1999/05/the-product-triumphant/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/1999/05/the-product-triumphant/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 26 May 1999 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=249</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[IT WAS A MONTH FOR SYMPHONIES: Mozart in full glory, two unfamiliar Dvorák delectables, one often-roasted chestnut from the Shostakovich legacy and another more rare &#8212; and, of course, the Nine. Beethoven&#8217;s inscrutable legacy drew sell out crowds to Costa Mesa&#8217;s Performing Arts Center; from overheard lobby conversations I would judge that the contingent who [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>IT WAS A MONTH FOR SYMPHONIES: Mozart in full glory, two unfamiliar Dvorák delectables, one often-roasted chestnut from the Shostakovich legacy and another more rare &#8212; and, of course, the Nine. Beethoven&#8217;s inscrutable legacy drew sell<br />
out crowds to Costa Mesa&#8217;s Performing Arts Center; from overheard lobby conversations I would judge that the contingent who came out of love for Beethoven-as-composer just about equaled the Bee-<br />
thoven-as-P.C.-icon crowd. On opening night, John Eliot Gardiner and his &#8220;Revolutionary and Romantic&#8221; Orchestra got through the entire program without a single intrusive between-movements ovation; on the second, when you could expect that the profound mysteries of the &#8220;Eroica&#8221; and the Fourth symphonies might hold an audience spellbound, there were outbursts<br />
of applause at every juncture. (The sad news is that between-movements applause, which in our reverence for Product we hear as intrusions, is actually the &#8220;authentic&#8221; practice. Respectful or stunned silence is a far more recent &#8212; and, I&#8217;m tempted to add, pretentious &#8212; behavior.)</p>
<p>
Gardiner, at work in this part of the world for the first time, enjoys a following from recordings, many of which I revere as the best-of-all performances &#8212; Beethoven&#8217;s <i>Missa Solemnis</i>, the Berlioz <i>Fantastique</i> &#8212; for their wisdom, strength, a certain bravado, and his mostly superb and mostly young<br />
orchestra. In the five concerts in Costa Mesa &#8212; sponsored by the Orange County Philharmonic Society, whose programming this season and next suggests an infusion<br />
of bravery other organizations might profitably heed &#8212; these qualities were in evidence now and then, except for the &#8220;superb young orchestra,&#8221; which filled the air each night with the bloopers and imbalances probably inevitable in period-instrument ensembles but resounding strangely in a hall where the Vienna Philharmonic once played.</p>
<p>
Still, Costa Mesa&#8217;s Beethoven week had its values. For all the misfortunes in the wind and brass sections, there were the<br />
seductive, velvet-and-bronze tones from a string section playing with gut strings and reduced vibrato, turning long melodic lines into a kind of superhuman breathing. For all the chill surrounding Gardiner&#8217;s conception of Symphonies 4, 6 and 9, there was the hair-raising energy in the &#8220;Eroica&#8221;&#8216;s first-movement drama, and in all of the Seventh. At the Wednesday concert, Gardiner, the orchestra and his Monteverdi Choir put together a demonstration of music that Beethoven might have heard on his way up the mountain: arbitrary in the jiggering of facts now and then, oblivious to the fact that, in the time of triads and<br />
neat dominant-to-tonic cadences, all music sounded somewhat alike.</p>
<p>
A certain piety pervades the whole concept of historically informed performance on period instruments, of &#8220;reinventing what the composer could have heard,&#8221; stepping gingerly around the hard facts of changed audience perception, concert-hall architecture, and, in Beethoven&#8217;s case, nearly two centuries of skillfully orchestrated hype under which music turns into an amalgam of masterpiece and product. Did the crowd that whooped and hollered for a good 10 minutes after Saturday&#8217;s Ninth Symphony react to the wretched execution all evening by horns and winds? Or to Gardiner&#8217;s straitjacketing conception that sandpapered the fury and desperation of the first movement into bland note spinning and turned the miraculous slow movement into dry wood chips? Or to the perceived wisdom that the Beethoven Nine form a product that defines its own wrapping and, like Everest, merits our adulation Because It&#8217;s There?</p>
<p>
DVORáK&#8217;S NINE LIVE ON A LOWER slope, ensconced among the world&#8217;s best feel-good music. The Fifth Symphony comes on &#8212; clarinets in a purring arpeggio &#8212; with a vision of fields and forests, oblivious to the tornado that lurks in the<br />
finale half an hour later. The Sixth begins with a most ingratiating wet kiss, such as a child on tippy-toes might deliver to a benevolent uncle. Later in his career, as the naïve Dvorák learned of his own genius from the product packagers, a certain stiffness set in; his last two symphonies, for all their grand tunes, move more carefully compared to the ease, the fluency, the unselfconscious repetitions of pretty tunes just because they&#8217;re pretty, in these earlier works.</p>
<p>
The L.A. Philharmonic had never performed the Fifth &#8212; nor, for that matter, have many other orchestras. The neglect is baffling, because the music &#8212; even the long finale, whose bluster demands some condescension &#8212; is gorgeous. Guest-conducted by David Zinman, the Dvorák crowned an evening that had also included Gil Shaham&#8217;s dazzling sprint through Bartók&#8217;s Second Violin Concerto &#8212; a neat folk-tinged pairing. The Sixth turned up to charm the daylights out of us at the<br />
season&#8217;s final concert by the Santa Monica Symphony in the acoustical horror of<br />
the Civic Auditorium. Sound aside, this orchestra and its free-to-all-comers concerts are a valuable local resource; its conductor, Allen Robert Gross, is particularly adept at leading a not entirely professional assemblage toward a fair facsimile of eloquence. That&#8217;s just my fancy way of saying that Dvorák&#8217;s most lovable symphony did its job lovably.</p>
<p>
Shostakovich&#8217;s month with the Philharmonic mingled fabulous and flatulent. Someone at the Philharmonic seems to mistake Mark Wigglesworth&#8217;s brattiness for talent, since he turns up as guest conductor so often (two separate gigs this season). I do not, and from the sounds of the orchestra &#8212; unbalanced and often tentative in the Shostakovich 10th &#8212; there is little love lost between players and conductor. After many years I am finally learning to like this symphony &#8212; long, powerful, also given to bluster now and then &#8212; but the performance under Wigglesworth, simultaneously sharp-edged and fuzzy, was a setback.</p>
<p>
For all the popularity and the hokey biographical detail concocted around the Shostakovich Fifth that turns symphony into product, I have little problem learning to like the work. I had less than usual, in fact, in Sakari Oramo&#8217;s beautifully thought-out performance with the Phiharmonic: the orchestra responsive and, in the wondrous slow movement, positively sleek; the finale, at a pace considerably brisker than in the legendary Kurt Sanderling performance here 15 or so years ago, an authentic bone-rattler. Oramo, the latest to emerge from Finland&#8217;s seemingly inexhaustible fund of star-quality musicians, nailed down his credentials with a performance of the Mozart 39th, its magical wind scoring lovingly sprinkled with stardust. I also have a warm spot for guest conductors so little ego-driven that they don&#8217;t bother to remove their eyeglasses before taking a bow; Oramo&#8217;s modesty in this regard seemed, in a word, spectacular.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>RE:&#160;BEETHOVEN</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/1999/05/re-beethoven/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/1999/05/re-beethoven/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 24 May 1999 22:39:56 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Musical America]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=1845</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[An all-in-one festival of the Beethoven Nine is one of music&#8217;s can&#8217;t-lose propositions. The size is right: five concerts of leisurely length, with room here and there for an overture or two. The music, needless to say, is also right: &#8220;the most sublime noise that has ever penetrated into the ear of man.&#8221; wrote E. [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>An all-in-one festival of the Beethoven Nine is one of music&#8217;s can&#8217;t-lose propositions. The size is right: five concerts of leisurely length, with room here and there for an overture or two. The music, needless to say, is also right: &#8220;the most sublime noise that has ever penetrated into the ear of man.&#8221; wrote E. M. Forster.<br />
Beethoven is &#8220;of all composers,&#8221; a wise critic once wrote, &#8220;the one who most insistently tells us that we cannot do without him.&#8221; The sublime efficiency of the hype machine &#8211; now well into its second century &#8211; further guarantees sellout crowds. They mustered last week at Orange County 3000-seat barn of a Performing Arts Center for the sublime Nine in the first-ever California visit by John Eliot Gardiner and his Orchestre Révolutionnaire et Romantique, brought in for an exclusive American stint by the Orange County Philharmonic Society. The parlay of Beethoven the genius and Beethoven the public-relations icon &#8211; however variable the performances themselves &#8212; made for an irresistible force.<br />
Gardiner himself, now 56, is an important part of that parlay; so is his mostly-youthful orchestra founded in 1990,  with its recorded legacy (including the Nine) well-received and voluminous. Part of that generation of Brits whose work purports to reconstruct the music of past masters as the masters themselves had heard it &#8211; strings of gut rather than steel, woodwinds actually made of wood, valveless horns and trumpets that invoke the twin gods of music and plumbing &#8211; Gardiner has been more successful than some colleagues in folding the sounds of his historically-informed orchestra into a more modern need for the bone-rattling and the whizbang. It cannot be mere coincidence that the hottest tickets around town last week afforded admission to battlefields: the expanse of the &#8220;Star Wars&#8221; landscape or the no-less-fantastic realm as an intruding C-sharp in the &#8220;Eroica&#8221; marks the invention of modern music for all time.<br />
It was the struggle-&#8217;n'-strife in this music that brought out the best in Gardiner&#8217;s week of performances: the brutal upheaval in the &#8220;Eroica&#8217;s&#8221; first movement that hurtles into vastly &#8220;wrong&#8221; keys; the blaze in the brass that bursts upon the spook-ridden scherzo in the Fifth; the manic rhythmic obsessions throughout the Seventh. The relatively small size of the orchestra (60 or so) and the silken clarity of old or quasi-old fiddles, beautifully broke apart the music&#8217;s complexity; rare indeed, the listener who found nothing new in Gardiner&#8217;s splendidly thought-out readings.<br />
There were other moments not so fine. Whatever Beethoven&#8217;s own (and often challenged) tempo indications, it is neither possible nor worth the effort to breed certain expectations out of an audience: the chilling outcry of grief in the &#8220;Eroica&#8217;s&#8221; Funeral March, the celestial soft harmonies in the slow movement of the Ninth. These moments, and others of quieter, more mystery-laden lyricism in the Fourth and Sixth, brought out lesser insights on Gardiner&#8217;s part &#8211; and a surprisingly high quotient of instrumental bloops in the winds and brass as well.<br />
At the end, the Ninth drew a standing, stomping, cheering 15-minute ovation. The miracle of Beethoven &#8211; one of them, at any rate &#8211; is the variety of sheer narrative momentum in each of the symphonies, each different, each leading to terminal exhilaration. Hearing the Nine as a unit &#8211; in a single sitting, you might say &#8211;  produces another kind of momentum, from the Haydnesque trickery of the first two symphonies to the Ninth&#8217;s ultimate triumph &#8211; marvelously voiced, by the way, by Gardiner&#8217;s own small Monteverdi Choir.  Great music never loses its power to surprise, to reveal something you never noticed before. The week of supremely familiar Beethoven became an exercise in constant surprise. &#8211; Alan Rich</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Let&#039;s Hear It for&#160;Ockeghem</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/1999/05/lets-hear-it-for-ockeghem/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/1999/05/lets-hear-it-for-ockeghem/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 19 May 1999 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=248</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Photo by William WegmanLISTENING TO VERY OLD MUSIC DEMANDS a confrontation on shaky ground between the imaginations of the long-dead composer and the listener presumed alive. However pious the press releases may read on the subject of &#8220;authentic performance practice as the composer might have heard it half a millennium ago,&#8221; the impression is inescapable [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Photo by William WegmanLISTENING TO VERY OLD MUSIC DEMANDS a confrontation on shaky ground between the imaginations of the long-dead composer and the listener presumed alive. However pious the press releases may read on the subject of &#8220;authentic performance practice as the composer might have heard it half a millennium ago,&#8221; the impression is inescapable that an interlock of artificialities is in operation. There is no way that today&#8217;s performance of, say, a Mass by Johannes Ockeghem can be made to resemble what the composer had in mind &#8212; let alone what he was able to extract from whatever amateur choral forces his church might have been able to afford. We wouldn&#8217;t like it if it did; over five centuries, ears and expectations change.</p>
<p>
Instead, our senses are bathed in a thoroughly modern contrivance: the richness of medieval and Renaissance repertory newly repainted to fit today&#8217;s conception of past practices: not the Parthenon of Athens but a Parthenon-shaped pizzeria in Fresno. In the last couple of weeks we&#8217;ve been visited by excellent early-music specialists whose performances, besides being gorgeous to hear, bore some cachet as &#8220;authentic&#8221; or, that more satisfactory epithet, &#8220;historically informed,&#8221; time machines devised for escorting latter-day throngs back through olden times in mellow comfort. The British group called Magnificat made its local debut, performing 16th-century Spanish polyphony in a church &#8212; vaguely Spanish, vaguely Renaissance &#8212; built in 1923. A week later came four women of the hot-ticket New York ensemble Anonymous 4, along with the six men of the group known as Lionheart, performing a complete Mass service by Ockeghem in UCLA&#8217;s Royce Hall &#8212; a secular venue inspiring secular behavior. (Despite an appeal in the printed program, some in the audience succumbed to the need to break the continuity with applause every three or four minutes, thus widening the gap between listening to music circa 1999 and inventing music in the time of Columbus.)</p>
<p>
Two major Renaissance figures, 130 or so years apart, formed the substance of these programs. Magnificat sang music of Spain&#8217;s Tomás Luis de Victoria (1549­1611) and his countrymen: dark, passionate, sideslipping into passages of the startling dissonance we tend to ascribe to Gesualdo. Anonymous 4 and Lionheart labored on behalf of Ockeghem (1410­1497). Together these two sublime composers form the bookends for the century that saw Man and God sharing the composer&#8217;s worktable and turning out music that told what the world needed to know about both.</p>
<p>
Ockeghem is the &#8220;where has he been all my life&#8221; of recent years. Not a note of his music existed on records during my student days in Berkeley, therefore we were left unaware of his existence. Like Monteverdi, Beethoven and, arguably, Mahler, he bestrides a major musical upheaval, from the chaotic mannerisms of the early 15th century to the infusion of triadic harmonies and sweet, shapely melody as the century neared its close. At Royce there was the music of Ockeghem&#8217;s <i>Missa Mi-Mi</i>, with others of his works inserted as they would be in a church service. The flow of expressive devices &#8212; strings of first-inversion triads (&#8220;fauxbourdon&#8221;) that sound as if born long ago in a distant galaxy; wrenching shifts of harmony; cleverly spaced-out counterpoint games (a tune sung in one voice against its mirror image in another) &#8212; is astounding enough; the sheer beauty of the music is beyond description. Ockeghem&#8217;s music is somewhat recent for the usual tendencies of Anonymous 4 and their &#8220;brother&#8221; ensemble; it could be that this venture into new repertory &#8212; or the rude applause &#8212; brought on the occasional unsettled-sounding passage at Royce that afternoon. At the end there was the lament on Ockeghem&#8217;s death by his most illustrious pupil, Josquin Desprez (1440­1521), music that seemed to capture the breath of anyone within earshot, and the surrounding air as well.</p>
<p>
CERTAIN CLICHéS EXIST UNCHALLENGED: the notion of the clean, snowy-white way of singing &#8212; vibratoless and often bloodless &#8212; imposed on early music by choral groups mostly British; the &#8220;authenticity&#8221; of using boys&#8217; voices for the soprano and alto lines; the tuning obsession whereby singers do lip service to the past by honoring archaic systems of intonation so that a modern audience, familiar with Beethoven and the Beatles, hears everything slightly out of tune. (It&#8217;s just as easy, by the way, to sing with contemporary intonation practices and still sound out of tune, as witness the work of our Master Chorale or, even more painful, the strained, wobbly singing I heard last March at the Los Angeles Bach Festival.)</p>
<p>
On the evidence of recordings I have heard recently with particular pleasure, I discern an overall trend away from the pale bloodless style and toward an elegant balance between historical correctness and beauty. Two recent discs on Virgin Classics&#8217; Veritas label &#8212; vocal duets and ensemble pieces by Claudio Monteverdi (1567­1643) &#8212; hold me spellbound, both for the incredible imagination that fashioned these works and for the splendid compromise between history and contemporary awareness that sets the music free to chill our senses with its hot breath. Alan Curtis is the conductor, an American harpsichordist &#8212; onetime faculty member at Berkeley &#8212; now living in Venice (the other one), where he maintains an ensemble called Il Complesso Barocco. If you seek the ultimate proof of music&#8217;s power to hold us in its grip, hear Curtis&#8217; group, on the second of the two discs, in the <i>Lamento della Ninfa</i>, a six-minute full-scale opera about abandonment, the pangs of love and the joys of eavesdropping, with the Complesso Barocco leaning with exquisite emphasis on the music&#8217;s amazing array of dissonance employed in the depiction of misery. I never argue with people who tell me that this heartbreaking small work is the world&#8217;s best music bar none.</p>
<p>
On a rewarding Harmonia Mundi disc, Paul Hillier leads his Theatre of Voices through the thickets of <i>Hoquetus</i>, a trove of medieval vocal music: liturgical works; secular songs about love, war and matters in between; amazing exercises in complex counterpoint in which liturgical and secular combine simultaneously; wondrous bursts of sound from the device of &#8220;hoquetus&#8221; or &#8220;hocket&#8221; (&#8220;hiccup&#8221;) &#8212; a strange way of varying a sung note by breaking it up (i.e., &#8220;hiccuping&#8221;) among two or more voices. The music isn&#8217;t just tricks, however; in its austere, two-dimensional way (think Ravenna&#8217;s mosaics), it generates its own kind of fascination. So do Hillier and his group; over the years, from the early Hilliard Ensemble to the current group, his work in celebrating the interaction of man and music &#8212; any music, all music, Arvo Pärt and John Cage no less than Peter Abelard &#8212; has been a major force in keeping open the heavy gates between music then and ears now.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>The Beethoven&#160;Imperative</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/1999/05/the-beethoven-imperative/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/1999/05/the-beethoven-imperative/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 12 May 1999 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=247</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[&#8220;Gusts of splendor, gods and demi-gods contending with vast swords, color and fragrance broadcast on the field of battle, magnificent victory . . . it will be generally admitted that Beethoven&#8217;s Fifth Symphony is the most sublime noise that has ever penetrated into the ear of man.&#8221; &#8211;E.M. Forster, Howards End BEETHOVEN LOOMS LARGE, AS [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><font SIZE=2><i>&#8220;Gusts of splendor, gods and demi-gods contending with vast swords, color and fragrance broadcast on the field of battle, magnificent victory . . . it will be generally admitted that Beethoven&#8217;s Fifth Symphony is the most sublime noise that has ever penetrated into the ear of man.&#8221;</i></font></p>
<p ALIGN="RIGHT">
<font SIZE=2>&#8211;E.M. Forster, <i>Howards End</i></font></p>
<p>
<font SIZE=2>BEETHOVEN LOOMS LARGE, AS HE ALWAYS</font><font SIZE=2> has. He is of all composers, a wise critic once wrote, &#8220;the one who most insistently tells us that we cannot do without him.&#8221; Fortunately, we never have to. Other composers rise and fall in the world&#8217;s affection: Bach, Mozart, Haydn, Mahler. Two bodies of work endure: Handel&#8217;s <i>Messiah</i> and all of Beethoven. A few weeks ago the Beaux Arts Trio surveyed Beethoven&#8217;s bequeathal for piano, violin and cello on three radiant evenings at UCLA. Next week John Eliot Gardiner, his Monteverdi Choir and his period-instrument Orchestre Révolutionnaire et Romantique transmute Orange County into pure gold with the eternal Nine spread over five evenings that portend fire and magic. To hear the first concert, however, you must forgo a Beethoven program by the Los Angeles Philharmonic&#8217;s Chamber Music Society that includes the astonishing C-sharp Minor String Quartet. All five piano concertos turn up on this summer&#8217;s Hollywood Bowl docket. Next season&#8217;s Philharmonic schedule lists four symphonies (one of them played by visitors from San Francisco), three concertos and a whole evening of violin sonatas.</font></p>
<p>
<font SIZE=2>His genius endures under many names. No single compositional trick in the entire musical realm casts a longer shadow than the opening of the Beethoven Ninth, that procession of veiled mutterings out of which the substance of the first movement takes shape only gradually. You can&#8217;t name a composer in the whole panorama of romanticism who didn&#8217;t find some use for Beethoven&#8217;s gambit: Berlioz, Liszt, Wagner, Bruckner, Mahler. Last week the Philharmonic played a work far outside the Beethoven orbit (or so you&#8217;d think): the delectable Fifth Symphony of Antonin Dvorák; yet the very opening of the work &#8212; a sustained F-major splashing-around that goes nowhere and has a fine time doing so &#8212; is a page shamelessly filched from the start of the Beethoven &#8220;Pastoral.&#8221;</font></p>
<p>
<font SIZE=2>He endures as a press agent&#8217;s dream; the Beethoven-as-icon industry is almost as old as the music itself. The gadgetry exists in lavish supply: the Napoleon biz with the &#8220;Eroica,&#8221; the &#8220;fate knocking at the door&#8221; biz with the Fifth, the mysteries and ultimate triumph of the Ninth, the deafness, the &#8220;immortal beloved&#8221; biz, the movies good and rotten. (My favorite: Harry Baur in the organ loft, in Abel Gance&#8217;s <i>Beethoven</i>, thundering out the Funeral March from the Opus 26 Piano Sonata while his erstwhile sweetie gets married to someone else down below.) The ultimate PR triumph came around 1940, when the handouts proclaimed that the world&#8217;s two supreme cultural inevitabilities, Beethoven and Toscanini, had joined forces under the aegis of the National Broadcasting Co. The music-appreciation racket fed handsomely on clichés and half-truths. The exploitation of mass-produced Beethoven created, in the words of critic Theodor Adorno, &#8220;a tendency to listen to Beethoven&#8217;s Fifth as if it were a set of quotations from Beethoven&#8217;s Fifth.&#8221;</font></p>
<p>
<font SIZE=2>His music endures in many shapes. Before 1910, a collector of recorded Beethoven in pursuit of, say, the &#8220;Moonlight&#8221; Sonata found fulfillment only on a single-sided Victor disc played by Vessella&#8217;s Italian Band; now the range of choice fills a full column of teensy type in the latest Schwann. In 1913, Arthur Nikisch, by some distance the most renowned and revered conductor of his time, gathered as many Berlin Philharmonic musicians as could fit in front of an acoustic horn and recorded the first-ever complete Fifth Symphony. (That recording also endures, available on several reprint labels.) Granted, a Schwann column&#8217;s worth of &#8220;Moonlights,&#8221; or two of &#8220;Fifths,&#8221; smacks of conspicuous consumption; even so, you can spend fascinating hours wandering through the versions, charting the many things that Beethoven&#8217;s music has meant to many people over the many years.</font></p>
<p>
<font SIZE=2>TAKE, FOR EXAMPLE, THE OPENING OF</font><font SIZE=2> the Fifth, just the first phrase up to the sustained G: surely the most famous opening of a symphony ever, with the four-note motif standing in for &#8220;fate knocking at the door&#8221; (in Beethoven&#8217;s words) to &#8220;V for Victory&#8221; (in Winston Churchill&#8217;s). I put the stopwatch to several versions from my own collection; in just this one passage &#8212; 20 seconds, out of a movement that lasts nearly eight minutes &#8212; the differences were astonishing. Here is John Eliot Gardiner, with his historically informed instrumentation that produces a comparatively light tone, setting the speed record of 16 seconds; yet George Szell, mustering the full symphonic potency of the Cleveland Orchestra, ties that mark. Roy Goodman&#8217;s Hanover Band, another &#8220;authentic&#8221; group, lumbers at a poky 19 seconds, matched by two &#8220;modern&#8221; ensembles: Bernard Haitink and the Amsterdam Concertgebouw and the 1955 performance by Herbert von Karajan and the Vienna. (Karajan revved up somewhat in later performances; his 1990 video clocks in at 17.) Toscanini lopes along at 20. Carlo Maria Giulini&#8217;s wonderful Los Angeles performance from 1982 whips by at 18 seconds, while his 1993 La Scala Philharmonic recording slows the pace down to 25. Arthur Nikisch, with the indulgent slowdowns and speedups that define a whole &#8216;nother era of performance values, demands 27 seconds of our valuable time, but so, half a century later, does Bruno Walter&#8217;s much less affected reading.</font></p>
<p>
<font SIZE=2>These figures have to be balanced against other matters, of course: how long you sustain the held E-flat in measure 2, or the held D in measures 4 to 5. Yet the differences among the 86 years of performing the Beethoven Fifth, or even the 59 years since Toscanini&#8217;s recording, seem to me the exact counterpart of the infinite and continual variety embedded in this inexplicable music itself. The Beaux Arts series began with Beethoven&#8217;s Opus 1 No. 1, music he looked upon as his way of getting his foot in the doorway to Vienna&#8217;s musical society: jolly, titillating Biedermeier note spinning. The journey from there to the profound eloquence of the &#8220;Archduke&#8221; Trio &#8212; the final work in the series &#8212; or from the jaunty frivolity of the First Symphony to the defiant outcries in the first movement of the Ninth follows arduous roadways over vast expanses. Beethoven struggled to chart these roadways for himself &#8212; struggles we can observe in the page after page of frustration and victory in the published sketchbooks. We owe him some struggle of our own to understand where he is taking us, and to sense the glory that awaits us on arrival. &#8220;Oh no, not Beethoven again!&#8221; the clods among us will intone; yet anyone who arrives with ears properly washed &#8212; on five nights at Costa Mesa&#8217;s Segerstrom Hall next week, or on Thursday nights at the Hollywood Bowl this summer, or at the Music Center come fall &#8212; will encounter at least one major surprise per work, however you may think you already know it. That&#8217;s part of the magic.</font></p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Opera&#160;Elsewhere</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/1999/05/opera-elsewhere/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/1999/05/opera-elsewhere/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 05 May 1999 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=246</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[LAST FRIDAY WAS WALPURGIS EVE, when witches ride and ballerinas glide, a festivity that provides the only justification I can think of for producing Charles Gounod&#8217;s Faust. Bill di Donato&#8217;s Bel Canto Opera did its usual patch-&#8217;n'-paste job, in the auditorium at Culver City High. (One thing about being a Bel Canto fan: You get [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>LAST FRIDAY WAS WALPURGIS EVE, when witches ride and ballerinas glide, a festivity that provides the only justification I can think of for producing Charles Gounod&#8217;s <i>Faust</i>. Bill di Donato&#8217;s Bel Canto Opera did its usual patch-&#8217;n'-paste job, in the auditorium at Culver City High. (One thing about being a Bel Canto fan: You get to know all the school auditoriums on the Westside.) I like the company, even when they overreach, as they did with <i>Aida</i> at the John Anson Ford last summer; our more expensive company, after all, has become increasingly famous for its underreach.</p>
<p>
The opera was given with the traditional cuts: Marguerite at the spinning wheel, her duet with Siebel &#8212; no loss. The agonizingly<br />
insipid Walpurgis ballet, alas, was left in and given complete, with dancers bumping one another, dropping bits of costumes, acting out a choreography on the brink of drag parody. The chorus sang the final apotheosis from behind a heavy curtain, and could not be heard. Kay Otani, a company regular, led the undersize but eager orchestra, working in an improvised pit space where the lamps on the players&#8217;<br />
music stands shone out into the hall and where Otani himself, not exactly a sylph, blocked the audience&#8217;s view from many of the best seats. There was a creditable Faust, Cuban tenor Gabriel Reoyo-Pazos, and a sweet-voiced, extremely pretty Marguerite, Kristin Hammar, both also Bel Canto veterans. There was a voiceless, last-minute-replacement Valentine, a squeaky Siebel, and a Mephisto who sang loud but out of tune. You don&#8217;t need to know their names.</p>
<p>
The Bel Canto gives the impression of putting on opera for sheer pleasure, and its loyal following has become something of a family over the years. They turned out in pretty good numbers for the <i>Faust</i>, although those numbers did dwindle as the evening wore on. &#8220;Wore on,&#8221; come to think of it, is exactly the right description for <i>Faust</i>. Never mind; I stayed to the end, and was happy to share in the crowd&#8217;s good time.</p>
<p>
DOMINICK ARGENTO&#8217;S <i>POSTCARD FROM Morocco</i> runs less than half the length of <i>Faust</i>, and delights at least twice as much, as it did at USC a couple of weekends ago. In 1972, when <i>Postcard </i>was first performed &#8212; by the Center Opera of Minnesota, which commissioned it &#8212; it occasioned huzzahs as an American work, bright, clean, clever and mysterious, full of musical and verbal puns and half-meanings, opera for the folks who do the <i>New York Times</i> Sunday crosswords.</p>
<p>
Argento&#8217;s 90-minute one-act piece, to John Donahue&#8217;s quirky text, escorts a pileup of contrasting characters, assembled in what is described as a &#8220;train station in Morocco&#8221; but can be anywhere you want, through a layering of musical and verbal gibberish: tunes and quotations from here and there, a smattering of 12-tone, a quick quote from Wagner to test whether you&#8217;re still awake. The plot may or may not deal with everyone&#8217;s expressed need to see what&#8217;s inside everyone else&#8217;s luggage. I can&#8217;t think of another opera that must be as much fun to stage or perform.</p>
<p>
That&#8217;s what came over, above all, in David Pfeiffer&#8217;s bustling, breathlessly inventive<br />
staging in the modest confines of USC&#8217;s Bing Theater, as the opera workshop at USC&#8217;s Thornton School of Music untangled the knots quite delightfully. The stage was a glorious clutter to match the score; only a few misplaced slide projections seemed lost in the turmoil. A student cast sang well under Timothy Lindberg&#8217;s musical direction; what came across best of all, however, was the interplay, the way people were tuned in to one another as they sang Argento&#8217;s sometimes-beautiful, sometimes-nonsensical, always-clever music. After the Workshop&#8217;s <i>Marriage of Figaro</i> last season, I promised myself never to miss their work in the future, and the resolve still holds.</p>
<p>
THREE OPERAS, THREE BRAVE BUT TOtally unalike attempts to define the beast; you cannot fault Tod Machover for trying. His first opera was an electronic fantasy based on the Philip K. Dick sci-fi classic <i>Valis</i>; his second, <i>Brain Opera</i>, enlisted interaction between the listener and computer gadgetry. Now comes <i>Resurrection</i>, a setting of Leo Tolstoy&#8217;s dense, speculative novel on the redemption of souls, calling for &#8212; and receiving with remarkable success &#8212; musical treatment along traditional Romantic operatic lines. Commissioned and produced by the Houston Grand Opera &#8212; its 24th world premiere in the 28 years of David Gockley&#8217;s enlightened leadership &#8212; the opera almost mitigated Houston&#8217;s junglelike climate when I looked in on it last week. &#8220;Almost,&#8221; I said.</p>
<p>
Tolstoy is said to have detested opera as an encumbrance to his words; previous treatments of <i>Resurrection</i>, including a lurid misrepresentation by Franco Alfano that reduces Tolstoy&#8217;s moralizings to soap opera, justify his distaste. For the 45-year-old, New York­born Machover, librettists Laura Harrington and Braham Murray have provided a more honorable, literate treatment of Tolstoy&#8217;s basically<br />
actionless probing of guilt and salvation. Machover, in turn, has given their words a richly intelligent setting, gritty at times but soaring and intensely lyrical at others, faltering only in some rather gooey final moments as Prince Dmitry Unpronounceable, &#8220;resurrected&#8221; from his profligate existence, sees Katerina, the woman he had once wronged, achieving her own &#8220;resurrection&#8221; in a Siberian prison, and walks off alone over Simon Higlett&#8217;s eye-dazzling snowscape into lighting designer Chris Parry&#8217;s boudoir-pink sunset.</p>
<p>
Up to now, Machover&#8217;s fame has been fashioned from his electronic inventions as head of musical matters at MIT&#8217;s media laboratory &#8212; including the interactive &#8220;cyber-cello&#8221; he built for Yo-Yo Ma. Perhaps his creation of a full-scale opera on a Tolstoy novel &#8212; scored for traditional orchestra, with only a smidge of electronic touchup here and there, managing with sure musical insights the novel&#8217;s tense, dark emotions &#8212; may strike his<br />
cutting-edge confreres as a backsliding. Whatever, it&#8217;s a work of genuine originality, remarkably skillful in the vocal writing, its<br />
music imaginatively tinged with a light wash of Mussorgsky here and Prokofiev there. It adds to the paltry store of worthwhile new operas a work of great attractiveness and power.</p>
<p>
Houston has again polished its laurels<br />
as a dynamic force in the treacherous realm<br />
of modern opera. Peopled largely with good young singers drawn from the company&#8217;s extensive apprenticeship program &#8212; including baritone Scott Hendricks and mezzo-soprano Joyce DiDonato as the &#8220;resurrected&#8221; pair, both splendid and promising young singers &#8212; under the strong baton of the company&#8217;s newly appointed music director Patrick Summers, <i>Resurrection</i> sounds the convincing note of belief that opera just might have a future.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>A Flight of Fantasy,&#160;Grounded</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/1999/04/a-flight-of-fantasy-grounded/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/1999/04/a-flight-of-fantasy-grounded/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 28 Apr 1999 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=245</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Photo by Susesch BayatCHARLES LINDBERGH&#8217;S SOLO FLIGHT across the Atlantic in May 1927 sent the world into a tizzy of adoration. It spawned parades, popular songs, Lucky Lindy Hair Tonic and &#8212; not the least &#8212; a strange but endearing cantata by Kurt Weill, to a text by Bertolt Brecht. That work, burdened with its [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Photo by Susesch BayatCHARLES LINDBERGH&#8217;S SOLO FLIGHT across the Atlantic in May 1927 sent the world into a tizzy of adoration. It spawned parades, popular songs, Lucky Lindy Hair Tonic and &#8212; not the least &#8212; a strange but endearing cantata by Kurt Weill, to a text by Bertolt Brecht. That work, burdened with its bifurcated title <i>Der Lindberghflug-Ozeanflug</i>, had its first-ever local performance two weeks ago, a one-shot production under Los Angeles Cultural Affairs Department auspices at San Pedro&#8217;s gloriously goofy Art Deco Warner Grand Theater. The evening had its share of mismatches, but at least the music and the venue seemed made for each other.</p>
<p>
Curious artwork, curious history. If aviation&#8217;s vast horizons seized the public&#8217;s imagination at the time, so did the even broader potential of the era&#8217;s other great invention, radio. By January 1929, Brecht had completed the text for a grandiose word salad around Lindbergh&#8217;s achievement, including words to be sung by Fog, by the City of New York saluting the Lone Eagle overhead, by the plane&#8217;s engine. (Such hifalutin fantasies were apparently embedded in the Germanic soul at the time &#8212; as witness the singing glacier in Ernst Krenek&#8217;s <i>Jonny spielt auf</i> and the poetry-shrouded mountains in Leni Riefenstahl&#8217;s early films.) The work was planned for presentation over German radio, with music jointly composed by Weill and Paul Hindemith; Hermann Scherchen conducted a broadcast, some of which survives on a recording once available on Capriccio. After a so-so initial reception, Hindemith withdrew his<br />
music; Weill completed the work himself, now announcing it as a &#8220;Cantata for Schools.&#8221; Otto Klemperer led the premiere of the revised score, and Leopold Stokowski gave it its first American hearing &#8212; also broadcast &#8212; in 1931, in an English translation by George Antheil. In 1950, disturbed by Lindbergh&#8217;s political activities in his later years, Brecht revised the text, deleting all mention of the pilot by name and adding an anti-Lindbergh spoken prologue, renaming the work <i>Ozeanflug</i>. In San Pedro the prologue was performed, but the name of Lindbergh still appeared on the projected titles and may, for that matter, have also been sung by the chorus; sharper ears than mine would have had to determine the latter point.</p>
<p>
None of this would merit detailing except that a) Weill&#8217;s music is wonderful, full of the slash and tension of his <i>Mahagonny</i> score, well worth reviving, and b) the local presentation, which could have offered much, was badly botched. A French vocal ensemble called Soli-Tutti &#8212; based, or so the press release raved, close to the <i>very airport</i> where Lindbergh landed &#8212; which on its own before intermission had sung Poulenc and Ligeti songs admirably, turned Brecht&#8217;s German words into Middle High Urdu. Aside from a clumsy printed synopsis, there was no clue as to text or<br />
action. Wandering spotlights plus a light leak from the brightly lit theater lobby added an overlay of visual confusion. Eventually, the stage was so crowded with wayward choristers that conductor Arthur B. Rubinstein, who led his Symphony of the Glen in what might have been a creditable performance, had no way to signal the music&#8217;s end.</p>
<p>
I hear that the Cultural Affairs Department has grand plans for the Warner Grand, and that the acoustics are splendid for orchestral concerts. On the first point I am hopeful; on<br />
the second I am so far unconvinced. Surely we need excellent new venues widely scattered, even as the Ambassador Auditorium remains dark. But nothing could kill the whole concept of cultural expansion faster than throwing the doors open to the kind of patched-together, grossly underrehearsed, vaguely defined presentation I endured at the Warner Grand a few days ago.</p>
<p>
LEONARD STEIN HAD TURNED PAGES FOR Frances Mullen at one of the first &#8220;Evenings on the Roof&#8221; concerts, on Peter Yates&#8217; roof, in 1939. Marni Nixon had performed songs of Charles Ives at a &#8220;Roof&#8221; concert in 1949. The &#8220;Roof&#8221; concerts became the Monday Evening Concerts; Leonard became &#8212; well, Leonard Stein; Marni recorded Webern and Stravinsky with Monday Evening Concert personnel, and was Audrey Hepburn&#8217;s voice in &#8220;The Rain in Spain.&#8221; It was fitting, and also glorious, to have them back at the County Museum doing Ives songs at the first of three concerts celebrating the 60th anniversary of a series that, under<br />
either of its two names, has been one of the most distinguished and longest-lasting explorations into unfamiliar and rewarding music anywhere in the world.</p>
<p>
Not everything on the two (of three) concerts I heard was up to that performance or musical level, but that&#8217;s always the chance you take when you explore. Two early works by eventual hell-raisers &#8212; Pierre Boulez&#8217;s 1946 Sonatine for Flute and Piano and Karlheinz Stockhausen&#8217;s 1959 <i>Refrain</i> &#8212; didn&#8217;t seem to have much to say these days. Schoenberg&#8217;s Violin Phantasy and the Bartók <i>Contrasts</i> were somewhat defused by an excess of care from violinist Maiko Kawabata. At the final concert, Gerhard Samuel&#8217;s dust-dry 1998 cantata <i>Hyacinth From Apollo</i> offered little nostalgic value and even less music. But at that concert David Sherr played two of Luciano Berio&#8217;s <i>Sequenze</i> and Samuel let loose the luminous flames of Anton Webern&#8217;s 1928 Symphony &#8212; save for the Ives, the oldest music on the three programs; suddenly you could realize that the cause for celebration was not merely a venerable concert series, but music itself.</p>
<p>
<i>OBITER DICTA:</i> FOR ME THE GREAT MOment in Martha Argerich&#8217;s steaming trajectory through Chopin&#8217;s E-minor Piano Concerto was her first entry: the impatience, violently voiced, after the agonizingly long and crudely orchestrated preamble (its length unmitigated by Emmanuel Krivine&#8217;s woolly reading with the Philharmonic on the first night). Yes, the nocturnal slow movement passed by on moonbeams; yes, the finale danced enchantingly. But was it really worth the 18-year wait for this one-of-a-kind musician to impose upon us so mealy-mouthed an excuse for a concerto while the masterworks languish for her touch?</p>
<p>
I had never paid much attention to Prokofiev&#8217;s <i>Cinderella</i> ballet score, regarding it as inferior to his <i>Romeo and Juliet</i>. (But then, what isn&#8217;t?) At the Ahmanson, performed by an undersize orchestra but crowned with the captivating originality of Matthew Bourne&#8217;s reworking of the old legend, it is magically transformed: music full of enchanting flicker, its great waltz an amazing study of dark shadows against daylight. Any number of ballets make an insignificant score tolerable through great dancing (e.g., <i>Giselle</i>); this new <i>Cinderella</i> makes an insignificant score significant, and that&#8217;s a lot harder.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Le Set&#160;Erector</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/1999/04/le-set-erector/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/1999/04/le-set-erector/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 21 Apr 1999 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=244</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Photo by Ken HowardLAST WEEK&#8217;S VISIT BY THE ENSEMBLE Intercontemporain delivered exhilaration and bafflement in equal measure; I don&#8217;t think I was the only member of the commendably large crowd at UCLA&#8217;s Schoenberg Hall to leave the concert wondering what had hit me and where. The playing, by the Paris-based ensemble under the splendid leadership [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Photo by Ken HowardLAST WEEK&#8217;S VISIT BY THE ENSEMBLE Intercontemporain delivered exhilaration and bafflement in equal measure; I don&#8217;t think I was the only member of the commendably large crowd at UCLA&#8217;s Schoenberg Hall to leave the concert wondering what had hit me and where. The playing, by the Paris-based ensemble under the splendid leadership of Santa Monica&#8217;s own David Robertson, was extraordinary: every note shaped with lapidary precision, textures balanced and shaped like crystal gleaned from some outer galaxy. Even with an American conductor, and a program including music by an American and a Korean composer, it was all very &#8212; how you say &#8212; <i>French</i>.</p>
<p>
Yes, bafflement. From the program notes I learned that Philippe Hurel&#8217;s <i>Six Miniatures en Trompe-l&#8217;oeil </i>contained &#8220;rhythmic units [with] precise functions, certain of them being sufficiently heterogeneous in and of themselves to be able to be distinguished and nevertheless sufficiently similar to be intermingled.&#8221; About Unsuk Chin&#8217;s <i>Xi</i>, the annotator informed the eager crowd that &#8220;there is a continuous metamorphosis of a certain number of generating cells . . . that remain, however, as unrecognizable as a single atom on the skin of a human being.&#8221; What I heard in these works was none of the above: in the Hurel, a clinkety-clank of successive sonorities, intricately shaded and including microtones; in the Unsuk Chin, more of the same but now spread through the hall via an elaborate surround-sound setup. Cast adrift by all that informational overload, could anyone in the audience claim to have experienced the music at all?</p>
<p>
Fortunately (for a few of us, at any rate), Robertson and the EIC returned to UCLA the next morning for a two-hour seminar devoted to Hurel, demonstrating the composer&#8217;s use of computer technology to explore the harmonic implications of certain notes and their power to generate other notes, along with demonstrations of the heroism involved in playing hard new music. That afternoon, the group went up to CalArts and performed a similar anatomy lesson on another work on the program, the two parts of Pierre Boulez&#8217;s <i>Dérive</i>. Anyone lucky enough to attend the sessions certainly came away feeling a lot closer to these works, and to the creative processes behind the glacial, intricate note spinning that we think of as intrinsically French (but which also embraces Elliott Carter, whose recent Clarinet Concerto fit neatly into last week&#8217;s program).</p>
<p>
But that only accounts for a few dozen enlightened souls, among the millions that the composers Hurel, Boulez, Chin and Carter surely hope will hear their music. The matter here is broader than just the activities of the 23-year-old EIC (which include performances so far of some 1,600 works); it touches on the whole interaction of music and audience, sense and sensitivity. I posed the problem to Robertson at one of the seminars, and his answer was intelligent if narrow: The EIC exists ideally to play its difficult repertory over and over, until people begin to catch an inkling of what the composers want to say &#8212; and can then accept or reject on the music&#8217;s own terms. (EIC&#8217;s Deutsche Grammophon recording of Boulez&#8217;s <i>Répons</i>, tingling, space-filling music that the Ensemble played here on a UCLA basketball court in 1986, is fresh at hand.)</p>
<p>
Some music asks to be loved: the &#8220;Crucifixus&#8221; from Bach&#8217;s B-minor Mass, <i>Don Giovanni</i>, Schoenberg&#8217;s Fourth Quartet, maybe a few thousand others. The music at the EIC concert made no such demand. It asked instead for admiration for the precision of wheels going around. Fine and dandy; I loved my Erector Set when I was a kid, and perhaps the exhilaration of last week&#8217;s concert reached the same nerve centers.</p>
<p>
THE PROPOSITION OFTEN ADVANCED, THAT Mozart&#8217;s <i>Don Giovanni</i> is the greatest of all operas, will encounter no opposition from this corner. The further proposition, that the L.A. Opera has finally shaken itself awake in what has been a dismal season, with a performance fully worthy of the music at hand, seems almost too good to be true. But that, too, will encounter no opposition here, or from the large crowd that cheered this latest effort &#8212; surely as much with delight as relief &#8212; at the Music Center last Wednesday.</p>
<p>
Karen Stone&#8217;s staging of Jonathan Miller&#8217;s production, premiered at the 1990 Florence May Festival and brought to Los Angeles a year later, digs deep into the roots that have made Mozart&#8217;s 1787 masterpiece a fertile field for psychological interpreters. From Giovanni&#8217;s first entrance, his clothes still askew after his thwarted rape of Donna Anna, to the love-crazed Elvira&#8217;s constant tinkering with fetishes and mementos, to the peasant Zerlina placating her miffed suitor Masetto with sweet singing while also loosening his belt, the production gives off a full awareness that babies don&#8217;t come from storks. The one flaw in the 1994 revival, the tendency to interrupt the music for long moments of pantomime, has been done away with this time around.</p>
<p>
Mozart has always fared well at the L.A. Opera, the more so since the Italian conductor Evelino Pidò has come on the scene. (Then why is there no Mozart scheduled for next season?) Pidò&#8217;s <i>Don Giovanni</i> rings true from first notes (those startling D-minor chords ringed in hellfire) to last (the little flick of orchestral stardust after affairs have been set right). His cast proves an altogether superior aggregation: Dwayne Croft&#8217;s intense, insinuating Don; Richard Bernstein&#8217;s savvy, sardonic Leporello; and the phenomenally vital singing of Jane Eaglen and Sally Wolf as the two heroines undone &#8212; probably past their powers of realization &#8212; by Don Giovanni&#8217;s predations.</p>
<p>
Robert Israel&#8217;s sets did not accord with everyone&#8217;s imagined <i>Don Giovanni </i>at the 1991 premiere: stark, massive, movable architectural units in pervading shades of gray. Duane Schuler&#8217;s new lighting, with its startling shifts of shadow for the supernatural moments, is a considerable improvement, especially as it allows the characters, in Israel&#8217;s nicely defined costume colors, to stand out against their background.</p>
<p>
Above all, there was balance: the splendid equilibrium among the cast and between vocal ensemble and orchestra; the visual balance between what people looked like and what they were up to; the dramatic balance in this most challenging of all operas between searing personal torment and delicious period comedy. Balance, at the L.A. Opera, has been a rare commodity of late; without it, all the beautiful singing in the world won&#8217;t bring Mozart to life. It was there this time, and the amazement was something you could almost reach out and touch.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Any&#160;Lengths</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/1999/04/any-lengths/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/1999/04/any-lengths/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 14 Apr 1999 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=243</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[TWO PERFORMANCES OF THE &#8220;GREAT&#8221; C-MAJOR Symphony; in between, the no-less-great C-minor Sonata: We Schubertians, a noble if embattled breed, had reason to stand tall last week. Great performances of great works reveal new facets, no matter how familiar the works themselves may already seem; they then lead to new ways to think about those [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><font SIZE=2>TWO PERFORMANCES OF THE &#8220;GREAT&#8221; C-MAJOR Symphony; in between, the no-less-great C-minor Sonata: We Schubertians, a noble if embattled breed, had reason to stand tall last week. Great performances of great works reveal new facets, no matter how familiar the works themselves may already seem; they then lead to new ways to think about those works, and about the creative spirits who brought them down to Earth. And even though the past week also afforded one other experience of enormous, unsettling power, it is Schubert who occupies my mind on the Saturday afternoon on which I write.</font></p>
<p>
<font SIZE=2>No other music, composed before or after the C-major Symphony, bears any resemblance to it. Within the broadest outlines of the forms that had served composers well for, let&#8217;s say, 75 years, Schubert invented a new music &#8212; new in melodic manner, new in its way of respecting (or disrespecting) the classic forms, new in its very sounds. All the program-note writers point to Schubert&#8217;s pioneering use of the trombone in this symphony, not to reinforce the downbeats at the big moments (as did Beethoven in his Fifth) but as a soft, mysterious, romantic voice from afar. In the sketches for a final symphony that Schubert worked at on his deathbed &#8212; which others have patched together as a putative 10th &#8212; there are passages even stranger, moments where four trombones are massed in a kind of funeral oration. What marvels these tantalizing score fragments do portend! But the C-major Symphony offers other innovations: the textures in the string writing, the sonorities of soft brass and strings in the Trio of the Scherzo, and, of course, the cataclysm, the apocalypse, as trombones confronting the full orchestra argue A-flat versus C in the final pages.</font></p>
<p>
<font SIZE=2>It&#8217;s not easy to account for any of these wonders flowing, at such lengths and with such exuberance, from the pen of a 28-year-old ailing composer, darling of Viennese hippie society but woefully lacking in friends in higher places. In 1822, at 25, Schubert had composed two movements of another symphony of similar innovative spirit, then laid it aside unfinished; those movements, at least, survive as one of our richest treasures. Schubert surely realized that, given his outsider status, music as daring as his B-minor Symphony, resonant with passions hitherto unknown in musical circles, was doomed to gather dust; of course he was right. We have to marvel, then, at the courage it took, three years later, for Schubert to start the upward climb once again, and this time make it to the top &#8212; &#8220;top,&#8221; that is, in the sense that he finished the work. It still gathered dust for years.</font></p>
<p>
<font SIZE=2>The history of this symphony and the sound of it &#8212; at the Music Center last Wednesday, with the Philharmonic and guest conductor Hans Vonk, and at Royce Hall two nights later, with Jeffrey Kahane and his Los Angeles Chamber Orchestra finishing out their subscription season &#8212; are closely intertwined. You have to take the giddy momentum of that amazing last movement, leading into the flaming torrents of its final measures, as some reflection of Schubert&#8217;s own wild enterprise in attempting the work. Musicians in the London Philharmonic are said to have ridiculed this movement on first confrontation, 10 years after Schubert&#8217;s death. I giggle too, at its sheer bravado, the message, the massage. Neither Vonk nor Kahane took notice of Schubert&#8217;s request to repeat the exposition of this finale, thus adding another four minutes of unbridled hilarity. I accept their wisdom, allowing for the symphony&#8217;s 50 or so minutes without repeats, yet . . .</font></p>
<p>
<font SIZE=2>Between the two performances I would be hard-pressed to choose; both gave off accents of love, admiration and &#8212; a most necessary ingredient here &#8212; patience. Vonk, Netherlands-born and current head of the St. Louis Symphony, led a solid, respectable reading through a thick pall of whooping cough and the Black Death; Kahane&#8217;s audience, in the brighter and kinder acoustics of Royce Hall, gave off the impression that they were there to hear the music.</font></p>
<p>
<font SIZE=2>MURRAY PERAHIA&#8217;S ROYCE HALL CONCERT, QUITE likely the best piano recital I have ever heard or could ever want to, ended with the great (lower-case, this time) C-minor Sonata, one of the miraculous three from Schubert&#8217;s last year. Again, it is the madcap exuberance in the finale that makes the work&#8217;s first friends, the onrush, the quick jamming-on of brakes, the sudden excursions into the middle of next week. The quiet, pleading simplicity of the slow movement makes friends more slowly; the fist-shaking opening movement makes no friends at all, but bedazzles us with its defiance, the desperate clinging to life of a doomed spirit with mere weeks to live.</font></p>
<p>
<font SIZE=2>At 52, Perahia has staked out a particular territory on the pianistic landscape that nobody else of his generation can challenge. His repertory is unsullied by the socko warhorses that others ride to glory: the Tchaikovsky and Rachmaninoff concertos, <i>Pictures at an Exhibition</i>, etc. His program here &#8212; Bach, Beethoven and Schubert &#8212; abounded in heavy thinking, all of it delivered with Perahia&#8217;s unique mix of humor and high drama, colored with a command of piano tone full of glints and soft, subtle colors. A finger injury in 1992 put him out of commission for five years; he has returned to performance fully recovered, a deeper, more humane musician. The morning after his recital I went to his master class at UCLA. Four students played; for each he had words first of commendation and then of concern. His concern wasn&#8217;t so much with fingers and wrists, but with the essentials of music itself &#8212; the harmonies, the momentum, the themes and their permutations &#8212; and their role in determining the direction of a piece. What he taught &#8212; to one-fingered me and to the budding young virtuosos in the hall &#8212; was a way of living in music, and of letting music live with you.</font></p>
<p>
<font SIZE=2>THE WEEK&#8217;S OTHER MIRACLE WAS, OF COURSE, Thomas Quasthoff&#8217;s half-program with the Chamber Orchestra: Bach&#8217;s &#8220;Ich habe genug&#8221; Cantata and four Mozart arias. The shock in the sight of Quasthoff onstage, his body the victim of Thalidomide, lasts perhaps half a minute; you marvel at his agility, his infectious huge smile, the utter absence of self-consciousness with which he has conducted his career. Then you listen, to that big voice so smooth, so flexible in the service of music&#8217;s moods, so utterly pure in its dark beauty. You think: This is the voice for <i>Die Winterreise</i>, and there&#8217;s already an RCA recording to prove you&#8217;re right. The fogies among us spent the intermission riffling through memories of Hans Hotter, Paul Schoeffler, George London, Dietrich Fischer-Dieskau, of course, and Hermann Prey. The circumstances around Quasthoff make comparisons difficult, but one impression stands out: In a world where outrageous premiums are placed on differentness &#8212; or have we already forgotten David Helfgott? Andrea Bocelli? &#8212; Quasthoff comes to us to make music, and he does it right now as well as anyone on the planet.</font></p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>One Out of&#160;Six</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/1999/04/one-out-of-six/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/1999/04/one-out-of-six/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 07 Apr 1999 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=242</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Photo by Dimo SafariDURING INTERMISSION AT LAST THURSDAY&#8217;S Philharmonic concert, the talk in my corner was about long-lost or neglected composers. The concert had begun with Arthur Honegger&#8217;s Symphonie Liturgique, which the orchestra had last played in 1949. It was followed this time by Franz Liszt&#8217;s First Piano Concerto, but all the poster-color and glitz [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Photo by Dimo SafariDURING INTERMISSION AT LAST THURSDAY&#8217;S Philharmonic concert, the talk in my corner was about long-lost or neglected composers. The concert had begun with Arthur Honegger&#8217;s <i>Symphonie Liturgique</i>, which the orchestra had last played in 1949. It was followed this time by Franz Liszt&#8217;s First Piano Concerto, but all the poster-color and glitz (including soloist Jean-Yves Thibaudet&#8217;s snazzy red socks) didn&#8217;t erase the memory of the Honegger &#8212; which, by the way, was accorded a decently respectful if indecently loud performance by the orchestra under guest-conductor Antonio Pappano.</p>
<p>
Correct me if I&#8217;m wrong, but there seemed to be a lot more Honegger in the air a few years ago. Daniel Lewis and the Pasadena Symphony gave a splendid performance of his oratorio <i>Joan of Arc at the Stake</i> in the early 1980s, but the story at the time was that orchestra board members objected to all that modern stuff. Serge Koussevitzky and Charles Münch played his music in Boston; so did Pierre Monteux in San Francisco. These days not many people argue his cause. In Berkeley in my time there was actually a Honegger Society, although I remember that its meetings were more devoted to concocting imprecations against Beethoven than upgrading Honegger. There was a recording on imported 78s of his big choral number <i>The Dance of the Dead</i>, which knocked everybody&#8217;s socks off; it had Jean-Louis Barrault howling passages from Ezekiel and the chorus screaming the &#8220;Dies Irae&#8221; chant. I sold dozens of copies at my record store, and wish I had kept one. (There was a newer recording, on Erato, now discontinued, but it was pretty tame by comparison.)</p>
<p>
The <i>Liturgique</i>, which dates from 1946, is an extraordinary work, but it&#8217;s easier to say what it isn&#8217;t than exactly what it is. Its orchestration leans to deep horns and ecstatic trumpets, but without the vulgarity of the César Franck disciples of the previous generation. Flights of angels pass close overhead, especially in the serene, sublime slow movement, but they don&#8217;t fly through the vapors stirred up in Messiaen&#8217;s liturgical ecstasies. Above all, you could never mistake this or anything else by Honegger as akin to the glib, easy charm of his fellow members of &#8220;Les Six.&#8221; He seems to have been the philosopher, the deep thinker of the group. He left a substantial musical legacy, some of it rather fun (like his <i>Pacific 231</i>, a tone-painting of a locomotive), some of it a gorgeous mix of profundity and theatricality (like the aforementioned choral pieces, a setting for a Jean Cocteau reworking of <i>Antigone</i>, and the <i>Liturgique</i> that inspired these thoughts). Along with a few other composers of our time badly in need of present-day champions &#8212; Luigi Dallapiccola, say, or Karl Amadeus Hartmann, or the early, pre-<i>Mathis der Maler</i> Hindemith &#8212; he certainly doesn&#8217;t deserve his current limbo. Overall, last week&#8217;s Philharmonic concert wasn&#8217;t great; Mendelssohn&#8217;s &#8220;Reformation&#8221; Symphony was made into hash. Honegger made the night important.</p>
<p>
THE PITTSBURGH SYMPHONY CAME TO TOWN with its new conductor, Mariss Jansons, and with Mahler &#8212; the 70 minutes of <i>coitus interruptus</i> that constitutes the Fifth Symphony. The work is surprisingly well-liked; the listing in <i>Schwann</i> is longer than for any other of the Mahler symphonies, even the good ones. I can&#8217;t tell a good performance  of this work from a bad, except for the separately famous Adagietto, recordings of which range from seven minutes (Bruno Walter and Willem Mengelberg, both educated at Mahler&#8217;s knee) to 14 (Georg Solti). I fought off sleep long enough to recognize Jansons&#8217; performance as somewhere in the middle. The orchestra sounded impressively loud, but &#8212; as usual with touring orchestras in unfamiliar halls &#8212; the brass badly outshouted everybody else all night, even in Beethoven&#8217;s First Piano Concerto, also on the program.</p>
<p>
The house was sold out, and the crowd yelled itself hoarse at the end. You have to hand it to Mahler; he knew how to orchestrate an audience better than any other 10 composers you could name. But the crowd had also yelled itself hoarse at the end of Helen Huang&#8217;s pallid, tinkly version of the concerto. Is the spectacle of a cute 16-year-old braving the tightrope across Big Bad Beethoven all it takes to bring an audience to its feet these days? And why does an orchestra, even the especially good one that the Pittsburgh now seems to be, travel with such uninspiring luggage? Are there no Pittsburgh composers worth highlighting? No specialties that define Jansons&#8217; musical outlooks?</p>
<p>
Oh, well.</p>
<p>
THERE ARE NEARLY TWICE AS MANY LISTings in <i>Schwann</i> for Vivaldi&#8217;s <i>The Four Seasons</i> as for Mahler&#8217;s Fifth, which I take as proof of civilization&#8217;s chance for survival. (In 1940, when I started collecting, there were no recordings of either work.) Tafelmusik, the excellent Toronto-based ensemble that performs Vivaldi delectably (and also Haydn), played to a near-capacity house (Royce, this time) not long ago and was properly cheered. Music director Jeanne Lamon&#8217;s flexible, willful Vivaldi is not everyone&#8217;s. She does tend to stress the music&#8217;s astonishing panorama of mood and tempo changes; you can almost smell fresh paint on Vivaldi&#8217;s pastoral landscape. A couple of the violinists seemed to be having a bad bow night, only enough to prove their humanness; Vivaldi, too, survived.</p>
<p>
Even without visiting ensembles, the local fund of early music seems to thrive; one could hear some kind of music-making almost every night without once descending to Mahler. I&#8217;ve missed most of Greg Maldonado&#8217;s programs with his Los Angeles Baroque Orchestra this season but promise to make up soon. I&#8217;ve gotten to our other local treasure, Michael Eagan&#8217;s Musica Angelica, more often, most recently in a vocal program at Santa Monica&#8217;s First Presbyterian Church that included some amazing &#8212; there&#8217;s no other word for it &#8212; music by Barbara Strozzi, singer and composer of 17th-century Venice.</p>
<p>
&#8220;I burn with silent fire,&#8221; sings the heroine of one of Strozzi&#8217;s long, passionate outcries. The music soars, dips; on &#8220;rivers of tears&#8221; the vocal line slithers down through chromatic harmonies that raise goose bumps; &#8220;tongues that cannot speak&#8221; speak in a monotone of repeated notes. One singer &#8212; the splendid Samela Aird Beasom &#8212; with a couple of plucked instruments to maintain the runway for these flights of fancy: The simplest of music creates the most profound, disturbing emotion. Opera was invented in Strozzi&#8217;s time; the power of music like this makes you feel present at the creation.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Return of the&#160;Native</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/1999/04/return-of-the-native/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/1999/04/return-of-the-native/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 07 Apr 1999 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=241</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[ASK ANY ORCHESTRAL MANAGER, ANYWHERE IN THE world, and you&#8217;ll get the same answer: There is no better way to pave a pathway to financial ruin than by playing new music. The real money flows in to the tunes of Beethoven and Tchaikovsky; substitute the abstruse patterns of Boulez and Carter, and the moneyed flow [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>ASK ANY ORCHESTRAL MANAGER, ANYWHERE IN THE world, and you&#8217;ll get the same answer: There is no better way to pave a pathway to financial ruin than by playing new music. The real money flows in to the tunes of Beethoven and Tchaikovsky; substitute the abstruse patterns of Boulez and Carter, and the moneyed flow toward the exit doors.</p>
<p>
Still, brave souls dot the landscape, and the true nobles in adventureland pull in fair-sized &#8212; if not always well-heeled &#8212; crowds. Our own California EAR Unit draws respectable aggregations to its County Museum concerts; the New York New Music Ensemble holds its torch aloft; in Frankfurt, the Ensemble Modern concerts are hot-ticket; so, in Paris, are the programs of extraordinary range by the courageous, much-traveled Ensemble Intercontemporain (henceforth to be noted as EIC), which pays its third visit to the UCLA campus with a concert at Schoenberg Hall on Sunday afternoon.</p>
<p>
Out on the podium that afternoon won&#8217;t be the formidable Pierre Boulez, the ensemble&#8217;s president and chief image-maker, and the name most associated with EIC since its founding in 1976. There&#8217;ll be Boulez on the program &#8212; the pair of pieces collectively known as <i>Dérive</i>, along with music by Philippe Hurel, Elliott Carter and the Korea-born Unsuk Chin, who had a knockout piece at a &#8220;Green Umbrella&#8221; concert earlier this season &#8212; but the music director will be David Robertson, who has held that post since 1992. And if the name &#8220;David Robertson&#8221; strikes you as rather un-French for someone leading an ensemble from notoriously xenophobic Paris, that&#8217;s understandable; he was born &#8212; some 40 years ago &#8212; right here in Santa Monica. If your memory goes back to, say, the mid-1970s, you may remember Robertson as a 17-year-old wonderkid assistant conductor in the days when Santa Monica High School had first begun to attract worldwide attention for the excellence of its young orchestra.</p>
<p>
Now, however, David Robertson has earned his own worldwide attention and gives phone interviews from his Paris apartment. He starts by explaining why, after his promising start in Santa Monica, he didn&#8217;t climb the usual American ladder toward stardom. &#8220;Sure, I started on the audition route, and I had a few good chances. But I also got the feeling early on that the American way of breeding top musicians had too much to do with marketing and too little to do with music. Some people take quite readily to all this image-building nonsense. I didn&#8217;t.&#8221;</p>
<p>
Instead, soon after high school, Robertson enrolled at London&#8217;s Royal Academy of Music. By 21 he had already begun a substantial career, with a door-opening win at a modest but important Danish conducting competition. In 1984 he began a two-and-a-half-year stint as conductor of the Jerusalem Symphony. By 1987 he was well-established in a circuit of small opera houses, and concert halls just below top level. &#8220;The value of Europe for me,&#8221; he says, &#8220;was the way I could easily get to conduct a lot of different things &#8212; concerts, opera, new music, old. Some of this may have been in piddling small towns, but the value for me was far from piddling.&#8221;</p>
<p>
Much of his early European renown came from his work in opera houses, with a particular leaning toward the grandiose virtuosity of the Italian bel canto &#8212; Bellini, Donizetti, early Verdi. &#8220;Yes, it&#8217;s a long way from <i>Norma</i> to Boulez,&#8221; he admits, &#8220;but to me the basis of all music is the vocal line, and the way all music moves along some kind of line. I don&#8217;t believe in trying to fit a performer&#8217;s musical tastes into compartments: early-music specialist, new-music specialist, that sort of thing. Every kind of music has to sing. Every piece of music creates its own language.</p>
<p>
&#8220;I don&#8217;t think in terms of &#8216;gear-shifting&#8217; in moving from one kind of music to another. I&#8217;m more aware of the spaces between the notes, and how each kind of music generates its own dynamic for filling in those spaces. If I conduct early Mozart, I don&#8217;t let myself get hung up on matters of &#8216;authentic&#8217; instruments. It&#8217;s hopeless to try to re-create the way Mozart heard his own music, because an audience today can&#8217;t listen through Mozart&#8217;s ears. It&#8217;s much more important to concentrate on what is in the language of each piece, the incision of its rhythms, the roundness of its triplets &#8212; that sort of thing.&#8221;</p>
<p>
Robertson&#8217;s career was granted the chance to shift gears almost by accident. &#8220;In 1990 I was asked by the French Radio to conduct an opera by Philippe Manoury, an important, upcoming French composer. What I didn&#8217;t realize at the time was that Manoury was a protégé of Pierre Boulez, and that Boulez was going to be in the studio audience that night. He was, and a few months later there was a call from Boulez&#8217;s secretary, inviting me to come in for a chat. Well, I figured, perhaps he wanted me to guest-conduct a program sometime. Instead, he asked me to become music director of the Ensemble Intercontemporain, replacing the departing Peter Eötvös, who had held the post since 1979.&#8221;</p>
<p>
The EIC was created by Michel Guy, then France&#8217;s minister of culture, to fulfill Boulez&#8217;s vision of an ensemble devoted entirely to performing the music of our own time, the thornier the better. The idea from the start was to create a body of extraordinarily capable soloists who would commit two-thirds of their time to the ensemble without abandoning their solo careers for the other third. (The recent Deutsche Grammophon recording of Luciano Berio&#8217;s solo <i>Sequenzas</i>, played mostly by EIC members, spectacularly illustrates the group&#8217;s level of performance.)</p>
<p>
Robertson has put his own one-third off-time to good use, including Janácek&#8217;s <i>Makropoulos Affair</i> for his Metropolitan Opera debut three seasons ago, the world premiere of Berio&#8217;s stunning new opera <i>Outis</i> at Milan&#8217;s La Scala in October 1996 and <i>Rigoletto</i> at the San Francisco Opera a year later. The present tour with EIC takes him to six college venues &#8212; UCLA, Stanford, UC Berkeley, Seattle, Buffalo and MIT &#8212; with performances and student workshops at each stop. Robertson himself is due back at the Los Angeles Philharmonic next December, in a &#8220;hugely difficult&#8221; (his own words) program: Ives, Janácek, Lutoslawski and the contemporary Dutch composer Tristan Keuris. Further plans include Robertson&#8217;s abandonment of the EIC post in August 2000 to take over what amounts to the musical directorship of the entire city of Lyons &#8212; head of its National Orchestra and of the municipal arts center as well.</p>
<p>
EIGHT YEARS WORKING IN THE SHADOW OF PIERRE Boulez, beyond doubt music&#8217;s most influential shaping figure in the second half of this century: Has that left David Robertson scarred, enriched &#8212; or both? &#8220;Not at all scarred,&#8221; he claims. &#8220;From the beginning, my relationship with Pierre took the form of a dialogue. I came to the EIC with my own set of ideas, my own set of styles, different from his and also different from those of Peter Eötvös.</p>
<p>
&#8220;We have come out of a time when music had formed a more or less homogenous language within well-defined social conventions. Now we have to create new priorities. I like to think back to Jackson Pollock, who never got further into an explanation of his own painting than to say, &#8216;It works.&#8217; In music, too, we have to experiment, to take chances . . . and to go with whatever works.&#8221;</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Pushing the Right&#160;Buttons</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/1999/03/pushing-the-right-buttons/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/1999/03/pushing-the-right-buttons/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 31 Mar 1999 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=240</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[THE ART FOR A RECENT ECM DISC SHOWS a solitary figure on a shadowy, fog-swept landscape, his worldly possessions, including a drum and a trumpet, beside him in loose bundles. The photograph &#8212; as is usual with this exceptionally arts-aware record label &#8212; is black-and-white, handsomely presented. In another photograph the performers &#8212; the Argentinean [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><font SIZE=2>THE ART FOR A RECENT ECM DISC SHOWS a solitary figure on a shadowy, fog-swept landscape, his worldly possessions, including a drum and a trumpet, beside him in loose bundles. The photograph &#8212; as is usual with this exceptionally arts-aware record label &#8212; is black-and-white, handsomely presented. In another photograph the performers &#8212; the Argentinean bandoneónist/composer Dino Saluzzi and Germany&#8217;s Rosamunde Quartett &#8212; play in what looks like the corner of a small, cramped room. The disc has become an important, much-repeated part of my life since its release a couple of months ago; those foggy blacks and grays of the artwork, and the sense of cramped space about to burst from the intensity of what it contains, seem exactly right for the music. It&#8217;s an extraordinary recording &#8212; the more so since its composer was just a blank space in my book until it arrived.</font></p>
<p>
<font SIZE=2>Saluzzi was born in 1935 in the province of Salta, came to Buenos Aires, studied his instrument &#8212; the 88-note, keyless button-accordion brought to Argentina by German immigrants &#8212; with the legendary <i>bandoneónistas</i>, inevitably absorbed the heat and passion of Astor Piazzolla&#8217;s <i>Tango Nuevo</i>, but moved beyond that to develop a style more beholden to Andean and Indio folk sources. In Europe he was heard by ECM&#8217;s Manfred Eicher, who then produced a solo disc, the first in the series Saluzzi calls <i>Kultrum</i>; this new disc is the second.</font></p>
<p>
<font SIZE=2>The confluence of this remarkably gifted musician rooted in Argentinean folk art and a sophisticated, adventurous young German string quartet &#8212; whose exploits I have praised before in this space &#8212; is one of those meetings of mind beyond explanation. The hour of music that fills this disc moves &#8212; hypnotically, slowly for the most part &#8212; past many familiar mileposts. Some turns of phrase, harmonized with a rich, late-Romantic urgency, bring to mind moments on the better side of Brahms; there are outcries &#8212; passionate, stretched-out flames of melody &#8212; that recall the way the Kronos plays Piazzolla. There is no need to keep score of the occasional and obvious borrowings in this music; what inflames my own imagination, after many hearings, is the rhapsodic, original sense of flow. Anyone who complains that new music denies us the emotional closeness to the composer afforded by, say, Mozart and Schubert can learn much from this disc.</font></p>
<p>
<font SIZE=2>IN 1958 LUCIANO BERIO COMPOSED A six-minute piece for solo flute; he called it a <i>Sequenza</i>, having to do with the interaction between the melodic nature of the instrument and the harmonic sequences implied in that nature. Over the next 37 years, Berio followed this first <i>Sequenza</i> with 12 more solos for almost all major instruments, including voice, accordion, harp and guitar &#8212; but not yet (dare one hope?) for cello or bass. (The formidable bassist Stefano Scodanibbio has, however, &#8220;kidnapped&#8221; one or two of the others for his own instrument.) Berio composed his <i>Sequenza III</i> in 1965 for his wife, the late, irreplaceable vocal stylist Cathy Berberian; her recording survives on a Wergo disc. In <i>Sequenza X</i> (composed for the Los Angeles Philharmonic&#8217;s Thomas Stevens), a solo trumpet plays into the resonance of an otherwise silent piano with the pedal down. Now Deutsche Grammophon has gathered all 13 <i>Sequenze</i> into one three-disc, imperative album; its value is enhanced in the accompanying booklet by the composer&#8217;s moving reflections on his music, and by Edoardo Sanguineti&#8217;s elegant, short, poetic invocations to each of the works. The performances are by members of the Ensemble Intercontemporain (whose stint here at UCLA on April 11 you are hereby forbidden to miss) plus a few guests. Eliot Fisk is the guitarist; Teodoro Anzellotti, the accordionist; Luisa Castellani has come as close as mere mortal can to standing in for the absent Cathy.</font></p>
<p>
<font SIZE=2>&#8220;Elegant, short, poetic invocations&#8221;: My words for Sanguineti&#8217;s lovely verses could also apply to Berio&#8217;s extraordinary music. (Not all the works are that short, however; <i>Sequenza XII</i>, for bassoon, fills an adventure-packed 18 minutes and 31 seconds.) There is more here than merely a set of etudes; more than just a composer&#8217;s explorations into the range of possibility, technical or expressive, within each of the chosen 13 instruments; more than an &#8220;Old Person&#8217;s Guide to the Orchestra.&#8221; Even as solos, the works embody a kind of counterpoint: the interplay among the various ways each instrument can be played, their intrinsic array of contrasting personalities. Each of the 13 works, in 13 different ways, seems to turn in on itself, to examine the full implications of &#8220;flute-ness&#8221; or &#8220;viola-ness.&#8221; In so doing, the music also seems to escort Berio himself onto center stage. He has always enjoyed that position, from his love song to the joys of the folk song in his <i>A-Ronne</i> to his richly theatrical paean to theatricality in the opera <i>Un Re in Ascolto</i>. He turns 75 next year; I can only hope the world won&#8217;t be too busy with the Bach year to give Berio his due.</font></p>
<p>
<font SIZE=2>THE DISAPPEARANCE OF THE OLD EMI recording of Francis Poulenc&#8217;s <i>Les Mamelles de Tirésias</i> (André Cluytens conducting, with Denise Duval as the titillating Thérèse) no longer floods my brow with weeping; the new version on Philips is, in a word, <i>merveilleuse</i>. You couldn&#8217;t want a bubblier cast: Barbara Bonney as the errant wife who donates her &#8212; er &#8212; bosom to the feminist cause; Jean-Paul Fouchécourt as the husband who compensates by making his own babies; and &#8212; most remarkable, considering his prowess in serious German art songs &#8212; Wolfgang Holzmair as the philandering Gendarme. The work &#8212; if, by some imponderable twist of fate, you don&#8217;t already know &#8212; is pure, surrealist champagne. Even more wondrous is the notion that Seiji Ozawa&#8217;s conducting (of the Saito Kinen Orchestra) &#8212; against all the unhappy thoughts I&#8217;ve been harboring about his work in recent years &#8212; is bouncy, shapely, thoroughly responsive to the work&#8217;s sun-drenched colors. As makeweight the disc contains further delight: Poulenc&#8217;s song cycle <i>Le Bal Masqué</i>, again with Holzmair, again led by Ozawa, again delicious.</font></p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Bass&#160;Instincts</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/1999/03/bass-instincts/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/1999/03/bass-instincts/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 17 Mar 1999 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=239</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[STRANGE, THESE CONFLUENCES. LAST week was the time of the double bass: Italy&#8217;s Stefano Scodanibbio, with Terry Riley, in an off-the-wall Monday Evening Concert at the County Museum; the multiphased Edgar Meyer in a new concerto of his own fashioning with the Los Angeles Chamber Orchestra a few days later. Add to this the hilarious, [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>STRANGE, THESE CONFLUENCES. LAST week was the time of the double bass: Italy&#8217;s Stefano Scodanibbio, with Terry Riley, in an off-the-wall Monday Evening Concert at the County Museum; the multiphased Edgar Meyer in a new concerto of his own fashioning with the Los Angeles Chamber Orchestra a few days later. Add to this the hilarious, unexpected double-bass solo called for midway in the Haydn symphony the Philharmonic had performed the week before &#8212; a bull fiddle in a china shop if ever one was &#8212; and you have what might be called some remarkable hijinks in the lower depths.</p>
<p>
Almost nobody had heard of Scodanibbio when he first turned up at the County Museum a decade or so ago, and so almost nobody came; a concert of nothing but new music for solo double bass does not automatically make for audience bait. Credit LACMA&#8217;s Dorrance Stalvey, then and ever since, for his bravado in concert planning in the face of near-zero budgets. Word got around; audiences grew. Scodanibbio was amazing then: an unbridled soul creating a huge range of possible music out of this most unwieldy instrument, and then wandering delightedly among those possibilities to create music fluent and astonishingly varied. I remember a solo concert I helped produce for him in 1993, in the big room at the Ace Gallery that reverberates like the space at Notre Dame; if you weren&#8217;t actually in the room you&#8217;d swear you were surrounded by half a dozen symphony orchestras in full array. Now that he is established as a major member of the innovative community, with recordings on the adventurous New Albion label, his spell is widely cast, and people come.</p>
<p>
Scodanibbio is not, however, merely a fashioner of trick sounds. At last week&#8217;s concert he contributed a spellbinding partnership to Riley&#8217;s somewhat less awesome improvisation on synthesizer in a work called <i>Orfeo</i>; stopped the crowd&#8217;s breathing once again with <i>Tritono</i>, a passionate solo; and then, best of all, used the strings of his instrument as a sinuous, throbbing tabla to Riley&#8217;s hypnotic singing and droning <i>tampura</i> in a night raga that nobody wanted to stop. There were problems; it took the museum&#8217;s sound engineer most of the evening to master the subtle balances in this fragile, powerful music. The <i>Orfeo</i> had been worked out in an intricate tuning system, with the synthesizer matched to the complex of overtones from each of the bass&#8217; strings; so far so good. What came off the stage, however, was less of that subtlety and more the impression of an unequal matchup between the heroic virtuosity of Scodanibbio&#8217;s live performance and the relative ease &#8212; and, therefore, seeming triviality &#8212; in the similar sounds out of Riley&#8217;s synthesizer. I kept thinking Music Minus One. With all these problems, it was still a one-of-a-kind concert, and it drew the right-size crowd.</p>
<p>
YOU MIGHT THINK OF EDGAR MEYER AS A two-of-a-kind musician: involved with the small but sturdy &#8220;serious&#8221; repertory for his instrument as resident bassist with the Chamber Music Society of Lincoln Center; looser-hanging free soul and crossover hero in such ventures as his Grammy-honored <i>Appalachia Waltz </i>collaboration with Yo-Yo Ma and Mark O&#8217;Connor &#8212; which, I am driven to confess, I have mostly managed to avoid so far and plan to keep on trying. His 20-minute Double Concerto, in which he participated along with New York Philharmonic cellist Carter Brey and the Chamber Orchestra under Jeffrey Kahane, works up a certain amount of primitive fun, and drew a hearty welcome from a large crowd at Royce Hall. Most of the writing is an ongoing argle-bargle between soloists, sometimes rising to outbursts of ill temper, then subsiding to a more easygoing joshing. The style is a sort of hillbilly with matching socks; there are no tunes to take home, but a lot of gestures that sometimes portend moments of glory that never come. It&#8217;s not a critical term much in circulation, but it seemed to me that the piece was what you could call okay.</p>
<p>
The composer shoots himself in the foot, however, by claiming kinship with one of music&#8217;s truly sublime works of wordless conversation, Mozart&#8217;s Sinfonia Concertante for Violin and Viola. Conductor Jeffrey Kahane shot him in the other foot as well, by scheduling that very work &#8212; with Margaret Batjer and Roland Kato the eloquent conversationalists &#8212; ahead of Meyer&#8217;s: no contest. Haydn&#8217;s Symphony No. 99, in a performance maybe just a shade too up-front, ended the program; what a splendid, happy revival this most worthy composer is enjoying in our midst!</p>
<p>
OF THE FIVE-PIANIST CONSORTIUM THAT creates the admirable &#8220;Piano Spheres&#8221; concerts at Pasadena&#8217;s Neighborhood Church, Mark Robson is apparently the resident gadfly, known in the past for such matters as an entire concert of his own original works for left hand. Last week&#8217;s concert began well: Mauricio Kagel&#8217;s weirdly likable piano etude <i>An Tasten</i>, one of Olivier Messiaen&#8217;s wonderfully colored bird pieces and Frederic Rzewski&#8217;s extended discourse on the Civil War spiritual &#8220;Down by the Riverside&#8221; &#8212; all of it proof of Robson&#8217;s trustworthiness with other people&#8217;s music. Then, however, came something truly strange by Robson himself, <i>Initiation</i>, in its world premiere, a revival of that hoary musico-dramatic form known as the &#8220;melodrama,&#8221; which, in the strict meaning of the term, involves the dangerous combining of music and spoken text. Maybe Isadora Duncan never danced to melodrama, but I always think of her in that connection.</p>
<p>
Robson&#8217;s hourlong expedition into futility involved a gathering of texts touching on the sad tale of Venus and Adonis, intoned (in English, Spanish, and classic Latin, Greek and Hebrew) alternately by Robson and Lynda Sue Marks-Guarnieri. Candles were lit, gongs and small percussion pieces were struck; at one point, darkness fell (but soon got up again). Around it all was Robson&#8217;s meandering, inoffensive but faceless music. The problem wasn&#8217;t so much atrociousness as blandness. Isadora would have known what to do.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>A Liberal Helping of&#160;Conservatism</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/1999/03/a-liberal-helping-of-conservatism/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/1999/03/a-liberal-helping-of-conservatism/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 10 Mar 1999 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=238</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[TARRED WITH THE BRUSH OF &#8220;CONSERVAtive,&#8221; politicians turn into bogeyman figures suitable for frightening small children. Composers are not so drastically afflicted. Their world may not be mine, but I feel safe there on occasional visits. At Pasadena City College, a small chorus beguiled me most pleasantly with the lavender-and-cream of the bygone Randall Thompson [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><font SIZE=2>TARRED WITH THE BRUSH OF &#8220;CONSERVAtive,&#8221; politicians turn into bogeyman figures suitable for frightening small children. Composers are not so drastically afflicted. Their world may not be mine, but I feel safe there on occasional visits. At Pasadena City College, a small chorus beguiled me most pleasantly with the lavender-and-cream of the bygone Randall Thompson and Ralph Vaughan Williams and their creditable contemporary descendant, the local composer Morten Lauridsen. At the Zipper Auditorium in the new Colburn School downtown, the &#8220;serious&#8221; doppelgänger of P.D.Q. Bach, who goes by the name of Peter Schickele, came to brimming life in an evening of safely harmonious chamber music. At the Music Center, the Philharmonic&#8217;s treasurable program included Benjamin Britten&#8217;s <i>Serenade for Tenor, Horn and Strings</i>, in which old poetry and not-very-new music come together in a rapturous oneness.</font></p>
<p>
<font SIZE=2>Hail Randall Thompson, most ivied of Ivy League musical gentlemen! All college glee clubs have his <i>Alleluia</i> in their luggage: seven or eight minutes on nothing but the one word, its harmonies the billowing sequences of first-inversion triads (&#8220;faux-bourdon&#8221; in your appreciation textbook) invented in medieval England and seldom out of earshot since. At Pasadena&#8217;s Harbeson Hall, the 29 members of the Donald Brinegar Singers &#8212; students, teachers, lawyers, folks &#8212; performed the <i>Alleluia</i> out in the room, surrounding the too-small audience. They sang with remarkable purity of tone and pitch, and the effect was bracing and grandiose.</font></p>
<p>
<font SIZE=2>So was the whole program: a parcel of Thompson&#8217;s settings of Robert Frost &#8212; talk about music matching words! &#8212; the <i>Mystical Songs</i> of Vaughan Williams, with Scott Graff as solo baritone, and two sets of Lauridsen songs. Lauridsen teaches at USC; his <i>Lux Aeterna</i>, recorded on RCM by the Master Chorale, made it to a Grammy nomination last month: good, solid choral writing, old musical languages put to new and lively use. On the Brinegar program I liked best of all Lauridsen&#8217;s elegant, witty <i>Chansons des Roses</i> of 1993, settings of fragrant Rilke poetry about roses, including thorns.</font></p>
<p>
<font SIZE=2>YOU COULDN&#8217;T EASILY CONFUSE THE SERENE elegance of Peter Schickele&#8217;s chamber music &#8212; now and then rather French in manner, but just as often a kind of quiet, civilized prairie-folksiness &#8212; with the riotous but deadly accurate classical send-ups of his P.D.Q. Bach creations, but there are strong resemblances even so. From the chamber music &#8212; five quartets so far plus works for piano and solo strings &#8212; you recognize a wise, well-schooled creative spirit with an accurate grasp of musical structure, of exactly how long a piece is to run and how it can be made to stop. It is this overarching wisdom, good Juilliard training, plus further study with the likes of Darius Milhaud, that make the P.D.Q. satires succeed on a level above the mere belly laff. He is one of the distinguished few &#8212; Anna Russell is another &#8212; who can extract the ridiculousness embedded in classical music and still always tell the truth.</font></p>
<p>
<font SIZE=2>Locally the Schickele franchise resides with the Armadillo Quartet &#8212; Barry Socher, Steve Scharf, Raymond Tischer and Armen Ksajikian &#8212; who perform concerts of his music at least once a year and are the dedicatees of several of the works. Last week&#8217;s concert at Zipper drew a large crowd; Schickele officiated, a most welcoming host, and collaborated with Guy Hallman on a couple of piano duets. Most of the music resembled most of the rest of the music, which nobody seemed to mind. The new Fifth String Quartet was subtitled &#8220;A Year in the Country,&#8221; and that was exactly what it sounded like.</font></p>
<p>
<font SIZE=2>The oldest music at Esa-Pekka Salonen&#8217;s Philharmonic concert was also the least conservative: Haydn&#8217;s Symphony No. 8, the last of his &#8220;Morning, Noon and Evening&#8221; trilogy, astounding for the many ways the still-neophyte composer kicked apart the musical customs of his time. There were musical phrases of unequal length in asymmetric groupings, sudden rhythmic shifts and unexpected harmonic break-ins, a solo for double bass (!) midway in the minuet, lots of blooie-blooie for the horns. It&#8217;s easy to guess what in this marvelously tricky music attracts Salonen, both as composer and as conductor; he leads it well, with all repeats observed and the orchestra pared down to proper size.</font></p>
<p>
<font SIZE=2>A great program all told, in fact. Paul Groves &#8212; the superb Tom Rakewell in the 1996 Salonen/Peter Sellars <i>The Rake&#8217;s Progress</i> in Paris &#8212; sang the Britten with fine regard for words and word-colors; Jerry Folsom&#8217;s horn &#8212; including the stipulated &#8220;natural&#8221; second horn with its inevitable woodnotes wild for the opening and close &#8212; hit well below the allowable number of blobs on the first night, and came even closer to sublimity on the second. The mingling of words and music in this piece, <br />
set into the star-studded halo of the string <br />
orchestra, is sheer magic. Even if Britten <br />
hadn&#8217;t also composed <i>A Midsummer Night&#8217;s Dream</i>, this <i>Serenade</i> could stand in its place. I envy anyone hearing it for the first time.</font></p>
<p>
<font SIZE=2>At the end came the hourlong torso of Mozart&#8217;s unfinished C-minor Mass, wisely delivered without the misguided attempts some have made to fill in missing sections from other Mozart works. Conservative and liberal mingle; Mozart had not yet gone far in his studies of Bach&#8217;s contrapuntal mastery, and there are fugal passages in an old-fashioned baroque style that do tend to lumber. (They might not have done so with half the choral forces employed here, and with cleaner diction than the Master Chorale tends to muster.) Of the vocal soloists, Janice Chandler (replacing the ailing Barbara Bonney) sang her &#8220;Et incarnatus&#8221; as angels might; Suzanne Mentzer&#8217;s brutalized &#8220;Laudamus te&#8221; could have shattered windows in South Pasadena; Groves and Nathan Berg dispatched their brief duties commendably. There is greatness in the work, if sporadic: the grinding, clenching chromaticism of the &#8220;Qui tollis,&#8221; the warm sunshine of the &#8220;Benedictus&#8221; and the triumphant C-major trumpeting of the final &#8220;Osanna.&#8221; Salonen hasn&#8217;t given us much Mozart; this was a step forward, passionate and immensely expressive.</font></p>
<p>
<font SIZE=2>LAST WEEK&#8217;S &#8220;GREEN UMBRELLA&#8221; BEGAN and ended rambunctious, deliciously so: Silvestre Revueltas&#8217; <i>Ocho por Radio</i> at the start, John Adams&#8217; <i>Chamber Symphony</i> &#8212; inevitably a letdown after the previous week&#8217;s triumph but still a hoot &#8212; at the end. Midway came Asia-inspired works that illuminated the joys and the dangers of the musical multiplex: Bill Kraft&#8217;s garrulous but endearing <i>Encounters XI: The Demise of Suriyodhaya</i> for Carolyn Hove&#8217;s English horn and Raynor Carroll&#8217;s vast and gorgeous array of gongs and gadgetry; Gerald Levinson&#8217;s indescribably awful <i>Time and the Bell . . .</i> for Gloria Cheng-Cochran&#8217;s piano and the ensemble under Salonen. I looked up what I had written in January 1995 when Simon Rattle and the Philharmonic imposed Levinson&#8217;s Second Symphony upon us: &#8220;turgid, derivative, agonizingly overwritten, aimless.&#8221; I asked then, and I ask again: Why?</font></p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Change of Heart, Loss of&#160;Heart</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/1999/03/change-of-heart-loss-of-heart/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/1999/03/change-of-heart-loss-of-heart/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 03 Mar 1999 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=237</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[MY NORMAL REACTION TO THE VIOLIN Concerto of Johannes Brahms is one of resigned tolerance. People whose friendship I cherish pretend to like it, therefore I must. In the past year, however, I have had two epiphanies about the work, which have induced the hallucination that the Brahms Violin Concerto is some kind of masterpiece. [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><font SIZE=2>MY NORMAL REACTION TO THE VIOLIN Concerto of Johannes Brahms is one of resigned tolerance. People whose friendship I cherish pretend to like it, therefore I must. In the past year, however, I have had two epiphanies about the work, which have induced the hallucination that the Brahms Violin Concerto is some kind of masterpiece. One came on hearing the recording with Jascha Heifetz, Arturo Toscanini and the New York Philharmonic in the first set of restored broadcasts by that orchestra issued several months ago. The second happened last week at the Music Center when the 18-year-old violinist Hilary Hahn and a last-minute-substitute conductor, Leonid Grin, made common cause to the greater glory of the work and to my delighted ears as well.</font></p>
<p>
<font SIZE=2>There are reasons to develop allergies to the hordes of teen and preteen violinists that seem to be pouring out of the woods. Most arrive carrying their own safety net: the repertory of no-brainer concertos (Sibelius, Wieniawski, Lalo, you name it) that can survive in the realm of dimples and baby fat. But Hilary Hahn &#8212; Virginia-born, currently living in Baltimore, product of Philadelphia&#8217;s Curtis Institute, which she entered at the age of 10 &#8212; came on with stronger stuff; she stood up to the Brahms Concerto, conquered it, even turned it into music. She had a splendid partner in Leonid Grin, pressed into service when Franz Welser-Möst called in sick for the second year in a row. In one memorable moment (of many), Grin brought in the orchestra at a barely perceptible pianissimo after the first-movement cadenza, then gradually built to the final climax: a radiant, ecstatic effect. Hahn &#8212; slender, attractive rather than merely pretty &#8212; was wonderful to watch: the give-and-take as she played the eye game with conductor and orchestra, the triumphant thrust as she raised her bow skyward at the end of some particularly juicy phrases.</font></p>
<p>
<font SIZE=2>After enduring the Grammys the night before at the Shrine, observing the chaos surrounding the live production numbers, recoiling at the inanity of perfectly good songs (plus a few clunkers) brutally overarranged for the stay-at-home gee-whizzers, the relative sanity of a Philharmonic concert &#8212; even with Brahms &#8212; served as a welcome restorative. After 55 years of pounding the classical-music beat, I don&#8217;t find myself choking up all that easily, but I admit with no sense of shame that in raising the Brahms Violin Concerto as a mighty monument, Hilary Hahn also stole my heart.</font></p>
<p>
<font SIZE=2>Ukraine-born Leonid Grin currently leads the San Jose Symphony, to that city&#8217;s good fortune and, last weekend, to ours as well. Slight of stature, with a facial expression that belies his name, he is all business on the podium, generous of gesture but precise and, I would guess, easy to follow. His program here had been chosen by the absent Welser-Möst and also included the Brahms &#8220;Tragic&#8221; Overture and the last of Shostakovich&#8217;s 15 symphonies. Not many conductors can take on the Shostakovich 15th on short notice, but the performance under Grin &#8212; even on the first night, with an orchestra he had never conducted before, in an unfamiliar hall &#8212; was solid, properly proportioned and beautifully balanced.</font></p>
<p>
<font SIZE=2>The symphony sent the usual number of offended parties toward the exits during its 40-plus minutes. To be sure, it is a hard nut. It dates from 1971; Shostakovich still had three productive years, but this symphony is inevitably regarded as a farewell. Its long, dark stretches of near silence, pierced from time to time by a single instrument, look ahead to passages in the 15th String Quartet of two years later, but they also recall the Sixth Symphony of 1939. Even the quotations from the &#8220;Lone Ranger&#8221; (i.e., <i>William Tell</i> Overture) theme, which always draw snickers, look back to the finale of the Sixth.</font></p>
<p>
<font SIZE=2>The 15th is by no means a comic work; the clattering small percussion that starts it in high spirits sounds like a death rattle when it returns at the end. Shostakovich apparently composed in waves; this final symphony seems a strange sequel to the violence in Nos. 10­13 and the melancholy of No. 14 &#8212; just as the short and jocular Ninth makes for an incongruous successor to Nos. 7 and 8. The 15th will never be popular; its mood swings defy simple explanation. Still, it was worth hearing this once, in what was surely a stronger performance than the erratic Welser-Möst would have offered.</font></p>
<p>
<font SIZE=2>TALK ABOUT MOOD SWINGS . . . THE ANNUal CalArts new-music bash, which filled a busy week at several downtown locations, came festooned with several subtitles: &#8220;Musical Explorations,&#8221; &#8220;Gradual Processes,&#8221; &#8220;Post Minimalist and Beyond,&#8221; &#8220;Pre-Post&#8221;; didactic elements freely mingled with the communicative process. At a free concert in MOCA&#8217;s small Ahmanson Theater, I wasn&#8217;t notably communicated to by extended works from electronic pioneers Christian Wolff and David Tudor; I heard the latter&#8217;s <i>Neural Network Plus</i>, created for a Merce Cunningham dance, in considerable pain. Both works seemed more like catalogs of possible electronic sounds, with some assembly still required. Kyle Gann&#8217;s <i>Custer and Sitting Bull</i>, with texts from the writings of the legendary antagonists and music tuned to what we know about Native American harmonic systems, revealed more convincing values in the electronic realm. And among all the gadgetry, one piece really did take flight: James Tenney&#8217;s <i>For Ann (rising)</i>, an ascending spiral of synthesized sound, like a flock of eagles taking off into bright sunlight, hypnotic in the same way that Mozart and Beethoven (and, yes, even Brahms) sometimes are.</font></p>
<p>
<font SIZE=2>The lines of communication were fully open when the CalArts New Century Players took over last week&#8217;s &#8220;Green Umbrella&#8221; concert for an evening mostly about delightful ways of drawing new sounds out of traditional instruments. Former CalArts luminary Lois V Vierk sent along her 1991 <i>Timberline</i>, music that I hear mostly as a portrait of a composer&#8217;s pleasure in the making of evocative, richly colored sound. Ten players stationed around an open grand piano, playing on the strings with splendidly varied gadgetry, bathed Stephen Scott&#8217;s <i>Vikings of the Sunrise</i> in audible radiance. Shaun Naidoo&#8217;s skittish <i>Bad Times Coming</i>, which pianist Vicki Ray had performed with tape at a &#8220;Piano Spheres&#8221; concert last year, returned with Ray and a live ensemble to even greater effect. For a rare instance on the new-music panorama, it was possible to leave the Japan America Theater that night both reassured and entertained.</font></p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>A Trivial&#160;Traviata</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/1999/02/a-trivial-traviata/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/1999/02/a-trivial-traviata/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 24 Feb 1999 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=236</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[THE L.A. OPERA&#8217;S CURRENT LA TRAVIATA &#8211; its second attempt to scale the expressive heights of Verdi&#8217;s irresistible tragedy &#8212; is its best production so far this season (five down, two to go), but that, alas, isn&#8217;t saying very much. The singing on opening night, barring an occasional wandering from pitch, was the work of [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><font SIZE=2>THE L.A. OPERA&#8217;S CURRENT <i>LA TRAVIATA </i>&#8211; </font><font SIZE=2>its second attempt to scale the expressive heights of Verdi&#8217;s irresistible tragedy &#8212; is its best production so far this season (five down, two to go), but that, alas, isn&#8217;t saying very much. The singing on opening night, barring an occasional wandering from pitch, was the work of intelligent singers giving a glorious score their best shot. On the podium, Gabriele Ferro shaped a well-paced musical realization of a much-loved opera that doesn&#8217;t exactly perform itself. Nobody fell down during the ballet. Giovanni Agostinucci&#8217;s visuals, co-sponsored by the L.A. and Washington operas and Belgium&#8217;s Opéra Royal de Wallonie, were oversize and stifling in the time-honored tradition, as they might have been for a <i>Traviata</i> a century ago. Marta Domingo, wife of L.A. Opera honcho-designate and supertenor Plácido, had promised in a program note that her staging would jerk tears in the old-fashioned way, and she made good on her promise. But . . .</font></p>
<p>
<font SIZE=2>The Violetta, American soprano Carol Vaness, poured out her heartbreak standing, lying supine and at various angles in between. Vaness&#8217; Violetta, beautiful and moving to watch, still left questions she has raised here before, about her suitability for the long Italian vocal line. Barring a few off-pitch notes at the start, her singing was nicely calculated but sadly lacking in the abandon that makes a great Verdian melody into a transfiguration of <br />
human speech. As her errant swain Alfredo, Greg Fedderly seemed somewhat mended vocally from the strain he&#8217;d been showing in recent performances. The voice is no longer pretty, as it once was, but he threw quite a resonant tantrum at the end <br />
of the second act. As the elder Germont, Finland&#8217;s Jorma Hynninen could have taught both his colleagues how to turn Italian bel canto into audible flame, but apparently didn&#8217;t. The choral forces in the opening party scene were of a size to drink Paris dry; they then returned in the bordello scene (a doozy of a shocking-red job that drew some of the evening&#8217;s heartiest applause) ready for more.</font></p>
<p>
<font SIZE=2>It was all very familiar, and very dusty. Anyone hoping for a fresh and enlightened approach to Verdi&#8217;s fragile masterpiece, a conception blown free of the dust of 145 years of performing practice, was obviously in the wrong opera house. What was even dustier was the decision to honor the ancient practice of cutting the opera to ribbons, dropping major arias (including big numbers in the second act for both Alfredo and Papa Germont) and specified repeats, leaving jolting gaps in the musical fabric. Most houses nowadays open these cuts at least partway, offering one of the two stanzas of the arias here omitted, allowing Verdi more of his say on his own time scale (a model of terse dramatic construction even at full length). The company&#8217;s 1992 <i>Traviata</i>, though otherwise wretched, at least offered that one amenity.</font></p>
<p>
<font SIZE=2>No such luck this time, however, in this resolutely old-school<i> Traviata</i>, a probable foretaste of the state of local opera when Plácido Domingo &#8212; splendid but aging singer, moderately capable conductor, impresario of qualities yet to be confirmed &#8212; assumes his new office next year without giving up his day jobs at the Washington Opera and New York&#8217;s Domingo&#8217;s Restaurant, and with Marta Domingo prominent in the entourage. (She is slated to stage Puccini&#8217;s <i>La Rondine</i> here next season.) Strange, isn&#8217;t it, that at a time when so much of the Los Angeles Philharmonic&#8217;s music making manifests a growing enthusiasm for exploring far horizons (see below) &#8212; for reaching out toward new ideas, new manners of presentation, new audiences &#8212; the most potentially spectacular of our musical institutions backslides into a comfy mom-<br />
and-pop operation. The future of local opera, some would have it, lies firmly in the past.</font></p>
<p>
<font SIZE=2> </font></p>
<p>
<font SIZE=2> </font></p>
<p>
<font SIZE=2>OUT OF SILENCE, A SOLO FLUTE BEGAN A </font><font SIZE=2>sinuous, ecstatic slow melody over the quiet throb of harps and, if I heard right, a guitar. The melody soared, seemingly without end; in empathy with the player, my own breath faltered. Gradually, the Philharmonic &#8212; huge forces, including percussion by the dozens, a sampler, and &#8220;normal&#8221; instruments in vast array &#8212; took up the line, which never seemed to stop as it churned to a brutal crescendo. A few from the near-capacity audience made their way toward the exits with the dazed, what-hit-me look we know well from new-music events. Most of the crowd remained, to cheer &#8212; 45 or so minutes later &#8212; John Adams&#8217; marvelous new work for orchestra, his longest so far and quite possibly his best.</font></p>
<p>
<font SIZE=2>In a pre-performance chat with Esa-Pekka Salonen, Adams admitted that the new piece &#8220;behaves like a symphony.&#8221; Instead, he has called it <i>Naïve and Sentimental Music</i>, cribbing its title from a Schiller essay on differentiating between instinctive (naive) and the calculating (sentimental) kinds of art. Okay; the pleasure I derived from first hearing did not include any particular effort to match what with what. All three movements work their way toward intense climaxes through powerful gatherings of resources; the slow movement is deeply dark and inward, and the outer movements rattle your bones with the splendor of immense performing forces wondrously deployed. Just the final note &#8212; resounding bright and clear from winds and brass that at this last moment have shaken loose from the percussion&#8217;s clatter &#8212; still rings in my ear as I gather these thoughts. Some of <i>Naïve</i>&#8216;s great wrenching moments bear the imprint of music&#8217;s greatest hits; Stravinsky&#8217;s <i>Rite of Spring</i> shows up in the distance, a distinguished visitor in meritorious company.</font></p>
<p>
<font SIZE=2>Adams has moved great distances. Gloria Cheng-Cochran played his early piano piece <i>Phrygian Gates</i> here not long ago and has recorded it for Telarc: half an hour or more of a single pulsating surge and, thus, miles removed from the tensile strengths in the melodic lines out of which this new work is woven. To venture upon an orchestral score of that magnitude, when most orchestras pay their lip service to new music with 10-minute soundbites (for which Adams has composed several) smacks of the death wish. Yet this new work, which had its world premiere at the Music Center last weekend, is a four-orchestra co-commission: four orchestras (in Los Angeles, Sydney, Vancouver and Frankfurt) willing to gamble that Adams &#8212; not Glass, not Lloyd Webber or McCartney, not Yanni &#8212; might be the composer to lend luster to the cause of new music. O brave new world that takes such chances!</font></p>
<p>
<font SIZE=2><b> Vaness&#8217; Violetta: Void of Verdian va-voom</b></font></p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Hands and&#160;Feats</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/1999/02/hands-and-feats/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/1999/02/hands-and-feats/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 17 Feb 1999 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=235</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[It was a week of pianists: top-dollar virtuosos at the Music Center, an early-music specialist at a &#8220;historic site,&#8221; a new-music specialist at the County Museum, brains and brawn with the L.A. Chamber Orchestra at Glendale&#8217;s Alex. If the results didn&#8217;t fully define the state of piano performance at century&#8217;s end, they at least afforded [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><font SIZE=2>It was a week of pianists: top-dollar </font><font SIZE=2>virtuosos at the Music Center, an early-music specialist at a &#8220;historic site,&#8221; a new-music specialist at the County Museum, brains and brawn with the L.A. Chamber Orchestra at Glendale&#8217;s Alex. If the results didn&#8217;t fully define the state of piano performance at century&#8217;s end, they at least afforded a glimpse of its variety.</font></p>
<p>
<font SIZE=2>Radu Lupu and Evgeny Kissin gave solo recitals at the Music Center. Lupu, a frequent visitor, drew a near-capacity crowd; Kissin, after a five-year absence, sold out the house to the rafters. Their points of origin are far apart: Lupu, the only Van Cliburn Competition gold medalist &#8212; after 10 runnings of that quadrennial event &#8212; to have actually gone on to a world-class career; Kissin, whose phenomenology includes the even more remarkable fact that he is, and surely will now remain, a competitional virgin. Their recitals here were major events beyond question: Lupu, in a stylistic sweep from the serene elegance of Ravel&#8217;s immaculately gorgeous Sonatine to the murk and turbulence of Brahms&#8217; early F-minor Sonata (with a Brahms intermezzo, the single encore, that said far more in three minutes than had the sonata in 45); Kissin in a narrower, safer orbit around his all-Chopin program, with encores that may still be going on.</font></p>
<p>
<font SIZE=2>There was much to enjoy on both nights, and some to deplore. Lupu, with his customary 99 percent finger accuracy, raged demonically through the Brahms, dabbed exquisite glints of color over the Ravel and a Debussy group, tried without complete success to endow the three Gershwin Preludes with similar French accents, and a week later joined Salonen and the Philharmonic in a ravishing disquisition on Beethoven&#8217;s C-minor Concerto. Kissin, with his customary 101 percent finger marksmanship, handsomely lit up the glistening surface of the Chopin Preludes, the &#8220;Funeral March&#8221; Sonata and a gathering of shorties, only occasionally suggesting that there might be more to this music than meets his fingertips. From both pianists I most happily remember the ghostly moments: Lupu in the magical passage with soft drumbeats after the cadenza in the first movement of the Beethoven, Kissin in the windswept final movement of the Chopin sonata.</font></p>
<p>
<font SIZE=2>Neither pianist, however, gave off any sign that they were enjoying my company as much as I was supposed to be enjoying theirs. The reason for preferring live concerts to recordings, after all, is the sense of communion. Radu Lupu pads onto the stage like a grizzly bear aroused too soon from hibernation, scowls at the audience, addresses the music, then scowls some more. Kissin wafts in like a stick figure, achieves a stiff bow with no facial expression, and acquits himself at the 88s with phenomenal technique that, from all appearances, gives him no particular pleasure. Is it too much to ask that a performer, given the prevailing cost of concert tickets, expend a little effort to make an audience feel welcome? My memories of great pianists &#8212; the scholarly Schnabel, the exuberant Serkin père, the lordly Rubinstein, the grand lady Myra Hess, even Alfred Brendel with his terminal fidgets &#8212; include more than just the notes they played; they include a couple of hours spent in the company of the human beings who produced those notes. Impressive as the notes were at last week&#8217;s star-quality recitals, I still had the sense from both performers of automatons acting out recordings. For Kissin, who was hailed not so many years ago as the dazzling young savior of the piano, it is especially distressing to suspect that growth in artistic stature hasn&#8217;t kept pace with his awesome fingers.</font></p>
<p>
<font SIZE=2>At the County Museum, the Houston-based pianist Sarah Rothenberg joined Amsterdam&#8217;s Schoenberg Quartet in Anton Webern&#8217;s cut-down version of Schoenberg&#8217;s First Chamber Symphony. Two nights later at one of those eye-and-ear-opening &#8220;Historic Sites&#8221; programs &#8212; in the handsome but frigid Blossom Room at the Hollywood Roosevelt &#8212; Harvard-based pianist Robert Levin joined the five string players of the New York Philomusica in the cut-down version of Beethoven&#8217;s Fourth Piano Concerto that Beethoven himself had helped fashion. In both cases the rewrites had been created to render the music portable for some specific occasion. All of Schoenberg&#8217;s white-hot scoring for winds and brass had been transferred to the piano; all of Beethoven&#8217;s subtle and gleaming wind scoring &#8212; the countermelodies for oboe in the first movement, to cite one wondrous instance &#8212; had been made gray when handed over to strings. The fact that these versions exist doesn&#8217;t strike me as justification for exhuming them as repertory pieces, especially since in both cases the piano parts so overwhelm the strings as to violate any real chamber-music quality. At the County Museum, Rothenberg and the Schoenbergs separately performed Debussy most radiantly: a group of the Piano Préludes and the Opus 10 Quartet. At the Roosevelt, the Philomusica also offered a charming and sadly neglected Mendelssohn string quintet, and the justifiably neglected Clarinet Trio of Brahms, music from the opposite end of the composer&#8217;s career from the aforementioned sonata, but no less dreary.</font></p>
<p>
<font SIZE=2>There was nothing at all dreary at the Chamber Orchestra&#8217;s concert, which I heard in the repeat performance at the Alex &#8212; certainly not the lively, mettlesome playing. Bartók&#8217;s Sonata for Two Pianos and Percussion started it off, with Jeffrey Kahane and Jon Kimura Parker out front and with Wade Culbreath and Thomas Raney on hardware. At the end came Schumann&#8217;s Piano Concerto, a work I have no hesitation in regarding as perfect, with Parker as soloist and Kahane back on his podium. In between there was Zoltán Kodály&#8217;s <i>Summer Evening</i>, delectable and negligible. Schumann and Bartók made for an interesting comparison, especially at the end of a week of pianos: the one the apotheosis of the power of the instrument to woo the ear with soft serenading and skittish trickery; the other the clear and sweeping denial of that power, the celebration of piano-as-mechanism, complete with skyrockets.</font></p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Sir Edward and the Sow&#039;s&#160;Ear</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/1999/02/sir-edward-and-the-sows-ear/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/1999/02/sir-edward-and-the-sows-ear/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 10 Feb 1999 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=234</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Photo courtesy Allegro Films By the same distance that the Elgar Cello Concerto is a better piece of music than the Rach 3, so is Hilary and Jackie a more honorable piece of movie making than Shine. As a teller of truths about music, or as a purveyor of plausible fictions, it far outshines such [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Photo courtesy Allegro Films
<p>By the same distance that the Elgar Cello Concerto is a better piece of music than the Rach 3, so is <i>Hilary and Jackie</i> a more honorable piece of movie making than <i>Shine</i>. As a teller of truths about music, or as a purveyor of plausible fictions, it far outshines such other cinematic horrors as <i>Immortal Beloved</i>, <i>Amadeus</i> or the consummate awfulness of Ken Russell&#8217;s <i>Mahler</i> (which, you might be thrilled to know, has just been reissued on DVD after years of blessed unavailability). It may be true that Emily Watson&#8217;s handling of the cello bow doesn&#8217;t match the passion of the music she is made out to be playing; what strikes me as more important is that, on her own, she creates a level of passion-driven strangeness of comparable intensity to that of Jacqueline du Pré herself. Her presence intimidates me almost to the same extent that du Pré&#8217;s did the one time we met; the two occasions in my life that I have been struck tongue-tied during an interview were with her and with Maria Callas. Furthermore, if you compare Watson&#8217;s perform ance technique to such classic ineptitudes as Paul Henreid&#8217;s cello in the Bette Davis weeper <i>Deception</i> (badly in need of reissue, by the way) or Robert Taylor&#8217;s baton in <i>Song of Russia</i> (in no such need), she comes off as a veritable Yo-Yo Ma of musical probity.</p>
<p>Elgar abides. New York had an Elgar bash a couple of weeks ago conducted by Sir Colin Davis (Elgar/Beethoven, actually, which couldn&#8217;t have done Beethoven much harm), and the reviews bordered on the ecstatic. The scraps of sketches for a Third Symphony, which Elgar puttered over in his last days and then left with deathbed orders that they were not to be tinkered with, have now been tinkered with and fabricated into a full-length work, raising questions of morality as well as musical quality. The gadfly Nigel Kennedy has made his second recording of the Violin Concerto, this time with Simon Rattle and the City of Birmingham Orchestra on EMI, unearthing hitherto unsuspected strengths in the work. And now there&#8217;s the movie, and with it reports that the Cello Concerto (which the Emily/Jackie character confronts as though it bore the full and only meaning of life) pushes its way onto the charts to join the curiously diverse company of Hildegard von Bingen and the Rach 3.</p>
<p>Even if the world needed another Elgar symphony, a matter which I will argue, the sow&#8217;s ear being passed off as a silk purse under the cop-out full title of <i>The Sketches for Symphony No. 3 Elaborated by Anthony Payne</i> merely inflicts Payne on Elgar&#8217;s already shaky reputation. By 1932, Elgar&#8217;s composing had been in decline; the Cello Concerto, his last truly rounded-off work, was already 13 years old. Still, the BBC asked for a new orchestral work, and the doddering Elgar set about the task, sketching new material, orchestrating brief bits here and there, taking over music composed for uncompleted projects during the preceding decade. By the time of his death in February 1934, he had assembled a bundle of vestigial starts and stops that, he was wise enough to realize, were beyond salvation. Yet the tinkering, which he had forbidden with just that word, began soon after.</p>
<p>I am no admirer of Elgar&#8217;s symphonies: The First starts off with the only music I know that I could qualify as &#8220;morose&#8221;; the Second is all last week&#8217;s Yorkshire pudding. Elgar seemed to need a soloist to light a path through the murk. Nigel Kennedy not only blazes his trail through the nearly hourlong Violin Concerto, he hangs colored lights and streamers along the way. I have always been amused by<br />
the work&#8217;s self-indulgence; Kennedy/Rattle have me hearing it as music. The Cello Concerto is all music, the deepest, purest and saddest of his works &#8211; a requiem, you might say, for Elgar&#8217;s own expressive power, and for a kind of music that nobody could, or would, write again. If the movie at least succeeds in bringing this music into your life, that&#8217;s accomplishment enough. There are three du Pré perform ances currently available on CD, plus<br />
another on the Christopher Nupen video documentary, where it is preceded by a wrenching scene with the real Jackie, her body already ravaged by the multiple sclerosis that killed her, coaching a young student in the workings of her own fingers, her own soul, in this music.</p>
<p>That&#8217;s why I am appalled by this utterly wrong-headed, if resonantly pub-<br />
licized, attempt to patch a wretched<br />
memento of Elgar&#8217;s senility onto a chron ology so nobly ended years before. Some of the music, and all of the gluing and whittling, is by Payne himself. The most interesting product of his endeavor, in fact, is not the NMC disc of Andrew Davis&#8217; performance (with the BBC Symphony) but the companion disc in which Payne, with violin, piano and occasional orchestral excerpts, does an honest job of explaining the nature of the sketches and what he has done to them. The music itself is dreary, its progress through 56 minutes clumsy and unconvincing, but you come away, at least, with some insights into the whole process of silk-pursemanship. What you donlearn, however, is why he bothered.</p>
<p>Can&#8217;t wait? The work gets its local premiere on Halloween next, with Leonard Slatkin and the National Symphony, at Orange County&#8217;s Performing Arts Center.</p>
<p>Those who can&#8217;t compose, I read somewhere, write. I refer you to a recent disc on Hyperion, offering no less than Sir Donald Tovey&#8217;s one and only venture into the lordly form of the Piano Concerto, a work in A major dating from 1903. If you&#8217;ve visited this space very often, you know of my adoration for the Scots Tovey as a writer about music; his <i>Essays in Musical Analysis: Chamber Music </i>(still in print, but abridged) were the catalyst for my abandoning medical studies &#8211; which, in truth, had also abandoned me &#8211; and entering upon my current nefarious practice. Had I known Sir Donald&#8217;s compositional predilections at the time, I might have flinched, but only for a moment. Think back to Sir Edward, and shed a tear that that doughty figure had denied the world a piano concerto; then recoil at the news of the existence of the Next Best Thing, its Elgarian accents depressingly recognizable. Sir Donald&#8217;s hilariously ponderous concerto has as its disc mate music by a fellow Scot, a <i>Scottish Concerto</i> in fact, by Sir Alexander Mackenzie, composed &#8211; or, more accurately, cobbled together &#8211; out of wayward folk-song fragments in 1897. Steven Osborne is the unquestioning pianist; Martin Brabbins leads the BBC Scottish Symphony. Forget the Yorkshire pudding; try a spoonful of last week&#8217;s oatmeal.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Taking No&#160;Prisoners</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/1999/02/taking-no-prisoners/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/1999/02/taking-no-prisoners/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 03 Feb 1999 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=233</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Photo by Diane AlancraigWithin a few days last week, a fearless listener could have taken in a wildly diverse and mostly wonderful panorama of new-music creativity and ended up the better for the effort. Just as a sample: At the County Museum&#8217;s Monday Evening Concert, the Parisii Quartet (from Paris, need I add) played music [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Photo by Diane AlancraigWithin a few days last week, a fearless listener could have taken in a wildly diverse and mostly wonderful panorama of new-music creativity and ended up the better for the effort. Just as a sample: At the County Museum&#8217;s Monday Evening Concert, the Parisii Quartet (from Paris, need I add) played music by the late Italian mystic and composer Giacinto Scelsi that centered entirely around the overtones generated by a single note. On Wednesday&#8217;s &#8220;Piano Spheres&#8221; concert at Pasadena&#8217;s Neighborhood Church, the treasurable Gloria Cheng-Cochran introduced a new work by Mark Applebaum that fairly seethed with notes notes notes, with accompanying program notes program notes program notes of comparable plenitude. At Tuesday&#8217;s &#8220;Green Umbrella&#8221; concert at the Japan America Theater, the extra ordinary percussionist Steven Schick played a work by Vinko Globokar that called for no instruments at all except the performer&#8217;s own body, banged upon, tapped and tickled in ways that, if described in detail, might resemble a page from the <i>Kama Sutra</i>. It was vastly different from the stageful of gadgetry that the nimble Evelyn Glennie had zoomed around to put over Roberto Sierra&#8217;s new percussion concerto, a far less interesting piece, at the Philharmonic the previous weekend. On Sunday, another visiting quartet, the Sine Nomine from Switzerland, made a name for itself at UCLA&#8217;s Schoenberg Hall with Bartók&#8217;s Third Quartet, 71 years old and perennially new.</p>
<p>To hear the Parisii (whose previous appearance here I somehow missed), I had to forgo Peter Serkin&#8217;s Music Center piano recital, which also included some alluring new works. Such luxury (or agony) of choice speaks well for the level of musical activity in these parts, while also calling out for some kind of cultural traffic cop. How do I choose, this coming Friday, among the Philharmonic program (with Radu Lupu at the piano and new music by Stephen Hartke), the L.A. Chamber Orchestra (with Bartók&#8217;s Sonata for Two Pianos and Percussion) and the Orlando Consort singing medieval music at one of the Da Camera Society&#8217;s &#8220;Historic Sites&#8221;?</p>
<p>The Parisii, who belong to that rarefied fellowship of take-no-prisoners new-music evangelists whose ranks also list the Kronos and Arditti, began with Alfred Schnittke&#8217;s Third Quartet, which locks its players into intricate argumentation about the past of music and its ongoing relevance. Beethoven&#8217;s <i>Grosse Fuge</i> is the matter of dispute, along with a passage that could be the cadence formula from a Renaissance motet and something else in rollicking triplets possibly out of one of Mendelssohn&#8217;s lower drawers. The Beethoven hurls out its bitter challenge, which must have terrified listeners in the 1820s and still can today; in Schnittke&#8217;s hands the fragment from the <i>Grosse Fuge </i>twists and turns, and gradually oozes into the contemporary (1983) harmonic language that Beethoven probably foresaw all along; the result is both funny and wise. The recorded Kronos performance, rough-edged and somewhat boisterous, tells us about the humor of the piece, but I also liked the wisdom in the smoother, more elegant Parisii version.</p>
<p>Their program included the seven brief, atmosphere-laden movements of Henri Dutilleux&#8217;s 1976 <i>Ainsi la Nuit</i>, music full of glinty moments, like a rock spangled with gold bits, but also rendered gray at times by the composer&#8217;s academicism &#8211; updated d&#8217;Indy &#8211; that some have found ways to admire and I never have. It ended with Witold Lutoslawski&#8217;s 1964 String Quartet (so called, but actually the first of two), music from the time of its composer&#8217;s experimentation with chance techniques. True, the work leaves certain choices open to the performers. Still, a given audience at a given time is confronted with the performance of that time; questions of fidelity to the score, or stylistic matchups with the music, go thus a-begging. The performance, in any case, was lively, intense and eminently winning. The evening&#8217;s magic, however, came in the aforementioned Scelsi&#8217;s 1984 Quartet No. 5, his final work, drawing immense expressive power from a throbbing single note restated over six minutes and subjected to infinitesimal microtonal deviations that generate a kind of overtonal haze, an aura amazingly rich.</p>
<p>Under the &#8220;Green Umbrella,&#8221; UC San Diego&#8217;s percussion ensemble red fish blue fish dispensed more of its by-now-familiar delights, a program consisting for the most part of remarkably quiet and charming percussive pieces: Iannis Xenakis&#8217; <i>Okho</i> for three African <i>djembe</i>s, rich-toned small-to-medium drums; Erik Griswold&#8217;s <i>Strings Attached</i> for snare drums tethered to a central pole, whose connecting ropes formed patterns reminiscent of the old &#8220;cat&#8217;s cradle&#8221; games; and Michael Gordon&#8217;s solo piece <i>XY</i>, virtuoso stuff involving the kind of, say, six-against-five rhythmic patterns that you find in Conlon Nancarrow&#8217;s pieces for player piano, but here performed live. At the end came Karlheinz Stockhausen&#8217;s 1964 <i>Mikrophonie</i>, with players wielding heavily microphoned kitchenware items on either side of a huge suspended gong that kept them visually isolated: real noise, sometimes horrendous, John Cage without the smile.</p>
<p>Splendid variety, the glorious Cheng-Cochran concert the next night. Mark Applebaum, now on the faculty at Mississippi State, worked for a time at UC San Diego with Brian Ferneyhough, panjandrum of academic rigidity, so his new work&#8217;s title, <i>Disciplines</i>, could have told us what to expect. Fortunately, it didn&#8217;t; the work, though garrulous perhaps to a fault, and bearing such internal titles as &#8220;Cosmo Drama&#8221; and &#8220;Outergalactic Discipline,&#8221; scampered delightfully. Known for her partiality to the music of Olivier Messiaen &#8211; with an excellent disc to back up her championing &#8211; Cheng-Cochran included nothing by that composer on her program. She did, however, begin with three works &#8211; tidbits by Dane Rudhyar and Peter Lieberson plus Scriabin&#8217;s &#8220;Black Mass&#8221; Sonata &#8211; that together seemed to constitute the parts of speech for Messiaen&#8217;s own musical language.</p>
<p>The concert&#8217;s high point came in Paul Hindemith&#8217;s 1922 Suite, music from an era when the composer&#8217;s icy, ironic, dry-point manner was given further thrust by his passing fascination with the newfangled American jazz then inundating European sensibilities. This whole edgy, athletic side of Hindemith &#8211; embodied also in his second and third quartets and in his Chamber Concerto &#8211; goes neglected while revivals of his dense, Brahms-infested<br />
<i>Mathis der Maler</i> pretend to celebrate his<br />
greatness. They don&#8217;t.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Dream&#160;Boat</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/1999/01/dream-boat/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/1999/01/dream-boat/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 27 Jan 1999 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=232</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[The Dutchman of legend must fly through tempestuous seas for seven years before he can seek redemption; for a while it has looked as if operatic ambitions hereabouts were similarly doomed. Salvation, however &#8212; or a pretty good likeness thereof &#8212; came last week, not on the Music Center&#8217;s burning deck, whence all hope hath [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><font SIZE=2>The Dutchman of legend must fly </font><font SIZE=2>through tempestuous seas for seven years before he can seek redemption; for a while it has looked as if operatic ambitions hereabouts were similarly doomed. Salvation, however &#8212; or a pretty good likeness thereof &#8212; came last week, not on the Music Center&#8217;s burning deck, whence all hope hath seemingly fled, but from the forces in Costa Mesa&#8217;s Opera Pacific, which has ridden out a few storms of its own in recent times but came within a hairbreadth of fulfillment this time out. I am not ready to proclaim that this <i>Flying Dutchman </i>justified the $131 top that the company has now become emboldened to exact (up from last year&#8217;s $93), but if you match it penny for penny against the L.A. Opera&#8217;s recent $137 worth of <i>Madama Butterfly</i>, you could look on Opera Pacific&#8217;s latest offering as the giveaway of the year.</font></p>
<p>
<font SIZE=2>Something about this opera, shortest and most old-fashioned of Wagner&#8217;s mature scores, brings out the meddlesome in stage directors. Jean-Pierre Ponnelle&#8217;s much-booed San Francisco production of 1975, still occasionally revived, enclosed the action within a dream of the work&#8217;s least important character, the Steersman on sea Captain Daland&#8217;s ship. Julie Taymor&#8217;s 1995 version for Los Angeles included, among its off-the-wall amenities, a ballet sequence for dress dummies. Keith Warner both designed and staged Opera Pacific&#8217;s <i>Dutchman</i>, created originally for the Minnesota Opera. It&#8217;s another dream number, this time for the heroine, Daland&#8217;s daughter Senta, set apart from her dowdy girlfriends by virtue of a bright-red gown that Armani wouldn&#8217;t disown.</font></p>
<p>
<font SIZE=2>Like most ghost stories, Warner&#8217;s contrived dramatic overlay does burden the credulity at times. His Senta was already onstage as the overture began, writhing on the floor, reaching out hungrily to the far wall where hung the portrait of the Dutchman of her dreams; she lingered in this trance even though Wagner hadn&#8217;t given her a note to sing for another hour. Her dreamboat finally showed up an act and a half later &#8212; but soon disappeared. Warner&#8217;s stage set, a vast, open space transformable by lights and scrims from a spook-infested shipboard to a folksy seacoast dwelling, heightened the unreality. At one point the floor split apart, and the Dutchman&#8217;s ghostly, ghastly sailors rose up in a mighty swirl as if from beneath the ocean floor; you just had to gasp. Nothing of such goose-bump­producing impact has transpired on an opera stage around here for as long as I can remember. Nothing.</font></p>
<p>
<font SIZE=2>Over it all was the surging, spirited musical leadership of John DeMain, newly appointed as Opera Pacific&#8217;s artistic director, masterfully dredging up Wagner&#8217;s D-minor billows from the depths of an alert if undersize orchestra. The major singers, most of them new to the area, ranged from splendid to wonderful: the immensely dramatic, ebony-voiced Dutchman of Mark Delavan; the smaller-voiced but intelligent Captain Daland of Charles Austin; and the Senta of Jeanne-Michéle Charbonnet, a bit reedy at first but rising to a passionate outpouring during her Act 2 ballad. (Yes, there was an intermission, despite Wagner&#8217;s prescribed single-act format; Costa Mesa&#8217;s opera-going society isn&#8217;t yet ready for a two-and-a-half-hour sitdown. Neither was Los Angeles&#8217; in 1995.) Everything worked: the interaction of the cast; the lusty, brawling choral ensemble; the harrowing expanse of Wagner&#8217;s conception.</font></p>
<p>
<font SIZE=2>Founded in 1987 by impresario David DiChiera as the Western outpost of his Detroit and Dayton companies, Opera Pacific has ridden its own rough billows in recent years, with its last director, Patrick Veitch, hardly long enough in office to unpack. After 18 years as music director at the Houston Grand Opera and several guest stints in Costa Mesa, DeMain &#8212; buttressed by Martin Hubbard as executive director and Mitchell Krieger as director of operations &#8212; implies a new stability for the company uncommon in local operatic circles in recent months. It couldn&#8217;t happen to a better conductor, or a more promising opera company.</font></p>
<p>
<font SIZE=2>On paper, last week&#8217;s Philharmonic </font><font SIZE=2>program suggested innovation and adventure. In actuality, it began with a bang but ended in a fizzle. The incendiary mating of Igor Stravinsky, Peter Sellars and Esa-Pekka Salonen, which trio&#8217;s <i>Rake&#8217;s Progress</i> had lit skies over Paris in 1996, flared only sporadically in a misguided and poorly realized <i>L&#8217;Histoire du Soldat </i>at the Music Center.</font></p>
<p>
<font SIZE=2>It was inevitable, of course, that Sellars would conjure some eccentric vision of this one-of-a-kind folk-theater gloss on the Faust legend dreamed up by Stravinsky and C.F. Ramuz in 1918; his penchant for not leaving well enough alone has produced a legacy dazzling and disturbing. Sellars&#8217; notion has been to relocate the venue of the piece &#8212; which the original &#8212;&#8212;&#8211;<br />
AUTHORs never specified anyhow &#8212; in the ethnic melting pot of East L.A.; a newly contrived text by Gloria Enedina Alvarez, which flops back and forth from Spanish to hip-Californian, padded with enough cutesy local references to outfit a year&#8217;s worth of talk-show monologues, underlines the mix. So, of course, does Stravinsky&#8217;s music, which flits nimbly from jazz to tango to baroque chorale to wherever, but the overextended text makes for deadly gaps between musical episodes. Imagine, if you can: Sellars plus Salonen plus Stravinsky adding up to boredom.</font></p>
<p>
<font SIZE=2>Perhaps it will all work when the Philharmonic loads the whole production onto flatbeds to tour the city; on the cluttered Music Center stage it didn&#8217;t. Huge painted panels by artist Gronk provided background color, carried off one by one by stagehands through a jungle of cables and other gadgetry to add to the overall sense of aimless busyness. Over on the side, Salonen and his ensemble, done up in garish, touristy shirts, played their music through overexuberant amplification. All three speakers &#8212; María Elena Gaitán, who read the much-padded verbiage of the Narrator, Alex Miramontes as the Soldier and Omar Gómez as the Devil of many disguises &#8212; tended to mouth their lines. Near the end, Tiana Álvarez did what she could to arouse the drifting-off audience with a sexy solo dance.</font></p>
<p>
<font SIZE=2>Roberto Sierra&#8217;s 20-minute percussion concerto, titled <i>With Wood, Metal and Skin</i>, began the program, a Philharmonic co-commission in its world premiere, with the amazing Evelyn Glennie dashing like a demented wraith from one set of big-bang machinery to another: great noise, resistible music. It, too, was done in by its setting; the orchestra, on the flat floor without the usual risers, had to play through the barrage of percussion across the stage front, and came over as audible mush. For the eyes, however, it was by some distance the better part of a mostly unenchanted evening.</font></p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>An Even Poorer&#160;Butterfly</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/1999/01/an-even-poorer-butterfly/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/1999/01/an-even-poorer-butterfly/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 20 Jan 1999 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=231</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Over the past few years I have occasionally been moved to deliver unhappy words about this or that production by our local opera company. Following these occasions, I have often been summoned to lunch by Peter Hemmings, the company&#8217;s general director, and invited to eat my words (along with more palatable fare). This season, however, [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Over the past few years I have occasionally been moved to deliver unhappy words about this or that production by our local opera company. Following these occasions, I have often been summoned to lunch by Peter Hemmings, the company&#8217;s general director, and invited to eat my words (along with more palatable fare). This season, however, I have yet to be summoned, which suggests that even Hemmings himself has begun to acknowledge that his company has fallen on bad times and, specifically, that the five of eight productions so far this season do scant credit to an organization that aspires to present world-class opera at world-class ticket prices &#8212; $137 for the current muddle of a <i>Madama Butterfly</i> revival.</p>
<p>
I am not ready, however, to lay the company&#8217;s gloomy string of near failures and not-quite successes entirely on Hemmings&#8217; leadership. An opera company, the most glamorous and expensive of any city&#8217;s cultural amenities, is run by its board of directors, chosen above all for their proximity to Money; they hire the artistic lead- ership and monitor its ability to keep Money happy. Traditionally, Money is happiest when confronted by stars and by familiar, easy listening. There&#8217;s a famous story, probably true, that one of the founding dowagers of the Metropolitan Opera demanded that the company move the Act 1 tenor aria in <i>Aida</i> to later in the opera, since she wasn&#8217;t in the habit of arriving on time. In that instance management told Mrs. Moneybags to go climb a tree; I wonder if they&#8217;d be so brave today.</p>
<p>
Hemmings came to Los Angeles with distinguished credentials: brave operatic explorations &#8212; along with the inevitable confrontations with boards &#8212; in England, Scotland and Australia. His first seasons here continued in that vein; even the failures &#8212; the Berlioz <i>Les Troyens</i>, for one &#8212; were at least interesting. Now the company is beset; the Domingo appointment as Hemmings&#8217; successor surprised nobody but still shocked everybody; the talk around town is that that blame lies not with Hemmings but with the descendants of Mrs. Moneybags on the board. Valuable and<br />
capable staff members have come but quickly gone: most recently publicist Elizabeth Connell, marketing director Joan Cumming and, at season&#8217;s end, executive director Pat Mitchell. It takes little imagination to envision the current morale among company members &#8212; singers and staff alike &#8212; still clinging to hopes for the distinctive and adventurous opera company that Los Angeles deserves and, not so long ago, actually had.</p>
<p>
The current <i>Madama Butterfly</i> &#8212; four times around for this production (as its tatters now clearly show), five times for the opera itself, counting the first year&#8217;s attempt &#8212; should be gladdening to the Moneybags crowd, if a happy box-office response has<br />
any meaning. As the 15-year-old Butterfly, we have the clearly overripe diva (Yoko Watanabe) whose publicity unabashedly cites over 400 previous performances as Puccini&#8217;s hapless heroine; her dream-hero is the comparably well-worn utility tenor (Richard Leech) whose career has afforded him mastery of every shade of fortissimo singing but little else. They move (no, make that stumble) to a clumsy and seemingly directionless restaging by Christopher Harlan. These are the ingredients for the clipped-wing cadaver the company is currently passing off as $137 worth of grand opera.</p>
<p>
Mitigating factors? They include the decently well-paced podium leadership of Marco Guidarini &#8212; better than that of any previous conductor of the work here &#8212; and the usual strong work in supporting roles by the company&#8217;s homegrown current or recent &#8220;associate artists&#8221;: mezzo-soprano Suzanna Guzmán as the servant Suzuki; baritone John Atkins as the well-intentioned Consul Sharpless; and, despite a ludicrous and ill-fitting bald headpiece, Louis Lebherz in a terrific few moments as the implacable Bonze.</p>
<p>
Five times, and they still haven&#8217;t gotten it right; whatever happened to shame?</p>
<p>
There was far better Puccini, and greater pleasure all told, at UCLA this past weekend, as the school&#8217;s newly resurgent opera program produced two delicious short comedies: the <i>Gianni Schicchi</i> that rounds off Puccini&#8217;s triptych of beautifully crafted one-acters, and Francis Poulenc&#8217;s giddy farce <i>Les Mamelles de Tirésias</i>. The Puccini, as <i>Johnny Schicchi</i>, was translated into English and, at no serious loss, set among studio lowlifes and hangers-on in Hollywood circa 1935. The Poulenc, which adorns a surrealist text by Guillaume Apollinaire whose overlay of puns and other wordplay defies translation, was wisely left as is. An attempt was made to link the two works dramatically through some pantomime at the start and a few explanatory lines in the program book: harmless but needless gadgetry.</p>
<p>
Bravo all around. This was the third production I&#8217;d seen &#8212; after <i>The Rake&#8217;s Progress</i> and <i>Falstaff</i> &#8212; since UCLA revived its opera program with some wise funding from the Maxwell H. Gluck Foundation. William Vendice is its artistic director, certainly the best of the &#8220;occasional regular&#8221; conductors on Peter Hemmings&#8217; roster; his conducting of both works, in the cramped and acoustically tricky space of the school&#8217;s Schoenberg Hall, was both lively and considerate. Dorothy-Jean Lloyd directed the Poulenc as her doctoral project, and led an exceptional young cast through a remarkably close re-creation of the work&#8217;s multilevel delirium. Her mentor, Frans Boerlage, formerly at USC, directed the Puccini and created the updated text. The singing in both works &#8212; and, above all, the ensemble work &#8212; was nicely trained and obviously loving.</p>
<p>
There have been times in Los Angeles history when the strongest and most interesting operatic activity took place at schools: Jan Popper at UCLA, Walter Ducloux at USC, later Natalie Limonick and Frans Boerlage. With the gloom &#8216;n&#8217; doom I sense at the Music Center &#8212; and believe me, I would like nothing better than to be proved wrong in that regard &#8212; the current level of activity at both schools could be the final refuge for those who cling to the notion of opera as a serious artistic commodity.</p>
<p>
Bravo, too, for the Los Angeles Chamber Orchestra&#8217;s concert last week at Royce Hall. Jeffrey Kahane came up with a couple of small-scale 1940s rarities very much worth attention: Samuel Barber&#8217;s prickly <i>Capricorn Concerto</i> &#8212; Stravinsky stirred into Bach &#8212; and Richard Strauss&#8217; world-weary but pretty <i>Duet-Concertino</i>, one of his sunset works. A parade of orchestra members served as the exceptionally fluent soloists: oboist Allan Vogel, flutist David Shostac and trumpeter David Washburn in the Barber, clarinetist Gary Gray and bassoonist Kenneth Munday in the Strauss, reminders that LACO &#8212; as a whole or in its parts &#8212; is one of our most valued resources.</p>
<p>
At the end there was Ivan Moravec as soloist in Mozart&#8217;s D-minor Piano Concerto, wonderfully in tune with the work&#8217;s astounding quotient of anger and dark passion, and locked as well into Kahane&#8217;s own enlightened view of the work. Over the years I have recoiled at the hype Moravec&#8217;s record company, the Connoisseur Society, poured over his career; yet, for the duration of that Mozart concerto last Friday, he very well could have been, as the ads once proclaimed, the world&#8217;s greatest pianist.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Conduct&#160;Becoming</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/1999/01/conduct-becoming/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/1999/01/conduct-becoming/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 13 Jan 1999 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=230</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Between the solemn ritual of Kurt Masur&#8217;s Beethoven, with his visiting New York Philharmonic at Royce Hall, and the giddy flamboyance of Junichi Hirokami&#8217;s Rachmaninoff, with the local gang at the Music Center, the choice is easy as to which event honored the greater achievement of Western civilization. As to which one afforded me the [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Between the solemn ritual of Kurt Masur&#8217;s Beethoven, with his visiting New York Philharmonic at Royce Hall, and the giddy flamboyance of Junichi Hirokami&#8217;s Rachmaninoff, with the local gang at the Music Center, the choice is easy as to which event honored the greater achievement of Western civilization. As to which one afforded me the greater enjoyment, however, that is another story.</p>
<p>
Why would anyone dream up the cockeyed idea of reviving Rachmaninoff&#8217;s<br />
Third Symphony? The Second is dreary enough, but it at least generated one or two workable tunes for the pop guys. (Eric Carmen, wasn&#8217;t it?) The Third is shorter (which is tantamount to reporting that Pismo Beach now has one fewer clam), has no tunes at all, but continually behaves as if it did. I&#8217;ve never understood why Rachmaninoff, who lived and died in Beverly Hills, didn&#8217;t make it as a movie composer until after his death. There&#8217;s a scenario implicit in this Third Symphony &#8212; composed in 1936, when Steiner, Korngold et al. were riding high in the studios &#8212; which could have become the worst and most profitable movie ever made.</p>
<p>
None of this is meant to detract in any way, however, from the sensational triumph scored by Hirokami on the Music Center podium last week. If the work has any use, it can at least serve as a showcase for a virtuoso conductor, and the 40-year-old, approximately 5-foot-0 Hirokami is certainly that. He had knocked my socks off with symphonies of Dvorák and Tchaikovsky at the Hollywood Bowl in August 1996, and I might as well exhume some of my words at that time: &#8220;exciting music-making, poised, the energy streaming ferociously . . . superb balance between meticulous orchestral detail and momentum. The left arm sweeping across the orchestra like a gigantic scythe, a nicely choreographed leap now and then (but no more often than now and then) to drive home a salient point.&#8221; All that happened again here last week, and it made the matter of the music&#8217;s gross inferiority almost beside the point. One gesture I will remember always: the way Hirokami held up his left hand at the end of the slow movement, slowly closing his fist as the music oozed into silence. You can play all the discs in the world on your home stereo, but for moments like that you have to be there. (And why weren&#8217;t you? The crowd on Friday night was pathetically small.)</p>
<p>
Toru Takemitsu&#8217;s <i>Twill by Twilight</i> began the program with its iridescent waves of legato, surging sound composed in memory of Morton Feldman, creator of non-legato plinks, plonks and silences: a Japanese seascape on a Monet canvas, gorgeous whatever the language. Concertmaster Alexander Treger was soloist in Prokofiev&#8217;s Second Violin Concerto &#8212; rhapsodic, rough, Russian, with orchestral details that I had never before noticed (the sound of strings over a bass drum) brought out in Hirokami&#8217;s collaboration.</p>
<p>
Any orchestra sounds better in Royce Hall than at the Music Center; that goes some of the distance to explain the ecstasy that engulfed the capacity crowd at UCLA&#8217;s handsome auditorium as Kurt Masur led the New Yorkers through hoops and over hurdles. And if these assembled forces had been granted the time, as visiting orchestras never are, to try out the hall&#8217;s acoustic singularities &#8212; to make the proper adjustments, for example, of how loud loud can be without shattering eardrums out front &#8212; their one-night stand among us might have taken on a few musical attributes to enhance the evening&#8217;s display of muscle stretching. The musical high-water mark was, in fact, not the two fifth symphonies listed, but the final encore, a wingding version of the old ragtime standard &#8220;Good &#8216;n&#8217; Plenty&#8221; by four of the brass players, with Masur beaming approval from the side.</p>
<p>
The New York Philharmonic is the country&#8217;s most famous orchestra, and its most peculiar. It has never had its own personality, as have the orchestras in Boston or Philadelphia in their glory days. It has always been a kind of machine, superbly functional at various times in its leadership history, wheezy and leaky at others. Under Masur the machine roars and purrs at Mach 4; since it did not do this under his predecessor, the woebegone Zubin, the improvement has made Masur seem like a savior, and a finer interpretive musician than he actually is. I found his Beethoven Fifth merely correct, interesting for its taking a rarely observed repeat in the third movement &#8212; as did Pierre Boulez with the orchestra in a 1960s recording about which the less said the better &#8212; but nothing much otherwise. And the Shostakovich Fifth under Masur, which both he and his smooth-functioning press machine have proclaimed his superspecialty, lacked the cumulative power that I hear in, for a supreme example, my cherished tape of Kurt Sanderling&#8217;s performance with our own Philharmonic from a distant and happy time.</p>
<p>
The &#8220;Song to the Moon&#8221; from Dvorák&#8217;s <i>Rusalka</i> was the third of five encores (O generous, benevolent soul!) that sent the enraptured crowd homeward at Renée Fleming&#8217;s Music Center recital the previous Wednesday. Last week I noted her singing of this aria as the most beautiful recorded sound of 1998; now we have had it as the most beautiful <i>live</i> sound, beyond possible challenge, of 1999. From any standpoint &#8212; beauty of voice, wisdom in its use, charm of stage presence, intelligence and imagination in program planning &#8212; Fleming&#8217;s first-ever local appearance proclaimed an event as close to perfection as never mind.</p>
<p>
Fleming&#8217;s recent London disc, Grammy-nominated last week, is properly titled <i>The Beautiful Voice</i>, but &#8220;beautiful&#8221; doesn&#8217;t say it all. What I found most astounding about her recital here was the range of her insights, her uncanny ability to find the exact emotional shading for a key moment &#8212; the unhinging of Gretchen&#8217;s reason on the word <i>Kuss </i>as she spins out her memories in Schubert&#8217;s marvelous song, the slinky insinuations in Duke Ellington&#8217;s &#8220;Do Nuthin&#8217; Till You Hear From Me,&#8221; the woodland mists around a bit of Verlaine&#8217;s poetic imagery as conjured in a Debussy song, the whipped-cream and bratwurst in a Richard Strauss banality.</p>
<p>
Along with Schubert&#8217;s sublime reactions to Goethe&#8217;s poetry, Fleming let us smile forgivingly at the same texts set by lesser hands: Glinka&#8217;s &#8220;Gretchen&#8221; and Mendelssohn&#8217;s &#8220;Suleika.&#8221; Throughout the evening she insisted that her pianist, Helen Yorke, share the stage bows out front, rather than the usual mousy nod from the piano bench &#8212; an awareness, seldom encountered, of the partnership that the magical repertory of the art song truly entails.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Music at the&#160;Turn</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/1999/01/music-at-the-turn/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/1999/01/music-at-the-turn/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 06 Jan 1999 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=229</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Artwork by Peter Bennett A year begins, a century ends. The Los Angeles Philharmonic&#8217;s last 1998 concert included music by Olivier Messiaen, a significant creator and inspirational force of recent decades; it starts this year with music by Toru Takemitsu, another. Last month, the Los Angeles Opera premiered a new American score; later this month, [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Artwork by Peter Bennett<i>
<p>A year begins, a century ends. The Los Angeles Philharmonic&#8217;s last 1998 concert included music by Olivier Messiaen, a significant creator and inspirational force of recent decades; it starts this year with music by Toru Takemitsu, another. Last month, the Los Angeles Opera premiered a new American score; later this month, UCLA will put on a concert of ages-old but very new music for drums, only drums. Ends of years &#8211; or of centuries or millenniums &#8211; are the listmakers&#8217; glory days, the time for summing up in tabular form. And so, like Gilbert and Sullivan&#8217;s Lord High Executioner &#8211; exalted archetype of paid criticism &#8211; I too have got a little list.</p>
<p></i>
<p>I was 16 when music first attacked me. My friend Normy and I were in the 25-cent rush seats, upstairs in Symphony Hall, on a Friday afternoon in 1940; Serge Koussevitzky and the Boston Symphony had begun the concert with Gluck and Mozart, full of comforting tunes and harmonies in a familiar language. After intermission, however, I was hurled across a boundary onto a strange and scary landscape. Midway in the first movement of a brand-new symphony (the Fifth) by a composer with a barely pronounceable name (Shostakovich), the man on kettledrums started up a huge bim-bam-boom. A xylophone joined in, maximum hysteria. The piano, for God&#8217;s sake &#8211; whoever heard of a piano in a symphony? &#8211; banged away. All around us elderly matrons pushed their way quickly to the exit doors. (The <i>Boston Herald</i>&#8216;s great satirical cartoonist Francis Dahl noted that one of Boston&#8217;s indigenous sounds was the rustle of Grandma Saltoncabot&#8217;s black bombazine in the Symphony Hall corridors, beating a hasty exodus from Dr. Koussevitzky&#8217;s Shostakovich.)</p>
<p>The first thing I learned about new music was that it survived on a battlefield. The critics &#8211; including the <i>Herald</i>&#8216;s Rudolph Elie, who would later hire me as a stringer, my first writing job, at $3 a review &#8211; greeted the Shostakovich Fifth with howls of protest. The dissonances and the banging were bad enough, the sentiment ran; what was worse was that the music, to those apprehensive 1940 ears, contained clear evidence of Soviet conspiracies against the American government. Koussevitzky, ever the warrior, immediately rescheduled the Fifth Symphony for a repeat performance later that season. (There are now close to 50 recordings of the Fifth in the latest Schwann catalog. It is easily the best-known symphony composed in this century; people whistle its subversive tunes in the streets.)</p>
<p>That afternoon&#8217;s encounter with the music of my own time brought a sense of astonishment that I can still feel; I simply had no idea that people could take the orchestra of Beethoven and Brahms, throw in a few more instruments, and create sounds like this. A few months later came Walt Disney&#8217;s <i>Fantasia</i> with its <i>Rite of Spring </i>sequence (hacked to pieces, I learned only later, from Stravinsky&#8217;s original score, but thrilling even so): more exhilaration, up to the edge of terror. I&#8217;ve never been much for horror movies or roller-coaster rides; the passion for new music I acquired on those two afternoons, and have tried to nurture on the thousands since, satisfies whatever craving along those lines I might otherwise entertain.</p>
<p>Of all the arts, music inspires the greatest fear of the unknown. If a painting or a sculpture offends, you can walk away. Music attacks, grabs hold and imposes its own time frame; try to escape from a live performance of some act of blatant musical innovation, and you risk stepping on toes, both literally and figuratively. A piece of new music sounds new because it does battle with expectations we&#8217;ve amassed from listening to other music not as new; therein lies its power. Stravinsky&#8217;s <i>Rite of Spring</i> aggressed upon its first audience &#8211; in Paris, 1913 &#8211; with its very first notes; a solo bassoon isn&#8217;t supposed to wail like that in its highest register. Beethoven&#8217;s &#8220;Eroica&#8221; Symphony got in wrong with its first audience right at the start &#8211; in Vienna, 1805 &#8211; because the C sharp in the eighth bar doesn&#8217;t  belong in the key of E flat. In the early 1700s, Bach was  constantly in hot water with his employers because of his wild and dissonant organ improvisations. In Florence around 1600, Claudio Monteverdi enraged a critic named G.M.  Artusi with passionate harmonies that no composer had dared to use before. In all those cases, and thousands more, the passage of time has smoothed the feathers of those first enraged audiences; Stravinsky&#8217;s <i>Rite of Spring </i>also gets whistled in the streets.</p>
<p>These offenses all seem to have taken place in the  early years of their centuries &#8211; by coincidence, or because the chronological upheaval at a century&#8217;s turn inspires a certain state of mind. Now we&#8217;re there again, and while the computer guys try to figure out how to cope with double-zero dating, the culture guys are having a fine old time with compiling lists: the best, the most  favored, the greatest or just the <i>most</i>.</p>
<p>My list is different: 100 pieces of serious musical artwork, arranged in no order other than chronological, that seem to me to define where composers of serious music have tried to take their art in the century now slouching toward the history books; perhaps also to suggest whence and how these creative urges arose back around 1900, and to intimate where music might &#8211; repeat, <i>might</i> &#8211; be headed in the years 2000-plus. Many entries that strike me as defining I do not personally like. Some things not on the list I like quite a lot, but they belong on someone else&#8217;s list. I would rather listen to early Louis Armstrong, Ella Fitzgerald or the Stones any day than Elliott Carter (and to Elliott Carter rather than Scriabin). &#8220;Serious&#8221; music I define as written-down music designed to be heard by non-participating &#8211; I almost said &#8220;passive,&#8221; but that&#8217;s wrong &#8211; audiences, and with the substance to warrant serious rehearing.</p>
<p>The question arises: By &#8220;defining,&#8221; am I also implying a prophecy that the music on this list will still be played and respected into the next century and even beyond? I think I am. I must assume, of course, that the performing forces that occasioned this music will survive; in these days, when not only symphony orchestras but whole national economies can fall off the map, that may be a foolhardy assumption. You gotta believe.</p>
<p>Music that embodies the strength to define its own era must also have the strength to outlast that era. There were string quartets, orchestras and opera houses in 1799 and 1899, as there are in 1999; there&#8217;s a chance, therefore, that something similar to them will be around in 2099, playing the new music of the day but also music created one, two or three centuries before. There are other imponderables, of course, that sometimes create curious additions to any survivors&#8217; list. If I were compiling this kind of list in 1799, I probably wouldn&#8217;t have included the name of Antonio Salieri, yet there he is on the charts today, for well-known reasons beyond his own making. In 1899 I wouldn&#8217;t have dreamed of including the symphonies of Joachim Raff, or the piano concertos of Anton Rubinstein, yet some current enthusiasts have exhumed these presumed-dead figures as well. I can&#8217;t guarantee that someone in the year 2050 won&#8217;t make a movie about, say, George Rochberg or Nikolai Lopatnikoff, and then I will be reviled as a lousy prophet for not including those less-than-defining figures on my list.</p>
<p>To make it look less listlike, I&#8217;ve broken the chronology into 25-year, 25-item segments. That works out to be not as arbitrary as it sounds; 1925&#8242;s <i>Wozzeck</i> and 1976&#8242;s <i>Einstein on the Beach</i> are major milestones, and 1950, plus or minus, works well as the nuptial year of music and technology. I&#8217;ve followed each segment with my own take on the music therein: not so much a history of music in the 20th century, but a memoir of my own evolving reactions in the century&#8217;s twilight years. I have, after all, been through a fair amount of it myself.</p>
</p>
<p><b>
<p>1901–1925</p>
<p></b>
<p>1. DEBUSSY: <i>Pelléas et Mélisande</i> (1902)</p>
<p>2. SATIE: <i>Pieces in the Shape of a Pear</i> (1903)</p>
<p>3. DEBUSSY: <i>La Mer</i> (1905)</p>
<p>4. IVES: <i>Central Park in the Dark</i> (1907)</p>
<p>5. SCRIABIN: <i>Poem of Ecstasy</i> (1908)</p>
<p>6. STRAUSS: <i>Elektra</i> (1908)</p>
<p>7. MAHLER: Symphony No. 9 (1910)</p>
<p>8. STRAVINSKY: <i>Petrouchka</i> (1911)</p>
<p>9. SIBELIUS: Symphony No. 4 (1911)</p>
<p>10. SCHOENBERG: <i>Pierrot Lunaire</i> (1912)</p>
<p>11. STRAVINSKY: <i>The Rite of Spring</i> (1913)</p>
<p>12. COWELL: <i>Advertisement </i>(for Piano) (1914)</p>
<p>13. IVES: Sonata No. 2 (&#8220;Concord&#8221;) (1915)</p>
<p>14. FALLA: <i>El Sombréro de Tres Picos</i> (1919)</p>
<p>15. VAUGHAN WILLIAMS: Symphony No. 2 (&#8220;London&#8221;) (1920)</p>
<p>16. JANÁCEK: <i>Katya Kabanova</i> (1921)</p>
<p>17. VARÈSE: <i>Amériques</i> (1921)</p>
<p>18. PROKOFIEV: Piano Concerto No. 3 (1921)</p>
<p>19. HINDEMITH: Kammermusik No. 1 (1922)</p>
<p>20. MILHAUD: <i>The Creation of the World</i> (1923)</p>
<p>21. STRAVINSKY: <i>Les Noces</i> (1923)</p>
<p>22. SCHOENBERG: Suite for Piano (1923)</p>
<p>23. GERSHWIN: <i>Rhapsody in Blue </i>(1924)</p>
<p>24. COPLAND: <i>Music for the Theater</i> (1925)</p>
<p>25. BERG: <i>Wozzeck</i> (1925)</p>
</p>
<p>No time in recorded history could match the euphoria, the eager curiosity about the future, that gripped the Western world right around 1900. The previous two decades had given the world the telephone, the light bulb, the phonograph, the automobile and, in 1903, the airplane; these were not merely improvements on things already in existence (as the compact disc might seem an improvement on the 78-rpm shellac disc, or the Concorde on the DC-3); they added up to an explosive expansion beyond what had previously been assumed the limits of human possibility. All the arts seemed to draw new energy from the spirit of innovation in  the land; in the decade and a half from 1900 to the outbreak of the First World War, the air crackled with the shock of the new.</p>
<p>Some of the newness may have been the logical consequence of the recent past; the whisperings and half-lights of Debussy&#8217;s <i>Pelléas et Mélisande</i> clearly stemmed from the impulses that guided Claude Monet&#8217;s brush at his lily pond; Gustav Mahler&#8217;s last symphony and the first works of Arnold Schoenberg took the agonized harmonic frustrations of Wagner&#8217;s <i>Tristan und Isolde</i> onto the concert stage. So did Richard Strauss in his blood-drenched <i>Elektra</i>, with more surface glitter and less inner substance. Igor Stravinsky&#8217;s first ballet scores were recognizably the work of Rimsky-Korsakov&#8217;s star pupil. Yet the spirit of the times seemed to drive the new creators hard and fast. The merely two-year gap between Stravinsky&#8217;s <i>Petrouchka</i> and his <i>Rite of Spring</i> yawns wider than the 20 between Beethoven&#8217;s &#8220;Eroica&#8221; and his Ninth. So do the two years between Mahler&#8217;s Ninth Symphony and the <i>Pierrot Lunaire</i> of his self-anointed apostle, Arnold Schoenberg.</p>
<p>Jump back a few decades &#8211; to 1880, say. The European bourgeoisie prospered; the great cities celebrated their grandiosity by building concert halls and opera houses. Virtuosos flourished &#8211; sopranos, pianists, conductors. The old masters held their place &#8211; Beethoven, Haydn, Bach in monstrously perverse reorchestrations; just the opening bars of Beethoven&#8217;s Ninth Symphony, that supremely romantic gesture of bringing the music in gradually as if from a distant cloud, became the gambit for dozens of latter-day rip-offs, some successful. It was taken for granted, however, that by far the majority of the concert and operatic fare was to be music hot off the press. The audience eagerly awaited the latest Brahms symphony, the latest Verdi opera. Richard Wagner died in 1883, and the world awaited with bated breath the emergence of his successor, assuming beyond argument that there would be one.</p>
<p>Around 1900, however, the first signs of a schism appeared between &#8220;music&#8221; and &#8220;new music.&#8221; Wagner had implanted some of the attitude with his orotund pronouncements about &#8220;the music of the future.&#8221; By 1900, too, Europe&#8217;s great music-publishing houses had caught up with the past, with complete performing editions of practically every major composer, from Bach to Beethoven and on through Schubert, Mendelssohn, Schumann, Berlioz. Performers could, better than before, think in terms of a &#8220;repertory&#8221; of past masterpieces; audiences, too, developed a fondness for wallowing in the familiar. The world at large no longer awaited the next symphony by Mahler or the next string quartet by Debussy with the hunger for newness that had driven taste in, say, 1880. Newness had become newer, and therefore more fearsome, than in the good old days. The impact of <i>Pierrot Lunaire</i> and <i>The Rite of Spring</i> &#8211; and the dozens of similar assaults on the musical status quo &#8211; drove the wedge.</p>
<p>Music&#8217;s world expanded beyond its traditional French/ German/Italian/Slavic boundaries in these years. Finland&#8217;s Jean Sibelius brought his country its first fame, with music rooted in the mainstream past but with at least one splendid work, the bleak, ascetic Fourth Symphony, which does indeed mirror the shrouding fogs of its native soil. Spain&#8217;s Manuel de Falla wrote Spanish-tinged music that went past post card prettiness in a dark, edgy and wonderfully witty manner. England&#8217;s Ralph Vaughan Williams, though defiantly anchored in his country&#8217;s ancient musical styles, at least turned out a repertory of symphonies that did not sound fresh off the boat from Germany, as did those of his countryman Edward Elgar. And the United States, whose handful of respectable 19th-century musicians also composed with heavy German accents, produced its first generation of indigenous crackpot geniuses with the likes of good ol&#8217; boy Charlie Ives, Henry Cowell, Carl Ruggles and the émigré Edgard Varèse, who proclaimed his Americanness with a wildly dissonant piece called <i>Amériques</i>, which had the critics disputing whether it was more descriptive of a zoo or a boiler factory.</p>
<p>The War happened, and then jazz happened, and the timing was just right. Great wars always leave the creative world with the need for a fresh start. In the post-WWII decade, composers would flop around for a time in desperate search of fresh impetus, adopting and rejecting a variety of artistic possibilities; but in 1918 that impetus had come ready-made, or so it seemed: an immensely vibrant language laden with fascinating interconnections to other arts (Cubism, for one), its potential beyond reckoning. Like the music, its very name &#8211; jazz &#8211; was a hybrid of arguable origin. Almost everybody was hooked at first. Visiting New York, France&#8217;s Darius Milhaud raided the shelves of Harlem record shops and returned home to create his &#8220;ballet nègre,&#8221; <i>The Creation of the World</i>; Germany&#8217;s Paul Hindemith blended the kicky new rhythms into his Bach-inspired chamber concertos; Stravinsky tried his hand at a couple of ragtime pieces, both terrible. Paul Whiteman toured Europe with his big, symphonic jazz band and played George Gershwin&#8217;s synthetic <i>Rhapsody in Blue</i> to awestruck crowds &#8211; lively stuff, even if neither jazz nor symphony. In Paris, another young innovator, Aaron Copland, was urged by his teacher &#8211; the legendary Nadia Boulanger, godmother to a generation of American composers &#8211; to use music as a way to define himself and his world. He did so by including, in his delicious, lighthearted <i>Music for the Theater</i>, a generous admixture of the newfangled jazz.</p>
<p>Stravinsky&#8217;s revolutionary orchestration in <i>The Rite of Spring</i> gave off all kinds of messages about new ways to make musical sounds. Ten years after <i>The Rite of Spring</i>, Stravinsky created <i>Les Noces</i>, depicting a Russian folk wedding, with an orchestra consisting of four pianos and a large battery of percussion; the American George Antheil, in cahoots with the Cubist painter Fernand Léger, did some of the same in his <i>Ballet Mécanique</i>, whose scoring included an airplane propeller. Before either of these, a San Francisco teenager named Henry Cowell astonished audiences with his piano pieces that involved reaching inside the instrument to stroke the strings, or whomping down on the keys with a fist or forearm to produce what he called &#8220;tone clusters.&#8221; Later, Cowell would become mentor and role model to the most carefree and influential of the century&#8217;s innovative spirits, the Los Angeles–born John Cage.</p>
<p>If Arnold Schoenberg had little taste for percussion ensembles or airplane propellers, he had his own visions of musical sounds hitherto unheard. Six months before Stravinsky&#8217;s bombshell had gone off in Paris, Schoenberg&#8217;s <i>Pierrot Lunaire</i> had earned a comparably hostile &#8211; if less vociferous &#8211; reception in Berlin: music in which a solo voice keened, wailed and whispered poetry about a moonstruck madman, joined by a chamber-music ensemble enhancing the spooky atmosphere with music devoid of any clear sense of harmonic progression or key. Standing aloof from all the jazzy razzmatazz, Schoenberg sought to codify his wholesale revision of traditional musical values with his &#8220;method of composition employing all 12 tones,&#8221; which he perennially explained as the logical extension of principles reaching back to Bach. His 1923 Suite for Piano, his first &#8220;pure&#8221; piece employing all 12 tones in strict serial order, did indeed link hands with Bachian models. But it was Schoenberg&#8217;s disciple Alban Berg, in his harrowing, immensely powerful operatic setting of Georg Büchner&#8217;s <i>Wozzeck</i>, who proved the expressive potential of the Schoenbergian style, moving in and out of 12-tone writing, also in and out of the Mahlerian shadows, as the moods of the intensely moody story dictated. Just by themselves, <i>The Rite of Spring</i> and <i>Wozzeck</i> were enough to prove that the new century had not lost the ages-old power to produce masterpieces.</p>
</p>
<p><b>
<p>1926–1950</p>
<p></b>
<p>26. BARTÓK: Quartet No. 4 (1928)</p>
<p>27. WALTON: Viola Concerto (1929)</p>
<p>28. WEILL: <i>Mahagonny</i> (1929)</p>
<p>29. STRAVINSKY: <i>Symphony of Psalms</i> (1930)</p>
<p>30. VILLA-LOBOS: <i>Bachianas Brasileiras</i> No. 1 (1930)</p>
<p>31. CRAWFORD SEEGER: String Quartet (1931)</p>
<p>32. RAVEL: Piano Concerto (1931)</p>
<p>33. WEBERN: Concerto, Opus 24 (1934)</p>
<p>34. THOMSON: <i>Four Saints in Three Acts</i> (1934)</p>
<p>35. GERSHWIN: <i>Porgy and Bess</i> (1935)</p>
<p>36. BERG: Violin Concerto (1935)</p>
<p>37. SCHOENBERG: Quartet No. 4 (1936)</p>
<p>38. McPHEE: <i>Tabuh-Tabuhan</i> (1936)</p>
<p>39. ORFF: <i>Carmina Burana</i> (1936)</p>
<p>40. HARRIS: Symphony No. 3 (1937)</p>
<p>41. SHOSTAKOVICH: Symphony No. 5 (1937)</p>
<p>42. PROKOFIEV: <i>Alexander Nevsky</i> (1939)</p>
<p>43. CAGE: <i>Second Construction</i> (1940)</p>
<p>44. MESSIAEN: <i>Quartet for the End of Time</i> (1940)</p>
<p>45. BARTÓK: Concerto for Orchestra (1943)</p>
<p>46. BERNSTEIN: <i>On the Town</i> (1943)</p>
<p>47. BRITTEN: Serenade for Tenor, Horn and Strings (1943)</p>
<p>48. COPLAND: <i>Appalachian Spring</i> (1944)</p>
<p>49. SESSIONS: Symphony No. 2 (1946)</p>
<p>50. BARBER: <i>Knoxville, Summer of 1915</i> (1947)</p>
</p>
<p>In attempting to force any aspect of artistic history into the listmakers&#8217; Procrustean bed, you inevitably end up with a dualism, &#8220;then&#8221; versus &#8220;now.&#8221; The musical &#8220;then&#8221; is a vast, safe area of sure-fire masterpieces, beloved by audiences and by concert managements as well: two centuries, give or take, bounded at the far and near ends respectively by, say, Bach&#8217;s &#8220;Brandenburg&#8221; Concertos and Richard Strauss&#8217; <i>Till Eulenspiegel&#8217;s Merry Pranks</i>. You wouldn&#8217;t mistake one for the other, yet there are aspects they share: They are both entertainments composed for performing forces that are required to exhibit a certain amount of solo virtuosity; their harmonies honor the assumption that listeners like the security of the music being in a specified key; their rhythms can, if you&#8217;re so inclined, set your toes to tapping in regular patterns of twos, threes or fours. (There had been music before Bach, of course, and one of the great events of recent decades has been its accession to popularity in  something close to its original sounds.) Over the 200 or so years of music&#8217;s &#8220;then,&#8221; the works that best exemplify the ideals of those years were developed in a certain few countries of Central Europe &#8211; France, Germany, Austria-Hungary and Italy &#8211; plus an occasional outsider from England, Spain or the Slavic lands who, most likely, had studied music within the inner circle.</p>
<p>The crumbling of that tradition which began right after the First World War &#8211; the invasion of that inner circle by aliens from (horror!) the United States, by alien styles (jazz, Asian gamelan, Appalachian folk song) and sounds (percussion ensembles, junkyard salvage, silence) &#8211; brought about a vast expansion of the means by which a composer might achieve uniqueness of musical language. This in turn meant that the differences among the works composed during music&#8217;s &#8220;now&#8221; tend to be far wider than in any previous century or even two centuries. Not all the aliens, of course, carried the seeds of revolt. Britain&#8217;s William Walton and Benjamin Britten, and America&#8217;s Samuel Barber, found plenty of new things to say within the old conservative language. One of the first Americans to respond sympathetically to Arnold Schoenberg&#8217;s principles, the still-underappreciated Ruth Crawford Seeger (stepmother of folk singer Pete), blended the atonal manner into her own powerful outlooks in her vibrant, intense String Quartet, music which has only now, 67 years later, been accorded worldwide masterpiece status. Stravinsky alone among music&#8217;s towering role models never handed down a legacy for others to follow.</p>
<p>With the expansion of sources and resources available to musicians practically from the start of this century, new music maintains its power to intimidate far longer than before. People still flee the concert hall during Stravinsky&#8217;s <i>Rite of Spring </i>(of 1913!) and probably always will. Béla Bartók&#8217;s Fourth String Quartet, 70 years old, still strikes me as a very &#8220;daring&#8221; work, with the needle-sharp pizzicatos of its scherzo and the shiver-inducing nocturnal sounds of its slow movement. So does much other music as it approaches respectable dotage: Crawford Seeger&#8217;s Quartet (1931) and Schoenberg&#8217;s Quartet No. 4 (1936), with their slow movements that seem suspended in outer space while holding us spellbound here on Earth. So does the searing beauty in the 1935 Violin Concerto of Alban Berg, his last completed work, which &#8211; as in his <i>Wozzeck</i> of a decade before &#8211; explores the &#8220;romantic&#8221; potential in the 12-note serial technique. And so, from 1943, does the interplay of deep mystery and sublime wit in Bartók&#8217;s Concerto for Orchestra &#8211; the most recent large-scale work on this list to achieve permanent repertory status &#8211; music by a composer desperately ill and impoverished, but driven by that indefinable force that makes music happen against all odds.</p>
<p>From my 1999 vantage point, the music of this second quarter is astounding above all for its mix. Jazz continued its inroads into the &#8220;classical&#8221; world, thus speeding the crumbling of the wall between &#8220;serious&#8221; and &#8220;popular&#8221; that the 19th-century bourgeoisie had erected and labored to maintain. Maurice Ravel&#8217;s fascination with blues harmonies shone forth in his elegant Piano Concerto. In Berlin, Kurt Weill and the poet Bertolt Brecht stirred their preachments into a pot already aboil with jazz, ragtime and atonality, and produced the sizzling agitprop opera <i>The</i> <i>Rise and Fall of the City of Mahagonny</i>. Four years later, Virgil Thomson and the sibylline Gertrude Stein wove their <i>Four Saints in Three Acts</i> out of a much more polite jazz plus hits from a Baptist Sunday-school hymnal. In his 1935 <i>Porgy and Bess</i>, George Gershwin&#8217;s attempt to meld a vivid blues style into a grand-opera format was uneasily received at first, and grew to masterpiece stature only slowly. And eight years later, the arrogant, jazzy rhythms of Leonard Bernstein&#8217;s <i>On the Town</i> signaled a giant forward step in literary and musical quality for the Broadway show, a breaking down of the wall of snobbery between musical theater and opera.</p>
<p>In the early 1930s, the American Colin McPhee traveled to Bali, and came home to compose music inspired by the rhythmic patterns of the Indonesian gamelan. Brazil&#8217;s Heitor Villa-Lobos produced amusing amalgams of his native folk rhythms and the stringent outlines of Bach. Closer to home, Roy Harris proclaimed his symphonies as illustrative of the &#8220;hard fastness&#8221; of the prairie soul; Aaron Copland succeeded somewhat better with his own fashionings of authentic or contrived &#8220;American&#8221; tunes in his cowboy ballets <i>Billy the Kid</i> and <i>Rodeo</i>, and the eloquent <i>Appalachian Spring</i>.</p>
<p>All of this happened within the context of an even greater upheaval, one that probably helped shape some of these other changes: the great communications explosion and its impact on the availability of music. By 1930, radio listeners coast-to-coast could hear live broadcasts by the New York Philharmonic and the Metropolitan Opera; by 1950, they could also watch them on television. In 1926, the process of recording was greatly advanced by the development of electronic technology to supplant the acoustic horn; in 1948, the long-playing record made it possible to survey the realm of masterful and not-so-masterful pieces in remarkable likenesses of the original performances. The spread of broadcasting also established music as an unparalleled political resource. In Adolf Hitler&#8217;s Germany, Carl Orff turned medieval German songs into musical poster art to help celebrate his nation&#8217;s past; Joseph Stalin&#8217;s Soviet Union made good use of its composers &#8211; the great Sergei Prokofiev and Dmitri Shostakovich among them &#8211; to spread the communist word, and came down hard on them when they strayed in the direction of originality.</p>
<p>In previous centuries, the construction of the first public concert halls and grand-opera houses, offering accessibility to an ever broadening social spectrum of consumers, had greatly influenced the development of grander, noisier and more flamboyant music. In our own century, the infinitely greater expansion of access through recordings and broadcasts seems to be having the same effect, infinitely magnified.</p>
<p><b>
</p>
<p>1951–1975</p>
<p></b>
<p>51. STRAVINSKY: <i>The Rake&#8217;s Progress</i> (1951)</p>
<p>52. CARTER: Quartet No. 1 (1951)</p>
<p>53. CAGE: <i>4&#8217;33&#8243;</i> (1952)</p>
<p>54. BOULEZ: <i>Le Marteau sans Maître</i> (1954)</p>
<p>55. BRITTEN: <i>The Turn of the Screw</i> (1954)</p>
<p>56. STOCKHAUSEN: <i>Gesang der Jünglinge</i> (1956)</p>
<p>57. STRAVINSKY: <i>Agon</i> (1957)</p>
<p>58. COPLAND: <i>Piano Fantasy</i> (1957)</p>
<p>59. HENZE: Kammermusik (1958)</p>
<p>60. SHOSTAKOVICH: Quartet No. 8 (1960)</p>
<p>61. PENDERECKI:<i> Threnody for the Victims of  Hiroshima</i> (1960)</p>
<p>62. RILEY: <i>In C</i> (1964)</p>
<p>63. BABBITT: <i>Philomel</i> (1964)</p>
<p>64. XENAKIS: <i>Eonta</i> (1964)</p>
<p>65. LIGETI: <i>Requiem </i>(1965)</p>
<p>66. PARTCH: <i>Delusion of the Fury</i> (1966)</p>
<p>67. REICH: <i>Come Out</i> (1966)</p>
<p>68. SCHNITTKE: Violin Concerto No. 2 (1966)</p>
<p>69. SUBOTNICK: <i>Silver Apples of the Moon</i> (1967)</p>
<p>70. NANCARROW: Studies for Player Piano<i> </i>(1968)</p>
<p>71. STOCKHAUSEN: <i>Kurzwellen</i> (1968)</p>
<p>72. BERIO: <i>Sinfonia </i>(1969)</p>
<p>73. CRUMB: <i>Ancient Voices of Children</i> (1970)</p>
<p>74. LUTOSLAWSKI: Symphony No. 3 (1973)</p>
<p>75. HARRISON: Suite for Violin and American Gamelan (1973)</p>
</p>
<p>To John Cage, composing music meant redefining music. One of his first teachers, Arnold Schoenberg at UCLA, tried to stanch his creative juices by telling him that he was more an inventor than a composer; Cage took it as a compliment. He invented the notion of creating music by pounding on resonant junkyard objects, by &#8220;preparing&#8221; a piano (i.e., imposing bits of hardware among the strings) to alter its tone quality, by allowing four minutes and 33 seconds&#8217; worth of the ambient room noise around a silent performer seated at a piano to stand for the entirety of a titled piece. In 1951, Cage established the Project for Magnetic Tape in New York, encouraging composers to create music out of taped sounds collected the world over. Magnetic tape had been invented in Germany in the 1930s. By the 1950s, armed with electronic sound-producing and sound-processing equipment &#8211; and, not many years later, reinforced with the ancillary marvels of computer technology &#8211; a composer could state with justification that the previous two millennia of music represented only the base of the mountain of possibilities.</p>
<p>Actually, there had been some attempt to redefine the very sound of music long before Cage. As early as 1914, the Futurist poet/painter/composer Luigi Russolo had built massive room-filling machines to produce an array of harsh, mechanized cacophony that he and his Italian cohorts had proclaimed &#8220;the music of the future&#8221;; unfortunately, Russolo&#8217;s machines and most of his musical sketches were destroyed during World War II. After that war, several composers in France &#8211; Pierre Henry, Pierre Schaeffer and, for a time, the young Pierre Boulez &#8211; had used the recently invented tape recorders to process natural sounds, overlaid upon themselves or otherwise transformed into the designs of what came to be called &#8220;musique concrète.&#8221; These experiments would soon be supplanted, however, by the broader potential in the range of sounds produced by electronic means and processed by computer.</p>
<p>Karlheinz Stockhausen, one of music&#8217;s most ardent redefiners, used the vast electronic mainframe facilities of West German Radio at Cologne to produce his <i>Gesang der Jünglinge</i>, a work of symphonic proportions constructed entirely out of synthesized sounds plus the processed voice of a boy soprano. The Hungarian expatriate György Ligeti worked at Cologne for a time, and then succeeded in duplicating some of tape music&#8217;s marvelously atmospheric sounds with live performers. Some of the ethereal swooshing in Ligeti&#8217;s spellbinding <i>Requiem </i>found its way into Stanley Kubrick&#8217;s <i>2001: A Space Odyssey</i>, where it underscored the spaceship&#8217;s journey to Jupiter through psychedelic space.</p>
<p>In California, young composers &#8211; among them Morton Subotnick, Pauline Oliveros and Terry Riley &#8211; worked at the San Francisco Tape Music Center, blending poetry, visual art and electronically produced sounds into a unique multimedia art. Their guru was the Michigan-born Robert Erickson, whose own music often included natural sounds (waves pounding the coast, a brooklet in the Sierra) blended with instruments.</p>
<p>A building-filling electronic installation set up in New York, funded by Columbia, Princeton and the Bell Laboratories, attracted hordes of composers young and old, including the venerable 12-tone evangelist Milton Babbitt, whose immensely appealing 1964 <i>Philomel</i> used synthesized sounds to describe the maiden of legend transformed into a nightingale. Not many years later, Subotnick used a synthesizer no larger than a dining-room tabletop, designed by Donald Buchla, to compose his <i>Silver Apples of the Moon</i>. Electronic gadgetry shrank in size (and in price) as its versatility expanded. Subotnick would soon move on to CalArts and develop one of the pioneer college-run electronic-music curricula.</p>
<p>Whether inspired by John Cage&#8217;s libertarian proclamations or off on their own, composers in these years seemed hell-bent on expanding music&#8217;s boundaries. Freedom rang; to LaMonte Young, a proper musical experience might consist of watching a violin burn in an East Village loft, or enduring a single tone sustained for two weeks. Stockhausen, not long after the implicit rigidity of his electronic pieces, turned 180 degrees to invoke principles of chance in his &#8220;happenings,&#8221; quasi-theatrical events to bear out the Cageian dictum that &#8220;Everything we do is music&#8221;; Stockhausen&#8217;s <i>Kurzwellen</i> had live musicians improvising on the spot to whatever happened to be emerging from a shortwave radio at the time of performance. In San Francisco, Terry Riley dreamed up a trance-inducing piece called <i>In C </i>in which any number of performers played a series of short fragments at any speed and at any length; a performance might last 20 minutes or three hours. Steve Reich concocted an extended piece in which a short spoken phrase, &#8220;come out to show them,&#8221; was repeated on multiple tape loops, with the tracks gradually oozing out of phase to create an enormous onslaught of sound. A new word, <i>minimalism </i>(borrowed, like so much of music&#8217;s vocabulary, from the visual arts), stood for their kind of music: maximum impact created out of a minimum of material, gradually changing.</p>
<p>Wherever you tuned in, there were new sounds. Greece&#8217;s Iannis Xenakis, renowned both as a composer and as a disciple of the great architect Le Corbusier, devised music that did, indeed, seem in its undulations to suggest physical structures &#8211; proving Goethe&#8217;s famous dictum that architecture is frozen music. Lou Harrison &#8211; like Cage a onetime Schoenberg student &#8211; flooded his music with the bright jangle of the Indonesian gamelan. Conlon Nancarrow, an American expatriate working in Mexico, composed music for player piano, punching out the paper rolls by hand and thus creating rhythmic complexities beyond the reach of any ordinary pianist. George Crumb&#8217;s haunting <i>Ancient Voices of Children</i> (based on García Lorca&#8217;s poetry) used small, tuned stones as part of its &#8220;orchestra.&#8221; Crumb&#8217;s <i>Black Angels</i>, written in 1970 as a Vietnam protest, subjected a string quartet to violent overamplification &#8211; grinding, gnashing, intensely disturbing &#8211; to send its outcry skyward. The self-taught hobo-turned-composer Harry Partch devised fantastic, colorful pieces that employed scales of 43 tones (instead of the &#8220;normal&#8221; 12), and built his own fantastic, colorful instruments to play them. Luciano Berio&#8217;s exhilarating <i>Sinfonia</i> included one movement in which a group of actors declaimed selections from various activist writings while the orchestra performed a collage compiled from familiar symphonic works of the past.</p>
<p>It was a time, too, of striking contradictions. Cage and his disciples proclaimed the notion of &#8220;anything goes.&#8221; The element of randomness motivated others as well, notably Poland&#8217;s Witold Lutoslawski, whose Second and Third symphonies contained episodes that freed the players in certain passages to improvise (within a stipulated time frame). In sharp contrast, the young Frenchman Pierre Boulez had re-examined the Schoenbergian principles of strict 12-note organization and discovered  that Schoenberg&#8217;s disciple Anton Webern had taken the notion of strict serial organization into matters of tone color and rhythm. Boulez earned his early fame with <i>Le Marteau sans Maître</i>: poetry by René Char intoned by a soprano with a chamber ensemble (a conscious tribute to Schoenberg&#8217;s seminal <i>Pierrot Lunaire</i>), remarkable also for the way recurrences and structural details in both words and music are rigidly worked out as a kind of audible mathematics. Boulez would go on to found his famous Parisian Institute for Acoustic/ Musical Research and Coordination (IRCAM), a hotbed for experimentation in the ways the computer, the live musician and electronically generated sound might join in this whole redefinition process.</p>
<p>Some, however, continued to nurture the old ways. Benjamin Britten&#8217;s powerful if small-scale operas, including a harrowing setting of Henry James&#8217; <i>Turn of the Screw</i>, sustained faith in the supremacy of the lyric stage. Deeply distressed by his first view of war-ravaged Dresden, Shostakovich &#8211; for whom the death of Joseph Stalin was an act of liberation &#8211; produced in his Eighth String Quartet a transfixing personal statement. Its mood was echoed, surely not entirely by coincidence, in the glistening, convoluted writing for full string orchestra in Krzysztof Penderecki&#8217;s wrenching <i>Threnody for the Victims of Hiroshima</i>, composed in the same year. Igor Stravinsky, who for most of his life had stood as a kind of antithesis to Schoenberg&#8217;s atonality, began after Schoenberg&#8217;s death to incorporate some of that methodology into his own work, notably the ballet <i>Agon</i>, arguably his last masterpiece. Even Aaron Copland, his fame secured by his &#8220;cowboy&#8221; ballets, tried his hand at a more abstract style in his 1957 <i>Piano  Fantasy</i>. His <i>Connotations</i> was composed in 1962 for the opening offerings at Philharmonic Hall, the first component of New York&#8217;s Lincoln Center. The music drew far more critical admiration than the building.</p>
</p>
<p><b>
<p>1976–2000</p>
<p></b>
<p>76. GLASS/WILSON: <i>Einstein on the Beach </i>(1976)</p>
<p>77. REICH: <i>Music for 18 Musicians</i> (1976)</p>
<p>78. GÓRECKI: Symphony No. 3 (1976)</p>
<p>79. ERICKSON: <i>Night Music</i> (1978)</p>
<p>80. SONDHEIM: <i>Sweeney Todd</i> (1979)</p>
<p>81. UNG: <i>Khse Buon</i> (solo cello) (1980)</p>
<p>82. GUBAIDULINA: <i>Offertorium</i> (1980)</p>
<p>83. KURTÁG: <i>Messages of the Late Miss R.V. Troussova</i> (1980)</p>
<p>84. RILEY: <i>Cadenza on the Night Plain</i> (1981)</p>
<p>85. HARBISON: <i>Mirabai Songs</i> (1982)</p>
<p>86. MESSIAEN: <i>Saint François d&#8217;Assise</i> (1983)</p>
<p>87. CARTER: <i>Triple Duo</i> (1983)</p>
<p>88. PART: <i>Frâtres</i> (1980, revised 1983)</p>
<p>89. TAKEMITSU: <i>riverrun</i> (1984)</p>
<p>90. FELDMAN: <i>For Philip Guston</i> (1984)</p>
<p>91. BIRTWISTLE: <i>Secret Theater</i> (1984)</p>
<p>92. LIGETI: Etudes (1985)</p>
<p>93. LINDBERG: <i>Kraft</i> (1985)</p>
<p>94. SCHNITTKE: Viola Concerto (1985)</p>
<p>95. ADAMS: <i>Nixon in China</i> (1987)</p>
<p>96. CAGE: <i>Fourteen</i> (1990)</p>
<p>97. KANCHELI: <i>Midday Prayers</i> (1991)</p>
<p>98. KNUSSEN: <i>Horn Concerto</i> (1994)</p>
<p>99. TAN: <i>Ghost Opera</i> (1994)</p>
<p>100. SALONEN: <i>L.A. Variations</i> (1997)</p>
</p>
<p>The most obvious thing to be said about music in the last 100 years is that there  isn&#8217;t just one thing to be said. The sonata tradition continues, grown dense with newly devised structural complexity from the Americans Roger Sessions and Elliott Carter, and Britain&#8217;s Harrison Birtwistle and Oliver Knussen (who of all this group at least holds on to a sense of humor). German opera pretty much died out after Richard Strauss, but Olivier Messiaen&#8217;s  spacious (if ponderous) 1983 <i>Saint Francis</i> couldn&#8217;t have been written if Wagner&#8217;s <i>Parsifal</i> hadn&#8217;t paved its way. Comic opera has spawned Broadway theater, a populous and populist brood written purely for money, but also with an occasional stage piece &#8211; Stephen Sondheim&#8217;s works, culminating in his <i>Sweeney Todd</i>; Leonard Bernstein&#8217;s output from <i>On the Town</i> to <i>West Side Story</i> &#8211; that suggests that artistic quality and box-office success can sometimes coexist. The collaboration of filmmaker Sergei Eisenstein and composer Sergei Prokofiev, in their <i>Alexander Nevsky</i> and <i>Ivan the Terrible</i>, might have presaged a future for the epic-nationalist style that Mussorgsky&#8217;s <i>Boris Godunov</i> had spawned 80 years before, but this has not yet happened. When Hitler&#8217;s proscription drove Germany&#8217;s leading composers to seek refuge in other countries, some came west with hopes of creating a new kind of musical drama &#8211; modeled, perhaps, after Wagnerdream of a &#8220;total artwork&#8221; &#8211; hand-in-hand with the film industry. The composers who succeeded best, however, were the ones who could scale their ambition down to fit the straitjacket of the Hollywood soundtrack.</p>
<p>The traditions held fast, but the impact of <i>Einstein on the Beach</i> was in its complete disassociation from any kind of musical past. Philip Glass had studied with Nadia Boulanger in Paris; more to the point, he had traveled extensively through the music of other worlds &#8211; India, North Africa, Central Asia &#8211; and absorbed the ways of making music out of stillness and repetition instead of sonata forms and 12-tone rows. With the poet/director/designer Robert Wilson, Glass evolved an allegory about the space age and the atomic threat, with the iconic figure of Albert Einstein (playing the violin but not speaking) as the generative force. Dance, chant (sometimes just strings of numbers repeated, repeated) and lighting effects blended into an uninterrupted five-hour musical trance. Unlike Stravinsky&#8217;s <i>Rite of Spring </i>of 63 years before, <i>Einstein</i> hasn&#8217;t exactly become a repertory item; its physical proportions are too daunting. Like the <i>Rite</i>, however, it was like nothing that had come before.</p>
<p>Minimalism didn&#8217;t last very long in its pure state (with Terry Riley&#8217;s <i>In C</i> as its  paradigm). Steve Reich, who had once played in the Philip Glass Ensemble, created one other minimalist masterpiece, the hourlong <i>Music for 18 Musicians</i>. John Adams&#8217; early <i>Shaker Loops</i> and his stunning piano piece <i>Phrygian Gates</i> also belong on that list. Glass found it profitable to remain anchored in his old methods, but both  Reich and Adams moved on, Reich most recently to multimedia dramatic works incorporating music and video, and Adams via the astounding &#8220;newsreel&#8221; opera <i>Nixon in  China</i> and in a large legacy of orchestral works as often-played as anyone&#8217;s new serious  music these days.</p>
<p>The musical buffet is well-stocked at century&#8217;s end. Over here there is the curious mix of the so-called &#8220;holy minimalists,&#8221; Estonia&#8217;s Arvo Pärt and Poland&#8217;s Henryk Górecki, with music that looks far back into history and tries to reconcile the pre-tonal harmonies of the Middle Ages with a contemporary awareness, both the 11-minute <i>Frâtres</i> of Pärt and the nearly hourlong Third Symphony of Górecki spinning their webs of enchantment by obsessive reiteration of austere, ancient-sounding harmonies. Over there is the growing influence of the Pacific Rim, with China&#8217;s Tan Dun and Chen Yi, Cambodia&#8217;s  Chinary Ung and Japan&#8217;s Toru Takemitsu casting their shadows over their eager American admirers Lou Harrison and Terry Riley. Among us also, the smiling countenance of John Cage encourages all comers to continue to dare, to question; his old friend and disciple Morton Feldman hands off his four- and six-hour concoctions of few notes and many silences, and rewards our patience. An extraordinary generation of Russians &#8211; Alfred Schnittke, Sofia Gubaidulina and the Georgian Giya Kancheli &#8211; bursting out of captivity after the end of Soviet artistic repression, writes symphonies, quartets and operas that pour into these venerable molds music of extraordinary vitality that, once again, sounds like nothing else in this wide musical world.</p>
<p>I was attracted to California, 20 years ago come September, by the new-music scene here: the electronic music at CalArts and Stanford; the mix of acoustic instrumental virtuosity and natural sounds at UC San Diego as taught by Robert Erickson (whose <i>Night Music</i> is one of only two works on my &#8220;100&#8243; list unavailable on disc); the Monday Evening Concerts at the County Museum, with their tradition reaching back to 1939; the Ojai Festival, with its unlikely mix of Pierre Boulez&#8217;s music in a rural setting; the Los Angeles Philharmonic&#8217;s ongoing service to new music, more ardent than the work of any other American orchestra I know, via the &#8220;Green Umbrella&#8221; concerts and similar projects. With the  noble music patrons Betty Freeman and Judith Rosen, I helped produce in-home concerts of new music, which allowed me to shake hands with György Ligeti, John Cage, Elliott Carter, Lou Harrison, Morty Feldman . . . you name &#8216;em.</p>
<p>That all actually happened during my second California incarnation. In the first, I studied music at UC Berkeley during the days of Roger Sessions and Ernest Bloch, and with Darius Milhaud a few miles away at Mills College. I helped start KPFA, the first-ever venture into public radio. We put Harry Partch&#8217;s music on the air, and when the rapturous phone calls came in after a live studio performance of Bartók&#8217;s Sonata for Two Pianos and Percussion (music still terra incognita in 1949), we simply had the players repeat the performance on the spot.</p>
<p>A few other memories: Shaking hands with Bartók in Boston after the world premiere of his Concerto for Orchestra. My first hearing of Mahler&#8217;s Ninth, conducted by Bruno Walter in Carnegie Hall (and a revelatory later performance conducted in Los Angeles by Carlo Maria Giulini). Pushing my car with its dead fuel pump into an illegal parking space in order to get to the Metropolitan Opera House for the premiere of <i>Einstein on the Beach</i> (and finding it neither towed nor ticketed five hours later). Discovering for the first time the music of Schnittke and Gubaidulina, on tape in a Soviet information office in Boston. Sitting for four hours on a chair carved out of stone at the Ace Gallery, transfixed by Morty Feldman&#8217;s <i>For Philip Guston</i>. The ovation after Esa-Pekka Salonen&#8217;s <i>L.A. Variations</i> at the Music Center.</p>
<p>I&#8217;m not a composer &#8211; the world isn&#8217;t ready &#8211; but I&#8217;ve spent most of my life close to creative people, and I think some of their sweat has rubbed off. I know that if I go to a new-music concert in Los Angeles, San Francisco or New York, I&#8217;ll run into lots of old friends; when I went to a Kathleen Battle recital at UCLA a few weeks ago, I ran into <i>nobody</i>. Among living composers, I listen to György Ligeti&#8217;s music with the greatest pleasure. I found Salonen&#8217;s 1997 <i>L.A. Variations</i> &#8211; the other as-yet-unrecorded work on my list &#8211; enormously appealing and reassuring: complex, sometimes even gritty, music that has the same sense of confident propulsion that I hear in Ligeti.</p>
<p>All but five among this final 25 are still active, including the 90-year-old Elliott Carter. If there were room for No. 101 in this list, it would surely be some brand-new work by the immensely talented young Brit Thomas Adès, still in his 20s, whose opera <i>Powder Her Face</i> is currently making the rounds. Rather than defining the century now slouching to its end, his success so far stakes out the solid ground on which to plant our hopes for the future. Onward!</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>The Century, A&#160;Primer</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/1999/01/the-century-a-primer/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/1999/01/the-century-a-primer/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 06 Jan 1999 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=228</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[One hundred entries is actually a paltry list to represent the achievements of this or any other musical century. Even so, let&#8217;s boil it down even further to an indispensable 10-plus-10, which you will accept only with the promise to move further afield on your own. List No. 1: The Absolutes 1. MAHLER: Symphony No. [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><font SIZE=2><i>
<p>One hundred entries is actually a paltry list to represent the achievements of this or any other musical century. Even so, let&#8217;s boil it down even further to an indispensable 10-plus-10, which you will accept only with the promise to move further afield on your own.</p>
<p></i>
</p>
<p><b>
<p>List No. 1: The Absolutes</p>
<p></b>
<p>1. MAHLER: Symphony No. 9. Carlo Maria Giulini conducting the Chicago Symphony (Deutsche Grammophon)</p>
<p>2. STRAVINSKY: <i>The Rite of Spring</i>. Esa-Pekka Salonen  conducting the Philharmonia  Orchestra (Sony)</p>
<p>3. BERG: Violin Concerto. Anne-Sophie Mutter, violin, with James Levine conducting the Chicago Symphony (Deutsche Grammophon)</p>
<p>4. BARTÓK: Concerto for Orchestra. Fritz Reiner conducting the Chicago Symphony (RCA)</p>
<p>5. COPLAND: <i>Appalachian Spring</i>, complete ballet. Aaron Copland conducting the Boston Symphony (RCA). Original version for chamber orchestra. Hugh Wolff conducting the Saint Paul Chamber Orchestra (Teldec)</p>
<p>6. SHOSTAKOVICH: String Quartet No. 8, Kronos Quartet (Elektra/Nonesuch). Version for string orchestra (&#8220;Chamber Symphony&#8221;). Mariss Jansons conducting the Vienna Philharmonic (EMI Classics)</p>
<p>7. LIGETI: <i>Requiem</i>. Michael Gielen conducting the Hessian Radio Symphony and Chorus (Teldec). N.B.: Salonen has also recorded this work for Sony; when it&#8217;s to be released is anyone&#8217;s guess.</p>
<p>8. BERIO: Sinfonia. Riccardo Chailly conducting the Royal Concertgebouw Orchestra (London)</p>
<p>9. REICH: <i>Music for 18 Musicians</i>. Steve Reich and Musicians (Elektra/Nonesuch). An earlier version, also by Reich and Musicians, is available on ECM New Series, but the newer one is better.</p>
<p>10. GLASS/WILSON: <i>Einstein on the Beach</i>. Greg Fulkerson (violin) and the Philip Glass Ensemble (Elektra/Nonesuch; an earlier version by the Glass Ensemble, on Sony, is severely cut.)</p>
</p>
<p><b>
<p>List No. 2: The Almost-Absolutes</p>
<p></b>
<p>11. IVES: Piano Sonata No. 2 (&#8220;Concord&#8221;). Gilbert Kalish (Elektra/Nonesuch)</p>
<p>12. BERG: <i>Wozzeck</i>. Claudio  Abbado conducting the Vienna Philharmonic, with Franz Grundheber and Hildegarde Behrens (Deutsche Grammophon; also available on video)</p>
<p>13. CRAWFORD SEEGER: String Quartet. Arditti Quartet (Grama vision)</p>
<p>14. SCHOENBERG: Quartet No. 4. Arditti Quartet (Disques Montaigne)</p>
<p>15. CARTER: Quartet No. 2. Juilliard Quartet (Sony)</p>
<p>16. CRUMB: <i>Ancient Voices of Children</i>. Arthur Weisberg conducting an ensemble, with Jan de Gaetani, soprano (Elektra/ Nonesuch)</p>
<p>17. SONDHEIM: <i>Sweeney Todd</i>. Angela Lansbury and Len Cariou (RCA, also available on video with Lansbury and George Hearn)</p>
<p>18. FELDMAN: <i>For Philip Guston</i>. California EAR Unit (Bridge)</p>
<p>19. SCHNITTKE: Viola Concerto. Kim Kashkashian, with Dennis Russell Davies conducting the Saarbrücken Radio Symphony (ECM New Series)</p>
<p>20. CAGE: <i>Fourteen</i>. Stephen Drury, pianist, with the Calli thumpian Ensemble (Mode)</p>
<p></font></p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Bach and the Art of the&#160;Striptease</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/1998/12/bach-and-the-art-of-the-striptease/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/1998/12/bach-and-the-art-of-the-striptease/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 23 Dec 1998 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=227</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[If I had to demonstrate the communicative power of Johann Sebastian Bach&#8217;s music with only one work, I would surely choose one of the church cantatas. These are the works, above all others in Bach&#8217;s voluminous legacy, that most vividly outline the unassailable niche he occupies in the realm of the arts: his skill at [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>If I had to demonstrate the communicative power of Johann Sebastian Bach&#8217;s music with only one work, I would surely choose one of the church cantatas. These are the works, above all others in Bach&#8217;s voluminous legacy, that most vividly outline the unassailable niche he occupies in the realm of the arts: his skill at composition, his unwavering faith in Higher Powers, and the genius whereby he applies the one in the service of the other. The further astonishment in these works &#8212; the 200 or so that survive out of probably twice that number &#8212; is the extraordinary beauty, originality and complexity of the greatest of them measured against the circumstances of their creation, music ground out on order to serve the daily needs of a church at which Bach was a salaried minion. Yes, there are cantatas that come across merely as the competent products of a busily engaged craftsman, as there are dull moments in Shakespeare and occasional uninspired brushwork by Michelangelo; with all three towering figures, the flub percentage is wondrous small.</p>
<p>
Right now I&#8217;m under the spell of the Cantata No. 8, thanks to a superb recording newly at hand on the Harmonia Mundi label. (The numbering of the cantatas, by the way, has nothing to do with the order of composition, but only with the sequence in which they were first published, more than a century after Bach&#8217;s death.) The text, which begins &#8220;Dearest God, when am I to die? My time is running out,&#8221; propounds one of the central tenets in the Lutheran canon: Earthly death not as a tragedy but a release to a more &#8220;blessed, joyful dawn.&#8221; As with most of the cantatas composed during his tenure at Leipzig&#8217;s St. Thomas-Church, Bach designed the work as a gloss on the chorale specified for that particular Sunday &#8212; Trinity XVI in this case. The text, fashioned by one or another of the merely adequate poets serving the church, is, similarly, a gloss on the words of the chorale, heavily laden with the dense interweave of metaphor and symbol that constituted churchly poetry in the Baroque (and may still).
</p>
<p>
The miracle is Bach&#8217;s ability to rise beyond the encumbrance of this workaday text, and the fact that he accomplished this at Leipzig week after week. Join me to sample what happens at the start of this particular magical work. Two <i>oboi d&#8217;amore</i> (deeper-pitched than an oboe, but not as honky as an English horn) wind their deep-bronze tones around one another to spin out a haunting, slow melody in triplets that seems to extend toward far horizons. Over their melodic line from time to time a piccolo goes &#8220;ding ding ding,&#8221; fast, repeated notes like a distant summoning bell. The melody stops, then starts again, still with the insistent &#8220;ding&#8221; from the piccolo; this time the chorus joins in with its opening text, sung to another flowing triplet melody in elegant, smooth counterpoint to the oboes&#8217; tune. Listen with delight and awe, in just the opening phrase of this new melody, to the way Bach sets the word <i>sterben </i>(&#8220;to die&#8221;): a dissonance, a chromatic shudder, a harmonic progression that seems for one wink of the eye to look ahead toward romantic harmonies as yet undreamed.
</p>
<p>
Actually, this new melody is a flowing, elegant, somewhat garrulous variant of the simple, hymnlike chorale tune that, in its unadorned form, will round off the work some 20 minutes later. Be amazed at the way Bach has built this first movement by combining four separate lines into music rich and warming, full of its own range of fantasy: the tune for the oboes, the piccolo, the flowing melody for the chorus, with the notes of the chorale embedded into that line. Many of Bach&#8217;s cantatas are constructed in this &#8220;striptease&#8221; manner; they start off with a chorus or ensemble in which an actual chorale melody is wrapped in elaborate counterpoint, and arrive eventually at that melody in its bare essentials.
</p>
<p>
The world gave Bach a pretty good birthday party back in 1985, his 300th, but it will surely find time to celebrate again in 2000, the 250th anniversary of his death. He needs these frequent celebrations, for at least two reasons. One is to make up for the decades after his death when his music was virtually unknown until Felix Mendelssohn&#8217;s famous revival of the <i>St. Matthew Passion</i> in 1829. Another is to make up for the years after that, when his music circulated in lurid reharmonizations and re-orchestrations that sought to re-create Bach as an eager precursor of Romanticism.
</p>
<p>
But that history of mistreatment says something about the timelessness of Bach&#8217;s music, and its resilience. His music survives the tamperings of the Victorian monster choruses, the irresistible pandemonium of Leopold Stokowski&#8217;s transcriptions of organ works and choruses for Wagner-size orchestra, Wendy Carlos&#8217; sci-fi synthesizer versions, Bach-as-scat by the Swingle Singers. It shines through the prissy rhythms in Wanda Landowska&#8217;s <i>Goldberg Variations</i> on an &#8220;authentic&#8221; harpsichord or the visionary intensity of Glenn Gould&#8217;s two performances on an &#8220;inauthentic&#8221; Steinway grand, either or both of which I hear as modern man&#8217;s self-defining statement on Bach. On the new Harmonia Mundi recording of three cantatas, Belgian conductor Philippe Herreweghe&#8217;s performance of the first movement of No. 8 runs six minutes, 41 seconds; Helmuth Rilling&#8217;s on Hänssler Classic runs four minutes, 34 seconds; both are the work of eloquent, dedicated specialists in this music.
</p>
<p>
When we listen to music &#8212; <i>listen</i>, I said, not merely bathe in &#8212; we are almost always made conscious of its place in time. We hear Haydn and Mozart as the fruition of Classicism&#8217;s sublime logic; we hear Beethoven as the fuse kindling Romanticism, Stravinsky&#8217;s <i>Rite of Spring</i> as modern music&#8217;s powder keg. I hear Bach&#8217;s music, however, beyond any chronological identity. Music like the cited opening of the Cantata No. 8, or the violent confrontations in the opening chorus of the <i>St. Matthew Passion</i>, or the end of the &#8220;Crucifixus&#8221; from the B-minor Mass &#8212; where a harmonic sideslip at the sepulchral bottom of the voices&#8217; range defines the exact meaning of grief for all time &#8212; exists apart from any sense of time frame. There have always been imitators, but never a successor. Bach endures, not in some kind of scholarly vacuum, but as music&#8217;s great self-renewing force.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Fox&#160;Pas</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/1998/12/fox-pas/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/1998/12/fox-pas/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 16 Dec 1998 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=226</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[I cannot believe &#8212; or, let&#8217;s say, I don&#8217;t want to believe &#8212; that in the managerial echelons of the Los Angeles Opera there was nobody to look in on the early rehearsals of Fantastic Mr. Fox, recognize the proceedings as a mess beyond redemption, and simply call a halt. Instead, like the legendary unstoppable [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><font SIZE=2>I cannot believe &#8212; or, let&#8217;s say, I don&#8217;t want to believe &#8212; that in the managerial echelons of the Los Angeles Opera there was nobody to look in on the early rehearsals of <i>Fantastic Mr. Fox</i>, recognize the proceedings as a mess beyond redemption, and simply call a halt. Instead, like the legendary unstoppable Juggernaut, the disaster grew to enormous proportions until the bursting of the bomb &#8212; for such it is &#8212; on the Music Center stage last week. Peter Hemmings had lunched the New York press and dispatched the tidings worldwide that his opera company was finally primed to produce an American world premiere. The company&#8217;s educational department set up an admirable program to lure both children and their teachers; the press department circulated word that no, it wasn&#8217;t just a kiddie opera, but a &#8220;family opera&#8221; for the young-at-heart of all ages. At the pre-performance talk before the dress rehearsal, Christopher Hailey promised the crowd that the music would be like &#8220;nothing you&#8217;ve ever heard.&#8221; Wrong: The music is like <i>everything</i> you&#8217;ve ever heard, only not as good.</font></p>
<p>
<font SIZE=2>Tobias Picker, the one acknowledged hand among the many whose music goes wriggling through <i>Mr. Fox</i>&#8216;s empty spaces, is himself a media masterpiece. &#8220;I look out at my trees,&#8221; he told an interviewer last week, &#8220;and I ask them to tell me where my melodies are. I walk through the forest and I hear my melodies.&#8221; At 44, he has gained a firm toehold for a tidy output of correct and trustworthy compositions, full of everybody&#8217;s best melodic gadgetry from times gone by, all aimed at assuring the timid that new music means us no harm. His 1996 opera <i>Emmeline</i>, an Oedipus spinoff set in New England, with all the melodramatic gestures that you hear as drama until five minutes later, has been televised and is making the rounds; like André Previn&#8217;s <i>A Streetcar Named Desire</i> of this year&#8217;s vintage, it draws sustenance from somebody&#8217;s notion that a Great American Opera should be some kind of cultural inevitability in this not-all-that-opera-minded nation. Picker is currently at work on not one but three opera commissions, including one for the Met.</font></p>
<p>
<font SIZE=2>The problems start with Donald Sturrock&#8217;s talky-talk libretto, which inundates Roald Dahl&#8217;s wise little children&#8217;s fable &#8212; wily fox bests stupid farmers and feasts on their fowl &#8212; with uncute jabberwock of no appeal to any age. (In fairness, there is one line, not in Dahl, but worthy of note: Animals, says Mr. Fox, &#8220;have a natural gift for forest life that humans had years ago.&#8221;) Dahl&#8217;s woodland critters, their numbers now swelled by the man-hungry spinster Miss Hedgehog and her amorous swain Mr. Porcupine, are obliged to sing for their supper; Dahl&#8217;s Rat becomes Rita the Rat, a gabbling, Spinoza-quoting yenta. There is also &#8212; I&#8217;m not making this up! &#8212; a tractor that sings and puffs steam and a singing earth-digger right out of <i>Jurassic Park</i>. As designed by cartoonist Gerald Scarfe&#8217;s magic pen, on a revolving set that bears some resemblance to Breughel&#8217;s Tower of Babel, they&#8217;re all fun to look at, but that&#8217;s as far as it goes.</font></p>
<p>
<font SIZE=2>Tobias Picker&#8217;s trees have led him astray. He has transformed Sturrock&#8217;s logorrhea into its musical equivalent, a featureless up-and-down singsong in rhythms that often clash with the sound and the sense of the words. His dense, busy orchestration further obliterates these vocal lines, often rendering them virtually inaudible. Adults with mature neck muscles can pick out the missing words from the supertitle screen high overhead; children shouldn&#8217;t have to. On opening night I detected no attempt from conductor Peter Ash to create any kind of balance between stage and pit.</font></p>
<p>
<font SIZE=2>There is something overall depressing about this latest in our local company&#8217;s long list of operatic miscalculations. It goes beyond the fact that Tobias Picker, widely hailed as American opera&#8217;s great new hope, has turned out this inept baggage &#8212; not at all funny beyond its cutesy staging, manifesting not even the minimum competence for combining words and music into a whole greater than its parts &#8212; and now basks in the momentary glory that the Hemmings machine has afforded him. A good cast has given the work better than it deserves. Some of its singers &#8212; Suzanna Guzmán, Louis Lebherz, Jamie Offenbach, Charles Castronovo &#8212; are &#8220;resident artists,&#8221; starting with the company in small roles and moving up. Gerald Finley, the titular Mr. Fox, has had a deserved sky-high career since his debut here in 1994. Grant Peter Hemmings high marks in the matter of attentiveness to emerging talent.</font></p>
<p>
<font SIZE=2>As the company has developed since its 1986 inaugural, there is reason to suspect a split personality. In its middle age, it has lost much of its early, appealing edginess: the Janácek, the Berg, the Alden brothers&#8217; inventive stagings. Last season&#8217;s <i>Fedora</i>, <i>Florencia en el Amazonas</i> and <i>Countess Maritza</i> were novelties in name but creaky antiques in actuality. Next season&#8217;s <i>I Capuleti e i Montecchi</i> (Bellini&#8217;s Romeo and Juliet opera) hardly counts as a brave step into the unknown. Nobody was taken in by <i>Mr. Fox</i>; everyone knew all along that management was trying to pass off a kiddie opera as grown-up fare. Even <i>Hansel and Gretel</i> has more substance.</font></p>
<p>
<font SIZE=2>Basically, the L.A. Opera is now the model of a company in a middle-sized city, doling out its standard-repertory fare, venturing afield only on the safest paths. This excess of programming caution might be justified if the company booked more of the generation that now lights up stages in San Francisco, Chicago and the Met: The names Renée Fleming, Deborah Voigt, Ben Heppner, Rene Pape come first to mind. Jennifer Larmore has been here in roles wrong for her; Carol Vaness is a world-class Mozart singer, but her upcoming Violetta doesn&#8217;t inspire confidence. Okay, Jane Eaglen&#8217;s Donna Anna does. Greg Fedderly sings <i>La Traviata</i>&#8216;s Alfredo, but his recent vocal decline results from too many roles too soon &#8212; the consequence, I&#8217;m willing to bet, of an overdose of bad advice.</font></p>
<p>
<font SIZE=2>Can anyone believe that Plácido Domingo&#8217;s accession to the top job will provide the turn toward imagination and adventure that the company now lacks? His star appeal cannot be denied. Yet nobody has accused Peter Hemmings &#8212; who runs only one opera company, doesn&#8217;t sing tenor leads or in three-tenor circuses, shows no inclination to conduct, and isn&#8217;t married to an aspiring stage director &#8212; of being underemployed. As the West Coast pole of a bicoastal opera cartel, the company risks losing some of its Los Angeles identity, a crucial part of the support structure. That&#8217;s what&#8217;s been keeping me awake nights lately &#8212; along with the recent news stories of Zubin Mehta&#8217;s ardent declaration of rekindled love for the Los Angeles Philharmonic and his resolve to heighten his local presence. Welcome to Pleasantville.</font></p>
<p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Exercises in&#160;Devotion</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/1998/12/exercises-in-devotion/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/1998/12/exercises-in-devotion/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 09 Dec 1998 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=225</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Hildegard von Bingen abides. Her 900th birthday occurred sometime this year and has been lavishly celebrated. An eight-disc box on BMG Classics honors the event with a comprehensive anthology of her music, gently and respectfully updated by the performers most active in maintaining her sacred flame, the Cologne-based medieval-music ensemble known as Sequentia, founded in [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Hildegard von Bingen abides. Her 900th birthday occurred sometime this year and has been lavishly celebrated. An eight-disc box on BMG Classics honors the event with a comprehensive anthology of her music, gently and respectfully updated by the performers most active in maintaining her sacred flame, the Cologne-based medieval-music ensemble known as Sequentia, founded in 1977 by American expatriates Benjamin Bagby and the late Barbara Thornton. Two weeks ago, high in the Brentwood hills in the handsome small Mary Chapel on the Mount St. Mary&#8217;s College campus &#8211; one of the Da Camera Society&#8217;s &#8220;Historic Sites&#8221; &#8211; 14 members of Sequentia performed Hildegard&#8217;s <i>Ordo Virtutum</i>, an allegorical disputation in which forces of good and evil battle to possess one faltering soul. (Guess who wins.)</p>
<p>It was an ennobling experience. Ninety minutes of meandering medieval song, unharmonized except for a few instances when a single string instrument might hold a long single note under a melodic gambit, didn&#8217;t seem a minute too long under the spell of the group&#8217;s elegant, pure singing. Afterward, the stars in the night sky and the distant city lights formed yet a further benediction. You can say what you want &#8211; and there&#8217;s a lot to be said &#8211; about the dangers of taking this ancient repertory too seriously, of imputing to the blessed Hildegard a degree of musical individuality to match her historic stature as a visionary and spiritual leader. (Oliver Sacks&#8217; famous essay on Hildegard&#8217;s visions ascribes their inspiration to migraines.) The rediscovery of this woman composer &#8211; not even the first, according to some recent researches &#8211; two decades ago fell into the collective lap of the emergent feminist/musicologist crowd like a gift from heaven. One disc &#8211; catchily titled <i>A Feather on the Breath of God</i> (one of Hildegard&#8217;s more modest descriptions of herself), with music overarranged and sweetly sung by a pre-Sequentia group called Gothic Voices &#8211; and she became an instant media bonanza.</p>
<p>I used to be more upset about all this hoopla, about the process of tarting up ancient music of uncertain provenance in the quest for sexy press releases. Very little of the music we know and love, even from recent times, after all, reaches our ears the way its composers intended; Mozart gets played with modern clarinets, Verdi with the wrong-size trombones. What mattered most up at Mount St. Mary&#8217;s the other night was the chance to hear some wonderful singers, nicely costumed in a very beautiful space, performing exceptionally attractive music worthy of that setting and of our love.</p>
<p>Short takes on a full and rewarding week:</p>
<p>What the people of Sequentia bring to their chosen repertory of the very old, the dedicated souls of our own California EAR Unit lavish on the very new; both groups make common cause in the battle to save the world from Muzak. Actually, last week&#8217;s EAR Unit concert at the County Museum ranged somewhat more broadly than usual, reaching back in time some seven decades for a quick but affectionate sweep through American musical origins: three of Ruth Crawford&#8217;s piano preludes from 1928, an orchestration (why?) of Virgil Thomson&#8217;s Second Piano Sonata from 1930, Henry Cowell&#8217;s <i>Toccanta</i> from 1938 and Lou Harrison&#8217;s First Concerto for flute and percussion from a year later &#8211; delightful, small-scale but consequential music. Crawford&#8217;s remarkably strong, rugged, even abrasive legacy looms ever larger these days; her String Quartet is an acknowledged masterpiece, and these short piano pieces &#8211; nicely played by Lorna Eder &#8211; are not far behind. The kicky rhythms and folkish harmonies of Cowell&#8217;s bright chamber piece underscore our need for a major revival of his works. So, too, for Harrison; I loved most of all the starry, slowly unfolding melody midway in this early concerto, sent skyward by Dorothy Stone&#8217;s magic flute. After intermission came the extended nuisance of some of Michael Torke&#8217;s minimalist hootchy-kootch that I won&#8217;t bother to name, and <i>Frame(s)</i>, Rand Steiger&#8217;s exhilarating new work for the EAR Unit&#8217;s percussion goddess Amy Knoles, knockout music including long improv passages for the players to feast upon royally, as, indeed, they did.</p>
<p>My memories of previous perform ances of Mahler&#8217;s Ninth Symphony &#8211; Bruno Walter at Carnegie Hall in 1945, Carlo Maria Giulini at the Music Center three-plus decades later &#8211; weren&#8217;t challenged by Zubin Mehta&#8217;s performance last week, especially since the Philharmonic seemed to be having a bad horn night on Thursday. But if any kind of music is Meh ta&#8217;s meat (a matter still to be argued), this sublime work surely is, and the performance &#8211; massive, spacious and eminently sensible &#8211; did him credit. Mehta had, quite rightly, reseated the orchestra as Mahler himself did, with the second violins downstage and the basses far back. The range of emotions had been carefully mapped: the heaven-storming climax of the first movement, the diabolical cachinnations midway, the long recession into silence at the end, when the music seems to resound from deep inside the hearer&#8217;s bloodstream. Those final moments at Thursday&#8217;s perform ance, alas, seemed timed to an outbreak of whooping cough in<br />
the hall.</p>
<p>On Friday there was Bach at Royce Hall, the first three (of  six) cantatas of the <i>Christmas Oratorio</i> shepherded by the much-loved Helmuth Rilling, with the Los Angeles Chamber Orchestra, the USC Chamber Singers and an exceptional quar  tet of soloists: music of joy and exaltation that sent me home to plan a whole &#8216;nother article about Bach sometime soon. In the spectrum of current Bach performance practice, Rilling stands just about midway. He doesn&#8217;t mind a judicious vibrato in either vocal or instrumental tone, he knows the expressive value of a slow tempo now and then &#8211; as in the &#8220;Pastorale&#8221; that opens the second cantata, luscious and radiant &#8211; and his management of contrapuntal textures is marvelously strong and bright. Best of all &#8211; as anyone knows who has seen him in action every summer at the Oregon Bach Festival &#8211; he projects the sense of knowing how to make people <i>want</i> to perform. Among the soloists, the tenor Alan Bennett, who has also been here with Paul Hillier&#8217;s Theater of Voices, sang the Evangelist&#8217;s music with extraordinary clarity and beauty of phrase.</p>
<p>Full schedules keep me away from too many tempting-looking school perform ances, but nothing keeps me away from Mozart&#8217;s <i>Marriage of Figaro</i>. I looked in on Saturday night&#8217;s performance by the USC Opera Workshop, figuring on leaving at intermission if matters got hairy. Instead I stayed to the end, riveted and beguiled. On a make-do but adequate set, David Pfeiffer&#8217;s staging was full of the right kind of comedic touches; Timothy Lindberg drew from his student orchestra sounds both silken and silvery; somebody had imparted to the young cast a high regard for the beauty of Italian vowels and consonants. The singers, at least in the 562-seat Bing Theater, were mostly wonderful. I shouldn&#8217;t name names at this stage of their careers, but if a young singer named Sarah Hagstrom, whose Cherubino nearly stole the show, doesn&#8217;t turn up sometime soon in the operatic firmament, I&#8217;ll donate my crystal ball to the next garage sale.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Songs Sad and&#160;Sardonic</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/1998/12/songs-sad-and-sardonic/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/1998/12/songs-sad-and-sardonic/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 02 Dec 1998 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=224</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Artwork by Akg London Nobody composed better art songs than Franz Schubert. Many tried, and Hugo Wolf came close. In his 43 years &#8211; a life cut short by syphilis and insanity &#8211; he produced some 300 songs, feverishly devouring texts by virtually every Romantic German poet and filling their every pore with music sublime, [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Artwork by Akg London
<p>Nobody composed better art songs than Franz Schubert. Many tried, and Hugo Wolf came close. In his 43 years &#8211; a life cut short by syphilis and insanity &#8211; he produced some 300 songs, feverishly devouring texts by virtually every Romantic German poet and filling their every pore with music sublime, sometimes witty, more often agonized. Like Schubert, he failed at composing opera (although his comedy <i>Der Corregidor</i> merits revival); like Schubert, he knew how to compose music with opera&#8217;s power to represent intense actions or thoughts in stunning detail, but within the span of two or three minutes with a solo singer and a pianist.</p>
<p>Wolf&#8217;s song legacy has been amply recorded. Great singers of today or the recent past &#8211; Dietrich Fischer-Dieskau, Elly Ameling, Elisabeth Schwarzkopf &#8211; show up among the Schwann Catalog&#8217;s listings. There is one Hugo Wolf recording project, however, that stands apart and above all other efforts; it has just been reissued in midprice on EMI Classics, and must never again be allowed to vanish: five discs representing the labors of the Hugo Wolf<br />
Society, nearly half the total song legacy, recorded between 1931 and &#8217;38, enlisting the services of an awe-inspiring list of the time&#8217;s finest singers of the German language, both opera stars and concert artists. They all belong to a glorious past; the last to go was the soprano Tiana Lemnitz, who died in 1994.</p>
<p>Confronted with the two columns of fine print that constitute the &#8220;Wolf&#8221; entry in the latest Schwann, it&#8217;s difficult to imagine a time when the recorded repertory contained no such treasures, no complete Beethoven piano sonatas or Mozart operas. To make such recordings possible, the smart marketers at EMI organized subscription societies: If so many prospective buyers kick in so much money in advance, we&#8217;ll go ahead and record Wolf, or Mozart at Glyndebourne, or Artur Schnabel&#8217;s Beethoven. The Wolf project was the first; the great British publication <i>The Gramophone</i> got down on its journalistic knees month after month during 1931 to plead for subscribers. The plan worked; we can sample its fruits even today. The Mozart Opera Society&#8217;s <i>Don Giovanni</i>, recorded at Glyndebourne in 1936 under Fritz Busch and currently listed on the Pearl label, is still the best version you&#8217;ll ever hear; Schnabel&#8217;s set of Beethoven&#8217;s &#8220;32,&#8221; on EMI Classics, is a mountain of probity few will dare to scale.</p>
<p>And now we have the Wolf once again: starting off with nearly an hour of tense, dramatic singing by the astonishing mezzo Elena Gerhardt at the height of her<br />
career; the purity of Tiana Lemnitz in<br />
some of the simpler, pastoral songs; &#8220;Prometheus&#8221; delivered as if from a mountaintop by Friedrich Schorr, the foremost Wotan of his time; the suave, delicious humor in Gerhard Hüsch&#8217;s &#8220;Epiphanias,&#8221; Goethe&#8217;s folkish retelling of the Three Kings on their way to the manger; Helge Roswaenge&#8217;s hair-raising &#8220;Fire-Rider&#8221; (for which, the legend goes, the usually placid singer&#8217;s orange juice had been spiked); John McCormack&#8217;s ecstatic delivery of &#8220;Ganymede&#8221;; and on and on. Gerald Moore is at the piano for most of the performances, collaborating with incomparable skill. More than a historical document, this set, its ancient sound astonishingly well restored, captures the dedication that created it, back in the days when a love of music and of the best way to serve it were the prime motivating forces that kept the record industry alive.</p>
<p>After Wolf, who died in 1903, there were the late songs of Mahler, some early tonal songs by Schoenberg and Berg, and some minor efforts by Pfitzner, but there were no new poets to stimulate the continuance of the German art song. The one great exception, however, was Hanns Eisler, who for a time was part of the refugee contingent here in Los Angeles, and who, working mostly with Bertolt Brecht, produced a remarkable set of songs they called <i>The Hollywood Songbook</i>. The poems aren&#8217;t all about Hollywood &#8211; frequent recipient of contempt from both poet and composer &#8211; but they are almost all bitter, cynical, aching with homesickness. Given Eisler&#8217;s proletarian leanings, you shouldn&#8217;t expect the subtle sophistication of Wolf&#8217;s songs; the 46 songs of <i>The Hollywood Songbook</i> are, for the most part, simple, folkish and not very artful. Brecht far preferred Eisler&#8217;s kind of song to that of his other collaborator, Kurt Weill, whose music could easily seduce the attention away from the text. Yet there is beauty in these artless, endearing songs, and power.</p>
<p>The new London recording, part of its &#8220;Entartete Musik&#8221; series that has admirably surveyed the broad repertory by composers considered &#8220;degenerate&#8221; under the Nazis (and often murdered by them as well),<br />
is sung by the splendid young baritone Matthias Goerne, who performed the songs in a marvelous if underattended concert here several months ago; Eric Schneider is the pianist. To my knowledge Goerne has not yet recorded any songs of Hugo Wolf, but he surely will; his voice is exactly right, with that rare power to seek out the drama in a song text and make it work on a concert stage.</p>
<p>During my student year in Vienna (rather a while ago, if you must know), my friends told me that two large-scale musical works would be my best guide to understanding the Viennese musical soul. One was Hans Pfitzner&#8217;s opera <i>Palestrina</i>, which was in repertory at the State Opera. The other was Franz Schmidt&#8217;s oratorio <i>Das Buch mit sieben Siegeln</i>, taken from the Book of the Revelation, the description by St. John the Divine of the Book With Seven Seals wherein lay the pertinent facts about the destiny of mankind. I attended both, over two long evenings that revealed to me, above all, the extent of pain that extreme boredom can produce. The Viennese audience, in both cases, greeted this thoroughly dreadful music with the ultimate ovation: complete silence interlaced with adoration. Pfitzner&#8217;s opera, which was produced at New York&#8217;s Lincoln Center Festival a couple of years ago and was greeted with a differently motivated kind of silence, has been around on disc for some time. Now comes the Schmidt, in its full uncoiling, running just under two hours, grinding and groaning under the baton of Franz Welser-Möst, wonderfully performed by the Bavarian Radio Symphony Orchestra and Chorus, with Stig Andersen and René Pape as, respectively, St. John and the Voice of God, and vividly recorded as if the Almighty himself were at the console. There are already three older versions of the work, would you believe, all recorded live under less than ideal conditions. Here it is now: last week&#8217;s schnitzel, congealed and stale, but elegantly served.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Here Come the Brits With Strings&#160;Attached</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/1998/11/here-come-the-brits-with-strings-attached/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/1998/11/here-come-the-brits-with-strings-attached/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 25 Nov 1998 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=223</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Between a 1610 violin sonata by Giovanni Paulo Cima and the 1995 Fifth String Quartet by Elliott Carter there stretches a chronological and stylistic gap of nearly four centuries. Still, the music in both cases &#8211; the one played last week by the British group that calls itself Romanesca at one of the Da Camera [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Between a 1610 violin sonata by Giovanni Paulo Cima and the 1995 Fifth String Quartet by Elliott Carter there stretches a chronological and stylistic gap of nearly four centuries. Still, the music in both cases &#8211; the one played last week by the British group that calls itself Romanesca at one of the Da Camera Society&#8217;s &#8220;Historic Sites&#8221; concerts, the other by Britain&#8217;s Arditti Quartet at Caltech on Sunday &#8211; assaulted the same nerve centers in my receptive apparatus. So &#8211; <i>ka-pow! </i>— did Saturday&#8217;s violin recital at Royce Hall, the first local appearance by the singular Brit with the single name of Kennedy, having forsworn the &#8220;Nigel&#8221; of his birth. (Show biz is full of name-droppers.)</p>
<p>Cima and his countrymen Dario Castello and Biagio Marini &#8211; who shared the Romanesca program that bore the subtitle &#8220;Phantasticus&#8221; in an elegant salon at Pasadena&#8217;s Ritz-Carlton Huntington Hotel &#8211; flourished in the early years of Baroque. Opera had just been invented, and with it a new manner of vocal writing, passionate and virtuosic, supported by some wildly adventurous turns of harmony that can still astound our ears today. The violin had begun to take the place of the earlier viol, also allowing greater feats of virtuosity and a vibrant tone of almost human earnestness. The concert was well-named; the players &#8211; violinist Andrew Manze, harpsichordist John Toll, and Nigel North, who played both the lute and its larger, giraffe-necked relative called the theorbo &#8211; lunged delightedly into music full of amazing shifts of mood, unruly outcries, grinding dissonances, &#8220;phantastic&#8221; in every sense.</p>
<p>Romanesca records for Harmonia Mundi; their latest disc, also called <i>Phantasticus</i>, contains some of the music from last week&#8217;s concert, but with a wonderful small organ alongside the harpsichord. Manze has also conducted a superb set of Handel&#8217;s Opus 6 Concerti Grossi on H.M., in the same kind of vivid, taut, deliciously impolite performances he delivered here. If his mission is to take Baroque music out of its wallpaper status, he has my vote.</p>
<p>In a getup that suggested a recent rummage through a nearby dumpster, the aforementioned Kennedy &#8211; self-styled punk kid, age 42 &#8211; ambled onto the Royce Hall stage half an hour late, engaged in some clumsy chitchat, got some laffs with the information that Béla Bartók had died of leukemia in an unheated Manhattan apartment (not true) and that he doesn&#8217;t like having his hair washed (obviously true). He also performed, phenomenally: Bartók&#8217;s Sonata and two movements from Bach&#8217;s C-major Sonata, both for unaccompanied violin, and seven movements from a &#8220;Concerto in Suite Form,&#8221; concocted by Kennedy from music by Jimi (listed in the program as &#8220;J.M.&#8221;) Hendrix, backed by an acoustic combo of guitars, cellos, winds and bass. Some of the Hendrix pieces were spatchcocked between movements of the Bartók, a lamentable procedure partly redeemed because the segues themselves were nicely imagined and the music itself somewhat stupendous.</p>
<p>There is, however, something of a Kennedy problem. He is obviously one of the great musicians of his generation, technically omnipotent and brainy as well. His in-your-face recorded performances of wide-ranging repertory, from Vivaldi&#8217;s <i>Four Seasons</i> to the Elgar concerto, prove that he, too, is anxious to do battle with the wallpaper syndrome. But he seems to be squandering a small fortune on unnecessary image building, which, on Saturday night, I found intrusive, offensive, and unworthy of his obvious brilliance and of his age.</p>
<p>The Arditti Quartet, which performs in suits and matching socks, had played Beethoven&#8217;s <i>Grosse Fuge</i> and Elliott Carter&#8217;s Fifth Quartet at Irvine in March; it did no harm to revisit them, even in the dreary acoustical and visual setting of Caltech&#8217;s Beckman Auditorium to open the 95th (!) annual Coleman Concerts. In the Beethoven, that extraordinary exercise in manic counterpoint, I discover more marvels on each hearing; in the Carter I discover fewer. The Arditti, which otherwise plays nothing but very new music, often with the ink still wet, apparently regards the Beethoven as a gateway, an understandable attitude. Their program also included Carter&#8217;s recent Piano Quintet, composed for the superb, adventurous pianist Ursula Oppens, its garrulous, cavorting piano part considerably leavening the usual Cartesian textures. On her own, Oppens also played a late Beethoven sonata, Opus 110. The day was Beethoven&#8217;s, by a considerable margin.</p>
<p>Yet another Brit, composer George Benjamin, led the Philharmonic&#8217;s New Music Group in some of his own energetic music &#8211; including his <i>Three Inventions</i>, commissioned by local patron Betty Freeman, and an immensely appealing early piece called <i>At</i> <i>First Light</i> &#8211; at last week&#8217;s &#8220;Green Umbrella&#8221; concert at the Japan America. Born in 1960, Benjamin studied with Olivier Messiaen, whose own genius for manipulating huge, multicolored blocks of sound his pupil has ob  viously absorbed. Benjamin&#8217;s music is full of paint and shards of stained glass, and wonderful moments in which distant, somber pronouncements from the brass make themselves heard through clouds of sparks and smoke. Susan Narucki sang Unsuk Chin&#8217;s <i>Acrostic-Wordplay</i>, enchanting, quiz-     zical music by a young Korean composer new to American audiences, and Benjamin, at the piano, played one of Messiaen&#8217;s ravishing bird pieces: an exceptionally strong, balanced program, too sparsely attended.</p>
<p>Watching Yuri Bashmet perform Alfred Schnittke&#8217;s Viola Concerto last week, with Esa-Pekka Salonen and the Philharmonic, you almost thought that the late Schnittke himself had returned. Schnittke was considerably less tall, but the two men&#8217;s features &#8211; gaunt, glaring, hollow-cheeked, the look of a latter-day Raskolnikov &#8211; seemed almost uncannily similar. And they seem to merge as well in this extraordinary concerto that Schnittke composed for Bashmet in 1985.</p>
<p>The work, which Bashmet has recorded for RCA, is music of outcry: 35 minutes of passionate discourse, sometimes wrenching, sometimes soft and conciliatory. The orchestra is large, but there are no violins; the solo viola sings out above the low strings, and its voice is almost constantly present. The orchestra also includes piano, harpsichord and celesta, all of them placed down front to engage in occasional intimate duets with the soloist. The work begins with a slow, rhapsodic melodic unfolding for the soloist; it returns to that kind of music at the end. The long, faster central movement veers wildly and wonderfully, as if obsessed with having too much to say in too little time. I cannot think of another concerto of this century in which the soloist seems to take on an almost human personality, singing (and sometimes shrieking) lines in which actual words lurk just below the surface. For this you would have to go back to the last piano concertos of Mozart, which this moving, tortured work of Schnittke in no way resembles &#8211; except in its impact.</p>
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		<title>Pretty Notes All in a&#160;Row</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/1998/11/pretty-notes-all-in-a-row/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/1998/11/pretty-notes-all-in-a-row/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 11 Nov 1998 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=222</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Photo by Zoe DominicAlban Berg&#8217;s Chamber Concerto and Donald Martino&#8217;s Notturno, composed 50 years apart (1923 and 1973, give or take a few months), were performed two days apart here last week: the Berg by the Philharmonic under Esa-Pekka Salonen with pianist Mitsuko Uchida and violinist Mark Stein berg as soloists, the Martino in a [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Photo by Zoe DominicAlban Berg&#8217;s Chamber Concerto and Donald Martino&#8217;s <i>Notturno</i>, composed 50 years apart (1923 and 1973, give or take a few months), were performed two days apart here last week: the Berg by the Philharmonic under Esa-Pekka Salonen with pianist Mitsuko Uchida and violinist Mark Stein berg as soloists, the Martino in a Monday Evening Concert at the County Museum by the New York New Music Ensemble. The two works relate interestingly. Both follow principles laid down by Arnold Schoenberg in his &#8220;method of composing with 12 different notes related entirely to one another&#8221; &#8211; composing, in other words, in a manner that denies the traditional practice of tonality in which some one of those 12 notes becomes more important than the 11 others, and is entirely derived instead from an arrangement (or &#8220;row&#8221;) of all 12. Both works, however, constantly and fluently contradict the harmonic anarchy implicit in the 12-note method at its purest; both succeed in being beautiful in ways that even the most fear-stricken of contemporary audiences can recognize.</p>
<p>
<p>Of the triumvirate that constituted the &#8220;Second Viennese School&#8221; &#8211; Anton Webern was the third member &#8211; Berg abandoned the old Romantic ways the most reluctantly. His <i>Wozzeck</i>, which dates from around the same time as the Chamber Concerto, draws its overpowering impact from the variety of its music: the 12-note depiction of the grotesque forces that prey upon the hapless nonhero, the more &#8220;Romantic&#8221; music for Wozzeck and Marie, the almost Mahlerian orchestral summing-up of the tragedy near the end. The Chamber Concerto, written as a birthday tribute to Schoenberg and built on a row that includes the note-equivalents of the letters of Schoenberg&#8217;s name, is an equally engaging amalgam of old and new. The term &#8220;delight&#8221; doesn&#8217;t always come first to mind when writing about these Second-Wieners, but there is no better way to describe the long episodes of smoky, slithery waltz music in the first movement &#8211; or the palpable exhilaration in Mitsuko Uchida&#8217;s interaction with Salonen and his players in the performance here last week.</p>
<p>
<p>The Chamber Concerto isn&#8217;t often heard; the Philharmonic performed it at Ojai in 1970, but seldom if ever at the Music Center. Its scoring &#8211; a 13-member ensemble of winds and brass &#8211; puts it in a gray area between chamber music and orchestra. It needs two brave and exuberant soloists; violinist Mark Steinberg, though known as an excellent chamber performer (as leader of the Brentano Quartet), was somewhat behind Uchida in succumbing to the intense power of this marvelous music.</p>
<p>
<p>Berg&#8217;s work compellingly defines its time; so does Martino&#8217;s. By the 1970s, Schoenberg&#8217;s principles had been kicked to death by a generation of academics and hangers-on who assumed that the rigid &#8220;rules&#8221; of 12-note composition meant that all you had to do to make masterpieces was to connect the dots. As a junior critic at <i>The New York Times</i>, I remember being assigned to concert after concert &#8211; usually on Saturday afternoons, when hall rental was cheap &#8211; of this murky, terribly correct, terribly predictable note spinning, a kind of 12-note Vivaldi. Leonard Bernstein&#8217;s New York Philharmonic played the nice, easy new music of Copland and Bernstein himself, but did nothing to encourage a generation of American innovators to compete with the vitality of the emergent  Europeans (Boulez, Stockhausen, Maderna, Dallapiccola . . . that crowd). Pierre Boulez&#8217;s accession to the Philharmonic in 1971 changed the atmosphere somewhat; so did the appearance of superb, dedicated smaller groups: Speculum Musicae, the Group for Contemporary Music, Dan Shulman&#8217;s Light Fantastic Players. The splendid New York New Music Ensemble, which performed Martino&#8217;s <i>Notturno</i> at LACMA last week, is of that lineage.</p>
<p>
<p>Very brave, that Martino work; very brave also the Pulitzer jury that in 1974 abandoned its customary dedication to easy listening and gave its prize to this tense, marvelously atmospheric but gritty music. Like the Berg half a century before, Martino&#8217;s 18-minute sextet, involving flute, clarinet, strings and percussion, had found a balance between doctrinaire atonality and deep, communicative expression. Many composers seemed anxious to write &#8220;night music&#8221; pieces at the time; there is much music of nocturnal inspiration worth hearing by George Crumb and Robert Erickson, among others. Martino&#8217;s nocturnal landscape is visited by storms as well as moonlight. Led by the haunting, dusky tones of Jean Kopperud&#8217;s clarinet, the New York visitors reminded us of what we miss by not hearing this music every week. (There are, however, excellent recordings, on Nonesuch and Koch.)</p>
<p>
<p>There was also Beethoven on last week&#8217;s Philharmonic agenda: Uchida in the &#8220;Emperor&#8221; Concerto, replacing the Berg on Saturday and Sunday; the Fifth Symphony at all four concerts. You want to talk about innovation and the modern touch? Beethoven belongs on that list. Recently I&#8217;ve read copious complaints by the New York critics about the inundation of concert life by Beethoven&#8217;s music; the folks at the Orange County Philharmonic Society have another Beethoven bash planned for later this season. I&#8217;m sad for the critics, delighted for Ludwig; we&#8217;ll never stop learning and discovering as long as his music is around.</p>
<p>
<p>Look, for starters, at the astounding, magical passages in both works at the juncture just before the start of the final movement. Look first at the breath-stopping, quiet drop in the concerto from B major (the key of the slow movement) to the distant key of E flat to start the finale. Then look at the similar, sudden key change in the symphony, again in an unearthly quiet, that ushers in the mysterious crescendo over drumbeats and links the third movement to the finale. They weren&#8217;t supposed to write that way in Beethoven&#8217;s time, but he did anyhow. (A glitch in the hall&#8217;s ventilating system on Sunday afternoon, alas, drowned out both these sublime moments with a sustained whoosh that also filled Beethoven&#8217;s dramatic pauses with audible goo.)</p>
<p>
<p>The marvel of Uchida&#8217;s performance of the &#8220;Emperor&#8221; was the sense she gave off that every turn in this wondrous score was, for her, a discovery that she couldn&#8217;t wait to share. Discoveries still await Salonen in the Fifth Symphony; the dark A-flat lyricism of the slow movement is, for him, still ever-so-slightly out of reach. He&#8217;ll get there, though.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Encounters Across&#160;Time</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/1998/10/encounters-across-time/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/1998/10/encounters-across-time/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 28 Oct 1998 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=221</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[In 1928, Arnold Schoenberg began sketches for his Moses und Aron and completed his orchestration of Bach&#8217;s &#8220;St. Anne&#8221; Prelude and Fugue: the one an opera completely atonal in style, the other a transcription of music that celebrates the full glory of God, at overpowering length, in the golden resonance of the key of E-flat [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>In 1928, Arnold Schoenberg began sketches for his Moses und Aron and completed his orchestration of Bach&#8217;s &#8220;St. Anne&#8221; Prelude and Fugue: the one an opera completely atonal in style, the other a transcription of music that celebrates the full glory of God, at overpowering length, in the golden resonance of the key of E-flat major. The opera has made its way slowly; I wouldn&#8217;t want to hang by my thumbs awaiting its appearance at our local company. The Bach transcription has also reached us only now, in its first performance ever by the Philharmonic, last weekend under Sylvain Cambreling.
<p>Pasteurized and purified as we have become in the hands of the authenticity worshippers, such vile misdeeds as Schoenberg&#8217;s inflation of Bach&#8217;s organ masterpiece are no longer to be tolerated, or so the story runs. Still, I suffer no conscience pangs from my delight at the glorious noise that filled the Dorothy Chandler Pavilion last Sunday afternoon. If the miscreant Schoenberg made his presence blatantly apparent, so, through Schoenberg&#8217;s machinations, did Bach. When Schoenberg hands over the consequent phrase of the opening proclamatory tune to six &#8211; count &#8216;em, six &#8211; clarinets, the sound that emerges is the mellow bellow of a dreamed-of instrument with which some future organ-designing genius may, with extreme luck, bless us all. Not one but two contrabassoons are enlisted by Schoenberg throughout the piece to simulate those 32-foot fundamentals that might, in some provincial organ loft, demolish the sturdiest stained glass. The sound is glorious. No, make that stupendous.
<p>Sure, the desecrations that Schoenberg imposed upon Bach &#8211; not to mention his enterprising aggrandizement of the Brahms G-minor Piano Quartet that Anne Manson conducts on this week&#8217;s Philharmonic program &#8211; were duplicated in the manicured hands of Leopold Stokow-ski with his reams of Bach orchestrations that still survive on disc. The philosophies were different, however. Stokowski covered his sins with the proclamation, many times professed, that if Bach were alive today he&#8217;d undoubtedly be composing for Wagner-size orchestral forces. Schoenberg reversed the process: In this &#8220;St. Anne&#8221; transcription, and in the two Bach chorale-preludes he had orchestrated some years earlier, he seems intent on proving that Wagner-size or even larger orchestras could, in proper scoring, re-create the sounds of the bygone pipe organ at its most sublime. Rather than the fussy, trickery-infested Stokowski escapades that sound snazzy enough but continually falsify their source, Schoenberg has given us the chance to glimpse the meeting of minds over two centuries, the outlook of a genius of our own century on the towering stature of his immortal predecessor.
<p>I am also still aglow from last week&#8217;s concert at UCLA&#8217;s Royce Hall by the wonder-working Jordi Savall and his ensembles: the instrumental group Hesperion &#8221; and the vocal sextet La Capella Reial de Catalunya, joyously giving off songs, dances and sacred pieces from 16th-century Spain, the &#8220;Golden Century&#8221; under Philip II. Savall and his viola da gamba made it to the charts with his music in Tous les Matins du Monde, and then, in an astounding turnaround, delighted us all by leading a period-instrument orchestra in a fabulous Beethoven &#8220;Eroica&#8221; (on Audivis, get it). In this Royce concert, too, there was a meeting across centuries &#8211; music fashioned to the taste of a bygone society, composed in a bygone artistic language, interacting with the wisdom of modern interpreters who have studied its nature and devised their own synthesis of &#8220;could&#8221; and &#8220;might&#8221; to create an acceptable facsimile of &#8220;authentic&#8221; or &#8220;historically informed&#8221; performance.
<p>That, I think, needs remembering whenever old music &#8211; 4 years or 4 centuries old &#8211; comes to mind. We can restore or reconstruct period noisemakers; Hesperion&#8217;s collection of cornetto, chirimia (an oboe ancestor), sacabuche (= sackbut = trombone), bajon (= bassoon), plus string instruments bowed and plucked, forms a handsome assembly. We can figure out the notes these instruments once played, or come fairly close. To re-create this music fully, however, we would also need to re-create the impulse that moved performers 400 years ago from one note to the next, and the interrelation between those notes and the people who heard them, were moved by them to dance or sing along and to share the ecstasy of their invention.
<p>These are elements that composers of any era, including our own, cannot write down or type into a computer. The music at the Hesperion concert seemed to exhilarate the performers, who in turn were wonderfully adept at passing that feeling on to the happy and large crowd at Royce with a trove of highly spiced, delirious musical treasures from four centuries and half a planet away. Performers at Philip&#8217;s court were well-supported, even as their monarch frittered away the Netherlands half of his empire and saw his Armada turned back by the upstart Brits. But they didn&#8217;t get to perform their songs and dances on a proscenium stage before an audience of 800. What is &#8220;authentic&#8221; about concerts such as this &#8211; or about the upcoming appearances by the Tallis Scholars or Anonymous 4 at Royce, by the string group Romanesca at the Ritz Carlton Huntington Hotel or Sequentia in, for once, a proper-size chapel at Mount St. Mary&#8217;s &#8211; is not so much the interaction between the sights and sounds of bygone music making and a contemporary audience however attuned. Beyond any of this, it&#8217;s the fact that the beauty in music is a generic phenomenon that exists beyond matters of time.
<p>This past week, I was reached by the dark, mysterious beauty and the delicious rhythmic quirks in just about every note of Jordi Savall&#8217;s concert; by the hypnotic spookiness of New York&#8217;s Bang on a Can All-Stars playing Brian Eno&#8217;s ambient music at El Rey; by Mendelssohn&#8217;s Violin Concerto at the Philharmonic (a work that I tend to think of as perfect) in Martin Chalifour&#8217;s unfussy, elegant reading. Others found happiness, but I did not, in the secondhand Stravinsky in Henri Dutilleux&#8217;s Metaboles, which ended the Philharmonic concert. Music eludes; that may be the greatest of its beauties.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>On All&#160;Fours</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/1998/10/on-all-fours/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/1998/10/on-all-fours/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 21 Oct 1998 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=220</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Between Joseph Haydn&#8217;s Opus 1 and George Crumb&#8217;s Black Angels &#8211; two centuries, give or take a decade &#8211; lies the realm of the string quartet, subtlest and most secretive of all kinds of music, demanding the listener&#8217;s most concentrated patience and rewarding it the most lavishly. Within a week, as it happened, we were [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Between Joseph Haydn&#8217;s Opus 1 and George Crumb&#8217;s Black Angels &#8211; two centuries, give or take a decade &#8211; lies the realm of the string quartet, subtlest and most secretive of all kinds of music, demanding the listener&#8217;s most concentrated patience and rewarding it the most lavishly. Within a week, as it happened, we were blessed by both the first of Haydn&#8217;s quartets, at the County Museum, performed by the Angeles Quartet, and Crumb&#8217;s stupendous outcry played by the Kronos at Irvine&#8217;s Barclay Theater. Wow.
<p>Those mileposts are not fixed, of course; there were string quartets before Opus 1 from 1760 and string quartets after Black Angels of 1970. Composers with serious matters on their minds seem to find benign companionship in two violins, a viola and a cello, and probably always will. The deep melancholy in the slow movement of Beethoven&#8217;s first quartet (Opus 18 No. 1) is phrased in terms far more mysterious than the language in his first two symphonies of about the same time. There is nothing in his late orchestral music, not even the Ninth, to match the crushing dissonances in his Grosse Fuge, the world&#8217;s first X-rated music. I cannot claim that every one of Haydn&#8217;s 80-odd quartets holds me by the throat, but most of them do, and all of them form the laboratory of one of music&#8217;s supreme innovators. The operative word for this music is fearless, and that applies as well to our excellent local Angeles Quartet, which is performing them all at the County Museum over several years, and recording the whole caboodle for Philips. The first release is due out this year.
<p>Already in Opus 1 No. 1 there is amazement. Haydn hadn&#8217;t yet mastered the art of freeing each of the instruments as an individual voice, as he soon would; the violins play their gorgeous tunes to a steady accompaniment from the lower strings. But in one of the minuets there is a fine trick, the two violins quickly alternating bowed and pizzicato passages, and you know that this isn&#8217;t more of that bland KUSC music you can just doze off to. The Angeles program also included Opus 33 No. 1, from 1783. Haydn by then was twice blessed: a steady job with an employer who encouraged innovation, and a group of players willing and able to tackle all challenges. This work is supposed to be in the key of B minor, and the unwritten laws of the so-called classical style ordain that you make your key clearly recognizable right at the start. Not Haydn this time; he begins somewhere else, and only slides into the &#8220;right&#8221; key after leaving his listeners baffled for several bars. Beethoven used that device at the start of the Ninth Symphony, and gets all the credit; here is Haydn doing it 42 years before. When Haydn&#8217;s Opus 33 quartets were performed in Vienna, the recently arrived Mozart was in the room, and he later credited Haydn for showing him the inner secrets of string-quartet creation.
<p>Two quartets from Haydn&#8217;s Opus 50 rounded out the Angeles program: No. 1, with its heart-rending, throbbing slow movement, and No. 4, with its final, gnashing fugue that again carries portents of the Beethoven to come. The Angeles, its new second violinist, Sara Parkins, joining Kathleen Lenski, Brian Dembow and Stephen Erdody (bearer of the illustrious name of the countess who was Beethoven&#8217;s &#8220;lady confessor&#8221;), played with marvelous flexibility, the sense of adventure that permeates this music and raises it above the cliches and customs of its time. In tracing the growth of Haydn&#8217;s quartet mastery in this series of concerts at the Museum, the Angeles itself has also grown.
<p>Black Angels lies at the foundation of the Kronos Quartet; hearing it on the radio 25 years ago, says the group&#8217;s founder and first violinist, David Harrington, instilled an obsession to create an ensemble that could play it. The work is about Vietnam; its language of shrieks and groans, with the strings purposely overamplified and interlaced with feedback mixed in with spoken, agonized gibberish from the players, may claim descent from Beethoven&#8217;s grinding masterpiece, but its concerns are of its own time, and they are expressed in an extraordinary richness of language. It belongs alongside Luciano Berio&#8217;s only slightly less frantic Sinfonia in its way of hurtling out from the stage with music that hovers on the edge of urgent speech about the world in horrific crisis.
<p>Crumb hadn&#8217;t been very productive in the 1980s, but Quest, a big recent piece for the guitarist David Starobin and a chamber ensemble, released on Starobin&#8217;s Bridge label, sounds to me like a welcome return to center stage. He is an important creative figure, especially for his ability to orchestrate the implications of his times into hugely compelling music. Larry Neff, the Kronos&#8217; lighting wizard, and Jack Carpenter have worked out a staging for Black Angels, mostly a matter of flickering lights and shadowy shapes on a darkened stage, around a kind of ceremonial altar under a rising and falling canopy. The effect is stunning, but tells me nothing that the music by itself doesn&#8217;t make achingly clear.
<p>The Kronos&#8217; Irvine program also included other bitter, lacerating music in the body of Alfred Schnittke&#8217;s harrowing Second Quartet, and Terry Riley&#8217;s two brief Requiem Quartets, in memory of recent deaths within the Kronos family, music of ethereal poignance that seemed to hang in the air. (I wish I could say as much for Riley&#8217;s UCLA concert of piano improv two nights before, which for once in my long admiration of his music I found meandering and pallid.)
<p>At Royce Hall the night before Irvine, the Kronos kicked off with Ben Johnston&#8217;s gleeful and gritty version of Harry Partch&#8217;s U.S. Highball, with the hobo texts declaimed by David Barron; so far so good. At the end, however, the quartet was joined by Margaret Kampmeier in a pointless if not downright goofy arrangement for piano and strings by John Geist of, if you&#8217;re ready, Stravinsky&#8217;s sublime orchestral tour de force The Rite of Spring. Why, for God&#8217;s sake? Even Stravinsky&#8217;s own two-piano reduction, created to make the work portable for audition purposes, makes some sense; it at least preserves some of the percussive effects. This version locates a place for the music on a dusty shelf as some insipid piece of French chamber music, a d&#8217;Indy reject perhaps, plus a few kicky rhythms. The opening, that unearthly bassoon incantation that can still raise goose bumps 85 years later, turns pale and featureless translated to a solo cello. To paraphrase whoever it was who said what about whom: The Kronos doesn&#8217;t make many mistakes, but when it makes one it&#8217;s a beaut.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Beginnings</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/1998/10/beginnings-2/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/1998/10/beginnings-2/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 14 Oct 1998 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=219</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[A silent-movie paean to life at its most forlorn, the grit &#8216;n&#8217; gloom of a live soundtrack cobbled from works of the grittiest and gloomiest of composers &#8211; who, even among the most sanguine, could have mistaken these as ingredients for a radiant, stirring opening to our Philharmonic&#8217;s 79th subscription concert season? The cheers at [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>A silent-movie paean to life at its most forlorn, the grit &#8216;n&#8217; gloom of a live soundtrack cobbled from works of the grittiest and gloomiest of composers &#8211; who, even among the most sanguine, could have mistaken these as ingredients for a radiant, stirring opening to our Philharmonic&#8217;s 79th subscription concert season? The cheers at the Music Center last Thursday night, therefore, must have been compounded as much out of surprise as admiration.
<p>There had been other grounds for pessimism. Once before, in the summer of 1990, Peter Sellars had attempted a melding of live music and classic film, a misguided splicing &#8211; of The Cabinet of Dr. Caligari with John Adams&#8217; Harmonielehre &#8211; that the writer of the Sellars bio in last week&#8217;s Philharmonic program book wisely overlooked. But Victor Seastrom&#8217;s The Wind cries out for Sibelius; you can sense that even from the video, with its score by the usually reliable Carl Davis that washes the horror-stricken drama in parlor sentimentality. When the film comes to its misbegotten tacked-on happy denouement commanded by the MGM executives, no music could better suit the moment than the featherbrained brassy rhetoric in the final bars of Sibelius&#8217; justly neglected Night Ride and Sunrise.
<p>And so Sellars this time out, with considerable brainstorming from Esa-Pekka Salonen &#8211; who, however, confesses that some of the selections were unfamiliar even to him &#8211; has concocted a Sibelius potpourri for The Wind in which both music and film sounded and looked better together than either element by itself. Some of the joinings of music and action were remarkably coordinated; a few blasts of taped wind noise interspersed between musical selections helped with the timing. There were production problems inherent in the hall; the screen, as large as it could be in its allotted space, was still too small; the lights on the musicians&#8217; stands diminished the stark black-and-white contrasts of the film&#8217;s magnificent photography. There is a problem there for the Disney Hall designers to countenance, because last week&#8217;s goings-on suggest that the love feast between film and the Philharmonic, with or without the project&#8217;s cutesy title, is here to stay.
<p>As the program&#8217;s brief opener there was Salonen&#8217;s new nine-minute Gambit, not of the stature of his LA Variations, but proficient on its own: the work of a man who knows what an orchestra is good at doing, and remembers what it has done.
<p>Sixty years ago come next April, brave music lovers and musicians first confronted fearsome new music in Peter Yates&#8217; rooftop studio in Silver Lake. &#8220;Evenings on the Roof,&#8221; which turned into &#8220;Monday Evening Concerts&#8221; and moved to the County Museum, is now the longest-running new-music series anywhere; last week&#8217;s concert, by Montreal&#8217;s Nouvel Ensemble Moderne under the leadership of Lorraine Vaillancourt, ushered in an uncommonly substantial and promising anniversary season.
<p>Elliott Carter&#8217;s 20-minute Clarinet Concerto began the evening, music 2 years old from a composer who turns 90 this December; the 27-minute Secret Theater by Britain&#8217;s 64-year-old Harrison Birtwistle ended it. Both share a gritty harmonic style right at the edge of tonality. Carter&#8217;s work is, as usual, basically about itself and its power to generate abstract patterns. I try desperately to discern the &#8220;direct poetic beauty&#8221; that respected colleagues find in Carter&#8217;s music and will keep on trying; I fear, however, that we live on different planets. The Birtwistle generates dreamlike shapes, dances and processions seen and heard through shifting fog planes. In a musical vocabulary not much different from Carter&#8217;s, this work unfolds as a fantasy richly woven and involving.
<p>Both works call for some stage biz. In the Carter, soloist Simon Aldrich moved around the stage to blend his playing into various groups within the ensemble; the Birtwistle encourages most of the players to alternate in performance between standing and sitting. The drab acoustics of the museum&#8217;s Bing Theater, however, tended to equalize the sound wherever its origin.
<p>Australian Mary Finsterer&#8217;s glistening sound study Pascal&#8217;s Sphere and the Alap  Gat by Spanish-born Canadian Jose Evangelista &#8211; an attempt, not entirely happy, to translate classical music of India for Western instruments &#8211; rounded out the program: lively, provocative, performed with the evangelical intensity that is the prime ingredient of all new-music ensembles. On such occasions, even a museum comes to life.
<p>At Royce Hall, the Los Angeles Chamber Orchestra began its season with a gala benefit. You only needed the exquisitely balanced, high-spirited Marriage of Figaro Overture to recognize the level that this precious small orchestra has reached under Jeffrey Kahane&#8217;s leadership. I was, however, less taken by Kahane&#8217;s rather hard-boiled run through Beethoven&#8217;s Fourth Piano Concerto, conducted from the keyboard; I didn&#8217;t sense as much loving as this sovereign work requires. I was not at all taken by soprano Maria Jette&#8217;s pallid singing of a big Mozart aria and Barber&#8217;s Knoxville: Summer of 1915 with James Agee&#8217;s beautiful words turned to mush. There was sheer delight, however, in Ginastera&#8217;s popular and elegantly fashioned Variaciones concertantes, a work designed (or so you might think) specifically to show off the skill of a superb small orchestra before a doting audience of patrons.
<p>The Los Angeles Mozart Orchestra is not quite superb, but I have taken greater pleasure in some of its previous concerts than I found at its season&#8217;s opener at the Wilshire-Ebell last Saturday. The program was substantial to a fault: the most dramatic of Mozart&#8217;s Piano Concertos &#8211; the C minor, K. 491 &#8211; and Beethoven&#8217;s Seventh Symphony. Both works, alas, lay beyond the reach of the performers. Local former boy wonder Alan Gampel, now in his mid-30s, whose program-book bio lists impressive worldwide attainments, skittered along the surface of Mozart&#8217;s wondrous profundities; his hard-as-nails pounding in the last movement suggested an antipathy toward the work bordering on hatred. A memory lapse toward the end, clumsily managed, did not help. Conductor (or &#8220;maestra,&#8221; as the program demands) Lucinda Carver, whose career is also in orbit these days, seemed to have mistaken the momentum in the Beethoven for haste; by ignoring most of the specified repeats, she also undercut the music&#8217;s marvelous logic. The orchestra did, however, keep up with her, and first French-hornist Jon Titmus hit some incendiary high E&#8217;s that might have wakened the deaf, Beethoven himself included.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Mass&#160;Hypnosis</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/1998/10/mass-hypnosis/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/1998/10/mass-hypnosis/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 07 Oct 1998 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=218</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[At the season&#8217;s final classical concert at the Hollywood Bowl last month, Yo-Yo Ma was the marvelous soloist in John Tavener&#8217;s 48-minute The Protecting Veil, with Jeffrey Kahane and his Los Angeles Chamber Orchestra; at the end, the crowd of just under 10,000 held its silence for a full minute as the last quiet sounds [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>At the season&#8217;s final classical concert at the Hollywood Bowl last month, Yo-Yo Ma was the marvelous soloist in John Tavener&#8217;s 48-minute The Protecting Veil, with Jeffrey Kahane and his Los Angeles Chamber Orchestra; at the end, the crowd of just under 10,000 held its silence for a full minute as the last quiet sounds mingled with the cool evening air &#8211; an atmosphere describable as hypnotic. The next night, at home, I allowed myself to be hypnotized again at even greater length by the new ECM recording of Arvo Part&#8217;s Kanon Pokajanen. The two works sang the same language: Tavener&#8217;s, with a solo cello weaving its incantatory, sinuous, nonstop melody in and out of the string orchestra&#8217;s enveloping haze; Part&#8217;s, with its unaccompanied chorus spinning immensely long vocal lines of penitence and exaltation, expanding from time to time into harmonies of almost palpable lushness, then falling back into an ages-old-sounding single strand like a small light in a huge, dark room.
<p>This is what the phrase-spinners have dubbed &#8220;holy minimalism,&#8221; and the tag is not far off the mark. It has nothing to do with the archetypal minimalism of Steve Reich or Philip Glass, their throbbing, repetitive patterns oozing almost imperceptibly from one shape to the next. I hear this music as &#8220;minimal&#8221; only in the sense that so much emotional power can grow out of such modest resources. The breakthrough work, in terms of surging public acclaim, was Henryk Gorecki&#8217;s Third Symphony; it rode to the charts a few years ago via the proselytizing efforts of crossover DJs here and abroad. (The recording that put it there &#8211; David Zinman and the Baltimore Symphony on Nonesuch, with Dawn Upshaw&#8217;s angelic singing &#8211; differed markedly from two previous versions, and also from the performance Gorecki himself conducted last year at USC.)
<p>The Protecting Veil, its title derived from a millennium-old Eastern Orthodox legend about the Mother of God casting her veil to protect the Greeks from invading Saracens, is too eloquent on its own to be thought of as a ripoff of the Gorecki. Let&#8217;s just say that it rises effortlessly from the older work. Tavener&#8217;s hand &#8211; here, and in much of his considerable output &#8211; is guided by his religious involvement. I resisted the Veil on first hearings, but no longer; despite its prevailingly thin textures it demands full attention. (It seems to be getting it; Yo-Yo Ma&#8217;s new Sony Classical recording, again with Zinman/Baltimore, is already the third.) Whoever in the Bowl management decided to accompany the performance with shifting colored lights in the shell surrounding the performance &#8211; climaxing in a barfworthy hot magenta at the music&#8217;s ecstatic climax &#8211; should be brought up on charges of heresy.
<p>Kanon Pokajanen, Part&#8217;s 83-minute ecstasy, is a setting of a Greek/Russian Orthodox morning service, for unaccompanied choir; its text, teeming with accents of repentance and atonement, even at times of abject groveling, might play well these days at the White House. If you know the great works in the Part legacy &#8211; the earlier Fratres, whose harmonic pulsations come at you like the summoning of distant bells; Passio, recounting the mysteries of the Passion through a pall of darkness; the glorious, brief, sun-drenched Magnificat &#8211; you should have mastered by now the task of relaxing in the face of his music&#8217;s daunting demands. Kanon Pokajanen&#8217;s time-scale is daunting, but its sounds are gorgeous. The ongoing chanted melodic line is the unifying force; that line, at times unadorned and austere, is then bathed at other times in the blinding light of rich, lush harmonies of indescribable beauty. Now and then the basses in the chorus hold a single low note at what seems like excruciating length, an effect familiar in some of the Russian liturgical pieces by Tchaikovsky and Rachmaninoff, or in my distant memories of the singing of the old Don Cossack Choir.
<p>Some of the profound impact of the work, as heard on this new two-disc set, comes from the performance itself and the way it has been recorded. The singers are Tonu Kaljuste&#8217;s Estonian Philharmonic Chamber Choir, who sang at the Irvine Barclay Theater last year in a concert I will not soon forget. The recording was made at the Niguliste Church in Tallinn, which looks from photographs to be a fairly small, unadorned structure; the singing is enveloped in an aura of resonance that, once again, suggests distant bells. (The work was actually composed to celebrate the 750th anniversary of the huge cathedral at Cologne, where it would probably sound even more resonant but not nearly as well-defined.) I cannot, in honesty, propose this music as the latest adjunct to the easy-listening shelf. For the believers, however &#8211; in whose ranks I gladly include myself &#8211; both the music and its realization on these discs make for an extraordinary experience.
<p>The indoor concert season began not in one of our major masonry edifices, but in the intimate, welcoming space of Pasadena&#8217;s Neighborhood Church, where Vicki Ray inaugurated the fifth season of Piano Spheres with music-making no less hypnotic than any of the above. The house was full, as it deserved to be; this series &#8211; five yearly concerts by five pianists, a consortium devoted to innovation and adventure in music mostly but not entirely new &#8211; has become a resource valuable and enchanting.
<p>The program consisted of Morton Feldman&#8217;s For Bunita Marcus, 90 minutes nonstop of vintage, exquisite music oozing &#8211; slowly, and on the edge of silence &#8211; around the periphery of some nameless vastness. For this performance the video artist Clay Chaplin devised a real-time visual counterpoint, projected images and abstractions of Ray&#8217;s hands in action, moving in and out of focus, with words of John Cage from his 1959 Lecture on Something, woven through the screen images. Once again, as with the Tavener piece at the Bowl, the participatory silence around the performance became a part of it; I&#8217;ve seldom known 90 minutes to go by so quickly.
<p>The venerable Leonard Stein, whose brainchild this series was, performs at the next Piano Spheres concert on November 24, followed by Gloria Cheng-Cochran, Mark Robson and Susan Svrcek, who ends her program (on May 18, 1999) with Beethoven&#8217;s Opus 110 Sonata &#8211; that work, too, being music as deserving of the epithets &#8220;innovative&#8221; and &#8220;adventurous&#8221; as anything you&#8217;ll hear all season.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Soap and&#160;Symphony</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/1998/10/soap-and-symphony/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/1998/10/soap-and-symphony/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 07 Oct 1998 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=217</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Willem Wijnbergen can&#8217;t wait to get back into music. His job description, after all &#8211; as executive vice president and managing director of the Los Angeles Philharmonic &#8211; demands at least as much attention to musical matters as to fund-raising, community relations, labor relations, the well-being of two full-scale orchestras and the planning of new [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Willem Wijnbergen can&#8217;t wait to get back into music. His job description, after all &#8211; as executive vice president and managing director of the Los Angeles Philharmonic &#8211; demands at least as much attention to musical matters as to fund-raising, community relations, labor relations, the well-being of two full-scale orchestras and the planning of new concert halls. Since moving into his Music Center office last March, he has, by his own estimate, been able to deal with musical matters &#8211; planning programs alongside music director Esa-Pekka Salonen, checking out promising new soloists, fighting the good fight for new music &#8211; for only about 5 percent of his time.
<p>On a Sunday night last month, Wijnbergen, his wife, Noelle, 8-year-old Hector and the 7-year-old twins, Eva and Merel, are coping with some newly arrived chaos, the large boxes from Amsterdam laden with all the family&#8217;s household goods. &#8220;I am no longer a resident of Amsterdam,&#8221; boasts the just-turned-40 Papa Wijnbergen. &#8220;I am a firm believer in burning bridges.&#8221; Barefoot, in shorts and a shirt with the Polo logo, he takes time out for coffee and a good Dutch cigar, and to look down the road for distant shadows. I try to visualize the imperial Ernest Fleischmann, 29 years in the job Wijnbergen has now inherited, doing an interview barefoot and in shorts. I cannot.
<p>&#8220;I&#8217;m not ready yet for any major statements about my plans for the Philharmonic,&#8221; says Wijn(VINE)bergen, in that elegantly modulated English that Northern Europeans master so beautifully and Americans never will. &#8220;I still have to learn how people work here, and about audiences here. Just think of the Hollywood Bowl, those thousands of people listening to Beethoven and Mahler and Gershwin. I tried that once, but Dutch audiences are much too snobbish to accept that kind of informal atmosphere &#8211; even if it didn&#8217;t rain so much in the summer, which it does.&#8221;
<p>A year ago, the Philharmonic&#8217;s search committee was operating in secrecy and in some desperation, trying to find someone reckless enough to take on Fleischmann&#8217;s well-worn mantle, with its built-in hazard of Fleischmann&#8217;s magnanimous offer to stay on as &#8220;consultant.&#8221; Suddenly there was Wijnbergen, reportedly at the ardent recommendation of Esa-Pekka Salonen, and he seemed almost too good to be true.
<p>In six years as managing director of Amsterdam&#8217;s Royal Concertgebouw Orchestra, he had pulled that renowned ensemble out of financial doldrums &#8211; brought on by drastic cutbacks in government funding and a somewhat stodgy public image &#8211; and had wiped out the orchestra&#8217;s deficit two years ahead of his own target date. Not only that: His credentials include a respectable career as conductor and pianist, studies in business and arts management at Southern Methodist, and a two-year stint as brand manager at Procter  Gamble&#8217;s Rotterdam office. Soap and symphony, the market and the muse: You couldn&#8217;t patent a better design for someone to lead the Los Angeles Philharmonic into a new millennium and a new concert hall.
<p>Crossing those thresholds are, of course, his major concern. Deep down, Wijnbergen shares the widely held (but surreptitiously voiced) belief that the downtown location of the Music Center is all wrong, in ways that adding the new Disney Hall will not correct. Whatever the Chandler family&#8217;s hopes were in 1964 &#8211; for the creation of a magnetic cultural enclave comparable to New York&#8217;s Lincoln Center or London&#8217;s South Bank, surrounded by restaurants, book and music stores, small and delightful gathering places &#8211; they have not materialized; the barren Music Center is surrounded by more barrenness. It&#8217;s not very likely, however, that its buildings will anytime soon be loaded onto trucks and moved somewhere else. &#8220;What we have to concentrate on instead,&#8221; says Wijnbergen, &#8220;is to develop many kinds of venues all over the city, where we can attract diverse audiences with diverse programs. I don&#8217;t mean only concert halls, although I&#8217;d love to find some use for Ambassador Auditorium, which just sits there sad and empty. I mean churches, small theaters, outdoor settings, a network of places with the Music Center as the nucleus.
<p>&#8220;The biggest job, as I see it, is to become important to the broadest segment of the audience. We have to take a long and hard look at programming. I don&#8217;t mean that we have to turn everything upside down; there&#8217;s nothing basically wrong with playing Brahms symphonies, and audiences will be moved by this music into the 21st century and even beyond. But there are ways of making programs that are more imaginative than just doing a Brahms and following that by a Tchaikovsky. For example, we could do a series of programs built around Russian music, or baroque music, or Hispanic, and then schedule other events that would expand on those concerts, make them a more meaningful part of the audience&#8217;s experience &#8211; chamber music by the same composers on the main program, or a lecture, or a free outdoor event. If we can suggest to an audience that we take seriously the music we present week to week, perhaps we can convince the audience to take it seriously as well.&#8221;
<p>Symphony orchestras do most of their programming two or three years in advance, to fit in with the schedules of touring soloists and visiting conductors; thus, most of the Los Angeles Philharmonic&#8217;s 1998-99 season, which begins this weekend, was already set in place during the last two years of Fleischmann&#8217;s leadership. There are exceptions, of course, due to inevitable dropouts of one kind or another. This weekend&#8217;s program, for example, was to have included the second of the &#8220;Film-Harmonic&#8221; projects: short new films with scores played by the orchestra, commissioned for inclusion on the orchestra&#8217;s regular concerts. But Renny Harlin, the scheduled director, took on another assignment and had to postpone his Philharmonic stint; it was Wijnbergen, then, who had to marshal his local forces to come up with a substitute. The result: a film not new but old &#8211; Victor Seastrom&#8217;s silent classic The Wind &#8211; with music also old, chosen by Salonen from some of Jean Sibelius&#8217; windswept tone poems, with additional brainstorming by director Peter Sellars. Thus, this weekend&#8217;s concerts, which inaugurate Wijnbergen&#8217;s first season as the Philharmonic&#8217;s managing director, inaugurate his prowess as a musical planner as well.
<p>Already there are reports of other innovations on Wijnbergen&#8217;s drawing board. Upon arrival last March, he immediately waded into musical matters at the Bowl, reorganizing the management of the Hollywood Bowl Orchestra, installing himself at the head, tearing up plans for a scheduled complete performance of Puccini&#8217;s Turandot as being outside that orchestra&#8217;s rightful territory, tromping on a few toes in the process, which have since healed. Now the reports point to a considerable expansion of Bowl fare starting next summer, with increased attention to jazz and the addition of world music to the summer fare. &#8220;I had the feeling,&#8221; Wijnbergen explains, &#8220;that the Bowl needed my attention at first even more than the Philharmonic. For one thing, the Bowl programs are usually planned only a year in advance, not three. What little time I&#8217;ve had for musical programming up to now, therefore, has gone into the immediate problem of next summer at the Bowl. We need to book more conductors and more soloists, and, frankly, we haven&#8217;t always made the best choices along those lines.&#8221;
<p>Leaving Amsterdam&#8217;s orchestra, recognized as one of the world&#8217;s half-dozen greatest, to take on America&#8217;s Wild West: Does that suggest a bravery verging on the foolhardy? &#8220;What attracts me the most about coming here,&#8221; says Wijnbergen, &#8220;is the scope of the possibilities. I know this can sound like public-relations bullshit, but I mean it seriously. My biggest problem? It&#8217;s the same as nearly every orchestra manager&#8217;s biggest problem right now. It&#8217;s to renew our relevance &#8211; to the musical world, and to our own community. Three orchestras in the world can exist beyond concerns about relevance: the Berlin and Vienna Philharmonics, and the orchestra I left in Amsterdam; they are the fac<br />
t of life in their cities,<br />
like every stone monument. The rest of us face the daily need to lead the musical life of our cities, and to prove to more audiences every day why that life is important.&#8221;
<p>Willem Wijnbergen pours another cup of coffee, and looks straight ahead into the next century. &#8220;It can be done,&#8221; he says.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Sometimes, the Play Isn&#039;t the&#160;Thing</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/1998/09/sometimes-the-play-isnt-the-thing/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/1998/09/sometimes-the-play-isnt-the-thing/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 30 Sep 1998 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=216</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Andre Previn&#8217;s score is bland and derivative; Philip Littell&#8217;s libretto reduces the play to a skeleton; Colin Graham&#8217;s staging is busy and hectic. Still, a fair portion of the blame for the failure of the San Francisco Opera&#8217;s A Streetcar Named Desire, whose premiere on September 19 was ushered in with hoopla of Richter-scale proportions [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Andre Previn&#8217;s score is bland and derivative; Philip Littell&#8217;s libretto reduces the play to a skeleton; Colin Graham&#8217;s staging is busy and hectic. Still, a fair portion of the blame for the failure of the San Francisco Opera&#8217;s A Streetcar Named Desire, whose premiere on September 19 was ushered in with hoopla of Richter-scale proportions &#8211; and cheered lustily by a gala audience obviously needing to justify having shelled out $1,500 for the top ticket &#8211; lies not with the above, but with the company&#8217;s general director, Lotfi Mansouri, who has proclaimed, as a litany published worldwide in press interviews, that an operatic Streetcar has been his dream for nearly 20 years. That&#8217;s a long time to be as deluded as Mansouri has been on this particular matter.
<p>What anyone hears when under the spell of this extraordinary play is music itself, not virtual but real. Not only is Tennessee Williams&#8217; 1947 tragedy an intense, lyrical unfolding, with full-scale verbal arias and ensembles for characters both major and minor (the &#8220;flores para los muertos&#8221; woman, for example, with her brief walk-through like a Wagnerian annunciation), but Williams&#8217; published text specifies an almost nonstop undercurrent of offstage music, later expanded upon but not desecrated by Alex North&#8217;s score for the 1951 movie version. To impose upon this rich, overpowering design a layer of overt operatic transmogrification &#8211; even if the Previn/Littell creation were any good, which it isn&#8217;t &#8211; becomes at the very least an exercise in redundancy. According to Mansouri, he had previously dangled the Streetcar project before Leonard Bernstein and Stephen Sondheim, who turned him down; no fools they.
<p>Hobbled by the Williams estate&#8217;s insistence that he add no words of his own to the original text, Littell&#8217;s contribution is mostly an act of jettisoning large chunks of that text, drastically reducing the play without the chance to add any kind of &#8220;operatic&#8221; enhancement &#8211; an ensemble for Stanley&#8217;s pals, perhaps, or an extended love/hate duet for Stanley and Stella to explore their steamy relationship. Blanche&#8217;s several extended speeches, which in the play hover at the edge of music, make the easy transition into full-scale arias. These moments, too, form the least-worst of Previn&#8217;s ambitious &#8211; and ultimately overreaching &#8211; musical setting: from a jagged, frazzled recitation as Blanche recounts the deaths of the folks back at Belle Reve and the loss of the property itself, to a serene folk song as she envisions, her mind unhinged but now at peace, her last days on her imaginary lover&#8217;s phantom yacht.
<p>As Los Angeles concertgoers remember all too well, Previn has built an up-and-down reputation dealing with other people&#8217;s music on orchestral podiums, and it shows here; his score veers widely among current and recent musical styles, from an attempt at blues to honor the play&#8217;s New Orleans setting (in the sanitized pseudo-jazz style familiar from some of his recent recordings) to the surge of Benjamin Britten&#8217;s ocean via a bit of Mahler at his most purple. What is most fatally lacking, however, is a musical point of view to shine any kind of light on the greatness of Williams&#8217; play &#8211; and, thus, to justify this misguided effort to drag it into the alien atmosphere of overstuffed, overpriced grand opera. Previn himself conducted the first four performances; on opening night he and the orchestra were not yet eye-to-eye. Same old Andre.
<p>On Michael Yeargan&#8217;s generic New Orleans set, Colin Graham, a practiced hand at putting over problematic new operas, creates a generic operatic busyness to match the generic undefinedness of Previn&#8217;s score. Thomas J. Munn&#8217;s projections serve as pictorial supertitles. Blanche sings of Stanley as a throwback to the age of the apes, and, by golly, the stage is engulfed in jungle foliage.
<p>As Blanche I heard the fast-rising Renee Fleming, who by current estimate can do no wrong; the strain that came across in her performance, however, was not that of a bygone belle coping with decay, but of a greatly admired soprano coping with tragic accents the music would not let her feel. Rodney Gilfry was similarly cast adrift by the facelessness of his music; in a role eternally overshadowed by the image of its first interpreter, his Stanley did, at least, make a praiseworthy stab at not being Brando. Anthony Dean Griffey&#8217;s lumbering Mitch and Elizabeth Futral&#8217;s rather chirpy Stella were as okay as the music demands. The opera runs through October 11, with several cast changes.
<p>Streetcar has already been booked into the San Diego Opera in 2000; Opera Pacific is reportedly nibbling. Operatic honchos from several other companies, including Los Angeles and Chicago, looked in at San Francisco last week, along with a 140-member corps of the international musical press. The world hungers for the Great American Opera; the mistake was in trying to extract it from the Great American Play.
<p>Across Grove Street, the torrid love affair between Michael Tilson Thomas and his adopted city continues apace, with the much-made-over Davies Symphony Hall serving as nuptial bed. At last week&#8217;s concert you could, in fact, have made an interesting case for the striking resemblance between the hall and MTT himself: the one festooned with acoustical chachkas (a virtual forest of suspended clear-plastic panels that go up and down, more reflecting panels on the sides and on the stage itself), the other in a reading of Mahler&#8217;s First Symphony similarly encumbered (interpretive quirks, minor moments overemphasized, subtle contrasts brutalized). The sound in the hall is impressively loud and in-your-face, and those, too, are the words for the San Francisco Symphony&#8217;s much adored conductor, widely if not universally acclaimed as the right guy in the right place.
<p>Credit where due: Tilson Thomas has led his orchestra on some interesting and important excursions into areas where few others care to venture. His program two weeks ago also included three American works. One was a rightly admired classic, Samuel Barber&#8217;s Knoxville: Summer of 1915, with James Agee&#8217;s words beautifully sung by Heidi Grant Murphy as a last-minute substitute for Sylvia McNair. The others were novelties very much worthwhile: Charles Ives&#8217; amazing From the Steeples and the Mountains, a venture into dissonance and clangor scored for nothing but brass and bells, and Henry Cowell&#8217;s Music 1957, an extended work for huge orchestra (including anvils and tom-toms), an extraordinary if at times exasperating interweaving of great tangles of complex rhythms with folksy tunes of almost embarrassing innocence.
<p>Cowell grew up in the Bay Area, antagonized his first audiences there while still in his teens, served time in San Quentin on a trumped-up perversion charge that today would probably get him elected mayor, and &#8211; even when later living in New York &#8211; composed music as innately Californian as any resident or visitor before his time or since. Since taking on the San Francisco post, Tilson Thomas has labored nobly to restore the Cowell legacy, which is copious and uneven; among his many other good deeds, this alone would be enough to assure his ticket to heaven.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>The $135&#160;Question</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/1998/09/the-135-question/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/1998/09/the-135-question/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 16 Sep 1998 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=215</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Two French operas back to back: mon dieu! Does this spell the end of the Puccini hegemony at the L.A. Opera? Not quite, I fear; despite a substantial sop to kick off the company&#8217;s 13th season &#8211; and the ominous rumblings of a threatened Samson et Dalila not far down the road &#8211; there is [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Two French operas back to back: mon dieu! Does this spell the end of the Puccini hegemony at the L.A. Opera? Not quite, I fear; despite a substantial sop to kick off the company&#8217;s 13th season &#8211; and the ominous rumblings of a threatened Samson et Dalila not far down the road &#8211; there is some ground to cover before the considerable and precious French repertory can assume a rightful place against the murky torrent of Butterflys and Toscas at the Music Center.
<p>One forward step would be to deal with the best-known work in that repertory in a manner mindful of its stature. Last week&#8217;s Carmen was the company&#8217;s second stab, but no step forward. The 1992 production, staged by Nuria Espert &#8211; with the promising (and, since then, acclaimed) Denyce Graves in the title role &#8211; was all high-concept revisionism, starting off with a death dance for Carmen during the overture. The new staging, by Ann-Margret Pettersson, is a Carmen by the book, but the book itself shows its tatters. Both productions dropped the spoken dialogue of Bizet&#8217;s superior original score in favor of the sung recitatives by Ernest Guiraud inserted after Bizet&#8217;s death that slow and muddy the pace and undermine the drama at the opera&#8217;s climactic moments. Customary and wise practice these days is to revert to Bizet&#8217;s pristine plan, which has been newly edited and published. The Los Angeles Opera apparently sees Carmen as a museum piece and last week performed it as such.
<p>Jennifer Larmore&#8217;s Carmen has been eagerly anticipated, and I still have hopes. Lovely of voice and of stage bearing, she is currently by just those attributes a failed Carmen, gorgeously engraved in the wrong colors. She lets you know, in the most exquisite, ladylike terms, that she would no more let loose with a dusky chest tone or a seductive portamento than sing the role in chain mail. This was her first stage Carmen, after last year&#8217;s concert performance at the Hollywood Bowl; she may grow into the role. Considering the marvels in her Handel/Rossini bel canto performances, I almost wish she wouldn&#8217;t, but Carmen, of course, is where the money lies.
<p>Placido Domingo was the Don Jose in 1992, and sang it again last week, only slightly the worse for wear. He sings the role not as Jose but as Domingo, which, I guess, is what some people want for their $135 top ticket. Never mind, then, Domingo&#8217;s unequal struggle with Bizet&#8217;s prescribed pianissimo ending to the &#8220;Flower Song&#8221; in Act 2. Never mind, also, that the spectacle of the, let&#8217;s say, portly Domingo coping with a ladder on Lennart Mork&#8217;s two-level set &#8211; on his way to murder his sweetie in what is supposed to look like a jealous rage &#8211; is not one of opera&#8217;s more endearing sights. Some day the company may unearth a Don Jose possessed of a pianissimo B flat and the looks to suggest a nice mama&#8217;s boy love-smitten and driven to murder; meanwhile, there&#8217;s Domingo. Local boy Richard Bernstein&#8217;s rafter-rattling Escamillo was just fine; Carla Maria Izzo&#8217;s wan, edgy-voiced Micaela, in something surely not French, somewhat less so. (She was well-along pregnant, which is a legitimate excuse for her vocal problems, but not for a company asking $135 for this level of work.)
<p>There was nothing wrong (or radiantly right) with Bertrand de Billy&#8217;s well-routined conducting, except for his acquiescence to using the wrong score. Pettersson&#8217;s staging consisted of people, people, people, clutter, clutter, clutter. The cigarette girls in the Act 1 chorus looked as if holding their cigs for the first time ever. The Act 2 set, a name-the-picture rip-off of Sargent&#8217;s El Jaleo, stole the show.
<p>The next night there was Werther, the company&#8217;s long-overdue first dip into the mauve-and-lavender Massenet legacy and, in its modest way, a thoroughly respectable piece of work. In an attempt to drive copyeditors off their rockers, the performance enlists the services of the conductor Emmanuel Joel and the director Nicolas Joel; they are half brothers, but only Nicolas spells his name with the dieresis. Both they and the production itself are from the opera house at Toulouse, which, from this evidence, must be a fine place to visit. The simple, generic sets by Hubert Monloup look as if they could serve a company&#8217;s entire repertory; anything more elaborate, however, would probably clash with this opera&#8217;s modest proportions.
<p>Nothing much happens in Werther, and it does so very prettily. Massenet&#8217;s melancholy vapors form a fragrant fog around Johann Goethe&#8217;s 1774 archetypal romantic weeper, which in its time lured generations of adolescents into suicidal frames of mind. The tenor in the title role learns in Act 1 that his beloved Charlotte is otherwise betrothed and wails, wails a little more in the next two acts, and, to nobody&#8217;s surprise, shoots himself at the end and expires in Charlotte&#8217;s arms as she, also unsurprisingly, confesses that she has loved him all along. Even the couple of hit arias along the way are patchwork affairs compared, say, to Carmen&#8217;s outpourings or, for that matter, the tunes in Massenet&#8217;s better-known Manon. The characters here are not bullfighters or philanderers but well-off provincials; in today&#8217;s world they would own lava lamps and dine at Benihana. Massenet&#8217;s bourgeois music captures their essence.
<p>Excellent as it is in most respects, this first-ever venture by local forces into the dolorous languors of Massenet makes friends slowly; the opening-night crowd thinned noticeably after intermission. Compared to the one-two punches delivered by Carmen the night before, Werther moves at a placid pace. Even so, the beauties in the score are deep and genuine; at the Music Center they are nicely probed. The L.A. Opera has peopled its stage with a mostly young cast welded into a fine-tuned musical and dramatic ensemble: maybe not $135 worth of all-star talent or spectacular scenery, but at least that much worth of lyric intelligence. The Charlotte, Paula Rasmussen, is one of the company&#8217;s homegrown stars, an intelligent and handsome young singer who began in small roles and now has an international career. The Werther, Mexican tenor Ramon Vargas, has exactly the light-textured, sleek vocal manner to mirror the monotone sadness of his music &#8211; and to steer the attention away from his somewhat clunky stage presence. Reminiscences of Italy&#8217;s Tito Schipa would not be out of place.
<p>The Joel/Joel contingent does itself proud. Director Nicolas moves his cast with no false moves. Conductor Emmanuel draws from the local orchestral forces the properly gossamer, wispy sounds, Chanel No. 5 made audible. It&#8217;s all very, very French and, as they say over there, splendide.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Darkness&#160;Revisited</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/1998/09/darkness-revisited/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/1998/09/darkness-revisited/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 02 Sep 1998 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=214</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[America was still savoring the triumph of the first moon landing, that summer of 1969, when the terrible thing happened at Chappaquiddick and the air darkened perceptibly. Soon after, the garish glory of Woodstock confirmed the fall of the curtain, the death of national innocence that made Vietnam and Watergate seem, if not inevitable, at [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>America was still savoring the triumph of the first moon landing, that summer of 1969, when the terrible thing happened at Chappaquiddick and the air darkened perceptibly. Soon after, the garish glory of Woodstock confirmed the fall of the curtain, the death of national innocence that made Vietnam and Watergate seem, if not inevitable, at least horribly explicable.
<p>Nearly a quarter-century later, Joyce Carol Oates produced her violent and harrowing short novel called Black Water, recounting the hours from the meeting of Senator
<p>Edward Kennedy and Mary Jo Kopechne to her drowning death in the Chappaquiddick Inlet in Kennedy&#8217;s car, its characters renamed &#8211; she is now &#8220;Kelly Kelleher&#8221; &#8211; but not otherwise disguised, its locale moved northward from Martha&#8217;s Vineyard to an island off the Maine coast. Out of the tragedy Oates fashioned a kind of ballad, much of it as the doomed heroine&#8217;s imagined last thoughts, trapped helpless in the submerged, overturned car, with its litany &#8211; &#8220;the black water filled her lungs, and she died&#8221; &#8211; repeated with agonizing insistence like a steady, maddening drumbeat.
<p>Now Oates and the composer John Duffy have turned Black Water into a chamber opera for relatively modest resources &#8211; 10 solo singers, piano, violin, cello &#8211; first produced a year ago at Philadelphia&#8217;s American Music Theater Festival, repeated with the same principals a few weeks ago at the Skirball Cultural Center, taped at that time by L.A. Theater Works for broadcast on KCRW-FM this Sunday, September 6, from 6 to 8 p.m., not to be missed. (Yes, I know it conflicts with Jane Eaglen&#8217;s concert at the Hollywood Bowl, but there are such things as tape recorders. It runs just under two hours.)
<p>For her libretto Oates has uncoiled her convoluted original text to form an ongoing narrative, fleshing out characters only lightly touched upon in the novel, artfully creating the milieu &#8211; chitchat at a Fourth of July party with its tangle of mouthed political and social gobbledygook, the central pairing gradually looming as if from a great distance. Duffy, a distinguished and prolific elder musical statesman whose good deeds include heading the support organization Meet the Composer, has caught the resonance of Oates&#8217; storyline &#8211; the vicious sarcasm as &#8220;The Senator&#8221; enchants the crowd with honeyed double talk, the not-quite-pure innocence of &#8220;Kelly&#8221;&#8216;s &#8220;American girl-ness,&#8221; the cliche-studded idealism of her tossed-aside boyfriend. This is brilliant musical theater, in a tense, angular style Stephen Sondheim might not disown, remarkable for its resourceful identification of character even in the cleverly intertwined ensembles. That latter quality in particular makes it work as a radio opera (which I heard again last week on tape) almost as well as it did with the live cast at Skirball, unstaged but mobile. That cast &#8211; Karen Burlingame as &#8220;Kelly,&#8221; Patrick Mason as &#8220;The Senator,&#8221; David Lee Brewer as the boyfriend, with Alan Johnson&#8217;s musical direction from the piano &#8211; labored as if in the service of a small but authentic masterpiece, an opinion I will not dispute.
<p>Acis and Galatea became, therefore, the second opera produced unstaged in Sepulveda Pass this summer. Michael Eagan&#8217;s Musica Angelica ensemble, which had presented the first of the Getty Center&#8217;s &#8220;Ancient Echoes&#8221; concert series tied to the museum&#8217;s antiquities exhibition, returned to close out the series with Handel&#8217;s giddy and wondrously charming pastoral piece, delightful in all respects, ecstatically greeted by a capacity crowd. The series has been uncommonly interesting and, aside from miscalculations inevitable in this kind of project the first time out, successful. The worst miscalculation was the inclusion of a dance program, in a space where the flat audience area and the too-low stage made the dancers invisible from the waist down to all but the front couple of rows.
<p>Acis is famous and often staged for several wrong reasons; smalltime music societies have a ball with the silliness of lovers serenading one another with roulades of &#8220;happy, happy&#8221; and the like. Eagan&#8217;s splendid group, sparked by Jennifer Ellis&#8217; wise and delectable Galatea, brought out strengths in the work that had escaped me in lesser performances: above all the rich, solemn beauty in the choruses, and the recent-immigrant Handel&#8217;s remarkable skill in setting the English language. It&#8217;s hard to believe that so profoundly good a production as this was put together for this one weekend at the Getty; it should be mounted on wheels and sent out to raise the level of civilization the world over.
<p>Questions I raised last week concerning the quality of the music making at the Hollywood Bowl do not, of course, apply in the matter of visiting orchestras; one can assume that they arrive with their programs already extensively rehearsed. I liked the sense of assurance around the Budapest Festival Orchestra&#8217;s performances &#8211; five programs over six days &#8211; last week. The orchestra has only existed full time since 1992, but this was already its second stint at the Bowl. Its membership, too, looks predominantly young. Its co-founder and conductor, Ivan Fischer &#8211; whose older brother, Adam, made a so-so Philharmonic debut at the Music Center last January &#8211; has appeared here off and on since 1983.
<p>The Budapest week began impressively, with a concert of Beethoven Threes: Third Leonora Overture, Third Piano Concerto, &#8220;Eroica&#8221; Symphony. That overture is always a knock-&#8217;em-dead item at the Bowl, with its offstage trumpeter sounding the message of salvation from high atop one of the lighting towers. Fischer and his players dispatched the entire work, in fact, with a fine mix of impulse and detail. This is music popular but not easy; midway there come page after page of steady eighth-note chug-along that in lesser hands can be made to sound like routine Philip Glass. This time there was drama, a steady buildup of tension that the trumpet calls really did resolve, and then a glorious swoosh onto the bone-jarring final dissonance. At times like this, music you think you know backward and forward comes on like a welcome stranger. The &#8220;Eroica&#8221; performance &#8211; spacious but never laggardly, filling nearly an hour even without the repeats, splendidly detailed especially in the way the wind playing came somewhat forward &#8211; produced some of the same feeling. Something about the sound of the performance, the depth and dark luster of the orchestral tone, took on an Old World eloquence different from the gleaming, tense clarity of our local orchestra, and no less cherishable.
<p>Veteran pianist Peter Frankl accomplished something similar in the Third Concerto, in a reading broad and rhetorical, beautifully controlled, especially responsive to the slow movement&#8217;s sublime meditations. This music, Beethoven&#8217;s first truly &#8220;serious&#8221; concerto, is often beset by tinkly performances from young fingers; a run-through of the same work by Seung-Un Ha earlier this summer (at one of the Bowl&#8217;s fireworks nights) was a case in point. I can only hope that among last week&#8217;s nearly 6,000 Bowl attendees there were a few young pianists (or pianists of any age) receptive to the evening&#8217;s message.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>The&#160;Bowl:</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/1998/08/the-bowl/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/1998/08/the-bowl/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 26 Aug 1998 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=213</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Against the taunts of the nonbelievers, I cling to the premise that a night at the Hollywood Bowl, even for the Tuesday/Thursday &#8220;serious&#8221; programs, can be a joyous, even uplifting, event. Some nights this summer, however, I&#8217;ve had to cling more tightly than usual, although the last two weeks&#8217; concerts, with Esa-Pekka Salonen back on [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Against the taunts of the nonbelievers, I cling to the premise that a night at the Hollywood Bowl, even for the Tuesday/Thursday &#8220;serious&#8221; programs, can be a joyous, even uplifting, event. Some nights this summer, however, I&#8217;ve had to cling more tightly than usual, although the last two weeks&#8217; concerts, with Esa-Pekka Salonen back on his rightful podium, outweighed some of the sadder memories.
<p>Attendance for the classical events has been down this summer. Any impresario would, of course, be happy if four or five thousand people showed up for a regular-season concert; yet scattered through the nearly 18,000 seats at the Bowl, a crowd that size looks like the population of an Inuit outpost. I find it harder than usual, this time, to castigate the stay-aways. The Bowl&#8217;s classical offerings are studded with masterpieces: Beethoven symphonies, Romantic symphonies and showoff concertos, not a note of Haydn or Schubert but lots of Brahms, a welcome year off for Tchaikovsky symphonies but a fair helping of Shostakovich, a big- or medium-name soloist every night. But each of these programs gets a single day&#8217;s rehearsal, under conductors sometimes previously unknown to the orchestra. Top-ranking conductors &#8211; Simon Rattle last summer, Roger Norrington last month &#8211; are allotted (and deserve) extra rehearsal time, and the results show. And they show, as well, when Salonen takes the podium and hasn&#8217;t had to waste half a rehearsal just getting acquainted.
<p>On any night, the idea of putting together a picnic supper and washing it down with live professional performances of symphonies and concertos is mighty appealing; the Bowl deserves its worldwide fame. (The new managing director, Willem Wijnbergen, has already confessed to an amorous passion for the Bowl, even for the august Philharmonic playing backgrounds for Bugs Bunny cartoons, as happened one night. You could never make this work in stodgy Holland, he assures me.) The sound in the boxes, where the pampered press is seated, is acceptably clean for outdoor amplification, although the mix of live and wired tends to fade in and out. In the first rows behind the boxes, where I sat a few nights ago, the sound was pure electronic, and even better. But the commodity being amplified &#8211; underrehearsed performances, led by conductors whose occasionally inadequate readings can be laid as much to circumstances as to failed musicianship &#8211; has struck me on many occasions as the Bowl&#8217;s major continuing problem. Anyone troubled &#8211; as I was &#8211; by Jeffrey Tate&#8217;s laggardly reading of Elgar&#8217;s Enigma Variations, by Stefan Sanderling&#8217;s slog through Mendelssohn&#8217;s &#8220;Scottish&#8221; Symphony or by Lawrence Foster&#8217;s merely dutiful Beethoven, redeemed only by the fireworks, might have difficulty in fixing the blame.
<p>There&#8217;s no easy solution. It&#8217;s not a matter of hiring better conductors; I&#8217;ve heard superior performances from the three named above, properly rehearsed. Maybe it&#8217;s a matter of hiring fewer conductors for longer stints: two weeks to get acquainted with the orchestra, rather than one. (Aside from Salonen, it&#8217;s the soloists rather than the conductors who usually sell tickets at the Bowl.) Cutting back on the classical series is, of course, an unconscionable option, although this year&#8217;s small turnouts must be causing concern in some quarters. Again, if a conductor were here for two weeks instead of one, there might be more opportunity to promote his or her appearance &#8211; granted, of course, an increase in enlightenment in the local media. But what can I, humble handservant of the arts that I am, know of such matters?
<p>Salonen&#8217;s four Bowl programs were dress rehearsals for the Philharmonic&#8217;s European jaunt now under way. (Lucky Europe is, however, being spared the Sibelius Violin Concerto, mushed through by Joshua Bell and Salonen on the third program.) Two extraordinary vocal performances, by singers a generation apart, lit up the skies. On the first program, Gundula Janowitz, a week past her 61st birthday, sang five slow Richard Strauss songs (with the piano parts acceptably orchestrated) with the same youthful urgency and sweetness of both tone and phrase that had enslaved us all with her Sieglinde at the Met (and on discs) in 1967. Lorraine Hunt&#8217;s transfiguration of Mahler&#8217;s Songs of a Wayfarer on the last program hung in the summer sky like an apparition from some benevolent planet. What an amazing, wondrously wise, seductive artist she has become in the few years of her incandescent career!
<p>And so Salonen and his Philharmonic take to Europe some of its own music: Strauss, Mahler, Bruckner &#8211; the Fourth Symphony, which he conducts cleanly and sturdily, but which still seems to get longer every year &#8211; and his rough-and-ready sprint through the Beethoven Fifth. Better yet, they take some of our own music: the glorious romp of John Adams&#8217; Slonimsky&#8217;s Earbox, with its writhing, steaming tangle of the many scale-forms that the great, late Nicolas explored and codified, and Aaron Copland&#8217;s archetypal world-music exploration, El Salon Mexico &#8211; whose execution the other night, alas, lacked some of the down-and-dirty that the much-missed Lenny had so gleefully supplied.
<p>Best of all, Salonen is taking his own latter-day triumph, his 20-minute LA Variations, a work that, many hearings after its memorable premiere, continues to assure me that serious, deeply considered and imaginatively crafted music for large symphony orchestra can still be written and can still exhilarate. It may, in fact, be the most challenging music ever performed outdoors anywhere: a stupendous workout for both players and listeners as a complex, tortuous theme spirals through the orchestra, tries on a wondrous variety of disguises, weathers storms along the way and ends enchantingly as a shaft of audible white light (a single high note on the piccolo). Perhaps the reception at the Bowl fell short of the memorable ovation at the premiere at the Music Center a year ago last January, but not by much; a small but happy, responsive crowd proved itself equal to the challenge. So, even, did the demons of air traffic. It was one of the Bowl&#8217;s great events.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Friends to&#160;Franz</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/1998/08/friends-to-franz/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/1998/08/friends-to-franz/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 19 Aug 1998 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=212</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Somebody had the good idea to initiate a series of Sunday-morning chamber concerts at the idyllic John Anson Ford Amphitheater. It&#8217;s the right time of the day, and of the week, to let our ears be wooed by the subtle and loving tones of this kind of music. Management provides an overhead canopy &#8211; two [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Somebody had the good idea to initiate a series of Sunday-morning chamber concerts at the idyllic John Anson Ford Amphitheater. It&#8217;s the right time of the day, and of the week, to let our ears be wooed by the subtle and loving tones of this kind of music. Management provides an overhead canopy &#8211; two huge parachutes, actually &#8211; to mitigate the sun&#8217;s rays. There&#8217;s a buffet brunch, a little pricey if truth be known and a little hard to manage in the absence of trays, but I&#8217;ve known worse. Somebody also had the far-less-good idea, however, to amplify the music; the two opening works at last week&#8217;s concert &#8211; trios by Haydn and Dvorak played by pianist Christopher O&#8217;Riley, violinist Andrew Dawes and cellist Paul Katz &#8211; were sent thundering through the ravine with all the power of the Rolling Stones, with the cello drowning out everything else. Fortunately, the air at intermission was full of complaint, and it reached the proper authorities. Schubert&#8217;s E-flat Trio, the final work, was wafted crowdward at something closer to its proper volume. Chalk up a rare but resounding victory for audience activism. One concert remains, on September 6.
<p>That Schubert trio &#8211; one of his few large-scale works that became known and admired during his lifetime &#8211; rolls on for nearly an hour. It can&#8217;t be hurried; the players last Sunday got that right. Given the heat of the day, they were wise to forgo the repeats in the first and last movements; otherwise we might still be there (but happily so). No music I care to discuss makes greater demands on its listeners&#8217; patience, or rewards it so handsomely. The other works on Sunday morning&#8217;s program &#8211; the famous Haydn trio that includes the &#8220;Gypsy&#8221; Rondo and Dvorak&#8217;s less-known F-minor Trio with its gorgeous slow movement &#8211; were models of concision next to the Schubert, but it was the latter score that seemed to flow out of the sylvan surroundings that make the Ford such a precious place for music.
<p>Schubert composed his two big piano trios almost simultaneously &#8211; in late 1827, less than a year before his death &#8211; and yet the two are remarkably dissimilar: the B-flat with its honeyed endearments, the E-flat with its astonishing shifts from giggles
<p>to grandeur. Only the Beethoven &#8220;Archduke,&#8221; among works in this medium, looms taller; Schubert must have learned from that work how great a range of emotion, how many dramatic shifts and surprises, could be wrung from just three instruments. Its range of trickery &#8211; above all, its way of affecting an air of utmost innocence as it flops arrogantly from one clearly established key to some distant harmonic region half a planet away &#8211; remains astonishing after 170 years. Schubert&#8217;s last months, as we are often told, produced a legacy of large works &#8211; three piano sonatas, the C-major String Quintet, the Mass in E flat, the F-minor Fantasy and the tantalizing outlines of a symphony that seems to peer far into music&#8217;s future (expertly filled in by Brian Newbould and recorded as &#8220;Symphony No. 10&#8243;) &#8211; whose greatness and variety constantly baffle and delight. Every one of these works, furthermore, is totally different from its contemporaries; it would be impossible to predict the style and shape of, say, any one of those piano sonatas from any other in the set.
<p>The E-flat Trio, for example, is the only one of these works that experiments with the notion of unifying a work of several finite movements by quoting material from one movement in the next. Composers after Schubert did this all the time, proclaiming that the Romantic ideal in music favored unity over variety. Robert Schumann, who anointed himself the avatar of Romanticism, used this Schubert trio as a template for one of his own large-scale works, the E-flat Piano Quintet.
<p>These are good times for Schubert. The 1998-99 brochure for MaryAnn Bonino&#8217;s &#8220;Historic Sites&#8221; series of chamber concerts is at hand, promising both this E-flat Trio and another vast, late Schubert work full of amazing inventions &#8211; the G-major String Quartet &#8211; in a setting, the Doheny Mansion rotunda, that could have been designed with that kind of music in mind. Meanwhile, some recent discs encourage hopes that we may once again be in a golden age of lieder singing.
<p>Hyperion&#8217;s Schubert Edition, a complete sweep through the songs &#8211; including works for vocal ensemble, part songs, and also including alternative versions and some repertory duplications justified in context &#8211; has attained its 30th volume. The discs come with fat booklets full of analytical information about the songs themselves and general essays on aspects of Schubert&#8217;s life and style, all the labor (of love, obviously) of Graham Johnson, who is also the pianist throughout. It&#8217;s a project, in other words, based on the premise that there are still people out there willing to allot full attention to great music, and who can be made interested in what they&#8217;re hearing beyond the notes themselves. That, I fear, may be a dangerous premise these days, but it&#8217;s also the one that keeps me going.
<p>Disc No. 25, released earlier this year, contains Ian Bostridge&#8217;s heartbreaking singing of the cycle Die schone Mullerin: music and musician, you&#8217;d swear, fashioned from the same bolt of lightning. Bostridge&#8217;s career only took wing four years ago; his voice is, above all, flexible &#8211; the sound of an oboe, the soul of a clarinet. It wraps itself around a melody and disappears into it, and we are left with an essence, of an artistry overpowering yet invisible. As the ultimate seal of heavenly approval, the disc also includes Dietrich Fischer-Dieskau, about whose singing 40 years ago I might have written some of those words. Now he appears as speaker, reading some of the Wilhelm Muller poems that Schubert did not include in his cycle.
<p>On disc No. 30, Matthias Goerne sings Schubert&#8217;s other cycle, Die Winterreise, with the soul of a clarinet in the roar of a volcano. Goerne was here last season, in an evening of chilling Hanns Eisler songs (which he has now recorded for London). His Schubert is also chilling, in a manner different from that of Bostridge. As the latter draws the tragedy of the young miller tight around him, Goerne&#8217;s forsaken lover engulfs us in the larger-than-life enormity of his tragedy. I would not abandon my Aksel Schiotz Schone Mullerin or my Hans Hotter Winterreise or my 5-foot shelf of Fischer-Dieskau&#8217;s Schubert; yet both these new discs, and the singers who made them, seem to me essential.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>It&#039;s All&#160;Greek</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/1998/08/its-all-greek/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/1998/08/its-all-greek/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 12 Aug 1998 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=211</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[The ethics of full disclosure oblige me to reveal up front that I wrote the program notes for one of the concerts reviewed in this space. The fee I received, every penny, went for a root canal. If that doesn&#8217;t count as expiation, I&#8217;d like to know what does. At the J. Paul Getty Museum, [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>The ethics of full disclosure oblige me to reveal up front that I wrote the program notes for one of the concerts reviewed in this space. The fee I received, every penny, went for a root canal. If that doesn&#8217;t count as expiation, I&#8217;d like to know what does.
<p>At the J. Paul Getty Museum, an exhibit called Beyond Beauty: Antiquities as Evidence presents some of the museum&#8217;s sculptural holdings in a nicely arranged gallery liberally festooned with informational placards. What the &#8220;evidence&#8221; is supposed to substantiate I&#8217;m not quite sure; the language of museumese can make even the most high-flying writing about music read like the Yellow Pages. But the artworks are beautiful enough, whatever beauty may lie beyond.
<p>As an adjunct to the exhibit, the Getty has put together a series of musical events with its own highfalutin title: Ancient Echoes: Music and Dance Evoking Greco-Roman Antiquity, six programs on Saturday and Sunday nights in the Museum Courtyard &#8211; three down so far and three to go. The Pasadena Symphony&#8217;s Jorge Mester is the series&#8217; artistic director; his programming becomes, indeed, an enterprising exploration into the ways musicians &#8211; from Renaissance times to our own &#8211; have fancied themselves driven by the highest ideals of ancient classicism. &#8220;The only way to become great,&#8221; wrote Johann Winckelmann in his book on classical art, a 1765 best-seller, &#8220;. . . is to imitate the Greeks.&#8221;
<p>There&#8217;s a historical thread that runs through music as far back as you care to trace it, a constant desire for composers to reconfirm their tickets to Heaven by identifying with ancestral personages from other arts, specifically with the designers of the Parthenon and their world. Music attains a certain level of high sophistication and complexity; then a crowd of composer-activists comes along to deplore all this high artistry. &#8220;Music has lost its human values,&#8221; they proclaim. &#8220;Let&#8217;s dump all this counterpoint and return to the pure ideals of the Greek masters.&#8221; Thus ranted the dilettantes of the Florentine Camerata around 1600, distancing themselves from the intricacies of Palestrina&#8217;s polyphony and inventing opera. Thus, 150 years later, spoke Christoph Gluck, proclaiming that opera had now become too encrusted with complexity, offering his Greek-inspired Alceste and Orfeo ed Euridice as correctives. In our own century, Igor Stravinsky, having turned the musical world upside down with his Rite of Spring, then reinvented classicism (or invented Neo-Classicism, either way) with his Apollon Musagete. Later on the nut-genius Harry Partch proclaimed that all music had been following the wrong path since Pericles&#8217; time, and devised scales and instruments to enable a whole fresh start.
<p>It may be worth noting &#8211; or worth nothing &#8211; that the one substance that might have facilitated these invocations of the Periclean ideal virtually doesn&#8217;t exist. There are volumes of ancient theoretical writings about Greek music, and a great deal of ethical writing as well. Both Plato and Aristotle defined the place of music in society, and even specified the kinds of harmony that bred bravery in the hearer and the kinds that bred cowardice. Friezes, statues and decorated vases provide a lavish visual display of instruments. Practically speaking, however, there is no music: perhaps 50 fragments surviving from an eight-century span (500 B.C.-300 A.D.), some not more than a measure or two, that may or may not denote a specific melodic or rhythmic pattern. At last week&#8217;s Getty concert, third in the series, Philip and Gayle Stuwe Neuman, a young Oregon couple who call themselves Ensemble De Organographia, performed their own creditable reconstructions of some of these fragments, on &#8220;authentic&#8221; instruments they themselves built from old designs. The results, though pretty in a singsong sort of way that occasionally reminded me of some of the dumb-dumb tunes in Carl Orff&#8217;s Carmina Burana, is hardly the stuff of the great art forms that might have served as role models for composers centuries later.
<p>In the Getty courtyard &#8211; a setting of some bleakness, more like an oil company&#8217;s corporate campus than a concert venue, under cool breezes that seek to sweep some of the sound out into Sepulveda Pass &#8211; Apollo and Dionysus wage their interesting battles; Winckelmann&#8217;s notion of &#8220;imitating the Greeks&#8221; can take many forms. The first program put forward a generous gathering of vocal works of Florence and Venice from around 1600, music stunning in its emotional intensity, directly influenced by the proclamations of the Camerata that had called for a new manner of composition in which melody and harmony were to join to underscore the passions of the text. Under Michael Eagan&#8217;s splendid direction, with vintage-instrument performers from his Musica Angelica ensemble (none the worse after their madcap Purcell with the Long Beach Opera a few weeks ago), a splendid vocal quartet delivered a survey of early Baroque heartbreak, songs short and long resounding with &#8220;lamento,&#8221; &#8220;soffrire,&#8221; &#8220;misero&#8221; relieved by an occasional palliative &#8220;dolcissimi.&#8221; It&#8217;s a wonderful repertory; the geniuses of the age &#8211; Claudio Monteverdi above all, but also his colleagues Francesco Cavalli and, you&#8217;ll be happy to hear, Barbara Strozzi &#8211; were marvelously adept at the sudden key change, the stinging dissonance, the jagged leap in the vocal line, all in the ardent quest for putting over the deepest sentiments with the most economical means. The singers &#8211; the well-known Judith Nelson along with Jennifer Lane, Daniel Plaster and the prodigiously resonant bass Curtis Streetman &#8211; had obviously been urged by Eagan to avoid the prissy delivery that lesser souls associate with early music, and to sing out. The results were astonishing.
<p>The second program also offered music of self-proclaimed Greek identity but of more recent vintage: Debussy&#8217;s elegant, chaste Sacred and Profane Dances, Satie&#8217;s Socrate and Stravinsky&#8217;s Apollon Musagete &#8211; music of considerably cooler temperament &#8211; and Britten&#8217;s remarkable cantata Phaedra, which does seem to take up where Monteverdi&#8217;s passions left off. The Satie was the evening&#8217;s curio, a half-hour setting of extended passages from Plato&#8217;s writings about Socrates, bland vocal lines over an instrumental backing prevailingly gray. In his pre-concert chat Robert Winter advanced the suggestion that the work could be recast for the Three Tenors. That might, indeed, have helped, as the earnest work by Jacqueline Bobak, Lisa Popeil, Virginia Sublett and Kimball Wheeler did not. Jorge Mester led a small ensemble from his Pasadena Symphony throughout the evening; JoAnne Turovsky was the fine harpist in the Debussy, and Wheeler returned in the Britten work to endow the evening with its finest moments.
<p>The Getty is admirably dedicated to musical presentations, both indoors and out. Shed a tear, however, for the setting in the elegant Inner Peristyle Garden of the once and (let us pray) future Getty out Malibu way. There you could feel the mingling of the arts. Now the music mingles with stone walls and the roar of I-405; it isn&#8217;t quite the same.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Strings&#160;Attached</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/1998/08/strings-attached/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/1998/08/strings-attached/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 05 Aug 1998 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=210</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[In a world overpopulated by fiddling moppets &#8211; dimpled teen and subteen virtuosos who wow the crowds with Bruch and Wieniawski concertos for a couple of years and then disappear into the woodwork &#8211; 51-year-old Gidon Kremer stands as honored patriarch. More to the point, he stands as one of the supreme musicians of our [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>In a world overpopulated by fiddling moppets &#8211; dimpled teen and subteen virtuosos who wow the crowds with Bruch and Wieniawski concertos for a couple of years and then disappear into the woodwork &#8211; 51-year-old Gidon Kremer stands as honored patriarch. More to the point, he stands as one of the supreme musicians of our time, a performer not only awesomely talented but also extraordinarily cognizant of the responsibilities that befall a world-class artist. For every hundred musicians you can name who use the resources of the repertory to further their fame, there may be one or two at best who use their fame to further the resources of the repertory. Kremer is of that number. Huge chunks of contemporary music, works by the likes of Alfred Schnittke, Sofia Gubaidulina and Arvo Part &#8211; not to mention John Adams &#8211; owe their current wide circulation to Kremer&#8217;s ardent championing.
<p>He came to town last week along with KREMERata BALTICA, the 26-member ensemble of smart-looking young string players from his native Latvia and the neighboring Lithuania and Estonia, which he founded in 1996. The group touched down at the Hollywood Bowl for its U.S. debut, initiating a trajectory that also included performances in San Francisco and at Manhattan&#8217;s Mostly Mozart festival. The program, while not at all Mozartian, did touch on points of Kremer&#8217;s own involvement: Estonian composer Part&#8217;s ethereal Fratres, and the legacy of tangos by Argentina&#8217;s Astor Piazzolla, which blend the throb of that smoky dance into subtle and emotional original creations (and which Kremer has lately recorded extensively on Nonesuch). Music by two contrasting Italians &#8211; Vivaldi&#8217;s evergreen The Four Seasons and the Concerto for Strings by film composer Nino Rota &#8211; filled out the rewarding evening.
<p>It&#8217;s possible that another small ensemble pleading the Vivaldian cause isn&#8217;t what the world most needs right now, but Kremer&#8217;s musicians won over their first American audience &#8211; 4,150 strong and obviously eager to applaud practically at every page turn &#8211; with playing full of imagination and snap. Even through the Bowl&#8217;s notoriously iffy amplification, the sound was sleek and nicely balanced. It&#8217;s hard to imagine a time when the record-collecting world had no Four Seasons (or much else by Vivaldi), but there was such a time; I helped produce the first American record release in 1947, an Italian re-orchestration by Bernardino Molinari, slurpy and sloppy, on the Cetra label. Now we are oversupplied &#8211; a column and a half of fine print in the latest Schwann Catalog &#8211; and this wonderful, fragile music suffers from absurd &#8220;personalizing&#8221; attempts: jazz ver-sions, piano transcriptions, in-your-face onslaughts from the likes of Nigel Kennedy and worse. Kremer and his lively band found an admirable middle ground: a performance flexible in tempo, responsive to the music&#8217;s delirious escapades &#8211; the soulful birdsongs and a thunderstorm that was actually scary &#8211; yet respectful of the 273-year stylistic gap.
<p>Rota&#8217;s zippy little String Concerto came off as a charmer, full of the slithery harmonies of his scores for Fellini&#8217;s greatest films, and worthy to stand on its own on a concert stage. A suite of Piazzolla tangos, arranged for strings by Leonid Desyatnikov and thus lacking the down-&#8217;n'-dirty sound of the composer&#8217;s own indigenous tango orchestra, pleased the crowd even so. So did the encore, one more small Piazzolla masterpiece called &#8220;The Shark,&#8221; toothsome, pearly white and biting.
<p>My words about Jon Nakamatsu at his local debut (at El Camino College) last October, that his only so-so recital suggested that he bore the same curse as all previous Van Cliburn International Piano Competition winners, brought the expected quadrennial yawp of protest from the Cliburn management (published on our Letters page, as was the one four years before). I have nothing new to add, however. At the Bowl last week, Nakamatsu performed Rachmaninoff&#8217;s Second Concerto, music miles superior to the Rach 3 but still not a piece that plays itself. The technique was excellent, the articulation so clean that you could have taken the piece down by dictation. But that&#8217;s as far as it went: all of the notes, with less of the force that binds one to the next. I happen to like this concerto; of all the romantic junk repertory it&#8217;s the one that can still give me shivers. I have the feeling, in fact, that I like the work more than Nakamatsu does.
<p>Marin Alsop, music director of the Colorado Symphony, conducted, another in that exalted roster (along with Kremer) of serious battlers in the cause of new music. She managed to keep alongside Nakamatsu in the Rachmaninoff, but had a lot more to say on her own in the Shostakovich Fifth Symphony that ended the evening. Like the aforementioned Vivaldi, this overplayed work has been allowed to slide onto the warhorse heap in the hands of lesser conductors unencumbered with much respect for its content. There&#8217;s plenty in the work of the good ol&#8217; bring-down-the-house stuff: the great noisy climax in the first movement, the nose-thumbing in the scherzo, the brassy bing-bang-boom in the finale. When the noble Kurt Sanderling was a frequent Philharmonic guest conductor in the 1980s, he gave a performance of the Fifth so deep and stirring that it really seemed to turn the work around. Alsop&#8217;s reading had some of that, and it made for an eloquent, memorable performance, full of dark and subtle shadows and, in the slow movement, particularly successful in underscoring the young Shostakovich&#8217;s acknowledged debt to Mahler. She&#8217;s a conductor worth watching, and she made the overworked Shostakovich Fifth a symphony once again worth hearing.
<p>A curious evening indeed, last Friday at the Luckman Fine Arts Complex of Cal State L.A. The program listed a &#8220;Taiwanese Music and Art Festival.&#8221; The music was by one Maurice Weddington, an African-American composer now living in Berlin, some of it inspired by ancient scrolls from mainland China. The performers included two Taiwanese dancers, but the music was played by the Ensemble Oriol, also from Berlin, whose entire American tour consisted of this one per-formance plus one other, a straightforward pops program at Cal State Northridge. The Taiwanese identity was nailed down to some extent, however, by letters of greeting in the program, one from the mayor of Taipei and the other from that old Taiwan apologist and one-time Chiang Kai-shek dinner companion, former Congressman Edward Roybal.
<p>Weddington&#8217;s music included two extended works with their related scrolls (photographed in black and white) unrolling on a screen above the players, and four shorter works with, alas, less to offer in the way of needed distraction. Much of the music seemed to draw its strength from solo wind instruments deliberately overblown, one of life&#8217;s least ingratiating sounds. One piece called Nebulae did approach pleasantness at times: a solo not for screeching flute or squawking clarinet, but for musette, a toy oboe. As so often in life, less was decidedly more.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Four&#160;Play</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/1998/07/four-play/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/1998/07/four-play/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 29 Jul 1998 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=209</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Here&#8217;s a new name for you: Emil Frantisek Burian, Czech composer (1904-59), imprisoned in a Nazi concentration camp but survived, journalist, socialist activist and experimental stage director. A recording on ECM of Burian&#8217;s Fourth Quartet, composed in 1947, marks his first appearance in the Schwann catalog: a work of exceptional beauty in a powerful performance [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Here&#8217;s a new name for you: Emil Frantisek Burian, Czech composer (1904-59), imprisoned in a Nazi concentration camp but survived, journalist, socialist activist and experimental stage director. A recording on ECM of Burian&#8217;s Fourth Quartet, composed in 1947, marks his first appearance in the Schwann catalog: a work of exceptional beauty in a powerful performance by the Munich-based Rosamunde Quartett. The disc also includes the Eighth Quartet of Shostakovich and Anton Webern&#8217;s early Langsamer Satz, making it virtually a steambath of intense emotion. I don&#8217;t advise hearing it all at once, but I do advise hearing it.
<p>The facts of Burian&#8217;s life &#8211; detailed in a single column in The New Grove Dictionary &#8211; rouse great curiosity about his other music. In Prague in the 1920s, he worked in a Dada theater, co-organized new-music concerts (with his mother!), led a jazz band and founded his own political cabaret. One of his operas is called The Quack. His musical influences included Janacek and Stravinsky, especially the latter&#8217;s Les Noces. There is quite a lot of Janacek in this Fourth Quartet: lush, densely concentrated melodic lines, sudden dramatic shifts that suggest a violent if undefined emotional concern. This is all nicely underlined in the Rosamunde&#8217;s larger-than-life performance, a style that also fits the deep, tragic draughts and the sardonic grotesquery in the Shostakovich Quartet, one of this century&#8217;s genuinely harrowing masterpieces.
<p>Like Shostakovich (and, for that matter, like Beethoven in the distant past), Alfred Schnittke seems to have used the string-quartet medium as confidant for his most intimate thoughts. On a two-disc Nonesuch release, the Kronos Quartet plays all four of Schnittke&#8217;s quartets, covering nearly a quarter-century of his creative span (1966-89) and, by implication, a quarter-century in the emergence of today&#8217;s
<p>Schnittke as an original and forthright
<p>expressive artist, from a former artistically shackled existence under communism. It&#8217;s not a straightforward path; it looks in on interesting byways &#8211; from the bits of Bartok that color much of the First Quartet (at 16 minutes, shortest of the four) to the cheeky eclecticism of No. 3, with its sideswipes at certain earlier milestone works &#8211; Beethoven&#8217;s Grosse Fuge most prominently.
<p>The Fourth Quartet dates from 1989; Schnittke by then had been canonized both in the Soviet Union and worldwide. He was desperately ill after a series of strokes, and desperately productive as well. This quartet, at 34 minutes the longest of the four, is a tense, irritating masterpiece. The program note by the famously untrustworthy Solomon Volkov (&#8212;&#8212;&#8211;<br />
AUTHOR of Testimony, the Shostakovich &#8220;memoir,&#8221; most likely fabricated) does make a valid point in comparing this music to the films of Andrei Tarkovsky, their momentum grindingly yet hypnotically slow, their emotional impact unshakable.
<p>The Kronos set also includes two short works by Schnittke: his 1971 Canon in Memory of I. Stravinsky and an arrangement of a heart-rending piece (originally for chorus and orchestra) with the accurate title of Collected Songs Where Every Verse Is Filled With Grief, which was first released in a 1997 collection &#8211; fascinating and thus essential &#8211; called, simply, Early Music.
<p>I am no closer to success in my struggle to scale the wall between Elliott Carter&#8217;s music and my own soul, but I haven&#8217;t stopped trying. Britain&#8217;s Arditti String Quartet, spectacularly gifted in their ability to pass off as music the most abstruse patterns, played Carter&#8217;s Fifth String Quartet (of 1994-95) twice in Southern California this past season, and I was there both times. The Fifth Quartet runs 20 minutes; it breaks down, I learn from the program notes but not from my ears, into 12 connected sections, alternating between concisely structured movements and freeform &#8220;interludes.&#8221; The piece gives off an aura of tremendous skill and meticulous craftsmanship; am I wrong, then, in believing that there needs to be more in music than just those elements?
<p>The Arditti performance &#8211; awesome, I need not add &#8211; comes on an Auvidis/ Montaigne Carter disc filled out with two earlier and already-known works &#8211; the 1948 Cello Sonata and the 1974 Duo for Violin and Piano with excellent support from pianist Ursula Oppens &#8211; and a four-minute &#8220;Fragment&#8221; that, surprisingly enough, the Kronos had first played, in 1994. Even more surprisingly, I find the work rather attractive in an ethereal sort of way.
<p>Nobody who heard Gloria Cheng-Cochran&#8217;s performance of John Adams&#8217; Phrygian Gates at one of last season&#8217;s &#8220;Piano Spheres&#8221; concerts can put it out of memory; now her mastery of the work is enshrined on a Telarc release that also includes the companion China Gates and a garland of short piano conceits by Terry Riley. The two Adams works dating from 1977-78 could, he says, be considered his &#8220;Opus One.&#8221; The 26-minute Phrygian, in particular, stands as a major step in rendering the essence of the newfangled &#8220;minimalism&#8221; into a huge and gripping time structure. Nothing moves in the music, yet everything moves; over its surging, billowing surface your mind imagines its own melodic shapes, and by its astounding final cadence you may find you&#8217;ve forgotten to breathe. The Riley works, which include the Beatles-inspired The Walrus in Memorium and the disarming Fandango on the Heavenly Ladder, enhance the value of this utterly treasurable disc.
<p>And, would you believe . . . There are treasures as well in a new disc on Denon, music by John Cage performed by the German accordionist Stefan Hussong. Cage, it seems, became enamored of the Japanese court instrument sho, which produces sounds from flexible reeds and is thus an ancestor of both the accordion and the mouth organ. From this implied license Hussong has transcribed other Cage works &#8211; several of the &#8220;harmonies&#8221; from the bicentennial piece Apartment House 1776, and the 1948 Dream and In a Landscape &#8211; for accordion, and also performs Cage&#8217;s Two&#8221; No. 5, composed for sho and struck water-filled conch shells. If this all sounds somewhat insubstantial, it is; it is also exceptionally beautiful. Honest!</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>War and&#160;Peace:</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/1998/07/war-and-peace/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/1998/07/war-and-peace/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 15 Jul 1998 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=208</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[It&#8217;s entirely possible that Gustav Mahler did not compose his Second Symphony with the Hollywood Bowl in mind; yet the two artifacts, the grandiose hullabaloo of a symphony from 1894 and the performance space imposed upon some impressive Cahuenga Pass real estate some 30 years later, strike me as having been created out of a [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>It&#8217;s entirely possible that Gustav Mahler did not compose his Second Symphony with the Hollywood Bowl in mind; yet the two artifacts, the grandiose hullabaloo of a symphony from 1894 and the performance space imposed upon some impressive Cahuenga Pass real estate some 30 years later, strike me as having been created out of a single impulse. It also occurred to me at last week&#8217;s &#8220;official&#8221; opening concert &#8211; as Sir Roger Norrington and his assembled forces (the Philharmonic, the Master Chorale, vocal soloists, offstage brass bands and maybe vacuum cleaners, a passing helicopter or two) set the heavens afire with wave upon wave of Mahlerian onslaught &#8211; that Mahler himself looms ever more clearly as the dominant musical figure of this century.
<p>The millenniologists and other list makers can argue for their Igor, Maria, Ringo and Lennie. You can also argue that the Mahler Second, which set off these thoughts, was actually composed in 1894. Never mind; this was the work (alongside, depending how you count, its eight, nine or nine and a half companions) that cast an inescapable shadow across the music making and the musical thinking of this century. The struggles of Mahler the composer (as distinguished from the unchallengeable triumphs of Mahler the conductor), from hostile rejection to grudging acceptance to triumphant hysteria, are a central saga of our time, the shaping force that altered for all time the nature of music.
<p>Mahler came to New York in 1908 at the invitation of the Metropolitan Opera&#8217;s Heinrich Conried; for two seasons he and Arturo Toscanini functioned as the company&#8217;s principal conductors, after which Mahler left to take on the New York Philharmonic. Nothing much has been documented about how the two volcanic geniuses got along, or whether they were even aware of each other&#8217;s presence; given Mahler&#8217;s long history of fight picking at the Vienna Court Opera, however, someone (Ken Russell, perhaps?) could concoct a pretty good scenario for a Gus &#8216;n&#8217; Artie epic or sitcom. I find the juncture of the two significant for other reasons, however. Think of Toscanini, his fierce obsessions with re-creating the cumulative power of a musical structure, whether a Verdian ensemble or a Beethoven symphony. Think of Mahler, his own music an equally fierce denial of structural unity, obsessed instead with creating vast, amorphous, emotion-crammed landscapes, more anecdotal than cumulative. In his entire career, by the way, Toscanini never conducted a note of Mahler.
<p>A famous medallion struck by some Mahler fan club bore the inscription &#8220;My Time Will Yet Come.&#8221; When it did come &#8211; through the efforts of true believers, among whom Leonard Bernstein was only one of many &#8211; Toscanini was already a memento. More important than the gratifying increase in performances and recordings of his own works from 1960 on, Mahler&#8217;s shadow also fell upon the worktables of generations of composers. Name someone &#8211; bet you can&#8217;t &#8211; whose music hasn&#8217;t been touched in some way by Mahler&#8217;s kind of anecdotal structuring, by his mastery of a buildup of intensity until a single thread of sound (a solo flute, perhaps, or a lamenting bassoon) stops our breath at extraordinary length. Think of Shostakovich, Copland, Schnittke (absolutely!), Ligeti (those wonderful burlesque pieces!), Bernstein himself, Tippett . . . the list grows.
<p>The struggle, while it raged, was fierce and bloody. Any critic mindful of responsibilities has to wince at the words of The New York Times&#8217; Olin Downes, his ears under assult from a 1948 performance of Mahler&#8217;s Seventh Symphony (by Dimitri Mitropoulos and the New York Philharmonic). &#8220;There is little that this writer cares to say on the subject of Mahler&#8217;s symphony,&#8221; wrote America&#8217;s most influential tastemaker. &#8220;He does not like it at all . . . It is to our mind bad art, bad esthetic, bad, presumptuous and blatantly vulgar music . . . After three-quarters of an hour of the worst and most pretentious of the Mahler symphonies we found we could not take it and left the hall.&#8221; (You should know that the frequently employed &#8220;we&#8221; with this critic always implied a partnership between Downes and the Almighty, with no clear definition of which was which.) From Los Angeles, Arnold Schoenberg, infuriated at Downes&#8217; out-of-hand dismissal of the work &#8211; as he had been with Downes&#8217; equally vitriolic putdown of his own Five Pieces &#8211; responded with a letter of protest full of Mahlerian resonance; Downes replied, allowing that the music he liked was to him a religion and, thus, entitled him to be intolerant of other religions. The correspondence, rather pathetic reading at this late date (it&#8217;s in Schoenberg&#8217;s collected letters), filled quite a lot of newsprint in a November and December of 50 years ago.
<p>Meanwhile, back at the Bowl . . . Norrington brought his passion for authenticity into the Mahlerian world in a performance admirably no-frills, even zippy, a touch always welcome in Mahler. He seated the strings onstage as in Mahler&#8217;s time, with the first and second violins down front to underscore the give-and-take between these sections; even through the Bowl&#8217;s always problematic amplification, the difference was notable. Better yet, he encouraged the strings to employ just a tad of portamento, a sexy sliding between notes instead of the clean attack favored nowadays; in the whipped-cream elegance of the slow movement in particular the effect was . . . well, delicious.
<p>On successive nights last week I attended two Mozart operas: a bounty at any time and especially during what are supposed to be summer doldrums. At the Torrance Cultural Arts Center, the newly anointed South Bay Opera sprang to brimming life with a more-than-merely-commendable Cosi fan Tutte; at the John Anson Ford Theater, Lucinda Carver&#8217;s Los Angeles Mozart Orchestra did all right by The Abduction From the Seraglio in an unstaged version, which, considering the problems of that space, was probably the better part of wisdom. Both operas were sung in their original languages: the Cosi with supertitles (which conked out for a while in Act 1), the Abduction with Rich Capparela&#8217;s maybe-one-joke-too-many English narration.
<p>One must not overpraise on the strength of good intentions; the South Bay singers showed more promise than current ability. The Fiordiligi (Lori A. Stinson) managed her two killer arias with better luck with the top notes than elsewhere; the Guglielmo (Zeffin Quinn Hollis) displayed a promising baritone that will probably clean up well. The perennial Frank Fetta held the ensemble together with fair success, but conducted with little elegance of line or phrase. I cannot but wish the company well, and also cannot but wish they were promising more adventurous repertory than their upcoming Hansel and Gretel or Madama Butterfly. Lucinda Carver led her splendid small orchestra in a bouncy, vital reading of the Abduction, but her cast was once again a matter of good intentions over results. The Osmin of Michael Li-Paz stole the show; Greg Fedderly sang his Belmonte through an announced and obvious case of sinusitis; the gals &#8211; Camille King and Diana Tash &#8211; were just okay. But the moon was full, the setting sublime, the music by Mozart; who could ask for anything more?</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Prize&#160;Packages</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/1998/07/prize-packages/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/1998/07/prize-packages/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 08 Jul 1998 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=207</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Among the piano soloists listed for this summer&#8217;s concerts at the Hollywood Bowl are Garrick Ohlsson, who in 1970 won the Chopin International Competition in Warsaw; Jon Nakamatsu, who won last year&#8217;s Van Cliburn Competition in Fort Worth; Natalia Troull, silver medalist at the 1986 Tchaikovsky in Moscow, gold at the 1993 Monte Carlo Piano [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Among the piano soloists listed for this summer&#8217;s concerts at the Hollywood Bowl are Garrick Ohlsson, who in 1970 won the Chopin International Competition in Warsaw; Jon Nakamatsu, who won last year&#8217;s Van Cliburn Competition in Fort Worth; Natalia Troull, silver medalist at the 1986 Tchaikovsky in Moscow, gold at the 1993 Monte Carlo Piano Masters; Jean-Yves Thibaudet, gold at Young Concert Artists in New York in 1981 (after several silvers). The lineup of violinists includes Gidon Kremer (gold at Tchaikovsky/Moscow, 1970) and Cho-Liang Lin (gold at Queen Sofia in Madrid, 1977).
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<p>This just skims the surface of the roster. It is hardly news anymore that admission to the inner circle of world-class concert soloists these days is best buyable with a solid piece of gold or the equivalent 30 pieces of silver. The exceptions are few: The late Sviatoslav Richter was one; the current phenomenon Yevgeni Kissin is another. Sometimes, of course, a good, solid scandale will serve almost as well as &#8211; perhaps even better than &#8211; a contest win. Witness, for example, the much-touted Ivo Pogorelich incident. At the Chopin Competition in Warsaw in 1980, the flamboyant Pogorelich was the favorite of the crowd &#8211; and of at least one outspoken juror, Martha Argerich &#8211; by several miles; when the jury refused to advance Pogorelich, Argerich resigned in a well-publicized protest. (Moral: Pogorelich moved on to instant celebrity and a big recording contract, but can anyone name the winner of that year&#8217;s competition? Try Dang Thai Son of Vietnam, whom you can hear, along with 14 other pianists, in a five-disc Chopin miscellany on the cheapo LaserLight label and, so far as I know, nowhere else.)
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<p>Last month I succumbed to the closet hedonist in me and accepted an invitation to look in at the aforementioned Piano Masters Competition in Monte Carlo, the seventh since the event was founded in 1989 by the charming and wily Jean-Marie Fournier, who also heads the venerable Salle Gaveau in Paris. This year&#8217;s running was somewhat beset by the strike at Air France; only eight of the scheduled 12 contestants were able to get to Monaco. I also consented, with some reluctance, to serve as a judge, but that ended up as no problem, since the final choice was unanimous. Dang Thai Son, by the way, was one of the jurors.
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<p>One distinction at Monte Carlo was that all contestants had to have been winners previously somewhere else, hence the &#8220;Masters.&#8221; Another was the admirable decision to up the maximum age from the customary 30 to the more sensible 40. Some of the eight pianists I heard &#8211; all in their early or middle 30s &#8211; had obviously spent a fair amount of time on the competition circuit. One semifinalist, the German-Russian Igor Kamenz, 33, had since 1982 carried off seven firsts and four seconds in competitions all over Europe; a finalist, Japan&#8217;s 30-year-old Yasuko Toba, had placed high in seven. Aside from the enlightened attitude toward age, the requirements at Monte Carlo were pretty much the normal competitionese: a first-round repertory culled from Haydn or Mozart (&#8220;without repeats,&#8221; the rules rudely stipulated), Chopin and Liszt; more Liszt, Rachmaninov and a big Romantic sonata in the second round; more of same plus Beethoven and Debussy in the semifinals; a concerto (the &#8220;Emperor,&#8221; Brahms, Rach 2 but not &#8211; hurrah! &#8211; 3, Tchaikovsky) with the Monte Carlo Philharmonic for the final. Since competition programs are not planned with any consideration of kindness toward the judges, we ended up heavily immersed in the Liszt Piano Sonata and Tchaikovsky&#8217;s First Piano Concerto. A powerhouse 32-year-old Georgian woman named Mzia Simonishvili, truly handsome (rather than, for a welcome change, merely cute), was everybody&#8217;s obvious choice to win the honors and the $30,000 cash prize.
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<p>To what end? I spent some time renewing an old friendship with Paul Badura-Skoda, who served as jury president; now 70, he has mellowed from everybody&#8217;s favorite Viennese dimpled darling in the early days of the LP &#8211; those Westminsters with their echoey, bloated but sexy sound. Dimples and all, he&#8217;s had a good life as a thinking pianist, an authority on classical-era pianos and Mozart performance &#8211; and with a secret yen nevertheless, he confessed with a twinkle, to take on Mussorgsky&#8217;s finger-bustin&#8217; Pictures at an Exhibition. &#8220;I never won a competition,&#8221; he recalled, &#8220;because I never had to. I didn&#8217;t; Alfred Brendel didn&#8217;t; Jorg Demus &#8211; yes, he did, once. What I did in my early 20s, instead, was to play in small halls, private homes, chamber music, anyplace where I could make my name recognized by patrons and concert managers. It was easy then; the American record companies were all over Vienna, and we were giving them repertory that nobody had ever heard before: Schubert&#8217;s four-hand music, for example.
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<p>&#8220;You can&#8217;t do that now. Patrons will pay $2 million for a van Gogh, but not to support an unknown young musician. And so we have competitions. Yes, there are too many of them. And that means, of course, that the winner of a competition this summer will have to act fast, before the winner of next summer&#8217;s competition comes along. The best are the small competitions that are more regional. If you win the Geza Anda in Zurich, for example, you have a pretty good chance of getting engagements in Switzerland; if you win the Busoni in Bolzano, you might get to play in Italy. I am more worried about the international competitions, like the Cliburn; there is something wrong with their method of judgments, compared with the realities of music today.
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<p>&#8220;One advantage with competitions,&#8221; Badura-Skoda continued, &#8220;is that we can guarantee these young contestants the fairest judgment they may ever get in their entire careers. The pianists we&#8217;ve heard this week &#8211; they&#8217;ve had their memory lapses, their fingering problems. My way of listening is to try to find a conception, a projection of an attitude toward the music; the technique can always be dealt with. Take Horowitz. At the end he was playing terribly. But he sat there at the piano, and you knew that there was some relationship going on between him and the music. That&#8217;s what I want to find in a new musician, to learn whether that musician is meant to remain.&#8221;
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<p>And this week&#8217;s Monte Carlo master, Mzia Simonishvili, whose account of the Tchaikovsky Concerto I found dazzling and even somewhat joyous? &#8220;Yes,&#8221; said Badura-Skoda, &#8220;I think she will remain.&#8221;
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		<title>Nudity, Gunshots, Sex,&#160;Feathers</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/1998/06/nudity-gunshots-sex-feathers/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/1998/06/nudity-gunshots-sex-feathers/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 24 Jun 1998 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=206</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[They&#8217;ve done it again, Michael Milenski and his weird and wonderful Long Beach Opera. What looked on paper like a couple of time-wasting, doom-destined ventures in operatic futility have turned out &#8211; in the time-honored Long Beach tradition &#8211; fascinating, irritating, provocative and more than somewhat worthwhile. And even though the two works offered over [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>They&#8217;ve done it again, Michael Milenski and his weird and wonderful Long Beach Opera. What looked on paper like a couple of time-wasting, doom-destined ventures in operatic futility have turned out &#8211; in the time-honored Long Beach tradition &#8211; fascinating, irritating, provocative and more than somewhat worthwhile. And even though the two works offered over recent weekends in the Carpenter Center at Cal State Long Beach seem to have journeyed toward that friendly space from different planets &#8211; Henry Purcell&#8217;s not-quite-dramatic setting of John Dryden&#8217;s The Indian Queen and Manfred Gurlitt&#8217;s not-quite-successful setting of Georg Buchner&#8217;s Wozzeck &#8211; they both told welcome tales of horizons beyond the familiar limits honored by other grander but more cautious local purveyors of operatic entertainment.
<p>I saw the second (and last) performances of both works. Of the two, the Purcell/Dryden concoction was by some distance the more curious and rewarding, stirring up by far the greater range of joy and anger in the gratifyingly large audience. Dryden&#8217;s play was written in 1664; Purcell&#8217;s score, left unfinished at his death and probably rounded off by his brother Daniel, was created for a 1695 London revival, not as an opera but as a set of incidental songs, ensembles, instrumental interludes and dances inserted during the course of the play. Public taste in Dryden&#8217;s world was held spellbound in an age of exploration and discovery. Painters and writers filled the empty stages of the recently discovered Americas with richly colored civilizations that never existed; the craze continued for decades and gave rise to such later exotica as Rameau&#8217;s Les Indes Galantes and the novels of Chateaubriand, with their glorification of the &#8220;noble savage.&#8221;
<p>Dryden&#8217;s play applied a light, exotic gloss to the time-honored conflicts of love, loyalty, honor and deceit that had nourished playwrights since Euripides; his rival queens and their lovers and villains are only casually located in a never-never Mexico of the writer&#8217;s imagining. Purcell&#8217;s music sounds like &#8211; well, like Purcell&#8217;s music: a wonderfully rich jewel of the English baroque, astonishing in its flights of dissonant adventure. Neither play nor music is any more Mexican, however, than A Midsummer Night&#8217;s Dream is Greek.
<p>At the entrance a warning was prominently posted: &#8220;The performance will include nudity, simulated sex, gunshots and feathers&#8221;; a further warning against highfalutin carry-on might well have been added. The Long Beach perpetrators &#8211; David Schweizer, who directed; Guillermo Gomez-Pena and Elaine Katzenberger, who fashioned a drastically updated script into which tiny dribs and drabs of Dryden&#8217;s play were occasionally woven &#8211; moved the dramatic accents some distance from the original text, thereby widening even further the gap between the original sense and contemporary stage biz. Staggering indeed was the informational overload; the text, much of it delivered as rap, nipped at artifacts Latino from I Love Lucy to West Side Story; a video screen overhead showed quick images of Mexico&#8217;s struggles over the centuries: Wallace Beery as Pancho Villa, Pete Wilson as, alas, Pete Wilson.
<p>An Inca chieftain, in shades and with an uncontrollable left arm, rode around in a Dr. Strangelove wheelchair. A couple of swingin&#8217; American tourists scarfed a few margaritas and mixed into the action. You get the picture?
<p>Purcell&#8217;s iridescent music, however, was left largely intact. A young Austrian conductor, Andreas Mitisek in his American debut, shaped a performance both lively and lovely with the splendid Musica Angelica Baroque Orchestra; in the title role, soprano Sharon Barr sang her one well-known tune, &#8220;I Attempt From Love&#8217;s Sickness To Fly,&#8221; prettily indeed. Scholarly instincts should, of course, lead me to rise up in horror at all the visual vandalism. But ponder the alternative; consider, that is, any possible contemporary value in a scrupulous, scholarly rendition of Dryden&#8217;s high-flown imagery in its prissy Restoration prose, broken off now and then by a few shafts of Purcellian light, and then slogging back through the web of Drydenesque metaphor. For all its anachronistic absurdity and monstrous self-indulgence, I had a fine time at the Long Beach Indian Queen.
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<p>There is a La Boheme by Leoncavallo, the I Pagliacci guy; a Falstaff by the notorious Salieri; a Don Giovanni by a certain Giuseppe Gazzaniga. All three works display a certain modest proficiency, and also serve to measure the stature of the superior versions of these essential dramas by Puccini, Verdi and Mozart. At Long Beach, Manfred Gurlitt&#8217;s Wozzeck served somewhat the same purpose, but to less fortunate effect. Alban Berg&#8217;s opera, completed in 1925, mere months before the Gurlitt version, is not yet standard repertory among major opera companies, and there is some justification in regretting the effort expended on a patently inferior commodity while the &#8220;real&#8221; Wozzeck, an acknowledged masterpiece, gathers dust for years between performances.
<p>    The power in Berg&#8217;s work lies, to a great extent, in its mastery of musical characterization through his meticulously controlled variety of styles. By the short evening&#8217;s end, the suffering Marie and Wozzeck, their doomed small child, the monstrous Doctor and Captain have all entered our bloodstream, whence they will not be easily dislodged. Gurlitt&#8217;s music &#8211; post-Mahler, pre-atonal &#8211; clothes Buchner&#8217;s fire-etched words in a reasonably skillful but monotonous gray blanket of sound. Both settings derive their impact from the sense of immense speed, the breathless progression from short scene to short scene. Late in the Gurlitt work, however, there is an inexplicable hiatus in the action, an overextended scene with children &#8211; as if the audience needed some kind of sherbet break &#8211; and the work never quite regains its momentum.
<p>The Long Beach forces endowed the opera with better than it deserved: a resourceful staging by Julian Webber joined with Neal Stulberg&#8217;s splendid pacing; Anthony MacIlwaine&#8217;s set, superb in just the outlay of imaginative simplicity so lacking in the Dryden/Purcell the night before, wondrously lit by Adam Silverman. Stephen Owen, a local bass-baritone with most of his credits in European houses so far, was a sonorous, immensely sympathetic Wozzeck; the always-reliable John Duykers and John Atkins contributed handsomely as Wozzeck&#8217;s evil spirits; Helen Todd&#8217;s Marie was, to these ears, somewhat on the shrill side. Garron Howe acted the role of Wozzeck and Marie&#8217;s child, rather strapping for the product of a three-year relationship, if truth be known.
<p>Nothing in opera chills the blood as do the final moments of the Berg Wozzeck, as the unwitting child trots off to view the bodies of his dead parents. Gurlitt&#8217;s ending, a reiteration for chorus of the leitmotif of terror and helplessness that underlines the whole of Buchner&#8217;s harrowing drama, is by comparison standard operatic melancholy. It sends its audience homeward saddened but not, as in the Berg, aghast. The difference is between competence and genius.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Something&#160;Old&#8230;</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/1998/06/something-old/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/1998/06/something-old/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 17 Jun 1998 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=205</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[You have to admire the thinness of the line that sometimes separates the very old from the very new. Here at hand, for example, are recent discs that demonstrate some interesting across-the-centuries coincidences. On a Nonesuch collection called, simply, Early Music, the Kronos Quartet creates believable soul mates (or, at least, disc mates) out of [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>You have to admire the thinness of the line that sometimes separates the very old from the very new. Here at hand, for example, are recent discs that demonstrate some interesting across-the-centuries coincidences. On a Nonesuch collection called, simply, Early Music, the Kronos Quartet creates believable soul mates (or, at least, disc mates) out of the very ancient Hildegard von Bingen and the very contemporary Arvo Part. On one Harmonia Mundi release, the remarkable baritone Paul Hillier and his vocal ensemble, Theatre of Voices, re-create a repertory, amazingly inventive and passionate, of some 12th-century monastic songs by Peter Abelard; on another, they whoop it up in some of the hang-loose vocal creations of John Cage. Across eight centuries, the two collections attain common cause: a loving celebration of the beauty of words and the way music enhances that beauty. On yet another Harmonia Mundi disc, Marcel Peres and his Ensemble Organum perform even earlier music, chants for an Easter Vesper Service from a sixth-century Roman liturgy that predates the better-known Gregorian Chant, full of grinding dissonances that, once again, seem to extend the hand of kinship toward the harmonic adventures in our own time.
<p>Hillier&#8217;s great artistry, and the marvelously smooth interaction among members of his vocal group &#8211; four soloists and chorus in the Abelard songs with a few instruments discreetly used, six singers in the Cage with appropriate electronic monkey business &#8211; define, as well as any single force can, both the 800-year void and the enthralling similarities between music of vastly different cultures, between a Peter Abelard love-smitten elegy and a John Cage vocal tone poem about &#8220;whales&#8221; with its text made up of nothing but the letters of that word. They&#8217;re not all that different, Hillier told me a few months ago, even though separated by many centuries. In between those two historical extremes we have this whole fertile field of the music most of us know best, from Bach and Handel to Mahler and Debussy, all more or less tied to a common harmonic practice, a common expressive ideal &#8211; &#8220;the age of vibrato,&#8221; Hillier calls it. &#8220;Before that time,&#8221; he says, &#8220;and also after that time, you&#8217;re on your own. You&#8217;re not supported by common-practice harmony with its tonic triads and carefully systematized dissonances, so that exact intonation becomes really crucial.&#8221;
<p>It&#8217;s that matter of clear, immaculate intonation with a minimum of vibrato &#8211; which nearly all interpreters of early music agree on, excepting only the luridly juicy Gregorian discs by those Spanish monks of Santo Domingo de Silos that made it to the Billboard 200 in 1994 in the early weeks of chantmania (and excepting also, of course, the Mormon Tabernacle Choir) &#8211; that immediately transports our ears out of that comfy region of the Bach-through-Debussy era Hillier cites. After emigrating to the U.S., he formed his Theatre of Voices as a sequel to his former London-based group, the Hilliard Ensemble (which still produces wonderful performances of music old and new on the ECM label); the use of &#8220;theatre,&#8221; he claims, invokes the notion of the dramatic clashes of harmony that can arise when music is purged of the sweetness of common-practice period harmonies.
<p>&#8220;The idea,&#8221; says Hillier, &#8220;is to explore the full range of what can be accomplished simply by voices, alone or in combination. Voices alone do create a kind of theater; listen to drama on radio, or to recordings, if you need proof.&#8221; His singers were purposely chosen from many musical backgrounds. &#8220;Maybe there are English choirs that make a smoother sound,&#8221; he says, &#8220;but there&#8217;s also the danger that in time they all might sound alike. I wanted an ensemble with built-in rough edges, singers from a variety of musical backgrounds, to create a constant interaction among the voices, a bit of friction perhaps. That&#8217;s also part of the notion of &#8216;theatre.&#8217;&#8221;
<p>Theatrical, too, is the marvelous, sputtering wordplay in the Cage pieces &#8211; the gnarled imagery in the 36 Mesostics Re and Not Re Marcel Duchamp and, better yet, the piece called, simply, Aria, created for the madcap and much-missed Cathy Berberian and here intoned to an electronic background by six singers in turn. The text &#8211; think of it as a free-associative talking brain cut loose from corporeal restraints &#8211; is sheer delight, a word that doesn&#8217;t come automatically to mind on mention of John Cage. Take this 10-minute romp, therefore, as an excellent gateway to his variegated musical world.
<p>The Paris-based Ensemble Organum has been here once, performing in a local church on one of the Da Camera Society&#8217;s &#8220;Historic Sites&#8221; events. The sound of the group is like none other you&#8217;ll ever hear: a stern growl, firmly buttressed by the group&#8217;s low voices; among their memorable previous discs is one of Corsican chant, ultimate proof that early music is as much a creation of blood and guts as anything from more recent times. The new disc of Roman liturgy is, in a word, astonishing. The melodies themselves demand great virtuosic tricks &#8211; coloratura, trills, leaps from low notes to high, somewhat reminiscent of the cantillation of Byzantine and Hebrew chant; in the ecstatic alleluias one voice will often sustain a low, slow-moving bass line while other voices move rapidly above it. The confrontation sets up clashes: not exactly &#8220;counterpoint&#8221; as we usually define it, but a thrilling effect by whatever name.
<p>You can find some of that clashing effect also on the Kronos disc. There&#8217;s a piece by a nun named Kassia, who served at Constantinople in the ninth century, in which once again a melody in the upper voices does battle with an obsessive bass line. Three excerpts from the 14th-century &#8220;Notre Dame Mass&#8221; of Guillaume de Machaut are aboil with colliding inner voices; so, in this remarkable collection of musical styles at once complementary and contradictory, are small pieces from our own time by Arvo Part and Alfred Schnittke, John Cage and the great street musician known as Moondog, as well as anonymous folk tunes from Sweden and Tuva.
<p>Everything here, as on the other discs mentioned in this disquisition, is colored by the educated guesswork of latter-day scholars and arrangers. Nobody knows what liturgical chant sounded like in sixth-century Rome; it&#8217;s a safe guess that Guillaume de Machaut never heard a string quartet; Cage&#8217;s Aria was conceived for one singer, not six. There&#8217;s a magnificent impurity at work here, and the results are glorious.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>A Fluctuating&#160;Sameness</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/1998/06/a-fluctuating-sameness/</link>
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		<pubDate>Wed, 10 Jun 1998 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=204</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Any entertainment that consists of two or more consecutive events under the same management qualifies as &#8220;festival&#8221; &#8211; from Bayreuth to Ojai &#8211; and the crowds come running. I&#8217;m not sure whether last week&#8217;s &#8220;Resistance fluctuations,&#8221; which was identified as &#8220;a new unpredictable music festival,&#8221; actually qualified as &#8220;entertainment&#8221;; I&#8217;m not even sure that the [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Any entertainment that consists of two or more consecutive events under the same management qualifies as &#8220;festival&#8221; &#8211; from Bayreuth to Ojai &#8211; and the crowds come running. I&#8217;m not sure whether last week&#8217;s &#8220;Resistance fluctuations,&#8221; which was identified as &#8220;a new  unpredictable music festival,&#8221; actually qualified as &#8220;entertainment&#8221;; I&#8217;m not even sure that the offerings over the six days &#8211; concerts of challenging new music involving solo and ensemble live performances, electronic presentations and multimedia interactions &#8211; were all that unpredictable. The crowds did come running, however, a mostly young, exceptionally well-informed audience that seemed unsurprised and generally delighted at the proceedings.
<p>The programs were co-curated by Daniel Rothman, a local composer and for the past several years a presenter (through his organization known as Wires) of valuable new-music events, and Christian Scheib, a CalArts faculty member and consultant to the Austrian Ministry of Culture. The Austrian new-music ensemble Klangforum Wien made its American debut, bringing in its luggage a repertory of new works by compatriot composers mostly hitherto unknown here; the programs were aimed at establishing both differences and similarities between the impulses of today&#8217;s energetic composers in the homeland of Mozart and Bruckner and products of various American creative hotbeds. A 60-page program book, distributed free at the concerts, teemed with statements and restatements of purpose, bristling with words like <i>iconoclasm, disorder, communication, entropy </i>and <i>noise</i>. John Cage, this century&#8217;s peerless re-definer of all the arts, was the sung if unplayed hero, invoked in the program notes (perhaps once or twice too often) as the enabling force that lets composers get away with murder. The events on Saturday, the penultimate day of the festival, were titled &#8211; with devastating accuracy &#8211; &#8220;No Noise Reduction&#8221; and &#8220;If it wasn&#8217;t noisy enough before . . . &#8220;
<p>I furloughed my eardrums from the Saturday concerts; they had paid their dues on Wednesday during the 60-minute duration of Carl Stone&#8217;s <i>Dong Baek, </i>an electronic work created live by Stone at a small computer activating a large selection of samples. The pleasure in this kind of music is in the association; in a long and genuinely beautiful passage midway in the work Stone seemed to locate both me and his music in the bell tower of a medieval cathedral &#8211; Notre Dame, perhaps, hanging out with Quasimodo &#8211; with the bells pealing ecstatically, an organist trying out luscious harmonies far below, and a gorgeous vista unfolding, down a river and across some meadows. Then, however, came intense, ear-gnawing pain, horrendous masses of sound piled upon sound, made the more agonizing in the confinement of a small room at LACE (Los Angeles Contemporary Exhibitions, one of the festival&#8217;s principal venues). I cannot, of course, claim that my 73-year-old ears are the receptors Carl Stone and his younger colleagues have in mind when laying out their statements on contemporary communicativeness; yet I had heard beauty somewhere in this piece, and feel justified in wishing for more.
<p>     I heard more beauty, for reasons I understand even less, in Marina Rosenfeld&#8217;s <i>Fragment Opera 3 </i>on opening night. Rosenfeld, this publication&#8217;s assistant arts editor, has a madcap sonic imagination; others of her works enlist the services, for example, of guitarists performing &#8220;anti-virtuosically&#8221; with nail-polish bottles. Her piece last week involved four DJs seated at LP turntables, playing and swapping vinyl discs of synthesized music, thus creating somewhat the same textures as Stone would with his electronic sampling the next night. Perhaps it was the sight of live participants running their machinery, shuffling their several discs, and thus creating a performance atmosphere &#8211; with a pleasant flickering image projected on a screen overhead, that made this work attractive. (Was it structure or coincidence that one of the festival&#8217;s final works, Mark Trayle&#8217;s <i>Automatic Descriptions, </i>also used a turntable &#8211; this time an old wind-up Victrola with horn &#8211; as a control device? <i>Plus ca change.)</i>
<p>You had to wonder at times, however, whether the ability to attract and divert ranks very high among contemporary priorities. Take, for example, Bernhard Lang&#8217;s <i>Schrift 2 </i>in which a solo cellist, the remarkable Michael Moser, sent both hands up and down the strings, plucking out a bristling, refreshing if pitchless texture. It was all fun until you read the program note. &#8220;The point of writing,&#8221; the composer insists we know, &#8220;originates in the interplay between the remembrance of predetermined scriptures and the aural anticipation of future significations . . .  therewith being uncovered by a kind of   &#8216;autogenerative&#8217; grammar.&#8221; Take, for another example, Randall Woolf and Arthur Jarvinen&#8217;s misguided homage to the spirit of Cage, in the form of a set of changes &#8211; 840 in all &#8211; on Erik Satie&#8217;s infamous, 24-hour <i>Vexations,</i> the work Cage revered above all for its unswerving changelessness. And take, for yet a third example, the squawks and feedbacks of 3-E Guitars, three grown men running wind-up toys across their strings, using their instruments as body-massage tools, all in the name of furthering musical horizons.
<p>I must, of course, be careful. Nicolas Slonimsky&#8217;s <i>Lexicon of Musical Invective </i>is my constant bedside reading, a compendium of writings that failed to recognize masterpiece stature when certain great works were new. Perhaps this kind of intense gathering together of new ideas and outlooks, with the music serving as richly illustrative examples, isn&#8217;t the ideal incubator for masterpieces. Yet there was beauty &#8211; the aforementioned moments in Carl Stone&#8217;s piece remain in the memory. On the last day, a gorgeous few moments in David Rosenboom&#8217;s <i>Predictions, Confirmations and Disconfirmations </i>(those titles!) with Rosenboom&#8217;s violin activating a torrent of radiant complimentary sound from the concomitant computers, and the whole thing resounding in audible Technicolor through the cavernous resonance of the big room at Ace Contemporary Exhibitions, should have convinced anyone that some power to exhilarate still lingers on the musical scene.
<p>Also lingering, however, was a slight sense of having been there before. I heard my first &#8220;tape-and&#8221; music in, I think, 1961; last week&#8217;s music for piano and tape (by Johannes Kalitzke) and cello and tape (by Winfried Ritsch), however agreeable, seemed mired in a bygone era. No matter. The fact of this event&#8217;s existence, and the message it sends out that somewhere in this world there are people willing to play and to listen to new music &#8211; and that the creators of this festival are already talking about the next, and the next &#8211; is the best of all possible news.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>For the&#160;Birds</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/1998/06/for-the-birds/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/1998/06/for-the-birds/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 03 Jun 1998 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=203</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[The crescent moon emerged in the sky over Ojai. The woodpeckers, at home in the huge sycamore to the right of the bandstand at Libbey Bowl, had finished feeding their newborn brats and chattered for a while about the day&#8217;s delights; soon their song would be taken over by the attendant crickets on their night [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>The crescent moon emerged in the sky over Ojai. The woodpeckers, at home in the huge sycamore to the right of the bandstand at Libbey Bowl, had finished feeding their newborn brats and chattered for a while about the day&#8217;s delights; soon their song would be taken over by the attendant crickets on their night watch.
<p>On the stage, Mitsuko Uchida played Schubert&#8217;s serene, nocturnal G-flat Impromptu as an unlisted encore to her piano recital that opened last week&#8217;s 52nd annual Ojai Festival, and there was no way to detect the seam between her music, the songs of the bugs and the birds, and the stream of silver moonlight threaded across the black crystalline expanse of sky.
<p>As previously confessed (more than once) in this space, I am hooked on Ojai: not only the one weekend of its annual music festival, but on the place itself. For its modest proportions, Ojai&#8217;s festival breeds strong emotions, and always has. So loving is the atmosphere in the town itself, with its perfect air framing perfect mountain vistas, and the perfect wisps of fragrance from the orange groves that ring the downtown area, that the festival regulars argue past and present accomplishments, not to mention future hopes, with parental possessiveness comparable to the brash, argumentative tones of the woodpecker family nearby.
<p>By the standards of the festival&#8217;s history &#8211; which embraces the times of such earlier destiny shapers as Igor Stravinsky, Aaron Copland, Lawrence Morton and Pierre Boulez &#8211; the last few runnings appear to have backtracked from the former cutting edge. Last year&#8217;s and this year&#8217;s festivals have been built around wonderful pianists not particularly known as heroes of the avant-garde: Emanuel Ax last year and Mitsuko Uchida this year. Both have borne the title of &#8220;music director,&#8221; which may be mostly honorary, since much of the actual programming is done years in advance. (It will surely not be honorary next year, when Esa-Pekka Salonen takes on the title and leads Toimii, the Finnish new-music ensemble he founded, in what&#8217;s bound to be a killer weekend.)
<p>Two years ago, as guest soloist, Uchida charmed the socks off everyone with her Schubert and Ravel; mere common sense must have preordained her return in whatever capacity. This year she played Mozart, Beethoven, Schubert and tiny wisps of Schoenberg and Webern, and every event was an illumination comparable to Ojai&#8217;s moonlight. Only one event was something of a dud, for its conception if not execution: a program of Schubert&#8217;s piano duets with Uchida and Ignat Solzhenitsyn that ended with an agonizingly, obsessively complete rendition of the Divertissement a l&#8217;hongroise, 10 minutes of music plus 45 minutes of repeat signs. I am usually an adamant advocate of respect for a composer&#8217;s specified repeats, but Schubert&#8217;s endlessly charming entertainments were more designed for parlor music making, not meant for audiences sitting still on hard wooden benches. (One of his more substantial duet pieces &#8211; the fabulous F-minor Fantasy or the A-flat Variations &#8211; might have strengthened the respective spines of both program and audience.) To atone, however, there was Uchida&#8217;s splendid opening-night recital, which ended in a collaboration with members of the Brentano Quartet in Mozart&#8217;s G-minor Piano Quartet, and her exhilarating aggression upon Beethoven&#8217;s &#8220;Emperor&#8221; Concerto (with David Zinman guest-conducting the Los Angeles Philharmonic) that brought the weekend to a fire-ringed close. No, there wasn&#8217;t very much of novelty in Uchida&#8217;s contributions to the festival, but a lot of brainpower was in evidence in the planning even so: the resemblance across the decades on that opening concert &#8211; for one of many examples &#8211; between Beethoven&#8217;s terse, crabbed C-minor Variations and the intense, epigrammatic set by Anton Webern.
<p>No, it wasn&#8217;t one of Ojai&#8217;s more ardent excursions into novelty. A curmudgeon might well question the inclusion of an entire program of Leonard Bernstein&#8217;s show tunes, however well sung &#8211; I am told &#8211; by Joyce Castle and Kurt Ollmann. But it would have taken an onslaught of terminal grumpiness to miss the pleasure in Zinman&#8217;s program with the Philharmonic New Music Group, with the jocular naughtiness of George Antheil&#8217;s pseudo-jazz and Charles Ives&#8217; pseudo-ragtime pieces framing Elissa Johnston&#8217;s marvelous delivery of John Harbison&#8217;s haunting Mirabai Songs and Leon Kirchner&#8217;s eloquent Music for Twelve. Zinman, still too little known on the West Coast, was a splendid addition to the roster. He might have spared the crowd his chatty if somewhat meandering spoken introductions to each piece, since Timothy Mangan&#8217;s written program notes, which covered the same ground, made their points more graciously.
<p>From the conversations of staunch Ojai-goers, I overheard the usual panoply of attitudes. Why, I heard it asked, the &#8220;Emperor&#8221; Concerto, of all tried-and-true repertory chestnuts, intruding upon ground sanctified by the likes of Boulez and Stravinsky? Why, there resounded in other corners, all that Webern (maybe eight minutes&#8217; worth, spread over two programs), so lacking in tunefulness? In truth, this year&#8217;s programs might have taken place in any major city you could name, spread through a particularly rewarding week of urban concert giving. I submit that it is Ojai itself &#8211; the air; the mountains; the kooky restaurants, amateur-run, turned panicky by this once-a-year invasion of hungry music-nuts; the great honor-system secondhand bookstore; the lingering ghosts of Krishnamurti, Stravinsky, Beatrice Wood and Lawrence Morton (and all this a 90-minute drive from downtown L.A.) &#8211; that surrounds the music in a rustic and not-all-that-comfortable setting amid the amateur outdoor painters and the professional woodpeckers and crickets, and turns it into a festival.
<p>There was a questionnaire handed out at the concerts asking some rather scary questions about possible future pathways for the Ojai Festival: more concerts spread over more weekends? more or different venues? more modern music? less modern music? more commercialization? less? All these questions drove home the realization of the fragility of the whole premise of Ojai, which by some miracle has managed to survive these 52 years. Any visiting New York hotshot &#8211; and I&#8217;ve talked to several in my 18 years&#8217; attendance &#8211; will tell you what&#8217;s wrong with Ojai: It needs a performing-arts center, a national press bureau, headline attractions on three-sheets hung from Lompoc to Lomita, Big Macs and Starbucks on every corner. By those standards, those 52 years of Ojai add up to one of music&#8217;s profound failures. Other standards, however, sound a different note. Cherish it.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Three for the&#160;Road</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/1998/05/three-for-the-road/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/1998/05/three-for-the-road/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 27 May 1998 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=202</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Symphony orchestras, like fine wines, travel badly; yet travel they must. It&#8217;s not enough, for both commodities, to garner fame and fortune in their own back yards. The Philadelphia Orchestra must also conquer audiences in Costa Mesa, as a superb Burgundy must lubricate the plastic at a four-star Manhattan eatery. Hearing the Philadelphia at Segerstrom [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Symphony orchestras, like fine wines, travel badly; yet travel they must. It&#8217;s not enough, for both commodities, to garner fame and fortune in their own back yards. The Philadelphia Orchestra must also conquer audiences in Costa Mesa, as a superb Burgundy must lubricate the plastic at a four-star Manhattan eatery. Hearing the Philadelphia at Segerstrom Hall in the Orange County Performing Arts Center, or the Metropolitan Opera Orchestra at Royce Hall, or the City of Birmingham Symphony at the Dorothy Chandler Pavilion &#8211; to cite three recent forays by visiting orchestras into our midst &#8211; is, however, a little like sipping fine Burgundy from a plastic cup.
<p>An orchestra plays upon the acoustical and visual properties of its home concert hall as subtly as its members play upon their violins and oboes. On tour, with the weariness in the bones brought on by an excess of air and bus travel, experiencing a new complex of sight and sound every couple of days &#8211; and, usually, with no more than an hour&#8217;s worth of sound-check and rehearsal time &#8211; a touring orchestra can offer its public only a facsimile of its hometown quality.
<p>Having its orchestra on tour, hailed with lavish outpourings of exclamation points by critics in the boonies, is an ego massage to the boards of directors back home; the promise of tour dates is an effective carrot-on-stick for keeping conductors in their posts as well. Our Philharmonic&#8217;s own Esa-Pekka owes his current New York acclaim almost entirely to his yearly visits there with his orchestra.
<p>There was a time when the &#8220;Philadelphia sound&#8221; &#8211; lush, seductive, wrong for the classical repertory but what the hell &#8211; was reason enough for enduring the mediocrity of Eugene Ormandy&#8217;s musical insights. You could hear it even in the orchestra&#8217;s home base, the hooty and echoey Academy of Music, and Ormandy was able to re-create that sound in every whistle stop on the orchestra&#8217;s tours. In the acoustic aridity of Costa Mesa&#8217;s Segerstrom Hall, the Philadelphia under Ormandy&#8217;s successor-once-removed, Wolfgang Sawallisch, played Dvorak and Tchaikovsky &#8211; with a little Samuel Barber tossed in for a semblance of adventurous programming &#8211; without style, without tone, without anything that could identify it as one of America&#8217;s most renowned orchestras and not just some band from the boonies. Sure, the Philadelphia Orchestra is famous for being famous, a triumph of the record-company blurbmastery as much as musicianship; both programs played to turn-away crowds.
<p>
<p>
<p><b>S</b>o, of course, did the Met Orchestra at Royce and the Birmingham at the Music Center. There are interesting similarities. Both are historic entities &#8211; the Met since 1883, the Birmingham since 1920 &#8211; whose current born-again eminence is entirely the work of spellbinding conductors fiercely dedicated to abolishing their orchestras&#8217; status quo and imposing upon them an entirely new personality and purpose. Against the &#8220;ho-hum, another tour date, another Tchaikovsky Fifth&#8221; pall over the Philadelphia concerts, there was something undeniably fresh in these orchestras&#8217; performances; it came from the fact that neither orchestra, and neither conductor, has yet had the time for the sense of routine to set in. It showed.
<p>The Met Orchestra has given concerts throughout its century-plus existence, but only under James Levine has it become great on its own. The new Royce acoustics are kind &#8211; bright and somewhat in-your-face, certainly the livest sound of any local large hall &#8211; and turned Vadim Repin&#8217;s dash through the Tchaikovsky Violin Concerto into audible flame; I don&#8217;t remember ever coming so close to being moved by the work. Better yet was the amazing detail, the glinting winds and the bright blare from the brass, in Levine&#8217;s performances of Rossini&#8217;s Semiramide Overture at the start and Wagner&#8217;s Die Meistersinger Overture as the encore. In between there was some more of Tan Dun&#8217;s arty and ludicrously extended pretentiousness.
<p>When I first interviewed Simon Rattle &#8211; for Newsweek in 1985 &#8211; he confessed that he had just begun learning the Beethoven symphonies. A dozen years later he gave us his extraordinary reading of the Ninth with the Philharmonic at the Hollywood Bowl last summer and, last week, the &#8220;Eroica&#8221; with his own orchestra &#8211; both conducted from memory. There were indications of edges still to be polished; the overenthusiastic timpani in the &#8220;Eroica&#8221; may have been an acoustic miscalculation, not repeated in the Mahler Seventh the next night. The energy on both nights was something you had to feel: not just the foot-stomping, hip-wriggling athletics of a Bernstein, but the work of an exceptional young talent as obsessed with defining each musical detail in turn as with pushing forward. Sure, the young orchestra was hard-pressed at times; the teensy flaws in the ensemble were about as important (i.e., not much) as the equally infinitesimal gray areas that still await exploration in Rattle&#8217;s growing mastery. Both programs &#8211; which also included a marvelous and little-played Haydn Symphony (No. 86) and Oliver Knussen&#8217;s intense, vital Third Symphony &#8211; were exactly what the musical world needs right now: assurance that within the hoary institution of symphony concerts the spark still burns bright.
<p>There was a Haydn symphony the next night, too: Leonard Slatkin leading off the final concert of the Philharmonic season with the rich fantasy of No. 93, as preface to the glorious clatter, bang and unbridled hell-raising of Gyorgy Ligeti&#8217;s Piano Concerto to end the orchestra&#8217;s extended homage to that cherishable composer. The soloist was Pierre-Laurent Aimard, who bears the standard for Ligeti&#8217;s piano music and does so with awesome skill and imagination, and who earlier in the week had dispatched all 16 of the Etudes in a jaw-dropping evening at the Gindi Auditorium.
<p>Slatkin&#8217;s program also included a lively run-through of Samuel Barber&#8217;s First Symphony, which Sawallisch and the Philadelphia had also pecked at in Costa Mesa the week before. I was delighted to read Paul Griffiths&#8217; program note for the Philharmonic performance, in which he pretty much ticks off the work as imitation movie music. Hurrah for free thinking!
<p>
<p>
<p><b>M</b>eanwhile, back at Royce, there was Verdi&#8217;s Falstaff, produced by the UCLA Department of Music, sung by an almost entirely student cast (save for John Del Carlo&#8217;s Falstaff), conducted by the L.A. Opera&#8217;s William Vendice with the school orchestra, directed by the University of Indiana&#8217;s Vincent Liotta, and funded by the Maxwell H. Gluck and Gladys M. Turk foundations to test the possibility of an ongoing opera program at the school. Some distance must still be covered; at the moment UCLA has only two full-time vocal coaches and about 30 voice majors. All the more remarkable, then: Galvanized by Del Carlo&#8217;s &#8220;Immenso Falstaff,&#8221; and created with wonderful wit and energy by both Vendice and Liotta, this turned out to be the brainiest, most stimulating and beautifully produced operatic performance of the entire season. Yes, the entire season.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Roll Over,&#160;Beethoven</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/1998/05/roll-over-beethoven/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/1998/05/roll-over-beethoven/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 20 May 1998 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=201</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Interesting paradox: At a time of continued lamentation in certain unenlightened circles over the overdose of hardcore atrocities being foisted upon helpless local audiences, the past few weeks have seen more kindness extended to new music than to the warhorses. At the Philharmonic we&#8217;ve recently had Esa-Pekka&#8217;s first foray &#8211; except as concerto accompanist &#8211; [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Interesting paradox: At a time of continued lamentation in certain unenlightened circles over the overdose of hardcore atrocities being foisted upon helpless local audiences, the past few weeks have seen more kindness extended to new music than to the warhorses. At the Philharmonic we&#8217;ve recently had Esa-Pekka&#8217;s first foray &#8211; except as concerto accompanist &#8211; into Tchaikovsky (a near fiasco), and a night of Beethoven, Schumann and Mendelssohn (not much better) under guest conductor Jahja Ling; at the Opera, <i>Il Trovatore </i>badly treated; on the recital stage, a Beethoven program (well-performed, I&#8217;m told) by the violinist Anne-Sophie Mutter, known for her services to contemporary music.</p>
<p>I chose the California EAR Unit, concluding its Wednesday-night residency series at the County Museum, over the Mutter, and was not sorry. In this past fortnight I was also able to commute from the Philharmonic&#8217;s Ligeti programs to Vicki Ray&#8217;s marvelous &#8220;Piano Spheres&#8221; recital in Pasadena, to Mathias Goerne&#8217;s extraordinary recital of Hanns Eisler songs at Hollywood&#8217;s Temple Israel, to a program of &#8220;Pacific Rim&#8221; composers at Cal State L.A. &#8211; organized by CalArts&#8217; adventurous and enterprising pianist Lisa Sylvester &#8211; to more new music played by the modest but ambitious Symphony of the Canyons in Valencia. Two of these concerts contained brand-new works composed for and performed by that local monument of cellistic probity, the EAR Unit&#8217;s Erika Duke-Kirkpatrick. In the weeks ahead the choices include more Ligeti at the Philharmonic (May 22–24); the marvelous annual festival at Ojai (May 29–31); a fantastic array of contemporary works, including several multimedia ventures, in &#8220;Resistance Fluctuations,&#8221; a &#8220;new and unpredictable&#8221; festival organized by Dan Rothman&#8217;s &#8220;Wires,&#8221; with performances at LACE and the County Museum; and a visit from Austria&#8217;s Klangforum Wien (June 2–7). Whatever happened to post-season doldrums?</p>
<p>Concerts of hardcore contemporary demand prodigies of courage and loyalty to the cause &#8211; from the performers onstage and from the usually undersize audience as well. Nobody expects much ear candy from the EAR Unit; the exhilaration stems rather from the group&#8217;s awesome fearlessness in the presence of challenging, abrasive, sometimes (but not always) rewarding new music, and the sense they provide that they&#8217;re all in it together for the challenges and for the fun.</p>
<p>Fun? Try this on your cello: a long, rhapsodic solo with the performer also singing a sinuous, captivating microtonal vocalise that seems to twine around the cello line like gift-wrap glitter liberally sprinkled, and with the harmonic deviations between voice and instrument creating a strange and novel intensity. That&#8217;s Joan La Barbara&#8217;s <i>A Trail of Incandescent Light</i>, written for and majestically delivered by Erika Duke-Kirkpatrick. Or consider <i>Zilver</i>, the weird and witty pastiche by Netherlander Louis Andriessen, in which an unidentified but definitely pop-sounding tune plays off against its own image at different speeds, faster and faster until you forget to breathe. Milder onslaughts on the sensibilities found embodiment in Paul Dresher&#8217;s <i>Double Ikat </i>— a mellow and richly patterned interweave, by Dresher&#8217;s admission his &#8220;most blatantly lyrical work to date&#8221; &#8211; and James Sellars&#8217; accurately titled <i>Go</i>, an ice-cold cascade of prickly, changing but hugely propulsive rhythms.</p>
<p>Founded at CalArts in the early 1980s, in residence at the County Museum since 1987, the EAR (&#8220;Experimental and Recent&#8221;) Unit belongs in the small company of new-music ensembles &#8211; including the Klangforum Wien due here week after next &#8211; for whom neither 12-tone row nor no-tone improv holds terror. Honoring its Californian identity, the group has also ventured into mixed media, notably an eveninglong rainforest piece some years ago with performance artist Rachel Rosenthal, not easily forgotten.</p>
<p>Audiences for new music remain small but loyal, even passionate; at LACMA&#8217;s Monday Evening Concerts you can still run into people who attended the first of these events (under their previous name, &#8220;Evenings on the Roof&#8221;) in 1939. With advertising budgets for new-music events down to practically zero, it&#8217;s more depressing that so few people even know about these concerts than that so few show up. Less than 200 attended this season&#8217;s final EAR Unit event; even fewer usually show up at the Monday events, scattered through the drab and uninviting 600-seat space that serves the County Museum as a pretty good place for movies but not much else. Better there than nowhere, however.</p>
<p>With the Symphony of the Canyons &#8211;   much of whose membership is drawn from the music faculty at the college of that name &#8211; Duke-Kirkpatrick played another brand-new piece composed for her, Michael Jon Fink&#8217;s <i>Touchless Light Alone</i>, its light this time less incandescent than in La Barbara&#8217;s work, the cello writing intensely and rewardingly lyrical, the mood, alas, somewhat on the morose side. (Fink&#8217;s funk?) Its 18 minutes go by as a series of slow forebodings of events that never materialize; after 10 or so minutes of soulfulness you long for the music to turn naughty, and it never does. Robert E. Lawson leads the orchestra, which gives five ambitious programs a year in the acoustically and visually wretched setting of the college cafeteria. Before the new work came the Overture to Wagner&#8217;s <i>Tannhäuser</i>, which, the program noted, had been composed in 1815 &#8211; surely the first known opera by a 2-year-old womanizer. The prospect of a Mahler First by such meager forces sent me homeward at intermission. I am honor-bound to report, however, that the crowd seemed to be having a swell time &#8211; small babies and all.</p>
<p>Pasadena&#8217;s Neighborhood Church is a far more welcoming venue, and the season&#8217;s final &#8220;Piano Spheres&#8221; program drew a deservedly large crowd that braved rain, fog, and hard new music punctuated by occasional onslaughts from tape and percussion. Founded four seasons back by the area&#8217;s five most adventurous pianists &#8211; Gloria Cheng-Cochran, Vicki Ray, Mark Robson, Leonard Stein and Susan Svrcek &#8211; the series could stand as a programming model, a fine-tuned progression of the lesser- and better-known, of the abrasive and soothing. The Vicki Ray concert included a set of beguiling, entrancing, tiny pieces by Gyorgy Kurtág, a splendid new sonata by Steven Hartke that had the shadow of George Gershwin smiling from the wings, and a piece by EAR Unit percussion goddess Amy Knoles, a hilarious tribute to a favored Belgian restaurant in London.</p>
<p>The Music Hall at Cal State L.A. is small, somewhat drab but friendly; &#8220;New Music From the Pacific Rim&#8221; filled it with strong and attractive ideas. Best came last: <i>Spiral II </i>by Cambodia&#8217;s Chinary Ung (now on the faculty at UC San Diego), for soprano (Jacqueline Bobak), piano (Lisa Sylvester) and &#8211; if you&#8217;re ready &#8211; tuba (Douglas Tornquist). Don&#8217;t worry, it seemed to say, our contemporary composers aren&#8217;t going to run out of ideas anytime soon.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Mastery,&#160;Mastery</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/1998/05/mastery-mastery/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/1998/05/mastery-mastery/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 06 May 1998 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=200</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[So far, the Philharmonic&#8217;s extraordinary celebration of Gyorgy Ligeti&#8217;s music has concentrated on his work from the 1960s &#8211; the decade of assassinations, Vietnam, the Bay of Pigs, Cuban missiles and the walk on the moon. For Ligeti it was also the decade of hope, hopes dashed and betrayal for his native Hungary, and the [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>So far, the Philharmonic&#8217;s extraordinary celebration of Gyorgy Ligeti&#8217;s music has concentrated on his work from the 1960s &#8211; the decade of assassinations, Vietnam, the Bay of Pigs, Cuban missiles and the walk on the moon. For Ligeti it was also the decade of hope, hopes dashed and betrayal for his native Hungary, and the time of his first worldwide fame &#8211; bestowed with neither his knowledge nor his consent when Stanley Kubrick appropriated three of his works as part of the score for <i>2001: A Space Odyssey</i>. Later works are still to come in this &#8220;Around Ligeti&#8221; festival: the whimsical, affectionate Horn Trio and the death-defying Piano Etudes at Gindi Auditorium on May 18, and the spellbinding Piano Concerto in the season&#8217;s final subscription weekend, May 22-24.
<p>
<p>Circumstance is important in evaluat-ing Ligeti&#8217;s music &#8211; as it might not be in the case of, let&#8217;s say, Harrison Birtwistle or Elliott Carter. He lets us know early on the forces that shaped his world-views: personal (the death of father and brother in Nazi camps) as well as political. The Requiem of 1963-65, whose performance here under Esa-Pekka Salonen, with the Master Chorale trained by Grant Gershon to sing far above its norm, must be reckoned one of the luminous events in local cultural history. The piece mingles its accents of sorrow with moments of sardonic, grotesque cackle right out of Hieronymus Bosch; better yet, it lets us hear these accents as if from Ligeti himself &#8211; the captivating countenance (lines of sorrow etched over an endearing smile) in the photographs clearly belongs to the composer whose hand shaped this music.
<p>
<p>This is elusive music; it demands and handsomely rewards superhuman performers and listeners of comparable strength. (The exit doors saw much action during the Requiem performance; call it the &#8220;Ligeti Split.&#8221;) The Requiem seems to transcend the realm of sound and turn into something as much sight as well. It also happens in the shorter orchestral pieces, <i>Atmospheres</i> and <i>Lontano</i>: mist-shrouded, mysterious mountainscapes that conjure visions of &#8211; who? Well, Mark Rothko for one. The &#8220;Kyrie&#8221; from the Requiem (which Kubrick used to splendid effect at the end of 2001&#8242;s big light show and the approach to Jupiter) spins a dark, shimmering web out of tiny fragments of choral tone jammed together; the final &#8220;Lacrimosa&#8221; dispels the clouds and ends in a burst of pure white light. (Think for a moment, perchance to dream, about what a collaboration between Ligeti and Robert Wilson might accomplish.) Between these comes the &#8220;Dies Irae&#8221; with its grinning, Boschian monsters, lit up in audible flames of lurid crimson and saffron from chorus and orchestra; you can shut your eyes if you wish, but the colors remain.
<p>
<p>At the Philharmonic&#8217;s previous Ligeti celebration, in February 1993 with the composer in attendance, Salonen had the admirable idea of surrounding his orchestral works with Debussy, thus extending the notion of audible color. This time there was Haydn: three symphonies (Nos. 43, 45 and 49) from the time when the composer (with the blessing of his employer, Prince Esterhazy, a role model for all patrons) felt free to experiment, to stray far from the norms of symphony construction and to invent and explore new worlds. Thus we had the amusing and clever slow decrescendo at the end of the &#8220;Farewell&#8221; Symphony, No. 45, in which the musicians leave the stage (or this time merely turned off their lamps) one by one, and the immensely sad &#8220;Passion&#8221; Symphony (No. 49), with its excruciating outcries from horns at the top of their range. Haydn between Ligeti became like wonderfully refreshing sorbet between courses at some illustrious and memorable banquet.
<p>
<p>Last week&#8217;s &#8220;Green Umbrella&#8221; &#8211; all Ligeti except for Mel Powell&#8217;s haunting &#8220;Nocturne&#8221; for solo violin, played by Mark Baranov in memory of the composer &#8211; included one recent piece, <i>Mysteries of the Macabre</i>, a conflation of three bewitching and insane bits from the 1978 <i>Le Grand Macabre</i>, turned into a suite for soprano and ensemble in 1991, gloriously screamed by the phenomenal Sibylle Ehlert (who has also recorded the work with Salonen in Sony&#8217;s ongoing Ligeti series). The two sets of Aventures and Nouvelles Aventures (1963/65) represent Ligeti&#8217;s ardent participation in the ferment of the time, mingling traditional and off-the-wall musical thinking. &#8220;Burn the opera houses!&#8221; Pierre Boulez had once proclaimed; these prickly little non-operas light the fuses. (Two nights after hoary old <i>Il Trovatore</i>, the contrast, I am sure, was lost on nobody.)
<p>
<p>The text is Ligeti&#8217;s own gibberish concoction; the singers bounce their nonsensical phrases off each other with a confrontational passion worthy of romantic grand opera. The players, dashing around the stage to pull their musical semblances from a banged-upon ashcan and scraps of torn paper as well as a few more &#8220;normal&#8221; noisemakers, enhance the impression that, just beyond the veil of ostensible non-meaning, something of intense, imaginative significance is taking place. Once again no real boundary between visual and sound stimulus is anywhere discernible; the music appears to float within a vast, undefinable continuum, and we are invited to float along. Salonen led performances both vivid and suave; his vocalists included the splendid Phyllis Bryn-Julson, whose heroism in the cause of new music has been celebrated in this space more than once, and will surely be again.
<p>
<p>These, you will not be surprised to learn, are hazardous times for the record industry, and nobody knows (or is willing to let on) how long Sony&#8217;s Ligeti project will continue. The seven discs that have so far appeared are superb. They include the <i>Macabre</i> music and <i>Aventures</i> under Salonen, with the same vocal forces that sang them here; the Etudes in astonishing performances by Pierre-Laurent Aimard (who will play them at Gindi); and a wonderful disc of Ligeti&#8217;s &#8220;mechanical&#8221; music for player piano, barrel organ and &#8211; in a piece he calls, with thumb to nose, <i>Poeme Symphonique</i> &#8211; 100 metronomes, ticking away and each slowing down at its own rate. How can you not love the guy who could dream up something like that?
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		<title>The Misery of Il&#160;Trovatore</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/1998/04/the-misery-of-il-trovatore/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/1998/04/the-misery-of-il-trovatore/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 29 Apr 1998 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=199</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Everything that&#8217;s right about romantic Italian opera, and everything that&#8217;s wrong, comes into focus in Verdi&#8217;s Il Trovatore. The plotline cries out for parody, and has been handsomely treated in that regard by the Brothers Marx in A Night at the Opera and by Gilbert and Sullivan with their theme of baby-switching in both HMS [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Everything that&#8217;s right about romantic Italian opera, and everything that&#8217;s wrong, comes into focus in Verdi&#8217;s Il Trovatore. The plotline cries out for parody, and has been handsomely treated in that regard by the Brothers Marx in A Night at the Opera and by Gilbert and Sullivan with their theme of baby-switching in both HMS Pinafore and The Gondoliers. The music takes a few direct hits, too, as it deserves, including a Jelly Roll Morton improv on what he called &#8220;The Misery&#8221; &#8211; a.k.a. &#8220;Miserere.&#8221;
<p>Sitting ducks for ridicule that both music and story may seem today, there are moments in Verdi&#8217;s opera that nobody should be obliged to live without. My favorite comes at the end of Act 2. Leonora, believing Manrico dead at the hands of his rival the Count di Luna, comes to join a convent. Di Luna and his men mean to kidnap Leonora at the convent gates; he sings of his being smitten with love, and the men do a &#8220;hurry up&#8221; number &#8211; &#8220;Andiam, andiam&#8221; in an urgent staccato while the action, of course, completely stops. Then comes magic; from inside the convent a chorus of nuns creates a ravishing melodic line; it becomes a descant over the onstage &#8220;andiams,&#8221; demonstrating at once the sublime power of opera to meld simultaneous but conflicting actions and emotions into a single musical structure, and Verdi&#8217;s equally sublime power to turn an audience into butter by the sheer beauty of melody. Simple in substance &#8211; perhaps also simple-minded and simplistic &#8211; Il Trovatore is basic opera.
<p>That makes it all the more unfathomable that Stephen Lawless, who directs the Los Angeles Opera&#8217;s first-ever Trovatore, has gone to so much misguided effort to invest the opera with a burden of symbolism, interior meanings and, yes, even s-e-x, whose only result is to bury everything pure and elemental in the work. The set of Benoit Dugardyn is basically a box, floor to ceiling, made up of separate panels that can move around on the stage and even, at times, come between the audience and the action. They are ugly on their own, and will be badly lit even when the crew gets the cues in order, as they weren&#8217;t on opening night. Swords are everywhere: stuck in the ground, hanging from above. Gusts of flame burst out of the stage floor; Manrico delivers his &#8220;Di quella pira&#8221; into what looks like a very pleasant fireplace. During the &#8220;Miserere,&#8221; Leonora picks her way across a stage littered with corpses, pausing to fondle one. The witch-burning only described in the opera is re-enacted onstage, twice. Some of Verdi&#8217;s ballet music for the opera, justly neglected, has been revived to accompany the gang rape of a Gypsy maiden by six soldiers in Andrew George&#8217;s choreography.
<p>It has taken the Los Angeles Opera 12 seasons to get around to Il Trovatore. The work demands (and deserves) the world&#8217;s most expensive voices, to deploy their luxurious high C&#8217;s &#8211; B&#8217;s this time, since the Manrico sings his big aria transposed down &#8211; as weapons in this battle against dramatic verities. (I cannot separate my love of this opera from the sound of Leontyne Price&#8217;s Leonora, live or on disc.) Reports from beyond the mountains tell me that operatic singing on a grand &#8211; and, thus, expensive &#8211; scale still flourishes here and there. You wouldn&#8217;t have learned it at the Music Center last Saturday.
<p>Carol Vaness is a strong, intelligent singer in killer Mozart roles, but her Leonora, to put it succinctly, lacked balls; she delivered her extraordinary music cleanly, accurately, but with no conception of Verdian heat. As I did after her Tosca last year, I think she is miscast in Italian opera. (Next season: La Traviata.) The same goes for Jorma Hynninen&#8217;s di Luna: a fine classical artist with a juiceless voice. As Manrico, Vladimir Bogachov manfully covered the dynamic range from fortissimo upward but also let loose a few ill-advised, strangulated attempts at pianissimo. As Azucena, Nina Terentieva stole the show; she, of them all, had what you could have taken as a genuine Verdian throb, along with some non-Verdian pitch wanderings early on that she later overcame. Of credible stage acting there was none, but nobody goes to Trovatore for great theater. On the podium Gabriele Ferro lit fires of his own with some blatant exaggerations of Verdi&#8217;s red-hot brass scoring. He kept things moving, all right; but nobody goes to Trovatore for the conducting, either.
<p>
<p><b>T</b>he giants pass on; Mel Powell, who died of cancer last week at 75, was one. What a Count di Luna he might have made, with that rich, booming baritone of his wrapped around a gorgeous, invented rhetoric that could turn &#8220;What time is it?&#8221; into high lyric art. So far as I know, Mel never sang outside the shower, but that&#8217;s one of the few of life&#8217;s possibilities that he did leave unexplored. In my college years, when the true classical aficionado risked ostracism by listening to anything on the &#8220;other&#8221; side, I heard a couple of Commodore 78s by a swing band led by a teenage pianist named Mel Powell &#8211; with Benny Goodman sitting in on clarinet under the name of Shoeless Joe Jackson &#8211; and suddenly realized that great minds could exist on that side as well.
<p>Fifty years&#8217; worth of history since that time records Powell&#8217;s defection to the classical side; the onset of muscular dystrophy made touring with a band unthinkable. Then came studies with Paul Hindemith at Yale; founding that school&#8217;s experimental center for electronic music (one of this country&#8217;s first); coming West in 1969 to help found the California Institute of the Arts; settling in at CalArts for the next three decades as teacher and morale officer to generations of hopeful young composers. The great thing about Mel&#8217;s teaching, former students tell me, was his refusal to impose his own stylistic earmarks onto other people&#8217;s music. The great thing about Mel himself was . . . well, Mel.
<p>There aren&#8217;t nearly enough recordings. Several of the early Benny Goodman Band reissues have him on piano; he first played with Goodman in 1937, at 14 (as Melvin Epstein). I defy anyone not to fall in love with the fellow who plays (and also composed) the rippling, tickling piece called &#8220;The Earl,&#8221; which comes on a Goodman disc on Sony called Clarinet a la King, Volume 2. A smattering of Mel&#8217;s chamber music &#8211; tight little flickering pieces like intricately carved, iridescent stones &#8211; is available, but not, alas, his vocal works, the Haiku Settings and the Little Companion Pieces. His 30-minute, Pulitzer-winning two-piano concerto called Duplicates (available on Harmonia Mundi with several valuable shorter works) accurately measures the wit, the endearing tenderness and the awesome imagination of this man. They won&#8217;t be easy to replace.
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		<title>Monstrous&#160;Disgrace</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/1998/04/monstrous-disgrace/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/1998/04/monstrous-disgrace/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 22 Apr 1998 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=198</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[There was a tingle in the news. UCLA&#8217;s Royce Hall, shut for over four years of earthquake repairs and retrofitting, was to reopen its doors with a most newsworthy event: a major collaboration between those blithe, innovative spirits, director/designer/poet Robert Wilson and maximally renowned minimalist composer Philip Glass, together again but for the first time [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>There was a tingle in the news.  UCLA&#8217;s Royce Hall, shut for over four years of earthquake repairs and retrofitting, was to reopen its doors with a most newsworthy event: a major collaboration between those blithe, innovative spirits, director/designer/poet Robert Wilson and maximally renowned minimalist composer Philip Glass, together again but for the first time hereabouts.</p>
<p>You have to know some history. In 1984 Wilson had created a vast entertainment called <i>The</i> <i>CIVIL warS</i>, with a reason for the orthography that I no longer remember; Glass was one of the participating composers, and the entire work &#8211; something like 15 hours &#8211; was to be the centerpiece here of that summer&#8217;s Olympic Arts Festival. The project fizzled through lack of both funding and press support. A few years later, when Michael Blachly became head of the UCLA Performing Arts Center, he made it known that he would battle hell, high water and the graybeards in the school&#8217;s music department to bring in the one unassailable masterpiece of the Glass/Wilson collaboration, the 1976 <i>Einstein on the Beach</i>. Again, no dough, no go. Now, at last, Los Angeles has its first Glass/Wilson production; if you come upon it cold, unaware of their previous accomplishments, you just might wonder why anyone bothered.</p>
<p>The ultimate impression left by <i>Monsters of Grace 1.0 </i>(&#8220;A Digital Opera in Three Dimensions&#8221;) is that of a rummage through the discards of creative artists who approached the new project at less than full strength: Glass, with yet another slice of the now-famous motoric burblings of his electronic orchestra over which a melodic line wanders prettily but aimlessly; Wilson, with the striking but glacially slow-moving stage pictures and light-show effects that stamp his uniqueness (but which also brought him boos for his staging of the Metropolitan Opera&#8217;s recent <i>Lohengrin</i>).</p>
<p>Even the division of labor is strange; Glass provided both words and music, Wilson the &#8220;design and visual concept.&#8221; The sensuous love lyrics of the 13th-century Sufi poet Rumi form the text, flattened into colloquial English in Coleman Barks&#8217; translation and intoned by singers in the pit in close harmony reminiscent of the Andrews Sisters. Wilson&#8217;s designs &#8211; translated from his storyboards into 3-D film by video innovators Jeff Kleiser and Diane Walczak and therefore requiring an audience to don special glasses as we did 45 years ago for the legendary <i>Bwana Devil</i> and <i>House of Wax</i> &#8211; come across like a retrospective of his Greatest Images from the past. Seeing them in 3-D was, of course, a hoot; there&#8217;s one great moment when a table, laden with beautiful small bowls and decorated chopsticks, seems to hover in the air within reach. But we&#8217;ve been there before.</p>
<p>At a panel before Wednesday&#8217;s performance, Wilson attempted a brave face on the work, with exaggerated praise for the freedom gleaned by working with film rather than live stage action. To admirers of his previous work, however, this comes over as a perverse decision; the glory of his stage work is exactly the interplay between live action and innovative lighting, innovative stagecraft &#8211; above all, light. Even the title <i>Monsters of Grace</i> trivializes the undertaking &#8211; it originated, says Wilson, as a slip of his tongue while reading the &#8220;ministers of grace&#8221; line from <i>Hamlet</i>. He found it amusing; does anyone else?</p>
<p>The full title, in fact, is <i>Monsters of Grace 1.0</i>; computer aficionados will recognize the <i>1.0 </i>as suggesting software in a preliminary version. Of the 13 scenes in the Glass/Wilson scenario, only seven had been completed on film for the Los Angeles run; live dancers and actors &#8211; including<br />
6½-year-old Cooper Gerrard trudging the stage in nicely controlled slow motion &#8211; filled in between the segments. The plan is to replace the live-action episodes with more Kleiser/Walczak film for future engagements &#8211; there are 10 co-commissioning venues &#8211; thus moving the work ever further from the realm in which Robert Wilson&#8217;s genius best operates.</p>
<p><i> Monsters of Grace</i> may, in fact, be the world&#8217;s first self-constructing &#8211; and, simultaneously, self-destructing &#8211; opera. As a celebratory piece to reopen a concert hall famous for its acoustics and its stage amenities, a work mostly on film and with all its sound emanating from monster loudspeakers (and only half-finished at that), it provided its star-studded opening-night audience with more questions than answers &#8211; chief among them: Why? The hall, at least, is gorgeous.</p>
<p>As it happened, the Wilson/Glass  monstrosity wasn&#8217;t the only new stage work in town with operatic inclinations and a plot line more complex than your basic boy-meets-girl. Daniel Rothman&#8217;s <i>Cézanne&#8217;s Doubt</i>, which had its local premiere at the last of this season&#8217;s Monday Evening Concerts at the County Museum, is a strange and strangely moving exploration into the tortured mind of the great painter, the conflict that played out in him between expression and order. Rothman&#8217;s hourlong chamber opera draws its texts from Cézanne&#8217;s letters and remembered conversations, and from the mystical Baudelaire poem &#8220;Une Cha rogne,&#8221; with which the painter was obsessed for many years. The work calls for solo baritone (the active and valuable Thomas Buckner), instrumental trio and electronic processing, with video projections not as snazzy as in <i>Monsters</i> but disturbing in their very vagueness.</p>
<p>Rothman teaches composition at Cal Arts; he has also served this area nobly as organizer of new-music concerts. I liked his new piece &#8211; which, by the way, is out on New World Records. Some of it seemed to hover as long, unwavering lines right at the edge of perception; then would come an arc of sound, a mel ody like a clear burst of color worthy of Cézanne himself. The phenomenal CalArts trumpeter Wadada Leo Smith wound small, fragile sounds around the music, like a gold thread seen from afar; clarine tist David Smeyers and cellist Ted Mook completed the en sem     ble: a distin guish ed event, a proper close to a series deserving of high praise (and, alas, a larger audience turnout).</p>
<p>Alfred Brendel  ended his Music Center concert with the last and most mysterious of Schubert&#8217;s piano sonatas, the B-flat (followed by that composer&#8217;s almost unbearably poignant G-flat Impromptu as encore); before, he had played sonatas by Haydn and Mozart. You may dispute his take on classical composers; I found his way with the Mozart C-major Sonata (K. 330) somewhat ungiving. Nobody but Brendel &#8211; at least among today&#8217;s pianists &#8211; knows how to reach into the depths of Schubert&#8217;s language: the sunset tones and heart-stopping emotion that come at the end of the first movement of that B-flat Sonata and then persist beyond definable limits in the sublime slow movement.</p>
<p>We will never know what drove Schubert to such prodigies of expression in his last year &#8211; which also saw the String Quintet, two other piano sonatas, the Mass in E flat and the deliriously blithe-spirited song &#8220;Der Hirt auf dem Felsen.&#8221; Schubert&#8217;s death came less than two months after completing the B-flat Sonata. Was its music a cry for help? A farewell to a world whose beauty he had helped to fashion? Brendel&#8217;s great playing does not answer these questions; he does, however, make them worth asking.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>The Gardiner&#160;Variety</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/1998/04/the-gardiner-variety/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/1998/04/the-gardiner-variety/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 15 Apr 1998 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=197</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Several weeks ago I wrote off the symphonies of Robert Schumann as some of music&#8217;s &#8220;most honorable failures.&#8221; Esa-Pekka Salonen had performed the &#8220;Rhenish&#8221; Symphony in an acceptable but hardly stirring manner &#8211; as he had the &#8220;Spring&#8221; Symphony a year before &#8211; and I came away convinced that, for all its melodic strengths, this [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Several weeks ago I wrote off the symphonies of Robert Schumann as some of music&#8217;s &#8220;most honorable failures.&#8221; Esa-Pekka Salonen had performed the &#8220;Rhenish&#8221; Symphony in an acceptable but hardly stirring manner &#8211; as he had the &#8220;Spring&#8221; Symphony a year before &#8211; and I came away convinced that, for all its melodic strengths, this repertory defies salvation. Part of the blame lies in Schumann&#8217;s turgid orchestration, with nice tunes threaded into a dense contrapuntal underbrush of strings, winds and brass bustling around to no apparent purpose except to thicken the texture; more of the blame lies in the music&#8217;s tendency to run out of gas, notes piled upon notes, rushing madly but going nowhere at all &#8211; the last movement of the &#8220;Rhenish&#8221; as a case in point. Now there is a new recording &#8211; the four completed symphonies, two not-quite symphonies, the Konzertstück for Four Horns and the seldom-played early version of the Fourth Symphony &#8211; in a three-disc box from Deutsche Grammophon, with John Eliot Gardiner conducting his &#8220;Revolutionary and Romantic&#8221; Orchestra. I cannot go so far as to suggest that Gardiner&#8217;s perform ances completely contradict my long-held views on Schumann&#8217;s orchestral compositions, but they are certainly the most persuasive presentations of this music I could ever hope to hear.</p>
<p>The orchestra itself can take credit, an ensemble of about 50 players drawn from the British freelance bunch who know how to deliver authentic-sounding Bach under Christopher Hogwood one night and an authentic early-Romantic sound under Roger Norrington or Gardiner the next. Of the dozen-or-so complete sets of the Schumann symphonies (why so many?), I would place Gardiner&#8217;s emphatically at the top. I would accord the same position for Gardiner&#8217;s set of the Beethoven symphonies (also on DG), challenged among the so-called &#8220;historically informed&#8221; versions only by the daredevil performances under Nikolaus Harnoncourt on Teldec. I also delight in word that Gardiner and this marvelous orchestra are booked into the Orange County Performing Arts Center in May 1999 for a complete unfolding of the Sacred Nine. On my &#8220;best ever&#8221; list I must also include Gardiner&#8217;s reading of the Berlioz <i>Symphonie Fantastique</i>; without falling into the scholarship-for-its-own-sake exercise, he draws from that orchestra exactly the right mix of exquisite, innovative sonority and irresistible forward impulse.</p>
<p>There is nothing &#8220;exquisite&#8221; in Schumann&#8217;s symphonies; for that quality in his orchestral works, you&#8217;d have to turn to his Piano Concerto, which succeeds primarily by sounding like chamber music writ large &#8211; as made gloriously apparent by Alfred Brendel in his performance last week with the Philharmonic (but more about Brendel next time). What makes these Gardiner performances work is the exuberance in his tempos and his phrasing; he can even transmute the bathos of the slow movement of the Second Symphony into a progression both ardent and sane.</p>
<p>The high point of the set is the chance it affords to compare the Fourth (D minor) Symphony in Schumann&#8217;s original scoring from 1841 with the revision he was talked into making (mostly by Clara) 10 years later. The early version is by far the better; even Johannes Brahms, himself no slouch at glutinous scoring, preferred it. Its orchestra is clean and lean; it is the work of a composer in a state of high exhilaration (a year after his marriage to Clara), aware that the Beethoven Nine has been a watershed in the evolution of large-scale orchestral music, and eager to invent new forms to contain his new ideas. There isn&#8217;t much difference between the two versions in the tunes themselves; what is different is the strength of the scoring, the absence of the clutter in the 1841 version that was to make the rest of Schumann&#8217;s orchestral music (including the Manfred Overture, which was also on the Philharmonic program last week) sometimes sound like wet blotting paper.</p>
<p>I&#8217;ve pretty much had it with Sir Edward   Elgar. Sure, there&#8217;s a certain news value in the Violin Concerto in the 1932 recording with Elgar conducting and the teenage Yehudi Menuhin as soloist, and in the Cello Concerto in the video documentary about Jacqueline Du Pré; take away the headlines and you&#8217;re confronted with a painfully interminable succession of small ideas with delusions of grandeur, furiously passionate unfoldings of melodic lines of paltry imagination. I sat through the 56 minutes of Elgar&#8217;s Second Symphony, which Mark Elder conducted to end last week&#8217;s Philharmonic program, and prayed in vain for sleep. It was a sensible, decently spirited performance &#8211; a blessed eight minutes shorter than the DG recording under Giuseppe Sinopoli &#8211; without presenting any reasonable case for the work&#8217;s persistence in the repertory. His countrymen conferred laurels upon Elgar as some kind of cultural hero, and he repaid the honor in kind, with great wads of music calculated to elicit an audience&#8217;s most elevated feelings about God, Country and the Muses. I hear nothing all that British in the Second Symphony, or in the aforementioned concertos &#8211; as I do, for example, in the hey-nonny dance music and pseudo-archaic harmonies in the symphonies of Ralph Vaughan Williams &#8211; except for orchestral textures that remind me of week-old Yorkshire pudding. To these ears Elgar represents the dying fall of the late-Romantic German manner best exemplified in the nine symphonies of Anton Bruck ner &#8211; except that Bruckner knew how to provide an audience with a little time to breathe now and then.</p>
<p>The tendency toward elephantiasis late in the last century also afflicted Gustav Mahler, of course; here, however, there&#8217;s a saving grace. He knew how to temper an astronomically overstuffed symphonic expostulation by bringing in a dog act along the way, or some acrobats. The Mahler Third runs 95 minutes in Salonen&#8217;s new two-disc Sony set (compared to the 104-minute slog by the usually footloose Michael Tilson Thomas on an earlier Sony release); the forces are those that performed it here last fall. It has apparently become Salonen&#8217;s signature tune: the austere intellectual, avatar of Pierre Boulez on Earth, finding a kindred spirit in this deliciously profane monster. On the home Victrola, without the conductor&#8217;s bouncing hairdo, without the seductive lurings of the offstage bugle calls and the beguilement from the look of the onstage kiddie choir (the Paulist Boy Choristers from West L.A.), the piece still scores mightily. What you might miss in the concert hall, in fact, rendered desperate by awareness of those impending 95 minutes, is the chance to relax, to greet the music on its own changeable terms, to recoil at the impact of the two outer movements &#8211; both of them wrenching and excellent &#8211; and to giggle delightedly at the dog acts in between.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>P.D.Q. on the&#160;Q.T.</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/1998/04/pdq-on-the-qt/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/1998/04/pdq-on-the-qt/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 08 Apr 1998 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=196</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Every year around this time, the excellent local ensemble called the Armadillo String Quartet puts on a concert of music by its anointed composer-in-nonresidence, Peter Schickele. Peter comes out from New York for the concert; sometimes &#8211; as a pretty good pianist &#8211; he mixes in with the string players, and he also delivers program [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Every year around this time, the excellent local ensemble called the Armadillo String Quartet puts on a concert of<br />
music by its anointed composer-in-nonresidence, Peter Schickele. Peter comes out from New York for the concert; sometimes &#8211; as a pretty good pianist &#8211; he mixes in with the string players, and he also delivers program notes before each piece that mainly tell us, as if we needed telling, that making up musical ideas and setting them down on paper is the world&#8217;s most enjoyable practice, bar none.</p>
<p>Schickele, I also don&#8217;t need to tell you, has gone through much of his life as an alter ego named P.D.Q. Bach. In that disguise he has created a wonderful repertory (much of it now recorded on TelArc) of musical spoofs both wise and hilarious, the kind of gloss on the works of the Great Masters that can only make sense after you&#8217;ve thoroughly absorbed the original targets of these manic rewrites. To fashion such latter-day masterworks as the <i>1712 Overture</i> or the too-true-to-be-good Philip Glass takeoff called <i>Einstein on the Fritz</i> demands more than merely the ability to look funny onstage; it demands knowledge. Like other advocates of the proposition that the way to make music ridiculous is to tell the truth about it &#8211; Anna Russell and Gerald Hoffnung, but not the glib, patronizing Victor Borge &#8211; P.D.Q.&#8217;s music constitutes both a parody and a celebration. He claims to have retired his doppelgänger from the touring circuit in favor of increased activity as a &#8220;serious&#8221; composer; don&#8217;t be too sure.</p>
<p>Last week&#8217;s concert, in the exceptionally pleasant setting of Pasadena&#8217;s Neighborhood Church, suggested that the separation between the halves of Schickele&#8217;s musical persona is not as complete as he would have us think. The program consisted of chamber works and four-hand piano music, including a brand-new String Quintet: music serious in intent and immensely charming in performance. Schickele&#8217;s music falls under the rubric of conservatism; sometimes it turns rather lavender and sets out to rephrase Gabriel Fauré. He thinks in tonalities and is unafraid of diatonic triads. Conservative, radical: This business of categories doesn&#8217;t mean very much, actually. I would rather be serenaded by the soft accents of a Peter Schickele quartet, even when it&#8217;s full of other people&#8217;s music, than be pulverized under the intellectualized grindings of an Elliott Carter. A composer&#8217;s choice of tools is a lot less important than what he manages to build with them.</p>
<p>P.D.Q. Bach helps with the building, deny his presence as Schickele might. A set of piano duets called <i>Little Mushrooms</i> (from the nickname given to Franz Schubert by his Viennese friends) turned out to be an uncanny simulacrum of Schubert&#8217;s breathtaking harmonic adventures and gift for melody floating unfettered. Maybe <i>Mushrooms</i> is more serious in tone than the P.D.Q. repertory, but it gives off the same sense of rip-off-as-love-letter. The new quintet, at 35 minutes one of the more substantial of Schickele&#8217;s chamber works, is full of endearing, romantic sounds; you realize shortly into the work that these are not all that far removed from the sounds that make Mozart&#8217;s string quintets the masterworks they are.</p>
<p>I cannot predict that any of Schickele&#8217;s music, from either half of his brain, will be around and admired in, say, 2098; I know that two hours of it came together last week to form a modestly challenging, eminently satisfying, feel-good sort of concert. We could use more of same. The Armadillos &#8211; Barry Socher, Steven Scharf, Raymond Tischer and Armen Ksajikian &#8211; delivered with love of music and pride of ownership; Schickele and Bryan Pezzone played the <i>Mushrooms</i>; violist Roland Kato and clarinetist Ralph Williams were also on hand, and a good time was had, I think, by all.</p>
<p>Slowly, the management of the Getty   Center moves toward a resumption of concert activities; a representative told me last week that they&#8217;re &#8220;in the works.&#8221; It won&#8217;t be easy, perhaps, to match the euphoric setting of the old summer concerts in the handsome, intimate Inner Peristyle Garden in Malibu, but life moves on, and last Friday&#8217;s sunset from Mr. Getty&#8217;s new parapet was worth fighting crowds and traffic. The occasion was the concert by House Blend, a newly formed and newly named chamber ensemble of old friends: pianists Gloria Cheng-Cochran and Grant Gershon, violinist Elizabeth Baker and soprano Elissa Johnston. Getty&#8217;s indoor auditorium is a functional, comfortable room seating 450, which is the right size; it&#8217;s dry to the ear and boring to the eye in, alas, the tradition of performing spaces in museums.</p>
<p>The House Blenders&#8217; program offered a nice assortment of novelties: Colin MacPhee&#8217;s remarkably effective transcriptions for two pianos of Balinese gamelan music; Messiaen&#8217;s early, Debussy-tinged <i>La Mort du Nombre</i>, the evening&#8217;s one work involving all four performers, with Gershon transformed for the moment into a reedy but accurate tenor; new songs by local Donalds Crockett and Davis and by New York&#8217;s Aaron Kernis; and <i>Hallelujah Junction</i>, a bouncy new work for two pianos by John Adams, full of amusing rhythmic dead ends, maybe a little long for its 15-minute length. The music I took home in my head was &#8220;Morning Innocents,&#8221; one of Kernis&#8217; <i>Songs of Innocents</i>, a line of vocal melody poignant and truly beautiful.</p>
<p>In December 1996 I returned from a   trip to Germany singing the praises of<br />
a young composer named Hanna Kulenty (b. 1961), Polish-born and living in the Netherlands, where she has studied contemporary techniques at the knee of the genial terrorist Louis Andriessen. I had seen Kulenty&#8217;s chamber opera <i>Mother of Black-Winged Dreams</i> in Munich, and found it brave and resourceful. Kulenty was at USC last Saturday, participating in panels organized by the school&#8217;s Polish Music Reference Center on what it means to be a Polish composer and what it means to be a woman composer. At night, before a paltry audience at Hancock Hall, three chamber works by Kulenty were performed; one, <i>A Sixth Circle</i> for trumpet and piano, had its world premiere.</p>
<p>I will continue to sing her praises. What I have heard of Kulenty tells me of a headstrong experimenter with some powerful ideas about pounding on and rewarding a hearer&#8217;s senses. Best of all on Saturday night &#8211; on first hearing, anyway &#8211; was the new trumpet piece, running about 10 minutes, setting a strong and shapely lyric line (plus a lot of sonic tricks) for Tal Bar-Niv&#8217;s trumpet against a breathless perpetuum mobile from Sergei Silvansky&#8217;s piano. Nothing of Kulenty&#8217;s is listed in the current Schwann; there are recordings avail-<br />
able abroad, including her Second Piano<br />
Concerto, a knockout piece. Tell me about there not being any new composers.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Monsters</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/1998/04/monsters/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/1998/04/monsters/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 08 Apr 1998 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=195</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[One thing is certain: Royce Hall, grand architectural landmark on the UCLA campus, 1,829-seat concert hall of matchless comfort, beauty and sonic amenities, reopens next Wednesday. After four years and three months of repair, reconstruction and retrofitting in the wake of the Northridge earthquake &#8211; four years in which ticket holders for the lavish offerings [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>One thing is certain: Royce Hall, grand   architectural landmark on the UCLA campus, 1,829-seat concert hall of matchless comfort, beauty and sonic amenities, reopens next Wednesday. After four years and three months of repair, reconstruction and retrofitting in the wake of the Northridge earthquake &#8211; four years in which ticket holders for the lavish offerings of the UCLA Center for the Performing Arts have endured the flaking plaster and flaky acoustics of alternative theaters rushed into service &#8211; the Westside&#8217;s premiere performance space is ready once again for an audience.</p>
<p>What that audience is in for, on opening night and for the ensuing 10 nights and two matinees, is not so easily explained. If you&#8217;re hoping for a proud demonstration of the hall&#8217;s legendary acoustics, be warned that everything this time will emerge from loudspeakers, probably amplified up the bazooty. The work itself, Robert Wilson and Philip Glass&#8217; <i>Monsters of Grace 1.0</i>, has a text consisting of steamy love-lyrics by a 13th-century mystic, and action in the form of 3-D film to be projected onto a screen filling the 40-foot proscenium. Up front, the information is enticing: This is the first creative collaboration in 14 years of two of the most controversial, influential and &#8211; here and there, anyway &#8211; highly regarded creative spirits these days. When the Texas-born director-playwright-designer-poet-etc. Wilson first merged his visions with those of the Baltimore-born New York taxi-driver-cum-minimalist-composer Glass, the result was an incredible five-hour-plus stage work called <i>Einstein on the Beach</i>, which left audiences both baffled and enthralled. Everyone agreed, at least, that the marriage of music and theater had produced an offspring of spectacular importance, perhaps even greatness. But nobody was exactly sure of how to put it into words.</p>
<p>&#8220;Phil and I have been working on  <i> Monsters</i> for something like three years,&#8221; Wilson says in a wee-hours phone call from his hotel in Paris, where he has just flown in from Bogotá and is about to fly off to Milan. &#8220;No, it hasn&#8217;t been like the way we worked on <i>Einstein</i>, together for hours and days &#8211; we&#8217;re both too busy. But now we know each other, and can do our collaboration in a kind of shorthand. It&#8217;s important that we share this sense of aim. We think alike.&#8221;</p>
<p>In 1976, when <i>Einstein</i> achieved two performances at Manhattan&#8217;s august Metropolitan Opera House (underwritten not by the opera company, however, but by Wilson and Glass themselves), Glass had already produced a repertory of seductive, hypnotic music relying chiefly on small melodic particles obsessively repeated. Wilson had produced one play lasting 12 hours, <i>The Life and Times of Joseph Stalin</i>, and another called <i>I Was Sitting on My Patio This Guy Appeared I Thought I Was Hallucinating</i> that didn&#8217;t last much longer than its title. Like Mozart and Da Ponte, like Gilbert and Sullivan &#8211; but vastly different from all four &#8211; Wilson and Glass found a way to clone each other&#8217;s cultural thumbprint. <i>Einstein</i>, in case you&#8217;re wondering, did deal in an indirect sort of way with the great scientist, as lover, mathematician, violinist and designer of spaceships; it also dealt &#8211; in an &#8220;aria&#8221; repeated verbatim 43 times &#8211; with bathing caps, Fourth of July plumes and the beach.</p>
<p>Glass had to drive his cab for another year or two to pay off the <i>Einstein</i> bills, but by 1980 he and Wilson were permanently entrenched in the ranks of those progress-minded souls who cannot bear to leave well enough alone. In 1984 the producers of Los Angeles&#8217; Olympic Arts Festival, an impressive gathering of performing forces from around the world, had conceived a vast original theatrical entertainment as the festive centerpiece: a 15-hour dramatic panorama, <i>the CIVIL warS</i>, with a text by Wilson and music by half a dozen composers of varying backgrounds, its separate parts staged in various theaters overseas and the whole shebang then assembled in Los Angeles. Glass composed the last of the five acts, which had its premiere at the Rome Opera in March 1984. By the time that curtain had gone up, word had already arrived from Los Angeles that <i>the CIVIL warS</i> would not take place. Wilson&#8217;s subtitle for the work, &#8220;a tree is best measured when it is down,&#8221; took on a prophetic ring.</p>
<p>Fourteen years later, Wilson, 56, is now hailed as the supreme theatrical innovator of the time, with a repertory that includes staging of traditional operas (Gluck&#8217;s <i>Alceste</i> in Stuttgart), original musical theater (<i>Black Rider</i>, to music by Tom Waits) and a spectacular legacy of plays. Glass, just past 60, is . . . well, Glass: of opera, movie (<i>Kundun</i>, etc.) and Violin Concerto fame. Technology marches on; no longer a couple of flesh-and-blood wooers in a railway carriage lurching through the night (as in <i>Einstein</i>), no longer an Abe Lincoln on 20-foot stilts or a singer in a birdcage high above the stage (as in <i>the CIVIL warS</i>), the major action in <i>Monsters of Grace 1.0</i> has been enshrined onto 3-D film, with other singers and the Philip Glass instrumental ensemble functioning on the sidelines. Objects &#8211; a shoe, a boy on a bicycle, a house &#8211; tumble through seemingly limitless space; a starscape stretches out toward infinity. The audience catches the 3-D effects by watching through polarized glasses, designed by L.A. Eyeworks and handed out free at the door. Anyone else remember <i>House of Wax</i>? 1953, wasn&#8217;t it?</p>
<p>The title and plot, if such there be, stem from the poetry of the Persian mystic Jelaluddin Rumi, greatest of the Sufi poets, &#8212;&#8212;&#8211;<br />
AUTHOR of ecstatic love-poetry &#8211; and founder of the order of dervishes, religious celebrants whose whirling movements while praying represent the movement of the human soul around God. I wonder at the &#8220;<i>1.0</i>,&#8221; which looks suspiciously like the indication on a preliminary version of computer software. The press handout supports my suspicion by referring to it as a &#8220;beta&#8221; version; will it, perhaps, self-destruct in the middle of the hero&#8217;s big aria? Producer Jed Wheeler, on the phone from New York, explains: &#8220;It simply means that there are still more questions than answers.&#8221; Jeff Kleiser, who with Diana Wal czak created the 3-D film, converting Wilson&#8217;s storyboards into computerized images, explains further: &#8220;The entire performance runs about 70 minutes, and we have completed about half that amount on film. The rest will be done at Royce by live actors and singers. As we complete more film before future engagements, we&#8217;ll keep plugging in the segments until, eventually, the entire work is on film.&#8221; Fine and dandy; <i>Monsters of Grace</i>, in whatever version, could be the world&#8217;s first self-<i>constructing</i> opera.</p>
<p>Memories, memories . . . At rehearsals   of <i>the CIVIL warS</i> at the Rome Opera in 1984, I watched in amazement as Wilson took as much as two hours to adjust the angle of lighting to the angle of a singer&#8217;s hand. I sat with Glass and Wilson at a hotel bar in Rome, demolishing the brandy supply and sweating out the uprisings as the various operatic unions took turns going on strike to protest the repetitions in Glass&#8217; music, which forced them to count. We were in the bar when the news came of the Los Angeles cancellation. Whatever else the realities and unrealities of <i>Monsters of Grace</i>, Los Angeles, at least, is getting its long overdue first shot of Wilson-Glass.</p>
<p>But what, in fact, are we getting? On the phone from Paris, Wilson points out the difference between two hours&#8217; work on a single image on a live stage and manipulating the computer-created visuals. &#8220;I turned over the storyboards to Jeff and Diana last October. Now it&#8217;s April, we go on in two weeks, and I haven&#8217;t even seen the final results. <i>Maybe</i> I&#8217;ll come out to see them in Los Angeles. All that exacting work I&#8217;ve always done on the stage, that&#8217;s out of my hands now. Maybe I&#8217;ll love it, maybe not.&#8221;</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Home of the&#160;Brave</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/1998/04/home-of-the-brave/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/1998/04/home-of-the-brave/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 01 Apr 1998 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=194</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[&#8220;Now that&#8217;s music,&#8221; whispered the man behind me to his companion, as Esa-Pekka Salonen and the Los Angeles Philharmonic launched into the merry A-major opening bars of Mendelssohn&#8217;s &#8220;Italian&#8221; Symphony. After a stiff dose of forward-marching works from his own century to start off last week&#8217;s program, my neighbor had finally achieved heartsease in this [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>&#8220;Now that&#8217;s music,&#8221; whispered the man behind me to his companion, as Esa-Pekka Salonen and the Los Angeles Philharmonic launched into the merry A-major opening bars of Mendelssohn&#8217;s &#8220;Italian&#8221; Symphony. After a stiff dose of forward-marching works from his own century to start off last week&#8217;s program, my neighbor had finally achieved heartsease in this music from the listener-friendly distant past. Never mind that neither of the two preceding works &#8211; Dmitri Shostakovich&#8217;s Second Piano Concerto and Jerry Goldsmith&#8217;s Music for Orchestra &#8211; ranked particularly high as standard-bearers for 20th-century innovation. The lightweight Shostakovich concerto, written as an adult toy for the composer&#8217;s pianist son Maxim and masterfully toyed with last week by Yefim Bronfman, burbles along in a crystalline F-major, throws in some quirky rhythmic changes to recognize its own time and place, but tells us little we couldn&#8217;t learn from a scampering, virtuoso exercise from a century before. Goldsmith&#8217;s eight-minute sequence of agreeable noises, composed in 1972 but only now achieving its West Coast premiere &#8211; so much for Southern California and its close-knit arts community &#8211; is the same kind of loose compilation of favorite moments from here and there (Stravinsky, Ravel, Rach, you name it) that light up the soundtrack creations by some of Hollywood&#8217;s more literate music spinners.
<p>The music page of the March 22 New York Times carried a couple of articles that explored the queasy relationship between the music of this century and what should be (but seldom is) a receptive audience, scattering blame over the fallow fields as a farmer might manure. The lively, controversial Paul Griffiths takes to task a pronouncement by Julian Lloyd Webber (brother of Andrew and a cellist on his own) that the blame for the decline of admiration and support for new music rests on the composers of the last 40 or so years, who have failed to provide the public with music they could like. New music terrifies people or makes them angry, says Lloyd Webber; they then seek revenge by boycotting the classical masters as well. Not only Carter and Babbitt but also Beethoven and Haydn wither away, and record producers go belly-up. Balderdash, retorts Griffiths. Fear stalks the land, he agrees, but the blame shouldn&#8217;t fall only on the composers.
<p>&#8220;Exposure to the best new music,&#8221; he claims, &#8220;remains woefully inadequate,&#8221; and the entire musical landscape &#8211; from its failure to take root in schools to the timidity of managements to risk brave programming &#8211; shares the blame.
<p>Farther down the page is Peter Gelb&#8217;s message of comfort and joy. Yes, says the president of Sony Classical, composers of new music have egregiously misbehaved in the last four or five decades. &#8220;A major record label,&#8221; he states, &#8220;has an obligation to make records that are relevant . . . It is neither commercially rewarding nor artistically relevant for us to make recordings that sell only a few thousand copies . . . For far too long classical-music audiences have been subjected to &#8211; and sometimes suffered through &#8211; an almost exclusive diet of new music that was atonal and difficult to enjoy.&#8221; Accessible new music, claims Gelb, has until now been &#8220;blocked by a cabal of atonal composers, academics and [!] classical-music critics&#8221;; now &#8211; thanks to the emergence of a new breed of &#8220;relevant&#8221; composers (all under contract to Sony, as it happens), typified by the slushmastery of John Corigliano and the slick opportunism of Tan Dun &#8211; the millennium is at hand, the atonal beast has been slain. (I love the way Gelb employs the epithet &#8220;atonal&#8221; as a synonym for &#8220;bogeyman.&#8221;) As for the notion of ascribing blame for music&#8217;s problems to the musical press &#8211; beheading the messenger for the message, in other words &#8211; would that we made that much difference in the health of new music or old!
<p>What saddens me the most in Gelb&#8217;s article is the realization that he is the direct descendant of one of classical music&#8217;s unchallenged heroes, the late Goddard Lieberson. Long before the Sony takeover, when the label bore the revered name of Columbia, Lieberson built a stupendous catalog of the new and important music of his time: a vast American repertory including songs by Copland and chamber music by Schuman, the first recordings of Boulez and Stockhausen, the first samples of the emerging electronic music, even a big and disturbing piece of minimalism, Steve Reich&#8217;s Come Out. These records never sold more than Gelb&#8217;s &#8220;only a few thousand copies&#8221;; Lieberson liked to fess up that the losses were covered by sales of Columbia&#8217;s Andre Kostelanetz and original-cast discs. His legacy &#8211; which also included extensive surveys of such giants as Stravinsky and Schoenberg &#8211; added up to one of the most glowing testimonials to the relevance of new-music recording. There was word a couple of years ago that Sony was planning a major reissue of the Lieberson repertory; then there was word that the people hired to pursue that project had all been sacked. Sony&#8217;s one current new-music project of great value, but of uncertain future, is its Gyorgy Ligeti series under Esa-Pekka Salonen &#8211; financed not by Sony but by a private individual who happens to worship Ligeti&#8217;s music, but who also happens at the moment to be in an English prison awaiting trial on a manslaughter rap.
<p>For about 150 years (1720-1870, say) of its millennium-long history, serious music derived most of its motive power from harmony, the interaction of consonance and dissonance to develop a sequence of urgencies and resolutions. Drama was heightened when a resolution took an unexpected turn: the shattering key change at the end of the &#8220;Crucifixus&#8221; in Bach&#8217;s Mass, the howling of Beethoven&#8217;s trumpets in the Funeral March of the &#8220;Eroica&#8221;; the torrents of audible ecstasy as Siegmund draws the sword in Wagner&#8217;s Die Walkure. Before those 150 years, and since that time, music has drawn upon other devices as well.
<p>In the second of two concerts last week, at Irvine&#8217;s Barclay Theater, the Arditti Quartet, masters of contemporary chamber music in any of the most daunting styles you can name, began their program with the &#8220;Grosse Fugue&#8221; that Beethoven had originally planned as the finale of his Opus 130 Quartet but which he later &#8211; on the urging of friends, ancestors perhaps of Peter Gelb &#8211; replaced with a kinder, gentler piece. It&#8217;s an amazing work, that 15-minute exercise in contrapuntal perversity, with Beethoven hurling great handfuls of craggy, twisted melodic lines at one another and commanding them to cohere, and with the players themselves &#8211; yes, even the phenomenal Ardittis &#8211; driven to violate their instruments&#8217; gentler nature with heaven-storming squalls and outcries.
<p>The remainder of the program that night included three more-recent works of killer status &#8211; Elliott Carter&#8217;s new Quartet No. 5, the Second Quartet of Akira Nishimura and the Second of Ligeti; the Carter and Nishimura had also been on the previous night&#8217;s concert at the County Museum, with lesser pieces by Jonathan Harvey and Roger Reynolds. At the Irvine concert the Beethoven of 1826 seemed to belong in this late-20th-century company, joining heart and mind to share the element that above all sustains the art of great composers of any time: the passion to be brave, and to assume bravery in the audience as well. The crowd at the County Museum was full of Arditti groupies (I am one); the Irvine turnout was older, subscribers to a chamber-music series that had previously included more comforting fare. Yet the exit doors were seldom used during this extraordinary concert; bravery was in the air.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>The Pursuit of&#160;Hippiness</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/1998/03/the-pursuit-of-hippiness/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/1998/03/the-pursuit-of-hippiness/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 25 Mar 1998 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=193</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Robert Ashley&#8217;s music offends me, insults my intelligence, wearies my posterior. Twice in my career as ear-for-hire I have been moved to issue a resonant &#8220;boo&#8221; at a public event. Once was at a Bang on a Can marathon concert in New York three years ago, 55 minutes into an interminable improvised reminiscence by Ashley, [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Robert Ashley&#8217;s music offends me,   insults my intelligence, wearies my posterior. Twice in my career as ear-for-hire I have been moved to issue a resonant &#8220;boo&#8221; at a public event. Once was at a Bang on a Can marathon concert in New York three years ago, 55 minutes into an interminable improvised reminiscence by Ashley, with musical punctuation, on the subject of his mother&#8217;s tomato-soup recipe; the other was last Tuesday at the Japan America Theater, after the 35-or-so minutes of a new Ashley work called <i>Superior Seven</i>. In neither case did my verbal reaction attract kindred souls; mine was the sole voice in the wilderness.</p>
<p>For &#8220;wilderness&#8221; read &#8220;trackless waste.&#8221; <i>Superior Seven </i>— its title and basic pulse drawn from the word rhythms in some real estate ads Ashley happened upon &#8211; slogs through an aimless melodic unwinding with no discernible direction or goal. Solo flute and piano play in unison most of the time; the supporting chamber ensemble doubles their phrases. We are supposed to think about gamelans, or south Indian musical texture, or perhaps the ethereal minimalism of Górecki; the abject poverty of the ideas, and the unconscionable lengths to which they are stretched, make such legitimate associations impossible.</p>
<p>The concert was the yearly contribution of the CalArts music department to the Philharmonic&#8217;s &#8220;Green Umbrella&#8221; series; Ashley has been a guest artist at the school this year. He is 68 and apparently well-regarded. His own New York–based record label &#8211; Lovely Music, one of the world&#8217;s great misnomers &#8211; is well-stocked with his works. Young and hopeful composers can, I suppose, benefit from occasional access to their elders in the field, and Ashley&#8217;s affected macho-hip demeanor, with music to match, might bridge the age gap. You have to wonder, though, how a novice composer in search of such basic matters as the right way to bring a work to a logical ending might profit from the presence of an  elder spirit who either doesn&#8217;t know or  doesn&#8217;t care to know such things himself.</p>
<p>Neither the Ashley nor two similarly inconsequential works by Alvin Lucier and the late Salvatore Martirano furnished much in the way of festivity to this CalArts Spring Music Festival. As a matter of fact, the paltry material at the last two or three CalArts &#8220;Umbrella&#8221; events, by other composers who have had residencies at the school, should be cause for concern. Years ago these festivals were stimulating gatherings of illustrious creators from all points of the compass. Now they have become . . . Swell, Robert Ashley.</p>
<p>Two works by the marvelous Chen Yi, also a recent CalArts resident, made the evening worth the venturing, however: marvelous, resourceful interminglings of cultural outlooks a world apart, the <i>Duo Ye</i> for small orchestra (recorded on New Albion) and the haunting <i>Song in Winter</i> for a mix of Chinese and Western instruments. China has sent out (or kicked out) dozens of important composers in the last few years, all of them understandably obsessed with effecting some kind of ocean-spanning mix between their identities and ours. Chen &#8211; smiling, tiny, looking for all the world like your favorite aunt bearing a fresh batch of cookies &#8211; has been one of the most successful. <i>Song in Winter</i>, with its important part for the <i>zheng </i>(a plucked instrument resembling the Japanese koto), is an enchanting piece about flickering. Strands of melody twist in and out of Asian and Western harmonies, the wisps of color pass from the stately Chinese instrument to the more demonstrative piano and percussion; the flute, that most &#8220;international&#8221; of all instruments, serves as a binding force.</p>
<p>If the music didn&#8217;t always speak well of CalArts, at least the level of performances did, with David Rosenboom leading the latest incarnation of the school&#8217;s New Century Players. The Ashley enlisted the services of flutist Rachel Rudich and pianist Bryan Pezzone; cellist Erika Duke-Kirpatrick, ubiquitous heroine of the new-music cause, formed the firm foundation for the first Chen Yi piece; the sounds of Weishan Liu playing her <i>zheng </i>were like cooling breezes.</p>
<p>These have been busy, rewarding   weeks, and I don&#8217;t have nearly the space to do them justice. Britain&#8217;s Emma Kirkby sang baroque songs and arias at the County Museum; our own Dawn Upshaw sang Rachmaninoff, Strauss and the achingly beautiful &#8220;Mirabai&#8221; songs of John Harbison at the Music Center; if you listened carefully, you surely heard the flutter of angel wings above both events. The Penderecki String Quartet &#8211; Polish by name, Canadian by residence &#8211; gave a spectacular program of tough, mostly new works at the museum, including György Kurtág&#8217;s coiled-spring, intensely beautiful <i>Memorial Mass</i> for Andreae Szervanszky and the String Quartet No. 2 by the group&#8217;s namesake, its quotient of violence a poignant reminder of Penderecki&#8217;s greatness before he went easy-listening. Leonard Stein&#8217;s &#8220;Piano Spheres&#8221; concert at the Pasadena Neighborhood Church ended with music of surprising eloquence: Stein&#8217;s own piano transcription of Schoenberg&#8217;s Variations on a Recitative, which never had much to tell me in its original scoring for organ, now brought to life.</p>
<p>At the museum, too, the staunch California EAR Unit sails ever upward, bloodied, unbowed, through music now abject and now invigorating, through the dismal spectacle of a 600-seat theater less than 10 percent full. The remarkable Alison Knowles was on hand for the March 11 concert, a composer/visual artist/ soundscape creator and remarkable in whatever she does. <i>Frijoles Canyon Live</i>, which had its world premiere that night, is a somewhat gorgeous conflation of the range of sounds that might (just might) define the trajectory of a voyage from Santa Fe&#8217;s Frijoles Canyon to northern Ontario: animal songs, the percussive impacts of city life, the unmeasurable expanse of empty space. Years ago, lesser spirits &#8211; Roy Harris, say, or Howard Hanson &#8211; played with the idea of translating American vastness into &#8220;pure&#8221; music: long-held cello tones for the Kansas night sky, or newly contrived yippee-ay-yay tunes for the Texas part. Knowles&#8217; piece comes closer, not because she draws upon authentic noises for some of her effects, but because a superior sense of form and motion makes her audible landscape into something recognizable and powerful.</p>
<p>Her music was followed by Kamran Ince&#8217;s 1996 <i>Turquoise</i>, another work of extraordinary, pulsating beauty. It was my first encounter with Ince &#8211; born in Montana of Turkish and American parents &#8211; and not, I hope, my last. He knows how to make music move &#8211; a talent you don&#8217;t find on every tree.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Finnish&#160;Touches</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/1998/03/finnish-touches-2/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/1998/03/finnish-touches-2/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 18 Mar 1998 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=192</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[It was Magnus Lindberg&#8217;s week: music long awaited, handsomely produced, agreeably if not ecstatically received. Finnish-born in 1958 &#8211; three days older than Esa-Pekka Salonen &#8211; Lindberg is already known here for some extraordinary works on disc, music of intense, raw energy, its dusky instrumental colors pierced now and then by lightning bolts. In their [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>It was Magnus Lindberg&#8217;s week: music long awaited, handsomely produced, agreeably if not ecstatically received. Finnish-born in 1958 &#8211; three days older than Esa-Pekka Salonen &#8211; Lindberg is already known here for some extraordinary works on disc, music of intense, raw energy, its dusky instrumental colors pierced now and then by lightning bolts. In their conservatory days, Lindberg and Salonen worked together to give their country a musical life that honored its one historic monolith, but looked toward a creative future in which the Sibelius shadow might dwindle somewhat. They founded a new-music ensemble, Toimii, to serve Finland the way the California EAR Unit and the Philharmonic&#8217;s New Music Group serve Los Angeles: as a message to new composers with new ideas that their music has a chance of being heard. Largely through their efforts, Finland has attained a musical stature beyond anything in its Sibelian past.
<p>Even though both young men forsook their native land to chart broader horizons &#8211; in Paris, with the violently innovative group gathered at the feet of Pierre Boulez &#8211; neither completely turned his back on his musical heritage. Lindberg lives once again in Helsinki, and Salonen conducts the music of Sibelius. (On a recent quick trip to New York &#8211; confronted with the grim specter of a Sibelius program at Carnegie Hall as the only accessible entertainment &#8211; I heard Salonen and a visiting student orchestra from the Sibelius Academy in a hurtle through the Fifth Symphony that left me exhilarated for hours. You never can tell.)
<p>Until last week, Lindberg&#8217;s best-known work was <i>Kraft</i>, a blazing, high-voltage half-hour recorded (on Finlandia) in 1985 by the Toimii players and a full orchestra under Salonen&#8217;s direction. At Tuesday&#8217;s &#8220;Green Umbrella&#8221; concert, three remarkable Lindberg works got their first local hearings: <i>Related Rocks</i>, violent, dark-hued music for percussion and synthesizer; the fluid, lyrical Duo Concertante for small orchestra with clarinet and cello solos; and another knockout piece, Arena II. All have been recorded; a large Lindberg discography already exists on Finland&#8217;s two labels, Ondine and Finlandia, which are kind to native composers to an extent that companies in other countries could well take to heart. On Thursday, Salonen and the Philharmonic played music commissioned from Lindberg by enlightened Los Angeles money, the 22-minute <i>Fresco</i>.
<p>It&#8217;s the sheer energy of Lindberg&#8217;s music that hits you first off: dense clouds of sound, melodic lines circling one another in constant whirlwind motion, driven onward by a remarkable variety of textures. The 1990 Duo Concertante &#8211; its solo lines gorgeously played at the &#8220;Green Umbrella&#8221; by Lorin Levee and Gloria Lum &#8211; is the most immediately likable of the four Lindberg works heard here last week. I love its sense of hovering in clear, cold air: long, wispy melodic lines that curl around one another and push forward, its harmonic language unrelated to the classical &#8220;rules&#8221; yet logical in itself. <i>Fresco</i>, the Philharmonic piece, seemed on first hearing imbued with the same fierceness, but with perhaps less of the clean-burning energy of the works for smaller ensemble. In the Chandler Pavilion&#8217;s grossly imperfect acoustics, some of the great sound-swirls were merely muddy &#8211; merely (dare I say it?) Sibelian. You can hear the work on the Philharmonic&#8217;s new broadcast series on KKGO-FM the week of May 18; that will be the time for judgment. I know already that Lindberg is a major composer and that his visit here was a major event.
<p>I am not fond of Leonard Bernstein&#8217;s Serenade under good circumstances; hearing it after Lindberg&#8217;s <i>Fresco</i> did it even greater cruelty. The work is cloaked in self-esteem: &#8220;Look, Ma, I&#8217;m reading Plato.&#8221; Even without the Platonic titles, the music is thin and dreary, more accessible than the Lindberg (if sweet harmonies and pretty tunes are your idea of access) but utterly devoid of anything that guides the listener in a logical trajectory from A to B, as Lindberg&#8217;s music constantly does. Concertmaster Martin Chalifour&#8217;s performance was all the notes demanded and perhaps a bit more. He played it without a score, which suggests that he values it enough to memorize it; I wish I knew why. At the end came the Schumann &#8220;Rhenish&#8221; Symphony in an okay unfolding, another tentative step in Salonen&#8217;s current incursion into the Romantic repertory. (Next week: the Mendelssohn &#8220;Italian.&#8221;) Nice tunes in thick, ungainly sound: The Schumann symphonies add up to one of music&#8217;s most honorable failures. Perhaps &#8211; to reverse one of my recent obsessions &#8211; someone ought to rescore them for string quartet.
<p>Nothing prompted my recent trip east except a plane ticket about to expire. In Boston there was Brahms; in New York, Sibelius: not my idea of meaningful travel. But the sound of Boston&#8217;s Symphony Hall &#8211; not the orchestra itself in its present shaggy state, and certainly not the soggy performances under Andre Previn &#8211; remains one of the world&#8217;s marvels. I sat in the second balcony, where, in times less complex, I had served as usher, and the years fell away.
<p>The splendid if still somewhat raw Finnish orchestra had come over to serve as guinea pig for one of Carnegie Hall&#8217;s annual conductors&#8217; workshops. Salonen was among the advisers, along with Finland&#8217;s legendary Jorma Panula (who taught but, alas, did not conduct); Grant Gershon, recently of the Los Angeles Philharmonic, was one of the participants. Again, however, the sound of the hall, after the recent rebuilding to correct a boo-boo from the previous overhaul, was what I really wanted to hear: lustrous, warm, wonderfully clear even in the muddiest passages in the music at hand that night.
<p>At the Metropolitan Opera there was Edo de Waart&#8217;s supple conducting of Mozart&#8217;s <i>The Magic Flute</i>, on the marvelous David Hockney sets but with only a so-so cast, except for Kurt Moll&#8217;s majestic Sarastro. I went mostly to check out the house&#8217;s new translation device: a small screen set into each seatback, enabling you to watch both the opera and its translation without the neck isometrics needed at the Dorothy Chandler Pavilion. The system worked perfectly well: a fairly modest light level to ward off glare to adjoining seats, and an on-off switch. But when the Queen of the Night entered in her chariot suspended over the stage, the woman in front of me leaned back to see her and her hair completely covered my screen. My advice to future Met-goers: Wait until they do <i>The Barber of Seville</i>, or bring scissors.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Confession of a Bruckner&#160;Dodger</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/1998/03/confession-of-a-bruckner-dodger/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/1998/03/confession-of-a-bruckner-dodger/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 11 Mar 1998 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=191</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[A few weeks ago I expressed some rude thoughts in this space concerning the program chosen for the Philharmonic debut concert of the young British conductor Daniel Harding. Specifically, I feared that a string-orchestra version of Anton Bruckner&#8217;s String Quintet, sprawling over nearly an hour of precious concert time, might be a paltry test for [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>A few weeks ago I expressed some rude thoughts in this space concerning the program chosen for the Philharmonic debut concert of the young British conductor Daniel Harding. Specifically, I feared that a string-orchestra version of Anton Bruckner&#8217;s String Quintet, sprawling over nearly an hour of precious concert time, might be a paltry test for the conductor, and a torture for the audience. I must now eat those words &#8211; some of them, anyhow.
<p>The music itself made some remarkable points in this orchestral expansion, more so than in other works similarly defiled: Schubert&#8217;s &#8220;Death and the Maiden&#8221; Quartet inflated for full string section, or the Brahms G-minor Piano Quartet in Schoenberg&#8217;s Wagner-size rewrite. It did so because Bruckner&#8217;s piece never had much to do with a recognizable chamber-music style in the first place. The members of a chamber ensemble discourse, each as an individual, on serious and complex matters that would be buried if entrusted to a symphony orchestra. Even as played by the intended five strings, Bruckner&#8217;s Quintet sounds like an evaporated Bruckner symphony. In the string-orchestra version, under the splendid young conductor, the music surged, charmed, occasionally nattered but sometimes moved, like everything else that composer has inflicted upon the repertory &#8211; with an exceptionally beautiful slow movement, which in Brucknerland (Austria and Germany) is often performed as a separate concert piece. Rather than deplore the ruination of this music by its conversion to an orchestral piece, I would advocate an even more sonorous treatment: not just strings but great dark clouds of Brucknerian close harmonies for horns and trombones, trumpets blasting away at the Pearly Gates, aggregations of the anointed dancing atop the kettledrums. I don&#8217;t happen to think that the world needs another Bruckner symphony, but I know people who do.
<p>Beyond my expectations, the Bruckner &#8211; and, for that matter, the entire Philharmonic program &#8211; became a triumph for the 22-year-old Harding, an appealing golden-haired sprite who, with a dab of help from a Hollywood agent, could make off with some of Leonardo&#8217;s lovesick maidens just for the asking. His work on the podium conjures memories of Simon Rattle &#8211; whose protege he once was &#8211; in his early days: exuberant with a touch of flamboyant, but remarkable in the way his sweeping gestures produce sweeping results. After his convincing Bruckner venture, Harding led the reduced orchestra as an eloquent participant in Robert Levin&#8217;s imaginative take on the last of Mozart&#8217;s piano concertos; at the end Bartok&#8217;s <i>Miraculous Mandarin</i> music engulfed the hall in audible lava. Watch this kid; he&#8217;s on his way.
<p>I remember saying that about Dawn Upshaw back in 1984, when I wandered into an all-Schubert program performed by then-unknowns in New York&#8217;s dowdy Symphony Space. Now, at 37, she has fashioned herself into an artist as close to flawless as never mind: a voice of silken, radiant beauty, in the service of words and music dispatched with impeccable taste, a lively imagination that opens doorways in the repertory that other singers would never aspire to enter. All this, plus the intelligence to shape and pace a career built around her own keen definition of excellence. Some singers I know began with Mozart and Schubert as steppingstones to Tosca, and ruined their voices thereby. She manages her own career with a keen awareness of her own sublime musicianship &#8211; and even its boundaries. Miss her solo recital, Sunday night at the Music Center, at your peril.
<p>With Salonen and the Philharmonic, Upshaw sang music of this century: arias from Copland and Stravinsky operas, and Lukas Foss&#8217; <i>Time Cycle</i>, that strange, misshapen showoff piece that some people around 1960 &#8211; including that year&#8217;s Pulitzer Prize jury &#8211; mistook for a genuinely modern spirit embarking bravely into the future. Foss has never been that; his real talent has been in sniffing out new currents and coming in mere split-seconds behind: not the first opportunist among composers, but one of the most charming. Time has long run out on <i>Time Cycle</i>; not the urgency of Upshaw&#8217;s singing, nor the elegance of the surrounding orchestra, could convert its ashes into a believable form.
<p>Salonen began and ended the program with music from Mexico: Jose Pablo Moncayo&#8217;s folkish <i>Huapango </i>at the start, and Silvestre Revueltas&#8217; what-hit-me <i>La Noche de las Mayas,</i> with its percussion that, if performed anywhere but at the staid Music Center, might have brought the cops. Great, boisterous stuff this, revealing a side of Salonen&#8217;s musical sympathies one might not have guessed a few years ago. I have heard Revueltas&#8217; 25-minute work led by Mexican conductors, in person and on records, lots of noisy fun but not much more. Perhaps it requires a Finnish interpreter; the exuberance in Salonen&#8217;s performance pounded on the chest, but the outcries and the pain in this remarkable score lingered even longer.
<p>A certain romance hovers over Johann Sebastian Bach&#8217;s six suites for solo cello. Like the similar suites, sonatas and partitas for solo violin and for keyboard, the works are sets of dance-paraphrases, each prefaced by an extended prelude and ending with something jovial in jig-time. There&#8217;s nothing in the Cello Suites with harmonies as heartbreaking as those in the Sarabande from the Third &#8220;English&#8221; Suite for keyboard, nothing as majestically conceived as the Chaconne in the D-minor Partita for violin. Still, the mystique around the Cello Suites made the notion of playing them all together less stultifying and more magical than you might have believed. Yo-Yo Ma&#8217;s performance of all six suites, in two concerts under UCLA auspices at the Grand Central Station-size Bel Air Presbyterian Church, drew full houses and filled them with lively, sometimes rather merry, sometimes melancholy music making of high order.
<p>These pieces take on a semblance of life before large audiences, more entrancing than their actual quality might suggest. The cello itself is part of the reason; it enables the performer to look straight ahead, unencumbered by violin or viola anchored in the jowls or preoccupied by the keyboard, to make faces at the audience, the music itself, or the Almighty who dictated it. Three of the great cellists of our time &#8211; Rostropovich, Harrell and Ma &#8211; also happen to be among today&#8217;s great face-makers. The sound of the instrument is also part of the reason: the throb of the low notes, the ecstasy of the highs. The music demands free, romantic, &#8220;inauthentic&#8221; if you will, playing, which is what it always has received &#8211; from Pablo Casals, who made the first recordings with rubatos that Chopin might have sanctioned, from Harrell and Rostropovich, and last weekend from Ma. One thing he brought to his playing that some other cellists may have missed: the fact that playing these sovereign pieces before a loving audience in a strange and slightly wacko setting was, above all else, great, infectious fun.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Under New&#160;Management</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/1998/03/under-new-management/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/1998/03/under-new-management/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 04 Mar 1998 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=190</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[In the realm of symphony-orchestra management there was some delicious double talk last week. On Friday, The New York Times broke the story that Kurt Masur, who has led the New York Philharmonic since 1991 and brought it out of the morass of irrelevance of the Zubin Mehta years, had begun to rub some of [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>In the realm of symphony-orchestra management there was some delicious double talk last week. On Friday, The New York Times broke the story that Kurt Masur, who has led the New York Philharmonic since 1991 and brought it out of the morass of irrelevance of the Zubin Mehta years, had begun to rub some of the orchestra&#8217;s management the wrong way, including honcho Deborah Borda. They haven&#8217;t exactly fired him, and he hasn&#8217;t exactly resigned, but he now has an oddly worded contract that might, or might not, keep him on the job a specific number of years, then will enlist his aid in finding a successor; the paperwork as much as states that if he wants to leave earlier, or to reduce his activities even further, that will be all right, too. (Where were those masters of contractual gobbledygook when the Mehta depression needed this kind of escape hatch?) Next day, The Times ran interviews with the new management team at the Vienna Philharmonic (which happened to be visiting New York), younger than that orchestra&#8217;s traditional board of Professoren and locked in the struggle to update a glorious but stifling history, seeking ways to make the orchestra meaningful once again after last year&#8217;s Schrecklichkeit over (Himmel!) the hiring of a woman.</p>
<p>Against those far-flung goings-on, the tremendous news right here in Los Angeles &#8211; that for the first time in the mature lives of most people still able to walk unassisted, Ernest Fleischmann no longer controls the destiny of the Philharmonic &#8211; conjures visions of sweetness and light, which may actually be true. Fleischmann&#8217;s successor, Willem Wijnbergen, is holding his first press conference the day this page comes off the press, so judgment must be withheld for the moment.</p>
<p>Fleischmann may be gone from the Philharmonic&#8217;s top job in corporeal essence, but he remains in both mind and spirit. Symphony orchestras must plan their programs at least three years ahead, which means that the Fleischmann hand will cast its shadow &#8211; alongside, of course, the hands of Esa-Pekka Salonen and others on the planning staff &#8211; at least through the century&#8217;s end, including a massive end-of-century festival whose planning is well along. Since Salonen plans to take the year 2000 as sabbatical &#8211; to compose an opera, as he announced at a New York press conference last week &#8211; the full impact of his interaction with the new management won&#8217;t be felt until at least 2001.</p>
<p>Nine years ago, Martin Bernheimer&#8217;s Fleischmann profile in the Los Angeles Times bore the title &#8220;The Tyrant of the Philharmonic.&#8221; Mark Swed&#8217;s valedictorian piece two weeks ago dubbed him &#8220;A Force of Nature.&#8221; Farewell, then, to both Attila and El Nino and, perhaps &#8211; closer to the point &#8211; Prince Metternich, Austria&#8217;s master of wily political game playing in the aftermath of Napoleon&#8217;s overthrow.</p>
<p>Fleischmann and the Philharmonic merged their destinies in 1969. The orchestra had been settled into its new home at the Music Center for five years; Mehta had been in charge for seven, much adored by some, much deplored by others. &#8220;I came at a time,&#8221; Fleischmann told me recently, &#8220;when anyone new would have made some inroads into the orchestra&#8217;s problems. Zubin had developed a rapport with the players; everybody was everybody&#8217;s pal. But he desperately wanted the orchestra to be better, and had no idea how to go about it.&#8221;</p>
<p>Fleischmann had an idea, however. He urged Mehta to abdicate as the orchestra&#8217;s music director &#8211; which involved programming, scanning horizons for new guest artists and better orchestral players, speaking convincingly to doubting supporters, all that and conducting as well &#8211; and concentrate on the latter. He, Fleischmann, took the other duties upon himself. Nine years later, Mehta was gone and &#8211; for reasons of image restoration no less than musical integrity &#8211; Fleischmann was determined to lure the eloquent but diffident Carlo Maria Giulini to the Philharmonic podium. He did so by promising the noble Italian that he, too, would only have to concentrate on conducting while Fleischmann continued as front man. As the Giulini presence drastically raised the Philharmonic&#8217;s worldwide reputation, Fleischmann himself became a bastion of power unchallenged anywhere in the world.</p>
<p>It made for an unholy alliance, however: management as dictator of both artistic and economic matters; conductors as hired stick wavers and not much else. Not even the most sanguine soothsayer could believe that the pattern would hold when Giulini left the post and Andre Previn came in. Previn, battle-scarred from management fights in London and Pittsburgh, spent a large part of his five-year tenure at the Music Center attempting in vain to earn his own latchkey as music director in both name and fact. Previn resigned in 1990 over Fleischmann&#8217;s signing of Salonen as principal guest conductor without consultation, just as Georg Solti, 28 years before, had resigned over the board&#8217;s hiring of Mehta as assistant conductor. Plus ca change . . .</p>
<p>Fleischmann&#8217;s hold on the duties of music director was open to challenge &#8211; they have now been returned to Salonen&#8217;s rightful ownership &#8211; but nobody can contest his role as kingmaker. His appetite for new, young conductors is, and always has been, voracious; like a pig after truffles, he knows where to dig. If the Philharmonic earns no other place in history, it will do so as the American launching pad for the likes of Salonen, Simon Rattle, Franz Welser-Moest, and the latest wonder-child as of last week&#8217;s concert, the phenomenal, 22-year-old Daniel Harding. The story of Fleischmann&#8217;s just happening to be in London in 1983, when the 25-year-old Salonen was called in by the Philharmonia as replacement for the ailing Michael Tilson Thomas, is one of those Music Center legends that everybody tells differently. It was also Fleischmann&#8217;s brilliant idea to bring in the aged but incandescent Kurt Sanderling as frequent guest conductor in the 1980s, to remind the orchestra of eloquence and probity as antidote to Previn&#8217;s disconnectedness.</p>
<p>It&#8217;s easy to tick off Fleischmann&#8217;s accomplishments, from the reinvention of the Hollywood Bowl as a musical venue of consequence, to the development of chamber-music and new-music concerts away from the Music Center as an extension of the orchestra&#8217;s identity. (It&#8217;s worth noting that Pierre Boulez, in his time with the New York Philharmonic, also tried the same kinds of off-site projects, without anything like the success of Los Angeles ventures.) Fleischmann&#8217;s capture of Salonen was one of his triumphs; so was the subtle cajoling that brought us Giulini. When I did some backstage interviews last summer for a Philharmonic cover story, several other American orchestras were out on strike, or had recently been so. Everyone I asked pointed to Fleischmann as the bulwark against labor instability at the Music Center. Why? &#8220;Because he&#8217;s one of us,&#8221; the answer usually ran, &#8220;a manager but also a musician.&#8221;</p>
<p>Out of diverse elements &#8211; show biz, the purity of music&#8217;s supreme classics, a sense of youthful innovation &#8211; Fleischmann has constructed an orchestra that stands alone, apart from and above the competition. Under whatever title he may choose, he will continue to leave his mark on the Philharmonic and, for that matter, on the future (if any) of the institution of the symphony orchestra as an entity worth any and all efforts to preserve.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>The Spectacle of a&#160;Mind</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/1998/02/the-spectacle-of-a-mind/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/1998/02/the-spectacle-of-a-mind/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 25 Feb 1998 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=189</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Here&#8217;s a letter, one of many. Its writer &#8211; whom I&#8217;ll identify only by noting that we have the same initials &#8211; has been rendered morose by my words that suggest a negative reaction to music closer to his heart than to mine. &#8220;There is no composition of any era . . . that deserves [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><b>H</b>ere&#8217;s a letter, one of many. Its writer &#8211; whom I&#8217;ll identify only by noting that we have the same initials &#8211; has been rendered morose by my words that suggest a negative reaction to music closer to his heart than to mine.
<p>&#8220;There is no composition of any era . . . that deserves the words &#8216;trash&#8217; or &#8216;abomination,&#8217;&#8221; the writer claims. Ah, if only it were true; the post of music critic could then be abolished, and we professional listeners could spend our days eating lotus and wallowing in the trashy abominations of the Scharwenka Fourth Piano Concerto and the Rach 3 &#8211; whose self-appointed protector Mr. R. has become. He invokes the name of Eduard Hanslick, the well-known scourge of Wagner and Tchaikovsky, the defending angel of Brahms and Verdi, the role model of any God-fearing music critic who dreams of getting turned into a big operatic role, as Wagner transformed Hanslick into Die Meistersinger&#8217;s Beckmesser. &#8220;Hanslick tried to dispose of Tchaikovsky&#8217;s Violin Concerto . . . as &#8216;odiously Russian,&#8217;&#8221; my correspondent goes on, &#8220;but aside from academics, who remembers Hanslick?&#8221; Gotcha that time, Mr. R.; everybody remembers Hanslick, who also wrote of Tchaikovsky&#8217;s concerto, &#8220;It stinks in the ear.&#8221;
<p>&#8220;Music is the most abstract of the arts,&#8221; proclaims Mr. R.; no problem there. &#8220;So writing about it must be painful,&#8221; he continues, on shakier ground. Sure, there are pains of the standard variety: long hours, meager pay, 405 freeway to Costa Mesa in a rush-hour cloudburst, or letters like this one. Mr. R. has only to check out his Freud to realize how close pleasure and pain can sometimes be. (Sometimes, I said.) I have the feeling that after Hanslick relieved himself on the matter of the Tchaikovsky Violin Concerto, he tumbled into bed purged, proud and happy.
<p>It&#8217;s the very abstractness of music that warms the backsides of letter writers. Whether you listen for pleasure or pain, or for both plus a paycheck, music cuts you adrift to think and react for yourself. It comes with a few user&#8217;s manuals, of course; Aaron Copland&#8217;s <i>What To Listen For in Music</i>, first published in 1939, is (despite its grammatically clumsy title) an infallible guide for directing your ears toward the music itself, its chain of events, and the composer&#8217;s skill in inserting a few surprising and thrilling links into that chain. What it tells you eventually, however, cannot be more than &#8220;This is the music, this is what happens in it, and this is how I react&#8221;: not a brainwasher, in other words, but a role model.
<p>For Mr. R. &#8211; and his co-complainers by the hundreds &#8211; being cut loose to form your own musical opinions is frightening; finding opinions differing from your own in the exalted state of printed permanence is all the more terrifying. At the supermarket you find packages labeled with everything you need &#8211; calories, carbs, protein &#8211; to identify the quality of the product. If each of those packages also bore a label with dissenting facts and numbers, you might become confused and start writing hostile letters. That phenomenon, however, doesn&#8217;t exist in supermarkets; it does in concert halls and record stores.
<p>With deference to Aaron Copland &#8211; the hem of whose toga I am unworthy to touch &#8211; I gladly admit that role modeling is the most important aspect of setting down opinions about the experience of music, even more so (despite colleagues&#8217; howls of protest) than in writing about film and theater. &#8220;This is what I heard, where and by whom,&#8221; the rubrics of journalism ordain at the start. &#8220;This is what the music was like&#8221; &#8211; continuing our trek toward the heart of the matter &#8211; &#8220;what the performance was like. How does it match up with my personal vision of the music (in the case of a familiar work), and (in the case of a new work, and quoting the eternally crucial line of the worldly-wise composer/critic/curmudgeon Virgil Thomson) &#8220;is it merely a piece of clockwork or does it actually tell time?&#8221; And finally, &#8220;This is what I heard, this is what I thought about it, and these are the reasons I arrived at this opinion and the processes that got me there. Now go do it for yourself.&#8221;
<p>Mr. R. does get into deep water at times. He has nursed a canker since last summer, when I objected to incongruous cadenzas inserted into Gershwin&#8217;s Rhapsody in Blue. &#8220;A cadenza,&#8221; he reveals from his own podium, &#8220;is a tribute to the work performed,&#8221; and an opinion to the contrary is &#8220;a stupid insult to the performer . . .&#8221; Fine and dandy, provided the improv sounds as if it belongs to the piece itself, as last summer&#8217;s pianist&#8217;s did not. About the recent performance of John Williams&#8217; Violin Concerto, he is miffed that I should be miffed that Williams hasn&#8217;t yet conquered the classical field as well as other fields. &#8220;That&#8217;s called creative growth, Mr. Rich,&#8221; he glowers; so would it be if I took up bricklaying along with my modest talent as an answerer of letters. I know better, and tried to express the wistful wish that John Williams knew better as well.
<p>Writers of letters to music critics have their own repertory of cliches. &#8220;I wonder if you and I heard the same concert . . .&#8221; is one of the most familiar. &#8220;You need a hearing aid, and I enclose a catalog&#8221; is another. Mr. R. falls back on one of the hoariest, the fact that such-and-such
<p>a performance drew a standing ovation and, therefore, how dare I, etc. &#8220;Mr. Rich probably would react by thinking, &#8216;So what?&#8217;&#8221; True enough. It would take only a few concerts to convince Mr. R. of the particularities of the Los Angeles standing ovation, which you can get just by showing up onstage in matching socks, and which has become the Music Center equivalent of the seventh-inning stretch.
<p>The critic has the responsibility to develop a writing style &#8211; throbbing with passion, including such value-judgment words as &#8220;trash&#8221; and &#8220;abomination&#8221; &#8211; horny enough to attract potential converts. &#8220;Hey,&#8221; I like to think of myself as saying, &#8220;there&#8217;s something going on out there, and I&#8217;m excited about it, and here&#8217;s why, and maybe you should check it out, too.&#8221; The worst that can happen to a musical community is to be drained of curiosity about anything beyond the Top 50 Masterworks. Los Angeles at the moment is well-served symphonically, less well operatically, and terrifically within the thorny stalks of new music. I&#8217;m enough of an egotist to believe that the critical press &#8211; thanks to the improvements at the L.A. Times above all &#8211; has something to do with this.
<p>&#8220;There will be &#8216;wrong&#8217; critics only as long as there are lazy listeners,&#8221; wrote Virgil Thomson. &#8220;The critic cannot stop at merely handing out grades . . . but also to nag, wheedle, cajole and &#8211; if the occasion calls for it &#8211; pontificate. It is not the &#8216;yes&#8217; or &#8216;no&#8217; of a judgment that is valuable to other people. What other people profit from following is the activity itself, the spectacle of a mind at work . . . A musical judgment is of value to others less for conclusions reached than for the methods they have been, not even arrived at, but elaborated, defended and expressed.&#8221;
<p>Fifty-plus years old, Thomson&#8217;s brave new words say it all.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Mostly Magical&#160;Mozart</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/1998/02/mostly-magical-mozart/</link>
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		<pubDate>Wed, 18 Feb 1998 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=188</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Well, that was more like it. After a season pretty far down in the operatic dumps so far, our aspiring if not yet perfect company has rediscovered enchantment at the most likely fountainhead, the music of Mozart. Last week&#8217;s Magic Flute, even braving the Friday-the-13th curse for its opening night, may have had its flaws, [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Well, that was more like it.
<p>After a season pretty far down in the operatic dumps so far, our aspiring if not yet perfect company has rediscovered enchantment at the most likely fountainhead, the music of Mozart. Last week&#8217;s Magic Flute, even braving the Friday-the-13th curse for its opening night, may have had its flaws, but they were minor alongside the grand favors. From the moment conductor Julius Rudel led his orchestra into the overture, with the wind chords perfectly voiced and the strings dancing with each other in immaculate precision, you knew that this wasn&#8217;t going to be an evening to join the sadnesses in the season&#8217;s five previous outings. Nothing can rescue a sagging opera season better than the sublimity of Mozart&#8217;s music sublimely dispatched.
<p>This production, designed by the gadfly cartoonist Gerald Scarfe and staged by Sir Peter Hall, was new here in January 1993, the crown jewel in a season that also included Janacek&#8217;s Makropoulos Case and Britten&#8217;s A Midsummer Night&#8217;s Dream; shed a tear for enterprise. What passed for the competition in those days found the staging &#8220;clumsy,&#8221; &#8220;incongruous&#8221; and &#8220;tedious&#8221;; I begged to differ. Look upon the opera, if you will, as an intermingling of lovemaking sacred and secular; what the Gerald Scarfe designs and the Peter Hall staging &#8211; now re-created by his assistant, Paul L. King &#8211; accomplished is to play out the colors in Mozart&#8217;s score into their exact visual counterparts.
<p>Children of all ages will find instant gratification in Scarfe&#8217;s stage-filling serpent in the first scene and the parade of invented animals that dance to Tamino&#8217;s flute later on; what I found even more gratifying was his capture of the iridescent colors in this lush score from one scene to the next, from the dark C-minor of Tamino&#8217;s initial plight to the radiant C-major of trumpets and drums in the Trial Scene, from the lustrous darkness around the Queen of the Night to the sunlight that blazes on the orange-gold costumes of Sarastro&#8217;s priests (with, however, their Planet of the Apes headdresses, which I don&#8217;t quite understand) and the fantastic getup that keenly depicts Papageno&#8217;s subtle mix of elf and earthling.
<p>The Magic Flute, with its famous built-in plot ambiguities, suffers much at the hands of producers, not to mention critics. Peter Sellars enraged and titillated a Glyndebourne audience by setting the work on the Los Angeles freeways and by eliminating all spoken dialogue. I have seen Jonathan Miller&#8217;s setting in London&#8217;s Masonic Lodge headquarters, done all in black and white, with the Queen as an interloping suffragette. Beni Montresor&#8217;s 1966 New York City Opera production, probably now in tatters, accomplished what Scarfe has also done, translating the clarinets and horns of Mozart&#8217;s orchestra into their visible complements. I have deplored the Metropolitan Opera&#8217;s incongruous Marc Chagall sets &#8211; so laden with Chagall&#8217;s own symbols that the opera should have been sung in Russian &#8211; and delighted in the David Hockney designs that have now replaced them (and can be had on video). The version now at the Music Center (through March 1) comes as close as any I&#8217;ve seen to honoring the subtle and supple magic that lies within this radiant score. It does, however, make certain demands; the spoken dialogue (in German) is here rendered uncut, including jokes that were already old in Vienna in 1791. One sidebar for today&#8217;s world: The First Priest&#8217;s &#8220;Ein Weib tut wenig, plaudert viel . . .&#8221; (&#8220;A woman does little and chatters lots&#8221;) goes untranslated in the supertitles.
<p>Greg Fedderly, who was the Monostatos in 1993, now sings the Tamino &#8211; in a strange red wig that looks as if it&#8217;s on backward. He&#8217;s a fine, intelligent singer, a credit to Peter Hemmings&#8217; intention of developing a repertory unit within the company and &#8211; since this was his third major role this season &#8211; obviously a handy man to have around. But I heard sounds last Friday that disturbed me, most of all a rough edge around the high tones that bespoke overwork, and that made me wonder about young singers cutting their operatic teeth in a 3,200-seat opera house. Gwendolyn Bradley, too long away, presented a rather stately Pamina, but broke hearts with her haunting &#8220;Ach, ich fuhl&#8217;s.&#8221; The Sarastro of Kenneth Cox I found somewhat underpowered; considering the majesty of his music (which Bernard Shaw noted as fit for the mouth of God), most people come to a Flute performance with some favored Sarastro in their ears: Alexander Kipnis, Wilhelm Strienz, Kurt Moll. It can&#8217;t be easy.
<p>Wolfgang Holzmair, he of all those superb Schubert and Schumann art-song recordings, was the Papageno: his first American operatic appearance, a wonderful performance both hilarious and wise &#8211; if, again, a little rough at the top early on. And Sally Wolf, who last season replaced Jane Eaglen in the last two performances of Norma, sang a Queen of the Night that included bull&#8217;s-eyes on all but one of the murderous high F&#8217;s but also included a strength of tone and phrasing not often encountered in the chirpier exponents of this role.
<p>The 1993 production was conducted by nobody in particular; now we have Julius Rudel&#8217;s marvelously colored, spirited dissertation on the music&#8217;s unique wonders. By this distance, at least, our opera company has put the intervening years to good use.
<p>At the University of Judaism&#8217;s Gindi Auditorium up in Sepulveda Pass (now better known as Culture Gulch), the Philharmonic&#8217;s chamber-music concerts &#8211; performed by orchestra members plus an occasional visit from the week&#8217;s Music Center concerto soloist &#8211; have drawn large audiences and rewarded them handsomely. Chamber music, of course, breeds a secret kinship among its idolators almost comparable to that of opera nuts; the crowds at Gindi both stir and dispel memories of the 1950s at New York&#8217;s YM-YWHA, with its buttoned-up worshipers at the shrine of Beethoven and the Budapest Quartet &#8211; German-accented elders glaring with territorial protectiveness at a college-age kid daring to breach their stronghold.
<p>The Gindi audience is far less hidebound by either dress or age code; above all, these concerts are great fun. Drawing on the orchestra&#8217;s resources allows the Gindi planners a wide range of instrumentation. Last week&#8217;s concert, as good as it gets, included a quartet of wind players performing Mozart&#8217;s wondrous E-flat Quintet with visiting pianist Stephen Kovacevich. A tiny but delicious Schubert String Trio raised the curtain; Schubert&#8217;s glorious, garrulous Octet for Winds and Strings provided an hour well-spent at the close. I suspected that Kovacevich&#8217;s Brahms performance at the Philharmonic the week before was sabotaged by elements beyond his control; the mellow, affectionate chamberishness of his performance this time confirmed my suspicions.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Missing&#160;Voices</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/1998/02/missing-voices/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/1998/02/missing-voices/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 11 Feb 1998 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=187</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Caught up in the charms of Ervin Schulhoff&#8217;s First String Quartet &#8211; as played by the Petersen Quartet at the Doheny Mansion last week in one of the Da Camera Society&#8217;s &#8220;Chamber Music and Historic Sites&#8221; concerts &#8211; I found it was hard to avoid shedding a tear for what might have been. Schulhoff was [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><b>Caught up in the charms</b> of Ervin Schulhoff&#8217;s <i>First String Quartet</i> &#8211; as played by the Petersen Quartet at the Doheny Mansion last week in one of the Da Camera Society&#8217;s &#8220;Chamber Music and Historic Sites&#8221; concerts &#8211; I found it was hard to avoid shedding a tear for what might have been. Schulhoff was born in Prague in 1894; 48 years later he died at Nazi hands in a prison camp at Wuelzburg, where he had been sent for the double crime of being Jewish and communist. It might be amusing sometime &#8211; might be, I said &#8211; to hear his cantata that sets the entire text of the Marx/Engels Communist Manifesto, composed in 1932 but not performed until 30 years later.
<p>My tattered 1985 Schwann Catalog lists a single work of Schulhoff&#8217;s; the current Schwann lists 49, many in multiple versions. Six ensembles, the Petersen among them, have recorded the First Quartet. We now have enough of his music to intuit a prototype of a talented composer between world wars, lured from his provincial milieu to the cultural hurly-burly in Germany&#8217;s major cities, sampling the new currents that swirled through music at the time &#8211; jazz, Africa-inspired percussion, Schoenberg&#8217;s harmonic anarchies &#8211; and pondering where they might lead. The Jewish Kurt Weill and Berthold Goldschmidt, and dozens of others, fit that prototype, as did the Catholic Ernst Krenek and the Protestant Paul Hindemith, among the survivors, along with the others whose bones abide in Nazidom&#8217;s poisoned soil. The London Records project to rescue and restore some of this repertory in its &#8220;Entartete (Degenerate) Musik&#8221; series has been enormously valuable. Now, I hear, it has been discontinued.
<p>Schulhoff&#8217;s First Quartet dates from 1924 and runs about 20 minutes: three perky, fast movements and a concluding Andante as long as the others together. The composer makes no secret of his origins. Bohemian rhythms abound, with the stomping on the second beat that we know so well from Dvorak; so does that peculiarly Slavic harmonic eagerness that won&#8217;t let you escape even if you want to. Now and then Schulhoff reaches out to shake hands with Bela Bartok, a dozen years his senior; other moments suggest that their composer has heard an American jazz band or two. The finale, rich-textured and profound, rouses the ghost of Mahler, close behind and smiling his approval. This is all wonderful &#8211; arguably great &#8211; music. Most of all, it can stand by itself as a document, evidence that there was once a thriving culture in a thriving place. Its power to stir the imagination toward what might have been &#8211; the denied and potentially glorious repertory from a generation of composers uprooted, persecuted and murdered &#8211; is its most potent impact.
<p>A splendid stewpot of artistic styles and outlook made up the Berlin scene from 1920 until the Reichstag burning: a thriving opera house under a mandate to produce contemporary works (yo, Peter Hemmings!); a National Radio underwriting new scores by Hindemith and Weill, with texts by Bertolt Brecht and Georg Kaiser; political cabarets teeming with mordant and important words and music. The striking thing about Berlin&#8217;s music in its heyday is its feverish, eclectic activity, comparable to Vienna in Beethoven&#8217;s time or Debussy&#8217;s Paris. What Germany then lost, however, is exactly what makes a great stew more than just a collection of ingredients. No sooner had a whole generation of new arrivals created their brave new world of music than they were gone, driven out of a country that, for the lifetime of its new regime, was to subsist on the feeble academism of a Hans Pfitzner and the over-the-hill Richard Strauss and the goose-stepping pseudo-archaisms of Carl Orff.
<p>Don&#8217;t jump to the conclusion that an untimely death in a concentration camp, or survival in a dangerous and hostile milieu, automatically confers greatness. The London &#8220;Entartete&#8221; series advanced quite a lot of proof to the contrary: for example, that the hapless Franz Schreker, for all his prolific operatic output, comes over as a pale Richard Strauss clone; that Krenek&#8217;s famous Jonny spielt auf is not so much a jazz opera as an overstuffed Romantic essay with a few jazzy moments as overlay. For its revelations of the greatness of Berthold Goldschmidt (who died in 1996, at 93) and Ervin Schulhoff, and the extraordinary if neglected Symphony No. 2 of Krenek, the series has been important, the sort of project that justifies the existence of the record industry even in these days of insane overproduction. This is not to promise that London won&#8217;t take the whole issue off the market day after tomorrow. That&#8217;s the way it runs.
<p>The Petersens had to perform last week with a substitute violist; if I hadn&#8217;t known this, I still would have had no trouble in regarding them as a splendidly unified, spirited young (30-ish) group. Their program began with Haydn, not Papa but Baby, one of the Opus 1 quartets already teeming with tricks and original beauties. At the end came Beethoven&#8217;s Opus 132, vast, rawboned and mysterious. The entire program had to do with daring and modernness, a rewarding mix. Afterward, as usual, hostess/producer MaryAnn Bonino presided over a splendid catered spread, with wine to match. The world is not so bad, after all.
<p>Of the triumph Britain&#8217;s Mark Wigglesworth may have enjoyed on his last Music Center visit (&#8220;. . . taut, nicely controlled!&#8221; -Rich, L.A. Weekly), none remained on his latest stint with the Philharmonic. The program should have been a pushover: Brahms at his friendliest, Beethoven at his most Beethovenian, with a pianist in the Brahms Second Concerto renowned for his excellence. Beethoven&#8217;s Seventh Symphony seemed to crash its way into Mrs. Chandler&#8217;s playhouse in the same armored tanks that Wigglesworth had used for the Shostakovich Seventh in 1995. In the Seventh, Beethoven scores his horns higher than in any other of his symphonies; if you have the old Toscanini/N.Y. Philharmonic recording, you know how thrilling those high E&#8217;s can be. Under Wigglesworth, they merely out-screeched everyone else; the timpani (properly played with hard sticks) drowned out winds and strings. He&#8217;s cute, all right, this diminutive Brit with the bouncy arm movements that look like the way record collectors contort themselves in front of the stereo. The word I took away last Thursday night was bratty; at 33, Mark Wigglesworth might consider giving up the greasy kid stuff in favor of a more responsible kind of musicality.
<p>The usually excellent Stephen Kovacevich delivered a much-under-par account of Brahms&#8217; Second Concerto, out of touch with the orchestra and, even worse, out of touch with a fair number of the notes. I&#8217;ve known Kovacevich (as Stephen Bishop) since when, at 17, he told me he was going to become the world&#8217;s greatest pianist. I&#8217;ve been pleased at how close he&#8217;s come. His problems last Thursday stemmed, I&#8217;m willing to swear, from a breakdown of communication with the conductor, a lapse understandable and forgettable.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Great&#160;Britten</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/1998/02/great-britten/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/1998/02/great-britten/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 11 Feb 1998 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=186</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Any critic worthy to wield a poisoned pen must be obsessed these days with drawing up lists: major events and masterworks of the decade, century and millennium now oozing toward their closure. I am not prepared to predict that Benjamin Britten&#8217;s name will appear on many of these lists, yet hearing that noble Britisher&#8217;s Serenade [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><font SIZE="+1"><b>A</b></font>ny critic worthy to wield a poisoned pen must be obsessed these days with drawing up lists: major events and masterworks of the decade, century and millennium now oozing toward their closure. I am not prepared to predict that Benjamin Britten&#8217;s name will appear on many of these lists, yet hearing that noble Britisher&#8217;s <i>Serenade for Tenor, Horn and Strings</i> last week at UCLA&#8217;s Veterans Wadsworth Theater &#8211; wondrously set forth by the Los Angeles Chamber Orchestra under Jeffrey Kahane &#8211; I had to rack my memory to rediscover many other pieces from our century as intelligently conceived, compiled and constructed as these 20-or-so minutes of intermingled poetry and music. The performance &#8211; with Richard Todd&#8217;s solo horn-of-Elfland, faintly and vigorously blowing, and with tenor James Taylor&#8217;s (no, not that one) unerring delivery of both Britten&#8217;s melodic lines and the further melody in the words themselves &#8211; couldn&#8217;t have been better. Our Chamber Orchestra is now, more than ever, a precious part of the musical life of this entire region. (Last week&#8217;s program, which also included Dvorak&#8217;s perky little <i>D-minor Serenade</i> and Schubert&#8217;s &#8220;Death and the Maiden&#8221; Quartet in Mahler&#8217;s expansion for string orchestra, was given as well at the Irvine Barclay Theater and the Alex in Glendale.)
<p>
<p>The <i>Serenade</i> dates from 1943; Britten and his alter ego Peter Pears had returned to England the year before, after several years of war avoidance in America and &#8211; more important &#8211; after much time spent in hobnobbing with another Brit escapee, W.H. Auden. In the U.S., Britten had been prolific. <i>Les Illuminations</i>, his 1939 setting (also for singer and string orchestra) of Rimbaud&#8217;s poetry, stands as an earlier manifestation of his amazing insights into the right music for the right words, and for the beauty of the rise and flow of language &#8211; French, in this instance; English, in later works. Lustrous indeed, the musical season that can offer both scores, <i>Les Illuminations </i>sung by Sylvia McNair with the Philharmonic and now this stunning performance of the <i>Serenade</i>.
<p>
<p>Its poetry forms a compact anthology: the words of six British poets, from a 15th-century anonymous mystic to the compleat Victorian Alfred Tennyson. The solo horn, onstage at the start, offstage at the end, frames the work in an evocation that startles the hearer into attentiveness. Midway, the horn dances merrily among the wee folk of Tennyson&#8217;s Elfland and &#8211; in the passage that invariably gives me shivers &#8211; laments most tragically the &#8220;Sickness&#8221; of William Blake&#8217;s Rose. Once again, in the hourlong Spring Symphony of 1949, would Britten honor his lyrical heritage with this kind of variorum collection, and that work &#8211; which Andre Previn conducted here some years ago in one of his few distinguished weeks with the Philharmonic &#8211; has its marvelous moments. Yet I value the Serenade even higher; it translates beautiful poetry into music of comparable beauty, and its brief time span passes before you notice and leaves you with a sense that you&#8217;ve spent those minutes somewhere beyond rainbows. The Serenade predates the repertory of operas grand and small that form Britten&#8217;s greatest fame; knowing this earlier work, and the exquisite sensibility that created it, makes the composer&#8217;s legacy the more miraculous.
<p>
<p>The remainder of last week was spent in proximity to D minor, the key of demons and storms and grudging redemptions: the Dvorak and Schubert entries on the LACO program, Dvorak&#8217;s <i>Seventh Symphony</i> at the Philharmonic. Yet another young Finnish conductor, Jukka-Pekka Saraste, demonstrated some curious arm-choreography, none of which seemed able to rekindle the heat or penetrate the tragedies implicit in the Dvorak symphony &#8211; music I cling to as the finest of all late-Romantic symphonies. The orchestral balances were maladjusted; as with another guest conductor the previous week, the strings seemed buried under the blare of brass and winds. My memory book includes a performance of the work led by Carlo Maria Giulini, with the same orchestra in the same hall, which left me catatonic for some ensuing minutes. (There are two Giulini performances on CD, of which the earlier &#8211; with the London Philharmonic on Angel-EMI &#8211; affects me in the same way.) Saraste&#8217;s program began interestingly, with Peter Lieberson&#8217;s Drala, a 17-minute splash of orchestral color, incorporating (as does everyone&#8217;s music these days!) influences from the far side of the Pacific as well as near. As the son of Goddard, most courageous of all record producers, and the dancer/actress Vera Zorina, Lieberson&#8217;s bloodlines are in order; so, from this one short work, is his music making. Pianist Andreas Haefliger &#8211; also, as it happens, the son of an eminent musician, the tenor Ernst &#8211; drew a pall of gray across Beethoven&#8217;s &#8220;Emperor&#8221; Concerto, with Saraste and the orchestra apparently in full agreement.
<p>
<p>Long before the present era of the authenticity stickler, composers and conductors saw no harm in transcribing established masterworks from one medium to another. The only way that you could hear, say, a Beethoven symphony at home a century ago was to buy a piano-four-hand version. As a student in Vienna I periodically ransacked the backroom at Doblinger&#8217;s sheet-music store, coming up with all the Beethoven string quartets, dozens of Haydn symphonies and a complete Don Giovanni, all rescored for piano duet. On the other side of the line there was, for example, Felix Weingartner&#8217;s footloose orchestral transcription of Beethoven&#8217;s &#8220;Hammerklavier&#8221; Sonata and, from only yesterday, Arnold Schoenberg&#8217;s roughshod ride over the Brahms G-minor Piano Quartet and Georg Szell&#8217;s comparable degradation of Smetana&#8217;s <i>E-minor String Quartet</i>.
<p>
<p>Gustav Mahler figures among the vandals; his orchestration for full string complement of Beethoven&#8217;s <i>Opus 95 Quartet</i> was broadcast on KUSC-FM sometime last week, which already put me in an adversarial mood toward LACO&#8217;s Schubert, to which Mahler&#8217;s miscreance is also attached. Kahane made a few wise alterations; every so often, especially in the sublime set of variations that forms the slow movement, he reduced his forces to the sound of the original quartet. Still, the effect overall was that of hearing one of the greatest of chamber-music masterworks, whose intense dramatic language is the defining force for music in this intimate medium, expanded into something still beautiful in substance but fatally ordinary in sound.
<p>
<p>A similar fate awaits Anton Bruckner&#8217;s one major chamber work, the <i>String Quintet in F minor</i>, which, in Hans Stadlmair&#8217;s version for full string orchestra, fills a fair portion of Daniel Harding&#8217;s Music Center debut program on February 25. Can it be that a bright and fast-rising 22-year-old conductor would choose such an encumbered steed as this to storm the boundaries of fame? Whoever made the choice should be tied down and made to listen to it. All three performances.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Ludwig&#160;Lives</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/1998/01/ludwig-lives/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/1998/01/ludwig-lives/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 28 Jan 1998 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=185</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[It may well be true, as a colleague pointed out in last Sunday&#8217;s L.A.Times, that the Beethoven glut has reached the point of absurdity, that the hundred-or-so available recordings of the Fifth Symphony are 95-or-so too many. It is equally true, however, that the DNA of great works of music contains a resurrection gene. There [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>It may well be true, as a colleague pointed out in last Sunday&#8217;s <i>L.A.Times</i>, that the Beethoven glut has reached the point of absurdity, that the hundred-or-so available recordings of the Fifth Symphony are 95-or-so too many. It is equally true, however, that the DNA of great works of music contains a resurrection gene. There is still room, in the realm of the masterpiece, for a transcendent performance to reveal a work as if newly composed.</p>
<p>Beethoven&#8217;s Fourth Piano Concerto and I have had a rewarding life together; if I had a dime for every performance I&#8217;ve heard &#8211; live or on disc &#8211; I could probably spend my weekends in Acapulco. Still, the performance at the Music Center two weeks ago, with pianist Leif Ove Andsnes and with Philharmonic concertmaster Alexander Treger pressed into service as conductor to replace the ailing Franz Welser-Möst, reached these ears as an experience awakening and refreshing.</p>
<p>The Fourth Concerto is Beethoven&#8217;s Opus 58. The &#8220;Eroica&#8221; is Opus 55; the &#8220;Triple&#8221; Concerto is 56; the &#8220;Appassionata&#8221; Sonata is 57; and the three &#8220;Razumovsky&#8221; quartets are 59. In little more than a year (1804–06), the musical world was accorded the incredible bounty of seven stupendous artworks (welllll, maybe six and a half, since the Triple Concerto does tend to chase its own tail), no two of which sound anything alike and which together form the foundation for all music from that time to the present.</p>
<p>Of that illustrious company, the Fourth Concerto is the most reflective, the most immediately ingratiating. Much is made in the music-history books about the opening, the fact that Beethoven allots the first music to the solo piano instead of the usual long orchestral exordium. The trick isn&#8217;t all that new; Mozart began one of his early piano concertos with a dialogue between solo and orchestra. What is truly novel in Beethoven is the collision between that piano solo and what comes immediately after. The piano enters with the principal theme, in G major, the work&#8217;s prevailing tonality. But the orchestra responds, not in G as expected, but in the &#8220;remote&#8221; key of B major. It&#8217;s a jolt similar to that famous C-sharp at the start of the &#8220;Eroica,&#8221; but softer this time, cloaked in mystery. The episode doesn&#8217;t last half a minute, but the events within that time amaze and delight the ear.</p>
<p>. . . Or should, at any rate. From the start, the young Norwegian pianist managed to project exactly what Beethoven had in mind in this sublime music: the opening solo quiet and reflective, as if responding to a passing cloud; a solo entrance later on like an arrival at a hilltop at sunrise; the slow-movement dialogue as close to actual words as instrumental music can come. Andsnes has been playing here since 1991: first at the Hollywood Bowl with the obligatory &#8211; and, if I remember, unremarkable &#8211; Grieg Concerto, later with the Brahms D-minor, the Rach 3, and in a particularly brainy duo-recital with the violinist Christian Tetzlaff. He&#8217;s 27, good-looking onstage without excessive mannerisms, obviously intelligent; even in this overcrowded world there&#8217;s room for an artist of his quality. The Monday after his concerto performances he joined Philharmonic musicians at one of their chamber-music concerts at the Gindi Auditorium, in an endearing performance of far lesser Beethoven, the Opus 16 Quintet for Piano and Winds. Word must have gotten around; I don&#8217;t remember that much turn -away business for a chamber program since the golden days of the Budapest Quartet.</p>
<p>Hungary&#8217;s Adam Fischer &#8211; best known for his Haydn recordings on Nimbus &#8211; took over the next week&#8217;s concert, which included oboist David Weiss&#8217; elegant reading of the Mozart C-major Concerto (which may have been composed for his instrument, or for flute) and a suite of color-slashed movements from Zoltán Kodály&#8217;s <i>Háry János</i>. Mozart&#8217;s &#8220;Prague&#8221; Symphony (No. 38) began the program, another of those prophetic works &#8211; subtle, complex, and full of strange and unexpected turns &#8211; that show the prodigious young Mozart, so much a product of the Classical outlook of his time and yet striding boldly into unknown regions and returning with treasure. Fischer&#8217;s performance was bright and loud, but &#8211; in this, his debut appearance at the Music Center &#8211; he had not yet learned that the first violinists down front in that acoustically treacherous setting, however splendid their actions may appear, are practically inaudible unless the winds and brass restrain their exuberance.</p>
<p>Both Mozart&#8217;s symphony and Beethoven&#8217;s concerto are two centuries old, plus or minus; their best performances underline their innate fund of innovation and courage. George Antheil&#8217;s 1925 <i>Ballet Mécanique</i>, which UC San Diego&#8217;s percussion ensemble red fish blue fish performed at the last Green Umbrella concert at the Japan America, enjoyed similar esteem in its time; music for percussion ensemble, although broached in 1921 in Stravinsky&#8217;s <i>Les Noces</i>, was a long way from the respectability it now enjoys. Antheil&#8217;s work, along with the film by Fernand Léger that had originally been meant to accompany it, became famous for being famous; its Paris premiere elicited another of those audience riots without which music didn&#8217;t seem able to exist at the time. Revived &#8211; along with the film &#8211; in a brilliantly conceived rescoring by red fish&#8217;s Steven Schick, Antheil&#8217;s conceit came across as a clumsy parody of musical pathways that other composers of the time &#8211; in Germany and France &#8211; were seriously exploring: an interesting sociological phenomenon, perhaps, with no musical substance worth mentioning.</p>
<p>Kaija Saariaho&#8217;s <i>Six Japanese Gardens</i>, which Schick had also played at the Ojai Festival last summer, said much more in its eight minutes than Antheil had in 20: elegant, delicately colored music, constantly involved in conversation with its player. Louis Andriessen&#8217;s <i>Hoketus</i> cleared the air: obsessive, hammering music, deeply textured and &#8211; for listeners fearless and, preferably, earless &#8211; exhilarating. At the end there was another piece by the ubiquitous Tan Dun: the 1991 <i>Elegy: Snow in June</i>. You have to admire Tan Dun; in his 11 years in the U.S., he has wrapped himself as a remarkably sleek, salable package: the movie score <i>Fallen</i>; operas <i>Marco Polo</i> and a new commission from the Metropolitan; the huge mishmash of a symphony (Paul McCartney meets Scriabin) composed for the Hong Kong takeover. The mechanisms are impressive; his music tells me what I am listening to, but not who. The <i>Elegy</i>, composed to honor the fallen in Tian An Men Square, draws a lot of elegiac sounds from the idea of a solo cello (Bang on a Can&#8217;s Maya Beiser) emerging with a single note from a hodgepodge of sound; in no time, however, it becomes a mannerism. The packaging, the gadgetry: Mozart and Beethoven turned out some mighty music without their help; too many composers these days don&#8217;t even try.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Voice&#160;Lessons</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/1998/01/voice-lessons/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/1998/01/voice-lessons/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 28 Jan 1998 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[A Little Night Music]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=184</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[The bel canto superstar urges the music of her madness toward its climax; she takes aim at the stratospheric E-flat on which much of her renown rests, scores a bull&#8217;s- eye; the audience, its own blood throbbing to every nuance in that climactic buildup, now goes wild. The political demagogue harangues the crowd with his [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>The bel canto superstar urges the music  of her madness toward its climax; she takes aim at the stratospheric E-flat on which much of her renown rests, scores a bull&#8217;s- eye; the audience, its own blood throbbing to every nuance in that climactic buildup, now goes wild. The political demagogue harangues the crowd with his own kind of mad scene, a vision of his world domination; his voice, too, rises, in pitch and in vibrance; at the end he, too, faces a crowd transported by the moment&#8217;s ecstasy into another world.</p>
<p>This is what the human voice can accomplish, skillfully employed. It is the total musical instrument; no massed string section, 76-member trombone choir or percussion ensemble can come close to the emotional ties that bind a singer of phenomenal magnetism and a listener willing to open his soul. Plenty has been written on that relationship out on its lunatic fringe (Wayne Koestenbaum&#8217;s <i>The Queen&#8217;s Throat</i>, Evan Eisenberg&#8217;s <i>The Recording Angel</i> and, as a look at one peculiar outbreak of opera mania in times long past, Joseph Horowitz&#8217;s <i>Wagner Nights</i>). Peter Davis is as mad about opera as anyone, but the wisdom that winds itself around his passion makes his new book &#8211; <i>The American Opera Singer</i>, a chronicle of the kingly and queenly throats, native-born or permanently transplanted, that established the United States as an operatic power base as long ago as 1825 &#8211; important, even thrilling.</p>
<p>Davis replaced me as <i>New York</i> magazine&#8217;s music critic, with my blessing, in 1981. He has survived that publication&#8217;s slippage from a decently liberal mirror of New York affairs to an Upper-East-Side-murder-of-the-week slicksheet. He is both smart and knowledgeable; a sublime operatic performance can send him into terminal ecstasy, and he always knows why. I know Davis well enough to suspect him of having participated in opera-house ovations now and then; I also know how long, and how carefully, and how assiduously he has worked on this book. Although he may write others, and I hope he does, <i>The American Opera Singer</i> has about it a sense of culmination: It&#8217;s a remarkable synthesis that captures both the lives and times of native-born singers who have earned their place in the galaxy over most of the last two centuries, and illuminates that information, as if from within, by writing about them as if the (let&#8217;s guess) 400 singers touched upon had each personally sung into his rejoicing ear. It&#8217;s not easy to fabricate what a musician may have sounded like, or been motivated by, in New York&#8217;s Italian Opera House in 1833, but it can be done &#8211; assembled from published  reports or private diaries. Harold C. Schonberg did that kind of second-guessing in his <i>The Great Pianists</i>, with remarkably vivid results; Davis&#8217; book belongs alongside.</p>
<p>Inevitably, the book assumes an inter woven texture: biographical and anecdotal material on one singer after another, with the more illustrious earning ampler space. There&#8217;s more to it than that, however, most of all the ongoing narration of the growth of cultural awareness in a nation which, at the start of Davis&#8217; account, knew not opera from ocelot, and had only faint inklings from abroad of such &#8220;modern&#8221; composers as Mozart, Beethoven and Rossini. Much remains the same in the slow-moving world of opera; and much has changed. In 1953, the Metropolitan Opera&#8217;s honcho Rudolf Bing fired his eminent Wagnerian prima donna Helen Traubel, on the pretext that her singing pop-music repertory (on disc and in clubs) &#8220;degraded&#8221; the reputation of the opera company. Today, American soprano Dawn Upshaw (who has &#8220;the world by the ear,&#8221; Davis rightly notes) sings Mozart at the Met, and Rodgers and Hammerstein in the recording studios. Davis, possessor of a fine sense of irony, gently slaps on the wrist the writer of the audition note for a chubby New York soprano named Mary Kalogeropoulos &#8211; &#8220;needs work on her voice&#8221; &#8211; who would soon change her name to Maria Callas.</p>
<p>Davis is smart enough, in selecting the vast cast list for his narrative, to broaden the definition of &#8220;American.&#8221; Enrico Caruso, foreign-born though he was, did as much as any native in his time to establish the glamour of opera-going in his adopted New York; without that one famous tenor, there would not now be a famous three. Callas, on the other hand, America&#8217;s own, never enjoyed the triumphs here that greeted her most spectacular work at the opera houses of Milan, Paris and London. Among the lesser binationals, France&#8217;s Lily Pons benefited enormously from the peculiarly American hype she received here in terms of passing for an important musical artist, and, recognizing a good thing, knew better than to try to impose her &#8220;terminally chirpy&#8221; inclinations on her fellow French.</p>
<p>Inevitably, too, <i>The American Opera Singer</i> will raise hackles &#8211; which can be raised higher in both pitch and volume among operaphiles than in any other field &#8211; for its interweave of accurate history-spinning and personal judgment. Read him on Beverly Sills, her early triumphs and (says Davis) her protracted decline, and you encounter an essence not always recognized in the critical canon: regret. He wants Sills to be better than she began to sound in the 1970s. He also castigates the merciless gods for making Aprile Millo into a self-indulgent booby with all she could have accomplished. From earlier times he reconstructs the career of one of opera&#8217;s great fascinatrixes &#8211; Sibyl Sanderson, mistress of Massenet and  creator of several roles &#8211; then adds the troubled reactions of her critics to darken the portrait.</p>
<p>That is Davis&#8217; triumph: perspective. Books about singers of the past exist in profusion (Henry Pleasants&#8217; <i>The Great Singers</i> being the quirkiest and most fun to read). What appeals to me most of all about Davis&#8217; book, about the dozens of pages of opinions with which I fully concur, as well as the fair number that set my blood aboil (the short shrift accorded Renee Fleming, the unconscionably long shrift enjoyed by Richard Tucker), is its caring.</p>
<p>As a companion to the book, RCA has issued a two-disc gathering of perform ances by the stars themselves, not a difficult task seeing as RCA (as its earlier avatar, the Victor Co.) had dibs on most operatic recording in the U.S. until well into the LP era. It makes for a neat package, although I would guess that many of the more ardent readers of the book already own most of the tracks. In any case, Davis&#8217; writing brings these singers to life almost as well as any recording. I can hear them now.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>CLASSCOL</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/1992/03/classcol/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/1992/03/classcol/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sun, 08 Mar 1992 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Daily News]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=2763</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[The news is not all bad. Over the usual sour coffee and sweet rolls last week, the Los Angeles Philharmonic announced its upcoming season with something close to justifiable pride. It begins to look as if we have a music director once again. (Bet you&#8217;d forgotten, by the way, that Esa-Pekka Salonen is not the [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>The news is not all bad. Over the usual sour coffee and sweet rolls last week, the Los Angeles Philharmonic announced its upcoming season with something close to justifiable pride. It begins to look as if we have a music director once again. (Bet you&#8217;d forgotten, by the way, that Esa-Pekka Salonen is not the first-ever Finn to serve here in that capacity. The first was Georg Schneevoigt, who held the post in 1927-29 seasons.) Not that the new young maestro is planning to blow the Music Center apart with a steady diet of tone-rows and synthesizers. The ponderous romantics of the late 19th century still hold sway, as do their musical progeny  of more recent decades. The season begins promisingly: four whole weeks before a note of Prokofiev or Sibelius is struck. On the fifth week, however, both composers appear, as if to atone for lost time. Then the goulash really hits the fan: Zubin Mehta in all-Tchaikovsky, followed by Zubin Mehta in all-Strauss. Oh well, this is the programming that sells tickets and placates elderly subscribers. What is more impressive are the flickers of genuine programming originality that shine through the murky pages of the new season&#8217;s published plans. I am, I must admit, a pushover for creative program-building, the kind that juxtaposes the devotional aura around Debussy&#8217;s &#8220;Martyrdom of St. Sebastian&#8221; with the dark radiance of the chorales in Hindemith&#8217;s &#8220;Mathis der Maler&#8221; and the Berg Violin Concerto; all three works share a most high-minded program sometime in February. You can also detect a creative hand in linking Gyorgy Ligeti&#8217;s &#8220;Clocks and Clouds&#8221; with the clouds that drift across Debussy&#8217;s &#8220;Nocturnes,&#8221; listed for around the same time. Symphonies of Haydn make a welcome return, after too long away. This wondrously inventive music draws out a sympathetic strain in Salonen, as his Sony recording and his recent adventure with the Symphony No. 80 clearly prove. A Haydn-Bartok program scheduled for March is another neat and imaginative juxtaposition:  Hungarian composers two centuries apart, but linked in their love of devastating musical hi-jinks. Yes, it&#8217;s a splendid season. Among the guest conductors, the known quantities are no less exciting for being predictable: the marvelous old Kurt Sanderling doing the Beethoven Ninth, Witold Lutoslawski conducting yet another program of his abstruse but intensely civilized music. Anytime you entertain doubts about the cultural integrity of at least part of the Los Angeles audience, rememberthat Lutoslawski&#8217;s visits here, along with those of those other formiable composer/conductors Pierre Boulez and Oliver Knussen, invariably draw large and loving crowds.There is, in all this, a clear suggestion that Salonen&#8217;s gifts as music director, his vision of what a symphonic season in a hidebound establishment like the Music Center can and should embrace, are strong and original. The persistent noise, about managing director Ernest Fleischmann&#8217;s vision of the Philharmonic as his personal playpen, ought to be stilled by this enticing list. There is, in these prospects, a faint glimmer of a new and strong musical personality come to town. The job ahead will be to keep him happy.One of last year&#8217;s stranger stories dealt with the awarding of a prize in the amount of $250,000 to a middle-aged British pianist named David Owen Norris, through the offices of the Irving Gilmore Piano Foundation in far-off Kalamazoo. This was not a competition in the usual sense; the Gilmore judges surveyed the field of worthy pianists in secrecy and chose Norris much to his own surprise. As it happens, I heard Norris at the Sydney Piano Competition in 1981, where he played miles above the level of anyone else there, baffled the judges with a free-choice of contemporary British music instead of the expected Chopin and, not surprisingly, won nothing. Sometimes even in music, however, justice  prevails. Norris plays at UCLA&#8217;s Royce Hall this coming Thursday. There&#8217;s reason to suspect that this will be the most interesting piano recital of the season (except, of course, for Maurizio Pollini at the Music Center on April 1, but that goes without saying). Amid all the moaning and gnashings from the voice buffs at the current dire shortage of star-quality singers, 25-year-old Cecilia Bartoli has emerged with radiant assurance that there is, after all, someone worth hearing in the firmament. Her recital at Ambassador last week, cobbled together at the last minute and, therefore, inadequately promoted, didn&#8217;t quite draw  a capacity house. Those who were there, however, came away with delighted memories that will not soon fade. Th marvel of Bartoli is not only the way she sings &#8212; the voice an idealized clarinet, curling itself  eloquently around ravishingly beautiful melodies with awesome accuracy and infectious ease. It is also in the way she seems, so far at least, to have paced her career with caution and intelligence. You think of the most recent phenomenon of her magnitude, Los Angeles&#8217; own Aprile Millo, who soared to the heights as her genuine talent warranted, and almost immediately turned into a parody of herself. Something about Bartoli gives off the message that she is with us for the long haul, as an artist rather than a freak.Her Ambassador concert was all-Rossini: the delicious repertory of songs that occupied him in his late years, plus a couple of arias. The artistry was pure and enchanting; it extended to the Martin Katz&#8217;s marvelous support at the piano. Some of the program is duplicated on Bartoli&#8217;s latest London record, also a Rossini recital but including the dazzling Joan of Arc cantata. Bartoli also has a Mozart recording, this time with orchestra: arias for both Susanna and Cherubino from &#8220;Figaro&#8221; and some moments from &#8220;La Clemenza di Tito&#8221; that will just break your heart. This is what music is all about, or should be.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>CLASSCOL</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/1992/03/classcol-2/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/1992/03/classcol-2/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sun, 01 Mar 1992 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Daily News]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=2762</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[The mastery in &#8220;Kullervo&#8221; extends from the work itself &#8212; the words and music by Aulis Sallinen &#8212; to the splendor of the production at the Music Center. However strange Peter Hemmings&#8217; gamble may have appeared, when he announced in 1990 that his own Music Center Opera planned to sponsor the world premiere of a [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>The mastery in &#8220;Kullervo&#8221; extends from the work itself &#8212; the words and music by Aulis Sallinen &#8212; to the splendor of the production at the Music Center. However strange Peter Hemmings&#8217; gamble may have appeared, when he announced in 1990 that his own Music Center Opera planned to sponsor the world premiere of a contemporary opera by a relatively unknown composer, from a country both geographically and culturally remote, the gamble has been handsomely won. Sallinen has fashioned his story from pages in Finland&#8217;s dark, sprawling epic poem &#8220;Kalevala.&#8221; Kullervo lurks in those pages as an anti-hero, a loser turned plunderer and murderer by a world into which he doesn&#8217;t fit. Sallinen&#8217;s  libretto exerts its own twists on the legend, and this is all to the good. What rattles around in the murky pages of &#8220;Kalevala&#8221; as hard-edged facts become transmuted in Sallinen&#8217;s own poetry into a beautifully conceived blend of fact and fantasy, moving in and out of reality as easily as the music moves through its vast stylistic vocabulary. As Kalle Holmberg&#8217;s production spans the gap between dream and reality, and between mythic time and modernity (so that, for example, a pop ballad singer with microphone and backup synthesizer shares the stage at one point with others in medieval robes), so do words and music hang tantalizingly free of definition. The three hours of &#8220;Kullervo&#8221; sweep through some remarkable music: sad, haunting arias, abrasive confrontations, and a short burst of leavening hilarity by a quartet of drunkards on their way to perpetrate a massacre. Sallinen&#8217;s music establishes him as a doctrinaire conservative, while pointing up the uselessness of such pat identifications. He draws upon the language of tonality, but shifts his harmonic focus easily and often. If further identification is needed, think Shostakovich tinged with Janacek&#8217;s exoticism, a dab of Strauss here, an authentic-sounding ripoff of contemporary Finnish cabaret there. The sounds themselves are wonderful: great, rolling choral sonorities, streamers of audible flame from the orchestra. Sallinen has been copiously recorded, mostly on the Ondine and Finlandia labels: three operas including, as of this week, &#8220;Kullervo,&#8221; three of his five symphonies, quite a lot of chamber music. He demands, and deserves, attention.So does the enlightened work of the Finnish forces on our stage. Start the list with Seppo Nurmimaa&#8217;s geometrically patterned backdrop that changes fantastically with the lighting, and his costumes that range from regal robes for the principals to  modern street clothes for the chorus (a statement as to the opera&#8217;s timelessness, and a boon to the costume budget). Continue with the sophistication of Holmberg&#8217;s stage direction, a way of creating enormous impressions with the barest elements that some local directors might profitably study. To these marvels add the overpowering vocal presence of the great Jorma Hynninen in the title role, and of Eeva-Liisa Saarinen in the harrowing role of Kullervo&#8217;s tortured mother. End with the masterful musical leadership of Ulf Soederblom, splendidly seconded by the awesome precision of the chorus (misidentified here last week as being the same as the Helsinki University Chorus, which it isn&#8217;t) and our own pit band, the Los Angeles Chamber Orchestra, more resonant and more responsive by far than the Helsinki orchestra on the recording. Beyond most of our expectations, I would safely guess, &#8220;Kullervo&#8221; turns out to be a towering musical experience, and an experience as well in a level of stagecraft and production integrity we would do well to observe. One performance remains, tomorrow night; be advised, be urged.Along the Finnish line: Esa-Pekka Salonen&#8217;s three weeks here, which ended last weekend, showed our young conqueror-designate in several lights, not all complimentary. The Mahler Fourth, the first week, was easily the low point: a misreading full of wilful distortions and mere smartass gimmickry. At the other end, however, was all of last weekend&#8217;s program: Haydn&#8217;s 80th Symphony with  its cheeky innovations firmly in place, a most elegant performance of the Stravinsky Violin Concerto by Cho-Liang Lin, and a clean, bright, dry-eyed reading that did more for the Brahms Second Symphony than I might have believed possible. A conductor who can deliver this level of performance is one worth waiting for.To reach your seat in Houston&#8217;s new Wortham Opera House, you have to ride up, on an escalator bordered with weird sculptures probably filched from Darth Vader&#8217;s armory, then back down some stairs to the theater. You arrive in a mood for the quiet devotions of Wagner&#8217;s &#8220;Parsifal,&#8221; but this is destroyed by a pianist in the lobby, filling the space with cocktail-hour reveries. You decide that maybe Los Angeles isn&#8217;t the cultural pits after all. The &#8220;Parsifal&#8221; was Robert Wilson&#8217;s creation. Wilson hangs on Los Angeles&#8217; conscience, after the failures, in consecutive years, to finance his &#8220;Civil Wars&#8221; and his &#8220;Einstein on the Beach,&#8221; both some kind of important masterwork. The &#8220;Parsifal,&#8221; co-produced with the Hamburg Opera, was a latter-day reminder of what we missed: stagecraft of the utmost subtlety and poignance, a vocabulary of light, scenery and movement that seems to flow unimpeded from the work itself. A deaf man could have realized the music in this supremely moving evening. Christoph Eschenbach, who now heads the Houston Symphony and often crosses the line to conduct for the Opera as well, led a musical performance worthy of the setting. Houston may not know how to build or maintain an opera house, but the company itself, under David Gockley&#8217;s 20-year leadership, has made an enviable mark in innovative repertory and productions. (The present house opened, in 1987, with the world premiere of &#8220;Nixon in China.&#8221;) Filling out last week&#8217;s playbill were two highly contrasting operas based on the &#8220;Beauty and the Beast&#8221; legend: the new &#8220;Desert of Roses&#8221; by the avant-garde-cultural-terrorist-turned-pussycat Robert Moran, and an updated version of Andre Gretry&#8217;s 1771 &#8220;Zemire et Azor&#8221; in which, to cite one instance, the father of Beauty, a medieval Persian prince in the original, is now an American vacuum-cleaner salesman. Get the idea?</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>CLASSCOL</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/1992/02/classcol-3/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/1992/02/classcol-3/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sun, 23 Feb 1992 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Daily News]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=2761</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[It took about ten notes, sung by the Helsinki University Choir at the Music Center, at the start of last week&#8217;s Philharmonic concert, to remind us of what is sadly missing in the musical life of Los Angeles, and of most American cities for that matter. Here was a chorus, with a tradition of excellence [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>It took about ten notes, sung by the Helsinki University Choir at the Music Center, at the start of last week&#8217;s Philharmonic concert, to remind us of what is sadly missing in the musical life of Los Angeles, and of most American cities for that matter. Here was a chorus, with a tradition of excellence extending back more than a century, which performed with standards like those of an idealized orchestra or chamber ensemble. It didn&#8217;t merely sing the right notes, or merely get the words out with something resembling a recognizable language. Even though this was, strictly speaking, half a chorus (men only), there was no limit to the beauty of their work, nor its awe-inspiring precision. You expect this level of work in small ensembles; the Tallis Scholars come to mind. Here were nearly 100 marvelously trained singers, who performed with amazing unanimity. There was a depth and a balance of tone here, a truly beautiful shaping of sounds, a command of diction that could make poetry sound not only clear but poetic. Without a scrap of knowledge of the Finnish language, any listener could grasp the sense of the words. It wasn&#8217;t only that the choir members knew what they were singing; they made us both know and care. Great choral singing is a cherished tradition in Northern Europe; it endures in the U.S. in some midwestern communities that maintain schools founded by Scandinavian immigrants: St. Olaf&#8217;s in Minnesota, for one. Our municipally maintained choirs, for the most part, fall below this level, probably from a lack of caring. Our Master Chorale, which follows a gruelling schedule every season, gets through the notes pretty well. It has a tradition of singing with great gusto that persists from the Roger Wagner days, and which survived every effort from its last leader, John Currie, to dampen it. But the standards of a group like the Helsinki (which, despite its name, is not a student group but a professional organization maintained by the university to benefit the community) are out of the reach of even the best of American municipal choirs. I hope all their leaders, from Robert Shaw on down, get to hear the chaps from Helsinki. They are here as the chorus in the Music Center Opera&#8217;s &#8220;Kullervo&#8221; this coming Tuesday, but also participated in the Philharmonic&#8217;s all-Sibelius program, with Esa-Pekka Salonen conducting, last week as a warmup. Imagine, hearing a program of Sibelius, and wishing it wouldn&#8217;t end.Those last thoughts only apply to the first half of the program, however: a garland of short Sibelius choruses, written at various times in his career, works of great charm, in a rather outdoorsy romantic style (early Mahler, perhaps, with even a touch of Wagner). They displayed, at very least, a fine coloristic sense in the writing for voices, and they were nicely set forth under the Choir&#8217;s present director, Matti Hyokki. To the Sibelius &#8220;Kullervo,&#8221; which sprawled across the second part of the program, none of these words apply. I am hard pressed to come up with another stretch of 70 minutes, or even 30 or 10, by any reputable composer where so little takes place. Granted that this is the work of a young Sibelius (if 27 be reckoned young); granted, too, the bravery in creating a work in Finnish when that language was only slowly gaining recognition. All that granted, this is drab, tawdry, crude music in which the choral writing is dull, the vocal solos empty declamation, and the orchestra goes tearing around creating atmosphere out of tricks already tried and discarded by the minor Russians of a generation before. It&#8217;s hard to imagine that Esa-Pekka Salonen, who conducted a properly loud and frenzied performance that must have aroused lots of nostalgia among the movie buffs in the audience, chose on his own to bring out this tattered baggage. It does tie in rather neatly, of course, with Aulis Sallinen&#8217;s upcoming opera. Cooperation between the Philharmonic and the opera was doubtless helpful in bringing the chorus to town along with the superb baritone Jorma Hynninen. But even a rational admirer of Sibelius, one willing to award points, however grudgingly, to a a couple of symphonies and, perhaps, half of a tone-poem, has to be embarrassed by &#8220;Kullervo.&#8221; Unfortunately, the monolithic Sibelius hangs like an albatross around the collective necks of the excellent conductors, not to mention composers, that Finland has produced in modern, post-Sibelian times: Sallinen, Salonen and dozens more. Like the demons who haunt the hapless, doom-ridden Kullervo, Sibelius himself is ripe for exorcism. Don&#8217;t believe all the ads and other flackery about Gioacchino Rossini&#8217;s 200th birthday, or even his 50th. He was born on Leap Year Day, 1792. which makes him 200 years old next Saturday, on his 48th birthday. Any calendar freak will tell you that 1800 and 1900 were not leap years, for reasons beyond my allotted space. San Francisco&#8217;s opera company has a major Rossini festival planned for later this year. Los Angeles has no celebration, unless you count the Music Center Opera&#8217;s &#8220;Barber of Seville&#8221; earlier this season, with its chamber-pot sight gags and dull conducting. But there&#8217;s a wonderful new Rossini singer, a mezzo-soprano named Cecilia Bartoli, who has just brought out a spectacular recording (on London) of Rossini songs and his &#8220;Joan of Arc&#8221; cantata, which she sings with flair and with a wonderful way of caressing the gorgeous vocal lines. Better yet, Bartoli has been late-booked for a local appearance, shoehorned into an Ambassador Auditorium recital this coming Wednesday night. If she sounds anything like this new disc, you&#8217;ll come away happy.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>CLASSCOL</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/1992/02/classcol-4/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/1992/02/classcol-4/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sun, 16 Feb 1992 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Daily News]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=2760</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Memories of last Wednesday&#8217;s unspeakable weather were handily dispelled that night at the Music Center, in the spell of enchantment cast by Barbara Hendricks. When did we last hear, anywhere in town, a program of pure art song &#8212; no operatic arias, no empty vocal showpieces &#8212; so handsomely delivered? Four years ago, by Peter [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Memories of last Wednesday&#8217;s unspeakable weather were handily dispelled that night at the Music Center, in the spell of enchantment cast by Barbara Hendricks. When did we last hear, anywhere in town, a program of pure art song &#8212; no operatic arias, no empty vocal showpieces &#8212; so handsomely delivered? Four years ago, by Peter Schreier, on a similarly rainy night? Nothing more recent comes to mind.Hendricks had sung with Esa-Pekka Salonen and the Philharmonic the week before, in a generally unsatisfactory, if not actually mindless concert. This time, with the excellent collaboration at the piano of Staffan Scheja {cq}, she ruled the stage. Nobody can pretend that the 3,000 seats of the Dorothy Chandler Pavilion are any kind of venue for an art song program; the tragedy of the dropping of a subsidiary small concert room from the plans for Disney Hall becomes apparent at times like this. Hendricks helped, graciously summoning all hearers to fill in the spaces down front (and even directing stragglers to empty seats). Her art helped even more; her beautifully chosen program, and the way she sang it, turned the vastness of the place into intimate surroundings. The magic of Hendricks is her seemingly infinite power to react to the poetry in these songs. It&#8217;s that amazing skill she has for coloring the voice from an intuition about the composer&#8217;s own reactions to the text. It doesn&#8217;t do merely to sing the words of Schubert&#8217;s miraculous &#8220;Nacht und Traeume&#8221;; you must draw your vocal colors from the soft, dark clouds that play over Schubert&#8217;s setting, the sudden desolate shiver as the harmony topples into a chasm midway. It doesn&#8217;t do merely to fling forth the outcries that end each verse of Hugo Wolf&#8217;s &#8220;Kennst du das Land,&#8221; unless you can also bring the pain of those words into your own tone. The marvel of Hendricks&#8217; program was the way she fulfilled all these hopes, with beauty of voice and high intelligence as well. Lots of opera singers drag small bouquets of art songs into their concert programs, along with the larger bouquets of showy blossoms from grand opera. It somehow establishes, in their own minds at least, their stature as &#8220;serious&#8221; artists, their own high purpose. Great singers willing to specialize in German lieder or French chansons &#8212; such as made up all of Hendricks&#8217; program &#8212; are rare right now. Twenty years ago they flourished in abundance. Now Elisabeth Schwarzkopf has retired; Dietrich Fischer-Dieskau and Hermann Prey never seem to pass by this way; Peter Schreier is building a second career as a conductor. And so the wonderful Hendricks is virtually alone. UCLA doesn&#8217;t have a single art song recital this eason; Ambassador&#8217;s vocal series offers the usual mixed grill of aria-plus-song programs. What Los Angeles needs, and achingly so, is the proper small and comforting setting for concerts such as this one: not the vastness of the Music Center or Royce Hall, not the impersonal blandness of the Japan-America or the garish bad taste of Ambassador. The final miracle of Hendricks is that she created the illusion, even in the hostile surroundings of the Music Center, that we had all been transported to the most beautiful, intimate concert hall in the world, there to hear the most beautiful, intimate  music. The Japan-America does work for certain kinds of concerts where a kinder, gentler atmosphere might actually be jarring. It works very well for the Philharmonic&#8217;s &#8220;Green Umbrella&#8221; series, which continues successful. By all odds the crowning glory of the most recent program (February 3) was Tod Machover&#8217;s Viola Concerto (subtitled &#8220;Song of Penance&#8221;) written for Kim Kashkashian and played by her with Stephen Mosko&#8217;s excellent podium support.Machover is a comer. With his curls, dimples and boyish grin, he has become a self-made media hero, marvelously voluble about his own work and about the new horizons he keeps on creating with all his electronic gadgetry at the M.I.T. Media Lab on the banks of the Charles. Fortunately, the quality of his work exonerates the manner of presentation; nobody can fault a composer just because he comes on strong, if the product justifies the presentation. His sci-fi opera based on Philip Dick&#8217;s &#8220;Valis,&#8221; recorded on Bridge, has caught on. Cheeky, eclectic, and devastatingly clever, it contains zillions of notes and doesn&#8217;t waste one. The Viola Concerto is cut from the same cloth. The deal here is that the solo viola is actually an electronic creation, with the usual strings but also with miles of cable connecting it to a bank of computers. The soloist&#8217;s sounds are, thus, drastically modified, as are the sounds of the surrounding instrumental ensemble. To thicken the brew even more, a tape of a singer, her voice also processed, is stirred in. Daunting as this sounds, the piece is immensely likeable. The sounds of the electronicized solo viola are so rich, and often so &#8220;human&#8221; in their impact, that just the sound of the piece is interesting enough. But there&#8217;s more: a genuine throb that goes beyond matters of technology, survives its own gadgetry and comes out sounding like some kind of great music. Machover has written another piece of similar intent, this time for electronic cello. We get to hear it during the upcoming CalArts Contemporary Music Festival at the end of March.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>CLASSCOL</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/1992/02/classcol-5/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/1992/02/classcol-5/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sun, 09 Feb 1992 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Daily News]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=2759</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[The notion of a cultural entente between Los Angeles and Helsinki may seem somewhat far-fetched, but it seems to be working. Evidence is easily at hand this month, as the shadow of Kullervo falls upon the Music Center. This week (Friday and Saturday nights and next Sunday afternoon) Esa-Pekka Salonen, a deputation of his fellow [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>The notion of a cultural entente between Los Angeles and Helsinki may seem somewhat far-fetched, but it seems to be working. Evidence is easily at hand this month, as the shadow of Kullervo falls upon the Music Center. This week (Friday and Saturday nights and next Sunday afternoon) Esa-Pekka Salonen, a deputation of his fellow Finns and the Los Angeles Philharmonic busy themselves with Sibelius&#8217; 70-minute symphony bearing that name. Later this month (four performances starting February 25), welcome please the visiting Finnish National Opera, bearing Aulis Sallinen&#8217;s brand new opera of the same name, in its world premiere under Music Center Opera auspices. Kullervo, &#8220;the blue-stockinged gaffer&#8217;s son, yellow-haired, handsome, fair of shoe,&#8221; the sad-sack anti-hero of Finland&#8217;s epic poem &#8220;Kalevala&#8221;: he hardly seems the heroic essence of symphony or opera. Rejected by his father, and again by his foster father, he roams the countryside as a brooding, dangerous loner. He rapes and murders a woman he finds on the road, and then discovers that she was his sister. He returns to confess his misdeeds to his parents, but only his mother acknowledges his presence. He leaves again to slaughter his father&#8217;s enemies, then takes his own life by self-immolation. &#8221;No, he is not what you&#8217;d call a hero.&#8221; This is the great baritone Jorma Hynninen, who sings the music of Kullervo both in the Sibelius symphony this week and in the opera later on (and also on the recording of the opera, due out next week on the Ondine label). I talked to him in Helsinki last fall, when I sat in on some of the recording sessions. &#8220;But he epitomizes quite a lot of the Finnish soul, which can be very dark and sometimes very cruel. To me Kullervo is a lot like some of the Texas loners I&#8217;ve seen in films &#8212; like Hud, for example.&#8221;Both works, the Sibelius symphony of 1891 and the Sallinen opera of exactly a century later, spend much of their time in darkness. They are not otherwise, however, very much alike. The darkness in the Sibelius is the warm, enveloping Romantic night. Sallinen&#8217;s opera is cloaked in a more austere, intimidating darkness. It comes closer to the essence of the &#8220;Kalevala,&#8221; that 666-page long national epic that demands of its readers infinite patience and rewards them with some powerful folk drama. His orchestral textures are shot through with electric bolts of violent, glacial colors. His characters sing, exult, argue and grieve in long, rhetorical melodic lines of haunting beauty. There are great arias, not in the Verdian sense, but full of deep, personal passion. One aria in particular lingers in my memory after hearing the mezzo Eeva-Liisa Saarinen {cq} singing it in a Helsinki recording studio: a mother telling her son (Kullervo) that a mother&#8217;s love for a son outweighs any of that son&#8217;s wrongdoing. There is much we can learn from Finland&#8217;s musical life, and especially from that nation&#8217;s remarkable aptitude for supporting its own music. That comes out of a continuing pride of nationhood that people there seem eager to impart to all visitors. I was struck by Hynninen&#8217;s earnestness, for example, when he told me that he would rather sing new roles in unfamiliar operas in Finland than become a star on the international operatic circuit (which he could certainly be). &#8220;I like the life that&#8217;s a little dangerous,&#8221; he said. The &#8220;Kalevala&#8221; is a compendium of centuries-old legends about everything from the creation of the world (out of eggshells) to a final folkish retelling of the coming of Christ. It was only collected and published about 150 years ago, but that event had a profound impact on the country: the first substantial forward step toward the establishment of Finnish as an official language in a country starved for any national identity. Decades after the publication of the poem, Sibelius began writing symphonies and tone-poems inspired by episodes in the poem; that, too, became an important step. Whatever you may feel about Sibelius&#8217; music (and I don&#8217;t happen to feel much), you have to award him points on the heroism that made a work like the &#8220;Kullervo&#8221; Symphony an act of political and cultural defiance. Perhaps inspired by Sibelius&#8217; forthright heroism, Finland supports its contemporary composers handsomely. It does so even when their composers choose to live somewhere else. Sallinen, for example, lives in the south of France. &#8220;Whenever I come to Helsinki,&#8221; he told me, &#8220;my batteries go dead. Even Sibelius had to go to Italy now and then to warm up his talent.&#8221;Sallinen composed &#8220;Kullervo&#8221; to inaugurate Helsinki&#8217;s new opera house. When construction on that house fell behind schedule, the deal was made to bring it here for its on-the-road premiere: a coup for Los Angeles, some Los Angeles sunshine for the visiting Finns (including the Helsinki University Chorus, which sings in both the symphony and the opera). Sallinen has now composed four operas, all produced by Finnish forces and three of them now recorded. The Finnish National Opera (or &#8220;Ooppera,&#8221; with Finland&#8217;s typical propensity for too many letters) has a remarkable record of support for native composers; it produces, and usually records, at least one new work every season. The new operas aren&#8217;t all about the hardship of life on Finland&#8217;s rocky soil; check out Einojuhani Rautavaara&#8217;s splendid &#8220;Vincent&#8221; (about Van Gogh) on the Ondine label. By the standards of Esa-Pekka Salonen&#8217;s own music, or that of his compatriot Magnus Lindberg, the 56-year-old Sallinen ranks as a conservative. If that means that he works with sounds and ideas that composers before him have also tried, so be it. In Sallinen&#8217;s case, it also means that he uses these sounds and ideas in new ways. You will like &#8220;Kullervo&#8221;. Among the reasons is the assurance it bears that there is still someplace in the world, at least, where grand, romantic, accessible, dramatic opera is still being created, sung and supported.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>CLASSCOL</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/1992/02/classcol-6/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/1992/02/classcol-6/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sun, 02 Feb 1992 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Daily News]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=2758</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[When the roster of Los Angeles culture heroes is next compiled, the name of Lynn Harrell will figure close to the top. The smiling cellist, New York-born but of tall, blond Texas stock, has been a part of the local scene since he moved here in the 1980s. He has taught a generation of young [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>When the roster of Los Angeles culture heroes is next compiled, the name of Lynn Harrell will figure close to the top. The smiling cellist, New York-born but of tall, blond Texas stock, has been  a part of the local scene since he moved here in the 1980s. He has taught a generation of young cellists at USC&#8217;s School of Music as the heir to the equally tall, legendary, Gregor Piatigorsky. He has led, with enormous spirit and resource, the  admirable summer Philharmonic Institute (now temporarily, but tragically, in abeyance). And he has turned on lights all over the area with the splendor of his playing. Thursday night he celebrated his 48th birthday by performing the solo cello part in Richard Strauss&#8217; &#8220;Don Quixote,&#8221; a warhorse which he rode easily and masterfully. The week before, at the Philharmonic&#8217;s &#8220;Green Umbrella&#8221; new-music concert at the Japan-America Theater, he had been soloist in something even more extraordinary, the Concerto by Gyorgy Ligeti, a killer piece which he performed as easily, as masterfully, as &#8212; well, as the &#8220;Don Quixote.&#8221; Nothing holds terrors for Lynn Harrell. He is a performer whose adoration of the art he serves plays across his wonderful, outsize countenance, up there on the stage. He is a joy for the eye and the ear in equal measure. He comes by it naturally. His father was the great baritone Mack Harrell, who died at 50, far too young for the great art he gave us. Baritones and cellists have a lot in common, of course, but there is more that this father and son have in common. Harrell was a phenomenal artist who could take on almost any kind of music and do it full justice. If you were around New York in the 1940s and &#8217;50s, you&#8217;d hear Mack Harrell in a Bach Cantata one week, a Schubert or Schumann song cycle the next, on the Metropolitan Opera stage in roles as diverse as Papageno and Amfortas. When the Met finally got around to Stravinsky&#8217;s &#8220;The Rake&#8217;s Progress,&#8221; Harrell was the inevitable, and brilliant, choice to sing the diabolical Nick Shadow. When Dimitri Mitropolos and the New York Philharmonic broadcast Alban Berg&#8217;s &#8220;Wozzeck&#8221; in 1951, the first time many of us had heard this landmark score, Harrell was the Wozzeck, the only member of the cast to sing the notes on pitch and with overpowering emotion as well. (If you&#8217;re lucky, you might find the recording.)Mack Harrell was more than a great artist, then; he was a valuable one, an artist who made things happen that wouldn&#8217;t have happened if he hadn&#8217;t been there. That&#8217;s what his son has developed into as well. The world is well populated with cellists these days, more so than usual, perhaps. Some of them &#8212; you know their names &#8212; are among the greatest musicians today on any instrument. But there&#8217;s even more to Lynn Harrell than that, because of the many ways he makes things happen.Someone came up to me at the intermision of the first &#8220;Green Umbrella&#8221; concert, a highly placed and intelligent cultural leader. &#8220;You know,&#8221; she said, &#8220;I would swap a dozen Philharmonic subscription concerts for one like this.&#8221; She was on target; it was an extraordinary concert for all the best reasons: the music, the way it was played, and the way it was received. The only subscription concert that has come close to that level this season was last week&#8217;s with Dawn Upshaw. Yet, when the Philharmonic starts crying poverty, as it has this season, it&#8217;s the &#8220;Umbrella&#8221; series that gets cut back.It was, indeed, an exceptionally rewarding and challenging evening, with the formidable Elliott Carter on hand to beam pride at a clutch of his short chamber and solo pieces, and with Oliver Knussen, that great teddy-bear of a conductor, in charge. The Carter pieces were Carter as usual, mostly desiccated notes being pushed around a page seemingly at random but probably with a great skill that I cannot bring myself to recognize. The great Witold Lutoslawski had sent over a brand-new and most flavorsome song-cycle, delicious pieces about flowers that sing, and these songs were splendidly sung by Solveig Kringelborn, a new Scandinavian soprano who sounds as delightful as her name. And there was, as the evening&#8217;s high point, Harrell&#8217;s performance of the Ligeti: a stupendous musical conceit that seems to rise  out of utter silence, flame forth in showers of sparks, only to fall back again into a void whose very emptiness one could actually feel. A work of great fantasy, this 13-minute score from 1966; at the &#8220;Umbrella&#8221; it fell into sympathetic hands and stirred an alert capacity audience to cheers. Meanwhile, back at the Philharmonic&#8230; This week&#8217;s program was only given twice, so you&#8217;ve already missed Harrell&#8217;s richly humorous traversal of Don Quixote&#8217;s famous escapades, with equally good-hearted support from the orchestra under David Zinman. The program also served to introduce Christopher Rouse, 42, currently teaching composition at Rochester&#8217;s Eastman School, and much performed by East Coast orchestras. Rouse&#8217;s best known works are a series of short orchestral workouts, fearsomely loud, fast and cloaked in a superficial virtuosity. Not so the First Symphony, designed as if in atonement as a single slow movement meandering through the better (or, let&#8217;s say, the longer) part of half an hour. On its meandering course, it take in a few gulps of Mahler, a fair chunk of Bruckner (including a direct quote from the Seventh Symphony) and rather a lot of Shostakovich. Pastiche? No, more like hodgepodge: a set of roughed-out eclectic episodes that hand off some interesting sounds along the way, ioncluding a few sonic booms to evoke memories of the Christopher Rouse we all know, but fail to come together in any way that might stand in as an individual composer with something to say. This was the only contemporary symphonic work on a  Philharmonic subscription concert from now until the end of the season. It&#8217;s not hard to agree with that woman I talked to at the &#8220;Umbrella.&#8221; The next &#8220;Umbrella&#8221; concert, by the way, is tomorrow night.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>CLASSCOL</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/1992/01/classcol-7/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/1992/01/classcol-7/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sun, 26 Jan 1992 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Daily News]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=2757</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[The curtain went up on the Music Center Opera&#8217;s new production of Bizet&#8217;s &#8220;Carmen,&#8221; which began its five-performance run on Wednesday night. There, on the empty stage, stood the Carmen, a figure in whom beauty and menace were equally merged. Since Bizet&#8217;s opera actually doesn&#8217;t bring the Carmen on until some 25 minutes of scene-setting [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>The curtain went up on the Music Center Opera&#8217;s new production of Bizet&#8217;s &#8220;Carmen,&#8221; which began its five-performance run on Wednesday night. There, on the empty stage, stood the Carmen, a figure in whom beauty and menace were equally merged. Since Bizet&#8217;s opera actually doesn&#8217;t bring the Carmen on until some 25 minutes of scene-setting music has gone by, you could guess right off that you were in for one of those new-fangled conceptual productions, with the composer&#8217;s instructions tossed out the window and some smart director&#8217;s ideas substituted. But this &#8220;Carmen&#8221; isn&#8217;t all that bad; it belongs, in fact, among the opera company&#8217;s more successful escapades: not perfect, mind you, but close. It offers the company&#8217;s resident superstar in one of his best roles. It offers, in the title role, an exciting new young singer whose career has zoomed into orbit only in the last year. It offers a handsome, massive scenic production and a director who knows how to use it. It looks good and, for the most part, sounds good. Denyce Graves is the new Carmen, replacing the scheduled Agnes Baltsa whose mother is seriously ill. Graves is 27. Two years ago she was working the switchboard at the Washington Opera; since then she has made a specialty of being in the right place when scheduled Carmens have dropped out &#8212; in  San Francisco, Vienna, and now here. She is impressively gifted: a big, bright mezzo-soprano voice, a gorgeous figure with face to match. This is the authentic look and sound of a Carmen. She has some distance still to cover, however. At Wednesday&#8217;s performance she sang beautifully most of the time, but she also let the pitch droop at crucial times and also lost coordination with conductor Randall Behr. She also displayed some bad stage manners, especially in the matter of avoiding eye contact with other singers and performing, instead, straight out to the audience. If I had been Placido Domingo during their final duet, I might have considered using a real dagger. Domingo was wonderful. That animal quality that gets into his voice at moments of high passion is, once again, the right sound for a Don José. On Wednesday it was powerful enough to cancel out his customary wooden stage manner; sound stood in for sight. Neither Angelique Burzinski&#8217;s Micaela (hard-voiced and tremulous) nor Michael Devlin&#8217;s Escamillo (strained at both ends of his range) were quite up to this level, but neither were distinctly bad. The production comes here from London&#8217;s Royal Opera. It is a vast piece of Spanish pseudo-stone work designed by Gerardo Vera. Franca Squarciapino&#8217;s costumes place the action around 1870, the time of the opera itself. Nuria Espert&#8217;s direction surrounds the central action with a swirl of people-props, including a large children&#8217;s contingent marvelously used. The version used is not the most up-to-date; it&#8217;s the old standard edition, with sung recitatives composed by an inferior hand after Bizet&#8217;s death, replacing the original spoken dialog. It&#8217;s an unfortunate choice, perhaps, in these enlightened times. But at least the usually lethargic Randall Behr seemed this once, on the production&#8217;s opening night, to have found the inner resources to create, from his podium, a reasonable likeness of this most grandiose grand opera. Chalk it up, then, as one of the Music Center Opera&#8217;s better offerings. It&#8217;s about time. LINE<br />
Thursday night&#8217;s Philharmonic concert belonged to Dawn Upshaw. Five years ago the slender, smiling young Chicagoan made her local debut singing the ten-or-so notes allotted to the soprano in Mahler&#8217;s Second Symphony; a year later she had the eight-minute solo in the Brahms Requiem. This time she came as a soloist in her own right, acclaimed as one of the brightest fixtures in the operatic firmament, an artist whose every note breathes enchantment. This time &#8212; the concert is repeated this afternoon &#8212; she came with Samuel Barber&#8217;s exquisite, nostalgia-drenched setting of James Agee&#8217;s &#8220;Knoxville, Summer of 1915&#8243; and two Mozart concert arias, exceptionally rich and complex pieces. (She has recorded the &#8220;Knoxville,&#8221; on Nonesuch; it was everybody&#8217;s favorite vocal record a year ago.) With warm-hearted, pliant support from the orchestra under David Zinman, she filled the hall with that true, splender, beautifully airy voice of hers, further illuminated by her impeccable command of diction, and her manner of phrasing that makes everything she sings sound spontaneous and radiant. If these words suggest that Dawn Upshaw, in the brief orbit of her career so far, has ripened into a perfect musical artist, they are well chosen. Line<br />
Apropos Samuel Barber: the haunting &#8220;Knoxville&#8221; piece from 1947, along with the even earlier First Symphony that was also on Zinman&#8217;s program, are the work of a poetic artist, robustly imaginative and totally in command of a musical language that managed to be both conservative and original. But Barber was soon to go into a sad decline. How sad, you can measure from his 1966 opera &#8220;Antony and Cleopatra,&#8221; written to open the new Metropolitan Opera House at Lincoln Center, a tired spinning-forth of exhausted formulas. The opera persists, on the strength of its famous origin and its composer&#8217;s stature. A recent production from the Chicago Lyric Opera, directed by Elijah Moshinsky in a version much edited and otherwise revised, circulated earlier this season on PBS. It was rejected by KCET, but it shows up tomorrow night on the Huntington Beach PBS outlet KOCE (Channel 50). Catherine Malfitano and Richard Cowan sing the title roles; Richard Buckley conducts. They do not quite rescue the opera from its deserved oblivion, but they come as close as the music allows.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>CLASSCOL</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/1992/01/classcol-8/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/1992/01/classcol-8/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sun, 19 Jan 1992 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Daily News]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=2756</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[These haven&#8217;t been very good weeks at the Philharmonic. Two of the orchestra&#8217;s former leaders have been around as guest conductors, presenting new evidence as to why not to mourn their absence from our midst.Zubin Mehta&#8217;s visit ended earlier this month with a wad of Beethoven, including the Violin Concerto with Pinchas Zukerman and the [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>These haven&#8217;t been very good weeks at the Philharmonic. Two of the orchestra&#8217;s former leaders have been around as guest conductors, presenting new evidence as to why not to mourn their absence from our midst.Zubin Mehta&#8217;s visit ended earlier this month with a wad of Beethoven, including the Violin Concerto with Pinchas Zukerman and the Eighth Symphony. Trustworthy friends reported with some horror on a most depressing evening, with a faceless meander through the concerto, a loveless approach to this most lovable symphony, and a performance level at which the orchestra seemed to unravel. I missed the event, listening instead to poised, meticulous, spirited playing by an orchestra of mere freelancers in a concert hall in Tokyo. I returned for Andre Previn&#8217;s concerts this week and last; his last concert in this brace falls this afternoon. and &#8220;fall&#8221; may, indeed, be the right word. Actually, I confess to having only heard half the program; no searching of souls, Previn&#8217;s or mine, has come up with a reason to devote an hour or so to music from Tchaikovsky&#8217;s &#8220;Nutcracker,&#8221; which either belongs on a stage with mice and a Christmas tree, or in Disney&#8217;s &#8220;Fantasia&#8221; with dancing mushrooms.The half I did hear had Radu Lupu in a depressingly heavy-handed onslaught on Mozart&#8217;s great C-major Piano Concerto, with his own dull, unstylish cadenzas in the first and last movements, and with orchestral support from Previn and the orchestra that seemed rushed at times and underrehearsed at others. Before had come Mozart&#8217;s &#8220;Cosi fan tutte&#8221; Overture, which lay flat on the page. The previous week&#8217;s programs had, at least, included something of nominal interest. Try as I might, however, I cannot detect the slightest glow of light or heat in the music of Sir Michael Tippett. It is an affliction of long standing, embracing the four symphonies, the operas (give or take a small fortunate accident here and there in &#8220;The Midsummer Marriage&#8221;) and, most recently, the Triple Concerto that formed the centerpiece of last weekend&#8217;s Los Angeles Philharmonic program. The concerto runs about 35 minutes, and dates from 1979. The scoring is interesting enough, involving as it does some nice, rattly percussion; the writing for solo instruments is mettlesome, and it was bravely dispatched on this occasion by three Philharmonic stalwarts &#8212; the violinist Elizabeth Baker, the violist John Hayhurst and the cellist Barry Gold. The viola writing is particularly attractive; Tippet knows how to favor the instrument&#8217;s coppery sonorities, and Hayhurst&#8217;s playing had something you would have taken for eloquence in better music.But what goes on in this piece &#8212; or in anything else of Tippett&#8217;s you might name, for that matter? The work is a thing of shreds and patches: a gambit in one direction here, then a reversal; the start of a promising line of musical oratory, and then a shift that dashes hopes. The element of surprise can be a wonderful thing in music; it certainly works well in Mozart. With the Tippett brand of illusion and disillusion, however, you cannot think back and recognize the composer&#8217;s bag of tricks &#8212; as you can with Mozart.It&#8217;s a scattershot style, as if the composer simply threw in everything he could devise, in the hope that something might work. The harmonic style is fairly dense; the music moves, with no clear logic, among several tonal plateaus. But the end result, from all I can glean after hearing the work live under Andre Previn last week, and from the recording under Colin Davis on Philips, comes off as deaf-and-blind manipulation, paper music or, at best, cardboard.You will know how mindlessly, agonizingly dull this work turned out when I tell you that the Brahms Fourth Symphony, which followed it on the program, sounded positively giddy by comparison. Giddiness is not, actually, one of Brahms&#8217; more noticeable traits, and the truth of the matter is that the quotient of ponderosity in this Fourth Symphony is actually a fair match for the Tippett.But there are attractions, as well, and the least you can say is that when Brahms&#8217; music starts off toward some particular goal, it usually gets there. Previn conducted the work interestingly this time around, somewhat more rhythmically plastic than on his Telarc recording. The orchestra, at least on Thursday, played badly for him, with long stretches of poor balance and some fuzzy entrances. Perhaps it had been corrected by the Sunday concert, perhaps not. Driving home I soothed my assaulted ears with some of Angel-EMI&#8217;s new recording of Mozart&#8217;s &#8220;Magic Flute&#8221; under Roger Norrington, with his London Classical Players on their reconstructed Mozartian instruments, and with an astonishingly good cast. Perhaps the world didn&#8217;t need another &#8220;Magic Flute,&#8221; with a full column of fine-print listings in the Schwann Catalog that includes the deliriously beautiful 1938 recording under Sir Thomas Beecham with his mostly-Nazi cast and the powerful 1987 performance under Nikolaus Harnoncourt. But there is an infectious quality to this Norrington performance. It sounds young and spirited, full of invention. Liberties are taken, including some orchestral interjections at key moments that may not be Mozart&#8217;s intention but do no harm. The Pamina of Dawn Upshaw is sheer delight, and the scene between Tamino (Anthony Rolfe Johnson) and the Speaker of Olaf Baer&#8211; the crucial moment when the plot takes its magical pivotal turn &#8212; is marvelously underscored by Norrington&#8217;s firm conductorial hand. The Mozart celebration continues, with just cause.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>CLASSCOL</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/1992/01/classcol-9/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/1992/01/classcol-9/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sun, 12 Jan 1992 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Daily News]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=2755</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[In Tokyo last Tuesday night, a crowd of nearly 3,000 clapped and cheered and went joyously mad after a concert by a visiting American orchestra. Another crowd of similar size had done the same on Monday, and on each of three days before that. No previous American conquest of Japan (of which there have been [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>In Tokyo last Tuesday night, a crowd of nearly 3,000 clapped and cheered and went joyously mad after a concert by a visiting American orchestra. Another crowd of similar size had done the same on Monday, and on each of three days before that. No previous American conquest of Japan (of which there have been many) was more skilfully managed, or more joyously received. The conquerors this time were the 80 members of the Hollywood Bowl Orchestra, on its first-ever tour: two concerts over the New Year holiday in Osaka then  five in Tokyo. The imponderables surrounding the event are many, but the over-all success of the venture renders them meaningless. It isn&#8217;t very often, for example, that a symphonic-sized orchestra would embark on an international concert tour less than a year after its founding. But the Hollywood Bowl Orchestra has led a backward life from the start, and it simply doesn&#8217;t matter.  The Japan tour was booked, for example, before the roster of musicians had been filled in or even drawn up. So was the recording contract with Philips, which has already seen fruition in two compact discs that ended 1991 high on the charts (&#8220;Hollywood Dreams,&#8221; which was nearly everybody&#8217;s favorite crossover record last year, and &#8220;The Gershwins in Hollywood,&#8221; an even more substantial achievement). And so, of course, were the six weekends the orchestra played at the Bowl last summer, replacing the resident Los Angeles Philharmonic for the Friday/Saturday easy-listening series. There are some easy explanations, of course, as to why this orchestra had been so precipitously rushed into being. The birth pangs were lightened by the deal with Philips, which had lost its juicy Boston Pops Orchestra connection and needed a glamorous substitute. The Los Angeles Philharmonic, with its own plans that include a stint at the Salzburg Festival smack in the middle of next summer&#8217;s Bowl season, needed some reputable caretaker orchestra to hold down the home fort. Even against the wretched financial statistics in today&#8217;s orchestral world, the Hollywood Bowl Orchestra made sense on paper long before the first downbeat.   There&#8217;d be some justice, even so, in approaching the idea of this Japan tour as an act of precocity. This was, after all, an orchestra that had only been formed last February for the &#8220;Hollywood Dreams&#8221; recording session, whose members had come together again during the summer for the Bowl concerts, the Gershwin recording session and a Rodgers-Hammerstein session (out on discs come spring), and had then gone their separate ways again until this past December 27. On that day the orchestra reassembled on a Culver City sound stage, and ran two rehearsal sessions to prepare the 37 numbers that made up the Japan tour  repertory. The Japan concerts &#8212; in Osaka&#8217;s Festival Hall and Tokyo&#8217;s Orchard Hall, both rather drab venues both visually and acoustically &#8212; also marked, mind you, the first times the orchestra had played in actual concert conditions, without microphones on a normal stage. The group sounded terrific through the Bowl&#8217;s microphones last summer, and it sounds even better on their first two state-of-the-art recordings. Playing a normal concert, however, presents a whole new set of conditions, the only proper lens for examining an orchestra&#8217;s true quality. Under that lens, the brand-new Hollywood Bowl Orchestra stands out as a genuine phenomenon. By the time of their seventh and last concert, these top Los Angeles freelance players had formed themselves into an orchestra with sheen and precision. The players seemed to recognize this no less than the audiences; along with the exhilaration of the players&#8217; discoveries of Japan (with its shrines to ancient gods coexisting with its shrines to cut-rate electronic equipment) I&#8217;ve never picked up so much backstage conversation by orchestral players, genuinely proud at how good the whole group was sounding.  Never mind that the programs for these concerts consisted mainly of showtunes from stage and screen, with some Tchaikovsky dances and Gershwin&#8217;s &#8220;An American in Paris&#8221; added for ballast. The first concerts had their rough spots, but the orchestra I heard at the final Tokyo concerts was an ensemble I would trust with the challenging transparencies of a Mozart symphony. Credit where due, of course: in John Mauceri the Hollywood Bowl Orchestra&#8217;s sponsors have hit upon the perfect force to weld these players into the ensemble they became this past week. Mauceri is now 46. I remember the blond curls and the winning grin when he presided over the first (and best) restoration of Bernstein&#8217;s &#8220;Candide&#8221; at the Brooklyn Academy in 1973; they&#8217;re still in place. He has grown in eclectic mastery; the week before Tokyo he had conducted Wagner&#8217;s &#8220;Die Walkuere&#8221; at the Scottish National Opera of which he is artistic director. He talked, and was entitled so to speak, about an American repertory of film and stage music as an entity deserving attention by symphonic-sized orchestras. He proved his point with such items on the Japan programs as the exquisite &#8220;Walking the Dog&#8221; number from Gershwin&#8217;s film score to the Astaire-Rogers &#8220;Shall We Dance.&#8221; Mauceri&#8217;s task was made lighter by the orchestra itself. &#8220;I looked for freelance players from around Los Angeles who already knew each other, who could travel and work together as friends,&#8221; he told me. &#8220;Many of these people I&#8217;ve known from my days conducting Opera Pacific in Costa Mesa. I hold onto my memories of the night I conducted &#8216;La Boheme&#8217; there, when at my last bow onstage the players in the pit threw flowers at me. How do you take an aggregation of freelance players, even the best ones, and make them into an orchestra so quickly? &#8221;I think that what I work for,&#8221; said Mauceri, &#8220;is what you could call a collective agreement. I try to unlock in every player the thing that made that person a musician in the first place. And then it just snowballs; the players hear how well everybody is playing, and so they play even better.&#8221; Pride of performance: it&#8217;s a pretty good perk for a freelancer, along with such added rewards as the chance to explore sushi at the source. Even so, several Hollywood Bowl Orchestra members took a money loss in playing with the orchestra. Daily salaries ranged from $140 to $210, with an daily $90 per diem (not exactly lavish at current Tokyo prices). At home in a Hollywood studio, playing for a TV commercial, the money can be a lot better. &#8221;Sure, it&#8217;s better,&#8221; said violinist Jay Rosen. &#8220;But I&#8217;ll tell you the real payoff on a gig like the Hollywood Bowl Orchestra. It&#8217;s the chance to take time off from the music business, and to play some music for a change.&#8221;    PAGE  1PAGE  3</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>CLASSCOL</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/1992/01/classcol-10/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/1992/01/classcol-10/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sun, 05 Jan 1992 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Daily News]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=2754</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[[*] STEVE: This comes in early because I&#8217;m off to Japan next week, (leaving Sunday 12/29) along with the Hollywood Bowl Orchestra for its concerts in Osaka (New Year&#8217;s Eve) and Tokyo. We get back on January 8, so my column for the 12th will be a report on the tour (Jon knows about this). [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>[*] STEVE: This comes in early because I&#8217;m off to Japan next week, (leaving Sunday 12/29) along with the Hollywood Bowl Orchestra for its concerts in Osaka (New Year&#8217;s Eve) and Tokyo. We get back on January 8, so my column for the 12th will be a report on the tour (Jon knows about this). I&#8217;ll have photographs fromJapan fed-exed to you directly. [F/L]Seekers after the uncommon experience in the realm of chamber music have a rewarding month ahead. Just in the next couple of weeks, for example, three separate groups will bring in three marvelous and large-scale works of Dvorak: the E-flat-major Piano Quartet (played by the Los Angeles Piano Quartet at Doheny Mansion on Jan. 10th), the G-major String Quartet (by the Chester Quartet at the Southwest Museum on the afternoon of the 12th) and the A-major Piano Quintet (with Mona Golabek and the Cleveland Quartet at the Wilshire-Ebell Theater on the 15th).The Doheny and Southwest Museum concerts are, as you&#8217;ve probably guessed, part of the Da Camera Society&#8217;s &#8220;Chamber Music in Historic Sites&#8221; series. Historic sounds as well as sites. Before we get to any of these marvelous works, none of them heard all that often, consider another chamber concert scheduled for next Sunday (January 12 at 7 p.m. at UCLA&#8217;s Schoenberg Hall), the start of the new season of the Music for Mischa concerts. That program offers a work even less often heard than any of the Dvoraks. Why is it, pray, that Ludwig van Beethoven&#8217;s C-major String Quintet has virtually disappeared from the repertory, both live and recorded? Against the dozens of recorded performances of Beethoven&#8217;s quartets, only one is currently listed of this quintet, and that on a small imported label.Ask an interesting question: if Beethoven had died, or stopped composing, after completing this particular work (Opus 29 in the chronological list), where would he rank today among composers? He would have had one symphony to his name, a brace of six string quartets, two piano concertos and quite a few piano sonatas. The symphonies, concertos and quartets would probably still hold their places as clear descendants of 18th-century models, with enough originality to establish Beethoven as a chap who might, someday soon, have blazed exciting new musical trails. The piano sonatas &#8212; the &#8220;Pathetique&#8221; and the &#8220;Moonlight&#8221; in particular &#8212; are even more clearly the work of a young composer eager to kick out against the restrictions of classical forms. Then there&#8217;s this C-major Quintet. The work dates from 1801; Beethoven was 31, and had already begun to make some noise around Vienna. Even so, the very start of this work might have startled its first hearers: Beethoven&#8217;s way of pushing his opening theme up the chromatic scale, rudely and forcefully. The effect is a little like that of a serpent slowly uncoiling. That&#8217;s startling enough.Move on to the slow movement. Mozart would have smiled at this, a haunting, songlike melody hovering over a simple accompaniment. Beethoven&#8217;s instrumental music doesn&#8217;t often seize the listener&#8217;s power to breathe this kind of melody that seems to imitate the intensity of human song; he would do so again in one or two of the slow movements of the later string quartets. He does it here, in this C-major Quintet, for the first time. Is this, then, the sort of music we, and the record companies, can choose to overlook?The finale is famous; it gave the entire work its nickname, &#8220;Storm.&#8221; It does, indeed, burst upon you: rolling, snarling tremors that sweep across all five performers. Then &#8212; surprise! &#8212; the storm is choked off, with a butter-wouldn&#8217;t-melt minuet that sneaks in out of nowhere. The storm returns. So does that minuet, now greatly changed. The sweet dance has grown oratorical, even petulant, and it is swept aside at the end with a violent harmonic change. Here is the shadow of the Beethoven to come!All credit, then, to cellist Robert Martin for pulling this remarkable, and remarkably little-known, work of Beethoven&#8217;s out of the shadows. This is the third &#8220;Music for Mischa&#8221; series at UCLA, produced by Martin and named for his late friend and colleague Mischa Schneider, cellist of the legendary Budapest Quartet. The quality of the programs &#8212; four this season &#8212; is worthy of the man whose name they bear.We could make the same case for Dvorak that we do for Beethoven: that we know many of his works all too well, at the expense of other works we know all too little. The G-major String Quartet is a case in point. The Dvorak quartet we know best is the F-major, subtitled &#8220;American&#8221; because he composed it during his sojourn in this country. The G-major is a later work, and its wisdom and intense beauty are the work of a man who has pondered deeply on the nature of his own art. It is a quiet work; the exuberance of the early Dvorak has given way to a deep calm, of the sort that often overtakes artists (Brahms of the Clarinet Quintet, Shakespeare of &#8220;The Tempest&#8221;) late in their careers. The scherzo does, to be sure, mirror the composer&#8217;s love of his own country&#8217;s folk dances; the slow movement, on the other hand, transcends all boundaries with Dvorak&#8217;s gorgeous theme and its ensuing variations. Again, this G-major Quartet is virtually ignored; a single recording exists, as opposed to 18 of the &#8220;American.&#8221; The Piano Quartet and Piano Quintet are full of that aforementioned exuberance; this is music that, from the first note, settles you back in your seat with the message that you&#8217;re in for a wonderful ride. Do both works go on a little long for their length? To be sure; yet in this music, as in all Dvorak, you&#8217;ll dig long and hard before you find a note you would willingly spare.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>CLASSCOL</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/1991/12/classcol-11/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/1991/12/classcol-11/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sun, 29 Dec 1991 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Daily News]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=2777</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[For this final Sunday of the Mozart year, another fond glance at music&#8217;s purest genius might be in order.The admirable project begun by Philips, to amass a complete recording of the Mozartian heritage in its numerical and radiant fullness, nears completion on schedule. Of 45 projected volumes, 37 are now at hand. Of the remaining [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>For this final Sunday of the Mozart year, another fond glance at music&#8217;s purest genius might be in order.The admirable project begun by Philips, to amass a complete recording of the Mozartian heritage in its numerical and radiant fullness, nears completion on schedule. Of 45 projected volumes, 37 are now at hand. Of the remaining eight, six will be reissues of recordings already familiar, complete operas conducted by Sir Colin Davis. The entire project &#8212; the quality of performance, the packaging and annotations  &#8212; has been carried out on a high level of integrity and taste. The final volume, by the way, consists of a miscellany, including pieces from a sketchbook that the 9-year-old wunderkind compiled during a visit to London. Also in this volume is an uncompleted rondo for horn and orchestra, whose manuscript was only discovered this past year. The work may be inconsequential, but it stands as a reminder that the Mozart treasury continues to grow.The passion for completeness, surely one of the motivating forces behind this monolithic recording project, has its down side, of course. Nobody will be so foolhardy as to proclaim that every moment on every one of these 180 compact discs is the affirmation of high genius. Any rational-minded connoisseur must admit, on working his way through all or part of this treasurable collection, that there is a hierarchy of excellence clearly in evidence. My own lists of expendable Mozart have contained, from time to time, such varied repertory as the two big Vesper services, the Concerto for Three Pianos, the interminable variations that form the finale of the Sinfonia Concertante for Winds, and the opera about the Disguised Gardener that appears in the series in both Italian and German versions, each running over three hours. In every case I have returned to the works in question, listened again with ears somehow mysteriously refreshed, and discovered some haunting turn of phrase, some astounding harmonic progression or breath-stopping orchestral color that I had somehow missed before. These works are, then, banished from the dark lists and returned to favor &#8212; until the next time.The essence of mastery in a piece of music, of whatever extent, is its power to reveal new aspects on repeated hearings. To visit and revisit  these Mozart packages over the past year, to check out one more time a work you think familiar, or to investigate some juvenile caprice you&#8217;ve never before heard, becomes an experience in continual revelation. When, before, did you hear the wind passage before the reprise in the slow movement of the 39th Symphony played with such exquisite balance as it is here by the winds of Neville Marriner&#8217;s Academy of St. Martin in the Fields? How did you miss, until just now, the sheer boyish delight in the piece called &#8220;Galimathias musicum,&#8221; flung forth by this incredible child at the age of ten?The total of these 180 discs is a staggering outpouring of great music. It makes for a daunting stretch along eight feet of shelf space, yet the quality of its content makes it user-friendly in a way that, say, a similar project for Bach or Haydn might not be. The ultimate triumph of Mozart is the way a human voice is, almost always, close to the surface of the music. The voice may be impersonated by a clarinet or horn, as in the slow movements of his mature piano concertos. It may be the voice of a real person, as when Susanna sings of her marital bliss in the last act of &#8220;The Marriage of Figaro.&#8221; But Mozart has this way in his music of making you believe that he is talking to you alone, and nobody else. It&#8217;s a gift he never lost. The Philips Mozart project was not the only large-scale tribute to this angelic composer produced in the anniversary year; his music has been lavishly attended to by any number of producers. But the Philips series was by far the broadest, and it was also managed by a group of artists exceptionally well-suited to the task. For a record company with Marriner and Davis under contract among its conductors, with Alfred Brendel and Mitsuko Uchida as its pianists, with its violin repertory still fresh in older recordings by the late Arthur Grumiaux and Henryk Szeryng, and with the Academy of St. Martin in the Fields  to provide the idealized Mozartian orchestral sound, its all-out participation in a Mozart celebration was preordained. You will search long before you come across a project of this size with performance standards so consistently maintained.The question of so-called &#8220;authenticity&#8221; arises. Strange; when Marriner&#8217;s Academy made its first recordings, some 20 years ago, their Mozart was hailed as a revelation of the &#8220;authentic&#8221; Mozartian sound, mostly because of the careful balance between a relatively small string section and the winds &#8212; as opposed to the full-orchestra sound of, say, Seiji Ozawa&#8217;s Boston Symphony.  Now, however, we have other ensembles (also mostly British) who dig deeper into the &#8220;authentic&#8221; sound, with instruments reconstructed from old models. By their standards, the Academy now sounds old-fashioned.And so it may be, and so may be the sound of Brendel and Uchida, playing on modern concert grand pianos. Yet there is another way of looking at this whole &#8220;authenticity&#8221; syndrome: the matter of fidelity to the spirit, no less than the sound. Someday, Heaven forfend, yet another record producer will hit upon the idea of a complete Mozart project, this time jiggered to as to produce exactly the sounds Mozart and his 18th-century audiences may have heard. It would be hard to conceive, however, that any such project could come as close to the authentic spirit of the music as you&#8217;ll find in the undertaking already at hand.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>CLASSCOL</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/1991/12/classcol-12/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/1991/12/classcol-12/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sun, 22 Dec 1991 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Daily News]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=2776</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Some brain-dead hobgoblin decreed some time ago that the Christmas season is a time of silence. Our concert halls are empty, except for a stray sing-along &#8220;Messiah.&#8221; Home from the holidays, the kids might, you&#8217;d think, find diuersion or self-improvement in a live symphony concert, or even a string quartet. But no; out of one [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Some brain-dead hobgoblin decreed some time ago that the Christmas season is a time of silence. Our concert halls are empty, except for a stray sing-along &#8220;Messiah.&#8221; Home from the holidays, the kids might, you&#8217;d think, find diuersion or self-improvement in a live symphony concert, or even a string quartet. But no; out of one side of their collective mouths, our musical managements scream at finding themselves out of touch with the young audience, but then they blatantly talk their way around this one opportunity to reaching a sizable segment of that audience with challenging programming at this time of the season. We can, of course, ward off cultural starvation at home. Handel&#8217;s &#8220;Messiah&#8221; on the home stereo can be an uplifting experience (especially with the superb new Nicholas McGegan performance released this year on Harmonia Mundi) but there are other serious musical pleasures appropriate to the season and less often heard. Since the musical managements have abandoned their task of broadening our musical horizons (at least for the moment) it falls to your reporter to fill the breach. Here, then, are some great works you may have overlooked, which may help you to hold onto sanity in this interval until the Philharmonic, the Opera Company and the various other local groups are back in operation.When was the last time, for example, that you heard the Christmas Oratorio by Heinrich Schutz? Never, you say? You are, then, missing a work of simple, powerful beauty. Schutz (1585-1677) comes in at the start of the Baroque. Like his German contemporary, the painter Albrecht Durer, Schutz spent much time in Italy, thawing his Northern sensibilities under the Tuscan sun. The result is a wonderful mixture of craftsmanship and delight.  This work from his mature years is full of fresh dramatic devices that were all new and startling in their time: voices interacting with instruments in a way that foreshadows operatic writing. Solo voices and chorus alternate in telling the story of the Nativity; near the end there&#8217;s a chorus in praise of God that is so simply, radiantly beautiful that you&#8217;ll need to play it again and again.The work is available on two recordings, both marvelous: Rene Jacobs and his Concerto Vocale on Harmonia Mundi and Andrew Parrott&#8217;s Taverner Choir and Players on Angel-EMI.Go back a few years, and revel in Claudio Monteverdi&#8217;s 1610 &#8220;Vespers of the Blessed Virgin.&#8221; This is not Christmas music, strictly speaking; it&#8217;s a setting of the evening service in the Catholic Church at any time of the year. But this particular setting was composed by Monteverdi for a festive celebration at the Court in Mantua, and so it will do for Christmas as well as not. Monteverdi&#8217;s dates are 1567-1643, which fortells 1993 as a big year for this composer. The Vespers form an astounding work: 90 minutes in which one of music&#8217;s sovereign innovators revels in an astounding vocabulary of new musical inventions, some of them of his own devising. The opening is astounding enough: the chorus in the center, surround by the raucous brass contingent pealing forth their challenges as if to ring the whole thing  by flames.Then Monteverdi moves us on, through a number of Psalm settings for soloists and chorus, up to one of the most stunning compositional feats of his or anyone else&#8217;s time. That would be the &#8220;Sonata sopra Sancta Maria.&#8221; The full Baroque orchestra &#8212; strings, winds, brass and organ &#8212; take on the measures of a dance: zany, wildly spirited, breathless, the rhythm constantly changing. Threaded through this glorious racket is a single line of chant, taken up by the sopranos and repeated 11 times: &#8220;Sancta Maria, ora pro nobis&#8221; (&#8220;Blessed Mary, pray for us.&#8221;)There is something in these insistently repeated phrases, and in the flickering dances all around it, that suggests something grandiose, wild and infinite; there&#8217;s nothing else in music quite like this.Recordings: there are several excellent performances, but the one conducted by Philippe Herreweghe on Harmonia Mundi stands apart, with the brazen sound of archaic trumpets and trombones (played by a group called the Toulouse Sacqueboutiers) adding to the sense of grandeur. There is also considerable charm in Arthur Honegger&#8217;s &#8220;Christmas Cantata,&#8221; on a recent Erato disc. Honegger (1892-1955) is one of those composers whose fame falls through the cracks now and then, and then occasionally gets revived. He was one of the composers (the so-called &#8220;Group of Six&#8221;) who hung out with Jean Cocteau in the 1920s, and, like most of the others, turned toward a very simple, devotional musical style in his later scores. The &#8220;Christmas Cantata&#8221; dates from 1953; it is scored (very prettily) for baritone, children&#8217;s and adult choirs, organ and orchestra, with a simple devotional text hailing Jesus&#8217; birth in ecumenical terms. The new recording, excellently led by Michel Corboz, also includes a more familiar Honegger work: &#8220;La Danse des Morts&#8221; (&#8220;Dance of the Dead&#8221;), decidedly not a Christmas text. It&#8217;s a marvelous work on its own, however, with the narrator howling forth the story of Ezekiel in the Valley of Dry Bones and the chorus and soloists shrieking forth their commentary. Unless you can lay your hands on the historic (but, alas, long-discontinued) performance under Charles Munch, with the glorious oratory of Jean-Louis Barrault as narrator, this one will do fine.Happy holidays!</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>CLASSCOL</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/1991/12/classcol-13/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/1991/12/classcol-13/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sun, 15 Dec 1991 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Daily News]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=2775</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Two veterans of the local battlefields have been back among us these weeks. Zubin Mehta is currently here at his old stand, the Los Angeles Philharmonic podium; the first of his three programs here will be repeated this afternoon at the Music Center. Gerard Schwarz {cq}, who was never invited to the Philharmonic podium during [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Two veterans of the local battlefields have been back among us these weeks. Zubin Mehta is currently here at his old stand, the Los Angeles Philharmonic podium; the first of his three programs here will be repeated this afternoon at the Music Center. Gerard Schwarz {cq}, who was never invited to the Philharmonic podium during his years as head of the Los Angeles Chamber Orchestra, attained that podium for a pair of programs earlier this month.Neither of these conductors rank high in my personal pantheon, but that&#8217;s not the same as saying that their visits here were without interest. Schwarz, currently with the Seattle Symphony, has carved a small niche for himself as a   proponent of American symphonic music from the recent past; his program here began with David Diamond&#8217;s Second Symphony, typical of the nuggets he has recently exhumed. Mehta&#8217;s program this past week began with a ghastly miscalculation not entirely his fault, but ended with some grand noise from the narrow repertory which he has come close to mastering.David Diamond is now 76. Thanks mostly to Schwarz&#8217;s efforts on his behalf, in concerts and on Delos Records, he seems to be enjoying a return to popularity  &#8212; a reputation, you might say, for having a reputation. The Second Symphony dates from 1944, and was commissioned by Serge Koussevitzky and the Boston Symphony. It was, and remains, Koussevitzky&#8217;s kind of music: sonorous, bland, academically correct. (By coincidence, there was more of Koussevitzky&#8217;s kind of music at the Music Center last week; more on this later.)The work&#8217;s history may be interesting, but the music is not. What can we learn today from this kind of tepid, derivative tone-spinning, in style midway between Sibelius and Vaughan Williams but with none of either composer&#8217;s profile? Here was more of what we were talking about last week: music dated from the moment of birth, desiccated beyond repair. On Schwarz&#8217;s program here there was also newer music, Lukas Foss&#8217; Clarinet Concerto in its American premiere. Again the matter at hand was a string of derivative gestures, designed so that a talented soloist &#8212; Richard Stoltzman, in this case &#8212; could strike handsome poses at the end of each section. Foss &#8212; another local warrior from times past, from when he taught at UCLA &#8212; has spent a lifetime as the great almost-ran among composers: nibbling skilfully at one modish musical style after another, never quite turning his serendipitous skill  into real music. The new concerto is more of the same. Mehta&#8217;s hobbyhorse on his first program was the Bruckner Eighth Symphony, and he rode it skilfully. No, it wasn&#8217;t the kind of performance to take the full measure of the work&#8217;s grandiosity, the flooding of naive but heartfelt emotion that can make the slow movement practically glow in the dark. It was, instead, a careful, meticulous performance, nicely balanced, loud enough at the end to convince the capacity crowd that angels had, indeed, passed overhead, but slack at times so that the endless, repetitive vulgarity of that final movement became, as usual, an exercise in listeners&#8217; frustration.Before had come Midori and her not-so-magical violin, at 20 no longer dismissable as a precocious nymphet. So out of touch she was with her music &#8212; the wondrous Violin Concerto of Alban Berg &#8212; that this listener&#8217;s hand itched to spank not only this oversized child but also whatever concert management dreamed up the notion that she was ready (or would ever be ready) to play the score. LINE<br />
Gidon {cq} Kremer, a violinist and enkindling musician of quite a different order, brought his German Chamber Philharmonic into the Music Center earlier this past week for two programs partly wonderful partly (to say the least) curious. The orchestra itself, Frankfurt-based, is a marvelous small ensemble, warm in tone and astounding in precision and balance. Kremer, a performer of genuine creative skills  of a breed that hardly exists these days, endowed the programs with a thread of gold by performing all five of Mozart&#8217;s Violin Concertos, leading the orchestra from his soloist&#8217;s stand.But the first program also included two sizable works by Arthur Lourie; Kremer had also performed some of his music at his Royce Hall concerts last season. Why Lourie? He was a Russian-born composer (1892-1966) who emigrated here shortly after the Revolution and landed for a time in Boston, at the feet of the aforementioned Serge Koussevitzky. He wrote an adulatory, if not exactly accurate, biography of Koussevitzky who then &#8212; surely more out of gratitude than musical taste &#8212; performed lots of Lourie&#8217;s music.The Lourie pieces Kremer played and conducted (with high skill, needless to say) were bland little exercises in a mostly backward style that made one think of cafe orchestras behind potted palms and punctuating cries of &#8220;Hey, Waiter!&#8221; Yet here is Kremer, one of the great musical adventurers of our time, carrying around the music of Arthur Lourie as something aflame with seraphic majesty. You just never know.1-line<br />
Sian Edwards merits belated mention, the English lass who led the Philharmonic over Thanksgiving weekend and, thus, became only the second woman to lead the orchestra in a subscription concert. (Marin Alsop, the first, had only preceded her by two weeks.) Edwards is a real talent, although a strangely planned program partially did her in.It was strange, for example, to start with Ravel&#8217;s &#8220;Spanish Rhapsody,&#8221; a rousing concert-ending piece but here out of place. A rather tentative, colorless reading heightened that impression, as did the ensuing music, Peter Serkin&#8217;s show-offish performance of the Beethoven First Piano Concerto.But Edwards ended the program with a stunning reading of the Shostakovich Sixth Symphony, a work full of  easy, rousing effects but full also of a dark profundity molded with a fine, dramatic hand. Edwards and the orchestra collaborated beautifully; this was major music-making.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>CLASSCOL</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/1991/12/classcol-14/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/1991/12/classcol-14/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sun, 08 Dec 1991 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Daily News]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=2774</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[SUGGESTED HED: CONTEMPORARY MUSIC, NEW AND OLDSome music, like some great stage &#8216;n&#8217; screen stars, never shows its age. Some music, like minor luminaries, begins to wrinkle right at birth. You never know.After as much Mozart as we&#8217;ve heard in recent weeks, due to the anniversary celebration that officially (but probably not actually) ended last [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>SUGGESTED HED: CONTEMPORARY MUSIC, NEW AND OLDSome music, like some great stage &#8216;n&#8217; screen stars, never shows its age. Some music, like minor luminaries, begins to wrinkle right at birth. You never know.After as much Mozart as we&#8217;ve heard in recent weeks, due to the anniversary celebration that officially (but probably not actually) ended last Thursday, it would still be hard to remember any performances that put this music across as anything but fresh, innovative, as inventive as if newly composed. Not even thepoorer occasions, the ones you remember the way you remember a stone in your shoe (Peter Maag&#8217;s conducting at the Bowl, for one of many examples) could erase the perpetual youthfulness in this music. Therein lies the Mozartian miracle: the phenomenon of a composer working in a time when musical form and style were fairly rigidly systematized, yet able through the clarity of his own vision to trick his way out of the system. The further miracle lies in the many ways Mozart found to work those tricks. Grasping the outlines of his style is no problem &#8212; for a 1991 audience, or even one in 1791. Against this familiar background, however, the Mozartian earmarks stand out in bold relief. Sometimes he chills a listener&#8217;s blood by merely wrenching the harmony into unexpected realms; the switch at the unmasking of Leporello in &#8220;Don Giovanni&#8221; is an ageless example. Sometimes it&#8217;s just a matter of a shift in tone; the slow movement of the Clarinet Concerto, which Richard Stoltzman played with the Philharmonic this past week, lingers in the memory because the melody demands of its soloist the tone of a human voice pure and haunting. There is nothing here that needs to be considered as very old music or very new; it remains timeless as a communicative act at its purest. These thoughts about aging and agelessness were brought on by a more negative experience. At last week&#8217;s Monday Evening Concert at the County Museum the composer-of-honor was Sylvano Bussotti, a major figure in avant-garde music both here and in Europe as recently as the mid-1960s. Bussotti, along with an ensemble of 12 musicians called Bussottioperaballet (one word), were flown here from Rome to give this single concert, the whole trip underwritten by several Italian cultural agencies here and abroad. The mind boggles at what this must have cost, and at how the money could have been better used.There was a style in vogue in the 1960s, whose earmarks were a kind of fragmented, insecure melodic line, lots of silences, an affectation of profundity through inscrutability, bits of straw passed off as diamonds. Anton Webern and John Cage were its progenitors; Lukas Foss (in town this weekend with his new Clarinet Concerto) was among its ardent disciples. Some of the music had a convincing  shape that could pass for something close to a melody. The Italian contingent was especially good at that, the composers Luciano Berio and Bruno Maderna along with Bussotti. They worked with pastiche and collage, and at least one work from that time&#8211; Berio&#8217;s Sinfonia &#8212; deserves its place in the repertory.Not much else does, I&#8217;m afraid. Bussotti came to town, charmed a couple of audiences with lectures, and brought a (blessedly) short program to the Museum, consisting for the most part of bloops and bleeps from this bygone style. More depressing was the fact that some of the music was quite recent: a noisy, incoherent pastiche of bird-imitations, all tossed together and performed as a 30-minute hullabaloo, that suggested that Bussotti was still mining the old veins. Here was music created during our lifetime, stillborn from the start, utterly devoid of anything like the energy that maintains the spark of life in Mozart&#8217;s music. Now it&#8217;s manifestly unfair, of course, to use the Mozartian miracle as a stick to clobber Silvano Bussotti, or any other composer living or recently dead. Yet the close comparisons that recent concerts have allowed do bring up this basic question about timelessness in music. Two nights after the Bussotti fiasco at the County Museum the EAR Unit came to the same auditorium with a program of works by Frederic Rzewski {cq}, with the composer himself on hand to play his new Piano Sonata. Again, it&#8217;s probably stretching a point to clobber the Italian innovator Bussotti with the American innovator Rzewski, yet the two evenings added up to a study in creative energy. From Rzewski we heard an evening of great, sprawling, untidy pieces. There was the Sonata, running on for some 40 minutes, cruising around some borrowed melodies that ran the gamut from a medieval folktune to &#8220;Three Blind Mice,&#8221; phenomenally difficult but marvelously dispatched by its creator. There were a couple of satiric pieces in Rzewski&#8217;s activist style, pastiches that kicked around familiar tunes and the cliches of modern advertising. Not everything came together, but everything had an energy that leaped from the stage. Even the Sonata, for all its length, held the crowd silent and spellbound. That wasn&#8217;t Mozart, either, but at least the music fairly glowed from its own  energy level, which the performers caught and flung out into the hall. That&#8217;s what music is all about, or should be. Talk about energy! With 23 complete boxed sets of the Beethoven symphonies ensconced in the latest LP catalog, you&#8217;re justified in questioning the need for No. 24, but a few minutes with the latest entry &#8212; performances by Nikolaus Harnoncourt leading the Chamber Orchestra of Europe on five Teldec discs currently selling for the price of four &#8212; might make you wonder if you weren&#8217;t hearing nine newly composed essays in the symphonic form at its most incandescent. Harnoncourt, Berlin-born and best known for a lot of fairly ho-hum Baroque performances using authentic period instruments, seems to have undergone a rebirth of the spirit. Last year&#8217;s &#8220;Don Giovanni,&#8221; and now this Beethoven set, are the work of an enkindling, energized musical visionary. The orchestra uses modern instruments, except for the brass players, who use old-fashioned valveless trumpets and trombones with their slashing, hard vibrance. That sound, best of all in the Seventh Symphony, will simply send shivers up your spine. So will the more eloquent passages, like the mysterious, half-spoken slow movement of No. 4, which Harnoncourt takes to the edge of silence. The vocal soloists in the Ninth are merely adequate; everything else about this set is extraordinary. Even if you already own the other 23, Harnoncourt&#8217;s new recording will usurp a place of leadership.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>CLASSCOL</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/1991/12/classcol-15/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/1991/12/classcol-15/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sun, 01 Dec 1991 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Daily News]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=2773</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[STEVE: I have art for opera; will bring by Tuesday noonishRossini&#8217;s &#8220;Barber of Seville&#8221; &#8212; exquisitely comic, meticulously timed, both supple and subtle &#8212; has been put forward by the Music Center Opera as a mindless, vulgar laff show. Imposed, like wanton graffiti, upon this beautiful structure there are Pavarotti gags, chamber-pot gags, bad-breath gags. [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>STEVE: I have art for opera; will bring by Tuesday noonishRossini&#8217;s &#8220;Barber of Seville&#8221; &#8212; exquisitely comic, meticulously timed, both supple and subtle &#8212; has been put forward by the Music Center Opera as a mindless, vulgar laff show. Imposed, like wanton graffiti, upon this beautiful structure there are Pavarotti gags, chamber-pot gags, bad-breath gags. The scenery, a Magritte ripoff done up in finger paints, is its own set of gags. Some of the sight gags do, to be sure, distract from the inadequacy of much of the singing, but that can hardly condone the over-all sense of vandalism. Given that inadequacy &#8212; the squeaky, off-pitch Almaviva of Raul Gimenez, Louis Lebherz&#8217;s woolly Basilio, Rodney Gilfry&#8217;s cute but underpowered Figaro, adrift under the shapeless musical leadership of Randall Bore (sorry, Behr) &#8212; the obvious alternative might be to turn one&#8217;s back on the enterprise. That, however, would cost us the one positive element in the production, which steps out beyond the shadows and works in pure light. That, of course, is the Rosina of Frederica von Stade, a role she has long owned. Lovely in appearance, graceful in her every move, and totally in command of the mighty benevolence that Rossini has bestowed on the role (which, by the way, she sings in the original mezzo-soprano range), von Stade moved through the otherwise depressing evening as if ensconced on a whole &#8216;nother planet.To say that she saved the show, but that she deserved one more worth saving, is to propound the obvious.Two performances remain: tomorrow and Wednesday nights. Better by several light years was last weekend&#8217;s other music-drama entry, Philip Glass&#8217; and Allen Ginsberg&#8217;s brilliant &#8220;Hydrogen Jukebox.&#8221; given two sold-out performances at UCLA&#8217;s Royce Hall. It was a glorious collaboration: two of our times&#8217; rebellious archetypes, surprisingly adept at finding common cause. I say &#8220;surprisingly&#8221; for a reason. The typical Glass texts &#8212; the sci-fi pieces, the dense overlay of metaphor in the early operas &#8212; have always embodied a kind of indirection that also spilled over into the music, not always to its benefit. Here we got 20 poems of the good old  Ginsberg, howling out his activist political posters, the sometimes drooling but well-meant sentiment, all in a slam-bang verbal onslaught in which metaphor played no part. And the impact upon Glass resulted in some of his strongest music in years.Six singers, all strong and wonderfully acrobatic, participated against Jerome Sirlin&#8217;s spectacularly textured projected scenery; Ginsberg himself came on stage for one gorgeous reading. There were, to be sure, moments of strain in the visual creation; words and music dwarfed the stage images most of the time. It&#8217;s good news, therefore, that &#8220;Hydrogen Jukebox&#8221; is up for a recording (on Sony) in a few months.What a busy weekend! In Long Beach on Saturday the brave JoAnn Falletta led her Long Beach Symphony and a chorus through Prokofiev&#8217;s complete score for &#8220;Alexander Nevsky,&#8221; with the great Eisenstein movie, in a beautifully restored print, on a screen overhead. It&#8217;s happened before, with the Los Angeles Philharmonic both indoors and out, but it cannot happen too often. The majesty of Eisenstein&#8217;s conception grows with repetition; his use of music (and of no music, when metal grinds upon metal in the battle scenes) deserves every filmmaker&#8217;s scrutiny. The production, in this enlightened restoration, cries out for capture on video.Philharmonic honcho Ernest Fleischmann, who in his time has brought to the Music Center a remarkable array of guest-conducting talent, struck gold once again last weekend with the local debut of Franz Welser-Moest. Now the conductor of the London Philharmonic (which he brings to the Music Center on March 16) the young (31) Welser-Moest delivered a powerful reading of the Mahler First Symphony, daredevil in the breadth of its contrasts but marvelously under control. He&#8217;s wonderful to watch, this Welser-Moest, with arms that look ten feet long, wheedling and shaping the music with splendid control. I also have a special fondness for a conductor modest enough to take a bow without removing his glasses; few do. That&#8217;s what I call spectacular.The Mozart celebrations come to a head this week. The financially-beset Philharmonic has only one all-Mozart concert (on Thursday, the actual 200th anniversary of Mozart&#8217;s death). But that concert has Richard Stoltzman to play the Clarinet Concerto, and there is no performer, on any instrument, with better command than Stoltzman&#8217;s of the shape of a Mozartian phrase, its power to wind itself around the hearer&#8217;s mind and heart.Two chamber orchestras are on hand, both under proven Mozartians: Sir Neville Marriner and his Academy of St. Martin in the Field at Ambassador tomorrow and Tuesday, our own Los Angeles Chamber Orchestra under Trevor Pinnock, Thursday at Royce, Friday at the Japan-America Theater downtown, Saturday at Ambassador. And another local band, the brave little Los Angeles Mozart Orchestra (adrift under guest conductors since the retirement of founder David Keith) has a charmer of an idea for next Saturday, the 7th. First, at 4 p.m., there&#8217;s a wake at &#8212; where else? &#8212; Forest Lawn (the Junior Achievement Patio), with champagne and a eulogy and with, the program states, &#8220;black arm band optional.&#8221; That&#8217;s followed by a concert in Forest Lawn&#8217;s Hall of Liberty, with the orchestra and the Cambridge Singers doing, among other things, Mozart&#8217;s Requiem.After that, we can all get back to business. Next year&#8217;s anniversary: Rossini,  on Leap-Year Day. That should be fun.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>CLASSCOL</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/1991/11/classcol-16/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/1991/11/classcol-16/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sun, 24 Nov 1991 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Daily News]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=2772</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Fame in music, as in other endeavors, comes and goes. Five years ago, for example, nobody could have foreseen the return to favor of Franz Schreker. Now here we are with three new recordings of Schreker operas. This past weekend, furthermore, Nov 15-17 [F/L] the Los Angeles Chamber Orchestra revived Schreker&#8217;s 1916 Chamber Symphony (for [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Fame in music, as in other endeavors, comes and goes. Five years ago, for example, nobody could have foreseen the return to favor of Franz Schreker. Now here we are with three new recordings of Schreker operas. This past weekend, furthermore, Nov 15-17 [F/L] the Los Angeles Chamber Orchestra revived Schreker&#8217;s 1916 Chamber Symphony (for 23 Solo Instruments). Schreker (1878-1934) had been at one time Europe&#8217;s most respected composer, his operas prized even above those of Richard Strauss, revered also as a teacher and conductor. His stage works &#8212; big, sprawling, superheated romances, the operatic equivalent of Barbara Cartland&#8217;s novels &#8212; appeared in dozens of houses throughout the German-speaking world. Shortly after World War I, however, his fame simply vanished; a new musical language, sparked by Europe&#8217;s frenzy over the new-fangled thing called jazz, made Schreker suddenly seem old fashioned. He hung on through the 1920s, but the Nazi rise cost the Jewish Schreker the remaining shreds of his fame, and brought on the heart attack that killed him.It might be stretching a point to think of Schreker as a genius rescued from undeserved neglect; he still sounds old-fashioned. So what? The operas, for all their gooey boy-loves-mountain-loses-girl mysticism, have some soaring,high-caloric, irresistible passages. The Chamber Symphony, which Christoph Perick led marvelously with the Los Angeles Chamber Orchestra, is full of what the Germans call &#8220;Klangzauber&#8221;: magical sounds. The work is in one movement lasting half an hour. In that time it dances, sighs, weeps, and gives off showers of bright sparks: Mahler touched by a fairy wand.The Schreker was followed on this program by exactly the kind of music that did him in: Ravel&#8217;s shimmering, flip, jazz-infused Piano Concerto of 1930, nicely set forth by Pascal Roge. The final work was an even greater miracle, however, Haydn&#8217;s &#8220;London&#8221; Symphony (No. 104) in a performance under Perick that still, a week later, resounds in my head.Haydn symphonies are often used to start off orchestral programs: the undemanding, easy-listening classical symphony to set the crowd comfortably in its seats. Placed this time as the climactic work on the program, and conducted by Perick with marvelous vitality and breadth, the symphony became a revelation. Here is the great Haydn at the absolute zenith of his musical mastery, honoring his adoring London audience with music crammed with novelty. He wreaks all kinds of violence against the accepted structural practices of the time, launching (at one magical point in the slow movement) into a series of harmonic changes that would do credit to any composer of our own time. This isn&#8217;t just any old piece of 18th century note-spinning; this is a work of awesome mastery, and that was the way Perick and the soon-to-be-his orchestra played it. If memory serves (and, believe me, it does), this was the best orchestral concert of the year so far.The arrival of Disney&#8217;s &#8220;Fantasia&#8221; &#8212; finally and, apparently, briefly &#8212; at your local video store (drugstore, supermarket and probably pizzeria) is a public-relations triumph orchestrated with the skill of Leopold Stokowski orchestrating a Bach Toccata. Even so, the film is some kind of cherishable disaster, a curio surviving from a bygone culture naive and permissive beyond any contemporary understanding.Purely as music, there is a ghastliness here beyond measure. It doesn&#8217;t have to do only with the major cuts &#8212; Beethoven&#8217;s &#8220;Pastoral&#8221; Symphony and Stravinsky&#8217;s &#8220;Rite of Spring&#8221; reduced by about half. At least the passages that remain are fairly extended. But even the small pieces are hacked at; in &#8220;The Sorcerer&#8217;s Apprentice,&#8221; generally regarded as one of the better segments, there are agonizing deletions of two or four bars here and there, obviously done to match the music to the animation. In 1940 there weren&#8217;t the 25 recorded versions of &#8220;The Sorcerer&#8217;s Apprentice&#8221; to insure that we all know the music backward and forward; there was one, and one each of the &#8220;Pastoral&#8221; and the &#8220;Rite.&#8221; To most of us seeing the film for the first time, in theaters with the requisite outlandish stereo setup that the video release preserves, this was all new music. It&#8217;s astounding now, when our audiences achieve repertory literacy at a far earlier age, to discover what Leopold Stokowski and his touted Philadelphia Orchestra put over on Disney and on &#8220;Fantasia&#8217;s&#8221; first audiences 50 years ago.The playing is coarse and inaccurate; as early as the opening Bach &#8220;Toccata and Fugue&#8221; the strings proclaim their inability to play 16th-note passages together. This was the time when the flamboyant Stokowski was inflicting his famous orchestral experiments on Philadelphia, including ordering the strings not to bow in unison. This created a flowing, gooey sound that seemed to hang suspended with no downbeats. It would be impossible to imagine dancers working in time to Tchaikovsky&#8217;s &#8220;Nutcracker&#8221; ballet in Stokowski&#8217;s treacly version. As a cultural document, a manifestation of the marketing of serious culture in times past, &#8220;Fantasia&#8221; has its value. (And has that brand of marketing, for that matter, really disappeared? Doesn&#8217;t it linger in the dose of pseudo-cultural pap ladled out daily by Karl Haas on KUSC-FM and its affiliates?) Oh well; just those opening moments, as the ethereally beautiful Stokowski mounts his podium in silhouette and raises his arms to conduct, and the studio lights catch just his hands and turn them to pure gold, you&#8217;re sure of two things. One: you&#8217;re being had. Two: it doesn&#8217;t matter.Then you should check out &#8220;Allegro non troppo,&#8221; also available on video. Bruno Bozzetto&#8217;s 1975 masterpiece was probably meant as a long-after-the-fact answer to &#8220;Fantasia,&#8221; but it&#8217;s a work of animation far better on its own in both concept and execution. Like the Disney, Bozzetto aims his animator&#8217;s imagination at a program of familiar pops chestnuts, in a series of contrived scenarios hilarious, loaded with compelling satire and in one instance (Sibelius&#8217; &#8220;Valse triste&#8221;) authentically tragic. Run his version of Ravel&#8217;s &#8220;Bolero&#8221; after the Disney &#8220;Rite of Spring.&#8221; Bozzetto&#8217;s dinosaurs are the real thing, and he puts them to far better use.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>CLASSCOL</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/1991/11/classcol-17/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/1991/11/classcol-17/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sun, 17 Nov 1991 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Daily News]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=2771</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Women conducting symphony orchestras: what will they think of next? This is meant in jest, I hastily add; the phenomenon is, as of some years now, a fact of life. And yet, in all the Los Angeles Philharmonic&#8217;s 72-year history, no woman had dared to broach its podium during a seasonal subscription concert &#8212; no [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Women conducting symphony orchestras: what will they think of next? This is meant in jest, I hastily add; the phenomenon is, as of some years now, a fact of life. And yet, in all the Los Angeles Philharmonic&#8217;s 72-year history, no woman had dared to broach its podium during a seasonal subscription concert &#8212; no woman, that is, until Marin Alsop this weekend (including this afternoon at 2:30). Interestingly enough, the second claimant in that rarefied category, Britain&#8217;s Sian Edwards, makes her local debut in two weeks. A certain skewed perception is, therefore, inevitable. You think you hear genuine musical quality at work on the Music Center podium, but then you shut your eyes and think: am I being honorable, or merely chivalrous? In the case of the 35-year-old Marin Alsop, currently head of the orchestra at Eugene, Oregon, chivalry played no part (or not much, anyhow) this past Thursday night; here was a conductor to the manner born. Blonde, slender (just this side of petite) and refreshingly modest in her podium behavior, Alsop drew high-spirited, poised playing from the orchestra in a difficult program: Bartok&#8217;s marvelous Concerto for Orchestra, Tchaikovsky&#8217;s evergreen &#8220;Romeo and Juliet&#8221; and, midway, Leonard Bernstein&#8217;s 1954 Serenade for Violin and Strings, by turns winsome, boisterous, contrived and momentarily moving, with Dmitry {cq} Sitkovetzky {cq} as soloist. The Bartok might have been the problem piece, but not this time; Alsop&#8217;s reading was the work of someone who truly owns the work. The tempos were dangerous and exuberant &#8212; perhaps a little too much so in the finale, at least on Thursday, when details sometimes got blurred. But the playing was big and exciting, virtuoso playing for a masterpiece that merits no less. No, the problem came with the Bernstein. There is sweet music here, and some amusing racketing at the end. But the substance is mostly gesturesome to no purpose. It is a concert work, and yet the first notes of the opening theme also outline the spiky melodic motive that starts the song &#8220;Maria&#8221; in the &#8220;West Side Story&#8221; of three years later, and you can&#8217;t hear the one without the other. The gigantic Sitkovetzky (son and frequent partner of the Soviet emigre pianist Bella Davidovsky) played the work with the requisite slickness, and Alsop got the orchestral sound nicely throttled down to chamber-music sonority. Important music, however, simply did not come. The remainder of the program &#8212; including a dazzling rendition of the Tchaikovsky &#8212; made amends. line<br />
Orchestras from abroad that engage in worldwide tours fall into two categories. There are the genuine star-quality ensembles (from Vienna, Amsterdam or Leningrad) which always sell out their American concerts and deservedly so. Then there are the lesser ensembles driven by some sort of nationalistic ego, which draw smaller crowds but usually garner a few reviews that read well back home. These events are at least valuable, if the visiting orchestra brings some of its country&#8217;s music that might otherwise escape American notice. The Oslo Philharmonic, which gave two programs this past week at the Music Center, brought along one attractive trifle from back home, Arne Nordheim&#8217;s &#8220;Canzona.&#8221; Otherwise the programs were undistinguished; if they were meant to tell us something about the Osla Philharmonic&#8217;s quality, they didn&#8217;t. The orchestra&#8217;s &#8212; and our &#8212; time was wasted with standard concertos with uninteresting soloists: Frank Peter Zimmermann in the Mendelssohn Violin Concerto one night, Misha Dichter in the Beethoven First Piano Concerto the next. They reminded us merely that the Oslo Philharmonic&#8217;s recording career is largely as a backup orchestra for concertos. Whatever the reasons for Norsk Hydro, the Oslo power producer that supports the orchestra back home, to fling it into the international critical arena, those reasons escaped detection. As heard at the Music Center, the orchestra wasn&#8217;t bad, just ordinary in tone, often unreliable in attack. Mariss Jansons, its conductor, has appeared here under better circumstances, leading the Los Angeles Philharmonic and, more recently, the Leningrad Philharmonic. But his proven powers were useless against the Shostakovich Seventh Symphony, which sprawled across 75 minutes of the first program. For all the work&#8217;s fame (as music composed during the Nazis&#8217; siege of Leningrad and, thus, a paean to Soviet heroism and determination) the Seventh is minor Shostakovich, agonizingly dull and contrived at every moment once the trickery of the first movement has passed. Maybe the work demands the flamboyance of a Leonard Bernstein; maybe the unfurling of flags and the release of white doves at the end might help. Jansons played the music straight, and the result was agonizing. line<br />
Awareness of the splendors of Mexican art, and the desire to pay it tribute, inundates the city these days, and the musical side of the celebration is not inconsiderable. Last Wednesday, however, there was a low point. Xochimoki is an ensemble consisting of the ethnomusicologist Jim Berenholtz and the composer Maxatl {cq} Galindo. At the County Museum they performed on an array of ancient Mexican instruments &#8212; flutes, whistles and a handsome array of percussion.There is no preserved repertory of indigenous Mexican music, so the two men made up their own instead: dull, thudding, unchanging drum rhythms, the other instruments spinning out the  cliches you may remember from old South-Sea adventure flicks &#8212; a sort of generic exotica. If Dorothy Lamour had slunk across the stage in her sarong, it wouldn&#8217;t have been out of place. At the start the crowd overflowed the capacity of the museum&#8217;s Bing Theater, but by intermission many had left. I am not one to go against tides.More interesting Mexican music, by five contemporary composers, is on tap next Friday at the museum, in the season&#8217;s first performance by the Los Angeles Philharmonic&#8217;s New Music Group (prior to their &#8220;Green Umbrella&#8221; series that starts in January). Ticketholders can also visit the museum&#8217;s spectacular Mexican show.But also on that night (Nov. 22) there&#8217;s the opening of the Music Center Opera&#8217;s &#8220;Barber of Seville,&#8221; and the Philip Glass/Allen Ginsberg &#8220;Hydrogen Jukebox&#8221; at Royce Hall. You could go to &#8220;Hydrogen Jukebox&#8221; the next night, but then you&#8217;d miss the following: JoAnn Falletta and the Long Beach Symphony playing Prokofiev&#8217;s score to Eisenstein&#8217;s &#8220;Alexander Nevsky&#8221; with the great film (newly restored) on the screen; Jorge Mester and the Pasadena Symphony in the Mahler Sixth Symphony, and the Los Angeles Philharmonic under the promising young German conductor Franz Welser-Moest. Most urgently, the city needs some kind of scheduling commission to coordinate the many performing groups now in action, and to prevent this kind of pileup. The musical life hereabouts is rich enough to merit that kind of supervision.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>CLASSCOL</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/1991/11/classcol-18/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/1991/11/classcol-18/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sun, 10 Nov 1991 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Daily News]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=2770</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Until this past week, the local cultural forces had honored the Mozart bicentennial with no particvlar distinction. There were lots of routine programs of predictable substance, and a half-hearted attempt by the Los Angeles Chamber Orchestra, to commission a series of new pieces &#8220;in the style of&#8230;&#8221; that bore but withered fruit. Then came the [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Until this past week, the local cultural forces had honored the Mozart bicentennial with no particvlar distinction. There were lots of routine programs of predictable substance, and a half-hearted attempt by the Los Angeles Chamber Orchestra, to commission a series of new pieces &#8220;in the style of&#8230;&#8221; that bore but withered fruit. Then came the Long Beach Opera&#8217;s production of &#8220;Lucio Silla,&#8221; and a note of true distinction was finally sounded. The work dates from Mozart&#8217;s 16th year, composed for a company in Milan whose own tradition rested largely in sustaining a repertory of artificial, serious, display operas set to old-fashioned plots. By and large, &#8220;Silla&#8221; honored that tradition. Giovanni di Gamerra&#8217;s plot held no surprises: the tyrannical Silla loves the virginal Giunia who loves the virtuous Cecilio who plots, with his friend Cinna (loved by Silla&#8217;s sister Celia) to assassinate Silla. The plotters are discovered, but Silla brings on the requisite happy ending by forgiving them all. The forgiveness gimmick was, of course, a basic 18th-century plot device; it showed up again in Mozart&#8217;s &#8220;Seraglio&#8221; and in &#8220;La Clemenza di Tito&#8221; and is also faintly echoed in &#8220;The Magic Flute,&#8221; in Sarastro&#8217;s sudden conversion from villain to saint.&#8221;Silla&#8221; was a success in Milan, on what must have been a grandiose staging with lots of clanking armor and elaborate sets. The Long Beach staging, which was none of the above, used the tiny space of the Center Theater to stunning effect; the company&#8217;s finest hours, over its 14-year existence, have been in that smaller of the Convention Center&#8217;s two theaters, in a repertory extending from Monteverdi to Britten. &#8220;Silla,&#8221; which has virtually no history of modern stagings in this country (although a fair number of cut-down concert performances), was a triumphant addition to this list. A single lush, green plant, in a lighted niche high above the stage, provided the one visual contrast. Most of director Roy Rallo&#8217;s action took place in heavy shadow, with single characters brought out with narrow spotlights, against a floor and a back wall done mostly in black.The plan of action made no attempt to do battle against the basically static manner of the music; the mind was left to feed, undistractedly, on the work&#8217;s multitudinous beauties.  It all worked, surprisingly well. &#8220;Lucio Silla&#8221; is not an opera of action; its arias and set pieces are long, and the musical forces at Long Beach made no  cuts in what is accepted as the opera&#8217;s authentic form. (The original Milan production ran some six hours, by dint of several inserted ballet episodes not by Mozart. The Long Beach production, with all repeats observed and nothing cut, came in at 3 1/2 hours.)For his &#8220;pit&#8221; band (actually located on a platform above the stage) impresario Michael Milenski chose wisely; Gregory Maldonado&#8217;s Los Angeles Baroque Orchestra is evolving into one of the area&#8217;s most valuable ensembles. For all the small accidents among horns and winds in the opening performance last Sunday, the orchestral sound was prevailingly sweet and strong. Patrick Summers, of the San Francisco Opera, conducted, and shaped a splendidly paced, unflagging performance. Conductors of this early-classic repertory must make many decisions on their own, and Summers&#8217; decisions &#8212; in the matter of tempo. and in determining questions of the singers&#8217; improvised ornamentations and cadenzas &#8212; seemed constantly just. Without gimmickry or intrusive attempts at updating, the essential power in this exquisite work of Mozart&#8217;s boyhood came across. An extraordinarily fine cast helped: not merely five singers of excellent technique and exemplary diction, but a cohesive enesemble that had obviously been well-trained in the elusive art of singing together. A brilliant young mezzo-soprano named Lynnen Yakes sang the Cecilio (a role orginally for castrato) with marvelous strength; Carmen Pelton, as his sweetheart Giunia, was equally touching. Lydia Mila, Anne Marie Ketchum and William Livingston (in the title role) rounded out this most remarkable group. &#8221;Lucio Silla&#8221; exists on a splendid new recording on Teldec, under the lively, probing leadershipo of Nikolaus Harnoncourt, with a fine cast that includes the delectable Dawn Upshaw as Celia. There&#8217;s no point in bemoaning the fact that a work as glorious as this hasn&#8217;t found its way to the major houses. A traditional staging at the Metropolitan or the Music Center would undoubtedly underscore the opera&#8217;s length and relative lack of action at the expense of its many musical wonders. The Long Beach production was exactly right, a tribute to this occasionally misguided, more often triumphant and always enterprising company, and a tribute to Mozart as well.Scholarly conscience dictates that I deliver a critical broadside against Paul McCartney&#8217;s &#8220;Liverpool Oratorio,&#8221; which sprawled across quite a lot of PBS&#8217;s time time a week or so ago. I cannot; something about the sweetness of the piece, underscored by the personality of Paul himself as it came out in the hourlong documentary that preceded the performance, drew out in me a benevolent tolerance toward the music itself that no exercise of common sense can quite obliterate. Sure it&#8217;s pure cornball, and its derivations stick out like a porcupine&#8217;s quills. Yet the piece is likeable, in exactly the ways that Andrew Lloyd Webber&#8217;s sludge never is. It never overreaches itself, and that&#8217;s a rare achievement.I only wish Angel-EMI had issued the documentary along with the video of the performance. That, at least, was a work of art.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>CLASSCOL</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/1991/11/classcol-19/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/1991/11/classcol-19/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sun, 03 Nov 1991 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Daily News]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=2769</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Melvyn Tan&#8217;s playing epitomizes quite a lot of what&#8217;s right, and what&#8217;s wrong, about this whole authentic-performance hangup. Tan, who specializes in playing old pianos (across the historical spectrum from the forte-piano of Mozart&#8217;s time to the piano-forte of later decades) is popular through his many records; surprisingly, however, his performances here over the past [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Melvyn Tan&#8217;s playing epitomizes quite a lot of what&#8217;s right, and what&#8217;s wrong, about this whole authentic-performance hangup. Tan, who specializes in playing old pianos (across the historical spectrum from the forte-piano of Mozart&#8217;s time to the piano-forte of later decades) is popular through his many records; surprisingly, however, his performances here over the past two weeks constituted his local debut.To start MaryAnn Bonino&#8217;s &#8220;Chamber Music in Historic Sites&#8221; a week ago Friday, Tan played the three sonatas of Beethoven&#8217;s Opus 2 plus an early sonata of Mozart. Then this past week, with the Los Angeles Chamber Orchestra at Pasadena&#8217;s Ambassador Auditorium and UCLA&#8217;s Royce Hall, he played an early Mozart concerto and, more remarkable, participated in a brand-new piece (sort of brand-new, anyhow) by Stephen Hartke, the Chamber Orchestra&#8217;s composer-in-residence.Tan, born in Singapore in 1956 and now living in London, is not the only advocate of early pianos, but he has become the most flamboyant and, thus, popular. His affectations at the keyboard are what a lot of people think solo performers should look like &#8212; the head bobbing, the hands (whenever not otherwise employed) engaged in spinning gossamer cobwebs above the keyboard. The word &#8220;cute&#8221; made its way more than once into intermission conversations.Affectation on the part of performers&#8217; stage deneanor is not necessary a sin in itself; you need look no farther than Leonard Bernstein for proof. But Melvyn Tan&#8217;s playing is also, you might say, &#8220;cute&#8221; and, in that way, most disturbing. He reduced great moments in the Beethoven Sonatas &#8212; of which there were many &#8212; to a series of fussy, overshaded, disconnected events. There are always reasons to suspect that a performer who takes up exotic instruments and nonstandard repertory, as Tan has built a reputation for doing, might be hiding inadequate musicianship behind the mask of authenticity. I have seen Tan often in other cities, notably with Roger Norrington&#8217;s London Classical Players for whom he is the house pianist. At the start I found it difficult to look at him while playing. These last two weeks I&#8217;ve found it difficult to listen to him as well.If it wasn&#8217;t all that interesting a week for fortepianists, it was a shade more interesting for small orchestras. At the end of last week Vladimir Spivakov brought his Moscow Virtuosi to Royce Hall; this week there has been our own Los Angeles Chamber Orchestra.Spivakov&#8217;s marvelous orchestra didn&#8217;t draw very well; we happy few were well rewarded, however. Most of the music was for strings alone, but the two French horns that joined the ensemble for Mozart&#8217;s wondrous 29th Symphony brought out marvelously  the element of the demoniac that Mozart had written for those instruments. Coming two nights after Tan&#8217;s first recital, that one performance restored the awareness of the many violent passions that sweep across the music of this indescribable genius. Mozart was 18 when he wrote it; call it a youthful work, but remember also that, at 18, half his life was over.The highlight of the Moscow program was yet another new discovery from Alfred Schnittke, a Sonata for Violin with the original piano accompaniment newly scored for chamber orchestra. Spivakov himself played the solo.What dazzling, edgy, thoroughly original music! One great sense in Schnittke&#8217;s music is the sureness in the way it unfolds. Sometimes it takes sideswipes at other people&#8217;s music &#8212; there is a hint or two of Stravinsky here and there in this Sonata. The best of it is the assurance it gives off that tough, serious, extended new music is still flowing off a few inspired pens somewhere.Alas, Stephen Hartke&#8217;s 9-minute work for the Los Angeles Chamber Orchestra, offered no comparable heartsease. The orchestra&#8217;s management has had the clever idea of commissioning a number of American composers to write short works to form a latter-day tribute to Mozart. It&#8217;s not that bad an idea, as witness Ravel&#8217;s &#8220;Tombeau de Couperin&#8221; or Brahms&#8217; Haydn Variations.It wasn&#8217;t a bad idea, the Hartke, just a bad piece. People sometimes ask why the current breed of American composers so often indulge in lightweight, insipid, forgettable compositions. One answer, of course, is that orchestral managements and audiences delight in the whole &#8220;it&#8217;s modern but no so bad&#8221; repertory. But that&#8217;s only a halfway answer, and we have the example of Mel Powell&#8217;s Pulitzer-winning Two-Piano Concerto of 1990 to prove that it doesn&#8217;t have to be that way.But the new Hartke piece, which goes by the imponderable name &#8220;I Kiss Your Hands a Thousand Times&#8221; (a familiar salutation in Mozart&#8217;s letters to his father), simply wasted everybody&#8217;s time: a kind of lavender later-romantic nocturne (Faure, perhaps). It included a few lines for Melvyn Tan&#8217;s fortepiano, but they might as well have been played on a kazoo for all the personality they embodied.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>CLASSCOL</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/1991/10/classcol-20/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/1991/10/classcol-20/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sun, 27 Oct 1991 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Daily News]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=2768</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[There was nothing all that remarkable about this weekend&#8217;s Los Angeles Philharmonic program (repeated this afternoon at 2:30). But excellent orchestral performance is always a remarkable event, and this week&#8217;s entry in the orchestra&#8217;s subscription series at the Music Center, under the estimable and reliable Kurt Sanderling, was certainly that. Mozart&#8217;s &#8220;Don Giovanni&#8221; Overture roared [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>There was nothing all that remarkable about this weekend&#8217;s Los Angeles Philharmonic program (repeated this afternoon at 2:30). But excellent orchestral performance is always a remarkable event, and this week&#8217;s entry in the orchestra&#8217;s subscription series at the Music Center, under the estimable and reliable Kurt Sanderling, was certainly that. Mozart&#8217;s &#8220;Don Giovanni&#8221; Overture roared out its message of doom and false cheer as it hadn&#8217;t at the opera (under Lawrence Foster&#8217;s more timid baton) two weeks before. Richard Strauss&#8217; &#8220;Ein Heldenleben&#8221; spun out its web of sugar and hokum with something approaching eloquence. And in the middle there was the phenomenal Mitsuko Uchida, in a one-on-one discourse on the Beethoven C-minor Piano Concerto, enough glory in itself to stand in for a supreme evening of concertgoing.The wonder of truly great performances, whenever they sometimes come your way, is their power to make even the most familiar music seem freshly reborn. It didn&#8217;t matter that Beethoven&#8217;s Third Piano Concerto lingers in the realm of thewell-roasted orchestral chestnut &#8212; heard less often, perhaps, than the &#8220;Emperor&#8221; but more often than the superior Fourth (which, by luck, turns up on next week&#8217;s program). The Third Concerto was heard in town as recently as the past summer at Hollywood Bowl. You might, quite pardonably, have slouched into Mrs. Chandler&#8217;s Pavilion last Thursday night with an &#8220;oh no, not the Third again&#8221; scowl.But then the miracle took shape: the beautiful, caring shaping of the solos under Uchida&#8217;s life-giving musicianship, the sublime way she and Sanderling seemed enraptured in their mutual rediscoveries of the brave drama that the young Beethoven &#8212; 30 years old and firmly launched on his campaign to conquer the musical world &#8212; had poured into this work.  The greatest performances are like clear windows through which masterpieces can be viewed. Uchida and Sanderling collaborated on one of those. You soon forgot to admire merely the presence of this handsome, dynamic woman in front of the orchestra, and began to sense through her work the creative energy that Beethoven had brought to his score: the fury in that stark opening theme, the obsessions in the way just the last five notes of that theme (TUM-ta-TUM-ta-TUM) echo again and again through the movement, a foretaste of the obsessiveness in the Fifth Symphony of eight years later.  You heard the spirit of the composer soar toward far horizons, in the supremely quiet meditations of the slow movement. You heard the wonderful inventiveness in pure sound in Beethoven&#8217;s orchestration: the hushed mystery in the soft strings and drums after the first-movement cadenza, the spaced-out stillness in the quiet piano scales that accompany the closing moments of the slow movement. You heard all this, because Uchida&#8217;s and Sanderling&#8217;s performance was of that supreme order in which performers disappear and only the genius of the music remains. The ultimate test was the hush that fell over the house during the Thursday performance, and the reception at the end: not the usual automatic, perfunctory Los Angeles standing ovation, but a prolonged tribute to a rare and marvelous occasion. Common sense, and an instinct for self preservation, ordained a homeward journey after the Beethoven. But MaryAnn Bonino&#8217;s pre-concert talk, wise and clear-eyed, raised suspicions that there might be better music in Strauss&#8217;s &#8220;Ein Heldenleben&#8221; than meets the ear. No such thing, of course; few works in the repertory are so fully packed with audible agony as this wretchedly vulgar piece of Straussian self-indulgence. Yet the Sanderling performance had its attractions. He kept the orchestral sound well focussed and clear. Barring a few mishaps from the solo horn on Thursday night, the performance had power, sometimes even a touch of wit. If the work must be done &#8212; a matter open to some argument &#8212; let it be as it was this time. line<br />
The preceding week found me in Helsinki &#8212; cold, damp but welcoming &#8212; to sit in on recording sessions for Aulis Sallinen&#8217;s &#8220;Kullervo,&#8221; the work that the Finnish National Opera brings to Los Angeles for its world premiere on February 25, 1992. Sallinen, who has created several operas performed and recorded by the Finnish National Opera, composed &#8220;Kullervo&#8221; to inaugurate Helsinki&#8217;s new opera house. Since that building won&#8217;t be ready until sometime in 1993, it was somebody&#8217;s bright idea to offer the work to Los Angeles for an out-of-town premiere. The good fortune is ours. I will write more about the opera closer to the premiere; the recording (on the Ondine label) will be on hand by mid-January.Kullervo is one of the tragic heroes from Finland&#8217;s epic poem &#8220;The Kalevala.&#8221; Sibelius also fashioned his story into a choral symphony which, surely not by coincidence, Esa-Pekka Salonen will perform with the Philharmonic here ten days before the opera premiere. (Do not confuse Sallinen with Salonen and don&#8217;t, for that matter, ask me for any rational explanation of the Finnish language.) From what I heard, &#8220;Kullervo&#8221; is a strong work, not exactly joyous but wonderfully written, in a style not distant from that of, say, Janacek. One of its strengths will be the presence of the great Jorma Hynninen in the title role, Finland&#8217;s superb baritone now at the height of his career. You can bone up on Sallinen&#8217;s operatic style with the recording of his &#8220;The Red Line,&#8221; which also has Hynninen in the principal role. Tense, devastating tragic drama, it reveals some surprising news about the current high estate of Finland&#8217;s new music. &#8220;Kullervo&#8221; will reinforce that news.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>CLASSCOL</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/1991/10/classcol-21/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/1991/10/classcol-21/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sun, 20 Oct 1991 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Daily News]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=2767</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[No composer, of this or any other era, enjoyed a longer, or more beneficial love affair with history&#8217;s muse than did Igor Stravinsky. As long ago as 1928, long before recording technology had advanced to where it could cope with the flamboyant orchestration of his early ballet scores, Stravinsky was in the studios of American [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>No composer, of this or any other era, enjoyed a longer, or more beneficial love affair with history&#8217;s muse than did Igor Stravinsky. As long ago as 1928, long before recording technology had advanced to where it could cope with the flamboyant orchestration of his early ballet scores, Stravinsky was in the studios of American and European Columbia, setting onto 78-rpm masters his own versions of &#8220;The Firebird&#8221; and &#8220;Petrouchka.&#8221; Long before the worldwide arguments had been settled on the relative sanity of his &#8220;Rite of Spring,&#8221; Stravinsky had entrusted to disc his views on that innovative blockbuster as well. And now Sony Classical, the corporate heir of Columbia, has issued its own blockbuster, 22 compact discs in one distinguished plastic box, containing Igor Stravinsky&#8217;s recorded legacy, his own recordings, or recordings made under his intimidating, critical eye, of nearly every work of consequence from his pen in the 61 years between the E-flat Symphony of 1905 and &#8220;The Owl and the Pussycat&#8221; of 1966. There are no surprises here. Every performance, even the half-hour of rehearsal takes and a chat with the composer and producer John McClure, has seen the light of day on previous issues, including the 31-LP blockbuster that Columbia had brought forth in 1982 for the centennial. The only Stravinsky anniversary that might occasion this new release is the current 20th anniversary of his death; you can be sure that 1996 will bring more widespread celebrations (including, of course, yet another reissue on the medium of choice at that time). What occasions this latest issue is the passion for the boxed set that currently sweeps both the pop and classical record market. If Mozart can rate the 180-disc whammo from Philips, can Stravinsky be far behind? The asking price for the Stravinsky package is $333. If Sony has immediate plans to issue the discs separately, nobody there is talking. You can bet it won&#8217;t be anytime this side of Christmas. Therein lie problems. There is no question of documentary value in a disc release of one of the most influential composers of our time involved in performances of more than 60 of his scores &#8212; lacking, in fact, only a few meagre scraps and arrangements that failed to engage the master&#8217;s hand. Would that we had similar documentary packages for other composers of this and past centuries! Of the musical values therein contained, more must be said. With few exceptions, the recordings now at hand date from the 1960s, when Stravinsky had moved to Hollywood and was lured back to the recording studios for a virtual remake of his entire repertory. He was then in his 80s, and increasingly dependent on Robert Craft for help even with performances that were issued under his own name. Most recordings were made with pickup studio orchestras under names like The Columbia Symphony Orchestra; they stood in for previous recordings made with earlier technology, but at least with genuine ensembles: the New York Philharmonic most notably.  Even the generous Carlo Maria Giulini, not known for raising his hand against a colleague, said in a 70s interview that &#8220;even if Stravinsky were his own worst enemy, he couldn&#8217;t have done better to destroy himself&#8221; than by conducting his own music at that time. Whatever qualities Stravinsky might have had as a conductor in younger days, they are much diminished in these late products of his work on the podium. Like Toscanini, he lives in recorded history only by the deeds of his dotage. Unlike Toscanini, however, many earlier Stravinsky performances still linger &#8212; on collectors&#8217; shelves or even, now and then, on compact disc reissues &#8212; to shame the new versions. Where is the diabolical eloquence in the dry-as-dust 1960 &#8220;Rite of Spring&#8221; to match the 1939 New York Philharmonic performance? Where, the wit in the 1960 &#8220;Petrouchka&#8221; to match the crackle in the 1928 version, still surprisingly vivid in a compact-disc reissue on England&#8217;s Pearl label? Where, the sardonic splendor of Jean Cocteau. reading his own text for &#8220;Oedipus Rex&#8221; in a 1950 Stravinsky-led performance from Cologne, no way challenged by the pomposity of John Westbrook in 1961?It all comes down to this. Even if someone didn&#8217;t already own a single disc of Stravinsky and wanted the composer whole, I could not recommend this package. There are too many superior alternatives: Esa-Pekka Salonen&#8217;s growing Stravinsky series (also on Sony Classical, apparently a label adept at shooting itself in the foot), Charles Dutoit&#8217;s glistening readings of the early ballets and &#8220;The Rake&#8217;s Progress&#8221; under Riccardo Chailly, both on London, Leonard Bernstein&#8217;s &#8220;Les Noces&#8221; on Deutsche Grammophon&#8230;and the list goes on.Like those boxed complete book editions your grandpa used to display with pride (but never opened), the new Stravinsky box seems fated to sit handsomely on a shelf gathering dust. At least the books came in handy for pressing flowers. The Stravinsky &#8212; box, booklets &#8216;n&#8217; all &#8212; comes to a mere seven pounds: a lightweight in more ways than one.line<br />
Tell me about there being no worthwhile music in Los Angeles! This week we have the finest of all American (arguably, world) orchestras, the Cleveland, with concerts at the Orange County Performing Arts Center on Tuesday and Wednesday, and at UCLA&#8217;s Royce Hall on Saturday. But Saturday is also the night for terrific programs by the Pasadena Symphony at the Pasadena Civic Auditorium and the Long Beach Symphony at Long Beach&#8217;s Terrace Theater. Stuck in among these other not-to-be-missed events, the Los Angeles Chamber Orchestra offers Britten&#8217;s &#8220;Serenade for Tenor, Horn and Strings,&#8221; as beautiful a work as this century has produced, Friday night at Royce Hall and Saturday night at Ambassador Auditorium. Atop all this the Los Angeles Philharmonic, still under the beloved Kurt Sanderling, welcomes the exquisite pianist Mitsuko Uchida, Thursday and Saturday nights at the Music Center. All this, and the Vienna Choir Boys, too: Saturday matinee at CalTech&#8217;s Beckman Auditorium. Some week!</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>CLASSCOL</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/1991/10/classcol-22/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/1991/10/classcol-22/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sun, 13 Oct 1991 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Daily News]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=2766</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[One message the Music Center Opera&#8217;s &#8220;Don Giovanni&#8221; made abundantly clear atits opening last Monday night: babies do not come from storks. From Giovanni&#8217;s first entrance, fresh from his aborted attack on Donna Anna&#8217;s virtue, still buttoning up his trousers and retrieving his boots from Leporello, to Zerlina&#8217;s calming of her angry sweetie by removing [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>One message the Music Center Opera&#8217;s &#8220;Don Giovanni&#8221; made abundantly clear atits opening last Monday night: babies do not come from storks. From Giovanni&#8217;s first entrance, fresh from his aborted attack on Donna Anna&#8217;s virtue, still buttoning up his trousers and retrieving his boots from Leporello, to Zerlina&#8217;s calming of her angry sweetie by removing his belt as she sings her lovely aria, the carnal byplay in Mozart&#8217;s dark comedy becomes the dominant tone. When, at the end, Mozart&#8217;s anti-hero goes off to his deserved doom among the eternally damned, he is actually carried off by a bevy of maidens. We are left to guess, therefore, whether he has gone to damnation or a juicy reward. For the most part, the opera comes across; it would take a lot to destroy this riveting masterpiece.  Jonathan Miller created the production last year, at the Florence May Festival; the local restaging, by his assistant Karen Stone, presumably maintains Miller&#8217;s outlines. It is, in fact, pure Miller: diabolically spirited, too clever by half at times, irritating and stimulatingby turns. Two performances remain, this coming Tuesday and Friday nights. Robert Israel, who worked here on Miller&#8217;s &#8220;Mahagonny&#8221; in 1987, is again the designer and his work, again, is vintage Robert Israel. Like the &#8220;Mahagonny&#8221; set, the new one again looks most of all like a theatrical warehouse, with free-standing wall units, predominantly gray (as opposed to &#8220;Mahagonny&#8217;s&#8221; predominant beige) pierced with doorways, carving the stage into angular performing spaces that sometimes cramp the action, but just as often surround it with uncharted emptiness. Lighting designer Duane Schuler&#8217;s sudden changes of tone, presumably attempting to reflect the violent clashes of mood in the work itself, become wearying. If it is possible for just the look of a production to add up to informational overload, this is it.Yet &#8220;Don Giovanni,&#8221; of all the masterpieces of the lyric repertory, can absorb this kind of treatment, and more drastic permutations as well. The cast in this instance is of enormous help, not only because the singing is, of itself, on a high level, but because the performing forces so keenly reflect the inner life of the opera. This is emphatically true of the three women, all of them superb singers but also neatly differentiated in manner and tone. As heard at the first performance, Karen Huffstodt&#8217;s Anna was a splendid study in self-indulgent, shrill frazzlement, wallowing in the delight of her own grief, yet wise enough to realize that her wimp of an Ottavio suddenly seems terribly small to a woman who has felt Giovanni&#8217;s caress. Rachel Gettler&#8217;s Elvira provided the perfect counterpart: thoroughly unhinged by her brief encounter with Giovanni, her mania pouring out in sharp, jagged melodic fragments. Balancing them both was the adorable and infinitely wise Zerlina of Gwendolyn Bradley, fully aware that those flashing eyes of hers, that melting smile are no less potent a seductive force than the blandishments of Giovanni himself.Thomas Allen was a superb Giovanni, sleek, insinuating, childishly self-centered, the supreme embodiment of everything you&#8217;ve ever read or wondered about the character&#8217;s twisted psyche; Kevin Langan&#8217;s wonderfully earthy Leporello was, again, a superb counterbalance. Local luminaries Jonathan Mack (his phrasing still eloquent but his once fluent tenor sounding rather tired these days) John Atkins and Louis Lebherz rounded out this superior vocal ensemble. Once again, however, some of this valuable effort was fogged over by Lawrence Foster&#8217;s workaday leadership on the podium. The orchestra that had soared and glowed in last month&#8217;s &#8220;Trojans&#8221; now sounded merely competent. Time and again the onrush of Mozart&#8217;s genius in this incredible work seemed to falter, as if the performance itself &#8212; not the individual singers &#8212; had run out of breath. The opera deserved better and so did the audience.line<br />
There is a temptation to find parallels between the Mozart opera and &#8220;Pioneers,&#8221; the performance artwork by the Paul Dresher Ensemble that drew undeservedly small crowds to UCLA&#8217;s Royce Hall last weekend. The similarities have to do with dramatic archetypes in both works: the self-destructive mania of women stripped of reason by carnal yearnings, the mindless macho destructiveness of the rogue male, the wanton urge of the haves to despoil the have-nots. But the parallels are tenuous, and &#8220;Pioneers&#8221; stands on its own. If you saw the previous members of the trilogy (both done at UCLA in recent years), &#8220;Slow Fire&#8221; and &#8220;Power Failure,&#8221; both also dealing through extended metaphor with the destructive force of the materialist obsession, you only need to know that &#8220;Pioneer&#8221; is the best work of the three, the surest theatrically, the most attractive musically. The work is hung up with exploration, with the need to get someplace first, to be the first on the block to own, to buy, to flaunt. Dresher&#8217;s kaleidoscopic electronic score, played behind a wonderfully lit scrim, was fleshed out with a few hilarious pastiche ballads by Terry Allen. The singers included the Dresher stalwarts Rinde Eckert and John Duykers, plus the marvelous vulgar raunch of Jo Harvey Allen, the good ol&#8217; Texas gal who told all those hilarious lies in David Byrne&#8217;s &#8220;True Stories.&#8221; If you weren&#8217;t there the loss is yours.  line<br />
At the Music Center this past Thursday the Philharmonic began its season by celebrating the end of the world &#8212; Richard Wagner&#8217;s world, that is, in its apotheosis in the final music of the mighty &#8220;Ring&#8221; cycle. The phenomenal soprano Jessye Norman was the center of the celebration, in all the volcanic majesty of her sight and sound. She is a phenomenon of our time, a force of nature beyond reckoning. She could also stand to pay better attention to diction, both in Wagner&#8217;s &#8220;Immolation&#8221; music and in Beethoven&#8217;s &#8220;Ah Perfido.&#8221; So much sound, so little meaning! Christof Perick conducted, in one of those rare and valuable instances in which one orchestra in a community &#8220;borrows&#8221; the leader of another. Perick, soon to take over the Los Angeles Chamber Orchestra, is clearly a splendid local catch: an ardent young musician full of old-world sensibilities. German conductors are in right now, as witness the latest acquisitions in New York and Philadelphia. Perick&#8217;s own contributions to the program began with the Beethoven First Symphony and continued with the familiar orchestral excerpts from Wagner&#8217;s music drama, all nicely set forth, large-scale and exuberant. The orchestra, after its month off, sounded rested. The omens are excellent.</p>]]></content:encoded>
			<wfw:commentRss>http://www.soiveheard.com/1991/10/classcol-22/feed/</wfw:commentRss>
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		<title>CLASSCOL</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/1991/10/classcol-23/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/1991/10/classcol-23/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sun, 06 Oct 1991 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Daily News]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=2765</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[There being little of musical consequence hereabouts for most of the past week, it seemed like a good time to seek refreshment at the source. Word was out that the Eastman School of Music, that singular adornment of Rochester, NY, was holding a weekend-long American music festival, and that the program even included music by [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>There being little of musical consequence hereabouts for most of the past week,<br />
it seemed like a good time to seek refreshment at the source. Word was out<br />
that the Eastman School of Music, that singular adornment of Rochester, NY,<br />
was holding a weekend-long American music festival, and that the program even<br />
included music by California composers. That, plus the prospect of Upstate New<br />
York apples, cider and foliage at this time of the year, became a siren call<br />
too potent to ignore.Eastman, founded with the money and the blessing of the same George Eastman who<br />
gave the world the Kodak camera and its film, is now 70 years old. It isn&#8217;t<br />
the only school that could be described as a source, but it is one of the best<br />
in the land, rivalled only by a couple of other East Coast schools and perhaps<br />
&#8211; but at some distance &#8212; the music department at U.S.C. It operates under<br />
the umbrella of the University of Rochester, but it is a separate institution<br />
in most ways. Current enrollment is 700, of which about two-thirds are are<br />
subsidized by scholarship funds.Even so, Eastman was, until recently, something of a joke among music schools.<br />
You went there to study trombone, or bandmastership, or public-school music<br />
education. The school had a bad reputation for its tendency to tell all<br />
graduates that an Eastman diploma, waved in the air, would immediately open<br />
all doors to hopeful performers. Thus, it became a school known for its<br />
ability to sow seeds of disillusionment and heartbreak. Its present director,<br />
a dynamic, fast-talking, supersalesman named Robert Freeman, has seen to it<br />
that Eastman graduates now go out into the world with a firmer grip on<br />
reality.He has also seen that they go out with a broader view of the musical panorama.<br />
Eastman&#8217;s guiding spirit from its founding until about 20 years ago was the<br />
composer Howard Hanson, in whom the spirit of arch conservatism resided full<br />
time. (The story is that George Eastman had originally offered the job to Jan<br />
Sibelius, who turned it down because the United States was in the throes of<br />
Prohibition. Hanson was only the second choice, but he repaid Eastman&#8217;s<br />
confidence by going on to compose music right out of the Sibelius<br />
stylebook.)Anyhow, the Hanson ghost has now been thoroughly exorcised, and Eastman now<br />
fields an impressive roster of composers who work in a wide variety of styles.<br />
Joseph Schwantner and Christopher Rouse, two of this country&#8217;s leading<br />
progressive spirits, are among the faculty luminaries; Samuel Adler, from a<br />
somewhat older generation, heads the composition department. Rouse, by the way, has a symphony scheduled for the upcoming Los Angeles<br />
Philharmonic season (January 30, 1992). During my weekend in Rochester I heard<br />
one of his string quartets, strong and abrasive music nicely put together. The<br />
performance, by the way, was by an amazingly talented young ensemble, the Ying<br />
Quartet: four siblings named Ying, aged 21 to 27, born in Chicago and clearly<br />
headed for a major career.The weekend&#8217;s music was programmed to honor Betty Freeman, the well-known<br />
Beverly Hills music patron, who was on hand to exhibit her marvelous set of<br />
photographs of major composers and to smile benevolently at being serenaded by<br />
music she had commissioned. Most of the names,the composers Rand Steiger,<br />
Ingram Marshall and Stephen Hartke, were unfamiliar to the Eastman audience.<br />
California&#8217;s music, several people told me, still hasn&#8217;t made the trip<br />
eastward in sufficient quantity. Only Berkeley&#8217;s John Adams flies high.<br />
Eastman&#8217;s weekend of music, which also included some of the &#8220;Freeman Etudes&#8221;<br />
composed for her by the ex-Californian John Cage, was of considerable help in<br />
filling in the informational gap. I sat in on a class in which a group of<br />
students jawboned some of the music they&#8217;d heard over the weekend, and the<br />
comments were lively and informed; Eastman&#8217;s intellectual level struck me all<br />
weekend as remarkably high. So was the performance level. The student new-music ensemble, Eastman Musica<br />
Nova, works up tough, challenging programs like this once every three weeks.<br />
Its conductor, Sydney Hodkinson, seems to have that rare gift for making<br />
young, raw players want to perform on a level over their own heads. The<br />
concerts were full of crackle, and they were also well attended. There is much<br />
to envy on the Rochester musical scene. l-line<br />
Local musical life starts in earnest this week: &#8220;Don Giovanni&#8221; opening<br />
tomorrow night at the Music Center, the Philharmonic season starting on<br />
Thursday, the marvelous Lucia Popp in a song recital at Ambassador this very<br />
afternoon. By far the major event is the first local appearance of Evgeny<br />
Kissin at the Music Center on Saturday night.<br />
Kissin turns 20 this week. His many recordings, including a number taken from<br />
live performances, herald him as a pianist of exceptional ability, and also<br />
something of a throwback to a bygone manner of playing that most of us had<br />
thought (with considerable regret) to have passed from the scene. It is<br />
significant that Kissin has made his way totally without the usual crutch of a<br />
competition win. That, in fact, may account for the remarkable amount of<br />
freedom and individuality in his playing. One of the major blights on the competition circuit is the way performers take<br />
on a deadly uniformity of interpretation, a style imagined as pleasing to the<br />
typical competition judge. Kissin is the first pianist in a long time to which<br />
the epithet &#8220;interesting&#8221; may be justly applied. Now he is launched on his<br />
first American tour, after his spectacular one-shot New York appearance a year<br />
ago. Pray that he can hold onto the extraordinary mix of freshness and<br />
eloquence that ennobled that Carnegie Hall recital last year.line<br />
The Mozart anniversary year has produced plenty of fine recordings but only a<br />
handful of important books; that counts more as a blessing than a curse. One<br />
extremely valuable book is &#8220;The Compleat Mozart,&#8221; (Norton, $29.95), compiled<br />
by Neal Zaslaw with William Cowdery. The book is what its title suggests: a<br />
gathering of analytical essays on every work from Mozart&#8217;s pen, written by a<br />
number of major scholars who &#8212; unlike a few scholars one could name &#8212; are as<br />
much captivated by the sound of the music they describe as by the surrounding<br />
facts. The value of the book lies, above all, in its writers&#8217; ability to define what<br />
is unique (or, for that matter, what isn&#8217;t) in each work. Next to the complete<br />
recording of the Mozart heritage, therefore, the book is the second-best way<br />
to get close to the sublime genius whose catalog of miracles we currently<br />
celebrate.</p>]]></content:encoded>
			<wfw:commentRss>http://www.soiveheard.com/1991/10/classcol-23/feed/</wfw:commentRss>
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		<title>CLASSCOL</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/1991/09/classcol-24/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/1991/09/classcol-24/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sun, 22 Sep 1991 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Daily News]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=2764</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[N.B.: NEW HED THE CLASSICAL COLUMNFairness demanded a second visit to the Music Center Opera&#8217;s &#8220;Madama Butterfly&#8221; to check out the new tenor, Jorge Antonio Pita, who has replaced Placido Domingo in the role of Lieut. B. F. Pinkerton in five of the six performances. Fairness, however, has also turned out to be service beyond [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>N.B.: NEW HED THE CLASSICAL COLUMNFairness demanded a second visit to the Music Center Opera&#8217;s &#8220;Madama<br />
Butterfly&#8221; to check out the new tenor, Jorge Antonio Pita, who has replaced<br />
Placido Domingo in the role of Lieut. B. F. Pinkerton in five of the six<br />
performances. Fairness, however, has also turned out to be service beyond the<br />
call. Pita, whose local debut this was, is 28, Cuban born with an impressive dossier<br />
of performances with major European companies, including a Pinkerton six years<br />
ago with the Vienna State Opera. He is tall, good looking, and reasonably<br />
proficient in his stage presence, although his decision to smoke a cigarette<br />
during his first long scene was rendered questionable by the way he held the<br />
thing &#8212; as if it were his first ever. He sang the role badly, his thin vocal line disturbed by a tendency to sob on<br />
the high notes. Did he really sing this way at the Vienna State Opera, with so<br />
little thrust, so little projection of the many-sided characters in this role?<br />
Granted, the Dorothy Chandler Pavilion seats twice the capacity of the Vienna<br />
House, and this discrepancy in size has brought singers to grief before. Chalk<br />
up these latter &#8220;Butterfly&#8221; performances  as the company&#8217;s first boo-boo of<br />
the season. The Music Center Opera&#8217;s &#8220;The Trojans&#8221; has fared well, by and large, in the<br />
national press. You&#8217;d think it might be high time, however, for visiting<br />
reporters and critics to find another way of leading off a report from Los<br />
Angeles than the usual invocation of smog and freeways. There are still lots<br />
of slow learners, apparently, beyond the mountains. The accusation of &#8220;gimmickry&#8221; has been leveled on the production, however.<br />
Upon a second visit &#8212; yes, all five hours &#8212; it is harder than ever to<br />
substantiate this accusation. There are some egregious miscalculations, to be<br />
sure. I would hope that both the director, Francesca Zambello, and the<br />
choreographer, Susan Marshall, might someday weigh the relative importance of<br />
the prestige of a note-for-note complete performance against the blatant<br />
inferiority of the insanely protracted dance episode that simply delays the<br />
sublime Love Duet in Act IV. Theatrically, this is the evening&#8217;s major<br />
failure, but it is a partial failure on Berlioz&#8217;s part as well. Losing the<br />
entire scene would be no loss. I had neglected to mention one other episode in the opera that represents a far<br />
more illustrious choreographic achievement: the staging of the famous &#8220;Royal<br />
Hunt and Storm&#8221; music. The few companies that have staged &#8220;The Trojans&#8221;<br />
invariably come to grief at this episode. The Metropolitan Opera did it with<br />
some dopey amateur movies when it first presented the work in 1973. In the<br />
1983 revival they simply left the stage empty, in this most colorful and<br />
action-packed orchestral episode. Zambello and Marshall have, at least, solved this one problem brilliantly, not<br />
with hunting and storms, but with a splendid battle pantomime: Aeneas and his<br />
Trojans vanquishing the enemies of Dido&#8217;s realm in some classy, stylized<br />
balletic action. It works just fine. Two performances remain (this afternoon<br />
and next Wednesday). Even if the production were less the brilliant near-<br />
success that this one is, the chance to hear this rarely performed, wildly<br />
ecstatic product of Berlioz&#8217; superheated genius, set forth with comparable<br />
genius under Charles Dutoit&#8217;s incomparable music direction, should be reason<br />
enough to make tracks for the Music Center. LINE<br />
The recent good news from the Baltic republics is a reminder of the remarkable<br />
resurgence of that region in musical matters. Estonia&#8217;s Arvo Part (pronounced<br />
PAIRT) fled his country in 1980, at the height of Soviet artistic repression<br />
pre-glasnost; he now lives in Germany. The music he has created during his<br />
years of exile has earned him regard as one of the most remarkable of<br />
contemporary composers, and a new disc on the ECM label will surely add to his<br />
renown. It contains two large vocal works, a Miserere for solo voices, small chorus and<br />
instrumental ensemble, and a work entitled &#8220;Sarah Was 90 Years Old&#8221; for<br />
voices, organ and percussion. In between comes &#8220;Festina Lente,&#8221; a brief work<br />
for chamber orchestra. Paul Hillier, who has participated in many performances<br />
of Part&#8217;s music in the past (including a concert here last season as part of<br />
the &#8220;Historic Sites&#8221; series) conducts the voices; Dennis Russell Davies<br />
leads the instrumental forces. The music on this disc is one of those<br />
powerful, mysterious experiences that deserve to be regarded as essential.<br />
Why this is so is not easy to explain. Like other works of Part on ECM, above<br />
all his overwhelming, 70-minute setting of the St. John Passion which Hillier<br />
also conducts, the surface of the music is a slow-moving, unruffled, austere<br />
sequence of small events. Like ice crystals in a winter landscape, they<br />
coalesce in the mind only gradually; you find yourself gripped by this music<br />
almost before you know it. If you have seen, and are moved by, the films of<br />
the great Soviet director Andrej Tarkovsky, you are on your way to<br />
understanding  the inexorable pace of Part&#8217;s music, the way it generates an<br />
almost subliminal sense of exhilaration.On the subject of Soviet films, there is also an interesting two-disc set on<br />
the Chant du Monde label (distributed in the U.S. by Harmonia Mundi of Los<br />
Angeles): film and stage music familiar and rare by Serge Prokofiev, in vivid<br />
if edgy performances by a vocal ensemble and the &#8220;Maly&#8221; Moscow Symphonic<br />
Orchestra under Vladimir Ponkin. The familiar music is the delicious<br />
&#8220;Lieutenant Kije&#8221; suite of 1933-34: music for a satiric film that was never<br />
made, about a character who never existed. The remainder of the set is filled with rarer material also very much worth<br />
while: music for a 1938 ballet version of Hamlet and a whole hour of<br />
incidental music for a 1937 stage production of Pushkin&#8217;s &#8220;Eugene Onegin. The<br />
&#8220;Onegin&#8221; also never actually materialized, but Prokokiev&#8217;s music did. He<br />
cribbed some of it later for the opera &#8220;War and Peace&#8221; and the Eighth Piano<br />
Sonata, but he also preserved his original sketches: orchestral music, songs<br />
and vocal ensembles. The musicologist Elizaveta Dattel completed the<br />
orchestration in 1973, and presented the world with an authentic Prokofiev<br />
masterpiece that now, in its first recording, is the crown of this splendid<br />
new release.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>TROYENS</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/1991/09/troyens/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/1991/09/troyens/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sat, 14 Sep 1991 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Daily News]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=2866</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[The curtain at the Dorothy Chandler Pavilion came down at 11:28 on Saturday night, five hours (minus a couple of minutes) after the start of the Music Center Opera&#8217;s production of Berlioz&#8217; &#8220;The Trojans.&#8221; There were cheers, a few boos, a final cry of &#8220;Viva Berlioz!&#8221; Lively productions deserve lively audiences.Yes, a few of those [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>The curtain at the Dorothy Chandler Pavilion came down at 11:28 on Saturday<br />
night, five hours (minus a couple of minutes) after the start of the Music<br />
Center Opera&#8217;s production of Berlioz&#8217; &#8220;The Trojans.&#8221; There were cheers, a<br />
few boos, a final cry of &#8220;Viva Berlioz!&#8221; Lively productions deserve lively<br />
audiences.Yes, a few of those boos were deserved, but so were the cheers. The real news<br />
is this: confronted with the most challenging artwork it has taken on in its<br />
six-year existence (a work, by the way, that has had only two previous<br />
American  fullscale productions in its nearly 150-year history) our opera<br />
company reached out bravely. It reached out for innovative if relatively<br />
unknown staging talent; it took some big chances in casting; it found the<br />
conductor as qualified as anyone alive to lead the score; it endowed its<br />
forces with sufficient rehearsal time so that even this first performance (of<br />
five) needed none of the apologies sometimes necessitated by present-day<br />
operatic realities.It didn&#8217;t all work, of course. There are a few terrible things about this<br />
&#8220;Trojans.&#8221; Most of the booing seemed directed at Susan Marshall&#8217;s silly<br />
choreography, a writhing disco scene just before Dido and Aeneas fall into bed<br />
in the fourth of the opera&#8217;s five acts, whose greatest sin was its failure to<br />
connect with Berlioz&#8217; music. Some of it may have reflected shock at some of<br />
director Francesca Zambello&#8217;s basic concepts; again, her curious<br />
constructivist vision of Berlioz&#8217; Carthage may have been interesting in itself<br />
but seemed mismatched to the music.Much more, however, is fully worthy of the score. The scenes at Troy, set into<br />
designer John Conklin&#8217;s frame of a ruined, toppled building that will, five<br />
hours later, rise from its own ruins to become Rome&#8217;s Pantheon, are powerfully<br />
put forth, wonderfully lit by Pat Collins. Even as seen first in silhouette<br />
behind a screen, and then merely as a head lying on the ground, the Trojan<br />
horse is an overpowering, fearsome spectacle. So is the tableau that ends the<br />
Trojan scene: the women in a powerful, writhing mass, oozing blood onto<br />
costume designer Bruno Schwengl&#8217;s virginal white  nighties. (The opera goes<br />
through quite a lot of ketchup, by the way, or whatever it is they use these<br />
days.)There is a quality of mind in all this: ill-advised at a few times, thrilling<br />
at many more times. The main problems occur in that ill-defined area where<br />
Zambello&#8217;s action-plan and Marshall&#8217;s choreography meet. Given the, let&#8217;s say,<br />
limited acting ability of tenor Gary Lakes (the Aeneas) and Carol Neblett (the<br />
Dido), it was a ludicrous notion to let them mix into the pseudo-disco<br />
dancing. Somewhere out in Weight-Watcher Land there might be a Dido and Aeneas<br />
with the voices these singers have, and the onstage grace they don&#8217;t; until<br />
they are found this one scene cries out for restaging. Ironic notion: Maria<br />
Ewing, so miscast as Butterfly two nights before, would probably have been the<br />
ideal Dido in both sight and sound, as Neblett wasn&#8217;t quite.Lakes is a splendid Aeneas. The highest compliment is that on Saturday night he<br />
constantly awakened memories of Jon Vickers in the role: the voice strong,<br />
plangent, beautifully lit with a golden thread that can turn both heroic and<br />
tender. The Cassandra for the Trojan scenes, Nadine Secunde, was also<br />
splendid, a strong vocal presence in a killer role, and a striking sight later<br />
on, as Zambello hatches the bright notion of using her as a ghostly visual<br />
presence in some of the Carthage music.Smaller roles were handsomely taken, for the most part, by the good local Music<br />
Center Opera stalwarts: Michael Gallup, Jonathan Mack (barring a momentary<br />
mishap on a cruelly exposed high note), Louis Lebherz and, best of all, the<br />
splendid youngster Nikolas{{cq} Nackley, so fine in last season&#8217;s &#8220;Turn of<br />
the Screw,&#8221; and fine again as the boy Ascanius.Over it all was the lively, probing, surging leadership of the great Dutoit,<br />
hero of some of the best Berlioz recordings in the catalog, and now a<br />
Berliozian hero in person as well. Under any circumstances the Los Angeles<br />
Chamber Orchestra is one of the world&#8217;s best pit bands; under these<br />
circumstances (and, of course, filled out far beyond  &#8220;chamber orchestra&#8221;<br />
size) it became the seething, churning, multicolored mirror of the composer&#8217;s<br />
orchestral genius. Whatever other problems this brave, challenging, uneven<br />
production may present, the sounds of &#8220;The Trojans&#8221; at the Music Center<br />
these nights add up to an exhilarating imperative.THE FACTS:What: The Music Center Opera&#8217;s production of Hector Berlioz&#8217; &#8220;The<br />
Trojans.&#8221;Where: Dorothy Chandler Pavilion, Los Angeles Music Center.When: 6:30 p.m. tonight, Friday and Sept. 25; 1 p.m. Sept. 22.Starring: Gary Lakes, Nadine Secunde, Carol Neblett.Behind the scenes: staged by Francesca Zambello, conducted by Charles Dutoit,<br />
designed by John Conklin and Bruno Schwengl, choreographed by Susan<br />
Marshall.Tickets: $17 to $85; for information call 213 972-7211.Our rating: * * *</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>BOWL</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/1991/09/bowl/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/1991/09/bowl/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Fri, 13 Sep 1991 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Daily News]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=2745</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Hail, this land of no seasons, where you can go to indoor grand opera one night and the Hollywood Bowl the next. These two cultural manifestations overlapped by one day this year; the Bowl went out with a bang &#8212; actually, with several- - this past weekend. A crowd of 17,942 (five short of capacity) [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Hail, this land of no seasons, where you can go to indoor grand opera one night<br />
and the Hollywood Bowl the next. These two cultural manifestations overlapped<br />
by one day this year; the Bowl went out with a bang &#8212; actually, with several-<br />
- this past weekend. A crowd of 17,942 (five short of capacity) was on hand on<br />
Friday night to witness the grand finale.It was, actually, quite grand. Whatever you can say against the notion of<br />
outdoor music in Cahuenga Pass, the one undisputed triumph is the massive<br />
fireworks displays at the weekend programs. Once again, to the great tunes of<br />
Handel&#8217;s &#8220;Royal Fireworks&#8221; Music, the whole place blazed into vivid action:<br />
pinwheels, rockets, pots of flame, even an effigy of Handel himself rising<br />
over it all. Friday&#8217;s weather added to the show; a heavy cloud layer trapped<br />
the smoke close to the ground, imparting a soft mistiness to the color scheme:<br />
modern technology as Manet might have painted it (as long as he didn&#8217;t have to<br />
breathe).David Alan Miller was part of the farewell; by Bowl time next year he will no<br />
longer be the Los Angeles Philharmonic&#8217;s associate conductor, to the Albany<br />
Symphony Orchestra&#8217;s gain. His program was the usual weekend grabbag,<br />
listener-friendly for the most part: nice, rambunctious performances of some<br />
Dvorak tidbits, Ronald Leonard&#8217;s sturdy runthrough of the Saint-Saens Cello<br />
Concerto No. 1 (with the solo cello badly overmiked) and all that Handel. The<br />
latter was done in a modern recreation of what might have been the original<br />
scoring, with 16 oboes, 9 horns, 9 trumpets, 13 bassoons or contrabassoons and<br />
3 drums: sonorous as all get-out.Not all the banging came from fireworks and drums. The evening&#8217;s second soloist<br />
was the Scots-born Evelyn Glennie, who banged with commendable agility on an<br />
array of clatter-machines (xylophone, marimba, vibraphone and glockenspiel) in<br />
an endearing medley that included more Saint-Saens (the &#8220;Introduction and<br />
Rondo Capriccioso,&#8221; originally written for violin) Richard Rodgers&#8217;<br />
&#8220;Slaughter on 10th Avenue,&#8221; and, if you&#8217;re ready, Rimsky-Korsakoff&#8217;s<br />
&#8220;Flight of the Bumblebee.&#8221; Glennie, 28 and, with her major hair, an alluring spectacle, won hearts. One<br />
might, even so, question the usefulness of capricious rondos and bumblebees<br />
transmuted into workout-pieces for percussion. The result seemed a little like<br />
butter sculpture or painting on velvet: feasible but why bother? The cheers of<br />
the crowd, however, suggested a different attitude.The air traffic, busy enough during the first half, kept its distance once the<br />
fireworks began. Perhaps that&#8217;s the answer to the overhead noise problem:<br />
continuous fireworks at all concerts. Worse ideas have been proposed.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>BUTTERFLY</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/1991/09/butterfly/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/1991/09/butterfly/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 12 Sep 1991 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Daily News]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=2751</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[The opera season began on Thursday night with all the fixings: gala crowd, sold-out house, Placido Domingo to sing, high-society supper afterwards. Musically, too, the news wasn&#8217;t all bad. It wasn&#8217;t all good, either. This was the Music Center Opera&#8217;s second try at Puccini&#8217;s &#8220;Madama Butterfly.&#8221; The other one came during the company&#8217;s first season, [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>The opera season began on Thursday night with all the fixings: gala crowd,<br />
sold-out house, Placido Domingo to sing, high-society supper afterwards.<br />
Musically, too, the news wasn&#8217;t all bad. It wasn&#8217;t all good, either. This was the Music Center Opera&#8217;s second try at Puccini&#8217;s &#8220;Madama Butterfly.&#8221;<br />
The other one came during the company&#8217;s first season, in 1986, and the less<br />
said the better. Version No. 2 suggested that the company still hasn&#8217;t quite<br />
got the hang of the piece.As any opera buff will tell you, Puccini&#8217;s operas are all about singing, and<br />
they&#8217;re very good of their kind. Perhaps the works don&#8217;t attain the<br />
sophistication level of, say, his illustrious predecessor, Giuseppe Verdi. But<br />
they display an  uncommon gift for using the human throat, and the human<br />
lungs, to project a sense of high drama. &#8220;Butterfly&#8221; has its great tunes,<br />
but it also has all the material in between those high spots, music that curls<br />
itself with high skill around the sad and helpless characters and the poignant<br />
drama of their destruction. All that being so, we can easily overlook one more important earmark of these<br />
Puccini almost-masterworks, that even with superior singing they don&#8217;t perform<br />
themselves. The element most lacking in Thursday&#8217;s performance was the sense<br />
of momentum that a superior conductor can bring to the work, without which<br />
even the best singers are lost in a sea of apathy. Randall Behr, the evening&#8217;s<br />
conductor, seemed unable to generate that momentum. Long sections seemed to slip by without sense of shape; the long love duet that<br />
ends the first act, to cite an egregious example, made these ears aware of the<br />
sense of interminable repetition, less aware of the subtle buildup of tender<br />
passion threaded through the music. It was hard, and at some moments<br />
impossible, to get the sense that the singers were at all interested in what<br />
they were about.There was nothing particularly wrong with Randall Behr&#8217;s leadership; there just<br />
wasn&#8217;t enough right. Behr is the company&#8217;s resident conductor, and is slated<br />
to conduct three of the season&#8217;s eight productions. Suspicions arise that<br />
perhaps the company might try a little harder in the podium department. (Such<br />
suspicions, of course, will be temporarily allayed by the arrival of Charles<br />
Dutoit for tonight&#8217;s &#8220;The Trojans.&#8221;) Meanwhile, back on the stage. Placido Domingo was the one-time-only Pinkerton;<br />
he heads for the Metropolitan Opera&#8217;s new production of &#8220;Girl of the Golden<br />
West,&#8221; with his place taken for the remainder of the &#8220;Butterfly&#8221; run by his<br />
protege Juan Antonio Pita. Domingo at 50 remains a phenomenon; nobody can<br />
touch him for sheer, animal vibrance of tone which he can produce over a<br />
phenomenal range of volume. As an actor he remains a clunk: one arm doing the<br />
semaphore gestures, the other hanging useless as if belonging to someone else.<br />
The real acting is in his singing; as many times as Domingo has sung this one<br />
role he could still, on this occasion, command that heartbroken throb in the<br />
last act, when the brutality of his actions finally confronts him.The Butterfly was Maria Ewing&#8217;s first-ever; Los Angeles seems to have become<br />
her tryout town for new roles. This did not, this first time out, seem like<br />
the role for her. She sounded like what she is, a retreaded mezzo dazzling in<br />
some dramatic soprano roles but out of her element in the lyric repertory. Ian<br />
Judge&#8217;s stage direction had given her some interesting stage tricks to divert<br />
awareness that she is hardly the wounded adolescent of Puccini&#8217;s drama, but<br />
the heaviness of her voice (apart from many moments under the pitch) betrayed<br />
her more than once.The cast was filled out decently  with Thomas Allen&#8217; strong, sympathetic<br />
Sharpless and Stephanie Vlahos&#8217; somewhat hooty Suzuki. And a tiny tot named<br />
Stephen M. Gilbert, in the silent but surefire role of Trouble (rechristened<br />
&#8220;Sorrow&#8221; in the supertitles) stole the show by just toddling across the<br />
stage a couple of times.John Gunter&#8217;s all-purpose indoor-outdoor set right out of Sunset Magazine, a<br />
sort of Malibu beachhouse with the Jacuzzi just out of view, was, let&#8217;s say,<br />
strange. A garish red frame upstage, setting off the background as if through<br />
an enormous picture window, completed the illusion. In the pit, the Los<br />
Angeles Chamber Orchestra seemed a little lackadaisical at times about<br />
togetherness. It was obvious that the upcoming Berlioz opera had gotten the<br />
bulk of the rehearsal time this week.THE FACTSWhat: Puccini&#8217;s &#8220;Madama Butterfly,&#8221; presented by the Los Angeles Music Center<br />
Opera.Where: Dorothy Chandler Pavilion, 135 N. Grand Ave. in downtown Los<br />
Angeles.When: 8 p.m., Sept. 15, 18, 21, 24; 2 p.m. Sept. 29.Starring: Maria Ewing and Juan Antonio Pita, with Randall Behr conducting.Behind the scenes: directed by Ian Judge, designed by John Gunter and Liz da<br />
Costa.Tickets: $17-$85; for information call 213 972-7211.Our rating: **</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<item>
		<title>BOWL</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/1991/08/bowl-2/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/1991/08/bowl-2/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Tue, 27 Aug 1991 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Daily News]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=2744</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Record collectors have known the name of Switzerland&#8217;s Peter Maag for several decades. In the early days of the long-playing record his Mozart performances, with various European orchestras, were regarded as beacons of clarity and strength. Something must have happened, however, because Maag&#8217;s belated debut with the Los Angeles Philharmonic, at the Hollywood Bowl on [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Record collectors have known the name of Switzerland&#8217;s Peter Maag for several<br />
decades. In the early days of the long-playing record his Mozart performances,<br />
with various European orchestras, were regarded as beacons of clarity and<br />
strength. Something must have happened, however, because Maag&#8217;s belated debut<br />
with the Los Angeles Philharmonic, at the Hollywood Bowl on Tuesday night in<br />
the third in its skein of four all-Mozart programs, fell somewhat short in<br />
both  clarity and strength.Maag is now 72. He looks like Central Casting&#8217;s prototype of a distinguished<br />
old-world musician, white hair and all. His podium manner is exemplary, modest<br />
and direct. Joined by the pianist Peter Roesel in the C-major Piano Concerto<br />
(known to movie buffs as the &#8220;Elvira Madigan&#8221; Concerto) he provided<br />
orchestral support that was accurate and considerate. He even apparently<br />
acquiesced to the pianist&#8217;s silly cadenzas (attributed in the program to<br />
Robert Casadesus) and to his breakneck speed in the finale.On his own, however, the conductor introduced some strange devices into both<br />
the opening &#8220;Magic Flute&#8221; Overture and the concluding Symphony No. 39.<br />
Conductors obsessed with establishing their own recognition factor will<br />
sometimes overstress some of the inner details in a score score, simply for<br />
the sake of differentness. Maag laid himself open to suspicions along this<br />
line. In the overture the conductor seemed obsessed with overstressing a line of<br />
brass scoring buried in Mozart&#8217;s textures; in the concerto he more-or-less<br />
invented a curious percussion effect; in the symphony he bent the recurrent,<br />
garrulous theme of the finale completely out of shape by inserting a<br />
gratuitous hiccup in each of its many recurrences. The good-sized crowd,<br />
11,856 strong, may have thought they had come to hear Mozart; they ended up<br />
hearing more of the conductor, less of the music.Moments here and there rose above this sorry norm, however. Conductor and<br />
soloist did blend their resources beautifully in the slow movement of the<br />
concerto: sublime, nocturnal music to blend with the radiant skies and the<br />
full moon (if not with several passing aircraft). And, that one melodic quirk aside, the symphony did receive a respectable,<br />
middle-of-the-road reading. It was, at least, a generous performance, with all<br />
the section repeats observed. The wondrous clarinet duet in the Minuetto, as<br />
played by Lorin Levee and Michele Zukovsky, could have been repeated another<br />
dozen times with no objection from this corner.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<item>
		<title>NEWMEXICO&#160;CULTURE</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/1991/08/newmexico-culture/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/1991/08/newmexico-culture/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Fri, 23 Aug 1991 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Daily News]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=2834</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[John Crosby chose well.An opera coach and conductor, Yale-educated, making his way in New York circles in the early 1950s but suffering under the pace and the bad air of East Coast urban life, Crosby decided that sinuses and sanity demanded a change of venue. Santa Fe beckoned: still in 1956 the sleepy desert town [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>John Crosby chose well.An opera coach and conductor, Yale-educated, making his way in New York circles in the early 1950s but suffering under the pace and the bad air of East Coast urban life, Crosby decided that sinuses and sanity demanded a change of venue. Santa Fe beckoned: still in 1956 the sleepy desert town that Willa Cather had celebrated in her &#8220;Death Comes for the Archbishop.&#8221; Here, the 30-year-old Crosby reasoned, he could stock up on much-needed r&#038;r.In this one regard, he was wrong. Within a year Crosby had sensed something else about Santa Fe: that under that sleepy desert facade there was a magnificent cultural awakening just waiting to happen. Crosby gathered some friends, well-heeled themselves and with access to other local money, and presented them with a plan, an 18-page single-spaced memorandum that laid out costs down to the smallest dry-cleaning item for a new opera company offering six operatic presentations over an eight-week summer season. Never mind that the theater for these operas hadn&#8217;t even been built. Ten months later it was. On July 3, 1957 the Santa Fe Opera was born, right on schedule. The opera was Puccini&#8217;s &#8220;Madama Butterfly&#8221;; Crosby himself was on the podium.This was not, by the way, just any old opera house. Crosby had come to Santa Fe to escape New York; now his opera house had to escape even the minimal urban encroachment of Santa Fe. A loan from Crosby&#8217;s father secured a parcel of land in the foothills of the Sangre de Cristo mountains 7 miles north of town: a natural bowl with space in front for a ranch-house office and dormitory, and a hillside onto which an indoor-outdoor performance facility could perch. The first theater seated 480; the success of the venture demanded expansion. In the summer of 1967, in the wee hours after an evening performance, the theater &#8212; which by then had grown to a nearly 1200-seat capacity &#8212; was completely destroyed by a fire whose cause remains a mystery.The company didn&#8217;t miss a performance that summer, working in a highschool auditorium without sets or costumes. By the next season a new theater had been built on the site, the present architectural marvel with a current capacity of 1,777 &#8212; the size, but not the shape, of most of the great houses of Europe.The shape is both a glory and a danger. The local architectural firm, Santa Fe&#8217;s McHugh and Kidder, marvelousy caught the dynamic of the site: the steep natural rake that promised a full stage view from every seat, with the distant prospect of more mountains, the distant lights of Los Alamos visible through the open back of the stage, and the occasional glimpse of dramatic mountain lightning storms through the open sides. Best of all, the roof would be split, with a wide swathe of sky visible between the front and rear portions. On clear, moonlit or starry nights, which Santa Fe sometimes (but not always) enjoys during the June-through-August opera season, there is no more exhilarating setting for opera anywhere in the world. The theater itself is ringed with further amenities: spacious refreshment areas on both sides, and a promenade up back.That&#8217;s the story on those clear nights. But that is not the entire weather picture of Santa Fe. The monsoons do come, especially in late July and August. The rains pour down in torrents through the split roof, and the winds take care to seek out and drench even those souls in the covered seats. This past summer has seen an above-average number of meteorological visitations; some 60 per cent of the summer&#8217;s operas were rained upon. Not rained out, mind you; just rained upon. Santa Fe&#8217;s busy opera season has no room for postponements. If management finally decides to fill in that roof, and reports out of Santa Fe indicate some talk in that direction, the loss in atmosphere will be great, but the loss in humidity will be universally welcomed. Meanwhile, the gift shop this past summer did a roaring business in ponchos.Credit Santa Fe&#8217;s audiences, at least, with holding their ground however soggy. It has to be a tribute to the high quality of the company&#8217;s world-class performing casts, and the comparable quality of the repertory itself &#8212; which can range from exquisitely formed Mozart performances to a dazzling excursion into brand-new, contemporary work &#8212; to see a capacity crowd sitting out a splendid night of opera in Santa Fe, the rains pouring down over them, nobody even daring to raise an umbrella. When you talk of operatic heroes, Santa Fe&#8217;s audience belong to their number.Not all of Santa Fe&#8217;s high culture has been planned in defiance of the elements. The Santa Fe Chamber Music Festival is also firmly entrenched, in the (blessedly) roofed-over Saint Francis Auditorium in a handsome courtyard building just off the main downtown Plaza. Founded 19 years ago and, like the opera, largely funded by the local growing, culturally-aware population, the festival has grown into the largest event of its kind anywhere in the country: six weeks of events nearly every night, most of them sold out, combining a fascinating mix of serious contemporary fare with the classics.One thing you come up against in Santa Fe, as soon as you start hunting down the cultural resources: there&#8217;s an overt sense of support there that you sometimes miss in larger cities. The opera has come to attract an international audience of opera connoisseurs, but even among the locals the talk during intermissions is about opera, not about the high cost of baby-sitters.And the sense of community involvement is, if anything, even stronger around the Chamber Music Festival. In their infinite wisdom, the sponsors allow the public in to all rehearsals, free of charge. Instead of possibly cutting down attendance at the concerts themselves, this breeds a sense of greater interest. When new music is rehearsed, the composer is often on hand to explain the music.The atmosphere crackles, with musical wisdom and with pride. At 7,000 feet, Santa Fe has proven the bane of some singers and wind players who must fight extra hard for their oxygen fixes. But it isn&#8217;t only the physical Santa Fe that&#8217;s that high; it&#8217;s also the cultural standards of the place, and that&#8217;s why people keep coming back.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<item>
		<title>BOWL</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/1991/08/bowl-3/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/1991/08/bowl-3/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Tue, 20 Aug 1991 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Daily News]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=2743</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[There&#8217;s a lot to be said for symphony concerts controlled by a firm hand at the podium. Once in a while, there&#8217;s something to be said as well for concerts in which the audience takes command. Something like that happened at the Hollywood Bowl on Tuesday night, and no harm was done.The program was all-Mozart, [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>There&#8217;s a lot to be said for symphony concerts controlled by a firm hand at the<br />
podium. Once in a while, there&#8217;s something to be said as well for concerts in<br />
which the audience takes command. Something like that happened at the<br />
Hollywood Bowl on Tuesday night, and no harm was done.The program was all-Mozart, with Stephen Bishop-Kovacevich as conductor and<br />
piano soloist. Since Mozart&#8217;s music demands a fairly small orchestra, without<br />
the heavy brass and percussion usually in evidence at Bowl concerts, the<br />
conductor decided to omit the customary &#8220;Star-Spangled Banner&#8221; at the start.<br />
The audience began to stand when Bishop-Kovacevich made his entrance, only to<br />
fall back as the orchestra struck up the &#8220;Marriage of Figaro&#8221; Overture<br />
instead of the expected anthem.Considering the political situation, perhaps this wasn&#8217;t the night to omit the<br />
anthem. Anyhow, no sooner had the conductor left the stage after the overture<br />
than a bunch of singers over on the right side started up &#8220;The Star-Spangled<br />
Banner&#8221; on their own. The sound spread; the crowd &#8212; 11,544 strong &#8212; came to<br />
its feet and sang along. Some orchestral players joined in on their own. The<br />
night was made safe for patriotism.It was made safe for Mozart as well. One of our most imaginative pianists,<br />
Bishop-Kovacevich has also emerged as a splendid conductor in recent years.<br />
The program&#8217;s concluding work, the great &#8220;Jupiter&#8221; Symphony, was capitally<br />
set forth. The conductor&#8217;s broad, expressive tempos might be the despair of<br />
the &#8220;authentic-performance&#8221; crowd, which likes its Mozart swift and crisp.<br />
But this was another kind of authentic performance, authentically powerful<br />
and, in the sublime slow movement, deeply moving.The solo piano concerto was a relatively early work, the A-major (K. 414).<br />
Here, too, both pianist and conductor (who happened to be the same person)<br />
worked for the expressive side of the young Mozart, and found it especially in<br />
the sweet, serene slow movement. Two single movements for violin and<br />
orchestra, sweetly and prettily played by Philharmonic member Michele Bovyer,<br />
rounded out the evening&#8217;s pleasures.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<item>
		<title>BOWL</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/1991/08/bowl-4/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/1991/08/bowl-4/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sun, 18 Aug 1991 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Daily News]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=2742</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[At intermission at the Hollywood Bowl on Sunday night, the season&#8217;s final concert by the Philharmonic Institute Orchestra, Philharmonic managing director Ernest Fleischmann came on stage. He had never, he told 8,725 listeners, come before an audience to ask for help, but the Philharmonic Institute was now in trouble. Unless $250,000 can be raised before [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>At intermission at the Hollywood Bowl on Sunday night, the season&#8217;s final<br />
concert by the Philharmonic Institute Orchestra, Philharmonic managing<br />
director Ernest Fleischmann came on stage. He had never, he told 8,725<br />
listeners, come before an audience to ask for help, but the Philharmonic<br />
Institute was now in trouble. Unless $250,000 can be raised before October 31,<br />
Fleischmann said, the entire Institute program &#8212; a training venture for young<br />
orchestral musicians and conductors, now rounding off its tenth year, of which<br />
each summer&#8217;s orchestra has been the most visible and audible product &#8212; could<br />
not continue.Fleischmann couldn&#8217;t have picked a better occasion to plead the cause of the<br />
Institute. This year&#8217;s orchestra has been a spectacular venture, performing<br />
with remarkable skill both under its own conductors-in-training and also with<br />
some of the guest conductors booked for the current Bowl season. Sunday&#8217;s<br />
program had some of both: two of the summer&#8217;s conducting fellows, Susan<br />
Davenny Wyner and Thomas Dausgaard, conducting music by Bernstein and<br />
Stravinsky before intermission and the redoutable Simon Rattle leading the<br />
Mahler Fourth Symphony to end it, with Rattle&#8217;s wife, soprano Elise Ross, a<br />
slightly quavery but eloquent soloist in the last movement.There were rough moments, to be sure. Dausgaard&#8217;s reading of the complete<br />
&#8220;Petrouchka&#8221; ballet score had its nervous moments, a tendency now and then<br />
to over-emphasize small details at the expense of momentum. At least this was<br />
a big, energetic conception whose rawness will mellow in time, and it at least<br />
drew beautiful playing from the orchestra all the way. The Mahler was, in a word, stunning.  Rattle, too, might be accused of an<br />
excess of concern with details, and there were moments where Mahler&#8217;s own<br />
suggestions of flexibility of tempo got exaggerated to the point of<br />
wilfulness. But there were also stunning moments, exquisite playing from the<br />
string section with tones throttled down to just this side of audibility (and<br />
with horrendously accurate intrusions from aircraft at exactly the worst<br />
moments), marvelous dabs of light from winds and brass. If Los Angeles can annually develop an orchestra of this quality, out of young<br />
and untried talent, in the mere seven weeks of the Institute, then the<br />
question of whether the Philharmonic Institute deserves all the help it can<br />
get becomes self-answering.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>BOWL</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/1991/08/bowl-5/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/1991/08/bowl-5/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 15 Aug 1991 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Daily News]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=2741</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[In a recent published statement a local air-traffic official claimed that the unusual amount of intrusion by planes and helicopters over the Hollywood Bowl was due to an exceptional amount of overcast this summer and the consequent rerouting of landing patterns. Well, the skies were crystal-clear on Thursday night &#8212; over the Bowl, and over [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>In a recent published statement a local air-traffic official claimed that the<br />
unusual amount of intrusion by planes and helicopters over the Hollywood Bowl<br />
was due to an exceptional amount of overcast this summer and the<br />
consequent rerouting of landing patterns. Well, the skies were crystal-clear<br />
on Thursday night &#8212; over the Bowl, and over Van Nuys, Burbank and Santa<br />
Monica airports as well. Did it make any difference? Is the moon made of green<br />
cheese? Four planes came over the Bowl during the first half of the concert,<br />
interfering with large stretches of Beethoven&#8217;s fourth Piano Concerto (the<br />
evening&#8217;s quietest music). Suspicions arise that the official regard, in high<br />
places, for the quality of Bowl concerts is largely doubletalk. If nobody up<br />
there is concerned, there was concern and annoyance on many faces among the<br />
10,306 concertgoers.At least the Prokofiev Fifth Symphony, the last work on Simon Rattle&#8217;s program<br />
with the Los Angeles Philharmonic, came through unscathed, probably because<br />
small airports shut down after a certain hour. Any doubts about the young<br />
Briton&#8217;s emergence as one of the spellbinding conductors of our time could be<br />
set aside after this performance. Unlike some conductors not worth naming,<br />
Rattle chose to explore the symphony rather than to hack at it. The beauty of the performance lay in the richness of its orchestral detail,<br />
the clarity with which, for example, the solo strands of wind and string tone<br />
twined around each other in the expansive, haunting slow movement. We&#8217;ve heard<br />
the symphony more than once, to put it mildly, in this Prokofiev anniversary<br />
year; it took Simon Rattle to reveal what the work is really about.Some doubts, in all frankness, had emerged about Rattle&#8217;s omnipotence in his<br />
Beethoven Ninth on Tuesday night. Beethoven brought out some curious responses<br />
this time as well. The evening&#8217;s soloist, the 20-year-old German keyboard whiz<br />
Lars Vogt in his American debut, went after Beethoven&#8217;s marvelous lyric<br />
patterns in a manner full of self-indulgence, a smart-aleck approach in which<br />
much of Beethoven&#8217;s eloquent, subtle rhetoric got blown up into empty oratory.<br />
This seemed to be the conductor&#8217;s way as well; the long invocation for<br />
orchestra alone was fussed with, touched up with tempo changes that only<br />
served to underline what was already obvious in the score.For starters Rattle and the orchestra got through Beethoven&#8217;s &#8220;Consecration of<br />
the House&#8221; Overture in fine style. This is a work, after all, where a certain<br />
amount of oversized oratory harmonizes with the composer&#8217;s plan. That&#8217;s what<br />
it got this time.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>BOWL</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/1991/08/bowl-6/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/1991/08/bowl-6/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Tue, 13 Aug 1991 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Daily News]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=2740</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Onstage and out front, Stravinsky, Beethoven and Simon Rattle filled the Hollywood Bowl quite handsomely on Tuesday night. If the Beethoven Ninth can draw one of the season&#8217;s largest crowds (17,073, just 900 short of capacity), there&#8217;s hope for civilization after all.The night began wondrously well. Rattle led his reduced orchestral forces (minus violins and [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Onstage and out front, Stravinsky, Beethoven and Simon Rattle filled the<br />
Hollywood Bowl quite handsomely on Tuesday night. If the Beethoven Ninth can<br />
draw one of the season&#8217;s largest crowds (17,073, just 900 short of capacity),<br />
there&#8217;s hope for civilization after all.The night began wondrously well. Rattle led his reduced orchestral forces<br />
(minus violins and violas) and the Los Angeles Master Chorale through a quiet,<br />
radiant probing of Stravinsky&#8217;s short masterwork, his elegant and austere<br />
&#8220;Symphony of Psalms&#8221; created in 1930 for the Boston Symphony&#8217;s 50th<br />
anniversary. It&#8217;s not exactly an inviting work, with its colors all muted<br />
bronze and silver. Rattle&#8217;s performance, remarkable especially for its quiet,<br />
unhurried unfolding, made the work come alive even in the Bowl&#8217;s overlarge<br />
space.The Beethoven Ninth fared less well. It had the feel of a learning process: a<br />
conductor still in his mid-30s trying things out, testing how far he can get<br />
away with bending Beethoven&#8217;s designs toward a personal statement. It came off<br />
as a curious mingling of authenticity and wilfulness. The authentic touches<br />
were excellent, with all repeats honored and with the orchestra, for once,<br />
seated in proper classical formation with the first and second violins<br />
downstage and the lower strings to the rear.But there were strange goings-on with changes of tempo, to underline effects<br />
that Beethoven had made abundantly clear on their own. It seemed almost as if<br />
the young conductor hadn&#8217;t yet come to trust the work, hadn&#8217;t quite gotten the<br />
hang of the music&#8217;s own marvelous sense of flow.He wasn&#8217;t helped much by the vocal soloists,  by Terry Cook&#8217;s delivery of the<br />
baritone invocation, with its register break that made it sound as if to<br />
unalike voices were sharing the line or Robert Tear&#8217;s tenor solo, strangulated<br />
and unfocussed. Soprano Alison Hargan and mezzo Alfreda Hodgson  sounded<br />
merely okay, but Beethoven&#8217;s cruel writing for these soloists is no way to<br />
judge a singer&#8217;s quality.With all its problems, and under a constant flow of air traffic sufficient to<br />
cover the Normandy invasion, this was a recognizable Beethoven Ninth. It may,<br />
for all anyone knows, carry the seeds of a great Ninth from Simon Rattle<br />
sometime in the future. It&#8217;s not quite there, however.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>BOWL&#160;WAGNER</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/1991/07/bowl-wagner/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/1991/07/bowl-wagner/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Tue, 30 Jul 1991 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Daily News]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=2748</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[In music-making, more may be merrier, but more is often mellower as well. That theory was nicely put to the test at the Hollywood Bowl on Tuesday night, when the presence of two orchestras &#8212; 200 musicians &#8212; sounded at least as good, perhaps even better, than either of the orchestras by itself.This was, in [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>In music-making, more may be merrier, but more is often mellower as well. That<br />
theory was nicely put to the test at the Hollywood Bowl on Tuesday night, when<br />
the presence of two orchestras &#8212; 200  musicians &#8212; sounded at least as good,<br />
perhaps even better, than either of the orchestras by itself.This was, in other words, the annual bout of duelling orchestras, when the<br />
resident Los Angeles Philharmonic moved over to share its stage with the<br />
youngsters of the Philharmonic Institute Orchestra. The result, it was easy to<br />
sense, was one of those ideal occasions when the young players&#8217; energy<br />
provided a challenge to the Philharmonic’s old-timers, while the older group<br />
could show the youngsters a thing or two about stability. All that, of course,<br />
is only an outsider&#8217;s intuition, but it might go a long way to explain why the<br />
combined forces sounded as good as they did that night.John Nelson was the evening&#8217;s conductor, formerly of the Indianapolis Symphony<br />
and more recently an active Europe-based freelancer; his contribution included<br />
the Barber Adagio for Strings and a set of selections from Wagner&#8217;s<br />
&#8220;Gotterdammerung,&#8221; with the two orchestras, and the Grieg Piano Concerto<br />
with the Philharmonic alone, and with the young Norwegian pianist Leif Ove<br />
Andsnes, in his local debut, as soloist. On its own, the Institute Orchestra<br />
was led by conductor-trainee Arthur Post in a brief Meditation from Leonard<br />
Bernstein&#8217;s &#8220;Mass.&#8221; A rich, full evening it was. Where, in fact, to start? The popular Barber Adagio, composed originally for<br />
four strings, was the evening&#8217;s only real failure in its drastic expansion;<br />
the simple, quiet patterns simply do not work under the burden of all that<br />
tone. Bernstein&#8217;s brief reworking of his &#8220;Mass&#8221; excerpt, arranged as a piece<br />
for cello and orchestra (and beautifully played by Lynn Harrell) is an<br />
elegant, impassioned tidbit from an otherwise grossly uneven work.<br />
But these were as divine discourses compared to the mindless vulgarity of<br />
Grieg&#8217;s strained and strenuous pomposities. Norwegian musicians must bear<br />
their Grieg as an albatross, as Finnish conductors must bear Sibelius, but<br />
Leif Ove Andsnes, at 21, is worthy of stronger challenges. The work demands<br />
old-fashioned, flamboyant, rhetorical virtuosity; the Andsnes performance,<br />
made up of interesting single moments but lacking in any real character, came<br />
off as so much clatter.But then came the Wagner to storm the heavens &#8212; and even, for once, to drive<br />
the air traffic from the skies. Nelson had put together a sweep across this<br />
final chapter of the mighty &#8220;Ring of the Nibelung&#8221;: &#8220;Dawn and Siegfried&#8217;s<br />
Rhine Journey&#8221; merging through a well-constructed bridge into the &#8220;Funeral<br />
March&#8221; which then oozed, somewhat less successfully, into the entire last<br />
scene of &#8220;Brunnhilde&#8217;s Immolation.&#8221; Without the voice, the final scene did have its aimless moments; some of it<br />
might have been cut back with no real loss. The rest was glorious: the<br />
marvelously paced, solemn March with its crashes like the harbingers of Doom,<br />
the throat-grabbing lamentations as the final harmonies build their unbearable<br />
tension. It&#8217;s all very well that we honor Mozart at the Bowl in this<br />
anniversary year, but it&#8217;s always the right year to celebrate Wagner, at least<br />
when it&#8217;s done this well.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>BOWL&#160;MORGAN</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/1991/07/bowl-morgan/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/1991/07/bowl-morgan/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Tue, 23 Jul 1991 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Daily News]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=2746</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[As far as one can determine, given the peculiar acoustical and aeronautical atmosphere at the Hollywood Bowl, Michael Morgan is a new arrival very much worth your attention. Morgan, who conducted the Los Angeles Philharmonic on Tuesday night in a most impressive debut appearance, is 35, and is the assistant conductor at the Chicago Symphony. [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>As far as one can determine, given the peculiar acoustical and aeronautical<br />
atmosphere at the Hollywood Bowl, Michael Morgan is a new arrival very much<br />
worth your attention. Morgan, who conducted the Los Angeles Philharmonic on<br />
Tuesday night in a most impressive debut appearance, is 35, and is the<br />
assistant conductor at the Chicago Symphony. More important, he&#8217;s the latest<br />
hired to try, where others have failed, to bring the Oakland Symphony (or<br />
Oakland East Bay Symphony, as it is now called) back to the glory it enjoyed<br />
under the prematurely departed Calvin Simmons.If Tuesday&#8217;s concert is any criterion, Morgan can do the job up north. He led<br />
an interesting program, more than usually challenging: Strauss&#8217; &#8220;Don Juan,&#8221;<br />
the Mendelssohn &#8220;Scottish&#8221; Symphony and, with Misha Dichter, the Beethoven<br />
Third Piano Concerto.Never  mind the Beethoven, which foundered on the inadequate visions of its<br />
soloist, in another of those uninflected, clattery performances that seem to<br />
characterize Dichter&#8217;s playing in recent years. What was truly exciting about<br />
Morgan&#8217;s part of the program was the depth and firmness of his orchestral<br />
command. He resisted the usual temptations to turn the Strauss tone-poem into a mere<br />
orchestral dazzler. Aided immeasurably by David Weiss&#8217; eloquent playing of the<br />
long oboe solo, he made the work into something resembling poetry. The<br />
balances between winds and strings were beautifully controlled; the noisy<br />
passages were oratorical but not vulgar. That takes doing; &#8220;Don Juan&#8221; may be<br />
a popular chestnut, but it is full of secrets as well, and these Morgan<br />
unlocked remarkably well.The Mendelssohn also went well, in a solemn but nicely paced reading, again<br />
agreeably free of the bombast that others have applied to this warm-hearted if<br />
somewhat padded score. The orchestra sounded fine; the woodwinds, so often<br />
entrusted in Mendelssohn&#8217;s scoring to shine little lights through the texture,<br />
did just that. The final peroration was truly grandiose.The crowd numbered 7881. The air traffic numbered a mere 3, but they were<br />
strategically placed: a helicopter to ruin the quiet ending of the Strauss,<br />
another to try to awaken Misha Dichter during the first-movement cadenza of<br />
the Beethoven, a third to out-roar the climax of the Mendelssohn finale.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>BOWL&#160;MOZART</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/1991/07/bowl-mozart/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/1991/07/bowl-mozart/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sun, 21 Jul 1991 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Daily News]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=2747</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[At 10:50 on Sunday the final joyous strains of Mozart&#8217;s &#8220;The Marriage of Figaro&#8221; filled the cool night air at the Hollywood Bowl. Billed variously as a &#8220;Mozart Akademie&#8221; and a &#8220;Mozart Mini-Marathon,&#8221; the concert had begun 4 hours and 20 minutes earlier, and had covered a lot of ground, all of it Mozartian. The [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>At 10:50 on Sunday the final joyous strains of Mozart&#8217;s &#8220;The Marriage of<br />
Figaro&#8221; filled the cool night air at the Hollywood Bowl. Billed variously as<br />
a &#8220;Mozart Akademie&#8221; and a &#8220;Mozart Mini-Marathon,&#8221; the concert had begun 4<br />
hours and 20 minutes earlier, and had covered a lot of ground, all of it<br />
Mozartian.  The crowd number 9,725, small by Bowl standards but a favorable<br />
comparison to the total count of people who heard Mozart&#8217;s music during his<br />
lifetime.It was a heady event: three overtures, a serenade for winds, three concertos<br />
plus one extra concerto movement, one symphony and nearly the whole last act<br />
from &#8220;Figaro&#8221; (minus only the arias for Marcellina and Basilio that are<br />
usually left out anyway). Historians have noted that concerts of this length<br />
were common in Mozart&#8217;s time, and that they did, indeed, go by the name<br />
&#8220;Akademie.&#8221;The splendid young orchestra of the Los Angeles Philharmonic Institute, the<br />
orchestra&#8217;s summer training program, now in its tenth year and impossible to<br />
praise too highly, held the stage all evening, although there were some<br />
personnel substitutions along the way. A wide screen was used to cut down the<br />
Bowl&#8217;s huge stage to fit the modest proportions of a Mozart-sized orchestra,<br />
and this had the effect of brightening the sound considerably. In terms of ensemble quality, as well as the excellence of individual players,<br />
this is a top-grade orchestra. Mozart&#8217;s scoring favors the wind contingent;<br />
the flutes, oboes and clarinets of this year&#8217;s Institute Orchestra made some<br />
elegant sounds throughout the long and demanding concert.At that there were some downs as well as ups. The guest instrumental soloists<br />
were uniformly poor: Misha and Cipa Dichter clattering their way through the<br />
Two-Piano Concerto (K. 365); Misha himself in as rash and unaffectionate<br />
saunter through the A-major Concerto (K. 488) as any anti-Mozartian could<br />
dream of hearing; Jaime Laredo, as conductor and soloist, clipping the wings<br />
of the G-major Violin Concerto (K. 216) and throwing in some dreadful cadenzas<br />
(by Sam Franko) along the way.As amends, there was a splendid vocal group, most of them younger Music Center<br />
Opera stars-to-be, to do full justice to the changing moods, the sorrow and<br />
the hilarity of the &#8220;Figaro&#8221; excerpt, done in concert format. Jennifer<br />
Trost, who sang the Countess in her recent European opera debut, came home to<br />
sing those few poignant phrases most disarmingly. Hector Vasquez and Jennifer<br />
Smith were a delightful Mr. and Mrs. Figaro, standing stock still and even so<br />
managing to suggest the drama in their roles, as did John Atkins as the ill-<br />
tempered Count.The evening&#8217;s conductors included this summer&#8217;s four trainees: William Eddins,<br />
Susan Davenny Wyner, Thomas Dausgaard and Arthur Post. David Alan Miller led<br />
the two-piano concerto, and Lawrence Foster led the opera excerpt with a fine<br />
sense of underlining the important role the orchestra plays in this<br />
music.Overhead, the air traffic was a constant bane; one tended to lose count after a<br />
dozen or so helicopters. But up there, too, beaming his benefice on the crowd,<br />
was the  little fellow whose music the night was intended to honor. Mozart<br />
looked happy, this once.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>BOWL</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/1991/07/bowl-7/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/1991/07/bowl-7/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Tue, 16 Jul 1991 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Daily News]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=2739</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Yuri Temirkanov, who conducted the Los Angeles Philharmonic at the Hollywood Bowl on Tuesday night &#8212; the fourth of his five appearances here &#8212; remains one of the most interesting of contemporary conductors. Perhaps &#8220;interesting&#8221; conducting wasn&#8217;t exactly what Tuesday night&#8217;s program called for, however.It was another of those solid, chestnut-studded programs: Tchaikovsky&#8217;s &#8220;Romeo and [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Yuri Temirkanov,  who conducted the Los Angeles Philharmonic at the Hollywood<br />
Bowl on Tuesday night &#8212; the fourth of his five appearances here &#8212; remains<br />
one of the most interesting of contemporary conductors. Perhaps<br />
&#8220;interesting&#8221; conducting wasn&#8217;t exactly what Tuesday night&#8217;s program called<br />
for, however.It was another of those solid, chestnut-studded programs: Tchaikovsky&#8217;s &#8220;Romeo<br />
and Juliet&#8221; Overture, Rachmaninoff&#8217;s &#8220;Rhapsody on a Theme of Paganini&#8221; and<br />
that old inevitable, Rimsky-Korsakov&#8217;s &#8220;Scheherazade,&#8221; junk food at its<br />
tastiest. Nikolai Petrov was the pianist in the Rachmaninoff, no better and no<br />
worse than his playing at his Ambassador recital a few seasons back &#8212; a<br />
recital that somehow lingers in the memory as almost a textbook essay in<br />
dullness.Given the minimal intellectual demands of this program, a case could be made<br />
for a fairly straightforward, zippy approach to all three works. Nothing like<br />
that was forthcoming, however. Temirkanov obviously takes considerable<br />
pleasure in imposing his own stamp upon everything he plays, an approach that<br />
used to be more common among conductors than it is in these electronic days.<br />
The range of tempos in both the Tchaikovsky and Rimsky-Korsakov works was<br />
extreme: slowness to the point of an imperceptible ooze, speed to violate all<br />
local traffic laws.The conductor has the technique to make all this work, and so, in his deadpan<br />
way, did the pianist. Barring the allowable quota of bloopers (mostly in the<br />
brass) it was a pretty good sounding program. But you could easily mistake<br />
these works, under Temirkanov&#8217;s heavy hands, for something more serious than<br />
their real nature. Nothing seemed to soar&#8230;Except, of course, the usual skyful of intrusions: a veritable regatta during<br />
the Rachmaninoff, with two small planes flying directly overhead and a couple<br />
of helicopters within easy earshot. A decent-sized crowd, 11623 strong, stayed<br />
to cheer at the end. At that, they had reason; it&#8217;s hard to spoil<br />
&#8220;Scheherazade.&#8221;</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>GETTY</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/1991/07/getty-2/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/1991/07/getty-2/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sat, 13 Jul 1991 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Daily News]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=2790</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Even when silent, the Getty Museum stands as continuing assurance that civilization abides. Add music, and the proof becomes indisputable.This summer&#8217;s Saturday-night series at the Getty (long since sold out) is, unsurprisingly, devoted to Mozart, whose music is the perfect match for the classical decor in the small inner garden where the music is played. [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Even when silent, the Getty Museum stands as continuing assurance that<br />
civilization abides. Add music, and the proof becomes indisputable.This summer&#8217;s Saturday-night series at the Getty (long since sold out) is,<br />
unsurprisingly, devoted to Mozart, whose music is the perfect match for the<br />
classical decor in the small inner garden where the music is played. But the<br />
fare is hardly garden-variety Mozart. The series is called &#8220;The Uncommon<br />
Mozart&#8221; and that, judging from last Saturday&#8217;s concert, is putting it<br />
mildly.The five concerts, put together by UCLA&#8217;s dynamic musicologist Robert Winter,<br />
is arranged more-or-less chronological. Saturday&#8217;s program found Mozart in his<br />
late teens, chafing at the provincial  life in Salzburg but beginning to<br />
develop his own musical voice. A Divertimento (K. 131 in the complete Mozart<br />
catalog) from 1772, Mozart&#8217;s 16th year, was full of the richness of the later<br />
Mozart: harmonic progressions and melodic turns that simply stop the breath,<br />
marvelous effects in an uncommonly large orchestra (strings, solo winds and<br />
four horns). A short Mass (K. 272b) from five years later was, once again, an amazingly rich<br />
score, joyous and profound by turns and with a closing chorus that prophecied<br />
moments in the later operas. And the slashing early G-minor Symphony (K. 183),<br />
the evening&#8217;s one familiar work, struck the tragic notes that Mozart would<br />
sound again, and often, in his mature years.Performances couldn&#8217;t have been better &#8212; not much, anyhow. Gregory Maldonado&#8217;s<br />
Los Angeles Baroque Orchestra seems to get better with every hearing. This is<br />
no longer merely a local early-instrument group standing up to the big guys,<br />
but a splendid ensemble that plays with style and real sheen, makes European<br />
tours, and has started to record. There was a little bit of rumpus among the<br />
horns now and then, nothing serious. It could happen anywhere. A small chorus<br />
from the Church of Saint Martin of Tours, led by Tracey Adams, joined forces<br />
with the orchestra in the B-flat Mass.  At the end there was wine and cheese and carrot cake alongside the Getty&#8217;s<br />
long pool. Who says this isn&#8217;t the best of all worlds?</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>BOWL</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/1991/07/bowl-8/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/1991/07/bowl-8/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Fri, 05 Jul 1991 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Daily News]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=2738</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Old Sebastian Bach lived a lifetime without hearing a note of his &#8220;Brandenburg&#8221; Concertos. There&#8217;s no information, in fact, that anyone &#8212; in the castle of the Brandenburg nobles or anywhere else &#8212; heard these works in their own time. Contrast that with the 7,549 souls privileged to sit through all six of these iridescent [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Old Sebastian Bach lived a lifetime without hearing a note of his<br />
&#8220;Brandenburg&#8221; Concertos. There&#8217;s no information, in fact, that anyone &#8212; in<br />
the castle of the Brandenburg nobles or anywhere else &#8212; heard these works in<br />
their own time. Contrast that with the 7,549 souls privileged to sit through<br />
all six of these iridescent scores at the Hollywood Bowl on Friday night, and<br />
you may suspect that, in some ways at least, the world has improved somewhat<br />
since Bach&#8217;s time.From any angle these are remarkable works. They constitute a compendium, first<br />
of all, of some of the best devices of Baroque instrumentation: the use of<br />
solo instruments against a larger ensemble, and the ways that ensemble can be<br />
subdivided to present an infinite variety of sonority. They also offer a fair<br />
study of the moods, the rhythms, the virtuosity of players available to<br />
composers in the year 1721. Each of the works draws an entirely different set<br />
of rules and expectations. An evening of all six &#8220;Brandenburgs&#8221; becomes an<br />
adventure in glorious excess.One might raise doubts, even so, about the fitness for this music in so vast a<br />
space as the Bowl, performed by the Los Angeles Chamber Orchestra in groups<br />
ranging in size from six players to 30. Truth to tell, the sound pattern<br />
wasn&#8217;t always kind to Bach&#8217;s invention. The horns in the first concerto were<br />
undermiked so that their marvelous rhythmic patterns of threes against the<br />
other players&#8217; twos weren&#8217;t always audible. The harpsichord in several works<br />
was overmiked almost to the point of drowning out the ensemble. Nobody ever<br />
claimed the Bowl as an ideal Baroque music venue, and nobody should,Yet there was vitality in iona Brown&#8217;s approach to the music, and high<br />
expertise in the way her ensemble did her bidding. Sometimes, in truth,<br />
vitality won out over repose; much of the music &#8212;  the marvelous, burbling<br />
fantasy of the fourth concerto, to cite one instance &#8212; went by so fast, and<br />
with so little inflection, that it sounded smaller than life, even in its<br />
larger-than life setting. Often as not, Brown&#8217;s conducting seemed to suggest<br />
that she didn&#8217;t like the music very much, a most peculiar attitude if true.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<item>
		<title>BOWL</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/1991/07/bowl-9/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/1991/07/bowl-9/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Tue, 02 Jul 1991 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Daily News]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=2737</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[The roar of drums split the evening air; the brassy strains of &#8220;The Star- Spangled Banner&#8221; lit up the evening sky. At approximately 7:45 last Tuesday evening a new season at the Hollywood Bowl sprang into life. From now until September 21, the most generously planned of any urban music festival will be going on [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>The roar of drums split the evening air; the brassy strains of &#8220;The Star-<br />
Spangled Banner&#8221; lit up the evening sky. At approximately 7:45 last Tuesday<br />
evening a new season at the Hollywood Bowl sprang into life. From now until<br />
September 21, the most generously planned of any urban music festival will be<br />
going on right in our own backyard.Something else was new, as well, at this opening concert, since it also saw the<br />
debut of a brand-new orchestra. The Hollywood Bowl Orchestra was formed last<br />
winter; it has already released &#8220;Hollywood Dreams,&#8221; its first recording,<br />
under its permanent conductor John Mauceri. Made up of freelance musicians<br />
from the Los Angeles studio scene, the orchestra&#8217;s principal summer job will<br />
be to take over some of the lighter programs that the Los Angeles Philharmonic<br />
used to have to play. The benefit is, of course, twofold: the new orchestra<br />
gets the work, and the parent orchestra gets more time to rehearse its more<br />
serious symphonic programs.So far as any orchestra can be judged in its early weeks of existence,<br />
performing into microphones in a vast open space, the new ensemble shows every<br />
sign of filling a long-felt need hereabouts, and filling it handsomely.<br />
Conductor Mauceri, led it through a fine razzle-dazzle program, in which the<br />
orchestra got the chance to anticipate on its own, purely through its music-<br />
making, the fireworks that were to come at program&#8217;s end.Expectedly from musicians used to playing on sound stages into microphones, the<br />
orchestra&#8217;s tone is big and brassy. It is capable, as well, of some soft and<br />
elegant sounds. An orchestral version of an unfamiliar Gershwin song,<br />
&#8220;Soon,&#8221; brought quite a lot of fine, silky playing from the strings. Like<br />
Andre Previn and a few other wise conductors, Mauceri has seated the orchestra<br />
with the violas, not the cellos, on the outside. The arrangement greatly<br />
lightens the string sound; even through microphones and loudspeakers, the<br />
difference showed.The concert was subtitled &#8220;America the Beautiful,&#8221; and was planned as a<br />
light-hearted family journey through familiar territory. Leonard Bernstein&#8217;s<br />
&#8220;Candide&#8221; Overture (well-known to Mauceri, who had conducted the Broadway<br />
revival of the show) was the most substantial work. The splendid young<br />
baritone Bruce Hubbard, who sings &#8220;Ol&#8217; Man River&#8221; on the famous complete<br />
&#8220;Show Boat&#8221; recording, did so again, and beautifully. He also sang five of<br />
Copland&#8217;s &#8220;Old American&#8221; song settings and another unknown Gershwin song<br />
whose lyrics have only recently been rediscovered, a blues number to a tune<br />
from &#8220;An American in Paris.&#8221; Even an uneventful saunter through the tall<br />
corn can sometimes turn up unexpected treasures.Mauceri proved a genial host, with some easy-going humor and even a little<br />
subversion (&#8220;please feel free to applaud any time you feel like it&#8221;) to put<br />
the crowd at ease. At the end came three Sousa marches, with fireworks to<br />
match: spectacular stuff, amazingly well coordinated to the downbeats in the<br />
music. Glowing likenesses of Desert Storm heroes emerged from the smoke and<br />
flame; at the end the pictorial epitome of America glowed high overhead. The<br />
audience of 13,155 happy souls appeared to be having the time of their<br />
respective lives, as well they should.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>RICHCOL</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/1991/06/richcol/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/1991/06/richcol/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sun, 30 Jun 1991 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Daily News]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=2849</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[The opera season ended with two ringing reaffirmations of the high quality of scores some of us may have laid aside. A second visit to &#8220;La Fanciulla del West&#8221; at the Music Center turned up details in Puccini&#8217;s score I hadn&#8217;t previously bothered to notice: the marvelous breadth of the harmonic language, the iridescent orchestration, [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>The opera season ended with two ringing reaffirmations of the high quality of<br />
scores some of us may have laid aside. A second visit to &#8220;La Fanciulla del<br />
West&#8221; at the Music Center turned up details in Puccini&#8217;s score I hadn&#8217;t<br />
previously bothered to notice: the marvelous breadth of the harmonic language,<br />
the iridescent orchestration, the grandeur of the choral writing.<br />
Then came an even more exciting rediscovery, Benjamin Britten&#8217;s &#8220;The Turn of<br />
the Screw,&#8221; in a stupendous staging that brilliantly underlined the<br />
extraordinary depth of this score, the way so little time and so few players<br />
are needed to fulfill Henry James&#8217; wonderful story in music as mere words<br />
never could. Strange to tell, neither opera has been adequately dealt with on records.<br />
Against the dozens of &#8220;Bohemes&#8221; and &#8220;Toscas,&#8221; there are only two proper<br />
recordings of &#8220;Fanciulla&#8221; (plus two dim-sounding &#8220;pirate&#8221; recordings).<br />
Each has its brutalizing force: Mario del Monaco on the London set with Renata<br />
Tebaldi, Zubin Mehta&#8217;s conducting on the DG set with Carol Neblett and Placido<br />
Domingo. A new version is needed, especially one to preserve the astounding<br />
performance given here by Gwyneth Jones.The &#8220;Turn of the Screw&#8221; lingers in the old London recording conducted by<br />
Britten (with the very young David Hemmings, in his boy-soprano days, as<br />
Miles). There is also a video version, a film by Petr Weigl with its imagery<br />
full of smirking Freudian subtexts and with the singers&#8217; voices dubbed onto a<br />
cast of actors. But  Helen Donath at least sings the role of the Governess, as<br />
she did here, and that makes the video worth enduring.Britten&#8217;s 37-year-old opera abides as a proclamation of the validity of<br />
contemporary harmonies and vocal lines as the bearers of operatic action. In<br />
its taut, exquisitely structured way it is as important a score as, say,<br />
&#8220;Wozzeck&#8221; or &#8220;Nixon in China&#8221;&#8230;or, as &#8220;Le Grand Macabre&#8221;<br />
Gyorgy Ligeti composed &#8220;Le Grand Macabre&#8221; in 1978; it circulated to ecstatic<br />
reception in several European houses, and has now finally achieved a proper<br />
recording, a two-disc Wergo set just released. From its wild and wondrous<br />
opening, a violent chorus of automobile horns that returns several times to<br />
punctuate the diabolical tale, to its finale as the devils sizzle over an open<br />
fire and bits of Mozart and Verdi are threaded through the orchestral<br />
pandemonium, the sheer bravado of the work holds you enthralled.<br />
Ligeti, 68, Hungarian by birth, now living in Germany, is still too little<br />
known in this country, although Pierre Boulez brought a large chunk of his<br />
music to Ojai two years ago. Two short, marvelously atmospheric pieces of his<br />
were used (without his permission and without payment) in the score Stanley<br />
Kubrick assembled for &#8220;2001.&#8221;Those who know Ligeti&#8217;s music have come to suspect him of omnipotence;<br />
everything he has attempted, over a wide stylistic panorama, seems to work.<br />
There are five CDs of his music on Wergo, including orchestral and chamber<br />
music, and there isn&#8217;t a moment less than enthralling.<br />
&#8220;Le Grand Macabre&#8221; is taken from a 1934 play by Michel de Ghelderode, who<br />
in turn took his inspiration from Pieter Breughel&#8217;s ghastly fantasy &#8220;The<br />
Triumph of Death.&#8221; Into this stewpot of influences Ligeti has stirred a<br />
fantastic mix of his own. The characters include a nude Venus, a fat boy who<br />
is the &#8220;Prince of Breughel-Land&#8221; and who in the London production was got up<br />
to look like Prince Charles. The stage directions are loose; in Paris the<br />
characters included Greta Garbo, the Marx Brothers and Superman.<br />
You&#8217;ll just have to believe that all this translates into music of the utmost<br />
appeal. The musical pastiche is wild: jazz, ancient liturgy, some corny<br />
waltzes &#8212; they all seem to hobnob, and the resultant mix is amazingly<br />
entertaining. The recorded performance is a production of the Austrian Radio;<br />
the conductor, who has given most of the performances of &#8220;Le Grand Macabre&#8221;<br />
from the beginning, is the splendid Britisher Elgar Howarth. You won&#8217;t<br />
recognize a single name in the cast, but it&#8217;s a fine ensemble and it sounds as<br />
if it is having fun with this grotesque but appealing music. Perhaps you will,<br />
too.Some kind of great operatic upsurge seems to be taking place in Finland, as<br />
we&#8217;ll learn for ourselves when the Finnish National Opera comes over with<br />
Aulis Sallinen&#8217;s &#8220;Kullervo&#8221; next February. Finland&#8217;s culture ministry,<br />
working through the opera company, has been exemplary in commissioning new<br />
works. Sallinen is becoming well known, and so is his compatriot Einojuhani<br />
Rautavaara. (In Finnish, by the way, you pronounce all vowels separately;<br />
there are six syllables in Rautavaara.)Rautavaara&#8217;s &#8220;Vincent&#8221; is at hand, an opera composed last year and recorded<br />
on the Ondine label. Its subject is not lakes or mountains or ancient Finnish<br />
heroes; the &#8220;Vincent&#8221; is Van Gogh, and the opera was written to celebrate<br />
the painter&#8217;s centenary. It is a work of tremendous power.The composer, now 63, wrote his own libretto. Van Gogh, nearing death, lies in<br />
a mental hospital. Voices call out to him, and the composer has fashioned a<br />
dense, powerful counterpoint of sounds. Paul Gauguin, cynical and hostile,<br />
wanders through the action. Later on Vincent&#8217;s mind wanders to his few moments<br />
of a happy love affair. Then the clouds settle in once again. The ending is<br />
devastating; Vincent tries to make a gift to the doctors of his remaining<br />
paintings, but they are rejected as &#8220;too modern.&#8221;Rautavaara&#8217;s music is dense and tortured, and some of it sounds amazingly like<br />
the way Van Gogh paintings look. Each of the opera&#8217;s three acts, by the way,<br />
starts with a prelude that is supposed to represent a particular painting.<br />
They might go together as an orchestral suite, in the manner of &#8220;Mathis der<br />
Maler.&#8221; But the opera as a whole also deserves to be heard. In this<br />
performance, conducted by Fuat Manchurov, the marvelous baritone Jorma<br />
Hynninen is  Van Gogh.On Virgin Classics there is John Casken&#8217;s &#8220;Golem,&#8221; winner of the Benjamin<br />
Britten Award for composition last year. This story, too, is told in<br />
flashback, as the mystical Rabbi Maharal tells of his creation of a Golem &#8211;<br />
the guardian spirit in Yiddish folklore &#8212; and how, like the monster of<br />
Frankenstein, the creation outgrew its purpose and turned violent. Casken,<br />
born in Yorkshire in 1949, fashioned his own libretto.<br />
Here, too, we have eloquent, skillful music drama. The Britten connection is<br />
clear; Casken&#8217;s vocal melodies have that same dry-point, understated quality<br />
that comes around and lingers in the memory. &#8220;Golem&#8221; isn&#8217;t quite a<br />
masterpiece, although it is a most proficient work by a composer hitherto<br />
unknown. The music uses a small orchestral ensemble plus tape; the<br />
performance, under Richard Bernas, was recorded at the University of Durham in<br />
the North of England. The best of it is the assurance that composers are still<br />
composing opera. Someday John Casken will compose a better opera than<br />
&#8220;Golem,&#8221; but at least he has been encouraged to make a start.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>SCREW</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/1991/06/screw/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/1991/06/screw/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sat, 22 Jun 1991 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Daily News]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=2855</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Like the story that inspired it, Benjamin Britten&#8217;s &#8220;The Turn of the Screw&#8221; holds you in its grip from beginning to end. So does the Music Center Opera&#8217;s brilliant production of the work, which had the first of four performances at the Music Center on Saturday night. Miss it at your peril.The power of the [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Like the story that inspired it, Benjamin Britten&#8217;s &#8220;The Turn of the Screw&#8221;<br />
holds you in its grip from beginning to end. So does the Music Center Opera&#8217;s<br />
brilliant production of the work, which had the first of four performances at<br />
the Music Center on Saturday night. Miss it at your peril.The power of the Henry James story, as every schoolboy knows, lies in its<br />
ambiguity. We are left to guess which is real, the ghosts or the Governess who<br />
thinks she sees them. Putting the story on stage, as play or opera, forces a<br />
producer to choose a single alternative, and this Britten and his librettist<br />
Myfanwy {cq} Piper have done in this masterful small opera of 1954. The ghosts<br />
are real; they come on stage and sing. The Governess, too, is real, because<br />
she too sings. And how, she sings!Yet, one beauty of this production, devised by Jonathan Miller for the English<br />
National Opera in 1979, is its success in preserving ambiguities. Patrick<br />
Robertson&#8217;s sets, with projections both on scrims and a back wall, so fill the<br />
stage with with a jumble of images that characters seem to float in and out of<br />
reality. The effect is both disturbing and stunning; you will look far before<br />
you discover better justice done to this greatest of all psychological<br />
thrillers, in any medium.The performances are, in a word, phenomenal. No milder word will do for the<br />
overwhelming Governess of Helen Donath, previously known here only from<br />
recordings. She has worked a magisterial voice and a powerful stage presence<br />
into a consistent portrait. It might be described as lyric frazzlement, or it<br />
might better reside beyond rational description. No less extraordinary is the<br />
work of 12-year-old Nik{cq}Nackley as the haunted Miles: again, a  marvelously<br />
consistent performance at once angelic and sinister,  and nicely sung<br />
besides.Old friends round out the cast: Marvellee Cariaga as a strong yet troubled Mrs.<br />
Grose, Jonathan Mack and Angelique Burzynski as a pair of reptilian ghosts,<br />
Eileen Hulse as the other child (although clearly several times the age of<br />
eight years specified in the script). The orchestra of a mere 13 players,<br />
under Roderick Brydon&#8217;s alert, flexible direction, reproduces the wonders of<br />
Britten&#8217;s iridescent scoring. And so a far-from-capacity crowd on opening night found itself, possibly with<br />
some surprise, cheering to the rafters a 20th-century chamber opera on a<br />
serious topic. &#8220;The Turn of the Screw&#8221; deserved no less. It has taken this<br />
whole season for our opera company to come up with one production for which<br />
the highest praise might pass as understatement. This time it happened.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>LEVITCH&#160;NOTE</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/1991/06/levitch-note/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/1991/06/levitch-note/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 03 Jun 1991 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Daily News]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=2824</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[The scene was the Leo Baeck Temple in Brentwood, at last week&#8217;s invitational tribute to Leonard Bernstein. The veteran pianist Leo Smit came onstage to play the opening work, tried to strike a few notes, and stopped. Something in the Yamaha grand piano, furnished for the concert by David Abell, was decidedly off-key. Smit tried [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>The scene was the Leo Baeck Temple in Brentwood, at last week&#8217;s invitational<br />
tribute to Leonard Bernstein. The veteran pianist Leo Smit came onstage to play<br />
the opening work, tried to strike a few notes, and stopped. Something in the<br />
Yamaha grand piano, furnished for the concert by David Abell, was decidedly<br />
off-key. Smit tried a second time; no luck. &#8220;Is Leon Levitch in the house?&#8221;<br />
the master of ceremonies called out.<br />
There was a stir up back; Leon Levitch was definitely in the house. Down the<br />
aisle he came, the smiling, diminutive, white-haired man of all pianos, looking<br />
for all the world like Central Casting&#8217;s idea of a kindly old-world craftsman -<br />
- which, indeed, he is. He twirled a couple of wing nuts under the piano, and<br />
before you could say &#8220;Mieczyslaw Horszowski&#8221; he had the entire innards of the<br />
instrument spread across the floor of the stage.<br />
A dab, a twiddle, and Levitch had the piano back together again. &#8220;I don&#8217;t know<br />
what I did,&#8221; he shouted out in all innocence, &#8220;but it seems to work.&#8221; Chalk<br />
up another Leon Levitch victory.<br />
Every city has its legendary piano wizard, about whom tales are told with<br />
laughter and awe. Levitch, who now lives in Pacoima, is that man for Los<br />
Angeles. Born in Yugoslavia 63 years ago, Levitch taught himself the rudiments<br />
of piano building while interned in an Italian prison camp during World War II.<br />
After Italy&#8217;s defeat, the Levitch family was part of a token group of freed<br />
prisoners brought to the United States by Franklin D. Rossevelt and quartered -<br />
- behind more barbed wire &#8212; in an abandoned army camp in upstate New York.<br />
Word got out that the camp had among its inmates a teenage piano tuner, and<br />
Levitch was frequently smuggled out under darkness, crawling through a break in<br />
the barbed wire,  to repair pianos in nearby Oswego.<br />
Along the way, Levitch also studied composition, later working with Roy Harris<br />
at UCLA. Several of his chamber compositions have been recorded, and he is now<br />
at work on a Requiem, to be performed next year at the opening of a museum in<br />
Oswego commemorating the wartime encampment.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<item>
		<title>OJAI</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/1991/06/ojai-2/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/1991/06/ojai-2/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sun, 02 Jun 1991 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Daily News]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=2839</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[The glory of the Ojai Music Festival surfaced once again this past weekend, as it has every year since 1947 around this time, somewhat tarnished but recognizable. No, it wasn&#8217;t the best festival ever, not as programming nor as performance. It also wasn&#8217;t the worst. In five generously planned programs, from Friday night to Sunday [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>The glory of the Ojai Music Festival surfaced once again this past weekend, as<br />
it has every year since 1947 around this time, somewhat tarnished but<br />
recognizable. No, it wasn&#8217;t the best festival ever, not as programming nor as<br />
performance. It also wasn&#8217;t the worst. In five generously planned programs,<br />
from Friday night to Sunday afternoon, there had to be something for nearly<br />
everyone somewhere along the way.<br />
The mix was interesting, to say the least: Mozart, the prolific American John<br />
Harbison, the iconoclastic Briton Sir Peter Maxwell Davies. Inevitably, the<br />
flames of creativity burned the brightest in the Mozart; that would probably<br />
have been the case no matter which contemporary figures had come on.<br />
Even so, there was something uncommonly depressing, deadly even, about the<br />
contemporary fare. Harbison, former composer-in-residence at the Los Angeles<br />
Philharmonic, Pulitzer laureate, brought along two of his large-scale song-<br />
cycles: one to words of Emily Dickinson, one to William Carlos Williams.<br />
Handsomely sung &#8212; Janice Felty, Sanford Sylvan &#8212; they nevertheless seemed<br />
like random notes curled willy-nilly around the respective texts but untouched<br />
by the beauty or the passion of the poetry. Any moment of Mozart&#8217;s text-<br />
settings heard over the weekend &#8212; a pair of concert arias, some extended<br />
excerpts from his final opera &#8220;La Clemenza di Tito&#8221; &#8212; might have served as a<br />
model for the way words and music can be blended into a higher art.<br />
Such judgments are probably unfair; few composers past or present could survive<br />
comparison with the divine Mozart. Still, the Ojai fare seemed almost<br />
stubbornly designed to shame the present with the past. From Max Davies we got<br />
two meandering, grossly extended concertos, one for clarinet and one for horn<br />
and trumpet, part of a series he&#8217;s creating for the soloists in the Scottish<br />
Chamber Orchestra. Of course they weren&#8217;t inflamed with the Mozartian spark,<br />
but they seemed on this occasion to have no spark of any kind. A couple of folk<br />
dances and a brand-new &#8220;Ojai Festival Overture&#8221; may have been small-scale<br />
exercises on Davies&#8217; part, but there was a sense of shape there, and also a<br />
sense of pleasure, that the larger works didn&#8217;t have.The Mozart works were all drawn from his last year: the sublime Clarinet<br />
Concerto, the operatic excerpts, the radiantly beautiful &#8220;Ave, verum corpus&#8221;<br />
(which Harbison had the gall to link to his own slapdash setting of the same<br />
text) and rather a lot of small dances. True, Mozart earned most of his money<br />
at the end with these German dances and minuets for Viennese court functions,<br />
but 27 of them at a throw, conducted with no excess of grace by Harbison and<br />
Davies, came across as something of an overdose.In the absence of the Los Angeles Philharmonic &#8212; currently touring European<br />
capitals and, according to reports, piling up ecstatic reviews &#8212; Ojai&#8217;s stage<br />
band  this time around was the Scottish Chamber Orchestra, playing with no<br />
great distinction. The singers were marvelous; outstanding among the<br />
instrumentalists were Dennis James, who brought along his &#8220;glass harmonica&#8221;<br />
for two Mozart works for that eerie, captivating instrument and Charles<br />
Neidich, tootling his way enchantingly through the Mozart Clarinet Concerto.<br />
But violinist Rose Mary Harbison (the composer&#8217;s wife) led a sub-professional<br />
reading of Mozart&#8217;s E-flat String Quintet that simply shouldn&#8217;t have been<br />
allowed onstage. Oh well, there&#8217;s always next year, with the guesswork favoring a return to Ojai<br />
of the Philharmonic and, dare we hope, Pierre Boulez. At least the weather was<br />
sublime and the setting &#8212; outdoors in Ojai&#8217;s Libbey Park and indoors for one<br />
late-night church event &#8212; beguiling beyond description. As long as these<br />
factors remain constant, no running of Ojai&#8217;s Music Festival can be reckoned a<br />
complete loss. Still&#8230;</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>SUNDAY</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/1991/06/sunday/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/1991/06/sunday/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sat, 01 Jun 1991 23:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Daily News]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=2859</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Witold Lutoslawski is in town this week, for two Los Angeles Philharmonic programs of his music. The Kronos Quartet&#8217;s program at UCLA on Saturday includes music by Alfred Schnittke. George Enesco&#8217;s opera &#8220;Oedipus&#8221; has been released on Angel-EMI, the first-ever recording of a kind of masterpiece by Romania&#8217;s best-known composer. Comprehensive, six-CD surveys of Lutoslawski&#8217;s [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Witold Lutoslawski is in town this week, for two Los Angeles Philharmonic<br />
programs of his music. The Kronos Quartet&#8217;s program at UCLA on Saturday<br />
includes music by Alfred Schnittke. George Enesco&#8217;s opera &#8220;Oedipus&#8221; has been<br />
released on Angel-EMI, the first-ever recording of a kind of masterpiece by<br />
Romania&#8217;s best-known composer. Comprehensive, six-CD surveys of Lutoslawski&#8217;s<br />
music, and that of his countryman composer Karol Szymanowski, were released<br />
last year on Poland&#8217;s Muza label. Krysztof Penderecki&#8217;s dark, intense &#8220;St.<br />
Luke Passion&#8221; has been newly recorded, under the composer&#8217;s direction, on<br />
Britain&#8217;s Argo label.<br />
These matters are related. They suggest an emergence, a growing awareness, or<br />
both, of a repertory of major significance, remote both geographically and<br />
artistically from the musical mainstream. Sure, the mainstream Russian and<br />
Soviet symphonic repertory has been with us for over a century. We&#8217;ve known<br />
something, if not very much,  about Polish music from a few salon tidbits by<br />
Szymanowski and Paderewski&#8217;s Minuet in G. And Enesco&#8217;s first &#8220;Romanian<br />
Rhapsody&#8221; has long been a pop-concert staple.<br />
But the new music from Eastern Europe is none of the above. Szymanowski died in<br />
1937, and it&#8217;s stretching a point, perhaps, to include him in a report of new<br />
music. But these six CD&#8217;s of his works &#8212; big pieces, including three<br />
extroverted, handsomely crafted symphonies, and stunning choral music &#8212; along<br />
with the opera &#8220;King Roger&#8221; which Long Beach produced three seasons ago (and<br />
which is also available in a recording on the Olympia label), point to a major,<br />
original talent whose reevaluation in the West is long overdue. What&#8217;s more,<br />
much of Szymanowski&#8217;s expressive style bears little resemblance to what anyone<br />
else was doing in his time. Violently colorful in the Scriabin manner, it has<br />
at the same time the jagged quirkiness of some of Stravinsky: a strange<br />
mixture, but one which seems to work.<br />
What you hear in Szymanowski&#8217;s music, most of all, is a fierce energy that<br />
seems to stem from his obsession with breaking away from everyone else&#8217;s music.<br />
And the generation of Polish composers that emerged after World War II &#8211;<br />
Lutoslawski, and the younger  Penderecki &#8212; picked up on that obsession.<br />
Similar in intent, but not in style, to the revolutionaries of Western Europe -<br />
- Pierre Boulez and Karlheinz Stockhausen above all &#8212; the new Poles set about<br />
inventing their own musical language.<br />
Life was made easy, for a time anyhow, by the cultural &#8220;thaw&#8221; that began in<br />
1956 and lasted  more or less until a new wave of artistic repression took hold<br />
a dozen years later. While beleaguered Soviet musical renegades like Schnittke<br />
were composing their progressive, abrasive scores in dark corners and<br />
underground enclaves, Poland&#8217;s composers moved freely around the world, and<br />
absorbed a broad spectrum of world outlooks.<br />
Lutoslawski first came to the U.S. in 1962, invited by Aaron Copland to teach<br />
at Tanglewood. We met that summer, and his warm, enthusiastic portrait of<br />
Poland remains memorable: a land where the government sponsored no-strings<br />
festivals of new art every autumn, where commissions for new works seemed to<br />
grow on trees, where young composers could experiment in electronic labs and<br />
study the works of Boulez and John Cage.<br />
The cultural paradise Lutoslawski outlined in 1962 crumbled a few years later,<br />
but the greatest of Poland&#8217;s composers did survive &#8212; at home in Lutoslawski&#8217;s<br />
case, in exile for Penderecki.<br />
Lutoslawski talked at our meeting, more than a quarter-century ago, about his<br />
own musical tendency toward the kind of chance techniques explored by John<br />
Cage, devices which allow the performer a certain range of choice within the<br />
broad outlines of the piece. He had, at the time, made his first venture into<br />
chance music with his &#8220;Venetian Games&#8221; for chamber orchestra, and that<br />
captivating work (included in the Muza record series) retains its<br />
freshness.<br />
But the Third Symphony, which is on Lutoslawski&#8217;s Philharmonic program this<br />
coming Thursday night (repeated Saturday night and Sunday afternoon) is<br />
stronger yet. Even though long passages threaded throughout the half-hour work<br />
challenge the orchestra&#8217;s powers of improvisation, the symphony as a whole<br />
seems to derive its terrific energy and sense of cohesion from just those<br />
creative challenges. It stands as one of the great symphonic creations of our<br />
time, far removed from anyone else&#8217;s conception of how symphonies are supposed<br />
to be built, fresh and explosive on its own.<br />
(You may also remember that this work was on the Philharmonic program the day<br />
Los Angeles first discovered the fresh-faced youth named Esa-Pekka Salonen. His<br />
recording, for reasons beyond rational explanation, comes bundled at the end of<br />
a two-disc set of Messiaen&#8217;s preternaturally vulgar &#8220;Turangalila&#8221; Symphony:<br />
like having to buy a whole overcooked meatloaf blueplate special in order to<br />
get the salad.)<br />
Anyhow, Lutoslawski is with us this week, first with the Philharmonic New Music<br />
Group tomorrow at the Japan-America Theater, in a program that also includes,<br />
besides three chamber-orchestra Lutoslawski scores,  a short work of<br />
Szymanowski and another by a composer as yet unknown here, Pawel Szymanski. Do<br />
not confuse the two; they are Poles apart.<br />
As Szymanowski stood apart in his own time, so did  Enesco in his: violinist<br />
beyond compare, mentor (to, among others, the young Yehudi Menuhin),<br />
extraordinary conductor and, least known of all, a remarkable composer.<br />
&#8220;Oedipus,&#8221; comes to records from a startlingly star-studded studio session at<br />
Monte Carlo in June, 1989 (Jose Van Dam as Oedipus, Barbara Hendricks, Brigitte<br />
Fassbaender, Gabriel Bacquier, with Lawrence Foster conducting). Like &#8220;Roger&#8221;<br />
for Szymanowski, &#8220;Oedipus&#8221; was to be for Enesco his crowning achievement. He<br />
struggled with it over most of a lifetime, until it finally achieved a premiere<br />
in 1936 &#8212; only to disappear almost immediately.<br />
It deserves better. It is a work of dazzling ambition, even if only fitfully<br />
realized. The evocation of antiquity through a kind of contrived paganism is<br />
extravagant, absurd at one moment, truly grandiose at another. Now and then the<br />
fraudulent exoticism of Carl Orff comes to mind, but this is better, more<br />
honest stuff. There is a genuine lyricism here; Enesco&#8217;s own adoration for the<br />
sweet fragrance of Gabriel Faure&#8217;s songs is easy to detect.<br />
The music is dense and difficult; it would be hard to imagine a major opera<br />
house taking it on, yet a major house would be needed for the opera&#8217;s extreme<br />
difficulty. At least there is this recording, and it casts a magnificent<br />
shadow.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>KREMER</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/1991/05/kremer/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/1991/05/kremer/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Tue, 07 May 1991 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Daily News]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=2796</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[The season winds down, but happily. Tuesday night&#8217;s concert at Royce Hall was, indeed, a most happy and vital occasion: challenging, joyous and rewarding. Gidon Kremer is an old friend; he has performed here as violin soloist with the Philharmonic, as recitalist on his own, and as a chamber player. Tuesday&#8217;s program was none of [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>The season winds down, but happily. Tuesday night&#8217;s concert at Royce Hall was,<br />
indeed, a most happy and vital occasion: challenging, joyous and<br />
rewarding.<br />
Gidon Kremer is an old friend; he has performed here as violin soloist with the<br />
Philharmonic, as recitalist on his own, and as a chamber player. Tuesday&#8217;s<br />
program was none of the above; it had Kremer sharing the stage with another<br />
violinist, nothing more. The other violinist, new to these parts, was none<br />
other than Tatyana Grindenko. At one time she and Kremer were married, raising<br />
a family in Moscow. Then he defected from both home and homeland, and found new<br />
worlds and new wives in other lands. Grindenko, meanwhile, won a few prizes and<br />
amassed a career on her own. Now, with glasnost, she is beginning to earn a<br />
worldwide reputation.<br />
Well she might; she&#8217;s an exciting performer, eloquent and gifted with a<br />
dazzling technique. She made her way into a killer piece by Luciano Berio, the<br />
&#8220;Sequenza VIII&#8221; for solo violin, snapped a string, fixed it and began the<br />
whole work over again &#8212; an evening&#8217;s toil in itself for most violinists.<br />
On his own, Kremer delivered a stupendous reading of the Bach Chaconne, the<br />
only really familiar work on the program. He also took on six rather sweet<br />
little Zodiac-inspired pieces by Stockhausen (the same music we heard when the<br />
EAR Unit did his &#8220;Belly Music&#8221; a couple of months ago).<br />
Together (Kremer plus Kremer, if a note of cuteness may intrude) the pair<br />
played some truly fascinating music. First came a strange duet piece by the<br />
late Luigi Nono, Italy&#8217;s great political and musical rebel &#8212; his last work,<br />
entitled &#8220;We must go forth.&#8221; LIke most of Nono, this was a piece as much<br />
theatrical as musical; the performers circle one another like slow-moving<br />
panthers, coming to rest and playing some music off at the edge of audibility,<br />
then moving on again. Irritating? Hypnotic? Nono had a way of being both.<br />
Finally came the Prokofiev Two-Violin Sonata of 1932, and where has it been all<br />
our lives? Wonderful music, this, from Prokofiev&#8217;s most robust period: four<br />
tiny, terse movements full of charm, wisdom and, in the scherzo, some<br />
enchanting arrogance. Violinist and violinist {cq} joined forces as one, in a<br />
performance that came across as nothing less than a revelation. For dessert<br />
there was a delicious ham sandwich, a pastiche of various romantic composers&#8217;<br />
treatment of the famous &#8220;Carnival in Venice&#8221; tune, hilariously tossed off<br />
with a hilarious larger-than-life delivery to send happily homeward a loving<br />
but undersized crowd.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>PIRATES</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/1991/05/pirates/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/1991/05/pirates/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sun, 05 May 1991 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Daily News]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=2846</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[In its 14 years of presenting the joys of the Gilbert and Sullivan repertory in unalloyed, untampered estate, Richard Sheldon&#8217;s Opera a la Carte has racked up an impressive string of triumphant productions. It would be hard to imagine, even so, a performance of more consistent delight than the company&#8217;s &#8220;Pirates of Penzance&#8221; given this [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>In its 14 years of presenting the joys of the Gilbert and Sullivan repertory in<br />
unalloyed, untampered estate, Richard Sheldon&#8217;s Opera a la Carte has racked up<br />
an impressive string of triumphant productions. It would be hard to imagine,<br />
even so, a performance of more consistent delight than the company&#8217;s &#8220;Pirates<br />
of Penzance&#8221; given this past Saturday night and Sunday afternoon before<br />
capacity crowds at Ambassador Auditorium.<br />
At a time when some producers feel the need to update these wise and witty<br />
Victorian treasures with modern settings or revisionist jokesmanship, Sheldon&#8217;s<br />
company remains steadfast in its belief that the authors knew best. Without any<br />
sense of merely ransacking some museum of bygone mannerisms, Sheldon&#8217;s stage<br />
direction has always been directly descended from the comic routines of the<br />
works&#8217; own times.<br />
Better yet, he also clings to pristine orchestrations and full-length musical<br />
numbers. Frank Fetta&#8217;s pit band for this &#8220;Pirates&#8221; may have been undersized,<br />
but the sounds &#8212; the marvelous Mendelssohnian wind scoring in particular &#8211;<br />
had the ring of authenticity. Above all, Sheldon&#8217;s company honors the most<br />
important of all Gilbert-and-Sullivan rubrics, the demand for crisp, flawless<br />
English diction. (Some well-placed floor-level microphones also helped<br />
immeasurably, of course.)<br />
So did the performance itself, an unusually strong and consistent cast this<br />
time around, with a superb pair of lovers in Patrick Gallagher and Lova Lee<br />
Hyatt and, of course, the redoutable Sheldon himself as the nimble-tongued<br />
Major General. Joining them as welcome guest was the grandiose veteran of G&#038;S<br />
performances on two continents, the d&#8217;Oyly Carte veteran Donald Adams, whose<br />
Pirate King is simply one of the great creations in any kind of musical theater<br />
these days. Among the day&#8217;s veterans, a low bow is also due the magnificent<br />
Eugenia Hamilton, who has done the repertory &#8220;heavies&#8221;&#8211; the nursemaid Ruth,<br />
this time &#8212; with the company since its founding.<br />
This, then, is a company to cherish, not only for its own work but also for its<br />
missionary services in keeping this marvelous repertory alive. (Sheldon, for<br />
example, has just been appointed artistic director of the Colorado Gilbert and<br />
Sullivan Festival at Boulder this summer.) For this, and for one of the<br />
season&#8217;s most delightful afternoons, &#8220;three cheers and one cheer more&#8221;  are<br />
very much in order.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>LAPO</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/1991/05/lapo/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/1991/05/lapo/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 02 May 1991 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Daily News]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=2813</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[And so the Philharmonic season ended, not with a whimper but with several bangs. The final subscription concert, Thursday night at the Music Center, drew only a small crowd; perhaps anything would be an anticlimax after the Salonen weeks. Those who showed up were well rewarded, however. John Nelson was the conductor, replacing the scheduled [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>And so the Philharmonic season ended, not with a whimper but with several bangs.<br />
The final subscription concert, Thursday night at the Music Center, drew only a<br />
small crowd; perhaps anything would be an anticlimax after the Salonen weeks.<br />
Those who showed up were well rewarded, however.<br />
John Nelson was the conductor, replacing the scheduled Neeme Jarvi; Peter<br />
Frankl was the soloist, replacing the scheduled Zoltan Kocsis. The program<br />
began with Charles Ives&#8217; &#8220;The Unanswered Question,&#8221; replacing the scheduled<br />
work by Eduard Tubin. Otherwise, there was the Bartok Second Piano Concerto and<br />
the Dvorak Sixth Symphony, as scheduled.<br />
Nelson, an old friend from the Cabrillo Festival as well as several Hollywood<br />
Bowl appearances, is a practiced hand with an orchestra. Still, whoever dreamed<br />
up the Ives as a concert opener must live on another planet. Four flutes<br />
constituted the stage contingent; a small string ensemble played, pianissimo,<br />
backstage; solo trumpeter Donald Green was somewhere in the loges &#8212; all<br />
according to Ives&#8217; plan in this haunting, nocturnal essay.<br />
Yes, but&#8230; It took at least a minute, out of the work&#8217;s total of five, for the<br />
people out front to realize the music had begun. The ushers slammed doors shut<br />
during the music; the audience made the noises that Thursday night subscription<br />
audiences usually make. This was listed as the work&#8217;s first hearing at a<br />
Philharmonic concert, but it remains unheard.<br />
Peter Frankl&#8217;s stunning traversal of the Bartok was thoroughly audible,<br />
however: a big, rawboned, dazzling performance of some of the most difficult<br />
piano music on this planet. What a work this is: the slithery, shimmering<br />
scoring in the quiet moments, the thrilling moments when piano and orchestra<br />
are transformed into some kind of super-drum. This performance was worthy of<br />
the music, and then some.<br />
Then came the delicious, rambunctious, lovable Dvorak, the perfect symphony for<br />
a May evening. Elliott Carter once wrote of &#8220;Dvorak fans&#8221; as the &#8220;little<br />
folk in the hills,&#8221; and Carter can go climb a tree. There is a special<br />
grandeur in this music; it takes patience (especially as Nelson chose to<br />
observe each and every one of the optional repeats) and it rewards patience.<br />
Nelson was inspired to allot an extra mini-second or two to give the grand,<br />
discursive themes plenty of breathing space, and it all worked. A lovely<br />
ending, to a mostly splendid season.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<item>
		<title>BSO</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/1991/04/bso/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/1991/04/bso/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Tue, 30 Apr 1991 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Daily News]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=2750</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[The performers&#8217; parts for Bartok&#8217;s Concerto for Orchestra, on the Boston Symphony Orchestra&#8217;s music stands at the Music Center on Tuesday night, were yellowed with respectable old age. They&#8217;re entitled; this was the orchestra, after all, that gave the work its world premiere, on November 30, 1944, before these very ears. (They then belonged to [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>The performers&#8217; parts for Bartok&#8217;s Concerto for Orchestra, on the Boston<br />
Symphony Orchestra&#8217;s music stands at the Music Center on Tuesday night, were<br />
yellowed with respectable old age. They&#8217;re entitled; this was the orchestra,<br />
after all, that gave the work its world premiere, on November 30, 1944, before<br />
these very ears. (They then belonged to a second-balcony usher at Boston&#8217;s<br />
Symphony Hall.)<br />
To those ears, however, the historic relationship between the Boston Symphony<br />
and Bartok&#8217;s autumnal masterwork has fallen on poor days. Under Seiji Ozawa&#8217;s<br />
flamboyant but flippant direction the other night, Bartok&#8217;s exploration into<br />
the personality of a great symphony ended up as merely an essay on how well the<br />
Boston Symphony can perform. It was a performance that laid bare the subtle but<br />
crucial difference between music-making and mere playing and came down,<br />
unfortunately, on the wrong side.<br />
The Boston Symphony plays very well, and always has. Its strings, even in an<br />
unfamiliar and untried acoustical setting, have a burnished lustre superior to<br />
the sound of any other American string section. Its winds are mellow virtuosi;<br />
its brass can blow you out of your seat. And all of this has been known to come<br />
together, now and then during the 18 years of Ozawa&#8217;s stewardship, in some<br />
performances beyond reproach.<br />
But Tuesday&#8217;s concert was the work of a tired orchestra under the command of a<br />
leader in a rampaging mood. He led the orchestra on a cold-hearted dash through<br />
Beethoven&#8217;s Eighth Symphony, with a few moments most accurately described as<br />
vulgar. He gave the Bartok no warmth of feeling, no regard for the rich humor<br />
of the work. He did somewhat better with the dear, lightweight &#8220;Semiramide&#8221;<br />
Overture of Rossini, in which the woodwinds chirped most engagingly and the<br />
music took on something close to a sense of spirit and momentum.<br />
But those last were exactly the qualities lacking in the rest of the concert.<br />
It&#8217;s seldom realistic to judge any orchestra on tour, especially when the<br />
realities of touring don&#8217;t allow for proper testing of a hall&#8217;s acoustic before<br />
concert time. But there were signs, even so, that the Boston Symphony is not,<br />
these days, in pristine shape &#8212; a temporary affliction, let us pray. 30.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>LEIPZIG</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/1991/04/leipzig/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/1991/04/leipzig/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Tue, 23 Apr 1991 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Daily News]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=2821</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Mention the Leipzig Gewandhaus Orchestra, and good vibrations arise. Here is a musical organization whose very name suggests longevity (210 years, in fact), distinguished bloodlines (Felix Mendelssohn was one of its conductors) and adherence to solid, middle-class virtues. (The Gewandhaus was the home of Leipzig&#8217;s fabric merchants, and it once housed a concert hall as [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Mention the Leipzig Gewandhaus Orchestra, and good vibrations arise. Here is a<br />
musical organization whose very name suggests longevity (210 years, in fact),<br />
distinguished bloodlines (Felix Mendelssohn was one of its conductors) and<br />
adherence to solid, middle-class virtues. (The Gewandhaus was the home of<br />
Leipzig&#8217;s fabric merchants, and it once housed a concert hall as well.)<br />
Current conditions bear out these virtues. Kurt Masur, its conductor for the<br />
past 21 years, is known for his solid, middle-of-the-road recordings of the<br />
most respected classical masters. Inevitably, he has recorded the Beethoven<br />
Nine, and these performances are correct as correct can be. On top of all that,<br />
he cuts a handsome figure, conducts most of his repertory from memory, and<br />
gives off a most statesmanlike aura. New York, of whose Philharmonic he is<br />
conductor-designate, will gobble him up after its years with the erratic Zubin.<br />
&#8220;Erratic&#8221; and Kurt Masur are strangers to one another.<br />
That being so, this report on Tuesday&#8217;s concert at the Music Center, the second<br />
of three appearances by Masur and his orchestra in our midst these past few<br />
days, ought to give off clouds of praise. It cannot, however. It wasn&#8217;t an<br />
awful concert, just a dull one. Drowning as we are in the surfeit of Prokofiev<br />
in this 100th birthday year, did we need another round of &#8220;Romeo and Juliet&#8221;<br />
cuttings? Masur&#8217;s half-a-program&#8217;s-worth of excerpts may have included material<br />
left out of the usual suites, but his orchestra&#8217;s strings were no match for the<br />
passionate declamation of this ballet&#8217;s great moments. The music simply did not<br />
dance.<br />
The evening&#8217;s novelty, at least in name, was Hans Werner Henze&#8217;s &#8220;Seven Love<br />
Songs,&#8221; a kind of anti-concerto for solo cello and large orchestra, its<br />
inspiration drawn from English poems which, however, the composer declines to<br />
name. There is nothing in it less than proficient. The orchestral palette is<br />
vast, although sometimes to the point of overpowering the soloist. The style is<br />
basic Henze: an eclectic mix, some Stravinsky, some merely generic-trendy-mod.<br />
Henze&#8217;s stage works are brilliant, teeming with personality, even personal<br />
rage. The blandness of this orchestral work, despite the eloquent pleading of<br />
cellist Jurnjakob Timm and the orchestra, make it all the clearer that Henze&#8217;s<br />
music is at its happiest when built around a text.<br />
All this faceless music should have made the final work, Strauss&#8217; perennial<br />
&#8220;Till Eulenspiegel,&#8221; more than usually welcome. But where was the humor in<br />
the work, the scamper, the blowsy tongue-in-cheek vulgarity? The performance<br />
was merely careful. Even the solo horn sounded timid. Yet the crowd cheered on<br />
and on, and for their trouble they got a reprise of the last moments of<br />
&#8220;Till,&#8221; torn bleeding out of context. Is that any way to treat a tone<br />
poem?</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>MEC</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/1991/04/mec/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/1991/04/mec/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 22 Apr 1991 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Daily News]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=2827</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[There were only two people on the stage, and not many more in the audience, for this week&#8217;s Monday Evening Concert at the County Museum. The concert was extraordinary even so, a reunion with one of the most remarkable musical minds of our time. Gyorgy Kurtag is reasonably well known among the new-music crowd. Five [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>There were only two people on the stage, and not many more in the audience, for<br />
this week&#8217;s Monday Evening Concert at the County Museum. The concert was<br />
extraordinary even so, a reunion with one of the most remarkable musical minds<br />
of our time.<br />
Gyorgy Kurtag is reasonably well known among the new-music crowd. Five years<br />
ago he made his first, and so far only, American appearance, as composer in<br />
residence at the 1986 Ojai Festival. The lucky audiences there encountered a<br />
shy, soft-spoken Hungarian gentleman in his early 60s. Better yet, they<br />
encountered the richness, the robust iconoclasm of his music, especially his<br />
song-cycle &#8220;Messages of R.V. Troussova,&#8221; which Susan Narucki sang<br />
magnificently.<br />
Monday&#8217;s concert was all one piece, Kurtag&#8217;s hour-long song-cycle &#8220;Kafka<br />
Fragments,&#8221; and the remarkable Susan Narucki was again the singer, joined by<br />
the equally remarkable Bay Area violinist Roy Malan. One song-cycle, 40 songs<br />
(mostly extremely brief or, better said, compressed), one singer, one<br />
violinist: that&#8217;s all it took for a powerful, fulfilling musical experience, as<br />
much so as any of this season&#8217;s offerings at the Museum. That, in this<br />
rewarding season, is saying a lot.<br />
Kurtag&#8217;s texts are drawn from Kafka&#8217;s diaries and letters, fragmentary<br />
impressions, sometimes just two or three words of stabbing eloquence. Around<br />
these texts Kurtag weaves his two voices: the singer explicitly tied to the<br />
texts, the violinist soaring on flights of fantasy inspired by the texts. Some<br />
moments are overtly pictorial: the shrieking of birds, the undulating crawling<br />
of snakes, a fiddler on a tramcar. Now and then the sharp-eared might detect a<br />
reference to the work of Kurtag&#8217;s great countryman, Bela Bartok.<br />
Kurtag does not flinch at wandering into exotic harmonic effects: quarter-<br />
tones, a violin deliberately mistuned. You come away aware, not so much of the<br />
juncture of composer, singer and instrumentalist, but of a oneness in which the<br />
separate voices transcend themselves. &#8220;Kafka Fragments&#8221; is one of those rare<br />
works, like the late Beethoven quartets, where the listener&#8217;s imagination is<br />
teased to fill in around the sparseness of the music. Without stretching a<br />
point, hearing this music in the capable care of these musicians became a<br />
cleansing experience. Some sixty rapt listeners, adrift in an auditorium with<br />
room for ten times as many, mustered a fine sendoff at the end. But where were<br />
you?</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>EAR&#160;UNIT</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/1991/04/ear-unit/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/1991/04/ear-unit/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 17 Apr 1991 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Daily News]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=2784</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Suddenly, there are Estonian composers where there were none before. The past few years have seen the emergence of Estonia’s Arvo Part, whose quiet, mystical compositions have won a large following. As Wednesday night&#8217;s County Museum concert by the California EAR Unit suggested, Part is not the only man of his country worth our attention. [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Suddenly, there are Estonian composers where there were none before. The past<br />
few years have seen the emergence of  Estonia’s Arvo Part, whose quiet,<br />
mystical compositions have won a large following. As Wednesday night&#8217;s County<br />
Museum concert by the California EAR Unit suggested, Part is not the only man<br />
of his country worth our attention.<br />
The concert included Part&#8217;s best-known work, &#8220;Fratres,&#8221; an 11-minute, slowly<br />
unfolding exploration of a single fragment of melody, repeated over and over<br />
with a rhapsodic line taking flight above it. The work exists in many scorings;<br />
here it has also been played by the Philharmonic and by the Kronos Quartet. At<br />
the EAR Unit concert the performers were violinist Robin Lorentz and pianist<br />
Vicki Ray. In any scoring, the work exerts its magic.<br />
So did the evening&#8217;s other Estonian work, Errki-Sven Tuur&#8217;s [*] yes that&#8217;s the<br />
way it&#8217;s spelled [F/L] &#8220;Architectonics III,&#8221; subtitled &#8220;Post Meta-minimal<br />
Dream.&#8221; Unlike his countryman Part, who has emigrated to the West, Tuur (born<br />
in 1959) remains in Estonia. &#8220;Architectonics III&#8221; is a striking work, 15-or-<br />
so minutes of dazzling instrumental writing,  somewhat touched by the style of<br />
American minimalism, but also rhapsodic in a way that reveals the composer&#8217;s<br />
exotic origins. Cold, glistening and exhilarating, the work nurtures a<br />
listener&#8217;s desire to hear more from this remarkable composer.<br />
The Estonian works were the program highlights; a thoroughly American work,<br />
Michael McCandless&#8217; &#8220;Against Nature&#8221; was not far behind. A charter member of<br />
the EAR Unit at its founding in 1980, McCandless has since defected to the New<br />
York area. His work, claims descent from &#8220;Against the Grain,&#8221; the famous<br />
Huysmanns novel about non-conformity, and it might even be that the form of<br />
this work &#8212; in which a long lyric line for clarinet seems to thread its way<br />
through opposing forces from the rest of the ensemble &#8212; owes something to the<br />
book.<br />
That possibility aside, this is an attractive piece, strong and compelling. An<br />
editor&#8217;s hand might help near the end; the composer seems to pass through a<br />
number of logical stopping-places before finding the one that suits his fancy.<br />
But the music was tidiness personified compared to the two other works on the<br />
program: Greg Fish&#8217;s garrulous, unmannered &#8220;The Powers that Be,&#8221; and Mary C.<br />
Wright&#8217;s self-consciously jazzy &#8220;He Don&#8217;t Care.&#8221;<br />
Win a few lose a few; the collective skills of this attractive group of young<br />
new-music wizards is, and was, never less than rewarding.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>ARDITTI</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/1991/04/arditti/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/1991/04/arditti/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Tue, 16 Apr 1991 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Daily News]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=2734</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[The Ardittis have done it again.Miracle workers in the cause of contemporary music, master musicians unafraid, the London-based Arditti Quartet came to town once again on Tuesday night, drawing a large (but not capacity) crowd to USC&#8217;s Bovard Auditorium, taking on a fearsome program and&#8230; Well, let&#8217;s pause there. Even the Ardittis&#8217; splendid performance fell [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>The Ardittis have done it again.Miracle workers in the cause of contemporary music, master musicians unafraid,<br />
the London-based Arditti Quartet came to town once again on Tuesday night,<br />
drawing a large (but not capacity) crowd to USC&#8217;s Bovard Auditorium, taking on<br />
a fearsome program and&#8230;<br />
Well, let&#8217;s pause there. Even the Ardittis&#8217; splendid performance fell short of<br />
transforming the Fourth Quartet of Elliott Carter into a silk purse, because it<br />
simply cannot be done. Faced with all that desiccated note-spinning, the dense<br />
clusters of notes pushed around on page after page with no apparent reason or<br />
destination, the Ardittis at least succeeded in turning the whole dreary<br />
exercise into a stupendous study in pure momentum. That much, on its own, was<br />
exhilarating.<br />
The Carter Quartet, and the Fifth Quartet of Bela Bartok, were the evening&#8217;s<br />
&#8220;classics.&#8221; One of the Ardittis&#8217; noble deeds, however, is to perform music by<br />
local composers at many of their tour stops; they can apparently produce<br />
handsome performances virtually at sight.<br />
And so Tuesday&#8217;s program was pieced out with local works: Donald Crockett&#8217;s<br />
1987 &#8220;Array&#8221; (which the Kronos Quartet also has played) and Stephen Cohn&#8217;s<br />
&#8220;Eye of Chaos,&#8221; the latter in its world premiere. Both composers were born in<br />
1951; Crockett is on the USC faculty, and Cohn is the vice-president of ICA<br />
(the Independent Composers Association) which sponsored the program. Wheels<br />
within wheels, you might say.<br />
Neither score suggested itself as permanent repertory material for even the<br />
most liberal-minded of performing groups, but the Crockett &#8212; 20 minutes or so<br />
of carefully worked-out musical patterning with a fine academic hand at<br />
dissonant counterpoint &#8212; was at least the work of a competent craftsman. Cohn,<br />
a successful composer of film and TV scores, has pathetically overvalued his<br />
own limited talents, producing music of the consistency of tepid mush, loaded<br />
down with a sorry collection of worn-out cliches. Its position on the program,<br />
after the Carter, should have saved it if anything could. Nothing could.<br />
That left the grand, pulsating Bartok to bring about the evening&#8217;s one melding<br />
of high performance and music worth the effort. What a work: sizzling, icy,<br />
deeply mysterious in its nocturnal passages, hilarious in its tiny bit of nose-<br />
tweaking at the end. And what a performance! Here, finally, the amazing<br />
Ardittis rode to glory in a vehicle worthy of their efforts.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>SANTA&#160;CLARITA</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/1991/04/santa-clarita/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/1991/04/santa-clarita/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sat, 13 Apr 1991 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Daily News]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=2851</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[For a few hours last Saturday morning and early afternoon, the center of Los Angeles&#8217; musical life shifted northward from its usual downtown location to some dusty, sunbaked real estate in the Santa Clarita Valley. The occasion was &#8220;A Day in the Old West,&#8221;organized by the indefatigable MaryAnn Bonino as an event in her &#8220;Chamber [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>For a few hours last Saturday morning and early afternoon, the center of Los<br />
Angeles&#8217; musical life shifted northward from its usual downtown location to<br />
some dusty, sunbaked real estate in the Santa Clarita Valley. The occasion was<br />
&#8220;A Day in the Old West,&#8221;organized by the indefatigable MaryAnn Bonino as an<br />
event in her &#8220;Chamber Music in Historic Sites&#8221; series.<br />
The sites were nothing if not historic. In the morning the splendid local<br />
group, the Santa Clarita Chamber Players, performed in the ancient (1887)<br />
Saugus train station (moved from its original location but handsomely<br />
restored). In the afternoon there was an old-fashioned outdoor brass concert in<br />
the vast (and unrestored) ruins of Melody Ranch, Gene Autry&#8217;s old stamping<br />
ground, in Placerita Canyon.<br />
In between, there were the opportunities to ramble through other local<br />
landmarks, including the one-time estate of another Western movie star, William<br />
S. Hart, which now stands as a museum at the center of Hart Park in Saugus.<br />
Ticket-holders were also furnished with a box lunch.<br />
If this sounds like a happy, folksy outing, that&#8217;s pretty much what it was. The<br />
Chamber Players&#8217; concert did, to be sure, have its challenging side, including<br />
a handsome set of songs by Ralph Vaughan Williams on William Blake texts,<br />
scored for soprano and oboe and nicely performed by Maurita Phillips-Thornburgh<br />
and Alan Vogel. Works by Haydn, Friedemann Bach and Villa-Lobos made up the<br />
rest of the rewarding program.<br />
The afternoon program made up for all that seriousness, however. The occasion<br />
was folksy as all get-out, with the Da Camera Brass Quintet struggling to<br />
protect their sheet music against the stiff breezes (some colorful clothespins<br />
helped) and struggling less happily against the demands in a set of perky<br />
little nose-thumbing marches by Charles Ives and a few Scott Joplin rags. The<br />
crowd seemed happy, however. If nothing else, the afternoon afforded the crowd<br />
of 150-or-so the chance for a start on this season&#8217;s suntans.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>LAPO</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/1991/04/lapo-2/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/1991/04/lapo-2/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 11 Apr 1991 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Daily News]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=2812</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[There were many empty seats at the Music Center at the start of Thursday night&#8217;s Los Angeles Philharmonic concert, and many more after intermission. The sounds of electronic beepers and the squeal of moribund hearing aids rang out in the vast spaces. Even after 250 years, the three-hour-plus bulk of Bach&#8217;s &#8220;St. Matthew Passion&#8221; is [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>There were many empty seats at the Music Center at the start of Thursday night&#8217;s  Los Angeles Philharmonic concert, and many more after intermission. The sounds  of electronic beepers and the squeal of moribund hearing aids rang out in the  vast spaces. Even after 250 years, the three-hour-plus bulk of Bach&#8217;s &#8220;St.  Matthew Passion&#8221; is  an intimidating presence. In all frankness, the work is a strange presence as a subscription event at a  series mostly dedicated to noisy romantic symphonies. (It was even more out of  place at the Hollywood Bowl in the summer of 1985, when the haunting moment  describing the death of Jesus was punctuated by a car alarm.) Yet the nature of  the work, its hold on the emotions of any listener willing to give in to its  splendors, demands some kind of hearing in some kind of context. Peter Schreier, who conducted this week&#8217;s performances (repeated tonight at the  Orange County Performing Arts Center and Sunday afternoon at the Music Center)  has dreamed up his own manner of presentation, and for the most part it worked;  when it didn&#8217;t, on Thursday night, the fault was not his. Schreier is, of course, better known as singer than conductor; he can only  conduct, he said recently, music that he also sings. The idea of combining the  role of Bach&#8217;s Evangelist with conducting makes a great deal of sense,  furthermore, since his is the central role in the work, and his own vocal lines  tend to activate most of the music&#8217;s other elements.  To make this work, Schreier has fashioned his view of the Evangelist&#8217;s music  around a highly emotional delivery. He breaks through the mask of stylized  Baroque singing. He erupts in anger and scorn at the lies and corruptions of  those who have sent Jesus to the Cross; he melts in agony as he tells of  Peter&#8217;s threefold betrayal. His Jesus  was the marvelous young bass Olaf Baer,  known chiefly for his splendid artsong recordings. The heartbreaking  vulnerability of Baer&#8217;s delivery became the perfect balance to the intensity of  Schreier&#8217;s conception.  If only the other soloists had been up to this level! Memories of bygone  Elisabeth Schumann, Janet Baker or Kathleen Ferrier recordings reflected no  glory on the thin, pinched singing of soprano Ulrika Sonntag and contralto  Elisabeth von Magnus. It was even more depressing to experience the watery  singing of the tenor and bass arias by David Gordon and David Evitts, standing  next to the singers &#8212; Schreier and Baer &#8212; who could have sent this music  heavenward.It was, then, a only a fair representation of a work deserving far better. The  Philharmonic&#8217;s forces performed well, as did a small contingent from the Master  Chorale. The Paulist Boy Choristers, who sang the chorale that floats across  the top of the amazing opening chorus, could barely be heard &#8212; the fault, most  likely, of the curious stage arrangement to allow Schreier some eyeball contact  with singers and orchestra, while singing toward the front.Oh well, it was a noble idea that almost worked. Sibelius next week; back, alas,  to normalcy.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<item>
		<title>PAN</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/1991/04/pan/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/1991/04/pan/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 10 Apr 1991 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Daily News]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=2840</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[I HAVE ART, ONE VERTICAL; WILL BRING IN THURSDAY A.M. [F/L]The music at Wednesday night&#8217;s concert by Ensemble P.A.N. (&#8220;Project Ars Nova&#8221;) may have been old in years, but it was thoroughly modern in spirit. It was, if anything. fairly aflame with the energy of its own innovation. This splendid ensemble. five singers and performers [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>I HAVE ART, ONE VERTICAL; WILL BRING IN THURSDAY A.M. [F/L]The music at Wednesday night&#8217;s concert by Ensemble P.A.N. (&#8220;Project Ars Nova&#8221;)<br />
may have been old in years, but it was thoroughly modern in spirit. It was, if<br />
anything. fairly aflame with the energy of its own innovation.<br />
This splendid ensemble. five singers and performers on instruments proper to<br />
the Middle Ages and Renaissance, takes its name from a period of great change<br />
in musical history, the &#8220;New Art&#8221; of the 14th and early 15th century.<br />
Wednesday&#8217;s concert, of the County Museum&#8217;s low-priced Bing series, consisted<br />
of a joyous romp over about a century of musical progress: vocal works both<br />
sacred and secular, dances and instrumental versions of vocal pieces.<br />
Naturally, we have to hear this music from a historical perspective. What<br />
sounded strange and somewhat mannered in music of the Flemish Johannes Ciconia<br />
(circa 1335-1411) was actually the work of one of the earliest contrapuntal<br />
composers, working his colorful combinations of harmony and rhythm at a time<br />
when virtually every new composition was a step into unexplored territory. Yet<br />
this music &#8212; the motets and lovesongs, songs of celebration and warfare &#8211;<br />
cannot be reckoned as primitive. It is highly developed, remarkably complex at<br />
times, a likely forerunner in its intricacies of the manneristic painting of<br />
two centuries later. It works best today, when heard by fresh ears free of too<br />
much information about later musical developments.<br />
Heard on its own, with the group&#8217;s splendid performance manner that, rightly,<br />
perceived no harm in an occasional slowing-down of the pace, even a<br />
&#8220;romantic&#8221; enhancement now and then of a particularly loving phrase, the<br />
music sounded vivid, and timeless as well. In style, the program ranged from<br />
the early mannerisms of Ciconia and his contemporaries, to the truly &#8220;modern&#8221;<br />
music of Guillaume Dufay (1397-1474) in which rhythms and harmonies become<br />
&#8220;ironed out&#8221; to approach a style closer to our contemporary concert<br />
experience.<br />
Ensemble P.A.N. was founded in 1980 in Switzerland; its members are currently<br />
scattered from Basel to Boston, coming together for occasional concert tours<br />
and recordings (on the New Albion label). Their recordings so far &#8212; one of<br />
secular music and one of music from a remarkable manuscript from the island of<br />
Cyprus &#8212; were enough to draw a near-capacity crowd to the museum.<br />
The presentation had its flaws; it didn&#8217;t occur to anyone until after the<br />
intermission that there might be an incompatibility between furnishing printed<br />
song-texts and turning the lights so low that they couldn&#8217;t be read. And midway<br />
in the second half, one misguided listener wrecked the beautiful mood of the<br />
musical flow by loudly demanding further program information from the<br />
performers, then and there. It was, therefore, a better night for musical mannerism than for concert<br />
manners. In any case, Ensemble P.A.N. deserves a R.A.V.E.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		</item>
		<item>
		<title>COSI</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/1991/04/cosi/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/1991/04/cosi/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 08 Apr 1991 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Daily News]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=2782</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Like the shock waves streaming from Dr. Mesmer&#8217;s magnets that figure in its dizzy plotline, Mozart&#8217;s &#8220;Cosi fan tutte&#8221; seems to have had a revitalizing effect on the Music Center Opera. The production, cheered to the rafters at its first performance on Monday night, represented enlightened opera at fairly close to its best: stimulating, controversial [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Like the shock waves streaming from Dr. Mesmer&#8217;s magnets that figure in its<br />
dizzy plotline, Mozart&#8217;s &#8220;Cosi fan tutte&#8221; seems to have had a revitalizing<br />
effect on the Music Center Opera. The production, cheered to the rafters at its<br />
first performance on Monday night, represented enlightened opera at fairly<br />
close to its best: stimulating, controversial and, for the most part,<br />
beguiling. Four more performances of the opera are scheduled; any or all of<br />
them are very much worth your while.<br />
Sir Peter Hall created the production for the company in 1988, with his then<br />
wife, Maria Ewing, as an alluring but grossly overdirected Dorabella. The Halls<br />
have since divorced, and neither were on hand for this revival; Stephen Lawless<br />
is credited with the updated staging, vastly different in tone, superior in<br />
many respects, and definitely challenging. There is an unseen hand involved<br />
here, as well: the hand of Peter Sellars, whose revisionist &#8220;Cosi,&#8221; seen on<br />
television earlier this year, has made it virtually impossible to return to the<br />
standard regard of the work as artificial, mannered comedy.<br />
Perhaps Stephen Lawless has actually arrived at his view of &#8220;Cosi&#8221; free of<br />
outside influences; that doesn&#8217;t matter. What does matter is the powerful,<br />
truly dramatic tone he has achieved, in which the comedy of artifice and the<br />
tragedy of deception and betrayal play equal roles. Conductor Randall Behr<br />
must, of course, also be reckoned in these credits, since his altogether<br />
original pacing of the score contributes much to the intensity of the<br />
experience.<br />
The result, to be sure, won&#8217;t be everybody&#8217;s &#8220;Cosi.&#8221; For one thing, every<br />
scrap of music that Mozart wrote for the first or subsequent performances,<br />
minus one short aria which he later replaced with a better long one, has been<br />
restored: arias, ensembles and long stretches of recitative as well, music<br />
usually cut in live performances and even on records. Behr&#8217;s pacing allows for<br />
frequent long pauses (a Sellars trick as well) to give dramatic points plenty<br />
of time for fermentation. The result, between the pauses and the restorations,<br />
stretches the evening out to almost Wagnerian length; Monday&#8217;s performance came<br />
in mere moments short of four hours.<br />
Yet it was time well spent. The best news is that the six-member cast formed an<br />
acting unit beautifully in tune with the staging concept: Christine Weidinger&#8217;s<br />
violent, stupendously sung, sacred monster of a Fiordiligi, Jeanne Piland&#8217;s<br />
dear, dithering Dorabella, Anne Howells&#8217; deliciously frumpy Despina. (The<br />
supertitles quite properly step around the &#8220;girl of 15 years&#8221; line of Howells&#8217;<br />
big aria.) The male side of the cast was almost as fine: Rodney Gilfry&#8217;s first-<br />
ever Guglielmo was another step up by this splendid young baritone, and veteran<br />
Richard Stillwell&#8217;s Alfonso was, as expected, rock-solid. Only the Ferrando,<br />
Jonathan Mack, whose long and valuable career has now brought him to the point<br />
of strain, seemed in over his head.<br />
The music is there, and it is honorably treated. John Bury&#8217;s handsome,<br />
breakaway set leaves plenty of room for stagefuls of extraneous characters<br />
without any sense of clutter. And there are arias sung in the moonlight of the<br />
uncredited stage lighting that look almost as beautiful as they sound.<br />
Considering that the sound is by Mozart, that&#8217;s saying a lot.<br />
THE FACTS<br />
What: The Music Center Opera&#8217;s production of Mozart&#8217;s Cosi fan tutte.<br />
When: 7:30 p.m., Saturday, April 15 and 17; 1 p.m. April 20.<br />
Where: Dorothy Chandler Pavilion, 135 N. Grand Avenue, downtown L.A.<br />
Behind the scenes: Staged by Stephen Lawless, designed by John Bury, conducted<br />
by Randall Behr, with Christine Weidinger, Jeanne Piland, Anne Howells and<br />
Rodney Gilfry.<br />
Tickets: $15 to $80. Phone 213 480-3232 or 213 972-7211.<br />
Our rating: * * *</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<item>
		<title>PART</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/1991/04/part/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/1991/04/part/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 03 Apr 1991 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Daily News]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=2841</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Music of a poignant beauty almost beyond the reach of mere words, achieved with means so simple that they, too, disappear in the telling: that was the essence of a most extraordinary concert on Wednesday night at Saint Basil&#8217;s Church in downtown Los Angeles. The performers were Paul Hillier&#8217;s newly formed ensemble called Theater of [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Music of a poignant beauty almost beyond the reach of mere words, achieved with<br />
means so simple that they, too, disappear in the telling: that was the essence<br />
of a most extraordinary concert on Wednesday night at Saint Basil&#8217;s Church in<br />
downtown Los Angeles. The performers were Paul Hillier&#8217;s newly formed ensemble<br />
called Theater of Voices; the music, all of it, was by the Estonian-born Arvo<br />
Part, including the first American performance of his &#8220;Berlin Mass,&#8221; composed<br />
in and for that city last May.<br />
Part (pronounced &#8220;pairt&#8221;) has achieved a following through a small handful of<br />
recordings, many of them performed by his fellow Estonian Neeme Jarvi, or by<br />
Hillier. They cover a broad spectrum; a recording of his three symphonies, by<br />
Jarvi on the B-I-S label, shows the work of an ardent atonalist and a skilled<br />
handler of great gobs of orchestral violence. More recently, however, Part&#8217;s<br />
music has taken a turn toward the austere, with performing forces cut down to<br />
small instrumental or vocal groups. His &#8220;Passio,&#8221; a setting of the story of<br />
the Crucifixion, recorded by Hillier with his previous vocal group, the<br />
Hilliard Ensemble, is an hour of enthralling, quiet, slow-moving music of<br />
utmost emotional impact, seemingly hovering on the edge of silence.<br />
The music on Wednesday&#8217;s concert, including several short religious works, two<br />
brief organ solos, and the 25-minute Mass, was of like quality. Included among<br />
the short works were three  vocal pieces &#8212; in English, Latin and ancient<br />
Slavonic &#8212; so transparent in texture that the slightest change of harmony<br />
seemed cataclysmic. The Mass, of all the works, seemed to waver enchantingly<br />
between very old and very new styles. The simple word settings, mostly<br />
syllable-by-syllable, note-by-note, had some of the quality of old church<br />
hymns. But there were moments &#8212; the radiant, bell-like harmonies at the start<br />
of the &#8220;Gloria&#8221; linger in the memory &#8212; when all sense of time disappeared.<br />
This was music at its most elemental, stripped down to its central expressive<br />
core.<br />
An ensemble of four singers &#8212; the extraordinary soprano Pat Forbes, alto Mary<br />
Nichols, tenor Paul Agnew, baritone Hillier with Christopher Bowers-Broadbent<br />
on the small, clear St. Basils organ &#8212; was all Hillier needed to recreate the<br />
wonder of this strangely austere yet impassioned music.<br />
The church itself, with its Franco Assetto bas-reliefs of the Stations of the<br />
Cross that also, like the music, seem to bestride very old and very new art,<br />
was the perfect setting. Credit MaryAnn Bonino, once again, for her special<br />
skill, in these &#8220;Chamber Music in Historic Sites&#8221; concerts, to effect the<br />
ideal merging of sight and sound.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>SCHICKELE</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/1991/04/schickele/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/1991/04/schickele/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Tue, 02 Apr 1991 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Daily News]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=2852</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[With a feat of transformation worthy to stand beside the changeover from Superman to Clark Kent, the volcanic force behind the delights of P.D.Q. Bach on Monday night became, one night later, just plain Peter Schickele. The result: new realms of delight. Schickele, Swarthmore and Juilliard trained, had already made his name as a serious [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>With a feat of transformation worthy to stand beside the changeover from<br />
Superman to Clark Kent, the volcanic force behind the delights of P.D.Q. Bach<br />
on Monday night became, one night later, just plain Peter Schickele. The<br />
result: new realms of delight.<br />
Schickele, Swarthmore and Juilliard trained, had already made his name as a<br />
serious composer before the invention of the P.D.Q. mealticket in 1965. On<br />
Tuesday night in a small theater on the Brentwood campus of Mount Saint Mary&#8217;s,<br />
the Armadillo Quartet, a splendid local group of freelance musicians founded in<br />
1980, performed Schickele&#8217;s entire quartet repertory to<br />
and a piece called &#8220;Music for an Evening&#8221; for quartet and piano duet (with<br />
Schickele and Guy Hallman as pianists). Charming, modest music it was,full of<br />
bright, kicky energy.<br />
In defining his chosen musical style, Schickele would have to rank as a<br />
conservative. His music uses familiar harmonic progressions in familiar ways.<br />
It also dips into popular American idioms, including a kind of elementary jazz<br />
and a fair amount of bluegrass. It comes up, in most cases, with results that<br />
are thoroughly original.<br />
The works on Tuesday&#8217;s program were all fairly recent, the earliest dating from<br />
1982. One of the quartets, by the way, has been recorded, a work subtitled<br />
&#8220;American Dreams.&#8221; This, the first of the quartets, proved the most<br />
ingratiating. The middle movement, a long, slow evocation of a remembered<br />
birdcall at dawn in upstate New York, might fairly be thought of, in fact, as<br />
gorgeous. The other movements, including a set of jazz studies and a whole<br />
bluegrass movement, had their charms as well.<br />
If there are clear points of reference in this music, it seemed to point to the<br />
rustic, outwardly simple but profound music of Leos Janacek. That is meant as a<br />
compliment, by the way.<br />
The concert drew a small crowd, including both Schickele and P.D.Q. Bach<br />
groupies who had assembled in town because of Monday night&#8217;s P.D.Q. farewell.<br />
Bill Walters, who has served P.D.Q. Bach as stage manager since the start,<br />
noted that this was the first Schickele concert where he could sit out front<br />
with his wife.<br />
Schickele delivered some valuable insights in his spoken program notes. He<br />
made no effort to conceal the fact that has been the most apparent in all his<br />
work: that he is one of the world&#8217;s great spontaneous humorists, and an honest<br />
and attractive musician as well.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		</item>
		<item>
		<title>PDQ</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/1991/03/pdq/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/1991/03/pdq/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Fri, 29 Mar 1991 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Daily News]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=2844</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[The true believers already know the scene by heart.Monday night at the Pasadena Civic Auditorium, a few minutes past 8. A capacity crowd stirs in anticipation. The unitiated are a little restless, but the Believers know the order of events. A sleepy-eyed stage manager shuffles out, glowers at the crowd, blows into the microphone and [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>The true believers already know the scene by heart.Monday night at the Pasadena Civic Auditorium, a few minutes past 8. A capacity<br />
crowd stirs in anticipation. The unitiated are a little restless, but the<br />
Believers know the order of events. A sleepy-eyed stage manager shuffles out,<br />
glowers at the crowd, blows into the microphone and shuffles back. The<br />
Believers hiss and boo.<br />
The stage manager returns. Professor Schickele, he announces, has become lost.<br />
He was due here in Glendale long ago. (Glendale??? groan the uninitiated.) But<br />
now it looks as if we&#8217;ll have to canc&#8230;<br />
A hullabaloo in the lobby, a rush down the aisle. Times were when Peter<br />
Schickele, self-proclaimed Professor of Musicological Pathology at the<br />
University of Southern North Dakota at Hoople, discoverer of and amanuensis<br />
(sidekick, to you) to the ignoble P.D.Q. Bach (1807-1742), &#8220;last but least of<br />
J.S.Bach&#8217;s 20-odd children,&#8221; made his famous belated entrances down a high<br />
wire, but that was many years and many pounds ago. Now, at 55, he zoooooms down<br />
the aisle, his concert clothes half-on half-off, his huge yellow workman&#8217;s<br />
shoes flailing furiously, the image of a deranged Rasputin trying to look like<br />
Brahms.<br />
Will the concert now begin? Not quite. His breath regained, Schickele returns<br />
to the podium. &#8220;There&#8217;s a change in the program,&#8221; he announces. &#8220;May we have<br />
the house lights up, please?&#8221;<br />
He directs the audience&#8217;s attention to a certain line on a certain page. &#8220;You<br />
see that comma in the third line? Well, that has to be changed. It&#8217;s supposed<br />
to be a semi-colon.&#8221;<br />
Like every detail in these gloriously wise and antic P.D.Q. Bach outings,<br />
Schickele takes this matter of the typos very seriously. If you&#8217;d been<br />
backstage an hour before concert time, you&#8217;d have found Schickele and his crew,<br />
including the selfsame stage manager, Bill Walters, poring through the night&#8217;s<br />
printed program. &#8220;I&#8217;ve made it a point of honor,&#8221; he said in a phone<br />
conversation last week, &#8220;never to plant a typo in my own material, but to rely<br />
on the rest of the booklet.&#8221;<br />
Has he ever been unable to find one? &#8220;One time in San Francisco, we came<br />
close. In desperation, I started to check the printed list of San Francisco<br />
Symphony patrons. I saw one name, Macdonald, with a small d in the middle. Now<br />
I know you can spell it that way, but I had a hunch. Sure enough, after sending<br />
someone to the Symphony office to check, it turned out that it should have been<br />
a capital D. The day was saved!&#8221;<br />
And yet, with all that thrill of the chase, and the blessings that the antics<br />
of P. D. Q. Bach have bestowed on deliriously delighted audiences since that<br />
first joint appearance in Manhattan&#8217;s Town Hall in April, 1965, Schickele is<br />
about to retire his sterling creation. Monday&#8217;s concert will mark the finale of<br />
the collaboration, at least for now. &#8220;I&#8217;m not calling it a farewell tour,&#8221;<br />
said Schickele, &#8220;because the next step would be to call it the first annual<br />
farewell tour. I like the idea of indefinite sabbatical, instead.&#8221;<br />
The time and place for the grqnd finale are appropriate. Monday is, after all,<br />
April Fool&#8217;s Day, which P.D.Q. has, naturally, taken over as his birthday.<br />
Pasadena is equally appropriate. Jorge Mester, currently conductor of the<br />
Pasadena Symphony, was on the podium for P.D.Q.&#8217;s debut in 1965, and he will be<br />
on the podium for the finale as well.<br />
The auspices were favorable, at the birth of P.D.Q. Bach. After a time of<br />
musical wandering that included a stint as resident composer in the Los Angeles<br />
Public School system, Schickele ended up at the Juilliard School, &#8220;majoring in<br />
cafeteria.&#8221; Around a cafeteria table Schickele and some pals &#8212; including<br />
Mester and fellow composers Philip Glass and Richard Peaslee &#8212; swapped jokes<br />
and wisecracks and doodled some parodies on the more ludicrous aspects of<br />
strict musicology.<br />
Suddenly there was a repertory: a marvelous piece called &#8220;Quodlibet&#8221; which<br />
played off unlikely tune combinations (&#8220;Tea for Two&#8221; on top of the Beethoven<br />
Seventh Symphony, for example) and a &#8220;Concerto for Horn and Hardart&#8221; of which<br />
the name alone was hilarious enough. (Horn &#038; Hardart was the corporate name of<br />
the East Coast restaurant chain better known as Automats.) Schickele, whose<br />
personal musical gods always included both Mozart and Spike Jones, endowed his<br />
new creation with both influences in equal measure. Someone among his friends<br />
and relatives back home in Fargo, North Dakota, came up with the name of<br />
P.D.Q.; Schickele is no longer sure who it was.<br />
The Hardart, a glorious assemblage of noisemakers that would do a Rube Goldberg<br />
proud, was the stellar attraction at the first concert; where is it now?<br />
&#8220;Mostly, in my basement in Brooklyn,&#8221; said Schickele. &#8220;Unfortunately, it&#8217;s<br />
in pretty bad shape, because we&#8217;ve cannibalized many parts over the years. I<br />
don&#8217;t think we could rebuild it. That would mean finding a mixing bowl in A-<br />
flat, for example, or a toy wind-up owl in B-flat. They make those things out<br />
of plastic nowadays, and they don&#8217;t make music the way the old ones did.&#8221;<br />
No, you&#8217;ll never see the Hardart in a concert any more. After Monday night<br />
there&#8217;s not much chance, for that matter, of another virtuoso coming along who<br />
can match the virtuosity of the Schickele-P.D.Q. team on the Schlagenfrappe &#8211;<br />
a set of cardboard mailing tubes of various sizes played by bounding them off<br />
your head &#8212; or the Tuba Mirum (&#8220;mere tube), a length of hosepipe filled with<br />
wine.<br />
You&#8217;ll miss the live performances of the Cantata &#8220;Iphigenia in Brooklyn,&#8221;<br />
with its deathless line &#8220;only he who is running knows&#8221; followed by an aria<br />
based on just those last two words. Or the &#8220;Howdy&#8221; Symphony, P.D.Q.&#8217;s rebuff<br />
to Haydn&#8217;s &#8220;Farewell&#8221; Symphony. Or the &#8220;1712 Overture,&#8221; which puts &#8220;Yankee<br />
Doodle&#8221; through the same treatment that Tchaikovsky imposed on Russian<br />
folktunes in his &#8220;1812.&#8221; Or the grand oratorio &#8220;Oedipus Tex&#8221; or&#8230;<br />
We have it all on records, of course. What sets Schickele and his creation<br />
ahead of certain less responsible entertainers who dine well off the inherent<br />
inanities in classical music is this: he is musical, and he is honest.<br />
And after you&#8217;ve gone through the records, there is the video of P.D.Q.&#8217;s<br />
magnum opus (to date, anyhow), the opera &#8220;The Abduction of Figaro,&#8221; a<br />
superbly observed Mozartian pastiche (including characters named not only Papa<br />
Geno but also Mama Geno). Unperformed here since its 1984 premiere, the work is<br />
eminently worth any impresario&#8217;s attention<br />
If there is an archetypal figure behind the art of P.D.Q., it is Mozart<br />
himself, whose boyhood scores were full of the little cadential cliches that<br />
pop up sidewise in such P.D.Q. masterworks as the &#8220;Schleptet,&#8221; a brilliantly<br />
observed takeoff that has become a repertory piece on its own. Later in his own<br />
career, Mozart set down the music that clearly prophesied the coming of P.D.Q.<br />
Bach, the sextet known as &#8220;A Musical Joke,&#8221; which purposely and deliciously<br />
falls into exactly the same compositional traps that Schickele and his pal<br />
would dig anew two centuries later.<br />
And Schickele&#8217;s great accomplishment beyond the keenness of these musical<br />
observations is that he has emerged, through the smokescreen of musicology, as<br />
a superb entertainer. What we will miss, most of all, is that stupendous array<br />
of stage tricks. You could go to P.D.Q. Bach resolutely and proudly ignorant of<br />
Mozartian sonata form and Baroque oratorio mannerisms, and still have a<br />
marvelous evening of funny sounds and stage shenanigans. An enlightened society<br />
might have laws against the P.D.Q. Bach deprivation that Peter Schickele now<br />
threatens. He and his alter ego would, in such a society, be locked up, in<br />
adjacent padded cells.<br />
*   *   *   *   *<br />
&#8220;If I have one regret,&#8221; said Schickele, &#8220;it&#8217;s that I didn&#8217;t think up another<br />
funny name for myself &#8212; Walter Krankheit, perhaps &#8212; when I started with<br />
P.D.Q. Almost the same time as that first concert, a publisher brought out my<br />
first serious compositions under my own name. Inevitably, my serious stuff has<br />
been taken in some circles as the clown wanting to play Hamlet.&#8221;<br />
There is, in fact, a considerable and attractive repertory of authentic<br />
Schickele: a musical version of the old play &#8220;The Knight of the Burning<br />
Pestle,&#8221; large-scale pieces that pit rock or bluegrass bands against symphony<br />
orchestras, songs and chamber music, and the much-admired score to the sci-fi<br />
film classic &#8220;Silent Running.&#8221; The very next night after the P.D.Q. Bach<br />
farewell, in fact, April 2, Schickele appears as pianist, with the Armadillo<br />
String Quartet, in a program of his chamber music at Mount St. Mary&#8217;s College<br />
in Brentwood.<br />
And then? Schickele ticked off a larger-than-life agenda: a radio series to be<br />
called &#8220;Schickele Mix&#8221; (&#8220;a little bit of everything that happens to interest<br />
me at the moment&#8221;), a television series for children, a possible movie project<br />
on the life of P.D.Q. (Aha! There goes that sabbatical!), chamber concerts by<br />
&#8220;Peter Schickele and Friends&#8221; on a barge under the Brooklyn Bridge.<br />
Even if he wanted to, Hamlet isn&#8217;t going to have the time to play the clown.<br />
Not for a while, anyhow.<br />
SIDEBAR:<br />
&#8220;I&#8217;m not making this up, you know!&#8221; shrieks Anna Russell in the middle of her<br />
famous retelling of the story of Richard Wagner&#8217;s &#8220;Ring of the Nibelung,&#8221; at<br />
the point where the hero Siegfried meets the first woman he has ever seen who<br />
isn&#8217;t one of his aunts. The point, which Russell superbly establishes, is that<br />
you don&#8217;t have to make things up to extract music&#8217;s quotient of hilarity. All<br />
you have to do is to tell the truth &#8212; somewhat selectively, of course.<br />
Russell, London-born and now retired, enchanted audiences for years with the<br />
thrust and the wisdom of her musical observations. Her persona was the<br />
lecturer, with her talks garishly illustrated from the piano. Like Schickele,<br />
she was awesomely accurate in her parodies and pastiches: a whole Verdi opera<br />
based on &#8220;Hamlet,&#8221; a program of mock Schubert lieder (with the deathless<br />
observation that singers of German songs, like cheese, are only good when<br />
they&#8217;ve properly rotten).<br />
Russell&#8217;s records, taken from live performances and therefore sometimes<br />
blotted out by laughter and applause, are a priceless legacy &#8212; or would be, if<br />
they were still in the catalog. There is, however, a splendid video of a<br />
complete Russell recital, including the Wagner.<br />
Records of the Hoffnung Festival, once on EMI-Angel, also seem to be out of the<br />
catalog, a situation best described as unconscionable. The late Gerald Hoffnung<br />
was a conductor, tuba player, cartoonist and humorist who assembled several<br />
elaborate music festivals, with contributions by major composers, to explore in<br />
depth music&#8217;s lunatic fringe &#8212; again, with deadly accuracy.<br />
What if, a Hoffnung piece asks, the offstage trumpet in Beethoven&#8217;s Third<br />
&#8220;Leonore&#8221; Overture kept chiming in in the wrong place, and then missed his<br />
proper entrance? What about the &#8220;1812&#8243; played by an ensemble of baroque<br />
instruments? The Hoffnung treasures include the absolute last word on<br />
Schoenbergian 12-tone music, a piece in which the climax is a measure of<br />
silence, notated in 3/4 time, to &#8220;impart a quasi-Viennese flavor.&#8221; Wise,<br />
accurate and hilarious, Hoffnung never had to make anything up, either.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<item>
		<title>LAPO</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/1991/03/lapo-3/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/1991/03/lapo-3/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 28 Mar 1991 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Daily News]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=2811</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Andrew Davis had already done well by the Los Angeles Philharmonic two months ago, in a regularly scheduled appearance as guest conductor. This week he has done even better, in a noble rescue operation. This week&#8217;s concerts at the Music Center, Beethoven&#8217;s Second Symphony and the Berlioz &#8220;Fantastic&#8221; Symphony, were slated as the program for [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Andrew Davis had already done well by the Los Angeles Philharmonic two months<br />
ago, in a regularly scheduled appearance as guest conductor. This week he has<br />
done even better, in a noble rescue operation.<br />
This week&#8217;s concerts at the Music Center,  Beethoven&#8217;s Second Symphony and the<br />
Berlioz &#8220;Fantastic&#8221; Symphony, were slated as the program for Roger<br />
Norrington&#8217;s debut with the orchestra. Norrington has had emergency surgery,<br />
however, and Davis took over the same program, most handsomely. Despite less-<br />
than-normal rehearsal time &#8212; he was engaged in England until two days before<br />
Thursday night&#8217;s concert &#8212; he presented a superior evening of high-grade<br />
musicianship, with support from the orchestra of like quality.<br />
It wasn&#8217;t the evening it was going to be, of course. Norrington&#8217;s readings of<br />
both these symphonies are known quantities from recordings: interesting,<br />
powerful and, well, strange. Davis, instead, gave polished and spirited<br />
versions of both works that had little in the way of iconoclastic value, but<br />
much in the way of musical value.<br />
The Beethoven, the composer&#8217;s high-spirited farewell to the musical methods of<br />
a previous generation, is not nearly often enough heard for its fund of<br />
delights. Davis managed those delights very well. If a single objection might<br />
be advanced, it would embrace the rather spirited tempo for the slow movement<br />
that is, after all, marked &#8220;larghetto.&#8221; This seemed to trivialize the<br />
profound lyricism of this one movement.<br />
The Berlioz went capitally: a raw, marvelously raucous reading of the final<br />
movements, some lovely tenderness and mystery in what had come before. The<br />
symphony, 160 years old, remains incredible. It is one of those works, daring<br />
and iconoclastic when it appeared (only 3 years after Beethoven&#8217;s death but<br />
utterly unrelated to anything in anyone else&#8217;s music) whose fund of modernity<br />
has never faded. It stands beside the &#8220;Eroica&#8221; of Beethoven and Stravinsky&#8217;s<br />
&#8220;Rite of Spring&#8221; as one of music&#8217;s imponderable forward steps.<br />
This quotient of daring seemed uppermost in Daviss reading. His woodwinds<br />
shrieked &#8212; best of all the ghostly dance from Michele Zukovsky&#8217;s clarinet in<br />
the finale. His brass roared, his percussion thundered. The famous passage for<br />
four tympani players at the end of the slow movement raised goosebumps on any<br />
attentive listener. It was a good night for listening.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<item>
		<title>SCHOENBERG&#160;QT</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/1991/03/schoenberg-qt/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/1991/03/schoenberg-qt/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sun, 24 Mar 1991 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Daily News]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=2854</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Arnold Schoenberg liked to complain that his name wasn&#8217;t well enough known. He would have had a ball on Sunday afternoon, when the Schoenberg Quartet from The Netherlands played a Schoenberg quartet at UCLA&#8217;s Schoenberg Hall, with a contingent from U.S.C.&#8217;s Schoenberg Institute also in attendance. The group has played here before, most recently in [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Arnold Schoenberg liked to complain that his name wasn&#8217;t well enough known. He<br />
would have had a ball on Sunday afternoon, when the Schoenberg Quartet from The<br />
Netherlands played a Schoenberg quartet at UCLA&#8217;s Schoenberg Hall, with a<br />
contingent from U.S.C.&#8217;s Schoenberg Institute also in attendance.<br />
The group has played here before, most recently in 1989 at U.S.C. Since then,<br />
however, a new cellist has come aboard, the dynamic Viola De Hoog, and it has<br />
made a difference. There was none of the sense of ho-hum another concert about<br />
their playing this time. Anything but, in fact.<br />
The program was curious: three works written within five years: Schoenberg&#8217;s<br />
First Quartet of 1905, Anton Webern&#8217;s Five Pieces from 1909 and the Opus 3<br />
Quartet by Alban Berg from 1910. The choice propounded an interesting study in<br />
middle-European romanticism in its hysterical twilight, but it may have<br />
actually been too much of a not-quite-good thing.<br />
Both the Berg, which runs 15 minutes and the Schoenberg, which lumbers along at<br />
45, trace and retrace pretty much the same ground. The echoes of Wagner&#8217;s<br />
&#8220;Tristan&#8221; have not died down, but the whole sense of tonality has begun to<br />
come apart. A tendency to screech when a softer cry might have sufficed: that<br />
is the frequent flaw in both works. Would either have survived in the repertory<br />
if their creators hadn&#8217;t gone on to greater achievements? That is one of<br />
music&#8217;s recurrent nagging questions, and it could have been asked more than<br />
once at this concert.<br />
The Schoenbergs specialize in this music, and they gave it the full feverish<br />
treatment, even at the points where a drier, more reticent approach &#8212; such as<br />
the way the late, lamented LaSalle Quartet performed on their complete<br />
recording &#8212; might have brought out more in the music. By far the lapidary,<br />
tiny, glittering Webern pieces fared best. For once, the performance and the<br />
music were properly matched.<br />
Preceding the concert was the first local showing of &#8220;Arnold Schoenberg: My<br />
Evolution,&#8221; a 50-minute film created by UCLA&#8217;s Office of Instructional<br />
Development to piece out visually a recording of a speech Schoenberg had given<br />
on campus in 1949. Fascinating and valuable stuff; the world suffers in that<br />
recording technology was invented so late in the history of the arts. A similar<br />
recording from Mozart or Beethoven might have lightened the scholars&#8217;<br />
load.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<item>
		<title>LAPO</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/1991/03/lapo-4/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/1991/03/lapo-4/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 21 Mar 1991 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Daily News]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=2810</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[It should have been better. Of all the cultural events around town relating to the County Museum&#8217;s &#8220;Degenerate Art&#8221; show, the Los Angeles Philharmonic&#8217;s concert on Thursday night (repeated tonight) turned out to be one of the more paltry components. Why? The programming itself was part of the problem; it seemed lazily conceived. To be [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>It should have been better. Of all the cultural events around town relating to<br />
the County Museum&#8217;s &#8220;Degenerate Art&#8221; show, the Los Angeles Philharmonic&#8217;s<br />
concert on Thursday night (repeated tonight) turned out to be one of the more<br />
paltry components.<br />
Why? The programming itself was part of the problem; it seemed lazily<br />
conceived. To be sure, the four composers represented &#8212; Ernst Krenek, Erich<br />
Korngold, Kurt Weill and Paul Hindemith &#8212; figured prominently on the Nazis&#8217;<br />
undesirables list. But the music chosen to represent these composers, with one<br />
exception, was only distantly related to the qualities the Nazis had found<br />
repugnant.<br />
Why, for example, represent Krenek with the &#8220;Symphonic Elegy&#8221; composed in<br />
1946, long after the composer had emigrated to the U.S.? It was a far different<br />
brand of music, exemplified by the jazz rhythms in the opera &#8220;Jonny spielt<br />
auf&#8221; and the subversive overtones in the twelve-tone &#8220;Charles V,&#8221; that had<br />
gotten Krenek proscribed; why hadn&#8217;t some of this been played instead? There is<br />
beautiful music in this Elegy (composed as a memorial to Anton Webern but<br />
actually full of motives that evoke memories of another Schoenberg disciple,<br />
Alban Berg). It did not, however, serve its purpose.<br />
It would be hard to discern any purpose served by the Korngold Violin Concerto<br />
&#8211; composed in 1945 and, thus, another after-the-fact work. A patched-together<br />
gathering of motives from several of Korngold&#8217;s vintage movie scores, the work<br />
is lathered over with a slick and sudsy violin line. Korngold designed the work<br />
for Jascha Heifetz but actually produced a virtual parody of that peerless<br />
virtuoso&#8217;s more superficial mannerisms. This is as close to a totally worthless<br />
piece as the repertory contains, not so much &#8220;degenerate&#8221; as depraved.<br />
Hindemith&#8217;s well-known symphony built out of the opera &#8220;Mathis der Maler&#8221;<br />
seemed a particularly lazy choice, considering the fund of unduly neglected<br />
works by this composer &#8212; the sharp-edged, acidulous set of chamber concertos<br />
from the 1920s, just for starters &#8212; that far more clearly epitomize what the<br />
Nazi cultural dogma found objectionable. This would have been the perfect<br />
occasion to bring some of this wonderful music down off the shelf, but no.<br />
That left only Kurt Weill&#8217;s flavorsome &#8220;Threepenny Music,&#8221; jaunty<br />
arrangements for wind band from the 1928 opera made at the request of Otto<br />
Klemperer. But here, as with everything else on the program, the utterly<br />
dreary, anti-rhythmic time-beating of conductor Lawrence Foster set everything<br />
into a pall. Such lively music, such lifeless playing, and such faulty<br />
intonation from a performing ensemble that seemed not to have been made to care<br />
about the week&#8217;s assignment. Sidney Weiss, the Philharmonic&#8217;s concertmaster,<br />
skated admirably across the glassy surface of the Korngold Concerto, but to<br />
little avail.<br />
The evening promised much, but delivered little. The tone was somehow reflected<br />
in the &#8220;Degenerate Music&#8221; exhibition that fills two lobby levels in the hall.<br />
It is a compelling display of valuable material about the Nazis&#8217; marauding<br />
music policies, but riddled with typos including, on one board, three<br />
misspelled names in one paragraph. Management promises to correct these errors.<br />
The concert itself, however, was beyond correction.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>UMBRELLA</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/1991/03/umbrella-2/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/1991/03/umbrella-2/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 18 Mar 1991 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Daily News]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=2869</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Ernst Krenek turned 90 last summer.He lives in Palm Springs, where he continues to compose. His opus numbers are, in fact, well into the high 200s. At Monday night&#8217;s Green Umbrella concert at the Japan America Theater, the sweep across Krenek&#8217;s music ran from Opus 58, of 1928, to 234, of 1981. Krenek has spent [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Ernst Krenek turned 90 last summer.He lives in Palm Springs, where he continues<br />
to compose. His opus numbers are, in fact, well into the high 200s. At Monday<br />
night&#8217;s Green Umbrella concert at the Japan America Theater, the sweep across<br />
Krenek&#8217;s music ran from Opus 58, of 1928, to 234, of 1981.<br />
Krenek has spent more than half his life as a self-willed exile from central<br />
Europe, where the quotient of &#8220;degeneracy&#8221; in his music was recognized as<br />
early as 1927. In that year he wrote his jazz-tinged opera &#8220;Jonny spielt<br />
auf,&#8221; which brought down on his head epithets both racial and religious. The<br />
logo for the current &#8220;Degenerate Music&#8221; exhibition which opens this week at<br />
the Music Center is the Nazis&#8217; perversion of the figure of Jonny himself from<br />
that opera, taken from an old poster.<br />
Monday&#8217;s concert, well-attended as all the Philharmonic&#8217;s new-music series have<br />
been this season, offered a fascinating look into a composer who, in his many<br />
years, has composed many kinds of music. The latest work, a set of tiny<br />
orchestral movements called &#8220;Arc of Life&#8221; possessed, among its other charms,<br />
an unshakable sense of nostalgia.<br />
Krenek had never been part of Arnold Schoenberg&#8217;s circle of atonal<br />
practitioners, yet his own career seemed to reflect the work of these<br />
compatriots. Schoenberg, Berg and Webern had all composed sets of small<br />
orchestral pieces, aphoristic little wisps of sound, encompassing strongly<br />
defined sentiments in very few measures. And here was Krenek, decades later,<br />
doing the same sort of thing in the 12 movements &#8212; none more than 90 seconds<br />
long &#8212; of this captivating little suite.<br />
That work came, chronologically speaking, at the near end of the survey. At the<br />
far end was the &#8220;Little Symphony&#8221; (&#8220;little,&#8221; however, neither in length nor<br />
scoring), bristling and sarcastic, attached this time not to the Schoenberg<br />
ideal but to the dry-point nose-thumbing works of Kurt Weill and Paul<br />
Hindemith. If the effect was a little like being trapped in an elevator with a<br />
man who knows only one joke, the joke at least had its moments.<br />
In between, in this exceptionally engrossing concert, were two vocal works, the<br />
exquisite song-cycle &#8220;Through the Night&#8221; (in its third local performance<br />
within the past month and still sounding like some unknown piece of Schubert,<br />
updated but still radiant) and the dramatic monologue &#8220;The Dissembler.&#8221; This<br />
last seemed the most dated of all, the composer&#8217;s own text (so much Freud, so<br />
much strained comic pastiche) half-sung half-yelled by the admirable Hector<br />
Vasquez, immersed in a musical setting that seemed more sound effect than<br />
musical counterpart. Any composer who racks up over 200 opus numbers is<br />
entitled to  nod now and then.<br />
Performances were top-grade throughout. David Alan Miller, who led the<br />
Philharmonic New Music Group in three of the four items, continues to grow in<br />
insight and technical mastery with every appearance. Donald Crockett&#8217;s<br />
Contemporary Music Ensemble from USC did its customary fine job with &#8220;Through<br />
the Night,&#8221; with Anne Marie Ketchum&#8217;s expert handling of the fragrant,<br />
evocative text. The composer, too frail to attend, would have been proud.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<item>
		<title>LAPO</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/1991/03/lapo-5/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/1991/03/lapo-5/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 13 Mar 1991 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Daily News]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=2820</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[The phenomenon of Vladimir Ashkenazy brightens our musical landscape. Pianist and conductor, his mastery of both arts is truly remarkable. If anything, his prowess in the one area seems to nourish the other. He has been with us these two weeks in the latter capacity. On Wednesday he led the Los Angeles Philharmonic through a [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>The phenomenon of Vladimir Ashkenazy brightens our musical landscape. Pianist<br />
and conductor, his mastery of both arts is truly remarkable. If anything, his<br />
prowess in the one area seems to nourish the other.<br />
He has been with us these two weeks in the latter capacity. On Wednesday he led<br />
the Los Angeles Philharmonic through a dazzling and rewarding all-Prokofiev<br />
program. You might think that an entire evening by this one composer might come<br />
off stylistically limited, and with lesser talents on the podium you might be<br />
right. But Ashkenazy, who as a pianist has delivered (and recorded) some<br />
overpowering Prokofiev performances, demonstrated on this occasion his ability<br />
to shine a variety of fascinating lights through the orchestral works as well.<br />
The crown of this week&#8217;s program (repeated, by the way, tonight and Saturday)<br />
is the Fifth Symphony, most extensive of Prokofiev&#8217;s seven and one of the<br />
latest works by any composer to take its place in the standard repertory. The<br />
work does explore a neo-romantic vein that, in some hands, might sound a little<br />
old-fashioned for a work dating from as recently as 1944. But there is an<br />
abrasive, thoroughly original side to this music as well, and this quality &#8211;<br />
the way long melodic lines, for example, take interesting and unexpected turns<br />
into dark areas &#8212; stood out especially well in Ashkenazy&#8217;s performance.<br />
It was an exceptionally attractive program, and a difficult one as well. There<br />
were passing problems in orchestral execution on Wednesday night, a few blurred<br />
wind and brass attacks, that would probably be smoothed out in subsequent<br />
performances. But at its best the Philharmonic honored its gifted guest<br />
conductor with playing robust and alert.<br />
The evening began with a relative novelty, an orchestral suite from the opera<br />
&#8220;War and Peace,&#8221; put together in 1987 by Christopher Palmer: dazzling dance<br />
pieces, a ravishing quiet Intermezzo and a final striding theme (the great<br />
chorus that ends the opera) that grabs you by the throat. If you need urging to<br />
take in the San Francisco Opera&#8217;s staging of this grand if imperfect work next<br />
September, let it be in this selection of snippets, 20 minutes of sublime music<br />
out of four hours.<br />
Alexander Treger, the orchestra&#8217;s co-concertmaster, was soloist in the D-major<br />
Violin Concerto, exquisite music, delicate and quiet, played with high regard<br />
for these qualities. Between this work of 1915, and the &#8220;War and Peace&#8221;<br />
excerpts from 1953, the variety of Prokofiev&#8217;s stylistic outlook was broad<br />
indeed. It was neatly sketched in this commendable concert.THE FACTSWhat: The Los Angeles Philharmonic in an all-Prokofiev program.When: 8 p.m., tonight and Saturday.Where: Dorothy Chandler Pavilion, 135 N. Grand Ave in downtown Los Angeles.Behind the scenes: Vladimir Ashkenazy, conductor; Alexander Treger, violin.Tickets: $9-$40; phone: 213 480-3232.Our rating: * * * *</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>POLLINI</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/1991/03/pollini/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/1991/03/pollini/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Tue, 12 Mar 1991 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Daily News]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=2847</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[The world is well supplied with promising pianists, accomplished pianists, even a few great pianists. Yet Maurizio Pollini stands apart, a musician of such towering intelligence and originality, coupled with with a virtuoso&#8217;s technique so close to flawless as anyone could hope from mortal fingers, that he seems to merit his own category. A cheering [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>The world is well supplied with promising pianists, accomplished pianists, even<br />
a few great pianists. Yet Maurizio Pollini stands apart, a musician of such<br />
towering intelligence and originality, coupled with with a virtuoso&#8217;s technique<br />
so close to flawless as anyone could hope from mortal fingers, that he seems to<br />
merit his own category.<br />
A cheering capacity crowd at the Music Center on Tuesday night roared its<br />
agreement. The program had no startling novelties: the complete Preludes of<br />
Chopin, Berg&#8217;s Piano Sonata, Schoenberg&#8217;s &#8220;Small Pieces,&#8221; Opus 19 and<br />
Stravinsky&#8217;s fiendishly demanding transcription of parts of his &#8220;Petrouchka&#8221;<br />
ballet, with Ravel and more Chopin as encores. Pollini&#8217;s playing was thoroughly<br />
novel, however; not a moment in this extraordinary recital failed to give off<br />
the sense that a sovereign intellect seemed to be creating each musical phrase<br />
anew.<br />
The effect in the Chopin was particularly arresting. Never a pianist to shrink<br />
from taking chances, Pollini brought to these visionary miniatures a broad<br />
spectrum of interpretive devices. Moments linger in the memory: the recitative-<br />
like passages in the second Prelude, so softly, mysteriously played that they<br />
seemed like voices from another planet; the thundering onrush of No. 16 and the<br />
soft but insistent mood-painting in the so-called &#8220;Raindrop.&#8221; Miniatures<br />
these works might be; as Pollini played them they fused into a single, most<br />
grandiose, musical entity.<br />
The Berg and Schoenberg works, appropriate contributions to the current<br />
showings around town of suppressed Germanic art, were also wonderfully put<br />
forth.There was a control of line and color here that set both pieces into a<br />
historic continuum: romanticism&#8217;s last gasp, and the first steps into a new<br />
musical territory where the old artistic standards no longer mattered.<br />
The Stravinsky was there, of course, to send the crowd home happy. Such useless<br />
music this is, contrasted to the orchestral original! Yet such exhilaration, as<br />
Pollini seemed to turn his resonant Hamburg Steinway into an idealized<br />
orchestra beyond even Stravinsky&#8217;s wildest dreams!<br />
Of course, the crowd didn&#8217;t exactly go home, happy or otherwise, at that point.<br />
As the final reward there came nothing less than the soaring, ecstatic B-flat<br />
minor Scherzo of Chopin.  Hardly a mere encore piece, the work capped an<br />
enchanted evening. Music-making doesn&#8217;t get much better than this.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<item>
		<title>MEC</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/1991/03/mec-2/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/1991/03/mec-2/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 11 Mar 1991 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Daily News]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=2826</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Art for the ear, art for the eye: it made for a compelling mixture at the County Museum on Monday night. In the Bing Theater&#8217;s Monday Evening Concert series, an imaginatively arranged program formed a musical reflection of the &#8220;Degenerate Art&#8221; exhibition across the plaza at the Anderson Gallery. By a stroke of generous planning, [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Art for the ear, art for the eye: it made for a compelling mixture at the County<br />
Museum on Monday night. In the Bing Theater&#8217;s Monday Evening Concert series, an<br />
imaginatively arranged program formed a musical reflection of the &#8220;Degenerate<br />
Art&#8221; exhibition across the plaza at the Anderson Gallery. By a stroke of<br />
generous planning, the exhibition remained open right up to concert time; the<br />
connections between sight and sound were easily measured.<br />
The effect, however, was not what most of the large audience surely expected.<br />
So overpowering are the elements in the visual display &#8212; the paintings, the<br />
film clips, the evocation of  life in the arts in a time of horror &#8212; that the<br />
concert itself, however well planned and performed, came across inevitably as<br />
an anticlimax.<br />
That fact, in itself, could stand as a tribute to the way Leonard Stein and his<br />
USC  colleagues planned the program. The musical elements most repugnant to the<br />
Nazis, after all, were the quiet, sophisticated intellectuality in the works of<br />
Arnold Schoenberg and his colleagues and disciples, the subtle, pointillistic<br />
patterns in Anton Webern, the complexity in Ernst Krenek and in Schoenberg<br />
himself. A program of this music, heard immediately after an immersion in the<br />
explicit fury that leaps off the walls in the exhibition, was bound to sound<br />
shackled.<br />
And so it was, despite some remarkable playing and singing by USC ensembles<br />
under Leonard Stein (in his final act of cultural glory before his retirement<br />
as head of USC&#8217;s Arnold Schoenberg Institute), Donald Crockett and Larry<br />
Rachleff. At the start there was Webern&#8217;s Concerto for Nine Instruments in a<br />
crisp, energized reading; at the end came Schoenberg&#8217;s &#8220;Accompaniment Music<br />
for a Film Scene,&#8221; handsomely delivered by the 40-member USC Chamber<br />
Orchestra. You don&#8217;t find, under every cabbage leaf, student ensembles capable<br />
of managing this kind of fearsome complexity. USC did itself proud.<br />
In between came a scattering of vocal works: Krenek&#8217;s radiant &#8220;Durch die<br />
Nacht&#8221; repeated from the campus performance of two weeks ago, some of<br />
Alexander von Zemlinsky&#8217;s lavender-tinged, world-weary pieces, and rather an<br />
excessive sampling of Hanns Eisler&#8217;s simplistic, sing-song settings of poetry<br />
of Bertolt Brecht and Ignazio Silone.<br />
Anne Marie Ketchum and Stephen  Kimbrough were the accomplished, stylish<br />
singers; the veteran Stein provided marvelous support as pianist and conductor.<br />
Wise counselor and musician, a bulwark of  musical life in this region for<br />
longer than anyone cares to remember, the 74-year-old Stein had come back from<br />
a recent heart attack to perform in a program obviously dear to his heart.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>SUNDAYCOL</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/1991/03/sundaycol/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/1991/03/sundaycol/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sun, 10 Mar 1991 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Daily News]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=2861</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[PAUL: I HAVE TO GIVE A LECTURE IN THE MORNING, IN AROUND NOON. HERE&#8217;S ANOTHER COPY OF MY SUNDAY COLUMN; I DON&#8217;T SEE WHERE ANY WORDS ARE MISSING UNLESS JON DID SOME EDITING> ANYHOW, I&#8217;LL SEE YOU LATER &#8212; ALAN [F/L]Paul Hillier, much respected for his recordings of early music with his Hilliard Ensemble, brings [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>PAUL: I HAVE TO GIVE A LECTURE IN THE MORNING, IN AROUND NOON. HERE&#8217;S ANOTHER COPY OF MY SUNDAY COLUMN; I DON&#8217;T SEE WHERE ANY WORDS ARE MISSING UNLESS JON DID SOME EDITING> ANYHOW, I&#8217;LL SEE YOU LATER &#8212; ALAN [F/L]Paul Hillier, much respected for his recordings of early music with his Hilliard<br />
Ensemble, brings his forces to town on April 3 for the first American<br />
performance of the &#8220;Berlin Mass&#8221; by the contemporary Estonian-born composer<br />
Arvo Part. New Albion, a record label renowned for its service to hardcore<br />
contemporary music, has just produced a disc of early 15th century music from<br />
the Island of Cyprus. Something seems to connect certain kinds of very old and<br />
very new music, and the connections are fascinating.<br />
Take that collection from Cyprus as a starting point. The disc contains 16<br />
pieces, some sacred and some secular, composed at the court of Cyprus during a<br />
brief flowering of high culture on the island, collected in a manuscript now in<br />
a library in Turin. The performers are the members of P. A. N. (Project Ars<br />
Nova) based in Basel. The music is, for the most part, intricately composed,<br />
sometimes with three or more vocal parts sung simultaneously but using<br />
different texts and moving at different tempos.<br />
Beyond question, hearing this music is an exotic experience. The harmonies are<br />
both rich and austere, something like the stretched-out perspective of medieval<br />
paintings on gold backgrounds. By the standards we are most familiar with, the<br />
harmonic style from Bach to Mahler, the music constantly eludes our<br />
expectation, veering wildly into unexpected regions. These regions were not, of<br />
course, &#8220;unexpected&#8221; to their anonymous composers. If there isn&#8217;t a word for<br />
the auditory equivalent of &#8220;hindsight,&#8221; there ought to be. Try as we might,<br />
we cannot help but bring the full range of our previous listening  &#8212; Mozart,<br />
the Beatles, whatever &#8212; to any and every new experience that comes our way.<br />
Inevitably, we bring some of that same process to hearing new music. There,<br />
too,  as in those 15th-century Cyprus songs (which on their own, by the way,<br />
are marvelous, flavorsome pieces) our expectations are constantly being<br />
tricked. As we hear this old music with our late-20th-century ears, we derive<br />
the completely twisted picture of the composer who refuses to follow the<br />
classic rules &#8212; even though those &#8220;rules&#8221; hadn&#8217;t yet been invented. We react<br />
in much the same way to first hearings of music of our own time. This is not to<br />
state, of course, that the way to hear very new music is to steep yourself in<br />
very old, but it sometimes helps.<br />
Some modern composers, of course, draw the past around themselves as a sort of<br />
justification for their own innovations. Arnold Schoenberg, early in his<br />
career, was fascinated by the revival in Germany and Austria of the music of<br />
the great 14th-century musician/poet Guillaume de Machaut, especially in the<br />
way Machaut often constructed music around formal devices that no listener<br />
could ever be expected to hear.<br />
One of Machaut&#8217;s most famous songs is titled &#8220;My End is My Beginning,&#8221; and in<br />
the song the tenor part follows the soprano line note-for-note, but backwards.<br />
Nobody could ever hear what Machaut is doing here, and that doesn&#8217;t matter; it<br />
is simply a great secret stroke of structural genius and, of course, it fits<br />
the text. Schoenberg&#8217;s later theories of twelve-tone writing, as he himself<br />
acknowledged, drew some of their inspiration from this great idea of building a<br />
piece of music around a sense of order strong yet inaudible.<br />
No composer ever shakes completely free of music&#8217;s rich and glorious past.<br />
Some, in fact, wallow in it.<br />
The late Harry Partch, that sterling iconoclast whose dance-drama &#8220;The<br />
Bewitched&#8221; has just reappeared on a CRI compact disc, decided early in his<br />
career that music had started to go wrong around the Middle Ages. He spent his<br />
life working out a system of composition, for which he designed and built his<br />
own instruments, that would, he fondly imagined, transport our senses back to<br />
the scales and melodies of ancient Greece. On a diametrically opposite level,<br />
Germany&#8217;s Carl Orff, who figures as one of the enemy forces in the<br />
&#8220;degenerate&#8221;  art exhibits currently around town, served his Nazi masters by<br />
turning music from an ancient Bavarian manuscript into latter-day marching and<br />
drinking songs; hence, &#8220;Carmina Burana.&#8221;<br />
The matter of Arvo Part is particularly interesting. He is, first of all, the<br />
best-known of a small group of important names to emerge from Estonia, whence<br />
no names had emerged before: the composer Eduard Tubin  a generation back, and<br />
the conductor Neeme Jarvi &#8212; newly appointed music director of the Detroit<br />
Symphony who, like Part, fled his country some years ago fearing political<br />
oppression.<br />
Part currently lives in West Berlin. His early music includes three symphonies<br />
(recorded by Jarvi on Sweden&#8217;s B-I-S label). They are strong, compact works,<br />
densely contrapuntal, extroverted in their orchestral brilliance. But then, in<br />
the mid-1970s, Part&#8217;s music took a strange turn toward a much more inward,<br />
almost mystical style. The first record of his music to achieve fame in this<br />
country contained a series of quiet, still pieces that seemed, in ways not<br />
easily described, to invoke a sense of the distant musical past: the austere<br />
harmonies, once again, of Machaut.<br />
Then came the incredible &#8220;Passio&#8221; of 1982, 71 minutes of music so still, yet<br />
so gripping, that it seems to move out beyond such secular matters as time. It<br />
is, again, music of a medieval sensibility &#8212; not because it imitates the music<br />
of the past, which it doesn&#8217;t, but because its subtle, other-worldly sounds<br />
inspire the same feelings as you might find on entering a great Gothic<br />
cathedral. To hear Part&#8217;s &#8220;Passio&#8221; &#8212; a setting of verses from the Passion as<br />
told in the Book of John, for small chorus with instrumental quartet and organ<br />
&#8211; is to journey to Cologne in front of your own stereo.<br />
The recording of &#8220;Passio,&#8221;on the ECM label, is by Hillier and his Hilliard<br />
Ensemble, and this is reason enough to look forward to the same group&#8217;s<br />
performance here of the new Part work, April 3 at St. Basil&#8217;s Church in<br />
downtown Los Angeles, part of MaryAnn Bonino&#8217;s &#8220;Historic Sites&#8221; concert<br />
series.<br />
Like Arvo Part, Hillier himself has made a world for himself balanced between<br />
the very up-to-date present and the distant past. One of his most fascinating<br />
recordings, on the ECM label, is called &#8220;Proensa,&#8221; after an ancient version<br />
of the name Provence, that fragrant region in the south of France that nurtured<br />
the great tradition of the Troubadours, those poetic wanderers whose aim was to<br />
fill the world with song.<br />
Hillier has, on this disc, sampled the surviving examples of medieval solo<br />
song, and reconstructed a series of glosses on these songs, combining in a most<br />
attractive way elements of past and present. Three players on ancient<br />
instruments, such as the Troubadours themselves might use, are his backing. The<br />
music is purely joyous. Hillier, by the way, has abandoned his London base for<br />
a time and joined the music faculty of U.C. Davis: a welcome presence<br />
indeed.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>LAPO</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/1991/03/lapo-6/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/1991/03/lapo-6/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sat, 09 Mar 1991 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Daily News]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=2809</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Cellists like to complain about the paucity of concertos for their instrument. And yet they have the Dvorak, and few concertos for any instrument are as rapturously beautiful as that supremely eloquent work. Lynn Harrell was the soloist in Dvorak&#8217;s concerto this past weekend, and Vladimir Ashkenazy conducted the Los Angeles Philharmonic. If there has [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Cellists like to complain about the paucity of concertos for their instrument.<br />
And yet they have the Dvorak, and few concertos for any instrument are as<br />
rapturously beautiful as that supremely eloquent work.<br />
Lynn Harrell was the soloist in Dvorak&#8217;s concerto this past weekend, and<br />
Vladimir Ashkenazy conducted the Los Angeles Philharmonic. If there has been a<br />
more sublime performance of anything at the Music Center this season, it has<br />
escaped these ears. As a solo performance, as a collaboration between soloist<br />
and conductor, as a study in give-and-take between soloist and orchestra, this<br />
was music-making of the highest order. On Saturday night the crowd cheered<br />
itself hoarse at the end. Even more remarkable, however,  was the audience&#8217;s<br />
respectful, cough-free silence throughout the performance.<br />
Harrell has played the concerto, as all cellists must, throughout his career;<br />
he has recorded it twice. Even so, there was a new dimension to his latest<br />
performance, a breadth in the rhetoric, a long and consistent line of thought,<br />
that represent something of a milestone for him.<br />
The touchstone for any performance of this work is the moment midway in the<br />
first movement where the cello and a solo flute converse, quietly but<br />
ecstatically. As Harrell and the orchestra&#8217;s flutist Janet Ferguson entered<br />
into this conversation, the drab concert hall suddenly became an enchanted<br />
place, with moonbeams everywhere.<br />
The whole performance, in fact, seemed motivated by a sense of intimacy, of<br />
creating chamber music on a grandiose but heartfelt level. Between the<br />
strapping Harrell and the diminutive Ashkenazy there is considerable distance.<br />
Where the Dvorak concerto was concerned, however these gifted musicians saw eye<br />
to eye.<br />
Otherwise, the evening held few charms. It may be possible, in fact, to chart<br />
civilization&#8217;s advance by how abominable William Walton&#8217;s &#8220;Wise Virgins&#8221;<br />
ballet music now sounds, half a century after its creation. In 1940 there<br />
seemed little harm in the composer&#8217;s taking on a clutch of arias and choruses<br />
from Bach cantatas and recasting them for full orchestra; now the work comes<br />
across as a grotesque and cruel insult to the source material. Ashkenazy and<br />
the orchestra gave it the full treatment, including a Paganini-sized vibrato in<br />
Sidney Weiss&#8217; violin solo in the &#8220;Sheep May Safely Graze&#8221; segment.<br />
Then there was some original Walton, the clattery and bombastic Second Symphony<br />
of 1960, a sad landmark in the creative decline in Walton&#8217;s late years. Had the<br />
composer assimilated a surfeit of tinsel from his years as a movie composer? Or<br />
was he simply written out? The Philharmonic had celebrated Walton&#8217;s music<br />
properly  a few weeks ago, with the marvelous Viola Concerto of 1929. That is<br />
where matters should have ben left.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>CALARTS</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/1991/03/calarts/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/1991/03/calarts/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 04 Mar 1991 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Daily News]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=2752</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Monday night at the Japan-America Theater, and the latest running of the CalArts Contemporary Music Festival came to a festive close, with the rattle and roar of Balinese percussion blasting its way through the sounds of Western-style woodwinds and brass. If not much else in the four-day round of concerts and discussions added up to [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Monday night at the Japan-America Theater, and the latest running of the CalArts<br />
Contemporary Music Festival came to a festive close, with the rattle and roar<br />
of Balinese percussion blasting its way through the sounds of Western-style<br />
woodwinds and brass. If not much else in the four-day round of concerts and<br />
discussions added up to the sheer dazzle of this last work, &#8220;Crossovers&#8221; by<br />
the Balinese composer I Nyoman Wenten, the least that can be said of this<br />
extended, challenging weekend was this: even its failures were<br />
interesting.<br />
The paired concepts of interaction and cross-culturation, stated at the outset<br />
of the festival last Friday, remained apparent to the end. Sunday&#8217;s concert, in<br />
the Modular Theater on the CalArts campus, was a case in point.<br />
It began with a joyous romp by jazz guru Charlie Haden and his Liberation Music<br />
Orchestra, abetted in some works by Paul Vorwerk&#8217;s CalArts Chorus. Big, loud,<br />
wonderfully extroverted but beautifully in control, the 22-piece ensemble<br />
worked mostly around a kind of primeval jazz; spirituals and African chants<br />
figured prominently in the texture, yet the pieces played were also<br />
&#8220;classical&#8221; in the sense of large-scale, intricate structuring. One regret:<br />
the music&#8217;s complexity demanded Haden&#8217;s services as a conductor, but allowed no<br />
time for his marvelous bass-playing.<br />
Sunday&#8217;s concert ended with more transculturation, music from the CalArts<br />
gamelan under its regular leader K. R. T. Wasitodiningrat, with traditional<br />
dances performed as dancing behind a shadow screen. Part of the ongoing charm<br />
at CalArts has always been the spectacle of its obviously Californiate students<br />
imbued with the techniques and the rhythms of the Indonesian gamelan; even a<br />
deaf person could have picked up on the transcultural process as it worked at<br />
this concert.<br />
The aim at Monday&#8217;s concert, with Vorwerk leading the New CalArts 20th Century<br />
Players, seemed to be a sort of sweep through a variety of progressive musical<br />
ideas, demonstrating the interaction process in the relation of player to<br />
computer (as in Jean-Claude Risset&#8217;s &#8220;Duet for One Pianist) as well as the<br />
interaction of cultures in the Wenten piece.<br />
Along the way there was one low bow toward one of progressive music&#8217;s<br />
archetypes, in Karlheinz Stockhausen&#8217;s &#8220;Refrain&#8221; (terribly dated after a mere<br />
30-year existence), another bow toward the instrumental experimenters (Robert<br />
Dick&#8217;s &#8220;Eyewitness&#8221; for flute quartet) and some attractive atmosphere-<br />
depiction (Libby Larsen&#8217;s &#8220;Black Roller&#8221;). There was also James Newton&#8217;s<br />
&#8220;The Suffering Servant,&#8221;  a setting of lines from Isaiah for singer and<br />
ensemble.<br />
Nothing much got proved. Bryan Pezzone&#8217;s yeoman service in the dreary Risset<br />
work, clattering away at one piano while also activating another by computer<br />
controi, seemed like a lot of fuss over something just as easily accomplished<br />
with one of those &#8220;Music Minus One&#8221; records. Newton&#8217;s piece, with all the<br />
good will in the world, still sounded like what it was, a timid effort by one<br />
of our superb jazz musicians to hide his best talent behind bland declamation<br />
and equally insipid instrumental support.<br />
In the long run, the triumph of the festival was of the usual kind. A lot of<br />
new music got heard over a brief and busy time, played with the high competence<br />
that CalArts drills into all its young performers. Success and failure were<br />
mingled in the classic proportion, and that&#8217;s par for the course.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<item>
		<title>BOWLORCH</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/1991/03/bowlorch/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/1991/03/bowlorch/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sat, 02 Mar 1991 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Daily News]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=2749</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[[*] laby2;p1205. By Alan Rich [B] Daily News Music Writer [B]On a blessedly rainy day last week, 85 musicians gathered for a recording session in a Culver City sound studio. If the sight was familiar enough, the circumstances weren&#8217;t. It was, in fact, the inaugural gig of a brand-new orchestra. It hadn&#8217;t yet given its [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>[*] laby2;p1205. By Alan Rich [B] Daily News Music Writer [B]On a blessedly rainy day last week, 85 musicians gathered for a recording<br />
session in a Culver City sound studio. If the sight was familiar enough, the<br />
circumstances weren&#8217;t. It was, in fact, the inaugural gig of a brand-new<br />
orchestra. It hadn&#8217;t yet given its first live concert, and wouldn&#8217;t for several<br />
months. Its members had never even played together, for that matter, before<br />
this session. In fact, the orchestra had only been recruited the week before.<br />
Yet it already had a lucrative recording contract with Philips.<br />
This, then, was the maiden flight of the brand-new Hollywood Bowl Orchestra,<br />
whose glowing prospects had been announced at a press conference last fall,<br />
long before a single member, aside from conductor John Mauceri, had been<br />
booked. Forty-five years ago, Hollywood Bowl had had its own resident orchestra<br />
and conductor, Leopold Stokowski&#8217;s Hollywood Bowl Symphony. Now with the word<br />
&#8220;symphony&#8221; dropped for good reason, the great Los Angeles summertime concert<br />
and picnic venue will again be served by its own titular orchestra.<br />
The dropping of &#8220;Symphony&#8221; from the title is significant. The new orchestra<br />
was formed, recuited from the immense local pool of freelance musicians,<br />
specifically to serve the Bowl for the lighter-weight programming: the weekend<br />
concerts that often come with fireworks and, therefore, draw huge crowds, and<br />
the opening preview week that encompasses the Bowl&#8217;s 4th-of-July<br />
celebrations.<br />
For those listeners, and their number is legion, who might have found<br />
intimidation in the notion of the august Los Angeles Philharmonic as the Bowl&#8217;s<br />
one resident ensemble, the presence of this second orchestra will suggest a<br />
kinder, gentler concertgoing experience. For the Philharmonic musicians, for<br />
whom playing those weekend-concert pop programs might have represented a kind<br />
of slumming, the new orchestra will send them back to their ivory towers. It<br />
will also, promises Philharmonic general director Ernest Fleischmann, allow the<br />
classical orchestra more time to rehearse its own Tuesday and Thursday<br />
symphonic programs, a consummation many listeners and critics have devoutly<br />
wished lo these many years.<br />
And so there was the latest orchestra in town, under its new conductor, working<br />
up its first recording, a disc to be called &#8220;Hollywood Dreams&#8221; &#8212; not, as<br />
conductor Mauceri pointed out, merely another collection of movie tunes and<br />
other morsels inspired by Hollywood, but a selection as well of &#8220;some of the<br />
dreams Hollywood created.&#8221; One selection was a genuine curio: a fanfare<br />
created by the formidable 12-tone composer Arnold Schoenberg, during his time<br />
as a Los Angeles resident,for Stokowski&#8217;s earlier Hollywood Bowl Symphony: a<br />
pastiche of themes from Schoenberg&#8217;s great choral work &#8220;Gurre-Lieder.&#8221;<br />
Behind thick glass walls, but connected to the control room by microphones and<br />
video cameras, Mauceri and the orchestra swung into a sonorous selection, some<br />
of the music for the forthcoming Albert Brooks film (or Meryl Streep film,<br />
depending on how you look at it) &#8220;Defending Your Life,&#8221; due out this summer.<br />
Composer Michael Gore, who is also the producer of this disc, beamed approval<br />
from behind an intimidating array of controls.<br />
&#8220;This movie starts off in a waiting room of Heaven,&#8221; Mauceri called out to<br />
the orchestra by way of cluing them in to the mood. &#8220;It&#8217;s all very sweet,<br />
about two dead people who meet.&#8221; A question came up about the scoring in a<br />
certain passage. &#8220;This might work for a moment in the movie,&#8221; Mauceri<br />
reasoned with the composer, &#8220;but could we change it for the record?&#8221; The<br />
composer acquiesced.<br />
&#8220;I hate records of bygone movie music,&#8221; Mauceri said during a break. &#8220;But<br />
this one will be better. The record will be out, next summer, while the movie<br />
is still playing, and so it&#8217;ll be much more current.<br />
New York-born and Yale-trained, the 45-year-old Mauceri has had a varied career<br />
that stamps him as ideal for a Hollywood Bowl identification. His actual debut<br />
as a conductor was in 1973 with the Los Angeles Philharmonic; in the same year<br />
he made his operatic debut at Washington&#8217;s Wolf Trap Festival. On Broadway, he<br />
was on the podium for the Hal Prince reworking of Bernstein&#8217;s &#8220;Candide&#8221; and<br />
also won a Tony for the revival of Rodgers and Hart&#8217;s &#8220;On Your Toes.&#8221;<br />
The Hollywood Bowl Orchestra is the first, however, that Mauceri can call his<br />
own. &#8220;&#8221;It&#8217;s been a long time coming,&#8221; he said, his dimples practically<br />
incandescent.<br />
&#8220;Conductors don&#8217;t have an easy time of it,&#8221; he went on. &#8220;A violinist can<br />
carry his instrument around; a pianist can always rent one. When I was at Yale,<br />
and desperately needed an orchestra to conduct, I used to cruise the streets,<br />
looking for whoever I could find who was carrying an instrument case. I would<br />
waylay that person; it didn&#8217;t matter how good or bad. And now, 25 years later,<br />
all that importuning has paid off.<br />
In Los Angeles, of course, there are more musicians walking the streets<br />
carrying instrument cases. The movie studios and broadcast stations don&#8217;t<br />
maintain the house orchestras that they once did, but even with this decline<br />
this remains one of the two American cities where a freelance musician can<br />
carve out a decent living &#8212; all other things being equal, of course. (New York<br />
is the other.)<br />
A freelance musician in Los Angeles earns his real money in the studios, doing<br />
the music for commercials and TV dramas, or in a movie orchestra for a big John<br />
Williams epic. If all this commercial work undermines his faith in artistic<br />
standards, he can play in one of the regional symphony orchestras: the<br />
Pasadena, Long Beach or Glendale, or the Los Angeles Chamber Orchestra.<br />
The new Hollywood Bowl orchestra fits into that latter category. In its first<br />
season, which begins with the Bowl this summer, the orchestra will play six<br />
pairs of concerts under its own name; most of its members will play another<br />
pair under the name &#8220;Members of the Hollywood Bowl Orchestra.&#8221; Then in<br />
December there will be a tour, two weeks in Japan with a concert scheduled for<br />
Tokyo on New Year&#8217;s Eve. And then there&#8217;s the Philips contract, which sets the<br />
orchestra above the other regional groups that usually don&#8217;t get to<br />
record.<br />
&#8220;All that means about $20,000 this first year, which isn&#8217;t bad for this amount<br />
of work,&#8221; said oboist Joel Timm. &#8220;I came out to Los Angeles five years ago. I<br />
had done fairly well in New York, including a year as a temporary player in the<br />
New York Philharmonic. What lured me out here, aside from the obvious pleasures<br />
of life in a warm climate, was an offer to teach half-time at U.S.C.&#8217;s music<br />
school. That seemed like a job with high visibility in the music community, and<br />
that translates directly into good freelance jobs.&#8221;<br />
Even with that kind of experience and visibility, a freelancer newly arrived in<br />
Los Angeles, or in New York or San Francisco or Chicago, or anyplace with some<br />
amount of freelance activity and high amounts of competition, doesn&#8217;t<br />
immediately walk into top-ranking jobs. &#8220;I paid my dues,&#8221; Timm remembered.<br />
&#8220;No matter how good you are, and how nice a guy, the working people in this<br />
town aren&#8217;t just going to move over and let you into the group. You start in by<br />
working for what you can get, in smaller gigs or as a substitute. It&#8217;s only<br />
now, after six years, that I can feel safe in the inner circle &#8212; or close to<br />
it, anyhow.<br />
&#8220;And that&#8217;s because I&#8217;m an oboist, and there aren&#8217;t too many of us. If I were<br />
a violinist I might be still be struggling on the edges.&#8221;<br />
Another time-out, and freelance keyboard artist and pianist Ralph Grierson<br />
showed off his own fantasic music machine: an array of keyboards (10 or 11 in<br />
all) hooked up to another array of faucets and knobs, all of it hung on three<br />
racks that encompass a space about the size of an old-fashioned phone booth.<br />
Grierson was joking about all that synthesizing equipment someday taking over<br />
from live musicians, something he doesn&#8217;t believe for one minute. His jokes<br />
were not finding their mark with the live musician next to him, harpist Katie<br />
Kirkpatrick.<br />
&#8220;Los Angeles is a wonderful place,&#8221; Grierson said, &#8220;with this incredible<br />
aggregation of freelance musicians who can do anything and everything, with no<br />
need for help from electronics and synthesizers. But there&#8217;s all this fear of<br />
electronics taking over, which they won&#8217;t. If you could translate that fear<br />
energy into practice energy, think how much better, even, we&#8217;d all<br />
sound.&#8221;<br />
And the fact that someone, namely the Los Angeles Philharmonic, has in these<br />
fear-racked days gone out and started a brand-new orchestra should be, you&#8217;d<br />
think, assurance enough that live performance is here to stay.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>LAPO</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/1991/03/lapo-7/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/1991/03/lapo-7/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Fri, 01 Mar 1991 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Daily News]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=2808</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Once again we owe much to the venerable conductor, Kurt Sanderling. Whether or not his efforts with the vast, lumbering Eighth Symphony of Dimitri Shostakovich were actually worth his time with the Los Angeles Philharmonic this past weekend, he certainly put the work forward in the best possible light. The symphony dates from 1943 and [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Once again we owe much to the venerable conductor, Kurt Sanderling. Whether or<br />
not his efforts with the vast, lumbering Eighth Symphony of Dimitri<br />
Shostakovich were actually worth his time with the Los Angeles Philharmonic<br />
this past  weekend, he certainly put the work forward in the best possible<br />
light.<br />
The symphony dates from 1943 and needs to be heard, therefore, in the light of<br />
its composer&#8217;s moods in his war-torn country. Like the other &#8220;War&#8221; symphony,<br />
the Seventh, it begins with vast statements: in this case a deep, sombre<br />
opening slow movement that explodes into abrasive madness near the end and<br />
takes up nearly half of the symphony&#8217;s hourlong span. Comparisons to some of<br />
Gustav Mahler&#8217;s more psychotic outpourings are inevitable.<br />
Then, like Mahler, Shostakovich does a certain amount of thrashing to devise<br />
ensuing movements large enough to balance his opening statement. Like Mahler<br />
(in the Fifth Symphony, for example) he is not completely successful. The two<br />
brief  scherzos, in Shostakovich&#8217;s well-known jokey style, sound trivial. They<br />
lead to a slow movement that meanders down dark corridors before finally coming<br />
to rest in gleaming C-major sunshine.<br />
That one moment is the symphony&#8217;s highpoint, but it is a single moment out of a<br />
very long run. A finale, built out of forgettable melodic blocks, ends softly<br />
and serenely (an effect ruined on Friday afternoon by heavy conversation in<br />
seats L-27 and 28). That moment, too, is potentially beautiful.<br />
Sanderling&#8217;s way with Shostakovich is familiar from his previous visits here.<br />
Having known the composer, he also seems gifted with powerful insights into the<br />
rhetorical side of this music. He drew a tremendous, virtuosic performance out<br />
of the orchestra, full of pianissimos that you didn&#8217;t so much hear as feel as<br />
goosebumps, and overpowering outbursts that were never raucous or cheap. If<br />
there is a case to be made for this imperfect work, a matter open to argument,<br />
let it be on Sanderling&#8217;s level of eloquence.<br />
Elizo Virzaladze, the darkly handsome pianist from Soviet Georgia who had<br />
played Mozart with Sanderling on a previous visit, did so again, starting the<br />
program with the B-flat Concerto (K. 450). One of the less-frequently performed<br />
of Mozart&#8217;s mature concertos, it operates on a quiet, witty, warm-hearted<br />
level. Sanderling in his wisdom had reduced the size of the string contingent,<br />
so that the lovely wind scoring came through nicely.<br />
Even so, it was not a successful performance. A term like &#8220;deadpan&#8221; is never<br />
pleasant to encounter in discussing Mozart performances, but no other<br />
description fits Virzaladze&#8217;s unloving, uninflected onslaught on Mozart&#8217;s<br />
magical measures. The program biography states that she &#8220;reads Shakespeare and<br />
Goethe in their original languages.&#8221; Too bad she did not accord Mozart that<br />
same favor.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>DEGENERATES</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/1991/02/degenerates/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/1991/02/degenerates/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 27 Feb 1991 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Daily News]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=2783</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Half a century ago, Los Angeles teemed with Germanic art, as refugees from Adolf Hitler&#8217;s persecution moved their creativity westward. Now, with the &#8220;Degenerate Art&#8221; show at the County Museum currently drawing crowds and a corollary &#8220;Degenerate Music&#8221; show about to open at the Music Center, that episode in Los Angeles&#8217; cultural history takes on [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Half a century ago, Los Angeles teemed with Germanic art, as refugees from Adolf<br />
Hitler&#8217;s persecution moved their creativity westward. Now, with the<br />
&#8220;Degenerate Art&#8221; show at the County Museum currently drawing crowds and a<br />
corollary &#8220;Degenerate Music&#8221; show about to open at the Music Center, that<br />
episode in Los Angeles&#8217; cultural history takes on a whole new perspective.<br />
The community at large is contributing handsomely to the observance of these<br />
strange and disturbing pages from history. This week, for example, there have<br />
been concerts at both U.S.C. and the County Museum, specifically devoted to<br />
examples of what Hitler&#8217;s minions had earmarked as &#8220;degenerate,&#8221; and the<br />
results have been illuminating and rewarding.<br />
On Tuesday night a too-small audience at U.S.C.&#8217;s Hancock Hall heard a program<br />
by the school&#8217;s own Contemporary Music Ensemble under Donald Crockett, with<br />
music fromn the 1930s by Anton Webern and Ernst Krenek that had certainly<br />
aroused Nazi anger, and a brilliant new piece that attests to Germany&#8217;s musical<br />
rebirth. On Wednesday, the superb New York-based American String Quartet played<br />
a mostly thrilling program of music by four proscribed composers: Webern again,<br />
Arnold Schoenberg, Paul Hindemith and Viktor Ullman, this time before a<br />
properly large and responsive audience at the County Museum.What did all this music have in common, such as to arouse the ire of the German<br />
censors? Seriousness and intricacy, for one thing. The complex unravelings in<br />
Schoenberg&#8217;s Third Quartet of 1927 no longer intimidate listeners; the gorgeous<br />
long melodic lines in the slow movement of Hindemith&#8217;s Opus 22 Quartet of 1922<br />
pose no problems; the visionary nature painting in Ernst Krenek&#8217;s 1931 song-<br />
cycle &#8220;Durch die Nacht&#8221; positively glow in the warm lighting of late<br />
romanticism.But there was a time when this was the newest new music of its day, and a lazy<br />
cultural consumership might find reasons, or invent reasons masked in some<br />
high-flown propaganda about race and nation, for shoving all this aside. Among<br />
the many things that these exhibits in town, and the accompanying musical<br />
events, prove, it is the damage the arts can suffer when those in charge cannot<br />
begin to comprehend the artistic material at hand. That message, unfortunately,<br />
is timeless.On the U.S.C. program, planned by the Schoenberg Institute&#8217;s Leonard Stein,<br />
there was also a new commissioned work, Berthold Tuercke&#8217;s Octet for winds,<br />
brass and strings: strong, abrasive music touched here and there by the ghost<br />
of Webern, but speaking throughout with its own voice as well. Thirty-three<br />
years old and currently teaching in Berlin, Tuercke is a find. The Kronos<br />
Quartet, among others, has taken up some of his music.Viktor Ullman&#8217;s short Third Quartet, eloquently played by the Americans, owes<br />
its fame to its historic circumstance: composed in 1943 while its composer, a<br />
former Schoenberg pupil, was in the notorious Terezin concentration camp in<br />
Nazi-occupied Czechoslovakia. For all this, however, it remains stillborn,<br />
note-spinning at romanticism&#8217;s death-throes, competent and correct. Its value<br />
as a document is beyond question; its value as music is beyond redemption.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>UMBRELLA</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/1991/02/umbrella-3/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/1991/02/umbrella-3/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 25 Feb 1991 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Daily News]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=2868</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[If these Green Umbrella concerts keep getting better, they&#8217;re in danger, one of these Monday nights, of taking off into orbit. Once again, Monday night at the Japan-America Theater, the Los Angeles Philharmonic&#8217;s new-music series struck gold: a triumph both of programming and performance. Oliver Knussen conducted with great skill and inmsight, his second appearance [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>If these Green Umbrella concerts keep getting better, they&#8217;re in danger, one of<br />
these Monday nights, of taking off into orbit. Once again, Monday night at the<br />
Japan-America Theater, the Los Angeles Philharmonic&#8217;s new-music series struck<br />
gold: a triumph both of programming and performance.<br />
Oliver Knussen conducted with great skill and inmsight, his second appearance<br />
this season. The only thing wrong about that is the unseemly modesty that keeps<br />
him from programming any of his own excellent music. On his home turf, this<br />
burly Britisher is highly regarded as a composer, and also as a brilliant<br />
interpreter of other people&#8217;s new scores. Lucky Los Angeles, that he has chosen<br />
this as his major American base.<br />
Four works &#8212; two American and two British &#8212; constituted the program, with the<br />
best music placed at beginning and end. Morton Feldman&#8217;s &#8220;For Frank O&#8217;Hara,&#8221;<br />
which began proceedings, is one of that late composer&#8217;s characteristic<br />
exercises in sounds mostly at the edge of silence. Written for seven<br />
instruments &#8212; flute, clarinet, violin, cello, piano and two percussionists &#8211;<br />
and relatively brief (15 minutes or thereabouts) as Feldman pieces go, the<br />
music generates a spell both firm and gentle. A plink here, a plunk there, a<br />
silence in between: the sense of unfolding is inexorable.<br />
The final work was more lavish by far: Harrison Birtwistle&#8217;s {cq} &#8220;Meridian,&#8221;<br />
composed in 1971 but only now produced on the West Coast. Birtwistle, in his<br />
late 50s, is Britain&#8217;s most enigmatic composer, and one of its finest. Inward,<br />
intense, not easily approached yet thoroughly gripping, his big works have yet<br />
to make headway in this country. &#8220;Meridian,&#8221; for solo mezzo-soprano, six<br />
female voices in ensemble, and an ensemble of winds, harps and percussion with<br />
solo cello and French horn, exerts its power and lingers in the memory.<br />
The texts are fragments of love poetry by Thomas Wyatt (of the 16th century)<br />
and Christopher Logue (of our own); they are blended into the instrumental<br />
ensemble until the end product becomes a synthesis of spoken and unspoken<br />
drama. As Mary King sang the solos, marvelously enveloped by the ensemble under<br />
Knussen, the stage seemed to glow with radiant imagery.<br />
These were the evening&#8217;s highlights. Neither the pretensions of Judith Weir&#8217;s<br />
&#8220;The Consolations of Scholarship&#8221; nor the exuberant but not fully realized<br />
ambitions of Brian Kehlenbach&#8217;s &#8220;In the Land Beyond Beyond,&#8221; came close.<br />
Weir is best known for her &#8220;A Night at the Chinese Opera,&#8221; greeted with<br />
deserved hostility at the Santa Fe Opera two seasons ago. &#8220;Scholarship&#8221; is,<br />
blessedly, shorter but no better; again the matter at hand is a setting of<br />
Chinese texts in a self-consciously simplistic manner of little import &#8212; this<br />
despite a clever staging worked out for herself by singer Mary King. There was<br />
more promise in the work of Kehlenbach, currently a composition doctoral<br />
candidate at U.S.C. The composer mingles jazz harmonies skillfully into his<br />
ensemble; still his piece is somewhat shapeless, long for its length. As<br />
student music goes, Kehlenbach has made an impressive beginning. We will hear<br />
from him again.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>ELEKTRA</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/1991/02/elektra/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/1991/02/elektra/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sat, 23 Feb 1991 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Daily News]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=2785</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Just when you thought it was unsafe to return to the Music Center Opera, along comes &#8220;Elektra,&#8221; and matters are again on the mend. The company&#8217;s new production of Richard Strauss&#8217; one-act mix of shock and shlock, unveiled Saturday night for the first of four performance, might have its flaws, but they rank as virtues [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Just when you thought it was unsafe to return to the Music Center Opera, along   comes &#8220;Elektra,&#8221; and matters are again on the mend. The company&#8217;s new   production of Richard Strauss&#8217; one-act mix of shock and shlock, unveiled   Saturday night for the first of four performance, might have its flaws, but   they rank as virtues compared to some of last fall&#8217;s shenanigans.  Note well, for starters, that director David Pountney has hit upon the   noteworthy scheme, apparently rare these days, of setting his production in the   time and place &#8212; post-Trojan War Greece &#8212; specified by Hugo von   Hofmannsthal&#8217;s libretto: no updating to Fresno in the 1980s. John Bury&#8217;s set   takes a few liberties; the ruined statue of Agamemnon in the foreground sports   a rather modernistic war helmet. But the designs are otherwise mostly abstract,   and the great palace facade, with its menacing flight of stairs slashed across   the front, looks appropriately timeless.   More remarkably, this set serves the opera&#8217;s title character, the crazed and   murderous Elektra, as a wonderful jungle gym. Marilyn Zschau, in the mounting   frenzy that is the opera&#8217;s dramatic thread, is all over the place, dashing up   and down the staircase, acting out her final dance of ecstasy while swinging   from some conveniently placed ropes, expiring at the end cuddled into the   dismembered hand of that statue of her murdered father.  All this would be fun enough to watch, but Zschau goes one further. Anyone who   remembers her fabulous Renata in the company&#8217;s Fiery Angel&#8221; some years back   knows that when it comes to giving voice to unbridled hysteria, nobody else in   opera can touch her. And so it was again. There was nothing much to ravish the   ear in Zschau&#8217;s Elektra; it&#8217;s a hard voice, with a jagged cutting edge. As   such, it is a tremendous vehicle for Strauss&#8217; steamy protagonist. This is an   Elektra as the role was conceived.  Then there is that Chrysothemis of Ealynn Voss, that towering talent (in any   sense of the term), simply stupendous in her company debut, remarkable in the   sound of her voice and, even more surprising, in the naturalness and grace of   her acting. Helga Dernesch is an uncommonly interesting Klytemnestra, not the   grotesque monster the character is often made out to be, but a woman in   believable human torment. Rodney Gilfry&#8217;s leather-boy Orest, in a silly red   hairdo, and Gary Bachlund&#8217;s Aegisthus round out the cast acceptably.  Lawrence Foster conducted, veteran of many Music Center productions, star of   none. He made his way tidily through the tangles of Strauss&#8217; murderous   orchestration, to be sure, but added little in the way of eloquence. Love this   music or loathe it &#8212; and there are potent arguments on both sides &#8212; there are   moments in the score that light up the sky, or should in a properly motivated   performance. This Elektra&#8221; was pure Lawrence Foster, competent and correct,   its glow steady but dim.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>LAPO</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/1991/02/lapo-8/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/1991/02/lapo-8/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 21 Feb 1991 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Daily News]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=2807</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Enduring a performance of Edward Elgar&#8217;s Second Symphony should be no problem. Bring along a good book and a soft pillow, and you&#8217;ve got it made. Most of the audience at Thursday night&#8217;s Los Angeles Philharmonic concert at the Music Center, however, had overlooked these amenities. Getting through the Elgar Second under those deprived circumstances, [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Enduring a performance of Edward Elgar&#8217;s Second Symphony should be no problem.<br />
Bring along a good book and a soft pillow, and you&#8217;ve got it made.<br />
Most of the audience at Thursday night&#8217;s Los Angeles Philharmonic concert at<br />
the Music Center, however, had overlooked these amenities. Getting through the<br />
Elgar Second under those deprived circumstances, then, meant spending some 55<br />
minutes fighting off not sleep but insomnia. Sure, Andre Previn demonstrated<br />
his expected skill in shaping the performance, but this hardly represents a<br />
triumph of musicianship &#8212; merely of patience.<br />
Elgar&#8217;s symphonic language presents no problems. It is the basic overripe style<br />
brought to its culmination on the Continent by Richard Strauss, and blown up by<br />
Elgar to such proportions as to make  Strauss into a miniaturist. The musical<br />
sequences mount, in a manner familiar nowadays from music that accompanies<br />
movie or TV characters hurtling down dim corridors toward closed doors. The<br />
orchestration has a kind of rolling, gummy majesty, but the lines of thought &#8211;<br />
assuming that there are such &#8212; are difficult to tell apart in the sonorous<br />
muck.<br />
And yet the music remains admired in some circles, most of all in its native<br />
England. A critic quoted in the Philharmonic program notes claims that this<br />
music &#8220;still means much in the consciousness of the nation.&#8221; That stirs up a<br />
real problem:  how can a nation with this joyless, long-winded stuff in its<br />
consciousness also produce &#8220;Fawlty Towers&#8221; and the Goons? There is obviously<br />
more variety in this British consciousness than meets the ear.<br />
Previn did, in truth, get quite a lot of brave and mellow noise out of the<br />
orchestra, but that&#8217;s not really saying very much. Credit Elgar at least with<br />
mastery over a tamper-proof orchestral style; it&#8217;s hard not to make the right<br />
kind of noise here.<br />
Far more convincing as a measure of Previn&#8217;s musical worth was the opening<br />
work on the program, Mozart&#8217;s wondrous Clarinet Concerto, with the orchestra&#8217;s<br />
own Michele Zukovsky as soloist. Zukovsky and Previn had, by the way, worked up<br />
the performance on short notice, replacing the indisposed pianist Maria Joao {cq}<br />
Pires who was scheduled for another Mozart work.<br />
Like Previn&#8217;s Mozart performances two weeks ago, this was a triumph of serene<br />
musicianship and a superior sense of the give-and-take that is at the heart of<br />
Mozart&#8217;s concertos. Zukovsky, herself slender and reedy like her instrument,<br />
bends and sways as she plays. Her clarinet cannot mimic such motions, yet its<br />
music, as Zukovsky played it on Thursday night, had a similar beguiling<br />
flexibility. The work itself, the last of all Mozart&#8217;s concertos, shines its<br />
modest smile through the twilight; it is  the work of a composer who, at<br />
only<br />
35, had already mastered the insights of a full life. The slow movement,<br />
properly played, reaches toward the stars. It did just that the other<br />
night.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>BALLO</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/1991/02/ballo/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/1991/02/ballo/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 20 Feb 1991 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Daily News]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=2735</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Here we are, a growing community of operatic connoisseurs, but starved this season for a touch from the warming hand of Giuseppe Verdi. No wonder the prospect of Opera Pacific&#8217;s &#8220;Un ballo in maschera&#8221; {cq upper &#038; lower case} looked so enticing. No such luck. &#8220;Ballo&#8221; can be reckoned Verdi&#8217;s perfect opera: beautifully proportioned, concise, [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Here we are, a growing community of operatic connoisseurs, but starved this<br />
season for a touch from the warming hand of Giuseppe Verdi. No wonder the<br />
prospect of Opera Pacific&#8217;s &#8220;Un ballo in maschera&#8221; {cq upper &#038; lower case}<br />
looked so enticing. No such luck.<br />
&#8220;Ballo&#8221; can be reckoned Verdi&#8217;s perfect opera: beautifully proportioned,<br />
concise, elegantly balanced between frivolity and high tragedy. Just the<br />
opera&#8217;s second act could stand as the ideal demonstration of the dramatic<br />
power of romantic operatic writing, from Amelia&#8217;s first fear-racked aria to the<br />
vicious sarcasm of the final ensemble.<br />
But even perfection of design demands a shaping hand, and the element most awry<br />
in this generally dispiriting evening was the flabby conducting of Louis<br />
Salemno. The opera seemed to move along as so many small and unrelated<br />
outbursts, with little regard for anything resembling dramatic continuity &#8211;<br />
this in the most dramatically continuous of all Verdi&#8217;s operas. Salemno<br />
obviously admires the look of his own conducting; he was stationed high above<br />
the orchestra so that he became an added visual presence in front of the stage<br />
action. Unfortunately, like most of his contribution to the performance, this<br />
was just another needless distraction.<br />
Leona Mitchell was the Amelia, a good role for her somewhat dusky, nicely<br />
controlled voice; she sang a performance that, under better conditions, might<br />
have had some shape. This time it did not; like the conducting, it seemed a<br />
performance fashioned out of small moments loosely connected. There were<br />
moments &#8212; the start of the big Act Three aria for one &#8212; when there was hope<br />
for a typically moving Leona Mitchell performance. But her best intentions<br />
seemed constantly to dwindle.<br />
At that Mitchell owned a great deal of the performance. Certainly the wobbly<br />
Gustavo of Taro Ichihara, the lurch-&#8217;n'-clutch of his rudimentary stage<br />
presence, can&#8217;t have been much incentive to draw anyone into a realization of<br />
Verdi&#8217;s high purpose. Nor Rosemary Bollin&#8217;s squeaky Oscar, a perversion of one<br />
of Verdi&#8217;s most fascinating roles. Nor the unfocussed Ulrica of Cynthia Munzer.<br />
Nor the Broadway-motel decor of the usually trustworthy Zack Brown. Nor&#8230;<br />
Better than any of this was the Renato of Timothy Noble, despite the<br />
announcement early on that he was suffering from a throat inflammation. Here<br />
was singing in the grand Verdian manner, supported by a continually interesting<br />
stage presence. Perhaps Noble should have shared his affliction with the rest<br />
of the cast. At least he shared some sublime Verdi with the rest of us.<br />
THE FACTS:<br />
What: Opera Pacific presents Giuseppe Verdi&#8217;s &#8220;Un ballo in maschera.&#8221;<br />
Where: Segerstrom Hall, Orange County Performing Arts Center, Costa Mesa.<br />
When: 8 p.m., February 22, 28 and March 2; 2 p.m., February 24.<br />
Behind the scenes: production from the Washington Opera, staged by Anne Ewers,<br />
conducted by Louis Salemno, with sets and costumes by Zack Brown.<br />
Starring: Leona Mitchell and Taro Ichihara (February 24 &#038; 28); Priscilla<br />
Baskerville and Tonio DiPaolo (February 22 and March 2).<br />
Tickets: $20 to $70; information and reservations: 714 740-2000 or 213 480-<br />
3232.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<item>
		<title>MEC&#160;XTET</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/1991/02/mec-xtet/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/1991/02/mec-xtet/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 11 Feb 1991 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Daily News]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=2831</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[The name of Bright Sheng has come into circulation lately. Born in Shanghai in 1955, he came to New York in 1982, has had performances and commissions by orchestras here and abroad, is currently composer-in-residence at the Chicago Lyric Opera, and assisted Leonard Bernstein on that composer&#8217;s &#8220;Arias and Barcarolles.&#8221; At 35, he has made [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>The name of Bright Sheng has come into circulation lately. Born in Shanghai in<br />
1955, he came to New York in 1982, has had performances and commissions by<br />
orchestras here and abroad, is currently composer-in-residence at the Chicago<br />
Lyric Opera, and assisted Leonard Bernstein on that composer&#8217;s &#8220;Arias and<br />
Barcarolles.&#8221; At 35, he has made his mark.<br />
At Monday night&#8217;s concert by XTET {cq}, the splendid aggregation of freelance<br />
musicians with a special bent toward new music, Bright Sheng&#8217;s &#8220;Three Poems<br />
from the Sung Dynasty&#8221; was by all odds the evening&#8217;s knockout piece. Three<br />
ancient poems are set by the composer into a chamber ensemble brilliantly used.<br />
The atmosphere is less Oriental, more universal. Reminiscences of Stravinsky<br />
and Boulez float across the horizon. The songs were gorgeously sung by Dasietta<br />
{cq} Kim, and beautifully framed by the ensemble under Donald Crockett, in 20-<br />
or-so minutes of magical, strong music.<br />
The Bright Sheng songs, and lesser works by David Ocker and Donald R. Davis &#8211;<br />
most of it busy-busy writing without much focus &#8212; were framed by two<br />
&#8220;contemporary&#8221; works of the past. Stravinsky&#8217;s amusing cycle of pseudo-<br />
folksongs called &#8220;Pribaoutki&#8221; (also magically sung by Dasietta Kim) came at<br />
the start. Aaron Copland&#8217;s Sextet of 1937 sent the crowd home happy.<br />
An extraordinary work, that Copland. He wrote it as a &#8220;portable&#8221; version of<br />
his 1933 &#8220;Short Symphony,&#8221; partly out of justified fear that the orchestral<br />
version might be too difficult for conductors and orchestras of the time.<br />
(Serge Koussevitzky and Leopold Stokowski had both scheduled and then canceled<br />
performances, probably for that very reason.)<br />
Today this music arouses fewer fears, although it&#8217;s interesting to note that<br />
there is only one recording of the symphony in the current catalog &#8212; an<br />
excellent one, under Dennis Russell Davies &#8212; compared to two of the sextet.<br />
Still, the daring is as obvious in the work now as when it was new: most of all<br />
the driving, quirky motion (nicely described in Roger Lebow&#8217;s program notes as<br />
&#8220;street-wise, jazz-besotted rhythms&#8221;). The slow movement, with those arching,<br />
intense melodies that came to represent Copland&#8217;s best melodic style, is pure<br />
and beautiful, perhaps even more so in the chamber version.<br />
An exhilarating ending, then, to a concert with many rewarding moments. In a<br />
city well-stocked with skillful new-music ensembles, XTET ranks near the<br />
top.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<item>
		<title>LAPO</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/1991/02/lapo-9/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/1991/02/lapo-9/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Fri, 08 Feb 1991 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Daily News]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=2806</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Back in 1985, at the start of his leadership of the Los Angeles Philharmonic, Andre Previn guided the orchestra through several Haydn and Mozart performances that linger in the memory. Those fond recollections were rekindled on Friday night at the Music Center, as Previn and the orchestra devoted an entire program to a loving celebration [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Back in 1985, at the start of his leadership of the Los Angeles Philharmonic,<br />
Andre Previn guided the orchestra through several Haydn and Mozart performances<br />
that linger in the memory. Those fond recollections were rekindled on Friday<br />
night at the Music Center, as Previn and the orchestra devoted an entire<br />
program to a loving celebration of the glory of Mozart.<br />
Three works constituted the program: the Sinfonia Concertante (K. 364),and the<br />
Symphony No. 39 (K. 543) &#8211; absolute masterpieces both &#8212; and the D-major<br />
Divertimento (K. 251), a lesser work but a charmer nonetheless. As is only<br />
proper, Previn used a reduced orchestra all evening: three stands of first<br />
violins (against the customary six) for the Divertimento and the Sinfonia, four<br />
for the Symphony. It was a lovely sound he drew, one which honored the essence<br />
of Mozart&#8217;s orchestral writing, the constant dialog between strings and<br />
woodwinds.<br />
What an extraordinary work, that Sinfonia Concertante! Young Uck Kim  Young<br />
is his first name [F/L] was the violin soloist, Heichiro Ohyama the violist.<br />
Together with Previn&#8217;s beautifully shaded orchestral support, they<br />
reconstructed the harrowing picture this music presents: the young Mozart at a<br />
sorrowful moment in his life, transforming himself in this work into the<br />
supreme expressive master he would now become. Can anyone remain unmoved by<br />
those poignant last measures of the slow movement? Previn and his soloists made<br />
that extremely difficult.<br />
That Sinfonia comes at the start of Mozart&#8217;s mature mastery; the Symphony No.<br />
39 comes close to the end; the juxtaposition of the two works (both in E flat,<br />
if that news matters) made for an interesting study in growth. Mozart composed<br />
no orchestral work more exuberant, more rich in the interplay of orchestral<br />
color, than this Symphony. From the full orchestral might in the slow<br />
introduction to the giggling duet for clarinets in the minuet (giggled<br />
enchantingly by Michelle Zukovsky and David Howard), the work proclaims a fact<br />
sometimes overlooked: that Mozart, among the other facets of his genius, was<br />
the greatest orchestrator of them all.<br />
This Previn and his cut-down orchestra proved beyond doubt in this altogether<br />
splendid concert. The smaller pleasures of the Divertimento were also much<br />
enhanced by David Weiss&#8217; splendid quacking of the oboe solos. A fine evening<br />
for the Philharmonic, and for Mozart as well.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<item>
		<title>TAVERNER</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/1991/02/taverner/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/1991/02/taverner/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Tue, 05 Feb 1991 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Daily News]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=2864</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[At the risk of sounding obsessive, Tuesday night&#8217;s &#8220;Chamber Music in Historic Sites&#8221; concert was one in a long series for which &#8220;perfection&#8221; is the most accurate description. The venue was beautiful; so was the music; so was the way the two elements seemed made for one another. The matter at hand was a program [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>At the risk of sounding obsessive, Tuesday night&#8217;s &#8220;Chamber Music in Historic<br />
Sites&#8221; concert was one in a long series for which &#8220;perfection&#8221; is the most<br />
accurate description.<br />
The venue was beautiful; so was the music; so was the way the two elements<br />
seemed made for one another. The matter at hand was a program of Claudio<br />
Monteverdi, music&#8217;s first true innovative genius. The performers were the<br />
members of Andrew Parrott&#8217;s Taverner Consort in their first Los Angeles<br />
appearance. Their music, and their singing, made the clean, noble outlines of<br />
the Wilshire Christian Church, in downtown Los Angeles, seem even more<br />
beautiful this once.<br />
The music was entirely drawn from Monteverdi&#8217;s vast compendium of sacred pieces<br />
composed for St. Marks in Venice in 1640, marvelously rich settings of psalm<br />
verses and other biblical texts for vocal ensemble with instrumental<br />
underpinning, interspersed with Gregorian chants sung by solo voices<br />
unaccompanied. The expressive range here is extraordinary.<br />
Monteverdi, already the supreme operatic and madrigal composer of his time,<br />
here brings his sublime dramatic gifts to the underlining of words of passion<br />
and exultation in the liturgical repertory. It was fascinating, for example, to<br />
trace in several selections on this program the setting of the one word<br />
&#8220;misericordia&#8221; (&#8220;mercy&#8221;), always lit with a deep, mysterious burst of<br />
innovative harmony, always different.<br />
Parrott is one of the long list of British conductors concerned with<br />
&#8220;authentic&#8221; musical interpretations. He and his group have a long list of<br />
recordings to their credit, including these Monteverdi pieces and a recent,<br />
jubilant performance of Handel&#8217;s &#8220;Israel in Egypt.&#8221; His views on authenticity<br />
are rational and enlightened; his players use old-style instruments but aren&#8217;t<br />
afraid of an expressive vibrato when it shines a light on the music. His<br />
singers &#8212; eight in number for this particular program &#8212; are, similarly,<br />
unafraid to sound like what they are: skillful and dedicated, thoroughly modern<br />
artists.<br />
The result was authenticity in the best sense: a glowing, rich tribute to one<br />
of music&#8217;s astonishing creators. The program ran without intermission; seldom<br />
have 70 minutes seemed so short.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<item>
		<title>LAPO</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/1991/01/lapo-10/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/1991/01/lapo-10/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 31 Jan 1991 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Daily News]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=2805</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[To the list of once-renowned composers currently and undeservedly in limbo, the name of Bohuslav Martinu surely belongs. During his time in America as a refugee from Hitler&#8217;s holocaust, Martinu was much performed; it seemed as if orchestras waited in line to commission new scores from him. Now his devotees, though ardent, are more widely [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>To the list of once-renowned composers currently and undeservedly in limbo, the<br />
name of Bohuslav Martinu surely belongs. During his time in America as a<br />
refugee from Hitler&#8217;s holocaust, Martinu was much performed; it seemed as if<br />
orchestras waited in line to commission new scores from him. Now his devotees,<br />
though ardent, are more widely scattered.<br />
Lawrence Foster, who conducted Martinu&#8217;s &#8220;Frescoes of Piero Della Francesca&#8221;<br />
at the start of Thursday&#8217;s Los Angeles Philharmonic concert at the Music<br />
Center, is clearly one of these. He is, in fact, one of our most valuable<br />
pleaders of lost or forgotten causes, as his recent recording of Enesco&#8217;s<br />
&#8220;Oedipe&#8221; also shows.<br />
The music dates from 1953, six years before Martinu&#8217;s death. Although the<br />
inspiration is the artwork by the great Italian painter, the music is pure<br />
Martinu: the lushness of his Czech ancestry peppered by a harmonic language<br />
reminiscent of Stravinsky. The orchestral coloration is applied with a sure<br />
hand worthy of the great Piero himself; still, the music itself vanishes rather<br />
quickly from the memory. More bluntly put, there is sweetness here, but no<br />
shape.<br />
If anything, the meanderings of Martinu were shamed most of all by the<br />
evening&#8217;s final work, the wonderful G-major Symphony (No. 8 in the<br />
authoritative listing) by his Czech forbear Antonin Dvorak, music set down with<br />
the same glistening orchestral palette, but infinitely more tender and<br />
memorable. If these adjectives did not entirely apply to Foster&#8217;s performance,<br />
in which the first and last movements seemed needlessly brutal, the shape of<br />
the music itself was still discernible.<br />
Among the echoes enshrined in the walls of the Music Center&#8217;s Dorothy Chandler<br />
Pavilion is the ghost of a supremely wise performance under Carlo Maria Giulini<br />
from 1982. It immediately dooms any subsequent attempt.<br />
The splendid young Yefim Bronfman was the evening&#8217;s soloist, in the C-minor<br />
Piano Concerto of Mozart (K. 491), a miracle among miracles. Something seemed<br />
to be lacking here, too, however. Bronfman, ordinarily an intelligent hand at<br />
preserving the proportions in these mature Mozart concertos, here seemed out of<br />
touch with Foster and, thus, with the orchestra. The piano was too far front,<br />
sonically speaking; the marvelous interplay between soloist and orchestra<br />
seemed, this time, to be carried out across too vast a distance. Some beautiful<br />
playing, from both piano and the orchestral woodwinds, seemed wasted this time<br />
around.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<item>
		<title>LAPO</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/1991/01/lapo-11/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/1991/01/lapo-11/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 24 Jan 1991 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Daily News]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=2804</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[When did any of us last hear William Walton&#8217;s Viola Concerto in live performance? Probably a lifetime or two ago; concertos for viola are rare birds indeed. That made Yuri Bashmet&#8217;s supremely beautiful performance of the work, with Andrew Davis conducting the Los Angeles Philharmonic at the Music Center on Thursday night, all the more [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>When did any of us last hear William Walton&#8217;s Viola Concerto in live<br />
performance? Probably a lifetime or two ago; concertos for viola are rare birds<br />
indeed. That made Yuri Bashmet&#8217;s supremely beautiful performance of the work,<br />
with Andrew Davis conducting the Los Angeles Philharmonic at the Music Center<br />
on Thursday night, all the more miraculous, all the more welcome.<br />
Writing of Walton&#8217;s work when it was new, in 1929, the essayist Donald Tovey<br />
could see &#8220;no limits to what may be expected of the tone-poet who created<br />
it.&#8221; That sense of omnipotence remains in the work. Not particularly daring in<br />
its musical language &#8212; Walton never was, in fact &#8212; the concerto is a<br />
remarkably satisfying essay in a warm, intensely lyric manner that expresses<br />
great thinking with the simplest gestures.<br />
The concerto only lasts about 20 minutes, but its progression &#8212; from the long,<br />
haunting melodic lines of the opening slow movement, through the garrulous<br />
scherzo, to the finale that recedes into dark shadows at the end &#8212; is the work<br />
of a sure master. Tovey&#8217;s recognition of its qualities was keen, but it could<br />
actually be argued that this early work persists as Walton&#8217;s masterpiece.<br />
The young Bashmet is a wonder. Adept as a soloist, chamber-music participant<br />
and, recently, conductor, he looks like a romantic hero out of Pushkin and<br />
plays in a similar manner. The elegance of his phrasing, his absolute command<br />
of the mellowness that lies at the heart of his instrument: these were the<br />
elements that ennobled his work in the important Walton work &#8212; and, as well,<br />
in an unimportant brief Telemann concerto at the start.<br />
Andrew Davis is no stranger here, in his earlier capacity as head of the<br />
Toronto Symphony and currently as music director of the Glyndebourne Festival<br />
and the BBC Symphony. A sober, correct musician rather than a spellbinding one,<br />
he got the orchestra through a clean, classic, refined reading of Stravinsky&#8217;s<br />
Symphony in C, and a rather unruly one of that composer&#8217;s &#8220;Firebird&#8221; excerpts<br />
in the suite fashioned in 1919.<br />
It could be, of course, that the vulgarity of the &#8220;Firebird&#8221; performance was<br />
preordained, coming as it did after the serene good sense of the Walton<br />
concerto. It was, therefore, one piece too many on the program; less might have<br />
been more.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<item>
		<title>SERKIN</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/1991/01/serkin/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/1991/01/serkin/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Tue, 22 Jan 1991 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Daily News]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=2857</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Last season Peter Serkin, most intrepid and interesting of all American pianists, embarked on a truly brave mission. He commissioned short new works from a dozen major composers around the world, and toured the country with a program consisting of these works and nothing more. He gave the program at Royce Hall in December, 1989, [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Last season Peter Serkin, most intrepid and interesting of all American<br />
pianists, embarked on a truly brave mission. He commissioned short new works<br />
from a dozen major composers around the world, and toured the country with a<br />
program consisting of these works and nothing more. He gave the program at<br />
Royce Hall in December, 1989, and was cheered by an equally intrepid audience.<br />
For this year&#8217;s tour Serkin has culled three works from that program, and<br />
worked them in around other music by Mozart, Beethoven, Brahms and Chopin. This<br />
was his recital offering on Tuesday night at the Music Center, and again the<br />
audience stayed to cheer. The motivations behind the concert were exactly<br />
right; deserving new works should be allowed to stand beside standard repertory<br />
composers, not quarantined in all-contemporary concerts.<br />
Two of the three new works were indeed, if memory serves, the best of the<br />
bunch: Oliver Knussen&#8217;s tough, gritty Variations, Opus 24, and Alexander<br />
Goehr&#8217;s &#8220;&#8230;in real time,&#8221; full of charm and wit that outweigh the dense<br />
numerological plan attached to the work by the composer. The third, Peter<br />
Lieberson&#8217;s Debussy-derived &#8220;Breeze of Delight,&#8221; seemed unsubstantial by<br />
comparison.<br />
Setting the new music in a sort of context, Serkin chose some out-of-the-way<br />
works by familiar composers: three of the  organ Chorale-Preludes, transcribed<br />
for piano, that were to be Johannes Brahms&#8217; last work; the Opus 126 Bagatelles<br />
of Beethoven; the F-major Piano Sonata that Mozart cobbled together from two<br />
movements composed here and a rondo from there; the garrulous, little-known<br />
Bolero of Chopin (with two Chopin Etudes and a Mazurka as encores).<br />
Enterprising program-building this, although that&#8217;s not the saying that<br />
everything worked. Neither the woolly Brahms pieces nor the jagged, unruly<br />
Beethoven pieces challenged the best in the pianist; the Beethoven in<br />
particular seemed rather tame in relationship to its fund of wildness.<br />
The Mozart, on the other hand, was the evening&#8217;s real triumph. The work is<br />
seldom played; perhaps its dual origin arouses suspicion. It is actually very<br />
much of a piece, three strong and well-planned movements, each a different kind<br />
of venture. into serious counterpoint.  Mozart at the time was in the process<br />
of discovering and devouring the music of J. S. Bach, and this deep, powerful<br />
music, with its ravishing slow movement and its strange experiments in piano<br />
sonority at the end, makes that clear. Trust Peter Serkin to make his every<br />
visit here a voyage of discovery.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<item>
		<title>COPPOLA</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/1991/01/coppola/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/1991/01/coppola/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sun, 20 Jan 1991 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Daily News]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=2781</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Among the many good reasons for looking in on the latest chapter in the ongoing family picnic known as &#8220;The Godfather,&#8221; musical matters rank high. Even in the two previous episodes the surge and onrush of events always seem to foreshadow some as-yet-unwritten violent musical melodrama from the hand of a Puccini or Mascagni. In [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Among the many good reasons for looking in on the latest chapter in the ongoing family picnic known as &#8220;The Godfather,&#8221; musical matters rank high. Even in the two previous episodes the surge and onrush of events always seem to foreshadow some as-yet-unwritten violent musical melodrama from the hand of a Puccini or Mascagni. In &#8220;Godfather 3&#8243; that unwritten opera gets written, as the red-hot measures of Mascagni&#8217;s &#8220;Cavalleria Rusticana&#8221; counterpoint the horrific bloodbath that brings Francis Ford Coppola&#8217;s chronicle to its smoky conclusion.These scenes from &#8220;Cavalleria&#8221; are shown as taking place at the Teatro Massimo in Palermo, as Tony Corleone, son of Michael, makes his operatic debut as the lead tenor, the hapless Turiddu who gets knifed by a jealous husband for his amorous escapades. Never mind that no untried tenor in real life gets a debut at the prestigious Massimo as anything more than a stage extra. Never mind also that, in order to interlock with the action of the offstage drama, Mascagni&#8217;s little opera has been chopped up and reassembled with opening and closing scenes reversed. &#8221;We had to do it,&#8221; was Carmine Coppola&#8217;s simple explanation. &#8220;Otherwise it wouldn&#8217;t work.&#8221; The &#8220;Godfather&#8221; trilogy&#8217;s composer, arranger, conductor and cultural conscience-without-portfolio; father of Francis, who directed, and Talia, who played Michael&#8217;s sister; grandfather of Sofia, who played Michael&#8217;s daughter; brother of Anton, who conducted the operatic scenes: the elder Coppola himself serves as head-of-family to the whole filmed chronicle, and has from the start. Surging headlong into a pastrami-on-rye at a deli not far from his home &#8220;in the low-rent part of Woodland Hills,&#8221; Godfather Coppola seemed happy with his many roles.Record collectors past a certain age know, of course, yet another Coppola: Piero, a prodigal composer and conductor who flourished around 1930 and who himself came from a long line of singers and instrumentalists. &#8220;I got a letter from his widow once, asking if we were related, but I don&#8217;t know,&#8221; Coppola said. &#8220;The name is common all over Italy. I was in Milan once, and I saw a Banco Coppola so I went in and introduced myself. They still wouldn&#8217;t cash a check.&#8221;Carmine Coppola turned 80 last June. He, too, got to appear in &#8220;The Godfather, Part III&#8221;; you can see him leading the Italian folk band in the party scene. You can also see him as he was 40 years ago, in the videos of Arturo Toscanini telecasts with the NBC Symphony recently reissued by RCA. There he sits in the first flutist&#8217;s chair, playing his magic flute in, for example, Wagner&#8217;s &#8220;Forest Murmurs,&#8221; a diminutive fellow with hair slicked back. When RCA gets around to reissuing Toscanini&#8217;s audio recording of Act Two of Gluck&#8217;s &#8220;Orfeo ed Euridice,&#8221; you&#8217;ll hear Coppola in the long flute solo in the ballet music.&#8221;My father fell in love with the flute while he was in the Italian army,&#8221; Coppola reminisced. &#8220;He was stationed at Forli, near Rimini, and there was a small opera in the town. He went to &#8220;Lucia di Lammermoor,&#8221; and after the flute solo in the Mad Scene he resolved that if he had a son he&#8217;d make sure that the boy got flute lessons. He married, and moved to New York, and after I was born (June 11, 1910) he made good on his vow.&#8221;After graduating the Juilliard School, young Carmine got a job in Hartford. &#8220;Radio stations had their own orchestras in the 1930s, and I got a job at WTIC. From there I went to the orchestra at Radio City Music Hall. Of course I didn&#8217;t know then that I&#8217;d be back there some day, conducting my own music for the the silent movie of &#8220;Napoleon.&#8221; How&#8217;d you like the music for that? Pretty romantic, huh?&#8221;By the time Toscanini and NBC beckoned, Coppola had moved on to Detroit, where he played in the Detroit Symphony and was also on coast-to-coast radio as flutist in the weekly &#8220;Ford Sunday Evening Hour.&#8221; His second child, Francis, was born at Ford Hospital during the Detroit stint &#8212; just in case you&#8217;re wondering where  his middle name comes from. Carmine Coppola remained with Toscanini for nine years. If you have the pirate recording of Toscanini rehearsing &#8220;La Traviata,&#8221; youll hear the conductor arguing with soprano Licia Albanaes. &#8220;Listen to Coppola,&#8221; the old man is screaming. &#8220;He play it right. You no sing it right.&#8221; &#8221;I used to tell Toscanini that I wanted to conduct,&#8221; Coppola went on. &#8220;He&#8217;d argue with me: &#8220;Why you want conduct when you play flute so good?&#8221; &#8220;But you were a cellist,&#8221; I&#8217;d say, &#8220;Yes&#8221; he said, &#8220;but I wasn&#8217;t a good cellist.&#8221;Showbiz beckoned, and Coppola followed his conducting ambition as music director for David Merrick productions, easing his Italian conscience now and then by conducting operas at the Brooklyn Academy. &#8220;Horrible, one rehearsal, maybe even less. But fun.&#8221;I was conducting &#8220;Half a Sixpence&#8221; on Broadway when Francis called from Hollwyood. He&#8217;d been assigned to direct a musical &#8212; &#8220;Finian&#8217;s Rainbow,&#8221; it ended up a flop &#8212; and he needed me. Well, you know the rest.&#8221;Coppola worked on several major films, both as composer and arranger. &#8220;Victor Young asked me to rescore the aria from &#8220;Pagliacci&#8221; for Lauritz Melchior. Now Leoncavallo did a pretty good job of orchestrating that aria himself; no, Young had to have something bigger for the movies. That&#8217;s the way things sometimes worked&#8221;Then Francis saw a revival of the Douglas Fairbanks &#8220;Thief of Bagdad,&#8221; a silent film with a new score played by a live orchestra. He decided to try the same with the legendary Abel Gance &#8220;Napoleon,&#8221; with Carmine pulling together a score part-original part-pastiche, with legendary results. That, too, has been Carmine&#8217;s role in &#8220;The Godfather&#8221; films, pulling together the major themes created by the late Nino Rota, adding others of his own as needed, bringing in repertory pieces to fill out the atmosphere. &#8220;The Godfather III&#8221; is a veritable musical panorama, with a grand religious chorus by Carmine, a band version of the famous chorus from Verdi&#8217;s &#8220;Nabucco,&#8221; a beautiful setting for guitar of Rota&#8217;s archetypal &#8220;Godfather Theme,&#8221; and, of course, the climactic &#8220;Cavalleria Rusticana.&#8221;JON: SHOULD THE NEXT TWO GRAFS MAYBE GO IN A BOX? [F/L]Typical of the Coppolas&#8217; respect for dramatic verities, they decided early on not to cast Anthony Corleone merely as a pretty Sicilian face with a dubbed-in tenor, but to find a real tenor who could also pass as a Corleone. Franc D&#8217;Ambrosio, the 28-year-old Long Islander, was chosen after an extensive talent search. &#8220;didn&#8217;t even know I could sing until my teens,&#8221; he stated in a recent telephone conversation. Trained at Hartford&#8217;s Hartt College and also at the Accademia Vocale at Lucca, D&#8221;Ambrosio had never done any more than classroom short scenes when he found himself tapped for the role &#8212; and for a reported<br />
$350,000, which no tenor has ever pulled down for singing &#8220;Cavalleria Rusticana,&#8221; or anything else, in an opera house.&#8221;It was an unbelievable experience,&#8221; D&#8217;Ambrosio said. &#8220;I never saw myself as a &#8220;Cavalleria&#8221; tenor; I hear myself more as a light tenor for, say, &#8220;Barber of Seville.&#8221; But Beppe di Tomasi, who staged the opera scenes for the movie, was really impressed with me. He told people that he could help me technically, but that I had a sensitivity that nobody could touch.&#8221; Supertenor Luciano Pavarotti agreed. After hearing D&#8217;Ambrosio he invited the young singer to his home in Pesaro. &#8220;He was also most encouraging,&#8221; D&#8217;Ambrosio reported.JON: SHOULD THOSE LAST TWO GRAFS GO IN A BOX ? [F/L]Even in its mangled form, &#8220;Cavalleria&#8221; seems headed for the charts &#8212; not that it has ever been far away. It won&#8217;t do Franc D&#8217;Ambrosio any harm, either, although he says he&#8217;s now looking at movie scripts rather than opera contracts. Carmine Coppola chortled over the notion of a raw tenor making his debut in such a killer role. &#8220;Nice voice, gotta mature,&#8221; was his one-line review.&#8221;We didn&#8217;t change any of the music in the opera,&#8221; Coppola continued. &#8220;We just put some of it in different places.I told Francis I&#8217;d be willing to conduct the opera myself. After all, I&#8217;ve done it before, and it&#8217;s a pretty square score. But Francis thought it would be nice to bring Anton in on the project. &#8220;You&#8217;ve got enough to do,&#8221; he told me.&#8221;One thing I want you to understand,&#8221; said Carmine Coppola at the end of his sandwich and his interview. &#8220;Sure, there are a couple of Coppolas on these projects, but it&#8217;s not because we&#8217;re related. There&#8217;s absolutely no nepotism in any of Francis&#8217; decisions. When we work together, it&#8217;s strictly as composer and director, never as father and son.&#8221;</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>LACE</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/1991/01/lace/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/1991/01/lace/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sat, 19 Jan 1991 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Daily News]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=2799</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Listening to new music is, to a large extent, a process of redefinition. The composer presents you with an array of unfamiliar sounds, and asks you to expand your personal musical vocabulary to embrace his innovative idwas. It sometimes works. LACE (Los Angeles Contemporary Exhibitions), a lively downtown art gallery that also includes a large [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Listening to new music is, to a large extent, a process of redefinition. The<br />
composer presents you with an array of unfamiliar sounds, and asks you to<br />
expand your personal musical vocabulary to embrace his innovative idwas. It<br />
sometimes works.<br />
LACE (Los Angeles Contemporary Exhibitions), a lively downtown art gallery that<br />
also includes a large performance space, is presenting three concerts on<br />
successive Saturday nights in its &#8220;Sonic Series,&#8221; devoted to exploring new<br />
musical sounds. Last Saturday&#8217;s opening concert, in a real sense, got off with<br />
a bang, in a program by the percussionist Ron George and the sarod player Linda<br />
Moskow.<br />
George, as his many previous concerts have demonstrated, is not just any<br />
percussion player. He builds his own instruments and he composes his own music.<br />
For the first piece on Saturday&#8217;s program he sat in, you might say, the<br />
driver&#8217;s seat of the &#8220;Bell Tree,&#8221; a fantastic composite one-man instrument of<br />
his own design.<br />
From a scaffolding of pipes and clamps, there were suspended 15 metal pieces<br />
of various shapes: old drumheads, pot covers, Chinese gongs. Below these were a<br />
further collection of metallic pieces: bowls, goblets, hanging cymbals and a<br />
steel anvil. On both sides were several large gongs and a tam-tam, activated by<br />
pedals. Down amidst all the paraphernalia, a paper scroll containing the music<br />
unrolled at the touch of another pedal.<br />
None of this would be more than clever hardware, of course, except that the 20-<br />
minute piece he played on his instrument, &#8220;Variations on a Butterfly&#8221; turned<br />
out to be music of considerable beauty, remarkable for its variety of sound and<br />
mood.<br />
Later George and several collaborators showed off yet another instrument of his<br />
fashioning, an &#8220;American Gamelan&#8221; which did, indeed, produce sounds<br />
reminiscent of its Indonesian counterpart. Instead of the various exotic drums,<br />
however, George&#8217;s ensemble consists of clusters of various-sized tubes, metal<br />
and bamboo, plus several more large gongs. His piece for the ensemble, called<br />
&#8220;The Floating Bubble,&#8221; came off as 15 minutes of gorgeous, complex clatter,<br />
considerably denser than the typical Indonesian repertory, bursting with<br />
energy.<br />
Linda Moskow&#8217;s sarod &#8212; a handsome, traditional 25-string instrument both<br />
stroked and plucked, smaller than the familiar sitar but clearly related &#8211;<br />
also made some marvelous sounds. Her part of the program included both<br />
traditional Indian classical works and, just a shade less successfully, some of<br />
her own songs that created a somewhat uneasy mix of east and west. The twain<br />
don&#8217;t always meet, you know.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>LAPO</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/1991/01/lapo-12/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/1991/01/lapo-12/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 17 Jan 1991 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Daily News]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=2803</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[An old friend has been in town these last few days, and has made himself welcome. Bernard Rands, former professor of composition at U.C.-San Diego, Pulitzer winner (for his &#8220;Canti di Sole&#8221;), currently Boston based, brought a glowing new orchestral work to this weekend&#8217;s Los Angeles Philharmonic concert. The Thursday night audience, which isn&#8217;t easily [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>An old friend has been in town these last few days, and has made himself<br />
welcome. Bernard Rands, former professor of composition at U.C.-San Diego,<br />
Pulitzer winner (for his &#8220;Canti di Sole&#8221;), currently Boston based, brought a<br />
glowing  new orchestral work to this weekend&#8217;s Los Angeles Philharmonic<br />
concert. The Thursday night audience, which isn&#8217;t easily charmed by new music,<br />
seemed genuinely charmed on this occasion.<br />
Rands&#8217; work, which lasts about 20 minutes, takes its title from a Samuel<br />
Beckett poem, &#8220;&#8230;body and shadow&#8230;&#8221;  punctuation and non-capitalization<br />
as given [F/L]. The first of its two movements is framed by a fearsome outburst<br />
from the solo timpani at beginning and end. In between comes a delicious<br />
orchestral workout, mostly on the furious side but coming to rest now and then<br />
in the sunlight of simple, clear harmonies. There is no direct derivation, says<br />
Rands, from the Beckett text; the two works, even so, share an air of poetic<br />
inscrutability.<br />
The second movement is even better, a haunting, sinuous melody, ever so lightly<br />
tinged by suggestions of Oriental harmonies, emerges slowly. Clouded over by<br />
interfering percussion instruments at the start, it eventually shakes itself<br />
free and seems to glisten in pure light. The music ends softly, but David Alan<br />
Miller&#8217;s conducting of the piece carried enough conviction that the audience<br />
knew to observe a few seconds of respectful silence at the end. This is sure,<br />
expressive music by a master of the craft. It was good to greet Rands and his<br />
art once again.<br />
Nothing else on the program quite reached that height, however. Rachmaninoff&#8217;s<br />
&#8220;Rhapsody on a Theme of Paganini&#8221; is so loaded with bright musical tricks<br />
that you&#8217;d think it impossible to play it badly. It fell to the evening&#8217;s<br />
soloist, Alexander Toradze, to achieve that dubious honor. Toradze&#8217;s big<br />
fingers dashed around on the keyboard with a certain flashiness, but the<br />
playing was merely cute and brittle; there&#8217;s more to the music than that.<br />
At the end Miller and the orchestra roamed through Mendelssohn&#8217;s &#8220;Scotch&#8221;<br />
symphony, gracefully but without notable event. For all its beauty, its<br />
glorious wind scoring in particular, this is music with problems. It totters on<br />
the brink of pomposity and, in the slow movement and the final peroration,<br />
falls in. There was nothing wrong with Miller&#8217;s performance, both spirited and<br />
respectful, but ot made for a very long 45 minutes even so.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>PERLMAN</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/1991/01/perlman/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/1991/01/perlman/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 16 Jan 1991 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Daily News]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=2845</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Outside, the world showed signs of coming apart; inside &#8212; in UCLA’s Royce Hall on Wednesday night, to be specific &#8212; all was well. Itzhak Perlman is more than just our best player of the violin; he is also a musician. Violin recitals do not always count as serious musical events; at least half of [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Outside, the world showed signs of coming apart; inside &#8212; in UCLA’s Royce Hall<br />
on Wednesday night, to be specific &#8212; all was well. Itzhak Perlman is more than<br />
just our best player of the violin; he is also a musician. Violin recitals do<br />
not always count as serious musical events; at least half of Perlman’s<br />
did.<br />
That half, consisting of sonatas by Mozart (the A-major, K. 526) and Prokofiev<br />
(the F minor, Opus 80), drew much of its appeal from Perlman’s superior sense<br />
of the ethereal elegance of a Mozart phrase, his phenomenal ability to turn the<br />
slow movement of the Prokofiev into a gossamer thread of sound right at the<br />
edge of silence. In both these works he drew immeasurable support, furthermore,<br />
from the collaboration at the piano of Janet Guggenheim, the Bay Area musician<br />
who has performed and recorded with him many times.<br />
An eloquent and imaginative musician on her own, Guggenheim provided at least<br />
as much of the shaping force in the Mozart, a marvelous, subtle work full of<br />
dark, lyrical mysteries, as did Perlman. The Prokofiev, similarly &#8212; a work<br />
both wry and introverted &#8212; similarly benefited from a continuous sense of<br />
give-and-take. It is consistently to Perlman’s credit, in fact, that he knows<br />
how to differentiate between the purely showoff aspects of, say, the music on<br />
the second half of this program and music of greater intellectual substance<br />
that demands a true collaborative approach. Not all violinists are that<br />
considerate.<br />
The second half &#8212; that string of desiccated marshmallows that Edvard Grieg put<br />
forward as his C-minor Violin Sonata, and another string of separate tidbits by<br />
Kreisler, Poulenc, Albeniz and Tchaikovsky &#8212; did, of course, serve some kind<br />
of purpose, as the cheers of the near-capacity crowd demonstrated. The<br />
repertory may be mindless, but it can achieve a kind of glory when fiddled with<br />
as Itzhak Perlman surely can. Master fiddler, master musician and, in some<br />
antic stage routines during the encore pieces, a not-bad comedian, Perlman<br />
ranks as best-of-breed.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>GINDI</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/1991/01/gindi/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/1991/01/gindi/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 14 Jan 1991 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Daily News]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=2792</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Felix Mendelssohn&#8217;s Octet for Strings, out of which eight members of the Los Angeles Philharmonic played the living daylights at the University of Judaism&#8217;s Gindi Auditorium on Monday night, stirs the listener&#8217;s spirit in two quite different ways. First there is its own store of beauty and exquisite workmanship, to hold us spellbound over its [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Felix Mendelssohn&#8217;s Octet for Strings, out of which eight members of the Los<br />
Angeles Philharmonic played the living daylights at the University of Judaism&#8217;s<br />
Gindi Auditorium on Monday night, stirs the listener&#8217;s spirit in two quite<br />
different ways. First there is its own store of beauty and exquisite<br />
workmanship, to hold us spellbound over its half-hour-or-so length. But it is<br />
also a humbling experience; what had we mere mortals accomplished at age 16 to<br />
equal what the juvenile Mendelssohn had here created?<br />
Even against the miracles by the adolescent Mozart, this Octet holds its own.<br />
Mozart at 16 was making sublime use of a musical language in common usage at<br />
the time. Mendelssohn invented a language: the long, poignant song melodies of<br />
the slow movement, the elfin trippings of the scherzo, the exultant, visionary<br />
outbursts that round off the cadences in first movement and finale.<br />
The wonder of the Philharmonic performance &#8212; by Mitchell Newman, Guido Lamell,<br />
Lawrence Sonderling and Judith Mass, violins; Evan Wilson and John Hayhurst,<br />
violas, and Daniel Rothmuller and Stephen Custer, cellos &#8212; was the players&#8217;<br />
remarkable response to the work&#8217;s fund of creative exuberance. It wasn&#8217;t<br />
exactly a careful performance, but its flaws &#8212; a pushed note now and then, an<br />
attack not quite precise &#8212; seemed to stem from the composer&#8217;s own daring.<br />
It was almost as though all of us in that hall, on stage and off, had become 16<br />
again for the duration of the music. At the end we all whooped and cheered like<br />
16-year-olds, because that was what the performance, and the music, deserved.<br />
This was one of the Philharmonic&#8217;s Chamber Music Society series at Gindi, seven<br />
concerts through the season of interesting, stimulating programs played by the<br />
orchestral members and occasional guests (pianist Yefim Bronfman next time, for<br />
example, on February 4). If the Mendelssohn gave the evening its warmest glow,<br />
it wasn&#8217;t the only delight.<br />
Before had come five duets from 1911 by the Russian composer Reinhold Gliere,<br />
scored for two cellos and played this time by cellist Stephen Custer and<br />
bassist Jack Cousins: dippy little pieces sometimes perky and sometimes merely<br />
gooey. Then came Prokofiev&#8217;s 1924 G-minor Quintet for winds (oboist Carolyn<br />
Hove and clarinetist David Howard) and strings (violinist Barry Socher, violist<br />
Meredith Snow and bassist Peter Rofe): marvelous sweet-sour music from the<br />
Russian composer&#8217;s most experimental years. In a strange way, the Prokofiev and the Mendelssohn made a fascinating pairing.<br />
Both works were about breaking through; both owe much of their appeal to that<br />
very act of pushing back musical horizons. In both work &#8212; all evening, in fact<br />
&#8211; the players seemed aware of the special kind of greatness in this music. It<br />
came across.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<item>
		<title>LAPO</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/1991/01/lapo-13/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/1991/01/lapo-13/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 10 Jan 1991 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Daily News]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=2802</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Any lingering doubts as to the high place of Witold Lutoslawski among today&#8217;s progressive composers can now be set aside. Thursday night the great Polish composer led the Los Angeles Philharmonic in a program of his own music, and drew the kind of cheers from a Music Center Philharmonicaudience unheard in those precincts for a [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Any lingering doubts as to the high place of Witold Lutoslawski among today&#8217;s<br />
progressive composers can now be set aside. Thursday night the great Polish<br />
composer led the Los Angeles Philharmonic in a program of his own music, and<br />
drew the kind of cheers from a Music Center Philharmonicaudience unheard in<br />
those precincts for a new-music concert since &#8212; well, since Lutoslawski&#8217;s last<br />
visit there eight years ago.What is this, about Lutoslawski&#8217;s bristling, uncompromising music that exerts<br />
this power, even over a large Philharmonic Thursday-night  subscription<br />
audience, an aggregation not noted for its spirit of adventure? It&#8217;s a quality<br />
hard to define, but it works its spell nevertheless. Lutoslawski ended<br />
Thursday&#8217;s program with his Third Symphony, now eight years old. It is a<br />
strange, wondrous work, lasting about half an hour, fearsomely difficult for<br />
the players, who must not only play passages of demanding virtuosity, but must<br />
also make certain decisions on their own as to how the music fits together.<br />
Yet the music, for all its abrasive counterpoint and dissonance, has a built-in<br />
power to communicate. Whether you follow its intricacies with a score, or let<br />
the music wash over you, somehow its violence, its surges of irresistible<br />
energy, come across. Against all the doomsayings about music&#8217;s future, here is<br />
a testimony to the continued strength of the symphony as a musical form.The composer, a sure and eloquent conductor of his own music, chose a beautiful<br />
program to illustrate milestones along his own career path. To begin there was<br />
an early work, the 1958 &#8220;Funeral Music&#8221; in memory of the greatly admired Bela<br />
Bartok, whose music had long cast its spell over the younger composer.Composed<br />
entirely for string ensemble, the work did indeed evoke such deep mysteries in<br />
Bartok&#8217;s music as the slow movement of the Concerto for Orchestra.Bartok again played a role, curiously enough, in the latest work on the<br />
program, the 1988 Piano Concerto,  written for Christian Zimerman and<br />
beautifully played by him on this occasion. Are those bird-like chirpings at<br />
the start a tribute to<br />
Bartok&#8217;s Third Piano Concerto? And might the tendency of the work to snap in<br />
and out of a somewhat romantic posture &#8212; with an echo of, say, Scriabin here<br />
and there &#8212; also  be a tribute to that attractive last work that Bartok did<br />
not live to finish?  The excursions into romanticism are brief and congenial. The concerto is a<br />
clattery, upbeat work, lasting about 25 minutes, that ought to become popular.<br />
If it lacks the fierce thinking of Lutoslawski&#8217;s earlier masterpieces, in<br />
delivers its own treasurable message: the greatest among our geniuses are the<br />
ones who know how to smile.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>NEWMEXICO</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/1990/12/newmexico/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/1990/12/newmexico/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 31 Dec 1990 23:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Daily News]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=2835</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Bored with the perishable artifacts of our own time, we travel far in search of something rooted in history. We come out of Rome&#8217;s train station to have our sensors astounded by the ruined grandeur of Diocletian&#8217;s Baths; we marvel at the enduring dome fashioned by Michelangelo over St. Peters. We don&#8217;t have to travel [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Bored with the perishable artifacts of our own time, we travel far in search of something rooted in history. We come out of Rome&#8217;s train station to have our sensors astounded by the ruined grandeur of Diocletian&#8217;s Baths; we marvel at the enduring dome fashioned by Michelangelo over St. Peters. We don&#8217;t have to travel that far, however, to walk in the tracks of other civilizations of other times. There are some closer at hand, no further away than, say, New Mexico.  Nobody can pretend, of course, that the remnants of the Indian civilizations that once thrived around Santa Fe can satisfy the same esthetic cravings as do the artworks of Italy. The hand of a Michelangelo may be absent; nomadic tribes tend not to cultivate stable artists. But the sense of history grabs us even so. The towering sandstone towers loom large over Pecos; the hillsides at Bandelier National Monument tell of multiple dwelling-places that make today&#8217;s condos seem puny. Santa Fe&#8217;s motivating passion is an obsession with its past. Sure, the clustered galleries along Canyon Road, and the clustered menus of the new restaurants around the Plaza, sing of the trendy, the mod. But let someone violate the ancient building code, put up a gas station or burger joint that breaks out of the adobe-bungalow cliche of the local architecture, and watch the vigilantes swarm.  The adobe fetish borders on the absurd in downtown Santa Fe, but the devotion to the distant past is ardent and genuine in the surroundings. Pecos and Bandelier lie in opposite directions out of town, an hour&#8217;s drive in each case; you could do them both in a day, but that wouldn&#8217;t do them justice. Each of them tells of a way of life both pastoral and hazardous. The Santa Fe Plateau is ringed with narrow, deep valleys. Today they are semi-arid, washed by occasional flash floods but basically hostile to serious agriculture. That wasn&#8217;t the case, however, 800 years ago when, as near as anyone can tell, tribes of nomadic Indians pushed their way into the area from other blighted regions and found the land hospitable.  Along the Pajarito Plateau northwest of the city the Anasazis (&#8220;ancient ones&#8221;) planted corn, beans and squash. At about the same time the Pueblo Indians settled along the Pecos River to the southeast; their farms were, if anything, more prosperous than those of their northern neighbors, and they developed a lively trade with neighboring tribes. In both places, the tribes dug in. The cliffs that frame Bandelier (which, by the way, takes its name from the Swiss archeologist Adolph Bandelier, who first surveyed and wrote about the ruins) are pockmarked by deep caves, the work of millennia of running water through sandstone. These gave the dwellers shelter, and also provided a way of anchoring huge dwelling complexes that seemed to lean back against the hill for support.  Today we walk the two-mile trail through the valley, marvel at the extent of surviving foundations of living quarters on level land, and make the gentle climb up the cliffside to peer into the abandoned quarters of a people who once lived well on this land. Nobody knows why the Bandelier settlements failed, but around 1550, after four untroubled centuries, they simply fell apart. Drought, disease, massacres by unfriendly tribes: all explanations are plausible. The lot of Pecos&#8217; Indians was somewhat more dramatic. By the 1500s the settlement numbered nearly 2000; the main pueblo, whose foundation remains, stood over five stories high and contained something like 660 rooms. Interspersed among the high-rises were the underground rooms (kivas) used for ceremonies. In the late 1500s the Spanish explorer Francisco de Coronado arrived from the south, hellbent in his search for the legendary Seven Cities of Gold. Coronado and his followers sacked the pueblo; the Indians crept out under darkness, waited for the Spaniards&#8217; departure, and then returned. By 1620 the Pecos pueblo had become gentrified. The Franciscans brought Christianity and built a church whose bulk dominated the landscape. A people&#8217;s revolt in 1680 destroyed the church, whereupon an even larger one took its place. That must have been some edifice for its time; what remains of its gigantic tower and huge encircling walls attest to the Christians&#8217; obsession with making their message visible. By 1840 the Pecos Indian population had dwindled down to a couple of dozen. The land became overgrown; the mysterious round underground rooms filled in with the detritus of ages. Again, as at Bandelier, it was an outside archeologist &#8212; Alfred V. Kidder, in 1915-27 &#8212; who dug into both the stones and the history of Pecos, and restored it to view. The Pecos land fell eventually into private hands, those of rancher Buddy Fogelson and his wife, the actress Greer Garson. The Fogelsons donated the pueblo site to the government in 1964. Stop off at the Visitors&#8217; Center at the entrance to the park; that soft, mellifluous British voice that narrates the ten-minute film is Greer Garson (Mrs. Miniver, to those of us of a certain age). Even if you&#8217;re old enough to remember Greer Garson movies, the circuit of Pecos is an easy stroll. You climb the ladder down into the restored kivas, and sense the isolation that made these rooms into magic places. From the rise near the church ruins, you can look down along the rolling Pecos Valley in one direction, or out to the truck and bus traffic along Interstate I-25 in another. The choice is yours.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>LACO</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/1990/12/laco/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/1990/12/laco/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 31 Dec 1990 23:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Daily News]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=2800</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Nobody has yet devised a more congenial concert companion than the six &#8220;Brandenburg&#8221; Concertos of Johann Sebastian Bach, and it&#8217;s not likely that anyone ever will. That being so, it should come as no surprise that UCLA&#8217;s Royce Hall was packed to the rafters on Friday night, to hear Iona Brown and the Los Angeles [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Nobody has yet devised a more congenial concert companion than the six<br />
&#8220;Brandenburg&#8221; Concertos of Johann Sebastian Bach, and it&#8217;s not likely that<br />
anyone ever will. That being so, it should come as no surprise that UCLA&#8217;s<br />
Royce Hall was packed to the rafters on Friday night, to hear Iona Brown and<br />
the Los Angeles Chamber Orchestra in their elegant, bewitching performances of<br />
all six of these marvelous orchestral essays.<br />
A word, first, about that current bugaboo known as &#8220;authentic performance.&#8221;<br />
If you look through the latest record catalogue, you&#8217;ll find several dozen<br />
complete &#8220;Brandenburg&#8221; recordings: symphony orchestras, ensembles of<br />
instruments from Bach&#8217;s own time, even an electronic version or two. The Los<br />
Angeles Chamber Orchestra, made up as it is of sturdy studio freelancers, who<br />
play Bach by night to purge their souls after playing panty-hose commercials by<br />
day, makes no attempt to preserve the &#8220;authentic&#8221; sound of early instruments.<br />
There are, after all, many other ways to honor the authentic spirit of old<br />
music.<br />
The performances Friday night handsomely illustrated the best of those ways.<br />
Brown, conducting the ensemble while playing first violin (a perfectly<br />
authentic touch, by the way) still allowed her group such modern expressive<br />
techniques as crescendos, slowdowns at the ends of movements, and a marvelous<br />
way of keeping the great Bach tunes aloft.<br />
Yes, there were points where &#8220;authentic&#8221; instruments might have helped<br />
clarify some inner voices. In the first movement of the first of these<br />
concertos, the horns play a triplet figure to conflict with the eighth-note<br />
passages in the rest of the orchestra, and chances are that no power on earth<br />
can make that particular effect audible with the heavy tone of modern<br />
instruments. In the first movement of the last of these concertos, however, the<br />
solo violas in modern-instrument performances are nearly always buried by the<br />
rumblings of cellos and basses, as they were this time. There is no question<br />
that a lighter tone from the lower instruments would help to improve<br />
balance.<br />
Some of Friday&#8217;s playing, therefore, did fall heir to these performance<br />
hazards. But there were so many redeeming features &#8212; the burbling flutes in<br />
No. 4, the deliciously squawking oboes in the last movement of No. 1, and the<br />
over-all vitality of Brown&#8217;s visions of these wondrous works &#8212; that it would<br />
be downright mean-spirited to dwell upon passing deficiencies. It was a great<br />
night for Bach and, therefore, for us all.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>CLASSCOL</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/1990/12/classcol-25/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/1990/12/classcol-25/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 31 Dec 1990 23:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Daily News]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=2778</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Even allowing for his usual boyish exuberance, Peter Sellars overstated the case for Mozart&#8217;s &#8220;Don Giovanni&#8221; only slightly, in his preamble to his famous video versions aired last winter. &#8220;A completely shattering experience,&#8221; he called the opera, &#8220;an evening in Hell.&#8221; &#8220;Don Giovanni&#8221; is all that, at least. If Mozart&#8217;s incredible artwork can strike modern [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Even allowing for his usual boyish exuberance, Peter Sellars overstated the case for Mozart&#8217;s &#8220;Don Giovanni&#8221; only slightly, in his preamble to his famous video versions aired last winter. &#8220;A completely shattering experience,&#8221; he called the opera, &#8220;an evening in Hell.&#8221; &#8220;Don Giovanni&#8221; is all that, at least. If Mozart&#8217;s incredible artwork can strike modern ears that way (as it is bound to, when the Music Center Opera gives it the first of a five-performance run on October 7) think of what its effect might have been on its first audiences, in Prague 204 years ago. Even allowing for Prague as the most sophisticated artistic capital in Europe at the time, nobody had ever tried to put into an opera the devices that Mozart hurled into &#8220;Don Giovanni.&#8221; Opera at the time was usually beautiful, sometimes sublime, but it was still an entertainment of fairly conventional construction, a succession of musically independent separate numbers. The action went forward in the recitatives, then the characters held back and examined their feelings in the arias and duets. Even &#8220;The Marriage of Figaro,&#8221; Mozart&#8217;s masterpiece of 1786, the year before &#8220;Don Giovanni&#8221; starts out in time-honored fashion: a vocal number, some recitative accompanied only by the keyboard player, another vocal number, etc. &#8220;Don Giovanni&#8221; was like none of the above. Just take the first ten-or-so minutes; they burst through every convention of the time. Before we&#8217;ve even settled in our seats, Mozart (and, don&#8217;t forget, his librettist Lorenzo da Ponte) have stopped our breath. The overture, usually some joyous orchestral exercise (as in &#8220;Figaro&#8221;) that doesn&#8217;t necessarily relate to the music itself, starts off this time with the horrendous, jagged dissonances that will return, three hours later, to escort its miscreant hero to the Underworld. The overture doesn&#8217;t even come to a full stop; we are swept along into Leporello&#8217;s first aria, as the servant grumbles at his lot in life. Already that short pieces plunges us into the atmosphere of social awareness and struggle that will become a supporting thread as the opera unfolds.That short aria, too, doesn&#8217;t round off to a full ending. It breaks off. In bursts the Don himself, and clinging to him is Donna Anna, his latest attempted conquest. Is Anna trying to capture him? to shake loose of him? to get him to complete the rape? The music doesn&#8217;t stop its headlong pace long enough to tell us. The Commandant arrives; he and the Don fight and the old man is murdered, while Leporello, hidden on the sidelines, chatters away like a demented bassoon. Five minutes of overture, five more minutes of continuous, violent action: no opera in the world zooms so violently, so suddenly into orbit. Three hours later, it still hasn&#8217;t faltered. No less overtly than Wagner&#8217;s &#8220;Tristan und Isolde&#8221; or Strauss&#8217; &#8220;Salome,&#8221; &#8220;Don Giovanni&#8221; draws its motive power from human sexuality. &#8220;We don&#8217;t have the words to talk about it,&#8221; Sellars has said, &#8220;but Mozart&#8217;s music goes right into the dark crevices of the human soul.&#8221; How soon that shows up in the opera! Soon after the murder we confront one of Giovanni&#8217;s latest rejects,  Elvira, stalking the countryside like a starved panther, the archetypal woman driven mad by love (as with Dido of &#8220;The Trojans&#8221; here only last week). She comes onstage, her madness in full flower. She tries an aria, but Mozart keeps breaking off the vocal line into short, jagged phrases. That short spray of  broken-off, confused declamation does, indeed, get into the crevices of Elvira&#8217;s soul and lay bare her passion. Mozart&#8217;s music has broken out of the notion that pretty tunes merely decorate a dramatic situation; words, music and emotion become the parts of a single-minded, intense drama. Mozart&#8217;s ability to match music to character is phenomenal. At one end of the social scale there is the jilted, high-born Elvira. At the other end there is the gullible peasant girl Zerlina. Moments after the first Elvira scene, Giovanni is all over the innocent maiden, trying to lure her back to his palace. Their duet, &#8220;La ci darem la mano,&#8221; is probably the opera&#8217;s best-known piece; it is a grand tune, but also a fabulous demonstration of music&#8217;s power over the mind. The device is simple enough: Giovanni lays down his proposition in a long musical phrase. Zerlina&#8217;s answering phrase is equally long. But as the message takes hold, the phrases get shorter, the two characters move closer together (on the stage and in their music), until they&#8217;re finally singing in close harmony. What more do you need to translate the act of seduction into music? No opera of any era works on so many levels of perception. Sellars&#8217; controversial conception, with its background of gang warfare in a contemporary urban slum, had lifted the proportion between what was innovative in the opera in its own time and its social milieu, and transferred those proportions exactly to our own time. Again, it was the depth of Mozart&#8217;s own work that enabled the Sellars perception to achieve its purpose. Take, as proof, one final example. In the party scene that ends the first act, Mozart has pulled another amazing trick, to describe purely in musical terms the levels of society assembled in that grand salon in Giovanni&#8217;s palace. The aristocrats dance a minuet; the middle-classes do a contra-dance in contrasting rhythm; the peasants do some sort of clog-dance in yet another rhythm. Mozart&#8217;s incredible genius allows us, for a moment or two, to hear all three dances simultaneously, as if it were, indeed, possible for people on different social levels to coexist. But that dream is quickly shattered. Giovanni has gotten Zerlina off to a side room, and proceeds to dismantle her virtue. One scream from the girl, and the onstage dancing idyll is shattered. The social message is blindingly clear. The classes of society can coexist, only if the right of the upper class to rape the lower class remains intact. Imagine, putting all this into an opera! It only happened once, which is why &#8220;Don Giovanni&#8221; remains in a class by itself. Beyond doubt, Jonathan Miller, who directed the Music Center Opera&#8217;s production and Bob Israel, who designed it, have a vastly different &#8220;Don Giovanni&#8221; for our delectation here next week. But the power of the work remains. line Space&#8221;Don Giovanni&#8221; isn&#8217;t the only work of musical theater on the horizon, however. On October 4 and 5, at UCLA&#8217;s Royce Hall, Paul Dresher&#8217;s &#8220;Pioneer&#8221; will have its local premiere. If you know Dresher&#8217;s previous pieces, &#8220;Slow Fire&#8221; and &#8220;Power Failure,&#8221; with their brilliant fusion of pop, rock and extraordinary electronic invention, their devastating range of stage metaphorfor the myth and reality in contemporary life, you need no urging to make tracks for this latest venture. Old Dresher hands, among them the amazing singer/dancer Rinde Eckert, are again involved. Be there.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>COMPETITION</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/1990/12/competition/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/1990/12/competition/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Tue, 25 Dec 1990 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Daily News]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=2779</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[&#8220;You have to realize,&#8221; says a contestant at Moscow&#8217;s Ninth International Tchaikovsky Competition, &#8220;that two weeks from now, one of us will be a world- renowned pianist, and the rest of us will be right where we are, or maybe running shops.&#8221; Honest, cynical and dismaying, the comment epitomizes Bill Fertik&#8217;s 90-minute documentary on the [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>&#8220;You have to realize,&#8221; says a contestant at Moscow&#8217;s Ninth International<br />
Tchaikovsky Competition, &#8220;that two weeks from now, one of us will be a world-<br />
renowned pianist, and the rest of us will be right where we are, or maybe<br />
running shops.&#8221; Honest, cynical and dismaying, the comment epitomizes Bill<br />
Fertik&#8217;s 90-minute documentary on the competition, airing at 8 p.m. tonight on<br />
KCET-TV (with simulcast on KUSC-FM). It may be the first clear-headed appraisal<br />
ever put on film of the grueling psychological and physical horror of today&#8217;s<br />
music competitions.<br />
The irony, of course, is that Fertik has aimed his cameras at the latest<br />
running of the very event that first put international virtuoso competitions in<br />
the limelight. If Van Cliburn&#8217;s win at the first Tchaikovsky contest in the<br />
summer of 1958 sent the Texas superboy into orbit, it did the same for the<br />
whole institution of the competition.<br />
Thirty-two years later Cliburn himself has all but disappeared from the scene;<br />
his &#8220;comeback&#8221; concerts last year went nowhere. The competition in Fort Worth<br />
that bears his name has become a ludicrous media circus. And the competition in<br />
Moscow that launched him has, as Fertik&#8217;s probing cameras make devastatingly<br />
clear, deteriorated into a parade of peevishness, bickering, unethical conduct<br />
by both judges and contestants and over-all mismanagement. A dreadful paradox<br />
obtains: a big competition win is still the best way to launch a career, and<br />
yet there are so many competitions these days that the value of a big win has<br />
sunk pathetically.<br />
Fertik&#8217;s excellent documentary zeroes in on two contestants who become friends,<br />
the American Stephen Prutsman and the Soviet Boris Berezovsky. Against a<br />
background of Moscow in the throes of perestroika&#8217;s economic hardship &#8211;<br />
terrible restaurant food, poor hotel service, pianos in disrepair and a paucity<br />
of practice space &#8212; the two somehow hammer their way to the top. Berezovsky<br />
takes the top prize but Prutsman, who comes in fourth, becomes a huge crowd<br />
favorite. Tall, lanky and golden-haired, he is greeted as a Cliburn<br />
reincarnation.<br />
Does it matter? The history of competition winners lists few who went on to<br />
long-term careers. At least Fertik&#8217;s documentary captures this air of pathos<br />
and frustration. Comparison with Peter Rosen&#8217;s goody-goody piece on the 1989<br />
Cliburn Competition (aired last winter on PBS as &#8220;Here to Make Music&#8221;) is<br />
inevitable. This one tells it as it is.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>SUNDAY&#160;COL</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/1990/12/sunday-col/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/1990/12/sunday-col/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sun, 23 Dec 1990 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Daily News]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=2860</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Classical music is dead. So began a column encountered recently, by some writer beyond the mountains hiding behind the generic name of Jones. The premise of his morose words is that the giants have fled, and that they have taken their art with them. The giants in this instance are Herbert von Karajan, who died [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Classical music is dead. So began a column encountered recently, by some writer<br />
beyond the mountains hiding behind the generic name of Jones. The premise of<br />
his  morose words is that the giants have fled, and that they have taken their<br />
art with them. The giants in this instance are Herbert von Karajan, who died<br />
last year, and Leonard Bernstein, who left us last October.<br />
Nobody with a working pair of ears takes this kind of guff seriously. Classical<br />
music has died, with commendable regularity, throughout civilized history. It<br />
died, attended by great public sorrowing, with Handel in 1759, with Beethoven<br />
in 1827, with Verdi in 1901. It died less publicly noticed, with Mozart in 1791<br />
(as we will not be allowed to forget in the anniversary year to come) and, most<br />
tragically of all, when Schubert’s unfinished life ended in 1828. &#8220;Every day a<br />
little death,&#8221; runs a lyric in a Stephen Sondheim show, and Sondheim is one of<br />
several living proofs that music lives on, and gloriously.<br />
The passing of Karajan and Bernstein happens, in fact, to be especially<br />
inadequate testimony to the demise of music. Both were, themselves, capable and<br />
confessed guardians of a dead art. Bernstein himself admitted as much more than<br />
once. Karajan would have done the same if he had had Bernstein&#8217;s gift for the<br />
public statement. Music&#8217;s particular glory has been its power of self-renewal,<br />
and it has possessed that power since the time of the ancient Greeks. It feeds<br />
upon itself to nourish its continual powers of growth and of change. It<br />
preserves its own corpses with immaculate skill. Karajan was adept at this, and<br />
so was Bernstein. The deaths of embalmers and pall-bearers do not, as writer<br />
Jones would have us believe, spell out the death of the civilization they<br />
serve.<br />
What this writer mistakes for death, actually, is nothing more than the latest<br />
stage in a pattern that runs through all the arts at all times. The phenomenon<br />
of the charismatic conductor, engaged in a two-way mystic relationship (with<br />
the music and with the audience) did, indeed, come to its long-drawn-out end<br />
with the passing of these two masters of the podium. Already, in their time, a<br />
rebirth of classical music had taken place in the presence of another species<br />
of conductor. Rather than placing his own podium manner at the center of the<br />
performance, this new breed relinquishes some of the spotlight to the music<br />
itself. Some do it with a great show of concern for the &#8220;authentic&#8221; sounds of<br />
music of the past. Others stay with the traditional sounds of the symphony<br />
orchestra, and accomplish their new-fangled results though the force of their<br />
intelligence.<br />
It is the pastime of the media to replace fallen giants with their latter-day<br />
clones. On Public Radio last week there was a serious and extended discussion<br />
of who would be the next Aaron Copland; similar discussions in past months were<br />
similarly concerned with &#8220;the next Bernstein.&#8221; These discussions, in both<br />
cases, missed one most important point. There is no need for another Bernstein<br />
or another Copland. These giants themselves fought the battles: for American<br />
music, for young American conductors. Why reenact these struggles, when the<br />
fruits of victory are already at hand? (The Copland replacements decided upon,<br />
if you care, were Elliott Carter and John Adams.)<br />
The easiest refutation for the notion of classical music&#8217;s death, of course, is<br />
to direct our attention to those many who stand in living disproof. This being<br />
the season of list-making, therefore, here is a handy list of ten guardians of<br />
the future of music. It is not, please note, the one definitive top-ten<br />
listing, but it&#8217;s a start. They are listed in no order except the way they<br />
first came to mind.<br />
[*] bo. Evgeny Kissin [B] The 19-year-old Soviet  whizbang has served<br />
irrefutable notice that the age of the musicianly romantic pianist has<br />
recommenced. Unlike the torrent of flashy fingerwork paraded on and off our<br />
concert stages in recent years, this sobersided, fiendishly talented youngster<br />
plays real music. Check out the RCA album of his Carnegie Hall debut if you<br />
still don&#8217;t believe.<br />
[*]bo. Simon Rattle [B] Now 35 and, thus, safely out of the prodigy category,<br />
Rattle has redefined the role of symphonic conductor in two ways. First, he has<br />
taken hold of the cultural growth of his community (Birmingham) and has gone<br />
most of the way to establish the city as a major British arts venue. Second,<br />
his own versatility (Bach, Gershwin, Stravinsky, etc.) sounds the final knell<br />
of the notion of a separating wall beween serious and pop.<br />
[*]bo. James Levine [B] Not the greatest, but merely the most important of<br />
traditional conductors, he has redefined opera &#8212; in his own Metropolitan and<br />
in all houses &#8212; as a musical balance of singer and orchestra. Even when<br />
results onstage are the despair of singing-buffs, he has made opera musically<br />
valid once again.<br />
[*]bo. Peter Sellars [B] Phenomenally interesting at all times, even at his<br />
brattiest, Sellars has redefined the whole realm of performance art as a close<br />
interweaving: music as drama as music.<br />
[*]bo. Carlos Kleiber [B] No, the spectacle of the mysterious, unapproachable,<br />
perfectionist conductor is not quite dead. Kleiber has achieved legend status<br />
for the marvelous strength and clarity of his performance, for the narrowness<br />
of his repertory (a fabulous opera conductor with only six operas in his<br />
intellectual luggage) and for his penchant for cancelling when matters are not<br />
to his liking. Like Maria Callas a generation ago, his stupendous performances<br />
suggest that his idiosynacracies are worth putting up with.<br />
[*]bo. Alfred Schnittke and Sofia Gubaidulina [B] Europe&#8217;s greatest composers,<br />
Soviet masters of a wide range of expression, mostly abrasive and all of it<br />
communicative. Schnittke&#8217;s Quartets and the Gubaidulina &#8220;OPffertorium,&#8221; on<br />
records, are proof enough that there are still masterpieces to be created.<br />
[*]bo. John Adams [B] A crossover darling, perhaps, but Adams&#8217; major<br />
contribution has been to compose thoroughly modern, approachable music within<br />
traditional frameworks (including grand opera).<br />
[*]bo. The Kronos Quartet [B] Like Adams, they are poised on the cusp of that<br />
mythical barrier between serious and pop. What they play (Reich, Hendrix, a<br />
medieval motet) they play with classical strength and depth. They make new<br />
music matter, and that is a crucial accomplishment.<br />
[*]bo. Stephen Sondheim [B] Like all the greatest artists, he forces upon us a<br />
rethinking of artistic categories, and he bestrides the boundaries with assured<br />
talent.<br />
[*]bo. Thomas Hampson [B] The young American baritone has been opera&#8217;s latest<br />
glory. (Check out his &#8220;Don Giovanni&#8221; on records.) Intelligent, versatile,<br />
phenomenally endowed, he could be the cornerstone of opera&#8217;s next, eagerly<br />
awaited golden age.<br />
Hardly a pallbearers&#8217; list, wouldn&#8217;t you agree?</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<item>
		<title>LAPO</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/1990/12/lapo-14/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/1990/12/lapo-14/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 13 Dec 1990 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Daily News]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=2819</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Gustav Mahler&#8217;s Second Symphony, that grinning, gibbering fast ride across the hellish environs, that most sacred of all symphonic monsters, ricocheted dizzyingly through the Chandler Pavilion of the Music Center on Thursday night. Everyone knew that Yuri Temirkanov, the Leningrad dragonslayer, would carry the Los Angeles Philharmonic into outer space with his performance of this [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Gustav Mahler&#8217;s Second Symphony, that grinning, gibbering fast ride across the<br />
hellish environs, that most sacred of all symphonic monsters, ricocheted<br />
dizzyingly through the Chandler Pavilion of the Music Center on Thursday night.<br />
Everyone knew that Yuri Temirkanov, the Leningrad dragonslayer, would carry the<br />
Los Angeles Philharmonic into outer space with his performance of this work in<br />
this, the final event in his two-week guest stint. Everyone was right.<br />
If there is such a thing as larger than larger than life, this work of Mahler&#8217;s<br />
relatively tender years &#8212; be began it at 27  &#8212; is surely it. Even among the<br />
wild jumble of his later works, nothing quite equals the Second for the<br />
arrogance of its vision, the incredible variety of moods and devices that lie<br />
across his path. Some conductors would minimize the breadth of contrasts and<br />
impart to the work some sense of symphonic consistency. Not for Temirkanov,<br />
however, this easy path.<br />
It was, if anything, a performance full of illusion. It seemed, as it unfolded,<br />
quite remarkably broad: a measured pace for the opening funeral march, a slow<br />
dance through the andante with the opening upbeats oddly protracted, a finale<br />
that swept toward the stage, inexorably but tantalizingly, from what seemed<br />
like vast distances (but were only a few feet backstage, where the extra brass<br />
and percussion were stationed). If Temirkanov’s tempo contrasts seemed extreme,<br />
so did the dynamics, with the soft percussion strokes that began the finale<br />
particularly memorable, and the quiet, other-worldly start of the final chorus<br />
an effect bordering on the incredible.<br />
Yet there was illusion here; a performance so broad, so full of sweeping,<br />
mysterious oratory, seemed to go on for hours and yet ended up at the same<br />
timing (82 minutes or thereabouts) as the swift-sounding, matter-of-fact<br />
recordings by Georg Solti among others. Music plays tricks, and this strange<br />
bulk of a symphony sounded, under Temirkanov&#8217;s fluent, intensely personal and<br />
inventive direction, positively feather-light.<br />
Mezzo-soprano Christine Cairns, remembered for her splendid solo in the Andre<br />
Previn restoration of Prokofiev’s &#8220;Alexander Nevsky&#8221; film score, seemed<br />
somewhat out of her range in her first solo in the Mahler, but recovered nicely<br />
for her brief invocation near the end. Soprano Susan Patterson&#8217;s brief last-<br />
movement solo was properly angelic. And John Currie&#8217;s Master Chorale,<br />
motionless on the stage for the first 70 minutes like silent watchers at the<br />
brink of an inferno, blazed into its own brilliant life at the end. Wow.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>MEC</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/1990/12/mec-3/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/1990/12/mec-3/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 10 Dec 1990 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Daily News]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=2830</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Of all living composers generally accorded a place in the upper echelons, Hans Werner Henze is one of the most difficult to classify. German by birth, his musical inclinations are toward the earmarks of the French manner. To call him a German Stravinsky is to propound an oxymoron, but the description comes close. This week&#8217;s [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Of all living composers generally accorded a place in the upper echelons, Hans<br />
Werner Henze is one of the most difficult to classify. German by birth, his<br />
musical inclinations are toward the earmarks of the French manner. To call him<br />
a German Stravinsky is to propound an oxymoron, but the description comes<br />
close.<br />
This week&#8217;s Monday Evening Concert at the County Museum had as its final work a<br />
major Henze score, 32 years old but unplayed on the West Coast up to now,<br />
called, simply, &#8220;Chamber Music.&#8221; It is a work of great beauty, in that<br />
special Henze manner in which beauty seems suspended in a dark void, both cold<br />
and compelling.<br />
The work, which runs 45 minutes, is a setting of a fragmentary text by the<br />
mystical poet Friedrich Holderlin, meditations  on beauty and on the<br />
relationship of mankind to divinity. Henze has divided the text into six<br />
sections, sung by tenor accompanied by guitar and, once in a while, a few wind<br />
instruments. Between these songs, and again framing the entire work, are<br />
passages for guitar, some solo and some with strings and winds. Quiet and<br />
haunting, this is music that stays in the memory.<br />
A recording exists, with the tenor Neil Jenkins on the Koch-Schwann label, but<br />
Monday&#8217;s performance, conducted by Gerhard Samuel (one-time Los Angeles<br />
Philharmonic associate conductor, now based in Cincinnati) was altogether<br />
superior. Tenor Randall Gremillion curled his light, fluent voice beautifully<br />
around Holderlin&#8217;s redolent poetry; guitarist David Tanenbaum, {cq} known on<br />
his own for splendid recorded performance of Henze&#8217;s solo works, brought his<br />
refined artistry to bear on this score. In a season marked by an unusual number<br />
of truly rewarding new-music events, this one ranks high.<br />
The concert began with Gremillion and the instrumental ensemble in an excerpt<br />
from another major, neglected score, Luciano Berio&#8217;s wildly experimental work<br />
of 1970 called, simply, &#8220;Opera.&#8221; (This was an evening for music with generic<br />
titles.) It continued with Tanenbaum&#8217;s expert performance of Peter Maxwell<br />
Davies&#8217; rather faceless solo Guitar Sonata. Samuel himself was represented by<br />
his &#8220;Outcries and Consolations,&#8221; a work for chamber ensemble, in its world<br />
premiere.<br />
Samuel, German-born and, later, a disciple of Paul Hindemith, is a composer of<br />
some skill, in a rather academic style. Now and then some of his music gives<br />
off sparks, but the new work seemed, on first hearing, like so much proficient<br />
tinkering. On its own, however, the craftsmanship was constantly<br />
impressive.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>TALLIS</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/1990/12/tallis/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/1990/12/tallis/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sun, 09 Dec 1990 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Daily News]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=2862</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Historic site, historic sounds: the Tallis Scholars were in town again on Sunday night, performing their superb repertory of Renaissance liturgical music, and also performing their familiar miracle of cleansing the ears and raising the spirit with the pure beauty of their singing. This was the Scholars&#8217; third visit, always under the aegis of MaryAnn [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Historic site, historic sounds: the Tallis Scholars were in town again on Sunday<br />
night, performing their superb repertory of Renaissance liturgical music, and<br />
also performing their familiar miracle of cleansing the ears and raising the<br />
spirit with the pure beauty of their singing.<br />
This was the Scholars&#8217; third visit, always under the aegis of MaryAnn Bonino&#8217;s<br />
&#8220;Chamber Music in Historic Sites&#8221; series, this time at Pasadena&#8217;s handsome<br />
neo-Gothic Westminster Presbyterian Church. The space was somewhat smaller than<br />
last year&#8217;s venue (the First Congregational in downtown Los Angeles) and the<br />
sound may have been a shade drier. But the gain was in clarity, the chance to<br />
hear the contrapuntal lines in a Palestrina mass and a Lassus motet curl<br />
gracefully and insinuatingly around one another.<br />
Conductor Peter Phillips had chosen a program in keeping with the season, but<br />
rewarding in any season. Anyone still under the delusion that all Renaissance<br />
choral music sounds alike should have learned otherwise from the juxtaposition<br />
of different composers&#8217; settings of the same text: William Byrd&#8217;s quiet,<br />
profound setting of &#8220;O magnum mysterium,&#8221; for example, against the simpler,<br />
childlike setting by Palestrina. Clearly, the spectrum of musical styles was as<br />
broad four centuries ago as it is today.<br />
And anyone still deluded that early music is all dull and slow must have been<br />
warmed and undeceived by the vitality of the ten-member Tallis group. Their<br />
aim, since their founding in 1978, has been to recreate the authentic spirit,<br />
rather than merely the sound, of old music. That, to Phillips, obviously means<br />
letting go at times, of overstating, say the marvelous interplay of rhythms at<br />
the end  of the Gloria in the Palestrina &#8220;Ut re me fa&#8221; Mass, the crown of<br />
Sunday&#8217;s program, to make its proper joyful noise.<br />
And so, Phillips&#8217; work is full of meaningful rhythmic liberties, all in the<br />
quest for vitality. His choir includes women&#8217;s voices &#8212; five, against five<br />
men, this year &#8212; because they are easier to put in tune than the customary<br />
boys&#8217; voices. The effect of his music-making, and that of his marvelously in-<br />
tune small chorus, is to propound the gospel that, above all, early music can<br />
be fun. Sunday&#8217;s concert, before a sold-out church, was fun all the way.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<item>
		<title>LAPO</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/1990/12/lapo-15/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/1990/12/lapo-15/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Fri, 07 Dec 1990 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Daily News]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=2818</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[A mighty man, this Yuri Temirkanov. He proved it last month, when he brought his own Leningrad Philharmonic to the Music Center and had it jumping through hoops. He proved it again on Friday afternoon with the Los Angeles Philharmonic, in the first of a two-program appearance as guest conductor. As with the Leningrad, Friday’s [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>A mighty man, this Yuri Temirkanov. He proved it last month, when he brought his<br />
own Leningrad Philharmonic to the Music Center and had it jumping through<br />
hoops. He proved it again on Friday afternoon with the Los Angeles<br />
Philharmonic, in the first of a two-program appearance as guest conductor.<br />
As with the Leningrad, Friday’s program had been planned as all-Russian, but<br />
Aaron Copland&#8217;s &#8220;Quiet City,&#8221; played to honor the late composer, was a<br />
welcome substitution for a piece of Rimsky-Korsakov fluff. The gods move<br />
strangely to bestow their favors.<br />
Temirkanov is great fun to watch. He hurls himself around in the grand, old-<br />
fashioned manner, with an occasional &#8220;how&#8217;m I doing?&#8221; look over his shoulder.<br />
Some may find it all excessive, but even the naysayers can&#8217;t help but notice<br />
Temirkanov&#8217;s galvanizing effect on the orchestra. Like Kurt Sanderling, but in<br />
an entirely different way, he gets the players to give their best.<br />
Nobody can really have wanted to hear Rachmaninov&#8217;s &#8220;Symphonic Dances,&#8221; the<br />
big orchestral work that ended the program. But nobody could have expected the<br />
music to gleam forth, in a grand burst of extroverted energy, as it did under<br />
Temirkanov.<br />
Arguably, this late work from Rachmaninov&#8217;s pen, with its occasional<br />
interesting flicker of sinister, sardonic harmony and even a quote from the<br />
&#8220;Day of Wrath&#8221; liturgical chant at the end, hangs together more cohesively<br />
than some of his orchestral flapdoodle, but that isn&#8217;t saying much. That<br />
Temirkanov found the impulse to make the music into a thrilling orchestral romp<br />
is, however, saying much for the conductor&#8217;s skills.<br />
Karine Georgian, 1966 gold medalist in Moscow&#8217;s Tchaikovsky Competition, was<br />
the splendid soloist in the Second Cello Concerto of Shostakovich: glistening,<br />
sinister music wondrously played. Perhaps the First Concerto has more emotional<br />
depth, but this work of 1966 is, all the way, a startling sound exercise. Most<br />
interesting of all is the strange clickety-clack for percussion right at the<br />
end, a curious anticipation of the 15th Symphony of six years later. Its quiet,<br />
inward solo writing has few rewards for a mere virtuoso. Karine Georgian, who<br />
has given much of her time to the new music of her Soviet countryman, brought<br />
to the work the intelligence and imagination it requires. She is clearly a<br />
major artist, here for the first time.<br />
Later this week the flamboyant Temirkanov ends his visit by conducting Mahler&#8217;s<br />
equally flamboyant Second Symphony, one of his few ventures here into non-<br />
Russian repertory. Can&#8217;t you just taste it?</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>TENDERLAND</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/1990/12/tenderland/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/1990/12/tenderland/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 06 Dec 1990 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Daily News]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=2865</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[π[*] laby2;p1205. By Alan Rich [B] Daily News Music Critic [B] TO JIM JOHNSON: NO OTHER ART AVAILABLE; GO WITH COPLAND [F/L]As the final event in its month-long celebration of Aaron Copland, underwritten by the E. Nakamichi Foundation &#8212; meant originally to honor the composer&#8217;s 90th birthday but now serving as a memorial as well [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>π[*] laby2;p1205. By Alan Rich [B] Daily News Music Critic [B] TO JIM JOHNSON: NO OTHER ART AVAILABLE; GO WITH COPLAND [F/L]As the final event in its month-long celebration of Aaron Copland, underwritten<br />
by the E. Nakamichi Foundation &#8212; meant originally to honor the composer&#8217;s 90th<br />
birthday but now serving as a memorial as well &#8212; the forces of the U.S.C.<br />
School of Music took up the considerable task of a complete performance of<br />
&#8220;The Tender Land.&#8221; Composed in 1954, the work deserves some attention as<br />
Copland&#8217;s only full-scale opera. Even so, and despite the valiant efforts of<br />
well-trained student performers, nothing happened at Thursday night&#8217;s first<br />
performance (of four this weekend) to vanquish the suspicion that &#8220;The Tender<br />
Land&#8221; is better off as a statistic in the Copland legacy than an actuality on<br />
the stage.<br />
Horace Everett&#8217;s libretto is set in, as if you couldn&#8217;t guess, the American<br />
midwest, where sweet Laurie falls for Martin the wanderer, only to be pulled<br />
out of his clutches by her mean and glowering granddad. The plot evokes dozens<br />
of well-known models, of which the play and movie called &#8220;The Heiress&#8221; comes<br />
quickly to mind. Is it coincidence that Copland did the film score for that<br />
very play?<br />
The fault, however, lies not in the timeworn plot but in the facelessness of<br />
Copland&#8217;s music, and particularly the clumsiness in almost all of his writing<br />
for solo voice. There are fine things in &#8220;The Tender Land,&#8221; mostly in the<br />
square-dancing choruses and orchestral interludes in the second act. But we<br />
don&#8217;t need to look into this otherwise bland stage work to establish Copland&#8217;s<br />
excellence in composing gfood square-dance music. E/P]<br />
Of character depiction and dramatic impetus, there is little in Copland&#8217;s score<br />
to establish its composer as any kind of master of the lyric stage. The opera&#8217;s<br />
most famous vocal scene, a 12-minute duet for the two principals, is a collage<br />
of small, incoherent patches. The musical idiom itself, Copland at his most<br />
open-handed, the harmonies sweet and inocuous, demands some sort of melodic<br />
profile and a sense of climax. None is readily at hand.<br />
For the U.S.C. production conductor Larry Rachleff used a greatly reduced<br />
orchestration, by Murry {cq} Sidlin, of Copland&#8217;s own revised and cut-down<br />
orchestra, and in the dull acoustics of U.S.C.&#8217;s Bing Theater not much sound<br />
got out of the pit. Thursday&#8217;s cast, one of two which will perform in<br />
alternation, had Susan Holsonbake and Scott Herrick as the romantic leads; that<br />
group will also sing on Saturday. Frans Boerlage&#8217;s staging had a curious<br />
tendency to clump most of the action on stage right; he did, however, succeed<br />
in drawing some lively action patterns out of the U.S.C. Chamber Singers, who<br />
consituted the chorus.<br />
THE FACTS<br />
*What: the U.S.C. Opera performance of Aaron Copland&#8217;s &#8220;The Tender<br />
Land.&#8221;<br />
*Where: Bing Theater, U.S.C. campus, near the Jefferson/McClintock<br />
entrance.<br />
*When: 8 p.m. Saturday, 2 p.m. Sunday.<br />
*Tickets: $4-$7.50; for information call 213 743-7111.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<item>
		<title>LAPO</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/1990/11/lapo-16/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/1990/11/lapo-16/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Fri, 30 Nov 1990 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Daily News]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=2817</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[So vast is the expanse of Gustav Mahler&#8217;s Ninth Symphony, so audience- involving its outlay of violent, palpable emotion, that any performance that gets through the work unscathed is bound to seem at least skillful. Even so, the performance by the Los Angeles Philharmonic under Kurt Sanderling on Thursday night must rank as an extraordinary [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>So vast is the expanse of Gustav Mahler&#8217;s Ninth Symphony, so audience-<br />
involving its outlay of violent, palpable emotion, that any performance that<br />
gets through the work unscathed is bound to seem at least skillful. Even so,<br />
the performance by the Los Angeles Philharmonic under Kurt Sanderling on<br />
Thursday night must rank as an extraordinary achievement.The music &#8212; 85 minutes of heaven-storming, demoniacal grimacing and, at the<br />
end, sublime, eloquent leave-taking &#8212; is as challenging as anything in the<br />
symphonic repertory, to conductor and audience alike. As at previous<br />
performances of the work in recent years, the Music Center audience was not<br />
entirely equal to the challenge; there were some premature departures.The forces onstage were more than equal, however. Search your memories as you<br />
may, it will be hard to remember playing as poised, as beautifully balanced,<br />
as the final five-or-so minutes of Mahler&#8217;s finale, with the sublime last<br />
melody working its way through the strings, ever softer until sound and<br />
silence become a single unity. Ungainly on the podium as he is, with his<br />
baton clumsily held as if it might turn and attack, Sanderling was<br />
nevertheless the shaping force in a supremely communicative performance.<br />
Those who question the high qualities of this orchestra under proper<br />
circumstances are invited to sample  memories of this one experience.Starting the program there was an authentic and endearing novelty: early Haydn<br />
(the Symphony No. 39), charming, witty and full of beans, a symphony in G<br />
minor that even ended in that key, against the common practice of always<br />
coming around to a &#8220;happy ending&#8221; in the major.  With music like this, the German symphonic tradition began; with the Mahler<br />
Ninth, it came to its close. At both ends, Sanderling reigned supreme.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<item>
		<title>CONTINUUM</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/1990/11/continuum/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/1990/11/continuum/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Fri, 30 Nov 1990 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Daily News]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=2780</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[The history of serious progressive music in the Soviet Union is only now coming into focus. It&#8217;s a history of oppression, of composers harrassed by official governmental forces, denied access to music from the West, and commanded to straitjacket their own compositions to fit the needs of the state. It is also the story of [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>The history of serious progressive music in the Soviet Union is only now coming<br />
into focus. It&#8217;s a history of oppression, of composers harrassed by official<br />
governmental forces, denied access to music from the West, and commanded to<br />
straitjacket their own compositions to fit the needs of the state. It is also<br />
the story of a few brave composers working virtually in secret, smuggling<br />
forbidden scores in and out of the country,  an avant-garde underground.<br />
This past weekend several departments at U.S.C. combined to present a symposium<br />
on &#8220;forbidden&#8221; Soviet art, and the climactic event occurred at the Schoenberg<br />
Institute on Saturday night: a fascinating concert of Soviet avant-garde music<br />
from the 1920s to the present. The performers were members of Continuum, the<br />
New York-based new-music organization led by by Joel Sachs and Cheryl Seltzer.<br />
It&#8217;s only recently, as Sachs explained in a pre-concert talk, that Soviet<br />
composers have gained access to the masterworks of their own time. Like beggars<br />
at a banquet, Sachs said, they eagerly assimilated 75 years&#8217; worth of outside<br />
influence, and some of their new music teems with the results of this new<br />
assimilation.<br />
That was certainly the case, on Saturday&#8217;s program, with a wildly eclectic,<br />
fearsomely energetic work by Alfred Schnittke for violin and piano, subtitled<br />
&#8220;Quasi una Sonata,&#8221; in which both instruments seemed bent on tearing huge<br />
holes in the atmosphere with the passion of their outcries. A Sonata for<br />
clarinet alone by Elena Firsova seemed motivated by the same intentions; in no<br />
more than ten minutes it explored with furious skill the full range of the<br />
instrument&#8217;s possibilities, and a few impossibilities as well.<br />
Two expansive vocal works were among the evening&#8217;s high points. &#8220;Pain and<br />
Silence,&#8221; Edison Denisov&#8217;s settings of lines from Osip Mandelstamm, was the<br />
one work that could, from any standpoint, be thought of as beautiful; Ukranian<br />
composer Leonid Hrabovsky&#8217;s {cq} &#8220;Kogda,&#8221; commissioned by Continuum, set some<br />
tiny poems of Velimir Khlebnikov (author of the mystical &#8220;Zangesi,&#8221; produced<br />
several years ago at MOCA) into a background full of such avant-garde toys as a<br />
thunder sheet and a brake drum banged upon with a hammer.<br />
Starting off the program was some short pieces from Soviet music&#8217;s early days:<br />
some dreary piano works and songs by Nicolay Roslavets and Alexander Mosolov &#8211;<br />
the latter best known for his piece of orchestrated social realism, &#8220;The Steel<br />
Foundry.&#8221; Also included was a 1949 Trio by Galina Ustvolskaya, a dry-point but<br />
well-crafted work by a Soviet iconoclast who was exploring her own brand of<br />
Western-style dissonance at a time when she might have been shot for doing<br />
so.<br />
Performances couldn&#8217;t have been better, with Sachs and Seltzer sharing the<br />
burdens at the piano, the stalwart mezzo-soprano Ellen Lang, violinist Mia Wu<br />
and clarinetist Nathan Williams. New York&#8217;s new-music audience is notoriously<br />
fickle, but their support of Continuum over 25 years suggests that they do know<br />
quality when they hear it. So did the cheering, capacity crowd at Schoenberg<br />
Institute, for a most worthy event.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>LONG&#160;BEACHOPERA</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/1990/11/long-beachopera/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/1990/11/long-beachopera/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 28 Nov 1990 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Daily News]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=2825</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Michael Milenski has done it again.On paper, the opening offering of Milenski&#8217;s Long Beach Opera&#8217;s 13th season, introduced on Wednesday night and repeated next Sunday afternoon, may have looked like marking time. Given the company&#8217;s reputation for innovative fare, a revival of Mascagni&#8217;s &#8220;Cavalleria Rusticana&#8221; may have seemed like warmed- over turkey; Massenet&#8217;s &#8220;La Navarraise,&#8221; [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Michael Milenski has done it again.On paper, the opening offering of Milenski&#8217;s Long Beach Opera&#8217;s 13th season,<br />
introduced on Wednesday night and repeated next Sunday afternoon, may have<br />
looked like marking time. Given the company&#8217;s reputation for innovative fare,<br />
a revival of Mascagni&#8217;s &#8220;Cavalleria Rusticana&#8221; may have seemed like warmed-<br />
over turkey; Massenet&#8217;s &#8220;La Navarraise,&#8221; which completed the double bill,<br />
is less familiar, yet cut from very much the same cloth. But paper is fragile stuff, and Long Beach has, once again, put on a terrific<br />
show. The reasons are numerous. They begin with two spellbinding performances<br />
by Elizabeth Day, who sang the leading roles in both short operas. The list<br />
continues with the stunning work of director/designer Hugo De Ana, whose<br />
staging of both operas was full of fresh ideas including, in the Massenet,<br />
some battlefield fireworks that could easily blow you out of your seat. They<br />
also include the conducting of Michael Recchiuti, who delivered two poised,<br />
nicely balanced readings.Elizabeth Day is not a newcomer; she was the Elisabetta in the Long beach<br />
&#8220;Don Carlo&#8221; of 1986 and the Tatiana in the &#8220;Eugene Onegin&#8221; the year<br />
before. Those were roles for a dramatic soprano; Santuzza and the Navarraise<br />
actually call for a high mezzo. (Marilyn Horne&#8217;s recording of &#8220;La<br />
Navarraise&#8221; is the way most of us know the opera.) In this range Day is<br />
marvelously communicative. There were a couple of rough spots in the<br />
Mascagni, which may have just been warming up. In the Massenet she dominated<br />
the stage with some stunning vocalism, and a marvelous stage presence to<br />
match. This was, make no mistake, the work of a big new star.The rest of the vocal work was at least competent, sometimes more so. Arturo<br />
Spinetti&#8217;s big, burly Turiddu, delivered fortissimo for the most part, is<br />
surely one of several legitimate ways of getting through &#8220;Cav&#8221; (if not the<br />
only one). Kirk Redmann, the love interest in &#8220;La Navarraise&#8221; got through<br />
the notes acceptably, but might consider narrowing his rather juicy vibrato.<br />
Excellent support in minor roles was provided by Paula Rasmussen (a perky<br />
Lola in the &#8220;Cav&#8221;) and Louis Lebherz, in the villain&#8217;s role in &#8220;Nav.&#8221;<br />
Not the least of the evening&#8217;s pleasures was the rediscovery of that latter<br />
work. We know Massenet from the lavender and gossamer of his big, romantic<br />
operas. &#8220;La Navarraise&#8221; has its share, but also some gorgeous large-scale<br />
thunder. Its action-packed brief duration is a marvel of dramatic<br />
compression. Nobody ever said that about &#8220;Cav,&#8221; and nobody ever will.<br />
THE FACTS:What: The Long Beach Opera presents Mascagni&#8217;s &#8220;Cavalleria Rusticana&#8221; and<br />
Massenet&#8217;s &#8220;La Navarraise.&#8221;Where: Terrace Theater, Long Beach Convention Center.When: 2 p.m., Sunday, December 2.Starring: Elizabeth Day, Arturo Spinetti, Kirk Redmann.Behind the Scenes: Conducted by Michael Recchiuti; designed and directed by<br />
Hugo De Ana.Tickets: $10-$55. Information: 213 596-5556.Our rating: * * * *</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<item>
		<title>MEC</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/1990/11/mec-4/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/1990/11/mec-4/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 26 Nov 1990 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Daily News]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=2829</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Aaron Copland turned 90 on November 14, and the event has been widely and wisely celebrated. It is doubtful, however, whether a more loving and imaginative tribute has been staged anywhere than this week&#8217;s Monday Evening Concert at the County Museum.The turnout was one of the largest in the series&#8217; history; nearly every seat in [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Aaron Copland turned 90 on November 14, and the event has been widely and<br />
wisely celebrated. It is doubtful, however, whether a more loving and<br />
imaginative tribute has been staged anywhere than this week&#8217;s Monday Evening<br />
Concert at the County Museum.The turnout was one of the largest in the series&#8217; history; nearly every seat<br />
in the drab Bing Auditorium was filled. The crowd had come for Copland, of<br />
course, but also for Leo Smit, the great composer, pianist and toiler in the<br />
cause of new music, now officially retired but still glowing with his<br />
wonderful energy. Smit was the pianist throughout the concert: first in<br />
Copland&#8217;s Piano Quartet (with string players Elizabeth Baker, Valerie Dimond<br />
{cq} and Roger Lebow), then as partner to soprano Rosalind Rees in a bouquet<br />
of songs by  Copland himself and 18 of Copland&#8217;s close friends, and finally<br />
with pianist Adam Stern in a two-piano version of Copland’s &#8220;Billy the Kid&#8221;<br />
ballet.It was an evening full of rewards. Copland&#8217;s 1950 Piano Quartet isn&#8217;t often<br />
heard; it&#8217;s a tough work, full of a rough-cut, honest beauty that demands<br />
close listening. It represents Copland at a sort of crossroads, moving away<br />
from the easy style of the great ballet scores and toward a denser harmonic<br />
manner, and at the same time looking back to the gritty, dissonant works of<br />
his early days. It is also a wonderfully brainy work, with a final slow<br />
movement that resolves all previous problems and dies out in an angelic calm. Between the Quartet and the ballet of 12 years earlier the stylistic gap is<br />
wide. For all the loss of instrumental color, hearing &#8220;Billy the Kid&#8221; in<br />
Copland&#8217;s piano version makes it easy to concentrate on the hard-edged<br />
originality of the work, its pungent harmonies, its sheer bravado in, for<br />
example, ramming melodic lines together in separate and unrelated keys.<br />
The song group was beautifully chosen: a set of bright, brief birthday cards,<br />
sung with great style and exemplary diction by Rosalind Rees (wife of the<br />
noted choral conductor, Gregg Smith). With the auditorium in darkness (why?)<br />
it was sometimes hard to remember which song was which, but such beauties as<br />
Virgil Thomson&#8217;s setting of Gertrude Stein&#8217;s &#8220;Susie Asado&#8221; and Elliott<br />
Carter&#8217;s of the Robert Frost &#8220;The Line-Gang,&#8221;  were easy to identify and<br />
hard to forget. So was David Raksin&#8217;s well-worn but still haunting &#8220;Laura&#8221;<br />
and an unfamiliar, ravishing Leonard Bernstein song, the 1950 &#8220;My House&#8221; to<br />
a text of his own.Performances throughout were of top-quality, but the evening&#8217;s highest<br />
pleasure was the sight of Smit at the piano, obviously standing in for<br />
Copland himself, having a whale of a good time  and anxious to share<br />
it.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<item>
		<title>LAPO</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/1990/11/lapo-17/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/1990/11/lapo-17/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Fri, 23 Nov 1990 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Daily News]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=2816</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[It didn&#8217;t take much imagination to predict that the stars would be in their proper places for this past weekend&#8217;s Los Angeles Philharmonic concerts. With Murray Perahia, our most serious romantic pianist, on hand to play Brahms, and Kurt Sanderling, one of the last of the old-school classicist, involved with Beethoven, Friday night&#8217;s program (repeated [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>It didn&#8217;t take much imagination to predict that the stars would be in their<br />
proper places for this past weekend&#8217;s Los Angeles Philharmonic concerts. With<br />
Murray Perahia, our most serious romantic pianist, on hand to play Brahms,<br />
and Kurt Sanderling, one of the last of the old-school classicist, involved<br />
with Beethoven, Friday night&#8217;s program (repeated on Saturday and Sunday)<br />
added up to a couldn&#8217;t-lose situation.And so it was. Perahia and the orchestra began with a spacious, warm-hearted<br />
reading of the Brahms Second Concerto. It lasted nearly an hour, but it was<br />
paved with gold all the way.Actually, there is no other way to play this work. In a meeting of minds that<br />
bridged the age gap between soloist (42) and conductor (78), Perahia and<br />
Sanderling mined the vast expanses of the Brahms for its fund of eloquence<br />
and sweet poetry. The slow movement, brought on by the melting warmth of<br />
Ronald Leonard&#8217;s cello solo, properly became the sort of quiet reverie that<br />
you hear with your inner ear. The buoyant finale positively scampered.A routine program-planner might have scheduled the Brahms at the end, and the<br />
quieter joys of the Beethoven &#8220;Pastoral&#8221; Symphony for starters. By<br />
reversing the order, however, and by conducting the Beethoven in a manner so<br />
miraculous that the work almost seemed newly composed, Sanderling sent the<br />
crowd home with all kinds of new thoughts about this much-loved and yet<br />
little-known flight of Beethoven&#8217;s purest fantasy.Do we, for example, pay enough attention to the miracle of Beethoven&#8217;s<br />
instrumentation in this work &#8212; a quality not at all evident, by the way, in<br />
the mangled version used in Disney&#8217;s &#8220;Fantasia?&#8221; Here, in the subtle glints<br />
of this music, is the extraordinary case of a composer going rapidly deaf,<br />
yet able in his mind to concoct a rainbow of sounds &#8212; the blend of strings<br />
and a solo bassoon that rounds off the first movement, the music of the<br />
second-movement brook, its own murmuring constantly echoed by other dabs of<br />
murmuring in the woodwinds, the radiant joy of horns and other brass<br />
instruments in the sunlight after the storm.All this came across in the quiet, understated Sanderling performance, in<br />
which the overriding concern seemed to be the preservation of absolute<br />
orchestral clarity. There was one miscalculation: the specified repeat in the<br />
first movement went unobserved, and the over-all balance of the movement<br />
suffered thereby. Still, there was the exuberance of Beethoven&#8217;s remarkable<br />
invention, otherwise beautifully honored under Sanderling&#8217;s probing<br />
leadership.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<item>
		<title>CLASNTZ</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/1990/11/clasntz/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/1990/11/clasntz/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Fri, 23 Nov 1990 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Daily News]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=2753</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[A small office building stands at the corner of Tampa Ave. and Roscoe Blvd. in Northridge. From its half-timbered, archaic look, it might have been designed by and for a gang of Munchkins. Instead, it houses the headquarters of DCC Compact Classics, which is the outfit you talk to whenever you&#8217;re looking for recordings from [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>A small office building stands at the corner of Tampa Ave. and Roscoe Blvd. in<br />
Northridge. From its half-timbered, archaic look, it might have been designed<br />
by and for a gang of Munchkins. Instead, it houses the headquarters of DCC<br />
Compact Classics, which is the outfit you talk to whenever you&#8217;re looking for<br />
recordings from Bulgaria.<br />
DCC is a label both old and new. Old, it was  known as Dunhill, with a strong<br />
pop identification and a catalog listing the likes of Sammy Davis Jr,, Judy<br />
Garland and Ray Charles. Then, sometime last year, the makers of Dunhill<br />
cigarettes brought suit against the use of their name, and so Marshall<br />
Blonfield, the head of Dunhill-the-record, set up new quarters in Northridge,<br />
with a new label, DCC in which the &#8220;D&#8221; &#8212; which doesn&#8217;t require an<br />
encyclopedia to figure out &#8212; maintains the link with the past.<br />
What has any of this got to do with Bulgaria? Enter Jerry Tolmich, one of the<br />
surviving patriarchs of the classical record business, p-r executive for a<br />
time at Columbia Records on both coasts, currently head of his own company<br />
called AVM (&#8220;Audio-Visual Masterpieces&#8221;) which is the exclusive American<br />
affiliate of Balkanton, which is Bulgaria&#8217;s major classical label. Under a<br />
DCC-AVM alliance, Tolmich has moved his office, too, up to the Munchkin<br />
building in Northridge, making that corner the Bulgarian records capitol of<br />
the entire Western World.<br />
&#8220;AVM is a company to be reckoned with, now and in the future,&#8221; says the<br />
hearty, garrulous Tolmich. Already, his catalog bears out his boast.<br />
Everything in it so far is some kind of premiere. One disc contains all of<br />
Bartok&#8217;s Piano Concertos &#8212; the first time all three have been on a single<br />
record. Another contains three Liszt Piano Concertos: the familiar Nos. 1 &#038; 2,<br />
and an obscure orchestration of the solo &#8220;Concerto Pathetique&#8221; and also,<br />
thus, a world premiere. A complete recording of Debussy&#8217;s piano Preludes is<br />
listed as &#8220;the first time complete Preludes in stereo on 1 CD.&#8221;  One genuine<br />
curiosity is a piano transcription of, of all things, Edward Elgar&#8217;s First<br />
Symphony. Responding to a raised eyebrow, Tolmich asserted that the pile of<br />
advance orders for that undoubted rarity was already mountainous.<br />
One AVM-DCC disc clearly bound for success is an operatic recital, recorded in<br />
1981, by the legendary Bulgarian bass Boris Christoff, with chorus and<br />
orchestra conducted by Ettore Gracis. &#8220;That one is only a western-world<br />
premiere,&#8221; smiled Tolmich. &#8220;It has never been issued outside Bulgaria.&#8221;<br />
One major breakthrough concerns price: AVM&#8217;s classical line lists at $8.98.<br />
with an even cheaper &#8220;Best of Composer&#8221; line priced at $5.98. Even here<br />
there are surprises: a &#8220;Best of Gershwin&#8221; disc with performances of<br />
&#8220;Rhapsody in Blue&#8221; and the Concerto in F, by the Bulgarian Broadcasting<br />
Symphony under Jo Alfidi.<br />
Remember Jo Alfidi? They called him Joey back in 1960, when as a dimpled<br />
cherub of 10 he had played his  Piano Concerto for the Queen Mother Elisabeth<br />
of Belgium. Two years later, he got her to visit his own home in Yonkers; now<br />
there he is, conducting Gershwin in Sofia for records distributed out of<br />
Northridge. Small, indeed, is the world!<br />
[*]bo. Where and When? [B] Trying to discover the extent of Los Angeles-area<br />
music making is frustrating at best, and becomes more so as the number of<br />
events increases year after year. No daily or weekly newspaper has room for<br />
the complete list, nor the facility to hunt down all the information.<br />
This, then, is by way of greeting the 1990/91 Cauer Calendar of Classical<br />
Musical Events, fresh at hand, a 36-page well-printed listing of the entire<br />
ongoing musical season so far as it is presently known. Robert Cauer is a<br />
violin restorer and dealer, with a shop at 2242 Cahuenga Blvd., Hollywood<br />
90068. He has produced his calendar free of charge, supported by a few<br />
advertisers.<br />
It&#8217;s a remarkable job, covering the concert and operatic scene from the San<br />
Fernando Valley down to Costa Mesa and east to Riverside. It even includes<br />
such added amenities as an accurate phone list of musical venues, including<br />
churches. Blessings upon Robert Cauer, for recognizing one of this community&#8217;s<br />
most urgent needs and fulfilling it so well.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<item>
		<title>LAPO</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/1990/11/lapo-18/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/1990/11/lapo-18/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 15 Nov 1990 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Daily News]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=2815</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[The Los Angeles Philharmonic is many kinds of orchestra, depending on the circumstances. For the young conductors, it is quirky and edgy; under Andre Previn, it matches his grayness; for Kurt Sanderling, it is somehow transformed into a noble, resonant ensemble in the best European manner. Thursday night at the Music Center, Sanderling began his [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>The Los Angeles Philharmonic is many kinds of orchestra, depending on the<br />
circumstances. For the young conductors, it is quirky and edgy; under Andre<br />
Previn, it matches his grayness; for Kurt Sanderling, it is somehow<br />
transformed into a noble, resonant ensemble in the best European manner.<br />
Thursday night at the Music Center, Sanderling began his annual stint that has<br />
become a high point in every Philharmonic season; a large crowd made it clear<br />
that he had been missed. Nobody in the orchestra has ever advanced a<br />
satisfactory explanation as to why this venerable veteran, now 78, invariably<br />
makes our local ensemble sound better than you&#8217;d think it could. It’s not a<br />
matter of technical wizardry so much as simple mutual respect and love. &#8220;It&#8217;s<br />
just that he makes us aware of the music itself,&#8221; one player once said. It&#8217;s<br />
as simple as that.<br />
Sanderling&#8217;s major work on this, the first of four programs he is down for<br />
this season, was the Bruckner Fourth, that majestic symphonic corpse. It would<br />
be stretching a point to suggest that he brought the work completely to life,<br />
since that is a task beyond human capability. But he and the orchestra did<br />
join forces in 75 minutes of marvelous sound-spinning, from the first<br />
throbbing of the strings, like an intake of breath right at the edge of<br />
silence, to the exultant hunting horns of the scherzo, to those final pages<br />
(of triumph? or simply of relief?) when the heavens do, indeed, open and the<br />
hot celestial light pours through.<br />
That, one presumes, is why people bother with Bruckner at all: those hours of<br />
pain and the ensuing moments of blessed release. In defense of the Fourth, it<br />
can at least be ascertained that the work is shorter than some.<br />
Miriam Fried was the evening&#8217;s soloist, the good Romanian-born violinist now<br />
living in New York, one-time protegee of Isaac Stern. She played the Mozart<br />
A-major Violin Concerto, for which Sanderling had wisely cut down the<br />
orchestra to chamber-ensemble size.<br />
Even so, she did not seem happy in the work. The term &#8220;dead-pan&#8221; is not very<br />
kind, but it came to mind at many junctures in the performance. She used the<br />
corny, sentimental cadenzas of Joseph Joachim, which strengthened the<br />
impression that she didn&#8217;t really know, or care, what this lovely, unruffled<br />
music is really about.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<item>
		<title>EMERSONS</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/1990/11/emersons/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/1990/11/emersons/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sun, 11 Nov 1990 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Daily News]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=2786</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[The ultimate test of quality for any chamber-music ensemble, and for its audience as well, is the slow movement from any of Beethoven&#8217;s mature string quartet. The sublime blend of vision, passion and mystery, the way Beethoven combines so few notes to signify so much: these stand as the definitive statement on the power that [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>The ultimate test of quality for any chamber-music ensemble, and for its<br />
audience as well, is the slow movement from any of Beethoven&#8217;s mature string<br />
quartet. The sublime blend of vision, passion and mystery, the way Beethoven<br />
combines so few notes to signify so much: these stand as the definitive<br />
statement on the power that music exerts at both ends of the process of<br />
communication.<br />
And it was this moment in the Emerson Quartet&#8217;s concert on Sunday afternoon,<br />
at UCLA&#8217;s Schoenberg Hall before a turnaway crowd, that most glowingly<br />
affirmed the greatness of the event. These four young men, together now for 14<br />
years, delivered the slow movement of Beethoven&#8217;s Second &#8220;Rasoumovsky&#8221;<br />
Quartet with an extraordinary blend of intensity and intense calm. If the<br />
legend that Beethoven conceived this particular music while contemplating the<br />
starry sky has any validity, the Emersons&#8217; performance fulfilled the story.The<br />
silence their playing inspired out front was something you could almost taste.<br />
None of this should come as any surprise. The Emerson Quartet is a frequent<br />
and welcome visitor, with series of concerts at the John Anson Ford<br />
Amphitheater and a Beethoven cycle at several historic sites among their<br />
recent local credits. In an era when cool meticulousness is especially prized,<br />
this group stands apart by virtue of the passion in their work and their<br />
fearless risk-taking (ub their choices of extreme ranges of tempo and<br />
dynamics, for example). They seem capable of every musical emotion except<br />
boredom.<br />
They are proficient, as well, in a wide range. Sunday&#8217;s program included<br />
Mozart&#8217;s stern, chill C-minor Adagio and Fugue, Elliot Carter&#8217;s pliant little<br />
Elegy for Quartet (early Carter, somewhat French in its musical manner) and<br />
the exuberant First Quartet of Bela Bartok, music teeming with its own energy<br />
and full also of prophecies of the greater composer to come. Even the one<br />
encore was uncommonly interesting: a Mozart Rondo, planned for the A-major<br />
Quartet but left unfinished. By a composer&#8217;s triumphs, and by his abandoned<br />
projects as well, we learn his full stature.<br />
All this was superbly played, but the Beethoven surpassed all else, even so.<br />
Music restless, full of grit and defiance, at rest only in the amusing<br />
quotation of a Russian folksong in the scherzo: it clearly held the four<br />
players in its spell, and they communicated the magic. First violinist Philip<br />
Setzer, who had occupied the second violinist&#8217;s chair during the program&#8217;s<br />
first half, got his instrument to soar enchantingly in that slow movement. His<br />
colleagues: violinist Eugene Drucker, violist Lawrence Dutton and cellist<br />
David Finckel were no less in tune with this one-of-a-kind masterwork.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>LENINGRAD&#160;2</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/1990/11/leningrad-2/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/1990/11/leningrad-2/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 08 Nov 1990 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Daily News]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=2823</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[The Leningrad marvel continues. Thursday night&#8217;s concert at the Music Center, the second of four by the visiting Leningrad Philharmonic, once again drew a capacity crowd and gave it plenty to cheer. Mariss Jansons, the orchestra&#8217;s associate conductor was in charge, remembered here for the Tchaikovsky Festival concerts he led with the Los Angeles Philharmonic [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>The Leningrad marvel continues. Thursday night&#8217;s concert at the Music Center,<br />
the second of four by the visiting Leningrad Philharmonic, once again drew a<br />
capacity crowd and gave it plenty to cheer. Mariss Jansons, the orchestra&#8217;s<br />
associate conductor was in charge, remembered here for the Tchaikovsky<br />
Festival concerts he led with the Los Angeles Philharmonic in the spring of<br />
1988.<br />
No greater contrast in podium manner exists than between Jansons&#8217; clear,<br />
classic beat and his unassuming stance and the flamboyant demeanor of his<br />
colleague, Yuri Temirkanov  that&#8217;s the real spelling [F/L] as witnessed at<br />
Wednesday&#8217;s concert. Both, however, drew resplendent results, an amazing<br />
display of orchestral discipline, beautifully balanced tone and stunning<br />
control over dynamics.<br />
Jansons&#8217; program, once again, was Prokofiev/Tchaikovsky: a suite of &#8220;Romeo<br />
and Juliet&#8221; ballet excerpts and the one-movement First Piano Concerto by the<br />
former, and Tchaikovsky&#8217;s Fifth Symphony. Dmitri Alexeev was the capable<br />
soloist in the concerto, a strange, vacillating work (robust romanticism one<br />
minute, brittle abrasiveness the next) interesting mostly as the pad from<br />
which a brilliant career would someday be launched. {E/P]<br />
The Tchaikovsky, as you might have guessed, was the evening&#8217;s major triumph.<br />
What was there, you had to wonder, that made this performance under Jansons<br />
satisfying in exactly the way last week&#8217;s performance here by the Japan<br />
Philharmonic was not? It wasn&#8217;t just a matter of nationality; plenty of non-<br />
Russian orchestras do spectacularly well by Tchaikovsky.<br />
No, it had to do with matters of eloquence. Both performances were note-<br />
perfect; both took some fearsome risks with breakneck tempos in the finale.<br />
But the one, the Japanese performance, seemed to stop at putting the notes<br />
across. Under Jansons, and with some stunning solo work from all over his<br />
orchestra &#8212; the brooding, stark clarinet tone, the extraordinary playing of<br />
the horns, not only in the famous &#8220;Moon Love&#8221; solo but elsewhere in their<br />
soft, muted punctuation &#8212; you heard long, oratorical lines of thought, a<br />
sense of building relatively simple ideas into grandiose structures. This time<br />
the Tchaikovsky Fifth resounded as a masterpiece; the last time it didn&#8217;t: as<br />
simple as that.<br />
Some details were fascinating. The orchestra is seated with the first and<br />
second violins down front on either side, behind to the right and cellos and<br />
basses to the left. Violins down front lend a special brilliance to any<br />
orchestra. Toscanini favored that arrangement; now it is generally out of<br />
favor except for &#8220;authentic&#8221; early music ensembles. But a lot of<br />
Tchaikovsky&#8217;s scoring seems to demand a special  kind of interchange, back and<br />
forth across the stage between the two groups of violins, and those effects<br />
were nicely brought out in this week&#8217;s performances.<br />
Someday, in a better world, all orchestras will sound like this.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>LENINGRAD</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/1990/11/leningrad/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/1990/11/leningrad/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 07 Nov 1990 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Daily News]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=2822</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Word has it that the Leningrad Philharmonic Orchestra of the U.S.S.R. &#8212; to use its full title this once &#8212; is some kind of stupendous performing organization. Word, this once, is right.Its history is splendid enough. Descended from the orchestra of the St. Petersburg court, the ensemble was anointed the Leningrad State Orchestra in 1917 [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Word has it that the Leningrad Philharmonic Orchestra of the U.S.S.R. &#8212; to<br />
use its full title this once &#8212; is some kind of stupendous performing<br />
organization. Word, this once, is right.Its history is splendid enough. Descended from the orchestra of the St.<br />
Petersburg court, the ensemble was anointed the Leningrad State Orchestra in<br />
1917 and amalgamated into the first Soviet concert society in 1921. During<br />
World War II, under the legendary Eugene Mravinsky (who led the orchestra for<br />
50 years, from 1938-1988) the orchestra never missed a concert. Mention any<br />
notable Russian composer past or present, and you&#8217;ll find his destiny<br />
inextricably linked to the Leningrad Philharmonic.It now performs under Yuri Temirkhanov, who conducts two of the orchestra&#8217;s<br />
four concerts here (including one tonight), and its associate conductor,<br />
Mariss Jansons, who leads the other two (including tomorrow&#8217;s). Temirkhhanov,<br />
who led Wednesday&#8217;s opening concert here, is a known quantity in this<br />
country, both as a gifted conductor and as something of a podium show-off. He<br />
has appeared at the Hollywood Bowl, and is due back here for two weeks with<br />
the Los Angeles Philharmonic next month. He was high in the running for music<br />
director with the Philadelphia Orchestra, although his present post, as head<br />
of the best orchestra in Eastern Europe &#8212; arguably on the entire continent<br />
&#8211; is nothing to take lightly.What makes this orchestra so spectacular? Its noble tradition under Mravinsky<br />
was a good starting point, and Temirkhanov has obviously maintained that<br />
level. He has, for example, preserved that tremendous, clean cutting tone in<br />
the brass, which play without the vibrato that, to some extent, afflicts the<br />
tonal purity of some American orchestras. The sound of the massed Leningrad<br />
brass section jabbing its way through the murky texture at the start of<br />
Tchaikovsky&#8217;s &#8220;Manfred&#8221; Symphony is something one doesn&#8217;t easily<br />
forget.The entire orchestra, larger in number (112) than most European groups, plays<br />
with a cleanness, a forthrightness, that is different from the mellowness of,<br />
say, the Vienna Philharmonic and not quite as dry as the Berlin. You get the<br />
feeling, rare at the Music Center, that even when the full orchestra is<br />
roistering through something loud and furious, that there is a welcome amount<br />
of air space around their tone.This opening concert under Temirkhanov was superior stuff all the way, from<br />
the opening romp through Prokofiev&#8217;s delicious &#8220;Lieutenant Kije,&#8221; through<br />
the clattering amorphousness of that composer&#8217;s Third Piano Concerto, with<br />
Dmitri Alexeev fully up to its virtuosic demands, to the hour-long<br />
&#8220;Manfred,&#8221; a work that suggests that the words &#8220;neglect&#8221; and<br />
&#8220;undeserved&#8221; don&#8217;t always go together.Even so, Tchaikovsky&#8217;s meanderings came across capitally, with marvelous<br />
lightness in the Mendelssohnian second movement, and some elegant wind<br />
playing all the way through. For the encore Temirkhanov and the orchestra<br />
clowned their way through Schubert&#8217;s harmless little F-minor &#8220;Moment<br />
Musical,&#8221; an unworthy gesture after this most imposing concert.THE FACTS:<br />
What: The Leningrad Philharmonic, presented by the Los Angeles Philharmonic When: 8 p.m., Friday and Saturday Where: Dorothy Chandler Pavilion, Music Center, 135 N. Grand Ave.<br />
Behind the Scenes: Conductors: Yuri Temirkhanov (Friday) and Mariss Jansons (Saturday)<br />
Tickets: $10-$45; reservations (213) 480-3232; information: (213) 972-7211</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>NORRINGTON</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/1990/11/norrington/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/1990/11/norrington/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sun, 04 Nov 1990 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Daily News]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=2837</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Like a powerful and refreshing cleansing agent, the sound of Roger Norrington&#8217;s London Classical Players swept through the Dorothy Chandler Pavilion at the Music Center on Sunday night. It lit lights in the dark corners, clearing out the accumulated sludge of years of Strauss and Sibelius. It cleaned out the ears, as well, of a [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Like a powerful and refreshing cleansing agent, the sound of Roger<br />
Norrington&#8217;s London Classical Players swept through the Dorothy Chandler<br />
Pavilion at the Music Center on Sunday night. It lit lights in the dark<br />
corners, clearing out the accumulated sludge of years of Strauss and<br />
Sibelius. It cleaned out the ears, as well, of a near-capacity audience, and<br />
left them cheering at the end.<br />
The LCP is one of London&#8217;s many groups dedicated to playing bygone music on<br />
the instruments of that music&#8217;s own time, and with some attempt at recreating<br />
performance practices of the time. Most groups stick to 18th-century music,<br />
butNorrington has taken his ensemble farther afield. They are currently well<br />
along in an invasion of the 19th century. Their latest record is of Schumann<br />
symphonies.<br />
Sunday&#8217;s program represented a recent stage in that invasion. It consisted of<br />
symphonies by Beethoven and Schubert (the Fourth, in each case), Beethoven&#8217;s<br />
&#8220;Egmont&#8221; Overture and a Rossini tidbit (the &#8220;Signor Bruschino&#8221; Overture)<br />
as encore. Even confined to a single decade (1806-16), there was enough<br />
variety to underscore the strengths and weaknesses of Norrington&#8217;s musical<br />
outlook.<br />
Beyond question, he thrives on controversy. Journals here and abroad delight<br />
in huge spreads on the authentic-performance question, and Norrington&#8217;s name<br />
invariably turns up as hero and/or villain. And so he did on this occasion.<br />
The Schubert Fourth, the first stirrings of romanticism in the teenage<br />
composer&#8217;s orchestral work, was not so much performed as shaken for dear<br />
life. The performance wasted no time on affection; it sped along, ignoring<br />
the specified repeats in the first movement and finale (and then inserting<br />
unspecified repeats in the Minuetto). Sure, the wind solos, played on genuine<br />
wood instruments, were ravishing, and so was the over-all blend of winds,<br />
strings strung with gut not steel, and the authentically brassy brass. The<br />
sound was there, but Schubert was not.<br />
As bad as was the Schubert, so splendid was the Beethoven Fourth, from its<br />
slow, spaced out opening (a vista of distant stars) to its giggling,<br />
breakneck finale. Maybe it was what Beethoven intended, maybe not; we&#8217;ll<br />
never know. But it was an exhilarating tracing of the published notes of<br />
Beethoven&#8217;s score, and that&#8217;s all we can expect from any performance,<br />
authentic or otherwise.<br />
The whole question becomes silly, in any case. Here we had music played by a<br />
Beethoven-sized orchestra (50-or-so players), in a hall ten times larger than<br />
any that Beethoven knew, for an audience with 20th-century tastes and<br />
expectations, and with the inauthentic spectacle of a flamboyant (but<br />
talented) conductor out front. All you can really expect from Norrington, or<br />
his fellow practitioners of the art of musical resuscitation, is a series of<br />
speculative essays on what might certain masterpieces from the past might<br />
have sounded like when new.<br />
The one authentic and indestructible quality in music is beauty. As long as<br />
that survives in the playing of such groups as Roger Norrington&#8217;s LCP, other<br />
questions become irrelevant.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>TARTUFFE</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/1990/10/tartuffe/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/1990/10/tartuffe/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Tue, 30 Oct 1990 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Daily News]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=2863</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[In the 27 years since its founding, the Opera Workshop at the California State University at Northridge has provided valuable training to its young participants, and substantial entertainment to the folks out front as well. Its over 100 productions have ranged from repertory works to contemporary novelties. Its current production of Kirke Mechem’s &#8220;Tartuffe,&#8221;which runs [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>In the 27 years since its founding, the Opera Workshop at the California State<br />
University at Northridge has provided valuable training to its young<br />
participants, and substantial entertainment to the folks out front as well.<br />
Its over 100 productions have ranged from repertory works to contemporary<br />
novelties. Its current production of Kirke Mechem’s &#8220;Tartuffe,&#8221;which runs<br />
through this weekend at the school&#8217;s Little Theater, is a distinguished entry<br />
in the latter category.<br />
A resident of the Bay Area, where he has taught at several schools, Mechem<br />
has composed prolifically in many musical forms. First produced at a San<br />
Francisco Opera workshop in 1980, &#8220;Tartuffe,&#8221; has made the rounds. And why<br />
not? It gives off an aura of high professionalism; it gives its singers a<br />
good workout, and puts up only a mild challenge to its audience. Its text has<br />
been adapted by Mechem himself from Moliere&#8217;s sublime satirical comedy, and<br />
he, too, has done a highly professional job.<br />
The opera&#8217;s musical ancestors are the sure-fire old masters: Puccini above<br />
all, whose best manner Mechem has carefully absorbed; Strauss (both Johann<br />
and Richard) in a few nice waltz tunes and in some dissonant scampering right<br />
out of &#8220;Till Eulenspiegel.&#8221; To these borrowings Mechem adds a passing nod<br />
or two: some Wagner (both &#8220;Tannhauser&#8221; and &#8220;The Ring&#8221;) as appropriate<br />
underlining to the pretentiousness of the title character, a flicker of the<br />
Beethoven Fifth to illuminate a fateful knocking at a door.<br />
If the resulting agreeable pastiche is somewhat less than memorable in<br />
itself, it at least accords well with Moliere&#8217;s delicious comedy, and the<br />
opera &#8212; which runs about 2 1/2 hours &#8212; does sail. Its acoustic setting at<br />
CSUN, in the 200-seat theater where the sounds from the orchestra pit tended<br />
to overwhelm all else, did the work less than full service, however.<br />
Still, the production, conducted and staged by the workshop&#8217;s founder, David<br />
W. Scott, did the work proud; the composer, in attendance on Tuesday night,<br />
looked pleased. Cathy Susan Pyles designed an attractive single set; the<br />
costumes by Teresa Gibson caught the period quite nicely.<br />
And while one hesitates to single out individual performers during their<br />
workshop years, don&#8217;t be surprised to see the names of Michelle de Young, a<br />
large-voiced dramatic soprano who sang Mme. Orgon, and Robin Lee Parkin, a<br />
pert, high-stepping soubrette as Dorine, showing up one of these days in the<br />
big time. Jason Daniel was the imposing, menacing Tartuffe; Benito Galindo,<br />
the properly dithering Orgon; Barbro Johansson his sweet if somewhat starchy<br />
daughter Mariane. The next CSUN Opera Workshop is scheduled for mid-March:<br />
&#8220;Suor Angelica&#8221; and &#8220;Gianni Schicchi,&#8221; real Puccini this time.<br />
THE FACTS:<br />
What: Kirke Mechem&#8217;s &#8220;Tartuffe,&#8221; presented by the CSUN Opera Workshop.<br />
Where: The Little Theater, School of the Arts, Nordhoff St. and Etiwanda Ave.<br />
in Northridge.<br />
When: 8 p.m., Friday and Saturday.<br />
Behind the Scenes: staged and conducted by David W. Scott, designed by Cathy<br />
Susan Pyles and Teresa Griffin.<br />
Tickets: $5-$10; information: 818 885-3093.<br />
Our rating: * * *</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>PASADENA</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/1990/10/pasadena/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/1990/10/pasadena/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sat, 27 Oct 1990 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Daily News]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=2842</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[They&#8217;re off and running again in Pasadena.Saturday night at the Civic Auditorium, Jorge Mester and his Pasadena Symphony Orchestra ended their season&#8217;s opening concert with a mighty sprint through Dvorak&#8217;s &#8220;New World&#8221; Symphony &#8212; transformed for the occasion from the music of a composer nostalgic for his homeland to the music of a man apparently [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>They&#8217;re off and running again in Pasadena.Saturday night at the Civic Auditorium, Jorge Mester and his Pasadena Symphony<br />
Orchestra ended their season&#8217;s opening concert with a mighty sprint through<br />
Dvorak&#8217;s &#8220;New World&#8221; Symphony &#8212; transformed for the occasion from the<br />
music of a composer nostalgic for his homeland to the music of a man<br />
apparently obsessed with having a plane to catch. There were impressive<br />
moments along the way, to be sure; the orchestra managed to remain upright<br />
over most of the hurdles its conductor had chosen to erect. But the feeling<br />
remained that a lot less fuss might have produced a lot more music.<br />
Have no doubts: Mester is an exciting conductor, and better his brand of<br />
podium exuberance than the work of certain of his sleepier colleagues. If he<br />
tends now and then to throw caution to the winds (and to the strings and<br />
brass, as well), he has a good aggregation of musicians to do his bidding,<br />
some of the area&#8217;s best studio freelancers. The orchestra plays fast and<br />
slow, loud and soft; there were times, in fact &#8212; in the symphony&#8217;s famous<br />
Largo &#8212; when the conductor had throttled the volume of the orchestra down<br />
below the audible level of the hall&#8217;s noisy (and inefficient) air-<br />
conditioning system.<br />
This is Mester&#8217;s seventh season in Pasadena, where (judging from Saturday&#8217;s<br />
turnout) he is much loved. He has now abandoned his post as music director of<br />
the Aspen Festival, and shuttles between his New York base (as head of the<br />
New Music Orchestral Project) and a new post as head of the Western Australia<br />
Symphony, with Pasadena as a handy stopping-off point. The Australian<br />
connection probably explains the new work on Saturday&#8217;s concert, Peter<br />
Sculthorpe&#8217;s 17-minute tone poem called &#8220;Kakadu,&#8221; named after a national<br />
park in the northern end of that continent.<br />
Sculthorpe is Australia&#8217;s best-known composer, a master at devising sound<br />
patterns that move easily between primitive percussive effects and a lively,<br />
inventive orchestral language. &#8220;Kakadu&#8221; is a big, attractive piece, neatly<br />
balanced between some impressive moments of violent instrumental cataclysm<br />
and a lovely quiet middle section built around a sinuous melody for English<br />
horn, (Between the Sculthorpe and the Dvorak, the orchestra&#8217;s solo English<br />
hornist, Joel Timm, had a big night for himself.)<br />
Midway came William Walton&#8217;s Violin Concerto, a work created for Jascha<br />
Heifetz in 1939 and affording a fair workout where empty virtuosity is the<br />
object, but not otherwise one of the splendid Briton&#8217;s better works.<br />
(According to a printed program note &#8212; illustrated, by the way, with a photo<br />
not of Walton but of Kurt Weill &#8212; the composer himself didn&#8217;t like it<br />
much.)Perhaps the famous Heifetz tone made its way successfully through the rather<br />
ponderous orchestration (at least it did on the recording), but the soloist<br />
in Pasadena, Kyoko Takezawa, was less successful. When she could be heard,<br />
she seemed to be responding adequately to the work&#8217;s limited fund of<br />
eloquence. Beyond question, however, she and the audience might have been<br />
happier with a different choice.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<item>
		<title>LAPO</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/1990/10/lapo-19/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/1990/10/lapo-19/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 24 Oct 1990 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Daily News]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=2814</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[At New York&#8217;s Carnegie Hall last month, Andre Previn had led the Los Angeles Philharmonic in Steven Stucky’s &#8220;Angelus&#8221; and William Schuman&#8217;s Third Symphony, and was scheduled to do so again this week at the Music Center. Later discovering that he needed more time to prepare an upcoming program in Vienna Previn, with his renowned [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>At New York&#8217;s Carnegie Hall last month, Andre Previn had led the Los Angeles<br />
Philharmonic in Steven Stucky’s &#8220;Angelus&#8221; and William Schuman&#8217;s Third<br />
Symphony, and was scheduled to do so again this week at the Music Center.<br />
Later discovering that he needed more time to prepare an upcoming program in<br />
Vienna Previn, with his renowned curious sense of priorities, dropped his Los<br />
Angeles commitment. It was caught by the Philharmonic&#8217;s associate conductor<br />
David Alan Miller, to his greater glory.<br />
Half a century separates Schuman&#8217;s big, exuberant symphony from Stucky&#8217;s<br />
empty little sound-bite, and the paradox of which is the more modern of the<br />
two is too obvious to belabor. Schuman&#8217;s symphony lasts just over half an<br />
hour; it is a strong, thoroughly original work with a particularly handsome,<br />
elegiac slow section at the start of the second of its two movements. It&#8217;s<br />
intricacies are not all that difficult to untangle; even Carlo Maria Giulini,<br />
whose taste for American music wasn&#8217;t profound, conducted it here quite<br />
successfully.<br />
The Stucky, co-commissioned by Carnegie Hall and the Los Angeles<br />
Philharmonic, has not improved on second hearing: ten minutes of clever<br />
orchestral sound effects purporting to represent different kinds of bells,<br />
harmless music meant to be forgotten five minutes after it&#8217;s over. Stucky has<br />
written better music, most of it for smaller performing groups. His message<br />
seems to be, however, that you write for orchestra these days with extreme<br />
caution, that the reaction you solicit from your hearers is &#8220;that wasn&#8217;t so<br />
bad.&#8221;<br />
Many composers today, apparently, harken to that message, writing these<br />
inocuous works for orchestra as if Jesse Helms might show up in the front row<br />
arm-in-arm with the chairman of the orchestra&#8217;s board.. Schuman, full of<br />
beans at 30, obviously worked from no such message, which is why his<br />
marvelous symphony, 50 years later, still sounds fresh and inventive.<br />
Both works drew out the best in young Miller, in big, extroverted<br />
performances nicely balanced and outgoing. Indeed, his poised, nicely planned<br />
reading of the Schuman ranks among his finest achievements here.<br />
Viktoria Mullova was the evening&#8217;s soloist, the splendid young Russian emigre<br />
whose mission here &#8212; at this appearance and the last, two years ago &#8212; seems<br />
to take on the hoariest chestnuts in the violin-concerto repertory and make<br />
them sound fresh. Last time it was the Tchaikovsky; this time, the<br />
Sibelius.<br />
Mullova is all musician. She does not bob or weave as she plays, nor flirt.<br />
Barring, at the most, two squeezed notes in the finale, her technique was all<br />
but flawless; even in the amorphous expanses of the Sibelius, she found more<br />
than mere technical challenge.<br />
Starting with the opening solo, which she shaped into a kind of rhapsodic<br />
improvisation over the buzzing and grumbling of the orchestra, she projected<br />
the work as something fresh and vivid. You forgot the actuality of the work<br />
as one of Sibelius&#8217; more tawdry creations, and listened as if to a piece of<br />
real music. The crowd stayed to cheer.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>MEC</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/1990/10/mec-5/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/1990/10/mec-5/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 22 Oct 1990 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Daily News]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=2828</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Over the past 40 years more or less, under one or another name, the Monday Evening Concerts have served to instruct, thrill, irritate, bore and fascinate audiences of various sizes, with their obsessive programs devoted mostly to the outer edges of the musical repertory. It is doubtful, however, whether many events in that series have [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Over the past 40 years more or less, under one or another name, the Monday<br />
Evening Concerts have served to instruct, thrill, irritate, bore and<br />
fascinate audiences of various sizes, with their obsessive programs devoted<br />
mostly to the outer edges of the musical repertory. It is doubtful, however,<br />
whether many events in that  series have been any more valuable, or have<br />
drawn a larger and happier crowd, than the latest edition, this past Monday<br />
at the County Museum.<br />
The program was planned as a memorial to the Italian composer Luigi Nono, who<br />
died earlier this year. Only one work by Nono himself was included . Filling<br />
out the long and rewarding list were works by Nono&#8217;s teachers, Gian-Francesco<br />
Malipiero and Bruno Maderna, and his colleagues, Luigi Dallapiccola and, as<br />
the one living composer represented, Luciano Berio. Juan Felipe Orrego-<br />
Benavente was the conductor, with a slendid group of local freelancers<br />
including the soprano Dasietta {cq} Kim and the tenor Jonathan Mack.<br />
What the program turned out to be, to its planners&#8217; immense credit, was a<br />
retrospective of a slice of contemporary musical history that has of late<br />
been virtually forgotten. These Italian composers, Malipiero, from an older<br />
generation, perhaps excepted, worked out their distinctive approach to the<br />
twelve-tone style very much in vogue throughout Europe in the first decades<br />
after World War II. They did so, however, on their own, very Italianate,<br />
terms.<br />
From Dallapiccola there came a string of quiet, elegant pieces full of<br />
fearful melodic gambits that somehow combined with the lyrical spirit of<br />
great Italian art of earlier times. The result, as two works on thie program<br />
&#8211; the &#8220;Little Night Music&#8221; for instruments, and the &#8220;Four-Part<br />
Divertimento&#8221; for soprano &#8212; clearly proved, was music of great charm, even<br />
of wit.<br />
If the Dallapiccola works were the highlight, the works of Berio (his<br />
&#8220;Sequence&#8221; for solo oboe cavorting with a single sustained B on tape, and<br />
his setting of James Joyce&#8217;s &#8220;Chamber Music&#8221;) and the gorgeously intricate<br />
Serenade of Maderna were worthy program companions. Nono himself was<br />
handsomely, if skimpily, represented by his quirky settings of Machado&#8217;s<br />
&#8220;Songs to Guiomar.&#8221;<br />
Of slighter challenge but no less charm were the two Malipiero works, &#8220;Four<br />
Antique Songs&#8221; and, in its American premiere, the long visionary song &#8220;The<br />
Celestial Kingdom.&#8221; Where has all this music been? There was a time when the<br />
music of this small group of Italian pioneers figured frequently on concert<br />
program. This program provided a resuscitation long overdue.<br />
The singing, the individual instrumental work, the strong, committed<br />
leadership of Orrego-Benavente: all were on a high level. Chalk it up as an<br />
unquestioned triumph (also long overdue) for these variable but valuable<br />
Monday Evening Concerts.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>MISCHA</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/1990/10/mischa/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/1990/10/mischa/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sun, 21 Oct 1990 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Daily News]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=2832</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[The spirit of Mischa Schneider hovered smilingly over UCLA&#8217;s Schoenberg Hall on Sunday afternoon. Cellist of the Budapest Quartet of fond memory, teacher and saintly friend to all chamber-music players, Schneider is now celebrated in &#8220;Music for Mischa,&#8221; a moveable chamber-music feast that began its fifth season on Sunday before a sizable if not capacity [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>The spirit of Mischa Schneider hovered smilingly over UCLA&#8217;s Schoenberg Hall<br />
on Sunday afternoon. Cellist of the Budapest Quartet of fond memory, teacher<br />
and saintly friend to all chamber-music players, Schneider is now celebrated<br />
in &#8220;Music for Mischa,&#8221; a moveable chamber-music feast that began its fifth<br />
season on Sunday before a sizable if not capacity crowd.<br />
The series has been organized by two former members of another distinguished,<br />
much-missed quartet, the Sequoia: violinist Miwako Watanabe (who did not<br />
participate in Sunday&#8217;s concert) and cellist Robert Martin, who decidedly<br />
did. Together with violinist Barbara Govatos and pianist Cynthia Raim, Martin<br />
performed in an elegant and challenging program of trios, by Haydn, Beethoven<br />
and Dvorak. Govatos, by the way, is a member of the Philadelphia Orchestra,<br />
who flew in to replace the scheduled violinist, Sylvia Rosenberg, recently<br />
injured in a car accident (but currently on the mend).<br />
Trios for piano, violin and cello are a special and cherishable class of<br />
chamber music. They were an extremely popular form of house entertainment<br />
around 1800; Haydn and Beethoven even arranged some of their orchestral works<br />
for trio; as with records in a later age, this was the way you got to hear,<br />
say, a Haydn or Beethoven symphony in your own home.<br />
The Mischa group, however, chose works originally composed for trio: an A-<br />
major Trio by Haydn dating from his last years, and the C-minor Trio from<br />
Beethoven&#8217;s Opus 1 &#8212; two works actually created in the same year (1793)  by<br />
composers of succeeding generations. The contrast was striking: the Haydn,<br />
full of forward-looking harmonic adventures, the Beethoven delightfully<br />
poised between classicism and his own dramatic musical language in its<br />
formative years.<br />
At the end came a seldom-heard Dvorak trio, the F minor, Opus 65: hearty,<br />
robust romanticism, perhaps a bit too crammed with oratorical gesture, but<br />
graced with a most enchanting slow movement. Throughout the afternoon the<br />
playing was skilled, and also colored with a fine sense of fantasy. One thing<br />
that Mischa Schneider always epitomized was the love of whatever he was<br />
doing; that has become the hallmark, as well, of the players&#8217; organization<br />
that honors his name.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>GLENDALE</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/1990/10/glendale/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/1990/10/glendale/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sun, 21 Oct 1990 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Daily News]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=2793</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Maybe the Glendale Symphony Orchestra isn&#8217;t actually in or from Glendale. But the crowd that made the pilgrimage to the Music Center on Sunday night, to greet the start of the ensemble&#8217;s 67th season, made it quite clear that this was the orchestra of Glendale. In actuality, the orchestra is formed from the immense local [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Maybe the Glendale Symphony Orchestra isn&#8217;t actually in or from Glendale. But<br />
the crowd that made the pilgrimage to the Music Center on Sunday night, to<br />
greet the start of the ensemble&#8217;s 67th season, made it quite clear that this<br />
was the orchestra of Glendale.<br />
In actuality, the orchestra is formed from the immense local pool of<br />
freelance players &#8212; as are most of the other metropolitan orchestras in the<br />
area (Pasadena, Long Beach, etc.). The concertmaster is the ubiquitous Stuart<br />
Canin, whose presence at his first-violinist&#8217;s stand is usually in itself a<br />
guarantee of high-level playing. The Glendale may not offer the most profound<br />
musical programming in these parts. If orchestras were breweries, this one<br />
would classify as Lite, low on calories but well-supplied with froth.<br />
That latter commodity bubbled forth in a work called &#8220;Impresiones,&#8221;<br />
composed by the evening&#8217;s conductor, Lalo Schifrin, for the evening&#8217;s<br />
trumpet-wielding soloist, Carl Severinsen, known outside the medical<br />
profession as &#8220;Doc.&#8221; Considering the circumstances &#8211;a work by a well-known<br />
and successful purveyor of film and TV scores (over 100 at last count) for a<br />
well-known talk-show bandleader and all-around entertainer &#8212; it should come<br />
as no surprise that &#8220;Impresiones&#8221; is not exactly a challenging latter-day<br />
masterpiece.<br />
It is, as expected, a nicely-crafted, harmless half-hour, claiming<br />
inspiration from a Garcia Lorca poem, but more obviously inspired by<br />
television travel ads. Travel where? Severinsen himself provided a hint, with<br />
an encore rendition of some slick variations on the old Spanish pop tune<br />
&#8220;Granada.&#8221;The audience responded with the familiar standing ovation, a<br />
practice which has obviously made the journey from Los Angeles to Glendale.<br />
The concert began with part of Mendelssohn&#8217;s &#8220;Midsummer Night&#8217;s Dream&#8221;<br />
Overture &#8212; minus, for some curious reason, its soft, luscious ending. It<br />
ended with Mussorgsky&#8217;s &#8220;Pictures at an Exhibition&#8221; in the Ravel<br />
orchestration. Aside from a startling number of boo-boos (horns in the<br />
Mendelssohn, winds in the Mussorgsky) the performances were brisk and<br />
noncommital. Nobody seemed to care.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>BERNSTEIN</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/1990/10/bernstein/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/1990/10/bernstein/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 10 Oct 1990 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Daily News]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=2736</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[I&#8221;VE MADE A FEW QUICK CHANGES HERE AS A ROUGH UPDATE. Nobody with any sense of history could have taken Leonard Bernstein&#8217;s retirement announcement of last Tuesday at face value. He had, after all, made the announcement before: casting off one facet of his multifaceted talent in order to devote more time to another. Sure, [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>I&#8221;VE MADE A FEW QUICK CHANGES HERE AS A ROUGH UPDATE. Nobody with any sense of history could have taken Leonard Bernstein&#8217;s retirement announcement of last Tuesday at face value. He had, after all, made the announcement before: casting off one facet of his multifaceted talent in<br />
order to devote more time to another. Sure, anyone who had seen him close up<br />
in the past few years &#8212; picked out his small, stooped figure, that is, in<br />
the middle of a dense cloud of cigarette smoke &#8212; knew that he had to be in<br />
poor health these days; anyone who has seen him at any distance knew the<br />
energy he poured into his conducting. IKt still seemed, lasty Tuesday, as if the time for obituary writing was a long way off. It wasn&#8217;t.<br />
He was never the retiring type. In 1969<br />
he &#8220;retired&#8221; as music director of the New York Philharmonic, which he had led for the past dozen years. A year or so later, back on the on that orchestra&#8217;s podium as guest conductor, he turned to the audience in one of his frequent folksy speeches, and all but asked for his old job back. His big compositional projects that he had left the orchestra to pursue &#8212; an opera based on Thornton Wilder&#8217;s &#8220;Skin of Our Teeth&#8221; and another on a play by Bert Brecht &#8212; had fizzled. So, in fact, did most of his p[rojects after the early sensational success of "West Side Story." A string of failures had to have left him embittered, and he desperately struggled to regain his own past glory. "This is my orchestra," he told the audience that night, "and, somehow, I'm going to come back."<br />
But Bernstein had a way of making any orchestra his own: the Boston Symphony,<br />
which was virtually his practice band in the early years under Serge<br />
Koussevitzky's watchful tutelage, at Boston's Symphony Hall and, most of all,<br />
at Tanglewood; later the New York Philharmonic, the Israel, the Vienna. Who<br />
else, besides this writer, cherishes vivid memories of this arrogant young<br />
genius striding the Tanglewood grounds in, say, 1946, flamboyant in his red<br />
turtleneck and sandals in a time when wearing such apparel constituted a<br />
statement of rebellion, especially in the poresence of the aloof, sartorially<br />
impeccable Koussevitzky. ?[ E/P]<br />
Who else remembers the music he made in those early days: the Mahler Second<br />
with the Boston Symphony when there were not yet the present 20 available<br />
recordings, when the work ranked as an exotic item? Or Britten&#8217;s &#8220;Peter<br />
Grimes,&#8221; whose American premiere he led that summer with mostly student<br />
forces and with the composer at hand, beaming approval?<br />
Bernstein had already, by the time of those early Tanglewood performances,<br />
become the most important conductor of his generation; that famous sudden<br />
debut with the New York Philharmonic, at a nationwide broadcast concert, had<br />
occurred three years earlier &#8212; on November 14, 1943. That concert &#8212; which<br />
you can still hear, on an LP of the radio broadcast issued by the New York<br />
Philharmonic and available for a donation to the orchestra &#8212; wasn&#8217;t just<br />
your basic Hollywood yarn of the understudy triumphantly taking over from the<br />
star. It stood, far more, for the explosive enabling force that made it<br />
possible for a young man, an American trained in his own land,  and even<br />
bearing the burden of a generic Jewish name (which Koussevitzky, in a widely-<br />
circulated anecdote, had once urged him to change) to earn credibility on a<br />
symphonic podium.<br />
And so it wasn&#8217;t just the success of that last-minute substitution (for the<br />
ailing Bruno Walter) that turned the 25-year-old Bernstein into the pivotal<br />
figure in the annals of American musical performance. More, it was the fact<br />
that it all happened in the glare of national publicity, in the depths of<br />
wartime gloom when the country desperately needed this kind of good<br />
news.<br />
And this made the Bernstein accession even more crucial: his approachability.<br />
When he started becoming a familiar podium on American podiums, he charmed<br />
the daylights (and the donations) out of his audiences by turning around and<br />
chatting with them about the music. The statesman-conductors of his time &#8211;<br />
Koussevitzky, Toscanini, Walter &#8212; walked through the world as serene,<br />
unapproachable demigods who received their messages direct from Beethoven and<br />
Tchaikovsky, never from the common herd. Not Bernstein. &#8220;Call me Lenny,&#8221; he<br />
said on our first meeting. Try to imagine Toscanini&#8217;s &#8220;call me Artie.&#8221;<br />
Bernstein, who drove fast cars and showed up in nightclubs and delivered<br />
friendly chats to his audiences &#8212; and who, when the medium was ready for<br />
him, betook his knowledge and his pizzazz to the television studios &#8211;<br />
signaled a new breed of conductor. He was the enabling force behind any new<br />
podium master who dared to dream of achieving fame before the customary<br />
debutant&#8217;s age of 50 and beyond. Michael Tilson Thomas, Simon Rattle, Esa-<br />
Pekka Salonen, Zubin Mehta? They&#8217;re all here because Lenny got here<br />
first.<br />
None of this would matter much except for one thing: Bernstein was as good as<br />
his early hypesters said he was, perhaps more. He had that mix of talents<br />
that few of his predecessors &#8212; Leopold Stokowski maybe but who else? &#8211;<br />
possessed: phenomenal talent as a conductor matched by his abilities to sell<br />
his art. He drew the casual concertgoer by his talks, and by his podium<br />
acrobatics that would have driven any ballet dancer to despair. But behind<br />
all this was the mind of an extraordinary creative musician, a spellbinding<br />
evangelist fiercely dedicated to the music he believed in.<br />
Plenty of conductors before his time, for example, had argued the case for<br />
Mahler, but it took Bernstein to turn that composer&#8217;s tortured flamboyance<br />
into show-biz. He did this (for Mahler, for Ives, for a certain, highly<br />
selective segment of the contemporary repertory) not merely by playing lots<br />
of their music, but by organizing Mahler Cycles, Ives Cycles, New-Music<br />
Festivals: neat, sexy packages that looked good in newspaper publicity. Some<br />
conductors are skilled at playing the house; Bernstein played the world.<br />
He made himself at home in a large part of that world. London&#8217;s critics<br />
looked upon him initially with the jaundiced eye they reserve for all<br />
colonials. (Get hold of some copies of The Gramophone in the 1950s. if you&#8217;re<br />
looking for textbook illustrations of chauvinism.) Later the Brits came to<br />
shower him with the sort of praise they usually reserve for their own queen.<br />
He has conquered Vienna, which seems implausible, since his own way of<br />
conducting some of the Viennese classics (the feverish Brahms, the sluggish<br />
&#8220;Rosenkavalier&#8221; and the distorted &#8220;Fidelio&#8221;) goes somewhat against that<br />
city&#8217;s tradition. Has the Austrian reverence for Bernstein become part of its<br />
expiation as the birthplace of Adolf Hitler? &#8220;Na ja.&#8221; say the wily Viennese<br />
when asked &#8212; the equivalent of a shrug and a knowing wink.<br />
But the art of Bernstein needs no such rationalization. There are those, this<br />
writer among them, who prefer other ways of conducting much of Bernstein&#8217;s<br />
classic repertory. There are also those who deplore the fact that, as a<br />
ground-breaking, dazzling product of a young musical society, he didn&#8217;t use<br />
more of his skills to perform, or at least to plead the case, for other young<br />
composers of progressive tendencies. He played the contemporary establishment<br />
(Copland, Schuman and, of course, himself) brilliantly; other, more<br />
adventurous souls, however, could have used his help.<br />
The records endure, however, to attest Bernstein&#8217;s enormous breadth of<br />
musical interest. Curiously, however, they don&#8217;t capture as much of the<br />
personal magnetism of Bernstein&#8217;s live performances as you&#8217;d think. That bond<br />
that he forged between everyone in that hall, and that dynamic bundle of<br />
himself on the podium, is a quality that no recording microphone has learned<br />
to capture.<br />
You had to have been there.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<item>
		<title>SCHIFF</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/1990/10/schiff/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/1990/10/schiff/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 08 Oct 1990 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Daily News]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=2853</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Recitals by strong-fingered pianists are reasonably common. Strong-fingered pianists with equally strong musical intelligence are a far rarer phenomenon. Monday night&#8217;s Music Center concert by Andras Schiff, however, proved eminently satisfactory on both counts. The program itself was a particularly brainy selection. Large works of Beethoven (the B-flat Sonata, Opus 22) and Schumann (the Symphonic [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Recitals by strong-fingered pianists are reasonably common. Strong-fingered<br />
pianists with equally strong musical intelligence are a far rarer phenomenon.<br />
Monday night&#8217;s Music Center concert by Andras Schiff, however, proved<br />
eminently satisfactory on both counts.<br />
The program itself was a particularly brainy selection. Large works of<br />
Beethoven (the B-flat Sonata, Opus 22) and Schumann (the Symphonic Etudes)<br />
formed the end-pieces. In between were shorter works by both composers:<br />
Beethoven&#8217;s strange, prophetic Opus 126 Bagatelles, and two charming genre<br />
pieces (and a third as an encore) in which Schumann seemed to fulfill that<br />
prophecy. It added up to a lovely mixture, all of it beautifully played.<br />
The Beethoven sonata was a special joy, one of the less-often performed of<br />
the 32, but one of the most remarkable. Already, in 1800, the composer was<br />
pushing toward unexplored territories. The work is full of what must have<br />
been at the time strange, unaccustomed sounds. Here and there the pianist&#8217;s<br />
left hand takes the principal melodic line, an effect new in Beethoven&#8217;s time<br />
that was to become one of Schumann&#8217;s favorite devices. The finale, light-<br />
textured and smiling, seems to float in a manner almost Schubertian. Early<br />
Beethoven though the sonata surely is, its stylistic adventures make it seem<br />
later than you think.<br />
The loving, expansive performance by Schiff seemed to take cognizance of all<br />
this. Without overstatement or excessive underlining, he managed to suggest<br />
both the similarities and the violent contrasts between this congenial work<br />
of Beethoven&#8217;s youth and the quirky, disjointed outbursts in that strange,<br />
inward set of late-period Bagatelles.<br />
If anything, the evening&#8217;s  Schumann performances, for all the music&#8217;s<br />
romantic exuberance, seemed more classic, more controlled. This is music, the<br />
pianist seemed to say, that can speak for itself. And so it did.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<item>
		<title>PRICE</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/1990/10/price/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/1990/10/price/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sat, 06 Oct 1990 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Daily News]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=2848</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[[*] laby2;p1205.By Alan Rich [B]Daily News Music Critic[B] Considering the number of years the musical world has basked in the glow of Leontyne Price&#8217;s artistry &#8212; 33, since her lustrous Aida at the San Francisco Opera &#8212; one might have regarded the soprano&#8217;s Royce Hall recital on Saturday night as an exercise in nostalgia. No [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>[*] laby2;p1205.By Alan Rich [B]Daily News Music Critic[B] Considering the number of years the musical world has basked in the glow of<br />
Leontyne Price&#8217;s artistry &#8212; 33, since her lustrous Aida at the San Francisco<br />
Opera &#8212; one might have regarded the soprano&#8217;s Royce Hall recital on Saturday<br />
night as an exercise in nostalgia. No such thing; the years rolled back on<br />
that magical evening, and there stood that achingly beautiful artist, still,<br />
mioraculously, at the top of her vocal form.<br />
Some artists travel with easy-listening programs for the boonies, made up of<br />
the chestnuts of the repertory. Not Price; she paid her compliment to the<br />
capacity audience with a substantial  and rewarding program: two big classic<br />
arias, groups of German and French songs, four by the contemporary American<br />
Lee Hoiby, the &#8220;Pace, pace&#8221; from Verdi&#8217;s &#8220;La Forza del Destino&#8221; and a<br />
final spiritual that, in turn, activated a generous outlay of encores.<br />
One of the classic arias was Electra&#8217;s Mad Scene from Mozart&#8217;s &#8220;Idomeneo&#8221;<br />
which, by coincidence, had been performed in its operatic context at the<br />
Music Center the night before. It stretches no point to suggest that the<br />
piano support of the veteran David Garvey at the recital was noticeably more<br />
responsive to the drama of the music than the orchestral forces at the opera.<br />
The voice of Price, now as then, is a wondrous instrument. It is especially<br />
so in the music of Verdi&#8217;s tragic heroines; there is a vibrance there that<br />
curls itself enchantingly around those big lyric lines, lands with awesome<br />
splendor on those final notes (the B-flat in the &#8220;Forza&#8221; aria as a shining<br />
example) and shades them down until you feel them throbbing under your own<br />
skin.<br />
There was a time when she tended to overuse the chest tone as a dramatic<br />
device. This time, in the &#8220;Forza&#8221; aria and also in arias from &#8220;Madama {cq}<br />
Butterfly&#8221; and &#8220;Adriana Lecouvreur&#8221; among the encores, one heard instead<br />
singing of remarkable purity, no less communicative but ravishing in its very<br />
freedom.<br />
That&#8217;s the word, &#8220;ravishing.&#8221; The German song group included two<br />
charming deceits by the underrated late romantic Joseph Marx along with three<br />
unfamiliar Richard Strauss works. The Hoiby group also had some exceptional<br />
material. A composer of conservative leanings (most recently known for his<br />
tiny operatic setting of a Julia Child chocolate cake recipe), Hoiby&#8217;s songs<br />
display a firmer art than one might otherwise believe. Outstanding among the<br />
four chosen by Price were two Emily Dickinson settings, &#8220;Wild Nights&#8221; and<br />
&#8220;There came a Wind.&#8221;  On stage &#8212; in something of dusky green in the first half, blue in the second<br />
&#8211; Price seduced the eye no less than the ear; just that generous smile of<br />
hers is enough to light lights anywhere. She lights even more lights with her<br />
art, of course; she could put on an evening of nothing but C-major scales and<br />
still send the crowd home happy. She was, and she remains, one of our few<br />
remaining genuine class acts.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>GLUCK</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/1990/10/gluck/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/1990/10/gluck/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 03 Oct 1990 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Daily News]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=2794</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Try as they might, not even the assembled forces of the Music Center Opera could obliterate the radiant beauties of Gluck&#8217;s &#8220;Orfeo ed Euridice.&#8221; The question must be raised, therefore: why did they even try? The production, which opened on Wednesday night and runs for three more performances, was brought in from Santa Fe, where [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Try as they might, not even the assembled forces of the Music Center Opera<br />
could obliterate the radiant beauties of Gluck&#8217;s &#8220;Orfeo ed Euridice.&#8221; The<br />
question must be raised, therefore: why did they even try?<br />
The production, which opened on Wednesday night and runs for three more<br />
performances, was brought in from Santa Fe, where it was staged last summer.<br />
There are grand mountain vistas at Santa Fe&#8217;s outdoor opera house, which might<br />
have taken an observer&#8217;s mind off the ugliness of Steven Rubin&#8217;s set, but the<br />
Dorothy Chandler Pavilion offers no such distraction. We face the mess on<br />
stage straight on. the creaky revolving panels with their artsy-craftsy-glitzy<br />
projections, the shaky shadow projections, the drab lighting.<br />
We try to keep from laughing at the dancing &#8212; Kimi Okada&#8217;s choreography<br />
perpetrated by the nine members of San Francisco&#8217;s Oberlin Dance Company &#8211;<br />
with no great success. The hootchy-kootch of the denizens of Hades is bad<br />
enough; hell, by Okada&#8217;s standards, is somewhere close to Las Vegas. The crowd<br />
in the Elysian Fields, on the other hand, all in virginal white, brings back<br />
memories of Greek Day at the Weedhaven Laughing Academy.<br />
Yet the music is honorably treated, and this makes the evening at least<br />
tolerable, and often more. Marilyn Horne, it comes as no news, owns the role<br />
of Orpheus for this generation. Perhaps the voice has lost some of its plummy<br />
resonance; perhaps there are even hints now and then of a faltering<br />
marksmanship (always, however, corrected within a note or two). But the<br />
sublime musicianship remains intact, the absolute rhythmic accuracy, those<br />
urgent, tragic tones of hers that simply disarm all resistance, most of all in<br />
that great scene of the taming of the furies.<br />
The Euridice of Benita Valente is almost as good. This supremely intelligent<br />
singer, her sweet, limpid soprano still a marvel after three decades of noble<br />
use, was as always a joy to hear. She had been given some silly stage business<br />
early on, weaving and bobbing to touch hands with dancers, and she is not the<br />
most graceful of actresses. What she does, however &#8212; sing a classic line with<br />
clarity and conviction &#8212; she did once again on this occasion.  As the Love-<br />
Goddess we had the delicious small bundle of a Tracy Dahl (last season&#8217;s<br />
Euridice, if anyone has the misfortune to remember the company&#8217;s otherwise<br />
disgraceful venture into the Offenbach &#8220;Orpheus&#8221;), done up as a sort of<br />
Spaceman-Cupid.<br />
Randall Behr conducted an unexceptionable performance, with the brass nicely<br />
brassy for the Hades scenes. The version used was basically that prepared by<br />
Hector Berlioz, itself a hodge-podge of parts from Gluck&#8217;s several versions,<br />
with an added bravura aria (plus cadenza) at the end of Act One that violates<br />
all of Gluck&#8217;s own principles about not pandering to singers&#8217; show-off needs.<br />
Oh well, if Gluck had had Marilyn Horne to conjure with, he&#8217;d probably never<br />
have made those rules.<br />
THE FACTS:<br />
What: The Music Center Opera Company&#8217;s production of Gluck&#8217;s &#8220;Orfeo ed<br />
Euridice.&#8221;<br />
Starring: Marilyn Horne as Orfeo; Benita Valente as Euridice; Benita Valente<br />
as Amor.<br />
Behind the Scenes: Randall Behr, conductor; Lamont Johnson, director; Steven<br />
Rubin, designer; Kimi Okada, chorographer.<br />
Where: Dorothy Chandler Pavilion, 135 N. Grand Ave. in downtown.<br />
When: 8 p.m., Saturday, 10/9, 10/14.<br />
Tickets: $10-$75; information: 213 480&#8211;3232, or 213 972-7219.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>SENDAK</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/1990/09/sendak/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/1990/09/sendak/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sun, 23 Sep 1990 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Daily News]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=2856</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[&#8220;It&#8217;s not quite true, what it says in the gallery brochure,&#8221; said Maurice Sendak, &#8220;that I only got into opera so that I could design &#8220;Idomeneo,&#8221; but it&#8217;s close. All those old-time &#8220;Idomeneo&#8221; lovers, they all look down on us newcomers as some sort of cultural yuppies. But I&#8217;m 62, and I&#8217;ve loved that opera, [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>&#8220;It&#8217;s not quite true, what it says in the gallery brochure,&#8221; said Maurice<br />
Sendak, &#8220;that I only got into opera so that I could design &#8220;Idomeneo,&#8221; but<br />
it&#8217;s close. All those old-time &#8220;Idomeneo&#8221; lovers, they all look down on us<br />
newcomers as some sort of cultural yuppies. But I&#8217;m 62, and I&#8217;ve loved that<br />
opera, above all others, since adolescence.&#8221;<br />
Softspoken, witty in the abrasive New York manner, Sendak took a few minutes<br />
off from applying finishing touches to the Music Center Opera&#8217;s upcoming<br />
&#8220;Idomeneo&#8221;  for a quick sandwich at the pleasant little cafe at MOCA, just<br />
down the street. He was obviously aglow from this labor of love. &#8220;I needed to<br />
do this,&#8221; he said, &#8220;not only out of love for the opera, but also to get out<br />
of the kiddie-book-illustrator-turned-opera-designer mold for once.&#8221;<br />
At that, he hasn&#8217;t gotten very far out of it. See for yourself. Mozart&#8217;s<br />
masterful opera may stand at some remove from the world of the kiddie-book<br />
illustrator, but all of Sendak&#8217;s set and costume sketches for the opera go on<br />
display this week (September 25 through October 28) at Every Picture Tells a<br />
Story, that most charming gallery of children&#8217;s-book art at 836 N. LaBrea in<br />
West Hollywood, where they will sit surrounded by a vivid selection of<br />
Sendak&#8217;s really-truly kiddie books.You can buy the books, but not the<br />
sketches.<br />
Even within the mold of kiddie-oriented opera, of course, Sendak&#8217;s work hasn&#8217;t<br />
been exactly frivolous. &#8220;I think of &#8220;The Magic Flute&#8221; as the most serious<br />
of all Mozart&#8217;s operas. Sure, there were those barnyard animals in Janacek&#8217;s<br />
&#8220;Cunning Little Vixen,&#8221; but the opera was really about Janacek&#8217;s last<br />
thoughts on humanity. And &#8220;Higgledy&#8221; was the most tragic of them all.&#8221;<br />
&#8220;Idomeneo&#8221; stands as a work apart. Its American career has been relatively<br />
brief. Its first performance, by an operatic workshop at Tangelwood, wasn&#8217;t<br />
until 1947, 166 years after its premiere. It only made it to the Metropolitan<br />
Opera in 1982, where its initial reception at the box-office was insured by<br />
the presence of Luciano Pavarotti in the title role. The darker side of its<br />
reputation has everywhere preceded it: that it is long, that its plot is full<br />
of old-fashioned devices, that it is serious and complex.<br />
&#8220;Idomeneo&#8221; is all of those things; its plot devices (father bound by the<br />
gods to sacrifice a favorite child, multi-level conflict of love and honor,<br />
last-minute redemption after the avenging god &#8212; Neptune, in this case &#8211;<br />
changes his mind) were indeed well-worn by Mozart&#8217;s time.<br />
But there is one aspect of the work that conquers all else: its radiant, noble<br />
beauty. It&#8217;s interesting, and fortuitous, that the Music Center Opera&#8217;s<br />
&#8220;Idomeneo&#8221; should be flanked on the schedule by Gluck&#8217;s &#8220;Orfeo ed<br />
Euridice&#8221; and Beethoven&#8217;s &#8220;Fidelio,&#8221; because in a very real sense, Mozart&#8217;s<br />
sublime creation forges a link, musical and dramatic, between the other two<br />
operas.<br />
&#8220;I want to do &#8220;Idomeneo,&#8221; &#8221; Sendak continued, &#8220;because I am happiest<br />
doing fantasy operas. &#8220;Cosi fan Tutte,&#8221; or &#8220;Don Giovanni&#8221; or &#8220;The<br />
Marriage of Figaro&#8221; &#8212; they&#8217;re all basically room operas. Unless I can<br />
overcome my extraordinary limitations &#8212; like, how to get in and out of<br />
properly designed rooms &#8212; I can&#8217;t do them; I can&#8217;t vibrate to them. Sure, I<br />
saw the Peter Sellars &#8220;Don Giovanni&#8221; in New York last summer, and it was set<br />
outdoors. It was plenty vibrant, but they weren&#8217;t my vibrations.<br />
&#8220;I do fantasy operas, because I can set them in some place of my own<br />
invention. I&#8217;ve seen &#8220;Idomeneo&#8221; productions that had no fantasy. There was<br />
one at Caramoor {the elegant summer festival just outside New York), but all I<br />
can remember is a lot of slaves being pushed around. And the one at the Met:<br />
well it was just your basic Jean-Pierre Ponnelle, may he rest in peace:<br />
pillars and schmattas.&#8221;<br />
We had by now walked back to the Dorothy Chandler Pavilion. On stage there<br />
were no pillars, no schmattas, just a Maurice Sendak fantasy ship in two<br />
guises, whole and wrecked.<br />
Sendak had a confession. &#8220;I really should have become a musician. The truth<br />
is, my family couldn&#8217;t afford a piano, and watercolors were cheaper. This kind<br />
of work&#8221; &#8212; a sweep of that supremely endowed right hand toward the ships on<br />
stage &#8212; &#8220;is the closest I can get. I stand here at rehearsal while the<br />
chorus sings its music, and I nearly faint from the beauty, and I wonder if<br />
those bums in the chorus know how jealous I am of just what they&#8217;re doing as<br />
their routine job.&#8221;<br />
All of Sendak&#8217;s operatic work so far has been with director Corsaro. &#8220;We sit<br />
at a table. He talks, I doodle. We agree on something or other, so I go home<br />
and do the sketches. Then, the next day, he sees the sketches, yells &#8220;what<br />
the hell is this!&#8221; and we discuss some more. Finally we come to an agreement.<br />
It&#8217;s a marvelous arrangement, because we work so closely. I couldn&#8217;t work any<br />
other way, with a director or with a writer. If some writer tells me that he<br />
trusts me to do the illustrations, that he doesn&#8217;t want to see them, I know I<br />
can&#8217;t work with him.&#8221;<br />
The future? Sendak listed a &#8220;Hansel and Gretel&#8221; for the Music Center Opera<br />
two seasons from now. &#8220;Now that I&#8217;ve broken the kiddie-book identification<br />
with &#8220;Idomeneo,&#8221; I can go back to it.&#8221; For further down the line, he talks<br />
of starting a children&#8217;s theater, probably near his current home in<br />
Connecticut, &#8220;where I can have complete control over design and direction,<br />
where I can develop new works, small and complex like my books.&#8221;<br />
&#8220;Control? &#8220;That&#8217;s the most important thing. Ideal, of course, is for the<br />
designer to be his own director, like Ponnelle. Working so closely with Frank,<br />
that&#8217;s the next best thing. I love the opera company here, because they offer<br />
respect, and freedom, and control; that&#8217;s rare. If anyone is trying to<br />
sabotage me here, it&#8217;s so subtle that I haven&#8217;t noticed it.<br />
THE FACTS:<br />
WHAT: The Music Center Opera Company production of Mozart&#8217;s &#8220;Idomeneo.&#8221;<br />
WHERE: Dorothy Chandler Pavilion, 135 N. Grand Ave., downtown.<br />
WHEN: 7:30 p.m., Tuesday, Friday and Oct. 2 and 5.<br />
STARRING: Siegfried Jerusalem, Susan Quittmeyer, Christine Weidinger.<br />
BEHIND THE SCENES: Directed by Frank Corsaro. Designed by Maurice Sendak.<br />
Conducted by Roderick Brydon.<br />
TICKETS: $15 to $80. For ticket information call (213) 480-3232. For more<br />
information, call (213) 972-7219.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>OCKER/GOLIA</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/1990/09/ockergolia/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/1990/09/ockergolia/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sat, 15 Sep 1990 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Daily News]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=2838</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Of all musical instruments, the clarinets come closest to the sound of the human voice. You might, therefore, expect a concert by two expert clarinetists to come close to the sound of real conversation. You&#8217;d be right. Exactly that happened, in fact, in a splendidly communicative encounter by two of this region&#8217;s most valued progressive [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Of all musical instruments, the clarinets come closest to the sound of the<br />
human voice. You might, therefore, expect a concert by two expert clarinetists<br />
to come close to the sound of real conversation. You&#8217;d be right.<br />
Exactly that happened, in fact, in a splendidly communicative encounter by two<br />
of this region&#8217;s most valued progressive musicians, David Ocker and Vinnie<br />
Golia. Ocker, a member of the chamber group called Xtet {cq} is usually<br />
thought of as part of the classical world; Golia usually busies himself with<br />
jazz.<br />
The music at their joint concert Saturday afternoon, part of the Los Angeles<br />
Festival offshoot known as the &#8220;Open Festival,&#8221; given in the charming garden<br />
in back of the Joanne Warfield Gallery in West Hollywood, hovered around the<br />
invisible line between the two worlds: fluent and improvisatory in the jazz<br />
sense, splendidly complex, full of bright contrapuntal exchange, to appease<br />
the classicists.<br />
Between them (and with the added assistance in one piece of visiting New York<br />
clarinetist Jane Ira Bloom), the players managed something like a dozen<br />
different sizes of clarinet, along with a few flutes plus a Chinese<br />
harmonica-type gadget called the Shang. The afternoon was, in fact, a little<br />
like a family reunion of the wind family. The huge contrabass clarinet, with<br />
enough plumbing to equip a small town, hobnobbed with tiny bamboo flutes; the<br />
piccolo shrieked its greeting to the sopranino saxophone.<br />
More important, however, was the sense that the players were well in tune with<br />
each other.There was a sense of solid music-making, even in passages that<br />
exploited the more arcane possibilities of the instruments: the squawk of the<br />
overblown clarinet, for one.  The music, some of it improvised, floated<br />
through the garden like bright butterflies. Most of the pieces had no names;<br />
they needed none. There ought to be more concerts as informal, as full of<br />
inventiveness, with the sense of togetherness,  the pure pleasure of music-<br />
making, that this one had.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>NIXON&#160;REVIEW</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/1990/09/nixon-review/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/1990/09/nixon-review/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Tue, 11 Sep 1990 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Daily News]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=2836</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[I HAVE NEW ART, 1 VERTICAL OF DICK &#8216;N&#8217; PAT, WILL BRING IN [F/L]It would be possible, with a little hard work, to have a terrible time at the Music Center Opera&#8217;s &#8220;Nixon in China,&#8221; but why waste the effort? However you may feel about the particularities of the work &#8212; the broad eclecticism of [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>I HAVE NEW ART, 1 VERTICAL OF DICK &#8216;N&#8217; PAT, WILL BRING IN [F/L]It would be possible, with a little hard work, to have a terrible time at the       Music Center Opera&#8217;s &#8220;Nixon in China,&#8221; but why waste the effort? However you       may feel about the particularities of the work &#8212; the broad eclecticism of       John Adams&#8217; musical style (sometimes repetitive, sometimes abrasive, often       romantic) or the liberties Alice Goodman&#8217;s text takes with historical       characters (some still living) &#8212; the fact remains that the sheer energy of       the piece, the level of daring in both its music and its text, not to mention       Peter Sellars&#8217; marvelously adept staging, and its moments of irresistible       beauty add up to a spellbinding experience in contemporary musical theater.       Miss it at your peril.      You surely know the details by now; &#8220;Nixon in China&#8221;is, if nothing else, the       most famous American opera since &#8220;Porgy and Bess.&#8221; The opera makes its       initial appeal through its abundance of good theatrical fun. That starts right       off with the landing of the American plane at the Peking airport (and never       mind that wide-bodied aircraft do not make vertical, helicopter-style       landings; all opera demands some suspension of belief).       It runs on through the tender comedy of poor, bemused Pat Nixon being pushed       this way and that through her obligatory guided tour of Peking. It embraces       the horrendous/hilarious night at the Chinese ballet (where choreographer Mark       Morris has based his work on Madame Mao&#8217;s actual jingoistic creation, &#8220;The       Red Detachment of Women&#8221; with its army lads and lassies doing their military       maneuvers en pointe).      But what really remains in the memory is the opera&#8217;s deeper undercurrent,       captured in the poetic, wondrously observant libretto and subtly undescored in       Adams&#8217; equally observant score: the Nixon-Mao meeting with its tangle of       verbal cross-purposes, and the final, surrealistic scene with its counterpoint       of self-revelations. You may hear some sneers about the use of supertitles in       this English-language opera in which the cast&#8217;s diction is fair enough, yet       the subtleties of Goodman&#8217;s word-choices are worth underscoring in this       manner.      The opera has made the rounds, since its Houston premiere three years ago, but       the cast has remained constant, to its greater glory. Small subtleties abound;       James Maddalena&#8217;s rightness in the title role, his little twitches of       incomprehension in the scene with Mao, his homely, clumsy gestures of       affection toward Pat, create a whole character; maybe it isn&#8217;t Richard       Nixon,maybe it is; it certainly is somebody. And what is true of Maddalena&#8217;s       work extends through the cast: Carolann Page&#8217;s frightened, fluttering Pat,       Trudy Ellen Craney&#8217;s shrieking, malevolent Madame Mao, Sanford Sylvan&#8217;s deep,       quiet Chou En-lai.       Along the way from the Houston performance (which was also televised),       director Sellars has made certain changes, all for the better. His ballet       scene now ends in a riot reminiscent of last year&#8217;s Tianamen Square tragedy;       his last act, which seemed a little bare at Houston, is now nicely filled out       with dancing and some added props.      And there is Kent Nagano&#8217;s conducting of his superb orchestral forces: strong,       vivid, finely spirited. &#8220;Nixon in China&#8221; has fared well on the podium: John       DeMain in Houston, Edo de Waart in Brooklyn and on the Nonesuch recording.       Nagano is worthy of these predecessors; his role in an altogether enthralling       night of genuine, stirring opera is considerable.      FACTS: WHAT: The Music Center Opera&#8217;s production of John Adams&#8217; and Alice       Goodman&#8217;s &#8220;Nixon in China.&#8221;      STARRING: James Maddalena as Nixon, with Carolann Page, Trudy Ellen Craney,       John Duykers and Sanford Sylvan.      BEHIND THE SCENES: Directed by Peter Sellars, with choreography by Mark       Morris; conducted by Kent Nagano; designed by Adrianne Lobel and Dunya       Ramicova.      WHERE: Dorothy Chandler Pavilion, 135 No. Grand Ave., in downtown Los Angeles.      WHEN: 8 p.m. Friday and 9/29; 2 p.m. 9/16 and 10/7.      TICKETS: $15 to $80; reservations: 213 480-3232; information: 213 972-      7219.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>KUNOPERA</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/1990/09/kunopera/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/1990/09/kunopera/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sat, 08 Sep 1990 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Daily News]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=2798</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[The aim of the Los Angeles Festival, as frequently stated by its producers, is to expand the horizons of local audiences through new and mysterious artistic experiences. That being so, Saturday night&#8217;s visit to the Japan-America Theater by the Kun Opera of China must be reckoned a success. It was a most mysterious evening. There [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>The aim of the Los Angeles Festival, as frequently stated by its producers, is<br />
to expand the horizons of local audiences through new and mysterious artistic<br />
experiences. That being so, Saturday night&#8217;s visit to the Japan-America<br />
Theater by the Kun Opera of China must be reckoned a success. It was a most<br />
mysterious evening.<br />
There is only one valid way, actually, for an audience unaccustomed to this<br />
kind of exotic musical/dramatic art (or any kind for that matter) to deal with<br />
its challenge: to approach it as a child might approach an unfamiliar toy, to<br />
examine it first for its outward glitter and ponder its meaning later on. The<br />
Kun &#8212; artistic descendants of a centuries-old Chinese company which was, for<br />
a time, scattered during the so-called &#8220;Cultural Revolution&#8221; but now<br />
reassembled &#8212; was a joy to watch and to hear, even if merely for the<br />
acrobatic skill of its performers and the jangly charm of its music (a few<br />
raucous small gongs, a couple of wind instruments and a small harp).<br />
Yet the mystery was needlessly compounded on this occasion; there were no<br />
programs, and the three works performed &#8212; all of them excerpts from longer<br />
classic works &#8212; were only scantily described by an announcer at the start of<br />
each. Most of the vocalism was in the form of artifically inflected speech,<br />
with now and then a sweet, small song accompanied by instruments in unison.<br />
Never was the case for supertitles more eloquently stated.<br />
Except for a musicians&#8217; area on the side marked off in red fabric, the stage<br />
was bare; surely this cannot be a Chinese operatic tradition, considering the<br />
brilliant fantasy of the costumes &#8212; including a pair of marvelous, elongated<br />
plumes on a headdress in the first piece that seemed to execute their own<br />
graceful choreography.<br />
This report, then, is of what seemed to happen and probably did. In the first<br />
piece a Monkey King (played by Chen Tongshen) tries to capture the magic fan<br />
belonging to a Princess (Shi Jehua), and succeeds only when he changes himself<br />
into a fly which the Princess then  accidentally swallows. In the second, a<br />
monk (Zhong Weide) tries to escape the monastic life, comes down the mountain,<br />
battles a wine merchant (Kai Qinling) and imbibes his wares, does a drunken<br />
dance and then returns up the mountain. In the third, a girl (the lovely Hua<br />
Wen-yi) repressed by her parents falls asleep in a peony patch, dreams of a<br />
love affair, but then wakes to reality.<br />
All of this was acted out, sung and played in a style of movement full of<br />
symbols honed over centuries. Beautiful, and sometimes extremely funny, as it<br />
all was to watch, a little elucidation out front would have deepened the<br />
experience. Still, anyone from any culture had to react to the extraordinarily<br />
lithe acrobatics of Chen Tongshen&#8217;s Monkey King, and the hilarious<br />
&#8220;bellyache-dance&#8221; of his Princess when she has swallowed that fly. And that<br />
Monk&#8217;s drunken dance in the second piece did seem to speak for all imbibers<br />
anywhere in the world: a universal language if ever one was.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>FIDELIO</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/1990/09/fidelio/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/1990/09/fidelio/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Tue, 04 Sep 1990 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Daily News]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=2788</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Has any opera company of any size, anywhere in the world, run up in its first five years a more distinguished string of successes than that of our own Music Center Opera. Sure, there have been lapses along the way, but Tuesday night&#8217;s &#8220;Fidelio&#8221; wasn&#8217;t one of them. The very excellence of the high points [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Has any opera company of any size, anywhere in the world, run up in its first<br />
five years a more distinguished string of successes than that of our own Music<br />
Center Opera. Sure, there have been lapses along the way, but Tuesday night&#8217;s<br />
&#8220;Fidelio&#8221; wasn&#8217;t one of them.<br />
The very excellence of the high points in Beethoven&#8217;s sole operatic venture<br />
makes &#8220;Fidelio&#8221; one of opera&#8217;s great problem pieces. One problem is the<br />
difficult balance between the shattering passions at the work&#8217;s sublime<br />
moments and those other moments &#8212; the love/hate bickering between the<br />
juvenile lovers, and the crushing vulgarity of the final chorus &#8212; that raise<br />
questions about the composer&#8217;s sanity. Another problem is the theme of its<br />
story, and the temptations it presents to a stage director to turn those plot<br />
elements &#8212; the political oppression meted out to defenders of truth, and the<br />
heroism of their  rescuers &#8212; into some sort of contemporary allegory.<br />
There is no question what contemporary images the opera has stirred in<br />
director Goetz Friedrich&#8217;s own imagination. His Prisoners&#8217; Chorus is<br />
unmistakably a vignette out of Buchenwald or Dachau; his final scene, with the<br />
prison now pulled apart into fragments of scenery and the citizens daubing<br />
graffiti on every available surface, is just as obviously the destruction of<br />
the Berlin Wall.<br />
Those are his references; to his credit, he does not pound us over the head<br />
with them. Designer Peter Sykora&#8217;s costumes are, perhaps purposely, of no<br />
particular period: some Biedermeier, some Victorian. The arch-villain Pizarro<br />
(sung a little drily by Michael Devlin), is by contrast a most fearsome, up-<br />
to-date 1990&#8242;s skinhead in floor-length leather coat; his office, furthermore,<br />
sports an  electric fan.<br />
If this &#8220;Fidelio&#8221; bounces around in various historical eras, its musical<br />
direction is commendably straightforward. Aided considerably by the splendid<br />
impulse of Jiri Kout&#8217;s conducting, Friedrich gets us past even the opera&#8217;s<br />
real nuisance scenes with remarkable dispatch. His Marzelline (Karen<br />
Beardsley) and Jacquino (Jonathan Mack) have become, this once, creatures of<br />
flesh, blood and a fair amount of anger. Wise old Father Rocco, his garrulous,<br />
patchy music splendidly thundered forth by  Matti Salminen, is also a far more<br />
compelling figure than usual.<br />
The Fidelio is Karan {cq} Armstrong; the Florestan, Gary Bachlund. These are<br />
roles often visited by the Wagnerian contingent, and the sheer animal<br />
intensity of a Nilsson or a Vickers isn&#8217;t easily gotten out of the memory.<br />
Those are not the sounds at the Music Center, however. Armstrong is a<br />
marvelous actress, and sings like one. Her smallish, over-bright tones on<br />
opening night went harsh at the top, yet she had the consistent ability to<br />
make her singing mean something, and that counted for a lot.<br />
Bachlund&#8217;s Florestan was, similarly, a dramatic creation of genuine power.<br />
Lighter of voice than most tenors who brave the role, he still produced some<br />
thrilling sounds at the start of his stupendous aria, which he began virtually<br />
prostrate; when he stood up near the end, however, the music seemed to run out<br />
of steam.<br />
These are minor points, however; the major point is that this uneven but<br />
spellbinding masterpiece of Beethoven&#8217;s has received full treatment at the<br />
hands of conductor Kout and director Goetz Friedrich and their assembled<br />
forces, and when the climactic scene arrived and Fidelio flung forth her<br />
incredible revelation, that moment was observed at the Music Center through<br />
not very many dry eyes.<br />
THE FACTS: WHAT: Beethoven&#8217;s &#8220;Fidelio,&#8221; produced by the Los Angeles Music<br />
Center Opera.<br />
THE CAST: Karan Armstrong as Fidelio; Gary Bachlund as Florestan; Michael<br />
Devlin as Pizarro.<br />
BEHIND THE SCENES: Goetz Friedrich, stage director; Jiri Kout, conductor, with<br />
the Los Angeles Chamber Orchestra; Peter Sykora, designer.<br />
WHERE: Dorothy Chandler Pavilion, 135 N. Grand Ave., downtown.<br />
WHEN: 8 p.m., September 7, 12, 15; 2 p.m., September 9.<br />
TICKETS: $15-$80; information: 213 972-7219; 213 480-3232.<br />
OUR RATING: * * * *</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>RICHPIK</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/1990/09/richpik/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/1990/09/richpik/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sat, 01 Sep 1990 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Daily News]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=2850</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Operatically inclined radio listeners within reach of New York&#8217;s WQXR know the voice and the wisdom of George Jellinek. For years, especially on his program called &#8220;The Vocal Scene,&#8221; he has expounded on the great voices of our time, without indulging in the kind of hysterical jabberwock that some opera fanatics assume as their lingua [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Operatically inclined radio listeners within reach of New York&#8217;s WQXR know the voice and the wisdom of George Jellinek. For years, especially on his program called &#8220;The Vocal Scene,&#8221; he has expounded on the great voices of our time, without indulging in the kind of hysterical jabberwock that some opera fanatics assume as their lingua franca. Among his other accomplishments, jellinek wrote the first major biography of Maria Callas; it still stands up.Now Jellinek goes nationwide, by means of a new weekly radio series, &#8220;Texaco/Metropolitan Opera: Echoes from the Last 50 Years,&#8221; which starts Saturday, September 1 on KUSC-FM at 9:30 a.m., honoring Texaco&#8217;s 50-year sponsoship of the Met broadcasts. Peter Allen, host of those  broadcasts, will be the host, but the words and the wisdom will be Jellinek&#8217;s own. First: a survey of &#8220;Aida&#8221; performances from the Met, with rare recordings (some from broadcast tapes) as far back as Giovanni Martinelli and as up-to-date as Aprile Millo. &#8212; ALAN RICH</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>SUNCOL&#160;STYLE</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/1990/08/suncol-style/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/1990/08/suncol-style/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sun, 26 Aug 1990 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Daily News]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=2858</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[The 18,000-or-so fortunate souls who sat at Ella Fitzgerald’s feet (in a manner of speaking) at the Bowl last Wednesday night were treated a display of pure style, a rare and precious commodity becoming more rare, more precious, in our lifetime. Homage was due this smiling, crippled old lady not as a relic but as [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>The 18,000-or-so fortunate souls who sat at Ella Fitzgerald’s feet (in a manner<br />
of speaking) at the Bowl last Wednesday night were treated a display of pure<br />
style, a rare and precious commodity becoming more rare, more precious, in our<br />
lifetime. Homage was due this smiling, crippled old lady not as a relic but as<br />
a continuing presence, not merely for what she has done but for what she still<br />
can do.<br />
Style; the word gets kicked around a lot, but it takes on many shapes for many<br />
pairs of ears. What it means above all, to this pair of ears, is the power<br />
some  musicians have to absorb the music &#8212; not merely the notes but the<br />
lingering echoes of the energy that created those notes &#8212; and then to become<br />
transformed into the essence of that music.  Ella, now 72, may have needed a<br />
little help on and offstage at her concert (and it was wonderful to see her<br />
coming out on the supporting arm of her 83-year-old jazz buddy Benny Carter),<br />
but once she was in place, it was the music that kept her aloft.<br />
That’s what happens with those few great stylists among today&#8217;s performers;<br />
for the listener it simply means being glued to your seat by the power and the<br />
purity of the experience. Last week, on some cable station, there was another<br />
of these stylistic revelations. It came in an unlikely place, a dreary and<br />
pretentious TV special on Great Moments from the Metropolitan Opera, snippets<br />
from Met telecasts over the years with the singers themselves mouthing the<br />
usual music-appreciationese platitudes before each performance.<br />
But in the middle of all this  pseudo-cultural bathwater Teresa Stratas came<br />
on and sang Mimi&#8217;s Farewell from &#8220;La Boheme,&#8221; and for those four minutes the<br />
tiny body, the burnished-bronze thread of tone and the harrowing dark eyes of<br />
Stratas literally transformed themselves into the fragile tragedy of Puccini&#8217;s<br />
haunting music. That, too, was style: not a singer here, a composer there, a<br />
TV camera somewhere else, but a single musical essence which, when it ended,<br />
required an act of will on the viewer&#8217;s part to return to Earth.<br />
Then, also last week, there came in the mail a most wondrous three-record set:<br />
the great Dietrich Fischer-Dieskau, who at 65 is still most people&#8217;s favorite<br />
singer of artsongs, in some of the Schubert songs he recorded in 1951 and &#8217;52.<br />
This was the start of his career, and what these disks capture above all is<br />
the rich glow of revelation, as an ardent young singer with a voice of pure<br />
velvet makes his first discoveries of what it feels like to sing this glorious<br />
music. That glow illuminates this Angel-EMI release, again a venture in pure<br />
style.<br />
And that&#8217;s what Ella kept doing in front of that capacity crowd last<br />
Wednesday. At one point she got Cole Porter&#8217;s &#8220;Night and Day&#8221; into her<br />
clutches, and what she didn&#8217;t do with that evergreen if much-mistreated<br />
venerable ballad! What she did &#8212; after singing it through straight and<br />
gloriously &#8212; was to take both words and music and turn them into toys,<br />
tossing little fragments (&#8220;Night, Night, Night, Day, Day, Day&#8221;) up into the<br />
air until they seemed to reflect the starlight overhead like so many diamonds,<br />
then catching each one of them in her warm and loving lap.<br />
If you weren&#8217;t paying attention, you could write off that sort of thing as<br />
pure trickery, and the Lord knows Ella&#8217;s own bag of tricks is as big as<br />
anyone&#8217;s &#8212; as you&#8217;ll easily agree if you stayed around for that great scat<br />
medley with Ella and all her jazz pals at the concert&#8217;s end. But that &#8220;Night<br />
and Day&#8221; wasn&#8217;t just trick stuff; it was a woman clutching that song close to<br />
her heart, and then just poking around inside it to help make it shine better<br />
than ever. That&#8217;s not tricks; that&#8217;s art, as when Stratas sings Puccini&#8217;s<br />
heroines and Fischer-Dieskau sings Schubert.<br />
There are no pat definitions for this matter of style, which is to say that<br />
there are many. Pure technical mastery &#8212; Pavarotti getting one of Donizetti&#8217;s<br />
high B-flats lodged in his throat, and holding onto it for longer than human<br />
strength should allow, Nureyev dashing up into the stratosphere and just<br />
sitting there for a while &#8212; is for many cultural consumers reason enough to<br />
shell out hard cash for tickets. Others demand artistry.<br />
Kathleen Battle, who looks a million on the stage, owns a pure and pretty<br />
voice which she used with superior marksmanship, and also drew  large crowds<br />
to her recent Bowl concerts,  strikes these ears nevertheless as a singer not<br />
often involved in what she sings; recent published words to that effect drew<br />
some heavy mail. One man&#8217;s stale, apparently, is another&#8217;s style.<br />
Here, for what it&#8217;s worth, is a personal little list of recordings, or of<br />
moments on recordings, that glow particularly bright in the stylistic<br />
firmament. Of Ella there is generous representations, best of all in the huge<br />
&#8220;Song Book&#8221; series (Gershwin, Porter, Berlin, etc., two or three disks each,<br />
all out now on CD) she recorded for Verve (and with Verve) in the 1950s:<br />
vintage stuff, a treasury!Of the young Bing Crosby, much underestimated today as a fabulous master of<br />
rhythm and the lyric line (and a scat artist right up there with Ella) there<br />
is, alas, little currently available. One ASV single of Crosby with Bix<br />
Beiderbecke is around, and it is essential.<br />
On the other side of the fence: the best news, for all worshippers of<br />
performing style at its most radiant, is the reissue on Angel-EMI of Pablo<br />
Casals&#8217; performance of Dvorak&#8217;s Cello Concerto (with Georg Szell and the Czech<br />
Philharmonic). Just that mighty swipe by the Casals bow at the start of his<br />
first solo carries the assurance that this noble musician is deep inside the<br />
music and knows exactly what to do.<br />
The list also includes, for as an example of pure flair and stylistic bravado<br />
in action, Glenn Gould&#8217;s first recording of Bach&#8217;s &#8220;Goldberg&#8221; Variations on<br />
CBS, Carlo Maria Giulini&#8217;s Mahler Ninth Symphony (with the Chicago Symphony)<br />
on DG, and&#8230;<br />
There may be more, but these words are being written with the sound of Ella<br />
still in the ears, and that&#8217;s hard to dislodge.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>GETTY</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/1990/08/getty-3/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/1990/08/getty-3/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sat, 11 Aug 1990 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Daily News]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=2791</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Anytime you get the premonition that civilization might be doomed, you need no firmer assurance of survival that the Saturday night series of concerts at the J. Paul Getty Museum. You can&#8217;t get in, of course; the series is always sold out. But it helps just to know it&#8217;s there: civilized, highly imaginative programs presented [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Anytime you get the premonition that civilization might be doomed, you need no<br />
firmer assurance of survival that the Saturday night series of concerts at the<br />
J. Paul Getty Museum. You can&#8217;t get in, of course; the series is always sold<br />
out. But it helps just to know it&#8217;s there: civilized, highly imaginative<br />
programs presented in the most civilized setting.<br />
Saturday&#8217;s program was the collaboration of two of UCLA&#8217;s blithe spirits, the<br />
musical scholar Robert Winter and the theatrical director John Hall, who<br />
between them concocted a replica of an 18th-century London musical and<br />
dramatic entertainment. The framework, as conceived by Hall, consisted of a<br />
confrontation between a troupe of hoity-toity  Italian opera singers and some<br />
English comedians. They squabble as to whose is the higher art and then, in<br />
the manner of Richard Strauss&#8217;s &#8220;Ariadne auf Naxos,&#8221; they reconcile their<br />
difference and put on their combined show.<br />
The idea was genial, but what made it work was the high quality of the music<br />
&#8211; a pastiche of songs and arias by popular composers of the time, including<br />
Thomas Arne, George Friedrich Handel and Stephen Storace &#8212; and the level of<br />
performance. All six singers &#8212; sopranos Laura Freeze, Frances Young and Shawn<br />
Daywalt; countertenor Brian Asawa, tenor Dale Trecy and baritone Jeff Calof &#8211;<br />
are active in opera workshops in and around Los Angeles &#8212; and all were first<br />
rate. Young Asawa, 23 and still finishing his studies at U.S.C., sang his<br />
stratospheric roulades with a marvelous ease and purity of style; he is<br />
someone to watch.<br />
The music was mostly unfamiliar and included some delightful rareties: songs<br />
and ensembles from a 1794 opera by Stephen Storace called &#8220;The Cherokee,&#8221;<br />
whetting the appetite for a complete performance; a ravishing trio from<br />
Handel&#8217;s &#8220;Imeneo&#8221; and, as an encore, Thomas Arne&#8217;s original operatic setting<br />
of &#8220;Rule, Britannia.&#8221;<br />
It was, then, a captivating idea for a concert, and  brilliantly brought off,<br />
with surprise and delight around every turn. Robert Winter officiated at the<br />
harpsichord. The evening&#8217;s damp air did raise some havoc with the fragile old-<br />
style instruments of Greg Maldonado&#8217;s Los Angeles Baroque Orchestra; the group<br />
has sounded better-tuned on other occasions. Oh well, a small price to pay for<br />
an evening of treasures beyond price.<br />
There&#8217;s one concert left in this summer&#8217;s series, on August 25, sold-out as<br />
usual. Maybe if you sneaked in a couple of days before, and hid behind the Van<br />
Gogh&#8230;</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>PASQUALE&#160;SUNDAY</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/1990/07/pasquale-sunday/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/1990/07/pasquale-sunday/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sun, 08 Jul 1990 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Daily News]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=2843</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Perfection in the arts comes in many shapes and sizes. Nobody could mistake the grand, humanitarian strokes in Mozart&#8217;s &#8220;Marriage of Figaro&#8221; for the glistening, small-scale artifice of Donizetti&#8217;s &#8220;Don Pasquale&#8221;; each are perfect comic operas in the elegance of their design, and in the way each work accomplishes what it set out to do, [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Perfection in the arts comes in many shapes and sizes. Nobody could mistake   the grand, humanitarian strokes in Mozart&#8217;s &#8220;Marriage of Figaro&#8221; for the    glistening, small-scale artifice of Donizetti&#8217;s &#8220;Don Pasquale&#8221;; each are    perfect comic operas in the elegance of their design, and in the way each work    accomplishes what it set out to do, so masterfully, with such    originality.  &#8220;Don Pasquale&#8221; is a perfect small comedy, and the classic 1933 recording,    newly issued on the MM (Music Memoria) label, brings it perfectly to life. The    plot couldn&#8217;t be simpler: the old operatic warhorse, many times ridden, about    the foolish old man, his infatuation with a young girl, and his comeuppance    engineered by the girl and her allies.  The wonder of Donizetti&#8217;s small comic masterpiece lies in its swift and    unflagging pace. He doesn&#8217;t waste a note. The opera runs considerably under    two hours, and its pace is breathtaking &#8212; literally so at times, since it is,    among other things, a singer&#8217;s paradise. The solo pieces, especially the arias    for the not-all-that-bright hero Ernesto, are ravishing, but the ensemble    writing is even more brilliant.   There is a comic duet for the foolish old Pasquale and his sidekick, Dr.    Malatesta (= &#8220;Headache&#8221;) that is just about as funny as anything in opera,    but it is also a marvel of musical construction: first one singer in a     tongue-twisting rapid patter, then the other, then both together, with the    orchestra all the while carrying on in high hilarity with a tune of its own.    When you come to this point on the recording (side 2 band 5) you will surely    want to repeat it, and repeat it again; the nice thing about compact-disk    technology is the way you can do this simply by pushing the right button.  The Ernesto in this ancient, but thoroughly clear, recording is the great    Italian lyric tenor Tito Schipa; this was the only complete operatic recording    he made during his long and memorable career. Ernesto Badini is the Pasquale;     the Malatesta is Afro Poli: two first-class burlesque comedians whose    marvelous sense of timing, of give-and-take, is an art virtually vanished from    operatic stages today. Norina, the heroine, is Adelaide Saraceni, a little    shrill at times, less good only when measured against the high quality of the    rest of the cast. Carlo Sabajno conducts, a solid, workhorse conductor much    used in the early days of operatic recording.It is of course Schipa, above all, who will sell this remarkable recording,  that wonderfully suave, beautifully modulated singer who had the intelligence  throughout his long career to recognize what he could do the best and, more  important, to shun what he could not do. Against the supertenor heroes of his  time, from Enrico Caruso through to Beniamino Gigli and Giovanni Martinelli,  Schipa was a lightweight: a Mozart singer, a perfect exponent of the bel-canto  repertory, a superfine Alfredo in &#8220;La Traviata.&#8221; Generations later, Luciano  Pavarotti could have become the Schipa of our day, had he not been lured into  the more strenuous repertory that dulled that marvelous bloom his voice once  had. But this reissue of &#8220;Don Pasquale&#8221; isn&#8217;t meant to deplore what might have  been, but to celebrate what was. Among the many welcome reissues of valuable  performances from the first years of complete-opera recordings (including a  wealth of Gigli material now reissued on Angel-EMI) this two-disk set looms  large. There&#8217;s enough room on the second disk to include a ravishing selection  of Schipa singles, some of them duets with Amelita Galli-Curci and &#8212; although  uncredited on the labeling &#8212; Toti dal Monte. The record comes without  libretto and with only the most meagre plot summary, but the music &#8212; and the  way it is sung &#8212; tells its own story.LINE SPACE The fear, at the dawn of the digital era, that the new technology would  relegate the great repertory of the past to the back shelves of collectors&#8217;  shops, has proven groundless. CD reissues like the &#8220;Don Pasquale,&#8221; along  with disk after disk of solo records by the greatest of the bygone artists,  have become profitable on the major labels and the smaller ones as well. Sure,  there is gold in the Pavarotti market, but who could have predicted the hot  competition now going on in the Caruso department? Hot on the heels of its Toscanini reissues, RCA has announced a Caruso  promotion, with the legendary tenor&#8217;s entire repertory on that label (his  major outlet during the two-dozen years of his recording career) to be  reissued in a CD set this fall. Another label, Germany&#8217;s Bayer (unrelated to  the aspirin people) also has a &#8220;complete&#8221; Caruso set on the way, and  meanwhile there have been Caruso singles on other labels, including Pearl,  Club 99, Pair and Nimbus. The overlap in actual repertory has, of course, been  widespread.Has it been worth the effort? Of course it has; you need only a few notes from  any vintage Caruso performance to fill in with actual sound all the raving  accounts about the beauty of his voice, the versatility of his repertory, the  radiant splendor of his phrasing. Sure, there are extravagances here that are  somewhat out of step with today&#8217;s passion for historically accurate  performance practices. It&#8217;s a safe bet, however, that if a tenor showed up  today sounding like Caruso he, too, would be allowed the liberties that Caruso  assumed as his nature-endowed right.Still dubious? Start with the &#8220;O paradiso&#8221; from Meyerbeer&#8217;s &#8220;L&#8217;Africana&#8221;  (currently on RCA&#8217;s &#8220;Enrico Caruso, 21 Favorite Arias&#8221; and on the Nimbus  disk simply labeled &#8220;Caruso&#8221;). Sure the aria is sung in Italian instead of  the proper French; sure Caruso milks the pianissimos and overshades the  climaxes of many phrases. But sure, too, is the stature of this record as a  study in suave, seductive singing of a quality that has vanished from this  world.The Caruso reissues have been created along two divergent philosophies. The RCA  series employs the digital re-engineering techniques developed by Thomas  Stockham and known as the Stockham/Soundsteam Computer Process which, without  getting into abstruse technology, digitally reconstitutes everything that was  on the original disks, and then does away with such unwanted elements as  surface scratch and the occasional blasting from notes that strained the  resources of the acoustic-horn recording studio. Most other releases,  including Nimbus Records&#8217; fancily-named &#8220;Prima Voce Natural Ambisonic  Transfer Technology&#8221; sticks more closely to the original product, scratch and  all, assuming that the consumer can twiddle his own knobs to improve the  sound.There are solid arguments for and against both systems. The RCA system, as  heard on Caruso disks already issued, creates a creamy-sounding product, with  scratch remarkably suppressed. But there is no escaping the fact that the  sound is an electronic product; something of the impact of that charismatic  singer in an ancient Victor Talking Machine Corporation studio, letting fly at  a primitive acoustic-horn recorder with the blaze of his incomparable  artistry, seems unnecessarily tamed by all this new technology. With all  the surface noise and other defects of their time, the undoctored Caruso, as  on the recent Nimbus reissues, retains its dazzle.The art of recording great music, after all, started from scratch. Perhaps it  should stay that way.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>GETTY</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/1990/06/getty-4/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/1990/06/getty-4/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sat, 30 Jun 1990 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Daily News]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=2789</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[There is a certain shock value in hearing the music of the distant past, as there often is with music of today. Our most familiar repertory stems from a time (Bach, say, through Debussy) when certain stated or implied rules governed such musical matters as harmony and structure. Anything composed before those rules, or after [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>There is a certain shock value in hearing the music of the distant past, as<br />
there often is with music of today. Our most familiar repertory stems from a<br />
time (Bach, say, through Debussy) when certain stated or implied rules<br />
governed such musical matters as harmony and structure. Anything composed<br />
before those rules, or after they had worn out their welcome, can put the<br />
timid listener to flight.Nobody actually tried to flee the wonderful concert at the Getty Museum on<br />
Saturday night. The fact that the music was all half a millennium old<br />
conferred on the performers &#8212; the Early Music Ensemble of San Diego and the<br />
lutenist Michael Eagan &#8212;  an aura of antiquarian respectability. Even so, it<br />
turned out to be a night full strange, daring sounds.<br />
It was a time and place, the court of Burgundy late in the 15th century, when<br />
all the arts seemed swept by a passion for change. In painting, the Van Eyck<br />
brothers experimented with perspective; in music the composers Guillaume Dufay<br />
and Gilles Binchois dabbled in new harmonic colorations &#8212; in something as<br />
natural to today&#8217;s ears as the triad, which was at that time denounced by<br />
cultural leaders as a  dissonance. In a fantastically colorful motet, Dufay&#8217;s<br />
&#8220;Flos florum,&#8221; sung by the San Diegans on Saturday, a vulnerable listener<br />
might well have expected the handsomely decorated walls of the Getty&#8217;s Inner<br />
Peristyle Garden to collapse from the weight of those twisted melodic lines<br />
with their raw, tortured harmonies.It was, therefore, a concert both new and old: a program in which,<br />
paradoxically, the opening set of short religious works seemed the livelier,<br />
and the later series of lovesongs seemed like one slow, lovelorn lament after<br />
another &#8212; all, of course, hauntingly beautiful.The five-member San Diegan ensemble has worked as an early-music group since<br />
1972.  Their voices did not come across as super-suave, in the manner of all<br />
those  British ensembles that have come to town recently. Their forte is the<br />
splendid  sense of ensemble, the give-and-take that even seems willing to<br />
admit that  some of this music is actually rather comic, and is meant to<br />
be.At intermission, to add to the music&#8217;s impact, there was the chance to wander<br />
through the museum, to marvel at the million-dollar shadows on the shiny<br />
surface of Van Gogh&#8217;s &#8220;Irises&#8221; and, even better, to take in the splendid<br />
illustrated manuscript of &#8220;The Visions of Tondal,&#8221; dating from the same time<br />
and place as the music, and reflecting the same wild grotesqueries as in the<br />
music downstairs. This was the first in the Getty&#8217;s fifth annual biweekly concert series, devoted<br />
this year to the historic music of five European cultural centers (next time,<br />
Florence). It has become a hot ticket; this summer&#8217;s series is already sold<br />
out, and deservedly so.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>MOZART</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/1990/06/mozart/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/1990/06/mozart/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Fri, 29 Jun 1990 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Daily News]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=2833</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Elsewhere the drought took its toll, but the UCLA campus has been richly awash these last four days &#8212; inundated, that is, with magical Mozart, much of it unfamiliar, all of it beautifully done. Perhaps the limitations suggested by the title &#8220;Baroque Mozart&#8221; were not strictly observed in this third biennial E. Nakamichi Festival, but [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Elsewhere the drought took its toll, but  the UCLA campus has been richly awash     these last four days &#8212; inundated, that is, with magical Mozart, much of it     unfamiliar, all of it beautifully done. Perhaps the limitations suggested by     the title &#8220;Baroque Mozart&#8221; were not strictly observed in this third biennial     E. Nakamichi Festival, but so what? Mozart&#8217;s genius belongs to all ages; it     spills beyond the historians&#8217; attempts to cram it into a single stylistic     period. Friday night&#8217;s Royce Hall concert proved this point triumphantly. The shadows     of Mozart&#8217;s musical ancestors fell across the evening&#8217;s big choral work, a C-    major Mass (No. 337 in Koechel&#8217;s chronological listing) full of the rousing     glories that Mozart might (or might not) have gleaned from Handel, and very     Baroque indeed in the &#8220;Benedictus&#8221; section that starts off in a Handelian,     fugal manner and moves with Handelian ease into its exultant Hosannas. But the program also included the evidence of Mozart&#8217;s uncanny prophesies of     musical styles to come: in the rhapsodic meanderings in the slow movement of     the G-major Piano Concerto (K. 453) and, indeed, in the way that whole     miraculous work seems like a conversation about romantic, personal emotions. Again, as at earlier concerts last week, the visiting Philharmonia Baroque     Orchestra from San Francisco, with its marvelously rich-sounding (if sometimes     treacherous) instruments modeled on those of Mozart&#8217;s time, filled Royce Hall     with sounds most mellow and grand. Even  the seating of the players was     authentically Mozartian, to allow for a dramatic give and take between, say,     first violins on one side and seconds on the other, or between trumpets and     trombones widely separated. Malcolm Bilson was the soloist in the concerto, hampered somewhat by a rather     drab-sounding early-style piano, but still finely sensitive to the way     Mozart&#8217;s miraculous scoring merges the solo instrument into his iridescent     orchestration. The chorus in the Mass (and in a remarkable single &#8220;Kyrie,&#8221;     K. 341) was that fine local group, I Cantori, not heard around here nearly     often enough; the solo quartet included the radiant soprano Judith Nelson. Neal Stulberg conducted, replacing the orchestra&#8217;s own Nicholas McGegan who was     obliged to honor European commitments this week. Stulberg, remembered      hereabouts as the Los Angeles Philharmonic&#8217;s assistant conductor in the     Giulini days, now has Albuquerque&#8217;s New Mexico Symphony as home base. His work     this week has been that of a poised, insightful, communicative musician; this     &#8220;rediscovery&#8221; has proven one of the festival&#8217;s most festive byproducts. Alongside the evening events, the Nakamichi program offered a full bill of     daytime concerts: Haydn and Mozart by Judith Nelson with Bilson at the same       early-style piano, a solo Bilson recital, a fascinating concert by UCLA&#8217;s     Thomas Harmon on the university&#8217;s splendid Baroque organ, and some fine-    grained playing by Gregory Maldonado&#8217;s Los Angeles Baroque Orchestra. It all     made for a busy four days, full of rewards and, with the Mozart bicentennial     due upon us next year, an enticing foretaste of things to come.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>HAPPY&#160;END</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/1990/06/happy-end/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/1990/06/happy-end/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Fri, 08 Jun 1990 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Daily News]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=2795</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Just before the happy end of &#8220;Happy End,&#8221; the 1929 Bert Brecht/Kurt Weill musical that began a five week run at Costa Mesa&#8217;s South Coast Repertory on Friday night &#8212; the ringleader of the bandit gang delivers a ringing speech. Robbing a bank, she (yes, she) proclaims, is nowhere near as great a sin as [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Just before the happy end of &#8220;Happy End,&#8221; the 1929 Bert Brecht/Kurt Weill<br />
musical that began a five week run at Costa Mesa&#8217;s South Coast Repertory on<br />
Friday night &#8212; the ringleader of the bandit gang delivers a ringing speech.<br />
Robbing a bank, she (yes, she) proclaims, is nowhere near as great a sin as<br />
owning one. Since the mostly marvelous production at South Coast has been<br />
underwritten by the &#8220;honorary producer,&#8221; the First Interstate Bank, it&#8217;s<br />
clear that Orange County contains more liberal spirits than are usually<br />
credited.<br />
Not, of course, that these ringleader&#8217;s sentiments or anything else in this<br />
hugely amusing (and hugely messy) dramatic farrago is to be taken at face<br />
value. Barbara Damashek&#8217;s sizzling, whizzing staging, and her superior cast of<br />
ruby-throated comedians who carry it out, forestall such a possibility.<br />
Brecht himself publicly disowned the playscript, yet his thumbprints are all<br />
over: the setting among Chicago gangsters and Salvation Army lassies, which he<br />
returned to in other plays, the cynical doubletalk, the inane satire of the<br />
&#8220;happy end.&#8221;  Michael Feingold&#8217;s English text is more a version than merely a<br />
translation; common sense lurks somewhere just out of reach. (By the way, the<br />
Damon Runyon story that became &#8220;Guys and Dolls,&#8221; which Brecht&#8217;s story most<br />
resembles, was as yet unwritten at the time of &#8220;Happy End.&#8221;)<br />
But Brecht at least acknowledged his lyrics, and these were what drew out of<br />
Kurt Weill a torrent of music that ranks among the best theater songs of his or<br />
anyone else&#8217;s time. When Patricia Ben Peterson pins the audience to its<br />
collective seats with her searing &#8220;Surabaya Johnny,&#8221; the song that is the<br />
exact orchestration of heartbreak; when the gang of thugs go all to pieces with<br />
their nostalgia for &#8220;Bill&#8217;s beerhall in Bilbao&#8221;; or when thugs and<br />
salvationists join forces for the hilarious sendup known as &#8220;The Liquor<br />
Dealer&#8217;s Dream,&#8221; you know you&#8217;re being had and you willingly give in.<br />
It&#8217;s a splendid production all told. Oh, perhaps Christopher Allport could lose<br />
some of his stiffening as the romantic lead; perhaps Ron Boussom, as the<br />
insidious &#8220;Dr. Nakamura&#8221; could keep his Japanese accent from veering off into<br />
middle-high German. Perhaps&#8230;<br />
Never mind. Peterson&#8217;s Lillian is mostly glorious. Among the thugs there&#8217;s the<br />
marvelous solo turns by Robert Machray and  Jerome Butler; as the uptight<br />
Salvationist major Jane A. Johnston is a starchy delight. Ralph Funicello&#8217;s<br />
stage design, including an oversized Industrial-Revolution engine to drive a<br />
mere nickelodeon, is its own catalog of wonders. &#8220;Happy End&#8221; is eminently<br />
worth your while; you&#8217;ll be happy long before the end.<br />
THE FACTS<br />
What: Bertolt Brecht and Kurt Weill&#8217;s &#8220;Happy End&#8221;<br />
Were: South Coast Repertory, 655 Town Center Drive, Costa Mesa.<br />
When: 8 p.m., Tuesday-Friday; 2:30 and 8 p.m. Saturday; 2:30 and 7:30 p.m.,<br />
Sunday, thru July 13.<br />
Behind the scenes: staged by Barbara Damashek, musical direction by Dennis<br />
Castellano; designed by Ralph Funicello.<br />
Starring: Patricia Ben Peterson, Christopher Allport and Ron Boussom.<br />
Tickets: $27-$34; for reservations phone 714 957-4033.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>FANCIULLA</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/1990/06/fanciulla/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/1990/06/fanciulla/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Tue, 05 Jun 1990 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Daily News]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=2787</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[By general agreement, &#8220;The Girl of the Golden West&#8221; is Puccini&#8217;s problem opera. Maybe so, but the Music Center Opera&#8217;s new production, unveiled Wednesday night in an out-of-town tryout at the Orange County Performing Arts Center in Costa Mesa, presents a whole string of problem-solvings, most of them brilliant. The problems are basic, the principal [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>By general agreement, &#8220;The Girl of the Golden West&#8221; is Puccini&#8217;s problem<br />
opera. Maybe so, but the Music Center Opera&#8217;s new production, unveiled<br />
Wednesday night in an out-of-town tryout at the Orange County Performing Arts<br />
Center in Costa Mesa, presents a whole string of problem-solvings, most of them<br />
brilliant.<br />
The problems are basic, the principal one being the notion of a romantic<br />
Italian opera drawn from David Belasco&#8217;s sweet but primitive melodrama set<br />
among bandits and miners during the California gold rush. &#8220;Whiskey per<br />
tutti,&#8221; someone sings; &#8220;Doo-da, Doo-da&#8221; sings the chorus, and the audience<br />
inevitably snickers. (And so the audience did on Wednesday night.) Another<br />
problem probably escaped Belasco&#8217;s notice: the idea of a spinster of uncertain<br />
age, virginal house-mother to a horde of thirsty miners, suddenly turned to<br />
amorous mush by the first bandit to challenge her resistance.<br />
Harold Prince&#8217;s production, introduced at the Chicago Lyric Opera and now here<br />
on loan, gets around that latter problem most effectively, by pretending it<br />
doesn&#8217;t exist. Under Prince&#8217;s guidance Gwyneth Jones&#8217; Minnie is, quite simply,<br />
a study in pre-menopausal repression that Tennessee Williams might have<br />
recognized, ready to snap her hinges at the very sight of the equally middle-<br />
aged, portly Placido Domingo, who apparently fell into banditry only because<br />
his daddy bequeathed him his old gang.<br />
Making no attempt at being believable, and singing away with the blazing lung-<br />
power that Puccini&#8217;s shaggy score demands, these two superstars become the<br />
pillars of an evening of mostly thrilling opera. It matters in no way that<br />
there isn&#8217;t a single moment that inspires belief. It&#8217;s all pure hokum on a<br />
level so high that you could almost mistake it for art.<br />
It&#8217;s a handsome production, at that, with its gold-rush rusticity and its<br />
snowflakes falling prettily &#8212; straight down despite the howling of the wind<br />
machine. The hand of Harold Prince shows in the prevailing sense of too much of<br />
everything: extra people-props, a set with cabins and teepees whirling around<br />
on turntables like so many spinning tops and, in the last act, a towering<br />
railroad scaffolding to serve as the bandit&#8217;s gallows. (On the other hand, the<br />
customary horses have given way to a single railway handcar.)<br />
Justino Diaz is a fine, sturdy &#8220;Sceriffo&#8221; (sheriff, to you); Michael Gallup<br />
is his usual solid self as Sonora. Even in the questionable acoustic<br />
surroundings at Costa Mesa, and even under Richard Buckley&#8217;s lethargic time-<br />
beating, the Los Angeles Chamber Orchestra provided a suitable backdrop.<br />
Another performance remains in Costa Mesa, Saturday at 8 p.m.; the opera<br />
reopens at its home base in the Music Center on Wednesday, June 12 for the<br />
first of five performances, with Carol Neblett replacing Gwyneth Jones in the<br />
last two.<br />
THE FACTSD<br />
What: The Music Center Opera production of Puccini&#8217;s &#8220;The Girl of the Golden<br />
West.&#8221;<br />
Where &#038; When: Orange County Performing Arts Center at 8 p.m. Saturday; Los<br />
Angeles Music Center at 8 p.m. June 12, 15, 18 and 21, 2 p.m. June 23.<br />
Starring: Placido Domingo and Gwyneth Jones, with Carol Neblett replacing Jones<br />
on June 21 and 23.<br />
Behind the scenes: Directed by Harold Prince; conducted by Richard Buckley;<br />
designed by Eugene and Franne {cq} Lee.<br />
Tickets:<br />
20 to $80; for information phone 714 556-ARTS for the Orange County<br />
performance; 213 972-7211 for Los Angeles.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<item>
		<title>ALA,&#160;ZAMBELLO</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/1990/04/ala-zambello/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/1990/04/ala-zambello/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sun, 22 Apr 1990 17:07:08 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Daily News]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=3019</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Even before Francesca Zambello arrived at the appointed hour, expectations had been shaped by memories of another hugely talented, innovative, ferociously energetic operatic stage director of our time. You can&#8217;t help it. It was Boston&#8217;s Sarah Caldwell, after all, who did the first American staging of Serge Prokofiev&#8217;s titanic &#8220;War and Peace&#8221; (which Zambello staged [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Even before Francesca Zambello arrived at the appointed hour, expectations had  been shaped by memories of another hugely talented, innovative, ferociously  energetic operatic stage director of our time. You can&#8217;t help it.
<p>It was Boston&#8217;s Sarah Caldwell, after all, who did the first American staging  of Serge Prokofiev&#8217;s titanic &#8220;War and Peace&#8221; (which Zambello staged in  Seattle last year). It was Caldwell who staged America&#8217;s first encounter with  Hector Berlioz&#8217;s &#8220;The Trojans&#8221; (which Zambello will stage for the Los  Angeles Music Center Opera this coming Saturday). After that, Zambello flies  off to Geneva to stage yet another Berlioz opera, &#8220;Benvenuto Cellini.&#8221;  Caldwell had put that opera on once, too.
<p>Zambello arrived, and the resemblance was further confirmed. No, she hasn&#8217;t  even come close to Caldwell&#8217;s famous girth that sometimes made for an unkind  remark or two. But there&#8217;s a lot of Zambello even so, and when she speaks it&#8217;s  with Caldwell&#8217;s forward-thrusting, dynamic, bronze-colored alto, and, of  course, with the same sense that she knows exactly where she&#8217;s going and how  to get there. If we&#8217;re lucky, history will repeat itself, Zambello in for  Caldwell.
<p>Born in New York to an American mother and an Italian father, both  actor/singers, she got her degree (in philosophy) at Colgate University and  launched her operatic career as assistant to yet another in the pantheon of  innovative stage directors, the late Jean-Pierre Ponnelle, a man governed by  the philosophy that anytime you don&#8217;t like what the composer tells you to do,  do something else.
<p>She&#8217;s come a long way; who, outside of Milwaukee, knew her name six years ago?  That&#8217;s where she did her first important professional work, starting in her  mid-20s as co-director of that city&#8217;s Skylight Opera Theater. Her partner   there was Stephen Wadsworth, best known as the librettist for Leonard  Bernstein&#8217;s unfortunate fling into grand opera known as &#8220;A Quiet Place.&#8221;  They have now gone their separate ways, but Zambello pinpointed the Milwaukee  experience as the best kind of training for a stage director with innovative  ideas.
<p>&#8221;It&#8217;s a small theater, 300 seats and only a chamber-orchestra pit,&#8221; she said.  &#8220;But we accomplished a lot there, eight productions a year, 15 or 20  performances of each. It became a sort of laboratory, where you learned to  focus on intimate performance details, on acting rather than just belting out  high notes.
<p>&#8221;Actually,&#8221; she continued, &#8220;I like to balance large and small productions,  and sometimes they even intermix.&#8221; She talked about her now-famous production  of Puccini&#8217;s &#8220;Tosca&#8221; in London last season, not at an opera house but in a  sports arena at Earls Court, seating 10,000. &#8220;Sure, it had to be big. We put  the production in the center of the arena, with a set that looked like the  whole city of Rome, with 10 horses and 20 dogs. When the shepherd sang in the  last act, instead of being offstage as the libretto demanded, he came on with  a flock of sheep.&#8221;
<p>Still, according to the star of that production, Los Angeles resident Julia  Migenes, the great thing about Zambello&#8217;s concept was the intimacy it  provided. &#8220;Instead of having to sing XI Love You&#8217; to the second balcony,&#8221;  Migenes remembered during a recent conversation, &#8220;the microphones made it  possible to sing it to the tenor.&#8221;
<p>Zambello also spoke with good feelings about her most recent gig, the American  premiere of Wolfgang Rihm&#8217;s &#8220;Oedipus&#8221; at the Santa Fe Opera, where she was  working for the first time. Here was innovative opera at its most resolute,  and it demanded innovative staging: singers on the opera house&#8217;s topmost  towers (in, as it happened, howling rainstorms at all four performances), one  onstage singer simulating (awesomely) suicide by hanging, all manner of  amplification tricks. The critics (present company excepted) hated it;  Zambello, she claimed, had a ball.
<p>&#8221;That&#8217;s my kind of opera house: no stars, heavy emphasis on ensemble, 4 weeks  of rehearsal. Sure, the critics jumped all over it, and that&#8217;s a real tragedy  nowadays. We don&#8217;t have enough critics who love opera, really love it I  mean.&#8221;
<p>Will the critics love the 4-1/2-hour expanse of Berlioz&#8217; &#8220;The Trojans&#8221;?  Nobody is saying, yet; the least everybody is saying is that our local company  is brave beyond belief in even attempting to cope with it. But that&#8217;s Peter  Hemmings&#8217; doing; after all, it was his Scottish  Opera&#8217;s production in the  1960s that restored the long-neglected score in its full glory to world  attention. When Hemmings took over the Los Angeles Music Center Opera six  years ago, he made no secret of the fact that a revival of &#8220;The Trojans&#8221; was  his fondest hope.
<p>Zambello feels that the recent popularity of Richard Wagner&#8217;s &#8220;Ring of the  Nibelung,&#8221; that 17-hour epic beside which any other opera (even &#8220;The   Trojans&#8221;) is no longer than a sneeze, cuts through any resistance to modern  full-length productions. This &#8220;Trojans,&#8221; she poined out with pride, is even  longer than previous &#8220;complete&#8221; performances. &#8220;There&#8217;s an 8-minute scene,  early on, where the Greek double agent Sinon tries to convince the Trojan King  Priam to accept the Greeks&#8217; gift of the famous Wooden Horse. Berlioz never  finished the orchestration of that scene, so it&#8217;s never been done. Now it has  been completed, by the Berlioz scholar Hugh MacDonald, and this will be its  American premiere.
<p>&#8221; XThe Trojans&#8217; really is the French XRing,&#8217; &#8221; Zambello said. &#8220;It doesn&#8217;t  only tell the story of the fall of Troy and the love of Dido and Aeneas; it  frames all this, as Wagner framed his gods and goddesses, with a text of even  higher significance. I&#8217;ve tried to bring this out in this production.
<p> &#8220;As in Wagner, I have the ancient gods standing around the stage, overseeing  the action of the mortals. I see Troy as a dead culture, its beaten warriors  mourning that demise, the whole thing set in dark colors and black.
<p> &#8220;But Carthage is different, and here we&#8217;ve brought the action up to Berlioz&#8217;  own time, and with lighter, brighter colors. After all, Carthage is only 7  years old when the Trojans land there. The city is still being built; there&#8217;s  scaffolding all around. And it&#8217;s being built as a Utopian society, Marxist,  Hegelian. But now Aeneas comes along and the whole plan goes up in flames.  Human weaknesses win out over grand ideas.&#8221;
<p>Pressed to describe the look of her production, Zambello hung back. &#8220;No, I&#8217;m  not going to tell you what our Trojan Horse will look like,&#8221; she said with a  conspiratorial wink. &#8220;Some things you have to find out for yourself.
<p> &#8220;I promise you,&#8221; said Francesca Zambello, &#8220;you won&#8217;t be bored. Not for a  minute.&#8221;<br />]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>NEW&#160;YORK</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/1990/04/new-york/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/1990/04/new-york/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sun, 22 Apr 1990 17:06:11 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Daily News]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=3017</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Every visitor, and even a few residents, recognize Manhattan as a paradise for the sightseer. But there needs to be a comparable word &#8212; &#8220;soundhearer,&#8221; perhaps? &#8212; for the music critic, with a few hours off from official duties, who decides to cruise the island specifically to sample its indigenous noises. Herewith, an account of [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Every visitor, and even a few residents, recognize Manhattan as a  paradise for the sightseer. But there needs to be a comparable word &#8212;  &#8220;soundhearer,&#8221; perhaps? &#8212; for the music critic, with a few hours off from  official duties, who decides to cruise the island specifically to sample its  indigenous noises. Herewith, an account of a few hours of noise-cruising in  Manhattan on a recent Thursday, a sp[endid day warmed by an Indian summer  sun.</p>
<p>9:30 a.m. My  hotel maintains a small coffee shop, run on what you might call  informal principles. You find a seat; the man at the cash register, across  the room, yells out a friendly &#8220;what&#8217;ll ya have?&#8221; and somehow a process is  set in motion. A benign pandemonium reigns, punctuated by the horns and  engine roarings of heavy crosstown traffic on 51st St.</p>
<p>9:50 a.m. Surcease awaits, directly across the street in the form of  Greenacre Park: a small, blessed oasis, no larger than a single building  site, with a 25-foot waterfall at one end, some handsome plantings, a few  chairs and tables, a coffee bar. My day&#8217;s second cup, therefore, has a far  more agreeable sound setting. From a seat beside the waterfall, all of New  York recedes.</p>
<p>10:30 a.m. Not many years ago New York&#8217;s subways were a sonic nightmare:  rattletrap cars, screeching brakes, outcries from protesting wheels rounding  curves that could set your teeth on edge. New cars and track repairs have  made life underground somewhat more bearable. Now you get harangued, all too  clearlu, by the sleazoid beggars and peddlers on their rounds from car to  car. And they get outshouted from time to time by the conductor&#8217;s station  announcements over the p.a.system that is usallu on the blink.</p>
<p>10:50 a.m. End of the line, and blessed, momentary relief. Manhattan&#8217;s true  miracle is the transformation that has taken place at the lower tip of the  island: not only the gigantic towers of the World Trade Center, the World  Financial Center and the waterside apartment complexes at Battery Park City,  but the complex of personal amenities that have been installed in, under and  beside these structures.</p>
<p>A walkways leads from the subway station directly to a concourse lined with  markets, snackbars and formal restaurants. One level up, on the streets of  Lower Manhattan, the sounds of traffic roil and surge; here, below ground,  there&#8217;s only the sounds of foot traffic on stone flooring. Where else can you  hear this strange mix of urgent pedestrian sounds in a seeming sound vacuum?  The back streets of Venice (the one in Italy) come immediately to mind.</p>
<p>11 a.m. My wanderings lead me to the architectural jewel of the building  complex, the Winter Garden on the ground level of Cesar Pelli&#8217;s  World  Financial Center.  A cascade of broad marble steps leads down to the floor  level, to a vast garden lined with our own California fan palms. At the far  end, a  windowed facade looks out on New York harbor, with Lady Liberty and  the newly restored Ellis Island in clear perspective.</p>
<p>Here, in a city where real estate is valued by the cubic inch, the prodigal  space-wastage of the Winter Garden stops the breath. It astounds the ear as  well. From the marble stairs, the distant rattle of china and silver at the  cafe tables rings like the chatter of far-off birds. The clink and purr from  the marimbas of a Mexican band, rehearsing for a free concert later in the  day, echo from the upward-curving roof like points of audible light. As is  only right, the Winter Garden serves as site for an ongoing list of free  concerts; I note with envy that jazzman Milt Hinton is scheduled a few days  from now when, alas, I&#8217;ll be otherwise engaged.</p>
<p>12 noon. Outdoors once again, I head toward Broadway, two blocks to the east.   Silence reigns, as always, in the small, handsome churchyard at St. Paul&#8217;s  Chapel, and inside as well. George Washington prayed here, moments before his  inauguration as our first President, and his pew is nicely preseved. Trinity  Church, a few blocks to the south, is the grander of New York&#8217;s two 18th- century churches, but I love St. Paul&#8217;s for its intimacy, and the way the  silence seems to wrap itself around the visitor.</p>
<p>12:15 p.m. On route to Trinity, there is a small park a few steps below  street level. There a girl on roller skates holds the crowd enthralled with  her rap songs, helped by a ghetto blaster whose sound probably carries to New  Jersey.</p>
<p>12:20 p.m. Fortunately, it doesn&#8217;t carry to Trinity&#8217;s elegant inner space,  where an organist runs through some tortured 19th-century harmonies. I wait  for a while, in hopes that he might try some Bach. No such luck.</p>
<p>12:30 p.m. Starting with the restrained, elegant rococo of Trinity, and then  along the twisted, tiny, aimless streets of Lower Manhattan,  it&#8217;s possible  as in few American places to imagine yourself in some European town. Sure,  the old buildings are now festooned with fast-food signs, but if you aim your  gaze upward the fantasy of Old New York, before the invention of the grid  pattern for streets (and the consequent gridlock), does take hold.</p>
<p>1 p.m. Along Fulton Street, heading east, the crescendo in fish odors tells  me I&#8217;m heading in the right direction. To the west, Lower Manhattan is  greatly enhanced by the new construction; on the east side, it&#8217;s the old  structures,  handsomely restored, that seize the attention. An area of  several blocks at the end of Fluton, just before the East River has been  closed to daytime traffic, and turned into a pedestrian mall, ringed by great  old buildings. Again, as in the underground concourse, memories of the  unnatural quiet on Venice&#8217;s untrafficked streets become inescapable.</p>
<p>The crown of the restoration is the South Street Seaport, with its few old  ships still at anchor &#8212; converted, for the most part, into tourist traps,  but still handsome on a late-September sunny day. In the open space a  superior jazz combo holds forth (trombone, bass, drums): the Chicken Wing  Trio. Not bad.</p>
<p>1:30 p.m. Across the street are New York&#8217;s two most serious seafood  restaurants: Sweet&#8217;s, which as usual looks jammed, and Sloppy Louie&#8217;s, which  doesn&#8217;t.Sloppy Louie&#8217;s main dining room is entirely tin-lined: walls and  ceiling both. The bluefish is marvelous, but the sound level creates the  sensation of a huge thumb, pushing me down toward the floor.</p>
<p>3 p.m. Back uptown, I soothe my ears in the sound of my waterfall.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>OPERA</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/1990/04/opera/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/1990/04/opera/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sun, 22 Apr 1990 17:05:06 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Daily News]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=3015</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[It seems to be a Long Beach Opera axiom that the more challenging the work at hand the more brilliant the results. The results this season bear this out: an indifferent stab at a couple of sure-fire romantic melodramas to start, and now a torrent of enlightened imagination applied to Debussy&#8217;s &#8220;Pelleas and Melisande.&#8221; The [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>It seems to be a Long Beach Opera axiom that the more challenging the work at  hand the more brilliant the results. The results this season bear this out: an  indifferent stab at a couple of sure-fire romantic melodramas to start, and now  a torrent of enlightened imagination applied to Debussy&#8217;s &#8220;Pelleas and  Melisande.&#8221; The production had its premiere on Wednesday night; two  performances remain.</p>
<p>&#8220;Pelleas&#8221; is an opera for the brave in heart, on both sides of the  footlights. It invests Maeterlinck&#8217;s sad, symbolic tale with a musical tapestry  woven out of shadows. On the other hand, the opera &#8212; both text and music &#8212; is  so full of half-meanings and ambiguities that it can be made to work in either  a literal or  symbolic production. The Long Beach forces, marshalled by stage  director Brian Kulick, designers Mark Wendland and Craig Pierce, and conductor  Paul Connelly, have chosen the latter approach.</p>
<p>You know what&#8217;s in store almost immediately, as the lost Golaud walks onto a  bare platform, facing a barren mound that looks like sand strewn with waste  paper, and sings of being &#8220;lost in a forest.&#8221; The forest is in Debussy&#8217;s  music, not on the stage and that, to the producers, is enough. They make us  believe, as well.</p>
<p>Some of the symbolic gadgetry may, in truth, be a little excessive. Melisande  has no long hair to let down from her tower, so her Pelleas must cope with a  symbolic bolt of some shiny fabric. The child Yniold does his spying number,  not through a window into Melisande&#8217;s room but down into a cut-away doll-house.  It isn&#8217;t Golaud who gets to hurl Melisande around by her hair, but a black-clad  surrogate, one of three silent stooges who function as stagehands and who, on  occasion, clutter the production with a welter of gratuitous images.</p>
<p>Yes, there are moments when less might have been more. Overriding these passing  flaws, however, is a consistent production philosophy under which Debussy&#8217;s  subtle, supple operatic masterpiece fills in the cramped spaces of the Center  Theater, throbs with its own life-force, and comes across as the kind of  challenging, memorable entertainment that has marked this company&#8217;s best work   through the past decade.</p>
<p>Musically, the forces are equal to the dramatic demands. Nobody could confuse  the matronly Michal Shamir for the child-bride of Maeterlinck&#8217;s text. Yet,  under Connelly&#8217;s expert pacing, she creates a Melisande out of whole fabric,  and her final moments are truly moving. James Schwisow is a Pelleas ardent and  haunted; Neil Howlett a marvelously fluent, menacing Golaud. But the authentic  miracle here is the Arkel of Jerome Hines, 70 this year, 50 years out from his  professional singing debut (which happened to be in Los Angeles). You have to  have those figures in front of you, to underscore the unbelievability factor in  the rolling, rock-solid eloquence of this performance.</p>
<p>Connelly&#8217;s pacing of the score was judicious and sympathetic; his orchestra,  behind a scrim in back of the performance, contributed an appropriately shadowy  visual background &#8212; and an unscheduled laugh as well when, at the end, the  scrim was pulled away on the line &#8220;why are all these people here?&#8221; Oh yes,  the opera was sung in English, a translation by Hugh MacDonald. Against all  fears of violence to the strange, half-lit French of Maeterlinck&#8217;s text, the  new words worked remarkably well. A memorable, spellbinding evening, then; go  see for yourselves.</p>
<p>THE FACTS: What: Debussy&#8217;s &#8220;Pelleas and Melisande,&#8221; by the Long Beach Opera.</p>
<p>When: Tonight [*] FRIDAY [F/L] at 8, April 28 at 2.</p>
<p>Where: Center Theater, Long Beach Convention Center.</p>
<p>Behind the scenes: staged by Brian Kulick; conducted by Paul Connelly; designed  by Mark Wentland and Craig Pierce.</p>
<p>Tickets: $22 to $55. Information: 213 596-5556.</p>
<p>Our rating: * * * *</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>LINSHO,&#160;PAVAROTTI</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/1990/04/linsho-pavarotti/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/1990/04/linsho-pavarotti/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sun, 22 Apr 1990 17:04:31 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Daily News]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=3013</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[As expected, Luciano Pavarotti filled the Hollywood Bowl on Monday night, both with his voice and with his fans. The one was received by the others &#8212; 17.979 strong, the full Bowl capacity &#8212; with clear and obvious delight. It was a night that the true believers could take home, relive and cherish. Pavarotti was, [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>As expected, Luciano Pavarotti filled the Hollywood Bowl on Monday night, both  with his voice and with his fans. The one was received by the others &#8212; 17.979  strong, the full Bowl capacity &#8212; with clear and obvious delight. It was a  night that the true believers could take home, relive and cherish.</p>
<p>Pavarotti was, in fact, in fair voice quite a bit of the time. His chosen  program could not exactly count as arduous. There was a generous spattering of  instrumental pieces to allow the singer to replenish his stock of high notes,  loud notes, soft and crooning notes and the rest of the vocal paraphernalia  that has earned him his particular place on the cultural landscape.</p>
<p>There were also, of course, problems. As early as the third aria on the  program, the &#8220;Cielo e mar&#8221; from Ponchielli&#8217;s &#8220;La Gioconda&#8221; there were  identifiable moments of strain. Later on, in the set of three sentimental  Italian songs that concluded the program, there were vocal slips, small but  constant. Now and again he seemed motivated to try a full-throated pianissimo,  a beautiful effect when it works. This time, nothing worked.</p>
<p>Why nitpick? Simply because in a program such as this, with a vocal superstar  at the center and nothing much around the edges. there isn&#8217;t much to  concentrate on except questions of vocal excellence. There was only one  message here, that Pavarotti can do no wrong. When he did something wrong,  therefore, it stood out.</p>
<p>In fairness, there were also moments that were glowingly, glisteningly right.  The big aria from Verdi&#8217;s &#8220;Luisa Miller,&#8221; which began Pavarotti&#8217;s part of  the program, was ravishingly delivered. The &#8220;Turandot&#8221; aria that was the  last of the five encores, was sent aloft sheathed in vocal brass, gold, steel  and many rarer metals as well. Either of those moments was easily worth the  price of a ticket (up to a thousand-dollar top).</p>
<p>Pavarotti aside, however, it was an evening strewn with silliness. This was the  final stop of a portable package, put together by impresario Tibor Rudas, that  also included the dubious services of conductor Leone Magiera and flutist  Andrea Griminelli &#8212; here with an aggregation from the Los Angeles  Philharmonic. A clutch of instrumental tidbits filled in the spaces around the  Pavarotti numbers, dispatched with no discernible grace. The lighting design  leaned heavily toward a lurid hot pink that turned the stage into a monumental  boudoir. Two truckloads of sound equipment were brought in, to replace &#8212; but  not improve upon &#8212; the Bowl&#8217;s own excellent facilities.</p>
<p>This last proved an especially sore point. Someone among Rudas&#8217; minions dreamed  up the notion of bending the whole sound image toward a rock-style  presentation, with dozens of microphones around the stage and with Pavarotti  so heavily miked that the orchestra behind his arias might as well have gone  home. The effect was more of a vocal recording being mimed than a live  performance.</p>
<p>IIt could be that Pavarotti  likes this line of work, and he can&#8217;t be blamed  for liking the money it brings. But with the world&#8217;s supply of tenors in dire  straits,it remains a shame that he has sealed himself off from serious  culture. It must be noted, however, that nearly 18,000 screaming, whistling,  stomping, cheering Pavarottists, at the Bowl on Monday night, acted as if they  believed otherwise.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>ALA,&#160;MORT</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/1990/04/ala-mort/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/1990/04/ala-mort/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sun, 22 Apr 1990 17:03:40 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Daily News]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=3011</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[There are certain advantages to being old. I can collect the awe of the multitude for having seen Rachmaninoff play the piano, and for having shaken hands with Bela Bartok. Still there are drawbacks. I have made the terrible blunder, for example, of letting myself, at this advanced age, become interested in the whole complex [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>There are certain advantages to being old. I can collect the awe of the multitude for having seen Rachmaninoff play the piano, and for having shaken hands with Bela Bartok. Still there are drawbacks. I have made the terrible blunder, for example, of letting myself, at this advanced age, become interested in the whole complex of computer technology as it relates to music. I hear people talk about the wonderful gadgetry that will be in every home by the year 2025, and I shudder to think what difficulty I will have, at age 101, in mastering all these wonders.A few weeks ago the California Institute of the Arts held a demonstration, at Santa Monica&#8217;s Electronic Cafe, of some of the devices that are being worked on at the school&#8217;s newly formed Center for Art, Information and Technology. That center, funded by AT&amp;T and the Peter Norton Family Foundation, is the umbrella under which the beardless techies and bearded electronic eminences at CalArts &#8212; and, eventually we &#8212; can command the creation, the shape and the sound of music in a manner as yet undreamed of.At this demonstration, Morton Subotnick &#8212; charter electronic guru at CalArts since its founding in 1969 &#8212; put something called the Gesture Piano through its paces. It isn&#8217;t a piano at all, of course, but a software program that enables a keyboardist to access whatever music the program has stored, and make it respond to the user&#8217;s whim. Take a Beethoven Sonata, as Subotnick did; lay it into the machine, and a performer at the keyboard can transfigure a performance of that work according to his own vision. A child, in learning that Beethoven Sonata, can command the way his machine performs the work; he can, in learning the work summon up repeats until a phrase becomes familiar. I wondered to myself, just for a moment: how is this matter of recreating a Beethoven Sonata through electronic means all that different from recreating a famous painting from a sheet of paper with numbered spaces to fill in with the right color? The answer lies in this magic word &#8220;interactive.&#8221; You don&#8217;t just recreate the Beethoven Sonata, you recreate it along the lines of your own personal vision of the way the music works. .David Rosenboom, newly anointed Dean of Music at CalArts, came on with a program called &#8220;Heirarchical Music Specification Language,&#8221;which also involved interactions whereby the whole process of artificial intelligence somehow conspires to create virtual new intelligent instruments within the computer. And the morning ended with a spectacular dance demonstration, called by its inventor, Mark Coniglio, a MIDI-Dancer. That, to an outsider, was both alluring and understandable. A dancer, her both arms wired to small receptors that sent information to a computer via a wireless transmitter strapped to her back, as she moved her arms, moved through a series of steps. Her movements, picked up by the arm terminals, controlled the music, and also the lighting of the improvised stage area in which she worked. This, of course, was stunning, if only for the elementary reason that the wired dancer creating the music and lighting was locked in to a perfect synchrony.That, of course, is also something of a drawback. The greatest hangup about the role of computers in the creation of art,. it seems to me, is the dehumanization process, the lack of randomness and surprise. The dynamic of a live  performance  is the risk factor,  the real chance that human factors will inevitably intercede in a performance, that no two will be exactly alike. Subotnick talked about the shared concern in this problem, and about the development of such things as a metronome that can allow for human variations in the rhythm and meter of a piece. Sounds self-contradictory to me: a random metronome; but who am I, at this advanced age, to say? I have seen the interactive future. and it is user-friendly. This is Alan Rich with Notes on Music.,</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>HI-FI&#160;MOVIE</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/1990/04/hi-fi-movie/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/1990/04/hi-fi-movie/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sun, 22 Apr 1990 17:02:43 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Daily News]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=3009</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[With three books already out on its collective lives and musicianship, and now a full-length documentary movie, the Guarneri Quartet must be doing something right. One of the things it does right, obviously, is to sign on with the right management and public-relations personnel; chamber-music ensembles don&#8217;t automatically become documentary subjects without a push here [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>With three books already out on its collective lives and musicianship, and now a full-length documentary movie, the Guarneri Quartet must be doing something right. One of the things it does right, obviously, is to sign on with the right management and public-relations personnel; chamber-music ensembles don&#8217;t automatically become documentary subjects without a push here and a shove there. Another thing it does right is to play well. It has, indeed, been doing  that for over a quarter-century, and it has gone through that long life without a single membership change.</p>
<p>Allan Miller, previously known for his Oscar-winning 1981 documentary &#8220;From Mao to Mozart: Isaac Stern in China,&#8221; is obviously a practiced hand at keeping a low profile around his subjects. He actually makes you believe that he and his camera crew just happened to be at the Guarneri Quartet&#8217;s rehearsal sessions during moments of hand-to-hand (or foot-to-mouth) combat over points of interpretation and repertory.</p>
<p>Did that crew just happen to be on the plane, for example, when viola player Michael Tree pulled a peevish tantrum about wanting to play violin once in a while? Were they really just in the neighborhood when violinist Arnold Steinhardt vainly tried to interest his colleagues in the trashy String Quartet by Fritz Kreisler, only to have cellist David Soyer ridicule the work as &#8220;Chinese monkey-business&#8221;?</p>
<p>Whatever its ratio of verity to hokum, &#8220;High Fidelity &#8212; the Adventures of the Guarneri String Quartet&#8221; is loaded with valuable insights. You do get to eavesdrop on some illuminating rehearsal moments, and come away with a fair idea of the genuinely democratic outlook that forms the heartbeat of any such ensemble. You weep along, as the group must sacrifice its comfortable stage setups to appease a gang of smug German television engineers. You shudder, as manager Harry Beall, obviously a shrewd money hand, laments that the group refuses to play more than 100 dates a year.</p>
<p>There is also some excellent travel footage, lots of in-and-out-of-airports stuff, a Prague audience turned rapturous at music by their own Smetana (in a Guarneri performance described by a critic as &#8220;staggeringly and wonderfully Americanm&#8221;); the absurdly gorgeous venue of a made-over theater in Tampa, miles too large for chamber music; adoring college audiences asking bright questions in pre-concert get-togethers.</p>
<p>Therein, in fact, lies the real &#8220;fidelity.&#8221; As far as the Guarneris themselves are concerned, Miller&#8217;s documentary is mostly high-class contrivance. Then you get a look at a young audience held spellbound by what the Guarneris have been doing so well these 25 years (and still do): the dizzying virtuosity in a Beethoven finale, the diabolical mystery in a Bartok excerpt. And so you believe at least one of the Guarneri statements into Miller&#8217;s ubiquitous microphone. &#8220;There aren&#8217;t many musicians,&#8221; says cellist Soyer, &#8220;who can say that they&#8217;re doing exactly what they want to do.&#8221;</p>
<p>Accompanying &#8220;High Fidelity&#8221; is a 5-minute short, &#8220;To Her Glory,&#8221; in which Los Angeles Philharmonic harpist Lou Anne Neill loads her harp into a van, drives through some pretty Oregon scenery, and ends up serenading Mt. Hood &#8220;in a personal act of honoring Mother Nature.&#8221; She plays a Handel concerto, and an invisible orchestra materializes in the background, just like in the old Harpo Marx movies.</p>
<p>THE FACTS*The film: &#8220;High Fidelity, the Adventures of the Guarneri Quartet&#8221; (unrated).*The stars: The Guarneri String Quartet &#8212; Arnold Steinhardt and John Dalley, violins; Michael Tree, viola; David Soyer, cello.*Behind the scenes; Produced and directed by Allan Miller; released by the Four Oaks Foundation.*Running tiime: One hour, 25 minutes.*Playing: Laemmle&#8217;s Monica 4-plex, Santa Monica.*Our rating: ***</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>KRONOS</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/1990/01/kronos/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/1990/01/kronos/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Fri, 12 Jan 1990 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Daily News]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=2797</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[There were more kinds of music at the Kronos Quartet concert, Saturday night at UCLA&#8217;s Wadsworth Theater, than you could shake a stick at. There was, indeed, a fair amount of stick-shaking, in one of the movements of John Zorn&#8217;s &#8220;The Dead Man,&#8221; wherein the four players wave their bows menacingly in the air, in [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>There were more kinds of music at the Kronos Quartet concert, Saturday night at<br />
UCLA&#8217;s Wadsworth Theater, than you could shake a stick at. There was, indeed, a<br />
fair amount of stick-shaking, in one of the movements of John Zorn&#8217;s &#8220;The Dead<br />
Man,&#8221; wherein the four players wave their bows menacingly in the air, in exact<br />
rhythm but to no exact purpose.<br />
Everything on the program, Alfred Schnittke&#8217;s Quartet No. 2 aside, was music<br />
commissioned and composed for the Kronos, and the variety of that music is<br />
proof of the enterprise of this remarkable ensemble. From John Zorn, guru of<br />
the lower Manhattan crossover crowd, the Kronos has elicited an extended<br />
collection of patches, some hilarious and some exasperating, some beautifully<br />
written for the instruments and some merely squawks: a compendium of what four<br />
string players should and shouldn&#8217;t do with and to their instruments.<br />
Other commissioned works were somewhat more listener-friendly. Australia&#8217;s<br />
Peter Sculthorpe, whose music the Kronos has befriended for all of its 12<br />
years, has provided, in his &#8220;Jabiru Dreaming,&#8221; a smooth and successful mix of<br />
native aborigine dance rhythms and Sculthorpe&#8217;s own percussive, dissonant<br />
style. From the African-born Dumisani Maraire and Foday Musa Suso, there came<br />
two short, congenial pieces of no great complexity, built out of simple,<br />
ingratiating folk melodies. From Canada&#8217;s John Oswald and Hungary&#8217;s Istvan<br />
Marta came two short works involved the live playing of the quartet with some<br />
wild and busy tape sounds.<br />
But the 20-minute Schnittke Quartet of 1981, the most substantial work on the<br />
program, towered above all else in depth and beauty. The great Soviet composer<br />
has, in this work, built a dense texture out of several mystical medieval<br />
church melodies, seemingly spread across infinite space at the start and the<br />
end, savage and defiant in the dense middle movement. Any doubts that the<br />
Kronos Quartet exists only to play musical tricks and deal out a kind of<br />
crossover mayhem, were easily dispelled by this fluent, beautifully shaped<br />
performance.<br />
As usual, the concert also embraced a carefully planned, imaginative visual<br />
scheme, with subtle color changes and abstract shapes projected onto a back<br />
screen and, of course, the quartet members&#8217; customary propensity for kicky<br />
costumes. One demurrer, however: while amplification may have been necessary in<br />
the pieces with tape and the woolly sound effects in the Zorn, it betrayed the<br />
best efforts of the quartet in the more serious Schnittke and Sculthorpe works.<br />
The Wadsworth theater may not be our prime acoustic marvel, but it isn&#8217;t<br />
Hollywood Bowl, either, and doesn&#8217;t need to be treated as such.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>LAPO</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/1990/01/lapo-20/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/1990/01/lapo-20/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Fri, 05 Jan 1990 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Daily News]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=2801</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Question of the day: Is Richard Strauss&#8217; &#8221;"Domestic Symphony&#8221; the ugliest orchestral piece ever written, or does it just sound that way?  That gross and untidy bulk formed the second half of this past weekend&#8217;s Los Angeles Philharmonic concert (heard on Saturday night). Christof Perick, who conducted, seems caught up in a Straussian passion, [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Question of the day: Is Richard Strauss&#8217; &#8221;"Domestic Symphony&#8221; the ugliest  orchestral piece ever written, or does it just sound that way?   That gross and untidy bulk formed the second half of this past weekend&#8217;s Los  Angeles Philharmonic concert (heard on Saturday night). Christof Perick, who  conducted, seems caught up in a Straussian passion, since he also has conducted  several of the operas, in San Francisco and at the Metropolitan, to great  acclaim. He conducted the &#8220;Domestic&#8221; from memory, and so that work, too, must  mean something to him.   He conducted it, in fact, very well. No power on earth can unravel the  horrendous orchestral chaos near the end, where Strauss gathers up all his   tawdry, sentimental and bombastic tunes and sets them grinding against one  another simultaneously in a ludicrous travesty of serious counterpoint. Perick,  however, came close. He achieved a remarkable orchestral clarity throughout the  work, and a commendable range of control over dynamics. Conductors do not  automatically earn their passage to heaven by succesful performances of  Strauss. If they did, however, Perick would be an early arrival.   The first part of the program was both quieter and more substantial. It began  with an old friend, Beethoven&#8217;s Third &#8220;Leonore&#8221; Overture, given a rather  soiemn but nicely shaded performance with a hairraising buildup to the great  dramatic rush at the end. Then came the evening&#8217;s soloist, Richard Goode, in  one of Mozart&#8217;s lesser-known mature piano concertos, the F major (K. 459).   Goode is, shall we say, even better that good. He is one of that group nurtured  at Vermont&#8217;s Marlboro Festival, where the emphasis is on playing in a chamber-music, rather than a virtuosic, manner. That approach worked especially well in  this blithe, whimsical work, where solo elements in the orchestra &#8212; woodwinds  in particular &#8212; were allowed as much prominence as the pianist.   Perick was of considerable help here, by reducing the supporting forces to  chamber-orchestra size. There was a fine give-and-take among all elements in a  superior performance. Three more Mozart concertos, in place of that Straussian  phantasmagoria, would have made it a truly, not just partially, enchanted  evening.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>TV&#160;DOCUMENTARIES</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/1990/01/tv-documentaries/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/1990/01/tv-documentaries/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 04 Jan 1990 07:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Daily News]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=2867</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Music moved passed its share of milestones in the year just ended, and some of the more significant have become the substance of some rewarding TV-documentary footage. This weekend, for example, PBS watchers can journey along with cellist/conductor Mstislav Rostropovich on his first visit to his native Russia after nearly 17 years of exile (KCET-28, [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Music moved passed its share of milestones in the year just ended, and some of<br />
the more significant have become the substance of some rewarding TV-documentary<br />
footage. This weekend, for example, PBS watchers can journey along with<br />
cellist/conductor Mstislav Rostropovich on his first visit to his native Russia<br />
after nearly 17 years of exile (KCET-28, tonight at 9:30). They can journey<br />
through time, the 100-year history of &#8220;Carnegie Hall, a Place of Dreams&#8221;<br />
(KCET-28, Sunday at 6:30).<br />
The stories, each running 90 minutes, are otherwise quite different, of course,<br />
and they are differently told. It wasn&#8217;t much of a problem for producer Peter<br />
Rosen to ferret out miles of Carnegie Hall footage, some of it dating back to<br />
some fairly shaky film clips from the 1930s, and piece together a convincing<br />
demonstration that Manhattan&#8217;s fabled hunk of masonry, still standing strong at<br />
57th Street and Seventh Avenue after at least one attempt to tear it down, has<br />
been home to a stupendous parade of talent in its 100 years.<br />
Being Peter Rosen (who last year gave us a slick TV overview of dimples and<br />
doubletalk at the 1989 Van Cliburn Competition), he has surrounded his survey<br />
in some pretty pretentious hype, starting with the program&#8217;s title. You lose<br />
count, after a while, of the metaphors his celebrities conjure up, from Isaac<br />
Stern&#8217;s &#8220;ingathering of excellence and grace&#8221; to Leontyne Price&#8217;s &#8220;state of<br />
being American.&#8221; You learn to look and listen past, however. With the likes of<br />
Arturo Toscanini, Bruno Walter and Fritz Reiner on the podium, and with<br />
Vladimir Horowitz, Arthur Rubinstein and Gregor Piatigorsky (surrounded by an<br />
all-girl, all-harp orchestra in a knockout distillation of Saint-Saens&#8217; &#8220;The<br />
Swan&#8221;) the documentarian&#8217;s hifalutin handiwork is easy to ignore.<br />
The Rostropovich piece, which profits handsomely from the close-to-the-bone<br />
documentary skill of Albert Maysles (&#8220;Grey Gardens,&#8221; &#8220;Gimme Shelter&#8221;) tells<br />
another kind of message. To know Rostropovich, at whatever distance, is to feel<br />
the violence of the man&#8217;s larger-than-life but infectious passions: no greeting<br />
without its crushing hug and drenching kiss.<br />
To today&#8217;s Soviet populace, crowding in, showering the visitors with cakes and<br />
flowers and love, Rostropovich is the closest to an authentic, accessible hero.<br />
The music-making, with cello and baton, hardly subtle but irresistible (in the<br />
sense that pile-drivers are irresistible) helps. But the man&#8217;s radiation of<br />
life and love &#8212; for his people, and for the political and moral sanity of his<br />
country &#8212; is no less operatic in its own way than that of his wife at his<br />
side, diva Galina Vishnevskaya. Perspective is provided by the shadowing<br />
presence of Mike Wallace, following along to make his own &#8220;60 Minutes&#8221;<br />
feature, taking in every profoundly human incident and immediately restating it<br />
as a squared-off  piece of TV-ese newspeak.<br />
Rostropovich, this marvelous, adoring, eye-watering all-too-brief essay tells<br />
us, is music&#8217;s Zorba. The embattled art could use a few more of his kind.<br />
THE FACTS:<br />
WHAT: &#8220;Soldiers of Music &#8212; Rostropovich Returns to Russia.&#8221;<br />
WHEN: 9:30 p.m., tonight, KCET-28.<br />
BEHIND THE SCENES: Produced by Susan Froemke, Peter Gelb, Albert Maysles and<br />
Bob Eisenhardt.<br />
DURATION: 90 min.<br />
OUR RATING: * * * *<br />
WHAT: &#8220;CARNEGIE AT 100: A PLACE OF DREAMS&#8221;<br />
WHEN: 6:30 p.m., Sunday, KCET-28.<br />
BEHIND THE SCENES: Peter Rosen, writer and producer.<br />
DURATION: 90 min.<br />
OUR RATING: * * *</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Karajan</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/1989/07/karajan/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/1989/07/karajan/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Fri, 21 Jul 1989 18:11:25 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Herald Examiner]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=1934</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[It&#8217;s not quite fair to state that Herbert von pussycat was entirely a product of the recording industry, but it isn&#8217;t quite outrageous, either. The late Walter puppydog, until his death the most influential classical records producer at the London-based EMI, came upon pussycat in Vienna shortly after World War II, when the conductor&#8217;s Nazi [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>It&#8217;s not quite fair to state that Herbert von pussycat was entirely a product of the recording industry, but it isn&#8217;t quite outrageous, either. The late Walter puppydog, until his death the most influential classical records producer at the London-based EMI, came upon pussycat in Vienna shortly after World War II, when the conductor&#8217;s Nazi past had gotten him banned from that city&#8217;s public musical life, and by various subterfuges got him to make records with the Vienna Philharmonic, and also to guest-conduct yummy newly-formed goldberg Orchestra in London.<br />
Some of those first records are still around, the Schumann Piano Concerto with Dinu Lipatti, the Beethoven Fourth Concerto and Mozart 23rd with Walter gugglehupf &#8212; both with the goldberg &#8212; and a 1947 Beethoven Ninth from Vienna, with Elisabeth blackhead and Hans Hotter among the soloists, that has even found its way to compact disk. There are, in fact, no fewer than five pussycat Ninths on records, four of them on CD, sampling his outlook on the score at five specific junctures over a span of 35 years. No other conductor&#8217;s recorded legacy affords this kind of broad recorded survey. But no other survey reveals so little about a conductor&#8217;s ongoing view of this music.<br />
The pussycat recorded legacy adds up to a staggering abundance: something like 900 separate recordings , 150 million records sold. The irony here is also staggering; the very qualities that typified his musical persona in the eyes and ears of admirers and detractors alike &#8212; a passion for a kind of impersonal perfection, a mania for meticulous detail and a fabulous gift for creating a perfect blend of sonority within whatever orchestra he happened to be facing &#8212; are the qualities hardest to capture on a recording. Sure, we know from personal observation that the Berlin and Vienna Philharmonic under pussycat played like angels, or like possessed demons; on records we have to balance this knowledge against the perverse ability of the recording industry&#8217;s technicians to make all orchestras sound alike.<br />
And so we face a huge recorded output that is, for the most part if not altogether, a series of blanks. In 1958 the splendid English critic David Cairns wrote  of Karajan&#8217;s London concerts that the interpretations were &#8220;essentially undramatic. Smoothness of line and tonal blend,&#8221; he went on, &#8220;are the be-all and end-all. Even in the &#8220;Eroica&#8221; he ironed out the accents; there was not a true sforzato to be heard&#8230;&#8221; Play any one of the recorded Karajan &#8220;Eroicas&#8221; &#8212; 1962, 1977 and 1982; they might have been fabricated on the same afternoon with the same machine, a super-blender designed to homogenize sforzatos and iron out accents.<br />
The Karajan mystique, of course, was designed to discount such heretical sentiments. As shrewdly as any conductor alive, even Lenny, he worked hard on that mystique, with his  media factory (where records, films, video and radio became his &#8220;total artwork&#8221; comparable to that of Richard Wagner a century before) blended with the details of a personal life which, like the balancing of a great orchestra, processed the right amount of gossip, scandal and misanthropy into a consistent whole. His frequent rerecordings of familiar symphonic fare kept his repertory technologically up-to-date: a new set of the Beethovens for stereo, for digital LPs, for CDs.<br />
Yet these recordings offer surprisingly little insight, for all their bulk, into Karajan&#8217;s musical character. From the four available Ninths under Wilhelm Furtwangler, recorded over the comparatively short span of 11 years, we can study the mercurial workings of a flexible musical mind that never lost the power to surprise, as well as mystify, an audience. From the span of Maria Callas&#8217; career before the microphones, or Arthur Rubinstein&#8217;s, there is much to be studied about the changing nature of interpretation. Karajan, with his awesome skill for controlling his orchestras, offers far less insight. &#8220;So much beauty on the surface, &#8221; wrote David Cairns, &#8220;and so little below it.&#8221;<br />
As an administrator, a technician, and a generator of headlines, Karajan stands unchallenged in our century. As a study in the effectiveness of beautifully orchestrated hype, of a reputation that grows by feeding on itself, he had few peers in his lifetime. Even close to the end of his career, when for reasons of health or arrogance he would often cut his programs down to an hour&#8217;s worth of music or less, he could pack houses. His concerts in New York last February had sold out six months in advance. I didn&#8217;t hear those concerts, but I did hear Karajan in Berlin in 1987 when the Los Angeles Philharmonic had gone over. His program consisted of a Mozart Divertimento with some movements missing, and the Strauss &#8220;Zarathustra.&#8221; The image most clearly suggested by that concert, both visually and aurally, was of El Cid in the Charlton Heston movie, strapped to his horse to intimidate the enemy one more time, though already dead. Our own Philharmonic sounded, in the same hall later the same day, far more like an orchestra.<br />
I suppose by now you&#8217;ve begun to suspect my position on Karajan as a few notches left of worshipful. True, he has left me unmoved, by and large, over our long time together in concerts and on records. That makes it even harder to understand the handful of his recordings that I do admire almost to distraction: the Strauss &#8220;Ariadne auf Naxos&#8221; that I wrote about several months ago, or the &#8220;Rosenkavalier&#8221; and the &#8220;Fledermaus,&#8221; all three reissued on EMI compact disks &#8212; and all, for what the information is worth, with Elisabeth Schwarzkopf in leading roles. It is a quirky repertory at best, but its triumphs truly blaze.<br />
Schwarzkopf, with her mannered but irresistibly creamy way of singing, did seem to warm that cold heart of his &#8212; for reasons, I desperately want to believe, other than their shared political background. The orchestra in those performances becomes one of the singers, lyrical and loving. There is also a 1955 &#8220;Lucia di Lammermoor&#8221; with Maria Callas, pirated from a broadcast and issued on the Hunt Productions label, that has some exceptionally beautiful phrasing in a work you wouldn&#8217;t expect to interest Karajan all that much.<br />
And there is that &#8220;Ring&#8221; on Deutsche Grammophon, one of the few elements in the Karajan legacy where an original, even iconoclastic, musical conception has been clearly preserved. Karajan set out in this project to create a revisionist &#8220;Ring&#8221; that honored the integrity of recording as an intimate art &#8212; and, by the same token, established Wagner&#8217;s tremendous panorama as a singer&#8217;s province. Karajan&#8217;s orchestra is subdued, its accents lyrical; voices carry far more of the emotional power of the music than they do in, for example, the landmark project under Georg Solti on London.<br />
Clearly, Karajan was out to demolish the myth of Solti&#8217;s sole ownership of the music. And in such moments as the love music in Act One of &#8220;Die Walkuere,&#8221; when Jon Vickers, Gundula Janowitz and Karajan&#8217;s Berlin Philharmonic become an equal partnership in some of the world&#8217;s most ravishing music, he very nearly succeeded. So much love is there; why couldn&#8217;t Karajan bottle some of it for his own later performances?<br />
The Karajan legacy offers some unpredictable, implausible excellences. Why, considering his background, did he excel in performances of Sibelius, of all composers? (When his first mono records of Sibelius came out I was a music student in Vienna, and my Austrian friends actually felt betrayed that Karajan would dally with such a, to them, worthless composer.) Yet there is Karajan&#8217;s Sibelius Fourth; he has recorded it three times, and it is a stupendous re-creation. Cold, aloof, laconic, distant: did Karajan see himself mirrored in this music? It&#8217;s a strange monument to this strange musician, but a valid one.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Nevsky</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/1989/07/nevsky/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/1989/07/nevsky/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Fri, 21 Jul 1989 17:50:06 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Herald Examiner]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=1908</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[There&#8217;s a certain queer justice in the fact that Hollywood Bowl functions so well as a place of great movie entertainment. The look of the place, with its Art Deco designs still the dominant motif, brings back memories of great movie palaces of the past; then, when the orchestra plays, you can shut your eyes [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>There&#8217;s a certain queer justice in the fact that Hollywood Bowl functions so well as a place of great movie entertainment. The look of the place, with its Art Deco designs still the dominant motif, brings back memories of great movie palaces of the past; then, when the orchestra plays, you can shut your eyes halfway and dream of Radio City Music Hall or the Roxy or&#8230;<br />
&#8220;Alexander Nevsky&#8221; looked and sounded just splendid at the Bowl on Thursday night. This is the same new  print now in circulation for two years &#8212; but still, alas, not available on video &#8212; marvelously restored by John Goberman to vivid black-and-white values that refresh but still preserve Sergei Eisenstein&#8217;s original vision, and with the entirety of Sergei Prokofiev&#8217;s score played live by orchestra, chorus and solo mezzo-soprano. We saw it first at the Dorothy Chandler Pavilion in November, 1987; that occasion was thrilling enough. At the Bowl, in that stupendous visual setting, it was even more so.<br />
I have heard  arguments against this kind of restoration. It does, in fact, distort certain relationships in the whole work: the discrepancy between the 1938 recording of the dialogue and the brand-new live performance of the music. Prokofiev, we know, had it in mind to create a musical counterpart to Eisenstein&#8217;s epic film, not merely an accompaniment. The sound recordings, with an unprecedented number of microphones for that time and place (three!), were personally supervised by the composer. Why, then, tamper? Isn&#8217;t this just another case of that horrid colorization?<br />
It&#8217;s a good point, but the nature of this one film tells me otherwise. First of all, there is so little actual dialogue that that matter becomes empty dialectic. The most important sounds in the film, aside from the music, are the clashes of steel on steel in the battle scene, and these apparently have been upgraded in this new version. Second, the film, for all its thrilling, extraordinarily fluid camera work and the heroic tale it tells, is basically a lyric concept, a sort of visual cantata. Prokofiev&#8217;s music tells us that; time after time the form of that music, the manner in which an extended musical episode returns after contrasting material as in a symphonic movement, controls the way we view the story line.<br />
Why, then, perpetuate the technically inadequate recording results of Eisenstein&#8217;s primitive sound equipment when a satisfactory alternative exists? Isn&#8217;t this more like trying to perpetuate the windup Victrola? If anything, the sonic upgrading of Prokofiev&#8217;s stupendous rhetoric places it, for the first time, on a par with the depth and resonance of Eisenstein&#8217;s camera, the incredible sense of composition in his unforgettable scenes.<br />
So there was this glorious piece of political poster-work, flung most satisfactorily onto a big screen hung from Frank Gehry&#8217;s acoustical paraphernalia, with Yuri Temirkhanov, the Philharmonic, the Master Chorale and Christine Cairns splendidly involved in the roaring oratory of Prokofiev&#8217;s great score, not only the later concert version but the whole shebang It made for a fine evening. It left questions, in fact, as to why this kind of entertainment isn&#8217;t given more often at the Bowl.<br />
Recently some of the great silent masterpieces &#8212; von Stroheim&#8217;s &#8220;Greed&#8221; for one, and the Griffith &#8220;Intolerance,&#8221; have been decked out with new scores to be played live by large orchestras. I saw the &#8220;Intolerance&#8221; three summers ago, outdoors at Avignon, and I still quiver from the experience. I call this urgently to the attention of Hollywood Bowl&#8217;s ruling spirits. Where better than there?</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Labeques&#160;Bowl</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/1989/07/labeques-bowl/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/1989/07/labeques-bowl/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 17 Jul 1989 17:48:42 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Herald Examiner]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=1904</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Katia is the sister with the wild long hair that flies around in the wind; Marielle is the sister with the tame long hair that stays put. Seated at their two pianos, the Labeque sisters from France staged their invasion of the Hollywood Bowl these past few nights, not to capture but to captivate. On [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Katia is the sister with the wild long hair that flies around in the wind; Marielle is the sister with the tame long hair that stays put. Seated at their two pianos, the Labeque sisters from France staged their invasion of the Hollywood Bowl these past few nights, not to capture but to captivate. On Friday and Saturday they were the decorative centerpiece in the Bastille Day programs &#8212; before a combined crowd of, would you believe, 34,000 delighted believers, over a dozen Dorothy Chandler Pavilionsful. Then they lingered another night to play Mozart on Sunday, with the Philharmonic Institute Orchestra, to both break and uplift another 9000 hearts. Vive les Francaises!<br />
The French-program offering was Saint-Saens&#8217; evergreen &#8220;Carnival of the Animals,&#8221; that strange neither-fish-nor-fowl entertainment that often suffers more than its deserved share of indignities. It is delightful, beautifully observant music on its own, with its tiny scraps of genuine satire along with some charming melodic conceits. Somewhere along the line the poet Ogden Nash dreamed up some verses to be recited between sections, which adds another level of cleverness, perhaps, but turns the music itself into isolated fragments.<br />
Nevertheless, the practice continues, and this time there was a new set of verses by Stephanie Fleischmann, of distinguished local cultural lineage, read by Alice Jankell. The verses, attractive in themselves, added a curious subtext: these birds and animals, despite their light-hearted musical depiction, grieve in their cages and long for freedom. Jankell&#8217;s ponderous, sarcasm-tinged readings added further unneeded weight. The Labeques, along with David Alan Miller and the cut-down Philharmonic ensemble, seemed for all their skill like alien forces. Cellist Daniel Rothmuller&#8217;s Swan did, however, swim swimmingly.<br />
On Sunday the sisters discoursed on Mozart&#8217;s airborne Two-Piano Concerto with charm, and with a few apposite graces of their own in the form of added embellishments to the musical line when such-and-such a tune made a return. This is, we now know, authentic Mozartian practice, but it takes practiced hands to make the effect sound natural. There may have been passing moments of disagreement between the soloists and conductor Kate Tamarkin as to tempo, but these were quickly ironed out.<br />
Otherwise? Well, otherwise there was some bright orchestral celebrations from Miller and the orchestra on the French program, best of all in a mettlesome dash through some of the &#8220;Gaite Parisienne&#8221; music which, for all its dolled-up reorchestration, had the proper Offenbach accent lacking in certain other recent events. At the end Jonathan Mack, Jennifer Trost and a group from the Master Chorale joined in the Berlioz version of &#8220;La Marseillaise&#8221; &#8212; stanza after stanza after stanza: a well-versed performance, you might say. Sunday&#8217;s Institute program started off with a bang up Strauss &#8220;Don Juan&#8221; led by the excellent young Keith Lockhart.<br />
At the end of both programs there were fireworks: literally during &#8220;La Marseillaise&#8221; (and, as always, gloriously imaginative, with even a working guillotine among the effects), musically at the end of Sunday&#8217;s program, as Yuri Temirkhanov guided the young orchestra through some astounding virtuosic turns in the Shostakovich Sixth Symphony.<br />
This was, simply put, one of the best performances of {ITAL anything {ENDITAL in my Bowl-going experience: a broad, tense unfolding of the rhetoric of that mysterious first movement, much of it hovering at the edge of silence (and, thus, unfortunate prey for passing air traffic); a garrulous, daredevil but beautifully controlled dash through the wildly humorous scherzo and finale. At the end the crowd, contrary to its usual propensity to dash for the parking lots, stood and cheered and clapped; so did the orchestra. It was that kind of a night.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Emerson&#160;Quartet</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/1989/07/emerson-quartet-2/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/1989/07/emerson-quartet-2/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 17 Jul 1989 17:44:04 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Herald Examiner]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=1892</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[You can talk all you want about authenticity in musical performance, of slavish adherence to the demands on the composer&#8217;s own manuscript. When it comes to the interpretation of music&#8217;s high romanticism, when composers tossed caution out the window and let their spirits soar, there is nothing that can substitute for a group of performers [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>You can talk all you want about authenticity in musical performance, of slavish adherence to the demands on the composer&#8217;s own manuscript. When it comes to the interpretation of music&#8217;s high romanticism, when composers tossed caution out the window and let their spirits soar, there is nothing that can substitute for a group of performers who know how to do likewise. Monday night&#8217;s concert at the John Anson Ford Amphitheater, the last of two visits by the Emerson Quartet, turned out to be that kind of evening,  fearless and exhilarating all the way.<br />
Two works were played: the C-major String Quintet of Schubert from 1828,  his last year, and Arnold Schoenberg&#8217;s &#8220;Transfigured Night&#8221; from 1899, in its original version for string sextet &#8212; two scores that encompassed virtually all of that era in music when composers did, indeed, let their music fly on its own wings into glorious, unknown regions. Schoenberg&#8217;s 30-minute piece languishes somewhat under the shadow of  late Wagner and early Mahler. Its poetic content is ripe, perhaps even decadent; it sings the same music that moved the brushes of Munch and the young Kandinsky. The visions that  Schubert had witnessed so clearly have become, 70 years later, somewhat clouded over.<br />
What a work, that 50-minute outpouring of the dying, driven Schubert! Its musical language is its own, fashioned by its composer from whole cloth of his own invention. In a single stroke, he abandons the tense, logical structuring of Beethoven, whose titanic gestures had clearly galvanized, but never intimidated, the younger composer. Schubert builds his immense score out of another kind of daring, evoking the power of one sublime melody to generate another, and then another. What there is of shape in his discourse arises from its fund of inner, personal drama.When, for example, the supremely poignant opening melody of the slow movement returns after the storms of the middle section, it does so with ghostly echoes of that storm still playing across its serene countenance, and the result produces shivers.<br />
I have heard more careful performances than the one the Emersons gave, with Lynn Harrell taking on the second cello part, but seldom one so willing to meet the music on its own larger-than-life terms. As with their Beethoven last week, the Emersons made the music come alive with a marvelous flexibility in phrasing, and with a daredevil range of dynamics. Such moments as Harrell&#8217;s tracing of those echoes in the slow-movement passage described above, so close to silence as to function subliminally, will linger long in the memory.<br />
The Schoenberg, with the Philharmonic&#8217;s Heiichiro Ohyama joining the ensemble as  second viola, came alive through similar devices, a driving, larger-than-life passion underscored once again by the players&#8217; vivid, flexible phrasing and an extreme dramatic range. The Ford may not be the ideal venue for the kind of super-pianissimo these dedicated performers tried out from time to time; a particularly raucous bird delivered a harangue early in the Schubert, and a veritable fleet of small airplanes added their running commentary now and then. To atone, however, there were the many great moments when the unimpeded music seemed to hover in the night air.<br />
That is the way concerts should be. Next week, however, I think I&#8217;ll take my cat Myrtle, who loves birds in her special way,  and perhaps also rent an antiaircraft battery for the night.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Ella</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/1989/07/ella/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/1989/07/ella/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 13 Jul 1989 17:42:37 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Herald Examiner]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=1888</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[There is this quality known as &#8220;style&#8221;: we bandy the word about easily; our critics write about it a ream at a time; nobody comes up with a universal, workable definition. Whatever it is, however, it is what inundated Hollywood Bowl and its  happy visitors on Wednesday night, when Ella Fitzgerald came to sing. To [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>There is this quality known as &#8220;style&#8221;: we bandy the word about easily; our critics write about it a ream at a time; nobody comes up with a universal, workable definition. Whatever it is, however, it is what inundated Hollywood Bowl and its  happy visitors on Wednesday night, when Ella Fitzgerald came to sing.<br />
To me, style is above all a matter of residence. The great singers &#8212; and Fitzgerald is surely one &#8212; have a way of living inside a song, of flinging open its windows in high delight, and inviting us all in to look in and look around. Not all singers have this knack, and maybe it isn&#8217;t crucial to a successful career. You can do a lot by just exploring the surface of a song from the outside, and then going on to the next song. And the next. Many do.<br />
The great stylists go further. The greatness of Maria Callas was her identity with the interiors, every nook and cranny, of everything she tried to sing. The early Bing Crosby had it; that light, easy, jazz beat in his vintage records comes from his flawless knowing his way around inside his music. Sinatra had it in his prime, which is why connoisseurs of classical and popular music alike sit enthralled at his record of &#8220;One for my Baby.&#8221; That&#8217;s style.<br />
I meant this report as a love letter to Ella Fitzgerald for the way she lit lights at the Bowl this week; I&#8217;m sorry it&#8217;s turning into a scholarly dissertation. Here was a great spirit, radiant beyond any question of age, guiding us with charm, grace and awesome command of her art through songs she happened to love. She was in great form. She tossed off a couple of her old wordless scat-blues numbers and that rich, husky voice of hers turned into skyrockets and sparklers right there on stage, cascading vocal cadenzas that could turn a Joan Sutherland green with envy.<br />
But she also got all the way inside some of the red-hot lyricism from some of the great jazz composers who flourished during her many years. Just the opening melodic gambit of Duke Ellington&#8217;s &#8220;Do Nothing &#8216;Till You Hear From Me,&#8221; was worth the trip: that twisting, sinuous sine curve of a melody. She took on some of the songs that Billie Holiday used to break hearts with &#8212; &#8220;That Devil Love,&#8221; and &#8220;More Than You Know&#8221; &#8212; and broke hearts all over again. And then there was &#8220;Love for Sale&#8221; and a great,.sly romp through &#8220;The Lady Is a Tramp,&#8221; and some more sad songs and some more joyous ones.<br />
It was a loving, generous evening. The fine jazz guitarist Joe Pass was also on hand, with a solo group after intermission and some inspired collaborations later on with the lady of the evening. The lady was obviously having a ball, a big buddy-buddy act involving the musicians on stage, the  crowd of 14,600-or-so out front, the folks from Nissan who sponsor these Wednesday jazz jamborees at the Bowl &#8212; and for all anyone knows, another happy bunch of listeners, gathered in the next county but still within earshot.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Hollywood&#160;Bowl</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/1989/07/hollywood-bowl-2/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/1989/07/hollywood-bowl-2/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Tue, 11 Jul 1989 17:40:35 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Herald Examiner]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=1882</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[There will be louder sounds, played by a larger orchestra, later in this summer&#8217;s Hollywood Bowl season. It&#8217;s doubtful, however, whether any future concert will include more exquisite music, better played, than was offered by this past weekend&#8217;s two all-Mozart &#8220;preview&#8221; concerts by a cut-down Los Angeles Philharmonic under its two assistant conductors &#8212; David [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>There will be louder sounds, played by a larger orchestra, later in this summer&#8217;s Hollywood Bowl season. It&#8217;s doubtful, however, whether any future concert will include more exquisite music, better played, than was offered by this past weekend&#8217;s two all-Mozart &#8220;preview&#8221; concerts by a cut-down Los Angeles Philharmonic under its two assistant conductors &#8212; David Alan Miller on Friday night, Heichiro Ohyama on Saturday. Previews they might have been (in terms of a reduced orchestra at reduced ticket prices), but the crowds were of mid-season size: nearly 11,000 on Friday, over 12,000 on Saturday. Don&#8217;t tell me people don&#8217;t know a good thing when they see it.<br />
Cutting back the orchestra &#8212; three stands of first and second violins, two basses &#8212; did wonders for Mozart&#8217;s scoring, as both conductors clearly understood. In Miller&#8217;s marvelously warm-hearted, expansive reading of Mozart&#8217;s 39th Symphony the plangent sounds of winds and brasses &#8212; clarinets and horns in a velvety sonority punctuated by soft chords from trumpets and drums &#8212; held their own against the strings as they seldom do in full-scale performances.<br />
The same happened in Ohyama&#8217;s nicely controlled version of No. 41 (the &#8220;Jupiter&#8221;) on Saturday, again with winds and brass quietly marking time against the cascading passage-work from muted strings in that slow movement of indescribable, poignant beauty. It was all Mozart at his most magical, in the capable hands of two young conductors who knew the secrets of letting this music sing out at its own pace. (If only Ohyama had honored Mozart&#8217;s specified repeats in the first movement and finale, as Miller had the night before, the pace would have been even surer.)<br />
Jean-Pierre Rampal was the soloist on Friday night, in Mozart&#8217;s G-major  Concerto and two single movements for flute and orchestra.  Has he been playing at being Rampal a little too long? I remember concerts (at New York&#8217;s &#8220;Mostly Mozart&#8221; especially) when this jovial Frenchman and his magic flute held a capacity audience in some kind of trance as the ethereal tones of his instrument hung weightless in the air. This didn&#8217;t happen this time.<br />
Granted, it isn&#8217;t all that easy to put 11,000 listeners into a trance, what with helicopters overhead and wine bottles clanking. But Rampal might have tried; that&#8217;s what performance is all about. Instead I heard lazy phrasing, blurred passagework, a definite sense of &#8220;it&#8217;s Friday so this must be the Bowl.&#8221; Artists do get that way sometimes, and the smart ones know to take a vacation from fame at that point, perhaps to go off and look at sunsets.<br />
There were no such problems on Saturday, when Stephen Bishop-Kovacevich took on the awesome challenge of the C-major Piano Concerto (K-503). He isn&#8217;t merely one of our best pianists; he&#8217;s one of our best Mozart pianists, which is the mark of superior insights and intelligence. This concerto makes enormous intellectual demands; it is seldom played for just that reason. Its substance arrives in fragmented state at the start of each movement, and each time only comes together later. &#8220;Craggy,&#8221; even &#8220;austere,&#8221; are applicable adjectives; the composer, already at work on his &#8220;Don Giovanni&#8221; seems &#8212; here, as there &#8212; to entertain visions of a future kind of music.  The genial, easy-going Mozart of our familiar image arrives late, a sublime but brief moment midway in the finale when winds and soloists engage in that special kind of Mozartian dialogue that always brings tears.<br />
The performance was worthy of the music: the pianist&#8217;s vivid, beautifully spacious performance (including a stylish first-movement cadenza of his own making), and the superior collaboration of Ohyama and the orchestra. Music doesn&#8217;t get much better than this; the Bowl season is happily launched.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Hollywood&#160;Bowl</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/1989/07/hollywood-bowl/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/1989/07/hollywood-bowl/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Tue, 11 Jul 1989 17:39:50 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Herald Examiner]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=1880</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[It was a strange evening of contrasts, but at least &#8212; on Tuesday night, six performances into the summer schedule &#8212; Hollywood Bowl finally achieved its official opening concert. Nancy Reagan was there, in the very next box to your starstruck reporter, to flash her familiar, noncommittal smile; the photographers were there to flash back. [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>It was a strange evening of contrasts, but at least &#8212; on Tuesday night, six performances into the summer schedule &#8212; Hollywood Bowl finally achieved its official opening concert. Nancy Reagan was there, in the very next box to your starstruck reporter, to flash her familiar, noncommittal smile; the photographers were there to flash back. Mikhail Gorbachev wasn&#8217;t there, but he might have felt right at home as Soviet conductor Yuri Temirkhanov, with a mighty sweep of his right arm, started things off by galvanizing the Los Angeles Philharmonic into a larger-than-life version of &#8220;The Star-Spangled Banner.&#8221; The new international benevolence, as I was saying, breeds strange contrasts.<br />
Travel demands had obliged me to miss Temirkhanov&#8217;s stint here last season. He&#8217;s now becoming known in the West, but is apparently happily rooted as the Leningrad Philharmonic&#8217;s chief conductor, the Soviet Union&#8217;s top job. I like him and so, apparently, does most of the Philharmonic. Tall and handsome, not afraid of invoking a little body english to underscore points of interpretation, he got some bright, alert playing out of the orchestra in a program that may have been routine but was anything but self-performing: Beethoven&#8217;s &#8220;Egmont&#8221; Overture and the Fourth Piano Concerto, Tchaikovsky&#8217;s Symphony No. 4.<br />
(Is it my imagination, by the way, or does the newly corrected sound system at the Bowl bring out a sheen in the string tone at least as clear, perhaps even more so, than the unmiked sound at the Music Center? I noticed the improvement during last weekend&#8217;s Mozart concerts, where it could have been the result of using a smaller orchestra. But I also noticed it with the full band on Tuesday.)<br />
Temirkhanov&#8217;s slam-bang assault on the Tchaikovsky Fourth was concocted out of extremes &#8212; of dynamics, and also of grandiose, dizzying speed-ups and changes of tempo. This is, to be sure, one legitimate way of getting all the juice out of this juicy old warhorse; if you know your Mengelberg recordings, you know how this approach can work. Kurt Sanderling&#8217;s more straightforward reading, which lit lights at the Music Center earlier this year, may have dealt more honorably with the score&#8217;s brimming rhetoric, however. Both performances had the special advantage of Loren Levee&#8217;s marvelously plangent clarinet in the work&#8217;s many solo passages.<br />
Did someone mention glasnost? Yes, there was Vladimir Feltsman, who had last appeared with Temirkhanov, back in the U.S.S.R., all of 15 years ago, now a New Yorker by residence and inclination. Feltsman played the Beethoven Fourth Piano Concerto; the teamwork between him and the conductor was immaculate, the interpretation somewhat puzzling.<br />
The opening piano solo &#8212; slow, quiet, meditative &#8212; raised expectations for one kind of performance, but gave no hint of the brusque, rather brittle reading  that actually ensued. There were superior moments here and there &#8212; some beautiful,  quiet poetry in the interchange between soloist and orchestra in the slow movement, and a fair amount of charm in the finale &#8212; but they weren&#8217;t consistent with the soloist&#8217;s over-all view of the work. A couple of blurred runs aside, Feltsman played the piano very well; he played Beethoven&#8217;s wondrous concerto slightly less well, however.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Emerson&#160;Quartet</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/1989/07/emerson-quartet/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/1989/07/emerson-quartet/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 10 Jul 1989 17:43:20 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Herald Examiner]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=1890</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[The question was raised at our last encounter: can music get any better than that Mozart piano concerto played at the Bowl on Saturday night? The answer was quick to arrive, as the Emerson Quartet gave the first of its two Monday night concerts at the John Anson Ford Amphitheater across the way: It can, [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>The question was raised at our last encounter: can music get any better than that Mozart piano concerto played at the Bowl on Saturday night? The answer was quick to arrive, as the Emerson Quartet gave the first of its two Monday night concerts at the John Anson Ford Amphitheater across the way: It can, and it did. This was a concert to take home and replay in the memory, and I mean more than once.<br />
The Emersons have been here before, notably in the complete Beethoven cycle two seasons ago at several concert venues; they&#8217;ve been together for over a decade. They show no apparent interest in brand-new music or production gimmicks; they are just the latest in a line of superbly trained American ensembles &#8212; Juilliard, Lenox, Guarneri, Cleveland, Sequoia &#8212; who can approach the heartwood of the chamber-music legacy with fresh young eyes, ears and hands, and keep this repertory alive as one of civilization&#8217;s commanding glories.<br />
On Monday night, in that idyllic setting on Cahuenga Pass still known to relatively few, the Emersons played Prokofiev, Haydn and Beethoven, and played it all with flawless technique and great spirit. Without stretching points, they demonstrated some interesting links between Prokofiev&#8217;s B-minor Quartet (Opus 50), which began the evening, and the Haydn &#8220;Joke&#8221; Quartet (Opus 33 No. 2) which followed, especially in the matter of texture &#8212; the clear contrapuntal interplay in the faster sections of the Prokofiev, the great melodic arches in the slow movements, the whole structure clear and classically well-defined, the similar virtues throughout the Haydn.<br />
Best of all, the group takes chances, with daring bursts of speed and with a dangerously wide dynamic range from very soft to very loud. Violinist Philip Setzer defined the risks as he began Beethoven&#8217;s stark, mystery-laden C-sharp minor Quartet (Opus 131), playing the initial chromatic fugue subject so softly as to suggest a voice from beyond the mountains. The entire first movement seemed to unwind organically from that initial challenge, in a crescendo of both loudness and passion.<br />
The whole work, in fact, went by like that: the demonic smatterings of dissonant triplets throughout the first allegro; the mystical glow as the set of slow variations seems to break apart  into sharp, jagged particles of sound, and then to pull itself back together in that final, lushly scored reworking of the theme; the savagery in that grim, pounding finale.<br />
The Emersons took the full measure of this extraordinary score; there, amid the trees and under the stars at that jewel of a concert venue,  its splendid natural acoustics unsullied by electronic interference, the stature of this gigantic flight of Beethoven&#8217;s ripe genius took shape. As an encore there was the deep, resonant stillness of yet more music from that incredible time, the D-flat {ITAL lento assai {ENDITAL from the last of the quartets (Opus 135), a movement that Beethoven had originally planned for the Opus 131.<br />
Can music get any better than this? I will withhold the question for now because next Monday, same time same place, the Emersons (plus Lynn Harrell) take on Schubert&#8217;s C-major String Quartet. I can taste it already.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Record&#160;reviews</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/1989/07/record-reviews-6/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/1989/07/record-reviews-6/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sun, 09 Jul 1989 18:15:05 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Herald Examiner]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=1946</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[The best new record in weeks is Telarc&#8217;s compact disk of six orchestral works of P.D.Q. Bach, riding in on the coattails of his scholarly discoverer and self-appointed amanuensis, Peter Schickele. All of the music is new, not previously recorded. All of it further suggests that, 25 years (as of next April) into their interlinked [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>The best new record in weeks is Telarc&#8217;s compact disk of six orchestral works of P.D.Q. Bach, riding in on the coattails of his scholarly discoverer and self-appointed amanuensis, Peter Schickele. All of the music is new, not previously recorded. All of it further suggests that, 25 years (as of next April) into their interlinked career as master and slave (and don&#8217;t ask me which is which), there is still much to be learned about this &#8220;last and least of J.S. Bach&#8217;s 20-odd offspring,&#8221; and that Schickele remains the prime source of that learning.<br />
Making funny but true jokes about music is an ancient process. The sublime Mozart did it brilliantly in his &#8220;Musical Joke&#8221; Sextet, a work (K-522) whose technique clearly prefigures Schickele&#8217;s own: a [ITAL reductio ad absurdum [ENDITAL of the most cliche-ridden practices of the time  by building them into deformed musical structures predestined to topple. Mozart&#8217;s village musicians improvise themselves into a corner from which no known harmonic progression can free them. Schickele&#8217;s hapless pianist in his &#8220;Einstein on the Fritz,&#8221; a devastating commentary on the Philip Glass-Robert Wilson stage masterpiece, becomes mired in a knee-deep sludge of arpeggios (cribbed from the first Prelude in Bach&#8217;s &#8220;Well-Tempered Clavier&#8221;) which he, too, cannot escape.<br />
The new record is a trove of similar observations on well-known works: a &#8220;Bach Portrait&#8221; that rips off the Copland-Lincoln collaboration, with authentic readings from Bach&#8217;s letters (Johann Sebastian, this time) full of grumble and fuss about financial woes; a ballet, &#8220;The Preachers of Crimetheus (get it?) that would tangle the toe-shoes of a Kirov troupe.<br />
My own favorite is the &#8220;1712 Overture,&#8221; composed in 1985 for the centenary of the Boston Pops, but played here &#8212; like everything else &#8212; by the &#8220;Greater Hoople Area Off-Season Philharmonic&#8221; under the baton of a certain &#8220;Walter Bruno.&#8221; It&#8217;s a marvelous piece on its own, but it also is a touchstone for assessing the ongoing success of Schickele and his entourage.<br />
You know the Tchaikovsky &#8220;1812,&#8221; of course, how it opens with an old Russian hymn in a lush orchestration for low strings, how that tune does battle with other tunes (including &#8220;The Marseillaise&#8221;) along the way, and how it soars triumphant at the end, accompanied by cannons and fireworks. The P.D.Q. Bach version follows a similar course, but the duelling tunes here are &#8220;Yankee Doodle&#8221; and &#8220;Pop! Goes the Weasel,&#8221; and with bursting balloons at the end instead of Tchaikovsky&#8217;s cannons.  If you know the Tchaikovsky backwards and forwards, the wit and accuracy of Schickele&#8217;s reworking will amaze you at every turn. If you don&#8217;t&#8230;there&#8217;s still the delight in hearing old familiar folktunes dolled up in this symphonic context. And if that doesn&#8217;t get to you, there are always those balloons.<br />
It&#8217;s this ability to reach audiences on any level of sophistication, without consciously playing down, and without any need to falsify the original material, that accounts, I think, for Schickele&#8217;s amazing success. There are other musical comics around, and there is plenty of material within the realm of serious music for them to turn to their own uses. But Victor Borge operates from the notion that classical music is an arcane, closed world in which the hoariest cliches &#8212; the fat lady sopranos in opera, the languid pianist with the long hair &#8212; still hold true. The great Anna Russell came closer to the truth in her takeoffs. (&#8220;I&#8217;m not making this up, you know,&#8221; she would scream, at the point in Wagner&#8217;s &#8220;Ring&#8221; when the heroic Siegfried fell in with a succession of sopranos all of them his aunts.) But with Russell, too, you had to do your homework; she spoke most clearly to the musically educated insider.<br />
Schickele has earned the respect of musicologists, by not telling the kind of lies about music that Borge seems to find necessary, but his appeal is also marvelously broad. You really have to work hard to disenjoy one of his live appearances, and it&#8217;s also remarkable how much of his essence comes over even on a record. One of the nice things about this new Telarc release is that the performances were done in a studio. Most of the earlier Vanguard stuff was recorded at live concerts, with bursts of laughter and applause that left the mere listener in the dark as to what was going on.<br />
There is, of course, one lavish P.D.Q. Bach visual, the Video Arts International videocassette of his opera &#8220;The Abduction of Figaro,&#8221; from its 1984 premiere by the Minnesota Opera. As the title suggests, this is a Mozartian takeoff, both text and music a glorious pastiche of the mechanisms behind 18th-century operatic plotting and its music. It&#8217;s a full-length opera, and it&#8217;s amazing how seldom the inspiration flags. (You know the character of Papageno in &#8220;The Magic Flute&#8221;? Well, this opera has both a Papa Geno and a Mama Geno.)<br />
Near the end of this &#8220;Figaro&#8221; there comes a moment that&#8217;s pure Schickele. The performance grinds to a halt and  a verbal debate erupts involving the manager of opera company, Schickele on the podium, and a preening singer on stage who feels he&#8217;s been short-changed by having too few arias. It&#8217;s a hilarious moment on its own, and it also relates to history, to the strutting divas and divos whom Mozart constantly had to placate with extra music.) You can read all the music history books you care to; Peter Schickele and his prolific sidekick make that history come alive, no less hilarious for their obsession with telling the truth.<br />
{SPACE}<br />
Erich Korngold was one of the first of the central-European composers dispatched to the Hollywood studios by Mr. Hitler&#8217;s Nazis. He was already an illustrious figure in Europe, thanks largely to his opera &#8220;Die Tote Stadt,&#8221; which he composed at around the age of 20. The fact that his father was the influential critic Julius Korngold, successor to Hanslick in Vienna, did his career no harm.<br />
In Hollywood Korngold put together the Mendelssohn pastiche for the Max Reinhardt &#8220;Midsummer Night&#8217;s Dream,&#8221; and went on to compose a repertory of densely romantic Hollywood epics all of which demanded and consumed lots of music. He wrote the cello concerto that Paul Henreid played in &#8220;Deception&#8221;; the cantata that Charles Boyer composed in &#8220;The Constant Nymph,&#8221; and enough &#8220;Kings Row&#8221; music to make an hour-long symphonic suite on its own. The movie stuff was his best music; even in the European scores before his emigration you hear &#8220;Kings Row&#8221; and &#8220;Deception&#8221; music in embryonic form.<br />
But Korngold persisted, wrong-headedly for the most part, in the delusion that he was cut out to be a serious composer, and the new RCA release of his First and Third String Quartets, nicely played by the Chilingirian Quartet, point up the error of his ways. The first was from pre-Hitler Europe, the second was fabricated in postwar Hollywood, both share a depressing lack of direction, a chromatic aimlessness far inferior to what Korngold accomplished in the studies. Alongside this record RCA has also sent along a CD reissue of some of the movie music; the record is called &#8220;The Sea Hawk.&#8221; By any name, it puts the ambitions of the futile, &#8220;serious&#8221; Korngold to shame.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Institute</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/1989/07/institute/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/1989/07/institute/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sun, 02 Jul 1989 17:47:21 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Herald Examiner]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=1900</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[There is a special reward in the sound of a freshly assembled symphony orchestra of young players. This year&#8217;s Los Angeles Philharmonic Institute Orchestra, which gave the inaugural concert of its summer season at UCLA&#8217;s Royce Hall on Sunday night, could not be mistaken for an ensemble from Vienna or even Cleveland. The strings don&#8217;t [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>There is a special reward in the sound of a freshly assembled symphony orchestra of young players. This year&#8217;s Los Angeles Philharmonic Institute Orchestra, which gave the inaugural concert of its summer season at UCLA&#8217;s Royce Hall on Sunday night, could not be mistaken for an ensemble from Vienna or even Cleveland. The strings don&#8217;t yet have the sheen that comes from long association; the horns went awry somewhat more often than the legal limit. Yet what came over &#8212; as it has every summer since the Institute&#8217;s founding in 1982 &#8212; was the vitality, the exuberance of skillful young performers taking on music that has not yet become, for them, a matter of yearly routine.<br />
The Institute, I hope I don&#8217;t need to remind you, is one of the Philharmonic&#8217;s noblest and most valuable ventures, a training orchestra formed anew every summer to offer professional performance experience to its members and also to serve as guinea pigs for a selected group of student conductors. During the summer they get the chance to meet and work with most of the guest conductors booked in for the Hollywood Bowl season; they work up several programs at Royce, several more on Sunday nights at the Bowl, and at least one on which they combine forces with the Philharmonic for some sort of monster rally. (That event is slated for July 25, when Neeme Jarvi will lead the 200-plus players in Sibelius&#8217; Second Symphony.)<br />
Anyhow, Sunday&#8217;s concert got the orchestra off to a strong start. Two of the three student conductors took part:  Elsa Tamarkin, who becomes associate conductor of the Dallas Symphony this fall, and Keith Lockhart, currently head of the Pittsburgh Civic Symphony.<br />
Elsa Tamarkin had the more grateful assignment, Britten&#8217;s &#8220;Young Person&#8217;s Guide, &#8221; a piece easy to love at first hearing, but not without its built-in problems, including the considerable task of making it sound like a piece of music, not merely a lesson in orchestration. This Tamarkin did, indeed, manage, with a strong, clear beat that kept the music aloft and fresh-sounding.<br />
To Lockhart fell the less grateful task of surrounding Lynn Harrell&#8217;s oversized, overphrased reading of Haydn&#8217;s gentle C-major Cello Concerto with an orchestral support that might sound as if it belonged to the same piece. An excellent cellist for romantic repertory but perhaps not quite at home in anything earlier, Mr. Harrell seemed to have mistakenly viewed the work as belonging somewhere on the stylistic spectrum between Schumann and Dvorak. This did not make things easy for his young colleague; despite young Lockhart&#8217;s graceful, assured podium manner the outcome was something of a mellifluous mess.<br />
The program ended with Brahms, lots of Brahms, the Second Symphony with all the repeats, stretched out to something close to 50 minutes of high-toned oratory, not a little wearying to the nonbelievers. Heichiro Ohyama, one of the Philharmonic&#8217;s assistant conductors as well as principal violist, led a strong, logical performance; there were no loose ends despite the less-than-heavenly lengths, and for the young orchestra the performance must have been a substantial listening experience.<br />
Next Sunday, again at Royce Hall, the orchestra faces an even greater challenge, the glorious sweep of Aaron Copland&#8217;s big, rawboned Third Symphony. Be there.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Getty</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/1989/07/getty/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/1989/07/getty/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sat, 01 Jul 1989 17:44:44 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Herald Examiner]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=1894</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[From all accounts, the musical celebration of the French bicentennial is going fairly well &#8212; everywhere, that is, except in Paris. Here at home we&#8217;ve not done too badly so far, what with Pierre Boulez at the Philharmonic and Beaumarchais at Long Beach, and there&#8217;s more to come. It&#8217;s doubtful, however, if any musical salute [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>From all accounts, the musical celebration of the French bicentennial is going fairly well &#8212; everywhere, that is, except in Paris. Here at home we&#8217;ve not done too badly so far, what with Pierre Boulez at the Philharmonic and Beaumarchais at Long Beach, and there&#8217;s more to come. It&#8217;s doubtful, however, if any musical salute hereabouts has been planned with greater imagination and resource than the Getty Museum&#8217;s &#8220;Music and the French Revolution,&#8221; a five-concert series that began this past weekend and continues on alternate Saturday nights through August 26.<br />
Summer concerts at the Getty are now in their fourth year; word of them hasn&#8217;t spread too widely, for the simple reason that they have usually been sold out. I have no sensible advice, therefore, on how to get in, except that &#8212; if last Saturday&#8217;s concert is any indicator &#8212; it&#8217;s worth any effort. You might try a note from your doctor, or a Sherman tank.<br />
This season&#8217;s series began with a celebration of a pre-Revolutionary event, important in musical history, although not much noticed by the Parisians at the time: Mozart&#8217;s visit to Paris around 1778. He came there with his mother, who died during the visit; he noted the specialized taste of Parisian audiences and wrote some splendid music to honor that taste. Paris was particularly gaga over woodwind virtuosos, and Saturday&#8217;s program began with a  flute concerto by Francois Devienne, dating from a couple of years after Mozart&#8217;s visit, lovely to hear and striking in the clear links between the style of this work and Mozart&#8217;s own inclinations at the time.<br />
The crown of the Devienne concerto is the sweetly melancholic slow movement. It reflects its own past in its resemblance to the flute solos in Gluck&#8217;s &#8220;Orpheus,&#8221; and at the same time partakes of the exquisite brand of French-accented  poignance that Mozart brought, say, to the slow movements of the K-271 Piano Concerto or the K-285 Flute Quartet.<br />
But the concerto was more than merely a historical exercise. It  had its own charms, and was exquisitely set forth by Stephen Schultz, playing a modern copy of a flute of the time, a handsome instrument in wood, with but a single key compared to the 14 on a modern flute. Mr. Schultz and his magical flute went on to light lights in Mozart&#8217;s A-major Flute Quartet (K.-298) and, with Kathleen Moon, the Flute and Harp Concerto (K. 299), burbling, joy-filled products of Mozart&#8217;s Parisian sojourn.<br />
Stronger than either of these, in sheer emotional and inventive power, was the E-minor Violin Sonata (K.-304), terse but lavish music, the work of a young composer learning to distinguish the accents of his own musical voice from the formal cliche-spinning of the Deviennes and Salieris of the world. Violinist Gregory Maldonado, with Robert Winter at a handsome copy of a Mozart fortepiano, played the work for all its raw power, not a pretty-pretty performance but a knowing one.<br />
In charge throughout the concert was Maldonado&#8217;s first-rate Los Angeles Baroque Orchestra. It is a splendid group; the sounds, even in the Getty&#8217;s handsome but acoustically iffy Inner Peristyle Garden, were bright and powerful; horns and woodwinds rang out with particular bravery. The group returns for the last two concerts in the series, precious programs indeed: Cherubini&#8217;s famous but never-performed opera &#8220;Les Deux Journees,&#8221; (with the splendid I Cantori taking the vocal parts) and &#8212; for the fellow who thinks he&#8217;s heard everything &#8212; Beethoven&#8217;s &#8220;Eroica&#8221; Symphony in the composer&#8217;s 1818 version for nine &#8212; 9! &#8212; instruments.<br />
The setting was fabulous, the music close to that. Add to the quality of these concerts &#8212; with their introductory talks by Robert Winter and their handsome program book with excellent notes by Janet Johnson &#8212; the fact that the museum itself is kept open on concert nights, and you might suspect that the Age of Enlightenment may not yet have run its course after all.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Cantori</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/1989/06/cantori/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/1989/06/cantori/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Fri, 30 Jun 1989 17:41:13 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Herald Examiner]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=1884</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[In local cultural annals these few weeks are generally thought of as the musical doldrums, the uneventful time between the end of the Philharmonic season and the Bowl. This year, however, this interval has hardly lived up (or down) to its name. Count the blessings: a Handel opera in Santa Monica, a new-music festival in [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>In local cultural annals these few weeks are generally thought of as the musical doldrums, the uneventful time between the end of the Philharmonic season and the Bowl. This year, however, this interval has hardly lived up (or down) to its name. Count the blessings: a Handel opera in Santa Monica, a new-music festival in East L.A. and, this past Wednesday, an uncommonly interesting and lively program of American music at the Pasadena Presbyterian Church, sung by that excellent group that goes by the generic name of I Cantori (&#8220;The Singers&#8221;).<br />
The group, under its founder and conductor Edward Cansino, is now in its 14th year; to my embarassment, this was my first encounter, but not my last. The ensemble consists of eight singers plus, on occasion, Mr. Cansino. They sing with finesse and a most attractive tone. Somewhere along the line, someone made the admirable decision that the sight of a vocal group merely lined up in concert formation might lead to boredom; at Wednesday&#8217;s concert, in the informal setting of the church&#8217;s Fellowship Hall, the singers moved freely around the performing area, like entertainers at a particularly friendly salon. One of their number, baritone Kenneth Knight, even did some decent baton-twirling tricks during a light-hearted group of Charles Ives songs.<br />
It was an interesting program, ranging from 1894 (the year of Ives&#8217; mettlesome choral setting of Psalm 67) to 1989 (the year of the program&#8217;s opening work, Cansino&#8217;s own &#8220;Design.&#8221;) Along the way there were two marvelous Joan La Barbara pieces involving advanced vocal techniques &#8212; one, called &#8220;Time(d) {cq}Trials and Unscheduled Events&#8221; was composed for the 1984 Olympics, and consists mostly of heavy athletic breathing in strict rhythms) &#8212; some powerfully conceived short works by Copland and Barber, a set of rather strained, anti-lyrical songs by George Rochberg from his pre-post-romantic years, {cq} and some of George Crumb&#8217;s Madrigals, settings of tiny fragments of Garcia Lorca texts.<br />
For leavening there was also a most beguiling set of songs and dances from Scott Joplin&#8217;s &#8220;Treemonisha.&#8221; Maybe the opera itself is too sweetly naive to persist in the repertory as a whole. Maybe also the sight of these  indigenous pieces being sung and romped to by a concert group in white tie and ball gowns strains the image somewhat. The results, nevertheless, were enchanting; one of the numbers was wisely brought back as an encore at program&#8217;s end.<br />
Along the way all of the group members had their solo flings: Sandra Stowe in the Rochberg songs and Diane Thomas in the Madrigals were especially fine. Three instrumentalists helped out where needed: pianist Lorna Eder, flutist Lisa Edelstein and percussionist Timm {cq}  Boatman.<br />
Mr. Cansino&#8217;s own piece consisted of a medley of shreds and patches out of vocal works from Gregorian Chant to the present, all sung more or less simultaneously: a trick nicely managed by, say, Luciano Berio in the collage movement from his &#8220;Sinfonia,&#8221; managed less well in this instance. Fortunately, it was placed first on the program; considering the delights that ensued it was soon, deservedly, forgotten.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Gould&#160;Video</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/1989/06/gould-video/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/1989/06/gould-video/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Tue, 27 Jun 1989 18:09:25 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Herald Examiner]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=1928</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[&#8220;The Gould problem,&#8221; intones the oracular voice as if from the very slopes of Delphi, &#8220;has not gone away.&#8221; The Gould problem, the Callas problem, the Rubinstein mystique, the Toscanini magic&#8230;these are the essential propositions on which the video documentary must rest: that curious media hybrid in which mortal scriptwriters grapple with immortal artistry, most [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>&#8220;The Gould problem,&#8221; intones the oracular voice as if from the very slopes of Delphi, &#8220;has not gone away.&#8221; The Gould problem, the Callas problem, the Rubinstein mystique, the Toscanini magic&#8230;these are the essential propositions on which the video documentary must rest: that curious media hybrid in which mortal scriptwriters grapple with immortal artistry, most often to preordained failure.<br />
Kultur Video has added a Glenn Gould documentary to its small but excellent catalogue of arts-oriented video cassettes. The program runs 105 minutes; it was produced by the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation in 1985, and contains enough footage of Gould in action, at or away from his piano, to be worth the attention of anyone who can be reached by the extraordinary playing of this strange, solitary musical visionary. At the same time, it ruins a great deal of that valuable material, all for the sake of what are known in media circles as  production values.<br />
Thus, a tantalizing piece of black-and-white footage, a very young Gould immersed in one of the early-Baroque tidbits he dredged up out of obscurity, is overlain with a succession of color shots of old admirers and friends croaking out their protestations of undying love. Time after time, moments of potential musical fascination are undercut this way; program producers Vincent Tovill and Eric Till, who also do most of the solemn narration, propose the existence of a &#8220;Glenn Gould Problem,&#8221; and then allow everyone to work on its solution except Gould himself.<br />
What, then, {ITALwas {ENDITAL this so-called problem? It was, simply, the refusal or the failure (or both) of this abnormally bright and insightful musician to satisfy the world&#8217;s image of what a musician was supposed to be. His repertory choices went against the grain; his playing, especially of any music before, say, 1830, was eccentric in relation to the way anyone else played this music; then there were the incidental matters: the curious bandy-legged chair, the humming (nay, caterwauling) that became an inseparable part of Gould&#8217;s playing, the strange clothing choices, including mufflers and galoshes on hot summer days.<br />
The media latched onto these  eccentricities early in Gould&#8217;s career, and you can see the results on this documentary. What other rising young pianist, for example, could show up at a piano warehouse to choose an instrument, with a camera crew also on hand? Who but Glenn Gould would willingly submit to being photographed singing a Mahler song to an apathetic herd of zoo elephants? Reclusive, crowd-dodging misanthrope that he became in his late years, Gould operated from the start with a keen sense of the importance of the image. His very dodging of that image-making process, from his abjuration of live stage performances following his Los Angeles recital of April 10, 1964, created for him the most powerful image of all.<br />
This documentary wastes a lot of time on the image; too little on the man and his music. Out of his copious outpouring of musical wisdom, via radio and television in Canada and Great Britain, the producers have winnowed relatively little: Gould and violinist Yehudi Menuhin exchanging words on the Schoenberg Fantasy they are about to play together, Menuhin baffled by the music, Gould ecstatic. The original of that program, shown a few years ago at Manhattan&#8217;s Metropolitan Museum, is full of warm and fascinating discourse; only a tantalizing snippet shows up on the documentary.<br />
What remains is, of course, never less than fascinating; some &#8212; the look of the boyish, exultant iconoclast against the hunched-over, weary, ingrown figure of those final studio sessions &#8212; comes across powerful and tragic. But nowhere is Gould shown filling out the dimensions of his own musical visions, of his demonic  joy in kicking over accepted idols, in the reflective processes that led him to his first interpretive decisions about Bach&#8217;s &#8220;Goldberg Variations&#8221; and the drastic changes that shaped his later recorded version. These, of course, are the elements that defy even the most sophisticated video cameras, even the all-hearing microphone.<br />
Perhaps those missing parts of the portrait are too much to ask from a public-consumption documentary, even from as responsible a source as the CBC. Television audiences don&#8217;t want their idols to elucidate on Bach phrasing; they want them at play in the zoo, or strolling in soft focus through fog-swept wilderness. They want old Dad Gould telling how the three-day-old Baby Glenn&#8217;s fingers kept moving, as though he already knew what lay ahead.<br />
Fortunately, there are other ways of solving the &#8220;Gould problem,&#8221; if problem it be. Otto Friedrich&#8217;s recent biography is detailed and soberly written, the point of view of a lifelong fan who also knows how to research. Unfortunately, the fan in Friedrich leads now and then to his book&#8217;s few howlers; he lets himself believe, for example, Leonard Bernstein&#8217;s own self-serving, error-strewn account of the famous Brahms Concerto episode, even when it contradicts Bernstein&#8217;s previous, equally erroneous accounting in an essay in an earlier haphazard and scattershot book called &#8220;Glenn Gould Variations.&#8221;<br />
Shall I relate that episode one more time? On April 8, 1962, Bernstein made a speech before a New York Philharmonic performance, explaining that he and Gould had disagreed on the way the Brahms D-minor Concerto should go, but that he (Bernstein) was going along out of admiration for the pianist. The ensuing performance (preserved on tape and now distributed by the Philharmonic to donors to the orchestra) was not the least iconoclastic, barring a few details such as a somewwhat softer-than-usual approach to those smashing octaves midway in the first movement.<br />
Yet Harold Schonberg of the New York Times, at that very performance, reacted more to Bernstein&#8217;s speech than Gould&#8217;s performance  and delivered a killer if completely misinformed review. Punchline: Bernstein, after complaining about Gould&#8217;s alleged slow tempos, later made another recording of the same concerto (with Christian Zimerman) even slower, but without disclaimer.<br />
All of which proves nothing, except to detail an extreme example of a media event built on an unfounded premise, but kept aloft by the ongoing legend of Glenn Gould. You don&#8217;t need this to approach the essential Gould, however. When you&#8217;ve worked your way through that extraordinary legacy of recordings, then you start on the offbeat, unpredictable, intellectual serendipity of the essays collected in Tim Page&#8217;s &#8220;Glenn Gould Reader.&#8221; Then you realize that diversions like this video documentary are mere scratchings around the base of the gigantic stature of Glenn Gould, never to be fully comprehended, always a source of heat and light.<br />
&#8216;</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Pacific&#160;Festival</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/1989/06/pacific-festival/</link>
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		<pubDate>Mon, 26 Jun 1989 17:52:08 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Herald Examiner]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=1914</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Some good new music in a good new locale: that sums up the events  at California State University Los Angeles (CSULA from now on), as the three-day First Pacific Contemporary Music Festival ended on Saturday night, with everybody on stage thanking everybody else, and a capacity crowd in the school&#8217;s 400-or-so-seat Playhouse cheering them all. [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Some good new music in a good new locale: that sums up the events  at California State University Los Angeles (CSULA from now on), as the three-day First Pacific Contemporary Music Festival ended on Saturday night, with everybody on stage thanking everybody else, and a capacity crowd in the school&#8217;s 400-or-so-seat Playhouse cheering them all. The school had never before dabbled in concert production on so large a scale; composer and faculty member Byong-kon Kim, who organized this festival, has done an impressive piece of work.<br />
CSULA&#8217;s music department operates in the shadow of the school&#8217;s huge statue of Confucius; not surprisingly, therefore, it pays a fair amount of attention to music of Oriental composers or, to be more specific, music from the whole circumference of the Pacific Rim. A second festival, in which the school will again participate, is set for June, 1990 in Korea.<br />
This first festival involved the sterling services of the California E.A.R. Unit, whose praises have filled this space before, an ensemble of the region&#8217;s phenomenally gifted new-music performers, virtuosos often on more than just a single instrument. (On Friday&#8217;s concert, for example, violinist Robin Lorentz and cellist Erika Duke doubled on their own respective instruments and, in one work, on spraycans. Arthur Jarvinen, composer of the work in question, performed in it both as percussionist and on a chromatic harmonica.)<br />
A scheduling conflict kept me from the first concert. The two I heard offered a neat selection of Pacific Rim music, along with some out-of-area interlopers, possibly for ballast. Among the latter were George Crumb, whose &#8220;Idyll for the Misbegotten,&#8221; a gorgeously scored (solo flute, wondrously played by Dorothy Stone, 3 percussionists) piece in Crumb&#8217;s most magical, mystical, atmospheric style; Stephen Albert (Pulitzer laureate a few years back), whose overextended, mealy-conservative song-cycle &#8220;To Wake the Dead&#8221; had me fighting off sleep; Elliot Carter, whose &#8220;Triple Duos&#8221; amounted to another large slice of his usual self-indulgent complexity.<br />
Against these the Pacific composers more than held their own. On Friday Erika Duke played Toru Takemitzu&#8217;s &#8220;Orion&#8221;; on Saturday, Isang Yun&#8217;s &#8220;Nore,&#8221; both beautifully formed, throbbing, intensely colorful pieces. On Friday harpist Ruth Inglefield played Juan Orrego-Salas&#8217; &#8220;Variations on a Chant,&#8221; large-scale, inventive music full of unusual effects for the solo instrument; another harp solo on Saturday, Byong-kon Kim&#8217;s &#8220;Sori,&#8221; was not as far-reaching in its experimentation, perhaps, but displayed a nice range of coloration.<br />
Friday&#8217;s concert began with a strong ensemble piece, &#8220;In Tension,&#8221; by Elena Katz-Chernin, a Soviet-born composer now living in Australia: hectic, energetic music, fascinatingly built out of abrasive small fragments. But a set of &#8220;Episodes&#8221; for piano, by Taiwan&#8217;s Tsang-Houei Hsu, nicely played by Gloria Cheng, indicates that the Orient, too, has carved out its colonies on Windham Hill.<br />
Those were, for this listener the musical highs and lows; let the record also show, for those fonder than I of Carter&#8217;s kind of charmless note-spinning, that the ensemble under Rand Steiger&#8217;s energetic direction did itself proud. And that Arthur Jarvinen&#8217;s &#8220;Egyptian Two-Step,&#8221; for all the damage those spraycans may have done to the ozone layer, has an agreeable kickiness that I haven&#8217;t heard in his other works. And that the members of the E.A.R. Unit,  together or separately,  constitute one of those local treasures that makes it possible to look forward to new-music events with assurance and delight.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Record&#160;reviews</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/1989/06/record-reviews/</link>
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		<pubDate>Sun, 25 Jun 1989 18:10:10 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Herald Examiner]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=1930</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[The Abbe Prevost had his Manon Lescaut die in a &#8220;desert near New Orleans&#8221;; Alexis de Tocqueville brought home to France glowing reports on the American political system; Albert Bierstadt painted our rivers and mountains. Foreign visitors have always reacted strongly and interestingly to the American landscape; few have acted as colorfully, as flamboyantly &#8212; [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>The Abbe Prevost had his Manon Lescaut die in a &#8220;desert near New Orleans&#8221;; Alexis de Tocqueville brought home to France glowing reports on the American political system; Albert Bierstadt painted our rivers and mountains. Foreign visitors have always reacted strongly and interestingly to the American landscape; few have acted as colorfully, as flamboyantly &#8212; and, I have to add, as noisily &#8212; as did Olivier Messiaen in a piece for piano, solo horn, percussion and orchestra called &#8220;From the Canyons to the Stars.&#8221;<br />
The work, in 12 movements and lasting 89 minutes, has an amusing history. The great music patron Alice Tully  commissioned Messiaen for a small piece for the American Bicentennial, to be played by her beloved Chamber Music Society of Lincoln Center. The composer looked through some picture books and fell in love with a photograph of Bryce Canyon, in Utah. But after Messiaen made the trip, the modest piece for chamber orchestra launched upon an uncontrollable process of growth: a larger orchestra, a pianist, more time, more instruments. The travelogue also expanded, from the Utah desert to Hawaii to (at least in the composer&#8217;s mind) Belshazzar&#8217;s palace in ancient Babylon. &#8220;The piece just grew, like Topsy, &#8221; Tully told me once, &#8220;and the expenses grew with it. But I didn&#8217;t mind.&#8221;<br />
The result is an amazing outlay of sheer musical bravado. Messiaen is one of music&#8217;s great imponderables: on the one hand, the humble servant of God and St. Francis, both of whom he has often honored in his music; on the other, the master showman, who paints his vast musical canvases in lurid poster colors. (At the Lincoln Center premiere of &#8220;Canyons,&#8221; the piano part was played by Messiaen&#8217;s wife, Yvonne Loriod, her massive frame draped in a flaming red-orange robe so that she looked exactly like sunrise over a Utah mountain. )<br />
Anyhow, there is a lot to &#8220;From the Canyons to the Stars,&#8221; and the new CBS recording, with Esa-Pekka Salonen conducting the London Sinfonietta,  with Paul Crossley, pianist, will give you a trip into audible psychodelia. The only piece, in fact, that carries the same power is also by Messiaen, the gaudy, knock-&#8217;em-down &#8220;Turangalila&#8221; Symphony, but that work I find oppressively vulgar compared to &#8220;Canyons.&#8221;<br />
If you know any Messiaen, you will expect to encounter his major obsessions in this piece: his fascination with translating the songs of birds into music, his passion for instilling into all his music a sense of reverence that  has taken shape during his many years in his organ loft at the Church of the Trinity in Paris and that reflects the broad span of personal belief in this venerable, 81-year-old French individualist. You can resist the clatter in this music, and resist also the composer&#8217;s extreme demands on a listener&#8217;s time. Sooner or later, however, this music will nail you to your seat.<br />
The performance under Salonen is powerful and sure; he also recorded the &#8220;Turangalila,&#8221; and his own strong sensibility keeps that score well under control, as well as this. The new album is rounded out with Messiaen&#8217;s most popular instrumental work,  the musical aviary &#8220;Exotic Birds&#8221; (again with Crossley the excellent pianist) and the crabbed, intense &#8220;Colors of the Celestial City,&#8221; a work that gives me some problems.<br />
{LINE SPACE}<br />
Witold Lutoslawski is now 76; every new work adds to his luster as one of the strongest, most original musical figures of his time. He came to the U.S. first in the 1960s, when the world rejoiced in the cultural thaw that had enabled Polish composers, writers and artists to express themselves freely and originally. I remember chatting with him at Tanglewood in 1961 about his hopes for his country&#8217;s integrity of expression. That process has encountered setbacks, yet Lutoslawski (alongside Penderecki and a few younger compatriots) have flourished both at home and abroad.<br />
For the spectacularly endowed (in many ways) violinist Anne-Sophie Mutter Lutoslawski has recast a violin and piano piece into a Partita for Violin and Orchestra, an elegant and expressive work. The title suggests a look back at older music, and there are movements in this five-part work that carry a suggestion of the Bach imprint, mostly in the sense of a rhythmic kinship. These dance-like movements alternate, however, with other sections in which the soloist operates with greater freedom, almost as improvisation.<br />
That is an important part of Lutoslawski&#8217;s musical manner, and always has been. If you remember the Third Symphony, which Esa-Pekka Salonen performed at the Music Center,  to spectacular acclaim, on his first-ever appearance here, you may recall the  vibrant interplay between written-down, prescribed matter and places where the orchestra is left to improvise (within given limits). That makes this music hard to bring off, but it endows it with a rhapsodic quality that I find irresistible. On this record, which has Mutter playing with the BBC Symphony conducted by the composer, there is also an earlier Lutoslawski work that has become popular, the &#8220;Chain 2&#8243; of 1984, along with the Violin Concerto in D of Stravinsky, which sounds in this company like the crackling of dried-out parchment.<br />
{LINE SPACE}<br />
Some of Stravinsky&#8217;s shadow falls across the Violin Concerto of Kurt Weill, a piece dating from 1924 &#8212; four years before the start of the collaboration with Bertolt Brecht that established Weill&#8217;s international fame. Here is a young composer, 24, newly arrived in Berlin, fine-tuned by his teacher, the great Busoni, to pick up on musical currents sweeping through that most current-swept city of its time. Stravinsky&#8217;s Piano Concerto, with its scoring for only wind band, must have made its effect; Weill&#8217;s Violin Concerto has the same scoring.<br />
But the tone is the young composer&#8217;s own: wry, sardonic, marvelously colorful. Earlier scores by Weill are only now coming to light: chamber works, glorious songs, some orchestral experiments. But the Violin Concerto stands as his great leap forward. On a Musicmasters recording Naoko Tanaka plays the concerto with tremendous control over the work&#8217;s sense of mystery, of never quite revealing its secrets. And Julius Rudel conducts the winds of New York&#8217;s Orchestra of St. Luke&#8217;s as a splendid background.<br />
Also on the record: Rudel&#8217;s extraordinary performance of the &#8220;Kleine Dreigroschenmusik,&#8221; the suite for small jazz orchestra that Weill made from the &#8220;Three-Penny Opera&#8221; in the despairing belief that the opera would flop and that something from it, at least, needed rescue. Nothing of the sort transpired, but Weill&#8217;s arrangement survives as a separate concert piece, its songs quite different in many ways from their appearance in the stage version. Rudel knows the secret of this music remarkably well; I have never heard it better performed &#8212; not even in the 1930 &#8220;pirate&#8221; by Otto Klemperer, for whom it was composed &#8212; than on this  record.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Orpheus&#160;Revisited</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/1989/06/orpheus-revisited/</link>
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		<pubDate>Sun, 25 Jun 1989 17:51:24 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Herald Examiner]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=1912</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Never let it be said of your doting correspondent, that he flinched from undergoing the tortures of Hades on behalf of the edification and uplift of his loyal readers. He did just that last Sunday afternoon, in fact, forsaking domestic comforts and bright sunshine to join the paltry crowds at the scene of that notorious [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Never let it be said of your doting correspondent, that he flinched from undergoing the tortures of Hades on behalf of the edification and uplift of his loyal readers. He did just that last Sunday afternoon, in fact, forsaking domestic comforts and bright sunshine to join the paltry crowds at the scene of that notorious crime, the Music Center Opera&#8217;s current production of Offenbach&#8217;s &#8220;Orpheus in the Underworld.&#8221;<br />
Why? News was out that Dom DeLuise, whose casting in the role of Public Opinion had been the major flaw in the production on opening night, had been replaced, at least temporarily, by one Roderick Cook. That {ITAL had {ENDITAL to be an improvement worth checking out. Besides, despite what you think, no critic worth his word processor gets that much pleasure out of running his verbal bulldozer over honest human effort. Perhaps I was out of sorts that first night; perhaps {ITAL they {ENDITAL were.<br />
Sorry, no such luck. Mr. Cook, best known as the author and star of &#8220;Oh, Coward,&#8221;  at least makes the effort to take aim at some of Offenbach&#8217;s music, and often comes within hailing distance of the right pitch. But his prissy-Brit mannerisms have no more to do with his part &#8212; the crucial role in the whole work, I remind you, the character who stands in for the librettists&#8217; and Offenbach&#8217;s visions as they skewed the ancient legend around to fit the tastes of Belle-Epoque Paris &#8212; than Dom DeLuise&#8217;s epic vulgarity.<br />
Whatever he might have accomplished on his own, Mr. Cook must play along with all the {ITALshtik {ENDITAL that designer Gerald Scarfe and director Peter Schifter have contrived for the role. Worst of all is that ugly, bloated, stage-filling bustle-shaped conveyance on which he must ride.<br />
There was, in fact, one definite change for the better at Sunday&#8217;s performance, David Eisler (remember? Candide?) as Pluto, with his clean young-sounding tenor and his superior diction replacing the nanny-goat squalling of Ronald Stevens, who was reported as ailing. Grateful we must be for such small favors; yet nothing can save this misbegotten misrepresention, over-all,  of the Offenbach genius.<br />
Once again, however, the glorious moment of Michael Smith&#8217;s Act-2 entrance as Mercury, done up in silver and truly mercurial, contained the concentrated energy, dash and immense good humor that the show otherwise lacked. I would suggest to management, in fact, that   Mr. Smith and his all-but-airborne performance be preserved and inserted into all operas from now on, whenever affairs on stage seem without hope.<br />
I  neglected to mention the rest of the dancing in my first review; after my second visit I remembered why. They can can that can-can.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Sultanov</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/1989/06/sultanov/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/1989/06/sultanov/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Fri, 23 Jun 1989 17:54:12 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Herald Examiner]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=1920</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[There could have been no doubt that Aleksei Sultanov could play the piano&#8211; not, at least, after the diminutive, 19-year-old Soviet black-belt (Tae Kwon Do) owner stormed through the  ranks of contenders at the Eighth Annual Van Cliburn International Piano Competition at Forth Worth13 days ago, and ended high in the saddle. The question  to [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>There could have been no doubt that Aleksei Sultanov could play the piano&#8211; not, at least, after the diminutive, 19-year-old Soviet black-belt (Tae Kwon Do) owner stormed through the  ranks of contenders at the Eighth Annual Van Cliburn International Piano Competition at Forth Worth13 days ago, and ended high in the saddle. The question  to be settled at his debut recital Thursday night at Ambassador, however, was how whether he could also  play  music. The answer so far: some day, perhaps, but not yet.<br />
Young Mr. Sultanov chose a challenging  program program: Mozart and Beethoven Sonatas, the Prokofiev Seventh, Chopin&#8217;s B-flat minor Scherzo and Liszt&#8217;s Mephisto Waltz: a classic calling-card to present to a competition jury. I missed the goings-on at Fort Worth this time, but it&#8217;s a safe guess that Sultanov knocked the judges off their perches with this  machine-made programming in performances spurred on by the  adrenalin such events inevitably generate. (I also assume his platform manners at Fort Worth were different from his grim, unsmiling, let&#8217;s-get-it-over-with demeanor at Ambassador.)<br />
Chances are that no Cliburn contender will ever play again the way they all did at Fort Worth, unless any of them is so foolhardy as to remain on the competition treadmill. That&#8217;s the tragedy, the irony of competitions; after a while the adrenalin just runs out, and it had certainly run out on young  Sultanov at Pasadena.  At this generally dreadful concert &#8212; easily the worst debut recital I&#8217;ve attended since the last Cliburn winner earned his obligatory Ambassador engagement &#8211;I heard the workings of an impressive piano-playing machine run by an unimpressive musical conscience. You wanted constantly to reach up and turn down the speed control; but for the steady stream of perspiration that fell like gumdrops on keyboard and floor, you might have guessed that there was nobody at the piano at all.<br />
The tone was set in the opening Mozart sonata (in C, K. 330), which Sultanov merely rippled though as so much finger exercise. The Beethoven &#8220;Appassionata&#8221; fared little better: great gobs of notes at breakneck speed, with  no shaping of events. One might have held some hope for the later works on the program, most of all the  Prokofiev, but no; those raging, swirling Sultanov fingers formed a juggernaut, obliterating everything in its path. As the first encore there was the much-loved E-flat Valse Brillante of Chopin, pulverized, brutalized, with arbitrarily placed stops and starts almost like a parody of a self-indulgent performing superstar.<br />
And so, the tragedy of the world of musical competition adds another chapter. True, Aleksei Sultanov is only 19, and already he has the fingers (not to mention the major hair) for some sort of career. Whatever the judges at Fort Worth heard, I heard piano playing utterly without point of view. If this had been any old debut recital, my advice to the young musician would be to take time off to learn something about the art of music. But Sultanov, of course, can&#8217;t; he has his prize money, his recording contract and his list of concert bookings stretching on for years. His prize has become his trap.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Pastor&#160;Fido</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/1989/06/pastor-fido/</link>
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		<pubDate>Sat, 17 Jun 1989 17:52:45 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Herald Examiner]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=1916</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Despite ugly rumors to the contrary, there are still new things &#8211;even old new things &#8212; under the sun. When, for example, did you last hear George Frideric Handel&#8217;s &#8220;Il Pastor Fido&#8221; &#8212; not, moreover, in the composer&#8217;s 1734 updating but as originally set down on paper in 1712? If your answer is &#8220;never,&#8221; you&#8217;re [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Despite ugly rumors to the contrary, there are still new things &#8211;even old new things &#8212; under the sun. When, for example, did you last hear George Frideric Handel&#8217;s &#8220;Il Pastor Fido&#8221; &#8212; not, moreover, in the composer&#8217;s 1734 updating but as originally set down on paper in 1712? If your answer is &#8220;never,&#8221; you&#8217;re probably right. Nobody connected with the Los Angeles Baroque Orchestra &#8212; which performed that very work, splendidly by the way, at Santa Monica&#8217;s St. Paul Lutheran Church, on Friday night &#8212; has unearthed any evidence of that work, in that version, ever having been given previously in these parts.<br />
If Handel&#8217;s opera is known at all, it is from the noisy orchestration of some of its music perpetrated by Sir Thomas Beecham as &#8220;The Faithful Shepherd&#8221; (that being the work&#8217;s English title). That farrago, with its racketing snaredrums and squalling brass, enthusiastically hailed by a bygone generation that believed that Baroque music was supposed to sound that way, does indeed draw its music from the opera, but &#8212; as Gregory Maldonado and his instrumental and vocal forces demonstrated over the weekend (with subsequent performances on Saturday and Sunday in other local churches), it sounds better Handel&#8217;s way than Beecham&#8217;s.<br />
The Handel opera is one of those pastoral nonsenses: Mirtillo loves Amarillis who is betrothed to Silvio who is loved by Dorinda but who himself only loves hunting and thus realizes Dorinda&#8217;s love after she puts on a bearskin and hides in a tree whereupon he shoots her(not fatally). This, apparently, was a hot scenario in Handel&#8217;s day; Jean-Philippe Rameau also set it, almost as beautifully as Handel. Wimpy text or no, this gentle drama drew out of both composers music of utmost charm, once in a while reminiscent of routine Baroque machinery but mostly radiantly beautiful.<br />
Even with an orchestra of three winds, a few strings and keyboard, Handel &#8212; only 27 at the time &#8212; knew how to make everything sing. Act 3 of &#8220;Il Pastor&#8221; starts with a gorgeous piece of orchestral mood-painting, with oboes and bassoon spinning out a nocturnal melody that holds you motionless as it unwinds. Hard-hearted Silvio has a couple of rollicking hunting songs; true-love Amarillis pulls down one glorious tune after another.<br />
The Los Angeles Baroque Orchestra has now completed its third year. Its players, for the most part, use contemporary copies of 17th and 18th-century instruments, and play them with authentic technique &#8212; a light bow pressure on the strings, for example. Best of all their playing is nicely animated; not for Maldonado&#8217;s group the notion that old music will shatter under a lively touch.<br />
Some good singers showed up &#8212; skilled, like the orchestra, in the manner of voice placement and use or non-use of vibrato, and also nicely adept at adding a few vocal ornaments whenever a tune came around for its obligatory repeat. Mary Rawcliffe was scheduled for the leading role but took sick; Kari Windingstad replaced her on short notice, began tentatively, but was the full mistress of the Handelian long phrase, and even the Handelian trill, by evening&#8217;s end. Susan Judy, heroine of much local performance of music old and new, was a fetching Amarillis; barring an occasional lapse into hootiness, countertenor Lawrence Lipnik was a sturdy Silvio.<br />
The altogether fine cast was rounded out by Sondra Stowe, Catherine McCord Larsen and Edward Levy &#8212; as the inevitable {ITALdeus ex machina {ENDITAL who comes on at the end of all these operas, announces oratorically than black equals white and thus that all mortal problems are henceforth resolved. Mr. Levy didn&#8217;t quite clear up for me why the lovelorn Dorinda was up in that tree disguised as a bear. But as the great Anna Russell keenly observed in another context, you can get away with anything in opera so long as you sing it. And sing it these good people in Santa Monica certainly did.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Satya</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/1989/06/satya/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/1989/06/satya/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sun, 11 Jun 1989 17:53:32 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Herald Examiner]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=1918</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[SAN FRANCISCO Since his arrival on the musical scene some 20 years ago, Philip Glass has made important noises on many fronts. He is beyond question our most prolific and often-produced composer of opera; concerts of his music have done turn-away business as classical events, as rock events, and in that gray in-between area variously [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>SAN FRANCISCO Since his arrival on the musical scene some 20 years ago, Philip Glass has made important noises on many fronts. He is beyond question our most prolific and often-produced composer of opera; concerts of his music have done turn-away business as classical events, as rock events, and in that gray in-between area variously known as &#8220;crossover&#8221; or &#8220;new age.&#8221; He has lately been criticized for an overabundance of facility, of possibly being stuck in a lucrative groove otherwise known as a rut.<br />
But &#8220;Satyagraha,&#8221; which yesterday completed a well-attended (but not sold out) five-performance run at the San Francisco Opera, evokes no such deplorations; it is a gravely beautiful, powerful work, arguably Glass&#8217;s masterpiece to date, possibly also the most eloquent  statement yet made on the dramatic potential of the minimalist style of composition. It is a pure example of that style; each of its nine scenes is based on long strings of repetitions of simple, easy-to-grasp melodic and harmonic patterns. A listener bored at a performance of &#8220;Satyagraha&#8221; &#8212; if such a rare creature there be &#8212; can at least pass the time by counting; one whole scene, for example, is built on no fewer than 143 repetitions of a four-chord harmonic progression. Mohandas Gandhi&#8217;s spellbinding final aria consists entirely of a scale passage repeated identically, with shifting orchestrations, 30 times.<br />
But that is far from the point. &#8220;Satyagraha&#8221; is, as you&#8217;ve surely read by now, a musical account of early struggles of Gandhi, his attempts to galvanize the Indian community in South Africa to an assertion of its identity in the face of hostility from the country&#8217;s European leaders. (The title, from Gandhi&#8217;s writings, suggests a fusion of honor and strength.)  There is no dramatic dialog as such; the libretto, by Glass himself and Constance De Jong, uses instead a text, in the original Sanskrit, from classic Indian sources that details Gandhi&#8217;s latter-day struggles by indirection and analogy. This manner of fashioning the drama is sure and skillful, and it works beautifully with the time-scale dictated by the music.<br />
That quality of interaction, above all, turns all of &#8220;Satyagraha&#8221; into an opera that is both profoundly, satisfyingly original and fulfills at the same time the classic definition: words and music blending into an art higher than its parts. The production, now nine years old and much-traveled (Seattle and Chicago most recently) is basically unchanged, but for a few minor directorial subtleties, from David Pountney&#8217;s staging at the1980 Rotterdam premiere. It becomes part of this oneness: Robert Israel&#8217;s simple, stylized set-pieces (small house-models carried in and out on platforms, a spectacular mockup of an old printing press with its turning flywheel that suggests an ancient Shiva sculpture) are beautifully lit behind a scrim that lends a chalky texture over-all. I remember pictures of old Indian cave paintings that had that same tone.<br />
Douglas Perry was San Francisco&#8217;s Gandhi; a vivid interpreter of comprimario parts (e.g., the Idiot in &#8220;Boris Godunov&#8221;), he has made a whole separate career out of his ownership of this one role, which he does superbly. His voice, soft-textured but accurate over a wide range, lends a disembodied quality that, again, becomes part of the opera&#8217;s dramatic whole. Bruce Ferden, who conducted, has also been part of the &#8220;Satyagraha&#8221; scene, and of the entire Glass operatic repertory, from the beginning. (Christopher Keene, however, conducted the New York City Opera performances and the CBS recording, not nearly so incisively or as sure-footedly, as Ferden.)<br />
&#8220;Satyagraha&#8221; belongs in the repertory. With its modest instrumentation (basically a Mozart orchestra, with one synthesizer that merely doubles) it demands only superb musicianship. It submits to a variety of stagings; for proof of that there is the lavish, wildly inventive Stuttgart production by Achim Freyer that shows up on cable TV now and then,<br />
as different from the Robert Israel conception as fireworks from fireflies. The opera itself endures,  a work of noble beauty and truth; its great moments, of which there are many, are genuinely moving.<br />
San Francisco&#8217;s opera audiences do not share the Los Angeles propensity for according standing ovations to anything that can cross a stage without falling down.  At Friday night&#8217;s &#8220;Satyagraha,&#8221; however, there were many who stood.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Ojai</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/1989/06/ojai/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/1989/06/ojai/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Tue, 06 Jun 1989 17:50:47 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Herald Examiner]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=1910</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[The sun finally burned through the  fog late Sunday afternoon, in time to lend its glow to the last measures of Pierre Boulez&#8217;s &#8220;Improvisations sur Mallarme&#8221; and, thus, to the end of the 43rd annual Ojai Festival. Even in the preceding chill and gloom, however, there had been warmth and light; the final all-Boulez concert [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>The sun finally burned through the  fog late Sunday afternoon, in time to lend its glow to the last measures of Pierre Boulez&#8217;s &#8220;Improvisations sur Mallarme&#8221; and, thus, to the end of the 43rd annual Ojai Festival. Even in the preceding chill and gloom, however, there had been warmth and light; the final all-Boulez concert was a stunning climax.<br />
Many words, mostly adulatory, have been spilled over Boulez in this space since he betook himself hither a month ago &#8212; to lead the Los Angeles Philharmonic in three weekends at UCLA&#8217;s Royce Hall and now at Ojai. Yet this final concert, the only entire program of Boulez&#8217; music during his stay, bore more than its share of revelations, as a stylistic survey of a musician who has devoted a lifetime to challenging old-fashioned artistic norms and exploring far horizons.<br />
And so, in this final concert, we had the Boulez of 1949 in his &#8220;Livre pour Cordes,&#8221; aloof, abrasive, clearly an obeisance to the bristling atonality of the Schoenberg school, suggesting the far-fetched notion that design itself &#8212; removed from melodic shapes and other easy appeals to a hearer&#8217;s memory, not to mention his gut &#8212; might support an extended musical offering. On Saturday the Arditti Quartet had played the entire &#8220;Livre&#8221; in its original form; now, on Sunday, Boulez began his concert with his reworking of just the first section.<br />
The Sunday concert then went on to a far later Boulez, the relaxed tone-spinner of recent decades, with two works, the &#8220;Eclat&#8221; of 1965 and the  1985 &#8220;Memoriale.&#8221; The battles have now been won; here is the mature Boulez working with light and color, even now and there with a [ITAL soupcon [ENDITAL of charm. Lovely music, it received lovely performances, with the arabesques of the solo flute line in &#8220;Memoriale&#8221; beautifully retraced by the Philharmonic&#8217;s Anne Diener Giles.<br />
Finally had come the Mallarme improvisations, completed in 1962 but many times revised since, repeats from the Los Angeles &#8220;Green Umbrella&#8221; and Royce Hall concerts, with Phyllis Bryn-Julson&#8217;s mastery of the vocal lines once again a source of wonderment. The three movements are, of course, merely the centerpiece of a longer work, &#8220;Pli selon pli.&#8221; Just by themselves, however, they stand as an extraordinary penetration into music, poetry, and the way the two arts intersect.<br />
On Sunday morning there had been other delights in a marvelous concert by Ursula Oppens and Alan Feinberg. They are two of the most honored pianists in the service of new music, friends and neighbors in New York; still, this was their first joint concert, and the quality of their work together suggests that we may have all witnessed the birth of a great new team.<br />
At Ojai they played only the most adventurous music &#8212; in which category I would certainly place their opening work, Mozart&#8217;s only two-piano sonata &#8211;ending with Bartok&#8217;s still-amazing Sonata for Pianos and Percussion (with Amy Knoles and William Winant beautifully managing the kitchenware), and lingering along the way at some vivid, finger-crushing works by Witold Lutoslawski and Gyorgy Ligeti. The performances, the works themselves &#8212; like everything else in this astonishing festival &#8212; were suffused with the joy of great music-making.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Wuorinen</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/1989/06/wuorinen/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/1989/06/wuorinen/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sun, 04 Jun 1989 18:16:19 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Herald Examiner]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=1950</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[The question needs to be asked: is today&#8217;s American composer really better off than his predecessor a generation or two ago? Is there an audience &#8212; meaning, in down-to-earth terms, a market &#8212; for serious, challenging, original, large-scale, new native compositions, such as would earn high marks worldwide for their respective composers? Of course there [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>The question needs to be asked: is today&#8217;s American composer really better off than his predecessor a generation or two ago? Is there an audience &#8212; meaning, in down-to-earth terms, a market &#8212; for serious, challenging, original, large-scale, new native compositions, such as would earn high marks worldwide for their respective composers?<br />
Of course there is, shout the managers, and they offer printouts of their recent symphonic seasons to prove their point. Here is the Los Angeles Philharmonic, with a new work on almost every program; there is the Pasadena Symphony with a new symphony by Tom McKinley on its March program; down the road there&#8217;s the Long Beach Symphony, which offered a brand-new work as curtain-raiser on every one of its programs this past season.<br />
Did someone say &#8220;curtain-raiser?&#8221; Aha; now were getting someplace. It begins to look as if there&#8217;s a new breed of new music, out on the horizon and getting closer by the minute. It consists of a repertory of short, thin-textured pieces  designed to open programs and then recede into the shadows. All you can say about the Philharmonic&#8217;s throwaway pieces &#8212; by the likes of Primosch, Stokes, Harbison, Stucky, and all the others you and I have already (understandably) forgotten &#8212; is that they went down easily with the orchestra and the audience, leaving our minds uncluttered for the Brahms or Prokofiev that was to follow,  and that they allowed management to swell its statistics on performances of new American music with a minimum of effort.<br />
(Part of Andre Previn&#8217;s catatonia, when faced with Robert Erickson&#8217;s &#8220;Corona&#8221; scheduled to start off one concert last February, could very well have been his discovery that, at 26 minutes, the piece couldn&#8217;t qualify as a curtain raiser. He then proceded, like Procrustes with his bed, to chop it down to proper size.)EP<br />
There is no law, in any of the expressive arts, that stipulates that works of long duration are superior to miniatures. Any one of my favorite Chopin Mazurkas tells me as much about sublimity and infinity, perhaps more, than any concerto of Brahms a dozen times as long. The best new work on the year&#8217;s Philharmonic programs was also one of the shortest, Arvo Part&#8217;s &#8220;Fratres&#8221; on the substitute final program conducted by Neeme Jarvi. But that work at least filled its 11-or-so minutes with original, serious beauty, and left us with thoughts far larger than its duration by the time clock.<br />
Somewhere in this world large-scale music is still being written. In London I have heard huge, gut-grabbing pieces by Harry Birtwistle &#8212; his &#8220;Earth Dances&#8221; and &#8220;The Triumph of Time.&#8221; These were being performed by the government-funded BBC Symphony, which meant that they got the rehearsal time they needed. From Russian tapes I have discovered a sizable repertory of serious, demanding symphonic music, by Alfred Schnittke, Sofia Gubaidulina and the Soviet Georgian Giya Kancheli, again in performances that sounded as though time (and, therefore, money) had gone into their preparation.<br />
Could these performances have happened here, within the time-frame of a typical American orchestra&#8217;s rehearsal schedule? Probably not, if the sad tales told by most American composers are to be believed. As long as this notion persists, that the way to buy off the American composer is to commission the kind of tidbit that constituted most of our local orchestras&#8217; lip-service to native music this year, American orchestral music will remain mired in triviality.<br />
Why am I writing all this now? Mostly, because I have only now gotten around to a record that arrived several months ago, but which I&#8217;d been putting off hearing, a Nonesuch disk of two works by Charles Wuorinen: his Piano Concerto No. 3 and &#8220;The Golden Dance,&#8221; which is also for piano and orchestra. Here we have a couple of fair-sized, new American works (30 and 23 minutes, respectively) that march fearlessly into the maelstrom: exuberant, original, challenging, rewarding.<br />
Wuorinen has been for some years composer-in-residence at the San Francisco Symphony, which commissioned &#8220;The Golden Dance&#8221;; the Concerto was a commission from the Albany Symphony and the pianist Garrick Ohlsson, who is soloist in both works. In the 1960s Wuorinen was an active provocative agent in New York musical circles; among other good deeds, he guided the hand of Nonesuch in recording a distinguished repertory of new American music &#8212; including his own Pulitzer-winning &#8220;Time&#8217;s Encomium,&#8221; along with works of George Crumb, Jacob Druckman, Milton Babbitt and other prime figures in the East Coast establishment.<br />
As an avatar of that establishment, Wuorinen seemed a curious choice to succeed John Adams in the San Francisco post, and it&#8217;s obvious from his new scores that the move hasn&#8217;t inspired him to dabble in minimalist patternings or exotic scales. On their own, however, these are powerful, agressive, disturbing works; they do, furthermore, constitute a hopeful answer to my fears about the waning of strength in our new music. The concerto is, by a slight margin, my preferred of the two works; the jagged, edgy rhythms of the outer movements frame, in the elegiac and extended slow movement, a feeling for gorgeous, soaring melody.<br />
You will need to spend some time with these, or with any of Wuorinen&#8217;s music; he isn&#8217;t one for revealing his secrets on first meeting. There is plenty of his music on records &#8212; surprisingly little, however, on CD, for a man whose &#8220;Time&#8217;s Encomium&#8221; revealed so vast an electronic horizon The new record is essential Wuorinen, and essential new American music.<br />
ZINKA MILANOV (MAY 17, 1906-MAY 31, 1989)<br />
Zinka Milanov is gone, another large serving of a bygone grandeur that we will never recapture. She was, among other things, a grandmaster of entrances and exits; it&#8217;s sad to think that no composer was on hand to set her own death scene to music.<br />
She retired from opera when the old Metropolitan shut down in 1966; two grand structures lost simultaneously. She was famous for her devastating digs at her colleagues and rivals, none of which I can repeat in a family newspaper, all of which were probably authentic. She flirted outrageously with her fans; she understood, for example, the greater importance of the opera queens&#8217; jabberwock over any press release from the Met&#8217;s front office, and she would invite the most ardent standees home to tea to feed their gossip network.<br />
Long after she stopped singing, she could walk down the aisle of either the old or the new Met and draw a standing ovation. New York was the home of her art, if not her politics. I once saw her arrive, unnoticed and uncheered, at an outdoor opera festival in Italy; that struck me as so wrong that I got up the courage, for once in my life, to go over and tell her that someone in that alien crowd, at least, remembered her.<br />
Remembered&#8230;that is&#8230;that hot lyrical throat of hers, put on earth to embody the particular passion of Verdi&#8217;s Leonoras, the heroines in &#8220;Il Trovatore&#8221;  and  &#8220;La Forza del Destino.&#8221; Her old recording of &#8220;Trovatore,&#8221; with Jussi Bjoerling and LeonardWarren, has survived into the CD era. Even with the cuts, the loss of her &#8220;Tu vedrai&#8221; in the last act that we have to savor only in our fantasies, it is my way of knowing what Verdi and Verdian melody were about in that opera.<br />
She wasn&#8217;t much to look at; near the end she forgot lines and had to hover near the prompter&#8217;s box. That&#8217;s not what we remember. She was the embodiment of the grandest music in the grandest operas. The singers today who occasionally get hailed as the new Zinka can, for now, stand in the shade. There was, and is, only one Zinka.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Phantom</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/1989/05/phantom/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/1989/05/phantom/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 31 May 1989 18:11:57 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Herald Examiner]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=1936</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Some composers work with a quill pen, some with a computer. Andrew Lloyd Webber may not be the first composer to operate on a treadmill, but he is certainly the best paid. We&#8217;ve heard it all before. From the beginning &#8212; or at least from &#8220;Jesus Christ, Superstar,&#8221; which came close to the beginning &#8212; [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Some composers work with a quill pen, some with a computer. Andrew Lloyd Webber may not be the first composer to operate on a treadmill, but he is certainly the best paid.<br />
We&#8217;ve heard it all before. From the beginning &#8212; or at least from &#8220;Jesus Christ, Superstar,&#8221; which came close to the beginning &#8212; you could be deaf and still recognize the emptiness in the music, the sweeping if faceless melodic gestures, the gambits picked up out of the pre-existing repertory as a street-cleaner impales bits of litter on a pointed stick. Other composers have operated on a, let&#8217;s say, eclectic level since the beginnings of time, or at least of the Broadway musical; Jerry Herman lost a famous court case to the composer Mack David over the provenance of the first nine notes of &#8220;Hello, Dolly!&#8221; and could have lost a few others to the likes of Tchaikovsky, Gounod and, for all I know, Max Reger if those gentlemen hadn&#8217;t already lapsed into public domain.<br />
But Herman pulls his source material together with a practiced hand; perhaps he cribbed from Mack David&#8217;s &#8220;Sunflower,&#8221; but at least &#8220;Hello, Dolly&#8221; has its own kind of grandeur. With Lloyd Webber&#8217;s music, the stitchery sometimes shows more clearly than the material. One number  of &#8220;Dolly&#8217;s&#8221; stature would redeem the unredeemed depression of &#8220;The Phantom of the Opera&#8217;s&#8221; steady progression of bland, forgettable parlando that serves not to illuminate Charles Hart and Richard Stilgoe&#8217;s lyrics, but rather clings to them like seaweed to ancient hawsers. The play&#8217;s Phantom at least shows half a face; Andrew Lloyd Webber&#8217;s music shows none.<br />
It&#8217;s as unfair, of course, to expect glorious, rolling showtunes in the grand old manner to surface from today&#8217;s musical theater as it would be to expect a latter-day Beethoven to emerge from the depths of Pierre Boulez&#8217;s IRCAM. The world is lucky if it can acquire a &#8220;Some Enchanted Evening&#8221; once in a century. A song like &#8220;I Get a Kick Out of You&#8221; happened only because there was an Ethel Merman to fling it skyward (without the aid of microphones, please remember). Even so, the greatness of a contemporary theatrical master lies in the way music can make words and dramatic situations into some kind of art. The springy athleticism of Stephen Sondheim&#8217;s songs are hardly Richard Rodgers redux, but they at least relate to happenings on stage; once in a while, furthermore &#8212; as in &#8220;Anyone can Whistle&#8221; or &#8220;Send in the Clowns&#8221; &#8211;  they can coalesce into something worthy of the theater&#8217;s lyrical pantheon.<br />
But the drab, uninflected, formula-ridden vocal lines of Lloyd-Webber accomplish no such lyric miracles. The show is, at heart, a package of clever stage trickery; the music is merely disposable shiny wrapping. He donates generously, but from a pathetically small fund of inventiveness; the same jiggety-jog triplets of the opening scenes of &#8220;Phantom&#8221; had turned up in the hyped-to-the-bazooty Requiem, in large chunks of the Variations he wrote for his cellist brother Julian, and in almost every turn of page in the ghastly, second-rate score for &#8220;Cats.&#8221; Lloyd Webber does for 6/8 time what Lorne Green does for dog food.<br />
You gotta admit, however, that your nerve-endings are well-tickled while the show is going on. It&#8217;s only when you&#8217;re halfway home that it suddenly hits that you&#8217;ve been tricked into thinking you&#8217;ve dined heartily on the arts, while you&#8217;ve actually been circumnavigating the smorgasbord with your hands tied. The trick here, I think, is in the casting. Hand your songs over to singers  adept at a certain kind of raw , sandpaper-textured throb that  seems to pass for high emotional singing in some circles &#8212; Mr. Crawford, as an implausible instance, or better yet, Patinkin and LuPone in &#8220;Evita&#8221; &#8212; and you can get away with a lot. You can, with Mr. Lloyd Webber&#8217;s gall and the smooth show-biz mechanism he commands, even pass phantoms off as opera.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Boulez</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/1989/05/boulez-3/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/1989/05/boulez-3/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Tue, 30 May 1989 17:39:16 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Herald Examiner]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=1878</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[It was an exhilarating ending to a remarkable concert series: Pierre Boulez and the Los Angeles Philharmonic, ending their three weeks at UCLA&#8217;s Royce Hall, not with a whimper but a bang &#8212; many bangs, in fact. The piece was Edgar Varese&#8217;s &#8220;Ameriques,&#8221; the first work completed by that Franco-Italo-expatriate upon settling in New York [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>It was an exhilarating ending to a remarkable concert series: Pierre Boulez and the Los Angeles Philharmonic, ending their three weeks at UCLA&#8217;s Royce Hall, not with a whimper but a bang &#8212; many bangs, in fact.<br />
The piece was Edgar Varese&#8217;s &#8220;Ameriques,&#8221; the first work completed by that Franco-Italo-expatriate upon settling in New York in 1921. Somewhere in a program note Boulez confesses a fondness for musical outsiders; this Varese certainly was. (So was Charles Ives, whose &#8220;Three Places in New England&#8221; also appeared on this program.) Every one of Varese&#8217;s surviving twelve works postulates its own esthetic laws, and follows no tenets gleaned from any previous work. That makes him wonderful to hear, hard to write about.<br />
&#8220;Ameriques&#8221; &#8212; identified by the composer as a kind of tone-poem tribute, not only to his newly adopted country but to its whole hemisphere &#8212; is as wild and unruly as any work I know. Yet, there is a unifying core, the composer&#8217;s obvious fascination with the most famous and widely-discussed work of its time, Stravinsky&#8217;s &#8220;Le Sacre du Printemps.&#8221;<br />
Huge chunks of &#8220;Le Sacre&#8221; are ripped out of Stravinsky&#8217;s context and cast into the volcanic melee of &#8220;Ameriques,&#8221; &#8212; there not merely to be cribbed verbatim, but newly digested and redefined. The whole piece becomes, among its many other things, a homage to a work that Varese already recognized as the enabling force for a new musical century.<br />
But &#8220;Ameriques&#8221; does not sit quietly on a shelf as a historical footnote. Boulez and his marvelously responsive orchestra hurled the work at a stunned Royce Hall audience on Saturday night, and the response out front was a series of &#8220;what hit me?&#8221; looks that clearly suggested that the immense power of the work was still alive.<br />
As with most of his work here since his arrival a few weeks back, Boulez surely had planned this concert not only as powerful musical entertainment but as a testimonial to the creative shock. I doubt if any sane conductor would want to maintain the programming of these three weeks as a standard for symphonic fare over a season; the exhaustion upon performers, audiences &#8212; not to mention critics &#8212; would be formidable. As a one-time experience in total immersion, however, these have been overwhelming events.<br />
Before had come the Ives pieces, those amazing &#8212; if at times persnickety  &#8212; ventures into twisting the tail of the musical tiger and carefully notating the roar. I confess to a problem with Ives, a difficulty at times in sorting out what happens in his music through accident and what through the outlay of compositional effort. &#8220;Three Places&#8221; is the one orchestral work that gives me no trouble, however. I love the colors of the piece,  intense and gorgeous; the incredible show-off counterpoint in the second movement (which, absent Boulez, could otherwise gainfully employ a whole corps of conductors, one for each meter); the deep spiritual calm of the final &#8220;The Housatonic at Stockbridge,&#8221; music as deeply beautiful as just the sound of its name.<br />
All these were magically detailed by the orchestra under Boulez &#8212; again, as in the Varese, clearly motivated by his passion for nonconformist music. But is sheer musical beauty ever truly &#8220;nonconformist?&#8221;<br />
This concert began with music of Boulez himself: the first and third Mallarme Improvisations from his &#8220;Pli selon pli&#8221; and the string-orchestra version of   the first part of his &#8220;Livre pour cordes.&#8221;  Without the need to push such music into journalistic pigeonholes &#8212; &#8220;this passage derives from the Impressionists, this from Mondrian&#8221; &#8212; the artist&#8217;s sensibility informs this music; we hear it as line, but also as color. And when in one of the &#8220;Improvisations&#8221; the mallet-instrument players set up a racketing that is hot, loud and golden, we react to its beauty with all of our sense at once, each engaged in its own definition of music.<br />
Once again (as at last Monday&#8217;s &#8220;Umbrella&#8221; concert, Phyllis-Bryn Julson sang the Mallarme pieces with infinite, awesome skill. All three of these works are listed for the last of the Ojai Festival programs this coming weekend, along with a further lavish outlay of the music Boulez tends to perform better than anyone else around. The miracle continues.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Guilty</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/1989/05/guilty/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/1989/05/guilty/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sat, 27 May 1989 17:46:23 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Herald Examiner]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=1898</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Twenty years have passed since the happy crowds dashed through Count Almaviva&#8217;s palace to celebrate the marriage of Figaro and Susanna. Figaro and Susanna are still the Count&#8217;s faithful retainers, and the entourage is increased by the presence of a pair of bastard children: Leon, born to the Countess after a dalliance with Cherubino, and [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Twenty years have passed since the happy crowds dashed through Count Almaviva&#8217;s palace to celebrate the marriage of Figaro and Susanna. Figaro and Susanna are still the Count&#8217;s faithful retainers, and the entourage is increased by the presence of a pair of bastard children: Leon, born to the Countess after a dalliance with Cherubino, and Florestine, daughter of Lord-only-knows with the help of the Count. The kids are in love, and it takes all of Caron de Beaumarchais&#8217; &#8220;The Guilty Mother&#8221; to assure them that they are not blood-brother-and-sister, and that [ITAL their [ENDITAL love, at least, is guiltless.<br />
To round out its cycle of Beaumarchais stagings that the Long Beach Opera has mounted as its bicentennial gift to France, the company has chosen curiously but well. &#8220;The Guilty Mother&#8221; is, by consensus. the weakest of the plays, by turns farcical and dark. The only known musical setting was created by Darius Milhaud as recently as 1965; Long Beach opted instead to do the play straight &#8212; well, as straight as it probably deserves &#8212; with a new incidental score by the fast-rising young composer Mark McGurty. One performance remains, at the trim little Center Theater, tomorrow afternoon.<br />
The play is, to be sure, something of a mess; yet there are powerful moments. It could also be seen as the dark side of &#8220;Cosi fan tutte,&#8221; since it unrolls as a game of couples &#8212; three pairs, as in that opera, whom fate brings together, moves apart, and plays off against one another in  rational but not symmetrical fashion. There is some powerful writing about halfway through the second half, a moving confrontation scene in which all characters drop masks and engage in some direct language about relationships. These are the winged words of the Beaumarchais of &#8220;The Marriage of Figaro,&#8221; back to stir his audiences to introspection one more time. The ending, too, is delicious farce.<br />
For these reasons alone I urge you to head to Long Beach; you are not, after all, likely to see this rounding-off of the Beaumarchais trilogy that often. McGurty&#8217;s score is slight but handsome; in a set of mood-pieces for a small ensemble (strings, mostly, with piano and percussion) he has captured a fair measure of the bittersweet, sometimes cynical mood of the play. Incidental music can often be a pain in an otherwise spoken play; this time I wanted more.<br />
On Mark Wendland&#8217;s weirdly raked set topped by an overturned stagecoach, Brian Kulick has directed a generally lively, boisterous performance as much acrobatic as verbal, and a good troupe of local actors does his bidding with engaging abandon. Brent Hinkley is especially touching as the lovelorn Leon; Shannon Holt overdoes the vapidity now and then as his beloved Florestine. John Fleck and Michelle Mais work up a fair amount of wise cynicism as the Figaros; Paul Elder and Camille Ameen plunge headlong into the Almavivas&#8217; anger, perhaps a shade too strenuously. The small instrumental ensemble under Keith Clark dispatch its modest assignment &#8212; well, modestly.<br />
PLAYBILL<br />
THE GUILTY MOTHER, play by Caron de Beaumarchais, produced by the Long Beach Opera with incidental music by Mark McGurty. Directed by Brian Kulick, designed by Mark Wendland and Peter Maradudin, conducted by Keith Clark. At the Center Theater, Long Beach Convention Center. Remaining performance, tomorrow at 2 p.m. Tickets $10-65. Information: 596-5556.<br />
Count Almaviva&#8230;&#8230;&#8230;Paul Elder<br />
Countess&#8230;&#8230;&#8230;&#8230;&#8230;&#8230;&#8230;&#8230;.Camille Ameen<br />
Figaro&#8230;&#8230;&#8230;&#8230;&#8230;&#8230;&#8230;&#8230;&#8230;&#8230;.John Fleck<br />
Susanna&#8230;&#8230;&#8230;&#8230;&#8230;&#8230;&#8230;&#8230;&#8230;.Michelle Mais<br />
Leon&#8230;&#8230;&#8230;&#8230;&#8230;&#8230;&#8230;&#8230;&#8230;&#8230;&#8230;&#8230;Brent Hinkley<br />
Florestine&#8230;&#8230;&#8230;&#8230;&#8230;&#8230;&#8230;&#8230;..Shannon Holt</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Atys</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/1989/05/atys/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/1989/05/atys/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Fri, 26 May 1989 17:34:33 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Herald Examiner]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=1872</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[[FI STYLE, OPERA] [QL RICH, MUSIC FOR TUESDAY, MAY 23] NEW YORK Whenever Louis XIV needed some opera to sweeten the air in his new palace at Versailles, he snapped his royal fingers and his favorite composer, Jean-Baptiste Lully, sprang to the task. Matters operatic aren&#8217;t so favorable around Paris these days, I hear; still, [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>[FI STYLE, OPERA] [QL RICH, MUSIC FOR TUESDAY, MAY 23]<br />
NEW YORK Whenever Louis XIV needed some opera to sweeten the air in<br />
his new palace at Versailles, he snapped his royal fingers and his favorite<br />
composer, Jean-Baptiste Lully, sprang to the task. Matters operatic aren&#8217;t so<br />
favorable around Paris these days, I hear; still, the rich fruits of Louis&#8217;<br />
patronage remain. One of the richest, the opera &#8220;Atys,&#8221; which dates from<br />
1676 and  can still be made to sound fresh, novel and altogether thrilling,<br />
has in its recent restoration been generally judged as the best operatic event<br />
in Paris in recent, or even distant memory. It was greeted with comparable<br />
acclaim this past week, when the Paris-based fashioners of this miraculous<br />
restoration played a four-performance engagement, sold out to every last<br />
seat, at the Brooklyn Academy.<br />
Opera in the French high Baroque was, and remains, an art unto itself. Italy<br />
lay captive to a grandiloquent if vapid repertory created to gladden the<br />
hearts and throats of virtuoso singers and their fans (whose descendants<br />
pack the standing-room areas at the Metropolitan and San Francisco Operas<br />
today). The Italian-born Lully (originally Lulli) ingratiated himself into a<br />
high post at Louis&#8217; court, and shrewdly read the French taste, which inclined<br />
more toward theater and dance than to flamboyant music. Together with the<br />
poet Philippe Quinault he invented an opera for France that partook<br />
fervently of the high lyric tragedy of the playwrights Corneille and Racine,<br />
and still deployed itself in the simple, clear rhythms of the popular dance<br />
steps at the time. Legend has it that Louis himself often participated in the<br />
dance numbers, and I&#8217;ll leave you to imagine George Bush onstage at the Met<br />
in, say, the Grand March from &#8220;Aida.&#8221;<br />
For &#8220;Atys&#8221; Quinault fashioned an elegant, moving paraphrase of the<br />
classic myth of Cybele, Goddess of Earth, thwarted in her love for the<br />
shepherd Atys, whom she then drives mad whereupon he kills her rival<br />
Sangaris and, upon regaining his sanity (still there?) realizes his crime, kills<br />
himself and is transformed into a pine tree. For all this complexity, it is a<br />
gorgeous text, and it moves trippingly, in simple rhyming couplets that Lully<br />
fashioned into elegant music that can still hold an audience spellbound over<br />
its nearly four-hours duration. The French have a word for all this: [ITAL<br />
sensibilite. [ENDITAL It does not translate as easily as it looks.<br />
Anyhow, the  musical and poetic wonders of &#8220;Atys&#8221; are easily sampled,<br />
in the complete Harmonia Mundi recording by the same forces that restored<br />
the opera in Paris in 1987 and   brought it last week to Brooklyn: William<br />
Christie and his ensemble of early-music specialists called &#8220;Les Arts<br />
Florissants.&#8221; Product of a typically abstract, scholarly Ivy League musical<br />
education (&#8220;where we were told,&#8221; he says, &#8220;that no gentleman ever<br />
actually touches an instrument&#8221;) he moved to Paris in 1972 and founded<br />
his group some years later.<br />
The beauty of the Arts Florissants performances (the name is from a vocal<br />
piece by Marc&#8217;Antoine Charpentier, Lully&#8217;s great rival) is not their slavish<br />
revival of exact Baroque performance rubrics, but their passion to dig out<br />
the life force in this music and translate it intact into contemporary terms.<br />
The sounds of, for example, their 53-member orchestra that came over with<br />
the singers, is not merely the exoticism of ancient instruments, but the<br />
enormous gusto of the playing. (Another applicable, untranslatable French<br />
word: [[ITALelan. [ENDITAL<br />
As they honored the music, so also did this marvelous, seemingly airborne<br />
group fashion a likeness of the sights that this kind of music inspires. The<br />
cast was costumed, not in the uniform, blank robes of a typical gods-and-<br />
goddesses production, but in a magnificent array of court clothes from<br />
Lully&#8217;s own time, exquisitely fashioned and tailored as if to be worn by<br />
nobles and not mere opera singers. The set was, similarly, a room in a grand<br />
palace, its walls done to resemble priceless travertine marble, its open doors<br />
affording a view of further rooms and exquisitely paneled corridors.<br />
Two casts of principals alternated in the Brooklyn performances. I had<br />
heard the American-English contingent, headed by the marvelous light tenor<br />
Howard Crook, at an earlier performance in Louis&#8217; own theater at Versailles.<br />
This time I heard the Franco-Belgian cast, the one on the recording, with the<br />
wonderfully lithe, stylist Guy de Mey in the name role and the extraordinary<br />
dramatic soprano Guillemette Laurens as the lovelorn Cybele. The dancing<br />
was sublimely executed by a fine small group called &#8220;Ris et Danceries&#8221;;<br />
my highest compliment would be to state that you simply couldn&#8217;t tell where<br />
the music left off and the stage movement began.<br />
I cannot see, in other words, how a night at the opera could ever be any<br />
better than this.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Hildegard</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/1989/05/hildegard/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/1989/05/hildegard/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sun, 21 May 1989 18:10:50 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Herald Examiner]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=1932</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[After 800 years, Hildegard von Bingen is back in the headlines. Records of her music are beginning to pile up. Only last week there was a very clear   photograph of her in a West Side throwaway paper. (At least I [ITALassume [ENDITAL it's a photograph of her; it came alongside an article about her music, [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>After 800 years, Hildegard von Bingen is back in the headlines. Records of her music are beginning to pile up. Only last week there was a very clear   photograph of her in a West Side throwaway paper. (At least I [ITALassume [ENDITAL it's a photograph of her; it came alongside an article about her music, and had no caption. What else was one to think?)<br />
Let me assure you: there was a Hildegard von Bingen. She was born in 1098, and died 81 years later -- a remarkable old age in those pre-antibiotic days. She rates 2-1/2 pages in Grove's Dictionary. From early childhood she entertained visions; later, at the urging of the monk Volmar, she wrote them down: a cycle of apocalyptic revelations that made her famous in her time. She founded an abbey near the Rhine village of Bingen, was often consulted on matters of theology and politics by leading figures of the time, and became known as the "Sibyl of the Rhine."<br />
She also composed -- not symphonies, operas and concertos, of course, but extended musical settings for her own poetry. We have access to a great deal of music of her time, but Hildegard's surviving manuscripts are among the earliest that we can actually ascribe by name to a specific composer. Most music in those days was simply composed For the Glory of God and dropped anonymously into the collection plate. Here was Hildegard, standing up for her own creative rights -- one of the first to do so -- and a woman at that!  Do you begin to understand those headlines?<br />
Two major recordings of Hildegard's music have done the most to spread her name and her fame: a Hyperion record called "A Feather on the Breath of God" which has been out for some time, and a recent two-disk EMI set that contains an entire cycle of her works, a sort of morality play called "Ordo Virtutum" ("The Play of the Virtues"). Both sets are performed by some of the best early-music proponents of our time: the "Feather" by an ensemble under Andrew Page (who has done those marvelous "Carmina Burana" restorations), the "Ordo" by the German ensemble Sequentia. In both cases, the records at very least afford an interesting and beguiling excursion into the way latter-day musicians go about reconstructing music of the past, and endowing their findings with the aura of antiquity. Where the original manuscript may consist of a single line of dim symbols, today's performers have spread it out for voices and instruments, including some snazzy percussion.<br />
That's important. The surviving manuscripts of Hildegard, or of the hundreds of unnamed scriveners in the service of church music at her time, offer up the barest outline of unharmonized melodic shapes: scratchings and wobblings, on fragments of parchment, whose interpretations are still a matter of controversy. The aforementioned article in the West Side throwaway seemed to operate from the naive notion that, in addition to sitting for that fine photograph, Hildegard also completely composed the big, complex scores we hear on these records, all written out for voices and instruments as any modern composer might.<br />
The music, as it emerges from the hands of modern arrangers and onto these nicely-recorded CDs, is undeniably pretty. I am amused, however, at how an application of latter-day promotion has elevated this music to a higher level of grace than anything else of its time. Hildegard never achieved sainthood in the annals of the Church; now the modern hype machine has stepped into the breach. How would  her  noble spirit react to the knowledge that  she  has joined the ranks of modern crossover heroes? Did Hildegard really die for our sings [cq]?<br />
A recent Philharmonic concert introduced the name and the music of Arvo Part to the hallowed Music Center precincts. Word of this reclusive, Estonian-born mystic poet and composer, now living in West Germany, has circulated slowly. Three records of his music are readily available on the ECM label. The first two are of quiet, intense, sparse but overpowering works for small instrumental ensemble &#8212; including the 12-minute &#8220;Fratres,&#8221; which the Philharmonic played. The third is &#8220;Passio,&#8221; a 71-minute setting for voices and instruments of the Passion Text from the Gospel According to St.John &#8212; the same text used in Bach&#8217;s famous setting, but here sung in Latin.<br />
Like Hildegard, Part has achieved crossover status. (My measurement for this &#8212; partly if not entirely &#8212; is that music by both composers turns up on Tom Schnabel&#8217;s &#8220;Morning Becomes Eclectic&#8221; on KCRW, my lifeline to the outside world.) Like Hildegard, too, his music exists in a curious, elusive continuum.<br />
&#8220;Passio&#8221; is a strange, disturbing, utterly haunting work. Much of it hovers on the edge of silence, as does &#8220;Fratres&#8221; (especially in the version for string quartet, which the Kronos has played and recorded). The Passion story is narrated, by a vocal quartet with solo parts for Jesus and the Evangelist, in an unadorned, syllabic style, with a modal harmonization by a small instrumental ensemble that sounds both contemporary and old beyond time. <br />
Mostly out of journalistic convenience, Part has been called a &#8220;minimalist&#8221; by some semi-listeners. If that is so, the music of Glass and Adams and Reich is maximally luxuriant. So spare, and yet so intense, is this &#8220;Passio&#8221; of Part that it seems to create a vacuum into which the listener   &#8212; the willing, cooperative listener, that is &#8212; is drawn beyond any power of resistance. There is a sort of time-vacuum, too; Part scores the work for a group of early-music specialists (Britain&#8217;s marvelous Hilliard Ensemble on the recording). The vibrato-less singing and string playing destroys any sense of chronological specificity; this is music of any and all times.<br />
The Estonian conductor Neeme Jarvi, who conducted Part&#8217;s &#8220;Fratres&#8221; with the Philharmonic, knows him well; they both emigrated from their native land on the same day. Jarvi spoke to me enthusiastically of earlier Part scores, including three large-scale symphonies which he has recently recorded. At a time when some of us feel the need to raid the ancient archives in search of novelty, here is another genuinely new, vitally important composer on whom we can pin hopes for music&#8217;s future.<br />
Since Wagnerian Ring-o-Mania has currently seized imaginations in some corners of the musical world, it is time to point out that the 1935 recording of the first act of &#8220;Die Walkure,&#8221; with Bruno Walter conducting the Vienna Philharmonic and with Lotte Lehmann, Lauritz Melchior and Emanuel List the singers, has been reissued on a single EMI compact disk, still sounding fresh and vivid, still sung &#8212; especially in the case of Lehmann&#8217;s Sieglinde &#8212; in a way that ruins any possibility of there ever being a better performance. More simply put, this is one of the best performances of anything, ever.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Boulez</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/1989/05/boulez-2/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/1989/05/boulez-2/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 15 May 1989 17:37:57 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Herald Examiner]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=1876</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Expected miracles are no less miraculous than the ones that surprise. Pierre Boulez did, as expected, start the Los Angeles Philharmonic on the road back toward a state of orchestral grace at UCLA&#8217;s Royce Hall on Saturday night. The playing he got from his musicians was alert, precise and richly colored. The program was full [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Expected miracles are no less miraculous than the ones that surprise. Pierre Boulez did, as expected, start the Los Angeles Philharmonic on the road back toward a state of orchestral grace at UCLA&#8217;s Royce Hall on Saturday night. The playing he got from his musicians was alert, precise and richly colored. The program was full of challenge, even a few brambles. Yet the quality of the music, and the way it was played, encouraged the not-large-enough audience to hang around and cheer, for a longer time and with better reason, than than on any recent occasion at the Music Center.<br />
Two works were played: the &#8220;Formazioni&#8221; of Luciano Berio, completed in 1987 and heard for the first time on this coast, and Bela Bartok&#8217;s &#8220;Duke Bluebeard&#8217;s Castle,&#8221; a two-character opera dating from 1921, done in concert dress. The works are far apart in musical language; drawing parallels between them would be a futile exercise. What they do share, however, is a stupendous range of bravado simply in the use of the orchestra.<br />
The Berio makes no bones about its aim at tonal virtuosity. The orchestra is seated strangely, with violins up back, string basses  down front, and clumps of winds and brass scattered through the ensemble so as to engage in a certain amount of antiphonal byplay. The work lasts about 20 minutes, and seems to move forward on an unbroken energy curve. Powerful, abrasive, aphoristic fragments well up from the orchestra; much use is made of a steady, pounding repeated-note figure, almost like a fusillade.<br />
It&#8217;s immensely powerful, appealing, original music which, at the same time, seems to look back to the way Berio and his colleagues &#8212; Boulez among them &#8212; were composing two or three decades ago, in the throes of a passion for the atonality of Schoenberg and Webern that they would later disown. There&#8217;s nothing wrong with this kind of backward look, of course, if such it be. Caught up in the momentum of the work, I had the unshakable sense that I had heard it before, but was hearing it better now.<br />
About the Bartok, there are no such questions of old or new; the sense of newness in this magical  one-of-a-kind score remains. The scenario, with its undertone of psychotic horror that repelled censors, and many audiences, when the work was new, is by now familiar coin; read any half-dozen recent movie scenarios and you&#8217;ll find the essence of &#8220;Bluebeard&#8221; dragged to its imponderable extreme in at least half of them.<br />
But you won&#8217;t find, anywhere else, music with the iridiscent glow of this score, the power it has to hold its audiences motionless for its 50-minute duration. The vocal lines are not, of themselves, arresting; what makes them work is the uncanny rightness of Bartok&#8217;s range of orchestral color and the way voices and instruments form a unity greater than its parts.<br />
The work is intended for staging, but no production I&#8217;ve seen or can envision &#8212; including a genuinely off-the-wall production by the New York City Opera in which each singing character was shadowed by a dancer to embody a psychological alter ego &#8211;  serves as a visual counterpart adequate to the music. The superb suggestibility in the music itself doesn;t seem to need visual realization.<br />
Under Boulez, the music itself was marvelously realized. Two splendid soloists were on hand: Susan Quittmeyer, a little bothered in her lower range but otherwise brilliantly dramatic as the gloom-haunted Judith; Laszlo Polgar, a stunning, strong bass new to this area, stupendous as the blood-obsessed Bluebeard.  The performance was in Hungarian; the rarely heard spoken Prologue was given in English by Gail Eichenthal.<br />
The singing was fine, but it was the orchestra, and the astounding level of its playing, that capped the evening in both works. There&#8217;s nothing of the conjurer in Boulez, at least nothing apparent to the naked eye. His batonless beat is straightforward; he puts on so little show that you usually forget to watch him. Somewhere along the line, however, he does conjure up a way of convincing an orchestra of the rightness of his musical visions, and the results come across as a way of playing in a class by itself.<br />
The opening-night crowd was far too small for the magnitude of the occasion. Two Boulez weekends remain at UCLA, plus a &#8220;Green Umbrella&#8221; concert at Japan-America on May 22, plus a miraculous weekend at Ojai, June 2-4. From where I sit, Boulez is now, and has been for decades, the most important figure in the  musical world. To our great fortune, there is some unnamable essence in this city &#8212; and apparently nowhere else in America &#8211;that lures him here every happy now-and-then. I urge you to experience his work for yourselves; it&#8217;s a rare and cherishable opportunity.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Chamber&#160;Music/LA</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/1989/05/chamber-musicla/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/1989/05/chamber-musicla/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sun, 14 May 1989 17:41:53 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Herald Examiner]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=1886</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Once again the crowd was large and, for the most part happy; Chamber Music/LA ended its fourth annual go-around in a blaze of popularity if not glory. The playing, at the Japan-America Theater on Sunday afternoon, was mostly (if not entirely) of de luxe quality. The music, alas, was not. Mozart wrote few works that [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Once again the crowd was large and, for the most part happy; Chamber Music/LA ended its fourth annual go-around in a blaze of popularity if not glory. The playing, at the Japan-America Theater on Sunday afternoon, was mostly (if not entirely) of de luxe quality. The music, alas, was not.<br />
Mozart wrote few works that can be truly called dull, but the G-major Trio (K. 564) pushes strongly toward that epithet. Its opening melodic gambit is strained; the ensuing variations attempt to inflate a rather trivial theme; the final rondo, while pretty enough, seems to look back toward the blandness of rococo chamber music from earlier generations.<br />
Much the same, I&#8217;m sorry to report, applies with equal candor to the Piano Quartet of Schumann (Opus 47). The work dates from 1842, and was composed almost simultaneously with the Opus 44 Piano Quintet. From the evidence, however, the Quintet apparently absorbed all of Schumann&#8217;s creative inspiration at the time; there was nothing left for the Quartet.<br />
The music strains and gesticulates, but there is little profile in any of its ideas. Alongside the glorious, assertive, breathless energy of the Quintet, this piece is a washout. Yet it is often played; this was the second performance I&#8217;ve heard in recent weeks. Schumann is, after all, a name to contend with, and for some players this seems reason enough to keep even his inferior scores alive.<br />
Jerome Lowenthal and his piano were the illuminating spirits in both these works. A modest, smiling East Coaster whose repertory is vast and whose good deeds are many, Lowenthal was one of the founding spirits of this festival and has recorded with several of its stalwart players. Along with Yukiko Kamei and Nathaniel Rosen in the Mozart, and Christiaan Bor, Marcus Thompson and Jeffrey Solow in the Schumann, he did what he could for the pallid, flagging music, and it was almost enough. I especially liked the antic, playful rubato he brought to parts of the Schumann.<br />
Finally came the Brahms B-flat Sextet, with all its groaning, heaving, gesturesome emptiness. Brahms, the story runs, destroyed all his music he thought unworthy; if this piece was granted survival the mind boggles at what the rejects must be like. At its worst, the piece stands as a denial of the whole concept of chamber music: its players do not partake in a democracy of performers, but combine their sounds into a thick, formless murk.<br />
I survived two movements; more would have been a sacrifice far beyond duty&#8217;s call. The acidulous, intrusive tone of Paul Rosenthal&#8217;s violin didn&#8217;t help matters much. There is an old recording, with Jascha Heifetz taking on the first violin part, where he too played in this manner. That wasn&#8217;t chamber music, either. ]EP</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Boulez</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/1989/05/boulez/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/1989/05/boulez/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Fri, 12 May 1989 17:36:59 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Herald Examiner]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=1874</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Twenty-five years ago, when I first sat down with Pierre Boulez to discuss the future of the C-major scale and similar weighty matters, he had already emerged as a pulverizing presence on the musical landscape. He had called, in one famous interview, for a destruction of all the world&#8217;s opera houses and a reduction of [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Twenty-five years ago, when I first sat down with Pierre Boulez to discuss the future of the C-major scale and similar weighty matters, he had already emerged as a pulverizing presence on the musical landscape. He had called, in one famous interview, for a destruction of all the world&#8217;s opera houses and a reduction of the operatic repertory to just one work &#8212; Kurt Weill and Bertolt Brecht&#8217;s &#8220;Mahagonny.&#8221; He had terrorized avant-garde circles with an article called &#8220;Schoenberg is Dead.&#8221; <br />
The Boulez who comes to UCLA this weekend &#8212; where he begins a series of weekend concerts with the Los Angeles Philharmonic,  &#8212; has mitigated his outlook somewhat. Kinder? Gentler? That may be going a little far, but at least today&#8217;s Boulez has broadened his world view considerably. The opera he will conduct on this weekend&#8217;s concert is not Weill&#8217;s agitprop masterpiece but rather Bela Bartok&#8217;s mystical, psychological &#8220;Bluebeard&#8217;s Castle.&#8221; And he is actually delving into musical history &#8212; as far back, at least, as the Ninth Symphony of Gustav Mahler, a work now in its venerable ninth decade.<br />
Much, I need not remind you, has befallen Pierre Boulez since his hellraising days a quarter-century ago. As conductor of the New York Philharmonic following Leonard Bernstein, he had seven years to play footsies &#8212; not very happily, if truth be told &#8212; with the conservative dodos on that orchestra&#8217;s board. To amend  his nihilistic views on opera, he has recorded (marvelously) a repertory extending from Wagner&#8217;s &#8220;Ring&#8221; to Berg&#8217;s &#8220;Lulu.&#8221;  At New York&#8217;s Juilliard School he breathed fire at student workshops for hopeful composers and conductors; in his Los Angeles visits, on the contrary, he has played benevolent older brother to invited auditors at his rehearsals, and intends to do so again this time.<br />
But while Boulez has brought about a more genial accomodation with the outside world, his own deeds and creations have thrown up a continual challenge to comfortable and easy definitions of the nature of music. Combat Central is, of course, his IRCAM (Institute for Research and Coordination in Music and Acoustics), a vast and surprisingly joyous workshop that serves as a kind of marriage counselor for music and electronic technology.<br />
Interestingly enough, says Boulez, the IRCAM experience has forced him to expend more awareness on the music of the past. &#8220;It&#8217;s good to maintain contact,&#8221; he noted at an informal get-together a few days ago. &#8220;I don&#8217;t conduct music of the past just out of nostalgia, however; I don&#8217;t see any good in cooking something again that was already cooked 100 years ago. But I like to remind myself of the impact this music &#8212; the Mahler, for example &#8212; had on me when I was younger. I look upon my time with an orchestra as a hygienic exercise.&#8221;<br />
This year the statewide University of California is helping to spread the hygiene, bringing to Los Angeles a group of 25 handpicked music students who will attend the  rehearsals at UCLA and, Boulez promises, have plenty of opportunity to examine the scores, ask questions and learn a lot of challenging music from close up.<br />
&#8220;It will be an experience in musical realities,&#8221; he says. &#8220;At the Paris Conservatoire, musical education is completely out of touch with reality. It isn&#8217;t enough, just going to concerts; the only real learning comes when you are close to the music-making. Music can be listening, thinking, dreaming&#8230; but it also has its practical side: what can you expect of an oboe player? how much does a horn weigh?&#8221;<br />
Lucky students; they couldn&#8217;t ask for a better guide into the dry facts of music. There is a mystique that surrounds the Boulez brand of music-making, but it has its roots in the man&#8217;s genuine gifts as a conductor. Time and again he has come to an orchestra as guest conductor &#8212; notably the Los Angeles Philharmonic in 1984, when it last gave a Boulez series at Royce &#8212; and transformed an indifferent, tired ensemble into another orchestra entirely, elegant and exquisite balanced.orchestra that even the archetypal Frenchman only dreams about. Even his New York detractors, put off mostly by Boulez&#8217;s penchant for adventurous &#8212; shall we say &#8212; programming have to admit that the orchestra never sounded so good as during his time there &#8212; not before under Bernstein, and certainly not since under Mehta.<br />
That, at least. you can expect once again, in the excellent acoustics at Royce, or when Boulez and the orchestra move up to the  sylvan setting at Ojai for several miraculously challenging programs June 2-4. It&#8217;s ironic, in a way, that this supremely gifted orchestral craftsman has devoted so much of his life to playing with non-orchestral sounds, through the monkeying around with synthesizers and computers at IRCAM. Boulez sees the notion of electronic involvement as just a logical step in the evolution of the sound.<br />
&#8220;It&#8217;s traditional,&#8221; he says, &#8220;that composers want to go beyond the resources that are available to them at any given time. And so the musical industry must always keep up with composer&#8217;s hopes for the future, as well as his needs in the present. The growth in the iron industry in the 1840s, for example, made it possible to build pianos with stronger frames and with much more tension in the strings. This, in turn, led the great virtuosic piano music of the 1850s and beyond.<br />
&#8220;Today, a composer may want a certain sound on the harp, a microtone between two regular notes. But you cannot build a harp that will hold its tune so exactly that you can get such a note. Similarly, you cannot easily get microtones high up on the violin, because our fingers are too fat to find the right position exactly. And so, to satisfy the composer&#8217;s desire for these notes, we develop electronic means.&#8221;<br />
The danger, as Boulez sees it, is in mistaking the electronic gadgetry in a new work for the excellence of the work itself. &#8220;The composer mustn&#8217;t be the prisoner of technology,&#8221; he says. &#8220;He must give something back; the composition must be his, not the machine&#8217;s.<br />
&#8220;I&#8217;ll never stop conducting the orchestra. No matter how excellent our machines become, my greatest pleasure is my conducting.&#8221; [END</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Umbrella</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/1989/05/umbrella/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/1989/05/umbrella/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 10 May 1989 17:55:33 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Herald Examiner]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=1924</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[It always works: plan an interesting program and the crowds will come. Monday night&#8217;s Green Umbrella event at the Japan-America Theater stands as proof: a program of genuine interest, a near-capacity crowd. It was a program about daring, about musical exploration into unknown regions &#8212; most of all, into unknown sounds. It was an act [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>It always works: plan an interesting program and the crowds will come. Monday night&#8217;s Green Umbrella event at the Japan-America Theater stands as proof: a program of genuine interest, a near-capacity crowd.<br />
It was a program about daring, about musical exploration into unknown regions &#8212; most of all, into unknown sounds. It was an act of some daring, back in 1924, for the expatriate American George Antheil to essay a 20-minute piece scored for nothing but percussion instruments &#8212; plus such exotica as electric doorbells and an airplane propellor. As a concert piece or, even better, performed alongside its Surrealist/Dada filmic soulmate and namesake &#8211;  concocted by such blithe spirits as Man Ray and the cubist painter Fernand Leger &#8212; Antheil&#8217;s &#8220;Ballet Mecanique&#8221; is an exhilarating creation.  He never again composed anything as good.<br />
If the Antheil work, along with the film as beautifully restored by William Moritz, was the evening&#8217;s joyous highlight, it did not stand alone. Edgard Varese&#8217;s &#8220;Deserts&#8221; began the program, music by probably the most fearless of all composers, whose every work represented a purposeful step into the unknown. &#8220;Deserts&#8221; was begun in 1949; it represents one of the first serious attempts  to incorporate electronic sounds into the orchestra.<br />
True, those electronic sounds are, by today&#8217;s standards, rather primitive, resembling at times nothing so much as shortwave radio static. Yet the piece moves with abrasive, searing energy; while the orchestral and electronic sections barely overlap, Varese&#8217;s own fascination with the power of pure sound comes across.<br />
These are big, seminal works.  In the pre-concert discussion composer Morton Subotnick freely acknowledged his debt to these  musical ancestors. A pioneer himself especially in computer-related music, Subotnick has now developed an easy mastery over this live-vs.-electronic interplay; such works as his &#8220;Key to Songs,&#8221; and the new &#8220;A Desert Flowers&#8221; &#8212; which had its West Coast premiere at this concert &#8212; have despite their considerable complexity even made their way  into crossover circles.<br />
&#8220;Flowers&#8221; is a considerable work: four movements lasting nearly half an hour. Some of its straightforward, jogging energy may be familiar from earlier works, but the degree of contrast among sections marks a welcome change in Subotnick&#8217;s outlook. On one hearing I would single out a long, quiet slow section &#8212; a long-held deep droning, illuminated by soft flashes like the calling of distant birds &#8212; as the musical high point.<br />
This was the next-to-last of this season&#8217;s &#8220;Umbrella&#8221; concerts, the last of the programs produced by CalArts, with that school&#8217;s first-rate New CalArts 20th Century Players, brilliantly led on this occasion by guest conductor Stephen L. (&#8220;Lucky&#8221;) Mosko &#8212; with a taped helicopter as an acceptable substitute for Antheil&#8217;s propellor. Along the way there were also smaller program entries of variable delight: James Tenney&#8217;s jovial short piece, &#8220;Wake for Charles Ives&#8221; for nothing but four tenor drums in a steady rat-tat-tat; Charles Dodge&#8217;s &#8220;Viola Elegy,&#8221; a memorial to Morton Feldman, with Laura Kuennen&#8217;s rhapsodic if overlong  viola solo wreathed in warm, caressing electronic emanations.<br />
Michael John Fink&#8217;s &#8220;L&#8217;Age d&#8217;Or&#8221; enlisted the composer at a computer, pumping electronic commands, mostly of a rather bland, minimal content, into a row of playerless Yahama Clavinovas lined up in front of the curtain. If this last represented a vision of a post-atomic musical desolation the rest of the program, I gladly report, was a great deal more optimistic.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Tanenbaum</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/1989/05/tanenbaum/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/1989/05/tanenbaum/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 08 May 1989 17:54:51 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Herald Examiner]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=1922</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Sunday afternoon I sat in the handsome music room of a serene old Pasadena mansion, beguiled by the soft, silken sounds of David Tanenbaum&#8217;s guitar. Out through the picture window I watched as a beautiful small bird &#8212; some kind of finch, I think &#8212; landed on a branch and joined in with the music. [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Sunday afternoon I sat in the handsome music room of a serene old Pasadena mansion, beguiled by the soft, silken sounds of David Tanenbaum&#8217;s guitar. Out through the picture window I watched as a beautiful small bird &#8212; some kind of finch, I think &#8212; landed on a branch and joined in with the music. Then I thought to myself: if Mary Ann Bonino could somehow distill and bottle the essence of these Chamber Concerts in Historic Sites &#8212; both the music and the ambiance &#8212; the result would probably be declared an illegal substance.<br />
They&#8217;re that stimulating &#8212; these superb entertainments. This, the last in this season&#8217;s concert series, took place in the grand old Freeman A. Ford House, one of the Greene Brothers&#8217; great creations, dating back to 1907, surrounding a courtyard full, on this occasion, of good cheese and perfect strawberries. Can anyone still doubt that this is the best of all possible worlds? Or that Bonino has had a hand in making it so?<br />
Tanenbaum, New Yorker by birth and now based in the Bay Area, is one of the brightest of the young guitarists. He has built a distinctive reputation by shying somewhat away from the traditional guitarist&#8217;s repertory and cultivating an interest in some of the serious, exploratory works for his limited instrument that a number of composers &#8212; among them Peter Maxwell Davies and Hans Werner Henze &#8212; are writing today.<br />
He began with four lovely, deceptively simple, short pieces by Lou Harrison, works that explore exotic tunings and influences from Asian sources; these were followed by a group of short, adventurous Etudes by Cuba&#8217;s Leo Brouwer. The afternoon&#8217;s highlight, however, was a 10-minute sonata by Max Davies, composed in 1984 for Julian Bream: serene, reflective, mystical music that, with the quiet resources of this solo instrument, creates the effect of a vast landscape &#8212; extraordinary, powerful music small only in its physical dimensions.<br />
Two Dowland lute pieces,  Bach&#8217;s B-flat  Partita &#8212; imaginatively transcribed by Tanenbaum from the keyboard original &#8212; and a couple of Spanish-style encore pieces ended the varied and agreeable program. The guitar is gaining respect as a concert instrument, largely because players with Tanenbaum&#8217;s skill and good sense are encouraging new works. One problem, however, is that these soft, intimate sounds invariably seem lost in large, impersonal concert settings. This  time, thanks to Bonino and her inexhaustible treasure of good thoughts and deeds, the instrument seemed right at home, and so did we all.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Gondoliers</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/1989/05/gondoliers/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/1989/05/gondoliers/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 08 May 1989 17:45:29 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Herald Examiner]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=1896</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[There is more great music in any five minutes of &#8220;The Gondoliers&#8221; than in all of &#8220;Phantom of the Opera&#8221; and &#8220;Les Miz&#8221; combined. Why, this being so, must we languish so long between magical encounters with the glory of Gilbert and Sullivan, while the cultural kibble of today&#8217;s musical theater sprays out its crumbs  [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>There is more great music in any five minutes of &#8220;The Gondoliers&#8221; than in all of &#8220;Phantom of the Opera&#8221; and &#8220;Les Miz&#8221; combined. Why, this being so, must we languish so long between magical encounters with the glory of Gilbert and Sullivan, while the cultural kibble of today&#8217;s musical theater sprays out its crumbs  from all sides?<br />
A brief respite from latter-day horrors was in order this past weekend, when Richard Sheldon&#8217;s Opera a la Carte touched down at Ambassador Auditorium with its  marvelous &#8220;Gondoliers,&#8221; done straight as written &#8212; perpetrators of the current Long Beach Opera offering kindly take note &#8212; and done with great comedic high style. Sheldon founded the company nearly 20 years ago, and has obviously been its principal nourishing force; in this production he was the stage director and also took on the main patter role of the Duke of Plaza-Toro, both on a level of skill to gladden hearts of the most devout Savoyard.<br />
There aren&#8217;t many companies like this any more. An attempt to revive London&#8217;s defunct d&#8217;Oyly Carte troupe has now failed. There&#8217;s the New York Gilbert and Sullivan Players,  a first-rate full-time company that does two or three productions a year at Manhattan&#8217;s Symphony Space; San Francisco has its Lamplighters; we have Opera a la Carte which, now that I think of it, is quite a meaningful title. In this age when some stage directors take fiendish pleasure in tarting up the Gilbert and Sullivan repertory &#8212; sometimes even successfully, as with the Music Center Opera&#8217;s &#8220;Mikado&#8221; &#8212; it&#8217;s significant that those other above-named companies are dedicated to maintaining the d&#8217;Oyly Carte performing rubrics that go back to the time of the creators who, after all, usually knew best.<br />
Like Saint Paul to the Romans, the  d&#8217;Oyly Carte veteran Donald Adams came into this &#8220;Gondoliers&#8221; company as guest artist, to recreate his sumptuously resonant, rubber-jowled, oversized Grand Inquisitor. It was a glorious performance, as it always has been, but it wasn&#8217;t just a star turn among mere mortals. The company managed a consistent performance level worthy of its distinguished guest: Sheldon&#8217;s Duke, Eugenia Hamilton, in a hilarious hoopskirt roughly the size of a jet hangar, as his Duchess, Alison England (a living doll if ever there was) as their daughter Casilda, Laurance [cq] Fee and Mark Beckwith as the enthroned Gondoliers, Kris Kennedy and Kathryn Stewart as their brides &#8212; the most appealing female roles in the entire Gilbert and Sullivan canon.<br />
David Barber&#8217;s brightly colored cutout set designs were adequate if little more; Frank Fetta&#8217;s conducting was adequate if at times a little sleepy. The chorus &#8212; even if their numbers didn&#8217;t quite measure up to the &#8220;four and twenty&#8221; girls of Gilbert&#8217;s playscript &#8212; was well-drilled in both music and movement.<br />
All we have to do now is to find a way to nail down Richard Sheldon and his company in our midst on a 52-weel basis &#8212; if only to allow the still-pointed satire in both the words and music of the G&amp;S repertory to mirror the realities of today&#8217;s world, (There&#8217;s quite a lot in &#8220;The Gondoliers,&#8221; about political profiteering and influence-peddling in high places, that the Messrs. Bradley in City Hall and Wright in Washington might take to heart.)  More than ever now, when overpriced mediocrity is all we can expect from our living practitioners of musical theater, it&#8217;s time for a wholesale Gilbert and Sullivan restoration. Those old boys knew all the answers. So do the folks of Opera a la Carte, inheritors of the spirit.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Record&#160;reviews</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/1989/05/record-reviews-5/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/1989/05/record-reviews-5/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sun, 07 May 1989 18:14:26 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Herald Examiner]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=1944</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[There is nothing I know from the pen of the late Samuel Barber more beautiful than his &#8220;Knoxville: Summer of 1915.&#8221; No performance I have ever heard &#8212; including that of Eleanor Steber, for whom the music was written &#8212; matches the radiant beauty of Dawn Upshaw&#8217;s new recording on Nonesuch, with David Zinman and [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>There is nothing I know from the pen of the late Samuel Barber more beautiful than his &#8220;Knoxville: Summer of 1915.&#8221; No performance I have ever heard &#8212; including that of Eleanor Steber, for whom the music was written &#8212; matches the radiant beauty of Dawn Upshaw&#8217;s new recording on Nonesuch, with David Zinman and New York&#8217;s Orchestra of St. Luke&#8217;s.<br />
Barber wrote the piece in 1947, for Steber with Serge Koussevitzky and the Boston Symphony; three years later he rescored it for smaller orchestra, and that is the version usually heard today. His text is the whole of James Agee&#8217;s intensely poetic, nostalgic prologue to his novel &#8220;A Death in the Family&#8221;: a small boy&#8217;s memories of a summer twilight in a loving home. In 15 or so minutes, Barber manages to tuck around Agee&#8217;s glowing prose a lovely patchwork of simple, quiet melody: a gentle, rocking pastorale theme that recurs, other music of great good humor.<br />
Upshaw&#8217;s rise in the past few years has been a joy to watch. What I love about her performance here is the clear, limpid, unforced way she shapes Barber&#8217;s great lyrical phrases, and the pure beauty of her diction. For all the outpouring of a great vocalist&#8217;s art in the Steber performance (which she recorded twice), she never had the sense of phrase, and certainly not the diction, of this new performance. You couldn&#8217;t find a better piece to demonstrate the  beauty resident in music of our own century.<br />
The record also includes John Harbison&#8217;s &#8220;Mirabai&#8221; song-cycle, more recent music of exceptional beauty by a composer whose best work &#8212; like Barber&#8217;s &#8212; has been in the realm of vocal music. A cute aria from an early Menotti opera, and Anne&#8217;s big aria from Stravinsky&#8217;s &#8220;The Rake&#8217;s Progress&#8221; round out this cherishable collection, Upshaw&#8217;s first substantial recording on a major label,  a glowing testimony to a great new artist whose horizons seem limitless.<br />
The particular nerve endings so nicely soothed by Upshaw&#8217;s singing today were long ago gently stroked by the creamy tones and honeyed phrasing of the German soprano Tiana Lemnitz, whose best-known recording was her Pamina in the 1938 &#8220;Magic Flute&#8221; recorded in Berlin under Sir Thomas Beecham. The flood of old performances, mostly from radio broadcasts, resuscitated by small record labels for CD reissue now, implausibly and miraculously, turns up Lemnitz&#8217;s 1944 performance of Wagner&#8217;s &#8220;Wesendonck&#8221; Songs, in performances &#8212; on the Acanta label &#8212; that hover like silvery cobwebs in an ancient attic newly opened. Robert Heger is the conductor; the record is filled out with the overripe, late-romantic &#8220;Glockenlieder&#8221; of Max von Schillings, eloquently sung by Peter Anders. But the Lemnitz half of the record is the treasure, and it is beyond price.<br />
Perhaps we&#8217;re all a little out of breath from the musical events hereabouts in the last couple of weeks, a game of musical chairs somewhat staggering to the credulity. Just a week ago I named the Estonian-born conductor Neeme Jaervi as a plausible top choice to replace Andre Previn at the Philharmonic; a day later Previn had (to no great surprise) walked away from his scheduled final week of the season, and here, lo and behold, was Jaervi  in our midst to rescue that final program.<br />
My high estimate of his abilities stems mostly from recordings; I had missed his previous appearances here in 1985. But those recordings are spectacular. Chief among them is a complete set, on the Chandos label, of the nine symphonies and most of the tone poems of Antonin Dvorak, all performed under Jaervi&#8217;s baton by the Scottish National Orchestra.<br />
It should come as no surprise to find Dvorak so eloquently performed by a non-Czech composer &#8212; an Estonian, at that. Like the Italian Giulini a generation ago, Jaervi is reached by the childlike grandeur, the ingratiating insinuation in this music. The music itself is full of revelation, especially if you still think Dvorak&#8217;s range of expression begins and ends with the &#8220;New World.&#8221; Listen to one of my favorite &#8220;unknown&#8221; symphonies, No. 5, and hear the work of an interpreter with the patience to allow the music to smile its own smiles, and amble at its own pace, and the forbearance to let the unruly finale rant and rave and, ultimately, storm the heavens with golden sonorities.<br />
There is wonderful music-making on these Chandos disks. (The last, with the Symphony No. 8 and the extraordinary tone-poem &#8220;The Wood Dove&#8221; that seems to prophesy the melodic turns of a Kurt Weill, will be released in a couple of weeks.) You cannot blame me, therefore, for wondering if that brand of musicianship mightn&#8217;t be jwhat we need on our local podium.<br />
A complete set of the Dvorak Nine, in performances of this quality, is always welcome. Did we also need another of the Beethoven Nine? I suppose there&#8217;s no point in asking, so long as every ambitious conductor on the face of the planet regards his (or her) personal view on these sovereign works as a kind of signature on a contract drawn up by supernatural powers.<br />
Two major Beethoven-symphony projects are drawing to a close: Christoph von Dohnanyi&#8217;s complete set on Telarc, with the Cleveland Orchestra, and Roger Norrington&#8217;s on EMI, with his London Classical Players. Both sets, praise be, are issued as single records, so that their conductors&#8217; respective outlooks can be sampled without mortgaging the premises.<br />
I admire Dohnanyi greatly, and have no difficulty in regarding his Cleveland as our best American orchestra &#8211;and not far below the best anywhere. There is a quiet, respectful eloquence in these performances; they grow on you. The Dohnanyi Sixth comes very close, for me, to being my favorite recording of any Beethoven symphony. Its congenial way of unfolding, its sure and gentle way of holding the pace in that celestial slow movement, the humor throughout &#8212; all these are, to me, exceptional examples of a great conductor&#8217;s art. The odd-numbered symphonies, especially the Seventh, are here and there a little cautious. But there isn&#8217;t a false move, a wrong turning, anywhere in these performances, and the sound of the Telarc recording is its own catalog of miracles.<br />
The Norrington series, with its adherence to Beethoven&#8217;s minutest rubrics thoughout including the unworkable metronome markings that the composer &#8212; already deaf &#8212; stuck in willy-nilly, continues fascinating. The sound is startling at times, especially when those hard tympani sticks exact their toll on the authentic skin drumheads. The tempos are all the more startling, justified mostly by Norrington&#8217;s own skill in clarifying orchestral balances. I could not conceive of owning these as my only Beethoven symphony recordings; at the same time, I refer to these disks often; their refreshing unorthodoxies (which Norrington, of course, identifies as strict orthodoxies) becomes a constant stimulus to rethink everything I think I know about these works. You can&#8217;t ask more than that from a record.<br />
I wish I felt that way also about Norrington&#8217;s new disk of Berlioz&#8217; &#8220;Fantasic&#8221; Symphony (also on EMI). Sure, there are enough &#8220;departures&#8221; &#8212; again, as always, in the name of honor to the composer&#8217;s own wishes &#8212; to make this an equally simulating, thought-provoking venture. But I feel more the cold hand of the laboratory dissector here, and less the ardent fire of a Berlioz devotee; that, in this music, is a fatal flaw.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Long Beach&#160;Opera</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/1989/05/long-beach-opera/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/1989/05/long-beach-opera/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sat, 06 May 1989 17:49:26 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Herald Examiner]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=1906</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Everybody knows that Giovanni Paisiello&#8217;s &#8220;Barber of Seville&#8221; of 1782 isn&#8217;t a patch, comedically or musically, on the more famous Rossini opera of 34 years later. Still, the early work has a great deal of charm, and more than a few moments of genuine high style; it takes a real effort to suppress this opera&#8217;s [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Everybody knows that Giovanni Paisiello&#8217;s &#8220;Barber of Seville&#8221; of 1782 isn&#8217;t a patch, comedically or musically, on the more famous Rossini opera of 34 years later. Still, the early work has a great deal of charm, and more than a few moments of genuine high style; it takes a real effort to suppress this opera&#8217;s many virtues. In its new production, unveiled Saturday night as the first in a cycle of entertainments  based on the plays of Caron de Beaumarchais, the Long Beach Opera almost succeeded in this regard. In the end Paisiello won out &#8212; but barely.<br />
The destruction was spearheaded by two visiting, but hardly flying Dutchmen, director Hans Nieuwenhuis and designer Paul Gallis, both of them working under the familiar if deplorable delusion that small jokes can become twice as funny when made into large jokes. Just the opposite, actually, happens to be true. Dear, sweet Paisiello and his modest but shapely comedy simply groaned under the weight of the stage gimmickry, none of it particularly funny, some of it particularly embarrassing.<br />
Example: every scene was framed by a recurrent bit of pantomime, not mentioned in either play or opera, wherein Count Almaviva, and the Rosina he will win during the course of the evening, sit at a wedding feast. The table pops up from the stage floor and then pops down again (with a loud clunk); it is the approximate width of the stage so that the nuptial couple are separated by vast space &#8212; like Citizen and Mrs. Kane in Xanadu. A group of flunkies serve the dinner; the menu is even listed in the program. But the food is whisked away after the first bite. Why bother?<br />
Example: Rosina and Dr. Bartolo make their first entrances on His-and-Her balconies, suspended gondolas that resemble heavy traffic on a ski lift. Rosina, on her entrance, is watering a plant, with real water. Accidentally, she misses the plant and waters the waiting Almaviva down below. That gets a laugh, so you know she&#8217;s going to do it again. She does it again.<br />
Example: the credit-card gag; the electronic-keyboard gag for the Lesson Scene; the bursting-balloon gag for Michael Gallup&#8217;s &#8220;Scandal&#8221; aria&#8230;but why go on? Director Nieuwenhuis has burdened a perfectly fine musical conception with a repertory of stage shtik that merely clutters the opera and which, furthermore, his cast cannot manage very well.<br />
This is an  adequate singing ensemble, sometimes more than that. But it doesn&#8217;t seem to have occurred to the director, or to anyone else, that high comedy &#8212; or even low comedy posing as high &#8212; can work only when there is a meticulously devised, consistent acting style. Maybe, with guidance, someone might have shown Don Bernardini, the Almaviva, or Kathryn Gamberoni, the Rosina, the difference between fine comic acting and mere mugging. Apparently, nobody did.<br />
And so, the chance to rediscover a sweet little comic almost-masterpiece, with some moments of ensemble writing that surely guided Mozart&#8217;s pen in his own Italian comedies, has been weakened in one of the Long Beach Opera&#8217;s rare miscalculations of the past few years. Not all is lost, however. Nicholas McGegan&#8217;s splendid little orchestra contributes a fine, forthright crackle that moves matters past even the most abject stage business.<br />
No opera with Michael Gallup, furthermore, can be all bad; his strong, forthright Basilio could, with proper thinking-out, have been the bulwark for a solid, truly comic evening. So could the bright, mostly appealing Figaro of John Fanning and the Bartolo of David Evitts, a creation unusually responsive to the sadder aspects of this foolish figure. Gamberoni&#8217;s Rosina began badly, with the voice little more than a squeak in the first couple of scenes. But her big Lesson-Scene aria got her back on the track, and her angry outburst near the opera&#8217;s end was superfine. <br />
But the cause of the Paisiello &#8220;Barber&#8221; was lost early on, and remained just out of reach during the long evening. Oh well, this slender, slight opera may have been an easy one to push over. Next weekend comes &#8220;The Marriage of Figaro,&#8221; an indestructible masterwork and, thus, a far more formidable challenge to forces of destruction. Go to it, Long Beach!<br />
PLAYBILL<br />
THE BARBER OF SEVILLE, opera in two acts by Giovanni Paisiello, libretto by Giuseppe Petrosellini, from the Beaumarchais play. Produced by the Long Beach Opera, directed by Hans Nieuwenhuis, designed by Paul Gallis, conducted by Nicholas McGegan. At the Center Theater, Long Beach Convention Center. Remaining performances: 5/10 and 5/14 at 8, 5/27 at 2; tickets $10-$50; information 596-5556.<br />
Figaro&#8230;&#8230;&#8230;John Fanning<br />
Almaviva&#8230;&#8230;&#8230;Don Bernardini<br />
Rosina&#8230;&#8230;&#8230;..Kathryn Gamberoni<br />
Bartolo&#8230;&#8230;&#8230;.David Evitts<br />
Basilio&#8230;&#8230;&#8230;..Michael Gallup</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Iona</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/1989/05/iona/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/1989/05/iona/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Fri, 05 May 1989 17:48:01 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Herald Examiner]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=1902</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Iona Brown led her Los Angeles Chamber Orchestra into unfamiliar territory on at the Japan-America Theater on Friday night, and staked out a handsome claim. Contemporary American music has not figured on her programs until now, to any great extent. As her vehicle of entry into this most rewarding area, John Adams&#8217; &#8220;Shaker Loops&#8221; was [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Iona Brown led her Los Angeles Chamber Orchestra into unfamiliar territory on at the Japan-America Theater on Friday night, and staked out a handsome claim. Contemporary American music has not figured on her programs until now, to any great extent. As her vehicle of entry into this most rewarding area, John Adams&#8217; &#8220;Shaker Loops&#8221; was an excellent choice.<br />
Originally composed for seven solo strings and easily expandable for a larger ensemble, Adams&#8217; marvelous invention was also, for him, a vehicle of entry. It dates from 1978, and stands as Adams&#8217; first coming to grips with the minimalist esthetic. Eleven years later, it remains fresh and energetic: simple on its gleaming, hypnotic surface, but amazingly complex in the way it interweaves complex melodic and rhythmic fragments of varying lengths into a seamless fabric.<br />
How far this composer has come in those 11 years! &#8220;Shaker Loops&#8221; is Adams&#8217; purest minimalist score; in later works he works that style into a variety of contexts; minimalism has become, for him, one of a number of languages he has mastered. Yet the &#8220;Loops&#8221; is more than just a seminal work of historic interest; it is a beautiful half-hour&#8217;s worth of exuberant invention, not easy to play, very nicely done by the 24 string players of Iona Brown&#8217;s ensemble. It has also not lost its power to irritate the nonbelievers, judging from the number who came up to complain to me (why [ITAL me? [ENDITAL) during intermission.<br />
This was the season&#8217;s final concert by this justly famous and valuable ensemble: a program entirely for strings, led by Brown, as usual, from her post as first violinist. It began with a Purcell Trio Sonata &#8212; wonderfully rich, vivid stuff from the High Baroque, its wild chromatic harmonies at least as disturbing as anything in the Adams. Vivaldi&#8217;s 4-Violin Concerto followed. a rich, flavorsome work well known in its original version and also in Bach&#8217;s transcription for four harpsichords.<br />
The playing &#8212; as much as could be heard over the whoosh of the hall&#8217;s faulty air-conditioning system &#8212; was elegant, stylish, and refreshingly unmannered. Neither Brown nor her orchestra get very much involved with this &#8220;authentic instruments&#8221; controversy; her players play modern instruments, but with a sense of dedicated style that is proper for music of any century.<br />
Tchaikovsky&#8217;s &#8220;Souvenir de Florence&#8221; ended the evening; I might have preferred more very old or very new music, but the work has its share of prettiness. True, the original scoring &#8212; for six players &#8212; doesn&#8217;t transfer to a larger ensemble as well as the Adams did. But Brown, very considerately, did cut the ensemble back to original proportions in certain intimate passages, notably in the slow movement. It brought the season to a brave, sonorous conclusion.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Record&#160;reviews</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/1989/04/record-reviews-4/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/1989/04/record-reviews-4/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sun, 23 Apr 1989 18:13:50 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Herald Examiner]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=1942</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[A special place of honor is ordained for the EMI recording of Richard Strauss&#8217; &#8220;Ariadne auf Naxos,&#8221; first accomplished in 1954 and now at hand  in a two-disk CD reissue. Whatever your feelings may be about the work itself, you have to recognize this performance as one of those rare occasions when everything worked, when [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>A special place of honor is ordained for the EMI recording of Richard Strauss&#8217; &#8220;Ariadne auf Naxos,&#8221; first accomplished in 1954 and now at hand  in a two-disk CD reissue. Whatever your feelings may be about the work itself, you have to recognize this performance as one of those rare occasions when everything worked, when every component of an assembled dream cast, and a conductor uniquely responsive to the score itself, became transformed into a performing mechanism simply without flaws.<br />
The cast list should make anyone&#8217;s mouth water: Elisabeth Schwarzkopf in the title role, Irmgard Seefried as the Composer, Rita Streich as Zerbinetta, the young Hermann Prey as the Harlequin. Herbert von Karajan, already regarded in some (but not all) circles as the first great postwar conductor, was in charge.<br />
Doubts about Karajan&#8217;s omnipotence were already in circulation when this &#8220;Ariadne&#8221; appeared (on a three-record Angel LP album). On records he had already stiff-armed his way through a few Mozart albums and a rather coarse &#8220;Meistersinger&#8221; from Bayreuth. For this project, however, he was on his best behavior, and the result is a performance so delicately shaped, so subtly woven out of a multitude of elements, that the passages in Strauss&#8217;s score that seem like so much padding &#8212; some of the argle-bargle in the Prologue, and the mercilessly extended final love duet &#8212; seemed this time like integral parts of the score.<br />
The performance is complemented by a full roster of small delights: the gloriously stuffy Major Domo of the great Viennese actor Alfred Neugebauer, the elegant pomposity of Hugues Cuenod&#8217;s Dancing Master, the exquisite Echo of Anny Felbermayer, the playing of the Philharmonia Orchestra, whose first-desk players at the time included the legendary hornist Dennis Brain. I know better operas on records, but few  better performances. But why a booklet, for this most verbose opera, with no English text?<br />
If you saw the Long Beach Opera&#8217;s production of Karol Szymanowski&#8217;s &#8220;King Roger&#8221; a year or so ago, you might have noticed &#8212; despite the  strange production that visited interesting  violence upon  the time or place of the action &#8212; that the music itself was an extraordinary experience.<br />
Szymanowski&#8217;s huge dramatic pageant, set in medieval Sicily and involving some striking argumentation on the nature of religious faith, embraces a wide panorama of musical influences: Debussy and Stravinsky foremost, with more than a sidewise obeisance of Mussorgsky&#8217;s &#8220;Boris Godunov.&#8221; Now, for the first time, we can examine this extraordinary score at its own pace. &#8220;King Roger&#8221; is now available in a domestic release, two disks on the Acanta label,  from a  broadcast from Warsaw&#8217;s National Opera in 1965.<br />
The opera is short &#8212; 80 minutes, and don&#8217;t believe the mislabeling on the back of the CD box &#8212; and the performance under Mieczyslaw Mierzejewski, with Andrzej Hiolski and Hanna Rumowska as Roger and his Queen, is more trustworthy than glorious. So is the recorded sound. The accompanying booklet gives a plot summary and a fair amount of historical background but no text in any language.<br />
These are important, but not fatal drawbacks. The point is that &#8220;Roger&#8221; &#8212; as even the up-and-down Long Beach production suggested &#8212; is a great opera, and this release is unlikely to be duplicated from any other source in the near future. Filling out the second side is another Szymanowski score I&#8217;ll bet you&#8217;ve never heard, the ballet-pantomime called &#8220;The Highland Robbers,&#8221; full of lusty folkdances and some delicious orchestrations. It&#8217;s time we gave Szymanowski the attention he has long deserved., and this album points us in the right direction.<br />
If Szymanowski&#8217;s opera languishes in the shadows of undeserved neglect, it is like a neon billboard on Main Street compared to Franz Schmidt&#8217;s &#8220;Notre Dame,&#8221; which turns up &#8212; implausibly but admirably &#8212; in a West Berlin  performance distributed on the energetic, Los Angeles-based Capriccio label. The much admired Christof Perick is the conductor; the cast includes such well-known figures as Gwyneth Jones, James King and Kurt Moll (as, you might have guessed, the hunchback Quasimodo).<br />
Schmidt (1874-1939) still reigns as the central deity of a small but dwindling cult, mostly in his native Austria. In my student days in Vienna I remember attending a performance of his luridly overstuffed oratorio &#8220;The Book of Seven Seals&#8221; &#8211;  which the audience  absorbed reverently, without taint of worldly applause  &#8212; and feeling as if I&#8217;d wandered onto some unknown but hostile planet. Confessing my boredom to otherwise rational friends, I found myself looked upon as a blasphemer.<br />
That oratorio, should you care, is also on records, but &#8220;Notre Dame&#8221; is considerably more fun. Come upon it without prior knowledge, as I did during a recent broadcast, and you&#8217;d swear you&#8217;d discovered something unknown from Wagner&#8217;s middle years &#8212; a couple of missing acts of &#8220;Lohengrin,&#8221; perhaps. The libretto &#8212; from Victor Hugo&#8217;s novel, of course  &#8211;  is co-authored by Schmidt himself, with Leopold Wilk. There is, at least, plenty of action, some grand choral scenes, and a pathetic if amusing attempt by the composer to evoke the medieval setting of the novel through some naive archaisms.<br />
The opera dates from 1906, had a middling success at its 1914 Vienna premiere, and still shows up there from time to time (most recently in 1975, with Julia Migenes as Esmeralda). The recording is from a radio performance which, considering the meagre visual suitability of Gwyneth Jones as the seductive dancing girl, is probably just as well. To my surprise, I find the music almost constantly pretty, sometimes rather stirring. Considering the recent fate of Victor Hugo in the musical theater, I would endure ten performances of &#8220;Notre Dame&#8221; over one return visit to &#8220;Les Miz.&#8221;<br />
Georg Buchner&#8217;s &#8220;Wozzeck&#8221; was first performed in Vienna in the same year as the &#8220;Notre Dame&#8221; premiere. We don&#8217;t know &#8212; but can surely guess &#8212; what the rising young genius Alban Berg might have thought of the Schmidt opera, but we know of his bedazzled reaction to &#8220;Wozzeck,&#8221;and have its fruition in Berg&#8217;s operatic setting of Buchner&#8217;s text. It&#8217;s late in the day to proclaim Berg&#8217;s score as one of the  masterworks of this century.<br />
Claudio Abbado&#8217;s new Deutsche Grammophon recording takes the full measure of this surging, harrowing drama. It comes from a live performance of last season&#8217;s new production at the Vienna State Opera, and, of course, the in-person quality of the sound adds much to the vibrance of the final product. I have never been partial to the steely esthetic that seems to inform the Pierre Boulez recording of &#8220;Wozzeck&#8221; &#8212; the only version, of several formerly available, to survive into the last Schwann catalog. Abbado&#8217;s is altogether superior; the emotional spectrum, from the accents of private horror to the grisly shadow-dances in the Tavern Scene, is broader, and the sweep is irresistible.<br />
The cast is superfine: Hildegard Behrens as Marie, Franz Grundheber as Wozzeck, Heinz Zednik and Aage Haugland as the grotesque Captain and Doctor. The photographs in the accompanying booklet are enough to make one ache to see this production in person. From the fine print on the album cover I glean the information that the performance was also televised.<br />
&#8220;Wozzeck&#8221; is a difficult opera to approach, although the rewards are overwhelming. It is simplicity itself, however, beside the contents of another recent DG release, Karlheinz Stockhausen&#8217;s &#8220;Samstag aus Licht&#8221; (&#8220;Saturday from Light&#8221;).<br />
Since his early  electronic pieces at the experimental lab in Cologne in the  1950s, Stockhausen&#8217;s stature as the guru of the artistically outrageous and the artistically possible has never been challenged. It may be, as in the case of that other pioneer John Cage, that his eventual fame will rest upon the paramaters he has devised for musical experiences, rather than the music itself. In any case, his creativity has been well documented, most of all by Deutsche Grammophon, whose recording engineers have dogged his footsteps almost from the start. (His recordings do not, however, linger in the domestic catalog for very long. You need friends in Europe to help catch up on such past treasures as the spellbinding &#8220;Sternklang&#8221; or the &#8220;Mantra,&#8221; which have come and gone on the local lists.)<br />
Stockhausen&#8217;s major project in recent years has been an operatic cycle called &#8220;Light,&#8221; which when completed will consist of seven separate works &#8212; one for each day, each a score of considerable dimension. Perhaps &#8220;operatic&#8221; is the wrong word; what Stockhausen has in mind is more like some gigantic ritual, with Eternity the real subject matter. &#8220;Thursday,&#8221; whose central character is the Archangel Michael (interpreted, as near as I can figure, by a solo trumpet) was completed and recorded (also on DG) five years ago; now comes &#8220;Saturday,&#8221; nearly four hours long, built around the figure of Lucifer, Bringer of Light.<br />
The work involves magic, vast spatial effects, and infinite forbearance. You know that deep thinking is taking place, and the curtain parts often enough to reveal the product of a phenomenally complex creative instinct. The great moments in &#8220;Samstag aus Licht&#8221; &#8212; except for one special moment &#8212; have a direct power which, for all its abstruseness of design, can hold you spellbound.<br />
The performance, under La Scala auspices, was actually given in a Milan sports arena, involving as it does spectacular lighting effects, sounds racketing around a vast enclosed space, a large chorus, solo players and, as principal performers, a huge college marching band &#8212; in this case, the entire University of Michigan Symphony Band deployed around the hall. Just as noise, therefore, and  as remarkable recording, this is exhilarating stuff. Whether the exhilaration will last through four hours, however, is something I leave to you to decide.<br />
One moment, however, is precious. During the recording sessions the band members, apparently restless and, perhaps, absorbing the spirit of native Italian pit orchestras since time immemorial, stop playing and start yelling about unfair overtime. The mild-mannered Stockhausen tries desperately to sweet-tongue them, to no avail. Some flunky from La Scala is summoned; he speaks no English and scolds the musicians for not knowing Italian. The situation ends in what sounds like a standoff. The album notes, maddeningly explicit in detailing the complexities of Stockhausen&#8217;s system of interrelated thematic elements, offers few clues to this real-life situation.<br />
To the credit of Stockhausen, a practiced hand with musical &#8220;happenings&#8221; and other performance-art phenomena, most of the episode, from the outbreak forward, has been left on the recording. It is one of the moments in &#8220;Samstag aus Licht&#8221; whose high dramatic impact is evident to all.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Record&#160;reviews</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/1989/03/record-reviews-3/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/1989/03/record-reviews-3/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sun, 12 Mar 1989 18:13:18 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Herald Examiner]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=1940</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Steve Reich has done it again. Natter on  all you want on the subject of minimalism, its musical style on a treadmill, its major composers likewise. Yet here is Reich&#8217;s &#8220;Different Trains,&#8221; introduced last December at New Music America in Miami, out now on a new Nonesuch release, bearing the welcome news that Reich, at [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Steve Reich has done it again. Natter on  all you want on the subject of<br />
minimalism, its musical style on a treadmill, its major composers likewise. Yet here is Reich&#8217;s &#8220;Different Trains,&#8221; introduced last December at New Music America in Miami, out now on a new Nonesuch release, bearing the welcome news that Reich, at least, has retained his power to turn corners and face new horizons.<br />
A description runs the risk of sounding simplistic. Given, after all, the easiest cliches about the minimalist musical language, the image of the train comes quickly to mind: chug, chug, chug, clickety-clack. Reich has written his piece for the Kronos Quartet, with an overlay of sirens, bells, train whistles both American and European, and an underlay of taped voices, both straight and electronically processed, talking about trains &#8212; about the great speedy trains of the past, the doom-laden trains of the wartime concentration camps, the dying-out of train travel in our own time.<br />
The result is an exuberant latter-day tone-poem, lasting just under half an hour, overpowering in its sheer energy far beyond what my superficial description might suggest. The mix of voices and instruments is, for Reich, both old and new. The tape-loop processing in some of his first pieces &#8212; the boy&#8217;s repetitions in  &#8220;Come Out&#8221; for example &#8212; created a strange sense of subliminal melody; you came eventually to hear the cadence of the words rather than the words themselves. That happens again in &#8220;Different Trains&#8221; &#8212; in, for example, the words of an old train conductor remembering how things once were &#8212; and the music of the words forms a taut counterpoint with the playing of the quartet.<br />
From the earlier pieces dominated primarily by the sense of repetition and slow, almost imperceptible change &#8212; &#8220;Come Out,&#8221; the first extended version of &#8220;Drumming,&#8221; up to the magnificent &#8220;Music for 18 Musicians&#8221; of 1976 &#8212; to his present tightly, almost classically structured scores, Reich has gone through a steady stylistic growth. The explosive energy of the large-scale &#8221; Desert Music&#8221; of 1984, and the smaller, even more exuberant Sextet of a year later, were reined in by something new in Reich: a passion for clear, audible musical structuring. In place of the ongoing, open-ended expansiveness of the early works which seemed sometimes more to stop arbitrarily than actually reach a logical ending,  we got these new, tight pieces with tunes that kept coming back to round off the proceedings in an almost Mozartian way; the &#8220;Desert Music,&#8221; with its A-B-C-B-A over-all design, is as clear as any 18th-century Rondo.<br />
But, like the classical masters, Reich has the artistic insights to make this kind of structuring seem both well-balanced and surprising. in &#8220;Different Trains&#8221; the verbal narrative determines much of the over-all shape of the work. Yet the musical changes superimposed on that dramatic structure, the marvelous sudden shifts of harmony, rhythm and tone-color, create the propulsiveness, that zooms past the mileposts and sweeps us along.<br />
I don&#8217;t know if &#8220;Different Trains&#8221; is any kind of masterpiece in the cosmic sense &#8212; whatever that might be. Enough that it is a terrific, beautifully managed half-hour of musical exhilaration. So, on what is for me a somewhat lesser level of accomplishment, is the companion piece on the disk, Reich&#8217;s &#8220;Electric Counterpoint&#8221; for guitars, written for and played by Pat Metheny, another in the series &#8212; along with &#8220;Vermont&#8221; and &#8220;Manhattan&#8221; Counterpoints &#8212; in which one live performer plays one part live against a multi-track tape of his own playing of several (ten, in this case) other parts. The music is attractive, somewhat predictable if you know the other Counterpoints, and makes for some terrific cover art: guitar necks against railroad tracks.<br />
I wrote effusively about Harold Shapero&#8217;s &#8220;Symphony for Classical Orchestra&#8221; when Andre Previn and the Los Angeles Philharmonic revived it in 1986 and, better yet, repeated it two seasons later. American music does have a past, some of it glorious, too much of it forgotten. Now Previn and the Philharmonic have recorded Shapero&#8217;s  work on New World Records (along with a lesser make-weight, the &#8220;Nine-Minute Overture&#8221;); hear it as a supremely beautiful large-scale work rescued from the dust; hear it, even, as a source of national pride, a commodity that gets a rather severe shaking these days.<br />
Shapero composed the work in 1947; it was played and recorded not long afterwards by his Harvard schoolfellow Leonard Bernstein, with a pickup orchestra. Previn&#8217;s 1986 revival (part of the  ATT-financed program for rediscovering American orchestral music that also underwrote the return of  Roger Sessions&#8217; marvelous Second Symphony) was the first performance in over 30 years. Why?<br />
Shapero wrote the work at a time when American music was in the grip of a neoclassic passion. Stravinsky was the absolute god, and his major acolytes included the younger Elliott Carter, along with Irving Fine, Lester Trimble, Bernstein himself for a quick sideswipe, and Shapero. The passion was short-lived. Shapero&#8217;s marvelously inventive symphony, a strange but workable synthesis of Stravinsky and, of all unlikely bedmates, Beethoven, fell out of style before it had any real chance of making headway. The intense braininess of the work appealed little to the more illustrious proponents of new American music, Leopold Stokowski or, in his last years, Serge Koussevitzky. Aaron Copland&#8217;s and William Schuman&#8217;s  extroverted Americana was more to their taste.<br />
Time has mellowed our historical perspectives, and it&#8217;s easier to see the overwhelming forces that motivated this marvelous Shapero symphony four decades ago. I demean nothing, I hope, when I state that this recording stands as Previn&#8217;s most distinguished, most valuable accomplishment to date. It&#8217;s fortunate that, unlike the way these things usually work, Shapero has lived to see his masterpiece exonerated. He turns 70 next year.<br />
And Mel Powell (did you notice?) turned 65 last year. What a presence, this white-haired eminence, with the robust, eloquent boom-boom of his speaking voice and the quieter eloquence of his lapidary, exquisitely fashioned music. That long musical life of his, a &#8220;different train&#8221; with many way-stations, comes to focus in his great late scores: the days of playing jazz piano with Benny Goodman, the prismatic glints in his electronic tinkering, the ruddy wisdom of a lifetime.<br />
Music Masters has given us a garland of recent Powell, six works most of them first heard at CalArts, where Powell now teaches. A song-cycle to the multi-hued, aphoristic poetry of Mark Strand shines kaleidoscopic lights on the wonderful words, and Judith Bettina sings enchantingly. The bygone (sob!) Sequoia Quartet moves lovingly through the thickets of the 1982 String Quartet; the Sequoia&#8217;s first violinist, Yoko Matsuda, participates in two other brief works. Rachel Rudich&#8217;s flute resounds in another short work like a light in a dark wilderness.<br />
This is, then, a glorious record of small but strong delights; 45 minutes in the company of a warm-hearted tone-poet,  congenial and witty. Why is there so little wit in today&#8217;s music? Mel Powell makes us wonder.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<item>
		<title>Record&#160;reviews</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/1989/02/record-reviews-2/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/1989/02/record-reviews-2/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sun, 12 Feb 1989 18:12:43 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Herald Examiner]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=1938</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Reinhold Moritsevich Gliere died as recently as 1956; his musical style suggests a much earlier date. His memory is kept alive by two works, one tiny (a dance from his satiric ballet &#8220;The Red Poppy&#8221;)  the other huge (the Symphony No. 3, subtitled &#8220;Ilya Murometz&#8221;). Neither is what you&#8217;d call a masterpiece worthy of the [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Reinhold Moritsevich Gliere died as recently as 1956; his musical style suggests a much earlier date. His memory is kept alive by two works, one tiny (a dance from his satiric ballet &#8220;The Red Poppy&#8221;)  the other huge (the Symphony No. 3, subtitled &#8220;Ilya Murometz&#8221;). Neither is what you&#8217;d call a masterpiece worthy of the inner circle, but now &#8220;Ilya&#8221; is back in circulation, via a new recording, the first in many years. If you were worried that the world was running out of big, noisy, gorgeously resounding Russian romantic orchestral nonsense, here is music to replenish the dwindling stock.<br />
The work was first performed, in Moscow, in 1912. Its inspiration is a Slavic myth about &#8212; as if you hadn&#8217;t already guessed &#8212; a legendary Russian hero. Ilya is a mighty warrior who roams the landscape challenging all evildoers to mortal combat and chopping off their heads. Drunk with power  and victory, Ilya and his cohorts challenge a contingent of heavenly troops, who defeat the earthlings and turn them to stone. (Moral: lay off the hard stuff.)<br />
As storybook symphonies go, &#8220;Ilya Murometz&#8221; has its own great stock of dimwitted fun. Gliere builds interestingly, devising a tangled skein of leitmotives for the various characters in his vast panorama, and coloring them to match the unfolding of the action. The result is a marvelously colored, rich tonal fresco, beautifully orchestrated. I would put it up against Tchaikovsky&#8217;s &#8220;Manfred&#8221; or Rimsky-Korsakoff&#8217;s &#8220;Scheherazade&#8221; as an exemplar of good, lusty story-telling through imaginative musical means.<br />
The work is long, over 90 minutes in this complete recording under Harold Farberman (with London&#8217;s Royal Philharmonic, the orchestra that happens to be visiting these parts this very week). Those of us who know the work at all probably learned it through the old Leopold Stokowski recording on 78&#8242;s, which was cut back to about half that length. Agreed, you have to love this kind of overstuffed fustian to endure Ilya&#8217;s less-than-heavenly lengths. I admit to a soft spot for the work, and have combed the catalogs for years, hoping for its return. Farberman, a journeyman conductor who once led the Oakland Symphony during some not particularly distinguished years, holds the work together and makes no egregious errors. The recording, on the British Unicorn-Kanchana label, does the work full justice.<br />
Russian music on a far higher intellectual level comes on two recent releases on Sweden&#8217;s BIS label, both devoted to music of Alfred Schnittke. The belated discovery of Schnittke in the West, along with his astounding colleague Sofia Gubaidulina, can be ascribed to the current thaw in cultural relations with the Soviet Union, although in Schnittke&#8217;s case we have had a few inklings of his high qualities through the advocacy of the violinist Gidon Kremer. He is, in any case, an extraordinary creative artist, not easy to describe but unforgettable in the power of his music.<br />
One record contains three Schnittke Concertos: for piano with string orchestra, for oboe and harp with string orchestra, and a Concerto Grosso that pits small ensemble against large orchestra. The scoring suggests modest, baroque-ish pieces, but the results are otherwise. For sheer violence, an onslaught of sound at once brutal and marvelously controlled, I know no recent new music the equal of this 1979 Piano Concerto. The performances, by the very young New Stockholm Chamber Orchestra under Ulf Forsberg, are full of the kind of life-force that evolves when young people take on young music.<br />
The second BIS record includes music for larger ensemble: a work with two titles (Concerto Grosso No. 4, Symphony No. 5) lasting about 40 minutes, and a stupendous orchestral exercise, called &#8220;Pianissimo,&#8221; that lasts about 8 1/2. The Concerto/Symphony was completed only last year. Again, you are first dazzled by the sheer technique of the man, the mastery over startling musical ideas that borders on arrogance. The work is full of quotes and near-quotes; wisps of melody that could almost, but not quite, have come out of Handel come and go like passing puffs of smoke; now you hear it now you don&#8217;t. Schnittke has a great passion, apparently, for using his own music as a kind of critic&#8217;s notebook, crammed with wry and compelling observations on the past. (On another new record, a Kronos Quartet anthology on Nonesuch, there is Schnittke&#8217;s Third Quartet, an  exigesis on Beethoven&#8217;s &#8220;Grosse Fuge,&#8221; with patches of the original work reworked and commented on until old and new composer seemingly function like close contemporaries. This, too, is an amazing work.)<br />
&#8220;Pianissimo&#8221; dates from 1967/68; it bears its own amazement. More than an essay in quiet orchestration, it is a powerful, tightly packed emotional statement &#8212; composed, do not forget, in a far less beneficial creative climate in the Soviet Union than exists today. Performances on this second record are by the Gothenburg Symphony Orchestra under Neeme Jarvi. Both records are superbly recorded, further benefit to the performers and to the composer himself.<br />
Schnittke turns 55 this year. His fame in the past year, thanks to his two East Coast visits, both to attend major presentations of his own music, has spread rapidly in this country; I don&#8217;t hesitate to rank him among the leading composers of his generation. The next good news is that all his symphonies, including the wildly eclectic First that was the show-stopper of the Soviet-music Festival in Boston last March are now being recorded on the Melodiya label, distributed here by Mobile Fidelity.<br />
On two fat Erato albums the ebullient Slava &#8212; Mstislav Rostropovich to you &#8212; conducts music of his great friend Serge Prokofiev: all 7 symphonies on one album, the opera &#8220;War and Peace,&#8221; its four-hour expanse uncut, on another. The symphonies form a fascinating body of work, spread more or less evenly through the composer&#8217;s life, from the youthful cheekiness of the &#8220;Classical&#8221; Symphony to the Seventh, the work of a tired soldier who has apparently surrendered to Stalinist brainwashing and composes merely to keep his pen from rusting.<br />
In between, there are amazing works: the ice-cold brilliance of Nos. 2, 3 and 4 (with No. 3 fashioned from parts of &#8220;The Fiery Angel&#8221;), the warm, accessible neo-romanticism of No. 5, the almost mystical passion of No. 6, as subtle a work as Prokofiev ever fashioned.<br />
Rostropovich knows the music, and the performances he draws from the French National Orchestra are stylish and well-balanced. Perhaps he takes the &#8220;Classical&#8221; more seriously than its composer did; perhaps he could loosen a top button before taking on the finale of No. 5, where the element of humor is somewhat underplayed. On the whole, however, this is as distinguished a job of conducting as Slava has ever contributed too the record industry; these are records to cherish.<br />
With some sense of relief I happily announce that the worst record of the current year has already been released, thus ending the suspense more than ten months early. The record is on CBS, and it contains songs from Walt Disney movies sung by &#8212; ready? &#8212; the Mormon Tabernacle Choir. I mean&#8230;there are things in life that you immediately recognize as ultimate, definitive, and the sound of those close-to-400 voices raised to trace the  musical patterns of &#8220;Bibbidi-Bobbidi-Boo&#8221; simply has to be one of them.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Beethoven&#160;10+1</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/1989/02/beethoven-101/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/1989/02/beethoven-101/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 01 Feb 1989 18:08:15 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Herald Examiner]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=1926</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Did the world really need a Tenth Symphony by Ludwig van Beethoven? Apparently so, says a British musicologist named Barry Cooper, and who&#8217;s to say he&#8217;s wrong? Nothing would please me more, in fact, than to be able to greet this mangled, crippled, stillborn  product of Dr. Cooper&#8217;s fantasizing as the very Tenth we (some [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Did the world really need a Tenth Symphony by Ludwig van Beethoven? Apparently so, says a British musicologist named Barry Cooper, and who&#8217;s to say he&#8217;s wrong?<br />
Nothing would please me more, in fact, than to be able to greet this mangled, crippled, stillborn  product of Dr. Cooper&#8217;s fantasizing as the very Tenth we (some of us, anyhow) have so long awaited and prayed for. Alas, as a man of rock-ribbed conscience annealed in the crucible of a New England upbringing, I cannot. Last week in this space I cited this deformed monster     &#8212; recorded on a new MCA release by Wyn Morris and the London       Symphony Orchestra &#8211;   as the booby-prize entry among last year&#8217;s records; duty demands that I elaborate.<br />
Out of Dr. Cooper&#8217;s imaginings, and founded on the flimsiest scraps of evidence, has come a single 15-minute symphonic movement, its musical substance vaguely reminiscent of other Beethoven scores (the “Pathetique” Sonata, for one). In a half-hour lecture that fills out the recording of this brief movement, Dr. Cooper ingratiatingly describes his source material: some fragments here and there in Beethoven manuscripts, some equally fragmentary references in letters to the existence of, or plans for, a possible symphony in the key of E-flat. Dr. Cooper talks in the genial, earnest style of your basic tweedy scholar; you have to listen fairly carefully to recognize the off-putting mix of fact and hoo-hah in his reasoning. At very least, he sounds like a man who desperately wants there to be a Beethoven Tenth; you end up profoundly sad that there isn&#8217;t.<br />
And there isn&#8217;t. If the stitched-together pastiche were, indeed, an authentic Beethoven score, we would have to revise our estimate of the composer drastically downward. The timing is wrong; an idea with one sort of thematic potential is too often allowed in Dr. Cooper&#8217;s version to crawl ignobly under fences and land in alien territory. The noble Mozart once created a piece called “A Musical Joke,” which took off enchantingly and knowledgeably after amateur composers who, by starting phrases they cannot properly resolve, continually  paint themselves into corners. At least Mozart&#8217;s   inept village composers are comical; Dr. Cooper&#8217;s Beethoven isn&#8217;t even that.<br />
The byways of music are cluttered with the scraps of projects begun and abandoned, sometimes for reasons easily discernible, sometimes not. Some composers &#8212; Brahms, for one &#8212; had the good manners to burn their abandoned manuscripts, thus denying to later scholars like Dr. Cooper the ghoulish pleasure of reassembling their bones. Franz Schubert, less tidy, began, but never completed, not merely one “unfinished” symphony but five or six, including one manuscript that he literally took with him to his deathbed. Why would he abandon such a considerable body of work, including the  B-minor symphony whose surviving, completed two movements are one of music greatest treasures? Probably because he needed money, and because he recognized that an unknown composer, still in his 20s, didn&#8217;t have the chance of a snowball in you-know-where to interest an orchestral management in music so bold, so advanced for its time. (Would a composer in Schubert&#8217;s situation be any better off today? You know he wouldn&#8217;t!)<br />
In Schubert&#8217;s case we can fall back on these facts about his economic hardships to justify a certain amount of latter-day  tidying up of his abandoned material. In any case these surviving sketches, some of which have also now been pieced together into performable music, are the soul of coherence next to Beethoven&#8217;s henscratchings. We know, furthermore, that Beethoven&#8217;s creative method consisted of constantly reworking, revising, sketched material after it had been first written down; it&#8217;s fascinating, in fact, to follow the evolution of some well-known Beethoven themes from their clumsy first fashionings.<br />
Thus, even if Dr. Cooper&#8217;s source material did come from Beethoven&#8217;s plans for a new symphony &#8212; and the matter is by no means clear &#8212; he has tried to evolve full-fledged organisms out of crude embryos, a feat both artistically and biologically impossible. (At that, some of his claims are. to say the least, suspect. He claims to have exhumed some 200 bars of authentic material from  Beethoven sketches &#8212; about 40 percent of the total work he has brought forward &#8212; but fails to note that several of these measures are actually second versions of first attempts.)<br />
What disturbs me the most, in all of this, is the insidious mix of pseudo-scholarship and media hype that such projects engender. Musicology is a fragile science. At its purest, scholars huddle in dimly-lit rare-book libraries, poring over ancient codices and developing extended dissertations on, say, the symbolic intent of the recurrent E-flat in the 14th-century Belgian liturgy. At its liveliest, in contributes the valuable news about long-lost and important rediscovered music, such as all that new material in  Offenbach&#8217;s “Tales of Hoffmann” that greatly enhanced last fall&#8217;s production at the Music Center.<br />
If Dr. Cooper had restricted his discoveries to finding a clutch of lost symphonies by, say, Karl Ditters von Dittersdorf, the musical world would have said “harrumph” and gone about its business. But Dr. Cooper has decamped on Beethoven territory, which is like setting up a burger joint in St. Peter&#8217;s Square, and it becomes incumbent for the musicologists of the world to clean out their own stables.<br />
It&#8217;s not as easy as it sounds, however. I couldn&#8217;t advocate casting into limbo all existing latter-day completions of old-time incomplete scores, since that would lose us such honorable scores as Berg&#8217;s “Lulu” (whose last act was completed from an elaborate scaffold left by the composer) or Mozart&#8217;s Requiem (whose completion by Mozart&#8217;s pupil Sussmayr is beautiful but controversial). It would also lose us the undeniable, if far more questionable, attractions of a whole wad of Schubert completions by another British musicologist, Brian Newbould, which also have some musicologists up in arms.<br />
I love the Newbould pseudo-Schubert &#8212; all recorded, by the way, on Philips, in rather frigid but clean performances by Neville Marriner and his Academy of Saint Martin-in-the-Fields &#8212; in a way I cannot accept the Cooper Beethoven. At least they [ITALsound [ENDITAL plausible; Newbould has done his stitching on larger scraps of fabric and with stronger thread. His completion of the Seventh Symphony, from a sketch in which Schubert indicated at least one musical line in every bar of a large-scale four-movement score, gives us a clear picture of the young Schubert&#8217;s growing orchestral mastery. And that work from Schubert&#8217;s last days on earth, a three-movement score containing many holes in the outer movements, embraces a bleak, shattering slow movement that takes its composer to a peak from which a vast musical panorama comes into view, stretching from a deathbed in 1828 Vienna to the wild visions of Gustav Mahler eight decades later.<br />
That work of Schubert, by rational listing, is also a Tenth Symphony. So you never can tell.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<item>
		<title>Ring&#160;video</title>
		<link>http://www.soiveheard.com/1989/01/ring-video/</link>
		<comments>http://www.soiveheard.com/1989/01/ring-video/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sun, 15 Jan 1989 18:15:45 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alan Rich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Herald Examiner]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://soiveheard.com/?p=1948</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Old Sourpuss has finally made it. His &#8220;one indivisible, supreme creation of the mind of man&#8221; &#8212; that being Richard Wagner&#8217;s own modest appraisal of his &#8220;Ring of the Nibelung&#8221; &#8212; has now achieved its ultimate consecration. Would the old boy be proud to learn that, starting right now, anyone with the requisite bucks can [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Old Sourpuss has finally made it. His &#8220;one indivisible, supreme creation of the mind of man&#8221; &#8212; that being Richard Wagner&#8217;s own modest appraisal of his &#8220;Ring of the Nibelung&#8221; &#8212; has now achieved its ultimate consecration. Would the old boy be proud to learn that, starting right now, anyone with the requisite bucks can acquire the totality of that staggering creation at his local video emporium: the sights, the sounds, the &#8220;total artwork&#8221; of its composer&#8217;s imagining? You know he would!<br />
This videodisk &#8220;Ring,&#8221; complete in four volumes with an extra documentary disk detailing the genesis and making of the whole project, is the 1976 Bayreuth production which first showed up on PBS in 1983 to honor the Wagner centennial. Perhaps you taped it at the time, intricately calculating how, by changing recording speed and alternating tape lengths, you could get each uninterrupted act onto a single cassette. Perhaps, like me, you promised yourself frequent private reruns, sitting spellbound as all 15 hours of Wagner&#8217;s titanic drama sailed past on the tube. Perhaps, like me, you haven&#8217;t actually touched those tapes in all these years.<br />
Anyhow, now you can toss them. The electronics boys have been predicting lately that we were due for a resurgence of the laser-videodisk, that altogether superior method of video recording that has muddled along as a poor relative to videotape all these years. There is no clearer confirmation of these predictions than these &#8220;Ring&#8221; disks, issued on Philips (which also produced the audio versions of the same performance). The sight, the sound (digital stereo, of course), the whole impact is, in a word, stupendous.<br />
Fifteen hours of the &#8220;Ring&#8221;? That&#8217;s an arcane exercise, of course; even Wagner planned the cycle to allow for a night&#8217;s sleep between sections. But I cling to the memory of once wandering into a series of rooms at London&#8217;s Victoria and Albert Museum, flooded by the sound of the classic Solti recording that was being played continuously that whole summer, pouring down from loudspeakers into  rooms carpeted with bodies wall-to-wall, tuning in, turning on, blissed out.<br />
Neither this proletariat stretched out on a museum floor, nor you and I in private ecstasy in front of a video monitor, exactly conforms to Wagner&#8217;s elitist image of his ideal audience; never mind. The &#8220;Ring&#8221; is the easiest to approach of all Wagnerian dramas. Its musical style is less forbidding than that of &#8220;Tristan&#8221; or &#8220;Parsifal&#8221;; its story infinitely more universal. You can prove that latter point in at least two ways.<br />
One way is by contrasting Wagner&#8217;s own dramatic vision to the way Patrice Chereau has staged the work here: an industrial setting of Wagner&#8217;s own time, with the Rhine surging through a massive hydroelectric plant, the drag
