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Posts categorized "Arts, Music, Movies & Theatre"

May 14, 2008

goethe's italian journey

in association with amazon.com, click More from David Derrick's The Toynbee convector, on one of my favorite reads: Goethe’s Italian Journey.

The book itself in translation:  Italian Journey: 1786-1788 (Penguin Classics)

Online, it's available in German only:

Continue reading "goethe's italian journey" »

May 05, 2008

elliott carter still going strong and composing at almost 100

The amazing Elliott Carter, who will be 100 in November:

Published: May 1, 2008
The playful qualities of Elliott Carter’s music outnumbered potential hazards on Tuesday night in the Peter Jay Sharp Theater at the Juilliard School.

Elliott Carter discusses his new clarinet quintet
Jennifer Taylor for The New York Times

The composer Elliott Carter, far right, discussed his new “Clarinet Quintet” with Ara Guzelimian, the dean of the Juilliard School, on Tuesday after the Juilliard String Quartet and the clarinetist Charles Neidich performed the piece.

April 23, 2008

theoi e-texts library of classics

In connection with yesterday's post on Virgil I discovered this great site:

The Theoi Classical E-Texts Library

"A collection of works from ancient Greek and Roman literature in translation. The theme of the library is classical mythology and so the selection presented consists primarily of ancient poetry (epic, lyric, bucolic, et. al.), drama and prose renditions of myth."

Explore it and enjoy!  Don't miss the Gallery.

April 13, 2008

what do early romantic composers and jane austen have in common?

Felix Mendelssohn BartholdyAccording to Christian Knapp, who was the guest conductor this weekend at the Stamford Symphony Orchestra, and discussing Felix Mendelssohn's Symphony #4 (The Italian), the early Romantic composers such as Schubert and Mendelsohn had much in common with Jane Austen: they had the same restrained emotions.  I'm not so sure, on either side, having watched the recent Austen craze on PBS, and listening to the second movement of the above symphony.

All this is by way of a lead-in to today's enjoyable concert.  Christian Knapp did not disappoint, though I may have heard better interpretations of the Mendelssohn in my long life.

Continue reading "what do early romantic composers and jane austen have in common?" »

March 28, 2008

before this gets lost in the shuffle: illustrations to ovid's metamorphoses

From The Ovid Project. The text links for the Baur – in German – are next to the plates:

Aetas Aureus

Image: Baur Plate 3: Aetas aurea

March 26, 2008

'the other zenobia' – from judith weingarten's blog

This is too good to pass up:  Judith Weingarten (Zenobia, Empress of the East) blogged another Zenobia:  Treachery in Armenia and the Musical Drama of Johann Adolf Hasse!  Don't omit listening to the aria!

Tacitus, Annals, Book 12.

March 17, 2008

lauro de bosis and edward sheldon
friends of thornton wilder

Thornton Wilder dedication of  The Ides of March reads:

This work is dedicated
to two friends:

LAURO DE BOSIS
Roman poet, who lost his life
marshaling a resistance against
the absolute power of Mussolini;
his aircraft pursued by those of the Duce
plunged into the Tyrrhenian Sea;
and to

EDWARD SHELDON

who though immobile and blind
for over twenty years
was the dispenser of wisdom,
courage, and gaiety
to a large number of people.

Continue reading "lauro de bosis and edward sheldon
friends of thornton wilder" »

February 17, 2008

more on monasticism

The figures Gibbon particularly draws our attention to in the early history of monasticism are St. Anthony in Egypt and St. Martin in Gaul.

Monasticism seems to have started in Egypt, and we have accounts of some of the monks by  Rufinus and Palladius. Perhaps the most famous of the monks was St. Anthony, a life of whom was written by his contemporary admirer, Athanasius. The Catholic Encylopaedia has a more modern account.

Anthony has been a popular subject for painters: Hieronymus Bosch painted a lurid picture of Anthony's temptation by demons. Another picture on the same subject was painted by Matthias Grünewald as part of the Isenheim Altarpiece, which also contains a more restful picture of Anthony's visit to St. Paul the Hermit.

Continue reading "more on monasticism" »

January 08, 2008

longtime director of met museum will retire

Philippe de Montebello, click for story From the New York Times:

Published: January 8, 2008
Philippe de Montebello, who has led the Metropolitan Museum of Art for 30 years, announced on Tuesday that he planned to retire at the end of the year.

Photo: Fred R. Conrad/The New York Time

December 21, 2007

on translating fiction

in association with amazon.com, click here Being bi-lingual and interested in languages and literature, I have or so I like to believe, a fine ear (or eye) for literary translations in the languages I know.  Here is a recent experience:  A short while ago, I read The Rest Is Noise: Listening to the Twentieth Century by Alex Ross, a history of classical music in and of the 20th century.  Excellent!  Related blog, with musical examples.  The author relates that a number of American musicians/composers have read Thomas Mann's Doctor Faustus: The Life of the German Composer Adrian Leverkuehn As Told by a Friend. This sent me back to my library to re-read the novel, in the original German, about a composer who makes a Doctor Faustus-like deal with the Devil and eventually sinks into insanity, coinciding with the turmoil of the 1920s in Germany and the rise of Nazism.  The novel is a tour de force in prose, and I wondered how this could actually be translated into English without loosing its impact.  Not very well, I decided, after I had borrowed the above linked 1997 edition, translated by John E. Woods.  As a matter of fact, I could not bring myself reading much of the book, it was too painful.  Somewhere out there, there is a translation authorized by Thomas Mann, but it's out of print. 

The question though is, do translations ever work satisfactorily?

Continue reading "on translating fiction" »

August 23, 2007

tanglewood music center: così fan tutte in modern garb & slapstick

Every year, the Tanglewood Music Center studies and performs one opera, in the old Theatre building, the only one at Tanglewood that has proper stage facilities and an orchestra pit.  This year it was Così fan tutte under James Levine, and I had secured the ticket early because the theatre is not very big.

But when I was there, I began to wonder, was it worth it?

The director was Ira Siff of La Gran Scena Opera Company, a “travesty group with falsetto ‘divas’ ”.  And so it should not have been much of a surprise that there was a lot of slapstick.  The question though is, how far can one go interpreting a Mozartean dramma giocioso?

Continue reading "tanglewood music center: così fan tutte in modern garb & slapstick" »

classical concerts at tanglewood 2007

Tanglewood Shed before concert Every Friday, Saturday and Sunday in July and August, there are concerts in the Tanglewood Shed, mostly with the Boston Symphony playing, some memorable, some not.  So here are my impressions:

Kurt Masur conducting Prokofiev (Symphony No.1, Violin Concerto No.1 with Joshua Bell) and Beethoven (Symphony No,1, and two days later Mozart's last three symphonies, 39, 40, and 41.   Mr. Mazur turned 80 a couple of weeks earlier.  My impression is that the BSO always plays Mozart and Beethoven better under him.  (I didn't like their performing these composer at all when Seiji Ozawa was the orchestra's music director, but it has improved some under Levine.)  In any case, both concerts were great, and Joshua Bell his usual excellent self.

Continue reading "classical concerts at tanglewood 2007" »

August 22, 2007

2007 festival of contemporary music – the generation of ‘38

The Festival of Contemporary Music (FCM) at Tanglewood this year had the theme “The Generation of  ‘38,” meaning most of the music performed was by (American) composers born in 1938 or thereabouts.  Almost all of them were present at the festival.  John Harbison, the festival director, is one of them.  (The FCM link above is accompanied by an audio portion describing  a photographic retrospective of the  festival in the Visitors  Center.)

Performers, with the exception of a few professional soloists, were the fellows of the Tanglewood Music Center (TMC),

 Established in 1940 by former Boston Symphony Orchestra Music Director Serge Koussevitzky, the Tanglewood Music Center (TMC) provides a unique, in-depth musical experience for emerging professional musicians of exceptional ability.

Judith Tick, Consulting Scholar, conducted lively pre-concert talks, often with the composers themselves.

Continue reading "2007 festival of contemporary music – the generation of ‘38" »

music and other arts in the berkshires this summer

Brook Farm Porch Laptop finally works again ... and another summer in the Berkshires with music and other arts is over.

Greeted by baby finches on the front porch who managed to hide well in the hanging fern plant and weren't fazed at all by the constant traffic of guests, let alone by those sitting and chatting on the porch, I happily settled in familiar surroundings.

Continue reading "music and other arts in the berkshires this summer" »

July 17, 2007

pope leo the great and attila the hun

In telling how Pope Leo persuaded Attila not to attack the city of Rome, Gibbon is more sympathetic to later legendary accretions to the story than he usually is: Gibbon Chapter 35

"The apparition of the two apostles of St. Peter and St. Paul, who menaced the barbarian with instant death if he rejected the prayer of their successor, is one of the noblest legends of ecclesiastical tradition. The safety of Rome might deserve the interposition of celestial beings; and some indulgence is due to a fable which has been represented by the pencil of Raphael and the chisel of Algardi."

I have added links to images of the artworks Gibbon is referring to.

Continue reading "pope leo the great and attila the hun" »

July 16, 2007

ravenna

"...and in the twentieth year of his age the emperor of the West, anxious only for his personal safety, retired to the perpetual confinement of the walls and morasses of Ravenna. The example of Honorius was imitated by his feeble successors, the Gothic kings, and afterwards the Exarchs, who occupied the throne and palace of the emperors; and till the middle of the eighth century Ravenna was considered as the seat of government and the capital of Italy."

Gibbon: Chapter XXX.

Although Ravenna's port had been founded by Augustus as one of the headquarters for the Empire's Mediterranean fleet, it was Honorius' shifting of the capital to Ravenna that brought the city its lasting fame, which can be summed up in one word: mosaics. Eight buildings in Ravenna have been placed on UNESCO's World Heritage list because of their mosaics.

Continue reading "ravenna" »

June 27, 2007

apelles of kos, greek painter, fourth century b.c.

In his delightful travel guide for time-travelers to Ancient Rome, Ancient Rome on Five Denarii a Day, Philip Matyszak writes (describing Caesar’s Temple):  “… And among the numerous statues and works of art are two paintings by Apelles, one of the greatest artists of  antiquity.”

This painting, a mural from Pompeii, is believed to be based on Apelles’ Venus Anadyomene, brought to Rome by Augustus.

Mural from Pompeii, click for larger image

Continue reading "apelles of kos, greek painter, fourth century b.c." »

June 25, 2007

honorius and his favourites

The Favourites of the Emperor Honorius, click for more This passage from the end of Gibbon's chapter 29 and the accompanying footnote sparked off a memory.

His subjects, who attentively studied the character of their young sovereign, discovered that Honorius was without passions, and consequently without talents; and that his feeble and languid disposition was alike incapable of discharging the duties of his rank, or of enjoying the pleasures of his age. In his early youth he made some progress in the exercises of riding and drawing the bow; but he soon relinquished these fatiguing occupations, and the amusement of feeding poultry became the serious and daily care of the monarch of the West, (61) who resigned the reins of empire to the firm and skilful hand of his guardian Stilicho.

Continue reading "honorius and his favourites" »

May 14, 2007

dream of scipio – mediaeval background: pietro lorenzetti (also: beata umilta)

Beata Umilta Transports Bricks to the Monastery, click for larger image In our current read, The Dream of Scipio, Olivier's painter friend Pisano recalls his studies with Pietro Lorenzetti in Siena.

Pietro Lorenzetti aka Pietro Laurati (c.1280-1348) and his brother Ambrogio Lorenzetti helped introduce naturalism into Sienese art and in turn Pietro imparted it to the fictitious Pisano.  The latter's experimentation in naturalism in Avignon gains him an unexpected assignment from Cardinal Cecconi

Read more about Lorenzetti at Wikipedia (with the usual caveat) and about the Sienese school.

Continue reading "dream of scipio – mediaeval background: pietro lorenzetti (also: beata umilta)" »

May 12, 2007

the ahn trio – an evening of contemporary music

Ahn Trio - Center for Chamber Music Last night we attended the last performance of the season at the Greenwich (Connecticut) Center for Chamber Music which mostly show-cases young artists.  The concert featured The Ahn Trio, consisting of South Korean, Juillard trained sisters: Angella Ahn (violin) and twins Maria Ahn (cello) and Lucia Ahn (piano).  Their website is a bit funky, but you can listen to them perform.  Their performances have had mixed reviews as far as their mastering techniques are concerned, but I found them not only lively but impressive, and they are still young enough to have a potentially great career ahead.

While the group does perform standard classical works, and its recording of trios by Dvorak, Suk, and Shostakovich has won Germany's prestigious ECHO Award in 1998, the sisters have created Ahn-Plugged, commissioning and/or show-casing modern composers of various styles, including jazz and heavy metal (of sorts).  Which makes them very much okay in my book!

Continue reading "the ahn trio – an evening of contemporary music" »

January 28, 2007

tiberius claudius caesar britannicus

Britannicus coin, click for larger image One of the most chilling scenes in Anthony Burgess’ The Kingdom of the Wicked is the murder of Britannicus (p. 350), mainly through its banality, as opposed to what one commentator has called “the theatricality of Tacitus.”

Britannicus was born Tiberius Claudius Germanicus in AD 41, the son of the emperor Claudius and his third wife Valeria Messalina.  After the Roman conquest of Britain in AD 43 he became Tiberius Claudius Caesar Britannicus.  After the death of the notorious Messalina, Claudius married his niece Agrippina the Younger (see also blog entry), the mother of the later emperor Nero.  Claudius adopted the latter, probably not so much due to Agrippina’s intrigues but the fact that he needed a son who was closer to his majority.

Continue reading "tiberius claudius caesar britannicus" »

January 21, 2007

stefan jackiw – amazing young violinist

violinist Stefan Jackiw, click for more Today, we went to the Symphony and listened to an amazing young violinist, Stefan Jackiw, who played Bethoven's Violin Concerto, the first time he performed this concerto in public.  He will be performing it in February with the Boston Symphony.

Mr. Jackiw is a Senior at Harvard University, at the same time pursuing an Artist Diploma at the New England Conservatory.  He is 21, looks 18, and comported himself with authority in the pre-concert talk.  He has already played with major orchestras, and even though he made his debut at age 14, with the Boston Symphony, he does not consider himself a child prodigy.  The Washington Post, in 2005, called him a Talent That's Off the Scale.  Until recently, he played the “Kiesewetter” Stradivarius, but has switched, if I heard correctly, to a Guarnieri.  I think it's wonderful that young artists nowadays have the opportunity to play great instruments through loans.

Continue reading "stefan jackiw – amazing young violinist" »

January 12, 2007

agrippina

in association with amazon.com, click here The huge cast of characters in our current read, The Kingdom of the Wicked, includes Agrippina, niece and wife of Claudius and mother of Nero. Mary Beard's latest blog post muses about writing programme notes for a new production of Handel's opera, Agrippina, and has a nice illustration of a coin with an image of Agrippina. Mary Beard also refers us to the wikipedia page on Agrippina, which has a picture of Ava Gardner as Agrippina in the mini-series A.D.  Anthony Burgess says in the Author's Note to The Kingdom of the Wicked:

Thus, The Kingdom of the Wicked, which was partly written for its own sake, partly in anticipation of A.D., may be regarded both as an expansion of the latter and a literary diversion in its own right.

Anthony Burgess of course follows the lurid stories in the ancient sources, but Memorabilia Antonina has a nicely illustrated blog post which gives extensive quotes from the sources and attempts to show that the lady has been much maligned.

December 27, 2006

nine heroes tapestries and julius caesar / the unicorn tapestries (met museum)

Julius Caesar in the Nine Heroes Tapestry, the Cloisters Still from our Saturday visit to The Cloisters:  There is a gallery that houses the late 14th / early 15th century Nine Heroes Tapestries, depicting Pagan heroes Hector, Alexander the Great and Julius Caesar;  Christian heroes Charlemagne, King Arthur and Godfrey of Boullion;  and Hebrew heroes Joshua, David and Judas Maccabeus.  I was quite taken with good old Julius Caesar, with his handle-bar mustache  and a divided, curly beard, and his crown!

Continue reading "nine heroes tapestries and julius caesar / the unicorn tapestries (met museum)" »

December 26, 2006

caelius sedulius, fifth century christian poet

On Saturday before Christmas, we went to The Cloisters at Fort Tryon Park, NY, which houses the bulk of the Medieval collection of the Met Museum.  We went there mainly to listen to a concert by the Pomerium, an a cappella group which sings Gregorian chants and Renaissance music.  Samples of their work.

The concert was mostly Gregorian chants and their Renaissance elaborations.  One was “A solis ortus cardine,” the text by the early fifth century Christian poet Caelius Sedulius, best known for his Carmen paschale.

From the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica:

SEDULIUS, COELIUS or Caelius (a praenomen of doubtful authenticity), a Christian poet of the first half of the 5th century, is termed a presbyter by Isidore of Seville and in the Gelasian decree.

Continue reading "caelius sedulius, fifth century christian poet" »

December 18, 2006

the met in december

Christmas tree and Baroque Neapolitan nativity scene, click for moreSunday we went into the big city, trains packed, incredible crowds on Fifth Avenue … and on to the Metropolitan Museum and its great annual Christmas tree and Baroque Neapolitan nativity scene.  It’s impossible to describe the elaborate crèche!  Pastoral and town scenes, Wise Men on camel and elephant, and much more.

There is also Judaica on View, from the Nuremberg Chronicle.

The main exhibit this and next month is Americans in Paris, an extensive overview of American painters in 19th century Paris, and those who did not live in Paris – short-term or long – but nonetheless exhibited at the salons and expositions

Continue reading "the met in december" »

December 11, 2006

a postscript on the clark museum

Alma-Tadema Piano, click here for more Last summer, I blogged the Sterling & Francine Clark Art Institute, better known as The Clark, and mentioned my favorite piano.

Mary Beard was visiting there, in her typical irreverent way, on the weekend.  (Not that she isn't right on the money…)  And lo and behold, she found an image of the Alma-Tadema piano!  It wasn't online when I blogged it.   I wish though they would show a frontal view, it's much more interesting.

Enjoy Mary's blog and the piano!

December 03, 2006

belisarius in the 19th century: lord mahon & donizetti

in association with amazon.com, click here Paolo Belzoni, author of the novel Belisarius: The First Shall Be Last, reviewed here, told me that one of the secondary sources he used was

The Life of Belisarius by Lord Mahon

Lord Mahon (wiki, handle with care), Fifth Earl of Stanhope, 1805–1875, member of parliament, was a trustee of the British Museum, proposed the foundation of a National Portrait Gallery, and facilitated the Historical Manuscripts Commission.  From 1846 on he was president of the Society of Antiquaries.

He published the Belisarius biography in 1829, at the age of 25, and it was reissued in 1848, but with hardly any changes.

The work has been reprinted this year with an excellent introduction by Jon Coulston, who corrects the relative few errors in the work.  The Life of Belisarius was the only excursion into ancient history by Lord Mahon, all his other writings are on modern history.

Continue reading "belisarius in the 19th century: lord mahon & donizetti" »

August 14, 2006

philadelphia orchestra at tanglewood

Yesterday, on a perfect day – sunny, absolutely blue sky, and pleasantly cool – I did another trip up to Tanglewood to listen to the Philadelphia Orchestra under its music director Christoph Eschenbach playing  Beethoven  (The Creatures of Prometheus, Op. 43, Ballet Music and Symphony No. 8 in F major);  and Tchaikovsky's  Symphony. No. 5 in E minor.

It was loud!  I'm kidding …  It was a great performance.   After a nice and briskly played Prometheus, we got to the meat with Beethoven's Symphony No. 8, which is somewhat of a tour de force of exuberance, jests and jokes. I found some online program notes.

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August 08, 2006

tanglewood all-in-one

I'm trying to resolve some image opening issues in Mozilla Firefox and Netscape, meaning that right now I can only put 10 posts on the frontpage for it to work.

Thus here are my Tanglewood posts together for easier access (you may also go to the  Arts, Music, Movies  & Theatre Index):

shostakovich string quartets
an orgy of mozart at tanglewood (can't get the URL to work, sigh - go to )
a stravinsky performance and three (living) composers
a little music education
hans graf conducting
the festival of contemporary music at the tanglewood music center (I)
the festival of contemporary music at the tanglewood music center (II), opera
the festival of contemporary music at the tanglewood music center (III), two concerti
the festival of contemporary music at the tanglewood music center (IV), the fromm concert
the sterling and francine clark art institute
all good things come to an end . . .

Addendum 8/14:  philadelphia orchestra at tanglewood

August 04, 2006

all good things come to an end . . .

Stockbridge Bowl as seen from TanglewoodMy last, and by now very hot, day did come and it was time to say goodbye, Linda & Phil, see you next time!

One final look at the lake …

… and my home away from home

home away from home

… and I was off, into 100 degree plus the farther I got south.

On the way,  I stopped to pick up some lunch at my tea dealer,  Harney & Sons Fine Teas, in Millerton, N.Y.   There they have a store, with a tasting room, a gift shop, and a nice little tea room, where they serve healthy and tasty sandwiches, and iced Chai.  The latter kept my going until I was home, where I barely  escaped  – by a couple of street blocks a power failure caused by the excessive temperatures.

So back to reality.  With all the great music going on, the students having a ball, the rest of us enjoying ourselves, it was often easy to forget the horror that is going on half a globe away…

the sterling and francine clark art institute

The Sterling and Francine Clark Art Institute in Williamstown, Massachusetts, is probably one of the best small private museums in the country.  We never miss a visit while up in the Berkshires and never get tired of the permanent collection, which is detailed here.

The collectors Sterling and Francine Clark opened the museum in 1955.  Thus, last year the museum celebrated its 50th anniversary, and still does in The Clark: Celebrating 50 Years of Art in Nature and with 50 Favorites you can view everyone of them online!  This summer's special exhibit pays a tribute to Sterling Clark and his brother Stephen, The Clark Brothers Collect: Impressionist and Early Modern Paintingsextensive online coverage of the exhibit.  The brothers originally collected similar art, but then Stephen earned Sterling's disdain when he started collecting moderns beginning with Cézanne, a period  Sterling could not relate to.  He considered some of Matisse's works “awful things”.

Later, the brother had a falling out over inheritance and did not speak to each other any longer.  While Sterling founded his museum, Stephen became involved with MOMA, and later gave part of his collection to that institution, as well as to other museums.  He also was the founder of the Fenimore Art Museum (American, folk, and native art) and the National Baseball Hall of Fame both in Cooperstown, New York where both brothers grew up.

This is the first time that collections by the brothers have been shown side by side (poor Sterling is probably revolving in his grave), and fascinating it is.  They both liked Renoir, as well as American painters such as Winslow Homer.  Sterling collected John Singer Sargent, Stephen preferred Thomas Eakins and Edward Hopper.

The exhibit will be on view at the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York from May 22 through August 19,  2007.

In the permanent collection, there was a small special exhibit of a new acquisition, Delacroix and the Horse, which was shown opposite drawings (black and colored chalk on paper) and sculptures by Degas, which I did prefer over Delacroix.  Also a Toulouse-Lautrec, “The Jockey”.

Then, I went to look for my favorite (ghastly?) piano, designed by Sir Lawrence Alma-Tadema. Next to it hang “The Women of Amphissa”, and another one which we had not seen before, “Preparations for the Festivities”.  For more on Alma-Tadema see my earlier blog.  My friend loves the Singer Sargent Fumée d'ambre gris.

All in all a perfect day, escaping the heat…

11/11/06 postscript

August 03, 2006

the festival of contemporary music at the tanglewood music center (IV), the fromm concert

The Festival of Contemporary Music always concludes Monday night with the Fromm Concert.  From the website:

The Fromm Music Foundation at Harvard University, founded by the late Paul Fromm in the fifties, has been located at Harvard University since 1972. Over the course of its existence, the Fromm Foundation has commissioned over 300 new compositions and their performances, and has sponsored hundreds of new music concerts and concert series, among them Tanglewood's Festival of Contemporary Music and the Fromm Concert Series at Harvard University. In 1992-1993, the Paul Fromm Composer-in-Residence program at the American Academy in Rome was founded, and the annual Fromm concert and Paul Fromm Award for Composition at Tanglewood were established.

This year's concert was another of the highlights of the festival, bringing us as sole performance  “Blood on the Floor”  for three jazz soloists and large ensemble (1995) by the English composer Mark-Anthony Turnage.  Turnage, a protégé of Oliver Knussen and Hans Werner Henze, is this summer's composer-in-residence at Tanglewood.  He is also co-composer-in-residence at the Chicago Symphony.  His works are often based on paintings by Francis Bacon – the title of the work comes from a Bacon painting – poems, and plays.  A Langston Hughes poem allusion is also part of this piece. 

Turnage combines pop, funk, and jazz with classical music, but, as the program notes point out, “crossover”, as opposed to today's commercial term, with Turnage means a true hybrid.

A brief online description of the work.  in association with amazon.com, click here The individual movements are listed with this CD:  Turnage: Blood on the Floor.  Fast movements alternate with slow ones – “in the good old Baroque pattern”, as the program notes say.  The latter were extensive and extremely helpful, too bad I can't scan and post them here.

To me, “Blood on the Floor” was a riveting piece of music!

The classical jazz soloists were Martin Robertson, soprano saxophone (although he did play at least two different types of saxes);  John Parricelli, guitar;  Peter Erskine, percussion;  and listed, Dave Carpenter, bass – I could not see him though, unless I missed him. There were several guest artists among the ensemble, especially the guitarist Michael Gandolfi.  The conductor was Stefan Asbury, the festival director.

BBC profile of Mark-Anthony Turnage
London Philharmonic profile

the festival of contemporary music at the tanglewood music center (III), two concerti

Sunday evening, after a not too inspiring first half, those in the audience who stuck it out were rewarded with two pieces for solo instrument and ensemble:

Ron Ford:  Versus for solo violin and ensemble (2006)
Poul Ruders:  Psalmodies for guitar solo and nine instruments (1989)

Versus, by Ron Ford, was a world music premiere, commissioned by the TMC with support from the Paul Jacobs foundation.  The ensemble consists solely of winds with the exception of two double bases, which contrasts nicely with the violin, which has a quite melodic part.  The soloist, 21-year old Russian born Yevgeny Kutik, a resident of neighboring Pittsfield where his mother Alla Zernitskaya is a music teacher, is a Fellows of this year's Tanglewood Music Center.  He played the part beautifully!  Googling found that he has won various prizes, and most likely has a promising career ahead.  And so has the conductor Kazem Abdullah, another TMC Fellow.  He is the founder and conductor of the Aspen Mozart Orchestra and the University of Cincinnati Community Orchestra, and has been assistant conductor of the Jeunesses Musicales World Orchestra and the Cincinnati Contemporary Music Ensemble.  In the fall he will become assistant conductor at the Los Angeles Opera.  I saw him several times, and he conducted Hin und Zurück.

in association with amazon.com, click here In contrast, the soloist in Poul Ruders ' (more on him) Psalmodies was David Starobin, a renowned classical guitarist, proponent of contemporary music, and founder of Bridge RecordsPsalmodies was written for him and premiered in 1990.  Tomasz Golka, another TMC Fellow, was the conductor.  The piece consists of eleven movements, beginning and ending with the solo guitar.  The other movements vary in the number instruments playing.  The interactions between the guitar and the ensemble are a bit difficult to describe, all I can say is that it was very enjoyable.  The descriprion of the numbers can be found on this CD:

Ruders: Psalmodies, together with two other works by Ruders, Vox in Rama for violin, clarinet & piano, and Nightshade, for 10 instruments.

August 01, 2006

the festival of contemporary music at the tanglewood music center (II), opera

The absolute highlight for me was the “Triple Bill” opera performance

Paul Hindemith: “Hin und Zurück” (There and Back), a Sketch with Music
Igor Stravinsky: “Mavra”
Elliott Carter: “What Next?” (conducted by James Levine with the composer in the audience)

The sets were by Doug Fitch (temporary available reviewsDirector brings unconventional ideas to opera and What’s Next for Opera).  Slighty surreal but in simple colors, they perfectly fit the stories but were not distracting from the happenings.  The costumes were by Catherine Zuber, and the lighting designer was Clifton Taylor.

Unfortunately, no photography whatsoever was allowed due to copyright protection, i.e., one could not take pictures of the sets & cast at the end of the performances.

Hin und Zurück is a farcical musical sketch, with a jealous husband shooting his wife to death (very funnily done by a little boy running with a bullet from the gun and poking the wife with it) and a midpoint from which everything is played backwards.  The piece begins with a sneeze by an otherwise mute (and deaf) aunt knitting and observing the proceedings, played formidably by Phyllis Curtin, and ends of course with a sneeze too.  Hindemith composed the sketch in 1927 in four days for the Baden-Baden Festival, at a time when unserious opera was de rigeur.

Mavra, composed in 1922, is an opéra bouffe about star-crossed lovers;  musically, compared to Hindemith, rather conservative, combining Stravinsky’s neo-classical period with his then pre-occupation with Tchaikovsky.  It is dedicated to the memory of Pushkin, from which he took the storyline; Glinka, whose influence is also shown;  and Tchaikovsky.  It is the last Russian-themed piece of music Stravinsky would compose.  The character of the lover Vasily, appearing in drag as the cook “Mavra”, has a wonderful buffo drag role.

What Next, a one-act tragic comedy about 40 minutes long, is Elliott Carter’s only opera, composed 1997/98.  Although he has written much for voice, and toyed with Aristophanes'  The Birds  (Mr. Carter studied the classics and literature at Harvard), and  The Emperor’s New Clothes, he didn’t get around to it until he was about 90 years old.  Working with the librettist Paul Griffith, who also took bows, Carter used a highly involved traffic accident sequence in Jaques Tati’s Monsieur Hulot movie Trafic to create the story.  When the curtain rises, a child is sitting on a rock and five adults emerge apparently unharmed from their smashed automobiles but in utter confusion about who they are and how they are related to each other;  and what follows is how the adults perceive each other, never quite getting it, it seems.  This makes for wonderful solos, duos, trios and on so on.  The child is a catalyst of sorts.  At one point, two road workers appear and inspect the scene, but do not notice the people.  One wonders at times, as the program notes author does, are they dead?  However hard they try, the characters can never resolve their situation, and at the end, the audience is left with the question “What Next?”

The singers, all TMC fellows, were outstanding, and they must have loved the Carter opera.

There were two performances on consecutive days.  I had so much fun and, through a mistake, an extra ticket, so that rather than giving it away, I went both times, and was by no means the only one who did so!  On the first day, one got the overall impression, on the second day one could concentrate on the music.

The happenings at the Friday afternoon performance were enlivened by a couple of tremendous thunderstorms, during which rain came through the roof of the “Theatre” building, an old wooden structure, which is the only one with an orchestra pit and stage facility.  It rained not only on the audience, but on the stage too, and the “What Next?” singers ada