With big-ticket American opera premieres from Adams and Picker already under our belt this season, there’s been a lot of ink-spilling over how new opera can/should function in the 21-century. Is opera just too over the top for cynical modern audiences, who can take hours of CGI violence but not suspend belief far enough to… Read more »
The Los Angeles Times hopes to add an additional arts reporter to its staff….Expertise in visual arts, architecture, classical music, theater, dance or any combination would be a plus, but curiosity and flair are what’s required. When did being clever become an acceptable, or even desired, substitute for being skilled?
I fear that we are beginning to lose a sense of the difference between what I shall call art music (or, God forbid, serious music) and popular music. As a presenter, I am flooded with material offering programs that “bridge the gap” when, in fact, I treasure the difference.
Hila Plitman – soprano, Richard Clement – tenor, Atlanta Symphony Orchestra and Chorus, conducted by Robert Spano One of the bravest acts by a record company in recent memory must certainly be Telarc’s commitment to record, music unheard, two works commissioned by the Atlanta Symphony and Chorus from composers not known for their choral writing.… Read more »
Perhaps interpreters would be as desirous to play new music as they are playing standard repertoire if they could “own” the performance more than they currently do.
Fulcrum Point New Music Project gets elemental, devoting their entire season to music somehow connected to air.
Warning: Turn the volume down a little bit before you pop this disc into your player, otherwise prepare yourself for an earsplitting assault. I’ve encountered all sorts of wall-of-sound approaches, from noise shows requiring earplugs to acoustic forays into aural chaos, but for some reason this CD seems really f-ing loud. Now then, with the… Read more »
The concert situation last weekend in New York left contemporary music fans with a busy schedule. The multitude of new music concerts included, among others, the Golijov Festival at Lincoln Center, the Juilliard Focus! Festival, and the Orpheus Chamber Orchestra performing a world premiere. Attending concerts all weekend, I found each offered something different, including ensemble, venue and even contrasting styles. With so much diversity under the panoptic title of “new music,” it made me ask: What is new music? This then leads one down the rabbit hole to ask the even bigger question: What is classical music? Two concerts in particular adequately summed up my findings.
Friday night was spent at the Juilliard Focus! Festival featuring music composed in the past year. Opening the night was a full orchestra piece by Zhou Long, The Enlightened, which was written to depict the composer’s awareness of international political conflicts. Sounds rumbled from the orchestra like a cloud of tension and anger. Through its untraditional landscape of sound, it was still composed in a traditional classical style of notes on a staff with meters and time signatures, scored for the ever-traditional full orchestra. Okay, classical music, check.
The next piece on the program started to blur the lines. Jukka Tiensuu, a Finnish composer, wrote a concerto for accordion and orchestra. Mikko Luoma, the guest accordionist, demonstrated the accordion’s many faces by simulating low bass lines of the bass clarinet and basses up to the high scratchy sound of violinists wistfully drawing their bows up and down the E string. Accordions are not quite a traditional classical instrument, but due to the presentation of the accordion as total orchestral machine, I felt able to check the classical music box on this one, too.
The concert concluded with an even bigger surprise from Paul Schoenfield who presented a jazzy rendition of the story Channah from the Old Testament in gospel-style with a narrator reminiscent of the comedian Chris Rock. There was an orchestra, but now with a choir, six vocal soloists including the high-pitched voice of a male countertenor, and a narrator. It wasn’t your typical orchestral concert offering, in either presentation or style of music. Was it still classical music? Maybe it was the venue, or the size and type of ensemble (orchestra, choir, soloists), but it seemed like classical music to me.
Venturing out from Lincoln Center, I headed downtown to the hole-in-the-wall experimental music club Tonic on Sunday night. None of that old “classical music” stuff was on the program, but the similarities to what I might consider new music were unavoidable. In true John Cage manner, the first act of the night, HZMT (Anthony Miller), pushed the definition of music. It was noise; feedback, static, pulsing bass at random intervals, all produced through circuits protruding out of a flat piece of wood. Composers of contemporary classical music are always looking for new ways to define sound, and this guy was no different. Were these excruciating loud, scratchy, trance-inducing sounds new music, classical music, or both? The music also played out in a minimalist vein with repeated motifs and slow-moving changes in sounds (a noise musician’s equivalent to tones). The lines were blurry, labels failed me, and even the surroundings couldn’t lend a helping hand in defining what I heard.
The concert ended with James Probiega under his alias Little Howlin’ Wolf. He played a drum set, at one point turning the bass drum on it’s side, using his hands to play, all while jamming on the harmonica. He was a man of many talents, playing both the tenor and alto saxophones – at the same time. He had two men behind him, one at the electronics table mixing in eclectic sounds while another guy played a set-up of bongo drums and cymbals to a beat of his own. I heard some jazz, blues, and folk influences, but there wasn’t a box I could check with this act. What made it any different from the music of other contemporary classical compositions? They were, as many composers strive for, finding new sounds.
Coming out of the haze Tonic left me in, I couldn’t help but realize that terms like classical music and new music were inane. They don’t mean anything outside of the meaning we prescribe them, which varies from person to person depending on their experience with music. A close relationship with new music expands your definition of classical music. A close relationship with rock, jazz and other younger genres expands your definition of new music. But it would be naïve to say that there weren’t differences between classical and jazz, new music and rock. So how do you know the difference? There doesn’t seem to be a good definition, but perhaps it’s like the Supreme Court Justice Stewart’s famous phrase regarding pornography, “I know it when I see it.” I know new music when I hear it. It’s as simple as that.
If you’re still smarting from the judgments of some critic who did you a bad turn, here’s a quote of ironic inspiration. The U.S. music critics lobbed this one at Antheil early in his career: “It would be difficult to imagine music staler and more stupid.” Listening to Quartet No. 1 for Strings in one… Read more »
Given that our favorite say-it-with-Hallmark holiday will be soon upon us, this love affair between science and music has got me thinking that perhaps we should do a few experiments of our own. So grab some graph paper, and let’s get started.
I am reluctant to comment on the controversy surrounding the use of the terms Uptown and Downtown. However, I hope it might be granted that there are some statements I could make that could not meet with persuasive disagreement.
Ezra Laderman becomes the sixth composer to serve as president of the 108-year-old institution.
Ron Blessinger and Denise Huizenga-violins, Anna Schaum-viola, Hamilton Cheifetz–cello One of music history’s great mysteries is how Roy Harris went from being one of America’s most widely performed and respected composers to someone whose music is almost never done and who gets referenced, if at all, only in passing in accounts of mid-century Americana, a… Read more »
Did you miss last night’s Grammy awards show? Don’t worry, I watched it for you.
David Jalbert, piano John Corigliano thinks big. Just listen to the opening of his Etude Fantasy. Despite the fact that this is solo piano—the first Etude is played primarily by the left hand alone—the music is symphonic in scope with full-blown dramatic gestures that sound larger than life. Of course with the mountains come the… Read more »
The Washington, D.C., music scene welcomes the new Great Noise Ensemble.
New World Records will release two CDs per year of live recordings of recent American repertoire performed by the New York Philharmonic.
An interview with the author of Jazz Consciousness: Music, Race, and Humanity.
Maria Schneider Orchestra Live at the Jazz Standard You have to be careful not to miss Maria Schneider’s discs these days. Now that it seems she’s releasing exclusively on ArtistShare, her albums don’t turn up in stores; they’re only offered online. This live recording from sets in January 2000 at the Jazz Standard is heavy… Read more »
Is there a universally adequate musical solution to page turns?
The Arthur Doyle Electric-Acoustic Ensemble heats up the Ars Nova Workshop’s stage.
Steve Hunt – piano, John Lockwood – bass, Gregg Bendian – drums and percussion Usually the pianist is front and center in a jazz piano trio, but everything shifts when a trio is led by the percussionist, as is the case with Gregg Bendian’s oxymoronically-titled (given the volume) Trio Pianissimo featuring pianist Steve Hunt and… Read more »
You’ve gotta love John Cage. The man foreshadowed too many things to mention, things we don’t yet know. Although he may have had Satie on the brain, pieces like In a Landscape, coming from Cage, seem like an indoctrinated prediction of not only minimalism, but the current re-embracing of tonality—irony anyone? After all, would it… Read more »
Art Jarvinen insists that The Invisible Guy is not an opera.