古典音樂 俱樂部 Classical Music Club

We want to share with you the music we love, some of the greatest music the world has ever heard. We’re not going to go through classical music from A to Z. We’re just going to share with you remarkable concerts we’ve heard by some of the world’s greatest orchestras or just whatever CD has just caught our ear But we want to hear from you. Email us at Jeffrey.Mark.Goldman@gmail.com, to leave comments or questions - suggestions or opinions. Or just to tell us how we are doing.

Sunday, August 24, 2008

Coming Up….Bernstein: The 20th century master musician’s 90th

你好 He was flamboyant, flashy and about as diverse musically as you can get, and yet Lenny Bernstein’s charisma has dominated music for over forty years. By October 14th he will have been gone over 18 years, and as the man himself recedes a little but more, we’re better able to see his accomplishments a little clearer. – and the man’s recorded legacy is tremendous.

The composer Ned Rorem has said of Bernstein, “Lenny has brought to life a mountain of first-rte works of his own and a hundred colleagues….When performing my music, his metabolism is so in tune with my own, that he might as well have written the music himself. Other composer will attest to this – his bloodstream is theirs during the length of their piece.”

Which pretty much summarizes Bernstein, particularly his stint at the New York Philharmonic from 1958 to 1969, when he made the orchestra the most virtuosic and wide-ranging it has ever been. During that time Columbia under Goddard Lieberson gave Bernstein free range. For years he took his orchestra into the studio and produced the most comprehensive discography this side of almost anyone. According to John McClure, Bernsteins long-time producer, the conductors contract freed him to record whatever he wanted Bernstein not only took a New World spin on Old World music, he took up the cause of composer not very well known up to that time, namely Gustave Mahler, but also Nielson. And he played up American compoasers like no one had before – or since; Copland, Ives, Roy Harris, William Schuman, David Diamond as well as Barber, Carter and Bernstein himself

Despite the huge success of West Side Story and some of the best music Broadway has ever heard, Bernstein was haunted by the fact that he never composed what he and others expected would be his one serious masterpiece. His Mass and Symphoony No. 3 (Kaddish) were noble failures. Even his relative successes, Symphony No. 1 (jeremiah) and Symphony No. 2 (Age of Anxiety) disappointed him. Yet at his peak, Bernstein created created genuinely American, moving pieces as much loved as those of Gershwin or Copland. With NYPO he recorded amazing performances of his West Side Stiory: Symphonic Dances, Facsimile, the score from On the Waterfront, and his Candide Overture, surely on a level with anything Rossini ever wrote. As New Yor Philharminc clarinetist Stanley Drucker once said, “Lenny and the orchestra spoke the same language – New York.” With missionary zeal, we should add.

What’s on our player now: “West Side Story” (Original Cast Recording): Bernstein, (Lyrics by Stephen Sondheim), New York Philharmonic, Bernstein, cond. - Sony SK60724

A Broadway musical or an opera? Your guess is as good as ours. This masterpiece has first rate arias (“Maria”, “I feel pretty”, “A Boy Like That”; duets (Tonight”, “Somewhere” “One Hand, One Heart”, which is not to forget some great work for the orchestra , “Overture, Prologue, “Dance at the Gym”, “The Rumble”. It’s not that other works for Broadway shows don’t have some of these elements, it’s that Bernstein’s music has the weight and concert hall quality that makes it one of the best abd most enduring vocal works of the second half of the 20th century. For directness and sheer dramatic power this version (Sony’s latest) can’t be beat.

Some other Bernstein music we wouldn’t want to live without:

Bernstein Century by Bernstein (Candide overture, Syphonc Dances from West Side Story, On the Water front – symphonic suite, Fancy Free – ballet,; New York Philharmonic, Bernstein, cond. - Sony SMK 63085

Copland: Appalachian Spring, Rodeo, Billy the Kid, Fanfare for the Common Man; New York Philharmonic, Bernstein, Cond.. - Sony SMK 63082

Ives: Symphonies No 2 and No. 3, New York Philharmonic, Bernstein, cond. – Sony SMK602022

Liszt: A Faust Symphony, Boston Symphony Orchestra, Bernstein, Cond., - DG 447-4492GDR

Mahler, Symphonies, Sogs, Assprted Soloists, Concertgebouw, NYPO, VPO, Bernstein, cond. – DG 459 081-2GX16

Nielsen: Symphonies No. 3 & 5, Royal Danish Orch, New York Phil, Bernstein, Cond. - Sony SMK 47598

Friday, August 22, 2008

Shame Shame Shame! LSO conductor Valery Gergiev leads pro-Russia concert in Ossetia

The principal conductor of the London Symphony Orchestra led a pro-Russian classical concert in the ruins of the capital of South Ossetia to celebrate a crushing battlefield victory over Georgia on Thursday evening.

In front of the blackened shell that once acted as the breakaway region's rebel headquarters, Gergiev, who was born in Moscow but is an ethnic Ossetian, raised his baton to cheers and applause.

From a specially constructed gantry an audience of 300-odd Ossetians enthusiastically waved Russian flags as Gergiev led St Petersburg's Marinsky Orchestra in concert.

The program was specially designed to combine pomp, grandeur and defiance with pathos and grief.

Shostakovich's Leningrad Symphony, written on the orders of Stalin to rouse Russians against the Nazi invasions, was followed by the delicate strains of Tchaikovsky's Pathetique symphony.

Russian soldiers perched on the top of armoured personnel carriers, straining for a better view, as Orthodox priests, Jewish rabbis and even an imam passed through the audience granting benedictions to a self-proclaimed nation united in victory.

As the strains of Shostakovich filled the air, fresh smoke and sheets of flame from burning Georgian villages in South Ossetia rose from the hills - the latest sign that while the war may be over, the plight of civilians is not.

Yet Russian officers refused to acknowledge what was going on before their eyes. "What fire?", one snapped before striding off.

Gergiev, who is godfather to Vladimir Putin's daughter, said before the concert that Georgia's assault on South Ossetia that sparked the Russian invasion was comparable to the September 11 attacks on the United States. "The world doesn't know the truth about what happened in Tskhinvali, there is a huge manipulation of public opinion happening now," he said.

"I am a musician and I am also an Ossetian and what makes me tense is I have friends in Georgia ... but the Georgians do not know the truth."

The LSO stood by Gergiev's participation in the event, despite the British Government's condemnation of Russian aggression in the region.

"We understand that Valery Gergiev feels passionately about the current situation in South Ossetia and Georgia and are aware that he has in the past created music as an ambassador for peace; we send our good wishes to him for a significant and successful concert," said Kathryn McDowell, the orchestra's managing director.

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worldnews/europe/georgia/2598068/LSO-conductor-Valery-Gergiev-leads-pro-Russia-concert-in-Ossetia.html

Thursday, August 21, 2008

Dudamel a Dud?

  • The fiery young Venezuelan's Prom appearance last week, no less than Daniel Barenboim's, reminds us that it's not always all about the conductor, says Tristan

Gustavo Dudamel conducting the Gothenburg Symphony Orchestra at last week's Prom. Photograph: Chris Christodoulou/BBC

"I'm sick of Dudamel," a friend told me after the 27-year-old Venezuelan's Prom last Wednesday. "He's just another audience-pleasing American." A harsh assessment, but I think I can see his point. Conducting the Simón Bolívar National Youth Orchestra of Venezuela last year, Gustavo Dudamel blew the roof of the Royal Albert Hall with his thrilling mix of Shostakovich, Bernstein and hot Latin rhythms. But an orchestra of fiery youngsters from South America is very different to an orchestra of sensible Swedes.

The Gothenburg Symphony Orchestra are very good, to be sure, and the players have clearly begun to let their hair down a bit since Dudamel took over as Music Director last year – some of them even got rid of their jackets for the second encore, Venezuelan style – but I couldn't help but feel the spell of last year's Prom was cast by that incredible Venezuelan orchestra rather than by their conductor, charismatic though he may be.

The same might be said for Daniel Barenboim and his superb West-Eastern Divan Orchestra, who played the following night. They gave gripping performances of Haydn, Schoenberg and Brahms, capping it with a magisterial encore of Wagner's Meistersingers overture. The West-Eastern Divan Orchestra is 50/50 Arab-Israeli, and Bazza got a big cheer when he refused to lecture us about what is wrong with the Middle East – after all, we "had just heard what is right with the Middle East."

But although Barenboim is clearly the driving force behind this admirable project, the real tribute is to the players themselves, who – very much like that Venezuelan youth orchestra – exude musicality from every pore. The orchestra's leader got so carried away at one point, he snapped a string. It was a good thing the co-leader of the Berlin Philharmonic was sitting in amongst the rank and file of the first violins – he swapped violins with the leader and still managed to make it through the finale of Brahms 4 despite being down a string. That's what I call musicianship.

http://www.guardian.co.uk/music/2008/aug/19/proms.classicalmusicandopera2

Saturday, August 16, 2008

The French horn, that wild card of the orchestra

The critic Allan Kozinn writes that orchestral instruments don't come more treacherous than the French horn, either for the musicians who play it, or, when the going gets rough, for the listeners who find themselves within earshot. Sometimes you wonder how the instrument found its way from the hunting lodge to the orchestra.

At the Mostly Mozart Festival in recent weeks, the intractable early version of the horn has made its way into the Rose Theater as a series of period-instrument bands from Germany, England and Italy performed music ranging from Italian Baroque choral works to Mozart opera. When these groups were at their best, a listener whose fondness for period instruments dates from the 1960s could reflect on how far the performance standard has risen since.

In those days period ensembles that sounded vigorous on disc often proved anemic in concert, and the instruments' antique technology was regularly blamed for mediocre performances. Nowadays, the performances are more typically extroverted and expressive, and although period instruments, by definition, have not been modernized to make them easier to play, listeners are no longer asked to consider their difficulty when a performance goes awry.

Except, that is, when the horn notes crack and slither. The horn remains the wild card in period-instrument orchestras, and in modern ones too. And if you find yourself cringing when horn players falter badly — as I did on Aug. 5, when Concerto Italiano played three Vivaldi concertos with prominent horn parts — caveats about the instrument's intransigence come quickly to mind.

It's worth understanding the challenges hornists face. In its 17th- and 18th-century form, the horn is basically just a long, flared pipe wound into two or three coils, with a mouthpiece on the end. What it lacks, compared with today's horn, is the valve mechanism: the complex tubing and finger keys at the center of a modern horn that let hornists play chromatically and in different keys.

Without recourse to valves, hornists are most at home in the relatively few notes in the overtone series that come naturally to a bit of coiled metal: mainly, the notes you hear in hunting and military calls. As the music grows more complex, the technical demands escalate. One resource hornists have is hand-stopping: by putting a hand inside the instrument's bell, they can flatten the pitch to produce chromatic notes.

When everything goes right, hornists can work miracles. You need only have heard James Sommerville, the Boston Symphony's principal hornist, play Elliott Carter's Horn Concerto at Tanglewood a few weeks ago to know how chromatic (and lyrical) a horn line can be. But you can see the potential for pitch problems. And a bit of condensation from a player's breath adhering to the inside of a coil can lead to cracked notes, or "clams."

As is often the case, when Concerto Italiano's hornists were good, they were great. Their sound had a fascinatingly gritty texture, much closer to the horn's hunting-party origins than to the mellow, warm sound of a modern instrument. But when they were off — oh, dear, what a mess!

Strangely, some believe that period horn playing is meant to sound thus. When I was in music school, I had a job in a record store and would sometimes stay after hours to listen to new releases. One was a period-instrument recording of Handel's "Water Music" on which the horns were consistently flat. When I crinkled my nose, the store's manager said, dismissively:

"Oh, you don't understand. It's only because of showoffs like Don Smithers" — a brilliant Baroque trumpeter who was also my music history teacher at the time — "that people think these instruments can be played in tune. But they aren't meant to be."

I didn't buy that argument then, and having heard many superb Baroque hornists, I find it less tenable now.

For some reason — maybe it's a little-documented, mouth-drying effect of global warming — the last season was particularly rough for hornists. In a concert of Brahms and Schumann works at the 92nd Street Y in December, the usually reliable David Jolley became ensnared in every tangle a hornist can encounter (or create), including serious balance issues in ensemble pieces. And visiting orchestras seemed more prone than usual to horn flaws.

But surely the most catastrophic horn performance of the season — of many seasons, for that matter — was at the New York Philharmonic in March, when Alan Gilbert, conducting his first concert with the orchestra since having been appointed its next music director, opened his program with Haydn's Symphony No. 48, a work with two prominent and perilous horn parts.

The Philharmonic has long been action central for horn troubles; its principal player, Philip Myers, is wildly inconsistent, and the rest of the section is also accident-prone. Much of the time Myers's playing is squarely on pitch, shapely and warm, and when it is, it's everything you want in a French horn line. But he cracks, misses or slides into pitches often enough that when the Philharmonic plays a work with a prominent horn line, you brace yourself and wonder if he'll make it.

The Haydn symphony was a real clambake.

Mentioning hornists' failings in reviews invariably brings plenty of e-mail messages, often from people who did not hear the performances but feel moved to defend a player's reputation. Perhaps not surprisingly, most of these correspondents have variations on the word horn ("corno" or "horncall," for example) in their e-mail addresses, and they usually identify themselves as hornists, as if their addresses didn't make that clear.

In the case of the Haydn, some offered amazing conspiracy theories. The most interesting was that Gilbert had programmed the work knowing that it would be botched, so that he would later have reason to replace Myers. ( Gilbert doesn't seem that Machiavellian.) Another blamed the orchestra's management for allowing Gilbert to program it.

Still others offered technical excuses: that the work requires a variety of horn that Myers doesn't play, for instance. (That an orchestra's programming is announced months in advance — ample time to deal with such technical problems or lobby to have the work replaced — seems not to have troubled anyone.)

Of about a dozen e-mail messages, all but one correspondent found someone other than the players to blame for the performance. A few blamed me: I am supposedly a raging cornophobe with some deep-seated resentment of horns and hornists.

To the contrary. I played the horn briefly as a teenager, somewhere between the violin and the trombone (which had a nicer bite), and I gave up brass instruments only when I realized that continuing would mean spending weekends marching around at football games in a dopey band uniform. It was the late 1960s; that kind of thing just wasn't done.

Nearly a decade later, as a composition student, I revisited the instrument and what it could (ideally) do when I wrote an unaccompanied horn piece and a quartet for horn, violin, bassoon and percussion (what was I thinking?) for a hornist friend.

I like the horn, honest. And I know how difficult it is to get a good, centered, well-tuned sound out of it.

But here's the thing about musical performance: It's all difficult. It's meant to be. Composers write, and have always written, music that pushes the limits of technique. And if you're onstage in a professional capacity, you're expected to be able to negotiate it. That's the least audiences expect, and it's a precondition for what they buy tickets for: to be moved by an interpretation; to savor its nuances and to hear something revelatory, whether the work is new or familiar.

If, instead, they end up wincing at mistuned notes and reminding themselves how tough the instruments are, they've been pushed out of the zone. And at that point, no amount of rationalization will make the performance anything but a sow's ear.

What’s in our player now: Mozart: Horn Concertos, NO.1 K412, No. 2 K417, No. 3 K 447, No. 4 K 495Piano Concerto No. 17 K. 453. Dennis Brain, Philharmonia Orch., von Karajan, cond. EMI 7243 5 66950 2 3

This is one of those recordings that legends grow around. Even though it was recorded in mono in 1954, von Karajan conducts the Philhormonia Orchestra in its golden age, featuring Dennis Brain, one of the finest horn players of all time. So many concerto recordings are ruined by bad partnerships, but not this one. The tone is glorious and the phrasing ravishing, Every note is warm and alive. The concertos are not just buoyant and infectious, they are smiling and witty – everything that you could ask for in Mozart.

Best of all, Brain proves that the French horn, as difficult to play as it is, can be absolutely tamed and made to play a liquid, lyrical line that can match the best any other instrument in the orchestra can produce. I’ve owned other, newer versions of these concertos, but even though other horn players come close, after you’ve heard Brain, you’ll wonder why no else seems to have the same clear, but affectionate intelligence he showed. Unfortunately, the CD transfer has dried out the sound of the strings a little – the extra clarity you get with a CD isn’t a fair trade for the extra dimension and resonance on the original LP. But Brain's playing is pure genius and this performance is not to be missed.

Thursday, August 14, 2008

Five crucial things Dudamel can teach orchestras

Dudamel offers orchestras a number of urgent challenges, challenges that need to be addressed by a musical scene that, at its worst, can be grey, dull and mediocre.

1, Rethink the hierarchies of the symphony orchestra.

What comes through strongly when orchestral musicians talk about Dudamel is that, while he is very clear about what he wants from them, he is a musicians' musician, rather than the traditional dictatorial maestro-monster. Venezuelan music education is essentially communitarian. All teaching is done in groups; the focus is on the collective and not the individual. This is one of the reasons he gets so much out of musicians. He is one of them.

2, Remember: it's supposed to be fun.

Dudamel's introduction to music was via his trombonist father's salsa band as much as through his orchestral playing. The kind of unabashed, party-time pleasure Venezuelans take in salsa leaks right into their attitude to classical music. Experiencing music should be about having a brilliant time - even though a journey with the masterpieces of classical music may take you to the darker places of the soul.

3, Play (and hear) every concert as if it is your last.

Dudamel said this week: "For us in Venezuela, everything is new. And for us every time we play something, it is also like the last time. This is how I grew up."

4, Throw out tradition; abandon routine.

Well, perhaps not quite. "I respect and have learned a lot from the European tradition," said Dudamel. But he, as a Latin American, is also free from much of the baggage carried by classical music in Europe and North America, where even to be interested in classical music immediately (though often unfairly) shunts you into a certain class paradigm. "When young people see orchestras just sitting down and doing concerts each week, they see something routine. They can't understand what people enjoy about concerts," he said. There are far too many orchestras in the country going through the motions with workaday, dreary concerts. This needs to change.

5, Don't be ashamed of classical music.

"In Venezuela going to a symphony concert is like going to a pop concert. Everyone feels very proud. It is our symbol. We have our flag, our national anthem - and now our orchestras. The citizens feel part of it," said Dudamel. The Government must get behind our orchestras without cringing about their perceived elitism. And our orchestras need to be proud and unashamed of their power to engage with the beacons of western art, and to communicate their excitement afresh. That way, American audiences will be swept to their feet by their orchestras

http://blogs.guardian.co.uk/art/2008/08/what_dudamel_can_teach_british.html

Wednesday, August 13, 2008

Elgar Without Vibrato? Fiddlesticks

The Great Vibrato Controversy is sending tremors through, well, a small corner of British cultural life.

The conductor Roger Norrington, a champion of playing classical music in the style of its day, says he may play Elgar’s “Pomp and Circumstance” March No. 1 on the last night of Britain’s premier music festival, the Proms, at the Royal Albert Hall in London, without vibrato. Oh, the horror!

True, it is not the stuff to tear down an empire. But traditionalists in England are in a huff, sending rockets of outrage into the blogosphere and newspaper columns.

“Elgar without vibrato is the musical equivalent of dead roses,” Stephen Pollard, a columnist, harrumphed in The Times of London last week.

As a rule, Elgar’s music has been played with the lusher, fuller sound produced by that slight oscillation of pitch called vibrato, which is typical of modern playing. But Mr. Norrington argues that orchestras in Elgar’s day played with much less vibrato, and that an unadulterated sound better suits the music.

The dispute sits atop the intersection of deeper issues, like British national pride and how to bring art of the past back to life. At the heart of the kerfuffle lies the reputation of Edward Elgar, the quintessentially British composer in a country that can be sensitive about its relative dearth of great masters. Elgar, who wrote works including the “Enigma” Variations and a popular cello concerto, is best known for the “Pomp and Circumstance” March, which is a staple at high school graduation ceremonies even in America.

The piece is called “Land of Hope and Glory” in the version traditionally sung at the vaunted Last Night of the Proms, when the buttoned-down British public goes a little nutty, wearing costumes, waving Union Jacks and singing along. That night (Sept. 13 this year) draws the most attention, but two months’ worth of concerts precede it. One of those last month featured Mr. Norrington and his Stuttgart Radio Symphony Orchestra playing Elgar’s Symphony No. 1. That prompted a letter to The Times of London, which seems to have set off the debate.

“Sir, as a professional violinist, I was appalled by the quality of sound,” Raymond Cohen wrote in the letter, published on July 29. “To anyone with a musical ear, it sounded bizarre.” Columnists and other musicians soon weighed in, some aquiver with rage. Mr. Norrington’s performances were “screeching” and “unmusical,” Mr. Pollard wrote, and someone identified as R. G. James of Brasschaat, Belgium, commented on The Times’s Web site (timesonline.co.uk), “I am fed up with these politically correct liberals in the establishment doing all they can to denigrate and undermine British and English cultural icons.”

Mr. Norrington has “gone too far,” the composer Anthony Payne was quoted as saying in an article in The Guardian. That article also quoted Mark Elder, the music director of the Hallé Orchestra in Manchester and the conductor of the Last Night of the Proms in 2007, as calling Mr. Norrington a wonderful but obsessed musician.

The debate blossomed into a discussion of a burning issue in the classical music world: How much should performers try to reproduce the musical conditions that existed when a piece was written? It is no small matter. We experience old paintings with an unmediated eye, but works of classical music require interpreters to bring black marks on a page to life.

The early-music movement of the second half of the 20th century sought to return to music’s performing roots, and Mr. Norrington played a major part in that movement in the 1980s and ’90s. He and other period-performance evangelists moved from the Baroque through Haydn, Mozart and Beethoven to the Romantics, and some now lap at the early 20th century, when Elgar was composing.

The movement calls for the use of instruments of the day, but also different techniques: cleaner articulation, sometimes swifter tempos, clarity of texture and, of course, less vibrato. And it has permeated contemporary orchestral playing. Even the most traditional conductors give a bow toward some aspects of the style. Some commentators have suggested that the movement is, in fact, a reflection of our modernist age.

“We value clarity, transparency, precision, sharpness, rather than what some people consider the excessive lyricism and indulgence and big sound of previous eras,” said Nicholas Kenyon, the former Proms director who engaged Mr. Norrington

http://www.nytimes.com/2008/08/13/arts/music/13vibr.html?ex=1219291200&en=37249e3c8e74f5af&ei=5070&emc=eta1

Tuesday, August 12, 2008

Exactly what does a conductor actually do?

And are an A-level in music and blind enthusiasm any help? Sue Perkins found out when she went to baton camp….

I came to music very young. I was bookish and awkward, and wanted a means of expressing the millions of emotions flying around inside me. The piano seemed as good an outlet as any. The only problem with music, however, is that in order to get to the point where you're good enough to really feel you're saying something, you've spent over a decade in a room on your own practising scales.

I did my grades; I even got as far as an A-level, where I was lucky to be taught by someone who moved me beyond the arpeggios and key changes and mind-boggling mathematics of it all. She made me see how music connects seamlessly to philosophy, politics, history, life. I loved it: it's the only study I've done that I found utterly and compellingly immersive. Then I went and spoiled it all by doing an English degree, and never played the piano again.

So, despite having a modicum of musical knowledge, I came to Maestro, the BBC's new TV series in which eight amateurs learn to conduct, with the same prejudices as everyone else. What is a conductor for? What does he (and invariably it is a he) actually do? Whenever I went to a concert, all I could see was a middle-aged man with a stiff peak of silver hair waving his arms around in blind opposition to the musicians around him. I could not see any correlation between the flamboyant baton-swirling and the music itself.

I soon learned. The very first thing we were asked to do on showing up at "baton camp" was to take a well-known waltz - Blue Danube - and then go straight into an enormous concert hall and conduct the BBC Concert Orchestra, from nothing. And it was awful. I was flailing and sweaty; I couldn't get my gestures to marry with the ones I wanted. There was a lot of giggling from the orchestra. Immediately afterwards, we were shown a tape of what we'd done, to review. It was excruciating: I don't like watching myself at the best of times, but here I looked like a perspiring windmill. We spent the next five days working on the same piece, plus the first movement of Beethoven's First Symphony - taking them apart, understanding what makes them work.

For the past few months I've been in training with my mentor Jason Lai, working on pieces by Brahms and Beethoven with a semi-professional orchestra. I've been learning how to stop and start, learning to speak to the orchestra in their own language. You can't just say, "Can we go from that bit and make it really quiet?" You've got to use musical terms and make it sound authoritative. After all, musicians know how to play the score marks; you need to be able to show them the emotional expansiveness. For example, I wanted the Blue Danube waltz to flow, like a merry-go-round, rather than sag like the turgid romance some might make it, and I had to communicate that to the orchestra. These famous pieces are in your power for a little while - that's the joy of it.

Being a conductor isn't just about setting the time. A metronome can do that. It isn't about grabbing the glory with a few judicious hand sweeps and a torrent of sweat. A great conductor is an alchemical force: someone who can absorb the historical weight of a famous melody, the expectations of an audience and the mercurial brilliance of a host of musicians, and shape them all to his or her interpretative ends. She can bend sound in the moment; she has the power to command consensus.

As a performer, I'm used to seeing my audience. Now, my backside is facing the people I'd normally be facing, and I'm looking instead at people who are more knowledgable than me, and who know far better than I do what's coming. I am a terribly shy person, but I have now learned to stare at a stranger with an oboe in his mouth, or a viola in her arms, with the intensity I would normally reserve for a lover.

I never realised what a very physical activity conducting is. My whole upper body aches. Conductors live well into their 90s, and this is largely down to the cardiovascular workout they get. Conducting has resculpted my physique into very lean muscle mass: I have lady biceps. (I can see a DVD workout coming on: eat what you want but beat time to Beethoven's Ninth. Mind you, your bottom half would be the size of a continent.) Meanwhile, my mentor has been trying to take away the props I find useful. He has made me tie my hair back. He's trying to get me to take my glasses off because he wants me to stare, and raise my eyebrows, and gurn at the orchestra. I talk with my hands a lot, and he's trying to take that away and make my gestures really delicate.

Whatever the critics make of Maestro, I hope they don't call it a reality show. Yes, we amateurs are eliminated as the weeks go on; but reality is washing your knickers and slagging off your friend's boyfriend and putting food out for the cat. It isn't standing in a posh suit in front of the finest performers in the world as a sonic boom of beautiful strings smacks you in the chops. That's not reality - not for me anyway. For me, it's pure bloody magic.

You always have to be a few bars ahead'

Empathy, authority, timing - the conductor's craft


Roger Norrington, conductor and Maestro judge

Of course conducting takes years and years to do well. What Maestro won't reveal is how the contestants would think about a score from the beginning to the end, nor how they would handle a three-hour orchestra rehearsal. But we will discover how to get sound out of an orchestra. The key thing is authority. Some people have it, some don't.

The thing that all the competitors found difficult was that they wanted to follow the music, as you do when you listen to it. But doing that meant the orchestra got slower and slower until it ground to a halt. If you're conducting you always have to be a few bars ahead.

People say to conductors: "What do you actually do? Couldn't the orchestra do it without you?" The answer is yes, they could, but it wouldn't taste too good. Conducting is like being a cook. As a conductor you spend a lot of time trying to make it look easy, so it was kind of heartwarming to hear the competitors say: "My God, it's more difficult than it looks." On a fundamental level we're all musical. It's instinctive, like dancing.


Charles Mutter, associate leader, BBC Concert Orchestra

At the end of each show the judges choose the two weakest contestants, and the orchestra votes to save one. But the real story is how we react with the various people in rehearsal and performance. Having to do the same little snatches of pieces with each contestant gives you the opportunity to really think about what you do and don't need from a conductor: people skills, a basic respect for the orchestra, a constructive approach to solving problems.

As the leader, my job is usually to interpret what the conductor is doing and translate it into a way of playing that the rest of the orchestra can get behind. But here, we were told to follow absolutely what the conductors were doing. If they don't bring us in, we don't come in. If they speed up or slow down, we follow them

http://www.guardian.co.uk/music/2008/aug/12/classicalmusicandopera.television

Friday, August 08, 2008

Woody Allen to tackle opera? Oy!

It happens to the best of us: you announce to the world your intention to direct an opera within the next three years, working on the theory that you'll be dead by the time you have to make good on your promise. And then, gadammit! You find yourself still very much alive and in a dreadful bind.

That is exactly what seems to have happened to Woody Allen, who has finally begun work on his long-promised opera, a collaboration with The Exorcist director William Friedkin.

Speaking to reporters at a press conference to promote his new film Vicky Cristina Barcelona, which stars Scarlett Johansson, Javier Bardem and Penélope Cruz, earlier this week, the 72-year-old Allen said: "I made this promise to do it three years ago and I thought I'd be dead in three years and it's never gonna happen so I said, 'OK.' Then, I didn't die and the time came and so I started work on this opera on Tuesday."

The film-maker is working on Gianni Schicchi, the third part of Giacomo Puccini's Il Trittico, with Friedkin and another unnamed director looking after the first two acts. Friedkin is a well-known opera lover who has been quietly developing a second career in the discipline, having directed productions in Tel Aviv, Florence, Turin and Los Angeles since 1999.

The self-effacing Allen is typically downbeat when it comes to his chances of pulling off a stage masterpiece. "I'll give it my best shot ... but I really don't know what to expect," he said. "The opera is unlike the movies; they boo. I've been disliked but from a distance, but this is different."

Allen's part of the deal, a comedic, 55-minute venture with a cast of 10, was reported in June last year to be debuting as part of the LA Opera's 2008-09 season in September. Given he started it last week, that may now be a little optimistic.

http://www.guardian.co.uk/film/2008/aug/06/woodyallen

Saturday, August 02, 2008

Loving Shakespeare may be a charming trait, but loving Bach marks you out as a nerd. Why?

Pianist Susan Tomes writes about something that's always puzzled us...whenever anyone comments on classical music (on Cif), commenters trip over one another in a race to be the first to say: "Who cares?"

So it is with some nervousness that I mention a thought that's been going round and round in my head since watching two episodes of Phil Beadle's fascinating Channel 4 programme about teaching adult literacy. Can't Read, Can't Write is following a group of people who left school without learning to read or write. Phil is trying to teach them, with some spectacular successes.

Two of the class are women who are fired by the idea that they might one day read the classics. One has longed for years to read Shakespeare. Another is inspired by the thought of reading Louisa M Alcott's Little Women. These ambitions are repeatedly and favourably mentioned, and it's made clear that their veneration of these classic works is a crucial factor in their remarkable progress.

I couldn't help thinking how different it would be if the programme were about music instead of literature: Can't Play, Can't Read a Note. Suppose that two of the group had declared their chief wish was to play a late Beethoven piano sonata or to be able to hear a Haydn string quartet in their heads by reading the score. Such an ambition would very likely be ridiculed. Loving Shakespeare may be a charming trait, but loving Bach marks you out as a nerd.

I've asked myself why classics of literature and of music should be so differently regarded. And I feel I have an inkling. Only in music do the classics have to compete with a vast, loud, hugely commercial popular field. It shouts so loud that it is difficult for quieter or older music to make itself heard. Nothing comparable exists in plays or books. Yes, there may be texts, emails, magazines and newspapers of immense variety. But crucially, they are all silent. There is no way that a form of literature can actually shout louder than another or drown out another's voice.

The classics of music, which do not use amplification, are struggling to survive. Because of short-sighted cuts to music education in schools, many people are not even aware that the classics are there. A child might notice Little Women on the classroom bookshelf, but may never come across a Mozart opera. And what a waste! For these classic works can provide lifelong enrichment, just like the classics of literature.

http://www.guardian.co.uk/commentisfree/2008/aug/02/classicalmusicandopera