Alex Ross's Blog, page 40

August 23, 2022

Monumentum pro Riccardo

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tribute to Richard Taruskin, on the New Yorker website.

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Published on August 23, 2022 15:55

August 19, 2022

Bookshelf

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New and recent publications of interest.


Tim Rutherford-Johnson, The Music of Liza Lim (Wildbird)


Kate Molleson, Sound within Sound: Opening Our Ears to the Twentieth Century (Faber)


Andrew Mellor, The Northern Silence: Journeys in Nordic Music & Culture (Yale UP)


Mark Clague, O Say Can You Hear?: A Cultural Biography of the Star-Spangled Banner (Norton)


Rebecca Mitchell, Sergei Rachmaninoff (Reaktion)


Philip Ross Bullock, ed., Rachmaninoff and His World (University of Chicago Press)


Richard Will, “Don Giovanni” Captured: Performance, Media, Myth (University of Chicago Press)


Brigid Cohen, Musical Migration and Imperial New York: Early Cold War Scenes (University of Chicago Press)


Nicholas Mathew, The Haydn Economy: Music, Aesthetics, and Commerce in the Late Eighteenth Century (University of Chicago Press)


Wagner-Abteilung:


Hans Rudolf Vaget, Richard Wagners Amerika: Eine Ausgrabung (Königshausen & Neumann)


Sabine Zurmühl, Cosima Wagner: Ein widersprüchliches Leben (Böhlau)


Raphael Gross, Katharina J. Schneider and Michael P. Steinberg, eds., Richard Wagner und das deutsche Gefühl (Deutsches Historisches Museum / wgb)


Anno Mungen, Hier gilt's der Kunst: Wieland Wagner, 1941–1945 (Westend)

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Published on August 19, 2022 20:03

August 16, 2022

The Schindler House at 100

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A Cultural Comment at the New Yorker website.


The great Schindler House in West Hollywood is celebrating its centennial this summer. Through September 25, the MAK Center for Art and Architecture, which presents programming and exhibitions at three Schindler buildings in the Los Angeles area, is offering a richly layered, historically conscious show titled Schindler House: 100 Years in the Making. It is co-curated by Jia Yi Gu, the MAK Center's director, and the historians Gary Riichirō Fox and Sarah Hearne, with support from Allie Smith, Ann Basu, Stratton Coffman, and Tristan Espinoza. Participating artists include Kathi Hofer, Carmen Argote, Fiona Connor, Julian Hoeber, stephanie mei huang, Andrea Lenardin Madden, Renée Petropoulos, Gala Porras-Kim, Stephen Prina, Jakob Sellaoui, and Peter Shire. Documentation of the exhibition's "rotating vitrine" can be found here. I urge anyone in the LA area to make a visit and, if possible, to support the house, which needs various restoration projects. The Friends of the Schindler House are the owners of the property itself.

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Published on August 16, 2022 14:25

August 13, 2022

A Kyle Motl moment

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Published on August 13, 2022 18:58

August 12, 2022

Nightafternight playlist

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Beethoven, Symphony No. 6, Stucky, Silent Spring; Manfred Honeck conducting the Pittsburgh Symphony (Reference)


Mother Sister Daughter: Music from Santa Lucia convent in Verona and San Matteo convent in Arcetri, alongside pieces by Antoine Brumel, Maistre Jhan, Leonora d'Este, and Joanna Marsh; Laurie Stras directing Musica Secreta (Lucky Music)


Wadada Leo Smith, String Quartets Nos. 1-12; RedKoral Quartet, with Smith, Alison Bjorkedal, Anthony Davis, Lynn Vartan, Stuart Fox, Thomas Buckner (TUM)


Farewells: songs of Henryk Czyż, Tadeusz Baird, Karol Szymanowski, Paweł Łukaszewski, Mieczysław Karłowicz, Stanisław Moniuszko; Jakub Józef Orliński and Michał Biel (Warner)


Messiaen, Vingt Regards sur l'Enfant-Jésus; Bertrand Chamayou (Warner)


Rachmaninov, Piano Sonata No. 1, Moments Musicaux, shorter pieces; Steven Osborne (Hyperion)


Nørgård, Symphonies Nos. 1-8; Thomas Dausgaard, Sakari Oramo, and John Storgårds conducting the Danish National Symphony Orchestra, the Vienna Philharmonic, and the Oslo Philharmonic, with Ulla Munch, the Danish National Vocal Ensemble, and the Danish National Concert Choir (Dacapo)


Mary Halvorson, Amaryllis and Belladonna; Halvorson, Patricia Brennan, Nick Dunston, Tomas Fujiwara, Jacob Garchik, Adam O’Farrill, Mivos Quartet, Olivia De Prato, Maya Bennardo, Victor Lowrie Tafoya, Tyler J. Borden (Nonesuch)


Shostakovich, Symphony No. 11; Rafael Payare conducting the San Diego Symphony (Platoon)

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Published on August 12, 2022 20:30

August 10, 2022

An Ig Henneman moment


Of Outside the Rain has stopped, Henneman writes: "Pianist/improviser Cecil Taylor’s intuitive, energetic, loosely structured flow is an important source of inspiration for this composition. Endless, nearly exhausting variations, caused by material I often employ as an improviser. Open strings are an essential colour throughout the composition. The Luna String Quartet was a great sparring partner in developing the material. The title is a sentence taken from Nicole Krauss’s novel The History of Love, which stuck in my memory."

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Published on August 10, 2022 21:06

August 8, 2022

Lubitsch

Windermere


From Lady Windermere's Fan.


Laughter in the Dark. The New Yorker, Aug. 15, 2022. 

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Published on August 08, 2022 07:37

August 3, 2022

A note on the Wu Tsai Theater

Lincoln Center made a slightly startling announcement today: the auditorium at David Geffen Hall, which reopens in the fall, will be called the Wu Tsai Theater, after the business couple Claire Wu Tsai and Joe Tsai. The proliferation of naming opportunities in the arts-donor world has meant that in many places the auditorium bears a different name from the building itself, even when there is only one performance space. But the Geffen / Wu Tsai case is an especially odd one because the word "theater" usually denotes a site for dramatic performances, not concerts. It's as if the building on Lincoln Center Plaza now has competing identities.


It also bears mentioning that Joe Tsai, the co-founder and executive vice chairman of the Chinese e-commerce giant Alibaba, is a figure of some controversy, especially in the world of professional sports, where he owns the Brooklyn Nets, the New York Liberty, and the San Diego Seals. Some paragraphs from an April 2022 ESPN story are worth quoting:



In the United States, Tsai donates hundreds of millions of dollars to combat racism and discrimination. In China, Alibaba, under Tsai's leadership, partners with companies blacklisted by the U.S. government for supporting a "campaign of repression, mass arbitrary detention and high-tech surveillance" through state-of-the-art racial profiling.


Tsai has publicly defended some of China's most controversial policies. He described the government's brutal crackdown on dissent as necessary to promote economic growth; defended a law used to imprison scores of pro-democracy activists in Hong Kong as necessary to squelch separatism; and, when questioned about human rights, asserted that most of China's 1.4 billion citizens are "happy about where they are." ...


Alibaba is "effectively state-controlled," according to a recent study on the company by Garnaut Global, an independent research firm that analyzes the Chinese Communist Party structure and China's technology footprint.


Under Tsai's leadership, Alibaba funded companies that helped China build "an intrusive, omnipresent surveillance state that uses emerging technologies to track individuals with greater efficiency," according to a 2020 congressional report.


Those technologies have been used widely in the western region of Xinjiang, where the government has forced more than 1 million Uyghur Muslims and other ethnic minorities into barbed-wire "re-education" camps, policies that have been described as cultural "genocide" by the United States, several other countries and human rights organizations.



The matter merits further discussion.

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Published on August 03, 2022 13:05

August 2, 2022

A Richard Barrett moment


Says ELISION's note: "In physics and cosmology a world-line describes the path an object takes through four-dimensional spacetime. Here, the journey is marked by the energies of fifteen different vortices that fling the listener and performer ever outwards into new sonic dimensions . . . 'world-line' described as a 'cycle' is not some kind of Baroque suite. Rather, its sections are conceptualised as universes in which a 'particle' of sound in one position can potentially find non-linear connection to any other sound. Theoretical physics proposes a way of imagining musical relations that are emergent in nature also allowing for the contingency of improvisation and split-second responses in a complex notational net."

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Published on August 02, 2022 16:34

July 21, 2022

The Schindler House at 100

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A Cultural Comment at the New Yorker website.

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Published on July 21, 2022 15:46

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