Alex Ross's Blog, page 60

March 26, 2020

March 24, 2020

Bayreuth in Milwaukee

Untitled


The Los Angeles Herald, Nov. 13, 1891.

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Published on March 24, 2020 14:35

March 23, 2020

Kate Soper's unwritten operas


Nothing on the spring schedule had whetted my anticipation more than Kate Soper's The Romance of the Rose, which was to have had its premiere at Peak Performances on April 2. It has been postponed, along with everything else. Soper is taking to YouTube to post a few fragmentary musical ideas and share insights from her keen literary-musical imagination. In the first of these, above, she reads a passage from Virginia Woolf's Orlando, with self-generated vocal accompaniment. I wrote about Soper's Ipsa Dixit in 2017.

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Published on March 23, 2020 15:22

March 21, 2020

Video of the day: Hannigan sings Nono


In a video from the Gothenburg Symphony, Barbara Hannigan sings Luigi Nono's Djamila Boupacha, written in honor of the young Algerian militant who was tortured and raped by French forces in 1960. That piece is also the first item on the new Hannigan / Ludwig Orchestra album La Passione, which also includes Haydn's Symphony No. 49 and Grisey's Quatre chants pour franchir le seuil.

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Published on March 21, 2020 09:04

March 19, 2020

Deepening crisis

As the coronavirus shutdown continues, organizations in the classical-music world are now beginning to carry out temporary layoffs or furloughs of their musicians and staff. Last night I heard from the president of the Oregon Symphony that the orchestra was laying off its players and half of its staff — a hundred people in total. It has been reported that the Winnipeg Symphony has laid off more than a hundred workers. Musicians from Opera Australia are protesting a similar decision by the administration. And today the Metropolitan Opera announced the cancellation of the remainder of its season and the furloughing of its full-time union employees, orchestral players included — meaning that they will not be paid past March but that they will continue to receive health benefits. Many more announcements of this kind will follow in coming days. The layoffs mean that musicians and staff can file for unemployment. But there will be questions, to put it mildly, about whether such drastic measures are necessary, particularly in the case of the bigger-budgeted organizations. The assiduously well-informed Zach Finkelstein will have a new story soon on his blog. Zach has pointed out that the question in many cases will not be about the hard economic reality — a seemingly large budget can be burned through very quickly — but about communication and understanding.


It is hard not to feel a certain terror for the future of the arts. I certainly have never lived through anything like this.

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Published on March 19, 2020 07:56

March 18, 2020

Buy music, don't just stream it (playlist)

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When Napster trained a generation to see music as a free commodity, decimating the record industry, we were assured that musicians would continue to make money via touring. Now that the coronavirus has put a stop to live performance, musicians have very little to fall back on. The culture favors streaming, but artists notoriously earn almost nothing from streaming. Music-lovers who are not facing immediate financial danger might want to help out artists by buying records instead of streaming them — digitally or physically.


This Friday, March 20, the estimable Bandcamp site will forego the 15 percent that it usually takes from sales, meaning that all proceeds will go directly to artists. To celebrate this generous gesture, I've picked a few recent contemporary-classical releases on Bandcamp that are worth hearing. You can always sample the embedded tracks and determine whether or not you agree.


— Feldman, Piano Music; Philip Thomas (Another Timbre)


— Feldman, For Bunita Marcus; Aki Takahashi (Mode)


— Anna Höstman, Harbour; Cheryll Dvuall, piano  (Redshift)


in manus tuas; recital by violist-composer Anna Leilehua Lanzilotti


nocturnes and lullabies: music of Nicholas Deyoe, Wolfgang von Schweinitz, Rebecca Saunders, Philip Cashian, Linda Catlin Smith, Maura Capuzzo, Marc Sabat; Richard Valitutto, piano (New Focus)


— David Lang, the loser; Rod Gilfry, Conrad Tao, Bang on a Can Opera Ensemble (Cantaloupe)


— Linda Catlin Smith, Drifter; Quatuor Bozzini, Apartment House (Another Timbre)


— Cenk Ergün, Sonare & Celare; JACK Quartet (New Focus)


— Michael Pisaro, Fields Have Ears, with Philip Thomas, piano (Another Timbre)


Go to NewMusicBox for a symposium on the new music world's response to the virus.

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Published on March 18, 2020 11:14

March 16, 2020

Dutchman and Agrippina at the Met

Phantom Vessel. The New Yorker, March 23, 2020.

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Published on March 16, 2020 16:45

March 14, 2020

Music during a pandemic

Coronavirus Concerts, on the New Yorker website, March 14, 2020.

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Published on March 14, 2020 15:56

March 12, 2020

COVID-19 live streams

As musical organizations shut down regular activity because of the coronavirius pandemic, a number of groups will offering video streams of concerts without audience. Here is a selection.


March 12


730pm ET: Yannick Nézet-Séguin leads the Philadelphia Orchestra in Beethoven's Fifth and Sixth Symphonies and the premiere of Iman Habibi’s Jeder Baum spricht. At Facebook.


730pm ET: The Chamber Music Society of Lincoln Center plays Schoenberg's Trio for Strings, the première of Alexandra du Bois's Heron, Rain. Blossom, Tristan Murail's Paludes, and Ben Johnston's Quartet No. 4, “Amazing Grace.” At www.chambermusicsociety.org/watch-and-listen.


8pm ET: Simone Dinnerstein and Baroklyn present a Bach concert from Miller Theatre in NYC, with Katy Evanyshyn as the vocalist in Cantata 82, "Ich habe genug." At Miller Theatre Live.


730pm PT: Thomas Dausgaard leads the Seattle Symphony in Mahler's First Symphony (rebroadcast). At  seattlesymphony.org/live.


March 13


7pm, CET: Igor Levit performs from his home in Berlin. At his Twitter account.


8pm CET: Simon Rattle leads the Berlin Philharmonic in Berio's Sinfonia and Bartók's Concerto for Orchestra. At the Digital Concert Hall, free of charge.


Today the Detroit Symphony will also make its Replay archive free to all visitors.


March 14


8pm PT: Thomas Dausgaard leads the Seattle Symphony in Mahler's First Symphony (rebroadcast). At seattlesymphony.org/live.


March 15


6pm CET: Masaaki Suzuki and the Bach Collegium Japan perform Bach's St. John Passion at the Köln Philharmonie. At Philarmonie.tv.


March 16


8pm CET: Joana Mallwitz leads the Bayerische Staatsorchester in Schubert's Unfinished, Mahler's First, and, with Igor Levit, the Liszt First Concerto. At staatsoper.tv.


5pm ET: Chamber Music Society of Lincoln Center presents Dohnányi's Serenade, Bartók's Sonata for Two Pianos and Percussion, and Tchaikovsky's Souvenir de Florence. At www.chambermusicsociety.org/watch-and-listen.

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Published on March 12, 2020 15:12

March 9, 2020

For Mom

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Mom and Penelope, 2005.


My mother, Daphne R. Ross, died on Feb. 24, at the age of ninety-one. A notice appears in today's Washington Post. There is more to be said than that, but I feel ill equipped to say it. She gave me, amid everything else, my love of words and music.

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Published on March 09, 2020 22:50

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