Alex Ross's Blog, page 66

April 19, 2019

Nightafternight playlist

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Weinberg, Symphonies Nos. 2 and 21; Mirga Gražinytė-Tyla conducting the City of Birmingham Symphony Orchestra, with the Kremerata Baltica and Gidon Kremer (DG, out May 3)


Schubert, Sonatas D958 and 959, Impromptus D899, Drei Klavierstücke; András Schiff (ECM)


Stefan Prins, Augmented: Generation Kill, Piano Hero, Third Space, Not I, and other works; Nadar Ensemble, Klangforum Wien, Stephanie Ginsburgh, Yaron Deutsch (Kairos CD / DVD)


Black Composers Series, 1974–1978 (Sony)


Dominique Schafer, Vers une présence réelle and other works; Matthias Kuhn conducting the ensemble proton bern (Kairos)


Juri Seo, Respiri and other works; Argus Quartet, Joann Whang (Innova, out May 24)


Mr. Handel's Dinner: Concertos, Sonatas, and Chaconnes by Handel and His Inner Circle; Maurice Steger, La Cetra (Harmonia Mundi)

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Published on April 19, 2019 13:44

April 15, 2019

Pulitzer Prize 2019

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Congratulations to Ellen Reid, whose opera p r i s m, on a libretto by Roxie Perkins, has won the 2019 Pulitzer Prize for Music. The première took place at Redcat, in Los Angeles, under the auspices of L.A. Opera and Beth Morrison Projects; I wrote about it here. I first encountered Reid's work when she contributed a memorable outdoor scene to Yuval Sharon's multi-composer Hopscotch project. Andrew Norman's Sustain was one of two finalists, alongside James Romig's Still. I heard Sustain at the LA Phil and found it be one of the strongest American orchestral works of recent years. I missed Romig's piece, which was recorded by New World, but will be sure to explore it. For an exploration of recent trends in the music Pulitzer, read Will Robin in the New York Times. After the surprise win last year by the hip-hop artist Kendrick Lamar, it is tempting to say that the Pulitzer has reverted to the old routine. However, the likes of Reid, Du Yun, and Henry Threadgill hardly conform to academic models and represent a real diversification in terms of style and subject matter. The lack of a celebrity name will undoubtedly minimize attention this year, but these choices still matter.

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Published on April 15, 2019 14:22

Tyshawn Sorey

Shape-Shifter. The New Yorker, April 22, 2019.

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Published on April 15, 2019 08:23

April 13, 2019

Thought of the day

"Live with your century, but do not be its creature; render to your contemporaries what they need, not what they praise."


        — Schiller, On the Aesthetic Education of Man

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Published on April 13, 2019 11:12

Bookshelf

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Andrew Patner, A Portrait in Four Movements: The Chicago Symphony under Barenboim, Boulez, Haitink, and Muti, ed. Doug Shadle and John Schmidt (University of Chicago Press)


Michael P. Steinberg, The Problem with Wagner (University of Chicago Press)


Timo Jouko Herrmann, Antonio Salieri: Eine Biografie (Morio)


Ian Woodfield, Cabals & Satires: Mozart's Comic Operas in Vienna (Oxford UP)


Timothy Hampton, Bob Dylan's Poetics: How the Songs Work (Zone)


Susan McClary, The Passions of Peter Sellars: Staging the Music (University of Michigan Press)


Jack Kohl, Bone Over Ivory: Essays from a Standing Pianist (Pauktaug Press)


Lawrence Kramer, The Hum of the World: A Philosophy of Listening (University of California Press)

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Published on April 13, 2019 10:16

April 12, 2019

Miscellany

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Esa-Pekka Salonen returns to the Los Angeles Philharmonic for a three-concert festival of the noted Angeleno composer Igor Stravinsky. The lineup includes Funeral Song, Agon, The Rite of Spring, Requiem Canticles, Mass, Cantata, Orpheus, and Perséphone, the last staged by Peter Sellars.... On Saturday, the perennially fresh LA series Jacaranda presents works of James Tenney, Julius Eastman, Lukas Foss, and Frederic Rzewski, with SUNY Buffalo as the common thread.... Yo-Yo Ma brings his Bach Project to the US-Mexico border this weekend, playing the six solo suites in San Antonio and then making appearances in Laredo TX and Nuevo Laredo, Mexico.... A busy cross-country week for loadbang: this weekend, premiere performances of Hannah Lash's The Shepherdess and the Chimney Sweep in Santa Fe and Albuquerque; then a Heather Stebbins composer portrait in Brooklyn; and, on April 18, a concert at Opera America featuring world premieres by Claus-Steffen Mahnkopf and George Lewis.... Loadbang member Jeff Gavett also performs with Ekmeles on May 10... Blank Forms celebrates the late Maryanne Amacher in Philadelphia this weekend.... On  May 4 in Chicago, the Spektral Quartet investigates the fascinating electroacoustic work of Christopher Trapani....  On April 20 at the DiMenna Center in NYC, the Talea Ensemble marks its first decade with a fairly awesome lineup of works by Grisey, Iannotta, Takasugi, Diaz de Leon, George Lewis, Cheung, Neuwirth, Fure, Thomalla, Diels, and GF Haas.... On April 29 in Eugene, Oregon, the undersigned will give a lecture at the University of Oregon's German and Scandinavian Department on the topic "Lords of the Ring: Wagner and Fantasy Culture."

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Published on April 12, 2019 09:45

April 11, 2019

Andrew, David

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In the space of ten days in February, 2015, I lost two beloved friends: the music critic and radio host Andrew Patner and the journalist David Carr. I don't think of them as necessarily similar in personality — each was far too singular to resemble anyone else — but they had in common a superhuman capacity for friendship, galvanizing the world around them, brightening every room they ever entered. As it happens, two books memorializing them came into my hands today: All That You Leave Behind, a memoir by David's daughter Erin Lee Carr; and A Portrait in Four Movements, a compendium of Andrew's writings on the Chicago Symphony, edited by Doug Shadle and John Schmidt. I was honored to write a foreword for the latter, in tribute to the man I called, on the day he died, "one of the wisest, wittiest, most generous, most avid, most altogether vital people in the world of the arts." Αἰωνία ἡ μνήμη, זיכרונו לברכה.

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Published on April 11, 2019 11:46

April 1, 2019

Shoshana Zuboff on surveillance capitalism

How Big Tech Built the Iron Cage, New Yorker website, April 1, 2019.

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Published on April 01, 2019 08:18

March 24, 2019

Nightafternight playlist

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New and recent releases of interest.


— Speak, Be Silent: works of Chaya Czernowin, Anna Thorvaldsdottir, Mirela Ivičević, Liza Lim, and Rebecca Saunders; Riot Ensemble (Huddersfield Contemporary Records)


— M. Lamar, Lordship and Bondage: The Birth of the Negro Superman; Lamar, Living Earth Show (Negrogothic)


— Salonen, Cello Concerto; Yo-Yo Ma, Salonen conducting the Los Angeles Philharmonic (Sony)


— Andrew McIntosh, We See the Flying Bird, Five Songs; Yarn/Wire, Estelí Gomez (Populist)


— Schoeck, Das Schloss Dürande; Robin Adams, Sophie Gordeladze, Uwe Stickert, Hilke Anderson, Andries Cloete, Jordan Shanahan, Ludovica Bello, Mario Venzago conducting the Bern Symphony (Claves)


— Liszt, Sardanapalo (realized by David Trippett), Mazeppa; Joyce El-Khoury, Airam Hernández, Oleksandr Pushniak, Kirill Karabits conducting the Staatskapelle Weimar (audite)


— Florence Price, Symphonies Nos. 1 and 4; John Jeter conducting the Fort Smith Symphony (Naxos)


— Busoni, Piano Concerto; Kirill Gerstein, Sakari Oramo conducting the Boston Symphony (Myrios)


— Klaus Lang and Golden Fur, Beissel (another timbre)


— Michael Pisaro, Nature Denatured and Found Again; Antoine Beuger, Jürg Frey, Marcus Kaiser, Radu Malfatti, André Möller, Kathryn Gleasman Pisaro (Gravity Wave)


— Nirmali Fenn, The Clash of Icicles and other works: Hong Kong New Music Ensemble (Kairos)

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Published on March 24, 2019 12:28

March 19, 2019

Miscellany

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The formidable young composer/instrumentalist Tyshawn Sorey has a heavy schedule at the end of March. On the 28th, he will sit for a Portrait Concert at Miller Theatre in NYC, with performances by ICE and the JACK Quartet; on the 29th, he will appear at the Kennedy Center's Direct Current festival; and on the 31st he will be back in NYC for a Zone Music Workshop with Chris Pitsiokos.... By design, no one is certain quite what will happen at the Yoko Ono evening at Disney Hall, part of the LA Phil's season-long Fluxus series.... Also in LA, the revitalized Monday Evening Concerts presents Chaya Czernowin's sensuously engulfing quartet-and-electronics piece HIDDEN with the JACK on March 25.... The Site of an Investigation, a new work for voice and orchestra by Jennifer Walshe, can be seen on YouTube, courtesy of New Music Dublin... The Boston-based vocal ensemble Blue Heron has undertaken a multi-season exploration of the complete output of Johannes Ockeghem; there's much to see and hear on their website.... On Friday, March 22, the SEM Ensemble reprises their famous performance of Morton Feldman's For Philip Guston at their Willow Place headquarters in Brooklyn. I wrote about SEM's 1995 traversal for the New York Times.... On April 5, Marianne Schroeder, one of the greatest exponents of the brutally otherworldly music of Galina Ustvolskaya, will play the six sonatas at St. Peter's in NYC, as part of the Blank Forms series.

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Published on March 19, 2019 16:44

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