Alex Ross's Blog, page 70
September 28, 2018
Final Welles
How Orson Welles's "The Other Side of the Wind" Was Rescued from Oblivion, on the New Yorker website, Sept. 26, 2018.
September 25, 2018
September 20, 2018
Nightafternight playlist
— Cassandra Miller, O Zomer!, Philip the Wanderer, For Mira, Duet for Cello and Orchestra; Apartment House, Philip Thomas, Mira Benjamin, Charles Curtis with Ilan Volkov conducting the BBC Scottish Symphony (another timbre)
— Mark Turner and Ethan Iverson, Temporary Kings (ECM)
— ARC: Glass and Handel arias; Anthony Roth Costanzo, Jonathan Cohen conducting Les Violons du Roy (Decca)
— Georg Friedrich Haas, Trois Hommages; Mabel Kwan (New Focus)
— Paula Matthusen and Olivia Valentine, Between Systems and Grounds (Carrier)
— Prism I: Bach Fugue in E-flat, Beethoven Quartet Opus 127, Shostakovich Quartet No. 15; Danish Quartet (ECM)
— Life: Bach-Busoni, Busoni, Liszt, Schumann, Rzewski, Bill Evans; Igor Levit (Sony, out 10/5)
— Reicha, Études dans le genre fugé; Ivan Ilič (Chandos)
— Birgit Nilsson: The Great Live Recordings (Sony)
September 11, 2018
Sedona Miscellany
And a new season begins. Next weekend in NYC brings a Feldman festival entitled Softly, curated by Marilyn Nonken. Alongside familiar landmarks like Triadic Memories and Patterns in a Chromatic Field there will be early piano works, to be announced, and three short Feldman-based films by Zahra Partovi and Chris Villars. For further showings of the latter, see Villars's site..... Beginning tonight is another edition of the Resonant Bodies Festival, with Paul Pinto, Helga Davis, Lucy Dhegrae, Jen Shyu, Nathalie Joachim, Caroline Shaw, Sarah Maria Sun, Gelsey Bell, and Pamela Z.... Missy Mazzoli's latest opera, Proving Up, opens the Miller Theatre season on Sept. 26. Zachary Woolfe interviews her for the New York Times.... WasteLAnd has announced its new season, with Katherine Young the featured composer.... The LA Phil has announced details of its Fluxus series, adding yet more allure to its extraordinary centennial season. Yuval Sharon will direct Cage's Europeras 1 and 2, Yoko Ono will be given a portrait concert, Patricia Kopatchinskaja will perform Fluxus pieces at the Getty, and La Monte Young is scheduled to preside over his Second Dream of The High-Tension Line Stepdown Transformer.... The Pulitzer Arts Foundation and the St. Louis Symphony have announced their 2018-19 concert series, featuring Mazzoli, Shaw, Anna Thorvaldsdottir, and Mary Kouyoumdjian, among others.... In this week's New Yorker, Rebecca Mead has a wonderful profile of George Benjamin, who speaks revealingly about his long development as a composer and the origins of his recent operatic work.
September 10, 2018
September 6, 2018
September 5, 2018
Semi-ironic
August 28, 2018
Playlist
— Gabriel Kahane, Book of Travelers (Nonesuch)
— Gershwin, Rhapsody in Blue, Concerto in F; Kirill Gerstein, David Robertson conducting the St. Louis Symphony (myrios)
— Blitzstein, The Cradle Will Rock; Ginger Costa-Jackson, Keith Jameson, Christopher Burchett, Aubrey Babcock, John Mauceri conducting Opera Saratoga (Bridge)
— Linda Catlin Smith, Wanderer and other works; Apartment House (another timbre)
— Anthony Cheung, Cycles and Arrows; Spektral Quartet, Claire Chase, Winston Choi, Atlas Ensemble, ICE (New Focus)
— Bach, Six Cello Suites; Yo-Yo Ma (Sony)
— Cassandra Miller, Just So: String Quartets; Quatuor Bozzini (another timbre)
— Ruth Gipps, Symphonies No. 2 and 4, Knight in Armour, Song for Orchestra; Rumon Gamba conducting the BBC National Orchestra of Wales (Chandos)
August 24, 2018
Bernstein v. Nixon
August 21, 2018
1989, the number
In my state-of-new-music essay in this week's issue of The New Yorker, I had originally intended to discuss several recent books on early-twenty-first-century composition. In the end, I chose to concentrate on Tim Rutherford-Johnson's Music After the Fall: Modern Composition and Culture Since 1989. But I'd like to mention various others that have informed my listening and thinking. Jennie Gottschalk's Experimental Music Since 1970 has quickly established itself as an essential text, mapping the vibrancy of experimentalism in the post-Cage age. David Metzer's Musical Modernism at the Turn of the Twenty-first Century focuses on established, quasi-canonical figures like Ferneyhough, Lachenmann, Sciarrino, Kurtág, and Saariaho. In so doing, Metzer vigorously opposes the idea of an endpoint for, or drastic transformation of, the modernist tradition: instead, he sees a network of continuities from the heroic early years to the present. The Cambridge anthology Transformations of Musical Modernism contains Susan McClary's crucial essay "The Lure of the Sublime" and much other work of value. Finally, I was fascinated by Seth Brodsky's study From 1989, or European Music and the Modernist Unconscious, even if its extensive deployment of Lacanian theory went somewhat over my head. Brodsky proposes a Lacanian distinction between "master modernism" and "analytic modernism," which could be aligned with the dividing line between past and present traced in McClary's essay. Brodsky writes: "A master modernism, dominating discourse with its calls for the new, fantasizes the future as its (Real) object. An analytic modernism, dismantling domination through its desire for absolute difference, takes the past as its (split) subject." Still, I find myself most in sympathy with Tim's approach, which avoids getting caught up in categorical debates around modernism and instead strives to address contemporary music very much on its own terms.
While working on the article, I also read or re-read George E. Lewis's indispensable A Power Stronger Than Itself, Benjamin Piekut's Experimentalism Otherwise, Robert Adlington's Composing Dissent, the Ashgate Research Companion to Minimalist and Postminimalist Music, Joshua Clover's 1989: Bob Dylan Didn't Have This to Sing About, and Nate Chinen's just-published Playing Changes: Jazz for the New Century.
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