Sunday, September 29, 2013

Tchaikovsky's 'Pathetique'

Another program note:

Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky (1841-1893)

Symphony No.6 in B minor, Op. 74 Pathétique

Adagio – Allegro non troppo
Allegro con grazia
Allegro molto vivace
Finale (Adagio lamentoso – Andante)

In February 1893, Tchaikovsky wrote to tell his brother, Anatoly, that a new symphony had come to him just as he was starting out for Paris in 1892. He said it would have a program, ‘but of the kind which remains an enigma to all’. There would also be much that is novel in the work: ‘For instance, the Finale will not be a great Allegro, but an Adagio of considerable dimensions.’
Responses to this work have sometimes been affected by the fact that it is nicknamed the Pathétique and also the fact that Tchaikovsky died nine days after conducting the St. Petersburg premiere in October 1893.
But such myths collapse against a broader consideration of the facts. Tchaikovsky, in fact, was happy at the time. He told his publisher that ‘I have never felt such self-satisfaction, such pride, such happiness as in the consciousness that I really am the creator of this beautiful work’. And pateticheskaya, the nickname in Russian, does not mean ‘arousing pity’ so much as ‘passionate’ or ‘emotional’. It was a name suggested for the second performance after Tchaikovsky’s original nickname ‘Program Symphony’ had failed to excite listeners adequately at the premiere. Attached to the second performance, after Tchaikovsky’s death, it couldn’t help but look like a harbinger of doom.
Other rumours surround this work. Tchaikovsky is supposed to have been outed as a homosexual just after the first performance, and ordered to kill himself by a jury of peers from his alma mater, the Imperial School of Jurisprudence. Recent evidence by writers such as Alexander Poznansky disputes this. Homosexuality was no big secret in Tsarist Russia, and was not uncommon in Tchaikovsky’s circle. Tchaikovsky’s death was most likely less scandalous: death by cholera after drinking unboiled water.
The ‘Pathétique’ is impressive, however, shorn of all the extra-musical legends. Tchaikovsky conjures a spectacular tapestry and one that can take hold of listeners who are not familiar with the conventions of classical music. (Note: ‘conjures’. As itemised above, there was plenty to suggest that Tchaikovsky was portraying grievous emotions, not venting them.)
After a mournful opening melody played by bassoon, the exposition builds in colour and excitement. Only then does the secondary melody appear, a full-bodied melody tinged with sadness and regret. More than half way through, we hit the development section: not just a technical dividing point in the structure audible to those familiar with sonata form, but an obvious change of scene, denoting crisis. A quote from the Orthodox requiem for the dead would have had significance for Russian listeners. The development is finally bridled in a passage of intense emotion which leads back to the recapitulation. If we are in any doubt that Tchaikovsky intends to depict suffering we need only note the baleful appoggiaturas of the trombones before the nostalgic melody returns and the movement closes with slightly consolatory hymn-like tones.
Critics have often derided Tchaikovsky’s symphonic credentials because his instinct for ballet music was never far away. Here, the second movement feels like a waltz, although it isn’t: it’s in 5 beats to the bar rather than the traditional 3.
A scherzo-like mood introduces the third movement, a vigorous march. Tchaikovsky the dramatist is again at work here, setting the audience up to experience with him the final tragedy. The climax invites exultant applause, but we are then launched all the more tellingly into the lamentoso last movement.
One explanation for Tchaikovsky’s extraordinary popularity is the drama, indeed pageantry, of his music. Few composers speak so immediately to an audience. Listeners can come away from this work with a sense of having lived through a wrenching emotional journey. And why not? Little music prior to Mahler covers as much emotional territory as the ‘Pathétique’.

Gordon Kalton Williams, © 2012


This note first appeared in program booklets of orchestras associated with Symphony Services International (http://symphonyinternational.net/). Please contact me if you would like to reprint this note in a program booklet. If you would like to read more of my notes on this blog please see:

Edward Elgar's Froissart, published 2 July 2013
Aaron Copland's A Lincoln Portrait, published 3 July 2013
Franz Waxman's Carmen-fantaisie, published 6 July 2013
Jan Sibelius's Oceanides, published 8 July 2013
Richard Wagner's Tristan and Isolde: Prelude and Liebestod, published 12 July 2013
Aaron Copland's Eight Poems of Emily Dickinson, published 18 July 2013
John Williams' Escapades, published 22 July 2013
Thomas Adès's Violin Concerto Concentric Paths, published 26 July 2013
J.S. Bach's Cantata: "Ein feste Burg ist unser Gott", BWV.80, published 28 July 2013
Beethoven's 5th and 6th Symphonies, published 29 July 2013
Wagner's Götterdämmerung (Immolation Scene), published 31 July 2013
Liszt's Tasso, published 2 August 2013
Stravinsky's Les Noces orchestrated by Steven Stucky, published 8 August 2013
Liszt's Hamlet, published 15 August 2013
Scriabin's Piano Concerto, published 18 August 2013
Christopher Rouse's Der gerettete Alberich, published 27 August 2013
Richard Strauss Der Rosenkavalier selections, published
Beethoven's Eighth Symphony, published 30 August 2013
'Traditional terms' - an interview with John Adams, published 5 Sep 2013
Berlioz' Waverley Overture, published 9 Sep 2013
Tchaikovsky's Fatum, published 17 Sep 2013
Wagner, arr. Henk de Vlieger A Ring Adventure, published 29 Sep 2013



Saturday, September 28, 2013

Henk de Vlieger's 'A Ring Adventure', based on Wagner

Continuing my series of program notes: 

Richard Wagner (1813-1883)
arr. Henk de Vlieger (born 1953)

The Ring – An Orchestral Adventure

from Das Rheingold (Prelude – The Rhine Gold – Nibelheim: the smithy – Valhalla)
from Die Walküre (The Valkyries – The Magic Fire)
from Siegfried (Forest Murmurs – Siegfried’s Deeds of Heroism – Brünnhilde’s Awakening)
from Götterdämmerung (Siegfried and Brünnhilde – Siegfried’s Rhine Journey – Siegfried’s Death – Funeral Music – Brünnhilde’s Sacrifice)

Considering that Wagner is widely regarded as the towering genius of 19th-century music, it is remarkable that he didn’t write more instrumental music. But Wagner’s overriding aim was to elevate the dramatic integrity of opera. He sought to achieve a new artform using lessons from the symphonic music of Beethoven to inform theatrical works constructed along the lines of classical Greek drama and based on myths which elevated the German consciousness. His crowning achievement is the 15-hour opera, presented over four nights, Der Ring des Nibelungen, drawn from Nordic myths and the Burgundian Nibelungenlied.
Critics have sometimes assumed that Wagner wasn’t interested in symphonic music. He had derided Brahms for concentrating on a musical form that Wagner considered outmoded the moment Beethoven introduced voices (and therefore texts) into his Ninth Symphony. But according to Cosima, Wagner’s wife, Wagner was considering writing a symphony around the time he was composing his final opera, Parsifal.
Over the years there have been numerous attempts to create concert works out of extracts from The Ring. Herman Zumpe in the late 19th century popularised extractable moments such as The Ride of the Valkyries. More recently there have been attempts to render the Ring as a symphony-length orchestral work. Henk de Vlieger wrote this ‘Adventure’ in 1991 for Edo de Waart and the Netherlands Radio Philharmonic Orchestra.
What helps these arrangers create a purely orchestral work is a device that Wagner invented to aid the drama - the ‘leitmotif’, a musical phrase or gesture, whose changes plot the development of an associated character, object or concept throughout the drama. Considering the length of the Ring, the system of leitmotifs is an important mnemonic device. But the leitmotifs also play a purely musical function. Their transformation and interweaving, creating variety while positing an underlying unity, allows the development of something like a Liszt-style symphonic poem.
De Vlieger’s ‘Ring Adventure’ follows the broad progress of Wagner’s plot. Three minutes’ play on E flat harmony at the beginning portrays the pure environment of the Rhine where Alberich, the dwarf, denied love by the Rhinemaidens steals the gold that sits on the bottom of the river. In Nibelheim, he forges a ring giving him power over all the world (you’ll hear anvils!). Wotan, king of the gods, needing to pay the giants Fasolt and Fafner for building Valhalla steals the ring, incurring Alberich’s curse. We then follow the course of the ring from doomed owner to doomed owner. One of Wotan’s valkyrie daughters courts Wotan’s anger when she rescues a flawed human who was intended to help Wotan evade the curse. Wotan puts her (Brünnhilde) to sleep surrounded by magic fire which none but a true hero can penetrate (you’ll hear Wagner’s marvellous evocation of flickering flames). That hero is Siegfried, whom we first encounter in the forest. But, after waking Brünnhilde, Siegfried travels up the Rhine where he is murdered by Hagen who wants the ring, now in Siegfried’s possession. Brünnhilde decides to put the world back to rights through self-sacrifice. She rides her horse into Siegfried’s funeral pyre. The fire flares up; Valhalla bursts into flames and the flooding Rhine sweeps away Hagen, restoring the golden ring to the river depths.
De Vlieger’s intention in this arrangement was to achieve something like a four-movement symphony – ‘Siegfried’ is the slow movement, for example. And De Vlieger wanted the piece to come across as if perhaps The Ring was conceived in this form in the first place. He maintains Wagner’s orchestration (except for wind instruments occasionally taking vocal lines) and only occasionally alters a transition to keep Wagner’s music in the original key.
What you get is not Wagner’s detailed depiction of downfall caused by denial of love in the quest for power, but something which reveals why  Wagner’s music works in the concert hall and perhaps some indication of what a Wagner symphony might have been like if he’d lived to write one.

Gordon Kalton Williams, © 2012
This program note was originally written for concerts by orchestras associated with Symphony Australia (www.symphonyinternational.net). Please contact me if you wish to reproduce it in your own program booklets.

Sunday, September 22, 2013

Experimental City - Los Angeles



Experimental City – Los Angeles’ operatic dimensions

When people think Los Angeles, they often think Hollywood and ‘Hollywood’ tends to be a byword for glitz and superficiality. But Los Angeles is also a home to musical experimentation. The groundbreaking Monday Evening Concerts that started on the roof of Peter and Frances Yates’ home in Silver Lake in 1939 are still going strong (though no longer on the rooftop), and I try never to forget that John Cage was born in the Good Samaritan Hospital on Wilshire Boulevard in 1912. 

One of the significant ways in which Los Angeles contributes to musical life is in opera. Composer Anne LeBaron, who is interviewed later in this article, has written that living in Los Angeles, she’s ‘fortunate to be in physical proximity to nimble companies that embrace risk-taking, companies that are beginning to make history (or have been doing so for some time) by presenting challenging new work’[i]. She mentions Long Beach Opera (soon to do Peter Lieberson’s ‘campfire opera under the stars’, King Gesar), Opera Povera and also The Industry, which established itself last year with a production of her ‘hyperopera’, Crescent City

Founded by director, Yuval Sharon, and producer, Laura Kay Swanson, The Industry aims to ‘present new and experimental productions that merge music, visual arts, and performance in order to expand the traditional definition of opera and create a new paradigm for interdisciplinary collaboration’ (according to their website). In October they’ll be presenting Invisible Cities, an opera by Christopher Cerrone based on the book of the same name by Italo Calvino. As The Industry’s kickstarter fundraising campaign said of this work, ‘Imagine yourself in LA’s historic Union Station, surrounded by passengers and passersby, wearing a comfortable pair of top-of-the-line Sennheiser wireless headphones with crystal-clear sound technology, listening to a new opera while discovering the live singers and dancers appearing and disappearing throughout the space.’ It’s a project that takes cognizance of Sharon’s desire to exploit opera’s capacity for multi-perspectives. It also has the support of the City and new mayor, Eric Garcetti - the kind of collaborative experimental work that Los Angeles is ripe for.

The big buzz last year, however, was Crescent City, the Industry’s first production in an old warehouse in Atwater Crossing[ii]. Its composer Anne LeBaron is a New Orleanian who now teaches at CalArts (California Institute of the Arts) based in Santa Clarita in one of Los Angeles’ northern valleys. A former student of Mauricio Kagel and György Ligeti, LeBaron has pushed the boundaries not only of opera, but of instrumental music. I heard her monodrama Some Things Should Not Move (about her experiences in a haunted apartment in Vienna) at The Colburn School’s Zipper Hall in March and can well understand how an eventual production of that opera, when it is complete, might make a virtue of positioning the audience in a haunted space (if indeed that’s the direction it goes in). 

Crescent City is what LeBaron calls a ‘hyperopera’. Not so much a genre, says LeBaron, as a ‘state of mind’, hyperopera takes opera’s collaborative potential and ‘ramps it up to another place that is more collaborative than anything you might imagine’. Hyperopera grew out of LeBaron’s courses at CalArts where students from various disciplines would get together and create an opera in a semester. There might be several writers, a composer for each character, negotiated ensemble writing...Crescent City took that concept to the highest professional level. Though there was only one composer, LeBaron and director Yuval Sharon storyboarded the opera before the final libretto was drafted. Sound designers and visual artists became members of the collaboration, ‘the creative family’, at an early stage of the process. They created the city that was the character behind everything else that went on in the opera[iii].

Crescent City is set in a city like New Orleans, just after a post-Katrina type event. Expecting another hurricane, Marie Laveau, queen of the voodoos, rises from her grave and approaches the Loa, the voodoo gods, pleading with them to spare her beloved city. At first indifferent, they eventually agree to save the city if they can find one good man in the debris.

Marie Laveau (Gwendolyn Brown) emerging from her Tomb in The Industry's production of Crescent City (Photo: Joshua White Photography)
‘The overall idea of hyperopera,’ said LeBaron when I met her in Santa Clarita, ‘is to diminish the hierarchy in opera, so that it’s not top-down composer, director, librettist and then the servants.’ In fact, LeBaron’s desire to change the hierarchy is inspired by the free interchange and fresh results of jazz. (Her score for Crescent City was described by Culture Spot LA as ‘Preservation Hall on acid’.) The big thing with this Crescent City production, however, was the use and design of the performance space. Six installation artists – Brianna Gorton, Mason Cooley, Katie Grinnan, Alice Könitz, Jeff Kopp and Olga Koumoundouros actually evolved a city in the Atwater warehouse. There was a supervening authority (Brianna Gorton was the curator) but separate ‘architects’ for the ‘buildings’ - cemetery, hospital, ‘dive bar’, swamp, Good Man’s Shack and junk heap - eventually amounting to a distinctive ‘civic character’. 

What made this opera such a unique experience? Audience members sat in the city with various options on where to sit in relation to the performers and musicians. ‘Our Dive Bar, the “Chit Hole”,’ says LeBaron, ‘was actually a long tongue of a runway - the tip was a tongue - and we had some of the audience sit around it in beanbag chairs. The highest-priced tickets were the skybox where you could have an overview of the city. And you could get a pedestrian ticket, too, where you could walk on planks behind and around the action.’ So the audience was fluid. It was possible to come on separate nights and gain new perspectives on what you might already have seen and heard.  Views were blocked just as in a city but live video on large screens around the space provided insight into areas you may not otherwise have been able to see. Video also served for surtitles or enhancement of stage action. The Loa, for example, were first seen onscreen, nonchalantly munching on chicken legs, before assuming human dimension onstage with other members of the cast.

But why do this in an opera? Firstly, the maximum development of the opera’s constituent parts enlivened other aspects of the work. With regard to composition, different heterogenous configurations of instruments (including strings, woodwinds, didgeridoos and electronica) in varying spatial arrangements accompanied strikingly different scenes. Olga Koumoundouras’s desire to do the dive bar as basically one enormous anus got LeBaron thinking that the dive bar should be all trombones and this led to the idea of bringing in the chromolodeon, the Harry Partch organ that has 43 tones to the octave. A big part of the payoff for all the various elements knocking together like this was increased vigilance on the part of the audience, multi-perspectives keeping the audience’s critical faculties active. 

Yuval Sharon was the director of Crescent City. An Illinois native and graduate of the University of California at Berkeley, Sharon was Project Director for four years of New York City Opera’s Vox program where he first met LeBaron and presented concert presentations of Crescent City. He has worked at houses such as the Mariinsky and Komische Oper, Berlin, and was Associate Director for the world premiere of Stockhausen’s Mittwoch aus Licht with Graham Vick for the London 2012 Cultural Olympics.
I asked him about the value of what LeBaron calls ‘meta-collaboration’. Why do it? ‘All operas are inherently collaborative,’ he says. ‘It’s not as if the composer is not being influenced by singers he or she is working with or the librettist and the source material. There are lots of influences. To take all of that away and say that this person is a monolithic creator is something that is not quite honest as to how operas actually come to life. It takes a village.’ 

Sharon was Assistant Director to Achim Freyer on the LA Opera’s Ring cycle. ‘Wagner is a huge part of my background,’ he says, ‘but much as I love the idea of the gesamtkunstwerk [Wagner’s theory of opera as a union of the arts], I can’t forget the Brechtian critique that Wagner takes all of the arts and throws them into one stew and makes a mush out of it. The music and text and scenography all become one general flow that puts the listener into a sort of catatonic state, whereas Brecht [whose plays and theories influenced 20th century theatre] wanted to separate the elements, to really wake up the audience and keep them alert and critical.’ 

Mention of Brecht, who wrote his classics The Caucasian Chalk Circle and the American version of Life of Galileo in LA’s beachside city of Santa Monica, takes the discussion into deeper theoretical areas. It may be objected that most opera lovers go to opera for the emotional experience, but Sharon doesn’t see emotion being excluded from the equation. ‘The idea of breaks and disruption in Brecht’s work was not at the expense of emotion. They were something that made the audience realise the construction of the emotion and woke up their critical faculties. I think opera is an emotional experience but it shouldn’t be manipulative. I don’t go as far as other people to say that Puccini is super-manipulative. But Puccini’s music almost always only means one thing. His orchestral writing’s very deep but the emotional life is ultimately, somewhat one-dimensional. And depth doesn’t always have to be multiple things happening at once. Verdi can create depth but almost lengthwise through a piece.

‘But you talk about being able to view things from different angles?
   
‘Absolutely.

‘And this is part of the reason why the audience can re-position themselves?

‘I’m really interested in that.

‘They will see things differently?

‘That’s right. That’s a key idea for me really, because what opera really does provide is multiple perspectives and multiple viewpoints onto the same action, same idea or same character. The multi-headed beast that is opera actually really encourages this type of thing.’

Which is all well and good, but are we talking about an area opera could legitimately move into and attract a completely new audience? ‘Oh absolutely’, says LeBaron, noting that The Industry’s goal was that everybody in Los Angeles should have heard about Crescent City and just about did. ‘It was a very mixed audience,’ says Sharon. ‘I’m really excited about that because that’s certainly been the mission for The Industry. I see opera as being a very solid 21st century possibility. And so I very much wanted to speak to people outside of the traditional world. There were certainly opera lovers who came. But we had just as many visual arts people. We had just as many people from all works of life who just wanted to see this spectacle. For a lot of people Crescent City was their first opera and they would come up to me and say, “Oh, is all opera like this?” And I’d say, “Well not exactly,” but that’s not bad either. We don’t want a one-size-fits-all approach. It’s exciting to see people’s gears turning a little bit and saying, “Oh wow, if this is opera what else is possible?”’
Sharon doesn’t believe the pieces he’s developing will replace the old operas or that the directorial ideas he came up with for Crescent City would necessarily be appropriate for them, but the sort of work he’s doing reveals directions for exciting new development in this 400 year-old form. After all, he says, ‘the potential for re-reading - that’s what’s really great about the standard repertoire.’
And the exciting thing is that there’s an audience for this in LA, and not just an audience but, as Sharon has noted before, ‘an amazing audience’ that has been developed here ever since Schoenberg and Klemperer came to town in the 1930s. Why look, even the Los Angeles Opera is doing the Robert Wilson/Philip Glass work Einstein on the Beach next season, right after that old favourite, Carmen.

Gordon Kalton Williams, © 2013
This article first appeared in The Podium, the e-newsletter of Symphony Services International (www.symphonyinternational.net) on 10 September 2013. 

If you'd like to read more of my articles from The Podium, please see

A Culture in Exile - European classical musicians in Hollywood in the 1930s and 40s, 25 Apr 2013 
@ http://gordonkaltonwilliams.blogspot.com/2013/04/a-culture-in-exile.html

Noblesse oblige - arts philanthropy in the US,  published 26 October 2012
@ http://gordonkaltonwilliams.blogspot.com/2012/10/noblesse-oblige-arts-philanthropy-in-us.html

Doors slamming shut - where to for American opera, published 23 Oct 2012
@ http://gordonkaltonwilliams.blogspot.com/2012/10/doors-slamming-shut-where-to-for.html

Walking with Stars, published 10 Apr 2012
@ http://gordonkaltonwilliams.blogspot.com/2012/04/walking-with.html



[i]  Crescent City: A Hyperopera (Anne LeBaron), Journal of the International Alliance for Women in Music, Volume 19, no.1 2013, pp1-6
[ii]  See The Industry’s page on Crescent City at http://theindustryla.org/projects/crescentcity/
[iii] See Yuval Sharon’s blog Building Crescent City, chronically the construction of Crescent City’s set in The Industry’s warehouse theatre: http://theindustrylosangeles.wordpress.com/


Friday, September 20, 2013

'Emerald City'

Green fingers of land running into sparkling blue water - the image of Sydney I have in my head is confirmed when I cross the Harbour Bridge. But the Edwardians, away from the water, must often have thought of Sydney as honeycomb-coloured.

Central Station, quarried from local sandstone in 1902. Photographed 19 Sep 2013.


Tuesday, September 17, 2013

Tchaikovsky's "Fatum"

Continuing my series of program notes


Peter Ilyich Tchaikovsky (1840-1893)

Fatum (Fate)

A strong argument could be made that Fate was Tchaikovsky’s great theme. For example, he said of the strident fanfare opening of his great Fourth Symphony of 1877 ‘This is fate...which hangs above your head like the sword of Damocles.’ It is not surprising, therefore, to find one of Tchaikovsky’s early works actually given ‘fate’ as a title, even though the work has no known specific program.
In 1868, Tchaikovsky had been nearly three years on the staff of what would become the Moscow Conservatory. He’d been headhunted from St. Petersburg by Nikolai Rubinstein when Rubinstein wanted to institute a Moscow branch of his brother Anton’s St.Petersburg-based Russian Musical Society. Tchaikovsky began Fatum in late September/early October 1868 and finished the scoring in December. Fatum’s first performance took place on 15/27 February 1869 at the eighth concert of the Russian Musical Society in Moscow, conducted by Nikolai Rubinstein. 
Biographers have speculated that the emotional turbulence of this work stems from the ups and downs of Tchaikovsky’s short-lived relationship with Belgian soprano, Désirée Artôt. At the time of the first performance, however, Nikolai Rubinstein suggested giving the work a more obviously explanatory title and some lines by Konstantin Batyushkov were added as a kind of epigraph:

You know what grey-haired Melhisedek
Bidding farewell to life, uttered:
‘A man was born a slave
He will die a slave,
And death will hardly tell him
Why he walked through the poor valley of tears
Suffered, endured, sobbed and perished.’

It’s hard to see how this might have enlightened the first audience. After all, what is the exact correspondence between Tchaikovsky’s often buoyant music and these words?

Tchaikovsky was at first proud of the form he had created for this work. However, still seeking validation as a composer, he sent the score to Mily Balakirev back in St. Petersburg for feedback. The leader of the group of nationalist Russian composers known as the ‘Mighty Five’ wrote back: ‘It is not properly gestated....The seams show, as does all your clumsy stitching...’ Though Balakirev accepted the dedication and conducted the work’s first Saint Petersburg performance, Tchaikovsky was discouraged and destroyed the score. It had to be reconstructed after his death.

Is the work as seriously deficient as Balakirev seems to have believed? What we have in Fatum is an overture-length work in two fairly similar halves. It opens with a stentorian statement of what we might consider the ‘fate’ theme. This is then given canonic treatment beginning in the bassoon before opening out into one of those eloquent melodies that we might describe as panoramic if it were accompanying stage action in a Tchaikovsky ballet. There follows a fast section (Molto allegro), rather like a Russian dance, before a truncated return of the very opening.

After this return, the ‘panoramic’ section follows (melody this time given out by horns), and the Molto allegro section is recalled. There is not much here in the way of detailed ‘symphonic development’, often a point of serious criticism as far as Tchaikovsky is concerned, but the work exhibits the eloquent lyricism that audiences have always loved in Tchaikovsky despite the reservations of critics.

Cesar Cuí, one of Balakirev’s ‘Five’, praised this work’s orchestration (the much-loved Tchaikovsky of the later symphonies and ballets is obviously present in such details as the woodwind and harp gilding of the ‘panoramic’ melody). All was not lost with Balakirev’s trenchant criticism, however. In many respects, Fatum opened the door to his and Tchaikovsky’s fruitful relationship. Though Tchaikovsky was never a member of the Five, Balakirev played something of the role of a mentor. Late in 1869, Balakirev came to Moscow and began a custom of suggesting programmatic topics to Tchaikovsky. On one of their walks together he suggested Romeo and Juliet. It worked. On 7 October 1869, after Balakirev’s hint, Tchaikovsky began what would become his first undoubted orchestral masterpiece, the Romeo and Juliet – Fantasy Overture.

Gordon Kalton Williams, © 2013

This note first appeared in program booklets of orchestras associated with Symphony Services International (http://symphonyinternational.net/). Please contact me if you would like to reprint this note in a program booklet. If you would like to read more of my notes on this blog please see:

Edward Elgar's Froissart, published 2 July 2013
Aaron Copland's A Lincoln Portrait, published 3 July 2013
Franz Waxman's Carmen-fantaisie, published 6 July 2013
Jan Sibelius's Oceanides, published 8 July 2013
Richard Wagner's Tristan and Isolde: Prelude and Liebestod, published 12 July 2013
Aaron Copland's Eight Poems of Emily Dickinson, published 18 July 2013
John Williams' Escapades, published 22 July 2013
Thomas Adès's Violin Concerto Concentric Paths, published 26 July 2013
J.S. Bach's Cantata: "Ein feste Burg ist unser Gott", BWV.80, published 28 July 2013
Beethoven's 5th and 6th Symphonies, published 29 July 2013
Wagner's Götterdämmerung (Immolation Scene), published 31 July 2013
Liszt's Tasso, published 2 August 2013
Stravinsky's Les Noces orchestrated by Steven Stucky, published 8 August 2013
Liszt's Hamlet, published 15 August 2013
Scriabin's Piano Concerto, published 18 August 2013
Christopher Rouse's Der gerettete Alberich, published 27 August 2013
Richard Strauss Der Rosenkavalier selections, published  
Beethoven's Eighth Symphony, published 30 August 2013
'Traditional terms' - an interview with John Adams, published 5 Sep 2013
Berlioz' Waverley Overture, published 9 Sep 2013

Friday, September 13, 2013

Coffee





Australians are very particular about coffee. They'll often come back to Australia saying they couldn't find a good coffee in the US (accompanying the finding with an expression of surprise because, after all, we know that Americans ditched the alternative, tea, in Boston Harbor back in 1773).

Call me obsessive but I've actually made a list of the best coffee I've found so far in the States. It would be odd if this turned out to be my most useful post!

California
The Blue Bottle, 300 Webster St Oakland, CA 94607 (It's in an industrial area, but also supplies various places over in the San Francisco city itself)
Philz Coffee, 3101 24th St (at Folsom St), San Francisco, CA 94110 (Mission District)
Lucky Llama, 5100 Carpinteria Ave., Carpinteria, CA 93013
Primo Passo Coffee, 702 Montana Ave, Santa Monica, CA 90403
Bru-Coffee, Vermont Ave, Los Feliz 90027 

New York              
Indian Road Cafe, 600 @ 218th Street, Manhattan (http://indianroadcafe.com/)
Gregory's Cafe, 327 Park Avenue South, New York, near 24th and 25th Street

North Carolina
Beyu Caffe, 355 West Main Street, Durham NC 27001

Charleston, South Carolina
Hope and Union, 199 St. Philip Street, Charleston, but I think that is closing and there's no word where it's going!
Kudu, 4 Vanderhorst Street, Charleston, SC,

Savannah, Georgia
Gallery Espresso, 234 Bull Street, Savannah, GA
The Sentient Bean, 13 East Park Avenue, Savannah, GA

And of course there are my favourite Starbucks - Reseda (cnr Vanowen & Reseda Blvds), Westwood CA and Bull Street, Savannah.

Some pictures:

Outside Indian Road Cafe, New York
Gallery Espresso, Savannah



Wednesday, September 11, 2013

The cooler coast

One of the most striking things I've learnt about Los Angeles from living there is that there are broadly four climatic regions in the city over summer. Winter seems to be pervasively comfortable, but in high summer when the Valleys are in the hundreds (40sC) and it's hotter the deeper in you get, Downtown will be in the 90s, Westwood in the 80s and Santa Monica, in the 70s. I wonder where else this happens?

Last week, to escape the heat, we went over to Carpinteria (so-named because the early Spanish explorers were impressed by the Chumash's boat-building techniques and named the area in honour of the 'carpenters'). It's also dubbed California's safest beach. It's another of those delightful beach town you get here on the coast, and hey - no Norfolk Island Pines, an absence of Australian references.

This fudges it a bit; we didn't go by train.

 Although I guess I should admit that for one brief minute, this Chumash design reminded me of Kuring-gai engravings.

  
  

Monday, September 9, 2013

Berlioz' "Waverley Overture"



Continuing my series of program notes:

Hector Berlioz (1803-1869)
Waverley – Overture

Berlioz’s Mémoires and the accounts of him written by other people at the time he wrote this work (most probably early 1827) reveal a young man pursuing his musical vocation with the ardent, even hungry, determination of a lover. 

Having arrived some years previously from La Côte-Saint-André near Grenobles, he was still trying to make his way in the musical world of Paris. His parents had cut his living-away-from-home allowance in the hope of convincing him to follow in his father’s footsteps and become a doctor. He was trying to gain performances of his opera, Les Francs-juges. He had been rejected in the first stage of the coveted Prix de Rome. Still he pressed on, reluctant to tell his parents too much of his difficulties for fear they would say, ‘You see – you’re killing yourself, and all for nothing.’ All this dates from around the time he wrote the Waverley Overture, which in pure musical energy reflects the determination of a budding master determined not to ‘remain at the foot of the mountain’ (as he wrote to his sister).
Waverley was therefore an appropriately dashing topic for a piece of music. The title derives from the first novel in a series by Sir Walter Scott, which concerns Edward Waverley who goes against his father’s sympathies to support Bonnie Prince Charlie in the Jacobite Uprising of 1745. Berlioz wrote a series of quotes from the novel down the title page of his manuscript. These dealt with the hero’s adolescent love of solitude and melancholy reverie, his embrace of soldiering, his dancing with Flora McIvor, and so on. But it would be inadvisable to listen for programmatic exactness in this work, suffice to say that a couplet from Scott, also on the title page of Berlioz’s manuscript, suggests the overture’s Andante-Allegro structure:

Dreams of love and lady’s charms
Give place to honour and to arms.

The work begins simply, with a single oboe note followed by a descending phrase on the strings. A broad cello aria follows, leading into the Allegro. There are three main themes here (a couple of them have been described as Rossinian, but they all have the older Berlioz’s élan), and the form is basically classical sonata form, with a short development and brusque recapitulation. This is to overlook the numerous touches which mark this as a work of burgeoning originality rather than student apprenticeship. The way the timpani quietly underlines the aria theme in the Andante, the way themes seem foreshortened to speed us through sectional divisions, the tumbling via a sudden conversion to triplets into the recapitulation – these suggest a natural ability to manipulate form on Berlioz’s part.
Berlioz eventually got this work performed by putting on a concert of his works, himself, in May 1828. Between then and publication of the work he reduced the instrumentation. He had originally scored the piece for 110 instruments, further proof that this work was among the first expressions of an outsize Romantic imagination.

Gordon Kalton Williams © 2012

This note first appeared in program booklets of orchestras associated with Symphony Services International (http://symphonyinternational.net/). Please contact me if you would like to reprint this note in a program booklet. If you would like to read more of my notes on this blog please see:

Edward Elgar's Froissart, published 2 July 2013
Aaron Copland's A Lincoln Portrait, published 3 July 2013
Franz Waxman's Carmen-fantaisie, published 6 July 2013
Jan Sibelius's Oceanides, published 8 July 2013
Richard Wagner's Tristan and Isolde: Prelude and Liebestod, published 12 July 2013
Aaron Copland's Eight Poems of Emily Dickinson, published 18 July 2013
John Williams' Escapades, published 22 July 2013
Thomas Adès's Violin Concerto Concentric Paths, published 26 July 2013
J.S. Bach's Cantata: "Ein feste Burg ist unser Gott", BWV.80, published 28 July 2013
Beethoven's 5th and 6th Symphonies, published 29 July 2013
Wagner's Götterdämmerung (Immolation Scene), published 31 July 2013
Liszt's Tasso, published 2 August 2013
Stravinsky's Les Noces orchestrated by Steven Stucky, published 8 August 2013
Liszt's Hamlet, published 15 August 2013
Scriabin's Piano Concerto, published 18 August 2013
Christopher Rouse's Der gerettete Alberich, published 27 August 2013
Richard Strauss Der Rosenkavalier selections, published  
Beethoven's Eighth Symphony, published 30 August 2013
'Traditional terms' - an interview with John Adams, published 5 Sep 2013