Tag: Repertoire

Mozart, Reconsidered

In the July Atlantic magazine, Corinna da Fonseca-Wollheim writes, “One of my favorite passages in all of Mozart sounds nothing like him. In the opening bars of his String Quartet No. 19 in C Major, quiet notes from the violins and violas ooze over the halting pulse of the cello. At times, sounds coalesce into weird dissonances as parts seem to grope, perhaps instinctually, toward harmony. Then a tense pause—and a jaunty melody bursts forth as if released by a spring. I’ve been hearing this moment with fresh admiration since reading ‘Mozart in Motion,’ by the British poet Patrick Mackie—an illuminating book that aims to ground the music of a composer too often idolized as a mere instrument of the divine in the context of his time…. To many listeners, Mozart’s music sounds so natural and self-evident that it’s hard to imagine it costing the composer much effort, let alone courage. ‘So pure’ is Mozart’s music, in the scientific assessment of Albert Einstein, ‘that it seemed to have been ever-present in the universe, waiting to be discovered by the master.’ Mackie’s book, subtitled ‘His Work and His World in Pieces,’ is a welcome reminder that the universe reflected in Mozart’s operas, symphonies, concertos, and chamber works was very much shaped by political and social currents—some of which reflect the anxieties and hopes of our own time as well.”

Review: Anna Clyne’s “This Moment” Gets World Premiere by Philadelphia Orchestra at Bravo! Vail Music Festival

In Thursday’s (7/20) I Care If You Listen, Esteban Meneses writes, “From July 12 to 14, I attended the last three concerts of the Philadelphia Orchestra’s 16th Bravo! [Vail Music Festival] residency … I gravitated toward the contemporary offerings … the highlight of which was the world premiere of Anna Clyne’s ‘This Moment.’… ‘This Moment’ was commissioned by a multi-orchestra consortium led by the League of American Orchestras, and created to celebrate women composers. Five orchestras will perform the piece during the 2023–24 season…. It quotes themes from [Mozart’s] Requiem … and also takes inspiration from a line by the Vietnamese Buddhist monk Thich Nhat Hanh … ‘When you meditate on death, you love life more, you cherish life more.’… ‘This Moment’ emerges from glacial strings, with a lightly brushed ominous gong and a bowed vibraphone. A long, anguished theme starts taking shape in the strings, with languid responses from the woodwinds. Suddenly, the music gets much louder, with tuba and trombones blasting sustained tones; when the theme for strings returns, it is transmogrified … shaken up by loud gong crashes…. The music ends in quiet weightiness, suggesting not resignation but acceptance…. Yannick Nézet-Séguin conducted with expressive attentiveness.” Learn more about the League of American Orchestras’ Virginia B. Toulmin Foundation Orchestral Commissions Program.

Conductor Anthony Parnther’s Extensive Musical Embrace

In Friday’s (7/14) Los Angeles Times, Mark Swed writes, “Saturday night Anthony Parnther conducted a stirring concert of a student chamber orchestra at the Music Academy of the West. This is an elite summer training program in Montecito for some of the country’s most promising young musicians … Eleven days earlier, Parnther led a small ensemble of excellent L.A. musicians to close the season of the new music series Tuesdays @ Monk Space, a small gallery and studio space on the outskirts of Koreatown. These two spaces, musical forces, neighborhoods and audiences were at opposite extremes, but both suited Parnther. He also happens to be a busy studio conductor and bassoonist who has worked over the last two decades on some 1,000 movie, television and video game scores. He is music director of the San Bernardino Symphony and the Southeast Symphony in Los Angeles, serving distinctly different and underrepresented communities. He is a composer and educator. The likes of Ye (formerly known as Kanye West) and RZA of Wu-Tang Clan turn to him for their orchestral needs. He is, in his exceptional musical reach, the quintessential L.A. musician of our day.”

“Black Metropolis” World Premiere: Hip-Hop Meets the Philadelphia Orchestra

In Tuesday’s (7/18) Philadelphia Inquirer (log-in may be required), Peter Dobrin writes, “Hip-hop is now notching a half century, which means it’s had more staying power than a few other major movements in music…. Neoclassicism and serialism seem like blips on the screen compared to the genre that came out of New York City in the 1970s and grew up in Philadelphia. It’s a point not lost on Chill Moody and Darin Atwater, whose hip-hop-infused, symphonic-fortified ‘Black Metropolis’ makes its world premiere July 19 in a free concert at the Mann Center…. ‘Black Metropolis’—which was commissioned by the Mann Center—speaks to the 50th anniversary of hip-hop, but more specifically to hip-hop as a ‘social movement and how music is constructed around culture,’ says Atwater, the Baltimore-based composer and pianist…. Atwater’s score draws on parts of his earlier Paint Factory and features the composer on piano and Moody as rapper, the Soulful Symphony Choir and Rhythm Section, DJ Wendel Patrick, various saxes and a Hammond B3 organ, and the Philadelphia Orchestra led by Jonathan Taylor Rush…. The Philadelphia Orchestra … thinks this is the ensemble’s first time performing with a hip-hop artist. It has worked with Atwater before, premiering his stunning ‘South Side: Symphonic Dances’ … in 2018.”