Topic: Industry News

National Youth Orchestra of the USA Spotlights Vitality of Local Youth Orchestras

In Saturday’s (7/22) Dallas Morning News (login may be required), Tim Diovanni writes, “The National Youth Orchestra [of the USA], comprising some of the top high school talent in the country, is performing in Dallas’ Meyerson Symphony Center today. Of 108 musicians in the orchestra, from 31 states and Puerto Rico, five hail from the Dallas-Fort Worth area, and 12 from Texas. Since its founding by Carnegie Hall in 2013, the NYO has played in 17 countries on four continents. This year’s North America tour stops in seven cities. At the Dallas concert, Sir Andrew Davis will conduct the orchestra … Joshua Elmore, principal bassoonist of the Fort Worth Symphony, participated in NYO in 2015 and 2016. Performing in last year’s NYO motivated trombonist Devin Drinan, an 18-year-old recent graduate from McKinney Boyd High School and returning member of the orchestra…. He will soon attend the New England Conservatory … Percussionist Dylan Khangsar, an 18-year-old recent graduate of Hebron High School in Lewisville, is attending Stanford University in the fall, with a major in data science and a minor in music…. Drinan and Khangsar have performed in the Greater Dallas Youth Orchestra, which they credit with helping them grow as musicians.”

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.”

Piano, Reinvented

In last Tuesday’s (7/18) Fast Company (password may be required), Elissaveta M. Brandon writes, “Few objects are defined by their shape as much as the grand piano. Inspired by the form of its predecessor, the harpsichord, the piano is the musical embodiment of ‘form follows function.’ It has had the same sinuous body for more than 300 years…. Dan Harden, founder and CEO of the San Francisco-based industrial design firm Whipsaw … four months ago set out to radically redesign the piano. Harden’s proposal, called the Ravenchord, is shaped like a bird’s wing, with strings fanning out from the center…. A pianist would sit in front of the piano and face the audience; viewers would get to see the inner workings of the instrument … The mechanisms that make up a piano—the hammers, dampers, and strings—are all exposed … Harden says, ‘I wanted to liberate the piano by more fully expressing its form, function, and usability.’  For now, the Ravenchord is just a concept … The biggest challenge will be to convince pianists that this thing they have known their entire lives … is ripe for reinvention. I, for one, welcome the experiment with infinite curiosity and a touch of skepticism.”