Quarter notes

Lots going on this weekend.  The Seattle Modern Orchestra — Julia Tai’s creation — gears up for a concert tomorrow night at Cornish.  Then on Sunday there is a free George Shangrow memorial concert at Benaroya Hall.  The concert program itself is a mix of various pieces organizers knew Shangrow adored.  This is the second memorial concert for Shangrow.  The first one happened this summer, after Shangrow’s untimely death.  Memorial concerts are nice testaments and this one will be no different. I do wonder if all of this memorializing is obscuring Shangrow’s legacy as a renegade force in the music community who had no problem thumbing his nose at authority and accepted conventions.  Every time the establishment came down on Shangrow he found a new way to survive and thrive. Adam Stern leads the Philharmonia Northwest this weekend in another concert that highlights Vaughan Williams.  Its his last (for the time being) with the orchestra.  other guest conductors will take the podium for the remaining programs this season.

Two classical music legends passed away this week: Rudolph Barshai and Henryk Groecki.  Gorecki will be remembered for his 3rd Symphony and Barshai for his orchestrations of Shostakovich’s string quartets.

Update: I forgot a performance.  The Thalia Symphony kicks off their new season after considerable uncertainty.  Stephen Radcliffe has taken over as music director.   Musicians are in high spirits.  The orchestra even has a new home at Town Hall.

Prokofiev’s 3rd Symphony headlines an almost all Russian program at SSO

Pablo Heras-Casado

By R.M. Campbell

For his Seattle Symphony Orchestra debut Thursday night at Benaroya Hall, Spanish conductor Pablo Heras-Casado conceived a predominantly Russian program. The one exception was Liszt’s “Mephisto” Waltz, No. 1: absolutely nothing from Heras-Casado’s native land or to suggest his Spanish origin.

However, one should not cavil. Instead we got a riveting account of Prokofiev’s Third Symphony. The piece is not done so much, especially compared with the composer’s First Symphony. Derived in part of his problematic opera, “The Fiery Angel,” the symphony takes what Prokofiev thought was the most salvageable musical ideas. The opera is difficult to absorb, awkward on stage and can be lurid at times. But much of the music is striking: Little wonder Prokofiev didn’t want to let it gather dust in some basement archives awaiting discovery.
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Kristallnacht recalled by Music of Remembrance

By Philippa Kiraly

One of the pleasures of Music of Remembrance concerts is the spoken (and written) historical context provided by founding director Mina Miller.

On Monday, the 72nd anniversary of Kristallnacht, the Night of Broken Glass when the nazis rampaged throughout Germany, destroying Jewish property wholesale, Music of Remembrance focused on the rich heritage of Jewish folklore, including music inspired by folksong and theater.

S. Ansky’s famous play written on an aspect of Yiddish folk culture, “The Dybbuk,” premiered in Moscow’s Habima Theater 1922 and went on to travel across the world (this writer saw it in New York in 1962). The music composed for it by Joel Engel has been much less heard.
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The week in classical music: Stock, Yannatos, Lucia, and the University of Washington

James Yannatos

To the front of me was David Stock. To my left, Harvard composer James Yannatos. Just another week with the Seattle Symphony, and another world premiere courtesy of the Simonyi/Gund Farewell Commissions project. David Stock’s Farewell Commission – Blast – wasn’t the only new piece on the program this past Saturday however. James Yannatos’ reworked version of Ritual Images also received a world premiere performance by Schwarz and the orchestra. Stock’s piece, a boisterous mélange of percussion, brass, and pulsing strings got the concert started, but it was Yannatos’ Ritual Images which commanded my attention more. Not simply an Ives knock-off, Ritual Images expands the American primativist vocabulary.  Yannatos stitches where Ives would have collided bits of Americana together. Ritual Images lacks the free wheeling feeling humor that makes Ives’ music so much fun to hear. But Yannatos makes up for this deficiency with a better sense of orchestration.
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Moscow Virtuosi Chamber Orchestra lives up to its name

By Philippa Kiraly

On tour around the country, the Moscow Virtuosi Chamber Orchestra made a stop at Benaroya Hall, Sunday night. It seems as though Seattle’s Russian community turned out for it in droves—I heard little English spoken that night, and it was a deeply attentive audience.

The two halves of the program were separated by close to two centuries, the first half containing the Symphony No. 4 in D Minor (called “La Casa del Diavolo,” or “The House of the Devil”) by Boccherini from 1771, and Mozart’s Piano Concerto No. 9 in E Flat Major from only six years later. The two works of the second half were composed even more closely together: Schnittke’s Sonata for violin, chamber orchestra and harpsichord, transformed from his own 1963 sonata for violin, and Shostakovich’s Chamber Symphony in C Minor, arranged under his aegis by Rudolf Barshai from his 1960 Eighth String Quartet, Op 110.
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PNB reexamines Tharp

Twyla Tharp’s Opus 111, presented as part of ALL THARP, Nov. 5-14, 2010. Photo Angela Sterling

By R.M. Campbell

Over the past five years, since the arrival of Peter Boal as artistic director, Pacific Northwest Ballet has been busy acquiring works of Twyla Tharp, including a pair it commissioned a couple years ago. Those were the product of a long residency when Tharp was in house, working with dancers, meeting donors and indulging the press. They are invariably evocative, sometimes compelling, sometimes witty and always inventive. One’s attention does not wander away at any moment.

The company revived three of those pieces Friday night at McCaw Hall: “Opus 111” and “Afternoon Ball,” the commissioned works, plus “Waterbaby Bagatelles,” first danced by PNB four years ago. It was a splendid night at PNB, first-rate, with attention to details and acute dancing by the whole company. I liked “Opus 111” better than I did at the premiere as well as “Waterbaby Bagatelles.” Perhaps they were better danced. Tharp returned to town for the evening.
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Sankai Juku returns to Seattle, this time at the Paramount

By R.M. Campbell

One of the strangest phenomena to emerge in post-World War II Japan was a dance movement called Butoh. It was a reaction against just about everything, Japan and otherwise, and once it crossed into the West made a powerful impression. Movement was often inexplicable, bizarre, disturbing, grotesque. And very dark.

With more extreme proponents, performances could be difficult to watch which, I suppose, was the point. One group was quite different. Certainly it was a Butoh ensemble in philosophy and style with its shaven heads, bodies painted in white rice flour and very slow movement. But Sankai Juku was more about poetry than shock value.
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Quarter notes: the new guy

Simon Woods. Photo: Seattle Times

After years of turnover in the top spot at the Seattle Symphony, the orchestra finally found someone who (hopefully) will stick around. The Seattle Times and New York Times reported Simon Woods — currently with the Royal Scottish National Orchestra — will become the next Executive Director of the SSO. Woods will begin his responsibilities almost immediately, but taking full control next season. Woods joins an organization on the rebound having settled contract negotiations earlier in the year and hiring a sharp new music director in Ludovic Morlot. Good will is abundant. This will surely benefit woods.

In other news, the San Francisco Symphony is releasing its entire set of Mahler recordings in a special vinyl addition.  A package worth having or at the very least worth admiring.

CSO’s Beyond the Score series debuts at SSO

By Philippa Kiraly

The Seattle Symphony’s new series, Beyond the Score, debuted at Benaroya Hall Sunday afternoon to a good-sized house, with quite a lot of kids present. The idea and the format began five years ago with the Chicago Symphony, creative director Gerard McBurney and executive producer Martha Gilmer, and involves taking one iconic orchestral work, deconstructing it for an hour with the aid of the orchestra, conductor, visual images, a narrator and a couple of actors, and then playing the work in its entirety in normal concert fashion. It’s been highly successful in Chicago, bringing in new audience and working so well that there are now three programs a year, each repeated.

Judging by the audience’s response to Debussy’s “La Mer,” this could well happen here.
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