Quarter Notes: May Day, Higdon, and Hadelich

One of the Seattle Chamber Music Society’s newer festival musicians – Augustin Hadelich – was earlier this week.

A new classical music review mega site is being launched by Chicago based critics Lawrence Johnson. endeavors to be a one stop review site for people seeking out concert and record reviews. The emergence of an online presence for classical music has shifted the debate (for me at least) from will arts journalism be able to survive in the 21st Century to what is the best model for arts journalism in the 21st Century?

in music for her Violin Concerto. Most classical music buffs know this by now. I am in the process of editing an interview I did with Robert Spano (who is in Seattle to conduct the Seattle Symphony in John Adams’ Harmonielehre) and we talked at some length about Higdon. Spano is one of Higdon’s most ardent supporters on the podium. Spano says in the interview that it took time to build Higdon’s relationship with the Atlanta Symphony (his home orchestra) but now she is mobbed in the lobby by music lovers who treat her like a classical music rock star. Congratulations Ms. Higdon! And, look for my video with Spano tonight.

Another reminder, this Saturday is . For 12 hours and $5 you can come hear the city’s best contemporary and new music acts and advocates. Some of the highlights include: the Pacific Rims Percussion Quartet playing John Cage’s Living Room Music; music by Fredric Rzewski played by Christina Valdes; Steve Reich’s Tehilliam; and Henry Cowell’s String Quartet No. 4 performed by the St. Helens Quartet. I’ll be introducing acts from 1-3 pm and 7-9 pm. Hope to see you there.

Update
The NY Times finally has finally run an .

Quarter Notes: Alan Rich

. I didn’t know Mr. Rich personally; we never shared conversation over a drink, or wondered about musical subjects together. But, I did know Rich’s writing. His contribution to arts journalism will be missed.

Rich’s words can be found throughout the classical music world. His handiwork is on display in Szell and the Cleveland Orchestra’s Brahms cycle for Sony. Rich was the long-time classical music critic/columnist for the LA Weekly. Once a week, Rich would weave a compelling narrative through a week worth of music.  In “American Pioneers: Ives to Cage and Beyond,” Rich zealously tells the tale of American music in the middle part of the last century. In recent years, Rich had taken to putting his thoughts on the Internet on his blog

If you’ve never had the chance to read Rich’s work I encourage you to visit his blog. With Rich’s passing, it is hard to know how long Rich’s columns will remain online. Read them while you can. I’ve excerpted Rich’s final column for the LA Weekly – written a few weeks after he was fired from the Weekly – below.

Beethoven, Bloomberg, Blog

Some of the happiest moments in a critic’s life come with discovering music you should have known long ago but didn’t. At Midori’s recital in Disney Hall, a week ago Sunday, there was a Beethoven Violin Sonata – A major, Opus 30 No. 1 – that I swear I had never heard before, or at least never paid attention. It had an ordinary, perky first movement. Then came an adagio straight out of heaven: a melting, embracing slow theme and a middle section that stood on a threshold and welcomed me with one arm and Franz Schubert with the other. Oh my, Midori plays wonderfully these days; so does Robert McDonald, her excellent collaborating pianist. A couple of weeks before, I had heard her in an unpublicized USC concert, before a paltry audience, performing a big, dramatic Penderecki sonata from 1999, very long and very intense; that work deserves to be brought out in a public performance now that she is located in Los Angeles and draws big crowds – as she did last week. I had gone to her Disney Hall concert out of curiosity for John Corigliano’s Sonata, but that turned out to be an early work, highfalutin Americana, not worth the carfare. It was Beethoven who made the evening.

Beethoven was my first love – the “Pastoral” Symphony, or what remained of it in Walt Disney’s Fantasia butchery. The Eighth Symphony figured in my first published review: Boston Herald, Thanksgiving Day, 1944, a Boston Symphony Youth Concert – and on that day, I abandoned my premed ambitions forthwith, breaking my mother’s heart, for a couple of years anyhow. (It was repaired when I introduced her to Leonard Bernstein.) Sue Cummings hired me as music critic for the Weekly in March 1992, and I got a nice note from her this week on the occasion of this, my final column. It was Cummings who thought up the title “A Lot of Night Music.” I wanted “A Little Night Music” in honor of two favorite composers (guess!), but I had no idea I’d be writing such a lot. Sixteen years! with the most cooperative local management and – honest! – the best readership any serious music critic could ever ask for. My lord! the outburst over my termination has been as gratifying as 10 Marriage of Figaro performances over a single weekend.

From this week, I’ll be writing regularly for bloomberg.com. My own blog, soiveheard.com, will be starting up any day now; there’ll be announcements on KUSC and elsewhere. I’ll also be keeping one foot in the door here at the Weekly; in fact, I’ve already got an assignment.
So, you see, it’s not so bad.

Quarter notes: Gergiev, Holst, and Pro Musica

V. Gergiev about conducting, his schedule, and Russia.

Seattle Pro Musica is a semi-finalist for the American prize and the group’s conductor, Karen Thomas, is also a semi-finalist in the conducting category.  Congrats Karen and Pro Musica!

Gustav Holst and Hans Graf .

Amelia is coming fast, be sure to check out to learn about Seattle Opera’s first commission in forty years. Check out part two of Seattle Opera’s making of series.

Coming up on May 1st, I am one of the three MC’s (Gavin Borchert and Dave Beck are the other two) for new music festival at Town Hall. $5 for twelve hours of music is just about the best deal around.

Quarter notes: Levine, the Ring, and Amelia

Scary clowns in the LA Ring.

has hit Los Angeles.

Levine on the rest of the Met season.

Morlot to Seattle to fill in for Roberto Abbado.  More than a few are looking forward to his return.  According to the SSO, Dutilleux and Morlot are close.  Will the second date be as good as the first?

The Seattle Chamber Music Society is out with their

Next week, I will be attending a media availability with the Seattle Opera’s creative team to discuss Daron Hagen’s new opera Amelia.  Don’t know Hagen?  Check out his Frank Lloyd Wright inspired opera Shining Brow on Naxos.  Live blogging will ensue.  Stay tuned for more details.

Ludovic Morlot to replace Roberto Abbado

Roberto Abbado has withdrawn from his upcoming appearance with the SSO.  In his place, the orchestra is bringing back Ludovic Morlot.  Morlot was last here in October when he conducted a concert of Martinu and Haydn.  For that concert, the orchestra was split with the opera.  This time, Morlot will have the benefit of the whole orchestra as he leads the group in Beethoven’s Fifth Symphony and Henri Dutilleux’s Cello Concerto with Xavier Phillips as the cello soloist.

Quarter notes: Chamber Music Madness, the Met, James Gaffigan, and La Traviata

On this Easter Sunday some classical music bits and pieces to tide you over.

Chamber Music Madness, a local organization that helps kids grow as musicians is looking for a new executive director.  String players with good administrative and fundraising skills should apply.

Vanity Fair is out with a piece questioning whether the Metropolitan Opera’s economic model is sustainable.  The article comes on the heels of Alex Ross’ own critique of the current Met season which includes the now infamous Luc Bondy Tosca.

Speaking of sustainable economic models, the Honolulu Symphony has a plan to save the beleaguered orchestra.

Consider me a Dausgaard partisan


Whether you fell in love with Lutoslawski’s Fourth Symphony or loathed it, found a new favorite in Sibelius’ Fifth Symphony or still prefer the Second, Danish conductor Thomas Dausgaard had one of the toughest programs to conduct of any of the season’s guest conductors. Based on the audience’s reaction after each piece, it can be said he succeeded.

Abbado might have Dutilleux in April, but Beethoven’s Fifth will have everyone flashing “V for victory” before the night is done. Even the Seattle Symphony debut of John Adams’ Harmonielehre under the baton of Robert Spano has the help of Rachmaninov’s Second Piano Concerto.

Dausgaard not only had to contend with the least interesting of Rachmaninov’s piano concertos (the fourth) but he also had the job of guiding the orchestra and (what I am sure was) a skeptical audience through Witold Lutoslawski’s slithering, slinking, and shimmering symphony from 1992. The score alone is enough to make lesser conductors and musicians hurl themselves into Puget Sound.

Under normal circumstances, closing the night with a Sibelius symphony – if it is the First or Second Symphony – would be an automatic hit. Dausgaard picked the Fifth instead, a symphony that begins with two movements that can be problematic for orchestra and audience, but ends with a third movement that is both dignified and resplendent.

Continue reading Consider me a Dausgaard partisan

KING FM makes the switch (in 2011)

KING FM has finally decided to make the switch. And it only took six decades.

In a press release yesterday, Seattle’s classical radio station announced they would become a listener-supported station effective July 2011. Since 1948, when the station was founded by Dorothy Stimson Bullitt, it has used a commercial broadcasting model.

The switch to a listener-supported model isn’t surprising. Many commercial radio stations and especially commercial classical stations have struggled in recent years. Stations can point to a variety of reasons for their difficulty, but the one-two punch of a faltering economy and new audience measurement methodologies crippled the remaining commercial classical stations across the country.  The biggest victim of the changing reality for commercial classical radio was WQXR which was absorbed by WNYC late last year.

Continue reading KING FM makes the switch (in 2011)

Ferko discusses how he composed his Stabat Mater

Frank Ferko is in town for a performance of his Stabat Mater by Choral Arts. He participated in a Meet the Composer last night at Fare Start. I live blogged the Q&A (you can find the transcript by clicking on the Live Blog page) and at the beginning of the question period I took this short video of Ferko talking about what went into each stanza, why he skipped the second, and why the stanzas toward the end are shorter.  If your Saturday evening is empty, consider coming to St. James Cathedral at 8 pm to hear Choral Arts’ performance.

Frank Ferko explains how he composed his “Stabat Mater” from gatheringnote on Vimeo.