Mozart at Bard; Botstein in the Bardo

Mozart at Bard; Botstein in the Bardo

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I can’t believe it’s been two months already since the Fisher Center for the Performing Arts announced that the focus of this summer’s Bard Music Festival will be “Mozart and His World.” The festival, now in its 36th year, will we be held at Bard College in Annandale-on-Hudson, NY, August 7-16. The fact that I didn’t share the news immediately is attributable to several factors:

Firstly, I’m sorry, Mozart may have been one the greatest musical geniuses who ever lived – and he wrote some music I would never want to be without (e.g. “The Marriage of Figaro,” an opera I like to say basically saved my life, or least got me through a very rough time) – but the idea of two weekends of his music doesn’t exactly thrill me.

In the past, I wouldn’t have considered it an issue, since the “and His World” qualifier ensured there would be plenty of fascinating discoveries by the subject’s contemporaries, those who influenced him, and those he in turn influenced.

Also, historically, Bard has been exceptional in digging deep into composers’ basements and turning up neglected scores from cobwebbed corners of their attics. This year, alas, seems to be a little disappointing in these regards.

For one thing, I was hoping the programs would mix it up a bit more and cast some light into the future. After all, there are so many pieces influenced by or written in tribute to Mozart. One program will include Tchaikovsky’s “Mozartiana” – hardly a rarity, but at least it will be presented in a lesser-heard piano version – though I would expect the concerts to also weave in works such as Jean Françaix’s “Hommage à l’ami Papageno” for wind ensemble or, say, Francis Poulenc’s Concerto for Two Pianos, with its clearly Mozartian slow movement. If not those works specifically, perhaps a few like them.

Of course at Bard, you never know everything you’re going to get until the actual, physical program goes to print. This early in the process, what’s given on the website is frequently but a sketch. But I imagine the major works are in place.

Anyway, for all my grousing, I will be there for at least some of it, and once I am in the concert halls and into the music, I know I will have a good time, regardless, even if I can’t imagine buying a ticket based on being able to hear the “Prague Symphony” again.

Unquestionably, there will be rarities: a Michael Haydn mass, selections from a Salieri opera, a Clementi piano sonata that contains the germ for Mozart’s overture to “The Magic Flute.” But what about the Mozart-Salieri collaboration “Per la Ricuperata Salute di Ofelia,” rediscovered as recently as 2016? How about Rimsky-Korsakov’s one-act opera “Mozart and Salieri?” Or Reynaldo Hahn’s “Mozart?”

As always with these things, people will have their own ideas, and I know I should be thankful for anything this group organizes – and I am! But there’s no way I can pretend to be anywhere near as pumped for a Mozart festival as I was for those devoted to past subjects, such as Prokofiev, Sibelius, Rimsky-Korsakov, Berlioz, Vaughan Williams, Bohuslav Martinů, Carlos Chávez, and Erich Wolfgang Korngold.

Okay, I’ve been putting it off, but now at last I come to the elephant in the room. I so badly do not want to even address it, but there’s the unfortunate quagmire through which co-artistic director Leon Botstein – also president of Bard College since 1975 – is currently slogging. If you don’t already know it, Botstein is in the Epstein files. Not with anything like the same frequency as the President of the United States, mind you, or, from what we know so far, with anywhere near the same degree of skeeviness. Actually, it doesn’t appear there’s any skeeviness at all. But the timing couldn’t be worse. The excrement hit the fan just before this year’s festival would have to be announced.

The New York Times has covered Botstein’s interactions with Epstein extensively, but a lot of “journalists,” I’ve noticed, in particular those writing for the local papers of the Hudson Valley, seem to have their knives out, through suggestive phraseology and loaded words. The last thing Bard needs, in this sensitive situation, is for anyone to be striking sparks.

I hasten to add, although Botstein is kind of a hero to me, I am in no way discounting the real and lasting trauma experienced by any of Epstein’s victims or that of anyone else who has suffered sexual abuse in their personal lives or at the hands of anyone on the faculty of the college itself (which has been alleged; after all, it is a college, and there are often abuses of authority at such institutions). There have been no allegations of Botstein himself participating in any illegal behavior.

However, one of Epstein’s victims made an interesting point in an interview when she stated that the fact that Epstein was able to attract someone as estimable as Botstein to his sphere – and Botstein is FAR from the only one – it lent to an illusion of legitimacy, so that she and others like her struggled with the disconnect between what they were seeing, this kind of acceptance, and what they were actually experiencing.

But Botstein himself appears to be clean, and the man himself has done so much for not only music, but for education, for social causes, and for the school itself. It would be unfortunate if he were forced out for the sin of trying to elicit additional funds from a millionaire, who made an unsolicited $75,000 donation to the college.

But an independent investigation is ongoing. I will stand by the findings, as I hope the student activists will. There is a group on campus raising hell as only young people can.

Botstein, who is brilliant and brilliantly articulate, is conspicuously absent, or downplayed to the extent that I don’t see him mentioned anywhere in the Bard promotional material. I’m hoping he is not forced out of the festival altogether, as there is no one currently involved that could ever fill his shoes.

He’s still attached to this year’s opera production, which precedes the festival, as part of Bard SummerScape, a larger celebration of the arts that spans June 25-August 16. I already have my ticket to hear him conduct Richard Strauss’ “Die ägyptische Helena” (“The Egyptian Helen”). The opera runs July 24-August 2.

Furthermore, I will hear him at Carnegie Hall this Thursday, with vocal soloists and the American Symphony Orchestra, as he introduces and conducts Berlioz’s rarely-encountered edition of Carl Maria von Weber’s “Der Freischütz.”

One of the reasons I feel so disheartened by my own reaction to this year’s music festival – a reaction that I suspect will be shared by others attracted to Bard for its advocacy of unusual and neglected repertoire – is that I do not want the college to misconstrue my or anyone’s lack of enthusiasm and/or low attendance for distaste for, or protest against, Botstein.

Be that as it may, you’ll find the program, as it currently stands, at the links below. If you’re a Mozart nut, I hope you will consider attending.

Long live the Bard Music Festival. I’m hoping we’ll still have a few more years of Botstein, who will turn 80 in December, but appears to be as vital as ever, and in comparatively good health, at least on the evidence of what I’ve seen at Bard and at his concerts in New York City.

Next year, another neglected or underappreciated composer, please!

——-

Bard Music Festival

https://fishercenter.bard.edu/what-we-do/bard-music-festival/

Bard SummerScape, including Strauss’ “The Egyptian Helen”

https://fishercenter.bard.edu/what-we-do/summerscape/


Comments

14 responses to “Mozart at Bard; Botstein in the Bardo”

  1. Anonymous

    I always preferred Beethoven…

    1. Classic Ross Amico

      Lesley Siedt Goes without saying. Although there are Mozart pieces I wouldn’t want to be without. Bard covered Beethoven in 2000.

      1. Anonymous

        Classic Ross Amico 👍

  2. Anonymous

    I’ll be there fore the whole festival. And next year, as you may recall, the featured composer is Gershwin. If they really go into the “and his World” part, they should, I hope, dig up a lot of lesser-known composers. Dana Suesse (the so-called “female Gershwin”) would be one and the whole symphonic jazz movement of the 1920s deserves a rediscovery.

    1. Classic Ross Amico

      Mather Pfeiffenberger I forgot about Gershwin! Thanks for the reminder. Yes, I hope they get very deep into “his World.” So many facets to cover. Tin Pan Alley. Broadway. Hollywood. Symphonic jazz. Paul Whiteman. William Grant Still and the Harlem Renaissance. Copland. Ravel. Oscar Levant wrote some “serious” pieces. Maybe they can unearth some of those. Maybe they’ll swing for the fences and even program a neglected American symphony or two. We’ll see what they cook up. I can imagine being there both weekends for that one.

      1. Anonymous

        Classic Ross Amico Knowing Botstein, he might well program the Oscar Levant Piano Concerto, which is from what I understand a sort of combination of Hollywood and Schoenberg. And speaking of Schoenberg, there was his whole friendship with Gershwin in Hollywood (playing tennis, etc.). Gershwin also helped to finance the recordings of Schoenberg’s string quartets by the Kolisch Quartet. They might look for a connection there. Maybe the Serenade or a later Hollywood work, such as the Fanfare for a Bowl Concert?: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tsuWBpL3zJQ

      2. Classic Ross Amico

        Mather Pfeiffenberger I would be game for any of those! Or the Schoenberg Suite for Orchestra. Gershwin composed only so many large-scale works, so there should be plenty of room for them to spread out.

  3. Anonymous

    Are you saying for this festival there will be too many notes?

    1. Classic Ross Amico

      Phil Merkel Not enough, actually. It’s my post that’s too many notes!

  4. Anonymous

    What a great post. Thoughtful, humane and informed. Thanks!!!!

    1. Classic Ross Amico

      Thanks. I hated writing it. So much that needs to be handled carefully, and the last thing I want to do is mar the festival, which is always one of the highlights of my year.

  5. Anonymous

    Perfect picture

  6. Anonymous

    Epstein is completely irrelevant to this. The issue is making the theme the already-most-programmed composer of the last century instead of exploring someone more-obscure, as usual.

    1. Classic Ross Amico

      Zlat Zlat With all due respect, you obviously know nothing about Bard. Last year, the focus was Martinů, whose music is not exactly overplayed. And the festivals always include composers you will likely never hear in concert anywhere else. To say that “Epstein is completely irrelevant to this” is patently ridiculous, since how this plays out could have a disproportionate bearing on the very future of the festival.

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