Category: Daily Dispatch

  • Virgil Thomson Thanksgiving Birthday Music

    Virgil Thomson Thanksgiving Birthday Music

    Virgil Thomson was not only a composer, he was a writer on music, who wielded power of a kind unimaginable in this day of eroded standards, as a critic at the New York Herald-Tribune.

    Perhaps his brand of “faux-naïf” Americana is not for everyone. Still, it earned him a wide and enduring audience. His music for Robert Flaherty’s “Louisiana Story” (1948) remains the only film score ever to be awarded a Pulitzer Prize.

    For Thomson’s birthday, here’s some music to get you in the mood for Thanksgiving.

    His “Symphony on a Hymn Tune” was composed during his Paris years. Thomson, like Aaron Copland and so many others, studied in France with Nadia Boulanger. The symphony was inspired by the composer’s memories of his Kansas City boyhood. The “Sunday best” of the church hymns occasionally gets tangled up in a few modernistic burrs – the exchanges between the violin, cello, trombone, and piccolo at the end of the first movement, for instance – but in 1928, it was a landmark in terms of helping to establish a distinctly American idiom.

    More austere, perhaps, is Thomson’s symphonic poem “Pilgrims and Pioneers” – but just stick around for the fiddle tunes.

    Finally, a seasonal work: the Concertino for Harp, Strings and Percussion, “Autumn” – according to Thomson, actually more of a “portrait of an artist ageing.”

    Happy birthday, Virgil Thomson (1896-1989) – and Happy Thanksgiving!


    Check out Thomson on TV!


    PHOTOS: Thomson, enjoying all his pleasures at once

  • Chamber Orchestra Blooms Under Hayes’ Baton

    Chamber Orchestra Blooms Under Hayes’ Baton

    This was my kind of concert!

    Yesterday afternoon, at the Kimmel Center for the Performing Arts’ Perelman Theater, The Chamber Orchestra of Philadelphia was conducted by David Hayes in a program of 20th century classics.

    Aaron Jay Kernis’ “Musica Celestis” (1990-91) takes its inspiration from medieval mystic and composer Hildegard von Bingen – a work in the holy schmoly, “Fantasia on a Theme by Thomas Tallis”/Alan Hovhaness mode, with perhaps a little Barber’s “Adagio” tossed into the mix. Both Kernis’ and Barber’s works are arrangements of movements from their respective string quartets. This has always been my favorite Kernis piece, with perhaps his “Superstar Etude No. 1” (in the style of Jerry Lee Lewis) a guilty pleasure. Kernis himself was in attendance for yesterday’s performance. The program was a repeat of one previously presented on Friday night.

    Béla Bartók’s Divertimento for String Orchestra (1939) was next, the first movement, a game of Baroque solo-tutti table tennis; the second an atmospheric tiptoe through the dank corridors of Dracula’s castle (Hayes, in some spoken remarks, compared it to the scene in every horror movie where you think, “Don’t open that door!”); and the third, a frenzied village dance, more determined in character than in any way euphoric. This is not your standard 18th century entertainment or diversion! But you’ll have this, with Nazism swallowing Europe and the world teetering at the brink of war. (Germany invaded Poland only weeks after the work’s completion.)

    The concert concluded with Leonard Bernstein’s “Serenade, after Plato’s ‘Symposium’” (1954) – scored for violin, harp, string orchestra, and percussion – essentially Bernstein’s violin concerto. Plato’s work is all about love, with dinner guests waxing philosophical on the multifarious aspects of Eros; but drink is involved, so things eventually devolve into a more worldly appreciation of the grape. Whether intentional or not, something of Bernstein’s character is reflected in the work’s debauched trajectory.

    Dionysian Sandy Cameron was the soloist, wearing a silver tunic, cross-laced “Demetrius and the Gladiators” boots, and diaphanous, ankle-length chlamys. It was her “Megalopolis” moment. Cameron moshed and swayed, contorted and smiled to the music, while meeting all the work’s technical and emotional challenges. Aristophanes never sounded so much like Korngold.

    I always thought this was Bernstein’s concert masterpiece, though of course there are moments when it is unmistakably the work of the guy who wrote “West Side Story” (already being formulated at the time). Hey, the work has six percussionists.

    I’ve been following Hayes on and off over the decades, since his days as a student at the Curtis Institute of Music. Apparently, I haven’t followed closely enough. I always considered him a choral conductor (for years, he was music director of the Philadelphia Singers; later, he directed the New York Choral Society), but his resume is much more diverse. I knew, but I guess must have willfully downplayed the significance of his service on the conducting staff of the Philadelphia Orchestra for a decade, from 2001-11. He kind of dropped of my radar when he moved to New York, and he’s racked up a whole lot of impressive credits since.

    Then a couple of years ago I saw him conduct the world premiere of Adolphus Hailstork’s Symphony No. 4 at Alice Tully Hall, on a program that also included works by Jennifer Higdon and Zhou Tian, with all three composers in attendance. Parenthetically, I was sorry to have to miss one of my favorite Hailstork works, the “Sonata da Chiesa,” on the Chamber Orchestra of Philadelphia’s October concert, with Michael Torke’s “December” and Beethoven’s “Emperor” Concerto, but unfortunately I had scheduling conflicts and was unable to attend.*

    At any rate, evidently I wasn’t really paying attention, as David Hayes is all growed-up!

    This is Hayes’ first season as music director of the chamber orchestra (succeeding Dirk Brossé). I hope the inclusion of so much worthwhile, wholly accessible 20th century and contemporary music works for the organization, because it really works for me. I could have very happily spent my Sunday afternoon at home (it was a whirlwind round-trip as I had another obligation on Sunday night), but this concert was like classical music shoo-fly pie. Bravo, and more please!


    *ERRATA: It was actually a more recent Hailstork work they performed, “Sagrada: Sonata da Chiesa No. 2.” All the more shameful for me to have missed it!


    Video excerpt from Bernstein’s “Serenade” from Friday night’s performance:

  • Trenton Concert: Julia Child & Kitchen Capers

    Trenton Concert: Julia Child & Kitchen Capers

    Last night’s concert at the Trenton State Museum with Daniel Spalding’s other group, the Philadelphia Virtuosi Chamber Orchestra, flowed naturally from his last as music director of the Capital Philharmonic of New Jersey. That program, which was presented at the historic Roebling Machine Shop in April, with George Antheil’s raucous “Ballet Mécanique” as its centerpiece, was a literal circus, employing acrobats and jugglers of Trenton Circus Squad to divert while the various configurations of percussion instruments were set. There were also musical interludes featuring the Plenty Pepper Steel Band and Gershwin’s “I Got Rhythm” played on the marimba by Greg Giannascoli.

    Last night’s program similarly unfolded as a kind of vaudeville, with its disparate elements flowing one into another. The overarching theme was one of a gastronomical nature, with Lee Hoiby’s “comic culinary extravaganza” (really, a 20-minute chamber opera about Julia Child) “Bon Appétit!,” the main course. Composed in 1982, this is a work that seems to have really gained traction since the pandemic, since it requires only one singer (no need to social distance), often supported by a pianist (inexpensive).

    Last night was the first time I heard it with a chamber orchestra of ten players, and unquestionably it enhanced the enjoyment to have the additional musical colors. Hoiby, who studied with Gian Carlo Menotti at the Curtis Institute of Music, has always been celebrated for his songs. I am unfamiliar with his other operas, but this one was Straussian (late Straussian) in its intimacy and word-painting. There are no arias. It is through-sung, with a libretto essentially compiled from two transcripts of Child’s popular public television program, “The French Chef,” most of it lifted from an episode devoted to the creation of L’Éminence Brune, a classic French chocolate cake.

    Mezzo-soprano Christine Meadows, who’s performed the work quite a lot, was a convincing Child, convivial, high on life, and fast and loose in the kitchen. She pauses as she mixes chocolate icing to put the spatula in her mouth. She ignores a proffered clean replacement and keeps right on stirring. In the few moments when she actually gets to speak, Meadows has got the voice spot-on. Her singing is certainly much more ingratiating than that of Jean Stapleton, for whom the work was written (and no doubt compensated for by her stage presence). At the end, the cake completed, Meadows cuts a slice and hands it with a fork to a member of the audience. (A chocolate cake reception followed).

    Gabriela Imreh, who is married to Spalding and last night served as creative director, had some amusing business (including having a bowl of flour dumped over her head) in a silent role as Child’s producer. (She’s the one who offers the clean spatula.)

    If the chamber orchestra in “Bon Appétit!” was an unexpected luxury (I didn’t even know this version existed), things were stripped to the bone for the opening piece, Camille Saint-Saëns’ “The Wedding Cake,” a valse-caprice for piano and string orchestra. Strings were cut back to one per part – so essentially it was made into a piano quintet. Artem Tenkeli was the pianist, who played on a battered instrument that presumably belonged to the museum. I must say, I missed the full body of strings. This was followed by two solo piano works, an etude by Chopin nicknamed “The Honey Bee” and Scott Joplin’s “Pineapple Rag.” Curiously, although the pianist had “The Wedding Cake,” the most substantial and perhaps the rarest of the three pieces, committed to memory, he played the Joplin from sheet music.

    More absorbing was Bohuslav Martinu’s “La revue de cuisine,” a 1920s ballet marked by dance rhythms and jazz inflections. The original scenario explored romantic entanglements among the kitchen utensils, but Spalding, in some spoken remarks, dismissed this as “dumb,” so he and Imreh concocted a new story that lacked anywhere near the kind of zany invention Martinu had in mind.

    Dancers Ruth Hernandez and Anton Domansky enacted the early stages of a romantic dinner in an intimate restaurant, backlit, behind a screen. (Amusingly the musicians were all dressed in chef jackets and Spalding entered with a towel over his arm.) The pantomimed conversation turns contentious and devolves into a quarrel. The couple emerges from behind the screen for (presumably) two fantasy sequences, the first a sultry tango (Hernandez’s field of expertise) and the second a Charleston (complete with feathered headband and scarlet fringe dress). Parenthetically, the Charleston, which became the anthem of the 1920s, was composed by James P. Johnson, born about thirty minutes up Route 1, in New Brunswick, NJ.

    In the end, the dancers are back behind the screen, the lovers’ quarrel is resolved, and they step out once more onto the stage for Domansky to take a knee in the time-honored position of proposal. Hernandez accepts.

    Sure, the scenario was trite (lacking the surreal spectacle of amorous pots and pans) but the dancers were clearly expert. More importantly, from a performance standpoint, the musicians did full justice to Martinu’s music, which is both pleasingly witty and propulsively neoclassical.

    In between the major numbers of this thoughtfully-constructed program, in which every component related in some way to food, were palate-cleansers, I suppose, in the form of totally unrelated Latin guitar music, performed by David Galvez. Galvez was the soloist when Spalding programmed Joaquin Rodrigo’s “Concierto de Aranjuez” with the Capital Philharmonic last season. He is a superb guitarist. It would be churlish of me to wonder what his presence had to do with food. Perhaps Saturday night is Spanish guitar night at the local romantic restaurant.

    The concert was about 90 minutes in length, performed without intermission. The time passed agreeably. At no point did any of its disparate elements seem to outstay its welcome, with the Martinu, Hoiby, and guitar interludes highlights. Spalding pitched the idea of a regular series in Trenton. We’ll see if he continues with this kind of free-association-on-a-theme approach to concert programming.

    Spalding’s tenure with the Capital Phil, an orchestra he founded, spanned ten seasons. He founded the Philadelphia Virtuosi Chamber Orchestra in 1991. The ensemble has recorded a number of CDs for the Naxos, New World, Arabesque, and Connoisseur Classics labels, including an acclaimed disc featuring Antheil’s “Ballet Mécanique” that was recorded at the Trenton War Memorial.

    For more information about the group, visit http://www.pvco.org.

    Bon appétit!


    PHOTO: Christine Meadows as Julia Child from another production

  • Thanksgiving Music: Home with Rogers & Copland

    Thanksgiving Music: Home with Rogers & Copland

    With Thanksgiving right around the corner, it’s hardly surprising our thoughts, memories, and desires would be full of home. It’s a good time then to listen to John Fitz Rogers’ “Magna Mysteria.”

    This week on “The Lost Chord,” we’ll hear this 2010 work, which weaves together Latin biblical texts and poetic verse of the 6th century philosopher Boethius, to elevate the idea of home – and the seeking of home – to a metaphorical or spiritual realm. If you have a fondness for the choral music of Morten Lauridsen or Stephen Paulus, I think you’ll really enjoy this, though Rogers is very much his own man. The music is tonal, melodic, and quite lovely.

    Also on the program will be Aaron Copland’s “Letter from Home,” from 1943-44. The work was commissioned by Paul Whiteman for his Radio Hall of Fame Orchestra, and suggests the emotions of an American soldier, as he experiences a bittersweet reprieve, if only for a few moments, while savoring a letter from his family.

    There’s no place like home for the holidays. I hope you’ll join me for “Homebodies,” on “The Lost Chord,” this week on “The Lost Chord,” now in syndication on KWAX, the radio station of the University of Oregon!


    Clip and save the start times for all three of my recorded shows:
    PICTURE PERFECT, the movie music show – Friday at 8:00 PM EST/5:00 PM PST

    SWEETNESS AND LIGHT, the light music program – ALL NEW! – Saturday at 11:00 AM EST/8:00 AM PST

    THE LOST CHORD, unusual and neglected rep – Saturday at 7:00 PM EST/4:00 PM PST

    Stream them, wherever you are, at the link!

    https://kwax.uoregon.edu/

  • Thanksgiving Music on KWAX Radio

    Thanksgiving Music on KWAX Radio

    This week on “Sweetness and Light,” I’ll do my level best to fill our heads with visions of pumpkin pie and cranberry bread and, yes, even Thanksgiving turkey.

    We’ll hear works by Rick Sowash, Thomas Canning, Edvard Grieg, Howard Hanson, and Aaron Copland, and a concerto by Antonio Vivaldi that bears the nickname “The Turkey” – not because it’s a dud, mind you, but rather because of the cascading broken third passages in the solo lines of the work’s third movement, which apparently reminded someone of the ungainly bird. Gobble gobble!

    Join me for an hour of hymn tunes and harvest dances and most of all music of gratitude. It’s a program of hope and thanksgiving. We’ll be reaching deep into the cornucopia on “Sweetness and Light,” this Saturday morning at 11:00 EST/8:00 PST, exclusively on KWAX, the radio station of the University of Oregon!

    Stream it where you are at the link:

    https://kwax.uoregon.edu/

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