Tag: Carnegie Hall

  • Schoenberg’s Gurre-Lieder at Carnegie Hall

    Schoenberg’s Gurre-Lieder at Carnegie Hall

    On Friday, I attended an all-too-rare performance of Arnold Schoenberg’s “Gurre-Lieder” at Carnegie Hall. I confess, I prefer the alternate spelling, without the hyphen, but since everything about “Gurre-Lieder” screams excess, I might as well swing for the fences. The American Symphony Orchestra was led by the indefatigable Leon Botstein, always one of my heroes for resurrecting underperformed repertoire and presenting it in a scholarly context. (Unfortunately, I missed the pre-concert talk.) Ostensibly, the Carnegie performance was planned to honor Schoenberg’s 150th birthday, the actual anniversary of which will fall in September. But any performance of “Gurre-Lieder” requires no excuse.

    This is not your grandpa’s Schoenberg – the high priest of dodecaphony who changed music forever and scared your grandma off buying tickets – but rather your great-grandpa’s Schoenberg – young, passionate, and all juiced up on Romanticism. Take Wagner, Strauss, and Mahler, toss them in a blender, and turn it up to 11. The composer embarked on the piece between 1900 and 1903 and completed it, after the interval of a few years, in 1911. The result is monumental post-Romanticism in its full flowering. The scoring itself is colossal, with vocal soloists, speaker, and three choruses. Its two-hour running time is epic and absorbing.

    “Gurre-Lieder” (“Songs of Gurre”) weaves texts by Jens Peter Jacobsen into a tapestry of doomed love, blasphemy, and damnation, unfurled at Castle Gurre in medieval Denmark. But it is a Middle Ages steeped in myth and legend. The work climaxes with a harrowing evocation of the Wild Hunt, with ghostly and supernatural beings roaring across the night sky, and concludes with an opulent sunrise.

    For all his laudable achievements, Botstein often takes heat for not being the most inspiring of conductors. It’s true, I didn’t feel quite as much juice radiating from the stage as I did the last time I heard the piece, with Simon Rattle, at Philadelphia’s Academy of Music in 2000. But Carnegie is a much larger hall. Acoustically, the vocalists were difficult to hear, from my vantage in the Dress Circle; but one would have to be the most reckless of heldentenors even to attempt to pierce the sonic blast of a 150-piece orchestra.

    Even so, all of the singers had their moments. The efforts of Dominic Armstrong to convey the ardor, brooding, and bitterness of King Waldemar were often frustrated by being swallowed up by his instrumental neighbors. He was best heard in the second half as, bereft at the murder of his mistress, Tove, by his wife, Queen Helvig, Waldemar essentially shakes an angry fist at God. For this, the king is condemned for all eternity to lead a pack of ghosts and reanimated skeletons on a nightly, hell-for-leather tour about the gloomy castle and its environs.

    The fearful sight is recounted by a pious Peasant, sung on Friday by bass-baritone Alan Held. Held was easier to make out, since Schoenberg’s orchestration of the latter half of the oratorio is more forgiving, in some regards, the composer having returned to complete the work after a hiatus, during which he obviously learned a thing or two about transparency.

    Carsten Wittmoser, as the speaker, supplied the uncanny narration in sprechstimme, an eerie netherworld of blended speech and song, which Schoenberg would explore more fully in “Pierrot Lunaire.”

    In one of those grotesque comic interludes of a kind seemingly so popular among Central European post-Romantics, tenor Brenton Ryan came across best among the male soloists, as he went the furthest to inhabit his part as Klaus the Fool. You really could imagine this jester being swept along against his will, face-to-tail, on horseback.

    Of the women, the palm went to Krysty Swann as the melancholy Wood Dove, who delivers the news of Tove’s death. Felicia Moore, as Tove, again had to push against the orchestra, though she seemed to be a good choice for the role. Both successfully landed their high notes.

    The chorus – though it seemed smaller than what I am accustomed to seeing in this work (I count 80 singers in the program; Schoenberg called for 200) – was appropriately rowdy and powerful when needed.

    No team of unamplified singers is ever going to go up against “Gurre-Lieder” in a hall of that size and be heard by everyone. Under the circumstances, supertitles would have been a great help and a sensible choice. Instead, the audience muddled through the old-fashioned way, with the very wordy text reproduced in the program in microscopic font to be discerned in semi-darkness.

    By coincidence, Friday also happened to be the anniversary of the birth of Werner Klemperer, son of conductor Otto Klemperer and two-time Emmy Award winner for his memorable turn as Colonel Klink on “Hogan’s Heroes.”

    Klemperer provided the sprechstimme as the Speaker on the late Seiji Ozawa’s recording of “Gurre-Lieder,” appearing alongside James McCracken, Jessye Norman, and Tatiana Troyanos. The recording was taken from a live performance, so it may well be the same as the one on this video, or at the very least it was taken from the same series of concerts. Klemperer makes his entrance at around 1 hour and 34 minutes in. And yes, he speaks fluent German.

    What you see in the video is wonderful, of course, but it is but a pale reflection of the visceral impact of experiencing the work live.

    I saw Klemperer (the son, not the father, alas) in person several times, narrating Beethoven’s “Egmont” with the Philadelphia Orchestra, playing the Majordomo (another speaking role) in a concert performance of Strauss’ “Ariadne auf Naxos,” again with the Philadelphia Orchestra, and as emcee for a starry gala for the Opera Company of Philadelphia – all at the old Academy of Music. I missed him in his Tony-nominated turn as Herr Schultz in the 1987 Broadway revival of “Cabaret” – which my parents attended – because I chose to hear the New York Philharmonic that night. (Kent Nagano conducted George Benjamin’s “Ringed by the Flat Horizon” and Béla Bartók’s “The Wooden Prince,” and Bella Davidovich was the soloist in Chopin’s Piano Concerto No. 2.)

    As I said, the last time I heard “Gurre-Lieder” live was in Philadelphia in 2000, with Simon Rattle conducting. The audience was whipped into ecstasies with that one. Most memorably, in the moment’s silence following the last decay of the music, and just before the explosion of frenzied applause, there came from somewhere in the balcony a deeply satisfied “YEEEEEEEEEEEEAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAHHHHHHHHHHHH!”

    The Philadelphia Orchestra gave the work its first American performance under Leopold Stokowski in 1932. Needless to say, because of the forces involved, and the expense in mounting it, it is seldom done, but when it is, it pleases the crowd mightily.

    Happy belated birthday, Werner Klemperer (1920-2000), and thank you, Leon Botstein and the ASO!

    Werner’s dad conducting Schumann in Philadelphia

    I’ve written about Otto Klemperer many times on this site, as here:

    https://www.facebook.com/photo?fbid=1844909085676373&set=basw.AbpuDWzgKAkm3TnfgzQN9VOGciZh068VBmrEC7s6TZuOvY0sWP2WF65SWXdWvtPNl6UCFpVXon4JgBoPB7u-aMAhzDmHFuyeybByVgYBV44emn5MDHkc4woxlj1YKmzdbQVSErSOVvES01qL7mMlKN60pXCUOh8qZzl4h6trZoBN-n2-RxSWtACCnjor6Bv0KGg&opaqueCursor=AboKz2dejQ1QKxjJ3ZL-8qoWhLQ-ztweo9I-KkJj8ZokdKTf_ZpMGRNjk4oVHO2y2CcfPTdhpZyU1ieD1Z0xsw8x-9YsfVFb62KvmZRCm-VoaJogaKSEBfghzlZgXU_uaSA1EM5PsPr5Ahf_nUgzcj8EjKJSTgLhieT1O7OYp-tV8ieRxXXvOKZEgz6TFmFWxr5HZIvbablb42PklPcJeLJ4hfMRfKdWRJkeRBES69EBxIMGR41oUMFkmvEwxY2tnWP8rHj-RSNB_Oeml7DG_trUqiOWZ-hRS-2xjYlX4LUfX6wWfZYFQKHJHAeJF2sX95lHDtHFtCJcyM2g3gDHnnP2tzmsUt-55Cu393Naddj9TI5bX5vx159UKm7mfcuRZl00ycfyLW6KXwZxuCgoj9XHcc0KRpLnvw2QAmfuEBAxq_xx7zSL-PjxOvvhZlY3FBt88o9l5a5Xs2KSQuX2Q8Yb3xo9x-IW1KsSUL_Qpo_pjXQ8Uwsq1uysmCK0_DB2LmL06WcYWJT0MPhOeUZV6slrKVF3fe2S2c2TPgLGfpqLBk84t_yTR2QpjFf4Fk4HNCt871ShxLTxYDBTPN_c4WmAxi5ZysTxnV85RlHiDJB0Yp7pAiHl3LWjuVTPzRj1JTJ3kcXg1ML4e5fLwKCF4qR64sY7AuN4eblsnwn4rR7psQfLWXx_n60KORyc5jAirsse7eqy95OGaunXQK4pVsfc

  • Chopin Yundi Li and Premature Applause

    How do you get to Carnegie Hall? Practice, practice, practice.

    How best to experience a superlative performance? Sit on your hands. Because it ain’t over ‘til it’s over.

    On the anniversary of Frédéric Chopin’s birth (March 1, 1810), Yundi Li plays the Ballade No. 4 in F minor. Too bad about the premature applause. The performance is dramatic, elegant, and altogether something special. If people would only listen…

  • Leopold Stokowski The Forgotten Celebrity

    Leopold Stokowski The Forgotten Celebrity

    In his lifetime, he was as recognized as – well, as Mickey Mouse.

    With his wild hair, dove-like hands, and faux middle-European accent, Leopold Stokowski was familiar to anyone who went to the movies.

    In the latter decades of the 20th century, kids were still emulating Looney Tunes’ cries of “LEOPOLD!,” thanks to television reruns of Bugs Bunny.

    Once upon a time, before classical music became marginalized…

    I’ll pass on asking the rhetorical question of what the hell happened to my country, and instead channel my energy into projecting happy birthday wishes to the beyond for Leopold Stokowski!


    Conducting Tchaikovsky in the film “Carnegie Hall” (1947)

    Shaking hands with Mickey Mouse in “Fantasia” (1940)

    Parodied in “Long-Haired Hair” (1949)

    Introduced by Burns & Allen in “The Big Broadcast of 1937”

    Introduced in a snood around the 3:30 mark in “Hollywood Steps Out” (1941)

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xOFG_qmoH8I&t=0m16s

    Charging his fingers at around 1:35 in Walter Lantz’s “Hollywood Bowl” (1938)

    https://vimeo.com/126713908?fbclid=IwAR07EsgTjeN70QIfVpM1HoWyJ66k-oc5T4hs2WRPl7XGDp530eLMuWyF8Xk

    With Deanna Durbin in “One Hundred Men and a Girl” (1937)

  • Falletta Celebrates Lukas Foss at Carnegie Hall

    Falletta Celebrates Lukas Foss at Carnegie Hall

    What a great night last night at Carnegie Hall! JoAnn Falletta and the Buffalo Philharmonic Orchestra celebrated the centenary of the birth of Lukas Foss.

    In addition to being a brilliant composer, conductor, pianist, and educator (he succeeded Arnold Schoenberg as professor of music at UCLA), Foss was music director in Buffalo from 1963 to 1970.

    Falletta served as his associate conductor at the Milwaukee Symphony Orchestra (where Foss was director from 1981 to 1986), later assuming the directorship he once held in Buffalo. Falletta has been music director in Buffalo since 1999. Her recordings of opulent repertoire and music by unjustly neglected composers for the Naxos label, among others, hold an honored place in my CD collection.

    She’s also one heck of a nice person. She gives so much of herself (she’s been a guest on my radio shows three or four times over the years, twice in person), I honestly wonder where she finds the energy.

    Last night’s program was all (or mostly) Foss, including “Ode for Orchestra,” “Three American Pieces” (with concertmaster Nikki Chooi, violin), the “Renaissance Concerto” (with Amy Porter, flute), “Psalms” (with the Choir of Trinity Wall Street), and the Symphony No. 1. Also included, as kind of an encore after “Psalms,” was the famous “Alleluia” by Foss’ teacher, Randall Thompson.

    I never dreamt I’d get to hear so much Foss in one place. In a sense, I feel like I got more “Foss” than I did when I actually met him in person, over 30 years ago. His was a great era for American music. I wish that particular generation of American composers would be represented more frequently in our concert halls. To bring a full program to Carnegie was very special indeed.

    A truly memorable evening, then. Thanks to JoAnn Falletta, the Buffalo Philharmonic, and everyone else who helped to make it possible.

    And a special thank you to Paul Moon, who scored me my ticket and was my generous host for the day!

  • Isaac Stern a Centennial Celebration

    Isaac Stern a Centennial Celebration

    A not-so-stern birthday observance for Isaac Stern, born 102 years ago today. The great violinist’s hands can be seen in the film “Humoresque” (1947), whenever John Garfield’s character “plays.”

    Franz Waxman’s “Carmen Fantasie,” written for the film, took on a life of its own. Not surprisingly, Stern remained a champion of the piece.

    He also appeared on the soundtrack of the film version of “Fiddler on the Roof” (1971), playing John Williams’ arrangements. No doubt his contributions helped Williams earn his first Oscar.

    A decade later, a documentary about his trip to China, “From Mao to Mozart” (1979), won an Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature.

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SlDJ2aE7iGs

    Of course, Stern’s impact ranged far beyond the silver screen. He was a prolific recording artist and kingmaker who held an enormous influence over other concert artist’s careers – many for the better, some for the worse.

    Most famously, he is credited with having saved Carnegie Hall from the wrecking ball in 1960. Sure, it cost New York a parking lot, but the city seems to have done all right without it.

    Happy birthday, Isaac Stern.


    The Istomin-Stern-Rose Trio in music by Franz Schubert

    Stern plays Bach

    Stern plays Barber

    Stern on “The Jack Benny Program”


    Stern in a photo inscribed to Carnegie Hall, ten years before he rescued it from demolition

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