Tag: John Adams

  • Presidents Day: Adams, Rouse & Albert

    Presidents Day: Adams, Rouse & Albert

    It could hardly be more appropriate to celebrate a composer named John Adams on Presidents Day.

    No relation to our second president, Adams is considered by some to be America’s preeminent living composer. He emerged from the haze of minimalism to become the most versatile and substantial of early proponents of the style. In 2003, he was awarded the Pulitzer Prize for Music for his 9/11 memorial “On the Transmigration of Souls.”

    Personally I’ve always been divided on Adams’ music. Some of it I find fun (“Short Ride in a Fast Machine,” “Grand Pianola Music”), some of it I find to be quite good (“Shaker Loops,” “El Niño”), some of it I find to be boring, clumsy, or downright embarrassing (“Harmonium,” for as much as I could stand of “Doctor Atomic”).

    I concede that these are subjective evaluations. There’s no arguing against Adams’ influence or his standing. Happy birthday to John Adams on his 74th birthday, and congratulations on his long-term success.

    “Shaker Loops” (1983):

    Also born on this date was Christopher Rouse. Rouse was the recipient of a Pulitzer Prize for his Trombone Concerto in 1993. In 2002, his guitar concerto, “Concerto de Gaudi,” was recognized with a Grammy, in the category of Best Classical Contemporary Composition. He served as composer-in-residence with the New York Philharmonic from 2012 to 2015, the year of his death at the age of 70. His music was quoted extensively in a 2017 documentary, “The Devil and Father Amorth,” by “The Exorcist” director William Friedkin.

    Rouse’s Flute Concerto (1993) is dedicated to the memory of James Bulger, a toddler murdered by two ten year-old boys.

    Finally, on this American holiday, I also wanted to acknowledge composer Stephen Albert, whose birthday anniversary I noticed on February 6, but didn’t get around to sharing news of it here.
    Albert would have been 80 years-old this year. His Symphony No. 1, “RiverRun,” earned him the Pulitzer Prize in 1985. Sadly, he was killed in an automobile accident seven years later. In 1995, a posthumous Grammy was awarded, for Best Classical Contemporary Composition, for Yo-Yo Ma’s recording of Albert’s Cello Concerto.

    My favorite Albert piece also happens to be his last, the Symphony No. 2 (1992), commissioned by the New York Philharmonic. It doesn’t hurt that it reminds me of Sibelius and, at times, even John Williams. The orchestration was left incomplete at the time of Albert’s death, so it fell to Sebastian Currier to supply the finishing touches. It’s a beautiful, valedictory work, from a composer who, at 51, left us in his prime.

    Interestingly, the slow movement of Rouse’s own Symphony No. 2 is dedicated to Albert’s memory.

    All worthwhile music to enjoy on this Presidents Day.


    Clockwise from left: John Adams, Christopher Rouse, and Stephen Albert (with Mstislav Rostropovich)

  • John Adams Nixon in China at Princeton Festival

    John Adams Nixon in China at Princeton Festival

    A composer who happens to share a name with at least one president writes an opera about another. John Adams’ “Nixon in China” is the centerpiece of this year’s The Princeton Festival. Check out my unimpeachable preview in this week’s U.S. 1 Newspaper – PrincetonInfo, out today.

    https://princetoninfo.com/modern-opera-brings-nixon-era-to-princeton-festival/

  • Sanford Sylvan Dies “Nixon in China” Baritone

    Sanford Sylvan Dies “Nixon in China” Baritone

    With John Adams’ “Nixon in China” slated for this year’s The Princeton Festival, it is with sadness and a bit of a shock that I learn of the death of baritone Sanford Sylvan. Sylvan created the role of Chou En-Lai. In fact, he was the champion of much new music, a very fine lieder singer, excelling in Schubert and Fauré, and a memorable participant in imaginative updatings of the Mozart-Da Ponte operas, directed by Peter Sellars, that were widely seen thanks to showings on PBS. He also sang in the world premiere of the Philip Glass-Robert Moran Grimm’s fairy tale collaboration, “The Juniper Tree.” Apparently he died of a respiratory ailment. Sylvan was only 66 years-old.

    His obituary in the Boston Musical Intelligencer:

    Sanford Sylvan Leaves Us

    Sylvan sings Bach’s “Ich habe genug:”

    As Figaro in Peter Sellars’ production, set in the Trump Tower!

    In “Nixon in China” (Sylvan appears at around the 3 minute mark):
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-rVfZlNXwtU

  • Unearthing Unique Holiday Music on WPRB

    Unearthing Unique Holiday Music on WPRB

    Tired of the same old, same old?

    Join me this Thursday morning on WPRB, as we tread the overgrown path of forgotten, overlooked, or neglected Christmas music (at least on the radio).

    We’ll be all over the globe, touching on many traditions. Among the highlights will be a complete performance of John Adams’ Nativity oratorio “El Niño.” The texts are taken or adapted from poems by Rosario Castellanos, Gabriela Mistral, Hildegard von Bingen, Sor Juana Inés de la Cruz, Rubén Darío, and Vicente Huidobro, as well as anonymous verses and passages from the Bible, the New Testament Apocrypha, and the Wakefield Mystery Plays.

    In my opinion, this is one of Adams’ most consistently inspired works. And what a cast! We’ll hear soprano Dawn Upshaw, mezzo-soprano Lorraine Hunt Lieberson, and baritone Willard White. Listen to it for the first ten minutes, and you’ll be hooked.

    I may even drop in a couple of pieces for Hanukkah, if I have anything worthwhile to contribute.

    However you celebrate, enjoy this season of light. The music will be our beacon, this Thursday morning from 6 to 11 EST, on WPRB 103.3 FM and wprb.com. We’ll have plenty of batteries, bulbs, and candles on hand, on Classic Ross Amico.


    The striking artwork of Yreina Cervantez that graces the cover of the Nonesuch recording of Adams’ “El Niño”

  • John Adams at 70 A Composer’s Legacy

    John Adams at 70 A Composer’s Legacy

    There’s something oddly appropriate about a composer named John Adams arriving between the birthdays of Lincoln and Washington.

    Adams turns 70 today. Considered by some to be America’s foremost living composer, he emerged from the fog of minimalism to become the most versatile and substantial of those who have embraced the style.

    Personally I’ve always been divided on Adams’ music. Some of it I find fun (“Short Ride in a Fast Machine,” “Grand Pianola Music”), some of it I find to be quite good (“Shaker Loops,” “El Niño”), some of it I find to be boring, clumsy or downright embarrassing (“Harmonium,” for as much as I could stand of “Doctor Atomic”).

    I concede that my reactions are very subjective. There’s no arguing against Adams’ influence or his standing. Happy birthday, sir, and congratulations on your long-term success.

    Adams’ music will be featured today alongside that of fellow birthday celebrants Christopher Rouse, Georges Auric, Robert Fuchs and Michael Praetorius, when I take to the airwaves from 4 to 7 p.m. EST on WWFM – The Classical Network and at wwfm.org.

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