Tag: Nixon in China

  • Happy 76th Birthday John Adams, Composer!

    Happy 76th Birthday John Adams, Composer!

    John Adams, the composer, may be no relation to John Adams, our second president, but today he is most definitely feeling the spirit of “76.” Adams was born on this date in 1947. 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 to be fun; some of it I find to be quite good; some of it I find to be boring, clumsy, or downright embarrassing. But what do I know? I’m just some dope posting on the internet.

    My subjective evaluations do nothing to mar Adams’ influence or his standing. Happy birthday to John Adams on his 76th birthday, and congratulations on his long-term success!

    FUN FACTS: Adams’ name may recall our second president, or perhaps his son, sixth president John Quincy Adams, but the composer’s middle name is actually Coolidge. Presidents John Adams and Calvin Coolidge were third cousins five times removed, through John and Priscilla (Mullins) Alden of the Mayflower fame. Admittedly, none of this has to do with the composer, beyond the fact that he was indeed named for Adams the president, who had no middle name.


    A few of my Adams favorites:

    “Short Ride in a Fast Machine”

    “Shaker Loops”

    “Nixon in China,” here introduced by Walter Cronkite

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

    John Adams on conducting

  • Princeton Festival Goes Virtual in 2020

    Princeton Festival Goes Virtual in 2020

    COVID-19 may have put the kibosh on in-person events, but The Princeton Festival, like life, finds a way.

    The June 2020 public performance season has been canceled due to the coronavirus pandemic. But in its place, the Festival has announced “Virtually Yours,” a free online series of live and recorded performances of instrumental and vocal music, musical theater, opera, and poetry, plus educational presentations, to be streamed every day, from June 1 to June 28.

    “This online program maintains the high artistic quality Princeton Festival audiences have come to expect in a variety of genres, both classical and popular,” says Richard Tang Yuk, PF Executive and Artistic Director. “It includes totally new material prepared especially for us by leading artists, plus performances from our recorded archives. We’re confident audiences will find it to be an exciting and engaging series of events.”

    Highlights of the “Virtually Yours” online festival will include the following (all times are EDT):

    • Videos of four Festival opera productions, each streamed just once on Sundays at 1 pm. The operas are Puccini’s Madama Butterfly (June 7), Mozart’s Le Nozze di Figaro (June 14), the acclaimed 2019 production of John Adams’s Nixon in China (June 21), and Wagner’s The Flying Dutchman (June 28).

    • A “Live Musical Theater Review” (Saturday, June 20, 8 pm).

    • Broadcasts of 2019 Festival concerts by Concordia Chamber Players, Van Cliburn competition pianist Rachel Cheung, and the Princeton Festival Baroque Orchestra and Chorus, airing Fridays at 8 pm on WWFM – The Classical Network at 89.1 FM and http://www.wwfm.org.

    • Videos of musical artists performing from their homes (various days).

    • Latin band Fleur Seule on Saturday, June 13.

    • A series of podcasts launched each Wednesday on such topics as “Women in Music” and “Costuming Operas and Musicals,” along with interviews with Shai Zohar, pianist, and Sylvia McNair, soprano.

    • Twelve renowned poets from the U.S., Japan, and China, reading poems on the theme of women, in a compilation of videos made especially for the Festival. To be released on Monday, June 22.

    • An Opera Workshop for people who want to learn more about the art form, starting Tuesday, June 9; and a Musical Workshop for aspiring singers beginning Monday June 15.

    • Lectures by prominent experts: Professor Timothy Urban on “Why We Love Opera” (Thursday, June 4) and Professor Stacy Wolf on “Beyond Broadway: The Pleasure and Promise of Musical Theater across America” (Thursday, June 18).

    A full roster of “Virtually Yours” events, with periodic updates to the schedule, may be viewed online at https://princetonfestival.org/virtually-yours/.


    PHOTOS (counterclockwise from top): Richard Tang Yuk conducts the Princeton Festival Orchestra; pianist Rachel Cheung; Mark Delavan as “The Flying Dutchman;” and Allyson Briggs of Fleur Seule

  • Princeton Festival’s Nixon in China Wins!

    Princeton Festival’s Nixon in China Wins!

    Having watched the Met stream of “Nixon in China” last night, I have to say, hats off to The Princeton Festival! Mark Morris’ choreography aside, Princeton presented the superior production – more imaginative direction by Steven LaCosse, more engaging set design by Jonathan Dahm Robertson, wittier characterizations by the singers, and a fresher voiced Nixon in Sean Anderson. You guys really nailed it!

  • 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

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