Tag: Philadelphia Orchestra

  • Doctor Atomic Symphony Barbenheimer Connection

    Doctor Atomic Symphony Barbenheimer Connection

    In response to the atomic pop-cultural detonation of Barbenheimer, I posted a couple of times over the past week about John Adams’ Oppenheimer opera “Doctor Atomic.”

    I remember listening to The Metropolitan Opera broadcast on the radio back in 2005, but I only just watched the stream this week, when it was offered free in the wake of the film’s release.

    Now I note that WRTI will be broadcasting one of this past season’s Philadelphia Orchestra performances of Adams’ “Doctor Atomic Symphony.”

    The symphony received its debut at the BBC Proms in 2007, originally in four movements, at 45 minutes in length. Adams tightened it up for its American premiere into three movements, running some 25 minutes, presented without break.

    I attended one of The Philadelphia Orchestra concerts, which also featured the Sibelius Violin Concerto and the Suite No. 2 from Ravel’s “Daphnis and Chloe,” with my occasional concert companion, filmmaker H. Paul Moon. Augustin Hadelich was the violin soloist, and Roderick Cox conducted.

    You can hear the concert broadcast on WRTI, where I hosted both classical and jazz shifts from 2014 to 2016 (technically I think I’m still on the call list) this afternoon at 1:00 EDT. For more information and interviews with the artists, follow the link.

    https://www.wrti.org/wrti-spotlight/2023-04-19/ravel-sibelius-and-john-adams-mark-roderick-coxs-debut-leading-the-philadelphia-orchestra?fbclid=IwAR3K6ql8328R8mNNFf7CwvgJHW4X0dFdbBdnrAI8GmYUf6psjacOau6Brto

    The opera’s standout aria is “Batter My Heart,” a setting of John Donne’s 14th Holy Sonnet. It’s intriguingly staged here, with Gerald Finley as Oppenheimer.

    Adams recalls the music for the final movement of his symphony. The opera explores the stresses and anxieties surrounding preparations for the Trinity test in 1945, with Oppenheimer, the “father of the atomic bomb,” a central figure.

    Oppenheimer made his home in Princeton for nearly 20 years, as director of the Institute for Advanced Study.

    For more selections inspired by Oppenheimer AND, believe it not, Barbie, scroll through my Facebook posts of the past week!

    https://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=100027272182187

    Then check out H. Paul Moon’s music and other documentaries at zenviolence.com.

  • Mann Center’s Golden Age of Classical Music

    Mann Center’s Golden Age of Classical Music

    There may be those among you who marvel at my ability to remember certain dates, such as the first time I saw André Watts in concert (as per yesterday’s post). The truth is I can’t remember everything, but I can certainly look it up!

    On the website for the Mann Center, there is a page devoted to past performers. Sadly, the programs themselves are not posted, but you can click through to jog your memory. Going back to the summer of ’84, you’ll note that the Philadelphia Orchestra performed at the outdoor venue, located in Fairmount Park, at least three times a week. Now you’re lucky if they appear there three times in a summer, and then it’s usually to accompany a film or play the “1812 Overture.”

    Back in the ’80s, you were guaranteed a truly satisfying crepuscular classical music experience. Bartók’s Concerto for Orchestra. Berlioz’s “Les nuits d’été.” Falla’s “Nights in the Gardens of Spain.” Hanson’s “Romantic Symphony.” Ravel’s “Daphnis and Chloe.” Prokofiev’s “Alexander Nevsky.”

    Lawn tickets were free with a clipped coupon from the Philadelphia Inquirer, which could be redeemed at the old Visitor Center near City Hall.

    Picnicking was welcome and indeed encouraged. The downside, as always, were the other people, as there were always a few who thought the orchestra was there as backdrop for their conversation. (Thankfully, this was before cell phones!) Also, you had to get there, which meant getting out the car, if you had one, with all the hassle urban living entails.

    My heyday at the Mann was from 1984 to 1994. Sometimes I went with friends, sometimes with girlfriends, sometimes with family, and sometimes with coworkers. Once I went with an ex-girlfriend’s coworker. And at least once, I went alone, when I saw Lara St. John play the Korngold Violin Concerto. On the other half of the program was a substantial suite from “Star Wars.” This would have been before the prequels that were the beginning of the end for the franchise, and the opportunity to hear a substantial suite from the original film was a rarity.

    Seriously, click through that decade and see what it was like once. In addition to Watts, guest artists included Vladimir Ashkenazy, Jorge Bolet, Shura Cherkassky, Van Cliburn, Alicia de Larrocha, Rudolf Firkušný, James Galway, Gary Graffman, Birgit Nilsson, Jessye Norman, Itzhak Perlman, Jean-Pierre Rampal, Isaac Stern, Paul Tortelier, Tatiana Troyanos, Benita Valente, William Warfield, Pinchas Zukerman, and Los Romeros, to name a few.

    Since I have absolutely no interest in anyone the Mann books now, I would be hard-pressed to imagine anything that could ever draw me there again. But it was very nice while it lasted.

    https://manncenter.org/about/past-performers

  • Remembering André Watts Philadelphia’s Piano Icon

    Remembering André Watts Philadelphia’s Piano Icon

    I am very sorry to learn that André Watts has died. Watts was a familiar presence in Philadelphia for decades. Indeed, he was the soloist on the first Philadelphia Orchestra concert I ever saw, playing the Rachmaninoff Piano Concerto No. 2, at the Mann Center for the Performing Arts in Fairmount Park, on July 16, 1984, with Michael Tilson Thomas conducting.

    An army brat born in Nuremberg, Germany, to a Hungarian mother (a pianist) and an African American father (a non-commissioned officer), Watts moved to Philadelphia with his family at the age of 8. Prior to that, he had studied violin in Europe. His mom gave him his first piano lessons.

    Like most children, he disliked practicing. She captured his imagination by telling him about the young Franz Liszt and what he was able to achieve by applying himself and practicing faithfully.

    Watts would continue to find inspiration in Liszt throughout his career. He was a great champion of the composer. In fact, it was as soloist in Liszt’s Piano Concerto No. 1 that he rocketed to fame after a performance with the New York Philharmonic conducted by Leonard Bernstein, televised as part of one the orchestra’s Young People’s Concerts, in January 1963. Watts was 16-years-old.

    Later in the month, Glenn Gould fell ill, and Watts was invited back to play the Liszt concerto on an actual subscription concert. The performance generated such electricity that the hardboiled musicians of the Philharmonic joined the audience in a standing ovation. The performance was recorded and released on Columbia Masterworks, the thrill of the occasion preserved for posterity, as “The Exciting Debut of André Watts.”

    Watts studied at the Philadelphia Musical Academy (now part of the University of the Arts), and then at the Peabody Institute in Baltimore under Leon Fleisher. In the meantime, his dance card was filling up fast. By 1969, his concerts were being booked three years in advance. He signed an exclusive recording contract with Columbia on his 21st birthday.

    Alas, in more recent years, Watts suffered his share of health difficulties. In 2002, he underwent emergency surgery for a subdural hematoma. In 2004, a ruptured disc affected the use of his left hand. In 2019, he underwent surgery for further nerve damage.

    An inveterate cigar smoker, he was diagnosed with (possibly unrelated?) prostate cancer in 2016. The cancer went into remission in 2017, but would return to claim him.

    Despite his medical setbacks, Watts continued to perform. Personal illness did nothing to dampen his passion for playing in public, but the pandemic threw up some pretty steep barriers.

    For certain, with half a century of performances and recordings behind him, and a National Medal of the Arts, among other honors, Watts had nothing more to prove. But he was determined to do what he loved for as long as he possibly could.

    In an interview, he claimed that early on, what he really wanted to be was a writer. For Watts, communication with an audience – storytelling, if you will – was key.

    He will be missed. R.I.P.


    Introduced by Leonard Bernstein, then playing the stuffing out of Liszt

    Visiting “Mr. Rogers’ Neighborhood”

    Playing Mendelssohn with John Williams and the Boston Pops

    Rachmaninoff in New York

    Liszt’s etude after Paganini’s “La Campanella”

  • Bruckner’s Triumph Phones and All

    Bruckner’s Triumph Phones and All

    Johannes Brahms described the mighty musical edifices of Anton Bruckner as “symphonic boa constrictors.” But at last night’s concert of The Philadelphia Orchestra, it was the audience that put on the squeeze.

    Music and artistic director Yannick Nézet-Séguin conducted a fascinating experiment, presenting a joint concert, without break, of Bruckner’s valedictory Symphony No. 9 and his almighty “Te Deum” (literally a dedication to God).

    He was not the first to do so. The symphony was presented that way at its first performance, in 1903, six years after the composer’s death. Bruckner, sensing the end was near, sanctioned the “Te Deum” as a makeshift finale for his symphony, the fourth movement of which he ultimately left unfinished – though most conductors, in their mature wisdom, grasp the poetic justness of simply letting the third movement trail away like incense on a reflective note. (Bruckner’s Roman Catholic faith was central to his life and work.)

    But it was Yannick’s own inspired idea to also affix one of Bruckner’s motets for a cappella chorus, “Christus factus est,” as a kind of preamble to the whole. The motet quotes material from the “Te Deum” and, thanks to a fortuitous key relationship, happens to dissolve seamlessly into the opening of the symphony. Then, on the other side, just as the mystic atmosphere of the symphony’s third movement is about to dissipate, the cathedral doors are blown wide open by the heaven-storming eruption that launches the sublime “Te Deum.”

    This conception of the three works as a kind of Holy Trinity transformed the evening into an epic parallel of Beethoven’s 9th Symphony, a work Bruckner clearly admired. And what a journey it was!

    Yannick’s evident mastery was all the more remarkable in that yesterday afternoon, he had just conducted his first ever “La bohème” – under the scrutiny of an international radio audience, no less – at New York’s Metropolitan Opera. The opera ended around 4 p.m. Yannick is well-known for his phenomenal energy. At 48, he goes and goes and goes until he can’t do it anymore, and then once in a blue moon he takes time off to recuperate from exhaustion – which is why he is one of the few conductors who can oversee both the Met and a major symphony orchestra – and yesterday was quite the demonstration of his superhuman stamina.

    The orchestra played like gods, and Yannick guided them like a diminutive Zeus, with a strength and an authority belying his 5-foot-five frame. The conductor later wore a wry, self-deprecating expression, acknowledging the physical contrast with choral director Joe Miller, who towered over him as the two took their bows during the rapturous ovations at the end of the concert.

    But before they could get there, there was some unexpected turbulence.

    Yannick and the orchestra were about half-way through the evening and totally in the zone – in the middle of what was shaping up to be the musical equivalent of a no-hitter – when, only about a minute into the symphony’s lofty third movement, at a particularly ethereal moment, someone in the row behind me and off to one side cried out. (I was sitting in row B in the orchestra tier.) Whether he was displeased with something he heard onstage or had a beef with somebody else in the audience or was unable to contain himself during a moment of personal disturbance is unclear, but it was disruptive enough that Yannick stopped the orchestra and began the movement over.

    A little uncomfortable, to be sure, but everyone was determined to carry on as if nothing had happened. Then, wouldn’t you know it, when the musicians arrived at the very same passage, from the other side of the hall, someone’s cell phone ringer went off. Loudly.

    At that point, Yannick let his baton arm drop to his side, his body went limp, and he turned resignedly to face that portion of the audience from which the disruption had originated. With evident exasperation, he remarked, “Can we just spend one hour of our lives without our DAMN PHONES????” To this, he added another sentence or two, while a large segment of the audience applauded. I wholeheartedly agree with the sentiment, but the applause only further served to break the spell cast by Bruckner.

    Nevertheless, Yannick raised his wand and the orchestra attempted to weave its magic a third time. Of course, by then the sustained atmosphere had been spoiled. I’m not sure if the musicians had difficulty regaining their involvement or if it was the natural aftermath of the disturbance that altered the mood in the hall, but it took a few minutes for everyone to slip back into Bruckner’s spiritual world.

    Thankfully, they did. It was a gorgeous performance. More fiery than usual, perhaps, in the ferocious scherzo (the symphony’s second movement), but if you’ve got it, flaunt it. This was young man’s Bruckner.

    I held my breath as the orchestra neared the transcendent final bars – the symphony ends quietly – feeling myself grow tense against the possibility of an overeager listener stomping the mood with a premature bravo, but after a mere pause, the Philadelphia Symphonic Choir again rose to its feet, on the tiered balcony behind the stage, where it had been sitting unobtrusively throughout the duration of the symphony, to join orchestra and organist in the explosive opening of the sublime “Te Deum.”

    It couldn’t have been easy for the soloists – soprano Elza van den Heever, mezzo-soprano Michelle DeYoung, tenor Sean Panikkar, and bass-baritone Ryan Speedo Green – who had also been sitting quietly. An awfully long time had passed since backstage warm-ups. Some of the singers drew water from metal thermoses, no doubt to ensure their voices wouldn’t catch in their throats. They sang beautifully, the individual and combined voices alternately blending and ringing out like silver clarions. The evening ended on a hair-raising tutti, with soloists, chorus, orchestra, and organ blazing. Goosebumps were palpable all across the auditorium. The audience reception was long, thunderous, and much deserved. The orchestra had overcome a double disruption in the symphony’s third movement to attain a lasting triumph.

    It is too bad that this rare Brucknerian experiment couldn’t be sustained quite as planned, as it really was something magnificent to experience. But looking back this morning, I find a touch of irony in Yannick’s wholly understandable expression of consternation at the disruption of a cell phone, as 15 minutes before the concert was scheduled to begin, I spotted him entering the lobby (as opposed to the stage door around the back of the building), smiling in a powder blue track suit and trailed by an assistant – or perhaps his husband – who was filming him, yes, on his phone.

    Hey, I’ve got no beef with that. Just noting that the damn phones are with us everywhere. But no doubt put to better use documenting Yannick, mid-marathon, on his way from the pit of the Metropolitan Opera to the podium of the Philadelphia Orchestra, than in the middle of Bruckner’s Ninth Symphony.

    Not all the drama was onstage, then, but all’s well that ends well. Flaws and all, this was one of the great Bruckner concerts of my life. Bravo, Philadelphia!

  • Rachmaninoff 150th Birthday Broadcast

    Rachmaninoff 150th Birthday Broadcast

    This Sunday night on “The Lost Chord,” get a piece of the Rach!

    With the impending sesquicentenary of the birth of Sergei Rachmaninoff on April 1, enjoy an hour of historic performances.

    We’ll hear Rachmaninoff play his own “Symphonic Dances” in a recently rediscovered, fly-on-the-wall recording, captured surreptitiously at the home of Eugene Ormandy in 1940. Then Ormandy will introduce – and conduct – the Philadelphia Orchestra, in a special memorial performance of Rach’s “Isle of the Dead,” given only days after the composer’s death, in 1943.

    We’ll round out the hour with a literal party piece – as Rachmaninoff tosses off the Ukrainian folk song, “Bublichki,” or “Bagels,” in 1942.

    The recordings are from a 3-CD boxed set issued by Marston Records, the record label of industry legend Ward Marston. Now based in West Chester, PA (he was born in Philadelphia in 1952), Marston is one of classical music’s most revered audio engineers. Incredibly, he has been blind since birth.

    Marston’s work in restoration and conservation of historic audio has been both miraculous and rapturously received. His acclaimed remasterings have appeared on the Andante, Biddulph, Naxos, Pearl, RCA, and Romophone labels. For more information and a complete catalogue of Marston Records releases, visit marstonrecords.com.

    Then join me for an hour of Sergei Rachmaninoff in vintage recordings. That’s “Rach of Ages,” for the 150th birthday of Sergei Rachmaninoff, this Sunday night at 10:00 EDT, on WWFM – The Classical Network and wwfm.org.

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