It's about the end of the school year at the University of Colorado. Within the next few weeks exams start and then they leave, blessing Boulder with a more quiet environment. Unfortunately that also means the end of the faculty and student recitals. Summer will bring the Colorado Music Festival back, but their season, once the highlight of my summer, has been dismally broken with crappy world music and miserable programming.
Last week I heard 3 concerts, two at CU. First was a performance of the Colorado Symphony in Denver with Ralph Kirschbaum in Shostakovich's Cello Concerto No. 1. It was sterling performance and he really drew me into the long cadenza which separates the second and last movements. The CSO admirably played Dvorak's "From the New World", with the anticipated audience reaction. Kirschbaum apparently also held a master class at CU later in the week.
The Pendulum series at CU has always been one of my favorites, where students and faculty have new works introduced by various players from the music school. This time a guest group, "The Playground Ensemble", was featured in two separate works by graduate students Anthony Green and Leanna Kirchoff. A frequent complaint of mine has been the diction of the singers. Even when singing in English and singing something as familiar as the Gettysburg Address, I just have a hard time making out the words. As a result, the art suffers.
What surprised me most at this Pendulum performance was a piece performed by Hunter Ewan. A graduate student and frequent participant in Pendulum, Ewan performed his own composition "Ohi'a and Lehua" on alto saxophone wired into a system which manipulated and synthesized play back. He controlled it with a foot pedal and got very interesting results. I couldn't help but think that music like this would make good movie background music.
Finally, I attended a performance by Oscar Soler, violin and Clayton Vaughn, cello doing their DMA chamber recital. They first performed Ravel's Sonata for Cello and Violin, a work I've never heard. It was very well played. Then they were joined by Kahyee Lee, violin and Rachel Gibson, viola to form the Altamira String Quartet. Rachel has been living with us this past year and I try to follow her performances and her quartet. The quartet did two, now fairly familiar works: Bartok's Second Quartet and Haydn's Op 76 No 1. Somewhat to my surprise I enjoyed the Bartok more. As I told them later, they really hit a home run in the second movement. Crisp, snappy and perfect.
I'll probably not contribute much more to this blog until the fall season starts again. I think I've got a Boulder Phil performance of Carmina Burana coming up, but little else. It's a good thing that I've got a large collection of MP3s to keep me happy.
Monday, April 19, 2010
Saturday, April 03, 2010
Some Prokofiev
Over the year I've really grown fond of Prokofiev. "Kije" and "Nevsky", "Three Oranges", 2 string quartets and 5 wonderful piano concertos. I've put two of his ballets, "Romeo and Juliet" and "Cinderella", on one of my mp3 players and listen to them as I ski -- it's seems to help my rhythm sometimes. So it was a good week when I heard two of his works in two different concerts.
Ending the University of Colorado's "Music Faculty Tuesdays" was Margaret McDonald, the Assistant Professor of Collaborative Piano. I guess we used to call them accompanists, but now collaborative pianist is the preferred and more accurate term. Dr. McDonald appears quit frequently with other CU faculty, but this time she was the center of attraction. She performed the "Seven Popular Spanish Song" by de Falla with mezzo Julie Simpson; two Schumann pieces with Michael Thornton, horn and alternating with Dan Silver, clarinet and Judith Glyde, cello. The clarinet and cello took turns collaborating, an interesting idea. Christina Jennings got me going, though, in Prokofiev's "Sonata in D Major". McDonald commented before each work what instruments were paired with the piano. I've heard the Prokofiev with violin, so it was exciting to hear it with flute, which is normally not one of my favorite instruments.
Last night Prokofiev's Second Violin Concerto was performed by Lindsay Deutsch with the Boulder Chamber Orchestra, Bahman Saless conducting. I must admit that I was a bit apprehensive about it because it's reputed to be a complicated piece for all involved. Deutsch and Saless pulled it off successfully. I'm tempted to go again tonight, but we have Japanese guests so I can't. Deutsch seemed to play effortlessly and with joy and the larger-than-normal orchestra responded.
The concert began with the premiere of Saless's own "Tango Variations for Violin and Orchestra". Saless apparently wrote the piece with Lindsay Deutsch in mind and it was a success. The audience responded very positively to this new, highly accessible set of variations on an old Nat King Cole theme "Nature Boy". Interestingly, my own reaction to the variations was that it would have been more interesting if it had a different theme. However, I did recognize the theme as it recurred and tangoed. My wife, on the other hand, said she didn't recognize the theme at all, but enjoyed how it all fit together anyway. Let's hope Saless gets his new composition performed again.
Ending the University of Colorado's "Music Faculty Tuesdays" was Margaret McDonald, the Assistant Professor of Collaborative Piano. I guess we used to call them accompanists, but now collaborative pianist is the preferred and more accurate term. Dr. McDonald appears quit frequently with other CU faculty, but this time she was the center of attraction. She performed the "Seven Popular Spanish Song" by de Falla with mezzo Julie Simpson; two Schumann pieces with Michael Thornton, horn and alternating with Dan Silver, clarinet and Judith Glyde, cello. The clarinet and cello took turns collaborating, an interesting idea. Christina Jennings got me going, though, in Prokofiev's "Sonata in D Major". McDonald commented before each work what instruments were paired with the piano. I've heard the Prokofiev with violin, so it was exciting to hear it with flute, which is normally not one of my favorite instruments.
Last night Prokofiev's Second Violin Concerto was performed by Lindsay Deutsch with the Boulder Chamber Orchestra, Bahman Saless conducting. I must admit that I was a bit apprehensive about it because it's reputed to be a complicated piece for all involved. Deutsch and Saless pulled it off successfully. I'm tempted to go again tonight, but we have Japanese guests so I can't. Deutsch seemed to play effortlessly and with joy and the larger-than-normal orchestra responded.
The concert began with the premiere of Saless's own "Tango Variations for Violin and Orchestra". Saless apparently wrote the piece with Lindsay Deutsch in mind and it was a success. The audience responded very positively to this new, highly accessible set of variations on an old Nat King Cole theme "Nature Boy". Interestingly, my own reaction to the variations was that it would have been more interesting if it had a different theme. However, I did recognize the theme as it recurred and tangoed. My wife, on the other hand, said she didn't recognize the theme at all, but enjoyed how it all fit together anyway. Let's hope Saless gets his new composition performed again.
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