Archive for October 31st, 2013

Shostakovich October

Thursday, October 31st, 2013

by Sedgwick Clark

It’s amazing, really. This month New York has been graced by a veritable deluge of Shostakovich. I remember when the Fifth Symphony was all we could hope to hear with any frequency. These days, I can barely stand to hear it because of the unbearably “meaningful,” post-Testimony manner in which most conductors distend the finale. My first exposure to the Fifth was Bernstein’s 1959 New York Philharmonic recording, made immediately following the orchestra’s return from its Soviet Russian tour. Bernstein tears through the finale like a bat out of hell (this was long before his meaningful, slow-is-profound period began in the 1970s), and all other interpretations appear schleppy to me. Shostakovich was in the audience for the Moscow performance and wrote to a young Russian conductor a year later: “I was very taken with the performance of my Fifth Symphony by the talented Leonard Bernstein. I liked it that he played the end of the finale significantly faster than is customary.” (Quoted from Laurel E. Fay’s Shostakovich: A Life (Oxford), page 309, note 83, in which she sorts out this most controversial of Shosta Sym questions.) Happily, the Fifth wasn’t played this month.

Free association: Before I go on with the Shostakovich works that were performed this month, I must alert readers to a DVD of a Bernstein/London Symphony Orchestra performance of the Fifth from December 1966—an incredibly exciting example of his impassioned music-making at its zenith—on the Idéale Audience label, released by EuroArts. For those who never saw Bernstein conduct live (“Ah, youth!”), this video is a must. The film quality shows its age, but who cares? The BBC also filmed a two-hour rehearsal to go with the concert performance, and an extremely disappointing five-minute snippet of perhaps that morning’s only temperate moments is included. It’s nothing like the incendiary excerpts contained on Teldec’s first “Art of Conducting” video, now retrievable on UTube, in which an ill-tempered Bernstein savagely berates the LSO musicians for not committing themselves completely to the piece.

I wrote last week in this space of the welcome reprise of William Kentridge’s wild production of The Nose at the Metropolitan Opera and the Mariinsky Orchestra’s devastating performance of the Eighth Symphony and the soloist-challenged First Piano Concerto, all conducted by Valery Gergiev. I missed Semyon Bychkov’s performance of the Eleventh Symphony (“The Year 1905”) with the New York Philharmonic but was reliably informed that he didn’t allow it to drag and that the playing was excellent. Its most recent performance hereabouts was by the Houston Symphony under Hans Graf at a May 2012 Spring for Music concert at Carnegie Hall that failed, in my estimation, to raise the piece above the level of a politically calculated tub thumper. The Russian music authority Boris Schwarz told me that maybe one had to be Russian to recognize the work’s true stature.

Bernard Haitink led the London Symphony at Lincoln Center for welcome concerts on the 20th and 21st, headlined by the mid-Thirties’ Fourth and the composer’s final symphony, the Fifteenth (1971). Characteristically, the Dutch conductor let the composer’s notes speak for themselves, without stressing the element of menace that many expect in Shostakovich interpretations. As in his Chicago Symphony performance of the Fourth at Carnegie Hall in May 2008, this allowed the occasional lyricism of the score to peek through the composer’s symphonic tirade that younger conductors emphasize. Haitink’s London Philharmonic recording, available in his Decca set of the complete symphonies, times out longer than any other performance in the catalogue, and both the Chicago and LSO concerts were slower still. Some may have missed the greater energy of his recording, but the breadth of his pacing imparted undeniable reason to what I used to characterize as a musical enactment of a nervous breakdown.

In his Fifteenth, Shostakovich inserts quotes from Rossini’s William Tell (familiar in America as the Lone Ranger theme) in the first movement and the “fate” motive from Wagner’s Ring in the last. Not surprisingly, Haitink integrated these quotes, and briefer ones detailed by Christopher H. Gibbs in his excellent program notes, into the score’s fabric more than I’ve ever heard—and for the first time in any performance I’ve heard live there was no laughter when the brass chuckled the Tell motive. Both concerts were cannily paired with early and late Mozart piano concertos, the 9th and 27th, genially played by Emanuel Ax.

The final Shostakovich symphony to be played this month was the Ninth, by the Orchestra of St. Luke’s under its 36-year-old music director, Pablo Heras-Cassado, at Carnegie Hall on 10/23. The neoclassical Ninth was a major disappointment to government officials, who had expected the country’s most prominent composer to come forth at the close of the Second World War with a rousing paean to Soviet supremacy. It’s not played often, which is too bad; divorced from the time of its composition, it’s an engaging mix of delight and disquietude that lights up any concert program when performed with as much effervescence as on this occasion.

Important tip: The Juilliard Orchestra under Vladimir Jurowski will perform an all-Shostakovich concert at Alice Tully Hall on November 25. The program of early works includes selections from the film score to The New Babylon (1929) and the orchestral suite to Hypothetically Murdered (1931), and the First Symphony (1924-25). For those like your devoted blogger who have never even heard of the second work, Juilliard’s press release describes it as “drawn from the composer’s one and only venture into music hall entertainment with one of Soviet Russia’s biggest vaudeville and jazz celebrities in 1931. Buried in the Soviet Archives, it was reconstructed from a variety of scores and sketches of this “Light-Music Circus” combining comedy, slapstick, and politics in the dark Russian style of satire.”

TO DIE FOR: THE MUSIC ONE CHOOSES AS THE LIGHT GOES OUT

Thursday, October 31st, 2013

by Albert Innaurato

I visited my doctor yesterday. He looks like Santa Claus. He eyed me and said, “Yo!” (he’s from South Philly), “No trick or treats. You’re a fatty.” I thought of Luke 4:23, where The Nazarene is mocked, “Physician, heal thyself” (Cura te ipsum as the nuns used to scream at us after they had thrashed us without mercy.) Doctor Santa then gave me a flu shot, and I had visions of dying from it. I thought, “what music would one chose for one’s last moments alive?”

A number of people have mentioned the second movement of the Schubert Quintet. It is one of the most celestially beautiful pieces of music ever written in the West. It was written two months before he died, and shrugged off.

Schubert Quintet in C, Stern, Casals

But there is a lot of music one loves in a lifetime. Bela Bartok for example. He saved me from Johann Sebastian Bach. I was a hapless six year old fighting the Inventions, too stupid to count them. A new teacher suggested Bartok. And though rhythm was never my strong suit, in life or music, I fell in love. As the flu shot worked its way toward my throat to close it, I thought of this memorial to Bartok by Gyorgy Ligeti. This is early Ligeti, but throughout his career he composed beautiful and moving music. It is played here by the great pianist, Pierre-Laurent Aimard.

Musica Ricercata number 9. Bela Bartok In memorium

But of course, if one wasn’t too out of it, one would want real Bartok. I’d ask to hear at least a movement from one of the six quartets. As I felt flu vaccine flood my lungs, I thought of Number Five. It uses elaborate Bulgarian rhythmic patterns (one might want a taste of the authentic as, with one’s dying eyes, one made out the white light — either The Eternal or the impatient orderly who wants to dispose of one’s body). The Adagio is strictly structured to have three subjects, one following another, ABC, then those subjects return. Not only does Bela invert the order in which they return but the subjects themselves. It’s sublime music to hear but also to count off as these small miracles of invention occur up to one’s final shut eye.

Bartok: Fifth Quartet, Adagio; Julliard Quartet

However, I was torn. The flu shot had entered my abdomen and pumpkin pie looked good. The Third Piano Concerto was written by a dying Bartok. Not Jewish, he’d fled to America to escape Fascism (funny that, today). The Piano Concerto was a birthday present for his wife; it’s a work of great beauty and the second movement is the last Bartok finished. (Tibor Serly completed the concerto). Dying, Bartok evokes the night sounds of his native Hungry, the universal spirit of late Beethoven, the famous Tristan chord. a homage to love in death perhaps as he thought of his wife, but unlike Wagner, Bartok resolves the chord on an affirmative C.

Bartok: 3rd Piano Concerto, Schiff, Rattle

I am not religious but Olivier Messiaen was devout. Perhaps, dying, one might want to bargain a bit just in case…? My belly was shaking — flu shot or pie? One piece in memory of Messiaen by Tristan Murail, one of his students (born 1947), might do. And, after all, Murail is part of a movement, which has an element of ghostliness in it, the “spectral” style. This is his beautiful homage to his master: Cloches d’adieu et un sourire (Bells of Farewell and a Smile), played by Marilyn Nonken

Murail: Cloches d’adieu et un sourire 

But I would try to hear all of Visions de l’amen. In college, my only friend and I would play this two piano piece at parties, and then wonder why no one liked us.  Wretched playing, maybe. It’s a wonderful piece, all about The Nazarene’s misfortunes and promises but wildly theatrical. That’s especially evident in this sweaty performance by Messiaen and another devout Catholic, the great Yvonne Loriod, with whom he was having an adulterous affair.  This is No. 5, The Amen of the Angels, the Saints and the Songs of the birds — hey, there are worse things to think about when dying!

Messiaen – Visions de l’Amen no. V (Messiaen/Loriod)

If my dying moments stretched a bit, I would want to hear something by John Adams. Several composer pals agreed we were less fond of Nixon in China than the works he composed around the same time. My favorite is Harmonielehre. Arnold Schoenberg used the title for his book on music theory (lots of fun to read). I’d choose the second movement, The Amfortas Wound, a reference to Wagner’s Parsifal but a summation of music that Adams had loved. Especially striking is the way he works in the amazing 12 note chord Gustav Mahler uses in the Adagio of the Tenth Symphony he died writing. There is a combination of sorrow and mind-energy, which just perhaps survives cessation in this deficient dimension.

John Adams, Harmonielehre, Part 2, Barnett Newman

But the shoulder wound made by Dr. Santa’s needle had healed, and seeing if there were a Family Guy episode on, I realized that I might want to laugh at death. Maybe the dread secret is that it’s funny at the final second. This is something chirped by Nellie Melba in 1910 from a useless work by Massenet that always makes me laugh. Trick or Treat!

nellie melba massenet-Don cesra de Bazan “Sevillana”

 

Oh, Canada!

Thursday, October 31st, 2013

By Brian Taylor Goldstein, Esq.

Dear Law and Disorder:

I represent a performance group from Canada who will be touring the United States. Three of the members are Canadians, but two are not. I have applied for a P-1 visa. Because the group is from Canada, can they enter the US just with the approval notice or do they first have to go to the consulate and get actual visas in their passports?  

There more to Canada than just poutine, health care, and HM The Queen on the currency. Canadians are also the only folks who are not required to have physical visas to enter the US.

Canadian artists must still file visa petitions with USCIS and be approved for either O or P visa classification. (Like artists from the rest of the world, Canadian artists cannot perform in the US as visitors—even for free!). However, once the visa petition has been approved, a Canadian artist does not have to go to a US Consulate, pay a visa application fee, and receive a physical visa in his or her passport. Instead, a Canadian artist can enter the US with only their passport and a copy of their USCIS visa approval notice. (Technically, a Customs and Border Patrol (CBP) officer can verify the approval through the USCIS database and does not need a copy of the approval notice. However, for obvious reasons, do NOT rely on this. Artists should always bring a copy of the actual approval notice, as well as a copy of the visa petition itself, just in case.

This unique privilege only applies to Canadian citizens. It does NOT apply to Canadian permanent residents (aka “Canadian landed immigrants”) or anyone who just happens to be passing through Canada en route to the US.

So, in your case, if the three Canadian members of your group are Canadian citizens, then they can proceed directly to the airport or border-crossing and enter the US with only their passport and their visa approval notice. The other 2 members of your group will need to make an appointment at a US Consulate and go through the visa application and issuance process. Apply early…US Consulates in Canada are notoriously backed up!

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THIS IS NOT LEGAL ADVICE!

The purpose of this blog is to provide general advice and guidance, not legal advice. Please consult with an attorney familiar with your specific circumstances, facts, challenges, medications, psychiatric disorders, past-lives, karmic debt, and anything else that may impact your situation before drawing any conclusions, deciding upon a course of action, sending a nasty email, filing a lawsuit, or doing anything rash!