Category Archives: Music

It’s Ojai Time Again

It’s time for preparing event sheets, laminating, hanging out with friends, amazing beer, mountains, spiders and best of all: stellar music. This year’s program is from all over the globe: we have Ensemble Modern from Germany, Indian ragas performed all weekend… and all sorts of Frank Zappa on Friday. As always, it is an eclectic, wonderful adventure. And it is the last adventure that will be held in the present Libbey Bowl. Later this month, the Bowl will be torn down to make way for a new, sturdier Bowl… one that doesn’t face the tennis courts. : ) The simplistic qualities of Libbey will be preserved but artist ammenities and seating will be drasticly improved. There are 5 or 6 interns that are composers this year and we all joke that they are just getting ready for the 2030 program that we already have prepared.

More to come as the ghosts of Boulez, Stravinsky, Messiaen and Zappa roam the stage as music director George Benjamin leads them on.

Keep listening! (Really, go to the OMF website for previews)

-e

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Vox

A few days ago weeks ago I flew up to NYC to see the many operas presented at VOX, a contemporary opera lab. The 11-year running event has been free to the public every year. Reserve your tickets a few days before and pick up your pass the day of- it’s great!

You can go on the site and hear clips and read about the operas presented. Most of the synopsis-es… synposes (?) are pretty clear. One of the biggest surprises was seeing Dr. Jame DeMars standing in the lobby of the Skirball Center reading a program! He had a piece performed at Carnegie the next night, which I was fortunate enough to grab a student ticket and watch. The man was sandwiched in between Bernstein and Mozart- talk about standing among giants. (Yes, I am aware that Dr. DeMars is taller than either of the other composers mentioned. And yes, I am sticking to the theory that Kurt and I came up with stating that you have to be short to be a good conductor…)

Anyway, so my favorites (in no particular order) are:

Dog Days by David T. Little and Royce Vavrek
Let’s just say that I STILL get this one stuck in my head. One of the characters, Lisa, has a killer aria that I hope to include in my hypothetical recital programming book.

Oceanic Verses by Paola Prestini (music and lyrics)
I laughed, I cried, I stood up clapping wildly at the end along with every other member in the audience. Paola, I promise to never again make fun of the butterflies on your website. Prestini beautifully wove two stories into a rather short but spectacular opera. A queen mourns over the loss of her countrymen while another woman weeps over the loss of a loved one. The female leads were stellar- a stunning black woman who emoted like there was no tomorrow and a pale coloratura whose soaring lines were so beautiful you didn’t have time to become jealous. Also equipped with a female chorus, an Italian folk singer armed with charisma and an accordion , Oceanic Verses was the perfect blend of story-telling, spectacle and great, memorable music.

Zolle by Du Yun (music and lyrics)
Was it a great experience- yes. Does this work need tweaking- yes. A narrator tells the story of a woman who has died and struggles with the idea that she no longer has a home, a family, a world. An animated mezzo echos the narration and the emotions of the woman with unworldly and haunting vocalizations. I would categorize this as more of an art/theatre piece rather than an opera. But I am so thankful it was included in the line-up. I don’t know what I would have done if I hadn’t heard some melodicas and walk-ie talk-ies. Really.

Revolution of Forms by Anthony Davis, Dafnis Prieto, Alma Guillermoprieto & Charles Koppelman
There was only time to see a few scenes from this opera. I don’t know how you can go wrong with a story that begins, “So Castro, Che and Cuban architect Ricardo Porro were playing golf…” The opera is in Spanish (there were very few works in English on Day 2) and unashamedly bellowed about politics and the female form. I would love to see the whole affair sometime soon.

Aquaenetta by Michael Gordon & Deborah Artman
Q: What do you get when you combine a 1940s sci-fi story with a minimalist composer and librettist?
A: Aquaenetta
Hook line: I am your beautiful monster.

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Hell Mouth

Composer John Adams’ blog, Hell Mouth, is hilarious. The absurdity of his last post would have had me rolling in the isles… had I not been at the back TA table in Gottry’s theory class. It is always reassuring to see/read composers who have kept their weird sense of humor- or at least developed it over time. And it is much more fulfilling to read about and listen to music while a group of 60+ kids have to wade through elementary theory bogs.

Speaking of John Adams- the Phoenix Symphony will be performing his Chamber Symphony at their American Masters concert on April 29th at the Scottsdale Center for the Arts. I already bought my ticket and me and Rascal (my new scooter) are looking forward to the event.

If any of you haven’t checked out pianist Jeremy Denk’s blog lately- do so! The entry Whose Brahms? is great!

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ASU Composer’s Concert 4/19 @ 7:30pm LIVE HERE!

Watch this!

Free TV : Ustream

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So I bought a ticket to this thing

And I really have no idea what is going to happen.
I noticed that there was a concert @ 8pm at the Issue Project Room. Cheap, weird, only 5 mi from the Skirball Center- why not?!?

So one of the groups is called Occasional Detroit… they are a hip-hop duo (I thin). And then there will be… puppets? Would “an ever-changing woodgrain diorama of dark forest characters” count as puppets? I am not sure.

Here is a video:

So yes, I’m not sure if I will be terrified, deaf or in awe of such a collection of din and oddities.

I will have to just let you know.

Keep listening?
-e

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