posted by James Reel
For health reasons, veteran actor Richard Moll has withdrawn from this weekend's Chamber Music Plus performance, Schubert Shadows, about the relationship between Franz Schubert and a baritone who championed his songs. Bass-baritone Burr Cochran Phillips and pianist Sanda Schuldmann are still in the show, written by Harry Clark, but they're scrambling to find a last-minute replacement for Moll. I'll tell you more if I get news before I take off on vacation.
tucson-arts,
January 3rd 2008 at 8:09 —
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posted by James Reel
My contribution to the latest Tucson Weekly considers proposed upgrades at a local community theater ensemble:
This new year marks the 25th anniversary of the Catalina Players, and the theater group's executive director is ready for a change.
Oh, Priscilla Marquez isn't going anywhere. She believes in change from within--which makes sense, considering that the Catalina Players began as a self-help-through-acting group in 1983. So rather than abandoning the ensemble she has belonged to from the very beginning, and run since 1988, Marquez is helping the Catalina Players grow up.
That means more finished productions and a more serious, even slightly provocative, choice of scripts.
"There's so much going on in the world," says Marquez, "it's time for a message."
The whole story awaits you
here.
tucson-arts,
January 3rd 2008 at 7:44 —
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posted by James Reel
NewMusicBox has published an essay by composer Roger Rudenstein that’s exactly on the mark in its account of how classical music lost favor with the American public in the 1960s and later, and what can be done to advance the classical cause today. One thing Rudenstein is not afraid to make clear is that “classical music is an important art form and potentially achieves more depth and complexity than popular forms, however wonderful those are.” In other words, all music is not created equal, and by certain standards and for certain purposes, classical music can be superior to other kinds. (Too often, however, it is not.) Rudenstein observes that since the 1960s, classical music has been a “victim of shallow populism that has been a reaction to arrogant elitism.” Part of that elitism can be traced to the audience-unfriendly Modernist style, but that wasn’t the entire problem. Writes Rudenstein:
I doubt, however, that rejection of modernism is what drove Baby Boomers away from classical music. They weren't there in the first place. Part of their act of rebellion was to put a minus sign on anything their parents found important and classical music was seen as part of the conformity and stuffiness of the middle class life they rejected. To make matters worse, music education in the schools was gutted as the post-war prosperity waned and brought massive school budget cutbacks. So, it can't really be said that most Baby Boomers and, especially, the generations following, considered classical music and then rejected it. It was simply not an option.
Now, I have nothing against elitism, as long as it isn’t arrogant, which it was in Modernist circles 40 and 50 years ago, and in their arrogance Modernist composer helped dig classical music’s early grave. That grave hasn’t yet been filled, though, Rudenstein’s essay is titled “Classical Music: Alive and Kicking,” and the composer offers several good ideas about how to keep it that way. Please do read the
full article.
Classical Music,
December 28th 2007 at 7:36 —
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posted by James Reel
The latest issue of Strings magazine is online, and a fair chunk of it is by yours truly. Most prominent is the cover feature on a fine violinist with whom you may be unfamiliar:
Yumi Hwang-Williams started playing new music quite casually, back when she was a violin student at the Curtis Institute. At the time, the school didn’t have a big composition program, and getting new scores performed was pretty informal. “The composers were there, you’d make friends, and they’d ask you as a favor to learn a piece for a class or concert,” recalls Hwang-Williams.
Not exactly high-profile premieres back then.
Today, in contrast, the violinist spends a great deal of her time playing freshly inked scores by such leading composers as Christopher Rouse, Michael Daugherty, Aaron Jay Kernis, and Thomas Adès. Most of these opportunities come to her via her work as concertmaster of the Colorado Symphony Orchestra and the Cabrillo Music Festival, in both cases under conductor Marin Alsop.
“She’s obviously someone I think very, very highly of,” says Alsop, who moved this year to the Baltimore Symphony. “For a violinist of her caliber in this stage of her career, if you have the talent it’s a wonderful way to make a statement by championing these new works rather than yet again playing the Mendelssohn concerto. Why bother with that? She can bring something unique and new to all these new pieces. She’s an extremely conscientious musician. She likes to delve deeply into the music, and she’s become close with the composers whose works she’s performed.”
You’ll find the whole article
here. Then, if you’re a practicing string player, you may want to move on to my article on
warm-up techniques. I admit that I took the lazy way out on this piece: One of the sources is a friend of mine, Tucson’s own Harry Clark, cellist of
Chamber Music Plus Southwest; the other is my
sister-in-law. Finally, the magazine reprints an article I wrote several years ago on how string players can master the fiddling technique called
the chop.
Classical Music,
December 28th 2007 at 7:34 —
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posted by James Reel
This being Christmas week, I had absolutely nothing to write about on the arts beat for the Tucson Weekly (but other contributors were more creative, as you’ll discover here). But I did contribute a restaurant review, after a long journey north and a deep dip into the expense account:
Dining at McClintock's Restaurant on Tucson's far northwest side is a rewarding experience, and you really do deserve a reward--by the time you arrive, you feel that you've had to earn the privilege of eating there.
Don't even think about just dropping in for dinner or drinks. For one thing, you wouldn't be able to find the place without research, and for another, there's a checkpoint, and if your name isn't on the list, you'll get picked up by the Border Patrol and sent to Sonora.
Well, not really; you can learn the truth, and even read about the food, in my full review
here. (By the way, the title of this post alludes to the actual path one must take to McClintock's.)
quodlibet,
December 27th 2007 at 7:09 —
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posted by James Reel
This morning, a newscaster reading a story about a post-Christmas gift exchange, accidentally called it a program "for returning unwanted presidents." If only it were that simple.
quodlibet,
December 26th 2007 at 6:34 —
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