Tuesday, November 10, 2009

The Phillips Collection Now Playing Leading Role In New Music Renaissance In Nation's Capital



Dear Pan Cogito,

The Embassies of the European Union in Washington, DC and The Phillips Collection have joined forces to create an unprecedented concert series: “Leading European Composers”

This series is unique in that the composers will be present to introduce their works and that the performers are chosen directly by them. “Leading European Composers” will provide our audience with an exclusive opportunity to get a comprehensive perspective on the state of musical creation in Europe!

Be apart of the series début on Thursday, November 12 at 6pm in the beautiful Music Room of The Phillips Collection. The performance will feature French composer Tristan Murail and the Argento Chamber Ensemble with conductor Michael Galante.

WHAT: European Composers Series Début: Tristan Murail (details below )
WHEN: Thursday, November 12, at 6pm
WHERE: The Phillips Collection Music Room (1600 21st St, NW)
ADMISSION: General: $15; Members of The Phillips Collection: FREE
TICKETS: www.InstantSeats.com

We look forward to welcoming you to the “Leading Contemporary Composers” première at The Phillips Collection.

Warm regards,

Roland Celette
Cultural Attaché | Director of La Maison Française

Unanswered Questions - Tristan Murail - 5 min.
Feuilles à travers les cloches - Tristan Murail - 6 min.
Flicker - Michel Galante - 7 min.
Cloches d'adieu, et un sourire... in memoriam Olivier Messiaen - Tristan Murail - 3 min.
Piccola suite - Giacinto Scelsi - 9 min.
Satori - Allain Gaussin - 9 min.
Le Fou à pattes bleues (The Blue-Footed Booby) - Tristan Murail - 9 min.
Les Ruines circulaires - Tristan Murail - 5 min.
La Barque mystique - Tristan Murail - 12 min.

Human skin forms the colour chart in Synecdoche, by Byron Kim, a recent gift to the National Gallery of Art, Washington, D.C. Kim copied the hues from friends and strangers in 20-minute sittings. [The work may currently be under installation at the NGA.]

Photo credit: (c) Colin McPherson 2009. Copyright controlled.

Monday, November 09, 2009

Two Pictures: How The Construction Of The New "Titanium Curtain" Contributes To Poverty, Inequality, And Depression In Present Day Europe



An actress of theatre piece 'Angel over Berlin' stands on a roof in Berlin, Germany,Present-day European Union, 09 November 2009. Many events are held to celebrate the 20th anniversary of the Fall of the Berlin Wall.



The participant of a flash-mob, dressed as a pig, accosts a pedestrian in downtown Kyiv, Ukraine, Future European Union, on 06 November 2009. Mob participants protested against depression and panic caused by a swine flu epidemic in the country.

[Click on images for enlargements.]

Photo credits: (c) EPA/BGNES 2009. Copyright controlled.

My First Night And Day In Berlin, Europe Many Years Ago ... (Because A Librettist's And Composer's Life Is No 'Hotel California')





[Click on images for enlargements.]

Photo credits:

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The newly divided Europe twenty years after the fall of the old Iron Curtain, and the slow construction of the new Titanium Curtain:




[Click on images for enlargements.]

Image credit: Present-day European Union, year-end 2009.

Thursday, November 05, 2009

"There Are Thousands Of Music Lessons On This Naked Planet, And This Is Just One (II)"





A master class taught by Dame Kiri Te Kanawa

FREE


Thursday, November 12 at Noon
District of Columbia Downtown Center for the Arts
The Lansburgh Theatre
450 7th Street NW
Washington, D.C.

"The Shakespeare Theatre Company and Washington Performing Arts Society present Happenings at the Harman: A master class taught by Dame Kiri Te Kanawa featuring artists from the Washington National Opera’s Domingo-Cafritz Young Artist Program. Te Kanawa first appeared as Carmen in Britain and New Zealand before making her sensational lead debut as the Countess in Mozart’s The Marriage of Figaro at the Royal Opera House Covent Garden in 1971. Te Kanawa has since mastered a large repertoire from the classics of opera to French art songs, works by German and British composers and a treasury of contemporary popular music while remaining at the front rank of international opera, becoming one of the most sought after sopranos in the world. The event is general admission. No reservations are required."

Photo credits: Copyright controlled. All rights reserved.

"There Are Thousands Of Music Lessons On This Naked Planet, And This Is Just One"



The Music Lesson: A Film by Virginia Galloway featuring young musicians from Boston, Massachusetts and Laikipia, Kenya.

Collaboration, not Charity

Photo credit: (c) Virginia Galloway 2009.

Richard Wagner, Warren Buffett, And Pan Cogito Agree: “Pessimism Is Your Friend, Euphoria The Enemy”



[Click on image for enlargement.]

Safe signals from Buffett’s train deal

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The so-called Washington National Opera invites citizens, visitors, and guests to sample opera and is offering $25 tickets to performances of Richard Strauss's "Ariadne Auf Naxos" and Richard Wagner's "Gotterdammerung" (without acting or sets). Apparently, you are supposed to whisper the word "Express" when you order your tickets for the Nov 5, 7, 8, 10, 13, or 15, 2009 performances.

The Szymanowski Quartet offers a FREE concert tomorrow night at 8 PM at the Library of Congress.

The Warsaw Village Band stages counter-performance to the first Washington National Opera concert performance of Richard Wagner's Gotterdammerung on Saturday at 7:30 PM at the National Geographic Society. Tickets ranging from about $7.50 to $12.00.

The Fine Arts Quartet perform a FREE concert on Sunday, November 8, 2009 at 3 p.m. at the National Academies of Science Auditorium 2101 Constitution Ave., N.W. (Photo ID required.)

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Header credit: Edward Hopper 'Haskell's House,' 1924
Gift of Herbert A. Goldstone 1996.130.2
Copyright © 2009 National Gallery of Art, Washington, DC

Monday, November 02, 2009

Pan Cogito Confronts A Prime Example Of Old-Fashioned European Thinking



EU-US Summit, Washington 3 November 2009

"EU and US leaders will meet on Tuesday 3 November in Washington DC for their yearly summit. Participants from the side of the Commission will be the President of the European Commission, Jose Manuel Barroso and Commissioners Benita Ferrero-Waldner. The EU Presidency will be represented by Swedish Prime Minister Fredrik Reinfeldt and Foreign Minister Carl Bildt, assisted by High Representative Javier Solana.

Issues featuring on the agenda this year will include major global challenges such as the economic recovery, climate change and development but also a range of foreign policy issues such as Afghanistan, Pakistan, Iran and the Middle East. The Summit also envisages strengthening the EU-US dialogue in the field of development cooperation.

A major outcome will be the creation of a new EU-US Energy Council."

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Candidates for EU membership

Croatia
The former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia
Turkey

Potential candidate countries

Albania
Bosnia and Herzegovina
Iceland
Kosovo under UN Security Council Resolution 1244
Montenegro
Serbia

Other European countries, including Eastern Neighbours

Andorra
Armenia
Azerbaijan
Belarus
Georgia
Liechtenstein
Moldova
Monaco (Principality of Monaco)
Norway
Russia
San Marino
Switzerland
Ukraine
Vatican

UNESCO World Heritage Danube Delta Biosphere Reservation -- Future European Union.

Photo credit: Far la Sulina - Lighthouse. Sulina, Romania, Present-day European Union. Copyright © 2007 Danube Delta Biosphere Reserve. All rights reserved.

Friday, October 30, 2009

Michael Tilson Thomas And The San Francisco Symphony's "Keeping Score: Season Two" Installations On Berlioz, Ives, And Shostakovich – The Review



The San Francisco Symphony – under conductor and host Michael Tilson Thomas -- has recently released the second full season of its “Keeping Score” public television, radio, and internet-based multi-media programming – this season launching hour-long programs focusing on three great composers and three great works of classical symphonic music – Hector Berlioz and his “Symphonie Fantastique”, Charles Ives’s and his “Holidays Symphony”, and Dmitri Shostakovich and his ”Symphony #5.” In the autumn of 2006, the San Francisco Symphony and public television station KQED released three programs in their path-breaking series: installations on Ludwig van Beethoven’s “Eroica” Symphony #3, Igor Stravinsky’s “The Rite of Spring,” and Aaron Copland and American classical music. In 2004, an initial episode aired on Pyotr Ilyich Chaikowsky and his Symphony #4.

While the initial four episodes, in 2004 and 2006, were outstanding, the new set is - in many ways - even more outstanding. These three new programs are joyful, powerful, evocative, and democratic celebrations of symphonic classical music over the past 175 years, and what it means to be human. All of these programs will be best enjoyed not just once, but – better – two or even three times. Along with an upcoming special installation on Gustav Mahler, the San Francisco Symphony will have created an eight-part, experimental and national public television cycle – with accompanying interactive website --on eight composers who mean so much to Michael Tilson Thomas, to the excellent musicians of the San Francisco Symphony, and to millions of 21st century classical music listeners today – whether they are seasoned listeners or new to classical music; and whether they are 10 years old or 100 years old. Those seven composers -- Beethoven, Berlioz, Chaikovsky, Mahler, Stravinsky, Ives, Copland, and Shostakovich -- and eight major works represent the basis for both an introduction to symphonic classical music, or a review of understanding of symphonic classical music for those more experienced and fortunate.

Two weeks ago, I attended a special program at the National Gallery of Art, in Washington, D.C., examining the 40th anniversary of the release, in America, of Lord Kenneth Clark’s BBC and PBS 13-part series (and book) “Civilization”, in 1969. One of the program participants, from Britain, noted that, today, the state-controlled broadcaster, the BBC, would never commit to a 13-part series of programs –six being the new, unwritten limit. However, the San Francisco Symphony, Michael Tilson Thomas, and KQED, have already well breached the BBC limit of six, having produced, or being in the process of producing, eight installations (and websites) in its “Keeping Score” Project. There is no reason why – given the unflagging enthusiasm from Michael Tilson Thomas, the San Francisco Symphony musicians, and the producers – the Project could not continue for at least another two seasons (or more).

Now, I will state here upfront that for 21st century classical music listeners – both experienced and new – I completely agree with the “Keeping Score” Project’s strategy of starting with 20th and 19th century masterpieces. There was no reason why, given Michael Tilson Thomas’s and the musicians of the Symphony’s musical passions, that the Project should have started with J.S. Bach, Handel, Haydn, and Mozart (and, later, Schubert, Schumann, Brahms, and Dvorak). While those composers are touchstones of “Civilization” (or better, “Western Civilization”), the modern symphonic orchestra today is primarily focused firmly on 20th, 19th, and 21st century music.

By choosing these eight great composers and works, Michael Tilson Thomas and the San Francisco Symphony musicians have placed the focus squarely on the immense passion, power, and mystery of great Western (and now, world) symphonic classical music. One comes away from the seven programs on Beethoven, Berlioz, Chaikovsky, Stravinsky, Ives, Copland, and Shostakovich knowing much more deeply how it feels to be a great, generous, passionate, and highly intelligent composer. (Michael Tilson Thomas notes that Charles Ives would have been a great American president.) One does this, in large part, by now knowing much more about the historical and social times in which the seven composers lived over a period of 150 years. (Other public television and web-site programming can explore the music of the past 50 years, as explored by Michael Tilson Thomas and the San Francisco Symphony in its earlier, successful, American Mavericks programming - successful at least in regards to more recent American classical music.)

Speaking of 20th century and contemporary classical music, let me refer briefly to two lesser known public television efforts on the part of classical music (there may be more than two) made in the 34 years between the last season in 1972, on CBS, of Leonard Bernstein’s “Young People’s Concerts” (which ran for fifteen years) and Michael Tilson Thomas’s and the San Francisco Symphony’s “Keeping Score” Projects of 2006 and 2009. In the 1980s, French television and public media produced the "Pierre Boulez XX Century Project"; while in the 1990s, British television released the ten programs (and Michael Hall authored book) of Simon Rattle’s “Leaving Home: A Tour of Twentieth Century Music” series. Both are, I believe, still available today, and I highly recommend the (Sir) Simon Rattle/Michael Hall “Leaving Home” television programs and accompanying book. However, the Michael Tilson Thomas and San Francisco Symphony eight-part television, radio, and website series/project is the best that we can expect in our early 21st century, post-“Civilization” age, and is superb, in and of itself. As I mentioned above, the passion and excitement of the 20th and 19th century Western symphonic classical music tradition – as exemplified in six great works of art -- comes through with flying colors.

All of the programs have wonderful, imaginative touches that will appeal to younger viewers and less-committed older viewers. The Berlioz program, naturally given the symphonic work in question, focuses on Berlioz’s lifetime love for Anglo-Irish actress Harriet Smithson, from the time they meet but had no common language to later in life when he supported her despite her business failures and growing mental problems. However, we also view 19th century musical dolls and a young Alpine village boy singing a French folksong that later influenced the symphony, as well as learn why having studied medicine can potentially help composers when the persons they love do not get with the program (poison and the antidote to poison is involved.) (In fact, all of the new programs have fascinating focii on the young composers and folk music; as well as unsurpassable glimpses and discussions of the pleasant living spaces in which the young composers grew up. I also enjoyed the wonderful glimpses of the Concert Halls of the Paris Conservatory, Yale University, and the Saint Petersburg Conservatory; only the last of which I have ever visited.)

Of the new programs, both the Ives and the Shostakovich programs are a bit too hyper-active visually in their opening minutes – the Shostakovich when exploring Soviet artistic life in the 1920s through a whirlwind of constructivism and futurism, the Ives, when watered-down Nam June Paik techniques are used to evoke the multiplicity of American experience at the opening of the twentieth century. Fortunately, both shows grow beyond this trendy hyperactivity, and they both find firmer groundings in slow, exceptionally thoughtful comments from the musicians of the Symphony – especially the handful of both older and younger Russian- and Ukrainian-American San Francisco Symphony musicians who discuss their experiences in the Soviet Union before 1991. (Broadly speaking, the Ives program comes across as transcendential, while the Shostakovich program comes across as existential.)

I personally liked the Charles Ives’s program best of the seven, despite the somewhat weak opening. Watching this wonderful program that deepened magnificently – and grew in transcendental mysticism -- over the course of the 55 minutes, I was reminded of the early 1970s when I performed some of Charles Ives’s symphonic music in both California and Germany (under Denis de Couteau and the Oakland Youth Orchestra) and some chamber music in Philadelphia, and when I heard the Philadelphia Orchestra perform the “Holidays Symphony” in the winter of either 1973 or 1974 – at about the time of the Charles Ives’s Centennial. I also recalled watching a documentary on Charles Ives on public television in Washington, D.C. in the spring of 1972; which naturally led me to think about the American decline and loss of the past two generations since then. (WETA-FM, in the Nation's Capital, recently featured a special "Symphony Weekend" but no music of Charles Ives was programmed; nor music of Shostakovich. Jean Sibelius's Symphony No. 1 and Mahler's Symphony #5 were, however, included; both of which were unusual for the very conservative station.)

While the seven composer "Keeping Score" websites are available day and night, viewing the three new “Keeping Score” installations will be a bit more work, and parents and caregivers to the young will have to be on point – especially in the Nation's Capital. (The first seven composers and works are also available now on DVD and blu-ray; and may be now in some public libraries in enlightened zones of the late American empire.)

Given balkanized civilization in America today, viewers in the San Francisco area were privileged not only to have been treated to “Keeping Score” last season (unlike in the cultural recession-scarred Nation’s Capital), but to have been able to view the "Keeping Score" installations on Berlioz and Shostakovich on KQED at fairly normal times – with the Shostakovich Symphony #5 program premiering last night.

In the Nation’s Capital, WETA will, in fact, be showing the second set of “Keeping Score”, if not the earlier set, but it will involve some sacrifice to normal living and sleeping schedules – for children and adults – to catch these wonderful programs, at least on their first round. (Unlike in the 1960s, I recall, when I was allowed to play outdoors on Saturday mornings, until Leonard Bernstein and the Young People’s Concerts came on at 11 AM. And, no, I was not groomed in the Washington, D.C. of the 1960s for more than an avocational life in music, despite fine violin instruction and even better high school and youth orchestra experiences.)

The Berlioz "Symphonie Fantastique" episode will first be shown on WETA, in the Nation’s Capital, on Sunday, November 1, 2009, at 2:30 PM. The wonderful Charles Ives’s and his "Holidays Symphony" episode will first be broadcast in the Nation’s Capital on Saturday November 7 at 7 AM (yes, AM); followed by the Shostakovich Symphony #5 episode on Saturday November 7 at 8 AM (yes, AM).

This is bizarre and unwarranted on the part of WETA.

KQED viewers could see the three episodes on three consecutive Saturdays at 8 p.m. beginning on October 17. Alternatively, they can also see the wonderful Charles Ives episode for a second time this Sunday, Nov 1, 2009 at 1:00 PM – a much more civilized time than 7 AM as in Washington, D.C. -- especially for younger people who need their morning sleep.

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Header credit: Harvey Dinnerstein “Sundown, the Crossing” 1999. 74 x 84”. Gift to the Fine Arts Museums of San Francisco from the Frey Norris Gallery.
(c) Harvey Dinnerstein and the Fine Arts Museums of San Francisco 2009. Copyright controlled. All rights reserved.

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Edited to add reference to KQED's 2004 Keeping Score episode on Chaikovsky.



Copyright © 2009 National Gallery of Art, Washington, DC

Prelude (Or Postlude) To Keeping Score: 25, 24, 15, 27, and 4



25, 24, 15, 27, and 4

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Or, for those preferring a multi-media, non-lecturing filmic and pianistic experience:

ONE MINUTE MORE
60 films, 60 composers, 60 seconds each


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Header credit: Andrew Kudless (MATSYS), P_Wall (detail), 2006/2009; plaster and multichannel audio; Collection SFMOMA, Accessions Committee Fund purchase; © Andrew Kudless 2009.

'The Days And Years Grow Shorter': In Memoriam: J. Karla Lemon, 1954-2009



Remembrance from the San Francisco Classical Voice by Jason Victor Serinus.

A memorial service is planned for Nov. 7 at 10 a.m., at the First Congregational Church in Berkeley, California.

Photo credit: (c) Copyright controlled.

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(We were classmates at Berkeley High School and colleagues in the Oakland Symphony Youth Orchestra.)

In Which Pan Cogito Promotes The Berlin Philharmonic and Deutsche Bank In Exchange For A Free Brahms Webcast (Open To 'Everyone' With A Computer)



[Click on image for enlargement.]

"Deutsche Bank will present a free webcast of the Berliner Philharmoniker and Sir Simon Rattle performing Brahms’s Third and Fourth symphonies on Monday, November 9 at 8.00 p.m. EST on its website, www.db.com. To register for the free webcast, visit www.db.com and click on the link on the lower right-hand corner. For more than 20 years now, Deutsche Bank has been the exclusive partner of the Berliner Philharmoniker. Deutsche Bank’s generous support makes the orchestra’s groundbreaking Digital Concert Hall project possible and has also enabled the orchestra to set up an innovative education project, Zukunft@BPhil.

New service this season: Programme notes in English

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Header photo credit: Potsdamer Platz, Berlin, in May 1986, showing No Man's Land between the Outer Wall (foreground) and Inner Wall (background). In the distance, East Berlin and the Fernsehturm. The Palast Hotel stood on the grassy area immediately beyond the lamp-post. The grass-covered mound partly visible on the far left marks the site of Hitler's bunker.

(c) Lyricmac 2008. Via Wikipedia. Some rights reserved. With thanks.

Thursday, October 29, 2009

Renaissance Research "Conservatory Project" Spirit Night Quiz: What 'Nihilistic' Classical Masterpiece Premiered on April 3, 2011?



カボチャ

Hint

Extra credit:

Will Christoph Eschenbach and the National Symphony Orchestra be able to match James Ross and the University of Maryland's exceptionally high level of orchestral programming?

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Another hint: A trip in the fall of 1909 to Koli -- a pre-Christian sacrificial site -- inspired the first movement of this Symphony.

President And First Lady Obama's White House East Room Increasingly Getting Makeover As Musicians And Artists Den





First Lady Michelle Obama has created the new The White House Music Series to celebrate the arts, to demonstrate the importance of arts education, and to encourage young people who believe in their talent to create a future for themselves in the arts community be it as a hobby or as a profession. On Wednesday, November 4, First Lady Michael Obama will welcome violinist Joshua Bell, cellist Alisa Weilerstein, guitarist Sharon Isbin and pianist Awadagin Pratt to the White House's East Room to take part in the event that will include student workshops for 120 middle and high school students followed by an evening concert. Previous White House Musicians and Artists Den events have featured jazz, country and Latin musicians. President Obama will make remarks at the evening concert that will feature the four musicians performing solo works and that will be streamed live on www.whitehouse.gov.

Photo credits: All (c) Copyright controlled. All rights reserved.

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Coming Tomorrow: Pan Cogito finally reviews KQED's "Keeping Score".

Tuesday, October 27, 2009

Aide Memoire




Aide Memoire

Nicola Porpora (1686-1768), Antonio Caldara (c. 1670-1736), Francesco Araia (1709-1770), Carl Heinrich Graun (c. 1703-1759), Leonardo Leo (1694-1744), Leonardo Vinci (1696-1730), Riccardo Broschi (c. 1658-1756) and Geminiano Giacomello (c. 1692- 1740).

"Symposia were usually held in the andrōn, the men's quarters of the household. The participants would recline on pillowed couches arrayed against the three walls of the room away from the door. Due to space limitations the couches would number between seven and nine, limiting the total number of participants to somewhere between fourteen and twenty seven. If any free boys took part they did not recline but sat up. Food was served, together with wine. The latter, usually mixed with water in varying proportions, was drawn from the krater, a large jar designed to be carried by two men, and served by nude servant boys from pitchers.

For example the most famous symposium of all, the one immortalised by Plato, was being hosted by the poet Agathon on the occasion of his first victory at the theater contest of the 416 BC Dionysia, but was upstaged by the unexpected entrance of the toast of the town, the young Alcibiades dropping in almost totally drunk and almost totally naked, having just left another symposium."

Pan -- whatever happened to your Alcibiades opera?

Photo credits: Both images copyright controlled. All rights reserved.

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Man Ray at the Phillips Collection