Tempers are starting to fray among musicians after months of being unable to perform: Van Morrison blasts Covid gig limits as 'pseudoscience'
Van Morrison has denounced the supposed “pseudoscience” around coronavirus and is attempting to rally musicians in a campaign to restore live music concerts with full capacity audiences.
The 74-year-old Northern Irish singer launched a campaign to “save live music” on his website, saying socially distanced gigs were not economically viable. “I call on my fellow singers, musicians, writers, producers, promoters and others in the industry to fight with me on this. Come forward, stand up, fight the pseudo-science and speak up,” he said.
There is no doubt that the current situation is impossible for musicians.
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Now, adapted for Music Salon readers:
Top 7 Warning Signs on a CD shelf:
- Luciano Pavarotti Sings The Beatles
- A Christmas Gift For You From Phil Spector
- Kris Kristofferson Does Mozart
- Grindcore: 85 Minutes of Brutal Heavy Metal
- Complete Collection of Brahms Polkas
- 20 Great Accordion Hits: Dermot O'Brien
- Guillaume de Machault: Non-Stop Dancing 1350!
The person who worked over the Oliver Room stole nearly everything of significant monetary value, sparing no country or century or subject. He took the oldest book in the collection, a collection of sermons printed in 1473, and also the most recognizable book, a first edition of Isaac Newton’s 98. He stole a first edition of The Wealth of Nations by Adam Smith, a letter written by William Jennings Bryan and a rare copy of Elizabeth Cady Stanton’s 1898 memoir, Eighty Years and More: Reminiscences 1815-1897. He stole a first edition of a book written by the nation’s second president, John Adams, as well as a book signed by the third, Thomas Jefferson. He stole the first English edition of Giovanni Boccaccio’s Decameron, printed in London in 1620, and the first edition of George Eliot’s Silas Marner, printed in the same city 241 years later. From John James Audubon’s 1851-54 Quadrupeds of North America, he stole 108 of the 155 hand-colored lithographs.In short, he took nearly everything he could get his hands on. And he did it with impunity for close to 25 years.
Read the whole thing for the solution to the mystery.
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The controversial Dave Brubeck? Strange times.
Dave Brubeck, in his lifetime, was the litmus paper of jazz, and most listeners turned red at the sight of him – either from rage at what they called his swingless, thumping pianistics, or out of embarrassment at having to admit that they rather liked what he did. Before Miles Davis went electric and Ornette Coleman bloomed, Brubeck was the surest name to start an argument. A cynical section of the jazz audience perceived his experimental nature as a search for a catchy idiom that might eventually bring him the triumph of a hit. And of course, this line of argument claimed a win when “Take Five” propelled the world onto the dance floor in 5/4 time.
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Signs of life: LIVERPOOL PHIL IS FIRST UK ORCHESTRA TO RESTART
The Royal Liverpool Philharmonic Orchestra is to resume live performances with audience from October 1.
Each concert will be one hour with no interval. Seating is limited to 240 people, with two-metre social distancing. The orchestra, also be socially distanced on stage, will be limited to 30 players.
Or sort of restart.
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On the other hand: 64% musicians considering leaving the music profession.
On average musicians have lost £11,300 in cancelled bookings as a result of the pandemic
50% have no bookings in the diary for the remainder of 2020 (average for same period last year was 27 bookings)
64% say they are thinking about leaving the music profession
40% have applied for a non-music job since March
This is in the UK, but it is likely even worse in North America. And if musicians are looking for work outside music, just where are they going to find it?
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Is this just another example of the New York Times pushing a narrative? Orchestras Looking to Broaden Horizons? Start Improvising.
Why won’t big American orchestras improvise? The answer might have something to do with a tough night for Leonard Bernstein and the New York Philharmonic back in 1964.
The great conductor wanted his audience to give serious consideration to John Cage’s chance-based music. But Bernstein couldn’t even get his musicians to put on straight faces. Some played scales instead of the material in Cage’s notated (yet flexible) “Atlas Eclipticalis.” To Cage’s chagrin, Bernstein also led the orchestra in improvisations — which Cage considered a different tradition altogether.
Most of the crowd audibly hated the results. Ever since, American orchestral life has pretty much insisted on fully fixed scores. Improvisation has largely been left to the very occasional special guest, like the pianist Aaron Diehl — who, after studying both classical and jazz traditions, sometimes improvises during a Gershwin concerto.
Why yes!
The improvising composer-performers Henry Threadgill and Anthony Davis have been among the winners of the Pulitzer Prize for music in the last five years. The trumpeter Wadada Leo Smith was a finalist for the Pulitzer in 2013. All three have collaborated with Mr. Braxton — as have Mr. Mitchell and Mr. Lewis. And all six of these composers have written large-ensemble or orchestral music, most of which has rarely if ever been played by major American orchestras. (Some of these orchestral works are fully notated.)
And all of these musicians are Black. Beginning to program their orchestral music — including works that stretch the orchestral sound into improvisation — would be one way to address larger patterns of racial exclusion in classical music.
Lots of composers use various forms of indeterminate notation to give freedom to the performers, myself included. Moment form is one example, where the motifs are written, but can be played in various orders. Lutosławski has passages in many orchestral works where the players have freedom to improvise within certain limits. John Cage is an example of many different kinds of performer freedom as are Morton Feldman and Karlheinz Stockhausen. And all of these musicians are white. So what?
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Over at The New Yorker Alex Ross continues his never-ending quest to let us know that this is Wagner's world, we just live in it: How Wagner Shaped Hollywood.
“The Birth of a Nation” set the pace for a century of Wagnerian aggression on film. More than a thousand movies and TV shows feature the composer on their soundtracks, yoking him to all manner of rampaging hordes, marching armies, swashbuckling heroes, and scheming evildoers. The “Ride” turns up in a particularly dizzying variety of scenarios. In “What’s Opera, Doc?,” Elmer Fudd chants “Kill da wabbit” while pursuing Bugs Bunny. In John Landis’s “The Blues Brothers” (1980), the “Ride” plays while buffoonish neo-Nazis chase the heroes down a highway and fly off an overpass. Most indelibly, Francis Ford Coppola’s “Apocalypse Now” (1979) upends Griffith’s racial duality, making white Americans the heralds of destruction: a helicopter squadron blares the “Ride” as it lays waste to a Vietnamese village.
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Also at the New York Times, Anthony Tommasini muses on the silence of the virus: For a Music Critic, a Vacation That’s All Too Quiet.
Typically, the end of August through Labor Day is an ideal time for me to take a two-week vacation. Classical music tends to take that time off, too. After a jam-packed concert season and a slew of summer festivals, everything seems to stop for a bit before the ramp-up to fall.
The shutdowns have been devastating for American classical music, given its dependence on patronage — which has been eroding of late — and the lack of meaningful government support, which still props up institutions in Europe. It’s depressing to read all the social media posts by accomplished freelance artists who have been without work for months and can have a bleak view of the future.
Were it not for the virus, I would be posting this from Salzburg.
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We need a nice couple of envois today, do we not? We haven't had any John Cage in a long time, so here is a clip of the actual 1964 performance of John Cage's Atlas Eclipticalis by Leonard Bernstein. There is a long introduction by Bernstein and the Cage piece actually starts at the 11:34 mark:
7 comments:
The Royal Liverpool Philharmonic Orchestra is to resume live performances with audience from October 1.Each concert will be one hour with no interval. Seating is limited to 240 people, with two-metre social distancing. The orchestra, also be socially distanced on stage, will be limited to 30 players.
Is this a secret Anti Mahler operation? Actually this hits 19th C music hardest (or 1820-1920). 20th C music generally had much smaller forces as did earlier music. Of course most concert hall attendance is for 19th C music along with some 18th and 20th C symphonies. I still think the only real solution is outdoor concerts. We are all familiar with the bronchial section in the concert hall audience and now people will flee when they start coughing.
The Brubeck biography is on my somewhat sprawling to-read list. Brubeck could be a little controversial even in the early 1990s as I discovered when sharing my interest in his work. There were still people declaring that "Brubeck doesn't swing". Someone at Downbeat wrote that Brubeck ultimately prevailed by outliving all of the jazz critic naysayers who died off well before Brubeck himself was close to done making music.
There is also, finally, an academic monograph on the album Time Out, by the way.
https://www.amazon.com/Dave-Brubecks-Oxford-Studies-Recorded-ebook/dp/B07WNK6TB1/ref=sr_1_1?dchild=1&keywords=time+out+dave+brubeck&qid=1598718475&s=digital-text&sr=1-1
Outdoor concerts are an excellent solution. Except not in Montreal in November. Or December. Or January. Definitely not February. And certainly not March, April and possibly May. June would be ok.
I'm not sure myself that Brubeck "swings," but he does other things. Plus, the other guys in the group could and did swing.
Yes there are issues with outdoor concerts in Northern countries like Canada, Scandinavia, Scotland and Russia. Although I doubt Russia will worry about a few more elderly deaths. They are manageable though. Covered seating, heaters, and more daytime performances will solve a good bit of the problem. Winter time less resource intensive concerts can be indoors; that is, smaller orchestras, spaced seating and more performances. More musicians could be working even if it is contract work. With faster virus tests perhaps even a decent sized orchestra could get on stage together indoors.
With more telework happening, accelerated but not caused by the pandemic, people's schedules will be increasingly flexible. So the matinee may no longer be limited to the blue hair audience. Of course musicians will have to give up the idea of a defined performance season.
The real stumbling block is the malign musical establishment. I think it is unable and unwilling to work toward solutions which deviate one iota from what they do now.
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As for Brubeck it is ludicrous to assert that he doesn't swing although his rhythmic style doesn't accentuate it. I always assumed it was jealousy of his relative commercial success and the fact that he wasn't a druggie (like Bill Evans) either combined to make him uncool.
Maury, I think you just made me realize that we are never going back to the previous environment as far as concerts go. Unless we either come up with a really usable vaccine or we just give up on the whole lockdown concept and accept, as you say, manageable elderly deaths (!)
If the musical establishment is as malign as you say (which may well be, there are certainly a lot of malign establishments in other areas of society) then it is going to be replaced as soon as the realization of its dysfunction is generally obvious.
Re Brubeck: don't you think that "swing" is actually a kind of spectrum and Brubeck is on the minimal end?
Considering that Charlie Parker, if memory serves, had nice things to say about Brubeck and Mingus and Brubeck did "Non-Sectarian Blues" together I'd say there's a spectrum of people with stances. Coleman and Davis were pretty much in the anti-Brubeck camp while Mingus and others were in the pro-Brubeck camp.
At the risk of venturing a theory here, take "Blue Rondo a la Turk", with its 2+2+2+3 pattern, Brubeck began to introduce musical gestures that don't come from African American folk idioms, to put it more directly, he was playing with ideas drawn from the folk and dance traditions of the Balkans, the Middle East and also some African musical elements. By not being in the bop and bebop scenes he functionally cut himself off from what was going to become the default realm of the jazzbro.
But since jazz began to appear in places like Estonia in the 1920s and there was a burgeoning jazz scene in Poland in the 1950s and even an Iranian jazz scene in the early 20th century I think there may be a gap between Americans who presume "all" jazz history has to be understood in Afro-American racial purity terms and music historians who have been digging into how truly urban and global jazz was as a popular style of music and compositional practice even before Stalin consolidated his power.
Part of Brubeck's deserved longevity was that whatever American purists in the bop and bebop camps have said about him, a truly global conception of jazz can lead us to a view on Brubeck that suggests he embraced the truly global (or globalist if you want to be mean about it) conception of jazz and distilled it in his classic quartet line-up.
Wenatchee, I am often surprised at the breadth of your musical knowledge!
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