Friday, November 6, 2020

Friday Miscellanea

Well, that was quite a week, wasn't it? And I hear that there was some sort of election? No, not the British Columbia provincial election, that was a couple of weeks ago. But never mind, we have more important things to discuss starting with an interesting performance of Bach's Goldberg Variations as a ballet:


That's just a sample, but the pianist, Pavel Kolesnikov, has a new recording just released and reviewed in The Guardian:

Just when you think there are enough recordings of Bach’s Goldberg Variations, here comes one that makes the music sound fresh off the page. The pianist Pavel Kolesnikov says he had “shied away” from performing Bach until he was invited to collaborate with the dancer and choreographer Anne Teresa De Keersmaeker on the Goldbergs; the result, with De Keersmaeker dancing and Kolesnikov playing live, has been seen by a few lucky European audiences this year.

Recorded in the studio, Kolesnikov’s performance stands alone: there is certainly no sense of the equation being less than perfectly balanced. The theme sings softly and simply – and then the first variation bursts out, speaking clearly, the two melodic lines chasing each other down the keyboard like kittens. These contrasts of texture, between softness and defined edge, at first make it feel as if the music is going in and out of focus – but that’s not quite it, because every single note is set forth by Kolesnikov with crystal clarity. It might rather be that we are moving in and out of Kolesnikov’s head: some variations feel “public” and consciously articulated, while some unfold as if privately.

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Over at Slipped Disc we are alerted to a new height (or bottom?) in artist marketing with this cover for a Scarlatti recording:

And it is fairly clear that the performance itself is not by a real pianist at all, but a MIDI file.

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The Berlin Philharmonic did a rather unusual encore the other day, after the government announced a new ban on concerts. Here they are conducted by Kiril Petrenko in a performance of John Cage's 4'33 for any instrument or combination of instruments.


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You can watch online performances of the Vienna Staatsoper at this link:


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And on a completely different note, here is an essay on the role of "theory" in the teaching of the humanities: Who’s Afraid of Theory?
The Theory Wars, that is the administrative argument over which various strains of 20th-century continental European thought should play in the research and teaching of the humanities, has never exactly gone away, even while departments shutter and university work is farmed out to poorly-paid contingent faculty. Today you’re just as likely to see aspersions on the use of critical theory appear in fevered, paranoid Internet threads warning about “Cultural Marxism” as you are on the op-ed pages of the Wall Street Journal, even while at many schools literature requirements are being cut, so as to make the whole debate feel more like a Civil War reenactment than the Battle of Gettysburg. In another sense, however, and Butler’s partisans seem to have very much won the argument from the ‘80s and ‘90s—as sociologically inflected Theory-terms from “intersectionality” to “privilege” have migrated from Diacritics to Twitter (though often as critical malapropism)—ensuring that this war of attrition isn’t headed to armistice anytime soon.

Read the whole thing for an informative and sympathetic look at the history.

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Bachtrack gives us Music vs. Covid-19: the state of play in Asia, America and Oceania. The whole thing is worth looking at. Here is a sample:

In Japan, where you are enjoined not to yell “Bravo”, people are making “Bravo cards” to be waved in the air instead; one orchestra is selling a “Bravo towel” in its foyer. And to understand Japanese rules on concert seating, look no further than the chequerboard-like pattern of “Ichimatsu-monyo”, a textile named after its most ardent fan, one of the great Kabuki actors of the 18th century.

Let's conclude with a note of optimism from Opera America’s Marc Scorca: “I believe that in the next years as we come out of this crisis, there will be a blend of a return to some of the old and incorporation of the new. That blend will be healthy for opera in the United States.”

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And for sheer amusement value, here is an ad that has been popping up everywhere lately:

https://training.breakthroughguitar.com/ggth-1?gclid=EAIaIQobChMI8qHOxPfr7AIVxAs_Ch0WjQC-EAEYASAAEgLbVfD_BwE

The biggest mistake guitar players make is that they try to LEARN their way to PLAYING the guitar... 

… Thinking that if they just keep learning…

… If they just keep practicing… 

… Eventually it will all connect.

And it WON’T! 

It CAN’T! 

Because it’s impossible to THINK your way to PLAYING well! 

Legendary Guitarist Joe Pass famously said “You can’t think and play”

Because it doesn’t work that way! The two are opposites!

THINKING… is what causes all the PLAYING problems in the first place!

This is both hilariously wrong and somewhat true, all at the same time!

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Let's have some music! Today's envoi is a complete performance of Donizetti's Anna Bolena at the Wiener Staatsoper in 2011: 



8 comments:

Marc in Eugene said...

I paid for access to the Hofoper's streamings the last two seasons and now they are providing them gratis. There may be a lesson there: even the plague has benefits for those who seek them out.

Am listening to Ferenc Erkel's Hunyadi László at the moment but Zemlinksy's Der Traumgörge begins in five minutes at Dijon.

Bryan Townsend said...

Wow, that's great! Could you post the link?

Marc in Eugene said...

The Zemlinsky is here: https://www.francemusique.fr/emissions/samedi-a-l-opera/gorge-le-reveur-de-zemlinsky-a-l-auditorium-de-dijon-88448.

I'm not having any luck keeping that open so am returning to the Erkel, here: https://mediaklikk.hu/bartok-radio-elo/.

Marc in Eugene said...

The non-music downside of streaming is that glitches happen, don't they; once in the concert hall, you're guaranteed to hear what performance you came for, barring fire or earthquake or videographers in the front rows. The Erkel is streaming perfectly but going silent at random moments-- although not for a while now. Usually I have no troubles with France Musique and do with Bartók Radio, a channel of the Hungarian state broadcaster.

Bryan Townsend said...

Thanks, Marc, I will give them a listen.

Marc in Eugene said...

In case you have not read about Neumz, there is that link. The idea is that all the chant from all the Hours of the Office for the entire three year cycle of the liturgical year is recorded and made available online and via an app for the iPad etc. This apparently will amount to 7,000 hours of recordings. Dr John Anderson has been quite helpful via email-- the website launched in May and the apps are supposed to be ready to go in time for Advent on the 29th of this month. The notation for each piece is meant to scroll simultaneously with the text and its translation-- this was happening not quite perfectly the last time I checked but in such an immense project one expects glitches.

Jouques (there is this at Classic FM from May) observes the New Rite (lessons and responsoria at Matins are distributed in a three year cycle, as opposed to the one year cycle of the Traditional Rite, Prime is suppressed, the calendar is rather different). Neumz people are open to a similar project in an abbey of men, and are looking at ways of making the Traditional Rite available too. (It is not that the chants are different in the two forms; they are ordered differently for some feasts-- well, that's as well as I can put it fairly briefly.)

Bryan Townsend said...

Thank you Marc. I listened to a bit of it and these are live performances, with coughing? Even though I have picked up a bit of liturgical knowledge from music history, the fact that I was raised with no discernible religion means I have only the vaguest understanding of the liturgical calendar and how the music functions within it.

Marc in Eugene said...

Of course there is coughing, ha, and noses blown, and the clattering of the misericords raised and lowered and so on-- the chant in real life always includes these evidences of humanity.