Wednesday, January 31, 2018




RECITAL

Merkin Hall
Young Concert Artist

Benjamin Baker - Violin
Daniel Lebhardt - Piano

Schubert - Fantasia in C major, D. 934
Britten - Suite, Op. 6
Elgar - Sonata for violin and piano, Op. 82|
With a premiere by YCA Composer, TONIA KO

"Baker gave an incandescent performance." (The Arts Desk)

"New Zealand native Benjamin Baker has moved audiences around the world with his musicianship. His playing has been described as having “expressive colour” and “sonorous presence” (Beethoven Society of Europe). Mr. Baker is a First Prize Winner of the 2016 Young Concert Artists International Auditions, at which he was the recipient of three special performance awards including the Bridgehampton Chamber Music Festival Prize, the Embassy Series Prize, and the Hayden’s Ferry Chamber Music Series Prize. He will make his U.S. recital debuts in the 2017-2018 Young Concert Artists Series at Merkin Concert Hall in New York, supported by the Peter Jay Sharp Concert Prize, and at the Kennedy Center in Washington, DC, underwritten by the Alexander Kasza-Kasser Concert Prize. He holds the John French Violin Chair of Young Concert Artists."















Tuesday, January 30, 2018




LINCOLN CENTER

Alice Tully Hall
Chamber Music Society of Lincoln Center

Brahms & Dvořák

Michael Brown - Piano
Wu Han - Piano
Chad Hoopes - Violin
Paul Huang - Violin
Matthew Lipman - Viola
Dmitri Atapine - Cello

Dvořák - Selected Slavonic Dances for Piano, Four Hands (1878, 1886)
Brahms - Trio in C minor for Piano, Violin, and Cello, Op. 101 (1886)
Brahms - Selected Hungarian Dances for Piano, Four Hands (1868, 1880)
Dvořák - Quintet in A major for Piano, Two Violins, Viola, and Cello, B. 155, Op. 81 (1887)

"The musical and personal friendship between Brahms and Dvořák is the stuff of legend. This pairing brings to life the creative energy that reverberated between the German neo-classicist and the champion of Czech folk music, producing a glowing array of classical music’s most essential works."



"Not all the great works of music that we treasure and enjoy hearing in ever-new interpretations here at CMS were composed in artistic isolation. Although it’s enchanting to imagine composers in their ivory towers of idealism and unadulterated vision, at times even the most independent of geniuses was influenced, inspired, or in some cases even intimidated by their contemporaneous colleagues.

Haydn and Mozart, Beethoven and Schubert, Mendelssohn and Schumann, Shostakovich and Britten, all worked in each other’s light, and their music, if closely examined, bears here and there bits of the spirit (if not the notes) of their doppelgänger composers.

Perhaps the most storied, and certainly touching, of these composer relationships was the one between the composers on today’s program. It was extraordinary for many reasons: first, Brahms was famously critical of other musicians, and his acid remarks and assessments of those around him are the stuff of legend; second, Dvořák’s and Brahms’s music are, for the most part, not really similar in the large picture, Brahms’s being the culmination of the German classic/romantic tradition and Dvořák’s the quintessential nationalistic voice of Bohemia, inherited from Smetana.

But each had something to admire in the other: Brahms said he would give anything to be able to write a melody of the naturalness and charm of Dvořák, and Dvořák actually sent his manuscripts to Brahms for corrections in his counterpoint and other technical matters. Dvořák was a devout Catholic; Brahms an atheist. Dvořák a happy family man, Brahms a loner who renounced marriage at an early age. But none of their external differences prevented the mutual admiration, and in some sense a dependency that turned out to be the wellspring for some of the world’s most beloved musical creations."





Friday, January 19, 2018




LINCOLN CENTER

Alice Tully Hall
Chamber Music Society of Lincoln Center

Homage to Schubert

Schubert - Sonata in A major for Violin and Piano, D. 574, Op. 162 (1817)
Schubert - Selected Lieder for Baritone and Piano
Isak Berg - Se solen sjunker (The Setting Sun) for Voice and Piano (1824)
Schubert - Trio No. 2 in E-flat major for Piano, Violin, and Cello, D. 929, Op. 100 (1827)

"The “Prince of Song” takes center stage for a performance of treasured masterpieces. A seamless juxtaposition of Schubert’s most memorable lieder with his quintessential chamber works makes obvious why the shy, diminutive Viennese composer became one of the titans of music."















Wednesday, January 17, 2018




CONCERT

Carnegie Hall
Royal Concertgebouw Orchestra

Wagner - Prelude to Act III and Good Friday Spell from Parsifal
Bruckner - Symphony No. 9

"Parsifal, Wagner’s final opera, is a majestic work that reaches heavenly heights in its spiritually transcendent third act. Wagner was Bruckner’s idol, and the sweeping breadth and tonal language of the older composer inspired much of his music. At the time of his death, Bruckner had only completed three movements of his Ninth Symphony, but what he left is compelling and deeply touching. His symphony ascends from a musical primordial haze to a finale that explores new harmonies and peace in its quiet closing benediction.

This evening, the Royal Concertgebouw Orchestra presents two works of the late 19th century that are underpinned by profound spiritual themes. There is also a strong connection between their composers, Richard Wagner and Anton Bruckner. Although a symphonist and not an opera composer, Bruckner nevertheless worshipped Wagner and was deeply inspired by his music dramas. Wagner, in response, honored Bruckner’s then-controversial symphonies.

Both Wagner’s Parsifal and Bruckner’s Ninth Symphony are the composers’ last works. Wagner was lucky enough to be able to complete his opera, but Bruckner died before he could give his Ninth its fourth and final movement. Thus, the Ninth concludes with its magnificent Adagio, which makes for an extraordinarily effective ultimate statement.

Although Wagner was not a believing Christian, he filled Parsifal with religious themes and symbols, both Christian and Buddhist. A fervently devout Catholic, Bruckner made all his symphonies—and especially his Ninth—epic spiritual journeys toward union with God."









Tuesday, January 16, 2018



PERFORMANCE

Merkin Hall
Tuesday Matinées

Verona Quartet

Jonathan Ong - violin
Dorothy Ro - violin
Abigail Rojansky - viola
Jonathan Dormand - cello

Haydn - Quartet in B-flat Major, Op. 50, No 1
Shostakovich - Quartet No. 3 in F Major, Op. 73
Ravel - Quartet in F Major
"Outstanding ensemble of young musicians…Cohesive yet full of temperament…vibrant, intelligent."
— New York Times

Recognized as “thoughtful, impressive musicians” by Cleveland Classical, the Verona Quartet is a winner of the 2015 Concert Artists Guild Competition. In just three years, the ensemble has earned a stellar reputation for delivering a “sensational, powerhouse performance” (Classical Voice America) every time they take the stage. Musical America recently selected the group as “New Artists of the Month,” further setting the Verona Quartet apart as one of the most compelling young quartets in chamber music. Watch the Verona Quartet perform.








Thursday, January 11, 2018




LINCOLN CENTER

David Geffen Hall
New York Philharmonic

Susanna Mälkki - Conductor
Baiba Skride - Violin

Tchaikovsky - Violin Concerto
Esa-Pekka Salonen - Helix (New York Concert Premiere
Debussy - La Mer

Susanna Mälkki, Musical America’s 2017 Conductor of the Year, leads the Philharmonic in La Mer, a richly layered seascape of glistening sounds — from iridescent light dancing on peaceful waters to the dramatic crashing of waves. Also, on the program: Esa-Pekka Salonen’s Helix (an “exuberant showpiece” — The New York Times), and Baiba Skride (“effortless virtuosity and intensity” — Sunday Times) interprets Tchaikovsky’s ravishing Violin Concerto, one of the most beloved in the repertoire.





Saturday, January 6, 2018




THEATER

Acorn Theater
Shadowlands

"The Unlikely, True Love Story of C.S. Lewis and Joy Davidman"

"From the producers of The Screwtape Letters, The Most Reluctant Convert, The Great Divorce and Martin Luther on Trial comes Shadowlands, the unlikely and true love story of renowned Oxford scholar and Christian apologist C.S. Lewis and the much younger Joy Davidman, a divorced Jewish New Yorker, former Communist and Christian convert."

"The smart, brash Joy bursts into Lewis’ sedate, middle-aged life and upends it. Lewis is as shocked as anyone to discover that he and Joy have fallen deeply in love – and then almost immediately he must contend with the equally deep pain of losing her when she is diagnosed with terminal cancer. Funny, poignant and insightful, Shadowlands — also an Oscar®-winning film — is a moving portrait of love and loss, faith and doubt, as inspired by Lewis’ own A Grief Observed."





Shadowlands

Beautifully subtle and sensitive revival of the play about the unexpected love affair between British theologian and writer C. S. Lewis and American Joy Abramson.





Daniel Gerroll, Robin Abramson and Jack McCarthy in a scene from the revival of William Nicholson’s “Shadowlands” (Photo credit: Jeremy Daniel)
Victor Gluck, Editor-in-Chief
Victor Gluck, Editor-in-Chief
Daniel Gerroll’s nuanced and layered performance turns the revival of Shadowlands, the play about the unexpected love affair between British middle-aged theologian, professor and writer C. S. Lewis and American Joy Davidman, into a beautifully subtle and sensitive story. This first New York revival of the biographical drama originally seen on Broadway in 1990 and then as a film in 1993 is a heady mixture of faith, doubt and philosophy, and affection, love and romance. In the hands of director Christa Scott-Reed for Fellowship for Performing Arts, Shadowlands is a quite moving story of the power of love and tragedy to thaw out a man who had devoted his life to intellectual and spiritual pursuits and avoided his emotional needs.
Best known today for The Chronicles of Narnia series, in his own time C.S. Lewis was an admired Anglican theologian, lecturer and author of such books as Mere ChristianityThe Screwtape LettersSurprised by Joy, and The Problem of PainShadowlands tells his own story from 1953 – 1960. A complacent bachelor as an Oxford Don with his regimented life at the college high table with other men, Jack (as he is known by his friends) often gives public lectures on “If God loves us, why does He allow us to suffer so much?” To the amusement of his older brother Major Warren “Warnie” Lewis with whom he has shared a house for 20 years, he begins a correspondence in New York with Joy Davidman, wife of author William Gresham and the only woman he has known whose intellectual acumen mirrored his own.
When she shows up in Oxford with her eight year old son Douglas for tea, Jack wonders what this “Jewish Communist Christian American” will be like, but is charmed by her ready wit and supple perceptiveness. Like himself she is a late convert to the Christian faith after both having been atheists. He invites her and Douglas to spend Christmas at his and Warnie’s home in Oxford. When her husband writes that he has fallen in love with someone else, she has to go home and deal with the divorce.

Dan Kremer, Sean Gormley, Daryll Heysham and John C. Vennema in a scene from the revival of William Nicholson’s “Shadowlands” (Photo credit: Jeremy Daniel)
Although Jack does not return Joy’s obviously ardent feeling for him, he finds he misses her companionship greatly. When she returns after the divorce, he agrees to marry her in name only to legalize her status in Britain. And then she is diagnosed with a virulent form of cancer, and the thought of losing her upends the life that Lewis has known all during his prior years. Suddenly his professed beliefs on pain and suffering, love and happiness no longer work. Experience is not only a great teacher but an agent for working on the human heart.
In depicting the Lewis/Davidson relationship, Gerroll runs the gamut of emotions from intellectual elitism to deep affection and friendship to passionate love. His modulated performance as Jack Lewis speaks volumes of emotions beneath the surface making C.S. Lewis a very appealing character. He is extremely convincing and moving as a man who finds he is “surprised by Joy,” to make use of the title of his early spiritual autobiography. Some will find Robin Abramson’s performance as Joy Davidman too aggressively New York; however, her very brashness and outspokenness makes an interesting contrast to the stuffy, regulated Oxford life that Jack has been leading and she represents a breath of fresh air. As the play goes on, the longer Joy remains in England, the less intrusive and forward she seems to be.
As Jack’s staid, placid brother Major Warnie, John C. Vennema is both warm and reticent as a man who has also lived without female companionship all of his life. Sean Gormley is amusing as an acerbic Oxford Don who can be accused of being both misogynistic and anti-American. Dan Kremer is sympathetic as the Reverend Harry Harrington, part of Jack’s Oxford circle. Alternating with Jacob Morrell in the role of Joy’s unemotional eight year old son Douglas, quite a reader, Jack McCarthy (at the performance under review) is fine as the unemotional but inquisitive little boy who wants the events in Lewis’ The Magician’s Nephew to be true in order to save his mother. Jacob H Knoll, Daryll Heysham and Stephanie Cozart give excellent support in a series of small roles.

Robin Abramson and Daniel Gerroll in a scene from the revival of William Nicholson’s “Shadowlands” (Photo credit: Jeremy Daniel)
Kelly James Tighe’s simple but elegant unit setting captures the feeling and look of old Oxford as well as a house inhabited only by men. The costumes by Michael Bevins are redolent of the conservative 1950’s when men wore vests and ties and women wore dresses and somber suits in solid colors. The soft lighting by Aaron Spivey depicts a world where one lives with broken boilers and the sun shining rarely. John Gromada’s original music and sound design is entirely appropriate for the academic English setting of the fifties. Claudia Hill-Sparks is responsible for the voice and dialect for the British and American accents.
William Nicholson’s Shadowlands is one of those subtle plays that grows on you as it evolves and weaves its own spell. Based on a true story of one the most improbable love stories of the 20th century, it covers a range of human emotions that should catch you in its web. Under Christa Scott-Reed’s assured and astute direction, Daniel Gerroll gives a memorable performance as theologian and writer C.S. Lewis. A play of ideas on the meaning and varieties of faith, it is challenging as one has to follow its intellectual and spiritual arguments. However, for discriminating theatergoers, this is an added fillip for more than simple entertainment.












Friday, January 5, 2018




LINCOLN CENTER

New York Philharmonic
Mozart and Tchaikovsky

Jeffrey Kahane - Conductor and Piano
Alisa Weilerstein - Cello

Mozart - Piano Concerto No. 17
Tchaikovsky - Variations on a Rococo Theme
Haydn - Symphony No. 98

"These concerts scheduled for January 4–9 are still scheduled to go on despite predicted winter weather. For updates, please call or email the New York Philharmonic Customer Relations Department at (212) 875-5656 or email customerservice@nyphil.org."


"Tchaikovsky called Mozart the greatest of all composers, and this concert is an audience-pleasing convergence of the two. Jeffrey Kahane is both conductor and soloist in Mozart’s graceful 17th Piano Concerto, and cello virtuoso Alisa Weilerstein joins the Philharmonic for Tchaikovsky’s Rococo Variations, a kind of tribute to Mozart that extends from ravishing to rhapsodic to bravura."











Thursday, January 4, 2018




THEATER

Pershing Square Signature Theater
Mary Shelly's Frankenstein

"The joys and perils of motherhood, the hovering shadow of infant mortality, and the sting of loneliness and rejection merge as Mary Shelley creates her masterwork, Frankenstein. The Creature that Dr. Frankenstein produces, an assemblage of disparate elements, coalesces into a monster with a human soul. His horrific appearance conceals the gentlest heart. Through no fault of his own, he is forced to descend into evil deeds. Excerpts from the 1818 edition of Frankenstein, music, and dance interwoven with Mary Shelley's letters and diaries create parallel narratives as both dramas unfold."










Robert Fairchild, left, and Rocco Sisto in “Mary Shelley’s Frankenstein,” an Ensemble for the Romantic Century production. CreditSara Krulwich/The New York Times 

“Mary Shelley’s Frankenstein” begins in a gothic-horror rainstorm, with flashes of lightning and the kind of organ music that sends a tingle up the spine. The teenage Mary Shelley lies sleeping, and in her dreaming mind, a monster jolts to life, electrified.
Hooked up to wires, then writhing on the floor, the creature is a nightmare vision. Yet he has the great fortune to be played by the dancer Robert Fairchild, who possesses a can’t-take-your-eyes-off-him eloquence of movement and facial expression. Mr. Fairchild, who created his own choreography, morphs into a monster of delicate, disarming beauty, an innocent perambulating through a world he flounders to understand.
In this “Frankenstein,” the latest multimedia fusion of classical music and theater from Ensemble for the Romantic Century, Victor Frankenstein’s monster is enchanting, endearing, irresistibly alive. He is, startlingly, a monster to love.
He is also trapped, unfortunately, inside an ambitious but awkward production whose elements battle one another more often than not. Directed by Donald T. Sanders on the Irene Diamond Stage at the Pershing Square Signature Center, the show sounds beautiful. Three musicians perform works by Liszt, Bach and Schubert on oboe (Kemp Jernigan), piano (Steven Lin) and organ and harpsichord (Parker Ramsay), while a glorious mezzo-soprano, Krysty Swann, gentles the anguished monster with song. If this were simply a concert that included dance layered with intricate projection design (by David Bengali) and a moody soundscape (by Bill Toles), it would make quite an atmospheric evening.
But “Mary Shelley’s Frankenstein” is a play of sorts, created by the ensemble’s executive artistic director, Eve Wolf, using excerpts from “Frankenstein” and Shelley’s letters and diaries. It aims to tell a story whose strands refuse to twine smoothly together: the tragic tale of the monster and the grief-scarred life of Shelley, whose mother — the writer Mary Wollstonecraft (“A Vindication of the Rights of Woman”) — died shortly after giving birth to Shelley in 1797. She lost two babies and a toddler of her own and became a young widow when her husband, the Romantic poet Percy Bysshe Shelley, drowned while sailing in a storm.
In a program note, Ms. Wolf writes that she wanted to explore “the connections between the author and her Monster from a woman’s point of view” — links that “may have been unconscious to Mary” but are “glaringly clear” to Ms. Wolf. Beyond the obvious one, the motherlessness of both Shelley and her monster, those connections are not, alas, clear in Ms. Wolf’s text. She puts much emphasis on the deaths of Shelley’s children and on a harrowing miscarriage, but most of that pain was yet to come when Shelley wrote “Frankenstein” in her late teens. So the juxtaposition feels forced and unilluminating.

Photo

Mr. Fairchild and Mia Vallet. CreditSara Krulwich/The New York Times 

Worse, the play’s dialogue has a way of shattering the mood created by the music, Mr. Fairchild’s movement and those projections — falling rain (the monster opens his mouth to taste it) or a swooping bird (he chases it with canine delight) or the roiling waves that swallow Percy Shelley.
The production elements that succeed appear to have received more tender care than those that don’t. The acted scenes are so tonally off that they seem like an afterthought. Mia Vallet’s Mary and Paul Wesley’s Percy are jarringly contemporary in affect and lack a vital spark. Rocco Sisto is more solid as Mary’s father, the philosopher William Godwin, and as a blind man who encounters the monster.
Vanessa James’s set, too, is puzzling, given that it needs to work with the projections. Instead it works against them, particularly in Act II, when the hulking gateway that stands upstage center casts a giant shadow on the mountains and sea projected behind it.
Continue reading the main story
In the program, Ms. Wolf writes that this “Frankenstein,” like her ensemble’s other shows, is intended to be “more than a concert or a play.” It is more than a concert. It is less than a play.
In 1831, nine years after her husband’s death, Mary Shelley wrote the introduction to a revised version of “Frankenstein.” In it, she recalled the challenge that Lord Byron had issued to her and Percy in the rainy summer of 1816. “We will each write a ghost story,” Byron said, and from that prompt came “Frankenstein.”
But Mary Shelley noted that Byron and Percy, a pair of poets, had experienced trouble assembling their tales. Her husband, she wrote, was “more apt to embody ideas and sentiments in the radiance of brilliant imagery, and in the music of the most melodious verse that adorns our language, than to invent the machinery of a story.”
In “Frankenstein,” Ensemble for the Romantic Century is similarly better at poetry than sustained storytelling. For all of the show’s flashes of beauty, it remains a collection of disparate parts, not a whole charged with lightning and brought to animated life.