Friday, December 26, 2014

We walked back



MUSEUM

Museum of Modern Art
5th Floor

Today is any easy day with little to do.  The weather is clear and not so cold.  We are going to the 5th floor of MoMA.  That's where "The Biggies" are.

It is an easy walk up 5th Avenue from 32nd Street to 53rd Street.  That'll take us past Bryant Park and Rockefeller Center.  Lots of Christmas Spirit!

Well, the walk wasn't so easy since the sidewalks are full of people.  The Museum of Modern Art was full of people.  New York City is full of people.

Regarding the lines and "wait time", membership has its privileges.  We go straight to the member's desk and are in.



We walked back to 33rd Street and ate at our "default", always good, predictable restaurant, Petit Poulet.  Across 33rd was this long line to go up to the top of the Em;fire State Building.


Saturday, December 20, 2014




LINCOLN CENTER

Koch Theater
New York City Ballet

The Nutcracker

Choreography by: George Balanchine
Music by: Peter Ilyitch Tschaikovsky

"During the holiday period, the entire Company is immersed in activities surrounding George Balanchine's The Nutcracker. All 90 dancers, 62 musicians, 32 stagehands and two casts of 50 young students each from the School of American Ballet join forces to make each performance as magical as possible. Children of all ages from New York City and the nation fill the David H. Koch Theater to be captivated by the lure of Tschaikovsky's music, Balanchine's choreography, Karinska's sumptuous costumes, and Rouben Ter-Arutunian's magical sets. George Balanchine's The Nutcracker, based on the Alexandre Dumas pere version of E.T.A. Hoffmann's tale, The Nutcracker and the Mouse King (1816), demands a full-scale production.

The elaborate stage elements and intricate lighting unleash the viewers' imagination by providing visual effects that are extraordinarily grand. The most famous example is the one-ton Christmas tree that grows from a height of 12 feet to 40 feet, evoking audible gasps of disbelief from the audience at each performance. Other notable feats include the comic figure of Mother Ginger — 85 pounds and nine feet wide, the costume requires handling by three people once it is lowered by pulley over the dancer's head — as well as the continuous flutter of the purest, crystal-shaped snowflakes (which are swept up and conserved after each performance for reuse).

While these technical achievements are wonderful fun, it is Balanchine's choreography that sustains the ballet through two acts. Act I introduces the characters — the Stahlbaum children, Marie and Fritz, Herr Drosselmeier and his Nephew — and also begins the transition from reality into fantasy with the concluding Snowflake Waltz. Act II offers the complete transformation. We have entered the "Kingdom of the Sugarplum Fairy" and there is no turning back.

George Balanchine's The Nutcracker™ is one of the most complex theatrical, staged ballets in the Company's active repertory. The popularity of the ballet is immense and it provides an unforgettable spark to everyone's holiday season."


Wednesday, December 17, 2014




SERENDIPIDOUS STROLLING

Today I had a medical appointment on the far Upper East Side at Weill Cornell Medical Center.  For us that's a bus ride Eastward down 32nd Street to Madison and then northward to 69th.  From there we walked further Eastward just under a mile to Weill Cornell.  It was pleasant.

For several reasons we decided to walk home and the trip turned into an unexpected adventure.  The goal was to see St. Peter's Evangelical Lutheran Church which was designed by Massimo and Lella Vignelli.  The Vignellis have done many things that you would recognize in many different areas.  They designed the NYC and other cities' subway maps, the guest literature for the National Parks Service, Helvetica Font, and much, much more.

To see Vignelli's designs, go here.

And here.

On the way from Weill Cornell at 70th and York Avenue we walked past Bloomingdale's and saw this...



Then we got to St. Peter's at Lexington and 54th.



When we arrived at St. Peter's we were told they were having a performance in the sanctuary.  There was a jazz combo consisting of a drummer, a bass, and a singer playing the piano.  As we were entering the space a woman singer was playing the piano and singing, "What's a Jew to do during Christmas?"

We then spent some time singing Christmas Carols and songs with those present.



From 54th and Lexington we walked to St. Patrick's Cathedral on 5th Avenue on our way to Rockefeller Center and The Tree.







Going through Rockefeller Center took us past Radio City Music Hall on 6th and 50th.  From there it was a straight walk southward down 6th Avenue to 32nd Street where we live.

We were out for 6 hours and walked 5 miles.











Tuesday, December 16, 2014




LINCOLN CENTER

Alice Tully Hall
Chamber Music Society

Brandenburg Concertos - Bach

"Bach’s Brandenburg Concertos stand at the pinnacle of Baroque musical art. These festive annual performances, called a “New York holiday staple” by The New York Times, are not to be missed."

From 2013's Performance of the Brandenburg Concertos

Saturday, December 13, 2014



PROTESTERS & SANTACONS

Today was "Santacon Day" in New York City.  Thousands of people come into the city in Santa Claus   costumes and go from bar to bar in packs.  As that was going on, a massive street demonstration against the police occurred with, I'm told that thirty thousand demonstrators marched the streets.  The police closed the streets down to the Santacon people and I suppose they stayed in the bars where they had little to do but wear their costumes and drink.

Article and pictures of the Santacon People.

I watched the street demonstration from the front of our building.  It was very impressive; no violence and no destruction of property.  All were very courteous.  It was powerful.































LINCOLN CENTER

Avery Fisher Hall
New York Philharmonic

Christoph von Dohnanyi - Conductor
Martin Helmchen - Piano

Dvorak - Piano Concerto
Dvorak - Symphony No. 9, From the New World

The 1st movement of No. 9

Slow movement with melody we all know.

The joy of the New York Philharmonic is the sound it is able to produce.  In a perverse way, the music and the composers are merely the facilitators to enable the musicians to produce the sound.  The musicians have to have something to play!  Yes, we enjoy the beauty and creativity of the music.  But, we love the sound of the orchestra.

It's like having a beautifully built thoroughbred horse.  You can put any rider and any saddle you wish on it, but watching the horse move is the treat.  Of course, the better the rider, the more fun to watch.

With that point made, when the orchestra plays a particularly interesting and beautiful piece, it all comes together for a wonderful experience of hearing the best perform at their best.  Beautiful music, beautiful sound, wonderful evening.



MUSIC | MUSIC REVIEW
A Steady Hand at the Helm as Heat Turns Into Sparks

Dohnanyi Conducts New York Philharmonic in Dvorak Works

By ZACHARY WOOLFEDEC. 14, 2014
Call it “Demi-Dohnanyi/Dvorak.” After missing the first week of the New York Philharmonic mini-festival named for him, the eminent conductor Christoph von Dohnanyi, evidently recovered from the flu, made it to Avery Fisher Hall on Thursday for the series’s second and final program.

What was supposed to have been an immersion in a single maestro was instead a study in contrasts. The stand-in last week, Krzysztof Urbanski, music director of the Indianapolis Symphony Orchestra, is 32 and athletic on the podium. Mr. Dohnanyi is 85, his presence calm and collected, his gestures (seen on Saturday evening) restrained.

His interpretation of Dvorak’s Ninth Symphony, “From the New World,” was calm and collected, too. Full of individual marks, from the daringly drawn-out pause that followed the subdued opening statement to the wistful elongation of a note in a violin melody, this was steady, secure, sometimes stolid playing. Brass fanfares were emphasized in a way that made the work seem more stentorian than the norm.

Atmosphere was conjured, nowhere more so than at the start of the Largo, when the strings made a hazy, vibrating halo around the classic English horn melody. But details were highlighted at the expense of structural logic, and this ruthlessly forward-moving work meandered.

Programmed by the New York Philharmonic for the third time in three seasons, the Ninth (1893) still clearly packs them in, but the novelty here was Dvorak’s Piano Concerto in G minor (1876), redolent of Beethoven, Brahms, Chopin and Liszt. While it was done in Avery Fisher Hall as recently as June, with Garrick Ohlsson and the Budapest Festival Orchestra, the Philharmonic hadn’t performed it since 1986.

Beyond attracting an audience, it makes sense to play this concerto — with its premonitions of the Ninth’s declarative rhythms and its aching slow melody, like a germinal “New World” Largo — opposite this evergreen symphony. Mr. Dohnanyi’s control was such that in the first movement, the orchestra executed a sudden diminuendo more unified and yet also more subtle than its usual.

He led a performance so streamlined and lithe that it exposed some wiry strings and thin brasses. But this conception was perfectly tailored to the lucid heat of the rising pianist Martin Helmchen, making an impressive Philharmonic debut with these performances.


Mr. Helmchen has a noble bearing and a noble sound, shaping lines as elegant and clean as a Greek temple’s. While Dvorak’s concerto is notorious for the discomfort it induces in its soloists, he never seemed to break a sweat, unleashing chromatic runs and laying down octaves with a style that was technically assured but also sly and nuanced, passing in and out of the orchestral textures. If Mr. Dohnanyi kept the emotional temperature rather cool throughout the concert, Mr. Helmchen provided ample sparks.



I HAVE JUST POSTED THE NYT'S REVIEW OF DANIIL TRIFONOV.

I suggest you go back a few days for his recital at Carnegie Hall.

Friday, December 12, 2014




LINCOLN CENTER

Jazz at Lincoln Center, Appel Room
Basie & The Blues

On December 12-13pianist Eric Reed leads a stellar group of musicians and vocalists to perform in Basie & The Blues in Jazz at Lincoln Center’s The Appel Room. Sets are at 7pm and 9:30pm. The Appel Room, in Jazz at Lincoln Center’s home, Frederick P. Rose Hall, is located at Broadway at 60th Street in New York, New York.

Basie & The Blues features music director and pianist Reed, vocalists Brianna Thomas and Kenny Washington, saxophonists Eric Alexander, and Tivon Pennicott, bass player Yasushi Nakamura and drummer McClenty Hunter performing a selection of tunes made famous by Count Basie, one of the leading figures in the Swing Era.

William James “Count” Basie established 4/4 swing as one of jazz’s predominant styles and solidified the link between jazz and the blues. An architect of the music with an original sound straight out of Kansas City, Count Basie led one of the greatest big bands of all time, featuring an enviable, hard-swinging rhythm section, premiere soloists, and a myriad of hit songs. 

Reed and this group of today’s finest jazz musicians will be “Swinging the Blues” as they honor Basie, the nine-time GRAMMY® award winner and NEA Jazz Master, by highlighting the blues elements that set his orchestra apart. A soulful talent, Brianna Thomas made her Jazz at Lincoln Center debut in 2006. New Orleans native Kenny Washington sings with his own unique Crescent City sound, blending his roots in gospel and jazz virtuosity with modern soul.


https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TnIlc79Ngn8

Above is a video of Briana Thomas.

And below, Count Basie doing "easy work."

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tP1nYX6SITI



Tuesday, December 9, 2014



RECITAL

Carnegie Hall
Daniil Trifonov - Piano

Bach - Fantasy and Fugue for Organ in G Minor, BWV 542 (trans. for piano by Franz Liszt, S. 463)
Beethoven - Piano Sonata No. 32 in C Minor, Op. 111
Liszt - Transcendental Etudes, S. 139
A sensation before he was 20, Daniil Trifonov has proven that he is more than just a young phenomenon. This program includes works by Bach, Beethoven, and Liszt, about which the Financial Times (London) said, “It was in the Liszt … that he came into his own—a titanic performance, projected with a confidence and relish that masked the music’s ferocious technical challenges beneath a mastery of its tempestuous surges and swings of mood; and without a whiff of exaggeration."



New York Times Review

MUSIC
Two Piano Superstars: One Safe, One Daring

Daniil Trifonov and Yuja Wang Play at Carnegie Hall

DEC. 12, 2014
Even at Carnegie Hall, a coincidence like this is rare. Superstar pianists are usually spaced at decent intervals throughout the season, but this week, in a quirk of the calendar, perhaps today’s two most prominent young pianists — Daniil Trifonov, 23, and Yuja Wang, 27 — gave their annual recitals in the space of three nights.

As it turns out, they share the impetuosity of youth and frankly unfathomable abilities, but that’s about all. Mr. Trifonov is all angles at the keyboard, his neck at times horizontal over the keys, his nose inches from his hands, his wrists arched high, then bent low. Inelegance escapes Ms. Wang, despite a tigerish attack, her body shaping rhythms as keenly as her fingers seek them out. Moreover, these two are taking quite different approaches to building a career.

Take the repertoire. Ms. Wang plays it safe. In her previous recitals, she’s stuck mostly with the pyrotechnic fringes of Romanticism. There was more of that to be heard on Thursday, in a program bookended by a brazen assault on Balakirev’s “Islamey” and three daintily but indistinctly conceived Liszt transcriptions of Schubert songs (“Liebesbotschaft,” “Aufenthalt” and “Der Müller und der Bach”).

Admirably, she’s waiting to tackle pieces that she thinks require more maturity, and her rare foray into the Austro-Germanic heartland here showed why. Delicate voicings and sublime colorations could not hide fussiness of detail and structural uncertainty in Schubert’s A major Sonata (D. 959). But those same qualities, along with her innate ear for rhythm, make her Scriabin so satisfying. In a dreamy progression through six of his works, the Fantasy in B minor (Op. 28) had a giddy, oracular haziness; three preludes, a poised regret; and the Ninth Sonata — the “Black Mass” — an enigmatic brutality.

By contrast, Mr. Trifonov is going all in, with a high-stakes bid for greatness. Both pianists may have played the Liszt Sonata at their Carnegie recital debuts, but for Mr. Trifonov, it was merely a warm-up for Chopin’s 24 Preludes. Tuesday’s recital was still braver, as his program of transformations and transfigurations — filmed by medici.tv and available online — took in Liszt’s transcription of Bach’s Fantasia and Fugue in G minor (S. 463), Beethoven’s Opus 111 Sonata, and finally Liszt’s “Transcendental Études” (S. 139).

All of them.

Let’s put that in perspective, shall we? “Islamey” is renowned as one of the most difficult pieces in the repertoire, one so challenging that Scriabin hurt himself trying to play it. Countless pianists play a few of Liszt’s études in concert, perhaps “Harmonies du Soir” or “Feux Follets.” But the entire set is an hour of grueling double octaves, defiant leaps and punishing runs as one ferociously challenging tone poem leads into another. There is nothing like it.

So Mr. Trifonov’s flabbergasting, exhausting achievement was not merely ambitious for a prodigy. According to Carnegie’s archives, Mr. Trifonov is just the fourth pianist to have dared to play the complete dozen in the main hall. José Iturbi attempted the feat in 1930 — the critic Olin Downes called it “a deed of derring-do” — and the hypervirtuosos Jorge Bolet (1967) and Lazar Berman (1976) both managed it in their primes.

A case of talent gone mad, then? A simple show? Absolutely not; this was technical facility used for higher ends. Sure, Mr. Trifonov might have evoked a more distinct atmosphere for each of the poems, especially in “Paysage,” or even reined in the speed for a more visionary grandeur in “Eroica.” But among all of its octaves and precise, almost anatomical detailing of hooves and muscles, the nearly unplayable “Mazeppa” had a remarkable nobility and a demonic, almost tragic valor. “Ricordanza,” an isolated moment of peace, possessed a quiet radiance, its dappled rolls glowing with the faintest of dwindling light.

Yet perhaps the Beethoven best showed Mr. Trifonov’s true potential. Here was an intellectual task, the kind of thing Ms. Wang sensibly avoids. It’s an extreme work, and Mr. Trifonov gave it an extreme reading, (too) full of ideas, from the rolling thunder and fanfares of the introduction to a daringly unwise, somehow effective immoderacy of tempo relationships. Not for him the analytical revelation of structure — rather a feeling of active discovery, the sense of creating, conjuring Beethoven’s structures on the fly. Imagine what he might achieve in years to come.



After mixed start, Trifonov’s Liszt proves trancendental at Carnegie Hall

December 10, 2014 at 12:15 pm



Daniil Trifonov performed a recital Tuesday night at Carnegie Hall. Photo: Dario Acosta
It should come as no surprise that Carnegie Hall was packed on Tuesday for Daniil Trifonov’s solo recital. Just twenty-three years old, the Russian pianist already commands as much star appeal as anyone on the concert scene.

Trifonov’s opening selection, Liszt’s transcription of Bach’s great Fantasia and Fuga for Organ in G minor, was anything but “historically informed.” His touch was elephantine, his rubato unrestrained. The late Christopher Hodgwood would likely have given him a good whack for this.

And that’s fine—this is Liszt-Bach, not Bach-Bach. But this piece just doesn’t work on the piano, or at least Trifonov’s interpretation did not persuade. The opening of the fantasia on organ has a beaming crispness that was lacking in this performance, and the expansive chords in the left hand were muddy. His treatment of the fuga was clear and straighter, but his hands were out of sync by just a hair, which in a complex Bach fuga is liable to drive a listener to distraction.

The pianist appeared to be more at home in Beethoven’s Op. 111 Sonata, even though the piano itself did not sound quite muscular enough to give the work its full, imposing effect. That complaint aside, the first movement was both intelligent and adventurous. In the Maestoso section Trifonov’s playing was smoky, stewing, and while his tempo was deliberate, it was never plodding or methodical. The allegro was certainly con brio, but beyond that it was almost ad libitum—at times, he was in danger of losing the music’s train of thought, but the manic, obsessive temperament in his playing kept it on track.

The Arietta, though, was off. Trifonov’s playing was simple and tender, but his tempo was slower than most, and too slow, frankly, to be cantabile, as Beethoven’s songlike indication instructs.
And then, more Liszt. To say that the second half played to Trifonov’s strengths would be an understatement. Here, at last, was the passionate virtuoso who dazzled a packed house in his first Carnegie Hall recital a year and a half ago. Beginning the Transcendental Études, his “Preludio” was swirling and suave, almost nonchalant in its showmanship, a wonderful teaser of things to come.
This was thrilling, jaw-dropping playing, and the highlights were many. He showed off stunning dexterity in “Mazeppa,” and his interpretation had a certain “cavalry dash” about it (odd, given that its subject is a young man tied to a horse as punishment, but convincing nonetheless).

There was an ethereal glow to “Feux follets,” as well as sparkling, impish wit. And the sheer power he was able to summon in some of these movements was astounding—forget the “Mannheim Rocket,” a few of Trifonov’s roaring crescendi had the thrust of a Boeing engine. But this was not all just bombastic, flashy Liszt—this was also sensitive and intelligent Liszt. The floating, blooming haze of “Ricordanza” was gorgeous to hear, almost making one believe there were a cello somewhere playing obbligato.

After teasing the audience by bowing tantalizingly close to the bench a few times, Trifonov finally acquiesced and played an encore. It was a rarity, “Alla reminiscenza” from Nikolai Medtner’s Forgotten Melodies I, gleaming and thoughtful, so soft you could hear the clicking of the keys. Nobody but nobody can make a keyboard whisper like Daniil Trifonov.


- See more at: http://newyorkclassicalreview.com/2014/12/after-mixed-start-trifonovs-liszt-proves-trancendental-at-carnegie/#sthash.BRarzcNW.dpuf


Saturday, December 6, 2014




LINCOLN CENTER

Metropolitan Opera
Il Barbiere di Siviglia

"In Bartlett Sher’s effervescent production of Rossini’s most popular opera, Isabel Leonard is the beautiful and feisty Rosina, who won’t be kept under lock and key. Lawrence Brownlee is her conspiring flame, Almaviva, and Christopher Maltman is the omnipotent barber, Figaro. Michele Mariotti conducts.

"Lawrence Brownlee makes a dashing Almaviva, singing with a focused, ardent tenor. Isabel Leonard is a pitch-perfect Rosina, cute but sharp clawed, dispatching Rossini's dizzying runs and ornaments with stenciled precision. Maurizio Muraro owns the role of Bartolo, his diction flawless in the rapid-fire patter arias... [Conductor Michele Mariotti] led an attentive, febrile performance from the orchestra that showed meticulous attention to small details." (New York Times)

This year marks the first time The Barber of Seville has been performed at the Metropolitan Opera. Of course, the Rossini favorite has been a part of the Met’s repertoire since the opera house opened in 1883, but it has always been performed in its original Italian. Well, that’s not quite true. Within ten years of the opera’s premiere here, the great diva Adelina Patti was interpolating renditions of "Home, Sweet Home" and "The Last Rose of Summer" into her Act II lesson scene. (When the opera ended, she would re-appear and offer "Comin’ Thro’ the Rye" as an encore.) But this season is the first time the opera itself has been given in English.

Bartlett Sher’s riotous new production premiered in 2006, and two years later the idea was born to transform it into a holiday presentation. With Rossini’s score so instantly recognizable, and Sher’s production so colorful and genuinely funny, it seemed like a logical progression from the company’s previous holiday offerings, The Magic Flute and Hansel and Gretel.

The Met has certainly presented other operas in English versions over the years—from Mozart to Johann Strauss—but the practice of using a country’s native language for performances is still far more common in European houses. And in any case, the advent of supertitles deflated the momentum toward operas in translation.

But these performances of Barber have been specifically designed for families. Many, especially younger audience members, will be attending their first opera. Unused to reading supertitles and unable to understand Italian, they will, we hope, be brought closer to the intrigues and upsets, the bluster and romance of Rossini’s sublime comedy. Comic operas work better in translation. In tragic operas, the music carries the drama and creates its emotional force. Comedy is more dependent on wordplay and sight gags, on surprise arrivals and hilarious exits. Listening to things as they happen allows the audience to be a part of the fun.

In the opera world, ideas take time to gestate—productions are planned and contracts are signed years in advance. And this one was no different. It wasn’t until a year after Peter Gelb first had the idea that the Met asked if I would both adapt and translate the opera for a family audience at holiday time. Another year passed before a team was assembled and work actually began.

Two people from the Met were essential in this project—the house’s dramaturg, Paul Cremo, with his keen dramatic instincts and intelligent ear, and Dennis Giauque, a veteran member of the Met’s music staff, who guided the musical setting of the new English text every note of the way. The three of us worked for another year to prepare a score to show the singers.

We had been asked to shorten the opera to 90 minutes—about the length of just Act I in the opera’s original version. But there is a difference between a "cut" opera, where whole sections are simply lopped off, and a "condensed" version, where the twists and turns of the plot and the emotional nuances of the characters are kept but poured into smaller containers. We did have to sacrifice some familiar moments—from pages of the overture to all of Don Basilio’s celebrated aria "La calunnia." We carefully studied the videotapes of Sher’s production to make sure that, with cuts, there was still enough time to move scenery around, enough time for characters to get on and off stage.

The process of making this English Barber involved countless second thoughts and further revisions. The director signed off on it a year ago, then the singers checked to make sure the new words suited their voices. More revisions. Considering that in 1816 it took Cesare Sterbini just 12 days to write the libretto and Rossini another 13 days to set it, our version was certainly slow in coming. But that was because we wanted to be sure to capture all the brilliance of the original in language that Met audiences will understand, laugh with, and cherish. —J. D. McClatchy

Monday, December 1, 2014




PERFORMANCE

Merkin Hall
What Makes it Great? - Beethoven

Beethoven's Appassionata piano sonata - Igal Kesselman - Piano

"In Beethoven’s time, the Appassionata Sonata was an incredibly radical, cutting-edge, avant-garde work that left most listeners baffled, dazed and confused, yet today the piece has become completely acceptable, mainstream concert fare. How did this happen? How did this wildly radical music get domesticated, and can we rehear this piece as the wildly revolutionary work it was for Beethoven’s contemporaries? Join Rob Kapilow as he explores this iconic masterpiece to see what makes it tick, and what makes it great." 

http://www.kaufmanmusiccenter.org/mch/event/what-makes-it-great-beethovens-appassionata-sonata#sthash.kTo0wAMC.dpuf

We have attended only one previous performance of this series.  The venue is packed and the presentation is really fun, interesting, and enlightening.  It is a wonderful hour of breaking the composition into its parts and then hearing it performed by a world class pianists.

Here is a performance by another artist with the score to follow.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QImFm4Y_QPM