Sunday, December 18, 2016




CHRISTMAS

By living within Mid-Town, we are literally within walking distance of so much of what makes New York City so attractive.  Last night on the way to the recital we walked through Rockefeller Center to see the tree, the light show on the facade of Saks 5th Avenue, St. Patrick's Cathedral, and the windows on the stores along 5th Avenue.  It's a nice neighborhood!












Saturday, December 17, 2016




LINCOLN CENTER

Alice Tully Hall
Great Performers

Christian Gerhaher - Baritone
Gerold Huber - Piano


All-Mahler Program

Die Einsame im Herbst, from Das Lied von der Erde (1908–09)

Sieben Lieder aus letzter Zeit
Blicke mir nicht in die Lieder! (1901)
Ich atmet’ einen linden Duft (1901)
Um Mitternacht (1901)
Liebst du um Schönheit (1902)
Ich bin der Welt abhanden gekommen (1901)
Revelge (1899)
Der Tamboursg’sell (1901)

Wo die schönen Trompeten blasen, from Des Knaben Wunderhorn (1898)

Der Abschied, from Das Lied von der Erde (1908–09)

A flavor of Gerhaher singing Mahler...


“One of the greatest proponents of the German lied tradition.”—New York Times on Christian Gerhaher

One of our goals in moving to New York City was to learn about and learn to appreciate a wider range of art and music.  German lieder is now a new, acquired taste for us.

"Called “the most moving singer in the world” (Telegraph, U.K.) and widely considered the successor to lieder legend Dietrich Fischer-Dieskau, Christian Gerhaher presents an all-Mahler program in which artist and repertoire transcend the limits of time. For this unique recital, the German baritone sings excerpts from Mahler’s “Song of the Earth,” a “symphony of songs” by a man bidding farewell to the complex beauty of existence. He also explores Mahler’s renowned Rückert-Lieder, brooding, intimate settings of text by the lyrical poet Friedrich Rückert."




Gustav Mahler’s mature songs divide fairly neatly into two periods that transition during the summer of 1901, as he turned 40: Early lieder inspired by the anthology of folk poetry Des Knaben Wunderhorn (“The Youth’s Magic Horn”) and later ones setting the elevated poetry of Friedrich Rückert. At first overtly, and later in subtler ways, many of these lieder are intimately connected to Mahler’s symphonies, the other genre commanding his attention.

Mahler’s great synthesis of song and symphony came in one of his last works, Das Lied von der Erde (“The Song of the Earth”), which he called a “Symphony for Tenor and Alto (or Baritone) Voice and Orchestra.” It consists of six extraordinary songs para- phrased into German from 8th-century Chinese poems, the second and sixth of which frame the program this evening.

Mahler’s lieder are best known today in their orchestral guises, but most exist both in piano and orchestral versions; which he com- posed first varied from case to case. The songs project a distinctive flavor appropriate to their accompaniment—the piano versions are not pale reductions of orchestral splendors, the orchestral songs not overblown expansions of intimate utterances. Tonight’s concert offers the relatively rare opportunity to hear some of Mahler’s supreme lied achievements with piano accompaniment.










Tuesday, December 13, 2016




RECITAL

Merkin Hall
Young Concert Artists

Tomer Gewirtzman - Piano

Couperin - Selections from "Pieces de clavecin"
Liszt - Sonata in B minor, S. 178
Corigliano - Fantasia on an ostinato
Schumann - Fantasy in C major, Op. 17

On almost every occasion these "Young Artist" are simply astounding.  That was certainly the case this evening.

"Poetic Israeli pianist ... Winner of the 2015 YCA International Auditions, the Chopin Competition for Young Pianists in Tel Aviv, and Gold Medalist at the 2014 Wideman International Piano Competition in Louisiana. A favorite soloist with the Israeli Philharmonic, the Jerusalem Symphony, and the New Haifa Symphony ... Appearances at Pianofest in the Hamptons, and at the Aspen Music Festival, where he won the Concerto Competition. He held Juilliard's Kovner Fellowship."




Monday, December 12, 2016




PERFORMANCE

Merkin Hall
What Makes It Great?

Shostakovich's String Quartet No. 8

The Attacca String Quartet was wonderful.  The violist is from Texas!

The string quartet, Attacca, that performed the Shostakovich...

Attacca playing Haydn...

The meaning of Shostakovich’s greatest chamber work, an emotionally wrenching piece he called his “ideologically depraved quartet,” has been contested for more than 50 years. Written in just three days in a white-hot burst of inspiration after visiting the bombed-out portions of Dresden, the quartet was officially dedicated to the victims of fascism and war. But did Shostakovich actually intend it as veiled criticism of Soviet rule meant to undermine the Communist regime? Or as a requiem for himself, a powerful testament to his own uniquely personal experience?





"The piece was written shortly after two traumatic events in the life of the composer: the first presentation of debilitating muscular weakness that would eventually be diagnosed as amyotrophic lateral sclerosis,[1] and his reluctant joining of the Communist Party. According to the score, it is dedicated "to the victims of fascism and the war"; his son, Maxim, interprets this as a reference to the victims of all totalitarianism, while his daughter Galina says that he dedicated it to himself, and that the published dedication was imposed by the Russian authorities. Shostakovich's friend, Lev Lebedinsky, said that Shostakovich thought of the work as his epitaph and that he planned to commit suicide around this time.[2]

The work was written in Dresden, where Shostakovich was to write music for the film Five Days, Five Nights, a joint project by Soviet and East German film-makers about the bombing of Dresden in World War II.

The quartet was premiered in 1960 in Leningrad by the Beethoven Quartet. In the liner notes of the Borodin String Quartet's recording of the quartet in 1962, critic Erik Smith wrote: The Borodin Quartet played this work to the composer at his Moscow home, hoping for his criticisms. But Shostakovich, overwhelmed by this beautiful realisation of his most personal feelings, buried his head in his hands and wept. When they had finished playing, the four musicians quietly packed up their instruments and stole out of the room."



Wednesday, December 7, 2016




RECITAL

Carnegie Hall
Daniil Trifonov - Piano

Schumann - Kinderszenen
Schumann - Toccata, Op. 7
Schumann - Kreisleriana
Shostakovich - Prelude and Fugue in E Minor, Op. 87, No. 4
Shostakovich - Prelude and Fugue in A Major, Op. 87, No. 7
Shostakovich - Prelude and Fugue in A Minor, Op. 87, No. 2
Shostakovich - Prelude and Fugue in D Major, Op. 87, No. 5
Shostakovich - Prelude and Fugue in D Minor, Op. 87, No. 24
Stravinsky - Three Movements from Pétrouchka

Combining consummate technique with rare sensitivity, Russian pianist Daniil Trifonov has made a spectacular ascent to classical stardom. Since winning first prize at both the 2011 International Tchaikovsky Competition and the 2011 Arthur Rubinstein International Piano Master Competition at the age of 20, Mr. Trifonov has appeared with the world's foremost orchestras and performed solo recitals in its greatest venues.
The music on this program requires poetry and passion that only a master pianist can deliver. “Daniil Trifonov’s playing has it all … he leaves you struggling for superlatives,” said The Guardian.

Schumann’s Kinderszenen tenderly reflects on childhood, his Toccata is dazzlingly virtuosic, and his Kreisleriana is wildly inventive. Bach’s The Well-Tempered Clavier and Chopin’s Preludes provided the inspiration for Shostakovich’s 24 Preludes and Fugues. Shostakovich’s music, however, is hardly derivative; the composer’s melancholy, acerbic wit, and technical genius shine through. For pure high-octane excitement, it’s difficult to top Stravinsky’s Three Movements from Pétrouchka, a touchstone for any pianist.





ROBERT SCHUMANN  Kinderszenen (Scenes from Childhood), Op. 15 

Schumann composed the deceptively uncomplicated miniatures that make up Kinderszenen (Scenes from Childhoodin part as a love letter to his future wife, Clara Wieck. Although he called them “as light as a bubble,” Clara saw clearly that he had invested these “scenes of touching simplicity” with the emotional turmoil of his inner life. 


ROBERT SCHUMANN  Toccata, Op. 7

Written when the composer was planning a career as a concert pianist, the short but notoriously difficult Toccata, Op. 7, was designed to show off Schumann’s virtuosity and stamina. On one occasion recorded in his diary, he played the work through 10 times in a single sitting.


ROBERT SCHUMANN  Kreisleriana, Op. 16

German Romantic writer E. T. A. Hoffmann, who created the memorable character of the half-crazed Kapellmeister Johannes Kreisler, was Schumann’s soulmate and literary counterpart. Kreisleriana pays homage to its namesake in the form of eight fantasy-like pieces that also reflect the contrasting personalities of the composer’s fictional alter egos: the impulsive Florestan and the dreamy Eusebius.


DMITRI SHOSTAKOVICH  Selections from 24 Preludes and Fugues, Op. 87

Inspired by Bach’s 48 canonic preludes and fugues, Shostakovich’s Op. 87 is the culmination of his lifelong admiration for the Baroque composer’s contrapuntal mastery. Although they were initially conceived as technical exercises, Shostakovich’s preludes and fugues are among his most intricately wrought and richly expressive creations.   


IGOR STRAVINSKY  Three Movements from Pétrouchka

Pétrouchka is the second of three wildly successful ballets inspired by Russian folklore that made Stravinsky a household name in Paris before World War I. After the war, the composer collaborated with Arthur Rubinstein to create the brilliantly virtuosic piano suite Three Movements fromPétrouchka based on episodes from the ballet.








Fleet Fingers and Red-Eye Flights: A Pianist Is a Study in Stamina



Daniil Trifonov at Carnegie Hall, practicing on a piano he chose after trying out two. 
Even with his astonishing technique, the Russian pianist Daniil Trifonov looked as if he needed all his youthful energy to get through his formidable recital program at Carnegie Hall on Wednesday. During the fiendishly difficult final work, Stravinsky’s Three Movements From “Petrouchka,” there were fleeting moments when the slender, boyish Mr. Trifonov, 25, threw his arms so forcefully into pummeling fortissimo chords that his body lifted maybe six inches off the piano bench.

But there is another kind of stamina involved in a touring career, especially when you are, like Mr. Trifonov, one of the most in-demand pianists of the new generation: the stamina of physical endurance and mental focus.

I observed some of his arduous preparation for this recital on Monday afternoon, when he tried out pianos at Carnegie Hall (eventually picking a German-made Steinway) and practiced for a couple of hours. He had just arrived from California, where, on Sunday afternoon, he played the last of four performances of Rachmaninoff’s daunting Third Piano Concerto with the Los Angeles Philharmonic. On Sunday night, he took a red-eye flight to New York, arriving on Monday morning at the Battery Park City apartment he shares with his fiancée, who works in publishing.

He had Carnegie to himself for two hours in the afternoon. After going through his program — works by Schumann and Shostakovich, in addition to the Stravinsky — he sat for an interview with me a block away at Petrossian Cafe, where he ordered a salad (no dressing) and ate only half. Then he took the subway to his apartment to get in more practice before meeting Sergei Babayan, his former teacher, at the Juilliard School for an evening coaching session.

That’s what you call a work-filled 36 hours.

But Mr. Trifonov told me he was planning to cut back his performing schedule, not just to have more leisure but also to resume his other love: composing. “I have several projects now which are on hold,” he said. Last month, he played his own piano concerto with the Kansas City Symphony. He is writing a double concerto for violin and piano, joined by strings, that he will play with the violinist Gidon Kremer and the Kremerata Baltica chamber orchestra. (Last season, he and Mr. Kremer gave a splendid duo recital at Carnegie Hall.)

During his practice session at Carnegie, Mr. Trifonov sometimes stopped to rotate his shoulders and loosen up. He usually takes more care to do stretching and yoga, but this afternoon he felt, he said, “hunched from excessive sitting” on his flight. He also finds swimming beneficial. “I actually practice in the swimming pool,” he said. “The resistance helps to release the upper arms.”

It was especially fascinating to watch him practice Schumann’s suite “Kreisleriana,” a teeming 30-minute masterpiece. Mr. Trifonov would repeat a rhapsodic flight — not to nail it technically, it seemed clear, but rather to highlight inner voices or bring out a milky coloring as harmonies mingled, what he described as paying “attention to resolutions,” “the way sounds connect.”

Playing through the “Russian Dance” movement from Stravinsky’s “Petrouchka,” which begins with a giddy riot of propulsive parallel chords for both hands, Mr. Trifonov kept repeating passages, even though they sounded flawless. He explained later that he was trying to keep these steely chords crisp and light, demonstrating by playing the passage on the tabletop at the cafe.

Those chords sure sounded crisp and light during the sold-out recital. Before the Stravinsky, he gave somberly compelling accounts of five of Shostakovich’s set of 24 Preludes and Fugues, a monumental work inspired by Bach. Mr. Trifonov said it took him a whole summer to learn these mercurial, complex pieces. Most pianists would say learning, and memorizing, Shostakovich’s enormous score in a single summer seems quick work.

He began the recital with Schumann’s tender “Scenes of Childhood” suite, played with delicacy and poetic refinement. At times his sound was almost too intimate for a hall the size of Carnegie, though the subtleties of the performance come though vividly on the medici.tv video, which was broadcast live; a recording is available on the site for three more months.

Trifonov the young conqueror of the keyboard revealed himself with a breathless account of Schumann’s joyous Toccata, a notorious finger-twister. The brilliant and poetic components of his artistry found ideal balance in his magnificent performance of “Kreisleriana.”

After two encores by the Russian composer Nikolai Medtner, Mr. Trifonov closed the keyboard’s lid to indicate that he had played his last piece. Many fans then went to a lounge area, where Mr. Trifonov signed copies of “Transcendental,” his stunning recent recording of Liszt’s complete études.

It took five grueling days to record this two-disc set. For a week afterward, he told me, “I couldn’t practice at all.”

I don’t wonder.



Trifonov’s artistry provides a historic piano night at Carnegie Hall




 Daniil Trifonov performed Wednesday night at Carnegie Hall. 




The combination of a Russian pianist, the music of Robert Schumann, and Carnegie Hall has produced historic moments in the 20th century record of classical music performances.

Now in the 21st century, we have a new entry, Daniil Trifonov’s recital on Wednesday night, a profoundly musical and expressive experience of music by Schumann, Shostakovich, and Stravinsky.

With almost a decade’s concertizing experience already behind him at age 25, Trifonov’s career is still young enough that he is in the process of discovering the piano repertory and what he can do with it. And with the range and depth of his talent already, one can only guess at the possibilities to come.

His playing and nationality make him a peer of Horowitz and Richter but his musical manner marks him as a descendent of Wilhelm Kempff. Kempff was a poetic player—as is the younger musician—in the particular way of illuminating some intimate corner of a score. Like the best of Kempff, Trifonov’s playing has an internal glow.

This comes through via his extraordinary technique. It is rare to hear Schumann played with both passion and clarity. The former tends to swamp the latter in terms of rhythm and the articulation of middle-range voices. But this is just what Trifonov did in the Kinderszenen and Kreisleriana, with a burning Op. 7 Toccata in between.

His grace and clarity combined for a ravishing effect. Every note was bright, whether the dynamic was high or low, the attack hard or soft. Trifonov also produced exceptional, unexaggerated, legato phrasing, a smooth arc connecting from first note to last while each individual attack was as transparent as an ice cube.

Trifonov has the exceedingly rare ability to produce several different colors from what is, by design, a monochromatic instrument. He can also produce as much explosive fire and power as anyone on the contemporary classical piano scene. All these elements complement each other, none takes precedence, and each serves to channel an expression that is honest. There is not a Trifonov “interpretation” so much as a close, intimate partnership with the composer, and the myriad ideas in the music.

The lovely opening of Kinderszenen, “Von fremden Ländern und Menschen,” was a case in point. Trifonov played it with a child’s naïve warmth and lyricism, somehow discarding all the emotional and intellectual complications of adult life. More than a pianist, Trifonov was an actor. Each shifting mood in the piece sounded spontaneous and exactly right, and though Trifonov’s variations in tempo were wider than most, there was never the hint of mannerism. The penultimate “Kind im Einschlummern” ached with tenderness.

His performance of Kreisleriana was incredible. In key stretches of “Sehr lebhaft,” and the closing “Schnell und spielend,” he played the opposing left and right hand parts not only with drastically different dynamics, but completely different phrasing, simultaneous parts played with a level of interpretive independence in each hand that seemed impossible.

To say this was a revelatory way to hear Schumann is an understatement. It seemed more like hearing Schumann himself, or rather the Florestan and Eusebius sides, playing in duet, even wrestling with control of the overall musical personality.

The sense of anticipation was then piqued for the second half, which opened with five of Shostakovich’s Op. 87 Preludes and Fugues. This music has as much poetry as Schumann, but it is the poetry of form and structure—it wasn’t safe for Shostakovich to indulge in personal rhetorical gestures, so his meanings come through via counterpoint and misdirection.

The only complaint was that we only heard five of the pieces, numbers 4, 7, 2, 5, and 24. Trifonov’s honesty made much of this almost unbearably powerful. Shostakovich’s formal constructions were a way for him to contain thoughts and feelings that were socially and politically dangerous. Trifonov laid these out piece by piece, as if each note was a brick set in a musical edifice that, once built, gave a clear outline and meaning to the things that Shostakovich could not say aloud.


Trifonov’s rhythmic control was a vital part. The slow Prelude No. 4 unfolded with an absolute, though never mechanical, regularity of quarter note to quarter note. This produced the uncanny feeling of a grim task meant to produce the extraordinary music of the Fugue. The Prelude and Fugue No. 2 were unusually fast but as smooth and even as No. 4. Trifonov’s selections descended in fifths. He worked his way down through the playful D major of No. 5 to the gravitas of the concluding D minor of No. 24 with a fascinating understatement, an emphasis on the technical brilliance of Shostakovich’s fugal writing rather than on biographical narrative. The music sounded complex yet free of rhetoric.



To finish, he powered through Three Movements from Petrouchka. Trifonov showed unsurpassed physical and mental agility. Not even Yuja Wang produces such force at the keyboard. Reduced for piano, the original music becomes incredibly demanding: there are simultaneous, competing rhythms and phrases, and wild swings between expressive and thematic ideas. Trifonov used these to thrill, charm, and seduce, especially in his stunning playing of the “Dance russe” and the quiet pathos of the “Chez Pétrouchka.”

While this is a pianistic showpiece, it comes from a powerfully dramatic score, and Trifonov’s focus was always on what was inside the notes.

The same went for the two encores, excerpts from two of Medtner’s Fairy Tales. Op. 26, No. 3, was as soulful and songful as a lullaby, and the virtuosic “Campanella,” Op. 20, No. 2, had a romanticism held aloft by a swaggering left hand.








Tuesday, December 6, 2016




PERFORMANCE

Merkin Hall
Tuesday Matinées

Manhattan Chamber Players

Mendelssohn - Octet in E flat major, Op. 20 (1825)
Shostakovich -Two Pieces for String Octet, Op. 11 (1925)
Chris Rogerson - Shadows Lengthen (2015)
Ernest Chausson - Concert for Violin, Piano, and String Quartet in D major, Op. 21 (1891)



“Absolutely stunning performances – luminous, probing, deeply personal” (Washington Post)

Manhattan Chamber Players is a collective of top Prize Winners at the Banff, Concert Artists Guild, Fischoff, Melbourne, Naumburg, Osaka, Primrose, Queen Elisabeth, Rubenstein, Tchaikovsky, Tertis and Young Concert Artists Competitions. Formed by Artistic Director Luke Fleming, MCP is comprised of an impressive roster of musicians who all come from the tradition of great music making at the Marlboro Music Festival, Steans Institute at Ravinia, Music@Menlo, Yellow Barn and Kneisel Hall Chamber Music Festivals and Perlman Music Program, and are former students of the Curtis Institute, Juilliard School, Colburn School, New England Conservatory, and Yale School of Music.



Sunday, December 4, 2016




LINCOLN CENTER

Alice Tully Hall
Solo Bach

Paul Jacobs - Organ
Anne-Marie McDermott - Piano
Ani Kavafian - Violin
Colin Carr - Cello
Jason Vieaux - Guitar
Tara Helen O'Connor - Flute


Bach - Partita in A minor for Flute, BWV 1013 (after 1723)
Bach - Suite No. 3 in A major for Cello, BMV 1009 (c. 1720)
Bach - Prelude and Fugue in D major for Organ, BMV 532
Bach - Suite in E minor for Guitar, BMV 996 (after 1712)
Bach - Sonata in G manor for Violin, BMV 1001 (1720)
Bach - English Suite in A minor for Keyboard, BMV 807 (before 1720)



"How can it be that in almost 300 years, no one has surpassed Johann Sebastian Bach as a composer of music for solo instruments?

While it is true that Bach was the greatest keyboard artist of his
day, his level of violin playing is unknown beyond his ability to lead orchestras from the concertmaster’s chair. It is additionally reported that Bach played brass instruments, the contrabass, cello, oboe, bassoon, horn, and most likely flute and recorder. While we expect his works for organ and cembalo to be of lofty heights, you will soon hear that Bach’s ability to compose for the violin, cello, lute, and flute was also truly beyond comparison.

What is equally astounding is how long Bach’s solo works remained in relative obscurity. Most of this music was not published until the mid-19th century. His suites for solo cello were regarded as instrumental exercises until the great Catalan cellist Pablo Casals discovered them in a music shop in Barcelona in 1889. It was not until 1901 that he performed one of them, and not until 1930 that he felt ready to record the cycle. Such was the reverence Casals had for Bach’s solo suites, and history has proven that profound respect justified beyond doubt.

Bach’s works for solo instruments serve as lasting confirmation of his incomparable skill and artistry. The works we perform today, and
the sets from which they are selected, hold little chance of ever being surpassed or equaled. CMS is immensely proud to present this first-of- its-kind performance by a cast of artists who bring profound dedication, long experience, and instrumental mastery to our stage.

The power of Bach is felt as deeply in his solo works as in his music for large ensemble. CMS presents a rare opportunity to hear six extraordinary artists performing works of astounding ingenuity, revealing Bach at the height of his compositional skill as he mines each instrument’s unique expressive potential."






Thursday, December 1, 2016




LINCOLN CENTER

David Geffen Hall
New York Philharmonic

Mozart - Symphony No. 31, Paris
Mozart - Flute Concerto No. 2
Mozart - Exsultate, jubilate
Mozart - Symphony No. 39

Bernard Labadie - Conductor
Robert Langevin - Flute
Ying Fang - Soprano

Listen to the flutist discuss the Mozart piece...

"This all-Mozart concert is bookended with the Paris Symphony, as popular today as when Parisians heard and raved about it for the first time, and the Symphony No. 39, a beautiful mix of grandeur and intimacy, seriousness and sunshine. In between: the enchanting Second Flute Concerto, with Philharmonic Principal Flute Robert Langevin as soloist, plus one of Mozart’s most delightful vocal works."


Wednesday, November 30, 2016




LINCOLN CENTER

Alice Tully Hall
Great Performers - Salzburg Mozarteum Orchestra

Matthew Halls - Conductor
Radovan Vlatković - Horn

Beethoven - Overture to The Creatures of Prometheus
Mozart - Horn Concerto No. 3
Mozart - Symphony No. 41 ("Jupiter")

A program worthy of the gods: Beginning with Beethoven’s fiery Prometheus Overture, Austria’s beloved Salzburg Mozarteum Orchestra—founded by the widow and sons of the composer himself—makes its 175th anniversary appearance in New York’s pristine Alice Tully Hall. The ensemble continues with its namesake’s rarely performed E-flat major Horn Concerto, followed by his soaring “Jupiter” Symphony.

Here is the artist several years ago playing the Mozart horn piece in this concert...

The soloist were perfection!  Judging much of his performance is subjective but I can objectively tell you he never craved or splattered a note during the concerto and two encores.  His attack was perfect throughout his performance.  Subjectively, I thought he was great.





Tuesday, November 29, 2016




THEATER

St. James Theater
Something's Rotten!

Visit the Renaissance in this hilarious musical about the Bottom Brothers, who are desperate to write a hit play in the shadow of "The Bard."

Set in the 1590s, brothers Nick and Nigel Bottom are desperate to write a hit play but are stuck in the shadow of that Renaissance rockstar known as “The Bard.” When a local soothsayer foretells that the future of theater involves singing, dancing and acting at the same time, Nick and Nigel set out to write the world’s very first musical. But amidst the scandalous excitement of opening night, the Bottom Brothers realize that reaching the top means being true to thine own self...and all that jazz.



Ingenious, outrageous and irresistible!
Review by Marilyn Stasio from Variety


Yep, this is a blockbuster! A deliriously entertaining new musical comedy that brings down the house!
Review by Joe Dziemianowicz from New York Post







Sunday, November 20, 2016




THEATER

Theater for a New Audience
The Servant of Two Masters - Carlo Goldoni




“★★★★ Elegant… Energetic… Broadly colorful…
masks, songs and snatches of anachronistic improvisation.” – Adam Feldman, Time Out New York

“Mr. Epp’s frenetic, knockabout performance is IMPECCABLE.” – Charles Isherwood, The New York Times

“Christopher Bayes’s much-lauded ‘Servant,’ had its premiere in 2010 at Yale Repertory Theater and has played across the country since then. The critic Peter Marks, in The Washington Post,
described the show as ‘deliriously happy-making,’ taking pains to note that it is not the sort of ‘calcified frivolity’ that so often gives commedia a bad name.” – Laura Collins-Hughes, The New York Times

“The Servant of Two Masters is a wondrous thing, a campy, happy romp.” – Joel Benjamin, TheaterPizzazz

“Hilarious, rowdy…Raucous entertainment.” – Lore Croghan, Brooklyn Daily Eagle

“Delightful… Screamingly funny… A comic masterpiece! The Servant of Two Masters is thoroughly enjoyable and deliriously well-performed.” – The Brooklyn Paper


The Servant of Two Masters is a timeless 18th century Italian comic masterpiece by Carlo Goldoni about a servant so hungry he takes on two jobs to survive. In this contemporary American adaptation, no two performances are the same. The actors improvise along with the written text in the style of commedia dell’arte. Masks, playful costumes, and original music by Aaron Halva and Christopher Curtis create a fresh, bold, surprising event.

Theatre for a New Audience is thrilled to present the New York Premiere of this award-winning Servant, first produced in 2010 by Yale Repertory Theatre and toured nationally. Goldoni’s classic inspired the 2012 Broadway hit, One Man, Two Guvnors.

The heart of this Servant is its acting and staging. Steven Epp, who plays the title role, and director Christopher Bayes, have honed a “brilliant, new-vaudeville style” that is “smart” and “unhinged” (The New York Times). The entire cast displays fresh and vibrant comedic talents and includes TFANA veterans Liam Craig, (The Killer), Andy Grotelueschen (The Two Gentlemen of Verona, The Taming of the Shrew,Cymbeline), and Emily Young (The Two Gentlemen of Verona, Cymbeline), as well as Allen Gilmore, Eugene Ma, Orlando Pabotoy, Adina Verson, and Liz Wisan.




Servant of Two Masters


Servant of Two Masters

"I'd like to see how I'll manage to serve two masters." Illustration from The Complete Comedies of Carlo Goldoni (1830)
Written by Carlo Goldoni
Date premiered 1746
Original language Italian
Genre Commedia dell'Arte


Servant of Two Masters (Italian: Il servitore di due padroni) is a comedy by the Italian playwright Carlo Goldoni written in 1746. Goldoni originally wrote the play at the request of actor Antonio Sacco, one of the great Truffaldinos in history. His earliest drafts had large sections that were reserved for improvisation, but he revised it in 1753 in the version that exists today. The play draws on the tradition of the earlier Italian Commedia dell'arte.
Plot

The play opens with the introduction of Beatrice, a woman who has traveled to Venice disguised as her dead brother in search of the man who killed him, Florindo, who is also her lover. Her brother forbade her to marry Florindo, and died defending his sister's honor. Beatrice disguises herself as Federigo, (her dead brother), so that he can collect dowry money from Pantaloon (also spelled Pantalone), the father of Clarice, her brother's betrothed. She wants to use this money to help her lover escape, and to allow them to finally wed. But thinking that Beatrice's brother was dead, Clarice has fallen in love with another man, Silvio, and the two have become engaged. Interested in keeping up appearances, Pantalone tries to conceal the existence of each from the other.

Beatrice's servant, the exceptionally quirky and comical Truffaldino, is the central figure of this play. He is always complaining of an empty stomach, and always trying to satisfy his hunger by eating everything and anything in sight. When the opportunity presents itself to be servant to another master (Florindo, as it happens) he sees the opportunity for an extra dinner.

As Truffaldino runs around Venice trying to fill the orders of two masters, he is almost uncovered several times, especially because other characters repeatedly hand him letters, money, etc. and say simply "this is for your master" without specifying which one. To make matters worse, the stress causes him to develop a temporary stutter, which only arouses more problems and suspicion among his masters. To further complicate matters, Beatrice and Florindo are staying in the same hotel, and are searching for each other.

In the end, with the help of Clarice and Smeraldina (Pantalone's feisty servant, who is smitten with Truffaldino) Beatrice and Florindo finally find each other, and with Beatrice exposed as a woman, Clarice is allowed to marry Silvio. The last matter up for discussion is whether Truffaldino and Smeraldina can get married, which at last exposes Truffaldino's having played both sides all along. However, as everyone has just decided to get married, Truffaldino is forgiven. Truffaldino asks Smeraldina to marry him.

The most famous set-piece of the play is the scene in which the starving Truffaldino tries to serve a banquet to the entourages of both his masters without either group becoming aware of the other, while desperately trying to satisfy his own hunger at the same time.
Themes

One of the main themes of this play is found in the character development of Truffaldino. As mentioned above, he is always hungry. That is his action: it is what he wants in the play. Yet, the play does not end when he finally gets a meal and a full belly; it ends with a kiss shared between him and Smeraldina. Truffaldino, it is implied, was hungry for love. Themes of confrontation between young and old are presented through confrontations between Dr Lombardi and his son, Silvio, as well as Pantalone with his daughter, Clarice.
Characterization

The characters of the play are taken from the Italian Renaissance theatre style Commedia dell'arte. In classic commedia tradition, an actor learns a stock character (usually accentuated by a mask) and plays it to perfection throughout his career. The actors had a list of possible scenarios, each with a very basic plot, called a canovaccio, and throughout would perform physical-comedy acts known as lazzi (Italian lazzo, a joke or witticism) and the dialogue was improvised.

This was our artistic bonus as we rode the subway home from Brooklyn.  








Thursday, November 17, 2016




RECITAL

Carnegie Hall
Behzod Abduraimov - Piano


Bach - "Siciliano" from Concerto in D Minor, BWV 596 (after Vivaldi, Op. 3, No. 11; arr. Cortot)
Bach - Toccata and Fugue in D Minor, BWV 565 (arr. Busoni)
Schubert - Moment musical in A-flat Major, D. 780, No. 2
Schubert - Moment musical in F Minor, D. 780, No. 3
Beethoven - Piano Sonata No. 23 in F Minor, Op. 57, "Appassionata"
Prokofiev - Piano Sonata No. 6 in A Major, Op. 82
Balakirev - Islamey

A video of the artist playing the Beethoven heard this evening...

An interview with the artist...

Striking arrangements of Baroque music, poetic miniatures, tempestuous sonatas, and an exotic showpiece are performed by an exciting young pianist who is taking the world’s stages by storm. Behzod Abduraimov has been praised by The New York Timesfor his “fluid finger work … dash and appealing impetuosity.” Cortot’s arrangement of Bach’s "Siciliano" from the Concerto in D Minor, BWV 596, has a stately beauty, while Schubert’s Moments musicaux are understated gems with gorgeous melodies. Beethoven’s “Appassionata” is famous for its stormy outer movements, but the theme and variations that comprise its central movement also fascinate. There are also exciting showpieces by two Russian composers, Balkakirev and Prokofiev.



Review: No Blood Spilled at This Concert (Though It Seemed So)



Behzod Abduraimov performing in his solo piano recital at Carnegie Hall. Hiroyuki Ito for The New York Times 


Before he played the first encore to his brilliant solo piano recital at Carnegie Hall, Behzod Abduraimov pulled out a handkerchief and wiped down the keys.

It was just sweat, his publicist told me later. I’m glad I checked, though. Because at that point, after a finger-twisting, knuckle-shredding performance of bravura pieces, including Prokofiev’s Piano Sonata No. 6 and Balakirev’s “Islamey,” I feared that this 26-year-old whiz from Uzbekistan might have actually shed blood.

I don’t mean to give the wrong impression: There’s nothing gratuitously gladiatorial about Mr. Abduraimov’s playing. Yes, he dispatched “Islamey” faster than anyone I’ve heard, his forearms a hummingbird blur in the grueling passagework. But his swift rise on the concert scene — this appearance on the main Stern Auditorium stage here came less than two years after his recital debut at the intimate Weill Recital Hall — is due as much to his profound musicality as to his power and speed.

Mr. Abduraimov also knows how to build a good program. He opened with Bach, but in rarely heard arrangements: a dreamy Siciliano from the Concerto in D minor (arranged by Alfred Cortot) and Busoni’s transcription of the Toccata and Fugue in D Minor, which, in its original organ version, has entered popular culture as a shorthand for Halloween horror. In his playing Mr. Abduraimov conjured some of the qualities of the organ’s sound, building up block-like dynamics and allowing notes to blur just a little.

The “Moment Musical” in A flat (D. 780) by Schubert, which followed, picked up the lilting dotted rhythm of the Siciliano, but with vulnerability and doubt in place of Bach’s soothing equanimity. Another “Moment Musical,” in F Minor, its momentum chirpy and steady like a windup toy, showed that Mr. Abduraimov knows how to get out of the way of the music, imposing his will in just one brief tease of the tempo.

Behzod Abduraimov - Piano Sonata No. 23 in F Minor, "Appassionata"- Beethoven: Verbier Festival 2016 Video by medici.tv

His maturity was evident in his reading of Beethoven’s “Appassionata” Sonata, which balanced dramatic thrust with a wonderful sense of flow. His sound has an appealing warmth even in the most testosterone-fueled outbursts. And stark dynamic contrasts still feel part of the same epic canvas. Prokofiev’s thorny Piano Sonata No. 6 — in many ways an “Appassionata” updated to reflect the horrors of the 20th century — also became a vehicle for Mr. Abduraimov’s purposeful storytelling and sense of space.

Two encores, Tchaikovsky’s Nocturne in C sharp minor and Liszt’s “La Campanella” étude, were gratefully received by the enthusiastic audience.

Watching Mr. Abduraimov play, I was struck by his undulating torso movements, which look a bit like the chaturanga push-ups in yoga, and seem to make visual his unshaking sense of pulse. His playing reminded me of a conversation I recently had with a musician who offered this definition of talent: open channels. Mr. Abduraimov’s music-making fits that description.









Wednesday, November 16, 2016




RECITAL

Merkin Hall
Young Concerts Artists Series

SooBeen Lee - Violin



A video of her playing...

Another video...

15-year-old Korean violinist SooBeen Lee has been called “Korea’s hottest violin prodigy” (Hancinema). She has already appeared as soloist with every major Korean orchestra, including the Seoul Philharmonic, the Suwon Philharmonic Orchestra, Gangneung Philharmonic Orchestra, Busan Philharmonic Orchestra, Incheon Philharmonic Orchestra, Gangnam Symphony Orchestra, and the KBS (Korean Broadcasting System). She also performed with the Wuhan Philharmonic in China, at the Seoul Arts Center, in the Prime Minister’s office for Ki-moon Ban, Secretary-General of the United Nations, at the Blue House for the King and Queen of Malaysia, and for many state guests in Korea.

This season marks her first U.S. tour, which includes her Washington, DC debut and her New York recital debut on the Young Concert Artists Series, and performances at University of Florida Performing Arts, the Sunday Musicale Series, and Rockefeller University.

Ms. Lee has performed at Festivals including the Chopin Music Festival in Poland, the City of London Festival, the Busan International Music Festival, the Great Mountains International Music Festival, the Seoul Spring Festival, and in Japan at the Ishikawa Summer Music Academy, where she worked with Koichiro Harada.

She won First Prize at the 2013 Moscow International David Oistrakh Violin Competition and First Prize at the 2014 Young Concert Artists International Auditions, where she was also honored with YCA’s Slomovic Prize, which provides support for her Washington, DC debut, the Michaels Award, which provides support for her New York debut, and three performance prizes.

Ms. Lee began studying the violin at the age of four. At eight years old, she won the National Competition of the Korean Chamber Orchestra and the next year, she won First Prize at the Russia International Youth Violin Competition. She made her Seoul recital debut at the age of nine on the Kumho Prodigy Concert Series. Ms. Lee studies with Nam Yun Kim at the Korea National University of Arts.


Saturday, November 12, 2016




LINCOLN CENTER

Jazz at Lincoln Center - Appel Room
Battle of the Big Bands

Tonight's big band battle is a feel-good, dance-up-a-storm, interactive jazz experience akin to those that originated in Harlem's Swing Era landmarks. This special event showcases two of New York's hottest young big bands – together on one stage – in a high-energy evening. Drummer/bandleaders Sammy Miller and Evan Sherman, known to pack the house at Dizzy's Club Coca-Cola Late Night Sessions, will deliver a full sensory experience through fast-paced music, friendly one-upmanship, and a bit of comedy. Both bands are intergenerational all-star groups, and they have repeatedly proven their ability to rouse up a crowd. Join them in The Appel Room for an entertaining night of great music and uplifting companionship.


Friday, November 11, 2016




LINCOLN CENTER

Alice Tully Hall
The Chamber Music Society of Lincoln Center - Mendelssohn's Berlin

Beethoven - Sonata in F major for Cello and Piano, Op. 5, No. 1 (1796)
Haydn - Quartet in F major for Strings, Op. 50, No. 5, "The Dream" (1787)
Bach - Selections from the Musical Offering, BWV 1079 (1747)
Mendelssohn - Quartet in C minor for Piano, Violin, Viola, and Cello, Op. 1 (1822)

For centuries, the energy of Berlin has attracted the world’s most ambitious artists and intellectuals. Long the epicenter of German culture, Berlin’s magnetic influence unites the composers on this special program, dedicated to the musical legacy of Mendelssohn’s home city. From the mature masterwork of J.S. Bach to the youthful, ebullient sonata by Beethoven, CMS presents a vibrant portrait of an immortal capital of music.



    LECTURE

    The Morgan Library & Museum
    Le Conversazioni: Films of My Life

    Phil Jackson and Mary Karr

    Celebrating the relationship between art, literature, and film, this program features Phil Jackson, former head coach of the Chicago Bulls and Los Angeles Lakers, president of the New York Knicks, and author of Eleven Rings, The Soul of Success and Mary Karr American poet, essayist and author of the bestselling memoir The Liars’ Club. They will be discussing some of the films that have inspired their lives and work. Moderated by Antonio Monda, Artistic Director of Le Conversazioni festival.


    Monday, November 7, 2016




    RECITAL

    Marble Collegiate Church
    Marble Organ Anniversary Concert

    Mark Miller - Organ











    LECTURE/RECITAL


    Merkin Hall
    What Makes It Great? - Rob Kapilow

    Beethoven's 1st Symphony
    Featuring the Manhattan School of Music Chamber Sinfonia

    The great composer, conductor and teacher Nadia Boulanger said, “A genius can only be original, therefore a genius need only try to imitate in order to be original.” Intended as an homage to his illustrious predecessors Mozart and Haydn, Beethoven’s First Symphony was, inescapably, original. Host Rob Kapilow explores how this symphony – which launched the symphonic career of the young Beethoven in Vienna in 1800 – honored the Viennese tradition in a voice that was unmistakably original and uniquely his own.


    Rob Kapilow spends the first hour going through the piece telling what makes it great and the second hour the piece is performed without interruption.

    It becomes a wonderfully interesting evening.





    Friday, November 4, 2016




    MUSEUM


    Met Breuer
    Kerry James Marshall: Mastry

    As we so often do, we ride the M4 bus up Madison Avenue to get to our destination.



    This major monographic exhibition is the largest museum retrospective to date of the work of American artist Kerry James Marshall (born 1955). Encompassing nearly 80 works—including 72 paintings—that span the artist's remarkable 35-year career, it reveals Marshall's practice to be one that synthesizes a wide range of pictorial traditions to counter stereotypical representations of black people in society and reassert the place of the black figure within the canon of Western painting.

    Born before the passage of the Civil Rights Act in Birmingham, Alabama, and witness to the Watts rebellion in 1965, Marshall has long been an inspired and imaginative chronicler of the African American experience. He is known for his large-scale narrative history paintings featuring black figures—defiant assertions of blackness in a medium in which African Americans have long been invisible—and his exploration of art history covers a broad temporal swath stretching from the Renaissance to 20th-century American abstraction. Marshall critically examines and reworks the Western canon through its most archetypal forms: the historical tableau, landscape and genre painting, and portraiture. His work also touches upon vernacular forms such as the muralist tradition and the comic book in order to address and correct, in his words, the "vacuum in the image bank" and to make the invisible visible.