Tag: classical

  • Steve Reich: ‘We all wish art could counter the direction of US politics. But it can’t’ – The Guardian

    How did it feel to play with Philip Glass again in 2014 after such a very long time? Was it significant that the first work you performed that evening was Four Organs?
    Phil and I had been at Juilliard together, but much later [in 1967] he came to my concert at the Park Place art gallery in New York and said: “I really like what you’re doing. Would you like to come over and see what I’m doing?” The following year, he wrote Two Pages for Steve Reich, basically taking a set of patterns, repeating them and making them longer, which was the breakthrough for him in the way phasing was for me. After that, we travelled and toured together, shared an ensemble – and then at some point it got a little close for comfort and suddenly my best friend became somebody I didn’t talk to.

    That persisted from the early 1970s until 2014, when Nonesuch Records’ Bob Hurwitz wanted to do something where we shared the evening. He took us out for dinner and I said [to Glass]: “Hi. How are you?” The deal was I’d play a piece of Phil’s and he’d play one of mine. He played Four Organs, which we’d both played on in 1970, and I played Music in 12 Parts, one of the early pieces I’d played in his ensemble. The whole thing went very well and we … we don’t hang out, but it broke the ice and just made things a lot more humane.

  • Der Ring des Nibelungen review – less is more in Regents Opera’s whittled-down Wagner – The Guardian

    But declare it a knockout too. For, although the Regents Ring is a very different experience from Wagner in the opera house, the intensity and involvement is remarkably undiminished and even enhanced. […] With the cycle’s 150th anniversary approaching in 2026, Regents Opera’s Ring is the only British performance of Wagner’s cycle about power and renewal this year. Hats off to them. With deluded megalomania so topical right now, this Ring could hardly be more timely.

  • Hate music practice? How you can learn to love your instrument again in 100 days – Classical Music

    The strange alchemy of #100daysofpractice is how things seem to get better all by themselves. If you play something through a few times carefully, focusing intently on the result – just noticing rather than negatively self-talking – and then leave it, coming back the next day and the next, the chances are it will be better. Consistency is everything. This is a lesson it’s taken me too long to learn. As a teenager I would not pick up my violin all week and then expect to catch up by practising three hours on a Friday night before my lesson at Junior Guildhall the next morning. Tears and tantrums ensued, not to mention frustrated teachers. Of course, it’s not that they didn’t explain this to me, but youth is indeed wasted on the young, and I wasn’t listening.

  • Daniel Barenboim reveals he has Parkinson’s Disease – Classical Music

    Barenboim has stated that he intends to continue working as much as his health allows. His top priority remains securing the future of the West-Eastern Divan Orchestra, which he co-founded in 1999 to bring together young musicians from Israel and Arab nations. Describing the mission of the orchestra, which has been a BBC Proms regular since 2003, Barenboim has observed, ‘It has very flatteringly been described as a project for peace. It isn’t. It’s not going to bring peace, whether you play well or not so well.

  • LPO announces Sky Arts documentary series – London Philharmonic Orchestra

    The series showcases the meticulous preparation and routines of each section of the Orchestra, getting under the skin of the LPO’s talented musicians and processes which combine to create an orchestral masterpiece. Viewers will get to know the players personally, hear their inspiring stories of getting into professional music, see their deep knowledge of their instruments and learn about their specific roles within the Orchestra. Viewers will also hear Gardner and the players’ own insights into Mahler’s detailed score, allowing the listener to fully experience the final performance – which featured 118 musicians, 131 instruments and 200 members of the London Philharmonic Choir – during the fourth episode.

  • Borusan Istanbul Philharmonic Orchestra – Cadogan Hall

    Programme: Schubert Symphony No. 8, ‘Unfinished’; Saint-Saëns Cello Concerto No. 1; Ferit Tüzün Nasreddin Hoca Humoresque; Beethoven Symphony No. 6, ‘Pastoral’

  • Three-armed robot conductor makes debut in Dresden – The Guardian

    Her two performances in the eastern German city are intended to show off the latest advances in machine maestros, as well as music written explicitly to harness 21st-century technology. The artistic director of Dresden’s Sinfoniker, Markus Rindt, said the intention was “not to replace human beings” but to perform complex music that human conductors would find impossible. […] The composer Andreas Gundlach wrote the aptly named Semiconductor’s Masterpiece for 16 brass musicians and four percussionists playing wildly diverging time signatures. Some begin slowly and accelerate while the others slow down. Gundlach told the local public broadcaster MDR that MAiRA’s technical skills ensured the music sounded smooth, “like it came from a single source”.

  • Nixon in China libretto – Opera Arias

    Act One Scene 1: Nixon’s arrival. (The airfield outside Peking. It is a very cold, clear, dry morning; Monday, February 21, 1972; the air is full of static electricity. No airplanes are arriving; there is the odd note of birdsong. Finally, from behind some buildings, come the sounds of troops marching. Contingents of army, navy and air force – 120 men of each service – circle the field and begin to sing “The Three Main Rules of Discipline and the Eight Points of Attention”)