Operas & ballets 1998-2013 (40 is the new 40/2)

Tonight is the second performance of Ferenc Erkel Istvan Kiraly (King Stephen) at the Margaret Island Open Air stage. Almost by the time we start the second half of the performance (right after the August 20 Festivities fireworks) Duna TV (Hungarian Public Media’s only satellite channel) starts the broadcast of yesterday’s performance. (21:35 local time) This is a nice occasion to list all the operas, musical theater works and ballets I have conducted in the last 15 years. My own operas are not included here.
Side note: being 40 does not feel any different than being 39. 🙂

Operas:
Bartok: Bluebeard’s Castle
Erkel: King Stephen
Peter Eotvos: The Three Sisters
Peter Eotvos: Radames
Gounod: Romeo and Juliet
Ligeti: Le Grand Macabre
Emil Petrovics: C’est la guerre
Puccini: La Boheme
Rossini: La Cenerentola
Gyorgy Ranki: The King’s New Clothes
Schoenberg: Erwartung
Verdi: Masked Ball
Wagner: Lohengrin

Fully Staged Ballets:
Bartok: The Miraculous Mandarin
Dohnanyi-Seregi: Variations on a Nursery Song
Prokofiev: Rome and Juliet

Musical Theater:
Bartok: Cantata Profana (fully staged)
Ligeti: Aventures & Nouvelle Aventures
Peter Eotvos: As I Crossed a Bridge of Dreams

40 is the new…

No, 40 is not the new 20. 40 is 40. Although I don’t think that #40 is any more important than #39 or #41(I remember doing a concert -being somewhat rebellious and silly at the same time- called “Gregory Vajda is 26 yo”) yet at age 40 I can’t totally escape thinking about what is behind and what is ahead. So to keep this light yet informative and hopefully blog-worthy I decided to list all the orchestras and ensembles I had the pleasure to conduct since I started my conducting career (my first real professional appearance dates back to 1998)
[Planning to write some more posts similar to this in the coming year.]
USA
Atlanta Opera
Baltimore Symphony
Camerata Houston
Charlotte Symphony
City Music Cleveland
Grand Rapids Symphony
Grant Park Orchestra
Houston Symphony
Huntsville Symphony
ICE: International Contemporary Ensemble
Kalamazoo Symphony
Los Angeles Philharmonic
Louisiana Philharmonic
Memphis Symphony
Milwaukee Symphony
Milwaukee Chamber Orchestra
Music in the Mountains Festival Orchestra
Omaha Symphony
Orchestra of St. Luke’s
Oregon Symphony
Philadelphia Orchestra
Saint Paul Chamber Orchestra
Santa Barbara Symphony
Santa Rosa Symphony
Seattle Symphony
Symphony Silicon Valley
Texas Festival Orchestra
Third Angle New Music Ensemble
Toledo Symphony
Vancouver Symphony

CANADA
Calgary Philharmonic
Edmonton Symphony
Kitchener Waterloo Symphony
Les Violons du Roy
Montreal Opera
Montreal Symphony
Orchestre Metropolitain du Grand Montreal
Toronto Symphony
Winnipeg Symphony

THE AMERICAS
Orquesta Sinfonico de Nacional Costa Rica
Simon Bolivar Youth Orchestra of Venezuela

EUROPE
Ensemble Intercontemporain
Ensemble Laboratorium
Hungarian State Opera
Hungarian Radio Symphony
Klangforum Wien
MAV Symphony Orchestra
Pannon Philharmonic
Savaria Symphony
UMZE New Music Ensemble
Vienna Philharmonic

AFRICA
Cairo Opera

International Bartok Festival Opening Concert

The last concert of the season for me is coming up at the International Bartok Festival in Szombathely, Hungary.
As a clarinet- and later as a conductor-student I have participated many times at the master courses of this signature new music festival. It was here about 20 years ago when I first met Peter Eotvos.
http://www.eotvospeter.com
I also studied with Gyorgy Kurtag here and listened to lectures of Gyorgy Ligeti.
I was invited as a professor of the conducting master course in 2009 and this summer I am doing the opening concert of the festival with the Savaria Symphony Orchestra as a guest conductor. Live concert broadcast by the Hungarian Radio can be streamed here:
http://www.mr3-bartok.hu

Bartok: Wooden Prince Suite
Ligeti: Mysteries of the Macabre (Bence Horvath -trumpet)
Eotvos: Cello Concerto Grosso (Miklos Perenyi -cello)
Kodaly: Hary Janos Suite

More information about the program of the festival is available here:
http://www.bartokfestival.hu

Music in the Mountains Summer Fest 2013 Second Weekend

“Gregory’s Musical Bookclub” tomorrow at Nevada Theater with great writers, Molly Fisk and Louis B. Jones reading their prose and poems to live music by Gershwin, Carmichael, Leroy Anderson, Bernstein, Copland, John Williams
“One Vision, The Music of Queen” with MIM Festival Orchestra and Jeans ‘n Classics on Saturday
http://www.jeansnclassics.com
Shostakovich Symphony #9 & Beethoven Symphony #9 on Sunday afternoon
Check out this website for details and tickets
http://www.musicinthemountains.org

Music in the Mountains Summer Fest 2013 First Weekend

First concert of SummerFest 2013 tonight.
Ravel: Le Tombeau de Couperin, Rodrigo: Concierto de Aranjuez (Gyan Riley-guitar), Bizet: Symphony in C
Saturday morning: Free Family Concert, Mozart: Magic Flute Overture, Britten: Young Persons’ Guide To The Orchestra
The fun and amazing band Three Leg Torso is playing a show in the evening.
Sunday: Glazunov: Summer, Mussorgsky: Pictures at an Exhibition (original solo piano version: Aleksander Korsantia, piano), Chopin: Piano Concerto #2 (Aleksander Korsantia, piano)
Check out the details here:
http://www.musicinthemountains.org

Lohengrin dress-rehearsal

Tomorrow is the day of the dress-rehearsal for Wagner’s Lohengrin at the Palace of The Arts as part of The Budapest Wagner Days. First performances on June 9 & 16.
Here is the wonderful cast:
Lohengrin: Istvan Kovacshazi
http://www.haydnrawstron.com
Elsa: Ricarda Merbeth
http://www.ricardamerbeth.de
Telramund: Anton Keremidtchiev
http://www.dietschartists.com
Ortrud: Linda Watson
http://www.lindawatson.net
King Henry: Peter Fried
http://www.bach-cantatas.com

Opera-Symphony, Anti-Anti Opera and the missing link

Busy 6 weeks ahead in Budapest, Hungary. I am starting with the final classical subscription concert of the MR Symphony Orchestra (Hungarian Radio Symphony) at Palace of the Arts. The program includes two symphonies numbered 9, one by Shostakovich and one by Beethoven. Two very different “Number Nines” juxtaposed. Now that I am doing Beethoven’s Choral Symphony three times in three months (April: Huntsville, May: Budapest, June: Music in the Mountains, California) I rediscovered the operatic, theatrical side of the final movement of this titanic piece for myself. (BTW I always thought that the Funeral March of Eroica was “music for a play”, just like Egmont) The famous opening lines by the bass-baritone
“O Freunde, nicht diese Töne!”(“Oh friends, not these tones!”)
written in recitativo style set the tone for this very special Rescue Opera called “The Last Movement of Beethoven Nine”.

http://www.mupa.hu

As part of a now decade old tradition the Palace of the Arts remembers the great composer Gyorgy Ligeti on (or around) his Birthday. He would be 90 years old this year. The time has come for Ligeti’s only opera, well his Anti-Anti-Opera as he called it to be performed as part of the Hommage To Ligeti series. I’ll be the conductor of the concert performance of the 1997 Salzburg Version of The Macabre at the helm of the Pannon Philharmonic in cooperation with
Neue Oper Wien
http://www.neueoperwien.at
and Amadinda Percussion Group
http://www.amadinda.com

Here is the summary of the story of this Anti-Anti-Opera
http://www.guardian.co.uk
Link to the Palace of the Arts production
http://www.mupa.hu

Now it seems that I could just move into the Palace of the Arts for the next couple of weeks. (BTW check out the architecture on their website. It is a gorgeous building.) After finishing the Ligeti project I dive into a “Real Opera” at last. As part of the internationally known Budapest Wagner Days I get to conduct Lohengrin semi-staged.
http://www.mupa.hu
The great thing about being a conductor, or a musician in general is that you get to wear many hats. From Beethoven through Ligeti to Wagner: one feels like an actor playing different characters. You are only as good an actor as much you can be yourself in the role you are playing. Studying Lohengrin is giving me great pleasure. Just like I re-discovered the operatic nature of Beethoven 9 for myself I did just make a discovery about Wagner’s romantic “Knight on a Swan” tale. Learning this opera made me realize how organically Wagner’s artistry is rooted in German musical theater tradition. It might sound like a cliche or a no-brainer to many (or to all who knows even a little about W) but it is different knowing something from your studies and actually living it as a musician. NOW I see (and feel) that Lohengrin is the “Missing Link” (along with The Flying Dutchman and Tannhauser of course) or rather the straight path between Weber’s Freischutz and Tristan und Isolde.

Ligeti 90
Wagner 200
Vajda 39 and One Lucky Guy with great pieces to conduct between now and mid June.

The Shostakovich-Beethoven and the Ligeti performances will be streamed live by the Hungarian Public Radio at
http://www.mr3-bartok.hu

A personal note on today’s concert

It happened to me again. I created a concert program a year and a half ago, and by the time I get on stage to conduct it, it gets a new meaning. The concert program is “wiser than its creator” and it definitely means more than just the sum of its pieces. Honestly, it is chilling, mysterious and somewhat scary to perform today’s program on the week of the Boston Marathon bombings.

Kernis: Musica Celestis
Bernstein: Chichester Psalms
Beethoven: Symphony #9

As a musician and the Music Director of the Huntsville Symphony I will dedicate this concert to the memory of the victims of the Boston bombings. We will also remember all the heroes of the horrific events. We must remember that there were, there are so many people who helped when it was most needed. We do what we can as musicians. The program is built like a huge “crescendo”. We’ll remember the victims with the slow, celestial opening. Chichester Psalms is a piece of music to help us cope with our loss and to “sing out loud” everything what goes through your mind in the aftermath of the events. And finally Beethoven’s Ode to Joy is our long journey from horrors and doubts to consolation, to hope and to the joy that is being born from the compassionate acts of good people.

Seasons of Santa Barbara

It’s the season of The Seasons. Conducting the Santa Barbara Symphony for the first time this week. Program includes: Vivaldi 4 Seasons and Glazunov The Seasons
See details at the SBS website:
http://www.thesymphony.org/2012-2013-season/


Here are some other “seasons” classical music videos for your enjoyment
Seasons of Buenos Aires by Astor Piazzolla

The American Four Seasons by Philip Glass

Piccolo Concerto and Rite of Spring in Costa Rica

Ready for my trip to San Jose, Costa Rica. My first ever trip to Central America and my debut with
Orquesta Sinfonica Nacional
http://www.osn.go.cr
Concerts on Friday and Sunday
Program:
Allen Torres: Tres Acuarelas (see the orchestra’s website about the composer)
Lowell Lieberman: Piccolo Concerto
See blog post by Crysania4 from 2010 with YouTube links to the piece
http://crysania4.livejournal.com

And of course it is still the 100th Birth-year of Good Old Rite of Spring. He has not aged a minute since his birth, I got to tell you that.