Chamber Music Envy | Kamarazene-irigység

I have had much fine music to conduct, some to write since my last post. I have started publishing monthly about music in a weekly magazine in Hungary. (This means constantly thinking of new topics and ways to put them on paper.) In short, there would be a lot to write about here, but right now I only want to talk about one piece of music, the one that woke up chamber music envy in me. Every instrumentalist knows this feeling (winds more than strings, brass more than woodwinds, etc.). “Oh, what a great piece of music, I wish it was written for my instrument!” I think this, along with wanting to add to the repertoire of your own instrument, contributes most to the making of arrangements. This week I was fortunate enough to join in performing a genius work, Sextet for Strings No.1 for Strings by Johannes Brahms. I made myself useful as a conductor, and indeed, considering the short rehearsal time, we needed one. I have learned a lot by studying this sextet (and No. 2 as well, once I was at it). I’ve learned a lot about where Brahms’ symphonic material is really coming from. Fantastic materials, harmonies, textures: difficult but fair string writing. It is funny knowing that B’s friends did not like his first symphony when it was first played to them (piano version). I guess they knew the Sextets, but perhaps thought that a symphony of similar complexity would do more damage to their friend’s career.
With Beethoven’s Sextet for winds after the Brahms we have successfully finished our strange and at times very challenging COVID19-season here isn Huntsville. We are ready for a season that we can now call “normal” (I mean it in a strictly positive way), starting late September. I have many exciting projects coming up in Europe in the next 6 weeks or so, before I return to the US to conduct at the Round Top Music Festival in Texas. I will keep you posted.

Brácsások a hegedűsökre, bőgősök a brácsásokra, fafúvók a vonósokra, rezesek a fákra féltékenyek. Mindannyian megéltük már karrierünk során azt, hogy kívántuk, bárcsak egy bizonyos zenedarab szerzője a mi hangszerünket is belekomponálta volna művébe. Sokminden történt a múltkori bejegyzésem óta, többek között elkezdtem a Magyar Narancsban havi rendszerességgel zenei tárgyú tárcákat írni Zene hetilapra összefoglaló cím alatt (most aztán már nem csak zene van a fejemben, hanem tárcatémák és szövegfordulatok is). Most mégsem ezekről az eseményekről, csak Brahms I. Vonós-szextettjéről szeretnék itt írni. Karmesterként, a próbák számát redukálandó, becsatlakozhattam ennek a fantasztikus műnek a tegnapi előadásába (ezzel és Beethoven Fúvós-szextettjével zárult a szezon Huntsville-ban). Persze tanulmányoztam a II. Brahms szextettet is, ha már az elsőt játszottuk, és az előadás örömén kívül sokat tanultam arról, honnan is jön Brahms szimfóniáinak az anyaga: a modulációk, témák, textúra, faktúra, és persze a nehéz, de idiomatikus vonós írásmód. Vicces, hogy Brahms I. szimfóniájának a fogadtatása (zongora-letétben) milyen hűvös is volt a baráti körben. Nyilván féltették, meg nem is értették, mindenesetre, mintha nem ismerték volna a vonóshatosokat.
Sikeresen befejeztük (és túléltük!) ezt az őrült COVID-19 szezont itt Huntsville-ban: megtartottuk anközönségüniet, és már áruljuk a jegyeket a következő évadra, amit – ha óvatosan is – de már normális körülmények közé tervezünk.
Az elkövetkező 6 hétben sok izgalmas projekt vár Magyarországon ls Franciaországban, ezekről majd mind be is számolok itt. Utána, június elején pedig visszatérek az USÁ-ba, a texasi Round Top Festival nyitókoncertjén Beethoven Hármasversenyét és IV. szimfóniáját vezényelni.

Do Your Essential Work, and Do it the Best Way Possible! | Alapvető művészetek: megélésről és élésről

My year-closing statements are:
1) It could have been worse
2) Fake News are like Arts
3) Improvisation is everything

OK, let me explain.

I am aware of the horrible fact, that hundreds of thousands of innocent lives were lost, and I know, that even more people are going to die before we take control of this pandemic. Yes, many deaths could have been avoided with more responsible and professional governance (this is true about many other countries, not just the US), and if Western societies had cooperation rather than competition as a shared value. Yes, at points the way lockdowns were managed caused more harm than good, and yes, panic has been the driving force of official response to COVID-19, at least at the very beginning. Yet, despite all this, we could have had it much worse. The virus could have been a much more aggressive one to start with. We could be living before times of modern technology: shared computational power, the Human Genome Project, worldwide distribution networks: indeed, we could be living a 100 years ago, when the Spanish Flu hit. We are surviving. We are adjusting — if not fast enough and perhaps not very well — to our changed environment thanks to science and accumulated human knowledge in not just medicine, but sociology, mathematics, physics and in other sciences.

Yes, we are managing this situation all right despite the newest level of human stupidity on an industrial level: fake news and “alternative truth”. These would be the natural byproducts of all the good things I have mentioned above. Our mindset as a race is behind our actual knowledge of the world by about a 100 years if not more. (Just compare the “wear a mask!”-stories from Spanish Flu- to present-times.) You hear and read stories about people dying of COVID-19 and still not believing in COVID-19. Well, cognitive dissonance was not invented in the 21st Century either, but it has, like everything else, grown into global proportions. Flat Earth Society has members all over the Globe, as we know. Still. This is nothing like the plague or a III. World War. We are lucky, and perhaps, we are also learning — if not fast enough and perhaps not very well — after all.

“Fake news” and “alternative truth” are the products of the human brain: they are the dark side of human imagination, and they are also a response: the reflexes of a person drowning in the water who would pull his rescuer, too, under the water to die. We should be extensively talking about the power of Arts, and how it can be used for good. We can make up stories to save ourselves. We can make up super-heroes who do good, and by doing good in a fictional world THEY, or rather WE can make us better in the real one. We can write music: melodies and rhythms that can help a person to escape the linear-time of our everyday troubles. By helping them “escape”, we are giving our fellow humans a place and time to breathe, to replenish, to push the restart button. Arts are powerful in ways we do not even realize: no doubt, you can cause real harm with the instruments of arts as well, but you can do real good even easier. We, artists have real responsibilities, so do people with money and power who can help Arts work for the better. If you can invent fake enemies, you can invent virtual friends and helpers just as easily. Do the latter one and help your fellow humans to be positive, supportive, sensitive, happy, relaxed.

Most of 2020 did not go as planned, and that tells us one very important thing: improvisation is everything. In every art form improvisation is a basic tool, and it is also true to the support system of arts. Keep in mind: ARTS ARE ESSENTIAL, and you will find the way to provide it, you will find the way to enjoy it, and you will find a way to help artists to help us get back to where we would like to be: in my case that would be a shared live experience in a concert hall, listening to great music performed by great players to a receptive audience. I have had to let many things go this year, just like pretty much everyone everywhere. However, other opportunities, perhaps never before imagined ones, arose. In my case time was made for more composing, planning, finding alternative ways of maintaining precious relationships with my musicians and music-lover friends. Events, important opportunities, were postponed instead of cancelled. This alone shows the importance of what artists do (for You All, not just “for a living”), we, and by we I mean, We All want this. We want to do this. It is important. It is essential. My fellow musicians (artists), keep improvising while keeping your eye on the target! Help others as much as you can, make things work in your area for the better! Art-institutions: postpone, do not cancel! Governments: replace, recalibrate, do not just throw things away, keep it going! To us all: work many times harder on delivering perhaps less than usual, but nevertheless delivering the very thing what you are here for, and for making it better for as many of your fellow human beings as possible. Do your essential work, and do it the best way possible!

At the end of the year I am thankful for many unexpected things: compositions I could finish, new commissions, being asked to judge composition-competitions, doing live concert-, and opera performance-streams, doing socially distanced concerts, finding unusual ways to fundraise. I am thankful for the Artisjus Performing Arts Award. I am thankful for being able to stay safe and feed my family. I am thankful for being part of working for better things, and for preparing — together with every one of you — to return to everything essential and human.

I wish Everyone Merry Christmas, Blessed Holidays, and a 2021 rich in Arts and all the Good Things only we can give each other.

Amit az elmúlt évről mondanék:
1) Lehetett volna rosszabb
2) Az álhírek olyanok mint a művészetek
3) Az improvizáció mindent visz

Akkor kifejtem.

Tudom, hogy százezrek, talán milliók haltak meg úgy, hogy nem kellett volna meghalniuk. Tudom, hogy a közeljövőben még több százezer ember lenne megmenthető. Mindez persze felelős és profi kormányzással (ami itt és most nem ország vagy rendszer függő), és akkor, ha itt nyugaton a szabadverseny helyett mondjuk az egymás iránti felelősség és a kooperáció lennének alapértékek. Érthető, hogy kezdetben a pánik volt a pandémiára adott hivatalos válasz alapja, de ahol ma is halogatnak és nem követik a hozzáértők tanácsát, ott tudatosan hagyják polgártársaikat meghalni. Mindezt számba véve mégis azt mondom, lehetett volna rosszabb is. Maga a COVID-19 vírus lehetett volna agresszívabb (a mutációkra továbbra is figyelni kell!). Élhetnénk 100 évvel ezelőtt is, a spanyol nátha korában, amikor még sem az emberi géntérkép, sem az egész világot behálózó gyógyszerterjesztő hálózatok nem léteztek. Az emberiség alkalmazkodik, talán nem olyan gyorsan és fájdalom nélkül mint szeretnénk, de a felgyűlt közös tudásnak köszönhetően legalábbis eséllyel élünk túl egy pandémiát.

Annak ellenére működni látszik a válságkezelés, hogy most már évek óta élünk együtt az emberi sötétség legújabb vívmányaival, az álhírekkel és az úgynevezett „alternatív valóság”-gal, és mindettől, az legújabb információs technológiáknak köszönhetően, a világ egyetlen pontján sem menekülhetünk. Az álhírek és az „alternatív valóság” az internet korának, és az emberi képzelet árnyoldalának természetes melléktermékei. Attól félek, mint faj, mentálisan még valóban 100 évvel ezelőtt, a spanyol nátha korában élünk. Hallunk megdöbbentő történeteket olyanokról, akik a COVID-19 komplikációiban haldokolva is azt mondják, ez az egész csak ki lett találva. Hiába, a kognitív disszonancia sem mai találmány. Mégis, ez azért nem a III. világháború vagy egy évszázadokkal ezelőtti pestisjárvány. Valljuk be, szerencsénk van, és talán tanuljuk a valóságot olyan sebességgel, ami továbbra is segíthet túlélni. Mindeközben részletesen és folyamatosan kellene beszélnünk a művészetek erejéről, és hogy azt jóra vagy rosszra használjuk. Az álhírek kitalálása, magunknak való bemagyarázása és terjesztése ugyanannak az emberi képzelőerőnek köszönhetőek, amely kreativitásával rengeteg fantasztikus alkotást tud létrehozni, és amely élhetővé teszi a mindennapokat. Nekünk művészeknek, közönségnek, hatalommal és pénzzel rendelkezőknek közös felelősségünk, hogy a művészetek a jóra tanítsanak, és segítsenek az önzés, a hazugság, a gonoszság erői ellen, amely erők persze szintén mi magunk vagyunk.

Nekem sem úgy alakult 2020, ahogy terveztem, de kinek? Az improvizáció minden művészeti ágban alapja az alkotásnak, és most már fontos és elismert alapja a művészeti alkotás feltételei megteremtésének is. Ez úton is köszönöm a szervezőknek, művésztársaknak, a közönség tagjainak, hogy közösen kitaláltuk, és megtaláltuk azokat az utakat, módokat, ahogy zene, tánc, színház — mindannyiunk túlélése érdekében — életben tartható. Mindez nem történhetett volna meg, ha nem vagyunk hajlandóak közösen improvizálni, annak minden bizonytalanságával és szépségével együtt. Köszönöm mindazoknak, akik a helyett, hogy lemondtak volna egy produkciót mindent megtettek, hogy azt online lehessen közvetíteni, akik kitalálták a táv-mozit és a virtuális koncerttermet, akik fáradtságot nem kímélve biztosították szociális távolságtartással megvalósítható események létrejöttét. Mindez nem csak a művészek megéléséről (avagy éhen nem halásáról) szól, hanem mindannyiunk „éléséről” is. Segítsünk egymásnak!

Így, az év végén hálás vagyok a várt és váratlan lehetőségekért: megrendelésekért, zsűrizésre való felkérésekért, élő koncertekért és élő közvetítésekért, videó-beszélgetésekért, zene-felvételekért. Hálás vagyok a halasztásokért a törlések helyett. Hálás vagyok az Artisjus Előadó-művészeti Díjért, mert újból bebizonyosodott, hogy vannak akik odafigyelnek arra amit csinálok, és értékelik azt. Hálás vagyok azért, hogy a családom és én eddig egészségben és biztonságban megúsztuk ezt az őrületet. Maradjon is így. Hálás vagyok mindazoknak, akik segítettek/ segítenek túlélni, és felkészülni a jobb időkre.

Mindenkinek Áldott Karácsonyt, Boldog Ünnepeket, és zenében — különösen élő hangversenyekben — gazdag 2021-et kívánok!

Mozartiana, Little 9, Big 9/ Mozartiana, Kis 9, Nagy 9

Meetings, programming, and a fun Debutant Ball, – the major annual fundraising for the Symphony, organized by the Huntsville Orchestra Guild – were/ are included in my program in Huntsville, before I head back to Budapest. On November 13 I will be conducting the Danubia Orchestra at the Liszt Academy in a program of music by Tchaikovsky, Ustvolskaya and Mozart. Here are the details:
https://odz.hu

After the concert I am back on the plane again to catch my rehearsals and two performances with the Huntsville Symphony Orchestra. On November 17 I will be picking up my clarinet, playing the 2nd clarinet part of Mozart’s Serenade for Winds in c-minor, and listening to a beautiful flute quartet written by the same genius. This will be our, by now traditional, dinner-concert, and our first Casual Classic program of the season. We are back at the Speakeasy for CC1 at Straight to Ale brewery this year.
https://hso.org

On November 22 the HSO will join forces with guest vocalists and the Huntsville Community Chorus to perform Beethoven’s ever-popular 9th Symphony. For the first half of the concert I programmed the little brother of Big 9, composed about 120 years later, Shostakovich’s wartime-defying gem, his 9th Symphony.
https://hso.org
It is going to be a tour de force show both for orchestra and singers.

I often get the question: “But when do you actually compose?” I can tell you exactly: for example right now. (OK, I am taking a break so I can finish this post.) I compose between orchestra projects, meetings, fundraising events and radio interviews. I compose in my head, even when I do not have time to sit down with my laptop. I am excited about the music I am writing right now, and if you read the page called COMPOSITIONS here:
http://http://www.gregoryvajda.com/compositions/
with a little thinking you can figure out, what’s on my drawing board at this moment. However, I like to wait until the piece is finished, then I will post about it plenty. See you around, and come back to read again soon!

Találkozók, megbeszélések, program-tervezés, és a Huntsville Symphony működését támogató legnagyobb éves jótékonysági akció, a Huntsville Symphony Guild által szervezett Debutant Ball történt/ történik most Huntsville-ban. Kb. két hét múlva megint itt leszek, hogy eljátszam a, most már tradicionálisnak nevezhető Vacsora Koncertünk programján, Mozart c-moll fúvósszerenádjának második klarinét szólamát. Elhangzik még ugyanitt Mozart Fuvola-kvártettje is, ezúttal a Straight To Ale sörház egyik termében.
https://hso.org

November 22-én kettő, egy kicsi és egy nagy IX. szimfóniát vezénylek majd. A jelzők természetesen csupán a művek terjedelmére, és hangszerelésére vonatkoznak, hiszen zeneművek zsenialitását biztosan nem a méretük, vagy az apparátusuk határozza meg. Beethoven és Sosztakovics művei adják idei második klasszikus koncertünk programját.
https://hso.org
Nem először vezényelem ezt a darab-párosítást, és remélem, hogy most is tökéletesen kiegészítik majd a művek egymást, és az este folyamán mindkettőről kiderül, mennyire zseniálisak.

A két sűrű amerikai periódus között, november 13-án, a Zeneakadémián lépek fel, ezúttal az Óbudai Danubia Zenekar vendégeként. Az ÓDZ ismét izgalmas műsorra kért fel, benne Csajkovszkij, Usztvolszkaja (még sosem vezényeltem azelőtt!) és Mozart műveivel.
https://odz.hu
A jegyek szépen fogynak, úgyhogy akit érdekel, vegye meg a magáét minél hamarabb!

Be kell valljam, azért komponálok is, (szokták kérdezni, mikor… hát például most) megbeszélések, találkozók, próbák, emailezés előtt és után, sokszor fejben, ha nincs időm a számítőgép elé ülnöm. Blog-honlapom COMPOSITIONS oldalát böngészve nem nehéz kitalálni, most éppen mit komponálok, de a erről majd akkor mesélek, amikor már elkészültem a darabbal.
http://http://www.gregoryvajda.com/compositions/

Addig is, – a térben, és időben – legközelebbi koncerten találkozunk!

Die Mutter liebt den Coffeebrauch, Die Großmama trank solchen auch

Die Katze lässt das Mausen nicht,
Die Jungfern bleiben Coffeeschwestern.
Die Mutter liebt den Coffeebrauch,
Die Großmama trank solchen auch,
Wer will nun auf die Töchter lästern!

The words above are from Johann Sebastian Bach’s Coffee Cantata and they translate as follows

Cats do not give up mousing,
girls remain coffee-sisters.
The mother adores her coffee-habit,
and grandma also drank it,
so who can blame the daughters!

Another piece of music that everybody seems to know about, but that is definitely not performed frequently enough, and under-appreciated despite its humor and musical craft. This short “mini-opera” and Bach’s B-minor Suite for flute and strings were on the program of our 2nd Casual Classics concert this season. We performed in front of a full house at Alchemy Lounge (Lowe Mill Arts and Entertainment) last Sunday. The week before last our 3rd Classical Concert of the season marked the beginning of the Bicentennial Celebration of the State of Alabama in the City of Huntsville. HSO featured its players in Schumann’s Concert-piece for 4 horns and orchestra, and in John Adams’ Absolute Jest for string quartet and orchestra. Beethoven’s 3rd Leonore Overture and Symphony No.8 framed the program in front of a great and enthusiastic house. This week HSO produced 4 kids concerts and a Free Family show with Benjamin Britten’s Young Persons’ Guide to the Orchestra as the main featured composition.
Details in the HSO 2018-19 Season brochure online
http://www.hso.org
On Sunday I am returning to Hungary to start rehearsals with the Hungarian Radio Symphony to record and perform my newest orchestra composition entitled Gloomy Sunday Variations (World Premiere). The other pieces on the program for February 11 at the Grand Hall of the Liszt Academy are: Piazzolla’s Bandoneon Concerto, Stravinsky’s fantastic Petroushka, and another John Adams piece, The Chairman Dances.
http://www.radiomusic.hu

Die Katze lässt das Mausen nicht,
Die Jungfern bleiben Coffeeschwestern.
Die Mutter liebt den Coffeebrauch,
Die Großmama trank solchen auch,
Wer will nun auf die Töchter lästern!

A macska nem ereszti el az egeret,
A hajadonok kávénénikék maradnak.
Az anya kedveli a kávézást,
A nagyanya is iszogatott,
Ki csepülhetné hát ezért a leányokat!

Ez a záróversszaka Johann Sebastian Bach Kávékantátájának, amely a h-moll Szvit mellett a múlt vasárnapi Casual Classics koncertünk műsorát adta, és amely számomra régi-új felfedezése Bach humorának és mesterségbeli tudásának. A zene mellé kávét is szolgáltak fel a Lowe Mill központ Alchemy Lounge nevű kávézójában. A websiteon a mini kávézó bolthálózat legújabb helyszínei láthatók, ahol mi játszottunk az hamarosan bezár és költözik.
http://www.alchemyhsv.com

Február 19-én az Alabama állam 200. születésnapját ünneplő naptári év első megmozdulásaként játszotta a Huntsville Symphony Beethoven III. Leonora nyitányát és VIII. szimfóniáját, valamint a zenekar zenészeinek szólójával Schumann négykürtös Konzertstückjét és John Adams Absolute Jest című vonósnégyesre és zenekarra komponált darabját. Ezen a héten pedig az ifjúsági koncertek voltak soron, valamint ma délelőtt az évi ingyenes családi koncert. A műsor központi műve Britten Young Persons Guide to the Orchestra című kompozíciója állt, elhangzottak még Purcell és Bernstein művei, valamint az én saját Purcell Variációm is, amit még annak idején egy hasonló családi koncertre komponáltam az Oregon Symphony felkérésére. Részletek a szezon online elérhető teljes PDF műsorában találni:
http://www.hso.org
Hétfőn érkezem Budapestre és szerdán kezdődnek a próbák a Rádiózenekarral a február 11-i koncertünkre. A zeneakadémiai bérletes műsorban elhangzik legújabb zenekari darabom, a Szomorú Vasárnap Variációk, valamint Piazzolla Bandoneon versenye, Sztravinszkij Petruskája, és John Adamstől a The Chairman Dances.
http://www.radiomusic.hu

Lots of Work and Plenty of Travel Already in 2018

Hello there and a Happy Belated New Year! I am writing this post at the Atlanta airport lounge, waiting for my flight to Huntsville, replacing the one that was just cancelled a couple of hours ago. Yes, IT IS WINTERTIME and it is coming down hard on the South now, after hitting the North-East of the US.
After a demanding and successful trip to Taiwan and Mainland China (with the Kaohsiung Symphony then with the players of the Hungarian Radio Symphony) I traveled back to Budapest for a couple of days (FYI Turkish Airlines is great!) then packed again to drive to the city of Pecs, where I got to conduct the great Pannon Philharmonic Orchestra. We presented an exciting program, including my piece, Drums Drums Drums, of which we played the Hungarian premiere. Other pieces on the program were: Weill: Little Threepenny Music, Stravinsky: Concerto in D for string orchestra and Hindemith’s powerful Concertmusic for brass and strings. As for Drum Drums Drums, it is now the third set of soloists playing it (however the drum-set part was played by the amazing Gergo Borlai again, who has been part of the World Premiere in Huntsville in 2015), and the piece, I am happy to report, works really well for the audience.
After spending a couple of days in beautiful Southern Hungary (Pecs is only about a 2hr drive from Budapest) I was ready to fly to the Big Apple. Representing Armel Festival as its Artistic Director I have attended 5 shows at the Prototype Festival. I have seen staged concert albums, multi-media music theater works and operas in the traditional sense. It was an impressive line up. I hope that Prototype Festival can become a partner for Armel by as early as 2020, and together we can bring some interesting new works to Budapest, Vienna, and to the screen of ARTE TV as well. Yes, IT IS WINTERTIME, and NYC was way colder than usual. However in the summer I always complain about humidity and high temperatures in manhattan. 🙂
I am ready for a couple of extremely exciting and challenging programs in the next couple of weeks. On Saturday with the Huntsville Symphony I will be conducting Brahms’ Haydn Variations, Beethoven’s Symphony No.7, and sharing the stage again with Elina Vähälä from Finland, who’ll be playing Berg’s beautiful Violin Concerto. More information on the concert here:

http://www.hso.org

After Huntsville it’s Budapest time again, and time for music about machines with the Danubia Symphony at the Liszt Academy. Yes, you read that right, MACHINES!

More about that later!

Until then, here is the link for your enjoyment:

http://www.odz.hu

Music For Different Summers

Bartók: The Wooden Prince (complete ballet with live sand animation)
Stravinsky: The Rite of Spring (performed with live dance)

I have started my summer by leading the conducting master-class with the rep above at the International Bartok Seminar and Festival. It was an honor to be a professor at this esteemed festival. John Cage, Gyorgy Ligeti and other world class musicians and composers have visited the Bartok Festival in small town Szombathely, Hungary back in the days. It was truly the place to be in the summer when I was a student. I myself have started there as a conductor student some 20 years ago, also have studied chamber music with Gyorgy Kurtág as a clarinetist.
This year I’ve had the honor to teach 10 active and a few passive students from all over the world. The closing concert was beautifully presented and very well attended.
After a short stop in Huntsville (there is always something to do when I am in town, and I did use my time wisely for business luncheons, meetings and planning) I have spent the last 10+ days in Portland, OR. I have taken on the role of Incoming Music Director of the Portland Festival Symphony in the last couple of years.

http://www.portlandfestivalsymphony.org

This wonderful organization has been providing free classical music for the Portland audience for over 35 years now. Playing live classical music in very different neighborhoods of the city for kids and adults is a fascinating and very rewarding mission. This year I have programmed overtures by Haydn, Mozart, Beethoven and Schubert along with my own piece “Rough and Ready, an American Outdoor Overture” composed directly for PFS and its outdoor concerts. The concert series ends today with an all strings concert.

I am ready for a brief vacation with my two sons, Balazs and Vince after this week. Well be spending our time in and around Huntsville, AL, and will be visiting the great city of New Orleans, too. After our annual “father and sons” vacation I will be flying to the Island of Jersey to start a hopefully long tradition of “Opera Island”. Armel Opera Festival is branching out and I am really excited about being part of this exciting new experiment. I will definitely post more about “Opera Island” at the end of this month. In the meantime, please check out the Jersey Opera House website for the Armel Festival program here:

http://www.www.jerseyoperahouse.co.uk

It sure feels like the extreme hot weather has been chasing me around. Hot and hotter weather in Szombathely, Budapest, Huntsville, and even in Portland (it was 109 degrees Fahrenheit on Thursday, that’s over 42 degrees Celsius). Yet the character of Summer is still different at these very different places, so is the music I have been working on. I find the summer of 2017 striking a nice balance between time off and good work. And yes, there is always composition time whenever I can get it. The new version of my first opera, “The Giant Baby” is in the making. Premiere at the end of June, 2018.

Fresh Coat of Copland

We are ready for our third Casual Classics concert this afternoon at University of Alabama Huntsville’s Roberts Hall.
Local artist, Pamela Willis is joining the musicians of the Huntsville Symphony to create a painting live, in front of the eyes of the audience in three stages “choreographed” to the music of Aaron Copland. The painting will be auctioned out to benefit the Huntsville Symphony.
On the all Copland program we’ll be presenting
Quiet City for English Horn, Trumpet and strings
Nonet for strings
Appalachian Spring (original version)

I am especially proud of us playing the rarely performed Nonet for strings, a late composition by Copland known mostly for his Americana music. Along with two late, and well-known orchestral pieces, Connotations and Inscape, the style of ‘Nonet’ is not at all like that of Appalachian Spring or Rodeo. This music is more ‘avant-garde’, more contemplative and at points more sinister than the all sunny Copland we all know and admire. Nonet for strings was commissioned by the Dumbarton Oaks Research Library (same as in ‘Dumbarton Oaks Concerto’ by Stravinsky) and is dedicated to Nadia Boulanger “after forty years of friendship.”

Come and join us in an hour at Roberts Hall, and come back to the VBC next weekend to hear our Classical 5 concert with music by Ligeti, Bartok and Beethoven!

https://www.hso.org

Healing with Bruckner and Conversations with Beethoven

Today at the Huntsville airport a young TSA agent, seeing my big musical scores, asked me about my profession. Upon finding out I was the conductor of the Friday Beethoven-Bruckner concert he said he was really sorry for missing the concert because he was so looking forward to it. I asked him why he did not come. “Because of what happened in Paris. I didn’t want to be in a public place with lots of people around.”, he said. Luckily most of HSO’s loyal audience was there to experience Kirill Gerstein’s amazing piano playing, and the true bonding of musicians and audience with the help of Bruckner’s powerful Symphony #4. Both the Bruckner and Bach’s Sinfonia in E-minor, the encore played by Kirill were dedicated to the dead and the wounded in the Paris attacks.
This afternoon Kirill Gerstein, three principal players of the HSO and myself (with my clarinet in hand) kicked off the Causal Classics series with a show called “Beethoven Conversations”. Kirill and I had a lively conversation about musicians’ every day challenge of interpretation and authenticity. We all got to listen to two Liszt Transcendent Etudes then, after a short demo of Mozart’s Quintet for Piano and Winds we performed Beethoven’s composition of the same title. Everybody who came to Roberts Hall at University of Alabama, Huntsville had a grand time, and I had fun playing some great chamber music as well. Once a great player like Kirill Gerstein comes to town we better take advantage of it and hear him play more than just, an otherwise glorious, piano concerto.
I am on my way to Budapest, Hungary to start rehearsals for the fully staged production of Verdi’s Don Carlo and also to perform new music with Ensemble UMZE at the Budapest Music Center.
Onward to make more beautiful and exciting music.

“ceux qui aiment. ceux qui aiment la vie. à la fin, c’est toujours eux qui gagnent.”
“Those who love. This who love life. In the end, they’re the ones who are rewarded.”
[Quote from a drawing of a Charlie Hebdo cartoonist after Friday’s Paris terror attacks.]

WOW Verdi

Sure I know, Verdi was a genius. I have always known that. Everybody knows that. When you are studying one of his operas however it all just hits you again. I have not done a fully staged Verdi for years (I was fortunate to do ‘Un ballo in maschera’ at the Montreal Opera) but now it is time again. I will be conducting four performances of ‘Don Carlo’ at the Budapest Opera (Erkel Theater) at the end of November and first week of December. Amazing ideas, inventive harmonies, unparalleled characters, genius orchestration. I am having an amazing time just studying it.
Five Acts in three parts, over three hours of great music by Giuseppe Verdi.
http://opera.hu

I titled my blog post ‘WOW Verdi’ because I felt the urge to write about the way learning truly amazing music makes me feel. Talking about that, before I get in the pit of the Erkel Theater in Budapest I will be conducting another great, however completely different kind of show in Huntsville and will be even playing the clarinet.

On Friday, just 8 days from today Kirill Gerstein
http://kirillgerstein.com
will be joining the HSO in Beethoven’s Piano Concerto #4 followed by Bruckner’s Symphony #4 ‘Romantic’.
Kirill, pianist extraordinaire and a good friend has agreed to open our Casual Classics series as well just two days after he plays with the orchestra. This is where I pick up my clarinet and along with principal wind players of the Huntsville Symphony will perform Beethoven’s Quintet for Piano and Winds. The first Casual Classics of the season is called “Beethoven Conversations” and will be held at Roberts Hall of University of Alabama, Huntsville. Join us Sunday at 3:30PM if you are interested in hearing Kirill and I talk about Ludwig and about other composers and classical music related, exciting stuff as well. And of course, there will be music played by Beethoven. He was a genius. But everybody knows that.

Last Friday I conducted the HSO’s first concert in the Pops Series. We presented live magic acts with live symphonic music including pieces by Liszt, Saint-Saens, Berlioz, John Williams and others. Michael Grandinetti illusionists did an amazing job with our Halloween audience and let our orchestra shine in making music as well as in doing a mind reading trick with the audience. Want to know more? You are just going to have to check out Michael’s shows!
http://www.michaelgrandinetti.com

#6-Misi-#6

Tomorrow is the day of two concerts opening the new chamber orchestra series of the Hungarian Radio Symphony Orchestra at the Budapest Music Center.
The first number on the show is the delightful Symphony #6, “The Morning” by Joseph Haydn. The humor and elegance of Haydn’s music always amazes me. This symphony also has a hidden violin concerto in it. It is scary how much Mozart owes to Haydn for his own violin concertos! In the slow movement the solo violin and the solo cello play an amazing duet, a variation on a Minuet-like theme. Sounds just like a Mozart violin concerto, I am telling you! In the first and the last movement the solo flute gets a lot of great music to play. What fun!
Watch this YouTube video to meet my soloist, Misi Boros! He is 11 years old and has the soul of a seasoned musician. I am not keen on child prodigies but Misi is something else. He is not only talented but also a fun and funny, intelligent human being.
http://youtube.com
For the major piece on the program I picked Beethoven’s Symphony #6, “Pastorale”. We are playing this “war horse” with a relatively small orchestra to match the space of the BMC concert hall. This decision gives me an opportunity to work on details that mostly get lost in a big orchestral setting. The end result is: lots of fun chamber music details in a very Haydn-esque Pastorale Symphony. Beethoven had his sense of humor, too!