My Microcosmos/ Mikrokozmoszom

Mikrokozmosz, as it is spelled originally, is of course the famous educational piano series composed by Béla Bartók between 1926 and 1939. This is where the idea of naming a new artistic agency is coming from. Long time friend, Béla Simon has started a new company based in Budapest by the name Microcosmos Agency, and I am truly happy and honored to share the roster with artists such as Andrea Rost, Arthur Fagen, Ödön Rácz, Péter Halász, Tamás Varga.
http://www.microcosmosartists.com

As for my own little mini-cosmos I am happy to report that I have completed a new chamber music piece commissioned by the Tsilumos Ensemble for the Salt New Music Festival and Symposium in Victoria, BC. The piece is called ‘From Left To Right’ and it is scored for five players (saxophone, viola, acoustic guitar, percussion and keyboard). Here are the program notes I have written.

RHYTHM, PITCH and SONIC QUALITIES, I mean nothing else. I could have given it the title: Music for Five, but I am not a minimalist composer. It could be called Sonata but then you’d think I am trying to ride the retro-classical wave. I could have titled this piece Quintet, but then who would care to listen? I always envied artists who could write a manifesto. I’m just not the type. Composing this piece is as close as I get to writing one.

This piece of music is not a statement. This piece of music has no program. This music does not want to be socially relevant. It’s not a deep-dive into my own psyche or into the collective unconscious.
This musical piece has no predetermined form or pre-fabricated building blocks. No fractals, no algorithms. No pop culture references. I even refuse to follow my own habits. No quotes, no musical allusions, no literally inspiration. Whatever your associations are they are your own.

I am 46 years old. I have been making music for 40 years. That should do it. I compose “from left to right”, one note after another. Form happens. Music is music is music. But there IS MUSIC, not just some attractive noise to accompany some visual attraction. That is important to me.
There is music:
RHYTHM, PITCH and SONIC QUALITIES,
my Mini-Manifesto if you wish.
Please, LISTEN!
Please, ENJOY!

If this is not quite my own Mikrokozmosz series, but a 19 minute long piece that I have immensely enjoyed composing. I am looking forward to the World Premiere at the end of August.

As promised on FaceBook let me write briefly about the new season of Ensemble UMZE. Since 2019-20 will be the first season of this Hungarian soloist-ensemble with me being the Artistic Director, I am truly happy to present 3 major concerts at the concert hall of the Budapest Music Center.
On September 13 Laszlo Tihanyi will conduct a program of pieces by Claude Vivier, Takemitsu and young Hungarian composers. The theme will be “Eastern Religion, Western Music”. Laszlo Sari, famous writer and Tibet-expert will be on stage with our musicians to share his thoughts with the audience. On January 17, as part of the Transparent Sound Festival, Balazs Horvath will be conducting a conversation concert comprised of music by female and male composers. Among other exciting and unusual things there will be an instrumental theater piece presented alongside with a beatboxer. Audience friendly interactive conversation, as it is always the case at this festival, will be a natural part of the presentation. On March 2020 I will be on the podium to conduct the World Premiere of my mono-concert-opera, The Transporters, based on a novel by Peter Esterhazy. In the first half of the program, to take the audience back to the times when The Transporters was written, we’ll be playing a two pieces from the early 80s. I am looking forward to Romantic Readings No.1 by Laszlo Vidovszky and to Laszlo Tihanyi’s The Silence of the Winds. In addition to these three concerts there will be a few interesting joint projects with the Peter Eötvös Foundation, including a concert at Collegium Hungaricum in Berlin.
Details of the program UMZE will be coming up before September on this website:
http://www.umze.hu

Ha nem is Bartók Mikrokozmosza, de az én saját bejáratú zenei majdnem-manifesztóm. A Tsilumos Ensemble megrendelésére elkészült 19 perces új kamarazenei művem a ‘Balról jobbra’, melynek bemutatója augusztus végén lesz a kanadai Victoriában. A fenti szöveg “RHYTHM, PITCH and SONIC QUALITIES, I mean nothing else…” a darab ismertetőszövege, és egyben (talán kissé paprikás) reakcióm is arra, hogy manapság 1) előbb kell megírni az ismertetőszöveget mint a darabot magát 2) amennyiben egy zenei mű nem reflektál valamilyen társadalmi vagy politikai problémára, akkor nincs is miről beszélni vele kapcsolatban 3) (még mindig) trend, hogy a zene csak az egyik, sokszor nem is legemlékezetesebb összetevője egy műnek, ami zenedarab esetében meglehetős hendikep, és hangok helyett vizuális, teátrális, irodalmi és egyéb effektekkel reméli(k) az áhított sikert elérni a szerző(k). A Tsilumos együttes minden koncertjét videón is rögzíti. Amint elérhető lesz a felvétel természetesen azonnal kiposztolom.

Örömmel jelentem be azt a hírt is, hogy mostantól az újonnan alakult Microcosmos menedzsment által (is) képviselt művész lettem, és büszkén osztozom Rost Andreával, Rácz Ödönnel, Halász Péterrel, Varga Tamással és további kiváló zenészekkel a Simon Béla által életrehívott ügynökség reprezentatív listáján.
http://www.microcosmosartists.com

No Longer a Ventriloquist’s Dummy / Nem egy hasbeszélő bábja többé

“The other. No longer a ventriloquist’s dummy at our disposal, but an uncharted territory ready to shake us to our cores, to be the wind beneath our wings in the best of cases.”
This short quote from the Master of Ceremony’s lecture delivered by actor Giuseppe Sartori
https://www.ricciforte.com
sums up the story line connecting Arnold Schönberg’s ‘Die glückliche Hand’ (The Hand of Fate)
https://www.wikipedia.org
and Béla Bartók’s ‘Bluebeard’s Castle’ into a one-act dance-opera-drama.
Singers Atala Schöck and Gábor Bretz along with the dancers and actors of performing arts company ricci/forte
https://www.ricciforte.com
directed by Stefano Ricci and Gianni Forte
https://www.ricciforte.com
music sung and played by the Chorus and Orchestra of Teatro Massimo Palermo. Tonight is opening night, further performances on November 20, 21, 25, 27. Radio RAI3 will be broadcasting the November 25 performance.

This year marks the 100th Anniversary of the World Premiere of Bartók’s only opera, and also the 20th year of me conducting it. Today I am not just conducting the firs performance of a new and exciting production, but I also think back on all the great singers, to name just one legend, László Polgár, directors, like Robert Lepage, and great orchestras like the Vienna Philharmonic or the Montreal Symphony, I have had the privilege of working with on this masterpiece. Winds beneath my wings.

“A másik. Nem egy hasbeszélő bábja többé, hanem olyan új földrész, amelynek felfedezése legbensőbb lényünking hatolva megváltoztat, és amelynek tengere, ha szerencsések vagyunk új szelet is fúj a vitorlánkba.”
Ez a rövid idézet a cirkuszi ceremóniamester monológjából költői összefoglalása annak, ami a ma esti Schönberg: ‘Die glückliche Hand/Bartók: A kékszakállú herceg vára’ produkcióban a két, idén száz éves színpadi művet összeköti, és amelyet a ricci/forte társulat
https://www.ricciforte.com
színésze Giuseppe Sartori mond majd el.
https://www.ricciforte.com

Idén 20. éve vezénylem a Kékszakállút, és a ma esti Schönberg-Bartók bemutató Schöck Atalával, Bretz Gáborral, a ricci és forte táncosaival és színészeivel, a Teatro Massimo Palermo kórusa és zenekar közreműködésével, Stefano Ricci és Gianni Forte
https://www.ricciforte.com rendezésében arra is alkalom, hogy felidézzem a Bartók remekművel való találkozásaim legszebb pillanatait, és hogy emlékezzek a sok név között Polgár Lászlóra, Robert Lepage rendezésére, vagy a Bécsi Filharmonikusok, és Montreal Symphony muzsikusaival való közös munkára.

További előadások november 20, 21, 25, 27, valamint rádióközvetítés a RAI3-on.

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

Mozart in the Looney Bin

I am about to take another brief break from Eötvös and Bartók, and take a short trip to London to conduct Mozart’s Magic Flute with the staging of Róbert Alföldi
http://alfoldirobert.eu
as part of the Armel Opera Festival Days at the Hackney Empire Theater.
This is going to be my London debut.
The director has placed Mozart’s magical opera-characters between the walls of a mental institution, where everybody has his or her own mental issue. Magically (pun intended) this idea works really well and highlights some of the more interesting twists and turns of the original story. Just think about it for a second: who is the bad guy here? Is it really the Queen of the Night or is it Sarastro? Is everything black and white like we would like it to be?

Check out the full Armel program at the Hackney Empire here including the ‘In Memory of 1956’ concert program on October 23 conducted by Adam Fischer
http://hackneyempire.co.uk

Two World Première Opera Recordings

Just five days to September.

Are you ready for another season of great music?

Here are two World Première opera recordings for your listening pleasure to start with!

Péter Eötvös: Paradise Reloaded (Lilith)
http://bmc.hu

In this new composition, Péter Eötvös explores the hypothetical question: what would have happened if our culture which is explicitly based on the Bible had chosen Lilith (Adam’s first wife) to be the ancestress of mankind, instead of Eve? Adam and Eve (his second wife) and the listeners alike are guided by Lucifer through past, present and future. In Paradise Reloaded, Lilith’s intentions define the course of events; she eventually attains her goal but at the end of the story Adam still does not choose her as his partner. Adam has to choose between two women who have different outlooks on life. His choice determines the fate of the generations to come. The conclusion promises a new beginning for all characters – hence the Reloaded in the title – in a new Paradise, but this will no longer be the same as the one they left.
The opera was premièred in October 2013 in Vienna, followed by its February 2014 Hungarian première in Budapest. The cast of soloist on the CD is the same as of the première in Vienna. I conducted both the recording session (Studio 22 at the Hungarian Radio) and the Hungarian live performance (Palace of the Arts Budapest) both with the Hungarian Radio Symphony. The sound quality of this recording is just amazing. The sound level is like that of a pop music recording with clear details and amazing energy. The recording is available via the website of the Budapest Music Center (see link above) and through record distributors all over the world (see list on BMC website).

Ernst von Dohnányi: The Tenor

What happens when a singing circle (well, really a good old, German style Barber Shop Quartet) operating according to classical middle-class values is forced to accept a talented but depraved and penniless musician? Primeval, genuine emotions break through bars of false convention. Or do they? This is the theme of The Tenor, the most celebrated Hungarian comic opera of the 1930s. This delightful, cleverly written opera is full of humor and great musical ideas. Mendelssohn and Webern quotes are incorporated into the chamber orchestra-like texture of the composition. The vocal parts are beautiful and inventive and all roles are great fun to play. I was the conductor of the Hungarian premiere of “The Tenor” (the first one since the late 1920s!) and of the studio recording of the work with the cast of the stage production and the musicians of the Hungarian State Opera Orchestra.

Read about the Opera Trezor recording series of the Hungarian State Opera here
http://opera.hu

If you are interested in this two CD-publication you can purchase it at the Budapest Opera House’s Gift Shop (Opera Shop), or you may contact me directly. I will make sure you get a copy!