New Website Coming this Fall | Idén ősszel új weboldal

Dear All, I am at the beginning of a long but fulfilling process of presenting you a new, fresh and more user friendly website. I hope that, as planned, you will be able to enjoy it by the end of September. New format, new pictures, new videos, renewed blog (most likely a vlog) and so much more will be coming. Until the launch of my renewed webpage, please follow my activity on Facebook, Instagram and Twitter!
Have a wonderful rest of your summer and see you soon!

Kedves Mindenki!
Belekezdtem a nehéz, de szép végeredménnyel kecsegtető weboldal frissítési folyamatba. Új képek, videók, a blog helyett valószínűleg egy vlog, és sokminden más alakul a boszorkánykonyhában. Amíg itt szünet van, addig a Facebookon, Twitteren és az Instagramon lehet követni, hogy mit történik velem. Reményeim és terveim szerint szeptember végén már elérhető lesz az új oldal.
Addig is kívánok mindenkinek további kellemes nyarat, és hamarosan találkozunk.

Summer Optimist | Nyári optimista

Today is the day of our annual Major Donors’ Reception. This wonderful event, recognizing our major donors, sponsors and board members, was postponed, and is happening now, in the middle of summer. I will be talking about the upcoming season, about being optimistic of the time ahead, and about the season’s trajectory. We will be going from carefully crafted shorter and less demanding programs towards Mahler’s titanic Symphony No.2. The “Resurrection” Symphony will be played for our last classical in the 21-22 close to Easter time. For today’s reception my son, Vince Vajda will be playing the piano. He is coming back to Huntsville next January to play a Mozart Piano Concerto with us for our Casual Classics series. Tonight’s event is the perfect way to introduce him and his playing to the wider HSO family.
About 10 days ago I’ve had the privilege of conducting Beethoven’s St. Stephen Overture and Symphony No.9 at the helm of the Hungarian National Philharmonic orchestra and chorus. We closed the traditional open-air Beethoven concert series of the National Phil. After my Huntsville stay I will be back in Europe, teaching at the European Creative Academy in beautiful and picturesque town of Annecy, France. Here is the link to the program.

https://eneuropeancreativeacademy.wordpress.com

A fenti linken az augusztusi European Creative Academy idei eseményeiről lehet olvasni. A festői Annecy-ban, a francia Alpokhoz közel lesz idén is az ECA, Stravinsky és Eötvös Péter fúvós-oktettjeivel a programban. Fiatal karmesterek és zeneszerzők lesznek a tanítványok, a profi hangszereseket pedig a francia Ars Nova együttes biztosítja.
Kb. két hete nagy örömmel dirigáltam a Nemzeti Filharmonikusokat és kórust, valamint kiváló énekes szólistákat Beethoven Szent István nyitányában és a IX. szimfóniában. Mindenki örömére idén mindhárom szabadtéri Beethoven program megvalósult Martonvásáron.
Most Huntsville-ban vagyok, ahol ma este tartjuk az éves Major Donor Reception-t, ahol bérleteseinknek és a Board tagjainak beszélek majd a szezonról. Vince fiam – aki jövő januárban muzsikál majd velünk itt a Causal Classics sorozatban – zongorázik is mindannyiunk örömére. A Huntsville Symphony 21-22-es szezonja óvatos optimizmussal, rövidebb, egyszerűbb programokkal indul, majd 22 Húsvétja környékén Mahler II. Szimfóniájával zárul. Reméljük, hogy a “Feltámadás” szimfónia nemcsak jelképesen, de hangzó valójában is jelzi majd a pandémiából a normális életbe való teljes visszatérést.

My Weeks With Ligeti | Heteim Ligetivel

“Music should not be normal, it should not be well mannered, it should not wear a neatly tied tie.”

“I have always been fascinated by faulty machines, in general by the world of technology, automatization that gives birth to bureaucracy, and exposes us to different bureaucracies.
/…/ Unruly machines and automata like that have always captured my attention.”

“When an exalted movement is so overly exalted, then you don’t even look at it like exalted any more.

“…there has to be some kind of order, but it should not be too dogmatic. /…/
Like you are entering a room and you can see that every object has its place, they were just slightly displaced by a not so reliable cleaning lady.”

“So in music there are also things that can be and cannot be called a parody at the same time. There is the entrance on Nekrotzar: there is a bass-ostinato all the way through it. It is like the bass melody of the last movement of the Eroica Symphony, it is just in 12 tones. Well, not really a 12 tone melody, there is a mistake, because it only consists 11 pitches. This is parody, but what it develops into is very serious, one could say, majestic music. This is true for the entire opera. I have worked the elements of parody into the tapestry.”

“Looking at fear with a telescope.This might be the most important characteristic – not message – of this music. Then it is not only a mixture of comedy and fear, buffa and seria, but the total concurrence of them. What is serious is also comical, and comical is serious. Now if I look at my own work from very far: this might be it, this might be the truly new in my music, something that did not exist before.”

The quotes above are from an interview book with composer György Ligeti done in 1979 by Péter Várnai. There is something in every one of these quotes that made it into my newest composition. this is my second piece already that was commissioned by the French Ensemble Ars Nova. It is entitled ‘Bagatelles canoniques’ (Canon Bagatelles) and it will be premiered in 2022. I composed the piece as an homage to György Ligeti. In the past 3 weeks, between two Moderna shots, I could finish this 12 minute long piece. Composing it gave me more pleasure than usual. Order, disorder (or to stay true to Ligeti’s art: Clocks and Clouds), determined and free: I wanted to create a balance, and I believe I succeeded. It is too bad that now I have to wait about a year to hear it played by live musicians. Well, indeed, a pandemic situation can bring unexpected gifts, like free time not planned.

„A zene ne legyen normális, ne legyen jólnevelt, ne legyen szépen megkötött nyakkendője.”

„Mindig faszcináltak a rosszul működő gépek, egyáltalán a technikai külvilág, az automatizálás, amely bürokráciát szül, és amely kiszolgáltatja az embert különböző bürokráciáknak.”
/…/ Az effajta makrancos gépezetek és automaták mindig nagyon lekötöttek.

„Ha egy patetikus mozdulat annyira patetikus, akkor már nem is tartod patetikusnak.”

„…valamilyen rendnek kell lennie, de a rend ne legyen túlságos, ne legyen dogmatikus. /…/
Mintha belépve egy szobába, látnám, hogy minden tárgynak meglenne a saját helye, de egy nem egészen megbízható takarítónő kicsit arrébb tolta a tárgyakat.”

„Tehát a zenében is vannak olyan dolgok, amiket lehet is paródiának nevezni, meg nem is. Itt van Nekrotzar bevonulása: végighúzódik rajta basszus-ostinatóként az Eroica utolsó tételének basszus-dallama, de Zwölftonban. Nem egészen Zwölfton, hibás, mert a sor csak tizenegy hangból áll. Ez persze paródia, de ami kialakul belőle, az nagyon is komoly, mondhatnám, méltóságteljes zene, s ez az egész operára vonatkozik. A paródiaelemeket is beledolgoztam a szőnyegbe.”

„A félelmet fordított gukkerrel nézni. Ez talán egy lényeges jellemvonása – nem üzenete – ennek a zenének. Aztán a komikumnak és a félelemnek, a buffának és a seriának nem csak keveredése, hanem teljes egybeesése. A komoly egyben komikus és a komikus egyben félelmetes is. Ha most tényleg nagyon messziről nézem eddigi életművemet: talán ez az, ami az én zenémben valóban új, ami ebben a formában eddig még nem volt.”

A fenti idézetek mind Várnai Péter: Beszélgetések Ligeti Györggyel (1979) című könyvéből valók, és mindegyikben van valami, ami valahogy belekerült legújabb darabomba. Az Ars Nova együttes felkérésére már második művemet írom. A ‘Bagatelles canoniques’ (Bagatell-kánonok) 2022 kerül majd bemutatásra, és Ligeti György emlékére íródott. AZ elmúlt 3 hétben, két Moderna vakcina adag között, a végére értem ennek a kb. 12 perces ensemble darabnak, amelynek megkomponálása a megszokottnál is több élvezetett okozott nekem. Rend, rendetlenség (avagy, hogy Ligeti művészeténél maradjunk: Órák és Felhők), kötöttség és szabadság egyensúlyát akartam létrehozni, és azt hiszem sikerült is. Kár, hogy majdnem egy évet kell várjak arra, hogy élő zenészekkel is hallhassam. Na igen, a pandémiás kiszámíthatatlanság egyik jó oldala éppen az, hogy váratlan szabad idők hullanak az ember ölébe.”

Georgia Bottoms in Budapest, Interviews, Reviews, Videos

A pretty long, exhausting and fun period is over. Georgia Bottoms, A Comic Opera of the Modern South had a new, Hungarian production in the frame of CAFe (Contemporary Art Festival) Budapest at the Liszt Academy. The production was a success, the audience loved it and so far the critics had a positive opinion as well. I am glad, that this 85 minute long, one act chamber opera made quite a few people among Hungarian intellectuals to go online and buy Mark Childress’ original novel, Georgia Bottoms. The book deserves attention, and a great translation for the European and Hungarian market. Luckily, many of the intellectuals interested in my art can speak and read English. They all bought the book here, and you should, too!
http://www.amazon.com

Unfortunately however, – this is what happens when a country has a language that nobody else is speaking,- all the interviews and reviews below are in Hungarian. This time being a Hungarian has an advantage: you get way more info about the opera, the production and you can also read about many other topics that came up in the interviews in the original language. I translated a couple of things below for my English speaking friends, and I can promise you that no music-lover will be left behind. I am in the process of translating a selection of the interviews and posting them online as soon as I can. In the meantime, enjoy what you can by clicking on the links below!

Let’s start with a really well translated interview with Rebecca Nelsen, who has been doing Georgia Bottoms’ role for the second time in two years. I myself have learned a couple of interesting, new things about what it’s like to be a woman in the South.
“The Era of Just Standing And Singing Is Over”
http://www.fidelio.hu

By clicking on the link below you can read the very first (posted just a couple of hours after the Sunday premiere) instant feedback by a local theater/ music-theater blogger. She will be posting more about Georgia Bottoms, once the entire CAFe Budapest Festival is over.
http://www.mezeinezo.hu

Here are three interviews with me, mostly about Georgia Bottoms, but also about teaching, conducting and politics.
“When A Chord Sounds That Can Feel Really Good”
http://www.operavilag.net

“I Want to Write Music I’ve Never Heard Before”
http://www.theater.hu

“Constant Failures Mean The System Is Working”
http://www.papageno.hu

“You Cannot Put 9-11 Into Music” (interview) + “Bittersweet Georgia” (review)
These articles will be available for free soon via the website link below.
According to this review my music is from the Deep South 🙂 The critic loved the humor of the opera in text, in music and in staging as well/ “…a múlt vasárnapi bemutatón átütővé vált a mű humora: szövegben, játékban és – éppen nem mellesleg – zenében egyaránt.”
http://magyarnarancs.hu

“Under Lucky Stars”
This critic loved the production in every way possible, including the staging by Andras Alamai Toth, the singing of the entire cast, especially Rebecca Nelsen and Keith Browning, the quality of the musicians of Ensemble UMZE, and the music itself. The critic had a nice summary of my music as well, Let me copy it here, first just in Hungarian.

“A muzsika majd’ minden hangjából árad az amerikai Dél hangulatát megidéző couleur locale, de hiba lenne, ha csak ennyit jegyeznénk meg az igényes kompozícióról, mely (az utóbbi évek kortársopera-tendenciáival ellentétben) jóval több egyszer használatos alkalmazott zenénél: saját értékénél fogva is emlékezetünkbe vésődik, miközben híven festi a szöveg dramaturgiai fordulatait. A posztmodern jó szokásához híven bőven idéz különböző zenei stílusok eszköztárából, ám ezeket egységes keretbe foglalja – sosem támad az az érzésünk, hogy bármely hang is öncélúan került volna a partitúrába. Ez a határozott zeneszerzői egyéniség biztos ismertetőjegye.”

http://nepszava.hu

The FaceBook page of CAFe Budapest festival. There is an interview with me about Georgia Bottoms and about getting our of your comfort zone in general. Again, the interview is in Hungarian, but the “Day 3 of the Festival” video can be enjoyed without speaking this one of a kind language.
http://www.facebook.com/CAFeBudapestOfficial

Oh yes, and I did get to translate Mark Childress’ RAP lyrics for a newly added scene into Hungarian for the surtitles. I even made it rhyme. 🙂

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.

100 Years Old Music

“Arbitrary as the choice of any year between 1880 and 1930 might be, 1913 was certainly distinguished by modernist landmarks in music, art, literature, fashion, and film /…/”

As it happens many times I don’t have access to my books in Budapest, Hungary when I need them. I have purchased and read a book entitled ‘1913’, and as much as I would love to use a couple of quotes here I cannot remember the author’s name. I tried finding the book online, but all the books of the same or similar title that pop up in a search, deal with politics and world history only instead of art. I found a great article at the Telegraph however and that is where the opening quote is from. Read the full article here:

https://www.telegraph.co.uk

Here are the dates for the pieces played by the Huntsville Symphony this Saturday for our last classical concert of the season.
Stravinsky: Rite of Spring -1913 (time of the infamous premiere performance)
Ravel: Alborada del gracioso -1905 (as a piano piece), -1918 (orchestra version)
Szymanowski: Violin Concerto #1 -1916 (composed), -1922 (premiered)

Yes, as unbelievable as it is, “The Rite of Spring” is over a 100 years old. So are the two other pieces. As you can see we are talking about a period a little over 15 years here, including some of the most turbulent times of the 20th Century, especially in Europe.
‘Rite of Spring’ was sure a “Vision of the Future” just one year before WW1 started. Ravel’s colorful Alborada del grazioso (The Jester’s Aubade) from the ‘Miroirs’ (Mirrors) piano series is one of the most popular examples of his “Spanish flavor” musical pieces. In its orchestral version it possesses the rhythmical and sound-color qualities of ‘Rite of Spring’.
I would like to encourage you to read the Wikipedia article below on Polish composer Karol Szymanowski. Upon reading his biography it’ll be clear how his gorgeous late-Romantic Violin Concerto No. 1 fits into the program.
https://www.en.wikipedia.org
By programming this beautiful piece of music, and by engaging the amazing Philippe Quint to play the solo violin part, I hope to contribute to the re-discovery of the music of this forgotten genius.

Thank You All for supporting the HSO in 2016-17!
Don’t forget to get your tickets to ‘Video Games Live’ on May 6 at the VBC! It will be the perfect ending to a great season.
Please read about our exciting next season here:
https://www.hso.org

Stay in touch and have a wonderful summer!

More Power to the Horns!

In the last few weeks I have been working on Béla Bartók’s Bluebeard’s Castle and Peter Eötvös’s Senza sangue, an opera double-bill at the Hamburg Opera in Germany. It is going to be a beautiful staging by Dmitri Tcherniakov, see a NY Times review about his work here http://nytimes.com
with four powerhouse singers in the principal roles, and the orchestra of Staatsoper Hamburg. The performances will all be in November.
I am not sure if the expression of “taking a break from sg” can be applied to my schedule. Conducting Mahler 5 does not sound like a break at all, and it sure is a great challenge for orchestra and conductor alike. Well, I am “taking a break from” opera this week and conducting a program of Mahler’s amazing symphony along with Mozart’s Magic Flute Overture and DiLorenzo’s Phoenix Concerto with the Huntsville Symphony.
http://hso.org
The latter composition was written for the amazing French Horn player William Vermeulen, whom I had the pleasure to work with on a few occasions.
http://vermeulenmusic.com
His playing and our extended horn section for Mahler 5 will sure make this week a powerful one!

I am excited and proud that our Huntsville Symphony can present such divers and exciting program to all the music lovers in the area. At the end of September for our first Casual Classics program called “Yoga with Live Music” we played compositions by Steve Reich, Arvo Pärt and John Cage at Lowe Mill. This week we are back with great symphonic repertoire at the Von Braun Center. Come and join us!

A Great List of Composers

Bartók, Eötvös, Halévy, Henze, Mahler, Offenbach, Saint-Säens, Schubert, Schumann, Verdi.

Schubert: Rosamunde Overture, Schumann: Cello Concerto and Mahler: Symphony #1 was the program of my concert with the Szeged Symphony on May 17. Miklós Perényi, one of the greatest cellists of the world played the solo part. The concert took place in the beautiful National Theater of Szeged. It was a great treat for me to conduct this program and a nice experience working with Szeged Symphony for the first time in a very long time.
Two days ago I participated in the press conference of the Armel Opera Festival 2016. Check out the website!
The upcoming program is very exciting.
http://armelfestival.org
I will be conducting Henze’s Elegy for Young Lovers with the Pannon Philharmonic and the young singers of the Academy of Music Budapest. I will also be doing a pre-rehearsal for Peter Eötvös’ newest opera called Senza sangue. This is the same work I will be conducting at the Hamburg State Opera this fall along with Bartók’s Bluebeard’s Castle.

Yesterday I attended the opening concert and ceremony of the Jewish Art Days, a new festival in Budapest Hungary. I am conducting an evening of opera music with Hungarian and Italian singers at the Italian Institute at the helm of the MAV Symphony Orchestra on Tuesday (May 31). On the program: music by Offenbach, Verdi, Saint-Säens and Halévy.
Check out the details here:
http://zsidomuveszetinapok.hu

I agreed to conduct the diploma concert of Bálint Kruppa. This amazingly talented young Hungarian is playing Bartók’s 2nd Violin Concerto with the Danubia Orchestra on June 7 at the Academy of Music.
http://zeneakademia.hu

Both the orchestra and Bálint will participate in the conducting masterclass organized by the Eötvös Music Foundation. The program is called Focus of Bartók, Kurtág, Lachenmann.
I will be teaching alongside with Peter Eötvös and Olivier Cuendet.
Read about the details here:
http://eotvosmusicfoundation.org

Many great composers and amazing pieces, lots of music, lots of work make me happy.

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!