Hungarian Orchestras and Eötvös Foundation/ Magyar zenekarok és az Eötvös Alapítvány

Liszt: From the Cradle to the Grave
Gregory Vajda: Gloomy Sunday Variations
Liszt: Piano Concerto No.2 in A (Peter Kiss, piano)
Mendelssohn: Symphony No.5 “Reformation”

the program above is on tomorrow for my debut performance with the Kodály Philharmony (Debrecen, Hungary). This concert marks another milestone in the series of concerts in the last couple of years in which I finally had the chance to work with all the major local orchestras in Hungary. I am privileged to work with the Pannon Philharmonic Orchestra a couple of times a year for multiple seasons now (they are based in Pécs, Hungary), but as of 2019 I have had the pleasure to work with the Györ Philharmonic orchestra (last summer for the European Clarinet Conference), the Miskolc Symphony (just last month with two concerts and a beautifully challenging program of music by Brahms and Stravinsky), and the Szeged Symphony (Schumann and Mahler, but I also conducted them in Mozart’s The Magic Flute as my London debut). I have worked with the Savaria Symphony as well, a group I have known for a while from the Bartok Festival and Seminar, and to which I will be returning next season for a subscription concert.

The month of April was busy with the last Casual Classics of the season in Huntsville (Alabama Storytellers II), a conducting an composition masterclass at the Budapest Music Center, where I was teaching alongside with the world famous composer Kaija Saariaho, Peter Eötvös and the former General Music Director of the Budapest Opera, Peter Halász. The Peter Eötvös Foundation has also made my role with them official and named me Program Director. In a week I am looking forward to returning to Huntsville to conduct the 6th Classical Concert of the 18-19 season with the wonderful Susanna Phillips as soloist.

http://www.hso.org

A fenti linken olvasható az idei szezon utolsó nagy klasszikus programja, amelyet a a Huntsville Symphony élén vezényelek. A Metropolitan Opera sztárja, Susanna Phillips énekel majd Strauss Négy utolsó énekében, és a W.B. Yeats versére írott zenekari dalomban.
Áprilisban Kaija Saariaho, Eötvös Péter és Halázs Péter professzortársaként taníthattam a Budapest Music Centerben, és a mesterkurzus zárókoncertjének apropóján az alábbi interjút adtam a Papagenónak, amelyben a Programigazgatóvá való kinevezésemről, és az Alapítvány terveiről is szó esik.
http://www.papageno.hu

Holnap (április 23) a debreceni Kölcsey Központban debütálok a Kodály Filharmónia élén az alábbi műsorral.

Liszt: A bölcsőtől a sírig
Vajda Gergely: Szomorú vasárnap variációk
Liszt: Piano II. zongoraverseny (Kiss Péter -zongora)
Mendelssohn: V. szimfónia, “Reformáció”

A koncert egy újabb fontos állomása annak a szerencsésen alakult sorozatnak, amelynek részeként az elmúlt pár évben karmesterként bemutatkozhattam az összes nagyobb magyar zenekar élén, bizonyítandó, hogy Budapesten kívül is van komolyzenei élet, de még milyen! Időben visszafelé haladva: Kodály Filharmónia (Debrecen), Miskolci Szimfonikusok, Győri Filharmonikus Zenekar, Szegedi Szimfonikusok. A szombathelyi Savaria Szimfonikusokat és a pécsi Pannon Filharmonikusokat már többször dirigálhattam, és idén is, valamint a 2019-20-as szezonban is visszatérek hozzájuk vendégkarmesterként.

Picture and Petition / Kép és folyamodvány

Musical compositions can be inspired by many different things coming from outside music. Soon I will get two of my newest pieces premiered, both of them for string instruments, one inspired by a photograph, the other one by an actual letter written by a very interesting musical-historical figure.
Tamás Varga, principal cellist of the Vienna Philharmonic is doing an impressive series of solo concerts with stops including Budapest (CAFe Budapest Festival)
https://cafebudapestfest.hu
Vienna (Festival Wien Modern), New York, Boston, Chicago and Milwaukee. He has commissioned new pieces for solo cello with the special tuning of Zoltán Kodály’s now classical Sonata for solo cello. My 6 and a 1/2 minute long piece, ‘Captain Hume’s Last Pavin’ will be played alongside with brand new pieces by composers like Aaron J. Kernis. The title and the inspiration of my composition is coming from an actual petition written in 1642 by soldier, composer and bass-viol player, Tobias Hume. His music was rediscovered in the early 2000s by the world famous Jordi Savall. Because of his imaginative music and colorful personality I have been returning to Hume’s story and his art ever since. I wanted to compose this Don Quixote-like character a well-deserved musical homage. The text below can be recited while playing my piece, or it can be projected during the performance.
Talented violin player Yevgeny Kutik
https://yevgenykutik.com
has approached me via the internet about a year ago (we have not yet met in person), and surprised me with a commission offer for his very exciting new recording project. Yevgeny wanted me to write a short piece, a kind of meditation on the topic “Family”, and also to use and actual photograph as the inspiration for the music. Yevgeny and his father in law, principal bass player of the Boston Symphony have recorded ‘How To Draw A Tree’, and the recording will be out soon. Please, stay tuned for the recording and for the accompanying pictures and stories as well! Until then, enjoy the program notes for the duo and the petition letter that inspired my cello solo piece.

HOW TO DRAW A TREE —for violin and bass
Instrumental folk music from Central and Eastern Europe and the Balkan has always been an inspiration to me directly, and through the music of Bartók and Ligeti. I speak this folk music when I speak of the past. When Yevgeny Kutik
https://yevgenykutik.com
approached me to write a composition for his project I immediately thought of the extended family tree that has been drawn up by some of my relatives for my 30th Birthday. The picture attached was taken at the annual Vajda family meeting a couple of years ago near the famous Lake Balaton in Hungary. This meeting takes place every year at the end of August initiated by one of my uncles and it brings together several generations. There has always been a strong connection in my head between this picture and the feeling of looking at the now over 10 generations of family history in the form of a family tree. In my short composition the music played by the double bass functions as the trunk of this imaginary tree while the swift, Eastern European folk music-like passages of the violin represent the branches. It is only natural, that the “branches” of a family tree, members of the younger generations, are closer to us, we can see them and their lives in clear details, from close up, while the beginnings of our family history are distant with less contrast, yet without the trunk there are no branches.

CAPTAIN HUME’S LAST PAVIN —for solo cello
The trve petition of Colonel Hvme as it was presented to the Lords assembled in the high court of Parliament being then one of the poore brethren of the famous foundation of the Charter house […] Hume, Tobias, d. 1645. Right Honourable and Noble Lords, I Doe humbly intreat to know why your Lordships doe slight me, as if I were a foole or an Asse: I tell you truely I have been abused to your Lordships by some base fellowes; but if I did know them, I would make them repent it, were they never so great men in your sight; for I can doe the Kings Majesty and my Countrey better service then the best Souldier or Colonel in this Land, or in all Christendom, which now it is a great wonder unto me, that your Lordships doe suffer so many unskilfull Souldiers to goe over for Ireland, to doe the Kings Majesties service, that are not able to lead a Company, neither doe they know what belongs to a Souldier; […] So that if your Lordships please to pay for the making of a hundred or sixe score Instruments of war, which I am to have along with me, if you please to send me for Ireland, and make me Commander of all those men that are now to goe over for Ireland, I will undertake to get in all Ireland in three or foure Months at the farthest, or else if I doe it not, I will give them leave to take off my head, if my Commanders will bee as forward as my selfe, and yet I will doe all things with great discretion. […] …and therefore if you will not beleeve me, it is none of my fault, when I speake the truth: But if you will not give me the command of all the souldiers that goe for Ireland at this time, I will not goe for Ireland, but I will goe for another Countrey, where I will have a greater command then all this which I have desired from your Lordships. But I yet live in hope that you will be pleased to beleeve me, and helpe me that live in great misery, by reason that I have maintained a thousand Souldiers in this City to do the King service in Ireland, and this I have done seven weekes together, which hath made me very poore, so that I have pawned all my best cloathes, and have now no good garment to weare. And therefore I humbly beseech you all Noble Lords, that you will not suffer me to perish for want of food, for I have not one penny to helpe me at this time to buy me bread, so that I am like to be starved for want of meat and drinke, and did walke into the fields very lately to gather Snailes in the nettles, and brought a bagge of them home to eat, and doe now feed on them for want of other meate, to the great shame of this land, and those that doe not helpe me, but rather command their servants to keepe me out of their gates, […] …for I eat Snailes and browne bread, and drinke small Beere, and some times water, and this I have thought good to make knowne unto your Lordships, hoping that your Honours will helpe me now with some reliefe, or else I shall be forced presently to runne out of the land to serve another King, and doe him all the great service, which I would rather doe unto my owne most gracious King, […] If this service bee not worthy of meat and drink, judge you that are grave & wise Lords of the Parliament, for I will make no more Petitions unto your Lordships, for I have made many, but have not got any answer of them, and therefore if your Lordships will neither entertaine me, nor give me money to buy me meat and drinke, I will goe with as much speed as I can into other Countries, rather then I will be starved here. […] …and so I most humbly take my leave for this time, and rest Your Lordships most humble servant to do your Honours all the good service I can, for I have many excellent qualities I give God thankes for it. Tobias Hume Colonell. FINIS.

Mindkét legújabb, hamarosan bemutatásra, illetve CD-re kerülő művem vonóshangszerekre íródott. A 6 és 1/2 perces “Hume Kapitány utolsó pavinja” Varga Tamás, a Bécsi Filharmonikusok szólócsellistájának felkérésére készült, Kodály híres szólószonátájának speciális hangolására. A mű a CAFe Budapest-en kerül bemutatásra,
https://cafebudapestfest.hu
majd a Wien Modern-en és az egyesült államokban több helyén is elhangzik. A másik darabra a felkérés az interneten keresztül érkezett. Yevgeny Kutik
https://yevgenykutik.com
“Meditáció a Családról” projektéhez rendelt tőlem egy rövid hegedű-bőgő duót, melyet apósával, a Boston Symphony első bőgősével rögzített hangfelvételen. A projekt lényege az, hogy mindegyik felkért zeneszerző egy-egy konkrét fotó alapján komonáljon egy hangszeres “meditációt” maximum 2 perc terjedelemben. A kiadványra, így a fotóra is, még várni kell, de a kísérőszöveg alább olvasható a “Captain Hume” darabról szóló szöveggel együtt.

HOGYAN RAJZOLJUNK FÁT —hegedűre és nagybőgőre
Közép-Kelet-Európa és a Balkán hangszeres népzenéje mindig is közvetlen, illetve Bartók és Ligeti zenéjén keresztül közvetett hatással volt rám. Amikor a múltról szólok, ezt a zenei nyelvet beszélem. Amint Yevgeny Kutik megkeresett, hogy komponáljak egy darabot a “Meditáció a Családról” projektjéhez, nekem rögtön az a családfa jutott eszembe, amelyet személyes kérésemre, a 30. születésnapomra ajéndék képpen rokonaim állítottak össze a számomra. A darab másik kiinduló pontja az a kép volt, amely az évente megrendezésre kerülő Balaton parti Vajda családi találkozón készült, és ami valójában inkább egy családi piramist, mint fát mutat.
A mára már tíz generációig visszamenő családfa és a négy generációt mutató fénykép közösen inspirálták két perces duómat hegedúre és bőgőre. A mélyebb vonós hangszer mintegy a fa törzsét, míg a hegedű népzenei jellegű virtuóz zenei anyaga az ágakat jelképezi. Egy családfánál minél régebbre megyünk vissza annál homályosabb kontúrokat látunk, azaz olyan fa ez, ahol az ágak hozzánk közel vannak és tisztán láthatóak, a törzs pedig a homályba vész. Törzs nélkül persze nem lennének ágak.

HUME KAPITÁNY UTOLSÓ PAVINJA —szóló csellóra
1629 Karácsonyán Tobias Hume hivatásos katona, viol játékos és zeneszerző a londoni Charterhouse lakója lett, azaz ekkor már legalább 50 éves volt, és szegény. 1642 júniusában magát a ‘colonel’ ranggal felruházva sokadik petícióját küldte az ország parlamentjének, amelyben felajánlotta szolgálatait a Királynak, és amely irományban szegénységéről és szerencsétlen sorsáról is tudósított. Nagy valószínűséggel erre sem kapott választ 1645 április 16-án bekövetkezett haláláig. Amióta a 2000-es évek elején Jordi Savall spanyol régizene szakértő és gambajátékos újra, a szélesebb közönség számára is felfedezte Hume zenéjét, nemcsak mint zeneszerző, hanem mint karakter is izgatott ez a skót Don Quixote. A Varga Tamás kérésére komponált szóló cselló darabom Hume kapitány utolsó ránk maradt, szívszakasztó levelének zenei eszközökkel való felidézése, egy elboruló elméjű muzsikus-katona megható üzenete.

Hume ezredes, aki egyike vala a híres Charter-ház szegény testvéreinek, igaz petíciója, ahogy az a lordok gyülekezetének a Parlament felsőházában átadatott, […]
Hume, Tobias, elhalálozott 1645 évben
Igen tisztelt nemes uraim,
Esedezve kérem Lordságitokat, engedjétek tudnom, miért aláztak meg, mintha bolond lennék, vagy szamár; istenemre, bizonyosan rágalmas szavakkal illetett Lordságitok előtt némely hitvány fickó, de ha tudnám, kik azok, tennék róla, hogy megfizessenek, bármely nagyra is tartanátok őket, mivel én sokkal nagyobb szolgálatot tehetnék Király urunknak és Országunknak, mint ezen ország, vagy akár az egész kereszténység legjobb katonája vagy óbestere, mert mostan nagy csodálkozásomra szolgál, hogy Lordságitok annyi alkalmatlan katonát eltűrnek, hogy Írországba menjenek és ottan szolgálják fenséges Király Urunkat, kik pedig nem alkalmasak arra, hogy egy Századot elvezessenek, s azt sem tudják, mi váratik el egy katonától; […]
Tehát ha Uraságotok kegyeskednének fizetni nékem vagy egy meg félszáz harci felszerelést, melyet magammal vihetek, ha kegyeskednének elküldeni Írországba és engem neveznének ki parancsnokául azon az embereknek, kik Írországba mennek, vállalom, hogy legkésőbb három vagy négy hónap alatt egész Írországot megszerzem, vagy ha nem tenném, akkor vegyék fejem, ha a csapataim is odáig eljutnának, ahová én és mindezt legnagyobb titoktartás mellet teendem. […]
… és mindemellett, ha nem hinnének nekem, nem az én hibám, ha kimondom az igazságot: ha nem engedik, hogy én legyek a katonák parancsnoka, kik Írországban mennek ezidőn, úgy más országot keresek, ahol vezetni engednek, mert csak ez minden, amit Lordságaitoktól vágyok. De mégis él bennem a remély, hogy kegyeskedtek hinni nekem és segítetek engem, ki nagy szenvedésben élek mivel hogy ezer katonát tartottam ebben a városban, hogy Írországban szolgálják a királyt, és hét héten keresztül tartottam őket, amitől elszegényedtem s legjobb ruháimat zálogba kellett adjam, s most nincs, mit viseljek.
És épp ezért alázatosan esedezem nemes Lordok, hozzátok, ne hagyjatok szenvednem és elsorvadnom étek hiányában, mert egy pennim sincsen, ki segítségemre lenne manapság, hogy kenyeret vegyek rajta, s lassan éhen halok hús és ital hiányában, s késő éjjelen a mezőre járok csigát gyűjteni a csalánosban, s kosárnyit haza vigyek s azt egyem s most ezen tengődök más húsnak hijján, e föld nagy szégyenére, s azokéra kik nem nyújtanak segítő kezet, hanem inkább arra uszítják szolganépüket, hogy távol tartsanak kapuiktól… […]
… mert csigán élek meg barna kenyéren, s kevéske sört iszom csak, s néha vizet, s úgy gondolám jónak, hogy mindezeket tudassam Lordságitokkal, remélvén, hogy Kegyességtek segít majd egy kicsinyést enyhülést lelni, vagy máskülönben kényszerítve leszek elhagyni eme földet, hogy más Királyt szolgáljak, s megtegyem néki mindama hatalmas szolgálatokat, melyet szívesebben tennék saját, legkegyelmesebb Királyomnak, […]
Ha ezen szolgálat nem találtatna méltónak étekre és italra, mérlegeljétek, hogy ti vagytok a parlament szigorú és bölcs urai, mert én több kérelmet Lordságitok felé nem írok, mert már eddig számát sem tudni, annyit küldtem, s egyikre sem jövel válasz, éppen ezért, ha Lordságitok nem tart el, sem pénzt nem ad, hogy ételt s italt vásároljak, a lehető leggyorsabban inkább más Országokba távozom, mintsem hogy honomban éhen haljak. […]
Így legkegyelmesebben engedelmükkel búcsút veszek s kívánom, hogy legkegyelmesebb szolgátok az önök szolgálatára leendjék, mivel sok kiváló tulajdonsággal rendelkezem, melyért csak Istent illeti dicsőség.
Hume Tobiás óbester FINIS.
Fordította: Vajda Márta

Happy Wednesday / Vidám szerda

It sure feels like this is the beginning of the season already, however my debut with the Györ Philharmonic is really the last concert of my summer. Check out the program of the 2018 European Clarinet Festival here:
http://www.clarinetfestgyor2018.com

I had a great time in Portland, OR with Three Leg Torso and the Portland Festival Symphony playing at beautiful city parks for big crowds in the first two weeks of August. After returning to Hungary I’ve had some time off at the famous Lake Balaton. Of course, I used the time to do some composing and arranging. I am working on my new orchestral piece for the Hungarian Radio symphony for March 2019 called Gloomy Sunday Variations, and on arrangements of Debussy’s Faun and Ravel’s Pavane for flute, clarinet, harp and string quartet. I am looking forward to starting the 18-19 season in Huntsville in about three weeks, and in Hungary with the Radio Symphony at the end of September. I will keep you posted, thanks for reading!

Hiába még nyár, de már szezonkezdés érzésem van az e heti koncertemmel kapcsolatban. Az Európai Klarinétfesztivál (program a fenti linken) gála koncertje ma este egyben a debütálásom is a Győri Filharmonikusok élén.
Augusztus első két hetében remek hangulatú koncertjeim voltak a Portland Festival Symphony élén a Three Leg Torso nevű world music csapat közreműködésével a város parkjaiban, szép számú közönség előtt. Ezután nyaraltam a Balatonnál egy kicsit. A fürdés és a Vajda család szokásos éves összejövetele mellé persze befért némi komponálás és hangszerelés is. A Rádiózenekar jövő évi koncertjére írom a Szomorú Vasárnap Variációkat, illetve a Ravel Pavane és a Debussy Faun kamarazenei átiratait is készítem. Kb. 3 hét múlva kezdem a 18-19-es szezont Huntsville-ben, majd a Rádiózenekarral itthon szeptember végén. Többet hamarosan itt! Kellemes nyár végét mindenkinek!

Don Quixote and Captain Tobias Hume / Don Quixote és Hume kapitány

About to start the rehearsals for the last classical show of the season of the Huntsville Symphony. On the program: Don Juan and Don Quixote by Richard Strauss, and the super-chambermusic-concerto for cello and orchestra by Schumann. See the details here:
http://www.hso.org
And here is the website of the soloist: my friend, Emilio Colón, cello player and professor extraordinaire:
http://www.emiliocolon.com

Somehow it feels appropriate to end this successful season with two musical portraits, one about Don Juan, the man who never stops searching for the ideal woman (according to the tale by poet Nikolaus Lenau), and one about Don Quixote, Knight of the Sad Face, who never stopped fighting for good causes, and even went agains the giant windmills. In case you did not make the connection let me spell this out for you: classical music business is constant seduction (that of the audience) and a constant battle of the windmills (that of balancing a budget while serving your community and focusing on your mission statement). We are looking forward to a great crowd this weekend, and to another great season of which you can read about in details here:
http://www.hso.org

It is funny, how things align in one’s professional life. As I am studying and performing Don Quixote, I am about to start composing a solo cello piece for Tamás Varga, principal cellist of the Vienna Philharmonic.
http://www.wienerphilharmoniker.at
Tamás requested a piece for solo cello with the special tuning of the Kodály Solo sonata so he can perform three contemporary compositions and the Kodály on the same concert without having to retune, or to have two cellos ready. I decided to compose a piece called, ‘Captain Hume’s Last Pavin’ based on the last letter of Tobias Hume
http://www.wikipedia.org
I go from the Sad Faced Knight portrayed by a cello to a soldier and viol-player in just a few weeks.
There is another commission coming up for me, this time for solo violin. The project was started by violinist Yevgeny Kutik and it is called ‘Meditation on Family’. Check out the Kickstarter video here:
http://www.kickstarter.com

Thanks for reading!
I will keep you posted on more exciting projects for the month of May, June and July!

Holnap kezdődnek az idei szezon utolsó klasszikus koncertjének próbái a Huntsville Symphony élén. Richard Strauss Don Juan és Don Quixote című szimfonikus költeményei, és Schumann Csellóversenye a program.
http://www.hso.org
Az alábbi linken a cselló szólistáról, Emilio Colónról lehet ovasni, aki Bloomingtonban Starker János utódja, és akivel hosszú évek óta ismerjük egymást.
http://www.emiliocolon.com

Érdekes, hogy a mindig az ideális nőt kereső Don Juan (legalábbis Nikolaus Lenau költeménye szerint) és Don Quixote, a Búsképű Lovag története zárják az idei szezont. Valahogy a klasszikus zenei biznisz is ehhez hasonló, egyfelől állandó csábítás (a közönségé), másfelől meg folyamatos szélmalomharc (adminisztráció és pénzügyek). Azért nem kell aggódni, a képem nem bús, és akárcsak Don Quixote, sosem állok meg. Ennek bizonyítéka az HSO következő szezonja, amelyről itt lehet olvasni:
http://www.hso.org

Ami a zeneszerzést illeti, a cselló által megszemélyesített képzeletbeli lovagtól egy valódi katona és viol-játékos történetéhez érkezem hamarosan. Barátom és régi kamarazene-társam, a Bécsi Filharmonikusok szóló csellistája, Varga Tamás
http://www.wienerphilharmoniker.at
kért fel egy mű megírására, amely Kodály Szólószonátájának speciális hangolását veszi alapul. A darab címe “Hume Kapitény utolsó pavinja” lesz, amely Captain Tobias Hume utolsó levelének szövege inspirált. Hume rendkívül érdekes történetéről itt lehet olvasni:
http://www.wikipedia.org
Egy másik felkérés is érkezett nemrég, ezúttal szóló hegedűre írott kompozícióra, amely Yevgeny Kutik hegedűs ‘Meditation on Family’ projektjének része lesz. A projekt Kickstarter kampány videója itt tekinthető meg:
http://www.kickstarter.com

Hamarosan újabb izgalmas hírekkel jelentkezem a következő néhány hónap eseményeiről, addig is köszönöm a figyelmet!

Holiday Wishes from Around the World

It’s time for the last entry of the calendar year. Why? Because I will be on my way to Taiwan next Monday, then off to China on December 26, and I won’t be back until early January. This will be my first ever trip to Asia ever. I will be conducting the Kaohsiung Symphony Orchestra in an all Viennese program, again with the great American soprano, Rebecca Nelsen singing. After that comes a multi-stop concert tour with the musicians of the Hungarian Radio Symphony. We will be playing Beethoven Symphony No.8 along with Strauss’ Kaiserwaltzer and other great and fun pieces.
As for what happened since my last blog entry, here is a short summary. On November 14 I have conducted a program with the Hungarian radio Symphony at the Palace of the Arts (MUPA), Budapest. The program was made up of two Mahler compositions, Songs of a Wayfarer and Symphony No.1 “Titan”, and the famous ‘Cantus Artcticus’, concerto for birds and orchestra by Rautavaara. The Radio Symphony and I have made history by playing a Rautavaara work for the very first time in the (now about 18yo) history o Palace of the Arts. After a short and sweet Thanksgiving break with friends in Milwaukee, Wisconsin I have gotten a lot of things done in Huntsville in preparation for season 18-19. Last week after spending two full days at the Budapest Music Center, composer-conductor Peter Eötvös and myself have selected 4 young composers and 2 conductors for the multi-year mentor program of the Peter Eötvös Contemporary Music Foundation. Two days ago I have spent a day working with the Pannon Philharmonic Orchestra in Pécs.
In the meantime I have finished Part One of my new-old Puppet Opera, The Giant Baby (premiere early July, 2018 at the Armel Festival) and have sent the vocal scores to the singers. I am planning to finish working on the opera latest by mid March, 2018. More on it later!
Check out my pretty busy schedule of the first three months of calendar year 2018 here ———————————>
If you are on the main page of my blog site just look to the right! 😉
I wish all of you a Blessed Holiday Season and all the best for the New Year!
See you here again in January!

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!

Bartók’s Birds

There is the famous bird trio for flute, oboe and clarinet in Beethoven’s ‘Pastoral’ symphony. There are the identifiable American birds in Bartók’s Piano Concerto No.3, and the sounds of rural Romania as composed by the young György Ligeti in his Concert Românesque. The 5th classical concert of the Huntsville Symphony fits the overall theme of the season: The Force of Nature.
David Kadouch
https://www.davidkadouch.com
a young and amazing pianist from France is playing the solo piano part of the Bartók Concerto. Needless to say, I am very particular about my Bartók. David has everything a Hungarian maestro’s heart can wish for in a pianist for the Hungarian composer’s last piano concerto. He is not only a virtuoso player but he also knows all the idioms, the unique phrasing, and the sound that is required to perform this music.

Join me and the HSO this Saturday at the VBC to hear three powerful compositions about the power of nature. Experience the power of live symphony music as only we can present it here in the great City of Huntsville!

Jacques And Richard Without Words

We are ready for our next adventure this weekend. Huntsville Symphony presents “Wagner Without Words” at the Von Braun Center on Saturday evening. The stage will be packed with musicians and instruments including some unusual ones like 4 Wagner-tubas, bass trumpet, anvils (in reality they are different size brake drums and other pieces pf metal). We are going to have 4 (!) harps on stage as well. Conductor Lorin Maazel, encouraged by Wieland Wagner, grandson of the composer, created a symphonic synthesis of Richard Wagner’s famous “Ring Cycle”.
Maazel wanted to
ONE a free-flowing synthesis (no stopping in between scenes or operas) in a chronological order starting with the first notes of ‘Rheingold’ and finishing with the very end of ‘Götterdämmerung’
TWO the transitions between scenes must be musically flawless
THREE most of the parts of ‘The Ring’ originally written for orchestra alone (no voices) must be included
FOUR every note must be Wagner’s own

The end product is a 75 minute long gorgeous piece of music for a huge orchestra. It includes the most original and powerful musical moments of the entire cycle and presents Wagner’s orchestral writing at its best.
Going down the “without words” path I have selected two short pieces by Jacques Offenbach, ‘Intermezzo and Barcarole’ from ‘The Tales of Hoffmann’ and ‘Overture to Orpheus in the Underworld’ to make up the first half of the concert. It only takes about 20 minutes to play these two pieces, but then again we will make up for the length in the second half of the show.
Why put Offenbach’s
https://www.wikipedia.org
music with Wagner’s?
https://www.wikipedia.org

First, they were contemporaries.
Second, they were both highly successful and popular, and had a great sense of stage.

I believe, that putting ‘Can Can’ and ‘The Ride of the Valkyries’ on the same program makes for and entertaining yet thought provoking evening. If you like popular melodies and great orchestra playing do not miss this concert!

4000 Kids, 2200 Adults

Huntsville Symphony has just completed a very busy and extremely successful week with 6 concerts and 2 programs. We performed 4 Young People’s Concert and a Free Family Concert for about 4K children (most of the 4th Graders) and a few hundred adults. The latter one I like to call “Bring Your Grandma” concert, and indeed there were many families: grandkids, parents, grandparents alike. Mozart: Figaro Overture, Mendelssohn: Piano Concerto No.1, 1st Movement (played by the brilliant Sarah Han, the winner of the Guild’s Concerto Competition 2017) and James Stephenson’s genius “Compose Yourself” were on the program. Jim’s composition introduces the orchestra, its sections and its instruments to the audience in a set of variations. Before the Finale audience members get to pick and mix 3 different melodies, harmonies and rhythms to create their very own piece of music. I highly recommend “Compose Yourself” to any orchestra interested in a stylish, clever and fun piece of music that can do what Britten’s Young Persons’ Guide can and more! At the Free Family Show I also did a crash course in conducting for kids who were not shy coming on stage. They got to conduct the Mozart Overture with the Huntsville Symphony.
On Saturday evening the HSO had a sold out pops show comprised entirely of John Williams soundtracks. It was a demanding and highly satisfying concert for the orchestra and drew several standing ovations from the audience. Once (tops twice) a year I agree to play the clarinet in Huntsville to benefit the Symphony. I have performed quite a few great chamber music pieces in the past couple of seasons, and also the obligate clarinet solo in a Mozart aria when my Mom was here to sing an opera gala under my baton. This time I played the clarinet solo of Viktor’s Theme from the movie The Terminal. Viktor’s character —played by Tom Hanks in the movie— is especially close to me. We are talking about a man from an imaginary Eastern-European country who gets stuck in an airport terminal in the US and has to manage living there for a few weeks. Considering my crazy busy traveling schedule I do feel like I live in an airport sometimes.
More great music is on the way with the Huntsville Symphony in the next couple of weeks: Mendelssohn, Richard Strauss, Offenbach and Wagner.
Check out our website here:
https://www.hso.org