Busiest Weeks | Legsűrűbb hetek

4 Young People’s Concerts, our annual Free Family show and a SOLD OUT John Williams pops concert is ahead of me with the Huntsville Symphony.
https://www.hso.org
After this busy week I will return to Hungary to conduct the UMZE New Music Ensemble. We will be premiering Fermata by Peter Eötvös, written for an international consortium including Ensemble Intercontemporain and UMZE Ensemble. Our March 6 performance will be the very first time this brand new composition will ever be performed. For the same concert UMZE is also playing another World Premiere by internationally known Hungarian composer Judit Varga, and a new ensemble piece by yours truly. Also on the program Ligeti’s famous Piano Concerto, and a selection from Kurtág cycle, Games (ensemble version).
http://umze.hu
The same week another composition of mine, Lessons with Vivaldi will also be premiered by the Ábrahám Consort.
https://zeneakademia.hu
After the UMZE concert (stay tuned, there will be video available sooner than later) I will be conducting the Hungarian Radio Symphony at the Liszt Academy. We will be playing a beautiful program (postponed twice due to COVID) with pieces by Liszt, Debussy, Britten and Hungarian composer, György Orbán.
This is definitely the busiest time of the season! I am loving it!

4 gyerekkoncert, az éves ingyenes családi szimfonikus show és egy teltházas John Williams pops koncert vár rám ezen a héten a Huntsville Symphony élén.
https://www.hso.org
Március első hetében azután következik az UMZE együttes hangversenye, melyen Eötvös Péter új ensemble darabjának, a Fermata címűnek (egy nemzetközi együttesekből álló konzorcium megrendelése, köztük az Ensemble Intercontemporain és az UMZE). A budapesti koncerten hangzik fel a mű a világon először. Lesz még bemutató Varga Judittól is, és az én Kánon-bagatellek című művem is itt találkozik először a közönséggel, Fejérvári János adja elő Ligeti Zongoraversenyét, és Kurtág Játékok sorozatának darabjait is elmuzsikáljuk, ezúttal ensemble verzióban. Érdemes lesz élőben ott lenni a BMC-ben!
http://umze.hu Ugyancsak március első hetében kerül bemutatásra egy másik művem, a Leckék Vivaldival című, Ábrahám Márta és az Ábrahám Consort előadásában a Zeneakadémián.
https://zeneakademia.hu
Az UMZE koncert után a Rádiózenekarral dirigálhatom majd Liszt, Debussy, Britten és Orbán György műveit (a COVID miatt kétszer halasztott koncert, nagyon szép darabokkal).
Éppen a szezon legsűrűbb hetei zajlanak, én pedig minden percet élvezek!

Year In, Year Out / Évvégére

Year in, year out there is the mandatory food coma of the Christmas Holidays. No matter how hard one tries, family always wins over scale-scare. Hungarian cuisine is hard on your stomach even when it is not the most important Holiday of the year.

After conducting two shows with the Savaria Symphony on December 6&7 (it was an interesting Hungarian program with music by Bartók, Kodály, Viski including my own Duevoe for orchestra) I went into administration mode (lots to get done at the end of the calendar year), then into Holiday shopping/ family-visiting mode. Administration duties included several meetings related to a new and exciting opportunity, as I was asked to serve as the new Artistic Director of Hungary’s leading new music ensemble UMZE.
http://www.umze.hu
I am looking forward to working with the musicians, to planning the next season, and of course to conduct exciting concerts in Hungary and abroad.
As I am writing this (the new Royal Crown Lounge at the Amsterdam Airport is beautiful) I am on my way back to the US to wrap up 2018 with a fun NYE Pops show of music by John Williams at the helm of the Huntsville Symphony Orchestra.
http://www.hso.org
It is going to be exciting and challenging (as J.W. always is), and we will have many fun surprises for the audience as well.
On January 3 I will be on my way back to Europe. I am conducting the wonderful soprano, Emőke Baráth (last time I worked with her it was Bach’s Magnificat on the program) and a hand-selected expert ensemble in a video recording session (the videos will be available online as soon as possible) of two cantatas by a major Hungarian modern composer, Sándor Szokolay. Before the video recording sessions we will present the two works at the library of the Budapest Music Center as part of the Transparent Sound Festival
http://atlatszohang.hu

Soon 2018 is OUT, and 2019 is IN.
I wish all of my friends a Successful and Happy New Year, and lots of amazing musical experiences!

Most, hogy a tradicionális év végi túlzásba vitt evésen ismét sikeresen túl vagyunk, ideje visszatérni a zenei témákhoz. Még az ünnepek előtt, december 6-án és 7-én a Savaria Szimfonikusok élén vezényeltem egy érdekes magyar műsort, Bartók, Kodály, Viski darabjaival, illetve saját Dűvő című zenekari művemmel. Ez után, de még Karácsony előtt ért a megtisztelő felkérés, hogy legyek a UMZE együttes művészeti vezetője. Az erről (is) szóló interjú itt olvasható:
http://www.papageno.hu
Örömmel és izgalommal várom a művészeti vezetéssel járó feladatokat, és a zenészekkel való közös munkát.
2018-at John Williams zenéjével zárom majd, illetve egy olyan zenekari koncerttel, ahol a Huntsville-i közönséget a zenén kívül még számtalan más (az amszterdami reptéri lounge-ban ebben a pillanatban szólították a pulthoz a Keith Richard nevű utast… Hogy mik vannak!) meglepetés is várja.
http://www.hso.org
Január első két hetében Szokolay Sándor két kantátáját vezényelem majd az Átlátszó Hang fesztiválon. A koncert után videófelvételre is sor kerül majd a BMC-ben. A remek muzsikusokról és a projektről bővebben itt lehet olvasni:
http://atlatszohang.hu
Mindenkinek ez úton is Boldog és Sikerekben Gazdag Új Évet, és persze sok szép zenei élményt kívánok 2019-re is!

Acoustic in Not the Paleo Diet of Music / Az akusztikus zene nem Paleo Diéta

The title of this post is a sentence taken from my first TEDx talk. Last Saturday as the first speaker of the newly formed local TEDx VoyagerWay group I gave a talk with the title “LIVE, UNPLUGGED AND CLASSICAL”. A string quartet made of principal players of the Huntsville Symphony shared the stage with me. They played the Intermezzo movement from Mendelssohn’s 2nd string quartet. In may talk I advocated for LIVE performances (with lively demonstrations on the spot), for UNPLUGGED music (and the perfect music machines, classical instruments) and for CLASSICAL music. I am going to make the YouTube video available here as soon as possible. I believe I did make a point, and I also had lots of fun doing it despite the fact, that I have not done such a long scripted presentation in a long-long time.
The day before the talk I conducted the HSO in two Barber pieces and in the Organ Symphony by Camille Saint-Saëns. Nathan Laube played the organ solos beautifully, and he even added a solo organ number to the concert written by Vidor. The concert took place at First baptist Church, Huntsville,
http://www.fbchsv.org
where the orchestra has not played for a long time. The church is beautiful and it sounds really good, and our audience did not mind the free seating either.
Our 2nd Causal Classics was on April 2 at the Botanical Gardens,
http://www.hsvbg.org
where the audience got to sit IN the orchestra, next to our players. We have repeated this type of event for the third time, and it has been always a huge hit. Amy Schwartz-Moretti, former concertmaster of the Oregon Symphony joined us to lead the group, and also to beautifully perform the “hidden violin concerto” in the middle section of Haffner Serenade. Our next, and this season last Casual Classics is on Sunday. We will be performing at an old style American mercantile store called U.G. White downtown Huntsville.
http://www.ugwhite.com
We are teaming up with three authors from Alabama who will read their own texts and poems. Words by Jacqueline Trimble, Harry Moore and Jeanie Thompson will be matched with music by Still, Barber, Bernstein and Dvorak.

http://www.hso.org

But before spoken words and music, the HSO is off to a n exciting adventure. We will be presenting the full movie score of E.T. —The Extra-Terrestrial by John Williams for which show the entire movie will be shown on a big screen hanging above the orchestra.
“E.T. phone home!”

http://www.hso.org

A második és harmadik link a Huntsville Symphony hétvégi koncertjeit mutatja. Szombaton az “E.T. a földönkívüli” című ma már klasszikus mozit prezentáljuk élő zenével. Vasárnap harmadik, ebben a szezonban egyben utolsó “Casual Classics” előadásunkat játszuk, ahol három alabamai író-költő olvassa majd saját művét. Jacqueline Trimble, Harry Moore és Jeanie Thompson írásaihoz Still, Barber, Bernstein és Dvorák zenéjét társítottam. Az E.T. a Von Braun Center nagy koncerttermében, az “Alabama Storytellers” pedig egy régi, igazi amerikai vegyeskereskedésben lesz majd, Huntsville belvárosában.
Itt:
http://www.ugwhite.com

Múlt hétvégén Nathan Laube orgona szólójával játszottuk Samuel Barber: II. Esszé zenekarra, és Toccata Festiva című darabjait, valamint Camille Saint-Saëns “orgona Szimfóniáját” a First Baptist Churchben. A tempolom gyönyörű orgonáján (a 60-as években épült) Nathan eljátszott egy Vidor szólódarabot is. a Huntsville Symphony nem játszott ebben a templomban hosszú évek óta, és most nagy örömmel, és a közönségtől csupa pozitív visszajelzést kapva játszhattunk a remek akusztikában.
Az alábbi linken megnézhető maga az épület.
http://www.fbchsv.org

A hónap a “Casual Classics” sorozat 2. koncertjével kezdődött. Amy Schwartz-Moretti, az Oregon Symphony volt koncertmestere (ma egyetemi professzor) vezette az együttest, és játszotta a szóló hegedűt Mozart Haffner szerenádjában. A Botanikus Kert főépületének egyik helyiségében:
http://www.hsvbg.org
A közönség a zenekari zenészek mellett, között foglalt helyet, majd két-három tételenként engedtem nekik, hogy másik helyre üljenek. Ilyen jellegű koncertet most csináltunk harmadjára, és mindig nagyon népszerű. Hol máshol tapasztalhatná meg egy zenehallgató, hogy milyen egy zenekari zenész bőrében lenni?

Posztom címét első TEDx előadásomból kölcsönöztem, melyet múlt héten tartottam, mint a helyi TEDx VoyagerWay csapat által felkért első előadó. A zenekar szólamvezetőiből alakult vonósnégyes segítségével demonstráltam az ÉLŐ, az AKUSZTIKUS és a KLASSZIKUS zene fontosságát, és próbáltam bizonyítani azt, hogy a technológia fejlődése nem teszi, nem teheti idejét múlttá az akusztikus hangszereken élőben előadott klasszikus zenét. Az előadás YouTube videóját amint lehet közzéteszem itt is.

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

Toward The Sea Into the New Year

The season of the Huntsville Symphony is always busier between January and May than it is in the fall. The reason? College football. In the fall we are doing our classical concerts on Fridays so we do not have to compete with the games on Saturdays. Also it seems it takes a while for everybody (definitely our core audience) to settle into the usual rhythm after the summer months. After presenting a no-orchestra New Years Eve show with the amazing Bela and Abigail Fleck the Huntsville Symphony is back on the stage of the Von Braun Center and we sure have a lot of notes to play for the second half of the season. Between February 1-4 we are doing 4 Youth Concerts, a Free Family Concert and a Pops concert with all John Williams movie hits. We are presenting our ever popular “dinner-concert” Casual Classics on February 12, then another classical concert with the music of Wagner and Offenbach on February 18.
https://www.hso.org

Yesterday, with a smaller than usual orchestra on stage, I conducted the HSO in a show called “Flute and Harp Impressions”. Principal flutist Evelyn Loehrlein and harpist Katherine Newman joined guest flutist Gergely Ittzes in a selection of pieces by Vivaldi, Debussy, Takemitsu and Respighi.
Gergely Ittzes https://www.ittzesgergely.hu has also performed two of his own solo flute compositions presenting unusual virtuosity on his instrument along with many special effects never heard before by our audience. Ittzes is capable of playing clear double stops (intervals) on the flute and special effects that sound like walking bass or an Indian, or Japanese traditional instrument. Our audience was very enthusiastic and thrilled about all the music that was presented. I believe we did justice to Vivaldi as well, since his music —due to the big size of our concert venue— has been definitely underrepresented in the classical series.
My favorite part of the concert was when Gergely Ittzes played Debussy’s famous solo flute composition, Syrinx then we went right into playing Takemitsu’s mesmerizing “Toward the Sea II” for alto flute, harp and strings. Great job HSO string section!
I admire Takemitsu for his beautiful sound colors and soothing rhythmical complexities (yes it does sound like a contradiction, but Takemitsu is just doing, in his own language, what Debussy has invented more than a 100ys ago now). I was very pleased with the audience’s positive response.
Our New Year has just started, and we are sailing on toward new adventures. Come and join us in 2017, too!

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

All About Horns

No, not about the fantasy-horror with Daniel Radcliffe in the main role. Huntsville Symphony’s 5th Classical concert this season was about different horns like the post horn, a tuba and French horns. Our soloist on Saturday, playing the Tuba Concerto by Williams was my good friend and amazing musician- Alan Baer, Principal Tuba, New York Philharmonic.
http://www.baertracksmusic.com
I conducted this beautiful piece a long time ago, but with a bass trombone soloist. In all honesty, the piece works much better with tuba. I am surprised that it is not on the repertoire of all the orchestras around the world. I guess it takes some courage to invite a tuba player as a soloist instead of a violinist or a piano player :). The audience loved the piece and rewarded the performance with a long standing ovation.

The second half of the concert started with one of my all time favorite compositions, the Sextet from the opera ‘Capriccio’ by Richard Strauss (I rearranged it for a small string orchestra) and ended with Till Eulenspiegel’s Marry Pranks. HSO rocked the piece!

In the first half, as an homage to Richard Strauss’s admiration for Mozart’s music we performed the Posthorn Serenade. I had the flutes, oboes and bassoons seated in the front of the orchestra. This emphasized the fact, that the two middle movements of the Serenade are really a hidden Sinfonia Concertante for woodwind instruments.
Chris Coletti http://www.trumpetchris.com
played the famous Post horn solo beautifully. Other than the famous 2nd Trio of the 2nd Menuet with the post horn in it, the trumpet section played on natural trumpets for the entire piece.

One more casual classic about The Science of Music and a classical concert with Liszt, Bartok and Brahms on the program are in store for this season with the HSO. Visit our website for details!
http://www.hso.org

Music in the Mountains Summer Fest 2013 Second Weekend

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