Time of Books and Summer Music/ Könyvek és nyári zenék

I have been reading lately with feverish speed and with a grand appetite for very different writers and different kind of books, both in English and in Hungarian.
It all started more than a month ago with a book entitled The Life and Deaths (yes plural!) of Imre Kertész by Clara Royer. This fascinating book about the only Hungarian Nobel-Prize winner author, a Holocaust survival, reads easily, and captures as much as possible of Kertész’ personality through his own words, diaries and works. This book made me want to read Kertész again so I dived into his last novel, Beyond the Last Tavern. How to tell the story of wanting to write a particular story for a lifetime and not succeeding? Nobody can do it better than him.The edited diary parts of the book has many mentions of late Avantgarde composer György Ligeti, and of course Bartók, Haydn, Mahler and Wagner. Music was of great importance to I.K. Also, who would have thought that getting the Nobel-Prize for literature counts as one of the many deaths if the winner wants nothing more just to be able to be as creative as when he was young and without a penny. Sad, depressing book, but also touching and heroic. Then I read something completely different, and again a book that was impossible to put down. Picasso, The Red Rooster it is called, and it was written by the Czech František Mikš. The book contains three fascinating portraits of artists who have been seduced, endorsed, used, abused and in at least one case killed by Communism and its henchmen. Kazimir Malevich, Georg Grosz and Pablo Picasso have always had my attention because of their art. Now I know much more about their lives, political believes and suffering. I am afraid, that this book is not available in English. As a change of pace the next book for me to read was If This Isn’t Nice What Is?, a collection of all the Graduation speeches of Kurt Vonnegut Jr. Let me put one quote in here.
“I am enchanted by the Sermon on the Mount. Being merciful, it seems to me, is the only good idea we have received so far. Perhaps we will get another good idea by and by – and then we will have two good ideas.”
On my nightstand I have Seven Brief Lessons On Physics by Italian theoretical physicist Carlo Rovelli. It’s fascinating.

As for summer music, after doing our first ever Summer Night Symphony in Huntsville, which show was very well received and a great success, I am off to Oregon tomorrow to start the summer season of the Portland Festival Symphony. Four fun concerts in four beautiful Portland Parks on two weekends. Check out the dates, parks and the program here.

http://www.portlandfestivalsymphony.org

A fenti linken olvasható a Portland Festival Symphony idei nyári programja benne többek között mind a 10 Brahms Magyar tánccal. Két hétvége, négy koncert, négy park. Aztán irány Kanada, majd Franciaország, de erről bővebben később.

Az elmúlt másfél hónapban nagy sebességgel és még nagyobb élvezettel faltam a könyveket.

Kezdtem Clara Royer Kertész Imre élete és halálai című letehetetlen életrajzírásával, majd annak hatására folytattam Kertész Utolsó kocsma című napló-regényével. Nyomasztó és megható, de leginkább kíméletlenül őszinte könyv, benne Mahler, Bartók és Haydn sokszor említve, akárcsak Schiff András. A haldokló Ligeti Györgyről sértett és személyeskedő, bár sokmindenben lényeglátó kiszólások. Kétszeri nekifutás egy már soha el nem készülő regénynek.
“Életem története a halálaimból áll, ha el akarnám beszélni az életemet, a halálaimat kellene elmondanom.”

Picasso a vörös kakas a cseh František Mikštől. Kazimir Malevics, Georg Grosz és Pablo Picasso életpályája a politika, de különösen a kommunizmus tükrében. Kötelező olvasmány, bár a szerző a végén nem bírja visszatartani a szuprematizmus és a minimalizmus iránti személyes ellenszenvét. Szegény Piet Mondrian!

Mondhatni lazítás képpen elolvastam Kurt Vonnegut Jr. összegyűjtött diplomaosztó beszédeit. Tőle már alig van könyv, amit ne olvastam volna. Nem tudom megunni. Felkészül Carlo Rovelli, olasz fizikus Hét rövid lecke a fizikáról című könyvével, benne az általános relativitás elmélete, quantumfizika és még sokminden más érthetően és élvezhetően magyarázva.

Action Packed Three Weeks

And more to come.
Huntsville Symphony has had a successful opening classical week with Mussorgsky-Ravel Pictures at an Exhibition and Orff’s Carmina Burana. It was just the perfect way to start the season and to create lots of positive buzz. My first weekend of the 2017-18 season at Huntsville also included an extensive day of auditions for several positions, including Concert Master and Principal Cello. We have hired some talented players and will be inviting candidates to fill the principal spots starting January.
The week after I have traveled to New Brunswick, NJ and conducted the Rutgers Symphony Orchestra. The program was the following: Ravel: La Valse, Haydn: Cello Concerto in C, Stravinsky: Petrushka. It was a great week with the young players and with this fun program. Also the first time ever I have stayed at an actual university campus. It was good to reunite and to spend some time with my friend, Al Baer, principal tuba player of the New York Phil and the head of the brass department at Rutgers. Last Friday I have conducted the second classical show of the season in Huntsville. Both our soloist, Claire Huangci and the orchestra did a great job in an especially difficult program. Ravel: Rapsodie Espagnol,Piano Concerto in G, Respighi: Fountains of Rome, and Debussy: La Mer. Just two days later, on Sunday we presented our first Casual Classics performance with Schubert’s genius Octet for which I have picked up my clarinet again. It was our usual, annual dinner/concert setting with the musicians telling funny stories about themselves. Oh yes, and the performance took place at the Yellowhammer Brewery’s Speakeasy, a perfect venue for this serenade-like composition.
I am writing this post at the KLM Lounge at the Amsterdam Airport. When I am done, I am going to continue watching YouTube videos of 77 young conductors who have applied to the multi year mentor program of the International Eotvos Contemporary Music Foundation. This week Peter Eotvos and I will be selecting the ones who will travel to Budapest in December to participate in a live audition along with 30 some young composers.
On Tuesday I am starting the rehearsals with the Hungarian Radio Symphony for our November 14 concert. For the program click the link below!

http://www.mrze.hu

Stay tuned and thanks for reading!

Mozart Symphony tailored to fit Mahler 4

First concert of “Voices and Symphonies” series with Hungarian Radio Symphony (MR Symphony)
http://www.mrze.hu
at Palace of the Arts, Budapest.
First half: Mahler Symphony #4
http://www.wikipedia.org
Second half: Mozart “Prague” Symphony with ‘Un moto di gioia’ concert aria as the “missing minuet”
http://www.wikipedia.org

I designed this program to tell the ‘story’ of the “Lied Symphonie”. Mahler’s Fourth is the last of his symphonies inspired by “The Boy’s Magic Horn” collection of poems.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Des_Knaben_Wunderhorn
I picked a three movement Mozart Symphony for the second (!) half of the program and inserted an aria about “the joyous movement of the heart” (written as an addition to Marriage of Figaro). It rhymes with the Mahler Symphony and “completes” the three movement classical symphony into a four movement piece. It is also a reminder that back in the days of Mozart the usual concert format was very different. They often mixed genres. A concert-aria could end up after one or two movements of a symphony paired with a concert rondo for piano and orchestra for example.

I am curious what the critics will have to say about this. 🙂