Happiest End of Times | Legboldogabb világvége

Happiest? Well, no. Perhaps light is spirit. Really? Well, I am not so sure.
What for sure is the fact that neither Saint-Saëns, nor Tchaikovsky, and not even Rachmaninov can be taken too seriously when quoting ‘Dies Irae’ in their works. For this week’s Classical concert in Huntsville I have programmed Danse Macabre, Rhapsody on a Theme of Paganini and Orchestral Suite No. 3 by Saint-Saëns, Rachmaninov and Tchaikovsky respectively. Dies Irae, the famous and infamous “Day of Wrath” sequence, attributed to St. Gregory the Great (d. 604) by some sources, has a long history in being quoted. Rachmaninov was especially obsessed with this menacing melody. He used it in his Symphony No.2&3, in his symphonic poem, Isle of the Dead (well, it fits the theme there…), in ‘The Bells’ for choir and orchestra and also in his Symphonic Dances along with some solo piano pieces (and of course in the Rhapsody in question as well). What I find intriguing in the three pieces programmed together for this Saturday is exactly the fact, that neither pieces treat this particular melody according to its original meaning. Three pieces, three quotes, three types of “parentheses”. Other than this common thread, the light-spirited elegance of the music holds this program together. A ‘wanna-be-symphony’ by Pyotr Ilyich, an ‘almost-piano-concerto’ by Sergei, and an ‘all-time-halloween-favorite’ by Camille make for a fun evening. Be there or be square!

https://www.hso.org

Legboldogabb? Azt talán mégsem. Könnyed? Talán. Biztos ez? Nem olyan biztos.
Ami bizonyos az a tény, hogy sem Saint-Saëns, sem Csajkovszkij, de még Rachmaninov sem vehető túlságosan komolyan amikor a ‘Dies Irae’-t idézik. A Huntsville Symphony e heti klasszikus koncertjén három művet, a Haláltáncot, a Rapszódia egy Paganini témára, és a Harmadik Zenekari Szvit címűt tettem a programba, sorrendben Saint-Saëns, Rachmaninov és Csajkovszkij tollából. A ‘Dies Irae’, magyarul ‘A harag napja’, – egy bizonyos források szerint Nagy Szent Gergelynek tulajdonítható szekvencia – számtalan műben megidéztetik. Jelen rapszódiáján kívül csak Rachmaninov 2. és 3. szimfóniájában, Holtak szigete című szimfonikus költeményében, ‘A harangok’ című kórus-szimfóniájában és néhány szóló-zongoraművében idézi a dallamot. Amit már a most szombaton játszandó program összerakásakor is érdekesnek találtam az éppen az, hogy az azon szereplő egyik mű sem veszi túl komolyan, avagy használja szokásos jelentésében a a ‘Dies Irae’-t. Mindhárom darab stílusa könnyed, mindhárom ‘Harag Napja’ (Saint-Saëns esetében még dúrban is az eredeti moll helyett!) futó epizód csupán az általában elegáns és szórakoztató zenei folyamatban. Egy ‘majdnem-szimfónia’, egy ‘mini-zongoraverseny’ és egy örök-Halloween-kedvenc ‘rajzfilmzene’ szerepelnek együtt ez évi első nagy klasszikus hangversenyünkön. Aki erre jár, jöjjön a koncertterembe, szeretettel várjuk. 🙂

Music On The Move | Zene mozgásban

Four shows and one open dress rehearsal in three days with the Huntsville Symphony.
Young People’s Concert and Free Family Concert with Haydn’s ‘L’isola disabitata’ Overture and ‘The Carnival of the Animals’ by Camille Saint-Saëns on the program.The same Haydn Overture, Piano Concerto No.1 by Shostakovich (with Gilles Vonsattel https://www.gillesvonsattel.com
at the piano and our own Chris Coletti playing the trumpet solo) and Mozart’s K.201 Symphony in A-major for our Sneak Preview rehearsal and Classical show.
https://www.hso.org
Musicians and audiences are happy, we make music, music make community.
I am on the move right after our classical concert, returning to Hungary to work with the Savaria Symphony. We will be presenting a live stream with Mozart and Tchaikovsky on the program. Stay tuned!

Négy koncert, egy nyilvános főpróba három nap alatt a Huntsville Szimfonikusokkal.
Ifjúsági és családi koncert Haydn ‘A lakatlan sziget’ nyitányával és Camille Saint-Saëns ‘Az állatok farsangjával’ a programon. Utóbbihoz óriásbábok, és Ogden Nash felettébb szórakoztató versei is társulnak majd. A ‘Sneak Preview’ elnevezésű nyilvános főpróbán és a klasszikus hangversenyen ugyanaz a Haydn nyitány, Sosztakovics I. Zongoraversenye (Gilles Vonsattel https://www.gillesvonsattel.com
a zongoránál, Chris Coletti trombitál) és Mozart A-dúr, K.201 szimfóniája lesz a menü.
További részletek a zenekar honlapján:
https://www.hso.org
A klasszikus koncert után irány vissza Magyarországra: igyekszem mozgásban maradni. A Savaria Szimfonikusok koncert-streamjén Mozart és Csajkovszkij műveit játsszuk majd. Erről többet is később, addig is mindenkinek a lehető legtöbb zenét és hozzá egészséget!

Down The Rabbit Hole 2016

“Either the well was very deep, or she fell very slowly, for she had plenty of time as she went down to look about her and to wonder what was going to happen next.”
[Lewis Carroll: Alice in Wonderland]

Down The Rabbit Hole goes 2016. It has been a strange year. We are all falling very slowly and wondering what happens next. Many losses, sad farewells, strange and unexpected twists and turns, and lots of great achievements, adventures, fun and happiness, too. Somehow everyone seems to think that Fate goes by calendar year, and things are going to change for the better on January 1. I am afraid it is not the that simple. Without trying to be too melodramatic I’d say: 2017 is going to be a year of “whatever we make of it”. Remember, we all signed up for a wild ride anyway! 🙂

Why the Alice quote? Well first of all I —like so many of you— admire Carroll’s Alice books. Ever since I first read them characters and quotes keep popping up in my head. Somehow they are always relevant. Lewis Carrol managed to write a truly entertaining encyclopedia of Nonsense, otherwise known as Life. After composing, premiering and recording my Clarinet Symphony in 2015-16 I was ready to create another major work for clarinet, this time a quintet with string quartet. I teamed up with the amazing Farallon Quintet in San Francisco to bring “Alice Etudes” to life. Read about the piece, the World Premiere performance and the GoFundMe campaign here:
https://www.gofundme.com/AliceEtudes
Yes, you got that right: no Year End without a fundraising pitch! 🙂 The Farallon Quintet and I are trying this for the first time. I hope You can all pitch in and help us make this happen in the New Year!

My last concert of 2016 was on December 14 with the Hungarian Radio Symphony at the Liszt Academy in Budapest. It was an all Saint-Saëns program (lots to discover there!). Andrea Vigh played the harp, and Istvan Vardai played the cello. The latter instrument is the famous Du Préz-Harrel Stradivarius cello which Istvan played for the first time in a live concert after receiving it for permanent lease. It was truly a once in a life time performance: amazing instrument, great musicianship, and first and foremost lots of fun playing real chamber music on an orchestral level. It made me happy to be the part of this performance!

As I am wrapping up the year by celebrating my younger son, Vince’s Birthday on the 29th, and New Year’s Eve with both of my sons Balázs (16) and Vince (14) in the meantime there is a lot of planning and preparing to do. If it is up to me 2017 is going to be one great year!

Whatever is ahead just remember: “It is a poor sort of memory that only works backwards.” Also, at the end: “it really IS a kitten, after all.”

Happy New Year!

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

Musical Metabolism

Metabolism: the sum of the physical and chemical processes in an organism by which its material substance is produced, maintained, and destroyed, and by which energy is made available.
There is sure a lot of energy made available during the performance of Métaboles by Henri Dutilleux. What a great showpiece for orchestra! It comes second on our program this weekend with the Omaha Symphony. The concert opens with Debussy’s Danse (Tarantelle Styrienne) orchestrated by Maurice Ravel himself. Concluding the first half is the virtuoso Violin Concerto #3 by Saint-Saens. My soloist for this piece is the amazing David Kim, concert master of the Philadelphia Orchestra
http://davidkimviolin.com
After a varied and fairly long first half we are playing only one composition for the second half of the concert. Shostakovich Symphony #1 is a long time favorite of mine. Written by a 19yo composer this symphony has everything we love Shostakovich for without the long shadow of Comrade Stalin over it.
About 9 years ago I was invited to conduct the Omaha Symphony for its last concert in their old concert hall. I was also asked to do a rehearsal in the then not yet finished new hall to help the acoustic adjustments the venue needed. This time I am really fortunate to conduct two shows of a truly exciting program in the Holland Center’s beautiful concert hall.