September List | Szeptemberi lista

Sometimes making a list of things you are doing speaks louder than any essay. By the last day of September I will have conducted these pieces for the following projects.
László Sáry: Cantata Dorogiensis de Eucharistia (live performance for distinguished guests of the International Eucharistic Congress in Dorog, Hungary)
Edward Elgar: Cello Concerto, Richard Strauss: Aus Italien (with the Savaria Symphony for their season opening concert in Szombathely, Hungary. Cello soloist: Tamás Varga)
Marcell Dargay: Ricercar, Dániel Dinyés: Capriccio, Matthias Pintscher: Occultation, Balázs Horváth: Quasi ciaccona metrica (at the helm of the UMZE Ensemble for the opening concert of this year’s edition of ‘European Bridges Festival’ of Palace of the Arts, Budapest. Trumpet solos were played by Simon Hoefele from Berlin, and Tamás Pálfalvi. The extremely difficult horn solo for Mr. Pintscher’s composition was played by János Benyus.)
Liszt: Piano Concerto No.1&2 (for the final round and gala of the International Liszt Piano Competition at the Liszt Academy in Budapest. The orchestral accompaniment was played by the Hungarian National Philharmonic, solos were played by Kevin Chen (1st prize), Giovanni Bertolazzi (2nd Prize), and Gergely Kovács (3rd Prize). Both the Finals and the Gala were live broadcast.)
Dvorák: Slavonic Dances Op.46 No.1-3 & 6-8, Dvorák: Serenade for Winds, Josef Suk: Serenade for Strings (for Classical Concert No.1 of the Huntsville Symphony)
Joshua Burel: Blue Means Water, William Price: Divisions, Amir Zaheri: Queer Canticles I-V (for our first Casual Classics called “Who is Afraid of Living Composers?”. Soprano solo: Amalia (Maya) Osuga)

Thankful to be working, thankful to be doing great music with great musicians. More next month, until then check out the info about the two shows with the Huntsville Symphony here:

https://hso.org

Néha egy lista arról, mi mindent csinál az ember többet mond mint egy esszé. Szeptember utolsó napjáig az alábbi darabokat és projekteket vezényeltem, vezényelem.
Sáry László: Cantata Dorogiensis de Eucharistia (az Eucharisztikus Kongresszus VIP vendégeinek élőben Dorogon az UMZE Együttessel)
Edward Elgar: Csellóverseny, Richard Strauss: Aus Italien (Varga Tamás szólójával, a Savaria Szimfonikusok szezonnyitó koncertje)
Dargay Marcell: Ricercar, Dinyés Dániel: Capriccio, Matthias Pintscher: Occultation, Horváth Balázs: Quasi ciaccona metrica (A MÜPA ‘European Bridges’ Fesztiváljának nyitóhangversenye az UMZE élén. Trombita szólisták: Simon Hoefele, Pálfalvi Tamás. Kürtszólista: Benyus János)
Liszt: I. és II. Zongoraverseny (a Nemzetközi Liszt verseny döntője és gálakoncertje a Nemzeti Filharmonikusokkal, szólistaként a győztesek: Kevin Chen (I. díj), Giovanni Bertolazzi (II. díj), és Kovács Gergely (III. díj). Mind a döntő, mind pedig a gála élőben volt közvetítve.)
Dvorák: Szláv táncok op. 46 Nos. 1-3 és 6-8, Dvorák: Fúvósszerenád, Josef Suk: Szerenéd vonósokra (a Huntsville Symphony szezonnyitó koncertje)
Joshua Burel: Blue Means Water, William Price: Divisions, Amir Zaheri: Queer Canticles I-V (a Huntsville Symphony ‘Casual Classics’ sorozata keretében ‘Ki fél az élő zeneszerzőktől?’ címmel a University of Alabama Huntsville koncerttermében. A szoprán szólista: Amalia (Maya) Osuga)

Örömmel dolgozom sokat és muzsikálok remek zenészekkel. Továbbiak októberben. Addig is a Huntsville-i koncertekről információk az alábbi linken:
https://hso.org

Same Airport, Different Music

HSV-BUD-HSV
I can definitely say that by now I know every little corner of the Huntsville and of the Budapest airports. I have seen these cities from the sky from every possible angle during take off and landing. Every time I depart and arrive however I am carrying different scores in my bag. I’ve got different music for familiar airport lounges.
This time my carry on was heavy of scores by Verdi, Telemann, David Lang
http://davidlangmusic.com/music/child
Kornel Fekete Kovacs
http://feketekovacs.com
and others.

2015 starts off with an all trumpet concert on January 5, honoring the 70th Birthday of Gyorgy Geiger, former principal trumpet player of the Hungarian Radio Symphony.
See a CD here him and I recorded together quite a few years ago:
http://amazon.com

Hungarian trumpeters from all over the world are coming together to celebrate and all of them are playing something fun. I am looking forward to a delightful mix of Baroque and contemporary music and some good times with friends who are also great musicians.
http://tarkovigabor.com
http://gabor-in-concert.com
http://www.berliner-philharmoniker.de

On January 11 Ensemble UMZE and special guest, flute player extraordinaire Claire Chase
http://www.clairechase.net
from NYC will be performing under my direction, again at the beautiful Budapest Music Center. The contemporary musical pieces on the program are all about marriage, birth, children and childhood memories. I am looking forward to hear Claire and the musicians of UMZE performing the Hungarian Premiere of my composition ‘Conversation With Children’!
Read about the concert here:
http://bmc.hu

On January 12 I will be on my way back to Huntsville to conduct Verdi’s magnificent Requiem for the classical series of the Huntsville Symphony. Then back again to Budapest…, but I will write about that in my next posts.

Here are the first two months of the New Year for me in airport codes:
HSV-BUD-HSV-BUD-HSV-BUD-HSV
Delta Lounge, here I come!

Dumb Art On Oaks

First of all, let me apologize for the title of this post.
1) The more I post the more I recognize the difficulty of finding a title that draws attention and will make people read my blog entry. The more I post the more I understand the pressure on online journalists and the direction online media is going. Do I like it? Not really, but I do understand the inevitability of things going the “tabloid way”. You really don’t want to end up like “white noise”.
2) I could not resist. 🙂
3) Please, do google ‘Dumb Art’ and look at the pictures. There are awesome, great pictures there. You are going to be surprised how many amazing works of great artists you will find this way, let alone all the really great street art.

OK, now that this is out of the way, I just have to say there is nothing ‘dumb art like’ about the program I am doing with pianist Lilya Zilberstein http://lilyazilberstein.webs.com/
and the Columbus Symphony this weekend. CSO website calls this Masterworks program a “Concerto Festival” http://columbussymphony.com/
and indeed three out of the four pieces are concertos (and very different ones)

Beethoven: Leonore Overture #3
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Leonore_Overture_No._3
Bach: Concerto for Piano and Strings in D major
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Harpsichord_concertos_(J._S._Bach)
Stravinsky: Concerto in Eb “Dumbarton Oaks”
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Concerto_in_E-flat_%22Dumbarton_Oaks%22
Shostakovich: Piano Concerto #1
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Piano_Concerto_No._1_(Shostakovich)

There are two other elements that make this program exciting for me.

1) “Time Travel”
OK, so you can say that every classical concert is like taking a trip back in time, and you’d be right about that. However having one of the most famous neo-classical pieces on the program (Stravinsky’s Dumbarton Oaks) is a true artistic time travel. This piece is like a 20th Century Brandenburg Concerto. Also I dare to say, that Shostakovich Piano Concerto #1 has many neo-classical moments in it as well. This makes the second half of the program a kind of ‘homage’ to the two composers in the first half. Then there is the fact, that we are playing a Harpsichord concerto with a modern piano as the solo instrument. J.S. Bach would have loved a Steinway if he could have possibly known one. I am afraid that the sound you’ll be hearing, as wonderful as it may be, is historically inappropriate. So there is another type of time travel for you, this time to an “alternate universe”. Bach’s music on the modern piano.
2) “The Trumpet Player’s Progress” (sorry, another Stravinsky reference)
In Beethoven’s Overture our principal trumpet player will leave the stage at a certain point then he’ll play two fanfares from back stage (he shall return to finish the first orchestral trumpet part). At the end of the concert the trumpet takes center stage as the secondary solo instrument of the Shostakovich Piano Concerto. Tom Battenberg, principal trumpet is doing an amazing job as he travels with ease between styles, genres and centuries.

What’s Up With Sussmayr?

“He was born in Schwanenstadt, Upper Austria, the son of a sacristan and teacher (who spelled the name Seissmayr, reflecting the Austrian pronunciation). His mother died when he was 6, and he left home at 13. He was a student and cantor in a Benedictine monastery (from 1779 to 1787) in Kremsmünster. When his voice changed, he became a member of the orchestra as a violinist.
The abbey performed operas and Singspiele, so he had the opportunity to study the operas of Christoph Willibald Gluck and Antonio Salieri. He composed a number of stage works and a good deal of church music for the abbey.
He became (after 1787) a student of Salieri in Vienna. In 1791 he assisted Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart as a copyist with La clemenza di Tito and Die Zauberflöte and is presumed to have written the secco recitatives in the first. Their relationship was close and playful, to judge by surviving letters to Constanze, whom Süssmayr accompanied to Baden.
For many years he was also thought to have been a student of Mozart, but there is reason to think that the notion of such a relationship was concocted by Mozart’s wife Constanze in order to legitimize his completion of Mozart’s Requiem. During Mozart’s last days, it is possible that they discussed his Requiem, and Süssmayr took on the task of completing the piece upon his death and did so, turning it over to Constanze within 100 days of Mozart’s death. Süssmayr’s version of the score is still the most often played, although several alternative versions have been written.”
[from Wikipedia]

Yeah, what’s up with this whole Sussmayr thing? According to Harnoncourt in no circumstances could he complete Mozart’s work. (Who did it then?) As far as I am concerned there are more “Mozart Requiems” and the one under the name of Sussmayr has its own life and has been proven to engage musicians and audiences despite its flaws. This is the version I have played many times as a young clarinet player (Oh, those cold churches in Hungary around Christmas time!) and this is the version we performed yesterday with the Huntsville Symphony in front of a full house at the Von Braun Center. The concert started with Mozart’s Masonic Funeral Music (another gorgeous piece using Basset horns) and we performed Haydn Symphony #93 before intermission. Our trumpet and horn players –as adventurous as they are– decided to use natural horns for the entire show. It sounded great and added an extra layer of artistry to the show.
Fun fact: I am traveling to Hungary today where I am doing a new music show next week. One of the pieces is going to be “Into The Little Hill”, a mesmerizing chamber opera by British composer George Benjamin. Guess what, he uses not one but two Basset horns (and Contrabass Clarinet among other “unusual” instruments) just like Mozart in his Masonic Funeral Music and Requiem. I love the sound of the Basset horns!

International Bartok Festival Opening Concert

The last concert of the season for me is coming up at the International Bartok Festival in Szombathely, Hungary.
As a clarinet- and later as a conductor-student I have participated many times at the master courses of this signature new music festival. It was here about 20 years ago when I first met Peter Eotvos.
http://www.eotvospeter.com
I also studied with Gyorgy Kurtag here and listened to lectures of Gyorgy Ligeti.
I was invited as a professor of the conducting master course in 2009 and this summer I am doing the opening concert of the festival with the Savaria Symphony Orchestra as a guest conductor. Live concert broadcast by the Hungarian Radio can be streamed here:
http://www.mr3-bartok.hu

Bartok: Wooden Prince Suite
Ligeti: Mysteries of the Macabre (Bence Horvath -trumpet)
Eotvos: Cello Concerto Grosso (Miklos Perenyi -cello)
Kodaly: Hary Janos Suite

More information about the program of the festival is available here:
http://www.bartokfestival.hu