Michel Plasson, formative conductor of the Orchestre du Capitole du Toulouse (1968-2003) and later of the Dresden Philharmonic, was conducting in Seville today when the players heard it  was his 80th birthday. They rushed out and got him a bottle of the region’s finest.

plasson

Here, as promised, is our first blog entry by a British composer who’s about to stage a world premiere in Mozart’s town. Enjoy.
harlot
My name is Iain Bell and I am a 33-year old classical composer. My opera ‘A Harlot’s Progress’ (based on the Hogarth series of etchings to a libretto by Peter Ackroyd) is due to receive its world premiere in Vienna’s Theater an der Wien on Sunday October 13th.
As of today, I have been in Vienna for exactly a month and will stay for another month. Being at this mid-point, a day shy of a fortnight before curtain-up, it feels like the perfect opportunity to take stock and bring you all (and myself) up to speed…
Now that time has ironed out those initial creases of paranoia that so crumpled my first few days here, with such internal outcries as, “that piano score reduction sounds nothing like the orchestra…eek” or blaming myself when a singer is fishing for their pitch at a particularly thorny vocal entry, I have now adapted to and grown very fond of my life in Vienna; I know to get all my food shopping in on a Saturday night as no shops are open on a Sunday, likewise I know better than to cross at a red light lest I incur the wrath of spittle-filled tutting from all others!
It is difficult to convey the surrealism that came with the first few days of rehearsal here. Obviously I knew this period was coming; I completed the work eighteen months ago and it was commissioned in 2010. Nonetheless, nothing could prepare me for the fact that on that first day of scenic rehearsals those dozens upon dozens of people were in that studio to realise a story that had up to that point existed solely (to me) as six etchings that had somehow morphed in my mind into the form of a black-and-white Watch with Mother cartoon with a slightly racier sound track.
What should have been the least surprising moment of the entire process was when the time came to hear the singers actually ‘sing’ their roles. I don’t know why it came as such a shock to me to hear them finally utter the words I had set to music, it is an opera after all, but I was utterly bull-dozed. No longer did I have to imagine how Diana Damrau would shape a certain phrase, it was there, living and breathing in 3D (excuse the mixed metaphor). Moll Hackabout – Hogarth’s name for his titular harlot – now existed, and what’s more she had a much finer voice than my broken-baritone could ever muster!
iain bell
As the weeks have passed, I’ve become more relaxed in the environment and completely engaged in the rehearsals I have attended. I chose not to attend them all as it was very important to me to hand over the reins to the singers, directorial and musical staff and let them really stamp their own identities on the piece. I didn’t want them to just interpret, I wanted them to create and therefore have as much ownership of the work as me. This has thus far floored every journalist out here who has interviewed me who are seemingly all too aware of stories about composers terrorising entire houses with their diktats. Not for me. There is so much fun collaboration to be had as an opera composer so you have to be willing and happy to embrace that, if not, just stick to writing (and conducting) symphonies!
So t-minus 13 days and I am a very happy bunny indeed. The cast is on fire, we have had several runs of the piece already and the director’s concept is marvellous. That said, I am well aware that another set of tests will be presented in the coming week. We move from our studio rehearsal space in the outskirts of Vienna to the stage in the opera house, meaning the cast will have to transfer all their staging to a completely new space. This is also the week in which the first orchestral rehearsals take place. I have been urged by my publisher to stay well away from the first couple of these. The orchestra is world-class but as this piece is brand new to them, one cannot expect them to be note-perfect on the first attempt, so it has been decided that hearing this may not be a completely necessary part of my musical journey, as desperate as I am to hear them breathe life into the dark underbelly of London I have sought to evoke!
Will let you know…

The Burkhard C. Kosminski production that showed SS guards killing Jewish prisoners in a concentration camp has been awarded the coveted Opernwelt prize for Worst of the Year.

"Tannhäuser"-Oper in Düsseldorf

Other winners in the magazine’s annual round-up are:

Opera House of the year: Berlin Komische Oper

Performance of the year: Parsifal at the Vlaamese Opera Antwerp / Ghent, director Tatjana Gürbacas (also voted Director of the Year).

gurbacas

 

New opera: George Benjamin, Written on Skin.

Singer of the Year: Barbara Hannigan (for her performance in Written on Skin).

Orchestra of the Year: Dresden Staatskapelle.

Record of the Year: Cecilia Bartoli’s Norma

 

Tatiana Stoklitskaya, a professor at Moscow’s Central School of Music, had not been seen since September 25.

Last night, her mutilated body was found by friends in her suburban dacha.

The police are questioning a suspect, apparently a builder who had worked on the cottage.

Tatiana Stoklitskaya taught many international virtuosi at an early stage of their development. Aside from the young Pletnev, her pupils included Vladimir Ovchinnikov, Maxim Vengerov and Vladimir Feltsman. She wrote several books on primary education for musicians and founded the museum at the Central School of Music. She was its curator to the day of her death.

On September 26, Tatiana Stoklitskaya would have celebrated her 75th birthday.

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Aaron Jay Kernis, the distinguished US composer, resigned today after 15 years as director of the Minnesota Orchestra’s Composer Institute. ‘I admit total bafflement and dismay at what has been done to dismantle this superb orchestra at the height of its powers,’ he told its president, Michael Henson. ‘The tactics of a lock-out have no place in the life of any artistic organisation.’

But, in an equal swipe at the musicians, he added: ‘I have personally never seen two sides that show such unwillingness to sit down together and attempt to tackle the major challenges that confront the orchestra.’ The trigger for his resignation was the decision to quit by music director Osmo Vanska.

Read the full letter below.

kernis

 

 

It is with great sadness and a heavy heart that I submit my resignation as Director of the Composer Institute at the Minnesota Orchestra.

I admit total bafflement and dismay at what has been done to allow the dismemberment of this superb orchestra at the height of its powers. The tactics of a lock-out have no place in the life of any artistic organization. The artistic and economic flourishing of a community of musicians cannot be ensured by essentially destroying it, nor by avoiding significant compromise on both sides.

I have personally never seen two sides that show such unwillingness to sit down together and attempt to tackle the major challenges that confront the orchestra. The collaborative spirit that is the essence of music-making has been completely absent this past year, and little can be forged without a modicum of trust and good will. In all of this, the audience of music-lovers, who most appreciate the orchestra’s extraordinary gifts have been forgotten and their voices disregarded. They have been left bereft.

Throughout this year I continued to hope for a resolution so the performers could return to Orchestra Hall and the Composer Institute program resume. The program has always put artistic education and collaboration above business models and branding, encouraging highly talented young creators in a generous and fulfilling way, with camaraderie and a strong sense of collaboration between artists and administrators being crucial to the effort. I can say confidently that the Institute had grown into one of the jewels of the Minnesota Orchestra’s programs.

But with not a shred of those sentiments left at the Minnesota Orchestra, I see no point in continuing my work there. Minneapolis has been a second musical home to me. The musical relationships and world-class performances I’ve encountered there have altered the course of my own creativity and path in the most transformative ways.

Over the 15 years of my tenure as New Music Advisor and Director of the Institute it has been one of my great pleasures to collaborate with its orchestra members, many of the finest musicians in the world. The program has been fortunate to receive gracious and passionate support of musicians, audiences, board and administration over the years. I also deeply honor the vision of former Artistic Director Asadour Santourian in the initial shaping of the Institute, unwavering dedication of previous co-director Beth Cowart, and recently Lilly Schwartz has been a joy to work with and has continued that deep engagement. The many wonderfully generous partners offered their experience and expertise to hundreds of participants. They offered an inspiring and true vision of a future for music that stands in the starkest contrast to the rancorous behavior shown during the last year.

I will greatly miss working with Osmo Vänskä, whose leadership and extraordinary, galvanizing and deeply inspiring performances raised the level of a superb ensemble to one of world class. I can speak for the nearly one hundred composers who have taken part in the Institute: their lives have been changed through working with the orchestra and this superlative music director. President Michael Henson’s critical support of the Institute has been greatly appreciated, but I cannot in any way condone the actions taken this year by the board and administration toward the musicians, nor can I see the point in the musician’s intransigence and sense of violation. At a certain point one must seek a way to move forward, and now Osmo’s departure is a heavy penalty for the choices made by both sides this year.

This is a great loss for American culture and the Twin Cities. The endgame that has been played out creates a diaspora of musicians and a deafening silence for countless music-lovers. But I will not lose hope that eventually some resolution can be achieved that will allow the Minnesota Orchestra to continue to play a vital role in American arts and culture.

They sold the house the composer built to developers. Now the heritage fight moves to another front.

The birthplace is falling down.

The museum in Danbury, Connecticut, is trying to raise money to save it.

If you think you can help, visit the website or write to info@danburymuseum.org.

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From the guide to historic buildings in Connecticut:

Charles Ives Birthplace in Danbury. Ives, born in 1874, was an unconventional composer who combined traditional and revolutionary elements. The original timber frame of his childhood home was built in 1780 by Thomas Tucker, but this building burned in the 1820s. The remains of the structure were purchased by Isaac Ives and rebuilt as a Federal-style houseCharles Edward Ives‘ father George Edward Ives, the youngest band master in the Union Army during the Civil War, was a music teacher who taught his son to embrace unusual combinations of sounds. In 1894,the younger Ives left Danbury to attend Yale. He would go on to form a very successful insurance company, while also composing modernist musical works which would not be fully appreciated by the public until later in the twentieth century. Ives married Harmony Twitchell, the daughter of Mark Twain’s friend, Rev. Joseph Twitchell. The house whereCharles Ives had been born was moved from its first location, on Main Street, to Chapel Place in 1923 and again to Mountainville Avenue in 1966. It was later restored by theDanbury Museum and opened to the public in 1992.

(He’s authentic)

kiri downton

Hear him here:

Here’s the letter that supporters and patrons are receiving today. No admission of error or responsibility by the bumbling management team. Just thanks and goodbye. 

anna nicole

 

Dear John

It is with much regret that we announce the cancellation of the 2013-2014 Season.   New York City Opera did not achieve the goal of its emergency appeal, and the board and management will begin the necessary financial and operational steps to wind down the Company, including initiating the Chapter 11 process.

For seventy years, since Mayor Fiorello La Guardia established it as “The People’s Opera,” New York City Opera has introduced generation after generation of young singers who are stars in the making, brought the public exciting new works and compelling, fresh interpretations of classics, acted as a champion for American composers and performers, and ensured that every New Yorker can experience the live art of opera.

We thank you for your continued support over the years and for making New York City Opera truly “The People’s Opera.”

For questions regarding your subscription, please call 212.870.5600.

For questions regarding contributions, please call 212.870.5626

For questions about the City Opera Thrift Shop, please call 212.684.5344.

For any other questions, please call 212.870.5620.

Best wishes,

Description: Image removed by sender.

George Steel

General Manager and Artistic Director

New York City Opera

 

And here’s the union’s response:

 

Statement by Tino Gagliardi,

President of Local 802, American Federation of Musicians,

re: New York City Opera

 

New York NY—As the musicians of the New York City Opera have long feared, NYCO management’s reckless decisions to move the New York City Opera out of its newly-renovated home at Lincoln Center, slash the season schedule and abandon an accessible repertoire have predictably resulted in financial disaster for the company. Despite disagreement with this strategy, the devoted musicians made great sacrifices in wages and benefits to keep the Opera afloat. Lamentably, due to egregious mismanagement and a paucity of vision, instead of reaping the benefits of a strengthening economy, this most storied of cultural institutions now lies in ruin. Nonetheless, the world-class musicians of the New York City Opera orchestra believe in the possibility of a new beginning are committed to continue working together as a cohesive ensemble should the opportunity arise. They are eager to hear from performing arts venues, producers, and other cultural organizations who may be interested in keeping the company together. Their ardent hope is to continue to play the opera they love in a company with a respect for tradition and a bold vision for the future.

Details to be clarified in a fortnight:

From the end of October selected opera and ballet performances from the

Wiener Staatsoper will be broadcast worldwide as live streams in high

quality via internet and Samsung Smart TV. Please find enclosed the

invitation and the media accreditation request form with further

information about the press conference (German/English) on October 15th,

where details about the streaming project will be presented.

Parsifal_at_Vienna_State_Opera_2012

The Kickstarter appeal failed to reach one-third of its target and was shut down this morning.

The company has posted the following notice:

It is with much regret that we announce the end of our fundraising campaign on Kickstarter and the cancellation of the 2013-2014 Season. New York City Opera did not achieve the goal of its emergency appeal, and the board and management will begin the necessary financial and operational steps to wind down the Company including initiating the Chapter 11 process.

For seventy years, since Mayor Fiorello La Guardia established it as “The People’s Opera,” New York City Opera has introduced generation after generation of young singers who are stars in the making, brought the public exciting new works and compelling, fresh interpretations of classics, acted as a champion for American composers and performers, and ensured that every New Yorker can experience the live art of opera.

We thank you for your continued support over the years and for making New York City Opera truly “The People’s Opera.”

city opera

In the thick of the civil rights struggle, the protest singer Phil Ochs wrote an ode to a southern, racist state. The refrain went:

Oh, here’s to the land you’ve torn out the heart of

Mississippi find yourself another country to be part of.

In the smaller world of symphonic music, those lines now apply to the Minnesota Orchestra. Over the past year, its board and executives have locked out their musicians, driven many of them out of the state and forced the music director to resign.

Most people we talk to in the US concert world want nothing more to do with Minnesota. The Orchestral Association has covered itself in disgrace, spending millions of dollars on a new lobby while reducing the hall and the city to silence. Throughout this dispute, the board has seemed to occupy a bubble of unreality, plugging fingers in their ears and going la-la-la at the storm they provoked.

There is no way back for these outcasts after today’s resignation of the music director. The only honorable course now is for the board and chief executive to resign.

minnesotaorchestraghost