Tonight, Jaap rolls out his New York Philharmonic

Tonight, Jaap rolls out his New York Philharmonic

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norman lebrecht

February 13, 2018

The incoming music director will go live on the NY Phil Facebook site at 1815 New York time, showing the changes he plans to make to the turbulent band.

We’ll update you in the morning.

Comments

  • Daphne Badger says:

    It’s gonna be dull, folks….

    • Winger says:

      cool opinion

    • John Borstlap says:

      We pick-up this comment with pincers, the way archeologists do, and wonder: what could it mean? Which message is intended to convey? What were the customs and traditions of the tribe, did they have any contact with the outside world? Did they know something about music, about the NY Phil, about Van Zweden? Had they studied his programs with all the orchestras he worked with? Cultural anthropology is a field with ever extending horizons and novel discoveries.

  • BP says:

    Plenty of new works with “something to say” about our times (whether they’re interesting to the ear is an open question), and a few curveballs thrown in with the standards, so a pretty nice season on paper, already strongly influenced by Borda.

    One question worth pondering when it comes to US orchestras : they love commissioning and touting new works, but post-WWII 20th century music is often completely absent from programming. Are the new works going straight for the dustbin after their performances ?

    • Herr Doktor says:

      As someone who has heard lots of new works over the years, with very few of them being ones I would be interested in hearing again, the answer is: YES. And often, deservedly so.

      What remains in the repertory represents only a minuscule fraction of the compositional output of the times in which the great works were written. The fact is, very little that is composed stands the test of time.

      And I’d say, since World War II, that already small fraction has gotten a WHOLE LOT smaller.

      • doremifa says:

        You are right.new works don’t mean quality works you will remeber not will I go back to them:DELET straight away.
        The CLASSICAL music has set its milestones long ago and nothing & noone will equal it.

      • harold braun says:

        Bullshit,Herr “Doktor”.I assume,the last piece of contemporary music was by hans Pfitzner,1944?

        • David R Osborne says:

          Poor tortured Pfitzner. So much of the more traditional music of that period is dour, gloomy, academic and to be honest, downright stodgy. The journey from Reger to Pfitzner was the reason we needed the 2nd Viennese School, although they turned out be less a breath of fresh air and more an icy wind. Mainly because of the catastrophe they inspired post-war.

          Incidentally this is lovely, it’s Pfitzner in a rare lighter moment- almost playful:
          https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=VMyOeFeBu0s
          He also wrote a children’s opera, Das Christ-Elflein which is probably due a revival. Bits I’ve heard sound great, although knowing Pfitzner it’s probably dramatically a mess.

          • John Borstlap says:

            “The journey from Reger to Pfitzner was the reason we needed the 2nd Viennese School, although they turned out be less a breath of fresh air and more an icy wind.”

            To suggest that the Viennese were necessary because of Reger /Pfitzner is to bypass the fact that Reger and Pfitzner were German, not Austrian, and to forget Schreker, Hindemith, Braunfels, Ernst Toch and quite some others who wrote music which was more itneresting and lively than Pfitzner’s.

            Pfitzner and Webern both agreed wholeheartedly about the nazis however, they both loved them dearly.

    • David R Osborne says:

      Yes. A second performance is a far bigger event than a ‘Premiere’. Entering the standard repertoire? Almodt unheard of, but it’s all still farbetter in the US than anywhere else.

  • PHF655 says:

    Lots of big, meaty, pieces from Jaap: his first subsription program includes Bruckner’s 8th, later in the season there is Mahler’s Sixth, the Brahms Requiem, Brahms one, the Eroica, the Emperor Concerto with Daniil Trifonov. I am not ashamed to say that I continue to be inspired by music like this, although I am well into my seventh decade. While the American press continues to judge a season by the amount of new music being programmed, I do not hear the public clamoring for more, and am hard put to name any piece premiered in the last several decades that has earned a place in the hearts of audiences

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