Bass Blog

Michael Hovnanian formerly played bass with an orchestra located in a large midwestern city.

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Thursday, March 08, 2007

This week's schedule

This week’s CSO Program

Haydn - Symphony No. 93
Mozart - Piano Concerto No. 17
INTERMISSION
Beethoven - Symphony No. 5
Roberto Abbado, conductor
Alfred Brendel, piano


This week’s Film Night Program

John Williams - The Cowboys Overture
Elmer Bernstein - The Comancheros - World Concert Premiere
Dmitri Tiomkin - The Alamo
Elmer Bernstein - True Grit
Waxman - Prince Valiant
Waxman - Sunset Boulevard Suite
Waxman - The Bride of Frankenstein Suite
Waxman - The Philadelphia Story
Waxman - Katsumi Love Theme from Sayonara
Waxman - Ireland from Spirit of St. Louis
Waxman - Ride of the Cossacks from Taras Bulba
Richard Kaufman, conductor


This week’s Ars Viva Program

Paul Creston A Rumor
Charles Ives Symphony No. 3
Jon Polifrone Ballad (on the one-year anniversary of Jon’s passing)
Aaron Copland Old American Songs
Copland Three Latin American Sketches
Alan Heatherington, conductor
Patrick Blackwell, baritone
I have no idea what the program order is.

Monday
off

Tuesday
2-5 Ars Viva rehearsal

Wednesday
10-12:30 1:30-3:30 CSO rehearsals

Thursday
10-12:30 CSO rehearsal
8 CSO concert

Friday
12-3 Film Night rehearsal
8 Film Night concert

Saturday
3-6 Ars Viva rehearsal
8 CSO concert

Sunday
2-5 Ars Viva rehearsal
7:30 Ars Viva concert


Monday
7:30 Ars Viva concert



The Abbado/Brendel program is only played twice. I’m not sure why film night was stuck into a week with a very popular program. Beethoven 5 – if that doesn’t sell, we may as well fold up the whole operation. And in fact the concert Thursday evening was well attended. Perhaps there is a good explanation why Abbado and Brendel will be cooling their heels back at the hotel (I don’t expect them to be at film night) instead of repeating the concert on Friday.

Abbado had interesting approaches to the Beethoven and Haydn symphonies. The orchestra was reduced in size – only 4 basses on the Beethoven, three on the Haydn, and two on the Mozart. He arrived with parts marked with all of his phrasing ideas, some of which were ambiguous. His brisk tempos were along the lines of an original instrument performance. Anything different from the way we ordinarily do things always elicits howls from some of the more small-minded member of the orchestra, so the response to Abbado was nothing unexpected. Some players complained he was hard to follow, but I found him no more or less clear than what we usually see.

The biggest surprise he pulled off was wearing the traditional white tie and tails – almost never seen on the podium these days anymore. Conductor apparel has become a rogues gallery of Neru jackets, priestly robes, or other unidentifiable garb. It was a pleasant surprise seeing something that didn’t produce titters and rolled eyes from the orchestra and audience when he appeared on stage for the concert.

Brendel was his usual superlative self. I am a big fan of his refined understated style. Always a pleasure to hear a real pro do his thing.

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