programming, old school!
A concert featuring an overture,
symphony, concerto and virtuoso showpiece, nary a Broadway show-tune
in earshot, Teutonic death worship given the week off, sweltering
heat, swarming gnats, cannons – this week had it all.
Program A
BARBER
Overture to The School
for Scandal
SHOSTAKOVICH
Symphony No. 9 in E-flat
Major, Op. 70
INTERMISSION
BARBER
Violin Concerto, Op. 14
RAVEL
Tzigane
(Joshua Bell, violin)
Program B
BERLIOZ Three Pieces from Romeo
and Juliet, Op. 17
INTERMISSION
VERDI
Overture to Giovanna
d'Arco
DVOŘÁK
Slavonic Dance No. 2,
Op. 72
MENDELSSOHN
The Hebrides
Overture, Op. 26, “Fingal's Cave”
ROSSINI
Overture to William
Tell
Program C
TCHAIKOVSKY
Symphony No. 4 in F Minor, Op. 36
INTERMISSION
TCHAIKOVSKY
Piano Concerto No. 1 in
B-flat Minor, Op. 23
TCHAIKOVSKY
1812, Overture
solonelle, Op. 49
The brief flashback I had in in the
middle of program B took me back to circa 1993. That is until I
realized we were playing on a Thursday night and the Pavilion was
nearly half empty. The gnats buzzing their way into every exposed
orifice might have helped sour my mood on an otherwise enjoyable
evening – finally the kind of lighthearted concert one would
ideally imagine for a summer audience. Only the lack of an audience
seemed to contradict the argument that poor programming leads to sub
par attendance. Even the brutal heat wave had dissipated enough to
where the temperature could be classified as pleasantly sweltering.
If you can't fill seats with Rossini, Verdi, Mendelssohn, Dvorak and
Berlioz on as cool an evening as we are likely to see any time soon,
then perhaps classical music is doomed after all. Or else there is
something horribly wrong somewhere.
To get a job in an orchestra a bass
player has to master the Beethoven 5th symphony. It
shows up on every audition. I'm sure each instrument has some piece
from the repertoire that serves a similar function, but the Beethoven
5th is pretty good because it is also well known to the
layperson. So to pass the audition, typically a player has to go up
against fifty, one hundred, two hundred others, play the Beethoven
5th, plus a bunch of other, often more difficult things, and somehow
come out at the head of the pack. Brutal as it is, the process
assures a certain level of quality on stage. I wonder what would
happen if the folks selling tickets to concerts went through a
similar procedure – get handed a typical program and released onto
the streets for half an hour. Anyone who can't sell tickets to the
Beethoven 5th is out of the running.
All of the above does not take into
account what happened at the Sunday concert, which I can only imagine
was overflowing – an all Tchaikovsky concert with cannons is sort
of the twinkle-twinkle of of concert programs. Anyhow, a bit of
strategery in choosing my concerts off had me sitting this one out.
Canons (or ballistics of any type) are on my growing list of things
that trigger an almost uncontainable urge to take a night off. I
think I have already mentioned some of them – Galas, Benefits,
Festive concerts, etc. Leafing through my notes, I identified a few
things I've endured over the years which, having dealt with at least
once, I feel perfectly comfortable with trying to avoid in the
future. Many of these items are perfectly fine and acceptable in and
of themselves. It is only their inclusion in a 'classical music'
concert that sends me scurrying for the leave request form. So,
count me out of any concert featuring:
fireworks
tap dancers
puppets (shadow, marionette, sock,
etc.)
alp-horns
ophicleides
animals (trained or feral)
bagpipes
musicologists or historians
trombones
Orcs
Jingling Johnnies
magicians
mentalists
conductors in costumes
smoke
bubbles
dirndl wearing zither players
(zithers)
(dirndls)
flags
confetti
bunting of any kind
mimes
scaffolding
balloons
powdered wigs
ice skaters
former music directors (living)
3 comments:
I'm surprised to not see "on stage speeches" in the list.
Good point - but then again, I didn't put in being poked in the eye with a red-hot iron either...
I suppose that was an amazing concert. I wish I was there, as I love Beethoven very much!
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