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Praise for Orli Shaham's Complete Mozart Piano Sonatas

The internationally renowned concert pianist Orli Shaham released the final two volumes of her multi-year endeavor of recording all of Mozart’s piano sonatas in February 2024. Volumes 5 & 6 of "Mozart: The Complete Piano Sonatas" (Canary Classics CC24) is available on CD and on digital streaming and download platforms. The complete box set with all six volumes will be released in spring 2024. 

The set has been incredibly well received across North America, Europe and the United Kingdom. Here’s what the critics are saying:  

“A top-tier and consistently satisfying Mozart cycle.” – International Piano  

“a significant recording achievement for Mozarteans ... brilliantly handled ... it is time to mark this as one of the significant releases in the Mozart discography and now one can even listen through all the sonatas in chronological order, though the pairings throughout the series have been intelligently determined and help each sonata stand on its own well. Highly Recommended!" – Cinemusical 

"Shaham’s artistry... easily holds its own alongside some of my favourite modern-day Mozart sonata cycles" - Gramophone 

“Shaham avoids the common pitfall of painting Mozart's portrait as a dainty child prodigy, and instead brings out his free and youthful spirit, an essential feature of his melodic lines. ... Under her hands, this is not simply the music of cute little powdered-wig Wolfgang, but the music of a master of the keyboard who knew exactly how to make the piano sing and dance.” – Classical Music Sentinel 

"a remarkable set" - Classical Candor 

Visit OrliShaham-Mozart.com for streaming audio, liner notes, purchase links and critical acclaim.  

Orli Shaham interview on WWFM's "A Tempo"

Pianist Orli Shaham released the final volumes of her 6-disc recording cycle of Mozart’s complete piano sonatas in February 2024. In a recent interview with WWFM’s Rachel Katz, Shaham speaks about the recording project, Mozart’s longevity, championing women composers, and commissioning new works. Below are some excerpts from the interview.  

To listen to the full 30-minute interview “Finding Tradition and Cutting Edge in Mozart,” stream the program at WWFM.org 

On Mozart:  

I spent a lot of time in my formative years studying historical musicology, especially with the wonderful Mozart scholar Elaine Sisman at Columbia University. It's something that one talks about with music of the Enlightenment and the logical distinctions between ideas that was so important at the time. Mozart’s sonatas were used as teaching tools to show not only how to play a sonata, but also how to decorate and embellish a sonata, as any good pianist was expected to be able to do on the spot.  

They really span his adult life, the piano sonatas. It's a wonderful way to look at Mozart’s entire development as a mature composer. He also had the incredible experience of living in a time that was the most exciting moment for keyboard instruments. The instruments couldn't possibly have been changing more. The invention of a pedal that you don't have to whack with your knees completely changed how he could sit at the keyboard, the kinds of sounds he could make, and the imagination that he could pour into it. He was clearly so inspired by these changes.  

On commissioning new works:  

I'm always thinking about the next project I'm doing with a living composer, and the next project I'm doing with a no longer living composer. This season I'm playing a new piano concerto which my husband, conductor David Robertson, wrote for me. I've also been working a lot with the composer Karen Tanaka. We premiered a piece of hers at Juilliard Pre-College last year, and I'm premiering another work of hers in April 2024.  

I really think the composers should be as free as possible to be creative and come up with whatever makes their heart excited. It's very important for a composer to write what they love, and so you get to know their writing. Once that happens, you have some idea that you can trust them, but you never know what's going to come out. 

On Clara Schumann and other overlooked composers:  

In the last couple of years, I've become obsessed with Clara Schumann, a woman not only worthy of our admiration, but also worthy of great study. She is a special, influential person in the whole of music history. She shaped at least two generations of pianists, and had a teaching legacy that lasted into a very, very long old age. As many as a third of Europe's pianists came to study with her. It's an enormous legacy for piano and pianism and how to interpret music at the instrument.  

In conjunction with these Clara Schumann-based programs, over the pandemic I discovered Amanda Röntgen-Maier. She composed a number of incredible chamber works, including a violin sonata, which I just think is the cat's pajamas. I'm thrilled that every violinist I have played it with says, “Where has this piece been all my life?” They're all putting it into their repertoire permanently. How wonderful for us that we live in a time when we can discover these overlooked composers. 

Listen to the full interview at wwfm.org 

Pianist Inna Faliks in conversation with WETA

Chromic Duo Insider Interview

On March 5, Baruch Performing Arts Center presents Chromic Duo. Blending classical music, keyboards (including toy piano) and electronics into compelling genre-fluid performances and installation the duo - Lucy Yao and Dorothy Chan - will perform music by Ryuichi Sakamoto, Andy Akiho, Maurice Ravel and more. We spoke to them about their upcoming program, pushing genre, experimenting with multimedia, and more!

Classical Music Communications: How did you meet, and what prompted you to join together as a duo? 

Lucy Yao: We met in a hallway! I saw Dorothy carrying this huge case of what looked like a piano, except it was shrunken down. And from that day on, we started to ask ourselves, “why not?” and started to experiment with whatever instruments could make sound. From toy pianos, to electronics, to other art forms that weren’t as familiar to us, but could help us express ourselves, and collaborate to explore new ideas, like dance, film, and technology.

Dorothy Chan: Curiosity and our openness to experimentation really brought us together. In our journey we’ve found that the core of what makes us want to create and connect to the people and community is to look further inside. To find the little moments, the joys, the reckonings, and really capture and remember the importance of them. 

CMC: Why toy piano? What intrigues you about it? How do you manage the contrast in timbre and volume in a duet with toy piano and grand piano? 

DC: Did you know that toy pianos could be made out of a variety of materials, resulting in very different sounds and timbre? Metal rods, hollow rods, glass bars even (in the very early days), plastic hammers vs. wood hammers…It’s fascinating! The toy piano first captured my attention when I realized how this “toy” is considered an instrument and that there are numerous pieces written just for it. I was playing a lot of contemporary classical at the time, and discovering the toy piano was such a joyful moment — to see ‘serious’ music made on this ‘non-serious’ instrument, and how it breaks through traditional expectations and creates an accessibility through curiosity. 

LY: That is what’s really exciting for me! The fact that you can reimagine the things that you would find in your everyday life, into new possibilities. With that, what else can be reimagined into new possibilities? What other things might we have overlooked in our everyday lives? How can we see things in a new light? 

It’s these kinds of questions that guide us in our work -  it could be anything from a performance, to an installation, to community engagement, where we find real joy and meaning in collaborating and listening to the stories of the communities we work with, and reimagine empathy and curiosity together. 

CMC: Electronics are a mainstay of your programs. How do you create these sounds, and how are they incorporated with the sound of the pianos? How much improvisation is involved?  

Chromic Duo: We started experimenting much more with electronics when the pandemic hit. We realized the limitations posed by the pandemic could actually be a place of opportunity for us to expand. We found that with electronics, as well as technology, we could tap into a different way of telling stories. Just like our soundwalk “Listen to Chinatown”– we interviewed mural artists, small business owners and community members in Chinatown, and integrated their stories to the work using spoken words and poetry, bringing users to behind-the-scenes stories, inspirations, and even food recommendations. This work also exists as a concert piece “Homecoming”, where we program for concert hall goers, revealing hidden stories that deserve to be heard on platforms that traditionally do not include them.  Storytelling never fails to be the heart of our work, and through that, we can reshape and rethink conversations to make them as accessible as possible to reach a wider spectrum of audiences.

CMC: The program also includes one of your own compositions. Tell us about this work, and about your composition process as a duo.

Chromic Duo: “From Roots We Carry” explores the complex intergenerational legacies that live inside of us. We interviewed community members and asked them - What do you carry? What have we inherited through familial bonds from the past generation? What are the legacies that we want to keep, and what are some that we want to shed? 

We collaborated with artist Amanda Phingbodhipakkiya to create a monument and performance ritual, which invites audiences to reflect on their own bonds with their past – both the gifts given to us by our ancestors and the heights and weight of those expectations we feel obligated to reach - and to choose what we want to keep carrying, and what to leave behind. Trailer linked here.

CMC: This concert is part of a larger series that Baruch College has started since just last October. You are also Artists-in-Residence at the Silberman Residency where you will talk to students majoring in a huge variety of fields, who are curious about your process. Can you tell us about how you are approaching engaging with the students? And how does your creative process link to that? 

Chromic Duo: When we first started working together in 2019, we struggled for so long to “define ourselves”, as musicians and artists. Music school, especially, has taught us to internalize a rigid way of thinking– you’re either this or that, successful or not, musician or composer– when it’s really not only about those labels. 

We’ve since broken out of those labels, these boxes, and in our work, you can see that it expands from events like a concert, that is accessible and meets audiences where they are at, to interactive installations focused on student health and wellness (recently at Purdue University), to Augmented Reality soundwalks– the medium and genre are always changing and flexible. But one thing we do want to make clear, in both our creative process, and in our engagement with the students at Baruch, is that you can rely on collaboration – you don’t have to be everything. You also don’t have to be just one thing. We believe that it’s super important to acknowledge that your voice is something that can be heard and celebrated. 

The timely significance of Shostakovich’s Piano Trio No. 2

On Wednesday, December 13, 2023, the pianist Orli Shaham joins members of the Vancouver Symphony (USA) for a concert of chamber music at the First Presbyterian Church in Vancouver, WA. Ms. Shaham, the Artist-in-Residence at the VSO has programmed works by Mozart and Poulenc alongside the Piano Trio No. 2 by Dmitri Shostakovich.

Orli Shaham tells us how this program is especially relevant as awareness of anti-Semitism around the globe is acutely heightened. She writes:

In Shostakovich’s memoir, Testimony, the composer condemned anti-Semitism in the Soviet Union and said this about Jewish music:

I think, if we speak of musical impressions, that Jewish folk music has made a most powerful impression on me. I never tire of delighting in it; it’s multifaceted; it can appear to be happy, while it is tragic. It’s almost always laughter through tears. This quality of Jewish music is close to my ideas of what music should be. There should always be two layers in music. Jews were tormented for so long that they learned to hide their despair. They expressed despair in dance music. All folk music is lovely, but I can say that Jewish folk music is unique.

Ian MacDonald, in his biography The New Shostakovich, wrote: “Horrified by stories that SS guards had made their victims dance beside their own graves, Shostakovich created a directly programmatic image of it in the Trio's final movement.”

“I can't think of a more appropriate work for the current moment,” says Orli Shaham. “Please join us for a performance of Shostakovich's Second Trio, Poulenc's remarkable Sextet and Mozart's breathtaking and tragic Sonata in E minor for violin and piano this Wednesday at First Presbyterian Church in Vancouver, WA with the wonderful members of the Vancouver Symphony Orchestra.” Details and tickets

Composer David Biedenbender reviewed in Gramophon

Cassatt String Quartet interview with violinist Dominique Valenzuela

Since 2005, the world-renowned Cassatt String Quartet has come to West Texas for a bi-annual residency. Cassatt in the Basin has enriched the lives of adults and students in the community through concerts, workshops and other music events across the region. On October 29 at 3 pm, the quartet performs at the Wagner Noël Performing Arts Center in Midland, Texas. Admission is free, details are here.

One of the alumni of Cassatt in the Basin programs, the violinist Dominique Valenzuela, recently conducted an interview with CSQ’s cellist Gwen Krosnick. The interview was for a community engagement class that is part of Valenzuela’s Master’s degree program at Juilliard. He gave the quartet permission to share the interview with the public.

Dominique Valenzuela wrote in an email to Gwen Krosnick, “As I was giving my presentation it made me realize the impact that the Cassatt has had on my life. To give a presentation on your quartet at the Juilliard School… I could have never imagined that it would be possible, and I am grateful beyond doubt. I am so grateful to have such wonderful role models in my life.”

Here is the interview, edited for context and clarity.

Dominique Valenzuela: What is the Cassatt String Quartet’s philosophy in presenting chamber music to the community?

Gwen Krosnick: Sharing what we do with different communities - from elementary schools to assisted-living communities and beyond - is centrally meaningful to the Cassatt Quartet! We treat these concerts with the respect and love that we bring to every concert we play. At each one we curate a program of music that we hope will allow these audiences to connect to this music we love.

DV: How does the Cassatt String Quartet see chamber music as a vehicle for social change?

GK: Chamber music is very literally an art form that hinges on our ability to connect with other people who have different backgrounds and different perspectives than our own - often wildly so! Our rehearsals and our concerts, and the way we interact with each other and the communities we play for, are a microcosm of listening to the ideas of others with generosity, thoughtfulness, and joy. For communities to engage with chamber music - which includes a great range of music across hundreds of years through today, gives us access to catharsis, meaning, and inspiration. This can only deepen the connections and strength of those community ties.

DV: What kinds of concerts does the CSQ present in the community?

GK: The Cassatt String Quartet has been on the roster of the New York State Council for the Arts (NYSCA) for years. That funding and other major grants from sources throughout the states of New York, Maine and Texas (for which my colleagues brilliantly write applications!) allow us to focus our community partnerships in these areas.

These three states have special personal and professional meaning to us: New York is where the CSQ is based (the quartet itself, and all our members live in the greater NYC area). Maine is the site of the Seal Bay Festival of American Chamber Music, at which the CSQ has been in residence every summer for 20 years. Texas is where Jennifer Leshnower, our second violinist, is from and where her non-profit organization, Cassatt in the Basin, brings us twice a year to work with string students in the Permian Basin.

In each of these areas - and very often at other series and residencies (such as through the Treetops Chamber Music Series in Stamford, CT, for instance) - we play concerts at assisted-living communities, schools, children's museums, community centers, and other venues that aren’t conventional spaces for live music-making.

DV: How do the Cassatts hope to impact communities in the future by building on your already-sturdy foundation?

GK: One thing I love about the CSQ is that we have built long-term relationships with the audiences and communities. I love playing for new audiences, too, in new places - we all do!

There is a real depth to the relationships built over time. This has been such an inspiration for me, both in West Texas with the string students and public school music teachers, and at retirement communities where the quartet plays every single summer in Maine. Returning again and again to places where the quartet has played for years has a deep resonance and opens a capacity for community-building that is even more meaningful.

DV: What is the Cassatt’s mission and hope for the world, especially given that the quartet is historically all-female?

GK: I'm not certain I can speak for the whole Cassatt String Quartet on a worldwide mission, given that I have been in the quartet for two years out of its forty! But I will say that my colleagues and I share a belief that art and music matter: that the arts provide something that the world and humanity need. The way music sparks conversation and gives us access to emotional places where we might not otherwise go is centrally and vitally important.

The fact that the Quartet, named for the 19th century American painter Mary Cassatt, has been comprised totally of women instrumentalists since 1985 is important to our story. We feel both a responsibility and a real pride in sharing music composed by a diverse range of American women. I hope that audiences will hear music by Dorothy Rudd Moore, Florence Price, Fanny Mendelssohn, Victoria Bond, Joan Tower, and Tania León (just a few of the women whose works we are performing this season!) and really understand that this art form of classical music, which has traditionally been so exclusionary and indeed prided itself on inaccessibility, in fact has the capacity to be wildly, celebratorily, and endlessly diverse. It is a living, breathing, ever-changing thing, chamber music!

The great music within the field of chamber music is made more profound by a wider and more diverse, passionate community of musicians, audiences, composers, and music lovers taking part in shaping its future.

DV: How do you curate a program for different audiences?

GK: For all our concerts, from our most convention and formal performances to outdoor parks and senior centers, we give our most passionate, personal playing. We offer repertoire that we cherish, including music that the audience may not have heard before, and we talk directly to audiences at each concert from the stage about what we love in the music we are about to share with them.

Sometimes presenters will ask for a specific piece, or for us to play with a specific collaborator, and of course that comes into our conversations about programming! But mainly we think about how different pieces of music will tell a story to an audience - an open-ended story so that each person can experience it in a different and personal way.

There are practical considerations, like how long is the concert at next week's assisted living community. How young are the kids at next month's childrens' concert - and therefore what are their attention spans? What works will be “in our fingers” for a given date, so that we can really play our best?. Once those factors are accounted for, we simply put together a program that we love, so that an audience member can feel the joy and love for this pouring off us and feel a connection to the music we share with them. I feel VERY strongly that this basic goal is not different for an elementary school audience or at the fanciest concert hall we play!

DV: How does engagement with audiences of various backgrounds further impact your greater mission as leader in the arts?

GK: In much the same way that we love playing chamber music BECAUSE of the access it gives us to different perspectives and different emotional places, it means a lot to us to play for audiences that show us – through their unique backgrounds and vantage points - new reactions, new insights, and new love for what we do and the music we play. For the Cassatt Quartet, getting to play for and connect with so many diverse kinds of audiences, each with its own energy, response, and chorus of reactions, makes us ever more motivated and committed to reflecting - in our programming, and in our mission - that diversity of energies, reactions, and voices. A musical field that reflects, echoes, and amplifies the communities for whom we play is more sustainable, more electrifying, and more profoundly meaningful as we step forward into the future.

Yvonne Lam Insider Interview

Grammy Award-winner and former Eighth Blackbird violinist Yvonne Lam’s debut solo album features works for solo violin with electronics by six remarkable women. Released July 28, 2023 on Blue Griffin Recording, Watch Over Us has been praised for its “dazzling virtuosity and kaleidoscopic colors.” In our latest Insider Interview, we spoke with Lam about the recently released album and more.

You are best known for your work in the ensemble 8th Blackbird. How does that chamber ensemble experience compare with performing solo with electronic tape? How did it prepare you for this project?

It’s like apples and oranges. There was a lot of blood, sweat and tears invested into the music and business of running Eighth Blackbird. Working with five other musicians so closely for eight years was like being in a very intense family. Indeed, we saw more of each than we did our own families, and we got to know each other so well on many levels. We could adjust on the fly and almost knew what others were going to do musically before they did.

Performing solo with electronic tape is a little bit like trying to play with someone who can’t hear you. There’s zero “give” with fixed media, so you have to learn to adjust to it, to know where you have space and where you don’t. I was introduced to playing with tape during my time with Eighth Blackbird. That prepared me by helping me realize how much I didn’t know about the tech! Performing solo with tape live is always stressful because things can go wrong with the tech, but that’s not an issue when recording.

You specifically chose music by women for this collection. Were there other works by women that you had to leave out, for stylistic considerations, practical reasons, or time constraints?

I didn’t intentionally set out to choose only women composers. If you had asked me ten years ago to picture a composer who writes electronic music, it wouldn’t have been a woman. But in the process of discovering works, I kept running across fabulous composers who happened to be women. And then I had enough for an album.  

Were there one or more compositions by men that you considered including?

Oh, sure. There are so many great pieces out there! Maybe for the next album…

Tell us about your collaborations outside of classical music. For instance, your work with the jazz bassist and composer Matt Ulery, and with the exper­imental performance group Every House Has A Door.

Matt Ulery is a unique musician and a joy to collaborate with. I am not a jazz musician, not in the slightest, and working with Matt gave me such insight to just how different his skill set is. I keep telling myself that one day I will actually take lessons, but I do know that jazz is learned by doing, so I’ll have to commit myself to some serious doing.

Working with artists who aren’t musicians is illuminating. I love seeing performance through their eyes, which is often more holistic than the way musicians think. We don’t scrutinize our extra-musical movement, for example, or think about the intention our facial expression or eye focus projects. We also don’t place much importance on what happens in-between pieces, either, even though that’s still an integral part of the experience we shape for our audiences.

This fascinates me: When you first started playing violin as a young child, you thought it was a guitar. Why? And why was your interest in guitar so keen? Did you ever get to learn to play that instrument?

I wish I remembered what I was thinking at that age! My mother used to schlep me to my older sister’s piano lessons at a music store. While we waited for her, I would stare at the display cases, and my guess is I saw the violin but didn’t know the word “violin”. Or maybe I genuinely thought it was a guitar, since I had likely seen one on TV. No one near me played either instrument. In any case, I bugged her for a year (or so she says) before she finally gave in and found a teacher for me.

My husband, who is also a violinist, taught himself electric guitar before he started violin. So we have a couple of guitars in the house. I never learned to play, but not for lack of trying. I can play a few chords, but anything beyond that and my brain ties itself into knots.

CMC named Top Classical Music Blog

Classical Music Communications is delighted to be included in Feedspot’s “100 Best Classical Music Blogs” for the press releases we post. Great to see so many journalists and colleagues here, too, including Gapplegate Classical-Modern Music Review, I Care If You Listen, Night After Night, WholeNote, WWFM, Classical Source, EarRelevant, and more.

Read the full list here.

Sono Fest! featured in New York Times

Insider Interview with Richard Guerin

On May 29-June 3, the Sinfonietta Cracovia returns to the U.S for the first time since 2011 for a 3-city tour. Performing music by Philip Glass and Wojciech Kilar, the program celebrates two great 20th century composers who were equally successful in writing contemporary classical works as they were in scoring film music. We spoke with the Richard Guerin, head of Philip Glass’ record label Orange Mountain Music, about the upcoming tour, what makes Sinfonietta Cracovia the perfect ensemble to perform this repertoire, Wojciech Kilar, and more.

Why center a program around Glass and Kilar? What do they have in common musically and how do their compositions complement each other?

When the possibility for this concert came up for Sinfonietta Cracovia to combine the music of Philip Glass and Wojciech Kilar in a concert, it felt like a natural fit. Not only was there a compatibility of the musics of these two amazing composers, but there was layer upon layer of connection.

Firstly, both Glass and Kilar studied in Paris under the most famous teacher of the 20th Century, Nadia Boulanger.  That in itself could mean a little or a lot – but anyone who studied with her can tell you that with her, it means a lot.  She was one of those amazing figures in music history.

Secondly, possibly the biggest issue for being an artist in the 20th and 21st centuries is “how to earn a living?” It’s not quite as simple as that but a more precise way of putting it would be: “where is the line between art and commerce?”  Both Glass and Kilar jumped back and forth over this imaginary line.  In a practical sense, we can hear it in the music; there isn’t a lot of difference between the sound of their art music and the sound of their commercial music. Both composers are immediately identifiable through their musical voice.  This goes back to Boulanger.

The third part of this is that their paths crossed in a very interesting way on the big screen. In the final scene of the 1998 film The Truman Show, when Truman is finally breaking out of his cage he takes to sea. At that moment, you hear very beautiful original music by Philip Glass called “Raising the Sail.”  When Truman finally reaches the end of “his” world, the music stops. A moment later he has a catharsis and it’s at this moment that Kilar’s music seamlessly appears.

To my point, Glass thought so much of his “Raising the Sail” that it ended up being the basis for the slow movement of his first piano concerto (a concert work).  Whereas the Kilar music we hear is called “Requiem Father Kolbe”...a concert work which actually also originated as film music in a film called “A Life for a Life.”

So in both Kilar and Glass there are incredibly strong musical voices that emerged from a common teacher, and those musical voices were applied to both realms of art music and main stream cinema.  It’s part of what Sinfonietta Cracovia will be exploring in their concerts.

What’s the orchestra’s connection to Philip Glass? How do you approach playing music by an American composer versus Kilar, who’s native to Poland?

Artistically, the conductor Katarzyna Tomala-Jedynak will be able to comment about the journey the orchestra has been on, having presented this music in different countries around the world. But there’s also a larger connection. In 2014 I traveled with Philip Glass to Krakow for performances of his “Complete Piano Etudes” at the Sacrum Profanum Festival. Krakow is an amazing place with non-stop festivals - from a Jewish Music Festival to the world’s largest Film Music Festival.  In the context of the Sacrum Profanum Festival, I recall Glass telling me that “the sacred and the profane turn out to be the same thing!” One of the people I first connected to while in Poland was Agata Grabowiecka.  She worked for the Krakow Festival Office – working a lot on the film music festival - and later became the director of Sinfonietta Cracovia. 

So when we talk about playing “music by American composers,” it needs to be understood that probably more American music gets played in Krakow than any other place in the world; we are talking about the great American composers of film music.  Agata has a deep commitment to that. And if you have ever been there, you can see the amazing culture they have built around embracing those American film composers as real artists. Sadly that’s not the case here in the USA. 

But really this is an international event, and cinema is an international art form.  If a composer only known for art music becomes an international success, and that may or may not be true of Philip Glass, but largely if you are a living composer, the only chance you have to be heard on an international level is through cinema. So there is an “international style” of performing this kind of music. 

With that said, part of what I love about Wojciech Kilar is that he is very much a Polish composer. When Francis Ford Coppola wanted music to evoke Transylvania, he simply went to what he thought was a dark corner of Eastern Europe and found this perfect kind of music for his imagination. It turned out to be Kilar’s music...the kind of music he had been writing for decades.  In that way, Kilar’s music already existed, it was just waiting for a canvas like Coppola’s Dracula in order to shine.

What Sinfonietta Cracovia brings to both Glass and Kilar is an understanding of how to play the music of both composers, and how to play both kinds of music.

What would prompt an avid concert-goer to come hear the Sinfonietta Cracovia? What is distinctive about the ensemble?

What this concert is really about is playing music that people want to hear.  So much of 20th century art music was tied up in politics, “Schools of Composition”, nationalism...etc.  The most admirable thing about both Philip Glass and Kilar – more important than anything else – is that these are composers who truly found their own way.  It’s not about “compromising” or not, it’s about writing the music you want to write. To do that you either have to find or make those opportunities.  Philip Glass’ voyage from dozens of odd jobs that took him well into his 40s is well-documented.  That was the price he had to pay to keep his independence – and for his music to keep its independence too. 

Kilar is similar in that way.  He was an almost exact contemporary with composers Gorecki and Penderecki. Neither of them did film scores whereas Kilar dived in head-first.  He always said he had three areas of composition:  concert music, film music, and sacred music. He never wrote an opera.  I don’t know for a fact but I think film music for Kilar was a way of keeping his independence during a very dangerous time for artists in Poland behind the iron curtain. In other words, his daring music could hide in plain sight.  Earning a living with film music probably saved his life, and it was good music! On the other hand, I visited his home and Kilar lived a quite modest life.

I was thrilled in 2022 when the Krakow Film Music Festival awarded the Wojciech Kilar Award to Philip Glass. The award is given to a film composer “who has remained true to the traditional art of composition.”  We can debate what that means, about what place film music takes in the history of music, but in the debating of these things the point emerges that good music – regardless of where it comes from – is good music and has a chance at being remembered. 

Insider Interview with pianist Jeeyoon Kim

On June 7, award-winning classical Pianist Jeeyoon Kim performs at Carnegie Hall with her new performance project 시음 /si-úm/ (pronounced shee-oom). The project combines music, poetry, and photography, and is part of a 30-city national tour. We spoke with her about the upcoming recital, her passion for surfing, being a best-selling author, and more.

You started playing piano at the age of 4? I think there are a lot of us who started something similar and lost interest, moved on to something else, or quit altogether. What was it about piano that not only held your interest, but became the kind of passion that you’ve continued to pursue through your education, teaching others, performing, podcasting, etc.?

I started the piano when I was four years old, but I don't know whether I chose it or it chose me. I listened to my inner voice whispering that love of music to me and exercised that love by working hard for life. At this point, the piano is an extension of my body and my soul mate.

For me, the piano is the queen of all instruments, a perfect chameleon. It can be completed on its own or work in beautiful harmony with other instruments. It can imitate the most thunderous sonority of an orchestra yet can produce the most sensitive and intimate sound. Whatever I do, I always hear the beautiful voice of the piano singing in my head. I believe in the innate power of music to connect and heal people. I can’t think of a better instrument to convey that message to the world than the piano.

Your book is called “Whenever You’re Ready: How to Compose the Life of Your Dreams.” which also became a best-selling book in Korea. Where did the idea for this book come from? Why was this something you wanted to write? 

In the final moment, when I’m backstage about to meet an audience, I note that someone with a hand on the stage door always waits for my cue. “Whenever you’re ready…” they tell me. At that very moment, I gather a tremendous amount of courage and strength through my fear and negative voices.  When I nod with a smile, a beautiful stage opens for me to walk toward the crowds.

Through this book, I wanted to demystify many assumptions that people might have about what I do and share the tools to prepare for the stage mentally, emotionally, and physically. Through my teaching, I realized that there are many tools in life that people ignore even if they know of them. With warmth, honesty, and compassion, I wished that through the lens of a concert pianist and fellow human being who also has struggles, people might be inspired and motivated to pick up some of the life tools that worked for me and hopefully use them in their green rooms when they perform on their stage of life. 

You’ve been recognized for your talents as both an artist and an educator, with numerous awards, and you’ve also attracted younger fans to classical music. Why is it that you think you’ve been able to draw younger people into enjoying classical piano? What are you doing differently? 

Many older generations experienced classical music as the main source of entertainment at home or at the local theatre when they were growing up. In the world of so much stimulation in which we live, the younger generations need a little more guidance or at least the first experience of being guided into classical music. It is not that they wouldn’t be interested in classical music, but they have never had a chance to experience it properly. I talk to the audience like a friend who happens to be a concert pianist, as if I am inviting them to my living room to hear me play a piece that I am passionate about. I assume nothing. I guide each piece on stage and embrace it as a journey we would take together.

I create a bridge by sharing my feelings about the piece, struggles, victories, stories, and emotions connected to the piece, then open a path for them to get into their stories and feelings about the music as they listen. My goal is to be a vessel for the music so that music can get its core message as directly as possible. The more they connect with me, the easier it is for them to bypass me, the pianist, and get to their souls directly communicating with the music. They finally get it when they are properly given the opportunities, and they think that the music of Beethoven and Chopin is ‘cool.’

Your bio says that you are dedicated to pushing the boundaries of traditional classical music to connect with new audiences. How would you describe what some of the boundaries of traditional classical music are, to you? And why are you dedicated to pushing those boundaries?

About 300 years ago, classical music was the pop music of European culture. A musician like Chopin might be one of your friends, introducing his new compositions at a cocktail party, but the wall between a performer and the audience has grown higher as time passed. Over the years, many unspoken rules and traditions have been created around the culture of classical music. When one attends a classical concert, there is the assumption that one knows a lot about classical music, you should wear formal attire, you would know who Chopin was, and there is a performer who would never interact with the audience and disappear after the concert, program notes explain the background of the piece like a history book, and there is always an intermission of 15 minutes after 45 minutes of music before another 45 minutes of music.

As much as I am familiar with these traditions, I am also aware that these assumptions and rules could drive a potential new audience away from giving classical music a try, thinking that it is only for a particular type of people or their grandmothers. I want to break the barrier down as much as possible without changing the content. Classical music is about raw human emotions that existed 300 years ago, and that are the very same emotions that we feel today. I want to let people know that this amazing gift, like mountains and rivers in nature, is available to everyone. I push these boundaries so that more people can experience the beauty of classical music and benefit from it.  

Your concert program, Si-Um, connects poetry and music with black and white film photography. How do the works and the art forms relate to one another? 

To me, music is like poetry with notes, and poetry is like music with words. These two vastly different yet similar art forms share many common grounds in which they both lie in a constant process of creating, searching, editing, polishing, and revisiting. Yet, both ultimately strive to communicate human emotions. Black and white film photography is also similar. With a film camera, you don’t have thousands of free tries like digital cameras. You set, prepare for it, come back to the same spot multiple times to get one shot, then go into a darkroom and develop images from the negatives. I find all three art forms - classical music, poetry, and black and white film photography - accentuate the beauty of the ‘slow’ process. I’ve attempted to combine these art forms in my si-úm concert with one goal in mind: To enhance the experience of the music.  

Did the featured poets write the works specifically for the project, or did you find poems that were already written? 

Some were newly commissioned for this project. Some were already written—about 70 to 30 ratio. 

What is one thing people would be surprised to find out about you?

The fact that I surf every day and love to ride gliders. To me, surfing is like making music, following an organic shape of phrasing with ever-changing waves, and being at one with nature. I love watching the sunrise from the water, seeing dolphins swimming by, and pelicans catching fish for breakfast. I try to observe what nature teaches me and express it in music.

How do surfing and music cross over, connect, and enhance each other? 

I think music and surfing are both spiritual. Whenever I perform, I connect with people in the 4th dimension, where no time exists, and our souls are connected through music. In music, I find a deep connection with nature, where I become one with the universe. 

In both surfing and music, there is a sense of weightlessness. In classical music, there is a sense of inner pulse like a heartbeat; there is a sense of sonic structure where you reach the climax, build up to the climax, and drop and turn from creating the musical phrasing. I find in music I truly become weightless, meeting my soul floating in musical phrasing in which I ride a sonic wave, whereas in surfing, I feel there is weightlessness physically riding a liquid wave. 

In music, no matter how much you practice, each performance is unique in that moment. The very note I am playing is determined by how I played the note prior. I have to listen to every note to create a musical phrasing and be totally present in the moment. In surfing, no one wave is the same. I have to adjust and follow the rhythm of each wave and feel the right pathway each time. 

As a pianist, I face a different instrument on stage at every venue. I have to get used to it and make beautiful music out of it no matter what. Each piano has different characteristics and strengths. Perhaps different surfboards are like different pianos. They play different tunes, and I need to change my approach completely. It goes the same with different breaks in the waves. I find different concert halls are like different breaks: each looks different and sounds different.  The environment and the audience are different too. 

I find that both music-making and surfing require me to be in the moment and flexible in mind and body. I love that aspect of it. Most of the time when I perform, I close my eyes. I can feel the music, and now as a surfer I also feel the sensation of riding the waves in my mind. I believe that it does make me a better musician and better person in the process. 

 

Gramophone: Christopher Holuihan "First and Last" review

Insider Interview with Rudersdal Chamber Players' Christine Pryn

On April 1, 2023, the Danish ensemble Rudersdal Chamber Players makes their U.S. debut with a performance at Carnegie Hall. We spoke with founding member and violinist Christine Pryn about the group’s early beginnings, what it takes to have a lasting impact as an ensemble, and their collaboration with with composer Andrew Waggoner.

How and when was the Rudersdal Chamber Players created?

The idea came in 2017 – I just had my festival Rudersdal Sommerkoncerter, where Lera Auerbach was the featured composer and she stayed for some weeks after the festival. I was supposed to perform her music at some other concerts with the ensemble I had at that time, but the group broke up and the concerts were canceled. I was devastated and felt so ashamed that I couldn’t keep my promise to Lera, but she and her husband Rafael DeStella were extremely supportive and got me through one of the most difficult times in my career.
It was their idea to form the kind of ensemble I have now, inspired by Camerata Pacifica in Santa Barbara which they collaborate with.
The concept is a flexible combination of instruments so we can accommodate venues of different size, with or without access to a piano. It also gives us options for an extremely wide repertoire and to portray composers performing a much larger part of their chamber works than if we were just a piano quartet or piano trio.
Our base is the piano quartet, but we regularly perform as string trio and piano trio and sometimes also as string quartet, flute quartet, clarinet quintet etc.
Within the first half year of Rudersdal Chamber Player’s existence, we had more than double the amount of concerts I had with the former ensemble and today we earn more than four times as much. So, it was a definitely a change for the better! 

What is the mission of RCP?

We like to focus on music by lesser-known composers including female composers from the romantic era as well as contemporary music. As a performing artist your work won’t last and be remembered like the work of a composer. But with our programming we have a chance to make a difference. If just one of the pieces we have commissioned from composers from Denmark and abroad will be remembered and played by musicians in the future, then we have had an impact on music history. In 2019 we premiered a piano quartet by the Russian-British composer Dmitri Smirnov who died half a year later in the pandemic. It is a true master piece and we are so happy and grateful that he made it for us. It has already been performed by other musicians in other countries, so we are confident that it will be played in the future, and someone will read on Wikipedia (or whatever they will have at that time), that it was composed for us.

You’re performing music by Poul Ruders on the program at Carnegie Hall – any connection between the composer and the ensemble’s name “Rudersdal”?

The similarity of the names is a pure coincidence. The word Ruders is related to “rydning” which is a clearcutting in the woods. Rudersdal is a desirable area a little north from Copenhagen – it is a part of the so called the “whisky belt” where wealthy people enjoy a good life close to the city and close to the sea. But Denmark is still very equal compared to many other countries in the world, so you will also find very modest apartment houses in that area. Historically it was a place where merchants as well as the cultural elite spent their holiday. Grieg was a frequent guest and composed his piano concerto there, and also Hans Christian Andersen enjoyed a long stay at his friend’s place in Rudersdal. 

I decided to start my music festival in that area since there wasn’t already a festival (although there is a rich cultural life), and the ensemble is connected to the festival – hence the name.

Last year we released a world premiere recording of Ruders’ chamber music including the piano quartet, “Throne” for clarinet and piano as well as the clarinet quintet. We had been collaborating closely with the composer who is extremely nice and supportive.
The music is extremely difficult to play together so it has really improved our ensemble work. It is fun to think that when someone will play these pieces in 300 years, they might listen to our recording since it was made in collaboration with the composer.

Tell us about Andrew Waggoner’s piece “Now, the Fire” which was dedicated to your ensemble.

Andrew has been my friend for more than 13 years. He composed two pieces for my former ensemble and Now, the Fire is the first of hopefully more made for Rudersdal Chamber Players.
We are currently working on a project on the Four Elements where we combine music with other arts and science and this was made for FIRE.
It is inspired by James Baldwin’s The Fire Next Time. Andy is very good in telling a story with his music. And since he is an excellent violinist himself it is extremely well written for the instruments.

What do you most look forward to about the group’s American debut at Carnegie Hall?

After years without a chance to travel due to the pandemic it will just be mind-blowing to play in one of the best halls in the world!

Classical Music Communications, Inc. Celebrates 15 years

A note from CMC founder and Executive Director Gail Wein:

On March 1, 2008, I landed back in New York after a month in Bali and a year in Minnesota. On that day, 15 years ago this week, I launched my publicity and writing company, Classical Music Communications, Inc.

Throughout my career, as a radio host, radio producer at NPR for the program Performance Today, and classical music reviewer for The Washington Post, I’ve had an overwhelming desire to bring music to people. Launching a business as a writer and publicist was a natural next step.

I’ve been privileged to work with a wide variety of artists, from internationally established stars to up-and-coming talents. It’s been uniquely satisfying to spread the word to the world about their work. Happily, I continue working as a journalist, writing feature articles for Playbill, Symphony Magazine, Classical Voice America and other publications, and occasional radio work for NPR, Voice of America, and others. 

I am thoroughly thrilled to celebrate this milestone anniversary of 15 years in the business. The success of CMC is in part due to the phenomenal writers, editors, and producers that comprise the media landscape, who have chosen to cover the artists and projects we represent. It’s been wonderful and gratifying to have major media outlets like The New York Times, Opera News, and NPR write and broadcast stories about our artists.

The artists I work with deserve equal gratitude, especially the pianist Orli Shaham and composer/conductor Victoria Bond, each of whom I’ve worked with for over 13 years; as well as – literally - a hundred other clients. Enormous thanks also to colleagues near and far who have referred new clients and offered advice and ideas. Their generosity of time and spirit have really helped build the business over the years. CMC associates over the years have also contributed immeasurably, especially Jacob Sievers, Geoffrey Landman, and CMC’s current Senior Communications Associate, Caleb Jaster, who has been with the company since 2016.

I’m looking forward to many more fruitful years in the music business. Thank you to all who helped me get to this milestone! 

Gail Wein
New York City
February 27, 2023

Insider Interview with Ontario Pops Orchestra founder Carlos Bastidas

The Toronto-based Ontario Pops Orchestra highlights the work of women and BIPOC composers and instrumentalists and is one of the most diverse professional orchestras in Canada. Their debut album Breaking Barriers (rel. March 31, 2023) features concertos by Bach and Vivaldi performed by violinists Tanya Charles Iveniuk, Yanet Campbell Secades and bassoonist Marlene Ngalissamy, all led by OPO founder, conductor, and music director Carlos Bastidas.  We spoke to Bastidas about the group’s mission, the new album, and what the orchestra plan’s to do next.

What prompted you to form the Ontario Pops Orchestra?

 In the Greater Toronto Area, there are several professional orchestras and about 20 community orchestras but there no symphonic pops orchestras, so we wanted to fill that cultural gap. We have been very successful in attracting new audiences to our online and in person concerts.

Tell us about the repertoire that is typical for the orchestra to perform?   

In our concert programs, I mix in popular classical pieces as well as movie soundtracks, Broadway songs and light classical concerti.

How did you choose the three soloists on Breaking Barriers?  

I wanted to feature three professional black women musicians to help bring diversity to the classical music world.

What plans are on the horizon for the OPO?  

We are one of the most diverse professional orchestras in Canada. I want to continue to grow that equity and diversity.

We are reaching to new audiences by taking the orchestra from the concert hall into public spaces to perform free concerts for everyone to enjoy, not just the patrons who can afford to pay for concert tickets. Music should be accessible to everyone, everywhere. I feel this is important for the future of classical music.

"Ray Charles and Me" an essay by Victoria Bond

RAY CHARLES AND ME
By Victoria Bond

It all started with Quincy Jones. He was composing an immense oratorio called “A Black Requiem” for full orchestra and chorus, with Ray Charles as featured soloist. He was working on it with my composition teacher, Paul Glass.  Quincy’s lessons each week were right before mine, and Paul introduced us. As we became better acquainted, I followed his progress on the work with great interest.

The Requiem was powerful and traced the history of black slaves coming to America, beginning with slave ships coming to America and continued through the Watts riots in Los Angeles. Ray was narrator, preacher, storyteller, and participant. When the work was premiered with the Houston Symphony, Quincy invited both Paul Glass and me to attend the rehearsals and premiere.

During rehearsals, when not onstage, Ray and Paul whiled away the time playing chess backstage.. Taking the opportunity to get to know Ray, I sat in as an observer on their games.  Ray was curious about me and my work, and when I told him I was a composer, he quipped “If you are a legitimate composer that makes me an out of wedlock composer!” Ray was funny and witty and loved a good joke. He had an acute sense of hearing that allowed him to be aware of everything around him, and he was endlessly curious and inquisitive.  Quincy had structured the Requiem with  Ray’s talents in mind, and being close friends since their childhood in Seattle, he knew every nuance of Ray’s personality and musicianship.  He created room for Ray to improvise and be spontaneous, and the orchestral and choral portions of the Requiem were organized around this.

However, during the rehearsals, Quincy made changes to the orchestral parts.  His work in film and recording allowed him the freedom to change things on the spot, and he applied that experience to the less flexible world of the symphony orchestra.  These musicians were accustomed to playing the repertory of composer long dead, who could not interrupt with any remarks or criticisms, and conductors rarely, if ever, changed the notes in the score unless there were errors.  For Quincy to edit his music as the rehearsal progressed and to make changes to the musician’s parts as he discovered a better version than what was on the page, violated the norm. The players were not shy with expressing their displeasure, and Quincy was frustrated with their lack of flexibility. He was able to make some changes, but I am sure he would have wanted more had he not encountered such resistance.

The concert was a tremendous success and Ray’s part was so skillfully written that he appeared to be making it up on the spot. The choral and instrumental writing was powerful and the audience cheered and rose in a standing ovation at the conclusion.

 

Conducting Ray Charles in Richmond

That was the last time I saw Ray for several years.  The next occasion was when I was invited to conduct the Richmond Symphony in a pops concert featuring Ray. The music consisted of his normal repertoire of rhythm and blues, country and western and standards. I expected to receive the kind of scores I was accustomed to using for a symphonic concert, with all of the parts notated. Instead, I received either a piano part with no indication of any other instruments, or worse, just one instrumental part. Standing on the podium in front of the orchestra with so little information was an exercise in Zen, and I had to recreate the score in my head as we played and I could hear what each instrument was doing.

Being someone who conducts a lot of opera, I was accustomed to working closely with singers and adjusting my tempos to their breath and the ebb and flow of the music. Few operas have steady tempos for long periods of time. Flexibility of the beat, known as “rubato,” is the hallmark of the romantic nature of opera, and allows the music to either hold back or rush forward as the emotion being expressed dictates.  So when the first rehearsal began, I watched Ray and slowed down and speeded up when he did, matching the tempo of the accompaniment to his voice as I would do in opera.  He stopped me and said, “No, no!  You keep going and I will catch up with the bus.” This was completely new to me. I did what he wanted and held the tempo steady as he wove around it. Sometimes he was so far behind the beat that I thought he had forgotten what came next, but in an instant, he was right there, synchronized perfectly. This was one of Ray’s signature abilities. His voice had the natural flow of speech. It was never mechanical or stiff, but dipped, dived and vaulted around the beat, surprising the listener with the revelation that this music was alive, vibrant and spontaneous.

I was told that at the end of one of the pieces, Ray would improvise for a long time as the orchestra held the final notes, and I was to wait until a movement of his shoulder gave me the signal to stop. Anyone familiar with Ray’s playing style knows that he famously swayed from side to side, leaning left and right. We were in performance, at the end of the piece in question, and Ray was wailing on the keyboard, swaying back and forth.  This went on for what seemed like an eternity and I watched his shoulder like a hawk to try and discover when I was to cut off. Just then, his left shoulder went down with a decisive motion and I thought this must be the signal, so I cut off the orchestra.  Thankfully the audience cheered and applauded noisily afterwards, because Ray was furious.  He started yelling at me right on stage because I had obviously mistaken his signal and should have continued to hold.  I wanted the floor to open up and swallow me.  Here was my opportunity to work with the legendary Ray Charles, and I had blown it.  I would surely never work with him again. I was shamed in front of the orchestra and was completely humiliated. 

After the concert I slunk back to his dressing room to apologize, expecting him to fly into a rage for ruining the performance.  He was, on the contrary, cheerful and forgiving. “Don’t worry,” he said, “You’ll get it right the next time!”  The next time? I thought in disbelief. He actually wanted me to conduct for him again even after what I did?  I had to be sure where to cut the orchestra off if there was to be a next time, so I checked with the drummer, perhaps the most important musician of the hand-picked soloists who traveled with Ray to each of his orchestral engagements. The drummer looked at me, knowing what had happened at the concert, and said “Watch the right shoulder, not the left one.” So that was it. I never made the same mistake again.

Recording A Black Requiem

After the concert I reminded Ray that we first met when I had attended the rehearsals and concert of “A Black Requiem” and asked him if he had performed it since then. He told me that Quincy had been so upset with the orchestra’s behavior and never wanted to have it performed again.  I asked Ray if HE would want to do the work again if I could program it on a concert, and he assured me that he would. “You’ll have to convince Quincy first,” he warned me, skeptical that Quincy would budge from his position. I told Ray that at the time I was the Music Director and Conductor of the Roanoke Symphony in Virginia and was sure that the orchestra would be thrilled to perform the work. Now my challenge was to convince Quincy.

I contacted him, explained the situation and emphasized that Ray was eager to do the Requiem again, and that I had an orchestra ready and willing to perform it. As is turned out, Quincy lived a short walking distance from my mother’s house in Los Angeles, and several months later, when I was visiting my mother, he invited my husband Stephan Peskin and I to lunch at his home. He met us at the door, casually dressed and elegant. He had a full-time cook and we ate a delicious lunch, listening to stories about his many projects.  After lunch I finally broached the subject of the Requiem. “There’s no score,” he said. “It’s all little bits and pieces in a big box. Nothing has been touched since the premiere.”  I asked if there was a recording, and there was an archival one made at the concert. I explained that I could match up the bits and pieces of the puzzle to the recording and create a score. I told him that Ray was eager to do it again and that I had an orchestra and chorus eager to present it, and I was eager to conduct it.  I pleaded with him to let me try to put it all together. Reluctantly he agreed, not certain that I could decipher his scattered notes and make sense of them.

He went over to a cupboard and started to pull things out of it.  “Come here and help me, Steve,” he said to my husband.  As the two of them sat on the floor, Quincy began to hand him statues and plaques, one after another. It was an amazing sight – Grammy Awards, Emmy Awards, Academy Awards and Tony Awards – all hidden away in a cupboard!  Finally he found the box he was looking for and dragged it out.  It was piled high with loose pages and bits of paper, scraps of music and assorted messages – a real mess!  “Here it is” he said, looking at me with an “I told you so” expression that challenged me to make some semblance of order out of this chaos. “Do you think you can do it?” he said. “If I can have the recording, I KNOW I can do it” I confidently replied, all the while wondering if I actually could.

That was the beginning of the great adventure. The bits and pieces were not as disorganized as I had feared, and once I was familiar with the recording, I was able to put them together into a cohesive score. The set of parts followed and after a Herculean effort, the work was ready for performance.  Ray was excited. The Roanoke Symphony was ecstatic. Gospel choirs from local churches rehearsed for months to learn the choral portions of the Requiem. The community was at fever pitch. To have Ray Charles in person performing with their orchestra, conductor and choirs was nothing short of a miracle. 

Ray arrived and immediately everyone wanted to have their picture taken with him.  He was courteous and generous, and very patient. The first rehearsal went smoothly and the minute I got home, there was a message on my phone from Quincy. I called him back immediately and he was as excited as kid, wanting to know how it went, and if there were there any problems, and asking me how did it sound, etc. I reassured him that it was a brilliant work and the orchestra and the choir loved it, and that Ray was as pleased as could be. “You know he can be the Ayatollah” Quincy warned me.  “Look out for his temper. It is fierce!” I assured him that Ray had been a perfect gentleman and hadn’t yelled at me once, remembering the dressing down I had received years earlier.

The performance was a sensational success, and Ray was so impressed with the performance of the orchestra, the choir and me, that he told me he wanted to return with a recording crew and record the work!  This was a heady prospect. The date was set, the orchestra and choir rehearsed again, and Ray arranged for an enormous truck, filled with recording equipment to park in front of the Roanoke Civic Center.  There were cables everywhere and technical crew rushing about adjusting microphones and rearranging the stage.  Ray flew in and supervised the setup, listening with superhuman precision to the takes as we recorded them.  At one point when the orchestra was playing a particularly complex passage, layered with contrapuntal textures and thick harmonies, Ray shouted “Where’s the harp?  I don’t hear the harp!”  How anyone could possibly hear such a soft instrument in the midst of that din was unbelievable. Sure enough, the harpist had lost her place and was not playing.  What an ear! I was impressed. We all were impressed except Ray. That was how he heard. It was just normal for him to hear every detail.    

On Tour with Ray

After that recording session, I became Ray’s regular conductor for his orchestral concerts and traveled all over the country and even to Poland with him.  It was what I called my post-doctorate musical training, as I learned so much from working with him that I had never learned at Juilliard.  The schedule generally consisted of flying to the location, having one rehearsal and a concert and flying back the next day.  Very often Ray would not show up for the rehearsal, and I attributed this to his confidence in me.  I must confess, however, that the first time this happened, I was surprised and concerned, never having done a performance without the soloist being at the rehearsal. Ray, of course, had performed thousands of times, knew his repertoire and was the consummate showman in front of an audience.  He was always on the road and hardly ever stayed at his Los Angeles studio and home for very long.  The audiences gave him energy, and he loved them and needed his intense schedule for sustenance.

He always stayed at Holiday Inns because he knew the configuration of the rooms, which were always identical, and he could maneuver them without assistance.  He did have someone who was always with him, guiding him onto the stage and helping him with the everyday assistance a blind person would need.  I remember walking through the airport with Ray and his assistant.  I was a few steps behind them and as they walked, I saw people do a double take once they realized who he was.

In September of 2000, I was in the midst of rehearsals for an opera in Harrisburg, Pennsylvania when I got a call from my husband.  “Ray just called and he said he needs you right away!” I called Ray’s manager Joe Adams who said yes, Ray wanted me to conduct his 70th birthday concert and he needed me to come the next day.  “Where is the concert?” I asked. “In Warsaw, Poland” was the surprising answer. “We have a first-class ticket waiting for you.  Just get to JFK tomorrow. This was a real challenge. Of course I was honored to be asked to conduct Ray’s special birthday concert and I wanted to go, but I did have an obligation to the opera company and I would need to get their permission to leave the rehearsal for a few days.  I spoke to the director. “Are you kidding?” he said. “Of course you should go.  This is a historic moment. We are OK managing the staging rehearsals without you.  Just let us know when you will be back.” The schedule was tight: I would fly overnight to Warsaw, rehearse that afternoon, perform the concert that evening and I would fly back the next day. There would be no problem missing two days of rehearsal.

The last concert I conducted with Ray was at the New Jersey Performing Arts Center.  As we were about to go onstage, Ray said to me “You play piano, don’t you?” I confirmed that I did. “At the end of the concert you and I are going to play a little duet!” I gasped. I was going to play a duet with Ray Charles? Where was the music? How could I do this? But Ray was off, walking onstage to the huge ovation of the thousands of fans in the audience.  I panicked. Was I about to crash and burn in front of thousands of people? Maybe Ray was only kidding. Maybe he would forget.  Throughout the concert I was praying that he would forget. 

But sure enough, at the end of the concert Ray made an announcement. “And now, ladies and gentlemen, I have a little surprise for you.  The Maestro and I are going to play a duet.  Come on over to the piano bench, Victoria,” he commanded.  What was I to do? Shaking all over, I walked like a condemned woman to the guillotine. “Sit down beside me, Victoria,” and I obeyed.  Then he whispered in my ear “just follow me. The song has only three chords. It’s very easy.” And so it was. Ray was as relaxed as though he was entertaining a few friends at his house.  His relaxation infused me and calmed my agitation. He began alone so that I could hear and see the chords and what he was doing, and then I joined him.  This was fun! It was such an exhilarating feeling that I didn’t want it to end, but finally we had to, and the crowd went wild!

 

Ray’s Final Years

A couple of years later, I saw Ray in New York where he had invited my husband and me to attend a performance with his big band at a jazz club. At the end of his set, he announced that his favorite conductor was in the audience and asked me to stand. People looked around in amazement to see a petite, white woman. “Come backstage and say hello” he said as he left the stage. My husband has been with me to many concerts where I go backstage to congratulate the artist, particularly when it is someone I know. He hates this ritual, which he calls “kissing the ring” as though the artist in question were royalty, expecting a sign of obsequious fealty from his subject. So when I dashed back to see Ray and was met by him giving me a huge hug that lifted me clear off the floor, Stephan hung back. “Where is that man of yours?” he bellowed.  “Or is he too proud to come backstage to see me?” Stephan heard this, as did everyone in a 10 block radius, and he came backstage where he and Ray embraced warmly.

 The last time I saw Ray was at his studio in Los Angeles.  My husband and I drove there at his invitation. He was very sick, and had not been performing for some time.  We were met by his manager, Joe Adams, who brought us inside.  “Look out!” Joe shouted, “Blind man driving!” and just then, Ray sped towards us in an electric wheelchair.  He was thinner and frailer than I remembered him being, but his robust personality was undiminished. He laughed and joked with my husband and me, and although we did notice a large number of medications covering his desk, he seemed his old self.  I was devastated by the news of Ray’s death in June 2004.  We knew it was coming when we saw him, but wanted to hope that somehow he would charm even death and live many more years.

Conducting Ray Charles’ Music with Stockton Symphony and Billy Valentine

I am grateful for this opportunity in February 2023 to bring Ray’s music to a new audience at Atherton Auditorium with the Stockton Symphony and with the brilliant singer/songwriter Billy Valentine. Billy knows Ray’s style so intimately, and he brings an impressive background of his own accomplishments to the program. He grew up in Columbus, Ohio where his parents owned a nightclub, Club Faces, where his five brothers and seven sisters worked. “We had people lined up around the block to get in because my mother and father greeted you at the front door,” Valentine recalls. “And my sisters would work the cash register while brother and I worked the stage. When there was a break, we would call our sisters to come up on stage to sing with us as well. It was a family operation.” His skills as a song writer allowed him to collaborate with greats like Will Jennings, the Neville Bros. and the immortal Ray Charles. 

It is a privilege to work with Billy Valentine and the Stockton Symphony, and we both look forward to bringing Ray Charles’ songs to life at Atherton Auditorium.

Victoria Bond on WQED's Voice of the Arts

Gramophone Review: Mozart Piano Sonatas Vol. 2 & 3

GRAMOPHONE Review

MOZART Piano Sonatas Vols 2 & 3 (Orli Shaham)
By Jed Distler

The following is an excerpt. To read the full review, visit Gramophone.co.uk

The stylish intelligence and pianistic refinement distinguishing the first volume in Orli Shaham’s Mozart piano sonata cycle (released in 2020) continues into Vols 2 and 3. She rightly brings out the operatic subtext of the A minor Sonata, K310, probing the Allegro maestoso’s gnawing dissonances and generating tension through dynamic understatement in the Presto finale. Her beautifully sung-out Andante cantabile manages to be expansive and flexible without losing shape or continuity. In the opening Allegro of the F major Sonata, K332, Shaham gives distinct character and breathing room to each theme, and astutely brings out the composer’s cross-rhythmic phrase groupings. The Allegro assai’s vertiginous runs truly scintillate yet never lapse into square regularity; sophisticated accent placement and subtle elongations keep the listener guessing, so to speak.

Insider Interview with Composer Mark Abel

Two song cycles form the cornerstone of “Spectrum” (Delos, DE 3592) by acclaimed composer Mark Abel, which features some of the most outstanding voices on stage today: Hila Plitmann, Isabel Bayrakdarian, and Kindra Scharich. Trois Femmes du Cinema (Three Women of Cinema) is about cult figures Anne Wiazemsky, Pina Pellicer and Larisa Shepitko. Two Scenes from “The Book of Esther” is a provocative excerpt from an opera in development. The album’s impressive array of instrumentalists includes pianist Carol Rosenberger; fellow pianists Dominic Cheli, Sean Kennard and Jeffrey LaDeur; Alexander String Quartet violist David Samuel; Pacific Symphony concertmaster Dennis Kim and cello star Jonah Kim.

Despite starting your classical music career while still involved in a different line of work (journalism), you have made an impressive mark with critical acclaim and six albums (!) under your belt. What made you want to write concert music? 

Classical has been my principal interest for many years, though initially it was as a fan only. For a good portion of my 21-year journalism career, I wasn’t certain I’d be able to raise the quality of my spare-time composing to clear the invisible bar of credibility that would result in my work being taken seriously. But I kept at it, juggling creative breakthroughs with strong doses of self-criticism. Finally, by the early 2000s, I felt confident I’d developed my own voice. Getting the music heard, recorded and performed since then is another story, of course.

Tell us about how your background prepared you for this path?  

My father was quite a devotee of pre-20th century music – Mozart, Beethoven and Brahms in particular. So in my childhood I got meaningful exposure to classical on a high aesthetic plane. But I began rebelling in my early teens, abandoning it in favor of the innovative modern jazz of the era. I did understand jazz deeply enough to realize I lacked the discipline to master it as a player. The best rock of the ‘60s, however, proved a viable entry point. I quit college after two years and went hard at this music for an extended period. It wasn’t until the late 1970s that I began facing the hard truth that rock is quite a limiting medium and further creative growth in that context would be impossible for me. With hindsight, it now seems inevitable that I would make my way back to classical, starting with a long period of catch-up to learn about the many composers I wasn’t familiar with. Happily, I was ready and eager to sink my teeth into this – but as a fan, not a composer. That came later.  

How would you describe your compositional voice or style?  

There’s a strong streak of lyricism in my work, in both the music and words (which I often write myself). The melodic component is important to me, and it’s never far off -- probably ingrained due to my prolific songwriting in the rock field. But I’m not a neo-Romantic. I’ve listened to a lot of progressive and avant-garde music over the years and elements of this can be heard in my output. Put simply, I’ve absorbed a lot of musical styles over time and it’s always been my goal to synthesize them into a cohesive – and hopefully seamless – original style.   

How has that voice evolved over the course of the six albums and your years of composing?  

Good question. Lately I’ve been re-listening to some of my earlier “serious” compositions and am getting some fresh perspective. It’s clear that the basic shape of my style has been set for some time. In the last six years or so I’ve been experimenting with differing iterations of a fully formed identity – a 100 minutes-plus opera (something I didn’t think I’d ever attempt), expanding my range of expression in song cycles and lyric writing, and, perhaps most significant, becoming comfortable writing chamber music. This last element has definitely stretched my horizons. One always wants to make every note count but chamber music is in many ways the ultimate test.      

You’ve collaborated with many brilliant performers across the albums, some of whom are featured on Spectrum. Tell us about how you got to know one or two of them, and how working together came about.  

The one I’ve worked with most extensively is the soprano Hila Plitmann – best known for her collaborations with John Corigliano, David Del Tredici and Richard Danielpour. She’s an absolutely fabulous and unique artist, dedicated from the start of her career to being a vessel for new music. Hila has very much inspired me to forge ahead and be more daring. I was very little known when I came cold calling in the summer of 2014, but that didn’t matter to her. What did was my song cycle The Palm Trees Are Restless, the first of what has grown into a sheaf of six projects together. I’ve also been blessed and am proud to have attracted such eminent musicians as David Shifrin, Fred Sherry, Isabel Bayrakdarian and Carol Rosenberger. But I find a special gratification in working with people on the way up, like pianist Dominic Cheli and mezzo-soprano Kindra Scharich; I’ll be very happy if their fine work on Spectrum helps boost their profiles.        

What do you hope listeners take away from Spectrum?  

I’m self-taught and didn’t come up through the familiar academic routes. This sets me apart in some respects from most composers; for example, very few write their own texts. I consider my composing an authentic reflection of who I am from an artistic and intellectual standpoint. And I think most people sense that after spending some time with my work. Spectrum is the broadest survey to date of what I do, and I hope listeners find the “content” resonating with them on more than one level.