United States Aspen Music Festival 2023 [12]: Benedict Music Tent, Harris Hall, Aspen, Colorado. (HS)
Over the previous few days, live performance goers on the Aspen Music Festival heard a Chinese composer’s piece for piano and orchestra that swerved from celestial magnificence to agonizing noise; a saxophonist who delineated music by composers from Baroque to Björk with a pop artist’s aptitude; a pleasant, jazz-infused model of a Stravinsky traditional by Wynton Marsalis; and a 45-minute rumination on the historical past of time that positioned sections of the orchestra across the perimeter of the music tent.
One can not say the music competition is doing the same-old, same-old. And most of it delivered the products with ear-pleasing virtuosity.
The marquee occasion was John Luther Adams’s An Atlas of Deep Time, which opened Sunday’s Festival Orchestra program with a re-definition of ‘world music’. The composer actually meant to immerse the viewers within the earth’s historical past from the planet’s formation to now. Like his Crossing Open Ground, which occurred exterior the music tent earlier than the earlier Sunday’s live performance, it bypassed the standard hierarchy of melody/concord/rhythm, as a substitute utilizing the sonic components of music to create an immersive expertise.
A kind of rumbling, sound-shifting meditation, it stacked clusters of chords, performed with dynamics and located separate sections across the house to resonate with encompass sound. Messiaen, a twentieth-century composer who famously derived his music from chook tune and representations of vastness (I saved considering of his From the Canyons to the Sky), would have beloved it. The musicians I talked with at intermission didn’t. ‘I tried, but after ten minutes of the same chord I couldn’t’, one mentioned. Some civilians beloved the hypnotic points of it. It’s all in what you anticipate from music.
The second half gave conductor David Robertson extra conventional music to work with. Listeners may admire the luxurious melodies of Chausson’s Poème, performed with silvery precision by Luna Choi (winner of final 12 months’s violin competitors), and experience Debussy’s vivid scene-painting in La mer, each performed with Robertson’s clearly delineated strategy and expressive physique language.
Saturday’s recitals in Harris Hall challenged performers to enterprise into extra music on the edges of what we normally consider as ‘classical’, they usually rose to the calls for brilliantly.
In her night program, British saxophonist Jess Gillam proved she will meet the virtuosic calls for of a Baroque oboe concerto transcribed note-for-note for soprano sax and apply the identical strategies to fashionable music written or organized for her. The advert hoc ensemble of scholar musicians that backed her – a string quintet plus piano and percussion – executed items that relied on reels and different dance music with obvious ease.
Clad in a vibrant blue pantsuit and rhinestone-adorned sneakers, Gillam linked with the viewers with welcoming vitality and dazzled along with her enjoying. Fast-moving acrobatic traces and tender, long-breathed melodies emerged gracefully, with candy tone. Highlights included a brand new piece, ‘Pressure of Speech’ by American composer Nico Muhly, co-commissioned by the competition. He performed the vigorous nine-minute work which juggled a number of genres for Gillam on alto sax.
‘Venus as a Boy’ by Björk acquired a jazz overlay in an association by John Metcalfe, who additionally organized movie composer Riu Sakamoto’s serene ‘Merry Christmas, Mr. Lawrence’. Even higher have been rhythmically important items resembling ‘Shine You No More’ (an up-tempo model of a gradual tune by the sixteenth-century composer John Dowland), and the night’s rousing nearer, ‘RANT!’ by John Harle (who has collaborated with Paul McCartney).
The Saturday afternoon recital normally begins with a prickly modern work and strikes on to a string quartet or piano trio, however this time it opened a number of eyes with one other piece by John Luther Adams and a outstanding theatrical work by Wynton Marsalis.
Adams’s serene there is no such thing as a one, not even the wind (2017) stuffed the corridor with sustained sonorities from strings, a clarinet and percussion, performed with infinite persistence and delicacy.
A trumpet virtuoso and composer who excels in each jazz and traditional idioms, Marsalis tailored Stravinsky’s groundbreaking Histoire du soldat for his 1998 A Fiddler’s Tale: unique music utilizing the identical instrumentation as Stravinsky’s to go together with a brand new script by Stanley Crouch, the famend jazz commentator (in a decidedly Black idiom). Stravinsky’s soldier battling the Devil for his violin is changed with a cautionary story a few musician hankering for fame, through which the Devil, posing as a music mogul, obliges.
Conducted by veteran percussionist Jonathan Haas with applicable sass, the combination of college and college students delivered Marsalis’s jazz-infused rating brilliantly. Formidable violinist Alex Kerr soloed with type, Stuart Stephenson acquired funky on his trumpet solos and Edward Stephan saved the rhythm going neatly on drums. Students, particularly bass participant Michael Zogaib, saved up marvelously.
Two members of the Aspen Opera Theater and VocalARTS – mezzo-soprano Adja Thomas because the narrator and tenor Justin E. Bell because the Devil – carried the intensive spoken elements, portraying a number of characters successfully.
Friday’s Chamber Symphony live performance was a blended bag, from an unique first half to a crisply formed Brahms Symphony No.2. The solely absolutely realized piece was a 1918 bonbon of nature-painting by Lili Boulanger, a French composer who died younger within the shadow of her rather more well-known sister, Nadia, a mentor to nice composers. ‘D’un matin de printemps’, a seven-minute tone poem, describes a spring morning in superbly orchestrated, evocative music. Maurice Cohn, assistant conductor for the competition who led the opposite night of John Williams’s movie music, caught the breeze completely.
An odd duck of a piano and orchestra piece by the one-time baby prodigy Peng-Peng Gong adopted. Now 31, he has created a stately stage presence and may nonetheless assault the piano formidably. His personal composition, Late Bells Concertante, began enticingly, with a single observe tolling and thrives rising round it, first on the piano, finally with the complete orchestra. It ended with a meditative, restful variation on the tolling, totally different sufficient to mirror an excellent composer’s sensibilities.
But there was a vastly totally different center half. The program observe mentioned it represented a prodigy’s frustrations and pressures. The orchestra exploded into dizzying layers of dissonance, so loud that an apparently complicated piano half disappeared into the storm clouds. Thankfully, all of it ebbed into a stunning end. With a re-written center part, this may very well be a heck of a chunk.
Brahms Symphony No.2 occupied the second half of this system. Cohn delineated the composer’s particular person episodes with a formidable array of tonal colours and clearly outlined rhythms. If the assorted gestures didn’t fairly move easily from one to the following, there was a lot to understand within the readability of those episodes.
Harvey Steiman
11.8.2023: Chamber Symphony: Peng-Peng Gong (piano), Aspen Chamber Symphony / Maurice Cohn (conductor). Benedict Music Tent
Lili Boulanger – ‘D’un matin de printemps’
Peng-Peng Gong – Late Bells Concertante for Piano and Orchestra (U.S. premiere)
Brahms – Symphony No.2 in D main
12.8.2023: Chamber Music: Vocalists, Soloists, Aspen Contemporary Ensemble. Harris Hall
John Luther Adams – there is no such thing as a one, not even the wind (Timothy Weiss, conductor)
Wynton Marsalis – A Fiddler’s Tale (Alex Kerr, violin, Jonathan Haas, conductor)
12.8.2023: Recital: Jess Gillam (saxophones), John Hale (piano), scholar ensemble. Harris Hall
Marcello – Oboe Concerto in D minor
Meredith Monk – ‘Early Morning Melody’
Philip Glass – ‘Melody No.10 for Saxophone’
Ayanna Witter-Johnson – ‘Lumina’
C. P. E. Bach (arr. Simon Parkin) – Allegro Assai from Flute Concerto in A minor
Thom Yorke (arr. Benjamin Rimmer) – ‘Suspirium’
Björk (arr, John Metcalfe) – ‘Venus as a Boy’
Nico Muhly – ‘Pressure of Speech’ (U.S. premiere, Nico Muhly, conductor)
Sakamoto (arr. Metcalfe) – ‘Merry Christmas, Mr. Lawrence’
Rune Tonsgaard Sørensen (arr. Parkin) – ‘Shine You No More’
B. Thompson – ‘The Unseen Way’
John Harle – ‘RANT!’
13.8.2023: Various: Luna Choi (violin), Aspen Festival Orchestra / David Robertson (conductor). Benedict Music Tent
John Luther Adams – An Atlas of Deep Time
Chausson – Poème for Violin and Orchestra
Debussy – La mer