Reviewing the Boston Symphony Orchestra Chamber Players.
Boston Globe, October 17, 2011.
Incidentally, by the measurements of Sabrina! this was an ill-behaved audience. The season’s started, Boston—brush up on your etiquette.
Globe Articles
Acts of respiration
Reviewing Audra McDonald.
Boston Globe, October 4, 2011.
Porous dancing
Reviewing Dinosaur Annex.
Boston Globe, September 28, 2011.
Let George do it
Reviewing Emmanuel Music in Bach’s B minor Mass.
Boston Globe, September 27, 2011.
Homiletic for the People
Reviewing Newton Baroque and Exsultemus in Telemann’s Harmonisher Gottesdienst.
Boston Globe, September 19, 2011.
Dégustation
Reviewing the Boston Chamber Music Society.
Boston Globe, August 29, 2011.
Crazy for trying and crazy for crying
Reviewing the Philharmonia Baroque Orchestra and Handel’s Orlando.
Boston Globe, August 18, 2011.
Waiting for summer, his pastures to change
Discursive:
The 2011 Tanglewood Festival of Contemporary Music, part 1.
NewMusicBox, August 8, 2011.
Concise:
The 2011 Tanglewood Festival of Contemporary Music, part 2.
Boston Globe, August 9, 2011.
Writing these round-up reviews for the Globe is always a dance between enthusiasm—it’s a great platform for saying things about works that deserve to have things said about them—and frustration: given the space limitations, there’s simply no way you can mention every piece. For a variety of reasons, these pieces were left on the cutting room floor:
- Eve Belgarian’s Robin Redbreast, which sets a Stanley Kunitz poem in an almost distractingly mannered recitative (here sung by tenor Martin Bakari), but backs it up with a combination of hollow, chirping piccolo (Henrik Heide) and electronically-altered birdsong that was very, very cool;
- Richard Festinger’s Peripeteia, a running-note divertimento for clarinet (Danny Goldman, who was quite good), violin (Wang Fang Wong), and cello (Marybeth-Brown Plambeck), music that, despite some mid-piece longueurs, was remarkably successful at pinning improvisatory fluidity to the notated page;
- Jonathan Keren’s Multiscala, combining a mandolin part of familiar-yet-unfamiliar extended strumming techniques (played by Avi Avital) with a string trio (Johanna Gosshans, Daniel Getz, and Jeremy Lamb), running quick-fire variations, like turning some exotic artifact over and over in one’s hands; and
- Bernard Rands’ Tre Espressioni, the festival’s oldest piece (1960), played by Ursula Oppens on her Sunday recital, and, indeed, expressionistic, aphoristic slabs of demonstrative old-school modernism.
Further reading: Jeremy Eichler, Allan Kozinn (1, 2), Andrew Pincus (1, 2).
Stop making sense
Reviewing Boston Midsummer Opera’s L’Italiana in Algeri.
Boston Globe, July 29, 2011.
Blue Light Special
Reviewing Jean-Yves Thibaudet.
Boston Globe, July 21, 2011.
Update (7/22): I reviewed the second of Thibaudet’s Ravel recitals here.