Music For The Day

The haunting choral piece “On The Transmigration Of Souls”, by John Adams, commissioned in the immediate wake of the terrorist attacks on September 11, 2001 as a tribute to the victims and those who were left behind.

 

Performed here by the New York Philharmonic Orchestra.

From the Wikipedia entry:

In an interview Adams explained: “I want to avoid words like ‘requiem’ or ‘memorial’ when describing this piece because they too easily suggest conventions that this piece doesn’t share. If pressed, I’d probably call the piece a ‘memory space.’ It’s a place where you can go and be alone with your thoughts and emotions. The link to a particular historical event – in this case to 9/11 – is there if you want to contemplate it. But I hope that the piece will summon human experience that goes beyond this particular event.”

The title itself carries a certain heaviness of thought and meaning. According to Adams, “Transmigration means ‘the movement from one place to another’ or ‘the transition from one state of being to another.’ But in this case I meant it to imply the movement of the soul from one state to another. And I don’t just mean the transition from living to dead, but also the change that takes place within the souls of those that stay behind, of those who suffer pain and loss and then themselves come away from that experience.”

I was present at the world premiere performance by the NYPO at Avery Fisher Hall, Lincoln Center, in 2002. A very moving experience.

Music For The Day

Trois Pièces by Francois Poulenc.

1. Pastorale

2. Hymne

3. Toccata

 

The Hymne, in particular, is quite stunning. And the Toccata fiendishly difficult!

I do like these YouTube videos where you are able to follow the score along with the music.

An Icon Turns 10

disneyconcerthall

 

The wonderfully designed Walt Disney Concert Hall in Los Angeles, California, turns 10 years old this year. With its sweeping, idiosyncratic curves. metallic finish and public spaces, it is doing a lot (at least in LA terms) to revitalise the downtown area.

The interior is also beautifully designed, with seating in the round (limited audience seating behind the choir) and a very dramatic organ placement. The warm finish of the interior contrasts strikingly with the bright, metallic exterior.

disneyconcerthall2

Gramophone Magazine reports:

The Los Angeles Philharmonic is celebrating the 10th anniversary of its Walt Disney Concert Hall with ‘insideOUT’, a number of special events taking place during September, October and November featuring music director Gustavo Dudamel, Esa-Pekka Salonen, Yo-Yo Ma, Leif Ove Andsnes, Yefim Bronfman and Julie Andrews.

There will also be public forums with Frank Gehry, designer of the concert hall (Oct 2, 15), who writes of his building: ‘One of the primary considerations when conceiving the design for Walt Disney Concert Hall was to preserve the iconic importance of the LA Phil, but break down the often imposing scale of a traditional concert hall. Walt Disney Concert Hall is not just a building for music, but a building for the people. From the inside out, the building was designed to respond to its surrounding, and serve as a gathering place.’

Semi-Partisan Sam hopes to make his own visit to the Disney Concert Hall in the coming few years.

Music For The Day

The Passacaglia from Violin Concerto no. 1 by Dmitri Shostakovich, performed here by Hilary Hahn:

 

Hilary Hahn has long been one of my favourite violinists, since she came to my attention with her recording of Bernstein’s “Serenade” for violin and string orchestra. Hers is a very pristine, clean style of playing, but it never lapses into mere dry technical mastery of her instrument.

If anything, her somewhat reserved and understated style serves to add greater profundity to much of the music that she plays – no more so than in the case of this Shostakovich violin concerto, where she draws out the full impact of the composer’s spine-tingling, chilling, yearning melody in the Passacaglia.