Thursday, April 9, 2009

Rediscovering Rachmaninoff: Day 3

No time for full post so some quick notes. Friday, April 3, attended hours and hours of Rachmaninoff at the PSO.

7pm, Listening to Rachmaninoff with festival curator Horowitz and conductor Gianandrea Noseda: A brief (half-hour), but interesting exchange. Horowitz played some records and discussed the uniqueness of Rach recordings by Stokowski's legendary Philadelphia Orchestra. Italian maestro Noseda tried to explain why he is championing Rach's unloved 1st symph by performing it 8 times around the world this year.

8pm, Pittsburgh Symphony concert, Rhapsody on a Theme by Paganini, "Spring Cantata" and Symphony No. 1. Noseda, conductor, Simon Trpceski, piano, Vassily Ladyuk, baritone, Mendelssohn Choir. Okay. The festival is called "Rediscovering Rachmaninoff," but at the risk of sounding glib, I found both the Spring Cantata and 1st Symphony rightly forgotten. Noseda pulled out an A+ effort as he valiantly tried to convey the enthusiasm for the piece he described in the pre-concert talk, but the symphony struck me as a snooze. I'm hardly alone in this opinion; it's been disliked since its premier, and Horowitz's program liner notes tiptoe around the elephant in the room: 99% of people don't like it, or ever liked it. But let's try *really hard* and maybe we will. I am sure that pros like maestro Noseda can enjoy, say, the motivic connections between the symphony's first and third movements, but I dunno.

The Spring Cantata. I wonder if the Mendelssohn Choir was annoyed at assembling at Heinz Hall for just this 15-minute piece. The problem with Spring Cantata is that, despite the 100-odd people on stage (full orchestra, full chorus, baritone solo), it seemed so small, such a minor work. Take any other work for chorus and orchestra-- Carmina Burana, Ein Deutsches Reqiuem, Beethoven's Ninth, for God's sake-- they're BIG! Was this uninspired Russian folk poem about a cheating peasant wife truly the best use of a small army of professional musicians? This would be better suited to a chamber ensemble, a soloist + small orchestra or quartet or something.

10pm, Post-concert performance by Vakhtang Kodanashvili, piano. Although brief, this was the most satisfying for me because it, like the Paganini Variations, is the Rachmaninoff we already know: big, impressive, virtuosic piano banging. I understand that the entire point of the festival is to challenge this very notion, and the crudeness of my comments here is meant to be provocative. I know there's much to love and admire in any Rach work, but so far I doubt that, for a general listener like myself, the Rach repertoire will ever expand beyond the Rach we already love. The Symphony 1 and Spring Cantata surely haven't changed my mind.

2/5 Duchamps

Wednesday, April 1, 2009

Rediscovering Rachmaninoff: Day 1 - Maxim Mogilevsky Master Class

I plan to attend a bunch of the Rediscovering Rachmaninoff festival throughout April, schedule here, with more details here.

Today I attended the master class at the PNC Recital Hall, which is tucked away in Duquesne's Mary Pappert School of Music. The class was led by Maxim Mogilevsky (bio), a Russian pianist who studied under Vladimir Ashkenazy's teacher, has taught at Oberlin and other music programs and toured and performed extensively. Mogilevsky will be performing pre-concerts at Heinz Hall the weekend of April 17th.

I've never sat in on a master class before, and it was interesting, although I'm not sure I'd crash one again unless the guest artist were, like, Yo Yo Ma. Three local college piano students-- Helga, Javier, and Vivian, if I recall-- each played a short piece, followed by about 25 minutes of comments and guidance by Mogilevsky. Helga played Scriabin's famous Etude Op. 8, No. 12, and Javier a part of a movement of a Scriabin piano concerto (i *think*), with an accompanist playing the orchestra part.

As classical music fans, most of what we hear are the A++ artists, the cream of the cream who tour, perform professionally, and record CDs. We rarely hear student-level performers, and it was interesting in and of itself to hear a college student perform a Scriabin Etude I've only previously heard performed by Vladimir Horowitz, a piano god. It was fun, like watching a minor league baseball game-- more exciting because it's messier, more real, more human, with the possibility that a mistake could actually happen raising the stakes as a spectator.

The students did 3-5 minute performances followed by 25 minute of private piano lessons by Mogilevsky, which is what a master class is, I suppose, but it got a bit boring for an audience schmuck like myself. I stayed for an hour and left.

Rachmaninoff Rediscovered: zero.
2/5 Duchamps
 
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