Christopher Rountree Archives - Cultural Attaché https://culturalattache.co/tag/christopher-rountree/ The Guide to Arts and Culture events in and around Los Angeles Wed, 05 Jun 2024 22:55:45 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.7.1 ANNA SCHUBERT AND HER BOLD EMBRACE OF NEW OPERAS https://culturalattache.co/2024/06/05/anna-schubert-and-her-bold-embrace-of-new-operas/ https://culturalattache.co/2024/06/05/anna-schubert-and-her-bold-embrace-of-new-operas/#respond Wed, 05 Jun 2024 22:55:41 +0000 https://culturalattache.co/?p=20478 "I'm going to be honest, this is one of the hardest things I've ever put together."

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For anyone who saw Ellen Reid‘s Pulitzer Prize-winning opera p r i s m when it had its world premiere in Los Angeles at REDCAT in November 2018, it is impossible to forget the powerful singing and acting by Anna Schubert who sang the role of Bibi. Those who did know that she dives head first into very complicated material. Complicated both thematically and musically.

Rachel Beetz, Mona Tian and Anna Schubert in “Ipsa Dixit” (Photo by Jason Al-Taan/Courtesy Long Beach Opera)

Schubert now steps up for another challenge: the sole singing role in Kate Soper‘s Ipsa Dixit. Long Beach Opera is performing Ipsa Dixit at the Art Theater in Long Beach on June 8th and 9th. It’s a very difficult work that Soper wrote for herself to sing accompanied by three musicians on flute, percussion and violin.

For this production, director James Darrah is adding two dancers (Anna Souder and Leslie Andre Williams) from the Martha Graham Dance company performing choreography created by Janet Eilber.

There are also film elements from Carl Theodore Dreyer’s silent film classic The Passion of Joan of Arc. Christopher Rountree conducts.

Recently I spoke with Schubert about her passion for contemporary opera, taking over a role originally performed by composer Soper and finding the inspiration to tackle such complex roles. What follows are excerpts from our conversation that have been edited for length and clarity. To see the full interview, please go to our YouTube channel.

Q: You are a passionate advocate for new works and for contemporary classical music. What do you think are the greatest misconceptions about what new music is today?

I think one of the greatest misconceptions is that the audience won’t understand it or won’t respond to it, or especially that new audiences will not want to see it. Every time I do any new work I have people come up to me afterward that say, this was my first opera, or, this was my first time coming to see something like this. I didn’t know opera could be like this. I didn’t know that this kind of music existed. And they’re always really excited, just entranced by what they saw. 

You have worked with Kate Soper before on The Romance of the Rose. What do you most respond to in her work? 

I think an advantage that Kate has as a composer is that she knows what she wants and she’s very exact about what she writes and how she wants it in the score. Oftentimes she’ll write staging out. In The Romance of the Rose there was staging written in already. With Ipsa Dixit there’s like 30 pages or so of performance notes before the score, that have text and translations and notes about what certain figures might mean – in terms of the sound that you’re supposed to produce. Everything is written in there for you. 

But there is freedom for you as an artist to bring what you do to it as well, right? It’s not regimented.

Mona tian, Leslie Andrea Williams, Anna Schubert, Anne Souder and Sidney Hopson in “Ipsa Dixit” (Photo by Jason Al-Taan/Courtesy Long Beach Opera)

There’s plenty of room for artistic interpretation as well. But she is very meticulous in the details of her work. More so, I think, than other composers that I’ve worked with. But yeah, there is still plenty of room for like, how do I want my face to look or what kind of a forte do I want to make this. It doesn’t have to be the exact same as everyone else’s or hers. She was the first one to perform this and the person who most performs it well.

That gives her an advantage as a composer because she is writing for her voice, which means she must know very well how to write for voice. 

I think she knows very well how to write for a lot of instruments. She does write really well for voice, but I think also she has like a unique instrument that she writes for specifically. As a soprano, I rarely have to go below a middle C, and she goes below middle C a lot because I think she has a very unique range where she can just belt out in her chest voice. I think the lowest note I have to go down to in this piece is a D flat below which I had never sung out loud before. Then the highest note is a high D, so it’s a very rangy piece.

You’re kind of trying to fit into the the box that she created for you. If maybe you’re used to kind of existing over here, well, for this piece you need to exist here. So you better figure it out.

If you were to describe Ipsa Dixit to people who have no idea what it is, how would you describe it?

I don’t know, because it’s not an opera. And it’s not a song cycle. And it’s not really a chamber piece, but it is also all of those things. It is hard to define it. It is just like a doctoral thesis, encapsulated in a piece of music. It’s very, very, complex and intricate and there’s a lot of philosophical text; there’s philosophical questions posed and answered. There’s also drama. There’s also poetry. There’s the drama of opera, but there’s also the poetic nuance of art song and then there’s also a bunch of extended technique and the wild things that we’re doing.

Given how many different sources are used for the text, is there any part of the text that you most that most resonates with you that you are most passionate about?

I think the metaphysics movement – which is movement five of the whole piece. It’s this whole existential question where she’s talking about what is matter? What is existence, really? It’s the only part of the piece where I get a break as the singer, where the instrumentalists just take over for a few pages. It’s kind of eerie, but it’s also calming in a way.

This is not your first collaboration with Long Beach Opera. Nor is it your first collaboration with James Darrah, who, I thin, in the best possible way, is a disruptor. But only in the sense of moving the art form forward. How does this production accomplish that goal?

Anna Schubert and Sidney Hopson in “Ipsa Dixit” (Photo by Jason Al-Taan/Courtesy Long Beach Opera)

This is an opera company and this is a very nontraditional performance for an opera company to offer. I think something that James is very passionate about, and something that I appreciate as a performer myself and someone that loves to do new works, is that he programs so much new music on the main stage. It’s part of the main season. It’s not a side project.

Opera, whether new or old, I think is at its best when it’s dealing with really big emotions and complex issues. But what are the personal challenges of delving so deeply into this kind of material?

For me, that’s always been about having some kind of balance. I know with p r i s m, it just weighed so heavily on me while we were rehearsing it. I mean, how could it not? When I’m here, in my home, your time is your own. In the weeks leading up to this, I was just rehearsing by myself at home as much as I could. Now that we’re in rehearsals, I’m trying to keep my home a much more sterile place. I’m done rehearsing for the day, I’m going to go home and do dishes and make food for myself and see my family and take my dog on a walk. I think that helps compartmentalize.

When I spoke to Kate, she told me that she hopes that one of the reasons her stuff is you’re sticking around is because it’s just really challenging and interesting and a fun experience for the performers. Is this work fun to do?

I’m going to be honest, this is one of the hardest things I’ve ever put together. I was actually going to send her an email today saying as much. Memorization wise, it’s definitely the hardest thing I’ve ever had to memorize. All new music is more challenging than we’re used to when you’re only studying super tonal, melodic, beautiful, romantic things in school – which is often the case. I don’t think that this kind of music is studied enough or prioritized enough in conservatories, at least in the US.

This music is very, very challenging, and I’m sure she wrote it to be that way. But therein lies the satisfaction of putting it together. I think she’s right about that, because it is challenging. That’s one of the reasons that it’s had a long life because everyone wants to climb that mountain, right? When you see something difficult, you’re just like, well, I want to show people I can do that.

There’s a manipulated film component to this production and that’s Carl Theodore Dreyer’s, silent film The Passion of Joan of Arc. Dreyer is quoted as having said, “There is no greater experience in a studio than to witness the expression of a sensitive face under the mysterious power of inspiration. To see it animated from inside and turning into poetry.” How does the mysterious power of inspiration work in your life, both professionally and personally?

Rachel Beetz, Mona Tian, Anna Schubert and Sidney Hopson in “Ipsa Dixit” (Photo by Jason Al-Taan/Courtesy Long Beach Opera)

It’s still mysterious to me in a lot of ways. Inspiration strikes me at all those inconvenient times [like] when I’m trying to fall asleep at night. When I’m working on a piece and I’m just really in the thick of it, I find myself going to sleep at night and thinking about the words.

I tend to find the most inspiration when I am outside, away from overstimulation. Definitely on a hike. Or I like to be outside at night. I can’t count the number of times I’ve just gone on night walks by myself and listened to music that I love.

You have a whole universe swirling around because you’ve been able to just block out all the extraneous noise. The stillness in there. So that I think that is when I find my mysterious inspiration strikes.

To see the full interview with Anna Schubert, please go here.

Main Photo: Mona Tian and Anna Schubert in Ipsa Dixit (Photo by Jason Al-Taan/Courtesy Long Beach Opera)

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Best Bets: May 7th – May 10th https://culturalattache.co/2021/05/07/best-bets-may-7th-may-10th/ https://culturalattache.co/2021/05/07/best-bets-may-7th-may-10th/#respond Fri, 07 May 2021 07:01:00 +0000 https://culturalattache.co/?p=14066 Our top ten list for cultural programming this weekend

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We’re lightening things up…upon request. Too many options you say. So going forward these will be just the Top 10 Best Bets: May 7th – May 10th. And not just any Best Bets, this week’s list, at least in part, celebrates Mother’s Day.

Our top pick, previewed yesterday, is a reading of Larry Kramer’s The Normal Heart on Saturday. We also have some great jazz music for you (both traditional vocals and a very contemporary performance), a London production of Chekhov that earned rave reviews, a tribute to two of Broadway’s best songwriters, chamber music and a contortionist. After all, it’s Mother’s Day weekend. Don’t all mothers just love contortionists?

Here are the Top 10 Best Bets: May 7th – May 10th

The company of “The Normal Heart” (Courtesy ONE Archives Foundation)

*TOP PICK* PLAY READING: The Normal Heart – ONE Archives Foundation – May 8th – 8:00 PM ET/5:00 PM PT

We previewed this event yesterday as out Top Pick, but here are the pertinent details:

Director Paris Barclay has assembled Sterling K. Brown, Laverne Cox, Jeremy Pope, Vincent Rodriguez III, Guillermo Díaz, Jake Borelli, Ryan O’Connell, Daniel Newman, Jay Hayden and Danielle Savre for a virtual reading of Larry Kramer’s play.

The reading will be introduced by Martin Sheen.

There will be just this one live performance of The Normal Heart. It will not be available for viewing afterwards. There will be a Q&A with the cast and Barclay following the reading. Tickets begin at $10 for students, $20 for general admission.

Playwright Angelina Weld Grimké

PLAY READING: Rachel – Roundabout Theatre Company’s Refocus Project – Now – May 7th

Angelina Weld Grimké’s 1916 play Rachel, is the second play in the Refocus Project from Roundabout Theatre Company. Their project puts emphasis on plays by Black playwrights from the 20th century that didn’t get enough attention or faded into footnotes of history in an effort to bring greater awareness to these works.

Rachel tells the story of a Black woman who, upon learning some long-ago buried secrets about her family, has to rethink being a Black parent and bringing children into the world.

Miranda Haymon directs Sekai Abení, Alexander Bello, E. Faye Butler, Stephanie Everett, Paige Gilbert, Brandon Gill, Toney Goins, Abigail Jean-Baptiste and Zani Jones Mbayise.

The reading is free, but registration is required.

Joel Ross and Immanuel Wilkins (Courtesy Village Vanguard)

JAZZ: Joel Ross & Immanuel Wilkins – Village Vanguard – May 7th – May 9th

You’d be hard-pressed to find a more compelling pairing of jazz musicians than vibraphonist Joel Ross and alto saxophonist Immanuel Wilkins.

The two have been collaborating for quite some time. Wilkins is a member of Ross’ Good Vibes quintet.

Nate Chinen, in a report for NPR, described a 2018 concert in which Ross performed with drummer Makaya McCraven this way. “Ross took one solo that provoked the sort of raucous hollers you’d sooner expect in a basketball arena. Again, this was a vibraphone solo.

Wilkins album, Omega, was declared the Best Jazz Album of 2020 by Giovanni Russonello of the New York Times.

I spoke to Wilkins last year about the album and his music. You can read that interview here. And if you’re a fan, Jason Moran, who produced the album, told me that this music was “just the tip of the iceberg.”

Tickets for this concert are $10.

Toby Jones and Richard Armitrage in “Uncle Vanya” (Photo by Johan Persson/Courtesy PBS)

PLAY: Uncle Vanya – PBS Great Performances – May 7th check local listings

Anton Chekhov’s Uncle Vanya is performed by a cast headed by Richard Armitrage and Toby Jones. Conor McPherson adapted the play for this production which played at the Harold Pinter Theatre in London and was directed by Ian Rickson.

Arifa Akbar, writing in her five-star review for The Guardian, said of the production:

“Ian Rickson’s exquisite production is full of energy despite the play’s prevailing ennui. It does not radically reinvent or revolutionise Chekov’s 19th-century story. It returns us to the great, mournful spirit of Chekhov’s tale about unrequited love, ageing and disappointment in middle-age, while giving it a sleeker, modern beat.

“McPherson’s script has a stripped, vivid simplicity which quickens the pace of the drama, and despite its contemporary language – Vanya swears and uses such terms as “wanging on” – it does not grate or take away from the melancholic poetry.”

Isabel Leonard (Courtesy LA Chamber Orchestra)

CHAMBER MUSIC: Beyond the Horizon – LA Chamber Orchestra – Premieres May 7th – 9:30 PM ET/6:30 PM PT

This is the 12th episode in LACO’s Close Quarters series and definitely one of its most intriguing. Jessie Montgomery, the composer who curated the previous episode, curates this episode as well. She is joined by her fellow alums from Juilliard, mezzo-soprano Isabel Leonard (who directs) and music producer Nadia Sirota.

The program features Alvin Singleton’s Be Natural (a pun any music major will understand); Mazz Swift’s The End of All That Is Holy, The Beginning of All That is Good and Montgomery’s Break Away.

The performance portion of Beyond the Horizon is conducted by Christopher Rountree of Wild Up! Visual artist Yee Eun Nam contributes to the film as does art director James Darrah.

There is no charge to watch Beyond the Horizon.

Delerium Musicum (Courtesy The Wallis)

CHAMBER MUSIC: MusiKaravan: A Classical Road Trip with Delerium Musicum – The Wallis Sorting Room Sessions – May 7th – May 9th

Music by Johannes Brahms, Charlie Chaplin, Frederic Chopin, Vittorio Monti, Sergei Prokofiev, Giacomo Puccini and Dmitri Shostakovich will be performed by Delerium Musicum founding violinists Étienne Gara and YuEun Kim. They will be joined for two pieces by bassist Ryan Baird.

The full ensemble of musicians that make up Delerium Musicum will join for one of these pieces? Which one will it be? There is only one way to find out.

This concert is part of The Sorting Room Sessions at The Wallis.

Tickets are $20 and will allow for streaming for 48 hours

Sarah Moser (Courtesy Theatricum Botanicum)

MOTHER’S DAY OFFERINGS: MOMentum Place and A Catalina Tribute to Mothers – May 8th

Will Geer’s Theatricum Botanicum is celebrating Mother’s Day with MOMentum Place, a show featuring aerial artists, circus performers, dancers and musicians. The line-up includes circus artist Elena Brocade; contortionist and acrobat Georgia Bryan, aerialist and stilt dancer Jena Carpenter of Dream World Cirque, ventriloquist Karl Herlinger, hand balancer Tyler Jacobson, stilt walker and acrobat Aaron Lyon, aerialist Kate Minwegen, cyr wheeler Sarah Moser and Cirque du Soleil alum Eric Newton, plus Dance Dimensions Kids and Focus Fish Kids. The show was curated by aerlist/dancer Lexi Pearl. Tickets are $35.

Catalina Jazz Club is holding A Catalina Tribute to Mothers at 9:00 PM ET/6:00 PM PT. Headlining the concert are singers Jack Jones, Freda Payne and Tierney Sutton. Vocalist Barbara Morrison is a special guest. Also performing are  Kristina Aglinz, Suren Arustamyan, Lynne Fiddmont, Andy Langham, Annie Reiner, Dayren Santamaria, Tyrone Mr. Superfantastic and more. Dave Damiani is the host. The show is free, however donations to help keep the doors open at Catalina Jazz Club are welcomed and encouraged.

Vijay Iyer (Photo by Ebru Yildiz (Courtesy Vijay-Iyer.com)

JAZZ: Love in Exile – The Phillips Collection – May 9th – 4:00 PM ET/1:00 PM PT

There is no set program for this performance by pianist/composer Vijay Iyer, vocalist Arooj Aftab and bassist Shazad Ismaily. The website says Love in Exile performs as one continuous hour-long set.

Having long been a fan of Iyer, spending an hour wherever he and his fellow musicians wants to go sounds like pure heaven to me.

Iyer’s most recent album, Uneasy, was released in April on ECM Records and finds him performing with double bassist Linda May Han Oh and drummer Tyshawn Sorey. It’s a great album. You should definitely check it out.

There is no charge to watch this concert, but registration is required. Once Love in Exile debuts, you’ll have 7 days to watch the performance as often as you’d like.

Choreographer Pam Tanowitz and her dancers in rehearsal from “Dancers (Slightly Out of Shape)” (Courtesy ALL ARTS)

DANCE: Past, Present, Future – ALL ARTS – May 9th – May 11th

ALL ARTS, part of New York’s PBS stations, is holding an three-night on-line dance festival beginning on Sunday.

If We Were a Love Song is first up at 8:00 PM ET on Sunday. Nina Simone’s music accompanies this work conceived by choreographer Kyle Abraham who is collaborating with filmmaker Dehanza Rogers.

Dancers (Slightly Out of Shape) airs on Monday at 8:00 PM ET. This is part documentary/part dance featuring choreographer Pam Tanowitz as she and her company resume rehearsals last year during the Covid crisis. It leads to excerpts from Every Moment Alters which is set to the music of Pulitzer Prize-winning composer Caroline Shaw.

One + One Make Three closes out the festival on Tuesday at 8:00 PM ET. This film showcases the work of Kinetic Light, an ensemble featuring disabled performers. This is also part documentary/part dance made by director Katherine Helen Fisher.

All three films will be accompanied by ASL and Open Captions for the hearing impaired.

John Kander, Fred Ebb and Jill Haworth rehearsing for “Cabaret” (Photo by Friedman-Abeles/Courtesy NYPL Archives)

BROADWAY: Broadway Close Up: Kander and Ebb – Kaufman Music Center – May 10th – 7:00 PM ET/4:00 PM PT

You know the work of John Kander and Fred Ebb: Cabaret, Chicago, Flora the Red Menace, Kiss of the Spider Woman, New York New York, The Scottsboro Boys and Woman of the Year.

Their work will be explored, discussed and performed with host Sean Hartley.

He’s joined by Tony Award-winner Karen Ziemba (Contact) who appeared in two musicals by the duo: Curtains and Steel Pier. The latter was written specifically for her.

Any fan of Kander and Ebb will want to purchase a ticket for this show. Tickets are $15

Those are our Top Ten Best Bets: May 7th – May 10th (even if we cheated a little bit by having two options listed together). But there are a few reminders:

The Metropolitan Opera has their own view of mothers with their theme of Happy Mother’s Day featuring Berg’s Wozzeck on Friday; Puccini’s Madama Butterfly on Saturday and Handel’s Agrippina on Sunday.

Puccini returns for the start of National Council Auditions Alumni Week with a 1981-1982 season production of La Bohème. We’ll have all the details for you on Monday.

LA Opera’s Signature Recital Series continues with the addition of a recital by the brilliant soprano Christine Goerke.

One rumor to pass along to you: word has it Alan Cumming will be Jim Caruso’s guest on Monday’s Pajama Cast Party.

That completes all our selections of Best Bets: May 7th – May 10th. I hope all of you who are mothers have a terrific weekend. For those of you celebrating with your moms, I hope we’ve given you plenty of options to consider.

Have a great weekend! Enjoy the culture!

Photo: Larry Kramer (Photo by David Shankbone/Courtesy David Shankbone)

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Best Bets: April 23rd – April 26th https://culturalattache.co/2021/04/23/best-bets-april-23rd-april-26th/ https://culturalattache.co/2021/04/23/best-bets-april-23rd-april-26th/#respond Fri, 23 Apr 2021 12:50:47 +0000 https://culturalattache.co/?p=13758 A lucky 21 great options to enjoy culture this weekend (and celebrate The Bard's birthday)

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Friday is Shakespeare’s birthday. In celebration of his 457th birthday (doesn’t everyone celebrate that one?), there are a few options for fans of his work amongst my Best Bets: April 23rd – April 26th.

Indirectly celebrating this natal day are multiple options that fall under the category of a line from Hamlet, “The play’s the thing.” Beyond the Shakespeare options are five other plays.

If you want funky jazz, contemporary classical music, operas from Europe or modern dance, I’ve got that for you as well. They’re all so good, I can’t make one of them the top pick.

In As You Like It, these famous words are said, “All the world’s a stage and all the men and women merely players.” So in this spirit of this weekend’s Academy Awards, the nominees for great players in Best Bets: April 23rd – April 26th are:

Charlayne Woodard (Courtesy Bret Adams Ltd.)

THEATER: Neat – Manhattan Theatre Club – Now – April 25th

Charlayne Woodard’s one-person show Neat opened at New York City Center in a Manhattan Theatre Club production in 1997.

Lawrence Van Gelder, writing for the New York Times, said of Woodard’s play, “Ms. Woodard sings, she dances, but most of all she tells good stories, bringing them to life in ways that are poignant.”

Woodard revisits the work in this prevention as part of MTC’s Curtain Call series. The great thing is you can see this wonderful play and performance for free. All you have to do is register. But act quickly, the run ends on Sunday, April 25th.

Mathilde Froustey in Marston’s Snowblind (Photo © Erik Tomasson/Courtesy SF Ballet)

DANCE: Digital Program 5 – San Francisco Ballet – Now – May 12th

Three archival performances make up this program from San Francisco Ballet. They include 7 for Eight from 2016 and Anima Animus and Snowblind from 2018.

Helgi Tomasson is the creator of 7 for Eight which is set to the music of Johann Sebastian Bach. David Dawson is the choreographer of Anima Animus which is set to music by Ezio Bosso. Cathy Marston is the choreographer of Snowblind which uses music by Amy Beach, Philip Feeney, Arthur Foote, and Arvo Pärt.

Tickets are $29 and allow for 72 hours of access to the program.

Gary Perez, Daphne Rubin-Vega, Florencia Lozano and Jimmy Smits in “Two Sisters and a Piano” (Photo courtesy New Normal Rep)

PLAY READING: Two Sisters and a Piano – New Normal Rep – Now – May 23rd ART IN AN EMAIL

Playwright Nilo Cruz is best-known for his Pulitzer Prize winning play Anna in the Tropics from 2002. Three years prior to that success he premiered Two Sisters and a Piano.

The play tells the story of two sisters under house arrest in Cuba in 1991. One sister is an author and the lieutenant keeping track of their case has fallen in love with her. The other is a pianist who finds her piano tuner falling head over heels for his client.

Cruz has directed a new reading of Two Sisters and a Piano with Jimmy Smits (Anna in the Tropics); Florencia Lozano (Rinse, Repeat), Gary Perez and Daphne Rubin-Vega (both of whom appeared in Two Sisters and a Piano at The Public Theater.)

In A.D. Amorosi‘s review of this reading for Variety, he says, “Cruz’s playful poetic language, even at its most harshly politicized, and his easy direction allow his actors a delicious freedom. Even when its characters are not free, enclosed in one cramped apartment with nothing but mangoes, rice and the occasional rum shot (and despite the virtual limitations of a laptop’s viewing screen), Two Sisters and a Piano is as open as a Havana landscape, with all of its flavors, scents and sensory overloads at full tilt.”

Tickets are $25 with $10 tickets available for students.

Khris Davis in “The Royale” (Photo ©T. Charles Erickson/Courtesy Lincoln Center Theater)

PLAY: The Royale – Private Reels: From the LCT Archives on Broadway on Demand – Now – May 16th

Real life boxer Jack Jackson (the first African-American world heavyweight champion) serves as the inspiration for the story of Jay “The Sport” Jackson in Marco Ramirez’s 2016 play The Royale. (He was also the inspiration for The Great White Hope).

The story is told in six rounds.

Rachel Chavkin, Tony Award-winner for Hadestown, directed this production. Starring are McKinley Belcher III (the 2020 revival of A Soldier’s Play), Khris Davis (Sweat), Montego Glover (Tony nominee for Memphis), John Lavelle (Catch-22) and Clarke Peters (Five Guys Named Moe).

As Ben Brantley said in his rave New York Times review, “…the great subject of The Royale, which has been given such original and graceful theatrical form, is the selfish single-mindedness required of champions, and the repercussions such a focus has when it’s exercised by a black man in a white man’s world.” 

There is no charge to watch The Royale, but you will have to register with Broadway on Demand.

Deborah Strang and Karen Hall in “An Iliad” (Photo by Eric Pargac/Courtesy A Noise Within)

THEATER: An Iliad – A Noise Within – Now – May 16th

Easily one of the most challenging and rewarding experiences I’ve had seeing a play was when I attended Denis O’Hare and Lisa Peterson’s An Iliad at the Broad Stage in Santa Monica. It’s a powerful work that is inspired by Homer’s Iliad.

This play, specifically called An Iliad because it isn’t the Iliad, calls for just one actor and a cellist and that actor has to be completely on top of his/her game.

A Noise Within is offering streaming performances of An Iliad with co-founder Geoff Elliott and actress Deborah Strang alternating performances. Joining them as both composer and cellist is Karen Hall. Julia Rodriguez-Elliott directs.

The link in the title will take you to the website so you can see which actor is performing in each performance. Tickets, which are $25 for an individual and $40 for a family, must be reserved a minimum of two hours before each performance.

To see what Denis O’Hare had to say about the show, check out my 2014 interview with him here.

Nina Machaidze in “Manon” (Photo courtesy Wiener Staatsoper)

OPERA: Jules Massenet’s Manon – Wiener Staatsoper – April 22nd – 1:00 PM EDT/10:00 AM

Conducted by Frédéric Chaslin; starring Nina Machaidze, Juan Diego Flórez and Adrian Eröd. This Andrei Serban production is from 2019.

Massenet’s opera was composed in 1883 and had its world premiere in January of 1884 in Paris. The libretto is by  Henri Meilhac and Philippe Gille.

They based the opera on the 1731 Abbé Prévost novel, L’histoire du chevalier des Grieux et de Manon Lescaut.

A young woman from a small town has an intense desire to lavish herself with all the riches and pleasures life has to offer her. But life doesn’t always work out the way we want. Sounds like a story that could be written today.

This is the first of Vienna State Opera’s productions I’ve included in our listings. Very much like the Metropolitan Opera, they offer a different production each day. There is no charge to watch the productions, but you do need to register on their website. Each production will be available for 24 hours.

Adam Heller & company in “A Letter to Harvey Milk” (Photo by Russ Rowland)

MUSICAL: A Letter to Harvey Milk – Now – April 25th

The creators of this musical, Jerry James, Laura I. Kramer, Ellen M. Schwartz and Cheryl Stern were inspired by a short story of the same name by Lesléa Newman. A Letter to Harvey Milk opened off-Broadway in 2018 at the Acorn Theatre in New York.

The setting is San Francisco in the mid 1980s. Harry, a kosher butcher who has retired and is also a widower, is given an assignment to write a letter to someone who is dead. He chooses California politician Harvey Milk – the first openly gay politician elected in California who was later assassinated by Dan White in 1978. But why?

Members of the original cast has reunited for this streaming production. They include Adam Heller, Julia Knitel, Cheryl Stern who are joined by Michael Bartoli, Jeremy Greenbaum, Aury Krebs and Ravi Roth. Evan Pappas directs.

Tickets range from $10 – $50 with proceeds going to The Actors Fund and HIAS. All tickets purchased will allow viewing of the musical through Sunday, April 25th at 11:59 PM EDT/8:59 PDT.

Drawing of Shakespeare by Kyd (Courtesy Gingold Theatrical Group)

SHAKESPEARE: Shakespeare Sonnet Slam – Gingold Theatrical Group – April 23rd – 6:00 PM EDT/3:00 PM PDT

Happy Birthday William Shakespeare. You don’t look a day over 450. The Gingold Theatrical Group is celebrating by holding a virtual open mic where Shakespeare’s sonnets or other material based on or inspired by the Sonnets will be performed. Everyone is invited to participate and you have three minutes to give it your all.

Joining in this celebration are Stephen Brown-Fried, Robert Cuccioli, Tyne Daly, George Dvorsky, Melissa Errico, Alison Fraser, Tom Hewitt, Daniel Jenkins, John-Andrew Morrison, Patrick Page, Maryann Plunkett, Tonya Pinkins, Laila Robins, Jay O. Sanders, Renee Taylor, Jon Patrick Walker and more.

You’ll have to come up with your own take on the Sonnets, but this is a free party! You can find the Shakespeare Sonnet Slam on Gingold Theatrical Group’s Facebook page.

Composer Jessie Montgomery (Photo by Jiyang Chen/Courtesy MKI Artists)

CONTEMPORARY CLASSICAL MUSIC: Sonic Shift – Los Angeles Chamber Orchestra – Premieres April 23rd at 9:30 PM EDT/6:30 PM PDT

Composer Jessie Montgomery has curated this new episode of LA Chamber Orchestra’s Close Quarters series. On the program are works by composers Marcos Balter, Anna Meredith and Alyssa Weinberg. Each work explores the progression from acoustic music to electronic and electro-acoustic music with an emphasis on the wind section.

Will Kim provides the visuals that accompany the performance which is lead by Christopher Rountree of Wild Up! Nadia Sirota is the music producer.

This is the first of two Close Quarters episodes curated by Montgomery. I recently interviewed her about working with LACO. You can read that interview here.

There’s no charge to watch this performance. Donations are encouraged.

Neave Trio (Photo by Mark Roemisch/Courtesy Jensen Artists)

CHAMBER MUSIC: Neave Trio – Asheville Chamber Music Series – April 23rd – April 25th – Art in an EMAIL

Pianist Eri Nakamura, cellist Mikhail Veselov and violinist Anna Williams are the members in Neave Trio. Following on the heels of their 2019 album Her Voice, which featured female composers, their concert this weekend as part of the Asheville Chamber Music Series will also showcase female composers.

On the program is the Trio No. 1, Op. 33 by Louise Farrench; Rebecca Clarke’s Piano Trio and Cécile Chaminade’s Piano Trio No. 1, Op. 11.

Perhaps none of these composers is familiar to you. They aren’t to me. But Neave Trio’s passion for this lesser-known music makes this concert utterly compelling.

There are three performances: Friday, April 23rd at 7:30 PM EDT/4:30 PM PDT; Saturday at 7:30 PM EDT/4:30 PM PDT and Sunday at 3:00 PM EDT/12:00 PM PDT.

You can watch this concert for free, but donations are encouraged.

Marshall Allen of Sun Ra Arkestra (Photo by Bud Fulginiti/Courtesy Sunraarkestra.com)

JAZZ: Sun Ra Arkestra – SFJAZZ – April 23rd – 8:00 PM EDT/5:00 PM PDT

The name Herman Poole Blount probably doesn’t mean anything to you. But if told that was the birth name of Le Sony’r Ra who would later become known as Sun Ra, you might have a better idea who he was.

Experimental, free and avant-garde jazz was his specialty. It was always performed best by the Sun Ra Arkestra.

After Sun Ra’s death in 1993, alto saxophonist Marshall Allen starting leading the ensemble. As he does in this concert at SFJAZZ from 2017.

To get a sense of what might be in store for you in this Fridays at Five concert, here are some of the songs being performed: Space Loneliness, Saturn, Angels and Demons at Play and Space is the Place. It’s going to be trippy.

And you can take that trip for $5 (which offers one full month of digital membership or $60 (which includes a one year digital membership.)

There is an encore showing on April 24th at 1:00 PM EDT/10:00 AM PDT.

“Romeo and Juliet” (Courtesy PBS)

PLAY: Romeo and Juliet – Great Performances on PBS – April 23rd – Check Local Listings

You don’t expect just some stand-up sonnets for Shakespeare’s birthday, do you? Of course not. Let’s throw in some tragedy. As in the tragic love story of them all – Romeo and Juliet.

The National Theatre created this film which maneuvers its way from rehearsal into and around the Lyttleton Theatre. The cast are stuck in a theater that has shut down and act out the story of the Capulets and the Montagues.

Starring as the title characters are Josh O’Connor and Jessie Buckley. The cast also includes Fisayo Akinade, Ella Dacres, Deborah Findlay, Tamsin Greig, Ellis Howard, Lloyd Hutchinson, David Judge, Adrian Lester, Lucian Msamati, Alex Mugnaioni, Shubham Saraf and Colin Tierney. Simon Godwin is the director.

As with any show on PBS, I’d advise checking your local listings for exact airdate and time in your part of the country.

Wiener Staatsoper’s “Die Zauberflöte” (Courtesy Wiener Staatsoper)

OPERA: Mozart’s Die Zauberflöte – Wiener Staatsoper – April 24th – 1:00 PM EDT/10:00 AM PDT

Conducted by Adam Fischer; starring Benjamin Bruns, Olga Bezsmertna, Íride Martínez, Markus Werba and Annika Gerhards. This Moshe Leiser and Patrice Caurier production is from 2015.

Mozart’s opera premiered in September 1791 in Vienna a mere two months before the composer died. It features a libretto by Emanuel Schikaneder.

Prince Tamino is asked by the Queen of the Night to free her daughter Pamina from Sarastro. Tamino, however, is impressed with Sarastro and the way his community lives in the world and wants to be a part of it. Both alone and together Tamino and Pamina endure multiple tests. If they succeed, what will happen to them? To the Queen of the Night?

Dory Al-Samarany in “Whispers International” (Photo by Taha Shanouha)

MONOLOGUES: Whispers International – April 24th – 2:00 PM EDT/11:00 AM PDT

As you know, there was a massive blast in Lebanon on August 4th of last year. Almost 200 people were killed and over 6,000 people were injured.

Whispers International was created to raise money for the victims and to help in the rebuilding of the area around the blast site.

British playwrights Geraldine Breenna, Mike Elliston, Kim Hardy, Angela Harvey, John Jesper and Kate Webster have made their writing available to a company of Lebanese actors to perform.

Those actors are Nadine Labaki, Georges Khabbaz, Nada Abou Farhat, Talal El Jurdi, Bernadette Houdeib, Rita Hayek, Badih Abou Chacra, Dory Al-Samarany, Bshara Atallah, Sany Abdul Baki, Josyane Boulos, Agatha Ezzedine and Hagop Der Ghougassian 

Tickets are £13.52 which at press time equals approximately $18.75.

Weiner Staatsoper’s “Händel und Gretel” (Courtesy Weiner Staatsoper)

OPERA: Humperdinck’s Hänsel und Gretel – Weiner Staatsoper – April 25th – 1:00 PM EDT/10:00 AM PDT

Conducted by Christian Thielemann; starring Ileana Tosca, Daniela Sindram, Adrian Eröd, Janina Baechle, Michaela Schuster, Annika Gerhards

The Grimm brother’s fairly tale about a brother and sister who are lured to a house with sweets and candies only to find a witch who wants to eat the duo is the basis for this opera that had its debut in 1893 in Weimar. Richard Strauss conducted the premiere. A second production the next year in Hamburg was conducted by Gustav Mahler. Adelheid Wette, Humpderdink’s sister, wrote the libretto.

Hansel and Gretel has the distinction of finding much of its popularity not just through opera houses, but on the radio. It was the first opera broadcast on the radio in Europe when a 1923 Covent Garden production was heard over the airwaves. Eight years later in 1931, it became the first ever opera broadcast in its entirety by the Metropolitan Opera.

The opera is commonly seen and heard during the Christmas season. An odd choice, but librettist Adelheid Wette did soften some of the harsher elements found in the original Grimm tales for her brother’s opera.

Mandy Gonzalez (Courtesy Seth Concert Series)

CABARET: Mandy Gonzalez – Seth Concert Series – April 25th – 3:00 PM EDT/12:00 PM PDT

With the upcoming film version of Lin-Manuel Miranda’s In the Heights, it’s a great time to check in on one of the musical’s original cast members: Mandy Gonzalez, who originated the role of Nina.

Gonazalez is an insanely talented singer and actress.

I saw her in In the Heights. She’s also appeared in Wicked, Lennon, Dance of the Vampires and as Angelica Schuyler in Hamilton.

I’ve also seen her perform her cabaret act and it is impossible to express the amount of pure joy that comes out of her when she’s singing. (And she does a killer version of Born to Run by Bruce Springsteen.)

She is Seth Rudetsky’s guest in his concert series this weekend.

Tickets are $25 and you can watch the live performance at 3:00 PM EDT or the replay of the concert at 8:00 PM EDT. Whichever you choose, you will certainly have a good time.

Betsy McBride and Jacob Clerico in “Indestructible Light” (Photo by Dancing Camera/Courtesy ABT)

IN PERSON: DANCE: Uniting in Movement – American Ballet Theatre – Segerstrom Center for the Arts – April 25th – 1:30 PM PDT

You could be ambivalent about the Academy Awards and go see a rare live performance of ballet in Costa Mesa. ABT has been creating a program of three different works that were filmed this week. On Sunday, they are opening up Segerstrom Center for the Arts for a limited number of people to see the performance live.

The works are Let Me Sing Forever More by choreographer Jessica Lang and set to the recordings of Tony Bennett (clearly the title comes from Fly Me to the Moon); La Follia Variations by Lauren Lovette set to music of the same name by composer Francesco Geminiani and Indestructible Light by Darrell Grand Moultrie which is set to music by Duke Ellington, Count Basie, Neal Hefti and Billy Strayhorn.

Hefti, by the way, composed the theme for the television series Batman.

At press time the only available tickets were $80 each. There are Covid-protocols in place for this performance.

For those willing to wait, Uniting in Movement will be available for streaming through Segerstrom Center for the Arts from May 12th – May 26th for $25.

Argus Trio (Photo ©The Noguchi Museum – Artists Rights Society)

CHAMBER MUSIC: Argus Quartet: noise/Silence – Five Boroughs Music Festival and The Noguchi Museum – April 25th – 7:30 PM EDT/4:30 PM PDT (Art in an email)

Cellist Audrey Chen, violinists Clara Kim and Gioncarlo Latta and violist Maren Rothfritz make up the Argus Quartet. Though they perform music from across all eras of classical music, they seem to excel in contemporary works.

This concert was filmed at one of my favorite museums in New York, The Noguchi Museum. It is being presented by the Five Boroughs Music Festival. The Argus Quartet will perform works by composers John Cage (String Quartet in Four Parts); Dorothy Rudd More (Modes for String Quartet), Rolf Wallin (several selections from Curiosity Cabinet) and Paul Wiancko (Vox Petra).

The concert will be available for free streaming on the Five Boroughs Music Festival YouTube channel through December 31st.

Anita Rachvelishvili in “Carmen” (Courtesy Weiner Staatsoper)

OPERA: Bizet’s Carmen – Weiner Staatsoper – April 26th – 1:00 PM EDT/10:00 AM PDT

Conducted by Andrés Orozco-Estrada; starring Anita Rachvelishvili, Piotr Beczala, Erwin Schrott and Vera-Lotte Boecker. This Calixto Bieito production is from 2021.

Georges Bizet collaborated with librettists Henri Meilhac and Ludovic Halévy on this immensely popular opera. It was based on Propser Mérimée’s novella of the same name. 

When Carmen was first performed in Paris in 1875 it was considered both shocking and scandalous. 

Set in Seville, Spain, Carmen is a gypsy who has caught everyone’s eye. A soldier, Don José, plays coy and gives her no attention. Her flirtation causes troubles for both when Don José’s girlfriend, Micaëla arrives. Tensions escalate between the two women and after a knight fight, José must arrest Carmen. When she seduces him it sets off a series of events that will not end well for the gypsy woman.

A scene from “Measure for Measure” (Photo by Liz Lauren/Courtesy Goodman Theatre)

PLAY: Measure for Measure – Goodman Theatre – April 26th – May 9th

Here’s another opportunity to celebrate the bard. But this isn’t going to be your standard production of a Shakespearean play.

Director Robert Falls has transported this play from Vienna to New YOrk City circa the late 1970s (or as I like to describe it, before Disney moved into Broadway).

The story is still the same. Claudio is sentenced to death under an arcane law invoked by Angelo who has taken over for the Duke who has left rather than have to deal with morality issues in (originally Vienna). Claudio’s crime? Getting his girlfriend, Juliet, pregnant.

The Duke returns in disguise and becomes aware of the decisions Angelo has been making. Deception, bargains, bartering, love and death are all on the table in this fairly convoluted play.

Justin Hayford, in his review for the Chicago Reader, had mixed feelings about the production:

“It’s rare for one of Shakespeare’s plays to be ripped from its original setting, transplanted across centuries and continents—and still end up feeling vital, urgent, and utterly contemporary. At least for a while. If Falls and his stellar cast could maintain that vitality past intermission, they’d have a masterpiece on their hands.”

Nonetheless, I think the concept sounds interesting and worth checking out. What else are you going to do on a Monday night? (Of course, I have another option for you…)

Tickets are free, but require registration.

Playwright Aleshea Harris (Photo by R.J. Eldridge/Courtesy NY Theatre Workshop)

AUDIO PLAY: Brother, Brother – New York Theatre Workshop – Live Premiere April 26th – 7:00 PM EDT/4:00 PM PDT Art in an email

New York Theater Workshop is offering up a twist on audio plays. This will feature visuals, but not of the performers. Rather, artists Ibrahim Rayintakath​ and Liang-Hsin Huang have created imagery that will accompany Aleshea Harris’ play.

Brother, Brother tells the story of two brothers sharing a bicycle while making their way through Appalachia. They are actors headed to Tennessee. They start getting followed by a mysterious man in a maroon suit. At this moment the dreams they have for their future are confronted by the acts from their past.

Starring in this audio play are Amari Cheathom (terrific in August Wilson’s Jitney), André De Shields (Tony Award-winner for Hadestown), Gbenga Akinnagbe (To Kill a Mockingbird) and Owen Tabaka (Ratatouille: The Tik Tok Musical). Shayok Misha Chowdhury directs.

Tickets are $10. Brother, Brother will remain available for streaming through July 25th.

Those are my Best Bets: April 23rd – April 26th. But a few reminders (and a preview):

MasterVoices has debuted the 3rd part of Myths and Hymns, a series of short films set to Adam Guettel’s song cycle. For details about the series, go here. For my interview with MasterVoices Artistic Director Ted Sperling, go here.

Jazz at Lincoln Center’s Gala 2021 is available for streaming through Sunday. For details about the program and how to get tickets, go here.

Carnegie Hall’s Voices of Hope series continues with multiple new shows available for free viewing. For details go here.

The Metropolitan Opera streams Philip Glass’ Satyagraha on Friday (highly recommended); Beethoven’s Fidelio on Saturday and Poulenc’s Dialogues des Carmélites on Sunday (also highly recommended). For details and previews go here.

Here’s a preview of next week at the Met where the theme is City of Light (all the operas take place in Paris). Monday’s opera is, what else, La Bohème by Puccini.

That truly is the full and complete list of Best Bets: April 23rd – April 26th. Enjoy your weekend!

Photo: William Shakespeare (By BatyrAshirbayev98/Courtesy Wikipedia Commons)

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Immediate Tragedy https://culturalattache.co/2020/06/18/immediate-tragedy/ https://culturalattache.co/2020/06/18/immediate-tragedy/#respond Thu, 18 Jun 2020 14:04:21 +0000 https://culturalattache.co/?p=9416 The Soraya Facebook Page

June 19th

Graham Company YouTube Channel

June 20th

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Legendary dancer/choreographer Martha Graham created a solo work in 1937 called Immediate Tragedy. The dance had its world premiere on July 30, 1937 at the Bennington School of Dance in Vermont. Featuring music by composer Henry Cowell, it was Graham’s response to the Spanish Civil War.

New York Times critic John Martin said of the work, “Not since the eloquent and beautiful Frontier, first presented three seasons ago, has she given us anything half so fine as Immediate Tragedy.”

This work was never filmed and was considered a lost masterpiece. Until now.

After a considerable amount of material was discovered by Graham biographer Neil Baldwin (including photos, reviews, letter and musical notations), Martha Graham Dance Company has collaborated with Wild Up’s Christopher Rountree and Thor Steingraber at The Soraya to come up with a new version of Immediate Tragedy that speaks to our time.

This reimagined piece features 14 dancers – all performing separately and safely from their own space – dancing to new music written by Rountree.

To help create their individual choreography, each dancer was given four photos and was tasked with designing specific movement phrases. The dancers, all members of the Martha Graham Dance Company, are So Young An, Alessio Crognale, Laurel Dalley Smith, Natasha Diamond-Walker, Lloyd Knight, Charlotte Landreau, Jacob Larsen, Lloyd Mayor, Marzia Memoli, Anne O’Donnell, Lorenzo Pagano, Anne Souder, Leslie Andrea William and Xin Ying.

Pictured clockwise (from upper left): Xin Ying, Lloyd Knight, Lorenzo Pagano, Leslie Andrea Williams (Photo courtesy of The Soraya)

Rountree and Wild Up (Jiji, Richard Valitutto, Jodie Landau, Brian Walsh and Derek Stein) used what little remains of Cowell’s original composition as their inspiration.

Cowell was an American composer who wrote 20 complete symphonies with significant work completed on a 21st (later finished by Lou Harrison.) His work inspired, amongst others, Bartok and John Cage. He published New Music Quarterly and was an ardent supporter of many composers including Charles Ives.

The video elements were edited by Ricki Quinn who has been working with Janet Eilbert, the Artistic Director of Martha Graham Dance Company, Wild Up and Steingraber on the world premiere of Immediate Tragedy.

You’ll be able to watch the end result of all these efforts when The Soraya premieres Immediate Tragedy on Friday, June 19th on their Facebook page at 7:00 PM EDT/4:00 PM PDT. The next day it will also be available on the Graham Company’s YouTube Channel at 2:30 PM EDT/11:30 AM PDT.

Photo of Martha Graham in Immediate Tragedy by Robert Fraser (Courtesy of Martha Gram Resources, a division of the Martha Graham Center of Contemporary Dance, Inc.)

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Dawson City: Frozen Time Live https://culturalattache.co/2019/12/03/dawson-city-frozen-time-live/ https://culturalattache.co/2019/12/03/dawson-city-frozen-time-live/#respond Tue, 03 Dec 2019 02:18:02 +0000 https://culturalattache.co/?p=7478 The Theatre at the Ace Hotel

December 6th

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It seems improbable. Impossible even. In 1978 a veritable treasure trove of silent movies was unearthed in Canada. By unearthed, I literally mean unearthed. During a construction project hundreds of reels of film where found buried in the frozen tundra of Dawson City, Canada. How those films ended up there, how they got discovered and the preservation of those films is at the heart of filmmaker Bill Morrison’s Dawson City: Frozen Time. The film is being screened on Friday at The Theatre at the Ace Hotel with live orchestral performance of the score written by Alex Somers.

Filmgoers will know Somers from his scores for such films as Honey Boy (currently playing), Captain Fantastic and Hale County This Morning, This Evening. Music fans might know him as a producer, engineer and mixer of several Sigur Rós albums. He and Jónsi, the band’s lead singer, also released an album together called Riceboy Sleeps. The two are also partners.

Performing this score will be Wild Up lead by Christopher Rountree. A woman’s chorus from Tonality also performs the score.

Dawson City was the final stop for film distribution. It was cost-prohibitive to send the prints back, so they found their final resting place in this Canadian town. Many of these films were thought to be lost forever. They didn’t come out unscathed by time and the elements, but more survived than expected. It’s truly a remarkable story and Morrison has created a thoroughly captivating film.

If the saying that “truth is stranger than fiction,” then Dawson City: Frozen Time is the perfect documentary to prove that point.

We will have an interview with Somers later this week. Be sure to check back for that.

Photo of First Avenue in Dawson in  1898 by Ernest F. Keir/Courtesy of Vancouver Public Library

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Ragnar Kjartansson – Bliss https://culturalattache.co/2019/05/20/ragnar-kjartansson-bliss/ https://culturalattache.co/2019/05/20/ragnar-kjartansson-bliss/#respond Mon, 20 May 2019 14:30:32 +0000 https://culturalattache.co/?p=5561 REDCAT

May 25th

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Let’s examine what the word loop means in music. According to Artopium’s Music Dictionary a loop is “a tape or magnetic film recording where the ends of the tape are spliced together so the tape will continually repeat.” Multi-disciplinary artist Ragnar Kjartansson is redefining loop where the continuous repetition is not spliced together electronically, but rather performed live. As it is with Bliss, which will be performed as part of the LA Philharmonic’s Fluxus program. The performance begins noon on Saturday at REDCAT.

So what’s being looped? In Kjartansson’s Bliss it is the final moments of Mozart’s The Marriage of Figaro. How long will it be looped?  12 hours. Yes, 12 hours of continuous performance of the same excerpt from Mozart’s opera.

Undertaking this performance will be Christopher Rountree conducting Wild Up. Cast in the opera are Kjartansson as Antonio, Kristján Jóhannsson as Count Almaviva, Laurel Irene as Rosina & Countess Almaviva, Maria Elena Altany as Susanna, Cedric Berry as Figaro, James Onstad as Don Basilio, Reid Bruton as Don Bartolo, Justine Aronson as Barbarina, Lauren Davis as Cherubino and Suzanna Guzmán as Marcellina.

The idea here is to run the gamut of emotions as the performance goes on. No matter who much one loves a particular piece of writing, the repetition is bound to influence your perceptions of the music, the world and people around you and of yourself during these twelve hours.

Tickets for the full 12-hour day have already sold out. There are available some $10 stand-by tickets that allow you to attend for one hour.

Kjartansson has been performing Bliss since 2011. I’m not sure if you noticed in the video, but the conductor at some point removed his jacket. Which begs the question, how do the performers (both on stage and in the pit) go to the bathroom? Audience members are welcome to walk in and out of the performance space freely. But what about the performers?

This is certainly one of the more intriguing parts of the Los Angeles Philharmonic’s Centennial Season which is fast coming to a close.

Standby tickets are available here.

Main photo courtesy of LuhringAugustine.com

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Christopher Rountree’s Obsession with Coltrane’s “Ascension” https://culturalattache.co/2018/11/06/christopher-rountrees-obsession-coltranes-ascension/ https://culturalattache.co/2018/11/06/christopher-rountrees-obsession-coltranes-ascension/#respond Tue, 06 Nov 2018 15:25:50 +0000 http://culturalattache.co/?p=3932 “When I heard this album I thought about it as having this pulsing energy and thought, I want to make something like this.”

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Author’s Note:  On Saturday, Christopher Rountree and wild Up will be performing of Ascension at The Soraya (formerly the Valley Performing Arts Center) in Northridge. I was asked to interview Rountree for their program and website. In the interest of full disclosure, I was paid to do this interview. However, the questions, the content and how it was put together was completely at my discretion. 

Everyone has that one record that becomes an obsession. The grooves get worn out from repeated playing. For wild Up Artistic Director Christopher Rountree, one of those albums was John Coltrane’s 1966 recording, Ascension. That album, considered to be one of the finest of the jazz saxophonist’s career and a landmark artistic accomplishment, awoke in Rountree a passion that continues to this day.

“When I heard this album I thought about it as having this pulsing energy,” says Rountree. “It has this beautiful architecture, but is totally free. I heard it as a young man and thought, ‘I want to make something like this.’”

"Of Ascension" was inspired by Coltrane's "Ascension"
John Coltrane (By Gelderen, Hugo van / Anefo)

Coltrane was a fearless musician. He constantly combined his exploration of sounds and innovative music with a deeply held spirituality. As he once said, “My music is the spiritual expression of what I am – my faith, my knowledge, my being…When you begin to see the possibilities of music, you desire to do something really good for people, to help humanity free itself from its hang-ups…I want to speak to their souls.”

Rountree along with several key composers and his experimental classical ensemble wild Up, have now created a work that takes its inspiration from Coltrane’s album. of Ascension is not an attempt to recreate Coltrane’s work, but rather to inspire and elevate an audience as Coltrane described by combining a wide range of musical genres together to create wholly unique and mesmerizing experience. Just as Coltrane did 52 years ago. As Rountree says, “The idea of music that lifts us up so much it sends us into the heavens.”

To create of Ascension, Rountree functioned like the most innovative and thoughtful deejay. He mixes styles and genres and samples music you might not think of putting next to each other, but when done right it seems as if they have always belonged together.

“Certainly classical music is part of it,” Rountree reveals, “although I wouldn’t say that’s the main part of it. Jazz is part of it. Sound art and performance art is part of it. We have ancient spiritual music that is tonal and gorgeous. We’re doing old church music. We have free jazz next to new complexity and they sound similar. And if you put them next to each other they have this similar energy, but something really special happens for all of those things. They all change and there is this energy of like lifting off the grounds.”

One contributor to of Ascension whose own music and familiarity with Coltrane’s album is crucial is composer Ted Hearne. He was recently a finalist for the Pulitzer Prize for Music for his composition Sound from the Bench. It was a conversation Rountree and Hearne had a few years ago that lead to the creation of this work.

“We were talking about Coltrane’s album and Ted said, ‘I teach this album as a study of form in my classes.’ I thought that was totally fascinating. Ted’s the big question asker. He’s the provocateur-in-chief. Sampling is part of what Ted’s work is and it’s part of the show. With Ted’s help what of Ascension has become, it’s not the thing after the thing, but it’s certainly a thing inspired by the thing. The central idea is of the feeling of the music.”

While that might sound as a puzzle within a puzzle, Rountree is certain that of Ascension absolutely lives up to what wild Up is known for and what its audiences expect to see and hear.

“So much of what we do is not the normal mode of performing. It’s about the experience and it’s about the ensemble. This does all the things that we want to be doing. It allows us to explore ideas we are interested in. It allows us to be soloists. And the person who is comfortable with totally notated music and those who are not are doing things they aren’t comfortable with. It’s central to what we are doing – putting separate pieces together and showing they are all valuable. It’s like doing a piece of theatre in the home of classical music, but it’s actually a jazz piece.”

wild Up | of Ascension

wild Up’s innovative approach to music reaches new heights here by adding a theatrical presentation involving movement of the musicians and the use of video. But perhaps the most important “added component” is the role the audience will play. When of Ascension has its premiere in November at The Soraya in Northridge, wild Up will be surrounded on three sides by the audience on stage.

“With an audience that will be as close as we want them to feel and, in fact, will be, they are in charge of the energy in the room as well. Music is at the core of the performance but it is not about observing beauty, but being part of a ritual where sound is at the center. Playing this certainly brings people who love all these different genres of music together to hear music who would never otherwise sit together.”

Different genres of music living next to each other is precisely the point for Rountree as it was for Coltrane those many decades ago. With of Ascension Rountree is exploring the possibilities of music his way. Which ultimately makes sense for the young man who grew up to appreciate equally Beethoven, jazz, Philip Glass and Kendrick Lamar. And who dreamed of some day creating something as inspirational for today’s audiences as Coltrane’s album was for him. Now he has.

Update:  This piece has been updated upon receipt of news that the previously announced Thursday night performance has been cancelled. 

Profile Photo Credit:  Stephanie Berger
Second Photo Credit: Courtesy of David Lieberman

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LACO: Session https://culturalattache.co/2018/05/21/laco-session/ https://culturalattache.co/2018/05/21/laco-session/#respond Mon, 21 May 2018 15:00:49 +0000 http://culturalattache.co/?p=3034 Angel City Brewery Beer Hall in the Arts District

May 24

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The Los Angeles Chamber Orchestra’s Creative Advisor, Andrew Norman, has put together this series of events in which classical music is presented as cutting edge and outside the stuffiness that many associate with a concert hall. It’s called Session and the inaugural event takes place on Thursday in the Beer Hall at Angel City Brewery in the Arts District.

Members of the LA Chamber Orchestra and others will perform five pieces at this event. Andrew Norman is leading the first one.  Four Larks, an adventurous local opera company, is part of this program as well. The event promises the opportunity to “hang” with the artists, a ticket for a free brew and there will also be food trucks at the venue. The goal here is to change the perception of classical music, where it is performed and that it is untouchable.

The series will continue in the fall with an evening with LA-based composer Derrick Spiva, Jr.; the winter with Matthias Pintscher and in the spring with wild UP’s Christopher Rountree.

Due to the location of this event audience members must be 21 and over to attend.

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Is Composer Ellen Reid’s New Work a Cautionary Tale? https://culturalattache.co/2018/05/09/composer-ellen-reids-new-work-cautionary-tale/ https://culturalattache.co/2018/05/09/composer-ellen-reids-new-work-cautionary-tale/#respond Wed, 09 May 2018 15:45:13 +0000 http://culturalattache.co/?p=2835 "If new and different and engaging is disruption, then I'm all for it."

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Depending on with whom you are talking, classical music is either dying or thriving. Perhaps it finds itself in the same conundrum as jazz. People will find themselves on either side of the argument. One person who truly believes classical music is thriving is composer Ellen Reid. She was one of the composers on Yuval Sharon’s Hopscotch. Her opera Prism, will be part of the 2018-2019 LA Opera season. She has a commission from the LA Chamber Orchestra. But more immediately on Sunday, May 13th, the LA Master Chorale will be presenting the world premiere of her new work for ensemble and chorus, dreams of the new world. Joining the LAMC for this premiere is local ensemble wild UP.

The three women used interviews as the basis for "dreams of the new world"
Sayd Randle, Ellen Reid and Sarah LaBrie

dreams of the new world presents three different stories from three different time periods that are all based on interviews Reid conducted alongside her librettist Sarah LaBrie and her researcher Sayd Randle. The first section is set in Memphis in 1890 and tells the story of Robert R. Church, a slave who accomplished a lot for his community in the Jim Crow-era. Part two is set in Houston during the boom era for the oil industry in 1970. The final section is set in Los Angeles in present day and is seen through the perspective of the pursuit of further space travel and exploration.

I spoke with Reid a couple days after she first heard the LA Master Chorale in a piano rehearsal of dreams of the new world.

Memphis is part one of "dreams of the new world"
Ellen Reid her collaborators visit Memphis

I’m intrigued by a comment on your webpage about the Memphis section: “the idea of the dream relies on erasure of such retreats, to continually slot the present into a hopeful, forward telos.” Does dreams of the new world ultimately explore the circle of life as it relates not just to be people, but cities?

Absolutely. In Memphis and in Houston you feel the impact of these time periods we were researching still. You see that the way the cities have adapted or shifted because of those histories. For example, the oil bust that came after the boom we’re talking about lead Houston to invest a lot energy into diversifying so it wouldn’t just be an oil city. They have new medical industries and now they can buoy themselves when the oil business falters.

Part two of "dreams of the new world" is set in Houston in 1970
Researching the oil boom of 1970 in Houston

What then can a city like Detroit learn from Houston’s experience?

I think what you see in situations like Detroit is that the solutions people are coming up with are really creative. There’s always light and there’s always shadow. What we were interested in doing is sharing both sides of the story. Not just the happy part, but what has to happen to make that possible or the reality of that moment in time.

Los Angeles 2018 is the final section of "dreams of the new world"
Exploring space at Google’s Lunar X Prize

You explore the boom and the bust in Memphis and Houston. You only have the boom of Los Angeles given the date of the story you’re telling. Is it inevitable that bust will follow here just as it did in the other two cities?

Yes, but the piece is also asking the question, “So what can we do with this information?” Maybe there doesn’t have to be a bust, but if we’re following in the same exact way it’s almost a biblical cycle. It’s been happening for so long. It feels like such an interesting time to have this piece.

We started working on it before we knew who was running for the last election. We were interested in telling these stories and politically raising these questions about westward progression and human achievement. Over the course of developing it, it started feeling more intense to put these different conversations and dialogues with one another across time. And these are conversations that can’t happen right now because of the heat around the political discourse. To hold these different stores in the warmth and the sound of the LA Master chorale right now feels so potent.

Does this make dreams of the new world a cautionary tale?

I think that’s strong language. I think it’s more than a cautionary tale. I think it’s a celebration and I think that it’s devastating and I think that it is more than to caution but to spark a conversation around what do we do now. What’s next? What does this mean? What are we not seeing? It’s not just what we do not know, but what we aren’t willing to look at.

You had a workshop in November 201 at UC Irvine. What did you learn from that workshop and how did that influence the work that is having its world premiere with the LA Master Chorale?

That workshop was so great. The students at UCI and Seth Houston, who runs the choir department, they were so engaged and so deeply involved in the subject matter and every aspect of the piece. It really helped us believe the piece was engaging. I think one of the biggest differences from the workshop to the premiere is I wrote it pretty focused and wasn’t writing much else before the workshop. There were times when I would hold the musicians back because I had written so much more for the choir that I thought we’d lose it because we had so much. I wanted to let the choir be more free and have more space just to sing because they are amazing. That was the big shift that happened.

Ellen Reid wrote "dreams of the new world" with wild UP in mind
Christopher Roundtree conducts wild Up
Photo Credit: ©Stephanie Berger.

Chris Rountree, who leads wild UP, told me in 2015 that disruption is the key to the survival of classical music. Do you agree with him?

I think disruption is a word that doing these interviews for dreams we heard a lot in the tech community. And it’s a word used in tech a lot. I wonder what the difference is between innovation and disruption. Innovation is also disruption. Definitely innovation has a role to play, but sometimes the word disruption is something that is off-putting versus something that is new and different and engaging. If new and different and engaging is disruption, then I’m all for it. Maybe disruption is an expansion of what we are considering as to what we can hear in the concert hall and that’s exciting. Life is change. That’s the only thing that is given. Of course change is what keeps something alive.

Ellen Reid photo by Arnaud Pyvka.

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War of the Worlds https://culturalattache.co/2017/11/06/war-of-the-worlds/ https://culturalattache.co/2017/11/06/war-of-the-worlds/#respond Mon, 06 Nov 2017 19:45:45 +0000 http://culturalattache.co/?p=1415 Walt Disney Concert Hall

November 12 and 18

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Many stories have been told about Orson Welles legendary radio broadcast about a martian invasion that had the public panicking in 1938. The H.G. Wells story was just the beginning.

Leave it to recent MacArthur Genius grant recipient Yuval Sharon (Invisible CitiesHopscotch) to come up with a unique way of presenting this work. His partner for this project is composer Annie Gosfield who will not only be taking advantage of the LA Philharmonic’s New Music Group, but will use vintage WWII sirens placed around town. Communications amongst those sirens and the concert hall will allow people to experience the show comfortably ensconced in the Walt Disney Concert Hall or in the locations of these three sirens.

The first performance is on November 12th. Additional performances take place on November 18th. Christopher Rountree of wild Up will be conducting.

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