Patti Smith Archives - Cultural Attaché https://culturalattache.co/tag/patti-smith/ The Guide to Arts and Culture events in and around Los Angeles Mon, 09 Mar 2020 15:08:19 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.7.1 Power to the People! – Week 1 https://culturalattache.co/2020/03/04/power-to-the-people-week-1/ https://culturalattache.co/2020/03/04/power-to-the-people-week-1/#respond Wed, 04 Mar 2020 22:48:49 +0000 https://culturalattache.co/?p=8230 Walt Disney Concert Hall

March 5th - March 24th

California African American Museum

March 7th

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This week the Los Angeles Philharmonic launches an ambitious and diverse series entitled Power to the People! Week 1 starts on March 5th. Power to the People! celebrates the many ways in which music – and the power of music – has helped shape public opinion, influence the actions of governments and given voice to a people who want their opinions to be heard and recognized.

The series starts with Herbie Hancock joining Gustavo Dudamel and the LA Phil. The first half of the concert begins with an 8-minute piece by Jessie Montgomery entitled Banner which was written to celebrate the 200th anniversary of the Star-Spangled Banner by Francis Scott Key.

Courtney Bryan’s White Gleam of Our Bright Star is next. The title comes from a line in poet James Weldon Johnson’s Life Every Voice and Sing.

The first half concludes with a performance of jazz saxophone legend Wayne Shorter’s Aurora which uses text by Maya Angelou. (The work is part of a planned bigger piece setting Angelou’s text from her poem The Rock Cries Out to Us Today which she wrote in 1992 for Clinton’s inauguration.)

Hancock joins for the second half which will feature two of his compositions: Ostinatio: Suite for Angela from his album Mwandishi and I Have a Dream from his album The Prisoner – which was a tribute to Martin Luther King, Jr.

On March 6th Patti Smith and her band will perform. (You don’t really need me to tell you who she is or why this is going to be an amazing concert do you?)

March 7th finds two concerts. The first, at the California African American Museum, is free. Composer and vocalist Imani Uzuri will hold a Revolutionary Choir Salon where she examines protest songs and performs them. (There will be a second performance of this on Sunday, March 8th at 1 PM in BP Hall at Walt Disney Concert Hall which is free and open to tickets holder’s of Yolanda Adams’ Sunday afternoon concert listed below.)

The second concert is back at Walt Disney Concert Hall and features Puerto Rico’s Residente (a Grammy Award-winning rapper/writer/producer) performing with the LA Phil. The first part of the program opens with Montgomery’s Banner which is followed by Gabriela Ortiz‘s TeneekInvenciones de Territorio. This work was an LA Phil commission that had its world premiere in 2017.

The first week of Power to the People! concludes with gospel singer Yolanda Adams performing with Dudamel and the Phil. Once again, Banner, by Jessie Montgomery opens the program. That is followed by Duke Ellington’s Three Black Kings.

Three Black Kings was Ellington’s last composition. It celebrates King Balthazar, King Solomon and Martin Luther King, Jr. It is one of many large-scale symphonic works Ellington wrote during his career. (And if you’ve never heard one of them performed live by an orchestra, you should.)

For tickets to Herbie Hancock go here.

For tickets to Patti Smith go here.

To RSVP for Imani Uzuri at the California African American Museum go here. (RSVP’s are requested)

For tickets to Residente go here.

For tickets to Yolanda Adams go here.

Image of Gustavo Dudamel, Patti Smith and Herbie Hancock courtesy of the Los Angeles Philharmonic.

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Composer Bryce Dessner’s Mapplethorpe Memories https://culturalattache.co/2019/03/04/composer-bryce-dessners-mapplethorpe-memories/ https://culturalattache.co/2019/03/04/composer-bryce-dessners-mapplethorpe-memories/#respond Mon, 04 Mar 2019 23:02:26 +0000 https://culturalattache.co/?p=4621 "My challenge on this piece, which is text driven, is I hope my music measured up."

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Update:  We’re reposting this interview as the full production of Triptych (Eyes of One on Another) is being performed at the Brooklyn Academy of Music June 6 – June 8

When something becomes taboo, it’s like the forbidden fruit. You know you aren’t supposed to try it, but inevitably you will. The realization of that cause and effect seems to be lost on politicians. As it was on Jesse Helms and others when an exhibition of photographs by Robert Mapplethorpe in Cincinnati became the front line in the culture wars in 1990. Not only did it capture the media’s attention, it became a pivotal moment for a then fourteen-year-old Bryce Dessner.

Bryce Dessner was inspired by the controversy over a 1990 Mapplethorpe exhibit
“Self Portrait, 1988” (c) Robert Mapplethorpe Foundation. Used by permission.

Dessner is known as one of the members of the rock band The National. He’s also known as a composer who has collaborated with the likes of Nico Muhly, Caroline Shaw, Philip Glass, Sufjan Stevens and Paul Simon.

On Tuesday, the Los Angeles Philharmonic will offer the world premiere of Triptych (Eyes of One on Another). The work is part of the Green Umbrella Series and was inspired by Dessner’s recollections of the controversy surrounding this exhibit and Mapplethorpe’s work. This premiere is the concert version of Triptych. A larger presentation, with full staging, sets and costume design, will have its premiere on March 15th at the University of Michigan, Ann Arbor.

Dessner wrote Triptych in collaboration with librettist Korde Arrington Tuttle (featuring words by Essex Hemphill and Patti Smith) and with the vocal ensemble Roomful of Teeth in mind.

I recently spoke with Dessner about Triptych, Mapplethorpe and the new recording of his Piano Concerto for 2 Pianos featuring Katia & Marielle Labéque.

What do you remember most about the controversy and shutting down of the Mapplethorpe exhibit?

As a teenager born and raised in Cincinnati, those events really marked the city in a way that stuck with me. It was later on when I got into college and studied art more seriously that I got to know better his work. 

What is it about defining art, particularly the way these photographs were, that provokes greater interest?

A controversial Mapplethorpe exhibit lingered with Bryce Dessner
“Alistair Butler, 1980” (c) Robert Mapplethorpe Foundation. Used by permission.

I think it absolutely backfired. There is a beautiful essay, The Invisible Dragon [by Dave Hickey] where he talks about on some level Mapplethorpe needed Jessie Helms in terms of how it amplified his work and it became so much more scrutinized and into the bloodstream. It had the opposite effect.

How has Triptych evolved as you near the premiere and do you anticipate making changes before the subsequent performances?

I think the score has evolved dramatically. The process and timing was a bit later than I would normally be comfortable with. It’s a tricky subject matter in terms of getting a solid structure to what we wanted to say. It took a lot of revisions. The music has been shifting up to the last week. It will keep evolving. There’s a bit of pressure with a premiere like this. Ideally we could keep workshopping it and make it better. In June it comes to New York. Before then I would imagine I will revise the score quite a bit.

You’ve chosen to use a lot of vocals accompanied by a chamber orchestra. How did that decision come about?

My challenge on this piece, which is text driven, the libretto is substantial and important and a lot is said with unbelievable poetry. I hope my music measured up. The piece does have a wide range of sounds. I wanted the music to be heard. But here I was very focused on the text to the extent the piece is clear and can be sung. 

Bryce Dessner wrote "Triptych (Eyes of One on Another)"
Bryce Dessner (Photo by Charlotte DeMezamat)

There’s a statement about Triptych that says the work “examines how we look and are looked at, bringing us face-to-face with our innermost desires, fears and humanity.” How did writing Triptych bring you face-to-face with those same things?

I try to let the piece guide me and to listen to my collaborators and the great musicians who are singing it and performing it and come to it with an open heart. And to be aware that these conflicts are in me, too.  Just because I’m making this piece, I’m not exempt from confronting these pieces the way others do.

Dessner's new CD is called "El Chan"
“El Chan” on Deutsche Grammophon Records

You have a new recording coming out in April featuring your Concerto for Two Pianos and El Chan (also the name of the CD). The Labéque Sisters seem to be a muse for you. What is unique about them and your collaboration with them?

Katia and Marielle have been playing music together since they were kids. They also work 8-10 hours a day together. It’s a joy to make music with them. They’ve been through enough and seen enough and they are open-minded and supportive. It’s been a beautiful experience.

Mapplethorpe said, “My whole point is to transcend the subject…to go beyond the subject somehow so that the composition, the lighting, all around, reaches a certain point of perfection.” As a composer, do you aspire to do the same thing?

I get great joy when the notes on the page, through the interpretive experience and collaborative experience of mounting the performance with performers, almost lift off and I no longer own them. That’s definitely the case with the singers in this project. I hear them sing ideas I had in the studio, but it’s almost a new piece through their interpretation. That feeling is what keeps me going and why I keep doing this.

Main Photo by Shervin Lainez

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