Category: Headlines

Music for 25 Writers: The NEA Institute and the Contemporary Canon

name
NEA Institute participants at a critical moment: (left to right) Dori O’Neal, Laura Emerick, Peter Lefevre, Claire Blaustein, Rick Rogers
(All photos by Jason Gross)

The question of how the music of our time should be included in the classical canon has been debated everywhere: articles, board rooms, stages, and books, as well as in a lecture room on the sixth floor of Columbia University’s School of Journalism. It was there in Manhattan that the third annual National Endowment for the Arts’ Institute in Classical Music and Opera was recently held in late October, drawing in 25 music journalists from across the country, specifically “outside of the top media markets.”

The participants came from an impressive span of the country—Alaska, Florida, Kentucky, New Mexico, Oklahoma, Rhode Island, Texas, Wisconsin—and included a good balance of men and women. Most came from print backgrounds where their short-sighted editors slotted them to cover the classical music beat since they were already covering other arts (i.e. dance, theatre). At the Institute, each of them received an eleven-day crash course in the mechanisms of the classical world including lectures, writing assignments, workshops, discussions, venue tours, and concerts. Somewhere in this week-and-a-half marathon, they also received a glimpse of contemporary music and hopefully had their thinking changed as to how they might cover it in the future.

name
Program organizers (left to right) Joe Horowitz, Anya Grundmann, and András Szántó

The Institute—run by András Szánt&oacute, the former director of the National Arts Journalism Program (which the Institute developed out of), in collaboration with NPR’s Senior Special Projects Producer Anya Grundmann and author/arts consultant Joseph Horowitz—strived to show these that these media people were part of a community where they could communicate, share ideas, and not feel isolated in their work, all to help ensure an ongoing and vibrant discussion of classical music in the media sphere. As part of these goals, the Institute arranged discussions with noted writers such as John Rockwell (The New York Times), Steve Smith (Time Out New York), and Terry Teachout (Wall Street Journal). They also rubbed elbows with directors from Carnegie Hall, Lincoln Center, Miller Theatre, the Metropolitan Opera, the New York Philharmonic, and the American Symphony Orchestra. The group attended the New York City Opera’s production of Cosí fan tutte, a Bach recital, two different versions of Mozart’s Linz symphony (for comparison), a pair of Shostakovich symphonies, and the Met’s production of Madama Butterfly. They managed to fit in all of this in addition to being exposed to some high-profile contemporary music events and speakers.

***

A Tale of Two Receptions

On day six of the Institute, the group gathered at the Brooklyn Academy of Music. BAM Communications Director Sandy Sawotka gave them a tour of BAM’s Harvey Theatre. Institute co-organizer Joseph Horowitz toasted the space’s excellent acoustics while the group asked about the architecture and décor there. They then strolled to BAM’s Gillman Opera House where Horowitz lectured again, explaining how the venue had fallen into neglect in the 1950s and 1960s, but has had a resurgence in recent decades.

From there, the group met up with Joseph Melillo, BAM’s artistic director. Melillo started the Next Wave festival upon his arrival 24 years ago, and described the festival as a mechanism for supporting American artists from the non-traditional community, artists who are usually denied the means to do a large-scale interdisciplinary work. Melilo explained that he’s constantly traveling in search of pieces to present, working one to two years ahead of time to plan the schedules. The NEA group was clearly interested in what he had to say, peppering him with questions about his criteria for selecting pieces, as well as working with peer institutions and other venues using new media.

About an hour into the discussion, a trio of artists arrived who were premiering their new work for an American audience that evening: Violet Fire, an opera about inventor Nicolas Tesla. Composer Jon Gibson, librettist Miriam Seidel and director Terry O’Reilly told how it took them 15 years to finally get the work produced. In the middle of this conversation, an extraordinary moment occurred. Gibson reluctantly admitted, “They call me a minimalist…” at which point Chris Waddington from the NEA group (freelancer for the Times Picayune, New Orleans) replied, “We can rip the label off; there’s plenty of us in the room!” Along with the ensuing laughter, there was also a moment of realization of the power that the group ultimately held in their positions as musical arbiters across the country.

In an ideal world, the opera that night would have matched the expectations of such a bold institution as BAM. But that wasn’t to be. The NEA group was nearly unanimous in their derision. “Re-VOLT-ing!” declared Arkansas Democrat-Gazette writer Eric Harrison. Orange County Register freelance writer Peter Lefevre was alone in his admiration: “People walked out but it obviously affected them.” Did this bad reception concern the NEA leaders that the group would be turned off by contemporary fare now? Grundmann didn’t think so, reasoning that the show was innocuous but not damaging.

Proof of that came the next night at the Steve Reich 70th birthday concert at Carnegie Hall. Famed jazz guitarist Pat Metheny performed Electric Counterpoint, playing over his own tape loops and creating such well-known Reich traits as phase-shifting patterns and an ebbing/flowing of the music. The second part of the program was another late-1980s piece from Reich, Different Trains, performed by the Kronos Quartet. Again, they played over taped segments of themselves, interspersed with ghostly, disembodied voices booming over the speakers, creating a lively, engaging atmosphere where the strings occasionally imitated train rhythms.

During the intermission, during which several of NEA participants gathered to discuss the show, it was telling that some of them were reluctant to make any judgmental statements about the pieces since they had never heard them before. This was especially curious since they weren’t willing to give the BAM performance the same benefit of the doubt. Reich is obviously the more established, lauded composer; most writers would find it hard to go out on a limb to criticize him at this point, whereas the lesser-known Gibson is an easier target for negative criticism.

The third and final part of the Carnegie concert didn’t lend itself to any reserved judgments. Reich appeared with his ensemble to perform his most famous piece, Music for 18 Musicians. The live performance proved magical with an interweaving tapestry of sound shimmering throughout the other-worldly composition. Near the end, the pace picked up and the pulse of the piece disappeared. Afterwards, the hall exploded in applause, forcing Reich and his group to come out for three bows. Later at a nearby restaurant, the NEA group buzzed about the show, sensing that they had witnessed something historic. Lefevre would later comment that “the Reich concert was one of the most profound musical experiences I have had.” Fellow NEA participant Edward Ortiz of the Sacramento Bee went even further, explaining that in large part because of the concert, “this program further fired my desire to champion this music as part of the greater continuum of music.”

***

Perhaps 160 Minutes is Not Enough Time for 100 Years of Music

New Yorker columnist Alex Ross was scheduled to present a three-hour lecture to the Institute’s participants covering the span of 20th-century music. However, the previous speaker, Nonesuch Records President Bob Hurwitz, drew such excitement from the attendees that it cut into 20 minutes of Ross’s allotted time. The late start meant that Ross had to hurry. He skipped through entire decades, movements, and genres. Plus, he ended his survey in 1985, completely leaving out the last 20 years. He also had to focus more on the development of individual styles, eschewing a strict chronology (which meant that he time-traveled back and forth a few times), only stopping once near the end for a leg-stretching break.

name
Alex Ross takes on the 20th Century

Ross sat at the front of the room with his Apple laptop hooked up to a large boombox as he fed through works from an iTunes playlist. He spoke softly, appearing amiable, thoughtful, and knowledgeable as he breezed through the material, occasionally pausing to play 20-30 second excerpts of the composers’ works. “This past century was an exciting and controversial time,” he told the group. “The worldwide audience is bigger now than a hundred years ago, and it’s spreading to a wider audience though culturally it feels smaller.”

Ross then went through some 30 compositions, touching on Schoenberg’s Five Pieces for Orchestra (“a new language”), Debussy’s impressionistic Pelléas et Mélisande, Stockhausen’s Gruppen (“free jazz before its time”), Berg’s violent Wozzeck, Stravinsky’s Rite of Spring (which he explained was cheered on after the initial riots), Bartok’s folk-inspired quartet works, Varese’s Arcana (“industrial-strength atonal music”), and John Adams’s Harmonielehre (the only extended piece of music played). If anything, Ross sought to convey two points: 1) this music shouldn’t be intimidating or threatening to an audience; 2) there are increasingly “porous musical borders” between classical and other genres (i.e. rock, jazz, electronic music). It proved to be a dizzying amount of material for the group to digest in one sitting. Lefevre again might have made the astute observation, saying that “(Ross) made a lasting impression in ways that I am not sure I will be able to sort out for a few years.”

***

On the final day of the Institute, András Szántó summed up what they had covered and handed out evaluation forms. While they briefly roasted Violet Fire again, the Reich concert was judged to be a huge success, faring much better than some of the older works they’d heard. The group was definitely grateful for what Harrison called a “broadening perspective.” After Szántó, Grundmann, and Horowitz were presented with cards and gifts, Naomi Lewin (Cincinnati Public Radio announcer/producer) sang her own set of words describing the whole experience to the tune of the hymn “Shall We Gather at the River,” which the group had learned earlier in the week during a choral voice lesson session with Judith Clurman at Juilliard. And then, the Institute was finished.

name
Last day of the 2006 NEA Institute

Or was it? By now, the group has long been back at their respective desks and has decompressed, hopefully having sorted out all that they’d seen and heard. While this year’s group ultimately fared slightly better than last year’s group in terms of new music exposure, it was largely due to serendipity. Hearing Steve Reich’s music in New York during his birthday month this October was almost unavoidable. Last year’s Institute also included a Ross lecture and a trip to BAM for a tour and performance, but last year’s BAM performance featured pop-turned-classical diva Daniela Mercury.

While it’s difficult to squeeze in any more to such a super-saturated program, one would hope that there would be a place in a future curriculum for avant venues which also organize worthwhile fall-time fare: The Kitchen, Issue Project Room, Diapason (which featured the cross-cultural, cross-genre N Collective), Roulette, the Dream House (to witness famed minimalist master La Monte Young’s decades-long installation), Tonic, and the Stone (where this year they could have heard New York contemporary group Red Light New Music Ensemble kick off its new season), as well as institutions like the Electronic Music Foundation (which organized an environmentally-minded Ear to Earth festival), and Columbia’s own Computer Music Center. Also, including some of the contemporary fare as part of the writing seminars would have undoubtedly helped the participants to appreciate and understand it more, and ultimately communicate about it more effectively in print.

Regardless of any suggestions of what should be included in the program, the NEA Institute at the very least provided a good basis for the participants’ journey into the world of classical punditry and succeeded in connecting these writers from across the country and making them feel part of a community. In the end, the ultimate proof of how it effected their stance on contemporary music will come in what the participants decide to write about (or not write about) in their future columns, based on what they experience in their own communities.

###

Gross
Jason Gross

 

Jason Gross is the editor/founder of Perfect Sound Forever, one of the first online music magazines. Along with freelance writing, he is also working with assorted members of the Gotham community on a New York City music commission as well as a world journalism project covering writers outside of America and England.</p

Susan Feder Appointed Mellon Foundation Program Officer for the Performing Arts



Susan Feder
Photo by Vita Studios

The Andrew W. Mellon Foundation has appointed Susan Feder to the position of program officer for the performing arts, effective January 1, 2007. For the past twenty years, Feder has served as vice president of G. Schirmer, Inc., where she developed the careers of many leading composers in America, Europe, and the former Soviet Union. Feder succeeds Catherine Maciariello, who served as program officer from 1996 to 2006.

“It is difficult to imagine another position that would have tempted me away from the stimulation of working with the composers at Schirmer and the international Music Sales Group and hearing their music created and sustained by the world’s finest performers,” says Feder. “The Mellon Foundation [is] a visionary organization with the capacity to make transformative grants to performing arts organizations, libraries and museums, and institutions of higher education, areas of longstanding professional and personal interest to me. With a great sense of anticipation, I look forward to working closely with my new colleagues, and with the field’s leaders and innovators, to help ensure that the performing arts continue to thrive.”

Previously the editorial coordinator of The New Grove Dictionary of American Music and the program editor for the San Francisco Symphony, Feder is also currently vice president of the Amphion Foundation, a philanthropic organization that supports new music. A graduate of Princeton University, Feder serves on the University’s Music Department Advisory Council and the Alumni Schools Committee. Feder received an MA in the History and Literature of Music from the University of California, Berkeley. She has served for many years on the board of directors of the American Music Center (where most recently she has been Second Vice President), as well as the boards of the Music Publishers Association and the Charles Ives Society. She has also served on the Symphonic and Concert Committee at ASCAP and the Strategic Planning Committee of the American Symphony Orchestra League. Her program notes, liner notes, and music criticism have appeared in a variety of publications, and she is a frequent speaker on issues related to music publishing. Her honors include ASCAP’s Concert Music Award (2001), where she was described as “Publisher, Advisor, Friend, and Champion,” an ASCAP-Deems Taylor Award for her program notes for the American Composers Orchestra, and the dedication of John Corigliano’s Pulitzer-Prize winning Symphony No. 2.

According to a source at G. Schirmer, Robert Wise, chairman of the Music Sales Group, is committed to finding the strongest possible successor. Barrie Edwards, president of Music Sales Corp., has already begun the process of interviewing candidates. In the meantime, Peggy Monastra will assume the position of interim general manager, in addition to her duties as director of promotion.

The Andrew W. Mellon Foundation is a private philanthropic institution, with assets of approximately $5 billion, that makes grants on a selective basis to institutions of higher education, independent libraries, centers for advanced study, museums, art conservation, and performing arts organizations. The Foundation’s Performing Arts Program focuses on achieving long-term results by providing multi-year grants to leading organizations in the disciplines of music, theater, dance, and opera. These grants, which are awarded on the basis of artistic merit and leadership in the field, seek to strengthen institutional artistic and administrative capacity; encourage the development and performance of new work; identify and train new generations of arts leaders; reinforce the role of individual artists within institutions; and expand research, learning, and scholarship in the performing arts. Annual giving in the area of performing arts has averaged $20 million since 2000. In 2004, The Andrew W. Mellon Foundation was awarded a National Medal of Arts.

New Music News Wire

Radio Station Ownership Consolidation Harms Musicians and the Public

name
Download False Premises, False Promises: A Quantitative History of Ownership Consolidation in the Radio Industry.

The Future of Music Coalition, a non-profit organization focused primarily on the needs of musicians in today’s ever-changing technology environment, has released a new study which argues that radio station ownership consolidation harms musicians and the public.

You can read their report, False Premises, False Promises: A Quantitative History of Ownership Consolidation in the Radio Industry, here.

Senator Russ Feingold (D-MI) has spoken in support of the report, as have radio veterans and artist organizations.

In short, the report examines the changes in the radio industry since the FCC and Congress began to loosen ownership regulations in the 1990s. Peter DiCola, FMC research director and the report’s author, finds that:

  • The top four radio station owners have almost half of the listeners and the top ten owners have almost two-thirds of listeners.
  • Just fifteen formats make up three-quarters of all commercial programming. Moreover, radio formats with different names can overlap up to 80 percent in terms of the songs played on them.
  • Niche musical formats like Classical, Jazz, Americana, Bluegrass, New Rock, and Folk, where they exist, are provided almost exclusively by smaller station groups.

***
Meet The Composer and the American Symphony Orchestra League Announce 07-08 Music Alive Residencies

Meet The Composer and the American Symphony Orchestra League have announced the selection of participants for the eighth season of Music Alive, a program which pairs American composers with orchestras for residencies that encourage the commissioning and performance of new work.

The composer/orchestra pairs are:

  • Brooklyn Philharmonic and John Corigliano
  • Colonial Symphony and Harold Meltzer
  • Denver Young Artists Orchestra and Belinda Reynolds
  • Patel Conservatory Youth Orchestra and Augusta Read Thomas
  • The Philadelphia Orchestra and Jennifer Higdon
  • The Phoenix Symphony and Mark Grey
  • Seattle Symphony and Aaron Jay Kernis
  • SONYC (String Orchestra of New York City) and Randall Woolf

The residencies, lasting from two to four weeks, provide orchestras with resources and tools to support their presentation of new music and build support for such programming within their institutions. Composers help guide the host orchestra through the presentation process and are also on hand so that the public can “meet the person behind the music,” further engaging the orchestra and its various audiences and providing a personal context for their works. Additionally, composers serve as advocates for new music in the organization by interacting with board members, musicians, administrative staff, and the community in education and outreach activities.

Further details on each of these residencies, as well as background information for each of the participating composers and orchestras, appear on Meet The Composer’s website.

***
NEA Chair and Six New National Council on the Arts Members Confirmed

name
NEA Chairman Dana Gioia Photo courtesy of the NEA

NEA Chairman Dana Gioia and the six new members nominated by President George W. Bush to serve on the National Council on the Arts have been confirmed by the United States Senate.

Gioia will serve a second, four year term. President Bush sent his reappointment of Gioia to the Senate Committee on Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions on September 30, 2006, and it was unanimously confirmed on Monday.

Ben Donenberg, theater producer and arts educator, Los Angeles, CA; Chico Hamilton, 2004 NEA Jazz Master percussionist, New York City, NY; Joan Israelite, local arts agency executive, Lee’s Summit, MO; Charlotte Power Kessler, arts patron, New Albany, OH; Bret Lott, author, Baton Rouge, LA; and Frank Price, film industry executive, New York City, NY will beging their six-year terms as members of the National Council on the Arts, the advisory body of the National Endowment for the Arts. The new council members will replace outgoing members Don V. Cogman, Mary Costa, Katharine Cramer DeWitt, Teresa Lozano Long, Maribeth Walton McGinley, and Deedie Potter Rose.

The United States House of Representatives approved $129.4 million in NEA funding—$5 million more than the level recommended by the Senate—but Congress adjourned last week without reaching a final verdict. Appropriations must be approved by both houses. This fall, Senators heard from orchestras and other arts advocates urging support for the House-approved NEA increase. Forty-three Senators signaled their support by signing a Dear Colleague letter to Senate appropriators. With a final verdict left undecided by the outgoing Congress, it will be taken up by the new Congress in January.

Edited by Molly Sheridan

49th Annual Grammy Nominee List Released

It’s that time of year once again when the members of the National Academy of the Recording Arts and Sciences rank and rate the albums record companies are relieved to note that we’re still buying.

In one of our favorite categories, Best Classical Contemporary Composition, four American composers—Elliott Carter (Boston Concerto); Osvaldo Golijov (Ainadamar: Fountain Of Tears); Christopher Theofanidis (The Here And Now); and David Del Tredici (Paul Revere’s Ride)—have caught nods for newly released recordings. All except the Carter performance were led by conductor Robert Spano.

Bridge Record’s release Lieberson: Rilke Songs, The Six Realms, Horn Concerto picked up a nomination in the Best Classical Album category, as well as in Best Classical Vocal Performance for Lorraine Hunt Lieberson. Patrick Mason also got a nod in the vocal performance category for his performance on Bridge’s Songs Of Amy Beach.

Two American works were recognized in the Best Opera Recording category—recordings of the Glimmerglass production of Bennett’s The Mines of Sulphur and the O’Connor/Upshaw/Spano/Atlanta powerhouse production of Golijov’s Ainadamar: Fountain Of Tears. In Best Choral Performance, pieces by Eric Whitacre appear on two of the nominated discs: Requiem [Clarion Records] and Whitacre: Cloudburst And Other Choral Works [Hyperion]. Andrew Russo (performing with Corey Cerovsek and Steven Heyman) also picked up a nomination in the Best Chamber Music Performance category for their work on Corigliano: Violin Sonata, Etude Fantasy.

Over on the jazz side of the fence, the list is full to brimming. Best Contemporary Jazz Album nominations went to The Hidden Land (Béla Fleck & The Flecktones [Columbia]); People People Music Music (Groove Collective [Savoy Jazz Worldwide]); Rewind That (Christian Scott [Concord Jazz]); Sexotica (Sex Mob [Thirsty Ear Recordings, Inc.]); and Who Let The Cats Out? (Mike Stern [Heads Up]).

Best Large Jazz Ensemble Album nods went to Some Skunk Funk (Randy Brecker/The WDR Big Band Köln [Telarc Jazz/BHM]); Spirit Music (Bob Brookmeyer/New Art Orchestra [ArtistShare]); Streams Of Expression (Joe Lovano Ensemble [Blue Note Records]); Live In Tokyo At The Blue Note (Mingus Big Band [Sunnyside/Sue Mingus Music]); and Up From The Skies—Music Of Jim McNeely (The Vanguard Jazz Orchestra [Planet Arts Recordings]).

John Williams adds another two Grammy nominations to his ever-expanding list (for his work on Memoirs Of A Geisha and Munich). Hans Zimmer also received two nods (for The Da Vinci Code and Pirates Of The Caribbean—Dead Man’s Chest) and Harry Gregson-Williams was recognized for his score for The Chronicles Of Narnia—The Lion, The Witch And The Wardrobe.

Something of a genre mash up, in the Best Instrumental Composition category composers Taylor Eigsti (Argument); Patrick Williams (A Concerto In Swing); John Williams (one nomination for A Prayer For Peace and one for Sayuri’s Theme and End Credits); and Fred Hersch (Valentine) received nominations.

In total, there are 108 categories to be considered by this year’s Grammy voters, and this report only scratches the surface. See the full list here.

New Music News Wire

Tsontakis Wins Ives Living Award

George Tsontakis has been chosen to receive the Charles Ives Living, which gives a talented composer an income of $75,000 a year for a period of three years, for a total of $225,000. The announcement was made by Ezra Laderman, president of the American Academy of Arts and Letters. The purpose of the Ives Living is to free a promising American composer from the need to devote his or her time to any employment other than music composition. It is the Academy’s intent to provide through this award an income sufficient to ensure that freedom for a period of three years. Tsontakis, the fourth composer to be chosen for this honor, will begin the three-year term in July 2007.

name
George Tsontakis
Photo courtesy Theodore Presser Company

Tsontakis, born 1951 in New York City and now residing in Shokan, New York, is currently the distinguished faculty composer-in-residence at Bard College. Although the Charles Ives Living winner agrees to forgo all salaried employment during the award period, there is no restriction on accepting composing commissions. In accepting the award, George Tsontakis said, “I felt a complex mixture of emotions, a bit giddy with exhilaration, yet at almost the same moment a realization that there was a message attached to the gesture, in that a serious rededication to my work was beckoning. I am excited and very grateful to the Academy for this wonderful gift to my music, as well as moved by my colleagues for their vote of confidence in my work. The Ives Living will impact not only the next three years but the rest of my life; I only hope that I might be able to live up to its message.”

Laderman, also a composer, said, “The selection of George Tsontakis follows in the Ives Living tradition which identifies a composer of enormous talent who is on the threshold of becoming a household name. What I’ve always admired about him is that he idealizes Beethoven in his music; in every work he includes a quote from a Beethoven work, such as the Egmont Overture or the Fifth Symphony. His music is both intellectually demanding and highly accessible, a rare and wonderful combination if you can pull it off. George does.”

William Bolcom, chairman of the selection committee, and the other committee members—T. J. Anderson, Robert Beaser, David Del Tredici, and Joseph Schwantner—studied scores and recordings over a six-month period to arrive at their choice of George Tsontakis. Bolcom said, “There are a slew of awards for young composers. There aren’t nearly enough for composers who have gained a solid reputation, who are in mid-career and sorely in need of more time to compose. For the last thousand years, only a handful of composers have actually made a living from their craft. For someone like George Tsontakis, the Charles Ives Living affords precious and well-deserved time to create. It is a great boon to him and potentially to American music.”

The Charles Ives Living was inaugurated in 1998 with the selection of Martin Bresnick. Chen Yi became the second winner, in 2001, and Stephen Hartke was chosen in 2004; his three-year term ends in June 2007. George Tsontakis becomes the fourth winner of the Charles Ives Living. Harmony Ives, the widow of Charles Ives, left to the Academy the royalties from her husband’s music to establish a fund for prizes in music composition. Since 1970, the Academy has given 200 Ives scholarships, and since 1983, 32 Ives fellowships. These awards continue to be given annually.

***

BMI Foundation Announces Carlos Surinach Awards

On December 5, 2006, Ralph N. Jackson, president of the BMI Foundation, Inc., announced that bassoonist Peter Kolkay is the recipient of the Carlos Surinach Prize, given to an emerging artist in recognition of “outstanding service to American music,” and that composer Judah E. Adashi is the winner of the Carlos Surinach Commission.

name
(L to R) BMI Foundation President Ralph N. Jackson, Carlos Surinach Commission winner Judah E. Adashi, Carlos Surinach Prize winner Peter Kolkay and Concert Artist Guild President Richard S. Weinert.
Photo by Dana Rodriguez, courtesy BMI

Established by a bequest from late BMI classical composer Carlos Surinach, these awards are given in cooperation with the Concert Artists Guild (CAG), a non-profit organization whose mission is to discover, nurture, and promote young musicians. Each year, a performer is selected from the roster of CAG’s international competition winners. The performer then chooses a composer from a pool of recent BMI Student Composer Award winners who will create a new work written specifically for that performer to premiere.

Composer Judah E. Adashi has been honored with awards from the American Academy of Arts and Letters, the BMI Student Composer Awards, and the Aspen Music Festival, and has twice been in residence at the Yaddo artist colony. Recent commissions have come from the Aspen Music Festival and from the Arc Duo. Adashi directs the composition program at the Peabody Preparatory and is on the music theory faculty at the Peabody Conservatory. He also directs the Evolution Contemporary Music Series at An Die Musik, a Baltimore concert venue where he is composer-in-residence. His principal composition teachers have been Nicholas Maw and John Harbison; he holds degrees from Yale University and the Peabody Conservatory of Music of the Johns Hopkins University.

Peter Kolkay became the first bassoonist ever to receive the First Prize in the Concert Artists Guild International Competition in 2002, and in 2004 he was the first bassoonist ever to be awarded the Avery Fisher Career Grant. As part of his solo recital debut in 2002 at Carnegie’s Weill Recital Hall, Kolkay gave the world premiere performance of Elliott Carter’s Retracing for solo bassoon and the New York premiere of Carter’s Au Quai for bassoon and viola with Maureen Gallagher, a work they subsequently recorded for Bridge Records. Kolkay opened the 2003-2004 season in New York City as a member of the Zankel Band, a select group of musicians chosen to work with John Adams for the opening of Carnegie’s Zankel Hall. Last season, Kolkay gave the world premiere performances of Harold Meltzer’s Concerto for Two Bassoons and Orchestra with the San Francisco Chamber Orchestra and bassoonist Rufus Oliver under the direction of Ben Simon.

Kolkay is scheduled to premiere Adashi’s commissioned work in a performance at Lawrence University in Appleton, Wisconsin in 2007.

***

Meredith Monk Turns Over Her Archives to NYPL

On December 6, 2006, Paul LeClerc, president of The New York Public Library, announced that The New York Public Library for the Performing Arts has acquired the archive of Meredith Monk. “Over a period of more than 40 years Meredith Monk has created a body of strikingly original works that challenge traditional forms and styles,” said LeClerc. “At the Library for the Performing Arts, her archive will be preserved as a source of knowledge and inspiration for future generations of creative artists, scholars, students, writers, and anyone interested in understanding the nature and impact of her work.”

The archive consists of both personal and professional papers, including audio/visual material, music scores, process notebooks, personal notebooks (dreams and ideas), research material, slides and photographs, correspondence, writings by and about Monk (including interview transcripts), production folders, copies of storyboards, project records, financial records, programs, awards, clippings, posters, and marketing/publicity materials. Because of the interdisciplinary nature of her performances, researchers will be able to go to any of the Library’s divisional service desks—dance, theater, music, or recorded sound—to request materials from this collection.

“Meredith Monk’s boundary-breaking work has inspired us to rethink the way we classify artists’ collections at the Library for the Performing Arts,” said Jacqueline Z. Davis, the Barbara G. and Lawrence A. Fleischman Executive Director of The New York Public Library for the Performing Arts. “Rather than categorize her to fit into one of our four existing research divisions, we have created a new Performing Arts classification to accommodate the personal artistic vision that she has expressed over the decades.”

Asked to comment about the archive, Monk replied, “Preservation was my highest priority, but how the archive can live on in the future was just as important. In the end, The New York Public Library for the Performing Arts was the best choice. I believed my work should remain in New York City with the largest community of creative artists and arts enthusiasts—all those who can benefit from these resources—where the archive can continue to give rise to new connections and synergies.”

The New York Public Library for the Performing Arts has had a long relationship with Meredith Monk. In 1977 the library filmed Quarry at the Brooklyn Academy of Music and in 1993 it filmed Education of the Girlchild at The Joyce Theater. In 1996, the library celebrated her extraordinary achievements with a retrospective exhibition, Meredith Monk: Archeology of an Artist. Designed by the artist herself, the exhibition brought together artifacts and other items representing productions from the start of Monk’s career in 1964 through to her latest work. Taken as a whole, the props, original designs, storyboards, programs, posters, photographs, recordings, and films revealed Monk’s unique artistic perspective, which continues to guide her creation of imaginative new worlds.

***

European American and Subito Announce Joint Service Initiatives

European American Music Distributors LLC, a member of the international Schott Music Group, and Subito Music Corporation, one of America’s leading publishers of contemporary classical music and a leading provider of printing and production services to classical publishers, has announced the formation of a new Rental Service Center to handle the distribution of the rental catalogs of both companies. Additionally, EAM will manage the licensing of dramatic performances and audio-visual synchronizations of the Subito Music catalog. Publishing and promotion of the EAM and Subito catalogs will continue to be operated independently by each company.

Stephen Culbertson, founder and president of Subito Music Corporation, said: “By bringing Schott/EAM’s rental library fulfillment to our facility in Verona, we will increase efficiency and ensure excellent customer service for both companies. We are looking forward to working with the EAM staff as well as presenters around the country to accomplish this.”

European American Music Distributors LLC, a member of the Schott Music Group, is the North American rental and licensing representative for the complete catalogs of the Schott Music Group, Universal Edition, European American Music Corporation, and Schott Helicon Music Corporation, as well the concert and opera catalogs of Warner/Chappell Music, Alfred Publishing (including Belwin-Mills and Lawson-Gould), and the MCA/Universal Music Publishing Group, among others. Subito Music Corporation, established in 1980, is a full-service music publisher, offering typesetting and printing, promotion, rental, sales, and copyright administration for composers and publishers.

***

Copland House Announces 2006 Awardees

Copland House (Cortlandt Manor, N.Y.) has announced the 2006 Aaron Copland Awards, which will allow nine American composers to enjoy three- to eight-week all-expenses-paid residencies in Copland’s rustic, secluded hilltop home in New York’s lower Hudson River Valley. The awardees are Clarice Assad, 28, of New York, N.Y.; Derek Bermel, 39, of Brooklyn; Daniel Brewbaker, 55, of New York, N.Y.; Tom Cipullo, 49, of Long Island City, N.Y.; Edward Knight, 41, of Oklahoma City; Janet Maguire, 79, of Venice, Italy; Henry Martin, 56, of New York, N.Y.; Russell Platt, 41, of New York, N.Y.; and Rob Smith, 38, of Houston.

Edited by Frank J. Oteri

United States Artists Announces $2.5 million in Artist Fellowships

United States Artists, a new organization which seeks to provide direct support to living artists across the U.S., has announced the first recipients of 50 USA Fellowship grants of $50,000 each. Fellows include artists in the fields of architecture and design, crafts and traditional arts, dance, literature, media arts, music, theater arts, and visual arts. The awardees were selected through a panel process from among 300 applicants.

Among the winners, artists connected to the music field include:

name
John Luther Adams
Photo courtesy Dennis Keeley

John Luther Adams, Alaska—USA Ford Fellow
The work of composer John Luther Adams is deeply rooted in his experience of the Alaskan landscape. He writes a wide variety of music, orchestral and electronic, for ensembles large and small. Most recently, he has explored site-specific works, including The Place Where You Go to Listen, a sound and light installation derived from seismic and electromagnetic data, shown at the University of Alaska Museum of the North. Adams is now working on installations and compositions based on data from weather stations around the world.

name
Natividad Cano
Photo courtesy David Bazemore

Natividad Cano, California—USA Rockefeller Fellow
Born in Jalisco, Mexico, into a family of mariachi musicians, Natividad Cano is widely recognized as one of the masters of his genre. He came to Los Angeles in 1957, and in 1961 he founded Los Camperos, a mariachi group that is still in existence. After touring with the group for eight years, he opened the restaurant La Fonda as a way to continue performing while staying at home. Cano is almost single-handedly responsible for the wide reach of mariachi music in the United States and has done much to preserve and perpetuate this genre in the course of his fifty-year career.

name
Ali Akbar Khan
Photo courtesy Lawson Knight

Ali Akbar Khan, California—USA Glover Fellow
Ali Akbar Khan is a master of the sarod and is one of the most respected Indian classical musicians in the world. He came to the United States in 1955, and in 1967 he founded the Ali Akbar College of Music in Marin, California. Since then Khan has had a tremendous impact on music in the United States, through both his teaching and his performances. He was named a MacArthur Fellow in 1991 and was honored with a National Heritage Fellowship from the National Endowment for the Arts in 1997.

name
Bill Frisell (top) Photo courtesy Ralph Gibson and Jim Woodring (bottom) Photo courtesy the artist

Bill Frisell and Jim Woodring, Washington—USA Rasmuson Fellows
Musician Bill Frisell and cartoonist Jim Woodring have created a number of short animated films exploring the themes of spirituality, the evolution of consciousness, and the contrast between horror and beauty. Frisell is well known among his fellow musicians as a consummate guitarist, composer, and bandleader. He has collaborated with artists such as Petra Hayden, Burt Bacharach and Elvis Costello, John Zorn, and Vernon Reid. Jim Woodring is the author of Jim—an illustrated “autojournal” that includes drawings, comics, and stories based on his childhood experiences—and is perhaps best known as the creator of Frank, a wordless cartoon series.

name
Lourdes Pérez
Photo courtesy Lisa Nickle, 2005

Lourdes Pérez, Arizona—USA Stevens Fellow
Lourdes Pérez is a singer-songwriter noted for the richness of her voice who blends various Latin American vocal traditions, engaging deeply personal stories as well as global politics in her music. She has particular mastery of decimal (a complex Mexican vocal style of singing and improvisation) and Puerto Rican trova. She has recorded six albums of music and is equally committed to performing in community, national, and international settings. Her immediate plans are to finish converting her mother’s stories into decimas and seis, composing music for these songs and recording them.

name
Meredith Monk
Photo courtesy Jessie Froman

Meredith Monk, New York—USA Prudential Fellow
Meredith Monk is a composer, singer, director, choreographer, filmmaker, and installation artist. Her groundbreaking exploration of the voice as an instrument, as an eloquent language in and of itself, expands the boundaries of musical composition, creating landscapes of sound that unearth feelings, energies, and memories for which we have no words. Noted for work that blends sound, music, and movement, Monk continues to capture the spirit of our time and is an inspiration for many artists both in the United States and abroad.

The Ford Foundation, the Rockefeller Foundation, the Prudential Foundation, and the Rasmuson Foundation contributed a total of $20 million to establish USA as a structure through which private philanthropists, corporate donors, and other foundations can support individual artists. Awards are given annually across an array of disciplines. This year’s USA Fellowships include one in architecture and design; six in crafts and traditional arts; four in dance; nine in literature (fiction, non-fiction, poetry); six in media (audio, film, radio, video); five in music; seven in theater arts, and twelve in the visual arts.

Edited by Molly Sheridan

October 2006 Composer Assistance Program Grants Announced

The American Music Center has announced grant awards totaling $35,090 to 29 composers through the current round of the Composer Assistance Program. Among the organizations premiering or featuring public readings of CAP-supported works this round are the New England Philharmonic, Minnesota Orchestra, Cologne Contemporary Jazz Orchestra, and Orkest ‘de ereprijs.’ A complete list of awardees and performers is available here.

Copland Fund Awards $575,000 To Performing Ensembles

The Aaron Copland Fund for Music, Inc. has awarded grants totaling $575,000 to performing ensembles across America through its 2006 Performing Ensembles Program. Eighty organizations received awards in recognition of their commitment to contemporary American music. Among the organizations supported are the Adorno Ensemble, Voices of Change, American Composers Orchestra, Jazz Composers Alliance, EarPlay, and the Firebird Ensemble. A complete list of grantees is available here.

Los Angeles: Monday Evening Concerts Face The Future

If you think that you have to have gallons of publicity and a well-developed knack for the commercial to survive in Los Angeles, contemplate a hardy, high-minded, world-famous concert series called Monday Evening Concerts.

The audience is small, the budget is tiny, the profile is low, and the music is thoroughly, uncompromisingly contemporary. Yet the series has been around in one form or another continuously since 1939—which in this city of constant turnover is quite a feat. Only the far more conservative Coleman Chamber Concerts in Pasadena can top MEC’s record of longevity in the area of chamber music here. Even for those who didn’t attend or stopped going, it was comforting to know that MEC was still around.

There was a moment, though, when it looked as if the Monday Evening Concerts were finally going down for the count. In the spring of 2005, the Los Angeles County Art Museum, which had housed the concerts in its gloomy, acoustically undistinguished Leo S. Bing Theatre for 40 years, decided to pull the plug on most of its music programming. MEC was given one more season and that would be it. Not only that, but almost as if on cue, the director of MEC for the last 34 of those years, composer Dorrance Stalvey, passed away just after the announcement was made—and just after he had finished planning what looked like it was to be MEC’s final season.

But no, the story isn’t over—at least for now. The musical press in Los Angeles decried the County Art Museum’s decision to abandon the series. A new advisory board, directed by Justin Urcis and containing figures like Stalvey’s widow Valerie, composer William Kraft, and former L.A. Philharmonic chief Ernest Fleischmann, was formed.

As a result, MEC—now an independent organization—has risen off the canvas again, albeit in greatly reduced form, announcing a 2006-07 season consisting of four concerts in two locations downtown. (By comparison, the 2001-02 season featured twelve concerts, and 2003-04 had nine). The programming for the last three concerts has been entrusted to three internationally-known “curators”—Esa-Pekka Salonen, Kent Nagano, and Steven Stucky—while the first concert on December 11 will be a memorial tribute to Stalvey.

***

name


For the whole fascinating story of the early years of the Monday Evening Concerts, read Dorothy Lamb Crawford’s invaluable Evenings On And Off The Roof (University of California Press).

Originally called Evenings on the Roof, at first the concerts were literally held on a roof—the small, add-on second-story studio of Peter Yates, built for him by the modernist Viennese architect Rudolph Schindler. Yates was a quintessential fish-out-of-water—an independent thinker with highbrow tastes in a city that had little use for intellectuals, a proud amateur in a circle of professional artists, a cheerleader for new music operating in a place that, then as now, mainly worshipped movie stars. He toiled away at a bureaucratic, low-paying job by day while organizing Evenings on the Roof in his spare time, citing the similarly-divided Charles Ives as a role model for not compromising one’s art to commerce. Like Ives, Yates drove himself to exhaustion and illness with his double life.

The first concert in April 1939 was an all-Bartók affair—this at a time when the Hungarian composer was still barely-known in America—for an audience of 19 people. But Yates’s policy of presenting new, old, and neglected chamber music caught on among the small intellectual audience scattered around the sprawling city. Highly skilled musicians, bored by the movie scores that they had to play in the studios for a living, flocked to Yates’s roof to perform challenging music for almost no pay. While there was plenty of contemporary music on hand, Yates also made sure that the past was well represented; there were extensive surveys of Beethoven and some of the earliest attempts at period-performances of J. S. Bach and his predecessors.

Hardly anyone else was presenting this mix of repertoire in the region then, and word spread around the country and Europe about this brave little series. Otto Klemperer, then the conductor of the Los Angeles Philharmonic, attended the early concerts. The music of Schoenberg, who taught at UCLA and lived in Brentwood, was heard on this series with more frequency than probably any other place on earth during his lifetime. Indeed, Yates was lucky to have started his concerts at a time when sunny Southern California had become a place of refuge for gifted artists fleeing the Nazis.

Located on Micheltorena Street, a steep, out-of-the-way side street in the Silverlake district, the “roof” was abandoned after May 1941, and the series moved from auditorium to auditorium before finally settling into the then-new Bing Theatre in 1965. In 1954, Yates turned the leadership of Evenings on the Roof over to Lawrence Morton, taking the name with him. Since the series had taken place on Monday nights since its second season, it became known simply as Monday Evening Concerts when Morton took over.

Under this crusty, diminutive Minnesotan who had been a crusading music critic in town, MEC became Stravinsky Central, often showcasing the chamber works of the Russian émigré genius who lived above the Sunset Strip. MEC racked up no less than twelve Stravinsky world premieres, usually tiny chips from the workbench or re-arrangements of existing music, but still enough to give Morton bragging rights. In turn, MEC (and Evenings on the Roof before it) greatly influenced Stravinsky himself; the twelve-tone music that he heard there, as well as the performances of early music, recharged his creative batteries and helped usher in his final, forward-looking serial period.

Stravinsky’s right-hand-man, Robert Craft, used MEC as a staging ground for the long, pioneering string of new-music and early-music recordings that he made for Columbia in the 1950s and ’60s. (A great souvenir of that time is the photo on the back cover of Craft’s first Gesualdo album of the MEC singers—including the young, then-unknown Marilynn (sic) Horne—sitting on Stravinsky’s front lawn). Pierre Boulez, Luciano Berio, Luigi Nono, and Karlheinz Stockhausen were heard for the first time in America during the Morton years. Michael Tilson Thomas, still a student at USC, became the resident wunderkind at these concerts in the mid-1960s just before his rise to fame.

Yet even in its Golden Age, keeping MEC going was always a struggle—maintaining quality and adventure on a shoestring budget, and engaging in sometimes acerbic battles with the local press. The Los Angeles Times’ chief music critic from 1947 to 1965, Albert Goldberg, often had caustic things to say about certain works that were out on the edge (On Stockhausen’s electronic Gesang der Junglinge, he said, “If this is music, it’s time to drop the H-bomb.”). Morton gave as good as he got; at one concert in 1956, he took the extraordinary (for an impresario) step of making a speech accusing Goldberg of misrepresenting “the facts” of a concert that featured the controversial U.S. premiere of Nono’s Canti per 13. In 1963, when Goldberg’s antipathy toward the serial music heard at MEC produced a chorus of written amens from noted local composers and musicians, Morton defended the avant-garde in a piece that appeared in the LA Times.

Under Stalvey, who succeeded Morton in 1971, MEC’s agenda was eventually limited to 20th century music, and it became a presenting organization, with out-of-town groups performing most of the programs. Following a near-fatal financial crisis, the County Art Museum assumed stewardship of the concerts in 1985 while Stalvey doggedly stayed on as director until his death, ultimately logging more years in the job than Yates and Morton combined.

By the 1980s and ’90s, one had to accept the possibility that perhaps the contemporary music world had passed MEC by. Minimalism had caught fire, a revolt against serialism and academic music of all kinds was underway, and yet the programming at MEC was slow to catch on. There was a vital, exciting new-music scene developing at CalArts in Valencia, whose annual spring Contemporary Music Festivals of the late 1970s and early ’80s were attracting national attention before they ran out of steam at the end of the decade. The Los Angeles Philharmonic New Music Group’s concerts became the main platform in which to hear leading and rising figures in the avant-garde and remains so in the future-world setting of the new Walt Disney Concert Hall downtown. Newer series like Southwest Chamber Music and Jacaranda took up MEC’s abandoned mix of old and new using local players and made it work anew.

Now and then in recent years, MEC would rise out of its torpor and find someone or something new and arresting—like the personable, eccentric Italian pianist Marino Formenti—and the final concert of 2004-05, a juxtaposition of the latest works of Morton Subotnick and Paul Dresher by the iconoclastic California E.A.R. Unit, drew a large, demonstrative crowd. Ultimately, though, it became depressing to go to the dimly-lit, cavernous, amenities-lacking Bing and stare at the rows upon rows of empty seats and smatterings of hard-core aficionados whose polite applause barely rose above the silence.

***
How will the resurrection of Monday Evening Concerts fare downtown? For one thing, the physical facilities are going to be much better. The locale for the Stalvey concert, REDCAT (an acronym for CalArts’ new downtown showplace, Roy and Edna Disney/ CalArts Theatre), is a versatile, high-tech black-box theatre in the basement of Disney Hall, with a state-of-the-art sound system and an informal coffee bar/book store in the lobby. The three “curated” concerts are in the Colburn School’s Zipper Concert Hall, a one-block walk up 2nd Street from REDCAT and a superb, compact facility with warm, woodsy acoustics.

Stucky’s Feb. 19, 2007, program will feature works by six young composers from Mexico, Canada, and the USA—Andrew Norman, James Matheson, Sean Shepherd, Philippe Bodin, Ana Lara, and Brian Current. At this writing, Salonen plans to showcase the music of fellow Scandinavians Kimmo Hakola and Rolf Wallin on April 16. Yet of the four programs, it is Nagano’s (March 19) that most closely embraces the Yates/Morton philosophies, juxtaposing works by living composers with classics by J.S. Bach and so help him, something as politically incorrect as Bach/Busoni. Another positive feature is a return to the Yates/Morton policy of mostly using expert local musicians.

For Kraft, who took part in some of MEC’s groundbreaking concerts of the 1950s and ’60s, the main issue is what MEC means in a multi-cultural city where there is no longer a Stravinsky sitting in the front row of the hall, conveying a silent sense of authority that this is the place in town where new music is happening. “It’s identity that we’re really concerned about, what will set the Monday Evening Concerts apart from others now that we have so much competition,” Kraft says. “The Monday Evening Concerts established the identity of the location, rather than the other way around. Now we have the Zipper and REDCAT, which are occupied by many ensembles. We don’t have the advantage of being the only act in town.”

Nor will the current programming formula necessarily extend beyond 2006-07. “We’re discussing the future,” says Kraft. “This first season is curated—that was Ernest’s idea. There’s the issue of continuing the curating of programs, and the other is to try to get it more focused in L.A., as a Los Angeles-based operation as it was before. I don’t know what we’re going to settle on as the location. It’s in flux.”

Who knows whether the new slimmed-down MEC will be able to compete with or complement the other new music presenters in town, let alone make history again. But at the very least, we repeat, it’s good to know it’s still around.

***
Richard S. Ginell is a regular contributor to the Los Angeles Times, Daily Variety, and All-Music Guide and is the Los Angeles correspondent for American Record Guide. In an earlier life, he was chief music critic of the Los Angeles Daily News for 12 years.

Ten Honored with 2006 National Medal of Arts

President George W. Bush has honored ten American artists with the 2006 National Medal of Arts, including composer William Bolcom, bluegrass legend Dr. Ralph Stanley, and the Preservation Hall Jazz Band. The medals, which are “the nation’s highest honor for artistic excellence,” were presented yesterday by the President and Mrs. Laura Bush in an Oval Office ceremony at the White House. The 2006 National Medal of Arts recipients also included Cyd Charisse (dancer); Roy R. DeCarava (photographer); Wilhelmina Holladay (arts patron); Erich Kunzel (conductor); Gregory Rabassa (literary translator); Viktor Schreckengost (industrial designer/sculptor); and Interlochen Center for the Arts.