Results tagged “new music” from Program Notes
(Otherwise it's just Girls Gone Wild)
by Nico Muhly
Discuss! To comment on this entry, click here.
Talking about programming new music is one of these paradoxical things; I feel like I, as a
composer, shouldn't have to say anything about it because it goes without saying that I am in
favor. Similarly, for presenting organizations - bot
h ensembles and venues - if you need to be told about it, it may already be too late. With the exception of Jordi Savall, Masaaki Suzuki, and, like, four other people, it is the responsibility of every musician and group of musicians to program - and champion (an important emphasis) new music.
(In fact, Jordi, call me, I have an idea: it's like Sephardic Judaism meets gamelan, you know you love it.)
A few weeks ago, I went to hear a dress rehearsal of Leonard Slatkin and the National Symphony Orchestra playing Mason Bates's (who is roughly my age, slightly older, though, slightly older) Liquid Interface, which is an ambitious commission for Slatkin; it features a very difficult interaction between the orchestra's tricky passages and the live electronics (which Bates controls). So: that's what I would consider, in a rough sense, to be somebody championing new music and really owning the fact of a new piece: put it on a truck and bring it to Carnegie Hall, don't hide it in that weird room between La Mer and the Emperor concerto.
Now, I would take a bullet for Mason, and I adore his music and particularly Liquid Interface,
but I want to ask the slightly provocative question which is: would the National Symphony
accept something from him that they had to play every year, or every two years? I can't
imagine
that they are going to be happy to schlep out the hi-fi and cart Mason
in from Berkeley if, for instance, Leonard Slatkin isn't there to make
it happen. So, is that commission an adventure for the orchestra,
orjust for the conductor and the composer? As far as I'm concerned, an
adventure is a journey that is in some way transformative for the
acting party or parties; a piece of music that enters into the
repertoire, into the cycle, is more likely to be transformative than
one that happens for just one night.
I am always suspicious when an orchestra commissions one new piece a season and it's some facacta Michael Torke + Tap Dancing situation like how Detroit did that one time. Michael Torke: knows how to write a piece for orchestra. The Detroit Symphony: needs some new orchestra music that it can claim for its own. More people are going to be embarrassed than excited about the tap dancing thing. Not to put words up in MT's mouth, but if Michael Torke srsly wanted to do a piece with tap dancer, I'm sure he'd figure it out without a major symphony's help. (Did that piece ever even end up happening?) This is not to say, however, that we (here, meaning composers in general) don't love a funny commission; I've been the happy recipient of many strange collaborative commissions. I guess my point is that I wouldn't call those things "adventurous" as much as "random" in the literal sense of the world: a blip, a way to spend (or make) some money and have a nice evening.
The times I have been the most honored by a commission have been when an ensemble -
established or not - asks me to add something to the pile of music written for that collection of forces. When a string quartet says, "we'd like a new string quartet, written by you," to me, that is itself more adventurous and touching than when people want a string quartet + electronics, or a string quartet + Inuit throat-singing, or a string quartet + liturgical acrobatics. If I wanted to do that, I'd do it my own self, in the D.I.Y. fashion to which I am accustomed (as I write this, I am applying Neosporin™ to a wound I received while lifting a three hundred-pound fiberglass stallion covered in hair, on whose back I stuck a folk singer, all in collaboration with an Icelandic sculptress in West Chelsea last weekend; I have that kind of adventure under control).
Adventurous commissioning is simple, ungimmicky programming of new works: a new violin concerto to join the pantheon, a new symphony, a new clarinet quintet. I feel like people in my generation deserve to be able to have it both ways: we should be able to be composer-performers, scrappily organizing concerts with our friends, and also, larger organizations should be actively involved in commissioning larger - and lasting - works. The stodginess and/or petulance of the 60's happily behind us, pursuing alternate means of getting our work heard is just that: an alternate route, a way to drive every other day to avoid the monotony of our daily commute. My concern, though, is that there is a lot of "adventurous" institutional programming that is actually just a mess, in a sort of "what happens in Vegas stays in Vegas" type way. One night of synthesized bass and a thumping beat does not an adventurous season make. Just as an exciting life is one that happens every day, not just on vacation, an adventurous season is one that contains a commitment to always buying that unknown vegetable, and learning how to cook it as a technique, not just as a way to spice up supper. One-offs are fun, but the adventure soon comes to an end.
To hear more from Nico Muhly, visit his blog.
To learn more about NPAC sessions such as "Adventurous Programming: Making New Music the Main Course", visit the website.
by Nico Muhly
Discuss! To comment on this entry, click here.
Talking about programming new music is one of these paradoxical things; I feel like I, as a
A few weeks ago, I went to hear a dress rehearsal of Leonard Slatkin and the National Symphony Orchestra playing Mason Bates's (who is roughly my age, slightly older, though, slightly older) Liquid Interface, which is an ambitious commission for Slatkin; it features a very difficult interaction between the orchestra's tricky passages and the live electronics (which Bates controls). So: that's what I would consider, in a rough sense, to be somebody championing new music and really owning the fact of a new piece: put it on a truck and bring it to Carnegie Hall, don't hide it in that weird room between La Mer and the Emperor concerto.
Now, I would take a bullet for Mason, and I adore his music and particularly Liquid Interface,
I am always suspicious when an orchestra commissions one new piece a season and it's some facacta Michael Torke + Tap Dancing situation like how Detroit did that one time. Michael Torke: knows how to write a piece for orchestra. The Detroit Symphony: needs some new orchestra music that it can claim for its own. More people are going to be embarrassed than excited about the tap dancing thing. Not to put words up in MT's mouth, but if Michael Torke srsly wanted to do a piece with tap dancer, I'm sure he'd figure it out without a major symphony's help. (Did that piece ever even end up happening?) This is not to say, however, that we (here, meaning composers in general) don't love a funny commission; I've been the happy recipient of many strange collaborative commissions. I guess my point is that I wouldn't call those things "adventurous" as much as "random" in the literal sense of the world: a blip, a way to spend (or make) some money and have a nice evening.
The times I have been the most honored by a commission have been when an ensemble -
Adventurous commissioning is simple, ungimmicky programming of new works: a new violin concerto to join the pantheon, a new symphony, a new clarinet quintet. I feel like people in my generation deserve to be able to have it both ways: we should be able to be composer-performers, scrappily organizing concerts with our friends, and also, larger organizations should be actively involved in commissioning larger - and lasting - works. The stodginess and/or petulance of the 60's happily behind us, pursuing alternate means of getting our work heard is just that: an alternate route, a way to drive every other day to avoid the monotony of our daily commute. My concern, though, is that there is a lot of "adventurous" institutional programming that is actually just a mess, in a sort of "what happens in Vegas stays in Vegas" type way. One night of synthesized bass and a thumping beat does not an adventurous season make. Just as an exciting life is one that happens every day, not just on vacation, an adventurous season is one that contains a commitment to always buying that unknown vegetable, and learning how to cook it as a technique, not just as a way to spice up supper. One-offs are fun, but the adventure soon comes to an end.
To hear more from Nico Muhly, visit his blog.
To learn more about NPAC sessions such as "Adventurous Programming: Making New Music the Main Course", visit the website.
Continue reading Repertoire Building Is The Only Adventure.
About
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About this blog From April 1 through June 9, 2008, weekly entries were posted here by some of the performing arts community's top bloggers. This 10-week intensive series served as a unique forum for digital debate and brainstorming, and both the entries and comments were archived for use at the live NPAC sessions in June. Participants:
Jaime Green - Surplus
Nico Muhly
Kristin Sloan - The Winger
Jason Grote
Jeffrey Kahane
Eva Yaa Asantewaa - InfiniteBody
Greg Sandow
Hilary Hahn
Tim Mangan, Paul Hodgins, Richard Chang - The Arts Blog
Andrew Taylor - The Artful Manager
During the convention, June 10 through June 14, 2008, attendees from across art forms and job functions reported on their conference experiences. Participants:
Amanda Ameer - web manager, NPAC
Sarah Baird - media and public relations executive, Boosey & Hawkes
Joseph Clifford - outreach and education manager, Dartmouth College Hopkins Center for the Arts
Lawrence Edelson - producing artistic director, American Lyric Theater
James Egelhofer - artist manager, IMG Artists
Jaime Green - literary associate, MCC Theatre
James Holt - composer; membership and marketing associate, League of American Orchestras
Michelle Mierz - executive director, LA Contemporary Dance Company
Mark Pemberton - director, Association of British Orchestras
Mister MOJO - star, MOJO & The Bayou Gypsies
Sydney Skybetter - artistic director, Skybetter and Associates
Mark Valdez - national coordinator, The Network of Ensemble Theaters
Amy Vashaw - audience & program development director, Center for the Performing Arts at Penn State
Scott Walters - professor, University of North Carolina at Asheville
Zack Winokur - student, The Juilliard School
Megan Young - artistic services manager, OPERA America
Please note: the views expressed in this blog are those of the independent contributors and participants, not the National Performing Arts Convention or the organizations they represent. more
NPAC - the National Performing Arts Convention - took place in Denver, Colorado on June 10-14, 2008. "Taking Action Together," NPAC sought to lay the foundation for future cross-disciplinary collaborations, cooperative programs and effective advocacy. Formed by 30 distinct performing arts service organizations demonstrating a new maturity and uniting as one a sector, the convention was dedicated to enriching national life and strengthening performing arts communities across the country. more
Contact us
more
About this blog From April 1 through June 9, 2008, weekly entries were posted here by some of the performing arts community's top bloggers. This 10-week intensive series served as a unique forum for digital debate and brainstorming, and both the entries and comments were archived for use at the live NPAC sessions in June. Participants:
Jaime Green - Surplus
Nico Muhly
Kristin Sloan - The Winger
Jason Grote
Jeffrey Kahane
Eva Yaa Asantewaa - InfiniteBody
Greg Sandow
Hilary Hahn
Tim Mangan, Paul Hodgins, Richard Chang - The Arts Blog
Andrew Taylor - The Artful Manager
During the convention, June 10 through June 14, 2008, attendees from across art forms and job functions reported on their conference experiences. Participants:
Amanda Ameer - web manager, NPAC
Sarah Baird - media and public relations executive, Boosey & Hawkes
Joseph Clifford - outreach and education manager, Dartmouth College Hopkins Center for the Arts
Lawrence Edelson - producing artistic director, American Lyric Theater
James Egelhofer - artist manager, IMG Artists
Jaime Green - literary associate, MCC Theatre
James Holt - composer; membership and marketing associate, League of American Orchestras
Michelle Mierz - executive director, LA Contemporary Dance Company
Mark Pemberton - director, Association of British Orchestras
Mister MOJO - star, MOJO & The Bayou Gypsies
Sydney Skybetter - artistic director, Skybetter and Associates
Mark Valdez - national coordinator, The Network of Ensemble Theaters
Amy Vashaw - audience & program development director, Center for the Performing Arts at Penn State
Scott Walters - professor, University of North Carolina at Asheville
Zack Winokur - student, The Juilliard School
Megan Young - artistic services manager, OPERA America
Please note: the views expressed in this blog are those of the independent contributors and participants, not the National Performing Arts Convention or the organizations they represent. more
NPAC - the National Performing Arts Convention - took place in Denver, Colorado on June 10-14, 2008. "Taking Action Together," NPAC sought to lay the foundation for future cross-disciplinary collaborations, cooperative programs and effective advocacy. Formed by 30 distinct performing arts service organizations demonstrating a new maturity and uniting as one a sector, the convention was dedicated to enriching national life and strengthening performing arts communities across the country. more
Contact us
more
Blogroll
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Terry Teachout on the arts in New York City
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Andrew Taylor on the business of arts & culture
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rock culture approximately
rock culture approximately
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Laura Collins-Hughes on arts, culture and coverage
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Richard Kessler on arts education
diacritical
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Douglas McLennan's blog
Dog Days
Dalouge Smith advocates for the Arts
Dalouge Smith advocates for the Arts
Flyover
Art from the American Outback
Art from the American Outback
Life's a Pitch
For immediate release: the arts are marketable
For immediate release: the arts are marketable
Mind the Gap
No genre is the new genre
No genre is the new genre
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David Jays on theatre and dance
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Paul Levy measures the Angles
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Judith H. Dobrzynski on Culture
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John Rockwell on the arts
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Jan Herman - arts, media & culture with 'tude
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Apollinaire Scherr talks about dance
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Tobi Tobias on dance et al...
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Howard Mandel's freelance Urban Improvisation
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Focus on New Orleans. Jazz and Other Sounds
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Doug Ramsey on Jazz and other matters...
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Jeff Weinstein's Cultural Mixology
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Martha Bayles on Film...
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Fresh ideas on building arts communities
The Future of Classical Music?
Greg Sandow performs a book-in-progress
Greg Sandow performs a book-in-progress
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Exploring Orchestras w/ Henry Fogel
Exploring Orchestras w/ Henry Fogel
Overflow
Harvey Sachs on music, and various digressions
Harvey Sachs on music, and various digressions
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Bruce Brubaker on all things Piano
Bruce Brubaker on all things Piano
PostClassic
Kyle Gann on music after the fact
Kyle Gann on music after the fact
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Greg Sandow on the future of Classical Music
Greg Sandow on the future of Classical Music
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Norman Lebrecht on Shifting Sound Worlds
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Jerome Weeks on Books
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Scott McLemee on books, ideas & trash-culture ephemera
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Wendy Rosenfield: covering drama, onstage and off
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Chloe Veltman on how culture will save the world
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Public Art, Public Space
Another Bouncing Ball
Regina Hackett takes her Art To Go
Regina Hackett takes her Art To Go
Artopia
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John Perreault's art diary
CultureGrrl
Lee Rosenbaum's Cultural Commentary
Lee Rosenbaum's Cultural Commentary
Modern Art Notes
Tyler Green's modern & contemporary art blog
Tyler Green's modern & contemporary art blog


Recent Comments
Keith Erickson commented on Repertoire Building Is The Only Adventure: I thank Mr. Johnson for his comment. I guess we both misunderstood one other! I apolo...
Dan Johnson commented on Repertoire Building Is The Only Adventure: I think Mr. Erickson has misunderstood me. The point wasn't about difficulty—Michael...
Keith Erickson commented on Repertoire Building Is The Only Adventure: I am intrigued to see that my comments (other than my ungenerous -- is it really mean...
Dan Johnson commented on Repertoire Building Is The Only Adventure: Let me echo Nico's "Wow"—it's refreshing to see so many people responding so thoughtf...
Nico Muhly commented on Repertoire Building Is The Only Adventure: Wow! I go to bed and wake up and all these people have commented. Excellent. I jus...
Cranky Orchestra Manager commented on Repertoire Building Is The Only Adventure: I guess my post should be called "who says it its broken?" Reading the original post...
Margaret commented on Repertoire Building Is The Only Adventure: Why don't we stop distinguishing between new music and music? Isn't it better to prog...
Professional Composer in LA commented on Repertoire Building Is The Only Adventure: Nico's making points that are already conventional wisdom in the orchestral music bus...
Judd commented on Repertoire Building Is The Only Adventure: These are really excellent points Nico is making here. With gimmicks, you have a situ...