Monday, June 29, 2009

Review: Centenary Festival Choir & Orchestra

Stanley M. Baker conducting
June 28, Centenary United Methodist Church, Richmond

Where does Renaissance music end and baroque music begin? The normally cited date is 1600; but a lot of 17th-century music (and some from the 18th century) retains the old dance forms and strophic-song structure, as well as using the instruments, at play in the Renaissance. That stylistic hybrid quality resonated through the 22nd annual installment of Centenary Classics, Richmond’s summer showcase of baroque choral and instrumental music.

These concerts focus on a single composer or school of composition. This year, it was Franz Biber (1644-1704), the Bohemian best-known as a violin virtuoso (one of the first to emerge north of Italy), heard in his less-familiar role as a composer of church music in the service of the archbishop of Salzburg. Stanley M. Baker led a chamber chorus and orchestra of period strings and brass in three of Biber’s Psalm settings and a larger ensemble of two dozen voices in Biber’s "Missa Sancti Henrici."

Alongside Biber’s liturgical works, the instrumental ensemble played pieces by the Austrian Johann Heinrich Schmelzer (1623-80) and the Bohemians Johann Kuhnau (1660-1722) and Pavel Josef Vejvanovský (c. 1630-93).

The Biber Mass, introduced in 1697 at the investiture of his daughter as a nun, is for the most part a straightforward setting of Catholic liturgy. Its most striking sections are celebratory, as in the Gloria, and the Credo's recounting of the Passion of Christ, garnished with representational or evocative effects. Baker’s chorus, drawn from the choir of Centenary United Methodist Church with some guest singers, projected the generally upbeat tone of the piece, with fine solo contributions from soprano Brittany Davis and bass John C. Ford Jr.

Diction, however, was rather muddy, both in the Mass and in Biber’s settings of "Dixit Dominus" (Psalm 110), "Laudate, pueri, Dominum" (Psalm 113) and "Laetatus sum" (Psalm 122).

The instrumental ensemble, led by violinist Daniel Boothe, was at its most sonorous and expressive in Schmelzer’s "Musical Swordfight," a crossbreeding of the representational "battle music" popular in the 17th century and the dance suite that would evolve in the hands of later composers such as Bach and Telemann. Framing the Schmelzer were the brief ceremonial sonata from Kuhnau’s cantata "Wenn ihr fröhlich seid an euren Festen" ("On the day of your gladness also, and at your appointed feasts") and Vejvanovský’s Sonata à 10, showing off the ensemble’s early trumpets and sackbuts (antique trombones) to excellent effect.

Wednesday, June 24, 2009

Prehistoric music


Archaeologists at Tübingen University unveil a 35,000-year-old flute made of bird bone, the oldest instrument yet found in Europe, from a site near Ulm in southwestern Germany. John Noble Wilford reports in The New York Times:

http://www.nytimes.com/2009/06/25/science/25flute.html?hp

Philharmonic history online


The New York Philharmonic has launched an online archive listing concerts, artists and programming back to its founding in 1842:

http://history.nyphil.org/nypwcpub/dbweb.asp?ac=a1

The archive lists five Richmond engagements, conducted by Josef Stransky (March 12, 1913), Willem Mengelberg (Jan. 5, 1928), Leopold Stokowski (April 16, 1947) and Leonard Bernstein (April 18, 1961, when Bernstein played Ravel's Piano Concerto in G major, and Sept. 23, 1961, when Eileen Farrell sang Wagner's "Wesendonck Lieder").

Other Virginia appearances: One date in Norfolk (Stokowski conducting, April 15, 1947); three in Roanoke (Stransky, May 20, 1916; Bruno Walter, April 26, 1949; Dmitri Mitropoulos, April 10, 1954); and nine at Wolf Trap in Northern Virginia (Erich Leinsdorf, Aug. 19 and 20, 1972; Pierre Boulez, Aug. 22 and 23, 1975; Julius Rudel, Aug. 28, 1977; Zubin Mehta, Aug. 19 and 20, 1981, and Aug. 22 and 23, 1990).

Tuesday, June 23, 2009

Biber time


Centenary Classics, the summer showcase of baroque music at Richmond's Centenary United Methodist Church, this year focuses on the 17th-century Bohemian composer Franz Biber. A preview, in print in Style Weekly, online at:

http://www.styleweekly.com/ME2/Audiences/dirmod.asp?sid=&nm=&type=Publishing&mod=Publications%3A%3AArticle&mid=8F3A7027421841978F18BE895F87F791&tier=4&id=B92C139E6D174BB7B5248C70FA46E3C5&AudID=C3A7C1EDE4E54E24AF4637F9AAFFD1B6

Tuesday, June 16, 2009

Richmond Symphony runs deficit


The Richmond Symphony projects a deficit of $146,706 on an operating budget of $4.75 million in the fiscal year ending June 30, the orchestra’s board was told at its annual meeting. A shortfall of about $200,000 in expected revenues, partially offset by savings of about $34,000 in projected expenses, was cited in the orchestra’s end-of-the-year financial roundup.

The symphony joins a long list of orchestras reporting recession-driven deficits this year. Most are running deficits equal to 5 to 10 percent of their operating budgets, said David Fisk, the symphony’s executive director. Richmond’s shortfall is about 5 percent.

Revenues dropped 5 percent from 2007-08, when the symphony reported a $21,050 surplus. The orchestra reported declines in both earned and contributed income in 2008-09.

"Through careful and constant monitoring of our financial progress, we have weathered this year of economic downturn with appropriate measures," Fisk said in a prepared statement. He added that despite the deficit, the orchestra is in "a strong position" for its return this fall to the Carpenter Theatre in the downtown Richmond CenterStage complex following five seasons of performing in temporary venues.

The symphony also announced a gift of $500,000 from the Pauley Family Foundation, the fourth gift at that level to its endowment fund in the past three years. The endowment currently is valued at about $7.5 million, down from a value of $9.3 million at this time last year. The orchestra is preparing to launch the public phase of fund-raising to enlarge the endowment, whose returns currently provide about 16 percent of the orchestra’s total revenue.

Other shares of contributions, which account for three-quarters of the symphony’s income, are 31 percent from individuals, 7 percent from businesses, 12 percent from corporate concert and series sponsorships, and 12 percent from governments and public agencies, with the balance coming primarily from grants by foundations.

Ticket sales for the 2008-09 season were $315,581 from subscriptions, $218,044 from single-ticket purchases and $94,000 from gala and special events.

Joe Murillo, client services vice president and associate general counsel of Altria Group, Inc. (sponsor of the symphony's Masterworks series) was elected as the new president of the symphony board. He succeeds Marcia Thalhimer, completing her second term as president in the past 10 years.

Arts education stuck in neutral?


The U.S. Department of Education's National Assessment of Educational Progress in Arts finds that arts and music education in the nation's schools is about where it was a decade ago. (The survey was conducted before the recent wave of recession-driven retrenchments in school budgets.)

The survey, whose results may be questionable because of the small number of students sampled, found that "in music and art, white and Asian students scored higher, on average, than African-American and Hispanic students, girls outscored boys, and private schools outperformed public ones," Sam Dillon reports in The New York Times:

http://www.nytimes.com/2009/06/16/education/16scores.html?_r=1&ref=music

Thursday, June 11, 2009

Battle of the bands


British music lovers, and possibly some innocent bystanders, are whiling away the summer observing supporters of the Royal Liverpool Philharmonic challenge the Hallé Orchestra's status as the oldest in Britain. The German émigré Charles Hallé founded the Manchester orchestra that bears his name in 1858. Liverpudlians claim their band is descended from a philharmonic society that began presenting concerts by a professional orchestra in 1853.

BBC Music Magazine quotes John Summers, chief executive of the Hallé, as calling Liverpool's claim "bollocks." (Don't you love it when highbrows talk dirty?):

www.bbcmusicmagazine.com/news/battle-be-named-britain’s-oldest-orchestra