Tuesday, April 26, 2011

Shteinberg moves on


Dmitri Shteinberg, the Russian-born pianist who has been coordinator of Virginia Commonwealth University’s piano program, is leaving VCU to join the faculty of UNC School of the Arts in Winston-Salem, NC.

Shteinberg, who earned degrees from the Gnessin Special School of Music in Moscow and Manhattan School of Music in New York, has been active internationally and in this region as a recitalist, accompanist and orchestral soloist, performing in recent seasons with the Richmond Symphony and Charlottesville & University Symphony. He also serves on the faculty of the Green Mountain Chamber Music Festival in Burlington, VT.

He takes up his new post in Winston-Salem in the fall.

Monday, April 25, 2011

Stravinsky for Freedom House


A cast of present and former Richmond Symphony musicians and guests will perform Stravinsky’s “The Soldier’s Tale” in a concert benefitting Freedom House at 7 p.m. May 2 in Perkinson Recital Hall, North Court, on the Westhampton campus of the University of Richmond.

Performers include violinist Karen Johnson, former concertmaster of the symphony; double-bassist Fred Dole; clarinetist Ralph Skiano; bassoonist Sue Heineman; cornet player Matthew Harding; trombonist Samuel Barlow; percussionist Jim Jacobson; and narrator Nick Anderson. Gustav Highstein, the symphony’s principal oboist, will conduct.

Suggested donation is $7. Proceeds will support Freedom House, which provides services to Richmond’s homeless.

For more information, call (540) 223-3003 or e-mail betweenordandaard@yahoo.com

Audubon Quartet disbanding


The Audubon Quartet, which barely survived a wrongful termination lawsuit by its former first violinist, has decided to disband, Mike Allen of The Roanoke Times reports:

 http://www.roanoke.com/extra/arts//wb/284234

Rachmaninoff on recording, radio


A fascinating article by Sergei Rachmaninoff, published in 1931 in Gramophone magazine, in which the composer-pianist heartily endorses recordings but dismisses radio performances as “pale ghosts of music”:

http://www.gramophone.co.uk/features/focus/the-most-significant-of-modern-musical-inventions

The article was written in the toddlerhood, if not infancy, of both radio and recording. Electrical recording supplanted the old acoustical process in the mid-1920s; a few years earlier, regular radio broadcasts had begun in the U.S. and Britain. (The first commercial radio station in this country, KDKA in Pittsburgh, signed on in 1920; the BBC was founded in 1922.)

If we’re to trust Rachmaninoff’s ears – as keen as any at the time, surely – the audio quality of radio lagged far behind that of recordings in the 1930s. Contemporaneous evidence is hard to find: We can hear many transcriptions of broadcasts from the period, but those document what went out from radio studios, not what came in to people’s homes on their radios. Very few musical performances recorded at the receiving end of radio signals survive from the 1930s. A sonically adequate home recording of broadcast music wasn’t really possible until tape recorders hit the market in the 1950s.

In my own listening experience, from the 1950s onward, I would say that radio did not begin to catch up with recordings until FM stereo became widespread in the 1970s. Parity in audio quality was not achieved until the arrival of digital radio early in this century.

The crux of Rachmaninoff’s argument was that recordings are lasting documents of performances that can be perfected through corrective retakes. (By this reasoning, recordings differ from live performances as writing differs from speech.) Broadcasts are as transient as other live performances, but denatured because listeners are physically separated from performers.

The article, unfortunately, does not address filmed performances of music, which began to appear in the late 1920s. Would Rachmaninoff have lauded the documentary values of music video, or considered it unnatural?

Saturday, April 23, 2011

Choral director out


The Virginia Chorale of Hampton Roads has fired Scott Williamson, who was about to complete his third season as its artistic director, in an apparent dispute over management authority, Teresa Annas reports in The Virginian-Pilot (Norfolk):

http://hamptonroads.com/2011/04/virginia-chorale-ousts-artistic-director

Williamson remains general and artistic director of Opera Roanoke.

Tuesday, April 19, 2011

Roanoke reaches out


The Roanoke Symphony launches an international piano competition, plans concerts in non-traditional venues, expands its pops series and commissions a bluegrass mandolin concerto. Mike Allen of The Roanoke Times reports on the orchestra's efforts to broaden its audience:

http://www.roanoke.com/news/roanoke/wb/283799

Avant-garde fin de siècle?


“No matter what path of experimentation a new composer might attempt to clear, it has been previously explored at great length — generally by composers several generations removed. Microtonality? Partch. Noise-based compositions? Varèse. Electronic sounds that are impossible to create through acoustic means? Been doing that too, for nearly 100 years. Works that assault the audience or involve self-mutilation? Done and done. Silent musical compositions? Done. . . . I believe that our generation's contributions will be incremental rather than revolutionary. We are living in an era of consolidation,” David Smooke writes in a NewMusicBox posting:

http://www.newmusicbox.org/chatter/chatter.nmbx?id=6889

A century ago, present- and future-tense composers were convinced that there was nothing original left to say within bounds of traditional tonality. Hmm.