Guest Blogger's blog

Perpetual Evolution

Submitted by Guest Blogger on Mon, 10/13/2008 - 2:26pm.

Today's guest blog is written by Stefan Lano who will conduct the Chicago Sinfonietta during the upcoming performances of the opera Margaret Garner at the Auditorium Theater beginning November 1st.

As we prepare for the production of Margaret Garner at the Auditorium Theater, I am pleased to share some thoughts with you about this important opera. 
 
Although, the commissioning venues of Michigan Opera Theater,  the Cincinnati Opera and The Opera Company of Philadelphia were most generous in alotting ample time and funding for workshops prior to the world premiere here in Detroit, both hindsight and the experience gained through repeated performances will inevitably color subsequent re- visitations to this score.  That this is now the case, became evident at our first rehearsals and run-throughs of the
opera this past week.   The goals and priorities set by production teams of most any opera, play  or film are pretty
much the same:  1.  tell the story clearly and with dramatic efficiency; 2.  entertain the public while, hopefully, simultaneously edifying them;  3.  try to achieve a sense of closure at evening's end such that the public feels that they have been 'taken somewhere.'

An example of point number 3, would be the ambience in the public when the reprise of the Aria is reached in Bach's Goldberg Variations; or the sense of tragic inevitability at the end of Verdi's Otello as opposed to the comic inevitabiltiy at the end of his Falstaff.  Point number 2 is a bit more subtle.  In some opera, such as Mozart's Magic Flute, the moral of a given scene is presented as an aside in the form of the ensembles  where the characters address the public more directly rather than each other.  In an opera such as Margaret Garner, the message of Toni Morrison is, as one would expect from a literary national treasure, inherent in her story.    Thus do we arrive at the conundrum articulated by Madeleine in the final scene of Richard Strauss'  Capriccio: do the words or the music take precedence?  

Rather than argue for one or the other, I have always found that if the notion of effective theater is well-served, then both words and music are better clarified.  In the case of this run of Margaret Garner, this notion dictates our modus operandi perhaps moreso than the first time around. The care taken in the preparation of any first performance  is, more often than not, devoted to 'getting it right', especially when composer and librettist may be present.  There is, however, more to theater than merely getting it right.  One can get the words and the notes right while missing their element of dramatic marriage.  From the resonance of the opening productions of Margaret Garner, it seems that most would agree that we 'got it right.'  

It bespeaks the vision of David Di Chiera in his mounting a reprise of Margaret Garner relatively soon after the premier.  His decision is now the more felicitous as we approach an historic Presidential election in which an African-American could well become our next President.  That our country evolve as to embrace change. 

In the spirit of opera being an art form in perpetual evolution, Kenny Leon and I intend to greatly expand upon that which we presented some years ago and are especially thrilled that we will do so in the architectural landmark of the Roosevelt Theatre about which one can only echo George Ballanchine's comment: 'Why don't they build them like this any more...?"  Amen.

All best wishes to you,

Stefan Lano

Click here to continue reading

Posted in


The 3% Solution

Submitted by Guest Blogger on Fri, 10/10/2008 - 2:20pm.

Today’s blog is submitted by musician and writer, Rashida Black. 

In his recent blog, Chicago Sinfonietta Executive Director Jim Hirsch wrote about his support of the mission of the Sphinx Organization.  Jim noted that Sphinx actively promotes diversity and inclusiveness in classical music and that it's "not our field's favorite topic... based on the national statistics that show less than 3% of orchestral musicians being people of color."  That's where I'd like to jump in to mention the many organizations, some of which are under the radar, that acknowledge the racial disparities and that are trying to do something about it. Like the Chicago Sinfonietta...

Just briefly, I'll point out youth programs like The Atlanta Symphony Orchestra's Talent Development Program , which prepared many of Sphinx's top performers over the past decade. There are larger organizations and festivals including the Soulful Symphony in Baltimore and the Gateways Music Festival that showcase Black and Latino talent and nurture their careers. There are web sites like Bill Zick's AfriClassical.com and my own, myrtlehart.org, which advocate, promote and educate the general public on the subject. I'm just scratching at the surface of who is working to raise that 3%. We live the 3%. We also acknowledge the fact that many who can do something about it simply don't want to do something about it, which is why we've stepped up to the plate.

So, in an effort to "do something about it," the Myrtle Hart Society is raising funds and awareness through its first benefit featuring The Boys Choir of Kenya to be held at 6:30 pm on Monday, October 13 at the G. R. N'Namdi Gallery located at 110 North Peoria, Chicago. 

Click here to continue reading

Posted in


Pandora Radio and the Music Genome Project

Submitted by Guest Blogger on Wed, 08/27/2008 - 9:11am.

Today's guest blog is written by Dileep Gangolli, Clarinetist with the Chicago Sinfonietta

While playing with my wife’s new computer, I stumbled on a desktop prompt for Pandora Radio which connected me to a world of streaming Classical music organized in a highly logical mathematical manner. 

I was immediately taken by the way the music is presented and delivered (at no cost to the listener).  I am anxious to get the thoughts of others on this method of classical music distribution.

After signing up for Pandora Radio, listeners are invited to create their “own radio stations” that feature their favorite composers.  I have stations that feature Mozart, Bach, Schubert, Mahler, and Coldplay among others. 

But what is so interesting is that the musical selections are not just of the selected composers but of those that compose in a similar manner either by being of the same time period or by being similar in aesthetic.  So Mozart could precede a neo-classical work by Stravinsky that would then be followed by a composition by Varese or Satie. This type of musical organization is a by-product of the Musical Genome Project. 

I “Googled” the MGP and this is what surfaced on Wikipedia:

Click here to continue reading

Posted in