Last week I showed a website sponsored by the Amsterdamse Hogeschool voor de Kunsten (Amsterdam School for the Arts) and the Conservatorium van Amsterdam called BeroepKunstenaar. This has many great resources about getting paid, teaching, media, marketing, and taxes. Unfortunately, most of the specific legal information is unique to the Netherlands, but I believe there is still a lot to be learned from this site.
University of Redlands Composition Studio Blog
Friday, January 27, 2012
Dutch Music Business Website
Last week I showed a website sponsored by the Amsterdamse Hogeschool voor de Kunsten (Amsterdam School for the Arts) and the Conservatorium van Amsterdam called BeroepKunstenaar. This has many great resources about getting paid, teaching, media, marketing, and taxes. Unfortunately, most of the specific legal information is unique to the Netherlands, but I believe there is still a lot to be learned from this site.
Friday, August 19, 2011
Calling All Artists: Where do you like to write/create/compose?
Over the past year, I have learned to push myself to be a much more productive composer (with quite a long way to go, I must say–I am quite a procrastinator). Even so, “writer’s block” is often that #1 universal excuse to fall back on to not get work done. It evokes a sense of pity: the writer/poet/songwriter/composer/(fill in the blank here) who, as a slave to his or her own artistic language, can’t be set free, and is alone in a dimly-lit room, scribbling desperate fragments of illusive masterpieces, only to later condemn them as inferior and cast them, sailing, into a nearby brimming wastebasket, teeming with irredeemable rejects of the like.
Like many, I admit to this crippling behavior, and I understand that artists are human and can’t always be expected to produce like factories while maintaining quality and integrity with their work. However, there are many strategies to get the ball rolling and simply do what needs to be done. For me, one of these strategies is changing my work environment.
Click here for the full article and the polls.
Happy composing!
Sakari
Thursday, July 14, 2011
My New Website
Thanks, and have a great summer!
-Sakari
Friday, April 22, 2011
Concert Review - April 5, 2011 Disney Concert Hall
This concert was part of a series featuring Thomas Ades. Two of his compositions were played, two arrangements were played, and he conducted the ensembles as well. The first piece (Powder on her Face) was a mixed bag of styles. Ades blended different elements into a solo piano performance that at times seemed improvised, at times seemed very strict and exacting. The Ligeti pieces featured massive amounts of percussion (played by three percussionists) and a mezzo-soprano. A series of short, playful pieces featuring gongs, marimbas, pitched and un-pitched metallophones, as well as the mezzo singing in multiple languages, and at times gibberish.
The arrangements of Nancarrow’s Studies for player piano were by far my favorite pieces of the night. It was quite amazing to watch two players perform these complex pieces. I imagine what a feat it must have been to arrange them, transcribing from a player piano roll into notation. There was also a video playing, which I found only to detract from the performance onstage.
Next was a premiere of a Coll piece (who, as Kyle pointed out is younger than me). It sounded as if the performers were playing 80 different Frank Zappa riffs, from different points in his career, all at once. It made my head want to explode. The concert finished up with another piece by Ades, which he conducted. This piece also contained non-traditional percussion (including a rock), and was rhythmically complex.
Kronos Quartet Concert Review
Kronos Quartet April 6, 2011; Segerstrom Concert Hall
Aheym – Bryce Dessner
Death to Kosmische – Nicole Lizee
WTC 9/11 – Steve Reich
Harp and Altar – Missy Mazzoli
Flow – Laurie Anderson
…hold me, neighbor, in this storm – Aleksandra Vrebalov
I try and see Kronos Quartet when they come to town. This concert featured pieces that were written for (or, in the case of Flow, arranged for) the quartet. Many of the pieces featured electronics. In some instances this was a tape rolling in the background, other times ribbon-controlled instruments were used. Sometimes this was a matter of good concept, poor execution. The Reich piece was a treat. WTC 9/11 was written for a triple quartet and tape with pre-recorded voices. It played by Kronos against a recording of Kronos to make up the other two quartets. The voices were all sampled from NORAD or FDNY recordings from the trade center attacks, along with some interviews. The piece begins and ends with the violins doubling a repeated F (the pitch your land line phones give when left off the hook). Reich’s voice tape concentrated on the speakers final vowel or consonant, which made for a very rich, rhythmically complex wall of sound for Kronos to play with. The Laurie Anderson arrangement started out very soft and still, slowly growing to a point when I thought it was going to take off, but ended instead, which was a disappointment not because of the material played, but because it ended so soon. Think of a still pool of water, with someone dropping rocks in it, slowly at first so each ripple spread out. More rocks get dropped and the ripples grow faster and stronger, you are waiting for the big splash that happens when a big rock is thrown into the pool. But that rock is never thrown, instead you realize that you friend who was throwing rocks is no longer beside you and is out of sight.
Thursday, April 21, 2011
Pacific Chorale: Daughter of Light
This concert featured the ‘Plorate filii Israel’ chorus from Giacomo Carissimi’s Jephte (1648), the choral version of David’s Lang’s The Little Match Girl Passion (2007), and the 1893 version of Gabriel Faure’s Requiem in D minor, Op. 48.
I admit that I had high hopes for this program, and those hopes were not satisfied by the end. Soprano Zanaida Robles was listed on the headline of the program, so I anticipated that she would play a greater role than what she actually did. First, I expected the Jephte excerpt to include more than just the final chorus; it is preceded by a very lovely soprano solo, so I initially assumed the Pacific Chorale would include that with Robles (I was mistaken). She did not have a solo in the Lang piece, either, so it was a little odd for her to return to the stage for an “encore” before the intermission, performing a very classically-styled rendition of the spiritual Sometimes I Feel Like a Motherless Child. (I love this spiritual, and enjoyed a very different performance of it by a former Redlands student much more than I did Robles’ classical soprano version.)
I didn’t mind this inserted performance once. I questioned the reasoning behind the programming, however, when Robles returned after her one-movement solo in the Faure Requiem to sing the same song again. Double encore of the same piece? I’ve never experienced that, and it gave me a very weird sense of déjà vu.
That strangeness aside, I wasn’t as pleased with the Lang passion as I thought I would be. The John Alexander Singers, a 24-voice professional chamber choir, performed a “staged” version of The Little Match Girl Passion. I appreciated their dedication to memorizing the entire work, but the staging left much to be desired. The movements were somewhat expressive but mostly just exaggerated gestures, and it was distracting when the performers were not completely synchronized.
Lang’s transformation of The Little Match Girl story into a Passion was interesting, and I appreciated the juxtaposition of texts. He had effective musical ideas too, such as the inclusion of several percussion instruments (bass drum, handbells, brake drum, glockenspiel, crotales, and sleighbells), a text-setting style that repeated syllables over and over for a “shivering” effect in several sections (like “When it is time for me to go”), and a very lovely canon that blurred between dissonance and consonance (“Have mercy, my God”). The latter was my favorite moment of the entire piece. My favorite use of the percussion was an interjection of solo brake drum that was amplified to project the unusual scraping/rubbing effect on its surface. The “shivering” vocal technique was interesting and evocative at first, but I would have preferred it to happen only at the beginning of phrases rather than through the entirety of the phrases. I liked the overall material of the work as well, but ultimately the repetition of different sections throughout the piece (to new text) was too minimal and redundant for my personal taste. I would have appreciated a greater depth of variety and development.
LA Opera: The Turn of the Screw
Benjamin Britten’s opera The Turn of the Screw (1954), based on the novella of the same title by Henry James, is pretty awesome of its own accord, regardless of the performance it receives. The LA Opera’s rendition during the March 2011 series demonstrated just how much more awesome a successful performance can be, particularly for a first-time listener/viewer. I had listened and read through about half of the score’s piano reduction sometime last year, but never seen the opera until this production.
I don’t want to give too much of the plot away because I think it is worth it for ALL of you to check out at some point, but it centers around a governess who travels to an estate far removed from the rest of society to take care of two children, Flora and Miles. The governess begins to notice an unsettling mystery surrounding the departed manservant, Peter Quint, and the former governess, Miss Jessel. Britten’s version of the original story is particularly effective because he does not cast it as specifically a ghost story or a psychological story; instead, he leaves the final interpretation to the viewer.
The orchestra is chamber-sized, using a one-on-a-part string section, flute/alto flute/piccolo double, oboe/English horn double, clarinet/bass clarinet double, bassoon, horn, harp, percussion/timpani, and piano/celesta. I found myself really enjoying this size and instrumentation. It has potential for a variety of thin and full textures, without overpowering the six-member vocal cast. Recurring motives help unify the musical structure of the two-hour opera; a spiraling theme, for example, represents “the turn of the screw.” One of the most recognizable motives is Quint’s melismatic and haunting summons to young Miles. To me, Quint had the best vocal role, which is no surprise (Britten wrote many tenor roles for his partner, Peter Pears. I’m really only mentioning this so I have an excuse to show this adorable picture of the two of them on a beach in dress clothes.)
William Burden as Peter Quint and Michael Kepler Meo as Miles were my favorite performers, and Patricia Racette as the governess was also quite good. The ingenuity of the set and lighting design really sold this production to me, however. The centerpiece was a large panel of glass with a pane that could open and close for a door; the entire panel could be raised and tilted, serving at times as a wall of the house and other times as the surface of the lake (allowing during one very cool moment for Miss Jessel to rise from the lake through the “door”). The other more permanent piece of set was a large, gnarled tree. At times, certain characters like Miss Jessel or Quint would be contorted in the background as part of the silhouette of the tree, so that the audience would only really notice them when they emerged from the silhouette.
I encourage you to look into this opera more if you’re interested, or Britten’s other fantastic operas! Here are some pictures from the LA Opera production, and a video with excerpts of music.
Wednesday, April 20, 2011
Pure Awesomeness...
Tuesday, April 19, 2011
Ensemble Green Concert Review
Ensemble Green: Saturday, March 5, 2011
The atmosphere of this concert was much different from previous new music concerts that I had been to: simplistic lighting instead of theatrical technology, a modest audience, and a stage that encouraged an intimate, human connection with the listeners. Even the style of the program and its notes were quite modest and personal, but highly effective. The notes aimed to connect the audience with the mindset of the composer during the writing of the piece instead of over-elaborating on the compositional process of the music and all of its relatively insignificant details.
The programming of the concert centered itself around relatively small chamber ensembles, with the largest being a string quartet. Many of the pieces were solos, some of them unaccompanied. Unfortunately, this left me with the feeling that everything was too thin texturally—I was looking for at least one or two relatively large, dense works maximizing the timbral color of the ensemble. Perhaps such programming would have been too overbearing for the atmosphere that Ensemble Green intended to create for the evening—they might have been aiming for a recital-like environment.
The opening piece, Nick Norton’s “Gare D’Arras” was a trio for violin, clarinet, and cello. Although I appreciated its experimentation with color (i.e. slap pizzicato, tapping/slapping the instruments), I feel that a lot of its coloring effects could have been more elaborately used and woven into the framework of the piece. Striking the body of the stringed instruments was a bit too unexpected at the point it arrived in the piece, and for me, it was hard to take the completely percussive section of the piece seriously in spite of it being a valid musical technique. (This is partly because of my unwanted association between clapping/stomping/etc. and entertaining young string orchestras with their repertoire.) In listening to the piece, I wanted the piece to “prove” that the percussion was necessary at that point.
One of the interior pieces of the program, “Impermanent Things,” for cello and piano, functioned well as a cinematic piece, although that was most likely not Elizabeth Alexander’s intention. In listening to the piece, I thought that its melodic content was a bit overemphasized while its harmonic content was relatively thin. However, Alexander succeeded in developing this piece into a meditation as she said it would: the nearly hypnotic repetition of the intervals in the motif as well as the chords in the harmony created a useful backdrop for the listener him or herself to meditate, not the just the music itself.