Tuesday, January 19, 2010

Why the most famous can't be the best

See more about MusicaNova Orchestra of Scottsdale at
www.MusicaNovaAz.org



So far in this blog I have steered clear of controversial positions, but here I will go out on limb: being the most famous musician of a certain class-say, conductor, pianist, cellist, tenor-not only means you may not be the best, it guarantees that you will not be. The very act of media edification of you will make it impossible for you.

Becoming famous involves a lot more than being good-there is shrewd and lucky publicity, personality, charisma, individualism and much else. And these are the things-the very things that help make you more famous-that ultimately make it so difficult to keep up the quality of your work. The conflict between continuing to grow and change artistically and reinforcing what made you famous in the first place creates an unbearable tension.The fame itself becomes part of your identity as an artist. And inevitably, you wonder why you are the anointed one. And once you think you have it figured out, then you are in real trouble. That is why so many famous performers slide into self parody(Pavorotti)or find themselves doing odd things to keep themselves interested that perhaps are not the best things to share with the world (YoYo Ma trying to play bluegrass). They are inhibited artistically by their fame, and I am pretty sure that this inhibition is part of being famous. The great artists of the second tier have a chance to continue to grow without having to contend with this conflict, to the benefit of their art.

I think anyone who thinks about it for a minute knows that Lang Lang is not a "better" pianist than Piotr Anderszewski and that YoYo is not "better" than Mischa Maisky. The simple truth is that there are many performers in the world on an exalted level, and many of the best are unknown to us (one of the great things about YouTube is our ability to find great artists we would never know about otherwise).

In this regard, often the best performances by the most exalted artists come from the period before their greatest fame. I have heard an exquisite Boheme with Pavarotti that he did at La Scala with Kleiber in 1979, in which he sings beautifully and without the cliches that we associate with him. Horowitz's 1930's recordings are astonishing, and astonishingly beautiful; and pre-NBC Toscanini includes some real gems that are far less grimly hard driven than the pretty unlistenable recordings from his last years.

In the hopes of promoting some truly unfamous talent, google the following: the pianists Hubert Harry, Mindru Katz and Ignace Tiegermann. And then buy or download the recordings. Each of them are great artists, equal of anyone who ever played the piano, but they are totally unknown. How many more like them lurk out there?

Saturday, January 2, 2010

"Good for a kid?"-or just good?

See more about MusicaNova Orchestra of Scottsdale at
www.MusicaNovaAz.org


Doing music by a child has some interesting factors, and it has me thinking about how we perceive a piece of music. Graham's piece is very interesting in that it is inconceivable that an adult could write it, and yet it is full of very sophisticated-read adult-things. But the pictures it conjures up are strictly from a child's imagination, and the whole idea of this fictional world he created-so like a real world and so not-is absolutely part of a child's brain.

The adult part is that he really hears the sounds of the orchestra very well and he knows what each instrument sounds like in each range-in this way he is better than most adults, including some very famous composers. He also seems to know the rules of orchestration, which he figured out from copying out scores and sitting in the middle of the orchestra. It is pretty surprising how well he figured this out, given that it seems to be very hard to learn for many people. And the work is structured very well, and in a way that we adults all understand. When the back eyewall of the hurricane hits he uses the figuration from the description of the front eyewall in retrograde motion, a perfect way to indicate that the winds are now coming from the other direction!

But the story, the word pictures and even the musical choices-sophisticated as they are-are so bound to a child's world view that I simply cannot imagine any adult writing anything like this. So in a way saying "it is a good piece for a kid" is kind of like saying a Schubert Symphony is a "good piece for a Viennese"-only a kid could have written Hurricane Abigale, just as only an Viennese of his time and place could have written a Schubert Symphony.

And that is really cool!

Buy tickets for this concert at Scottsdale Center Box Office. Tickets for the fundraising event on Friday January 8th where Graham will talk about his piece are available at
www.MusicaNovaAz.org
.