March 31, 2008

Gustavo Dudamel Raises the Wow Factor

Dudamel Classical music as theater? Let the experts wax on about the brilliant performances conductor Gustavo Dudamel elicits from his band; from the point of view of an enthusiast, Dudamel is a thrilling showman, a dancer on the podium who the Los Angeles Philharmonic responding with multi-hued and multi-layered performances on Sunday afternoon. If the marriage works as well as it did on his first concerts since being named music director designate of the L.A Phil, we could be in for a very long honeymoon.
Dudamel takes over from Esa-Pekka Salonen in the fall of 2009 and his two-week stay at Walt Disney Concert Hall - works by Berlioz, Profkofiev and Salonen over the weekend, Ravel, Bartok and Debussy starting Thursday - instantly became one of the hottest tickets in town. "60 Minutes," the New York Times, L.A. Times and the New Yorker have let their jaws drop as they chronicle the 27-year-old Venezuelan's emergence; his Sunday show supported their enthusiasm.
He had the tall task of conducting Salonen's post-9/11 piece "Insomnia," a work given its darkness by odd-sounding Wagner tubas, nine basses bowed in unison and a vast assortment of percussion. As is his wont, Dudamel found the light inside the work and elicited a striking depth of field.
To some degree, it reminded these ears of the difference between John Adams conducting his own work and Salonen taking the podium to lead an Adams piece such as "Naive and Sentimental Music." Adams opts for precision, detail and control; Salonen produces a fuller canvas.
Dudamel took a back seat on Prokofiev's Piano Concerto No. 1, a showy sprint of a piece that Simon Trpceski blazed through. Within the context of setting a land speed record, Dudamel got the orchestra to play with a sense of give and take, laying back in some passages and creating tension in others. (The conductor won charm points by sitting on the podium during Trpceski's far gentler encore). 
After two works that required some deference on Dudamel's part, the conductor went wild on Berlioz's Symphonie fantastique, a 50 minute five-movement work from 1830. Working without a score, Dudamel through himself into Berlioz's self-portrait and provided a dizzying focal point for the work. He conducts with his entire body, assuming the hop-hop-hop of a child pretending to ride a horse, standing on his toes and reaching over his head to draw out delicate tones from woodwinds, and shimmying with his shoulders, hands by his side, during a particularly whimsical passage. He twists in a two-armed backhand motion to summon a powerful entry, waves the baton at knee height to goad some swirling bass tones and culls a few buoyant bars out of the violins just by moving his head left and right. 
This is what will keep audiences coming back for more. The orch responds to his enthusiasm and generates a sound that is playful and enticing; as animated as he gets, the playing never becomes  a series of curlicues. Can't wait to go back for more.    

 

February 18, 2008

The Conductor As a Rock Star: L.A.'s Choice Has New York Cooing

Salonen_dudamel "60 Minutes" was inordinately prideful at the conclusion of its piece on Venezuelan conductor Gustavo Dudamel. Reporter Bob Simon was adamant that the next time any viewer heard about Dudamel, they could say they saw him on the CBS Sunday night news program first.
Such is the pride that surrounds this conductor, a "rock star" of the classical field as "60 Minutes" called him. There's a rush to chronicle his rise to prominence over the last dozen years, but the Dudamel story has a distinct life of its own:  This is the rare story in which New York is tipping its hat to Los Angeles.
Mysteriously, the Gotham media is accepting - and glorifying - Dudamel at face value, praising his skill on the podium, his attitude and work ethic, and his suddenly cemented place in the classical music world. The zinger is that New York media is doing it without taking potshots at Los Angeles or how the city might strip him of his talents; the media is not even questioning the wisdom of giving a young conductor his first major orchestral job in the U.S.
Dudamel is 26 years old and conducts Venezuela's Simon Bolivar Youth Orchestra, which toured the U.S. in November, six months after being announced the L.A. Philharmonic's music director beginning in September 2009.  He replaces Esa-Pekka Salonen, the Finnish conductor and composer who elevated the status of L.A.'s orchestra through performance and programming, a famous world tour in the mid-90s and a glorious concert hall that opened in 2003. Salonen has become a landmark figure in Los Angeles and the classical world has followed his lead. He has matched the popular and the experimental like no one before him, merging the modern and historical across a broad spectrum of music, including  pop, jazz and world music.
Salonen, who turns 50 this year, had to earn his stripes when he came on board in 1990; Dudamel arrives with media trumpets blaring - he's like the newly signed baseball player expected to hit .300 and, 40 home runs, steal 30 bases and play solid defense.  Salonen didn't have that luxury. He had to watch plans for a new hall come, go and return, much like recording contracts for himself and the L.A. band. Classical music and orchestras were a dying breed while he was setting the course for the L.A. Phil; orchestras in other cities that dumbed down programming while he took the opposite tack and proved not only successful here, his style was mimicked in other cities such as New York.
Mahler The portrayal of Dudamel is as the superstar product of Venezuela's "las sistema," the public education program that puts instruments into the hands of children. he is exciting to watch, a passionate and exuberant baton waver (Salonen is no slouch either  on the podium, just a bit more stern looking).   
Youth and looks - he's attractive as is his wife - are definitely Hollywood qualities yet the L.A. Phil has, in recent years, deliberately stayed away from the studio Salonen and the people who program  Walt Disney Concert Hall and the Hollywood Bowl have had far greater success reaching out to rock acts, particularly indie performers such as Belle & Sebastian, the Decemberists, Sigur Ros and Bright Eyes.
No one really knows about Dudamel's tastes  - Salonen's favorite band has long been Radiohead - and whether he will continue to offer that connection between classical and unlikely rock acts. He is certainly committed to youth orchestras and it's quite possible he enters the L.A. job with a good sense of how to make that part of his equation.
Salonen will announce the programming for his final season as music conductor in a week; Dudamel returns to L.A. to conduct Salonen's "Insomnia" and Berlioz's "Symphonie fantastique" at the end of March. While  a smooth transition benefits all parties, this will be one fascinating torch passing: Salonen stepping away with a body of work that stands on its one yet is clearly only a significant chapter in his artistic life; Dudamel arriving with the world's eyes affixed to every move. It can't be comfortable, but it should make great theater and, the locals hope, a triumph.

July 24, 2007

Times Not Yet A-Changin' For CD Giveaways

Jt Patrick Goldstein's Tuesday column was killed by the Los Angeles Times, though LAObserved.com snagged a copy, and in it Goldstein suggested that the Times follow the lead of the U.K. Mail on Sunday, which recently included copies of the new Prince CD in its Sunday edition. Circulation hit 2.9 million.
His argument is rock solid: Newspapers need to attract readers; so called "heritage" artists are looking for new ways to get music into the hands of consumers; partnerships would help save the paper from compromises such as front-page ads.
But what he proposes is getting music from "heritage" artists, or presumably ones he likes: Elvis Costello, Beck, Ryan Adams, Ry Cooder, Lucinda Williams and Steve Earle. His mistake? Prince was a superstar and remains a person of interest to millions. On top of that, he is an intelligent free agent willing to turn his back on the old-fashioned machine.Esapekka_2
What Goldstein doesn't appear to realize is that all but one of the artists he lists, Earle, have comfortable deals with major labels. Recording costs are picked up, they get artistic freedom and they have a marketing partner in the label. Unlike Prince, none of them were ever superstars.
In Los Angeles, an empire built on hype, the albums that the L.A. Times should be including
in Sunday editions need to have mainstream appeal and a marketing tie-in. The hip factor is not necessarily who is on the disc, just the existence of free entertainment.
Disney should be on the horn with the Times suggesting a "High School Musical 2" sampler or a single from Hillary Duff; producers and performers from a small film like "Once," which has built an audience slowly, should be looking into what it can do to drive more soundtrack sales and box office.
Newspapers have to supply something that a good percentage of its readers might want; that means "American Idol" finalists,superstars of the past and the kid that your kids watch on TV.Katharine McPhee, Mick Jagger and Raven - Sunday could be made for you.
Prince got his CD in the paper to coincide with him playing 21 days in a newly christened venue. It's about keeping his name out there. Finding another artist of his stature willing and capable of going that route will be tough.
Sirelton If Elton John moved his Red Piano show from Las Vegas to another city, a giveaway would be smart. Cheap Trick is playing the Hollywood Bowl and pretending to be the Beatles so why not reacquaint people with their catalog? And wouldn't it be marvelous if Esa-Pekka Salonen and the Los Angeles Philharmonic created a send-off disc when he departs the podium next year? Talk about an item that would have people talking across the country and Europe.
The guy that would be the best fit, considering the demographic of current newspaper readers, is reportedly checking out his recording options. James Taylor - who has not signed with Starbucks' Hear Music. A new album from JT. Free. That would be a coup.

July 19, 2007

Bitching In the Key of Life

Chicago Everybody sing: The weather is terrible! There are too many drunk Iowans! Rex Grossman sucks!
International artists Tellervo Kalleinen (Finland) and Oliver Kochta-Kalleinen (Germany) are extending an invitation to all Chicagoans to complain about any topic they like and to sing their complaints out loud with fellow complainers.
People may submit complaints and register to participate by visiting Smog Veil Records online at SmogVeil.com or by emailing complaintschoir@yahoo.com. All of the participants, along with Chicago-based musician and conductor Jeremy Jacobsen, will write the song together.  This process will be realized in a workshop consisting of five rehearsals (Oct.16-­Nov. 2).
The premiere performance will take place at Chicago's Museum of Contemporary Art on Nov.3.Complaintschoir14
The first Complaints Choir performance took place in Birmingham, England two years ago and since then Complaints Choirs have sung in  Helsinki, Hamburg and St. Petersburg.
Smog Veil Records, in collaboration with the artists and the Danish production company Fine & Mellow are working on a documentary film of the project which will debut in 2009.

June 07, 2007

A pianist of note

Cinemax will be screening all the Oscar-nominated shorts, one of which, "Two Hands," is a fascinating look at a pianist. "Two Hands" premieres Aug. 2 at 7 p.m.

Continue reading "A pianist of note " »

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The Set List is written and compiled by Variety associate editor Phil Gallo. Gallo, based in Los Angeles, writes about the music business for Daily Variety and reviews concerts, television shows and theater.

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