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Wednesday 9 October 2013

Verdi 200th Birthday Spectacular Live Webcast - October 10 2013

With its potent mix of fury and fear, punctuated with hammering chords and explosive bass drum bangs, the Requiem Mass is one of Verdi’s most striking choral works. For one night only—on the composer’s exact birthday—Riccardo Muti and the Chicago Symphony Orchestra and Chorus celebrate the 200th anniversary of Verdi’s birth by reprising their acclaimed 2009 performances, which sold out months in advance and led to their Grammy? Award-winning recording.

This magical moment in musical history will be captured and shared with the world through a live webcast and on-demand viewing availability following the performance. Join us at Millennium Park (Chicago, IL) as we host a special viewing of this performance in Pritzker Pavilion or watch the concert from the comfort of your own computer at?cso.org/Verdi or on the CSO’s Facebook page at facebook.com/chicagosymphony.

Patrons are also invited to Benito Juarez Community Academy (1450 W. Cermak) in Chicago’s Pilsen neighborhood for a free public viewing of the webcast. Admission to the live webcast at Benito Juarez Community Academy is free, but tickets are required. Tickets can be obtained by phone at 800-223-7114 or 312-294-3000 or in-person at the Symphony Center box office.For updates and details, please visit cso.org/verdi.#CSOVERDIThanks to donor Kay Bucksbaum for underwriting the Requiem webcast.

Debussy La mer - October 17 2013

Escape the everyday grind with the luscious sound of the Chicago Symphony Orchestra. Each Afterwork Masterworks concert features incredible music with an early start time and no intermission.?Stay after each performance for an engaging Q&A with Susanna Malkki and Thomas Ades and enjoy complimentary wine in the Grainger Ballroom.

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Herbie Hancock Quartet - October 11 2013

Our 20th anniversary celebration kicks off with legendary keyboardist Herbie Hancock in his first appearance on the SCP Jazz series in 10 years. The Chicago native and his incredible quartet, including drummer Vinnie Colaiuta, bassist James Genus and guitarist Lionel Loueke, will deliver a performance that embraces the unique blend of innovation and soul that makes Hancock one of the most admired artists in jazz history. Joining the program as special guest is phenomenal tabla player Zakir Hussain, one of the foremost percussionists in jazz and world music.

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No good news from the Northern Front (with update)

Today is what most observers are assuming is the deadline for a settlement in Minnesota that will keep Osmo V?nsk? and the November Carnegie concerts in the picture. It doesn’t appear that negotiations are going well, though.
One indication of that is the management offer of last week, made with great public fanfare and certainly not as part of the mediation process:
The Minnesota Orchestra sweetened its offer to locked-out musicians Thursday, after an 11th-hour fundraising effort led by Marilyn Carlson Nelson, one of Minnesota’s wealthiest people.
The latest proposal in the bitter yearlong dispute includes a $20,000 one-time bonus to each musician, to help offset a pay cut that would reduce base salaries over three years, ending at 25 percent below current levels.
Money for the bonuses would come from the Carlson Family Foundation, 14 other Minnesota foundations and the community group SOS: Save Osmo.
“We consider this a unique offering, born of shared respect for the Orchestra and in recognition of so many Minnesotans committed to finding a solution,” Nelson said in a statement.
The board asked the musicians for a vote before the offer expires at noon Monday.

Blois Olson, a spokesman for the musicians, complained that the board had gone public with this new proposal. “We are further offended that they have again broken the confidentiality of the mediator’s process,” Olson said, referring to former Senate Majority Leader George Mitchell’s offer to mediate the negotiations. “We encourage management to stop playing games and work through the mediator.”
In an interview, board negotiator Doug Kelley said the proposal was made directly to musicians and not through the mediator.
First of all, this proposal doesn’t address the fundamental concern of the musicians, which is a permanent reduction in compensation and worsening of working conditions. Secondly, making a proposal like this publicly suggests that management has lost confidence in the mediation process and is more concerned with managing their image going into what happens following V?nsk?’s departure than in averting it.
To add to the gloom, today came an article with the distressing headline “Minnesota Orchestra: Negotiations planned for today.” One would think that would go without saying in a situation like this. But apparently not:
Negotiators of the board and musicians of the Minnesota Orchestra will meet Monday afternoon to see if there is a way to resolve a year-long lockout.
The session would be the first face-to-face discussion since musicians voted Saturday to reject the board’s most-recent proposal.
Spokesman Blois Olson told a morning news conference that musicians had tried “numerous channels, including the mediator, to deliver offers. At every turn the board requested we send offers before we meet.”
Management representatives claimed that Monday morning’s request for a meeting was, “The first time since the players rejected the board offer that they have sought a meeting with board negotiators,” according to spokeswoman Gwen Pappas.
Pappas said the request was received in a letter delivered at 9:40 a.m., to Richard Davis, chair of the negotiating team.
“It’s short notice, but we will see who is available for a meeting,” Pappas said.
Olson said musicians are willing to compromise on finances if the board compromises on artistic issues. He did not discuss specifics.
Management’s public positions going into the weekend don’t offer much hope either:
Henson said the musicians have never acknowledged the extent of the Orchestra’s financial difficulties. The orchestra reported a $6 million shortfall last year.
Orchestra President and CEO Michael Henson wants a longer deal.
“Our position remains that a short-term solution for a few months is not actually doing this community, the musicians or indeed the generosity those funds are given for any service,” Henson said.
Henson said the musicians have never acknowledged the extent of the Orchestra’s financial difficulties. The orchestra reported a $6 million shortfall last year.
Any new proposal, Hanson said, needs to fit within the financial limitations of the most recent management offer.
“If they want to reposition it, using the same amount of money across three years, we would be happy to discuss this,” he said. “However we have a very real financial problem. We have a deadline on the 30th of September and the musicians are fully aware of the challenges that we face.”
Henson said if musicians vote down management’s offer they need to come up with a serious counter-proposal within the next three days.
The line about “reposition[ing] it, using the same amount of money across three years,” is all too reminiscent of what management said last fall about the amount of savings being non-negotiable, with only the distribution of the savings to be discussed. And why is a deal such as George Mitchell offered over the summer (four months of discussion with some pay adjustments) unacceptable? A short-term solution is not optimum. But neither is having the orchestra be silent for even more months – not to mention losing the Carnegie dates and their music director in the bargain.
It may be that the musicians could have done some things differently than they have; no dispute like this leaves anyone blameless. But the bottom line appears to be that management remains unwilling to accept “any new proposal” that doesn’t “fit within the financial limitations of the most recent management offer.”
Update
(11:45 PM CDT, September 30):
The Minnesota Orchestra board cancelled the Carnegie concerts and, in passing, also redefined “negotiating”:
The first face-to-face talks since January in the Minnesota Orchestra labor dispute ended abruptly Monday after management rejected pay proposals put forward by locked-out musicians.
Management then announced it would cancel two November concerts by the orchestra at Carnegie Hall. Music Director Osmo V?nsk? has told the board that scratching the New York concerts would force him to resign.

One proposal by musicians would have cut salaries by 6.7 percent for one year. The other, a three-year offer, would have cut salaries immediately by 8 percent, and then slowly restored the cuts to 2012 levels by the third year.
We were experiencing $6 million deficits at that level,” said Michael Henson, CEO and president of the orchestra.
[Musician spokesperson Bloise] Olson said the 8 percent plan would result in $1.1 million in savings. In addition to reduced expenses from having fewer musicians and the departure of several higher-paid players during the lockout, that would bring total musician pay to the 2007 level, he said.

Henson said mediator George Mitchell was not involved in the Monday session, which he described as a presentation, not a negotiation. “We were read an offer,” he said.
Isn’t that usually where negotiations begin
? As I wrote this afternoon, the Board’s bottom line remains that “management remains unwilling to accept ‘any new proposal’ that doesn’t ‘fit within the financial limitations of the most recent management offer.’”
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MacArthur Foundation strikes out again

Those who’ve followed my various blogs over the years (at least I’m hoping it’s “those” and not “him or her”) know that the MacArthur Foundation Fellows Program (aka the “Genius Awards”) is a hot button for me.
They recently pushed it again with the selection of pianist Jeremy Denk. To quote from the MacArthur Foundation website:
Jeremy Denk is a concert pianist enlivening the musical experience for amateurs and aficionados alike through his eloquence with notes and words. As a soloist and in concerti and chamber ensembles, Denk masterfully performs some of the most technically demanding works of iconic masters—Bach, Beethoven, Chopin—as well as compositions of storied twentieth-century artists—Ives and Ligeti—with virtuosic dexterity and imagination. Noted for his unexpected pairings of pieces in recital programs and recordings, he often draws out surprising themes and continuities between historically and stylistically disparate works. His live and recorded duets with violinist Joshua Bell, a longstanding tradition, are critically acclaimed and lauded for their extraordinary balance and original interpretation.
As a complement to his performance career, Denk is a gifted expositor. In the liner notes on his recordings, his blog, Think Denk—a spirited “life log” of technical analysis, informative repartee, and witty memoir—and articles in publications such as the New Yorker
and the New Republic, he couples analytical thinking about the sound and structure of a piece with lyrical descriptions of the affect produced as one plays or listens to it.
Denk’s writings not only offer poignant and humorous meditations on such subjects as the complex relationship between protégé and mentor, they also demonstrate the connection between the process of writing and the practicing musician’s ceaseless efforts to find the most vivid and meaningful way to bring a particular phrase to life. An extraordinary pianist and essayist of keen musical intellect, Denk is engaging listeners and readers in a deeper appreciation of classical music.
To translate into language that is not completely out of breath, Denk is a pianist who’s having a successful career playing the stuff that concert pianists are asked to play, some of which was written since 1900. He puts together interesting programs. He also writes really well, and has been published in a couple of prestigious magazines.
All of which is true. Oddly enough, Denk was doing the first Lizst concerto with my orchestra the week he won, and did a really nice job of what is a problematic piece (although one with one of the most fun-to-play viola solos in the literature). I liked it a lot better than his performance of a Mozart concerto with us a few years ago. And he writes really
well; I loved his article in the New Yorker on piano lessons, in particular those he had with Gy?rgy Seb?k.
So I hope my carping about Denk getting a MacArthur fellowship is not seen as a comment on Denk. My real issue is the notion that any but the barest handful of performers – whether contemporary or historical – meet the Macarthur Foundation’s own criteria:
The MacArthur Fellows Program awards unrestricted fellowships to talented individuals who have shown extraordinary originality and dedication in their creative pursuits and a marked capacity for self-direction. There are three criteria for selection of Fellows: exceptional creativity, promise for important future advances based on a track record of significant accomplishment, and potential for the fellowship to facilitate subsequent creative work.
Anyone who makes a living in this business has demonstrated over and over again “a marked capacity for self-direction.” There are few activities in our society requiring more “self-direction” than spending thousands of hours over most of a lifetime practicing an instrument by oneself. Likewise with the needed “dedication” to spend that time, cope emotionally with the fact that there hundreds of people striving to fill any given position (or career niche, in the case of soloists) in this business, and then actually being good enough to make a living at performing. I could give the folks at the MacArthur Foundation a list of a few thousand names easily meeting both those criteria in not much more time than it would take to type them.
So how about “extraordinary originality”? Denk (and past Fellows Leili Josefowicz, Alisa Weilterstein, and Dawn Upshaw) are all very accomplished musicians who fully deserve the careers they’ve had (and not all the performers the Foundation has selected in the past have risen to that level). But have any of them really demonstrated “extraordinary originality”? Do any performers demonstrate that?
I’d pick a handful over the course of my lifetime. Leonard Bernstein is one; anyone who can introduce an entire continent to the music of Mahler, conduct the Sibelius Fifth in as revelatory a way as he did in his last recording of the piece with the Vienna Philharmonic, and compose West Side Story
is a true genius. Dietrich Fischer-Dieskau essentially re-imagined the art of singing lieder, as Pablo Casals re-imagined cello playing. Pinchas Zukerman is the greatest violinist in the history of the violin. Albert Schweitzer was not only a great organist and Bach scholar, but he led a major reform in organ building – in addition, of course, to his work as a theologian and saving countless lives in Africa as a medical missionary.
Those performers were geniuses.? But I suspect their accomplishments would have been too deep for the MacArthur Fellows selection process to grasp. Their lives and careers remind me of a line I read once:
The only thing you need to know about competitions is that Mozart never won one.

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October 04, 2013 - CHICAGO SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA ASSOCIATION PRESENTS CONCERTS FOR CHILDREN AND FAMILIES AT SYMPHONY CENTER IN 2013/14 SEASON

The ChicagoSymphony Orchestra Association (CSOA) announces its full roster of family programmingfor the 2013/14 season. This year’s offerings—provided under the auspices ofthe CSOA’s Institute for Learning, Access and Training—provide musicalexperiences for families with children starting as young as 3 years old, creatingan engaging introduction to classical music and the concert-going experience atSymphony Center.

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Wednesday 25 September 2013

Muti Conducts Verdi's Macbeth - September 28 2013

Revering Shakespeare above all other playwrights, Giuseppe Verdi based three operas on the Bard’s works. His electrifying psychodrama Macbeth was the first, a blood-soaked portrayal of ambition and guilt. Riccardo Muti, the “greatest Verdi conductor of our time” (Chicago Tribune), leads the incomparable Chicago Symphony Orchestra and Chorus in this dramatic concert.


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