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Mostly Music in the Midlands


 Mozart: "The best work I have ever composed..."
 

Excuse the lengthy pause between blog entries; I have been (and still am) in the Caribbean, performing at the St. Barts Music Festival, and computer access has been a bit limited. My absence also means I have not been in Columbia for the beginning of the SC Mozart Festival, the ambitious undertaking of Jared Johnson, organist and music director at Trinity Episcopal Cathedral, and Peter Hoyt, professor of music history at USC. They have organized an astonishing array of concerts, lectures, theatrical and film presentations to celebrate the 250th birthday of Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart. Here are some links to the State newspaper's coverage of the festival.

I am very happy to be doing my bit for this festival, with a couple of performances coming up for their daily lunchtime series of short programs at Trinity. The first of these takes place this Monday, Jan.30, at 12:30 PM, when I'll be joined by USC wind faculty Rebecca Nagel, Robert Pruzin, Douglas Graham, and Carol Lowe for a performance of the Mozart Quintet for Piano and Winds. This is one of the few pieces for this combination (piano with oboe, clarinet, bassoon, horn) by any composer, and one of Mozart's finest chamber works, period. In fact, shortly after the work's premiere in Vienna, he told his father in a letter that he felt it to be "the best work I have ever composed." That might have been a bit of a stretch, perhaps the enthusiasm of the moment, but it is a marvelous work, full of high spirits, a bit of comedy, and plenty of lovely harmonic manipulations and striking sonorities. Come take a break from your work day next Monday at 12:30 and join us for a delightful half-hour of music.

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 Paris: Two "sights" and a "site"
 

If you're planning a trip to Paris, allow me to recommend two places well worth a visit for those of you with an interest in music and/or art. You won't find them at the top of the lists of most famous "must-sees" but my wife and I  found them engrossing and fascinating and were glad we searched them out.

The first is the Musee Marmottan, backed up against the Bois de Boulogne, near the La Muette Metro stop. We saw about 50 of Claude Monet's works there, including many very late ones which push the murkiness of his brand of Impressionism almost past a border into abstraction. If you want to have a comprehensive understanding of this artist, this museum is a must.

The Cite de la Musique (out to the northeast fringe of the city, near the Porte de Pantin Metro stop) contains a wonderful 700-seat hall where we (the Philip Glass Ensemble) played, and other groups such as the incredible Ensemble Intercontemporain are based there. But within that complex is the Musee de la Musique, which possesses a remarkable musical instrument collection (click on this link to view a virtual tour). Especially memorable for me was seeing a Pleyel piano that was rented to Chopin for several years when he lived in Paris, and an Erard piano on which Franz Liszt performed in Lyon and to which he affixed his signature. You wear headphones when you tour the museum and wireless signals near different display cases convey music played by the instruments you are viewing, you don't have to push any buttons at all.

Finally, if you are about to travel to Paris, you must check out Chocolate and Zucchini, a website created by a twenty-something Parisian woman named Clothilde who is a true foodie, and who will clue you in as to where to get the best hot chocolate in Paris, or a delightful little hole-in-the-wall which features 10 delicious soups daily, or how to find the places where the pros buy their kitchen tools and utensils,  and on and on. This website is a treasure trove of information for food-lovers, and after all, food is half the reason for going to Paris in the first place!

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 Last week to see Mint Museum show in Charlotte
 

This is the last week to see "Renaissance to Rococo: Masterpieces from the Wadsworth Atheneum," a very special exhibit that has been at Charlotte's Mint Museum of Art since September. I went just after Christmas, and have to say it might be worth the drive from Columbia just to see the one Caravaggio in the show, an astonishing "St. Francis of Assisi in Ecstasy." Others represented in the collection of some 60 paintings on display include Frans Hals, Canaletto, Michael Sweerts, Goya, Zurbaran, Tintoretto, Orazio Gentileschi, Francois Boucher, Tiepolo, and an almost-Impressionistic landscape by Gainsborough. I haven't yet been to the collections at Bob Jones University but that museum notwithstanding, the Mint's exhibit is a rare chance to see this many Old Masters in this part of the country.

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 Paris: City of Light AND Music
 

Hope everyone had or is having a wonderful holiday season. Just before Christmas we were in Paris for a week and the city of Caen in Normandy for two more days. I was playing concerts during this time with the Philip Glass Ensemble, and it was a big family time, with most members of the band bringing spouses along and some bringing their kids too for a wonderful work/vacation time in the City of Light.

For Lynn and me, this visit to Paris was especially music-oriented. We brought along a guidebook which we found fascinating and helpful, and which we enthusiastically recommend to any of you music-lovers who are planning a visit to Paris. The book is entitled Paris: A Musical Gazetteer and it's written by Nigel Simeone, a music lecturer at the University of Wales. (The Amazon link is to an expensive hardcover copy, but with hunting I think it can be found in a cheaper and more practical paperback edition).

Most of the book is comprised of entries on specific composers, with amazingly complete information as to every place in Paris they lived, where they wrote particular works, where they are buried, and so forth. Other sections are devoted to theaters and concert halls and churches, with copious information on the significant musical events that took place within them. There are also detailed descriptions of four suggested walks that take in a number of musically significant sites along the way.

Here's a thumbnail sketch of some of the sights we took in, guided by this marvelous little book: the church of La Madeleine, where both Camille Saint-Saens and Gabriel Faure served as organists and where Chopin's funeral was held, with Mozart's Requiem being performed on the occasion.....The small and dignified Passy Cemetery in the elegant 16th Arrondissement, with its wintry views of the Eiffel Tower and the graves of Faure and Claude Debussy....A walk through that same neighborhood of the "16th", where not only did we see Passy Cemetery but also strolled by the home where Maria Callas spent her final years, and the mansion of the Princesse de Polignac, at whose musical soirees countless premieres took place in the early 20th century....And on our last day in Paris, the church of La Trinite, where the composer Olivier Messiaen served as organist for an astonishing 61 years, from 1931 till his death in 1992.

This is just the tip of the iceberg as regards all that we took in during our Paris visit, but it gives you some impression of the fun you can have with Simeone's Gazetteer if you visit. Surely there is no city on earth more important to the history of Western music than Paris. From Leonin at Notre-Dame Cathedral to Messiaen and Pierre Boulez in our own time, a visit to this awe-inspiring and breathtakingly-gorgeous city confirms this truth.
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 Greenville envy
 

Excuse the bad pun, but that's the phrase that popped into my head last Friday night as Lynn and I enjoyed a lovely early evening stroll along Greenville's delightful Main Street. We were there to hear Alison Krauss and Union Station at the Bi-Lo Center, and arrived early enough in the afternoon to have a bit of a walk and a very leisurely dinner at Sassafras, a fine restaurant downtown (I can recommend the prosciutto-wrapped sea scallops over wilted spinach and grits). I hope that eventually Columbia's Main Street north of the capitol building will take on some of the vibe that Greenville's Main Street has going for it: no empty storefronts, pedestrian-friendly, landscaped beautifully, lots of interesting stores of different varieties, a number of intriguing-looking restaurants, galleries, and performing arts venues. It's all capped off by the spectacular Reedy Falls Park and the Liberty Bridge spanning the falls, with an impressive vista across the chasm to a jewel of this state, the South Carolina Governor's School of the Arts and Humanities.Well, we don't have the natural wonders like the falls to add to our Main Street's charm, but the State Capitol on one end and Finlay Park sort of at the opposite end could be the anchors to a revamped Main. The Art Museum (see yesterday's post) is a great boon, and I like some of the new buildings going up. The Nickelodeon's move in a couple of years will aid the resurgence as well.

The Alison Krauss concert, by the way, was spectacular.
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