Good public relations

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The above arrived in the packet yesterday containing LA Opera’s season announcement. Yes, it’s hand written. Yes, it’s addressed to yours truly. Yes, that’s Placido Domingo’s signature. Nice touch, wouldn’t you say? I can’t say that I’m quite so jaded that I didn’t get a kick out of it.

LA Opera unveils 2013-14 season

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My brief article emphasizes the Orange County performances, but the basics are there. Things are improving. “Einstein” arrives.

Click here to read my article, or pick up a copy of Thursday’s newspaper.

photo: Lucie Jansch

A trombonist goes viral

OMG, and all that. I just saw this on the NBC Nightly News with Brian Williams. I had seen it a few days ago on a friend’s Facebook page. David Finlayson, of the New York Philharmonic, introduces the trombone cam. Is the world ready?

I don’t know if this video has actually “gone viral,” but it was on the national news … btw, he’s really, really good. Take it from a trombonist.

Interview with Bernheimer

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He didn’t remember me, even though I had taken his class. But he knew who I was. He had been reading me in the Herald Examiner. I wanted to move up in the world, so I sent him my resume and clips and Martin Bernheimer, the Pulitzer Prize winning music critic of the Los Angeles Times, agreed to interview me for a position as a freelance reviewer for the newspaper.

I remember just a couple of things distinctly about that day in 1989. Bernheimer invited me into his office and I got my first view of The Wall. Beside his desk, as well as some behind it, this wall was covered with outrageous photographs, many of them nudes, most of them, as far as I could tell at a quick glance, from opera productions. There was also a photo of a young and impossibly handsome Zubin Mehta donning an apron in the Times kitchen. I think you weren’t supposed to say anything about this comically shocking wall; at any rate, I don’t believe I did.

The interview wasn’t really an interview. Apparently Bernheimer had already decided to add me to his large stable of freelancers, so he began by mapping out the lay of the land at the newspaper. He had a certain appendage, he explained, using another word. It was longer than anyone else’s, so he got to write the big articles and got the most column space. His second in command, Daniel Cariaga, he continued, had an appendage that was also notable for its magnitude, but it wasn’t quite as long as his, so he was granted a little less space. My own appendage, Bernheimer asserted, was rather tiny — how he knew, I don’t know; but he had been reading me in the Herald — and I would be allotted the smallest amount of space and assigned to the most insignificant concerts. Size mattered, in other words.

I soon began getting my first review assignments — lots of stuff in Orange County (the Times had an O.C. edition in those days), little orchestras, recitals and chamber music concerts at colleges. The job was to prove yourself with the small stuff first, then you’d get more important assignments. Bernheimer would send me little notes through Cariaga, critiquing my reviews, pointing out errors, suggesting this or that. But I soon learned that he also had my back. He had a go-get-’em attitude about reviewing, and he enjoyed it when a reviewer raked someone over the coals. As a young gun trying to show the world how tough and talented I was, I gave it my best shot.

He would receive letters of complaint about me, some questioning my manhood and some people wanting me fired. He would pass these letters on to me, sometimes with a little comment of his own on them showing that he didn’t take them too seriously. On one nasty letter he scrawled “zzzzzzz” at the top.

Another outraged letter came in one day from the executive director of the Pacific Symphony. The orchestra was trying out conductors for the job of music director and I had been rather tart about the leading candidate, Lawrence Foster. The executive director took exception, rather vehemently, and didn’t think I was qualified to write at the Times. So what did Bernheimer do? He assigned himself the next Pacific Symphony concert to review, wrote an even tarter notice than mine had been (that appendage, I guess), and from then on the Pacific Symphony and its executive director welcomed me with open arms as the lesser of two evils. (I think it was my very next Pacific Symphony review that I picked Carl St.Clair as a definite front-runner for the music director job.)

I am very grateful for the support that Bernheimer gave me in those early days. He still sends me emails when he’s read something of mine that he particularly likes. His belief in me has kept me going through some hard times. It is rare, and I just thought I’d mention it.

New recordings from Salonen, blackbird, Kremer

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In today’s Orange County Register online, I review new recordings from Gidon Kremer and the Kremerata Baltica, eighth blackbird and Esa-Pekka Salonen.

Click here to read my review, or pick up a copy of Sunday’s newspaper.

2012 deaths in classical music

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Here’s a list of notable deaths in classical music for 2012. If there’s anyone we’ve left out, please leave the name in the comments section.

Elliott Carter, Dietrich Fischer-Dieskau, Dave Brubeck, Ruggiero Ricci, Richard Adler, Ravi Shankar, Zvi Zeitlin, Eduard Khil, Jacques Barzun, Hans Werner Henze, Roman Totenberg, Edward Shanbrom, Marvin Hamlisch, Maurice Sendak, Evelyn Lear, Grigory Frid, Nan Merriman, Jonathan Harvey, Gloria Davy, Paavo Berglund, Alexis Weissenberg, Maurice André, Gustav Leonhardt, Mihaela Ursuleasa, Charles Rosen, Galina Vishnevskaya, Lisa della Casa, Richard Rodney Bennett.

Classical Life: 2012 annual report

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Happy New Year and all that. May it be better than the last.

Some of you may remember last year around this time, when the good folks at WordPress prepared an annual report on Classical Life.

Well, they’ve done it again, and the numbers are scintillating.

The best news is that, despite the economic situation, despite the fiscal cliff, despite rising healthcare costs, the profit margins for this blog remained the same as last year. The bad news is that there were no profits whatsoever, unless you count all the good friends who visit this space as profits.

Here are a few stats included in the annual report.

1. The number of “views” (different from “visitors”) here went down a smidgen, but then I didn’t post as often. Still, the “view” number is pretty healthy, I think. I posted 145 times in 2012, and in those posts included 120 photos.

2. The busiest day of the year was January 24 and the most popular post that day was Classical Life: 2011 annual report.

3. The most popular posts in 2012 were Great moments in commercial music: Air France; Review: ‘The gospel According to the Other Mary’; Same old song; Another celebrity columnist re-assigned; and 10 Giulini recordings. Two of those posts weren’t even written in 2012, but people keep on finding them. The annual report suggests: “Some of your most popular posts were written before 2012. Your writing has staying power! Consider writing about those topics again,” which makes me feel like Woody Allen in ‘Stardust Memories.’

4. The most popular searches that brought visitors to Classical Life were classical life, air france commercial music, air france commercial, yuja wang dress, and bruckner. I guess I should write something about Yuja Wang performing Bruckner in a red dress while on an Air France flight.

5. The top referring sites to this blog (they sent people here) were …

  1. therestisnoise.com
  2. outwestarts.blogspot.com
  3. npr.org
  4. allisyar.com
  5. facebook.com

Thanks to Alex, Brian, the government, CK and Mark (Zuckerberg).

6. I had visitors from 115 countries, including Nigeria, Botswana and Bolivia.

7. My most commented on post for 2012 was Same old song.

8. The top commenters were … drum roll please … CK Dexter Haven, MarK, deborah, chris and Lisa Hirsch. Good work and mille grazie.

In closing all I’ll say is that I aim to keep this little blog going and I hope you’ll continue to visit. Stay thirsty, my friends.

The Regers

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Inspired by Martin Bernheimer’s venerated Beckmessers (OK, we just stole the idea), we give you the first annual Reger Awards (named after Max Reger) for classical music, offered with tongue firmly in cheek.

Click here to see the winners of the Reger Awards for 2012.

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Just because it’s hilarious … but note the crucial contribution of the music to the sketch.

The next time you’re “overthinking it,” remember this video.

Reunion

The Register band, now called The Trusted Sources (get it?), made a long-awaited reunion last night at the company Christmas party, which for the first time since I started there was held off-site, at the Hyatt Regency in Huntington Beach, courtesy of the new owners. We kicked five sets (if I say so myself), and I had a particularly grand time thanks to a couple of stringers we hired for the horn section, Johnny V on trumpet and Tom Morgan on saxophone. I attempted to keep up with those guys, and since they tried to make it easy for me, I mostly did, even nailing the tough horn lick (to my surprise) in Stevie Wonder’s “Superstition” near the end of the evening. (Photos 1-3 by M.A. Mullen. Photo 4 by Kevin Sullivan.)

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