A parasite with high verbal skills

When you’ve been a critic as long as I have, you learn to cherish comments like this one (below). It’s in response to my recent review of “Elijah.”

“This reviewer follows the general rule of all reviewers: they are parasites with high verbal skills. This one feels he is a musicologist. I am not one, but I do know that Mendellssohn was responsible in his time for bringing Bach’s oratorios and the oratorio form back to life when it was generally viewed as a dead form. It is merely a different form. He cites three composers whose main compositions were operas, and then disparages Mendelssohn. I sang my first Elijah solos with John in the 70’s, as other of Mendelssohn’s oratorios, and to compare them with operatic composers is ridiculous. Handel wrote over 40 operas until they became old school, and he started writing oratorios. Bach’s oratorios were gathering dust until Mendelssohn brought them back to public view, and wrote his own. The tradition is very evident in his oratorios, and yet his lyric writing surpasses anything Bach wrote. Only Mendelssohn could have written what he did, just as Bach and Handel are their own creators. As for text, I doubt few libretti could ever stand up as prose, save the few that used Shakespeare plays as their basis. Verdi only wrote one major “oratorio” in his elder years, after many years of honing his talent. Mendelssohn died at a very young age. If the reviewer would have sung as many different oratorios by different older and contemporary composers as I and others have, including Dave Brubeck, he might have a more balanced perspective of the oratorio as a particular musical form, never meant to be opera, and never meant to be salon music as Chopin. PLEASE, spare us, Lord, from the ignorant tongues of reviewers.”

Why, oh why, ‘Elijah’?

In today’s Orange County Register online, I review last night’s performance by the Pacific Chorale of Mendelssohn’s “Elijah,” with Eric Owens in the title role.

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

‘Rite’ Jones

I got an announcement in my email yesterday (Friday) that the Deutsche Grammophon and Decca labels will band together in celebration of the 100th anniversary of “The Rite of Spring” (or, as it is invariably known in the higher intellectual circles here in O.C., Le sacre du printemps) to release a 20-CD box set “including every version in their respective catalogs” of the epic work. The recordings date from 1946-2010.

There’s no word on the number of “Rites” that’ll amount to, but they could easily fit 40 on 20 CDs. It’s supposed to be released before the end of 2012.

I also can’t name all of the recordings that will be included in the set, not being that complete of a “Rite” nerd, but surely we’ll get performances conducted by Ansermet, Monteux, Dorati, Karajan, Ozawa, Markevitch(?), Solti, Maazel, Dutoit, Boulez, Bernstein … who else? I don’t think we’ll get Muti (whose fantastic recording is on EMI) or Stravinsky (who recorded with CBS).

I have to admit I think the set is a bit much. There are limits to comparing interpretations, I believe. Nevertheless, I want it.

Jacques Barzun, 1907-2012

Jacques Barzun, an intellectual giant and hero of mine, has died at 104.

His magnum opus, published when he was 92, is “From Dawn to Decadence: 500 years of Western Cultural Life, 1500 to the Present,” a mammoth and beautifully written tome that anyone interested in things cultural should at least dip into.

Barzun also wrote expansively on classical music, including his landmark “Berlioz and the Romantic Century.” Among other musical adventures, he published a translation of Berlioz’s Memoirs and put together a fine anthology called “The Pleasures of Music.”

One of my favorite of Barzun’s books is “The House of Intellect,” which I happen to have picked up for 50 cents at Bart’s Books in Ojai.

Here’s the New York Times’ obituary.

John Alexander: 40 years with the Pacific Chorale

In today’s Orange County Register online, I interview John Alexander, who begins his 41st season as conductor of the Pacific Chorale on Sunday performing Mendelssohn’s “Elijah,” with Eric Owens in the title role.

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

Parker Quartet performs Pärt, Britten and Beethoven

In today’s Orange County Register online, I review last night’s concert by the Grammy Award-winning Parker Quartet.

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

Conrad Tao performs with Pacific Symphony

In today’s Orange County Register online, I review last night’s Pacific Symphony concert with conductor Carl St.Clair, pianist Conrad Tao and a slate of standards.

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

Lebrecht notes Mangan’s comeback

My return to the classical realm has been noted by none other than Norman Lebrecht on his Slipped Disc blog at the Arts Journal.

The post includes a photo of the formerly bearded me with Tim Page. Thanks, Norman.

Click here

Last item

From today’s Orange County Register online, and tomorrow’s print version, Page 2:

Last item

It has been our pleasure to serve you as the ruthless people columnist these past two-plus years, but as a philosopher once said, “All bad things must come to an end.”

Today is our (as in Timothy Mangan’s) last celebrity column. We will be returning to our first love, reporting on and reviewing classical music, elsewhere in these pages. Someone less cranky will take over here.

It’s not that we don’t love celebrities. You, dear reader, know that we do. Oh, the times that we’ve had.

We’d like to thank those readers (Mom) who dropped us a note saying how much you enjoyed these columns.

We’d also like to thank those readers who told us they hated the column. But we can’t.

Don’t be sad. We’ll all get over it. Then we’ll die.

Besides, we’ll always have Lindsay, the “Herbie Fully Loaded” star, who starred as Liz not Dick.

-30-

[Champagne tonight.]

Dudamel’s Mahler’s 8th

“If it doesn’t sweep the Grammys in every eligible category, I’ll eat all the Mahler recordings in my collection.” — Sedgwick Clark, Musical America

Read the whole thing here.