Tovey conducts Holst, Midori plays Korngold

Review: Bramwell Tovey and the Pacific Symphony take off with ‘The Planets’. The Orange County Register, April 29, 2016.

The week ahead: Yuja Wang, New York Philharmonic and more

Pianist Yuja Wang. Photo by Norbert Kniat

The week ahead in classical concerts: Yuja Wang, the New York Philharmonic and more. The Orange County Register, April 29, 2016.

Photo: Norbert Kniat

Vadym Kholodenko returns to stage after family tragedy

Review: Pianist sets tragedy aside in recital at Musco. The Orange County Register, April 27, 2016.

(Kholodenko played the music in the video as his first encore Tuesday.)

Eighth Blackbird plays ‘Hand Eye’

Review: Eighth Blackbird reveals ‘Hand Eye’ coordination in Irvine. The Orange County Register, April 25, 2016.

Upcoming concerts

Classical concerts this weekend: Trio Celeste, Kholodenko and more. The Orange County Register, April 22, 2016.

Salonen, L.A. Phil offer tribute to the late Steven Stucky

Review: Every note in place in L.A. Phil tribute to Steven Stucky. The Orange County Register, April 21, 2016.

Profile: Trio Celeste

Things are looking up for Orange County’s Trio Celeste. The Orange County Register, April 21, 2016.

(There’s a sound sample at the link, Dvorak’s “Dumky” Trio.)

Music criticism books (4): ‘Paul Bowles on Music’

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We arrive at “Paul Bowles on Music,” a book I edited with Irene Herrmann.

Before he became the celebrated novelist of “The Sheltering Sky” and a cult figure in Tangier, Bowles was a composer and music critic at the Herald Tribune in New York, where Virgil Thomson was his boss. He also wrote for the important periodical Modern Music.

With the help of Herrmann, I selected the reviews and essays contained in this volume, wrote the introduction and the questions for the interview (Bowles’ last), which Herrmann carried with her to Tangier and dutifully put to Bowles while she taped his answers. I transcribed the tape and presto, we had a nifty interview about Bowles’ life as a music critic.

It took me a couple of years to put the book together, in my copious spare time. I remember much work with microfilm; a trip to UCLA special collections to retrieve an article by Bowles from an obscure avant-garde magazine; and writing to Mademoiselle for permission to reprint a couple of articles that Bowles wrote for the magazine. I never received an answer but I had done my due diligence. We put them in the book.

It came out in 2003 and got some nice reviews from Tim Page and Judith Weir and others. It never quite made the New York Times bestseller list, though.

Bowles was a good critic, who came at the job much as Thomson did, as a composer who knew something about the nuts and bolts of music and who also had his own strong aesthetic.

The photos above show the cover; the title page; the table of contents; the first page of my introduction; and two random reviews (one of violinist Samuel Dushkin and one of Stravinsky conducting his own music) from the Herald Tribune, which will give you the flavor of Bowles’ style.

As always, click on the photos for larger (readable) views.

Update: You can buy a used copy of the book for one cent plus shipping here.

Stravinsky: ‘Danse russe’ from Three Movements from ‘Petrushka’

Michel Béroff, piano.

Hadelich, Yang and Villegas perform ‘Tango, Song and Dance’

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Review: Hadelich, Villegas and Yang perform ‘Tango, Song and Dance.’ The Orange County Register, April 17, 2016.