Review: ‘Carmen’ at Los Angeles Opera

In today’s Orange County Register online, I review last night’s season opening performance of Carmen at L.A. Opera. Patricia Bardon sang the title role; Brandon Jovanovich sang Don Jose. Placido Domingo conducted.

Here’s the opening of my review:

“Carmen” again.

Nothing wrong with that, unless your cast is thinking it, too. Nothing wrong with that, unless the production you’re presenting once more was silly the first time around. Nothing wrong with that, if you’ve got a Carmen that can light the place on fire.

Click here to read the whole thing (one day pass or paid subs required), or pick up a copy of Thursday’s newspaper.

Facets of Tao

Pianist Conrad Tao. Credit: Vanessa Briceno-Scherzer

An interview with pianist/composer Conrad Tao, 19, who comes to Orange County this week to play Rachmaninoff’s Piano Concerto No. 3 on the Pacific Symphony’s season opening concerts.

Click here to read my article (one day pass or subscription required), or pick up a copy of Sunday’s Orange County Register.

photo: Vanessa Briceno

Music Critics Association launches new web journal

The Music Critics Association of North America (MCANA) has posted the launch issue of its new web journal, Classical Voice North America. It looks like it will be a good resource. The first issue already includes some heavy critical hitters, including Bob Commanday (former music critic at the San Francisco Chronicle) weighing in elegantly on Dolores Claiborne.

I have added it to my blogroll, to the right.

Argerich: Scarlatti: Toccata

What can I say? Another, earlier rendition is here.

A critic’s life, or, how it’s not

rolls

My editor had told me to go home early. “Take a nap,” he said. “You’ve been working too hard, and we need you to be fresh for the big concert tonight.” When I got back to the ranch, a phone call awaited. “It’s Riccardo Muti,” my secretary, not at all bad looking, told me. “He wants a few tips on improving his Bruckner.” I told her to tell him I was out and would get back to him. Blissful sleep awaited.

Dinner, a vegetable laden, carbohydrate-rich meal, with some delicately sauteed Dover sole thrown in for brain function, was prepared by Pierre. I must say that Pierre is simply the best. The Limousine arrived promptly at 7 p.m., and my secretary handed me scores and recordings (fetched from the archive) for study on the way. But Charles, my chauffeur, knew the routine. The Lakers were playing Boston tonight — he had it going on the screen in the back seat. I glanced at the music for “Benvenuto Cellini,” coming up at L.A. Opera upon my suggestion (Domingo is such a good listener), during the commercials. What a genius, that Berlioz.

We arrived at the hall a little late, but the game had a couple more minutes to go. The concert could wait. Final score: Lakers 115, Boston 50. Entering the hall I found all in order: audience and orchestra in place, conductor at the ready. A kind of awed exhalation escaped from the throng upon my arrival therein, and people turned to each other and said “There he is” under their breath. I was shown to my seat — specially designed to support my back — by a continually bowing usher who insisted on addressing me as “sahib.” Then, the concert began.

It was critic’s choice night. I had chosen some Berlioz, of course, specifically the frothy Overture to “Beatrice and Benedict,” followed by Lutoslawski’s Concerto for Orchestra and Stravinsky’s “Agon.” What the heck. Abbado conducted because he can be good on occasion, I feel. At the end, the orchestra “allowed” me to conduct the encore, “Danse Macabre,” with Leonidas Kavakos as my soloist. Marvelous.

After signing a few autographs, I made my way to the car, parked as usual in the critic’s space right out front. My agent was on the phone. A bidding war for my next collection of reviews had erupted, he told me. Farrar, Straus and Giroux was offering a seven figure advance. I snorted, and my agent knew. We could do better. My secretary informed me that my editor at the paper had called; he really needed and wanted my review. So I dictated one of my typically witty and pithy feuilletons — flavored with learned erudition and read-between-the-lines jabs — and my secretary took it all down on the laptop, sending it off via e-mail just as we arrived at the ranch. Pierre awaited at the door with a glass of cuvée, a sassy little Moët and Chandon if I remember correctly. The next day, my review ran on the front page, above the fold, and was picked up, via wire, in newspapers across the nation, which was all atwitter with excitement and gratitude for my sparkling prose.

90 days: Long Beach Opera’s ‘Macbeth’ and the Ojai Music Festival

A couple more of my pieces have been released from jail. Click on the links to read them for free.

Review: 67th Ojai Music Festival. Orange County Register, June 10, 2013. (I was sorry that I didn’t have more space for this one, but that’s the newspaper biz.)

Review: Long Beach Opera revives Bloch’s ‘Macbeth’. Orange County Register, June 16, 2013.

St.Clair takes post in Costa Rica

The Pacific Symphony conductor has signed for a one-year appointment to lead the National Symphony Orchestra in San Jose.

Click here to read my article (behind a pay wall), or pick up a copy of tomorrow’s Orange County Register.

Fall arts preview

080918 Esa-Pekka Salonen

The Fall Arts Preview, in which my contribution is a brief discussion of some of the new music on offer this season and a top ten list of concerts more broadly reaching, is now online.

Click here to read it (one day pass or paid subscription required), or pick up a copy of tomorrow’s Orange County Register.

photo: Clive Barda, courtesy of the LA Phil.

Music in London

I took a trip to London recently — vacation, more or less, not business. I did a few musical things, though. Here are a few photographs, mostly music-related.

View from London Eye 2013View from the London Eye (photo by M.A. Mullen).

Westminster Green Plaque on the site of first UK performance of Beethoven's 9th Symphony 252 Regent Street LondonI went to the unveiling of this plaque, on Regent Street (photo courtesy of Royal Philharmonic Society).

Read more…

Review: Long Beach Opera performs ‘King Gesar’

In today’s Orange County Register online, I review Long Beach Opera’s production of Peter Lieberson’s “King Gesar.”

Click here to read my review (free).