Recent Concerts You've Enjoyed

Thought this might be a fun thread and a way to find out about acts on tour.

My wife and I saw the Smoke Fairies at the Tractor Tavern last evening as the opening act for Rasputina. The Smoke Fairies are a 'folk blues' duo from Wales and have been described as "Bob Dylan's dream." I thought that their debut release "Through Low Light and Trees" was one of last year's best. It was just the two principles singing and playing guitar. Really terrific concert with excellent acoustics and thankfully not too loud.

If you are ever in Seattle, the Tractor Tavern is a great venue in the Ballard neighborhood. Very fun people watching...I think my wife and I were the only ones without tattoos! I got to chat with them after their set and had my LP signed. I love the lilting Welsh accents!

Here's a video of "Hotel Room" from their debut LP:

[video]

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It'll be interesting to see if Ely Perlman will be playing with them in February. It's hard to imagine how he can go to music school and tour at the same time. I live in NJ so won't be there to find out. Let us know!
Ely is listed on the tour date but I know that information may not be reliable that far in the future.

On the other hand is there a better way to "go to school" than tour with Christian McBride?
 
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Not long returned from the Albert Hall and tonight’s performance , The assembly of church bells were quite stunning :

“1 9:30 Thu 22 Aug 2024 Royal Albert Hall
The City of Birmingham Symphony Orchestra and Kazuki Yamada present Mussorgsky’s Pictures at an Exhibition in an orchestration by Proms founder-conductor Henry Wood. Meanwhile Paul Lewis is the soloist in Mozart’s Piano Concerto No. 27 “


 
Play list from recent Alison Kraus with Robert Plant. She’s a savant and his voice was shockingly good. Beat the thunderstorm by 15’

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On Sunday night I attended a very unusual performance of Mahler’s 5th Symphony in Paris. Philip von Steinaecker led the Mahler Academy Orchestra, an organization dedicated to Mahler performances that hew to not only the origins of the score, but the period and instrumentation as well.

The orchestra draws players form orchestras from all over Europe as well as were teenage members of academy. Paris Phil regulars, including key soloists, joined in, as well as a few very talented local amateur players.

Christian Merlin, a French music critic and musicologist, gave a thirty minute introduction before the performance, highlighting its unusual circumstances and intents. He introduced the tympanist, who was also the fabricator of his kit (deerskin) and mallets; the bassoonist and clarinetist, who showed their unique period instruments and then played a bit of the score with those instruments vs their contemporary versions (the newer ones were extremely expressive, bright in a good way, complex, while the 19th century versions mellower, warmer and tonally more subtle and mysterious—kind of like vintage v modern speakers? Klangfilm v Avantgarde?). And Herr Steinaecker explained how he approached the score, hewing to Mahler’s emendations and annotations, and not juicing up the tempos or making the Adagietto lugubrious and morbid (a la the film Death in Venice).

The performance that followed was a blast, literally and figuratively...echt Mahler. The winds and horn parts were particularly vivid and spectacularly well-played. Tempos, save for the second part of the first movement, were very lively and fast by modern standards, and dynamic contrasts made you jump. The musicians were fully committed…they communicated an urgent vitality throughout. This performance clearly mattered to them.

Overall rhythms and meters were careful and taut, neither rushed nor extended. Since the composition of the entire orchestra was exactly per Mahler’s instructions, you didn’t get the large string section necessary for a huge string tone or string mass sound one usually hears when this piece is played in the concert hall. Nor was the orchestra the kind of extremely well-rehearsed, single unit playing as one, ie it wasn’t the Vienna Phil…but I still heard of bit of that Vienna sound, circa 1900 that is.


This piece was performed in the Grand Salle Pierre Boulez, the usual hall for the Paris Phil, in the Cité de la Musique, way out in the 19th arrondissement. The acoustics are great wherever you sit and prices pretty affordable, compared to say San Francisco, New York, etc. And it is very easy to get there via Metro, from almost anywhere in Paris. I would urge any of you coming here for business or vacation to check out the offerings of the Philharmonie de Paris and try to go to a concert!
 
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Suspect we were the only attendees to Orville Peck and the Seattle Symphony this week. :cool:

Had a lovely time listening to Ravel and Tchaikovsky’s 4th

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Suspect we were the only attendees to Orville Peck and the Seattle Symphony this week. :cool:

It took a few slow considerate reads to fully remove the idea you didn't attend a concert with Orville Peck and the Seattle Symphony - together. :p
 
M8 in Boston

I think I can now say with certainty that M8 is my least favorite Mahler symphony. It's the only Mahler Symphony I have not heard live as it is not frequently performed in large part due to the personnel requirements. (It's called the "Symphony of 1000" for a good reason.) Or maybe I was just not thrilled by Nelsons and the BSO last night. I’ve seen more than my share of conductors but although the Bostonians will probably condemn me for saying this, Nelsons just didn’t impress me. (The last time I was at the Hall decades ago, I saw Ozawa). Nelsons is not particularly animated and maybe Mahler is just not his thing (as is Shostakovich), but it just felt to me like a tired and worn performance that he could have phoned in, with some exceptions. I was also not particularly impressed by the BSO as good as they are, as there were many glitches in surprising places such as first violin. The horns, particularly French horns, were wonderful. Woodwinds were very good. The double bass were good but for a hall renowned for its acoustics, the bass sound doesn’t compare to Musikverein, Carnegie or Geffen. The lower brass did not impress me in particular. The organ however, knocked me out. Probably the best organ in a hall I’ve ever heard with the possible exception of Meyerson in Dallas. The Children’s choir was exceptional! So were the 8 soloists including the famed sopranos Christine Goerke and Latonia Moore. In addition, the program notes were among the best I have ever seen for any performance anywhere.

The one thing that was most disappointing were the sight lines from the orchestra's parquet seats. Virtually all halls use staggered seating so you can look between the 2 people in front of you. Not a Symphony Hall. The tallest guy in Boston sat right in front of me so I had to lean around one side or the other to see the stage from excellent mid/rear orchestra seats. Inexcusable. Very good sonics as everyone knows, but no comparison to Musikverein (on which it was modeled; same proportions only slightly larger). I actually prefer Carnegie and Geffen, at least from my usual seats. Seat location always matters. And speaking of seats, what idiot designer decided to install the most uncomfortable seats ever made into that hall? It’s like they want you to leave before the performance is over. If I heard Yuja Wang do all 4 Rach concertos there instead of Carnegie last year, I’d have to be hospitalized for back pain by the 3rd concerto.

As far as M8, I was troubled throughout. Part 1 was really very good, and received separate applause before the BSO began Part 2. But I couldn’t help thinking that in Part 1, all the praise for God and Jesus came from the liturgy chosen by a Bohemian born Jew who probably made a conscious decision to write a piece that would appease the vehemently antisemitic mayor of Vienna. But it obviously didn’t work as they fired his ass from the Vienna Phil anyway despite his conversion to Christianity. (Mahler then moved to the US in 1908 to lead the Metropolitan Opera and then the Metropolitan Symphony Orchestra which eventually became the NY Philharmonic, before returning to Austria to die in 1911.) The music was rich and beautiful as only Mahler can be although it didn’t have his usual themes (i.e., song of the Wayfarer, military marches, Viennese dances). Still gorgeous and inspirational at times. No surprise. After all, it’s Mahler. Part 2 however was a wrecking ball. Some beautiful orchestration but the lyrics? I couldn’t figure out the Faust story at all. What I got was a homage to the “eternal feminine who uplifts us” which was not only a reference to the Virgin Mary, but to Mahler’s wife Alma, to whom the piece was dedicated. In the meantime, at the time M8 was written, she was having an affair with the architect Gronius (who she eventually married). I guess that’s one way to get a symphony dedicated to you.

What impressed me the most was looking at Nelsons, who was a rather obese guy the last time I saw photos of him. I think my Lilly stock went up solely because of him and possibly Oprah. Semaglutides really are miracle drugs.

Now that a re-visit to Boston Symphony Hall is off my bucket list, the only halls in the US I want to visit next are Disney in LA in Verizon in Philly. I’m looking forward to going to Concertgebouw in January to hear the wunderkind Klauss Makela.


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I’m flying back to NY now to hear the NY Phil w Manfred Honeck, (who I really like) perform Beethoven 7 and Brahms 1st Piano Concerto (Vikingur Olaffson- a pianist with whom I am not familiar) tonight.

So, who doesn't like Beethoven's 7th? This was close to the first piece of music that took me to a new place after a long fascination with Bach in the days of my youth when I was able to play the Toccata and Fugue in D minor (sadly, not very well although I surely tried). Well, to cut to the chase, tonight was as enjoyable a Beethoven 7th as there is. Honeck is considered a world class interpreter of Beethoven. Although tonight he led the NY Phil, his Pittsburgh Symphony is now among the finest orchestras in the world according to numerous reviewers, having been nominated for many Grammy's and winning one for Best Orchestral Performance in 2018. If you are unfamiliar with Honeck and Pittsburgh, his Tchaikovsky 5th is phenomenal in both performance and sound (they record on Fresh- a subdivision of Reference Recordings) and is a demo disc piece if there ever was one. Tonight, Honeck and the NY Phil gave a standout performance indeed. After intermission, Olaffson delivered a competent performance of Brahm's 1st piano concerto.

But the biggest surprise of the evening is shown in this picture.

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Question - how many men are in the violin sections of the NY Philharmonic? The answer is...2! That's right, out of about 30 violinists in the 1st and 2nds violin sections, there are only 2 male violinists by my count!! What the hell did they do with all the men violinists? Shoot them? I recall the highest number of women in a violin section of a major orchestra was in Cleveland for many years, but I'm pretty sure the NY Phil now owns that record! No complaints from me as the orchestra played beautifully, but it was a wow moment as there was. a lot of buzz among the attendees in the audience who noticed the same thing. Funny thing- nobody seemed to notice that there is not a single female double bass player. Hmmm....

So glad the concert season is underway. I'm headed to Carnegie next week to hear Dudamel and the LA Phil but I can hardly contain myself knowing I'm at Carnegie again on the 15th ot hear Yannick and Philly perform M3. Several friends who heard Yannick do M3 in Philly this past week simply said it was "indescribably brilliant" as did the reviews. It might be highlight of the season at Carnegie! Can't wait.
 
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M8 in Boston

I think I can now say with certainty that M8 is my least favorite Mahler symphony. It's the only Mhler Symphony I have not her liv as it is not frequently performed in large part due to the personnel requirements. (It's not called the "Symphony of 1000" for no reason.) Or maybe I was just not thrilled by Nelsons and the BSO last night. I’ve seen more than my share of conductors but although the Bostonites will condemn me for saying this, Nelsons just didn’t impress me. (The last time I was at the Hall decades ago, I saw Ozawa). Nelsons is not particularly animated and maybe Mahler is just not his thing (as is Shostakovich), but it just felt to me like a tired and worn performance that he could have phoned in, with some exceptions. I was also not particularly impressed by the BSO as good as they are, as there were many glitches in surprising places such as first violin. The horns, particularly French horns, were wonderful. Woodwinds were very good. The double bass were good but for a hall renowned for its acoustics, the bass sound doesn’t compare to Musikverein, Carnegie or Geffen. The lower brass did not impress me in particular. The organ however, knocked me out. Probably the best organ in a hall I’ve ever heard with the possible exception of Meyerson in Dallas. The Children’s choir was exceptional!

The one thing that was most disappointing were the sight lines from the orchestras parquet. Virtually all halls use staggered seating so you can look between the 2 people in front of you. Not a Symphony Hall. The tallest guy in Boston sat right in front of me so I had to lean around one side or the other to see the stage from excellent mid/rear orchestra seats. Inexcusable. Very good sonics as everyone knows, but no comparison to Musikverein (on which it was modeled; same proportions only slightly larger). I actually prefer Carnegie and Geffen, at least from my usual seats. Seat location always matters. And speaking of seats, what idiot designer decided to install the most uncomfortable seats ever made into that hall? It’s like they want you to leave before the performance is over. If I heard Yuja Wang do all 4 Rach concertos there instead of Carnegie last year, I’d have to be hospitalized for backpain by the 3rd concerto.

As far as M8, I was troubled throughout. Part 1 was really very good, and received separate applause before the BSO began Part 2. But I couldn’t help thinking that in Part 1, all the praise for God and Jesus came from the liturgy chosen by a Bohemian born Jew who probably made a conscious decision to write a piece that would appease the vehemently antisemitic mayor of Vienna. But it obviously didn’t work as they fired his ass from the Vienna Phil anyway despite his conversion to Christianity. (Mahler then moved to the US in 1908 to lead the Metropolitan Opera and then the Metropolitan Symphony Orchestra which eventually became the Ny Philharmonic, before returning to Austria to die in 1911.) The music was rich and beautiful as only Mahler can be although it didn’t have his usual themes (song of the Wayfarer, military marches, Viennese dances). Still gorgeous and inspirational at times. No surprise. After all, it’s Mahler. Part 2 however was a wrecking ball. Some beautiful orchestration but the lyrics? I couldn’t figure out the Faust story at all. What I got was a homage to the “eternal feminine who uplifts us” which was not only a reference to the Virgin Mary, but to Mahler’s wife Alma, to whom the piece was dedicated. In the meantime, at the time M8 was written, she was having an affair with the architect Gronius (who she eventually married). I guess that’s one way to get a symphony dedicated to you.

What impressed me the most was looking at Nelsons, who was a rather obese guy the last time I saw photos of him. I think my Lilly stock went up solely because of him and possibly Oprah. Semaglutides really are miracle drugs.

Now that Boston Symphony Hall is off my bucket list, the only halls in the US I want to visit are Disney in LA in Verizon in Philly. I’m looking forward to going to Concertgebouw in January to hear the wunderkind Klauss Makela.


View attachment 137329
Plus I learned about Semaglutides...
 
On Sunday night I attended a very unusual performance of Mahler’s 5th Symphony in Paris. Philip von Steinaecker led the Mahler Academy Orchestra, an organization dedicated to Mahler performances that hew to not only the origins of the score, but the period and instrumentation as well.

The orchestra draws players form orchestras from all over Europe as well as were teenage members of academy. Paris Phil regulars, including key soloists, joined in, as well as a few very talented local amateur players.

Christian Merlin, a French music critic and musicologist, gave a thirty minute introduction before the performance, highlighting its unusual circumstances and intents. He introduced the tympanist, who was also the fabricator of his kit (deerskin) and mallets; the bassoonist and clarinetist, who showed their unique period instruments and then played a bit of the score with those instruments vs their contemporary versions (the newer ones were extremely expressive, bright in a good way, complex, while the 19th century versions mellower, warmer and tonally more subtle and mysterious—kind of like vintage v modern speakers? Klangfilm v Avantgarde?). And Herr Steinaecker explained how he approached the score, hewing to Mahler’s emendations and annotations, and not juicing up the tempos or making the Adagietto lugubrious and morbid (a la the film Death in Venice).

The performance that followed was a blast, literally and figuratively...echt Mahler. The winds and horn parts were particularly vivid and spectacularly well-played. Tempos, save for the second part of the first movement, were very lively and fast by modern standards, and dynamic contrasts made you jump. The musicians were fully committed…they communicated an urgent vitality throughout. This performance clearly mattered to them.

Overall rhythms and meters were careful and taut, neither rushed nor extended. Since the composition of the entire orchestra was exactly per Mahler’s instructions, you didn’t get the large string section necessary for a huge string tone or string mass sound one usually hears when this piece is played in the concert hall. Nor was the orchestra the kind of extremely well-rehearsed, single unit playing as one, ie it wasn’t the Vienna Phil…but I still heard of bit of that Vienna sound, circa 1900 that is.


This piece was performed in the Grand Salle Pierre Boulez, the usual hall for the Paris Phil, in the Cité de la Musique, way out in the 19th arrondissement. The acoustics are great wherever you sit and prices pretty affordable, compared to say San Francisco, New York, etc. And it is very easy to get there via Metro, from almost anywhere in Paris. I would urge any of you coming here for business or vacation to check out the offerings of the Philharmonie de Paris and try to go to a concert!
Any performance of M5 is like pizza or Chinese food. Impossible not to like! As you may know, Leonard Bernstein chose to be buried with the score of M5.
 
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Santana at the Toyota Center in Houston. (Counting Crows was the opening act.) Very different vibe than the same musicians at the House of Blues a year ago in Vegas.
 

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Liszt / Dante Symphony
Daniel Smith conductor
Giuseppe Ricotta maestro della Cantoria
Riccardo Scilipoti maestro of the Children's Choir
Orchestra Sinfonica Siciliana, Cantoria della Fondazione Teatro Massimo di Palermo, Children's Choir of the Fondazione Orchestra Sinfonica Siciliana
Vaughan Williams Fantasia on a theme by Thomas Tallis for string orchestra – First performance in Palermo
Liszt Dante-Symphonie S. 109, version for female choir, children's choir and orchestra – First performance in Palermo. Concert realized in collaboration with the Fondazione Teatro Massimo di Palermo;


DE6104E7-F2AB-4D0F-86EC-A4FD579A6FB3.png
 
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Liszt / Dante Symphony
Daniel Smith conductor
Giuseppe Ricotta maestro della Cantoria
Riccardo Scilipoti maestro of the Children's Choir
Orchestra Sinfonica Siciliana, Cantoria della Fondazione Teatro Massimo di Palermo, Children's Choir of the Fondazione Orchestra Sinfonica Siciliana
Vaughan Williams Fantasia on a theme by Thomas Tallis for string orchestra – First performance in Palermo
Liszt Dante-Symphonie S. 109, version for female choir, children's choir and orchestra – First performance in Palermo. Concert realized in collaboration with the Fondazione Teatro Massimo di Palermo;


View attachment 137726
Such a magnificent venue.
 
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