Showing posts with label Peter Lieberson. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Peter Lieberson. Show all posts

Saturday, September 1, 2012

Chronicle of July 2012


July 1

Death of Evelyn [Shulman] Lear (b. 1/8/26, New York, NY), at 86. Sandy Spring, MD. "[She was] an American soprano who became a star in Europe in the 1950's and later won acclaim in the United States for singing some of the most difficult roles in contemporary opera. Miss Lear, who sang more than 90 performances with the Metropolitan Opera in the 1960's and afterward, was praised on both sides of the Atlantic for her vocal warmth, expressive musicality and dramatic stage presence. As a recitalist, she was also known for her versatility, singing the work of composers from Mozart to Schoenberg to Sondheim. She was especially renowned as an interpreter of Alban Berg. In midcentury Europe, Miss Lear was considered one of the pre-eminent interpreters of Berg’s Lulu, the doomed, murderous prostitute at the heart of his 1937 opera of that name. At the Met, Miss Lear sang Marie in Wozzeck . . . . Reviewing her Marie there in 1969, Harold C. Schonberg wrote in The New York Times that Miss Lear was 'intelligent, capable of producing floods of well-focused tone, dramatically intense.' He added, however, that her physical attractiveness worked against her, making Marie’s affair with 'that lout of a Wozzeck' implausible. . . . Her maternal grandfather, Savel Kwartin, was a distinguished cantor in Europe and the United States. Her mother, Nina Kwartin Shulman, was an opera and concert singer who largely forsook her career for marriage and motherhood. Young Evelyn had determined to be a singer by the time she was 3, but was waylaid by piano and French horn studies. After an early marriage to Walter Lear, a doctor, ended in divorce, she decided to pursue vocal training in earnest and enrolled at the Juilliard School. In 1955 she married a classmate, the baritone Thomas Stewart, with whom she would appear often in recital and on recordings. Like many homegrown singers of their day, Miss Lear and Mr. Stewart labored under the onus of being American. American opera houses of the period displayed a marked bias toward the Old World, with first-rate American singers often passed over in favor of second-rate European ones. Mr. Stewart was on the point of abandoning music for a job with I.B.M. when both he and Miss Lear were awarded Fulbright fellowships for study in Germany. They moved to Europe, where they made their reputations. In 1958 Miss Lear drew wide notice for singing Richard Strauss’s Four Last Songs with the London Philharmonic under Sir Adrian Boult. She had learned the score in just four days. Her talent for quick study served her well two years later, when the Vienna Festival asked her to take over the part of Lulu -- a role she had never sung -- on short notice. . . . 'Why does this have to be so damn hard?' Miss Lear recalled thinking as she was learning the role. But she mastered it in a matter of weeks, and her performance, under Karl Böhm, brought international renown. Miss Lear made her Met debut in 1967, under Zubin Mehta, as Lavinia (the counterpart of Electra) in the world premiere of Mourning Becomes Electra. The opera, by Marvin David Levy, is an adaptation of Eugene O’Neill’s drama, itself a reworking of the Greek myth of Orestes. . . . Her . . . Met roles include Octavian in Richard Strauss’s Rosenkavalier and the Composer in his Ariadne auf Naxos . . . and, in later years, Countess Geschwitz in Lulu. . . .If Miss Lear was best known for appearing in operas of murder, incest and that sort of thing, then her reputation, she made clear, did not faze her. 'I love to do Handel, Mozart and Strauss, and I love to do my neurotic modern heroines too,' she told The New York Times in 1967. 'I am never afraid to make an ugly sound on stage because it is real and reality is never ugly.' [Marglit Fox, The New York Times, 7/4/12].


Trinity Choir performs works by Nico Muhly, Herbert Howells, and William Byrd. St. Paul’s Chapel, Trinity Church, New York, NY. "Julian Wachner . . . presided over a candlelit concert of recent sacred works . . . . Muhly began his musical career as a chorister, and in his program notes for A Good Understanding, a recent Decca recording of his choral music, he wrote of 'an addiction to the textures and rapturous moments that define the Anglican choral tradition from the 16th century to the 21st.' You can hear that passion in Bright Mass With Canons (2005), the movements of which Mr. Wachner spread through the program, with other works interspersed. Driven, joyful motifs, couched in a harmonic language that oscillates between light dissonance and a firmly traditional, Renaissance-like openness, propel the Kyrie, parts of the Gloria and the Sanctus. Those same musical moves take a more introspective, purely devotional turn in the Agnus Dei. Mr. Muhly was also represented by the premiere of the rhythmically focused In One Place (2012) and a handful of shorter settings. These included a shapely Pater Noster (2008) cloaked in antique harmonies, and The Sweets of Evening (2006), which begins with a move that Steve Reich used in his Desert Music -- a quickly repeating chordal figure -- but blossoms into an entrancing melodic work, sung ably by Trinity’s children’s choir. To open the second half Mr. Wachner gave a vivid account of Mr. Muhly’s O Antiphon Preludes (2010), a set of seven organ fantasies preceded by choral renderings of the Advent chants on which each is based. Offsetting Mr. Muhly’s works -- and, in a way, explaining their roots -- were a few richly harmonized Howells hymns, and selections from Byrd’s sublime Great Service" [Allan Kozinn, The New York Times, 7/2/12].


July 8

Iktus Percussion presents a John Cage centenary concert. Le Poisson Rouge, New York, NY. 'Cage’s music has never been absent from New York’s concert halls, but this year’s celebration of his centenary has brought more of it into the rotation than usual, with precisely the effect Cage would have wanted: Whether the works at hand are relatively sedate early pieces, or later essays in odd timbres, chance operations and studied eccentricity, an all-Cage concert is bound to leave you smiling with the recognition of having heard something strange, wonderfully wayward and provocative. Much of Cage’s music treats the spirit of the moment as an unseen ensemble member, so even works you have heard often -- this year Credo in Us (1942) has supplanted Third Construction (1941) and 4’33'' (1952) at the top of the Cage hit parade --invariably yield fresh ideas. That doesn’t mean you can’t quibble. . . . Iktus Percussion, the pianist Taka Kigawa and the toy-piano player Phyllis Chen performed nine works with admirable clarity, precision and focused energy: qualities that are usually not causes for complaint and that certainly illuminated aspects of these scores. But you missed the ramshackle touch of the unplanned that animates Cage’s work. Credo in Us, for example, which closed the program, typically includes a player dialing through a radio to pick up random sounds that become part of a piano-and-percussion fabric, though Cage proposed using recordings as an alternative (he figured that Romantic symphonists would do). The Iktus players updated this instruction by playing samples of harpsichord and orchestral music, rock and funk from a laptop, which allowed them to control which sections of each sample were heard. It was a clever, thoroughly 2012 approach, but what of Cage’s desire that happenstance be part of the piece? Cagean philosophy aside, the playing was uniformly superb. Iktus Percussion began with a short, amusing rendering of But What About the Noise of Crumpling Paper Which He Used to Do in Order to Paint the Series of ‘Papiers Froissés’ or Tearing Up Paper to Make ‘Papiers Déchirés?’ Arp Was Stimulated by Water (Sea, Lake and Flowing Waters Like Rivers), Forests (1985), using a table full of mostly metal and glass objects, as well as a sheet of paper (waved, not crumpled). They moved with no break into the exotically melodic, gamelan-accented Double Music (1941), a collaboration between Cage and Lou Harrison. Mr. Kigawa, playing a prepared piano that produced both percussive sounds and pure tones, joined the ensemble for a focused, pointillistic account of Amores (1943). Ms. Chen, in her short set, offered a dynamically supple reading of the Suite for Toy Piano (1948), a study in innocent tunefulness, as well as a more complex but brief rendering of Music for Carillon No. 2 (1954), using a toy piano and a music box to produce what sounded like electronic timbres. Mr. Kigawa played And the Earth Shall Bear Again (1942) with an alluring fluidity before removing the screws and other objects from the piano’s strings for a graceful interpretation of the impressionistic In a Landscape (1948) and a sizzling, virtuosic performance of the angular Études Australes, No. 1 (1974)" [Allan Kozinn, The New York Times, 7/9/12].


July 16

International Keyboard Festival: Prestige Series. Alexander Schimpf plays Scriabin’s Five Preludes (Op. 74, 1914) and of Ravel’s Tombeau de Couperin. "[A] beautifully colored, crisp and lively account [of the Ravel]" [Anthony Tommasini, The New York Times, 7/17/12].


July 19

Kaija Saariaho’s Émilie, a monodrama for soprano and orchestra, presented by the Lincoln Center Festival. Gerald W. Lynch Theater, New York, NY. "Of all the various operatic forms, the hardest for a composer to pull off may be the monodrama. What could be more dramatic than having a solo singer on stage giving a tour-de-force performance of a character in crisis or at some emotional turning point? Yet how long can a monodrama be sustained before the dramatic tension slackens and a sameness sets in? This may explain why not many monodramas have taken hold in the repertory. The most successful of them tend to be short, like Schoenberg’s Erwartung, which presents a disoriented woman searching a forest at night for her lover, a searing Expressionist work that wisely lasts just a half-hour. Kaija Saariaho’s Émilie lasts about 75 minutes. The monodrama genre may not be able to prop up a work of that length, even something as involving and intense as Émilie, which featured the soprano Elizabeth Futral in a vocally luminous, emotionally vulnerable and brilliant performance, with John Kennedy conducting the excellent Ensemble ACJW. With an elemental, eerily subdued and restless score and a poignant, literate French libretto by Amin Maalouf, Émilie presents the pioneering French physicist, mathematician and philosopher Émilie du Châtelet, who died in 1749 at 42. Châtelet, who as a willful, ambitious and unconventional woman is a compelling subject for a monodrama, is shown in the final days of her tumultuous life. Pregnant by her younger lover, the poet Saint-Lambert, Émilie sits at her desk writing a letter to him and recalling her life and work. She thinks back to her long affair with Voltaire and dreads the birth of her child, feeling trapped in her' swollen body' by this 'visitor,' this 'passenger.' Most of all, Émilie is seized with fear that she will never finish her French translation, with commentary, of Newton’s Principia Mathematica, and shaken with premonitions of death. Premonitions well founded, it turned out: Châtelet died nine days after the birth of her baby girl. Ms. Futral was magnificent. That Ms. Saariaho, one of the major composers of our time, was inspired by her subject comes through in this rich, complex and wondrously colorful score. Still, the monodrama is structured in nine episodes with thematic titles, like Pressentiments (Forebodings), Tombe (Tomb) and Voltaire. And the scenic structure lends a formal element to the work that undermines the dramatic immediacy. During passages in which Ms. Futral essentially faced the audience and gave voice to her character’s thoughts and fears, the piece, for all its intensity, began to seem an overextended aria. In a program note, Ms. Saariaho writes that for this work she wanted to 'devise a very intimate type of music.' That seems the right instinct for the subject, and though the scoring is richly varied, including harpsichord and electronic elements, the orchestra is small. But what resulted from this striving for intimacy is a score that lacks variety. Below the surface, as always, Ms. Saariaho’s music teems with jagged lines, astringent sonorities and uncanny instrumental effects. Her language is so distinctive, so rich with spectral colors, eerie glissandos and hazy harmonies that you cannot reduce it to tonal and atonal elements. And subtle rhythmic figures gurgle and swirl constantly. Châtelet played the harpsichord, and Émilie’s most personal forebodings and memories are often accompanied by harpsichord passages lightly evoking Baroque styles. Yet on the surface there is a sameness to the score. In the climactic moments of the final episode, Against Oblivion, the orchestra breaks into wrenching fury and slashing dissonance. Émilie could have used more such violent and searing moments. . . . Ms. Futral inhabits this role and sings this demanding work with a mesmerizing combination of vocal elegance and expressive ferocity. . . . It is hard to quibble with such an intelligent and affecting work. But Émilie might be an overpowering monodrama were it a little shorter, certainly under an hour" [Anthony Tommasini, 7/20/12].


July 25

Karol Szymanowski's King Roger. Santa Fe Opera, Santa Fe, NM. "Someone with my job should probably be able to explain why a seemingly great work has never caught on. But after attending the Santa Fe Opera’s new production of Karol Szymanowski’s King Roger . . . I am more baffled about why this mystical, sumptuous and daring Polish opera, which had its premiere in Warsaw in 1926, remains such a rarity. With a libretto by Szymanowski and the Polish writer Jaroslaw Iwaszkiewicz, King Roger finds a wrenchingly personal way to explore a timeless theme prone to cliché: the duality of human nature, or the struggle to balance reason and duty with erotic ecstasy. . . . Szymanowski, who died in 1937 at the age of 54, is finally gaining recognition, not just as the father of 20th-century Polish composition, but also as a modernist on his own terms. As a young man, Szymanowski absorbed the music of Germany, France and Russia. But his trips to southern Italy, with its remnants of ancient Greek culture, and to northern Africa, proved formative. Szymanowski saw the Mediterranean region as a melting pot of cultures and religions. King Roger has a melting-pot score, urgent and quickly paced, lasting about 80 minutes. Hints of Wagner, Strauss, Debussy and Scriabin are also charged with Middle Eastern sensuality. The conductor Evan Rogister had a great night, performing the three-act work without an intermission. He drew nuanced and voluptuous playing from the Santa Fe Opera orchestra. King Roger was a work of brave personal exploration for Szymanowski, a homosexual who wrote homoerotic love poems and a philosophical novel intended for his friends. . . . The opera opens with an entrancing choral scene, beautifully sung here, set in a Byzantine church in Sicily" [Anthony Tommasini, The New York Times, 7/27/12].


July 26

Santa Fe Chamber Music Festival. Music of Magnus Lindberg, Samuel Barber, Oliver Knussen, and Bela Bartok. St. Francis Auditorium, Santa Fe, NM. "It was a close call. Before the program began, Steven Ovitsky, the festival’s executive director, announced that Mr. Lindberg had put 'the final touches' on the piece at 1:30 that morning and came up with the title at the last moment as well. That would be Acequia Madre, and when the savvy audience heard it, people broke out laughing. The Spanish phrase, which means 'Mother Ditch,' refers to the oldest irrigation ditch in Santa Fe. The commanding performance of this 11-minute piece suggested that the final touches may not have been that extensive, or that [clarinetist Chen] Halevi and Mr. Lindberg are experts at the honorable musical tradition of faking. Acequia Madre opens with a stern, four-note theme, punched out on the piano, embedded in thick chords and driven home by the clarinet with raspy power. The music unfolds in fits, hurtling forward with cluster chords, skittish piano runs and wailing clarinet lines that segue into elusive riffs. Overall the harmonic language is modernist and steely. Yet in an intriguing internal conflict, the musical gestures are often stirring and neo-Romantic, like something Rachmaninoff might write if he were working today. The intense music keeps threatening to break out into some form of animated release but never does. After Acequia Madre these two musicians were joined by the cellist Anssi Karttunen for a performance of Mr. Lindberg’s Trio for Clarinet, Cello, and Piano (2008). The first movement opens with ominous, grumbling figures in the lowest range of the piano. The clarinet and cello come to the rescue by playing rising, beckoning melodic lines that animate the stuck-in-place piano and crest to intense highs, only to dissolve over and over into descending cascades. I liked best the third and final movement, in which for the first time the piece settles into an extended episode of pulsating music, all breathless energy and fractured phrases. . . . The Miró Quartet . . . opened a different program with an ardent performance of Barber’s early String Quartet in B. The achingly sad, slow movement is famous in its guise as a work for string orchestra, Adagio for Strings. . . . The brilliant pianist Kirill Gerstein gave a fleecy account of Oliver Knussen’s bewitching piano piece Ophelia’s Last Dance. . . . [He was joined by] violinist Ida Kavafian . . . [and] Halevi for Bartok’s Contrasts, a performance so rhapsodic and impish you would have thought the players were improvising" [Anthony Tommasini, The New York Times, 7/29/12].

Lincoln Center Festival presents the New York premiere of Guo Wenjing's Feng Yi Ting (2004). Gerald W. Lynch Theater, John Jay College, New York, NY. "In his beguiling score Mr. Guo deftly fuses Chinese and Western classical styles. The distinctive sounds of four Chinese instruments -- pipa (a lute), dizi (a flute), erhu (a fiddle) and sheng (a mouth organ) -- blend with those of a Western chamber group: here, the Ensemble ACJW, potently conducted by Ken Lam. Much of the instrumental music rises and falls in singing cadences; more than once, though, Mr. Guo shows off an impressive assimilation of film-noir moodiness and jazzy swing. Ms. Shen [Tiemei] sings in the traditional pinched, nasal style of Chinese opera, her voice rising and falling with an oboe’s penetrating tone and an erhu’s haunting slur. Physically, she embodies Diao [Chan] in a perfectly pitched balance of archetypal gesture and relatable characterization. Jiang Qihu, the countertenor who portrays Lu [Bu] in his few, brief scenes, is more a clarinet; a rounder warble and less pointed projection make his character’s agitation credible. . . . If there is a complaint to be lodged, it surely must be the brief duration [45 minutes]; when it was over, I just wanted more" [Smith, Steve, The New York Times, 7/27/12].


July 27

Santa Fe Chamber Music Festival: A Tribute to Peter Lieberson. St. Francis Auditorium, Santa Fe, NM. "[A] program . . . in honor of this . . . American composer, who died last year at 64 (Mr. Lieberson lived in Santa Fe for the last years of his life) . . . [T]wo Lieberson works for cello and piano were performed, both wonderful, and both played beautifully by the cellist Felix Fan and the pianist Andrew Russo: Three Variations (1996) and Remembering Schumann (2009), a three-movement piece that evokes the spirit and musical gestures of Schumann but is through-and-through Lieberson. . . . There was also a performance of [Oliver] Knussen’s Requiem: Songs for Sue, an affecting piece for soprano (Tony Arnold) and chamber orchestra (conducted by Jeffrey Milarsky), written in memory of Mr. Knussen’s wife, who died in 2003" [Anthony Tommasini, The New York Times, 7/29/12].

Sunday, January 1, 2006

21ST-CENTURY MUSIC / January 2006


21ST
CENTURY
MUSIC

January 2006

Volume 13, Number 1


Peter and Lorraine Hunt Lieberson / Phillip George

SFS Opening Rehearsal / Mark Alburger

Life Is Rough / Mark Alburger

Pieces of Perturbation / Elizabeth Agnew

Chickens and Eggs / Carolyn Jean

Chronicle of November 2005

Recording


Illustration / Lorraine Hunt Lieberson, Peter Lieberson


Editorial Staff

Mark Alburger
EDITOR-PUBLISHER

Harriet March Page
ASSOCIATE EDITOR

Patti Noel Deuter
ASSISTANT EDITOR

Erling Wold
WEBMASTER

Alexis Alrich
Katherine Buono
Ken Bullock
David Cleary
Jeff Dunn
Phillip George
Brian Holmes
Jeff Kaliss
John Lane
Michael McDonagh
Tom Moore
William Rowland
Andrew Shapiro
CORRESPONDENTS


INFORMATION FOR SUBSCRIBERS

21ST-CENTURY MUSIC is published monthly by 21ST-CENTURY MUSIC, P.O. Box 2842, San Anselmo, CA 94960. ISSN 1534-3219.

Subscription rates in the U.S. are $96.00 per year; subscribers elsewhere should add $48.00 for postage. Single copies of the current volume and back issues are $12.00. Large back orders must be ordered by volume and be pre-paid. Please allow one month for receipt of first issue. Domestic claims for non-receipt of issues should be made within 90 days of the month of publication, overseas claims within 180 days. Thereafter, the regular back issue rate will be charged for replacement. Overseas delivery is not guaranteed. Send orders to 21ST-CENTURY MUSIC, P.O. Box 2842, San Anselmo, CA 94960. email: mus21stc@gmail.com.

Typeset in Times New Roman. Copyright 2006 by 21ST-CENTURY MUSIC. This journal is printed on recycled paper. Copyright notice: Authorization to photocopy items for internal or personal use is granted by 21ST-CENTURY MUSIC.

The Journal is also online at 21st-centurymusic.com and 21st-centurymusic.blogspot.com


INFORMATION FOR CONTRIBUTORS

21ST-CENTURY MUSIC invites pertinent contributions in analysis, composition, criticism, interdisciplinary studies, musicology, and performance practice; and welcomes reviews of books, concerts, music, recordings, and videos. The journal also seeks items of interest for its calendar, chronicle, comment, communications, opportunities, publications, recordings, and videos sections. Copy should be double-spaced on 8 1/2 x 11 -inch paper, with ample margins. Authors are encouraged to submit via e-mail.

Prospective contributors should consult The Chicago Manual of Style, 15th ed. (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2003), in addition to back issues of this journal. Copy should be sent to 21ST-CENTURY MUSIC, P.O. Box 2842, San Anselmo, CA 94960. e-mail: mus21stc@gmail.com. Materials for review may be sent to the same address.


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Send all inquiries to 21ST-CENTURY MUSIC, P.O. Box 2842, San Anselmo, CA 94960. e-mail: mus21stc@gmail.com.

Peter and Lorraine Hunt Lieberson / Phillip George


American composer Peter Lieberson (b. October 25, 1946, New York, NY) is the son of ballerina and choreographer Vera Zorina (née Eva Brigitta Hartwig) and Goddard Lieberson, president of Columbia Records.

He studied composition with Milton Babbitt, Charles Wuorinen, Donald Martino, and Martin Boykan. After completing work at Columbia University, he left New York in 1976 for Boulder, Colorado, to continue his studies with Chogyam Trungpa, a Tibetan Vajrayana Buddhist master.

It was there he met and married Ellen Kearney, a fellow student of Trungpa. At the request of their teacher, the Liebersons moved from Boulder to Boston, Massachusetts. to co-direct Shambhala Training, a meditation and cultural program.

Lieberson attended Brandeis University, from which he received a Ph.D. From 1984-88 he taught at Harvard, and then became international director of Shambhala Training in Halifax, Nova Scotia.

Since 1994, Lieberson has devoted his time entirely to composition. He met his second wife, mezzo-soprano Lorraine Hunt, in 1997 during the Santa Fe Opera production of Ashoka's Dream, marrying her in 1999 after his divorce. The composer wrote the Rilke and Neruda Songs for Hunt Lieberson, the latter work co-commissioned by the Los Angeles Philharmonic and the Boston Symphony, with the world premiere given on May 20, 2005, by the Los Angeles Philharmonic with Esa-Pekka Salonen.


Works

Flute Variations (1971)

Concerto for Four Groups of Instruments (1972)

Concerto for Violoncello with Accompanying Trios (1974)

Accordance for 8 Instruments (1975)

Piano Fantasy (1975)

Tashi Quartet for clarinet, violin, cello and piano (1978)

Concerto for Piano (1980)

Three Songs for soprano and chamber ensemble (1981)

Lalita, Chamber Variations (1984)

Bagatelles for piano (1985)

Drala for orchestra (1986)

Feast Day for flute (also piccolo, alto flute), oboe, cello and harpsichord (or piano) (1985)

Ziji for clarinet, horn, violin, viola, cello and piano (1987)

The Gesar Legend for orchestra (1988)

Raising the Gaze for flute (also piccolo), clarinet (also bass clarinet), violin, viola, cello, piano and percussion (1988)

Fantasy Pieces for piano (1989)

Scherzo No. 1 for piano (1989)

Elegy for violin and piano (1990)

Wind Messengers for 3 flute, 2 oboes, 2 clarinets (also bass clarinets), 2 bassoons and 2 horns (1990)

King Gesar for narrator and chamber ensemble (1991)

A Little Fanfare for flute, trumpet, violin and harp (1991)

World’s Turning for orchestra (1991)

Viola Concerto (1992)

A Little Fanfare (II) for clarinet, violin, viola, cello and piano (1993)

Variations for violin and piano (1993)

Garland for piano (1994)

Rhapsody for viola and orchestra (1994)

Rumble, Medley for viola, double bass and percussion (1994)

String Quartet (1994)

The Five Great Elements for orchestra (1995)

Processional for orchestra (1995)

Three Variations for cello and piano (1996)

Ashoka's Dream (1997)

The Ocean that Has No West and No East for piano (1997)

Free and Easy Wanderer for chamber orchestra (1998)

Horn Concerto (1998)

Tolling Piece for piano (1998)

Red Garuda for piano and orchestra (1999)

The Six Realms for cello and orchestra (2000)

C'mon Pigs of Western Civilization Eat More Grease for baritone and piano (2001)

Forgiveness for baritone and cello (2001)

Piano Quintet (2001)

Rilke Songs for mezzo-soprano and piano (2001)

Ah for orchestra (2002)

Piano Concerto No. 3 (2003)

Neruda Songs for mezzo-soprano and orchestra (2005)

***

Lorraine Hunt Lieberson (b. March 1, 1954) was formerly a professional violist, and did not shift her full-time focus to singing until she was in her 30's.

Her parents were both involved with opera in the San Francisco Bay Area; mother, Marcia, was a contralto and music teacher and father, Randolph, taught music in high school and college.

Hunt Lieberson performed as a child in Engelbert Humperdinck's Hänsel and Gretel, as a gingerbread boy.

She began her musical career as a violist, and became principal with the San Jose Symphony. At age 26, she turned to studying voice seriously at the Boston Conservatory of Music.

After charity performance of the Humperdinck at a prison, this time taking Hänsel's role, she auditioned for the Met, at age 29.

Her professional career as a singer began in 1984, and in 1985 she made her operatic debut after meeting Peter Sellars and appearing in his 1985 production of Handel's Giulio Cesare. Hunt Lieberson began working with Craig Smith at Emmanuel Music as a violist, then sang in the chorus and began taking leading roles.

Her work with Emmanuel continued throughout the 1980s and 1990s.

While rehearsing in Peter Lieberson's opera Ashoka's Dream at Santa Fe in 1997, she met the composer and married him two years later.

Her debut performance at the Metropolitan Opera came during the 1999-2000 season, in eleven performances as Myrtle Wilson in the world premiere of John Harbison's The Great Gatsby (December 20). During this same season, she also appeared as Sesto in the New York City Opera's production of Mozart's La clemenza di Tito, as well playing La Perelin in Kaija Saariaho's Clemence at the Salzburg Festival.

Peter Lieberson flourished creatively in their relationship, composing for her Rilke Songs (2001) and Neruda Songs, both of which have been recorded.

Critical opinions of her work, both in live performance and in recordings, have generally been high. Most reviewers have made note of her beautiful tone and controlled style.

Chronicle of November 2005


November 2

Premiere of Philip Glass's Symphony No. 8, plus his Symphony No. 6, by the Bruckner Orchestra Linz, directed by Denis Russel Davies. Brooklyn Academy of Music, New York, NY. "Glass's most glamorous projects these last 25 years have been operas, which he has composed plentifully and on virtually every conceivable subject, from historical figures to science fiction. But Mr. Glass has been building up his symphonic catalog as well, largely through the encouragement of Dennis Russell Davies, a conductor who has championed Mr. Glass's music since the early 1980's. It wasn't until 1992 that Mr. Glass wrote a work he called a symphony, and that was a tentative step: he based that first effort on themes from David Bowie and Brian Eno's Low. But as anyone who knows Mr. Glass's work will attest, once he cottons onto something, he keeps at it. . . . To fill out the program, Mr. Davies and company, as well as the soprano Lauren Flanigan, offered Mr. Glass's Symphony No. 6, a work that Mr. Davies and Ms. Flanigan introduced at an American Composers Orchestra concert at Carnegie Hall in 2002. Symphony No. 8 shows the distance Mr. Glass has traveled since his early 'additive process' works. In those scores, winding lines would be literally repeated many times, then gradually transformed through the addition of single notes or short phrases. The three-movement Symphony No. 8, though, is about virtually continuous change. Its basic materials are pure Glass: the rhythmically repeated minor chords, the arpeggiation and other signature moves are all there. But the chromaticism that has crept into Mr. Glass's music since Koyaanisqatsi (1982) is now more extreme, and more fluid, as well. And once a theme is stated, it immediately morphs into something else, with barely a single repetition. Changes in texture are constant as well. Indeed, the great attraction of this work is the unpredictable orchestration. Every section has a moment (or a few) in the spotlight; there is even a lovely flute and harp variation in the melancholy second movement. Symphony No. 6, a setting of Allen Ginsberg's 1978 poem Plutonian Ode, comes from a different universe. A symphony though it may be, this is Mr. Glass at his most operatic. Ginsberg's angry, searing text being what it is -- an excoriation of the war industry, mainly -- Mr. Glass set it to intensely dramatic and overtly virtuosic music, much of it in soaring, fortissimo soprano lines that leap around the voice and spend plenty of time in the highest reaches. There were moments when its demands clearly taxed Ms. Flanigan. But she brought to the score something more than perfect pitch: an electricity that made her gripping, emotional reading impossible to resist. Mr. Davies created an electricity of his own, drawing a warm, rounded sound from the orchestra's strings and winds, and ample energy from the brass players and percussionists, whom Mr. Glass keeps busy in both scores" [Allan Kozinn, The New York Times, 11/4/05].


November 16

Benjamin Britten's Midsummer Night's Dream given by Juilliard Opera Center. Peter Jay Sharp Theater, New York, NY. "[The production] achieves . . . balance through the richness of the performance and the inventiveness of the staging. Moreover, seeing the opera performed by a young and eager cast works wonders, especially in the story line involving the two Athenian couples who are so muddled in their passions even before Oberon, the king of the fairies, interferes with his herbal potion. The emotional torment these characters go through seems volatile and impulsive when the roles are sung, as they are here, by intense, gifted and attractive student singers. . . . Britten's powers of evocation are strongest in this alluring score. Oberon, a countertenor (here Randall Scotting, an impressive guest artist) and Tytania, a coloratura soprano (the agile and bright-toned Erin Morley), sing in grandiloquent lines that recall English Baroque opera, but with wayward chromatic turns and spiky modern harmonies. When the rustics present their bungled version of the tragedy of Pyramus and Thisbe, Britten deftly parodies bel canto opera, complete with a mini-mad scene for the heroine. To conduct, Juilliard brought in David Atherton, an acclaimed Britten interpreter. . . . Atherton draws some lithe and colorful playing from the orchestra, and the chorus of fairies sounds ethereal" [Anthony Tommasini, The New York, 11/18/05].


November 18

Sound Insights: Seeing Debussy, Hearing Monet, with David Robertson and the St. Louis Symphony. Carnegie Hall, New York, NY. "[T]he program was an attempt to uncover the parallels between the music of Debussy, here the Prelude to the Afternoon of a Faun and Jeux, and the paintings of Monet, here the artist's Morning on the Seine series and his later Water Lilies . . . . The obvious approach when comparing Impressionism in painting and music would have been to focus on the big picture, in a sense, and to point out that both Monet and Debussy employed hazy textures, blurry colorings and impressionistic imagery. Mr. Robertson chose instead to focus on specifics. For example, he discussed the concept of reflection in the work of both creators. He described Monet's series depicting the same bend in the Seine, painted at different times of day in different atmospheres, to a theme and variations form in music, and showed how the same clump of trees gets reflected in the water in wondrously different ways in the different paintings. He compared this effect to the opening theme for solo flute in Afternoon of a Faun, which seductively squiggles between a C sharp and a lower G. With the aid of the orchestra, he showed how in a series of crucial moments when that C sharp is sustained, Debussy reflects it in the watery pool of the orchestra with precise and exactingly different harmonies. Mr. Robertson had people all over the hall nodding in comprehension as he shifted between projected images of the paintings, orchestral examples and, finally, riveting performances of both Debussy works. He is a brilliant lecturer who spoke at length without notes, but also a delightfully quirky character with deadpan comic timing" [Anthony Tommasini, The New York Times, 11/21/05].


November 19

David Robertson conducts St. Louis Symphony in Morton Feldman's Coptic Light and Gustav Mahler's Das Lied von der Erde. Carnegie Hall. "David Robertson, who recently began his tenure as the conductor of the St. Louis Symphony, demonstrated his skills at a whole range of things a music director must be able to do if American orchestras are to thrive at a time of daunting challenges. . . . [H]e showed his technical and interpretive mastery at conducting both a cutting-edge contemporary score, Morton Feldman's cryptic Coptic Light, and a touchstone of the repertory, Mahler's Lied von der Erde. He gave evidence aplenty of his skills as an orchestra-builder, for the musicians of the St. Louis Symphony seemed more engaged and inspired than I have ever heard them, and the orchestra sounded just great. Finally, Mr. Robertson proved himself a natural teacher, someone who can explain and illustrate complex musical matters in ways that general audiences can get . . . [with] some helpful spoken comments before performing Coptic Light (1986), a mesmerizing Feldman score inspired by the composer's encounter with Egyptian tapestries. In this 30-minute work, the music evolves in calm, slow, inalterably quiet spans of quixotic harmonies and motivic fragments. If not much seems to happen on the surface of this piece at first, as played here you soon detected a multitude of minute variations of sounds and mini-events. Mr. Robertson aptly praised the score for it curious mix of 'lush sound and austerity.' The evening ended with a bracing, lucid and unsentimental account of Das Lied von der Erde. The tenor Stuart Skelton brought youthful determination to his singing, though vocally he was not fully up to this taxing music. The golden-haired, golden-voiced mezzo Michelle DeYoung sang with affecting beauty and floods of sound throughout. So far, it seems that things could not be going better for Mr. Robertson and the St. Louis Symphony" [Anthony Tommasini, The New York Times, 11/21/05].


November 25

Lorraine Hunt Lieberson sings Peter Lieberson's Neruda Songs, on a program with Gustav Mahler's Symphony No. 4, with the Boston Symphony Orchestra, conducted by James Levine. Symphony Hall, Boston, MA. Through November 28, New York, NY. 'With great relief I can report that Ms. Hunt Lieberson performed . . . looking radiant and sounding wonderful. Though she had to pull out of some high-profile events this past year, including the premiere in San Francisco of John Adams's opera Doctor Atomic, she made a point of singing Neruda Songs, a co-commission of the Los Angeles Philharmonic and the Boston Symphony, at its premiere in Los Angeles in May. How could she not? Every phrase of Mr. Lieberson's new work seems to have been crafted with his wife's beautifully earthy voice and keen expressive instincts in mind. . . . . Lieberson's 30-minute score, a setting of five sonnets by the Chilean poet Pablo Neruda, deals with, to paraphrase the composer, different faces of love: the pure appreciation of love; its joy and mystery; the anguish of separation; the volatile back and forth between passion and contentment; the inevitability of parting through death. Perhaps because of the subject matter, Mr. Lieberson's richly chromatic harmonic language, despite arresting swatches of atonality and pungent dissonance, is grounded, almost tonal, and deeply melancholic. Though the colorings are lush, the textures are lucid. Ms. Hunt Lieberson, who speaks Spanish, provided her husband essential advice about setting the Spanish text with idiomatic naturalness. The work evolves in long-spun lines of ruminative lyricism. For the most part, the orchestra alternately cushions, empowers, consoles and agitates the vocal lines. For example, in the first song, as the soloist sings of being alive with love, the orchestra envelops the melodic writing with sultry shimmerings and a wistful tune for a lazy clarinet. For me, the only misstep in this haunting work comes in the first half of the fourth song, when the passion of love is evoked and bossa nova maracas gently rattle in the orchestra. It seems too explicit, too obvious a touch. But the fifth song, on the inevitability of death, provides an overwhelming conclusion, with an aching yet ennobled melodic line and astringent yet beautiful harmonies sustained by tremulous strings and reedy winds. . . . One moment she would send a phrase soaring with plaintive intensity and dusky sound, and the next she would plead with her lover not to leave, sounding pale-toned, breathy and painfully human. When the final song ended in a whisper, she held the spell and did not break character. It seemed like half a minute before the audience intruded upon the silence and began a prolonged standing ovation for the performers and the composer. . . . In the Mahler, Mr. Levine revealed inner details and intricacies you seldom hear, while never hindering the symphony's bucolic spirits and overall shape. In the final movement, the soprano Heidi Grant Murphy, substituting for Dorothea Röschmann, who was ill, brought her angelic voice to Mahler's disarmingly innocent portrait of heavenly life" [Anthony Tommasini, The New York Times, 11/26/05].


November 27

Earl Wild plays his own compositions, three days after his 90th birthday. Carnegie Hall, New York, NY. "Earl Wild [is a] a former staff pianist for NBC television, who composed, arranged and played music for Sid Caesar's Caesar's Hour in the mid-1950's and wrote crowd-pleasing novelty pieces, like Variations on an American Theme ('Doo-Dah'). . . . In certain elitist quarters, Mr. Wild has never been forgiven for his early work in radio and television, his nonintellectual approach to music and his refreshingly nonchalant virtuosity. During his stint on the piano faculty at the Juilliard School in the late 1970's and early 80's, he must have chuckled over some of the fledgling virtuosos who wore the blood-and-sweat effort of playing the piano like a badge of honor. Everything about his technique and music-making is relaxed, free and easy. . . . His discography contains more than 70 recordings, with 35 concertos by, among others, Menotti and Xaver Scharwenka, and the 'Spellbound' Concerto by Miklos Rozsa, best known as a film composer. His recording 20th- and 21st-Century Piano Sonatas, released in 2000, offers meticulous and surprisingly insightful accounts of sonatas by Barber, Stravinsky and Hindemith as well as his own harmonically crunchy Neo-Classical Sonata, composed in that year. Read through Mr. Wild's résumé and you come across unusual facts. He was the first pianist to give a recital on television, on NBC in 1939. In 1960, he conducted Puccini's comedy Gianni Schicchi at the Santa Fe Opera on a double bill with Stravinsky, no less, who conducted his severe one-act opera[-oratorio] Oedipus Rex. Mr. Wild is particularly proud of his 1965 recordings of Rachmaninoff's four piano concertos and the Rhapsody on a Theme of Paganini, with the Royal Philharmonic Orchestra conducted by the dynamic Jascha Horenstein. He had an instantaneous rapport with Horenstein, as he recounted in an interview in New York shortly after his July recital. 'We recorded those five works in five days, one per day,' he said. 'We had a single rehearsal of each piece, then we recorded it, playing it right through. It was a joy.' Mr. Wild has no apologies for making cuts in the Rachmaninoff Third, which he deems too long for its own good. The current penchant for restoring cuts 'gets to be a pain,' he said, adding, 'It's very easy to blab things.' Rachmaninoff, he noted, typically took those cuts when he performed the work. 'You have to remember that if the composer decides to take a cut, he's right,' he said. 'Even if he's wrong, he's right.' Besides, he added, 'a piece should say what it has to say and then get off the stage'" [Anthony Tommasini, 11/27/05].