Interview: Eric Whitacre, Virtual Choirmaster
How the Nevada-born composer taught the world to sing on the internet
McDonald's (the hamburger people) are rarely acknowledged for their contributions to the arts, but without them we may never have witnessed the meteoric rise of composer Eric Whitacre. When he was 14, he heard a casting call on the radio for a McDonald's TV ad, persuaded his mother to drive him into Reno, Nevada to join the throng of hopeful teenagers, and ended up making a brief appearance in the "McDonald’s Great Year" commercial.
Michael Jarrell, Hoddinott Hall, Cardiff
Swiss spectralist composer strong on sonority but not structure
Music, Wagner famously pronounced, is the art of transition. For the Swiss composer Michael Jarrell, by contrast, music is “the art of punctuation”. On the one hand, how to get from one thing to the next; on the other hand, how to separate one thing from the next. But in the end the problem is much the same: how do we make sense of large chunks of time that contain nothing but music?
theartsdesk in Llantwit Major: Arvo Pärt in the Vale of Glamorgan
The contemporary music festival receives a celebrated visitor
Amazingly, the Vale of Glamorgan Festival has been on the go for more than 40 years, and has got better and better as it has gone along. Until recently, any kind of mould-breaking musical enterprise was likely to collide with the entrenched interests of the Taffia, the Cardiff and County Club, the Welsh Arts Council and the Land of Song.
Bliss, Opera Australia, Edinburgh Festival Theatre
Hotly anticipated new Australian opera is hoist by its absurdly trendy Leftist petard
The Lying Down Concert: Earthrise, Royal Opera House
Lying down and looking up makes an entirely different music experience
We should lie down to listen to music much more often. Gravity pulls away the thought and frown lines, smoothes the intellectual tracks and folds on the face, while you feel the blood in your head pumping lushly to dreamier parts of your brain. Joanna MacGregor’s If-A-Tree festival at the Royal Opera House this weekend may well be hitting some fey bases along its way, but Earthrise: The Lying Down Concert - was a spectacularly enjoyable opening event.
Tilbury, BBC Scottish Symphony Orchestra, Volkov, Royal Albert Hall
Experimentalists Cage, Cardew, Feldman and Skempton given rare Proms slot
The Duchess of Malfi, ENO, Punchdrunk
An unmissable new show but a mess of an opera
It's tough being a critic.
Pollini, London Symphony Orchestra, Eötvös, Barbican Hall
Lachenmann may be the bogeyman of modern composition but he ravishes the ear
Helmut Lachenmann is a sort of George Bush of contemporary classical composition, a bogeyman, a warrior, an ideologue. In my time his name has always been served up with an exclamation mark - "you like Lachenmann!?" - partly because his politics have always reveled in anti-social extremes, partly because his musical tools were always either abstraction, noise, difficulty or perversity (musica negativa, as Henze once put it), his enemy, having a good time.
OperaShots, Royal Opera
Three major composers lose their operatic virginity and score in football-themed event
Anyone hoping to take refuge from last night’s football fever in the solemn halls of the Royal Opera House would have scored something of an own goal. Heading the bill for OperaShots – a trio of new operas staged in the intimate Linbury Theatre – was Jocelyn Pook’s Ingerland, an operatic meditation on the beautiful game. Framed by shorter works from Orlando Gough and Nitin Sawhney, the evening was a chance for three established composers to have a “shot” at opera for the first time. With Gough promising not so much an attempt as a “shot across the bow of opera”, we prepared ourselves for something pretty provocative.