Anonymous friend & I review Renegade Ensemble at Studio Z

Go see this set of works yourself on the evening of April 1!

From anonymous friend:

John Cage…Musical crank or visionary.  One will probably not discover the answer to this question at a Minnesota Orchestra concert.  Not that there is anything wrong with the Minnesota Orchestra.  It’s just that the MO is no Studio Z.

In fact, there is nothing quite like Studio Z(eitgeist) in downtown St. Paul.  On the one hand, to live in the Twin Cities is to have an embarrassment of riches: The Schubert Club, Minnesota Opera and Lyra, just to name a few.  It’s all good stuff to be sure, but it’s all so, well, classical.  There is so much more music out there, new interesting stuff that’s worth a listen because it’s good and challenging.  And it will make you appreciate Brahms/Stravinsky all the more.

So it was a Friday night and we had a choice between Brahms/Stravinsky and Renegade Ensemble at Studio Z.  We chose the latter.  It was truly an eclectic mix of what might be called New Classical music.  The music snobs might sniff and call it the adult contemporary of classical, but that is just insecurity rearing it’s ugly head.

It was an eclectic selection with two John Cage compositions providing compositional pedigree to the program and local composers Carlisle Peck and Joshua Weinberg rounding things out.  The opening work by Mr. Peck was an progression of chords on piano that might not be to your taste if your definition of good music is Bach.  However, if you can stick with it to the very end, it is very gratifying piece.  The Cage works were very much in contrast to one another.  “In a Landscape” for concert harp was Cage at his most lyrical.  In contrast “Litany for a Whale,” which in this presentation required some audience participation, could be called experimental as it blurred the line between music and nature in a way that Stravinsky’s “Rite of Spring” cannot.  Dolce Tormento for solo piccolo by Kaija Saariaho played by Joshua Weinberg was a tour de force of technique and arguably one of the most intensely and transparently passionate works of classical music that I have heard.  Joshua Weinberg also had two of his original compositions performed: two pieces for clarinet, flute and piano and a world premier of his tone poem “Out of the Sickroom”.  Both are engaging with Sickroom being a good way to send the audience out into the night.  My favorite piece of the evening was Hikari by Sômei Satoh played by Derek Thorsteinsson.  It is a immensely challenging piece for trumpet and piano.  The challenge is bringing together a bubbling piano line together with the clarion sounds of the trumpet.  Subtlety and intensity at once.

All in all, a most enjoyable evening.  Studio Z is the place to come for new, interesting and challenging music in the Twin Cities.  The Minnesota Orchestra and the like are great institutions, but few, except with the possible exception of the SPCO (occasionally), ever attempt much that is truly avant garde.  The Twin Cities music scene, both performers and connoisseurs alike, ought to be secure enough to celebrate a place like Studio Z that is willing to push the boundaries of what good music can be.

From the blog owner:

I really enjoyed the sets of pieces here. The first two (Meditations II: Tenderness and Cage’s In a Landscape) fit together nicely as melodic pieces with consistent rhythms, inviting us to relax into the space and the music. A hint of Satie, perhaps. I found myself thinking someone should transform the Cage piece into a kantele piece… but that’s just me 🙂 The middle pieces seemed more nature-oriented, from the pastorale by Weinberg and the Litany for a Whale by Cage to Hikari (Light) with its burbling piano line, like a stream in the background of the light-beam of the trumpet. (That piano line drove me a little nuts as it is very burbling!) The second half of Weinberg’s earlier piece (it’s 1 am — can’t find the title here) focused more on human relationships; the clarinet and flute played together until one died and the other remained for a final arc…

Saariaho’s piccolo piece was unique as every Saariaho piece is — definitely an adult work about adult passions. Fun to hear all the piccolo techniques that went into it, as well. Last was the song cycle Out of the Sickroom by local composer Joshua Weinberg. The texts were written by Charles Bukowski and William Shakespeare, and the interpretation by Alyssa Anderson was passionate and intimate. Bukowski & Shakespeare, together at last — but it really works. It’s clear that Weinberg’s compositional experience has grown; his earlier featured work was enjoyable and well-done, but with the more recent work I stopped thinking about the structure of the piece and how it was put together and just listened because I had to. The Shakespeare part and the part that featured the poem Bluebird were the strongest, to me, and I can’t characterize why with any technical justification; they’re just the parts that swept me away and moved my emotions enough to forget about technique and composition.

and it’s nice enough to
make a man
weep, but I don’t
weep, do
you?

— end of Bluebird, by Bukowski

 

Links and links and links

Because they’re things I might want to revisit or am mulling over:

History is important to read about and reflect on, and distortions of history can cause distortions of vision now. This article is an interesting read, especially the discussion of Reconstruction at the end. It’s not what I learned about Reconstruction…. I’m apparently not the only person thinking about history. Bannon thinks about history a lot. Here’s an article about war and crisis as leverage for change, a point of view apparently very interesting to Bannon. Here’s a more recent article about Bannon’s reading these days, about “the best and the brightest.”

Lessons from our global neighbors are also important. Marches are important for building community and visibility, but we’ve seen the Arab Spring and marches in Russia and now marches in Romania — marches that fizzle and marches that lead to larger movements. Likewise, we can listen to what activists in places like Venezuela have to say about populist governments; they have some experience.

Last, data. Data’s been a big and perhaps under-rated part of these changes in our government. Here’s an unauthorized translation of an early article about how the Trump campaign used data, perhaps inspired by Brexit’s use of data. I think vice.com finally picked up the story and published an “authorized translation” a week later.

Data Selfie is a way of tracking your own Facebook data — haven’t used it yet — but it might be worth checking out as you ponder your own susceptibility to having personalized advertising whisper possibly false sweet nothings into your ear, influencing what you see as Truth….

Last Liquid Music: Orpheus Unsung

Here’s a review of Liquid Music’s Orpheus Unsung (by Steven Mackey) at the Dowling Studio at the Guthrie. I went with Theoroi, which is looking for new members for next year!

I think some of our group was surprised that Ars Moriendi was the first half of  the performance — we’d been talking about Orpheus during the dinner preceding and I don’t think anyone knew the story behind Ars Moriendi. Mackey told us the story he writes about here, recounting the death of his father and the musical ingredients of the piece, from wheezing breaths and medical machinery to Danny Boy and the laments of the 16th and 17th century.  During intermission, I heard that one Theoroian wished that Mackey hadn’t told the story — he wanted to come to the music without preconceptions — but I disagreed. I liked being able to pick apart the elements and unravel the inspirations.

While I connected with Ars Moriendi (the art of dying) on a few levels, for instance on the level of medical music, very evocative of a certain intersection of man and machine and the end of life, I ultimately find that in general modern classical music really doesn’t tap into my primal emotions. Listen to a sample here and see what you think. It’s intellectually interesting but I need a melody or a beat to really move me. The second half had more of that!

Orpheus Unsung is called a wordless opera in some places — the guitar is the voice. Electric guitar, percussion, three dancers, masking tape, and a video. That’s what makes up the hour-long second “half” of the evening. I really liked Orpheus Unsung. Melody and emotion in the music, not quite so intellectual or reserved. The dancers seemed to be playing the role of the Greek chorus and Cerberus the three-headed dog of Hades, as well as Orpheus and Eurydice. Orpheus was a guy in a bowling shirt, which brought to me an absurd touch of the Big Lebowski, but the bowling shirt was also about the path from life to death and back, and at the same time about blindness and sight (since the masking tape that formed the path and echoed the shirt was also the blindfold that Orpheus wore in this retelling of the story). The struggle between the dancers that results in the removal of the blindfold and the fateful look made me rethink the myth. What I remember (and looked up) is that Orpheus doubts and so looks back — Eurydice is just a passive, literally silent follower in that version of the myth. (Orpheus doubts in part because he can’t even hear her footsteps.) But in the danced presentation on Thursday, Eurydice plays a role, and it’s so much truer to marriage and partnership as I know it. Who is trying to remove the blindfold from Orpheus and who is trying to prevent it? It’s not clear and it keeps changing. Eurydice goes back and forth between Why won’t you look at me? don’t you really want to know I’m here? and You can’t look or you’ll lose me. Orpheus has a similar struggle. Don’t we all? But in this wordless dialogue between them, played out in the dancers’ hands, the real tragedy of relationship is played out. It’s not just one guy overcome by love and a bit of distrust, it’s the tragedy of two people who want to be seen, be together, but can’t quite control the cost.

The videography was well-done, I think, adding to the story and overall not putting too much stimulus into an already saturated setting. I loved the way the dancers interacted with the space and the musicians and the music. Along with their dancing and hanging out on street corners, they made some of the music as well, transforming between being roadies, Cerberus, and the fractured soul of one messed-up guy. Maybe that’s why some of the Theoroians liked the first piece better: Ars Moriendi is a piece of modern classical music, while Orpheus Unsung is a multimedia wordless opera. As such the music is essential but not at all the sole focus. It’s part of a whole that doesn’t even really make sense unless you know the story and follow the visual conversation unfolding.

(Image by Craig Cloutier under CC BY-SA 2.0)

More logging

Germany was great. The Max Planck Institute for Math is an incredible place to do research, from the wonderful staff to the good talks to the coffee machine on the main floor. My collaborator and I made a lot of progress and I learned a lot about the affine Grassmannian. Maybe pictures to follow.

I had a good jetlag-free week in Germany and then came back to the US and got into the work rhythm again. Side projects: Am I ready for college math? Trying to figure out how to provide good resources to students to deal with the psychological side of math, since I see so many students drop out because of feelings rather than ability. I put up my first Youtube video on stereotype threat while in Germany. Just putting it together was interesting! The next set of videos will probably be shorter…. Work projects: I’m leading a seminar on CCAR and stress testing. CCAR stands for “Comprehensive Capital Analysis and Review,” and it’s a process in which banks have to justify to the Federal Reserve that they’ve got enough money to deal with their obligations should the economic situation get bad. It’s directly in response to the financial crisis of the late 2000s and there is a TON of math modeling involved.

Next week I’ll be helping with the math modeling workshop for high school students at the University of Minnesota, and my group will be working on nitrate runoff in southern Minnesota. Prepping for that has been interesting — it’s math and nature (so related to a lot of activities I’ve written up for Earthcalculus.com) but there are some definite financial aspects, too. Finance and risk management in agriculture are going to be a theme in the Actuarial Research Conference that MCFAM is organizing at the University of Minnesota and St Thomas this summer!

Also trying to keep up with the weeds in the back yard…. things grow so fast!!! Our corn is showing tassels already (new fertilizer regimen) and we’ve got strawberries galore…. The hops are growing like crazy and we’ll have a good crop this year.