Friday, April 15, 2011

Hello Cleveland! Viva la Revolucion!

     Yes, Cleveland -- there is a Revolution near you. To be exact, it' a Classical Revolution that will happen this Tuesday, April 19 between 8-10 P.M.
     All over the U.S., Canada, and Europe -- from Toronto, Montreal, Detroit, D.C., Portland, Seattle, Philly, South Florida, Houston, Pittsburgh, Berlin, Amsterdam, and even Cincinnati, bars and cafés will play host to chamber music.  Yes, that's right.  Out from the feathery cobwebs, starchy collars and powdered wigs (not that I mind powdered wigs seeing as how Mozart and Marie Antoinette were creators of ones I particularly dig) arrives classical music for a generation in the here and now.
    Founded in 2006 at the Revolution Cafe in the Mission District of San Francisco, Classical Revolution features recently graduated artists from music schools such as Oberlin Conservatory, San Francisco Conservatory, Juilliard, and Rice University.  "To present concerts involving both traditional and modern approaches while engaging the neighborhood by offering chamber music performances in highly accessible venues and collaborating with local musicians and artists from various styles and backgrounds" -- its mission statement. 
   Since its creation, it has continually spread.  Who would have ever thought that venue choice alone could have such an immense impact on as high of an art form as classical music?  (Music in general, or any form of "self-expression," in my opinion, is high art. Yet many people consider "classical music" as the highest form of self-expression for the music world.  So, I say this in regards to those traditional folks.)  Classical Revolution makes classical music "cool" and accessible to the audiences culturally conditioned to receive pop, hip-hop, rap, and all forms of rock.  
   So, go check it out.  It will be fine, fab, fantastic, and all of the hip and pimpley-hyperboles one can muster.  It's at the Happy Dog on W. 58th & Detroit, Gordon Sq.           

Sunday, April 10, 2011

Blurring Musical Boundaries



    While rifling through the Strings January 2011 issue, I came across an intriguing article.  Today’s burgeoning, fool-proof classical music is sustained in its ability to cross-over genre-defining boundaries.  Titled “Unconventional Wisdom,” the author, Jeremy Kurtz, celebrated the fact that modern string players no longer need to embrace ideas of endless, rote preparation of orchestral excerpts in finding an acceptable paying gig.  Instead, fully equipped with electricity, James Page, Robert Plant, Bill Munroe and His Bluegrass Boys, associates Mozart, Stravinsky, and Bach, classical musicians can really bring it with the concept of well-roundedness (not just preparedness) as vital organs in their repertoire.
    Kurtz interviewed three bassists: Louis Levitt of the Sybarite5, Peter Seymour of Project Trio, and Paul Kowert of the Punch Brothers -- three ensembles that encompass the idea of crossing-over genre barriers.  Because chamber music repertoire yields a barren amount of quintet literature including a bass part, these three bassists solved the issue and concocted, along with the other musicians in their ensembles, a formula: engage modern audiences and claim sanctuary for the desperate chamber musician bassist. 


    According to Louis Levitt of Sybarite5, after preparing a program for one performance that included Dvorak and Led Zeppelin’s “Babe, I’m Going to Leave You,” audience members, intent on hearing standard chamber music repertoire, were impressed with Sybarite5’s Led Zeppelin arrangement.  The secret behind this phenomenon? Listing on the program “James Page and Robert Plant” as the piece’s composers instead of “Led Zeppelin.”  Audience members were asking Levitt,  “James Page and Robert Plant -- how come I’ve never heard of them? Where can I hear more of their music?  Do you have any recordings?” 
    At the essence of any notable piece of music -- whether it be classical, jazz, funk, rock, or pop -- remains a constant message: its relation and message to the audience.  Levitt himself says, “If you take the music seriously and present it in a serious way, the audience takes it seriously.”  So, with his advice, I believe that today’s classical music lovers can succumb to the idea of accepting strictly American-cultivated music which is being added to the austere “European” artform of Western Classical Music. American rock musicians (or even jazz, blues, and country artists who invented rock with their influences) can present “serious” music because truly they communicate so well with audiences today.  So, does it matter the medium used to connect listeners to what any performer is trying to say? I believe the answer is no.  After all, like modern art which is devoid of strict mediums, music too can communicate incredible messages.                             

Take Punch Brother's Bach's Brandenburg Concerto No. 3 for instance,


Or Project Trio's version of a Bach Bourée à la Jethro Tull.