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Saturday, April 6, 2013

Going to 'Carmina Burana' tonight?

Posted on 2:35 AM by Unknown
The Rest is Noise has just reached my most loathed piece of all time: Carl Orff's Carmina Burana. I'm leaving them to it. Watch this documentary to learn the truth about Orff, the Nazis and the White Rose Resistance Movement. Below is an article I wrote about it for the Independent in 2008 - for some reason it is not showing up on the Indy website, so I'm rerunning it here...






CARL ORFF, CARMINA BURANA AND TONY PALMER’S FILM (WRITTEN 2008)
Jessica Duchen


Every day for the last 30 years, a performance of Carl Orff’s Carmina Burana has taken place somewhere in the world. Few pieces of classical music have achieved such ubiquitous recognition. Its chorus ‘O Fortuna’ has been used to advertise beer, aftershave and horror movies; performers worldwide fall over themselves to tackle the bawdy Latin texts and the panoply of accompanying percussion. In January the work is coming to London’s O2 Arena in a spectacular staging by Franz Abraham, involving 250 performers, naked dancers, fireworks, bungee jumping and more.

The first classical presentation at the O2 Arena, it’s also the first time since 1926 that such a vast a classical music event will have been held indoors in the UK – nothing on this scale has been seen since the demise of the Crystal Palace’s Handel festivals back in 1926. It is more than 125 years since Messiah was performed there to an audience of 87,000.

This production of Carmina Burana has now been touring for 13 years, but this is its first visit to Britain. Those who snort that the 18,000 audience capacity at O2 is too large for classical music would do well to reflect that on Copacabana Beach in Brazil the production played to some 100,000. Indications are that this is more than just an attempt to sex up a classic. The performing ensemble of the Royal Philharmonic Orchestra, the Brighton Festival Chorus and Youth Choir and an outsize company of dancers, actors and puppets will be conducted by Walter Haupt, a former student and friend of the composer, and Abraham has said that on attending the premiere Orff’s widow declared that this was what her late husband “had dreamed for his masterpiece”.

The tormented history of Orff himself has become the subject of a documentary by Tony Palmer. His film O Fortuna, which premieres at the Barbican in December, carries a message no less spectacular in its own way, but far more sober: Carl Orff effectively sold his soul to Hitler’s henchmen, and paid the price in his conscience for the rest of his life. Yet today his educational innovations in music are helping to brighten the existences of children across the globe.

The film contains much that will shock fans, as well some phenomenal twists of fortune. Orff emerges as a highly complex man who, according to the third of his four wives, Luise Rinser, “found it impossible to love” and “despised people”, habitually using, then discarding those close to him. He would often wake up in the night, screaming, and would tell her: “I have seen the Devil.” She adds: “If he had been a less great person, he would have gone mad. Nevertheless, there is madness in his music.” Orff’s only child, Godela, gives a candid account of a father whom she declares did not want her and had no place for her in his existence. But the catalogue of lies, deception and heartlessness goes back to the very beginning.

It turns out that Orff, who was born in Bavaria in 1895, had a Jewish grandmother – a fact that extraordinarily he managed to conceal from the thorough research processes of the National Socialists. “Once you tell one lie to cover up a lethal situation – one Jewish grandparent was enough to condemn you to death – it’s a slippery slope,” comments Tony Palmer. “Ever more must be done to maintain the deception.”

The lies went on. Orff later claimed that the Nazis had banned Carmina Burana. Nothing could have been further from the truth – they adored it, and no wonder. Its simplicity, accessibility and primal force exemplified the opposite of the atonal or serialist works that the regime deemed ‘decadent’ (‘entartete musik’). Indeed, the work – premiered for the Nazi party in 1937 – helped to draw Orff to their attention and won him support from the Reich. Nor was he above writing new incidental music to A Midsummer Night’s Dream when the much-loved work by the Jewish Mendelssohn was indeed banned.

Orff, however, was never a card-carrying member of the Nazi party and privately despised them for their crudity and philistinism. “He wasn’t interested in politics,” his second wife, Gertrud, recalls in the film. She adds that the war was “not our fault”, but that they did not protest because it “wasn’t safe”.

It is telling that one of the works closest to Orff’s heart was a ‘Märchenopera’ (fairy-tale opera) that he wrote in 1939: Der Mond, telling of a world plunged into darkness when fiends steal the moon. It contains some of his most appealing music, but proved unstageable except by a puppet theatre. Many artists, comments the historian Michael H. Kater, felt that “the regime had stolen the light” from them.

Still, it was not difficult for the previously penniless and struggling Orff to tell that the Reich had high hopes for him. By 1943 his name was on a special list of favoured artists; he was not to be conscripted, he received a prize from the Cultural Chamber of 2000 marks in 1942 and he was placed on an elite payroll that gave him 1000 marks per month. Germany’s two senior composers, Richard Strauss and Hans Pfitzner were aging and would soon die; it was clear that if Germany were to win the war, Orff would quickly become the Reich’s leading composer.

One can argue that, like so many living under insane and tyrannical regimes, Orff merely did what was necessary in order to survive. And perhaps it was his good fortune that when he found himself facing the ‘de-Nazification’ process after Germany’s defeat, his interrogator was a musically educated admirer. This American intelligence officer, keen to help him, asked him simply to provide something, anything, that could show he had spoken out against Hitler.

Orff’s invented response at this moment would never cease to haunt the composer.

Kurt Huber, professor of philosophy at Munich University, had provided Orff with the medieval Latin texts that he set in Carmina Burana; the two had also worked together on Der Mond. In 1942 Huber and a core group of students formed the White Rose Resistance Movement which distributed pamphlets calling for active opposition to the Third Reich. Huber authored the sixth and final leaflet. Huber’s widow, Clara, relates on camera that Orff was a close friend and used to visit them every Sunday. Yet, she adds, he had no part in the movement and never said a word against Hitler.

On the contrary, the day after Huber’s arrest, when she told Orff what had happened, his response was: “I am ruined! Ruined!” She hoped he would use his influence to intervene on her husband’s behalf; but Orff did nothing. “He thought only of himself,” she recalls. She never saw him again.

Put on the spot by the de-Nazification interrogator, Orff falsely claimed that he had co-founded the White Rose Movement with Huber. The group’s members, including Huber, had been executed in 1943. Nobody was left alive to dispute his words and he walked out with a clear name. He had only to answer to his own conscience.

Among Orff’s papers, Michael Kater discovered a document in the composer’s handwriting, addressed to the deceased Huber: a letter recalling their good times and begging forgiveness. It appeared to be Orff’s private, desperate attempt to work through his guilt over betraying his friend. Perhaps it is no coincidence that Orff’s later works included settings of Greek tragedies, such as Antigonae and Oedipus, in which guilt and the unforgiving nature of fate are recurrent themes.

Orff, though, has experienced an astonishing posthumous redemption. In 1924-5 he co-founded the Günther-Schule for music and dance in Munich. There, with half an eye on the Hitler Youth, he devised a new approach to musical education entitled Schulwerk– literally, ‘schoolwork’. Its central concept is that every child is musical and that each individual can become free to express him- or herself musically through learning simple rhythms on percussion instruments, playing and singing in groups, and building confidence through imagination and creative thinking. “When we lose our fantasy,” said Orff, “we are lost.”

The Hitler Youth turned up its nose at Schulwerk. But in time, Orff’s ideas proved strikingly effective; today they are passionately advocated by musical educationalists the world over.

Palmer has filmed Orff Schulwerk classes in China, Taiwan, the townships of South Africa and, harrowingly, a music therapy group in Nottingham for children with cerebral palsy. This sequence is agonising to watch. But when one small boy breaks into a smile and reaches out for his drum, the entire sorry saga of Carl Orff suddenly becomes worthwhile. Whatever his personal failings, he devised a system that is now improving the lives of ailing children who under the Third Reich would have been condemned to death.

Orff died in 1982 and was buried in the monastery at Andechs on Bavaria’s ‘holy mountain’. Fortune may have been merciless to him in his own mind, but in the musical world it has smiled lavishly upon him, and continues to do so. “The good man,” said Orff, “is the one who begins again, with his ideas and his life.”







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Posted in Carl Orff, Carmina Burana, Hitler, Nazis, The Rest is Noise, White Rose Resistance Movement | No comments

Friday, April 5, 2013

Friday Historical: Beethoven's Triple in Moscow, 1970

Posted on 2:49 AM by Unknown
Heads up, first, to a feisty performance of this extraordinary piece at St George's Hanover Square yesterday. The Orpheus Foundation's mission is to help young musicians bridge the gap between finishing college and finding their way into the profession by providing orchestral performing experience with the Orpheus Sinfonia. Yesterday their cello soloist was one of their increasing number of success stories: born in Belorus, Aleksei Kiseliov played with the ensemble for several years and, besides winning a number of prizes, he has now been appointed principal cello of the Royal Scottish National Orchestra. Beethoven's Triple Concerto features a virtually irrational workout for the cello, which has to undertake all manner of stratospherical pyrotechnics, but Aleksei stayed cool as can be, maintaining exquisitely beautiful tone throughout. Expert contributions, too, from his fellow soloists - the fine young violinist Benjamin Baker and our neighbour-in-SW-London Anthony Hewitt, who was in volcanically eloquent mode at the piano.

Since giving that talk a couple of weeks ago, I've been preoccupied with Beethoven. It's too easy to take him for granted. Rather than musing at length, though, let's hear some...

So here are the Triple's second and third movements, played live in Moscow in 1970 by David Oistrakh (violin), Sviatoslav Richter (piano) and Mstislav Rostropovich in "that" cello part. Kirill Kondrashin conducts the Moscow Philharmonic in the Great Hall of the Moscow Conservatory.


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Posted in Aleksei Kiseliov, Anthony Hewitt, Beethoven, Beethoven Triple Concerto, Benjamin Baker, David Oistrakh, Kirill Kondrashin, Mstislav Rostropovich, Orpheus Foundation, Orpheus Sinfonia, Sviatoslav Richter | No comments

Polunin update

Posted on 12:48 AM by Unknown
Following yesterday's announcement that Polunin will not dance next week and hasn't been seen since Tuesday, a report in the Independent suggests that his disappearance is a matter of "artistic differences" rather than anything more serious. Nick Clark tells all: http://www.independent.co.uk/arts-entertainment/theatre-dance/news/sergei-polunin-the-runaway-ballerino-strikes-again--coliseum-hit-by-new-disappearing-act-8560542.html
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Posted in Sergei Polunin | No comments

Thursday, April 4, 2013

Polunin vanishes

Posted on 4:42 AM by Unknown
The Ukrainian ballet star Sergei Polunin appears to have gone missing in London. He is here to dance in Peter Schaufuss's controversial contemporary ballet Midnight Express from next Tuesday, but did not show up to rehearsals yesterday. The company has said that he has not checked out of his hotel, but is not responding to their calls, and Schaufuss has said that he is concerned for Polunin's welfare. More from the Evening Standard, here.

He has just performed, with the Stanislavsky Ballet, the Russian premiere of Kenneth MacMillan's dramatic masterpiece, Mayerling, with reports of his interpretation of the anti-hero Crown Prince Rudolf suggesting history in the making. Fortunately someone filmed it.


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Posted in Sergei Polunin | No comments

Gove "could close Chetham's"

Posted on 12:12 AM by Unknown


This report from Channel 4 News last night is about the latest developments at Chetham's in Manchester. It suggests that after ISI findings and a Manchester City Council report, the institution has until May to address alleged failings in its management structures and child protection systems and that if this is not done satisfactorily, the education secretary Michael Gove might have the powers to close it down.

This school is too vital and precious a presence in British musical life to allow such a thing to occur. We always hear bad news first, but the number of fine musicians and happy people who have also emerged from its portals over the years is high, and now many devoted, honest, hard-working and non-abusive teachers are there to guide musical youngsters through top-level training and see them into the profession. We hope profoundly that the necessary issues can be addressed rapidly and thoroughly and put right once and for all. We need specialist music schools, we need more of them, and we need them to function reliably.

Of course, the National Union of Teachers has just passed an unprecedented motion of no confidence in Gove.
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Posted in Chetham's School of Music | No comments

Tuesday, April 2, 2013

Hot Bach in freezing hall

Posted on 10:17 AM by Unknown
 "HEY, YOU! TURN ON THE BLOODY HEATING!"

My gosh, but it was cold in the Royal Albert Hall on Monday. The Bach-loving faithful assembled for John Eliot Gardiner's nine-hour marathon (as trailed on JDCMB here) - some of us, heeding anxious tweets from the orchestra saying we should please dress warmly, realised what was going to happen and restricted our attendance to the evening.

Blasts of chill wind bowled down upon us in the stalls. A friend among the performers told us afterwards that she was wearing six layers on stage. And, most regrettable of all, the performance suffered: the English Baroque Soloists use original instruments, natch, and the delicate, valveless horn and trumpets made their opinions of the situation felt even if their players did not - tragic, because eminently avoidable. I'm informed that the day itself was better than the day before: apparently when they arrived to rehearse, the heating wasn't working at all.

What on earth is the matter with the endemic attitude in UK institutions towards people and  temperatures? I've never, ever, in any other country, seen an audience sitting through a two-hour unbroken performance (or any other performance, for that matter) in their overcoats and scarves. And we wonder why people cough? It was an absolute disgrace. I suspect the management is now being told so repeatedly by disgruntled punters who had forked out a lot of money for the privilege of freezing their butts off for nine hours. OK. RANT OVER.

All the more credit to the Monteverdi Chorus and Orchestra and JEG for pulling off a tremendous occasion with such aplomb. The atmosphere was ecstatic, despite the cold. Promenaders in the arena (much less crowded than for the Proms proper) clustered at the front, hanging on every word and note. And when one speaker declared that though Bach has been accused of all manner of personal failings, handicaps or faults, he was actually a really good bloke, there was applause. The hall was really too large for the occasion - it was about half full, which would translate in the RFH or Barbican into queues around the block - yet it's hard to think of any other London venue in which such an atmosphere can be created. This was a Prom in all but the calendar.

The talks, led by Catherine Bott, were fascinating: the final one, featuring Howard Moody, John Butt, Raymond Tallis and JEG, focused on Bach the human being and raised questions such as whether he was as supportive to his daughters as to his sons (answer: "he was no better and no worse than anyone else"), whether he eschewed opera or was influenced by it, and whether he had any idea of just how good he really was.

Everyone had been mesmerised by Joanna MacGregor's Goldberg Variations; there was much enthusiasm for the singalongaBachChorale for Christ Lag in Todesbanden and the way JEG led the audience rehearsal; and violinist Viktoria Mullova, cellist Alban Gerhardt and organist John Butt had all drawn many plaudits. But the B minor Mass can only have been the crowning glory.

It was a celebration of a performance, one that stirred rather than shook, but stirred greatly: if there is ever to be a procession into heaven led by angels, saints and composers, the Sanctus - stately, airy, magnificent, blazing - would surely accompany it. The strangeness and mystery of the work shone out, too: the chromatic harmonies of "Et expecto resurrectionem", hushed, legato and translucent, evoke sometimes Mozart and sometimes Wagner, and the final alto aria seemed a humanising plea of doubt and guilt before the "Dona nobis pacem". The bizarre nature of the Lutheran Bach's Catholic Mass stood out as well: soon after the belief in one Catholic thingywhatsit been proclaimed there's a chorus in which a Lutheran (or quasi-Lutheran) chorale is unmistakeably embedded, in true Bach Cantata/Chorale Prelude fashion. All the more reason to appreciate it as pure music that can speak to us all, if we allow it to.

A very different performance from Andras Schiff's at the Lucerne Easter Festival a year ago, of which I adored every minute. At Gardiner's, I missed the intimacy and collegiality of Schiff's Cappella Andrea Barca - though smaller forces would have been insane in a space as large as the RAH; also, sometimes the consistency and audibility of their more modern instruments. An oboe d'amore is a thing of beauty and a joy forever, but they were often hard to hear, being so quiet. Still, Gardiner's sheer magnificence, the sense of 'rightness' in the tempi, and the fierceness of passion that underpinned the whole interpretation, all of this was in a class of its own.

What an achievement. What a way to celebrate your 70th birthday. Someone, please give that man some champagne, the world's finest Easter egg and a good hot bath. Me, I think I'm coming down with a cold - but at least if I do, I can listen to the rest of the day on the iPlayer.

(Photos: Chris Christodolou)


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Posted in Alban Gerhardt, Andras Schiff, Bach Marathon, English Baroque Soloists, Joanna MacGregor, John Eliot Gardiner, Monteverdi Choir, Royal Albert Hall, Viktoria Mullova | No comments

Monday, April 1, 2013

Stop press! Motorcycles to take over Royal Opera House

Posted on 1:16 AM by Unknown

The Royal Opera House's new production of I vespri siciliani, a grand celebration of Verdi's bicentenary involving both the opera and ballet companies, has been widely tipped to be the event of the season. And so it will be - but not quite as expected.

Everyone has been so busy speculating about the choice of the French language version and the strength of the mooted dance element - to say nothing of the cost - that until now we completely failed to notice one vital fact about the production.

This is in fact not Giuseppe Verdi's opera The Sicilian Vespers, but a work by Guillaume Verdi, an all-but-unknown French composer deemed to be the descendent of, allegedly, an illegitimate relative of the great Italian father of grand opera. Its title is The Sicilian Vespas.

It's to be a treat for opera and ballet lovers alike: a newly discovered European equivalent, perhaps, to West Side Story. Two rival motorcycle gangs in Palermo clash over their Mafia heritage; the star-crossed lovers, Paulo and Giulia, mirror the tragic progress of their Shakespearean models. The stage of the Royal Opera House is to host a specially constructed "volcano" on which the bikes will race in a spectacle unlike anything these august spaces have seen before.

I tracked down Guillaume Verdi's daughter to her remote hillside home in Provence. Valerie Verdi, a woman of few words, with dark eyes that speak more than her voice, expressed simple gratitude that her father's work is at last to receive the attention it deserves.

"It's a beautiful, dynamic creation," she suggested, "but was long suppressed in an atmosphere of contemporary music that was hostile to any style but the atonal avant-garde. And in terms of stage drama, Leonard Bernstein dominated the same territory my father chose, with West Side Story, and who knows if he had a vested interest in suppressing any potential rival? Who knows the truth?" She gave a shrug and a smile that betrayed a long-held and infinite sorrow.

I asked her to tell JDCMB readers more about her father's relationship to Giuseppe Verdi. "It's difficult to prove," she said. "Given the circumstances of my father's birth, documentation is limited. But there really was an extraordinary resemblance between them. When I look at photographs of Verdi and his beard, I see my father's face."

Will she come to London for the show? "Yes, perhaps," she said, "if I can find someone to feed my goats in my absence."

Speculation is rife that Sergei Polunin will return from Moscow's Stanislavsky Ballet to dance the ballet-double of Paulo, with tiger-scratch tattoo fully exposed. Leading ballerinas are said to be vying for the chance to play Giulia. As for the singers, the house has apparently put in a call to a German tenor who happens to look rather good in leather.
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Posted in Giuseppe Verdi, I vespri Siciliani, Royal Opera House | No comments
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      • My first (real) Last Night
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