Mixed Nuts For An Alternative Vancouver Christmas
Saturday, December 13, 2014
Vancouverites for a
long time were creatures of habit. You drank your coffee at Murchie’s, bought
your books at Duthie’s, went to Stanley Park, replaced your forgotten umbrellas at the
Umbrella Shop and for Christmas you went to a Nutcracker and made sure you
witnessed and sang along one Messiah.
Things may be changing
perhaps with the demise of family-owned businesses not being able to compete
with the American Big Box. Some changes are not of that ilk. Some of these changes are good.
Consider that a couple
of weeks back I went to the Art Club Theatre’s anti-Christmas (but very
definitely with that Christmas spirit) A Twisted Christmas Carol at the
Granville Island Review Stage.
Second in this trend
that I call the Alternative Vancouver Christmas was Saturday’s Arts Umbrella
Dance Company’s Mixed Nuts. With an occasional nod to Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky,
Mixed Nuts is to The Nutcracker what A Twisted Christmas Carol is to Charles
Dickens.
The last Nutcracker I
ever saw (with both my granddaughters) was some years ago. We went because the Sugar Plum Fairy was the inimitable Sandrine Cassini who at the time was
dancing (briefly) with the Alberta Ballet. I will have to be still alive and
sentient in some far away future to take my great-grandchildren (none yet,
thank God) to another Nutcracker.
The prospect of seeing
old potentates sit on thrones to watch several dreary dances of ethnic origin
(as imagined by a Russian) is enough to want me to jump into a time machine and
escape December.
So I am happy to
report that Artemis Gordon’s Granville Island-based Arts Umbrella has brought
us Mixed Nuts (they have perfected it in a few past years) to a very fast
evening (it is never dreary or slow) of non-stop dancing by the best talent the
school has (they have an extremely long bench of talent) with fantastic
costumes, good music (not all Tchaikovsky) that mixes the choreography of
several good ones with ballet, ballroom and modern dance. The venue, the Vancouver Playhouse is perfect as it is intimate enough but has room for a larger audience.
But the best part is
the sheer exuberance of the young dancers, many who graduate to go to the best
dance companies of the world.
Any derivative of The
Nutcracker that brings into the mix choreographer Lina Fitzner and Evan Christopher’s
dynamite version of that fave of mine St. James Infirmary deserves to be our
new Christmas routine (for a while at least). Pity that there are no more
performances!
At age 72 I can get
away with stating that I have a new fave dancer in this fine bunch that is the
Arts Umbrella Dance Company. It’s Albert Galindo from the Senior Dance Company.
I kept pointing to him to my granddaughter Lauren, 12, who has been dancing at
Arts Umbrella for five years (Lina Fitzner is her current instructor) who was sitting
next to me dead centre, front row at the Vancouver Playhouse. She kept slapping
my hand so perhaps she might agree! And I cannot stop here without mentioning that after having seen Nicole Ward dance (second picture from top in red) I would not be in the least surprised if she is not whisked away by some foreign dance company when she graduates.
Thursday, December 11, 2014
"You can smell the resin in his violin parts, taste the reeds in the oboes."
Igor Stravinsky on J.S. Bach in 1958
Bach this Christmas at the Chan, 21 Dec
Why Bach? I requested an answer to some of my friends, many of them musicians. I did receive a,
"Why not?" Composer Rodney Sharman mentioned what somebody else said about Bach (Igor Stravinksy ) so that statement is above. Many of these erudite musicians apparently while being able to read complex music do not seem to be clear on what a paragraph is.
Bach! Aw geeze how to
even begin to flick mere words at Bach? I have to stand back here and try to
find an opening somewhere. Mathematicians, there's a study showing that a
strangely disproportionate number of mathematicians rank Bach as their
favourite composer. Christ, Johannes Brahms wrote about Bach's Chaconne in a
letter to Clara Schumann, saying that it captured every emotion possible in a
few minutes and that if he, Brahms, had written it, he would surely have gone
mad. I had to refer to my esteemed polymath Zia Haider Rahman for details.
"The Chaconne," wrote Brahms, "is the most wonderful,
unfathomable piece of music. On one stave, for a small instrument, the man writes
a whole world of the deepest thoughts and most powerful feelings. If I imagined
that I could have created, even conceived the piece, I am quite certain that
the excess of excitement and earth-shattering experience would have driven me
out of my mind." I need to think mere words, meanwhile here's (below) apologies to
Steinberg,
Mati Laansoo - Journalist
|
Illustration by Mati Laansoo |
His music can truly be described as divine
art. Bach weaves together unfathomably intricate lines of music to create
something that touches deep within the human soul. I will never stop
loving to perform his music. I hope I continue to have the honour.
I love Bach and have from the first time I
heard one of his Brandenburg
Concertos. The strangest thing about his music, to my mind, is that his
absolutely transcends the instrument it is written for.It's a palimpsest -
witness Uri Caine's Goldberg Variations (with David Moss raving in the Dr.
Jekyll and Mr. Hyde variation! oh yes...), the Swingle Singers Bach,
Bach on accordion,
Marimbach...I could go on...
Jocelyn Morlock – Composer in
Residence at the Vancouver
Symphony Orchestra
Because he translates so well. All through
my musical life I've been occasionally fanatical about various recordings of
the music of Bach. As a kid, wanting to highlight what I thought was the
greatest music going, I took a Swingle Singers record to school for
Show-and-Tell. In junior high school, the Canadian Brass had me in their
clutches with their performances of Bach's music. Later I discovered Wendy
Carlos' “Switched-On Bach” and was transfixed by his music presented with
completely new textures and timbres. Even in grad-school, studying performance
practice and, with the benefit (luxury) of a few years of professional activity
playing Baroque violin, I was still not able to give up on my old recording of
Henryk Szeryng which I found so compelling even though so different in their
dialect from the performance manner that I was embracing more each day. Last
week I was captured yet again by a video (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=j3lH_Tevw5o)
of the American Bluegrass mandolinist, Chris Thile, playing Bach's first
unaccompanied Sonata for violin, casually on a couch, with such fantastic facility
and musicianship that I could not turn it off—I just needed to go right to the
end. It's completely amazing how Bach's music can take each new treatment and
sound just like someone speaking their native language. Paul Luchkow -
Violinist (The Luchkow—Jarvis Duo,
Victoria Baroque Players, Pacific
Baroque Orchestra)
What to say about that
greatest of musical minds? When exposed to his music as a player or listener, I
am always filled with a sense of wonder about the Shakespearian volume and
variety of his work, in which the music flows freely, but is at the same time
mathematically organized. And although there is the occasional moment of
frustration when the great man wrongfoots you yet again, making you realize
that your presumed understanding is being proved wrong, his music always fills
me with joy. A joy that not only comes from simply experiencing his beautiful
melodies, rhythmic invention and killer harmony, but also from the awareness of
being in the presence of a great mind, who somehow seems to have had an insight
into the true nature of things.
Arthur Neele –
Violinist – Pacific Baroque Orchestra, Stile Moderno
If you've heard
pianist Glenn Gould lovingly caress each perfect note from Johann Sebastian
Bach's Goldberg Variations, or listened to Kathleen Ferrier's burnished alto
pleading for mercy in "Erbarme dich" from Bach's St. Matthew Passion,
you will know the essence of Bach. You will have a sense of the deep power of
Bach's music, and his gift for making each of us want to find our better
selves. In 1685, Mother Nature sneezed. She felt a sharp pang, then birthed a
wet, genius bundle of light with twice the allotment of talent and zeal as
anyone else. Gesundheit. The young
Sebastian got his hands dirty repairing pipe organs. He earned a rep for
incredible keyboard facility, a kind of Hendrix of the organ, if you can
forgive the anachronism. He once shirked his church gig to hang with Buxtehude
in Lübeck, 250 miles north, walking both ways. In winter. He returned with
twisted chorales for his confused but appreciative congregation. Then came the
cantatas, reams of them, keyboard works, concertos, sonatas, solo works,
masses, marriage, love, and a house full of children who all lived and breathed
music and expanded on papa's art in their own ways. When the music stopped,
like the unfinished Contrapunctus 14, the silence was cold as snow. We know
Bach put on his Hosen one leg at a time just like everyone else. Except once he
got dressed he wrote triple fugues. He lived, and laughed, prayed and drank
like the rest of us. But he was more than us.
Michael Juk –
Senior Producer – CBC Music
Why
Bach? The obvious answer is "why not?", but Bach deserves more than
that. I've played a lot of Bach, and listened to a lot more, and I never get
tired of either. The appeal, for me, lies in the way he marries incredible
complexity with an abiding commitment to fundamental melodic simplicity. There
are plenty of layers in his music, but for me they're never obtrusive; they
only serve to deepen the beauty of the experience.
Genevieve
MacKay – Violist
The
music of J.S. Bach balances the structural, the technical, the spiritual and
the sensual. Musicians speak little about the latter quality, but to me it is
an essential part of his work. There is some explicit eros in the cantatas, of
course, and in his overtly pietist music, but it also present in so many of the
instrumental pieces. As a flute-player, I approach Bach's music with eagerness
and joy, so deliciously conscious of my breath, lips and tongue. As a teacher,
I delight in showing the quirkiness of the early cantatas to my students,
written before JSB's exposure to contemporary Italian music and common-practice
tonality; I offer the later cantatas and passions as models of multiplicity and
layering. As a composer, I also aspire to the balance the structural,
technical, spiritual and sensual. We can always learn from better artists than
ourselves, and that, too, is one of the life-long lessons of J.S. Bach, his
gift to us, his legacy.
Rodney
Sharman – Composer
Note:
Mr. Sharman when suggested he write stuff that was not so serious he responded
with this other paragraph:
Too
late, Alex. I have only positive things to say except, perhaps, that he's the
only composer I know of who did prison time except Dame Ethyl Smyth.
As a musician,
because Bach's music challenges my mental stamina, my technical mastery, my
emotional maturity. As a performer, because Bach's music speaks to every audience
member. As a scholar, because Bach's music promises intriguing puzzles and
fascinating discoveries. As a listener, because Bach's music puts every mood
into perspective. Researched as carefully as I know how,
Christina Hutten –
UBC School of Music
Why
Bach? Here are seven reasons:
Cantata,
BWV 105, aria: Wie zittern und wanken
Mass
in B minor, BWV 232, Symbolum Nicenum: Crucifixus
Easter
Oratorio, BWV 249, Sinfonia
Partita
no 4 in D major, BWV 828
Violin
sonata no. 2 in A minor, BWV 1003
Brandenburg
Concerto no 3 in G major, BWV 1048
Suite
no 2 in B minor, BWV 1067 These select works and many others by the great
Kapellmeister have been constant companions since I was a teenager. I believe,
no words can explain 'Why Bach' as much as listening to the music. The
emotional depth of Bach's work constantly astounds and inspires.
Graham
Walker – Graphic Designer &Typographer
Why
not Bach? Why not Wachet Auf Chorale
Prelude?
(or
why not Brandenburg
5?)
Patricia
Hutter – Bassist – Artist
What
a great idea! I am getting ready to perform a bunch of Bach harpsichord
concertos so this is on my mind...Bach is unique among the great composers in
that he seemed to be writing not for his own time but for some universal ideal.
Indeed his music only began to have significant impact nearly 100 years after
his death. In some ways he fit the mold of the 19th-century artist/genius
better than that of the Baroque artisan/craftsman. On the other hand he had a
deeply pious humility rare in composers since the 18th century.Those are my
thoughts about Bach this morning.
Byron
Schenkman – Harpsichordist - Pianist - Music Director
As
for myself, I can only say that I find Bach fresh and surprising and creative
after a lifetime of listening, which I guess is a sign of true genius.
Andrew Taylor, Engineer – Guadalajara, Mexico
Let
me step on some toes with this one. Here goes: The simple answer is,
"Bach? Of course!" My background in the European tradition that
focuses on Bach rather than the Messiah around Christmas and Easter still has
an impact. The powerful Mengelberg tradition of the Matthew Passion with the
Concertgebouw Orchestra, for example ("early music" of a different
kind!) kept people huddled around the radio on Palm Sunday, and the streets
were deserted. Not to offend anyone; there's of course nothing wrong with
Messiah — but personally I would rather sit through the Passions or the Christmas
Oratorio on hard pews in a cold church (as I have done many times) than hear
another Messiah in a comfortable concert hall.
José
Verstappen – Artistic Director Emeritus Early Music Vancouver
I am
a Jazz musician and Bach to me was one of the first major improvisers. His
fugues for piano or cello are masterpieces of open improvisation full of
rhythmic nuances and yes, a swing feel. The fact that they are written down
doesn’t alter the fact that Bach was improvising. A master Jazz player like
Charlie Parker or Bud Powell would play over a structured form and build a set
of variations and so would Bach. He wrote the notes down with very little
direction as to how to phrase or interpret them leaving his music open and free
to personalize for eternity.
Gavin
Walker – Saxophonist
Why
Bach? Which one? I'm actually fascinated by the relative and
intermittent obscurity and fame of J.S. and his kids as they traverse history.
From what I've learned it took marketing efforts from W.A. Mozart and Felix
Mendlessohn to reinvigorate musical history with J.S.B's talents a generation
after his death! For me as a trombonist,
I still try to play through a dance or two from his unaccompanied cello suites
as often as possible to find my core sound, a template for balancing
rhythm,harmony, and melody, and way into my inner desire to get a Handel (just
kidding, he sure creeps in every December, eh!) on this chaotic world.
Jeremy
Berkman – Trombonist – Turning Point Ensemble
Playing
Bach on the organ, I think of life 300 years ago. The quiet of the land, the natural
environment when thunder would sound catastrophic so the full organ must have
been unimaginably awesome. To play Bach is the beginning and the end for me. I
will always play and learn and relearn his music. The Chorale Prelude Wachet
Auf, is a signal; a clarion call for love and peace. To play it at this time of
the year; to accompany the choir as they sing the very old melody is to create
that great ephemeral beauty that is always with us and always unattainable.
Michael
Murray – Organist
There
is something about Bach himself that speaks to our modern world. Bach used the most
rational, intellectual system in art – counterpoint – to produce some of the
most significant artistic creations of western culture. In Bach, the human, the
rational, and the transcendent met to produce monuments that pay homage to both
the spiritual and natural worlds, the heights of human reason, the depths of
human imagination, and the relationships that connect all things. – Brian Mix
-Cellist
I
took the extra time to rewrite.Please use whichever format looks best in your
blog:
I
remember trying to play Bach as a young music student. The patterns in the
score kept flowing on and on, but there was no convincing outer context that I
was afforded to help make sense of the whole. The only dictum was “you must
practice this,” and of course I did. Today the outer context of Bach has two
parts, the commercial and the institutional. While we holiday-shop, we hear
“Sheep May Safely...", and “Jesu, Joy..." canned orchestrally. As we
attend concerts or educate the next generations of music students, we reference
him as of central value amongst the old composers of art. It remains
unconvincing to me. So I try to leave all this aside, as if discarding the
tough, outer husk of a fruit. Within, the most delicious, fleshy, tropical pulp
awaits:
I
practice Bach today at my pleasure, the inner context of the notes and patterns
amongst themselves, providing its own reward.
Stephen
Creswell, musician
----------------------------------------------------
I
remember trying to play Bach as a young music student. The patterns in the
score kept flowing on and on, but there was no convincing outer context that I
was afforded to help make sense of the whole. The only dictum was “you must
practice this,” and of course I did. Today the outer context of Bach has two
parts, the commercial and the institutional. While we holiday-shop, we hear
“Sheep May Safely...", and “Jesu, Joy..." canned orchestrally. As we
attend concerts or educate the next generations of music students, we reference
him as of central value amongst the old composers of art. It remains unconvincing to me. So I try to
leave all this aside, as if discarding the tough, outer husk of a fruit.
Within, the most delicious, fleshy, tropical pulp awaits: I practice Bach today
at my pleasure, the inner context of the notes and patterns amongst themselves,
providing its own reward.
Stephen
Creswell, musician
Because Bach's music reflects back to us
what makes us most deeply human, our joys and sorrows and the most profound
aspects of what it is to be a human in the world. Playing and listening to his
music makes us better people. Reason enough?
Marc Destrubé - Violinist
It's universally understood that, to
understand Bach, you have to immerse yourself into the vast sea of sacred vocal
works. In this collection of cantatas, oratorios, motets, and passions, stands
the testament of a man who not only fully understood the complexities of
humanity and divinity, but also understood the complexities in the way that the
two are inextricably linked. Despite his unrivalled contrapuntal ingenuity, and
a rhythmic and harmonic language that borders on jazz, it's his unmatched
understanding of the bittersweet reality of life that has deepened my devotion
to Bach. Being a black man raised in the Deep South,
religion played a strong role in my upbringing. There is a hope and trust in
better things to come after death that galvanized the will of the black people
in America.
There is a sweetness in death, due to the promise of no racism, poverty,
homelessness, or any sort of injustice or inequality. There is a steady march
to the end of our days, blindly focused on a world better than the one we live
in now. And the only way to get there is by standing above and brooking the
storm, all the while doing our best to make the journey just a little better
for those who walk behind us. Yet, there is still joy. There is still love.
There is still a happiness that can be seen and enjoyed. These messages are
passed down in story and song for us, and Bach's music tends to sing the same
tune. I get the same feeling from singing a cantata or passion that I do from
any spiritual or gospel tune. It's that connection that makes his music
impossible to see as historic, or part of a canon. It's alive and relevant,
because WE are.
Reginald Mobley - Countertenor
I don't like Bach...too mathematical...give
me Mahler,Mahler, Mahler...his pre-WW1 music is premonitory and doomladen as it
goes downdowndowndown.....love to you...Art b a mensch
Art Bergmann ' Guitarist/Songwriter
"
This is what I have to say about Bach's life work: listen, play, love, revere - and keep your trap shut."
Albert Einstein
A Coda by Marv Newland