Listen to This

Home > Other > Listen to This > Page 46
Listen to This Page 46

by Alex Ross


  BLESSED ARE THE SAD

  Behind Brahms’s professorial façade was a well of deep feeling. The challenge in interpreting his music is to reconcile that feeling with the orderly forms that contain it. The First Piano Concerto is Brahms at his darkest and boldest; with regretful glances at recordings by Emil Gilels and Leon Fleisher, I’ll stay with a longtime companion, Clifford Curzon’s monumental rendition with George Szell and the London Symphony (Decca). No set of the four symphonies is perfect, although a Music & Arts compilation of live Furtwangler performances is riveting throughout, and Charles Mackerras’s cycle with the Scottish Chamber Orchestra (Telarc) delivers exceptionally lucid rhythms. For the First Symphony alone, I’d suggest either Klemperer and the Philharmonia (EMI) or Toscanini and the NBC Symphony (live in 1940, available at pristineclassical.com); for the Second, Mackerras; for the Third, Bruno Walter and the Columbia Symphony (Sony); and for the Fourth, Carlos Kleiber and the Vienna Philharmonic (DG)-one of the most potent symphonic recordings ever made. Klemperer’s German Requiem, with Elisabeth Schwarzkopf and Dietrich Fischer-Dieskau as the soloists (EMI), is ponderous in the best sense: slow, grave, grandly moving. For an introduction to Brahms’s chamber music, try a warmly idiomatic collection of quartets, quintets, and sextets by the Amadeus Quartet and various colleagues (DG). Radu Lupu’s disc of the late Intermezzos and Piano Pieces, Opp. 117-119 (Decca), contains playing of such unmannered beauty that you seem to meet the elusive soul of Brahms face-to-face.

  ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

  During my time at The New Yorker, I have been under the benign control of two great editors, both of whom contributed decisively to my development as a writer. Charles Michener read passionately, broadened my musical sympathies, and proved to be an improbably convivial supervisor, to the point where the laughter emanating from his office drew puzzled stares. When Charles left, I was fortunate to fall into the hands of Daniel Zalewski, who is younger than I, and wiser. I am profoundly indebted to Daniel’s panoptic vision, pinpoint editing, fervent advocacy, and uncommonly generous spirit. David Remnick, the editor of The New Yorker, is a model boss and a model colleague; I consider myself lucky to be living in his golden age.

  Tina Brown, during her tenure at the magazine, hired me and let me roam free. Pam McCarthy, Henry Finder, and Dorothy Wickenden, in the editorial offices, and David Denby, Nancy Franklin, Joan Acocella, Sasha Frere-Jones, David Grann, and Luke Menand, in the writers’ warrens, have been intensely supportive over the years. The New Yorker’s copy editors, led by the wizardly Ann Goldstein, have deepened my love of language. The fact-checker for most of these pieces was Martin Baron, who has since retired; in my previous book, I called him “the greatest fact-checker that ever was or ever will be,” and I stand by the claim. I’m also grateful to Nana Asfour, Jake Goldstein, Nandi Rodrigo, Jennifer Stahl, and Greg Villepique for their excellent checkingwork. Peter Canby, Leo Carey, Will Cohen, Bruce Diones, Kate Julian, Daniel Kile, Russell Platt, Lauren Porcaro, Aaron Retica, and Rhonda Sherman helped out at one time or another.

  Many people contributed to the making of these essays. I’d especially like to thank Radiohead (most of all Colin Greenwood), Courtyard Management, Steve Martin of Nasty Little Man, Esa-Pekka Salonen, Deborah Borda, Adam Crane, Bjork, Scott Rodger, Valgeir Sigur6sson, Arni Heimir Ingólfsson, Ken Smith and Joanna Lee, Nick Frisch (an invaluable guide in Beijing), John Luther Adams, Hassan Ralph Williams, Joe Horowitz, Sebastian Ruth, Frank Salomon, Mitsuko Uchida, Leon Wieseltier, and Alex Abramovich, my Dylan road companion. I received scholarly counsel from Will Crutchfield, Drew Davies, Walter Everett, Walter Frisch, Luis Gago (who noticed the resemblance between Nina Simone’s “Strange Fruit” and “Der Doppelganger”), Christopher Gibbs, Philip Gossett, Wendy Heller, Andrew Patner, Ellen Rosand, Alexander Silbiger, and Richard Taruskin. Alex Star, Paula Puhak, Jason Shure, and Mike Vazquez, ex-WHRB DJs, converted me to punk rock, and Steven Johnson alerted me to Radiohead. The Goldstines—Josh, Stephanie, Eli, Theo, Danny, and Hilary-make trips west a joy. Ellen Pfeifer of the New England Conservatory and Jane Gottlieb of the Juilliard Library assisted with research inquiries. Jake Holmes, Peter Bartók, Sigríður Porgrímsdóttir, and Jeff Rosen of Special Rider Music were most generous with permissions.

  Eric Chinski is again the book editor of my dreams; I am still reeling from the magnanimity that he showed in the making of The Rest Is Noise. Jonathan Galassi, Laurel Cook, and Jeff Seroy provided yet more vital support at FSG; Eugenie Cha elegantly disposed of nagging details; John McGhee was a quick, incisive copy editor; Charlotte Strick made another brilliant cover; Chris Peterson, the production editor, guided the book smartly to the end. Tina Bennett, my agent, continues to work magic on my behalf, as does Dorothy Vincent. William Robin, my assistant and fellow blogger, was hugely helpful in researching, checking, and fine-tuning the manuscript. Maulina, Bea, and Minnie brightened my days; Penelope is ever so missed. My parents; my brother, Christopher; and my beautiful husband, Jonathan, surrounded me with love.

  INDEX

  The index that appeared in the print version of this title does not match the pages of your eBook. Please use the search function on your eReading device to search for terms of interest. For your reference, the terms that appear in the print index are listed below.

  Abbado, Claudio

  Abert, Hermann

  Abingdon School

  ACT UP

  Adams, Cynthia

  Adams, John Coolidge: and John L. Adams; Hallelujah Junction (book); Harmonielehre; Harmonium; and L.A. Philharmonic; Naïve and Sentimental Music; El Nino; Nixon in China; and San Francisco Symphony

  Adams, John Luther: background of; early style of; goes to Alaska; love of wilderness of; mature style of; personality of; works of: Always Very Soft; Clouds of Forgetting, Clouds of Unknawing; Dark Waves; Earth and the Great Weather; In the White Silence; The Place Where You Go to Listen; songbirdsongs; Strange and Sacred Noise; Veils

  Adès, Thomas

  Adorno, Theodor W.

  Advocate (magazine)

  Afrika Bambaataa

  African-American music

  Al Jazeera

  Alary, Olivier

  Alaska: environmental movement in; landscape of

  Alden, Christopher

  Alessandrini, Rinaldo

  Allen, Woody

  Alsop, Marin

  Altman, Robert

  Amadeus (play and film)

  American Idol

  AMM

  Anderson, Marian: childhood of; Lincoln Memorial concert of; racism and; recordings of; voice of

  Andreu, Paul

  Ansermet, Ernest

  Anti-Semitism

  Aphex Twin

  Apocalypse Now (Coppola)

  applause

  Apple (company); iPod

  Aquinas, Thomas

  Aranés, Juan: “Un sarao de la chacona,” ; recording of

  Arditti Quartet

  Aristotle

  Armbrust, Kyle

  Armstrong, Louis; “West End Blues,”

  Árni Heimir Ingólfsson

  Artists’ Club

  Arts Florissants

  Ashbery, John

  Asmundur Jonsson

  Atlanta Symphony

  Aud the Deep-Minded

  audience behavior

  Autechre

  Avie (label)

  Ax, Emanuel

  Azerrad, Michael

  Babalon, Christoph de

  Bach, Johann Sebastian; and Brahms; as first “classical” composer; lament and; religious beliefs of; works of: The Art of Fugue; Cantata No. 12, “Weinen, Klagen, Sorgen, Zagen”; Cantata No. 82, “Ich habe genug”; Cantata No. 150, “Nach dir, Herr, verlanget mich”; Capriccio on the Departure of a Beloved Brother; Ciaccona in D Minor; “Crucifixus” from Mass in B Minor; Goldberg Variations; Partita No. 2 for violin; Passacaglia in C Minor; St. Matthew Passion

  Bad Taste (label)

  Baez, Joan

  Ball, Gordon

  Baltimore S
ymphony

  Band

  Banff Centre

  Bangs, Lester

  Bard College

  Barnes, Denning

  Barney, Matthew; float in Salvador Carnaval

  Bartok, Béla; Concerto for Orchestra; transcribes bocet

  Basement Tapes (Dylan)

  basso lamento, see lament

  basso ostinato

  Battle, Kathleen

  Bauernfeld, Eduard von

  Bayreuth Festival

  Bax, Arnold

  Baxter, Bucky

  Baxter, Carol

  BBC

  Beach Boys

  beatboxing

  Beatles; “A Day in the Life”; descending chromatic line in “Michelle”; “Helter Skelter”; “In My Life”; “Nowhere Man,” ; Sgt. Pepper; White Album

  Beavis and Butt-Head

  Beaux Arts Trio

  Bechet, Sidney

  Beckett, Samuel; Molloy

  Beckham, David and Victoria

  Beethoven, Ludwig van; Bernstein on; Brahms and; in China; late style of; recordings of; works of: An die ferne Geliebte; Choral Fantasy; Diabelli Variations; Für Elise; Piano Sonata No. 29, “Hammerklavier” ; Piano Sonata No. 32; Piano Trio No. 2,; Piano Trio No. 7, “Archduke”; Quartet No. 11, Serioso; Quartet No. 14; Symphony No. 1; Symphony No. 3, Eroica; Symphony No. 4; Symphony No. 5; Symphony No. 6, Pastorale; Symphony No. 7; Symphony No. 9; Thirty-two Variations in C Minor

  Beijing: concerts in; education in; experimental music in; traditional music in

  Beijing New Music Ensemble

  Beilman, Benjamin

  Bell, Joshua

  Bell, Mark

  Benjamin, Walter

  Bennett, Richard Rodney

  Berg, Alban; Lulu Suite; Quartet Opus 3, ; Wozzeck

  Berganza, Teresa

  Berger, Jonathan: Miracles and Mud

  Berger, Karol

  Bergonzi, Carlo

  Berio, Luciano; Rendering

  Berkeley Symphony

  Berlin, Irving: “Alexander’s Ragtime Band”

  Berliner, Emile

  Berlin Philharmonic

  Berlioz, Hector; Beatrice and Benedict; Symphonie Fantastique; Les Troyens

  Bernstein, Leonard; and Beethoven’s Eroica; and New York Philharmonic; on Verdi

  Bernstein, Richard

  Berry, Chuck

  Beta Band

  Beyoncé

  Bible: Chronicles; Job; Psalms; Revelation; Sermon on the Mount

  Bieto, Calixto

  Bilbao, Radiohead in

  BIS (label)

  Bishop, Walter, Jr.

  Biss, Jonathan: at Marlboro; with Providence Quartet

  Björk Guðmundsdóttir; background of; in Brazil; children of; classical influences of, ; creative process of; fame of; in London; lyrics of; at music school; in New York; and “Nordic idea,” ; personality of; voice of; works of: “Anchor Song”; “Cover Me”; Dancer in the Dark; Debut; “Desired Constellation,” ; “An Echo, a Stain,” ; Gling-Gló; Glora; Homogevcic; “Human Behavior”; “Hyper-ballad”; “Isobel”; “It’s in Our Hands”; “It’s Not up to You”; “I’ve Seen It All”; “Jóga,” ; Medúlla; “Modern Things”; “Mouth’s Cradle”; “Oceania”; “The Pleasure Is All Mine”; “Pluto”; Post; Selmasongs; “Submarine”; “Triumph of a Heart”; Vespertine; “Where Is the Line,” ; “Who Is It”

  Blatz; “Fuk Shit Up”

  blogs

  Blood on the Tracks (Dylan)

  Blossom Time (Stein)

  blues; Dylan and

  Blur

  bocet

  Boccherini, Luigi: Minuet

  Boggs, Dock

  Boito, Arrigo

  Bonaparte, Napoleon

  Bond, Justin

  Bono

  Borda, Deborah

  Boretz, Benjamin

  bossa nova

  Boston Globe, The

  Boston Lyric Opera

  Boston Symphony

  Boston University

  Bostridge, Ian

  Boulez, Pierre; and Cage; and NewYork Philharmonic; Le Marteau sans maître

  Brahms, Johann Jakob (father)

  Brahms, Johannes; argues with Mahler; and Bach; background of; and Beethoven; and chaconne; “classical” tendencies of; early works of; and Gypsy music; image of; late works of; melancholy of; personality of; recordings of; Schoenberg on; and Schubert; Clara Schumann and; Robert Schumann and; Wagner and; works of: Alto Rhapsody; Clarinet Quintet; Clarinet Sonatas; Clarinet Trio; “Es liebt sich so lieblich im Lenze,” ; Fantasias, Op. 116; Four Serious Songs; German Requiem; Hungarian dances; Intermezzos, Op. 117; Motets, Op. 74; Piano Concerto No. 1; Piano Pieces Opp. 118 and 119, Piano Quartet No. 1; Piano Quintet; Piano Sonata No. 1; Piano Trio No. 3; Serenade No. 2; Sextet No. 1; String Quintet No. 2; Symphony No. 1; Symphony No. 2; Symphony No. 3; Symphony No. 4; Violin Sonata No. 3

  Branca, Glenn: Hallucination City

  Braun, Margrit von

  Braun, Wernher von

  Braxton, Anthony

  Brazil: bossa nova; Björk in

  Bream, Julian

  Brecht, Bertolt

  Brendel, Alfred

  Brinkmann, Reinhold

  Britten, Benjamin: Peter Grimes; Phaedra

  Brodsky, Joseph

  Brokaw, Tom

  Bronfman, Yefim

  Brooklyn Philharmonic

  Brown, Carolyn; Chance and Circumstance

  Brown, Earle

  Brown, James

  Brown, Willie: “Future Blues”

  Brown University

  Bruckner, Anton: Brahms and; Symphony No. 8

  Budapest Quartet

  Budden, Julian

  Bulgakov, Mikhail: The Master and Margarita

  Bülow, Hans von

  Bumbry, Grace

  Burnham, Scott

  Burton, Robert: The Anatomy of Melancholy

  Busch, Adolf; recordings of

  Busch, Herman

  Busch Quartet

  Bush, George H. W.

  Bush, George W.

  Butler, Keith

  Butthole Surfers

  Butt Trumpet

  Buxtehude, Dietrich; Ciacona in E Minor

  Byrds: “Eight Miles High”

  Caccini, Giulio: Euridice

  cadenza

  Cage, John; and John Luther Adams; Asian influence on; background of; and Bjork; and Boulez; and chance; criticism of; and Merce Cunningham; death of; early style of; final years of; frugality of; homes of; humor of; influence of; and Joyce; and Manhattan; as mushroom collector; and noise; personality of; politics of; and prepared piano; radicalism of; recordings of; relationship to art world; and Schoenberg; sexuality of; and silence; and Tan Dun; television appearances by; works of: Black Mountain Piece; Concerto for Prepared Piano; Credo in Us; Europeras 1–5,; Four; 4’33”; HPSCHD; “Lecture on Nothing,”; Lecture on the Weather; Music for Marcel Duchamp; Music of Changes; Imaginary Landscape No. 4; Imaginary Landscape No. 5; “Other People Think”; Roaratorio; Ryoanji; Silence (book); Sonatas and Interludes; String Quartet in Four Parts; Theater Piece; Variations VII ; Water Music; Water Walk; Williams Mix

  Cage, John Milton, Sr. (father)

  Cage, Lucretia (mother)

  Cage, Xenia Kashevaroff

  Cairns, David

  CalArts

  Callas, Maria; Björkon; and Verdi

  Cammarano, Salvadore

  Campbell, Larry

  Cantaloupe (label)

  cantus firmus

  Caplan, Elliot

  Carnegie Hall

  Carneiro, Joana

  Carroll, Hattie

  Carsick Cars

  Carson, Johnny

  Carter, Elliott: Eight Etudes and a Fantasy

  Carter, Jimmy

  Caruso, Enrico

  Casals, Pablo

  Case, Anna

  Cash, Johnny

  Cavalli, Francesco: Gli amori d’Apollo e di Dafne; Didone; lament and

  Cavicchi, Daniel

>   CBS

  Cellini, Benvenuto

  Centeno, Vanessa

  Central Conservatory (Beijing)

  Cervantes, Miguel de: La ilustre fregona

  chacona

  chaconne: and Bach; and Brahms; and Couperin; and Frescobaldi; and Gluck; and Ligeti; and Lully; and Monteverdi; and Mozart; and Purcell

  Chaconne in D Minor, see Ciaccona

  Chandler, Dorothy Buffum

  Chandler Pavilion

  Chang, Jeff

  Chaplin, Charlie

  Charles, Ray: “Hit the Road Jack”

  Chávez, Hugo

  Checchia, Anthony

  Cheever, John

  Chen Ping

  Chen Qigang

  Chen Xinyi

  Chen Yi

  Chéreau, Patrice

  Chicago Symphony

  “Chim Chim Cher-ee” (Sherman)

  China: classical music in; cultural repression in; traditional music of

  China National Symphony

  China Philharmonic

  Chopin, Frédéric

  Chou When-chung

  Christie, William

  Christine of Lorraine

  chromatic scale

  Ciaccona in D Minor (Bach); recordings of

  Ciara: “1, 2 Step”

  Cincinnati Symphony

  Clark, William Andrews, Jr.

  classical music: African-Americans and; in America; in China; definitions of; ongoing death of; origins of “classical” mentality; Wagner’s dislike of

  Clear Channel

 

‹ Prev