![]() |
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
Repertoire > Conferences & CDs > CBDNA 2007 Back to Repertoire > Conferences & CDs Back to Repertoire Home
CBDNA 2007
March 28 – 31, 2007, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor
TOP EIGHTEEN WORKS
In his forward to the conference programme,
President Jerry Junkin wrote that
Michael Haithcock and his
colleagues have assembled what will be one of the most exhilarating
conferences in recent memory. For once the description on the packet
was what we got inside; unusually this was not American hyperbole. There
were many works which I would love to recommend but which I am leaving
out to concentrate on two per concert.
Unfortunately we were rarely given dates for the works, and never
publishers, so for more information please contact the band or ensemble.
ALL WE CAN DO IS TO MAKE THINGS BETTER FOR THE NEXT GENERATION
H.Robert Reynolds
It is a little over twenty-four years since I attended my first American
music conference, the Michigan Music Educators Conference in
Packed into three and a half days were nine concerts, twenty three
papers, four panel discussions and a video session on marching bands. In
the concerts we heard fifty two works of which three were world
premieres, three were transcriptions and fourteen were not by American
composers. The overall artistic planning of each concert was impressive,
with the usual aggressive virtuoso pieces set cheek by jowl with major
repertoire works, such as a Krommer
Partita, Hammersmith,
Dionysiaques, Hindemith’s
Konzertmusik with organ solo,
the Schoenberg Chamber
Symphony no 1, and
Création du
Monde. Thus the Conference
was very much about music rather than band, but I thought
there were several performance issues which I believe are crucial to our
survival and development.
TAMING THE DECIBELS
We do have a
problem with the wind band, that of decibels…..in short we all tend to
play too loudly. The reasons for this are five-fold, in part due to the
brilliance of the medium with all of those primary colours jostling and
competing, in part due to our choice of repertoire, in part due to the
noisiness of our modern age, in part due to sheer laziness and in part
due to poor conducting. We can learn so much from the great orchestral
conductors of our time.
THE ABUSE, AND MISUSE,
OF DYNAMICS
Gunther Schuller sums it
all up, with reference to symphony orchestras, in his magnificent book,
The Compleat Conductor (Oxford University Press).
The abuse, and misuse,
of dynamics is perhaps the most common evil in orchestral playing today
being either tolerated or generated by our conductors. This is
particularly ironic, since the technical abilities of modern players are
so high that no claim could ever be made that subtle control is beyond
their capabilities. And to excuse this dynamic laziness by saying “its
more fun to play loud” or it makes a bigger effect” or “its more
exciting” or more philosophically resigned – “it’s just human nature”,
is insufficient reason and just plain laziness, carelessness.
It is at that very
highest level of performance that a wealth of interpretative choices and
decisions become available at least to the really sensitive intelligent
and imaginative recreator. It is in this realm that there is not one pp,
but many subtly different pps; not one f but many different kinds of fs,
and not one slur but many different kinds of legatos etc. etc. The more
basic point however is that it is pp not a p or a mf.
At the 2003 WASBE
Conference, the late Wayne Rapier, co-principal oboe for many years of
the
BALANCING THE BRASS
In most halls, the sound
level of trumpets and trombones is just right if the conductor
barely hears them. The same is true for horns in piano passages,
while they often must be encouraged to bring out a forte marcato.
Woodwind soloists should hit the conductor’s ears quite strongly to make
sure that their sound carries into the auditorium. This, of course, must
not be accomplished by forcing the tone, which would hurt the
instrument’s sound quality and intonation. The solution lies in having
the accompanying instruments play more softly….
Eric Leinsdorf
in another of my bibles, The
Composer’s Advocate, makes two excellent points about dynamic
levels:
VERTICAL DYNAMICS
Composers often wrote
one dynamic mark for the entire vertical scoring involved. They expected
performers to adjust their instruments' relative strength according to
the primary or secondary importance of their roles.
A SUSTAINED NOTE IS
ALWAYS STRONGER THAN A MOVING VOICE
There is one fundamental
physical law that bears repetition, since so many musicians are unaware
of it; a sustained note is always stronger than a moving voice....There
is so much to be decided by the conductor who cares for a balanced
performance that no amount of detail can possibly cover the permutations
presented by such considerations as types of instruments (and players),
size and acoustic of hall, seating arrangements, types of scoring....
Pierre Boulez
explains the process of decision making:
There are times when
respect for the musical text alone does not serve much purpose. You may
have a secondary part written for a relatively weighty instrument, and a
principal part written for a much lighter instrument. You have to change
the dynamics. I have no qualm about doing that. As a fellow composer, I
say to myself, "That's what he wanted to hear, but he didn't have enough
experience to write down the exact dynamics,.” So I change them, that's
all.
The composer has written
a certain number of instrumental lines and on the whole, he hasn't done
so just to make a general amount of noise. He's composed those lines so
that we can hear certain things, so that we can experience a certain
hierarchy that's dependant on his writing. What I try to do is to bring
out that hierarchy in a very precise way, even when its difficult.
Walter Beeler,
one of the great band trainers of the last century said:
Restraint is especially
important in fast music; the spirit begins to suffer if played too loud.
The audience tires, the players tire and it becomes a very determined
piece. It's hard for a band to play with restraint because speed and
excitement always tend to increase the volume. But if we rely on
articulations, accents and rhythm (rather than volume) to bring about a
condition of brightness, it will definitely be more musical.
RICHARD STRAUSS GOLDEN
RULES
4 Never look encouragingly
at the brass, except with a short glance to give an important cue.
6 If you think that the
brass is not blowing hard enough, tone it down another shade or two.
I believe that the quality of the music and the level of performance by
our top wind groups is second to n one in the world of music. However,
rather like our colleagues in the brass band world, we often go for
noise to engender brilliance and excitement, and we lose the real energy
of contrasts of orchestration, of clarity of little notes, of
architecture of dynamics, diversity of accents. However, having said
that, the quality all of the performances and repertoire at
INDIANA WIND ENSEMBLE
Nine disparate works made up the first programme, Bach and Dvorak
transcriptions, bouncily attractive new pieces by Prior, Phan and
Puckett, each lasting about six minutes, Ives and Nelson to end on an
upbeat, and a deeply felt elegiac cello solo by Michael Schelle,
Prayer: Schöne Maydl,
commissioned by Robert Grechesky, for me at eleven minutes just a little
too lacking in contrast and hence too long. The major work was a
large-scale romantic piano concerto by Stephen Paulus, with hints of
energetic Prokofiev in the first movement, of the timeless quality of a
Bartok slow movement in the second,
Tranquil
with
Mystery, and some marvellous
Ravellian wind swirls in the finale,
Driving. None of these are quotations, just my reaction as I try to
find signposts; the work is twenty minutes in length and has a lot to
say, a great addition to the repertoire. My other favorite work here was
Race
of Gods (2005) by the
Vietnamese composer P.Q.Phan, a fleet scherzando miniature tone poem.
Neatly concise programming by
The problem with conferences is that there are frequently hidden agendas
to the performances; here the ensemble had suffered a nightmare journey
the day before, arriving at their hotel after
Under the energizing baton of Bobby Francis, TCU gave us an attractive
mix of works and began with a choir singing the piece on which
Grantham’s Trumpet Gloria is based,
a nice touch. I enjoy multi-faceted programmes if there is at least one
major symphonic work to concentrate on, and preferably a concertante
piece as well; here we had both, the spiky sonorities of Hindemith’s
Kammermusik Nr. 7 for organ and ensemble contrasting sharply with
the noble expanses of Michael Colgrass’s
Artic
Dreams. A colleague who has
performed the work three times said that this was the best choral
contribution he had heard, and certainly the nuances of the score,
sometimes lost in recordings, came into full play in the splendid Hill
Auditorium. They gave us an upbeat beginning and end with the Grantham
and the Ives Country Band
March, and a pool of serenity
in the middle with Ye Banks and
Braes, but also another new work, a premiere of
Turning by John Mackey;
strong, lyrical, intense, full of sentiment but not sentimental, this is
a wonderful addition to the pitifully small repertoire of short slow
works for band.
CINCINATTI CONSERVATORY CHAMBER PLAYERS
We are forever in Rodney Winther’s debt for his research which gave us
An Annotated Guide to Wind Chamber Music, recently published by
Warner Brothers and an essential part of any library.
Here he brought a clever five-work programme, two contemporary
works preceded by an early 19th century classic, and a second
half which contrasted the Gallic wit of Jean Françaix with the Austrian
intensity of Arnold Schoenberg. Performances were excellent, neat, and
tidy, but I found the Krommer
Partita lacked the charm
of phrasing which is so essential to this most elegant of composers, and
although superbly balanced in the woodwind, the problem of the
contemporary horns in the
wind ensemble was not always solved, here or in the Schoenberg. I need
to hear the Between Blues and
Hard Places again before I can assess this world premiere, but I
very much enjoyed hearing live the
Three Spanish Songs by
Matthew Tommasini again. Looking back over the week, Terence Milligan’s
unobtrusive direction of the very funny
Hommage à l’Ami Papageno was as delightful as anything in the
conference, and took me back to a performance in
No such problems beset the start of this concert, two Takemitsu fanfares
enclosed Milhaud’s little masterpiece, each following without applause.
This restrained first group gave way to the exuberance of Michael
Daugherty’s Raise the Roof for Timpani and Symphonic Band, enthusiastically
energetic in performance by Michael Haithcock and the home team and the
only work of the week to be awarded a standing ovation; if you like
Michael Daugherty music, you will love this macho concerto. The second
half just included two major statements,
Hour of the Soul by
Gaubuldaina which was impressive but needs repeated hearings, and a fine
reading of Dionysiaques.
There is an energy and excitement about the Michigan Band which sweeps
the audience along whatever the repertoire, and while I prefer the
clarity of the smaller wind ensemble, the Michigan performances have a
maturity and depth which was there under H. Robert Reynolds and has been
fostered and developed by our wonderful host for this conference,
Michael Haithcock.
So to the final day, and a programme of three works by
composer/conductor, Fank Ticheli, with Grainger and Grantham as the
filling in a double sandwich. Ticheli is energetic and charming, his
music-making fun and full of interest. His new work
Nitro might be described as
minimal Copland; subtitled a
Fanfare for
Band, this is a very useful addition to the repertoire of ‘openers’.
Grainger’s Children’s
March was nicely paced and
pointed, Grantham’s hilarious moto
perpetuo,
Baron Cemetiere’s
Mambo was very amusing, and
they enclosed Frank’s Sanctuary,
beautifully played and yet for me a little too sweet and sentimental –
that word again. It is based on the idea of Granger’s
Colonial Song, his own
First
Sentimental, so perhaps I should not grumble. No grumbles about his
Symphony no 2, commissioned
to honour Jim Croft on his retirement, and now an astonishing four years
old. Frank has a real gift for writing what works and sounds good, as
someone said, a skill born of being a natural conductor. The students
sounded as if they had had a ball with Frank throughout the week.
THE
This concert was loud, as was their concert at the Eastern Division
Regional Conference last year. Many wind bands play too loud, and this
is one of the loudest. The missed point is that the excitement of the
wind band, or of any ensemble, is not in the noise level, which just
becomes boring, but the detail, the
crescendi and
diminuendi, the variety of accents, the colours of double reeds and
weaker percussion, the intensity of the inner harmonic progressions.
Bands and orchestras must also consider the acoustic; the
Some time ago I went to hear a rehearsal and concert by Sir Simon Rattle
and the City of
Glen Adsit and his players are first rate, he gets incredible accuracy,
the sound is very loud but never forced, the passage work virtuosic.
However, I could not help contrasting the end of Joseph Schwantner’s
Recoil, which ended with a
lower intensity than the previous three minutes and left the audience
dazed, not knowing whether to clap or not; there was a performance later
that evening of another very noisy piece, John Mackey’s
Turbine, in which the high
decibel factor was off-set by enormous care over the detail of
crescendi, subito
piano or different types of
accent. There was a growing sense of inevitability at the end which led
us inexorably onwards with a louder
ffff than any previous
ffff, the kind of growth that
we feel at the end of Stravinsky’s
Danse Sacrale. I learned
such a lot about timing from our opera producer in
That being said, this was indeed a high velocity programme, and the
exciting virtuosity of Scott Hartman, trombone in the premiere of
Passagi by Stephen Gryc and of
Ben Toth in Tales from the Centre
of the Earth by Zivkovic saved me from sheer boredom of being
battered by noise. Glen gave a fine apologia of why he selected these
three works, but it was heavy duty even for those of us going deaf.
Recoil I need to hear again,
perhaps in a bigger but dryer acoustic, the Gryc and the Zivkovic I
would programme if I had a great ensemble. They are both terrific. It
was a nice touch to commission a Lullaby from Joe Turrin (check out his
opera The Scarecrow on his
website) to go with Bassett’s
Lullaby for Kirsten, conducted lovingly by H Robert Reynolds.
This was a concert in which I enjoyed every aspect, the programming,
performances, balance, phrasing, sound world. If I have the smallest
quibble it was in the slightly heavy handed accompaniment to the Kurt
Weill Violin Concerto, a
lighter touch from Rick Clary, one of my favorite wind conductors, would
have made this score more transparent and have brought out the
bitter-sweet wit of Weill’s accompaniment.
Grantham’s Court
Music is a fun piece, full of engaging sounds, and I have already
commented on the performance of John Mackey’s
Turbine. This work will always be exciting, it inhabits that typical
wind world, and we all do ‘exciting’ very well, but Mackey includes a
huge amount of detail that can get lost very easily but was featured
strongly here. In contrast
we heard Jonathan Newman’s beautiful
As the Scent of Spring Rain,
at last a miniature, full of sentiment but not sentimental. We are lucky
at present to have so many older and younger composers of real talent
and imagination writing for us. One of the most skilled is Dan Welcher,
and it was a considerable experience to hear such a fine performance of
his Symphony No 4 to go
alongside Frank Ticheli’s
Symphony No. 2, two major musical statements of our time.
Rick Clary has built on the legacy of Jim Croft and turned this ensemble into a very potent force in wind music, retaining the quality of sound and elegance of phrasing which was such a feature, and adding on perhaps a greater efficiency, accuracy in pointing rhythms, a wider dynamic range, in all a maturity which we find in the President’s Own or in the best of the world’s symphony orchestras playing at their peak. While I was delighted with most of the programming of all nine concerts, and thrilled as ever by the playing, we in the wind world perhaps have one more journey to make towards mature performances which are not over-stretched and over-exuberant, in which there is no testosterone-fuelled competitive element.
THE FUTURE OF CONTEMPORARY MUSIC IS IN THIS ROOM
One great legacy from the 2005 New York Conference was the welcome
publication by Donald Hunsberger of essays on the Wind Band in and
around
FINAL THOUGHTS ON DYNAMICS
If we as wind band
conductors are to have a future in the world of real music, we must
develop a more sophisticated approach to our music making, starting with
the problem of noise. I wanted to ask the composers panel whether they
felt we were doing a good job in interpreting their dynamics. Like
Mozart, most composers write forte or fortissimo right down the score,
whether for flutes, oboes, trumpets, trombones, snare drum or cymbals.
Leinsdorf wrote:
I think they still do
today, since it is impossible for a composer to write sensibly all of
the nuances which will balance a chord perfectly with a dozen different
family types in a myriad of different situations. We need to invite our
players to address these problems, and we need to carefully balance
every measure. The mature wind orchestra and the careful conductor will
automatically edit these markings.
THE SINGLE FORTE IS
OFTEN OVERDRIVEN
On the subject of loud
music, Leinsdorf sums up the
dilemma in a discussion of the Beethoven Seventh Symphony:
The optimum effect is
created by a well-considered scale of dynamics. Achieving it requires a
firm resolve that nothing before bar 427 of the finale in Beethoven's
Seventh Symphony shall reach the triple-forte level. There are many ff
spots in the preceding forty minutes of play, and every one of them is a
bit different. The scoring is different, the emphasis is different and
the impact should be different. Perhaps the most decisive nuance in this
whole reckoning will be the single f, which is, alas, often overdriven.
FOOLISH SCRAPINGS AND
MEANINGLESS NOISE
Leopold Mozart re-inforces
this view of forte when he writes …wherever a forte is written
down, the tone is to be used with moderation without foolish scrapings.
And finally it is worth
repeating a couple of bon mots on crescendo. First Gunther Schuller, who
writes:
As the crescendo is
initially held back and then gradually released to run its course, its
ultimate resolution, when it finally arrives, is all the more exciting,
dramatic and rewarding.
And lastly Von Bülow who
insisted that Diminuendo signifies forte, crescendo
signifies piano.
The excitement comes from contrast, not from noise. I am often laughed
at with my T-shirts that state
forte is a light dynamic, and one distinguished conductor at
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||