Friday, April 30, 2010

We couldn't resist putting these two videos together this week. Zoltán Kodály's music for Háry János (1926) is a classic and quite unusual in featuring a cimbalom, the Eastern European version of a hammered dulcimer. Other composer who have used the instrument include Igor Stravinsky, Béla Bartók Pierre Boulez, Peter Maxwell Davies and even Frank Zappa and Elvis Costello in concert works of theirs. And so it is that we find film composer Hans Zimmer using it in his 2009 score for Sherlock Holmes. To celebrate the musicians who helped perform the music for Sherlock Holmes we're given this quite fun music video of music from the film score . . . this week's FEATURED NEW MUSIC VIDEOS. Enjoy!

Jennifer Higdon started late in music, teaching herself to play flute at the age of 15 and then beginning formal musical studies at 18, with an even later start in composition at the age of 21. Higdon makes her living from commissions and her music is known for its technical skill and audience appeal. Hailed by the Washington Post as "a savvy, sensitive composer with a keen ear, an innate sense of form and a generous dash of pure esprit," the League of American Orchestras reports that she is one of America's most frequently performed composers. From a PBS special called Being Creative in Philadelphia we hear Higdon talk about her life and her music . . . it's our current COMPOSER PORTRAIT. And by the way, her Violin Concerto just won the 2010 Pulitzer Prize in Music. Congratulations Ms. Higdon!

According to Art Lange (Fanfare Magazine), "Rumor has it that there's a big chunk of the classical music listening public that is afraid of contemporary music. When it's played with the passion and conviction that violinist Jennifer Koh generates on behalf of these 21st-century scores, the skeptics have nothing to fear. She displays impeccable technique and a flawless tonal range regardless of their degree of difficulty, and more important, uncovers the lyrical impulse at the music's core. Jennifer Koh is a hell of a violinist (sorry, couldn't resist), and this is a most impressive collection." Check out Jennifer Koh's CD Rhapsodic Musings - 21st Century Works for Solo Violin . . . this week's FEATURED RECORDING.

Sinfonía India (1936) by Mexican composer Carlos Chávez is one of the best examples of his forays into musical nationalism. Based on mestizo music from Chávez's childhood as well as including a massive array of native percussion, this is one of the most impressive and accessible pieces in the composer's repertoire. Watch a fabulous performance of the Sinfonía India (1935-36) by Gustavo Dudamel and the Berlin Philharmonic . . . this week's FROM THE
PYTHEAS ARCHIVES.

Explore, Listen and Enjoy!
Vinny Fuerst
Pytheas Center for Contemporary Music

No comments:

Post a Comment