bernard
sherman's site AKA
"Barney Sherman" in the Midwest, "David Sherman"
when I lived in California (& went by my middle name),
and "Bernard D. Sherman" in print. Analyze that! My
news
.
classical radio host 9 - noon on Iowa
Public Radio Classical (any opinions you discern
here are my own, not my employer's)
"Excellent
. . .a great achievement." -The Times Literary Supplement
"I
can't imagine a better book of its kind... readers will profit greatly,
and they are addressed considerately and without condescension."
- Richard Taruskin
OLD: David
Brooks's nostalgia for the Middle Ages bothers me for many
of the reasons it bothers these letter-to-the-editor
writers. To their perceptive points I would add: ixnay on the
Uizinga-Hay. Not that I don't admire Huizinga (and you can read
the first edition of the book in question for free
online); it's his idea of a "childlike" medieval mentality
that Brooks embraces and I reject. (See the chapter with Christopher
Page, and right after it, in my first book for explanation.)
Brooks, in his excellent book Bobos in Paradise,
chronicled American boomer authenticity-seeking: a feeling
that our advanced, commercial, monetarized, unrooted, post-modern
culture is made of polyester. But in this column Brooks embodies
a version of that same sense. Instead of yearning for carpets
woven by peasants in Peru, he yearns for the God-intuiting medieval
sense of the night sky.
To apply this to music, this same yearning for
authenticity led many of my generation to reject white-bread
All-American popular music (say, Bing) in search of what Marc
Perlman calls "singing someone else's song" - someone
more real, more authentic, whether gamelan ensembles, Chicago
blues artists, Woody Guthrie, or medieval trouveres. It's not
all of what motivated us; TV and radio and computers and travel
gave us the ABILITY to hear other peoples' songs. But that sense
was part of why early-music people sought the medieval or Baroque
or 18th-century mentality - a nostalgia for a mentality imagined
to be more true than ours.
I do think it was different in some ways, and
of course I agree with Brooks that developing sympathies for
other times and places and their mentalities expands us. But
yearning for a different mentality tends to exaggerate the differnece
and romanticize it. And when it starts to get parochial, it
makes me nervous. - April, 2008
Bernard
Holland can't stand "histrionics" among classical
performers. The concert he pans sounds pretty extreme, but
his generalizations deserve no slack -e.g.,
the line, "Its another reason classical music
is not reaching more young people." Nor should he get
away with the suggestion that physical responsiveness means
you're a hack. His evidence for both claims is SO cherry-picked
- like, "At the end of the day, whom do we take more
seriously, Rubinstein or Lang Lang?" Cherry-picking
means ignoring the obvious counter-examples, so let me point
to Youtubes of Leonard
Bernstein and Jacqueline
DuPre.
As
for that rhetorical question, let's count the problems. First,
Rubinstein is just as daunting a standard for the most stony-faced
young pianist. Second, Lang Lang does great at the box office
and reaches a lot of young people. Third, the question of whom
we take seriously hinges not just on artistic merit but on the
values of classical-music standard-bearers: audiences adored
Leonard Bernstein while serious critics condescended to him,
partly because they found his histrionics offensive. Lenny's
reputation has gone way up among critics in recent years; the
public got it right all along. (As for Lang... he's just a kid
who got way too hyped way too soon. The earliest recordings
I have of Rubinstein come from his 40s - let's give Lang another
15 years before we start comparing.)
OTOH, I'll grant Bernard two points: 1) Annoying emoting
while performing classical music is a turn-off. The mega-serious
Alfred Brendel used to grimace in a way that suggested an urgent
need for an exorcist. It WAS mannerism, and Brendel cured himself
by practicing in front of a mirror. If this is all Bernard were
saying, I'd agree. 2) Great artists like Rubinstein, Schnabel
and Heifetz proved that you can be facially static while being
emotionally ecstatic (and, with the exception of Schnabel, boffo).
MY
generalization : the problem is not how much or little
a musician acts-out the music while performing, but how well.
Obvious analogy: it's like acting - how well does the bodily
motion support the words? Or: it's like ordinary body language
- when that contradicts the words coming out of your mouth,
you know you got trouble. Feb. 12, 2008
- POSTSCRIPT - But, then, here's evidence
of when it's better to be motionless :)... Feb.
13, 2008 ...... PPS: Here's evidence of when
it's not!:
Clap
Your Hands Say Bravo!
The
above reminds me of a previous question about whether It's
OK to Applaud between movements at a classical concert.
The proscription against that sure chimed with the proscription
against "histrionics." Anyway, I hold with those
who say Express yourself! See: Alex's short essay
and Greg'spost
.
.FORE!
It's
not just classical-music institutions that have the aging/ shrinking
audience problem (as Greg
Sandow has been carefully documenting) . It's also golf,
the Times reports. And my brother, who ties flies in his basement
(when he isn't doctoring, reading, and being a dad) tells me
that fly-fishing has the same problem (which you'd think
would be good for the trout - but my brother tells me
no, the hunting and fishing fees were what paid for keeping
the fields and streams in good condition). People are hanging
out on the Internet (not you and me, but some people) or playing
video games and clubbing; increasingly, younger people seek
the urban indoors rather than the wild outdoors. The Times mentions
that other outdoor sports are going downhill fast, including
tennis, swimming, hiking, biking and skiing.
Also,
it says, golf takes a lot of time, and Americans work
more, so we don't have as much of that. Further, the Times mentions
that golfing costs a lot of money, and the median American
household has less of both this decade relative to inflation.
Obvious
comparisons to classical institutions: sitting through a symphony
in a concert hall takes a lot of time, and you can't hit the pause
button or watch part of it tomorrow night (entertainment outside
the home in general is down); also, mastering the piano or violin
takes tons of time (nobody ever picked up the violin at age 17,
but I've known rock pros who started out at that age). Then there's
the cost: classical instruments are way costly, etc.
Another
comparison is my usual socioeconomic hand-waving: Golf
was a sport for the striving middle-class, the man who wanted
to rise up the corporate ladder, the executive who could afford
to belong to a private country club; and classical music world
was always about the striving middle-class, as William
Weber documents. Striving in American now takes
a different form: since the late 60s, Americans have tended
to aspire to cool,
not class. Classical-music institutions, like golf courses,
were optimized to appeal to the aspirations of the mid-20th-c
American middle class. My hands have just started waving, but
more on this later.- Feb. 21, 2008
April
update: On the other hand, golf is bad for the environment,
some say - cutting down all those trees, watering all those
greens. Now that gut strings have largely gone out of fashion
(outside of the early-music movement) I can't think of any similar
criticism of classical music institutions.
UPDATE:
It's also NEWSPAPERs. Says Eric Alterman, "Only nineteen
per cent of Americans between the ages of eighteen and thirty-four
claim even to look at a daily newspaper. The average age of
the American newspaper reader is fifty-five and rising."
In this case the reason is obvious: the Web. Why bother with
print? And
.Why
do we like the music we like? Some
thoughts and resources
as I start to draw this together for some future writing maybe.
Let me know if you have any comments, thanks. -
Feb 17, 2008
Why
not just give Alex
Ross his Pulitzer right now and be done with
it? (for
The
Rest Is Noise.)
So I wrote in October. I'm delighted that the NY Times
has since put it on its "10
Best Books of 2007" list and that the Washingon
Post, LA Times, Economist, Time,Newsweek, and Slate put it
on their best-of-year lists. His writing has by itself improved
the future of music.- Jan 1, 2008
.
The
tone of moral outrage sounds Leon-Wieseltierian, and he bullies
the defenseless, but Richard Taruskin
on the
state of classical music is not to be missed. (Much more essential, though, is his
Oxford
History of Western Music. There he had to seek the
tone of the balanced observer - although his difficulties with
that role are part of what make the book so utterly compelling.)-
Nov. 2007
.
some notable online radio/print/
lecture sources:
Open
Source Radio, the model
in harnessing the Web for creating radio, IS BACK!!!!!
Thinking
Allowedwith Laurie
Taylor on the BBC - great title, eh? Great show,
too; listen online.
WGBH's
"Forum" trove
- unbelievable collection of lectures and interviews
from the Boston area
bloggingheads.tv
- love
the redesign. Political argument on a much higher level
than the Sunday talk shows.
authors@google- amazing series of invited lectures at the corporate
campus
Thoughtcastwith Jenny Attiyeh -
master interviewer at work.
My
enthusiasm can be an ominous sign: I loved The
Connection. Some of the shows are archived.
The
Financial Timesreally
is the world's best newspaper. They only give away 30
articles/month, though.
.
TV
Uh, have I mentioned bloggingheads.tv?
Twice a week, two bloggers, journalists, or academics "diavlog"
about the issues of the day via Web cams. An attempt to foster civil
discussion between liberals and conservatives. I listen to the audio
mp3s as I drive or work out. (A criticism: they really could improve
the audio - easily.) I especially like those where Bob Wright interviews
a specialist (like Gershom
Gorenberg on
Israel and
the settlements, and on
Gaza). UPDATE:
You gotta see Bob's diavlog
with Fred Kaplan on Daydream
Believers.)
.
A lot of talent gets directed to sitcoms. See Sports Night (season
1, not after) and West Wing. Dialogue snappier than real
life, enhancing the convincing characters and dramas. And I recommend
my favorite Scrubs episode, My
Musical
- with actual Broadway production numbers (sample!)
courtesy of the team that wrote "Avenue Q." I bought it
at iTunes for $1.99.
. The Brits. How do they speak American so well? June Thomas
shows how here,
hilariously. And no, I can't stand House, M.D., but Hugh
Laurie's comedy with Stephen Fry, often in Brit-speak, is some of
my favorite -e.g., here
and here
and here
and here
and here
etc. etc. And while we're with Brits, here's Eddie Izzard on
the Church
of England. And in another tone altogether, thanks to SQ
for turning me on to Foyle's
War
.
recordings
I'm lovin': -
.
I
love Ravel. I'm into his piano
trio anrd
piano concertos (notably, Krystian Zimerman). On
Youtube you can watch the Beaux
Arts Trio playing this Trio and Leon
Fleisher play the Left-hand Concerto and Martha
Argerichplay the G Major! And Rattle/Berlin
in La
Valse ! - a You Tube not to be missed.
.
Barenboim
on Beethoven - a
6-DVD set from EMI, On Discs 5 and 6 Barenboim gives masterclasses
to young pianists, including Alessio Bax, Jonathan Biss, and Lang
Lang.
Sample this
Youtube excerpt. E.g., the part about a piano crescendoing
on a single note.
.
I'm discovering Wilhelm Kempff, who used to do nothing
for me. At his best, art that conceals art. My favorite example:
Schubert's "Unfinished" C Major Sonata, D. 840. He makes
it sound so easy to interpret (it's not: the overwrought recordings
by Brendel and Richter prove the opposite). It all unfolds so
naturally, yet he makes us feel Schubert's sudden pleasure in
each harmonic excursion. In some other works, what Kempff doesn't
seem to do much of is the mad and intense - in some of his Beethoven
I miss the wildness. But I love some of the Kempff Beethoven I've
heard: op. 7, op 26, op 28, op 53 - the 1930's recording on Hannsler,
not at all underpowered- op 78. Or the Fourth Concerto, with Van
Kempen, but even better with the volatile Abendroth on Music and
Arts.
.Ludwig
won't roll over: In fact, he's never had it better. Yes, I
love golden-agers like Schnabel, Arrau, Kempff, Busch, Klemperer,
Furtwaengler, the Quartetto Italiano, etc. But spare me the lead-age
mentality. So many people devote so much of their lives to this
music now that we shdn't be surprised that some of their playing
is so great. Examples: Garrick Ohlsson's op. 2 no 3; Mitsuko Uchida's
op. 101; Paul Lewis in Op. 10 no 2; the Takacs quartet cycle;
the Vanska symphony cycle; Angela Hewitt's Op. 7 (i haven't had
access to more of her cycle-in-progress); Jonathan Biss in op.
13 and op. 28; Peter Serkin in op. 27 no 1; .... more to come
as I think of them. [BTW, I oppose Vanska's extreme literalism
in principle, but the results shut me up.]
Newish
recordings that have jumped out at me:Stephen Hough
playing Chopin Ballades and Scherzos on Hyperion; in fact,
anything by Stephen Hough, come to think of it; Trevor Pinnock's
return to the Brandenburgs on Avie; Peter Watchorn's
WTC book 1 on his own Musica Omnia label; Rene Jacobs
in Don Giovanni on Harmonia mundi; Marc-Andre Hamelin's
Haydn sonatas on Hyperion: the the the Shahams playing
Prokofiev on their own label; Yevgeni Sudbin playing
Scarlatti; Hausmusik playing Mendelssohn; Pierre Hantai
playing Scarlatti; more TK.
Handelian
bliss, part 1: Andrew Manze and the Academy of Ancient
Music's recording of Handel's
Op. 6 concertos - and btw, this opus is not just another set
of Baroque concertos, but a cornucopia of invention (some of which
is plagiarized, but who cares?) And this is not just another recording.
Try the effortlessly overdotted rhythms at the beginning of op.
6 no 10; you can hear how to these players this style has become
a natural language. And try the unhurried Allegro Moderato in
the same concerto - the vitality comes from within, not from mindless
briskness, and the performance makes you feel the music's almost
childlike delight. The group plays with tons of character throughout.
And you can download it.
Handelian bliss, part 2: Don't hold Gramophone's
enthusiasm against it: the
Messiah by the Dunedin Consort and John Butt really is inspired.
Ideal for those who've heard the thing way too often and don't
care if they ever hear it again (because it's the first attempt
to record the Dublin premiere version, and it makes the "small-chorus"
ideal so intimate); just as ideal for someone coming to it for
the first time.
.If
you like the idea of Ira Gershwin and
Kurt Weill performing "The
Nina, the Pinta, and the Santa Maria" et al., you
gotta hear them. Available at emusic.com and on a CD, "Tryout."
(Also:
don't miss their musical/ operetta Lady in the Dark.)
.
I love The
Shins.
I like the way James Mercer's lyrics play with cliches
- evoking them then subverting them. (E.g., in Saint Simon,
"Mercy's eyes are blue [evoking cliche, but then.... ]/
when she places them in front of you [were you expecting that
image?]/ Nothing holds a Roman candle to ["Roman"
transforms the "holds a candle to" cliche, making it
resonate with the song] etc... ) I like how the music works
with the words - sometimes by opposition. (Try A Comet Appears
- the line "let's carve my aging face off/ fetch
us a knife/ start with the eyes/ till all that's left is a grimacing
smile "- such
a violent image, such
tender music. And the two adjectives earn their keep; the verbs,
like "carve" and "fetch," do more of the work.
As they should.)
I like how he undermines the potential repetiveness of the strophic
song through meaningfully varying the returns [Australia:
"damned to be one of us, girl/ faced with the dodo's conundrum/
i felt like I could just fly/ but nothing happened every time
I tried" --- later in the song becomes "dare to be one
us, girl/ facing the android's conundrum/ i felt like I should
just cry/ but nothing happens every time I take one on the chin..."
- with a beautiful, surprising new harmony at "take one on
the chin..".] I like his control of metaphor (in the same
song - Australia - early on, the line "keep your wick
in the air and your feet in the fetters" is a striking set
of verbal sounds, but seems obscure; but much later in the song
it connects to "you don't know how long I've been/ watching
the lantern dim/ starved of oxygen..." And the last line:
"so give me your hand and we'll jump out the window.."
-- that chimes with the dodo's conundrum, maybe?) Above all the
music... the man has always been known for his ability to write
a hook, and his music is inventive way after the hook. Australia
uses a polka rhythm, begins with a hook full of syncopation, and
then has the melody start in the same non-tonic harmony that the
hook reached up to. Similar invention right through to the end.
Here's an interview with Mercer on the craft of songwriting: http://www.pitchforkmedia.com/article/feature/40237-interview-the-shins
My top-10 Shins list, in alphabetical order: Australia;
A Comet Appears; Kissing
the Lipless; New
Slang;
The Past and Pending; Phantom
Limb;
Pink
Bullets; Saint Simon; Sleeping
Lessons;
Those
to Come.
.
I love Ben
Folds. If Sasha Frere-Jones hates it, it's
probably for me.Contrary to John McWhorter, of whom I'm a big
fan, there is a kind of verbal intelligence available in the pop
world even now. More on this later.
.Nigunim
by Frank London,Lorin Sklamberg,
and Uri Caine - moving, beautifu, (Thank
you, LK.). Even though I don't
romanticize the Chassidim as they seem to. Also: Srul
Irving Glick's A
Night at Heaven's GateAnd, in a different vein,
the Klezmatic's Woody Guthrie CDs.
.
I love
Rene
Jacobs in Haydn's symphonies 91 & 92
on Harmonia mundi - check out 92's
opening . What
is more beautiful than a string section playing superbly and perfectly
in tune? - Which brings us to....
.
...another
exclusive! - sample
Simon Rattle and
the Orchestra of the Age of Enlightenment in the Brahms
Tragic Overture. Rattle, who's often
dissed as superficial, proves otherwise. I've heard other conductors
project these inner voices but make them sound like too-precious
detail. Here they are meaningful - and moving. Beautiful phrasing.
(also: the strings in Rattle's new Berlin Mahler 9th on
EMI. Phew!)
.Eric
Ewazen'sDown
a River of Timeis heartfelt. I like so much
of what I hear from this unabashedly neo-romantic composer.
.When old means new: the Debussyrelease
from Andante.com (early recordings, e.g., Coppola's La
mer) . And at emusic, Sibelius bud Robert
Kajanus conducting the Sibelius Fifth.
Kajanus and Coppola bring a lightness, volatility and spontaneity
to the music that would be hard to regain once the works became
Classics.
.Mozart
- Benjamin Britten and Sviatoslav
Richter playing the first movement of
the duo sonata in C, K. 521 (iTunes) strikes me as a mind-blowing
synthesis of imagination, finesse, and wild energy. The musical
equivalent of the right stage of hypomania. And Rene
Jacob's recordings of Mozart's Don Giovanni (at
youtube, here's a documentary), and Figaro and
Cosi - no "hypo" to this mania!
.What's
on my iTunes? Aside from the above?: RayCharles,
I Don't Need No Doctor;Martha and the Vandellas,
Jimmy Mack (the stereo version), Miriam Makeba's
The Click Song, MahlerAdagietto by Bruno
Walter with the New York Phil,. (and his Mahler Fourth from
Vienna in 1955, from the Andante set); Paul Robeson (anything
I can get my hands on, but above all Balm in Gilead); Louis
Jordan (Look
out, sister, look out!);
Neal Young'sHarvest Moon; Death Cab for Cutie's
Plans; Joni Mitchell's Hejira, Paul
SImon'sOnly Living Boy in New York City; and lots
of Handel and Bach (two opposites, really). And a lot of
Bob Dylan (notably Blood on the Tracks, and John
Wesley Harding, and Modern Times, and odd songs like
Isis, and Tears of Rage, and Visions of Johanna,
and and and...) and of the Beatles.
.Too
Many Books!! .
On
my bedstand right now:
I'm reading Bryan Caplan's The
Myth of the Rational Voter, and Matt Yglesias'sHeads
in the Sand. Also reading Vikram Seth'sGolden
Gate (crazed genius novel written entirely in sonnets...). And.
Assignments:
Every journalist really should be forced to read Jonathan Gruber'sPublic
Policy and Public Finance before covering political /economic
assertions. And if you're at all involved in media, you MUST read chapter
5 - "Media: The Dog That Didn't Watch" - in Jonathan Chait's
book The
Big Con.
.
Some
of the books I'm glad I spent the time on
recently:
Big
Think: RobertWright's Nonzero
(highly recommended - the link takes you to an excerpt). William Bernstein's
A
Splendid Exchange. Cullen Murphy'sAre
We Rome? (And of course Jared Diamond.)
Music:
Alex Ross's The
Rest Is Noise.Not just for classical music fans; if you have any interest in 20th-century
history (or great writing) don't miss it. Also, don't miss RichardTaruskin's Oxford
History of Western Music (if you've browsed this page, you've
really gotta read it).
Psychology: JamesSurowiecki's The
Wisdom of Crowds
(and here's my interview
with Surowiecki - and yes, I'm aware the political prediction markets
don't tell us much); JudithRich-Harris'sNo Two Alike . And for politicos, Drew Westin's The
Political Brain.
.I
am eager to get my hands on Robert H. Frank's The
Economic Naturalist,the same Robert H. Frank's Falling
Behind, The other Robert Frank's Richistan. As for forthcoming
books, I'm eager to read Sean Wilentz's on the Reagan administration;
and once I get Robert Wright's book on religion and foreign policy,
apparently called The Evolution of God, I will devour it
and suffer big losses of productivity and sleep time in the process.
.
recent-ish publications.
My review of John Butt's Playing
with History is in the autumn 2006 issue ofThe Journal of the
American Musicological Society .
I guest-edited the fall issue of The Journal of Musicological Research(on 20th-c performance)..
The BBC Music Magazineliked this site: "[A]refined voice... intriguing articles
on early music and performance from a wide variety of publications. A
cleansing experience after all this mud-slinging." - April 2002
(may
I also mention my modesty and avoidance of self-promotion...?) .
My chapter on "Conducting Early Music" appears
in The Cambridge Companion to Conducting(ed. Jose
A. Bowen, 2004). Kind review here
.
.
My archived shows The
Wisdom of Crowds with
James Surowiecki and Joyce Berg. Better: just read The
Wisdom of Crowds. My followup read will be Cass Sunstein's Infotopia.
His review
of The Wisdom of Crowds is well worth reading: http://www.powells.com/review/2004_06_24.html
. BUT - see this new study http://palmdesert.ucr.edu/conferences/economica2007/erikson-gdi.pdf
- showing why prediction markets are LESS successful than polls at
predicting election outcomes.
myinterview with Daniel Altmanabout his first book, Neoconomy(now available for $0.01 at Amazon...)
And
an mp3 of Studs Terkel (on
his book And They All Sang) - WFMT called with the opportunity
to do a short interview with Studs, and everyone was on vacation, so...
I did it. What an honor.
And
I just interviewed the brilliant Rebecca Sheir of Alaska Public
Radio about her Third Coast-award-winning documentary, The End as Beginning:
An Audio Exploration of the Jewish View of Death. I'll play parts of it
interspersed with the documentary on KSUI tomorrow. Here's the interview
itself (17 minutes) rebecca mp3
.How
to Invest- revealed! - a short transcript
from when I used to host radio shows on this. Still pretty timely. (TIPS
are yielding a little less, but not enough to make a difference to what
Larry says.)
.
Beta: a wiki for classical-radio producers in English-speaking countries,
who need to think about ratings as well as musician: what pieces from
the last 30 years would work in our format? (Not: what are the most important
pieces, or the greatest pieces? Just... what will fit into the sound of
classical radio?) Here's a beta
version.
Contact
me: sherman.bd at gmail
That
review of my chapter in The Cambridge Companion to Conducting:
"Sherman lucidly moderates between differing views concerning performance
practice, from standpoints of control and authority to changing priorities
and progress. He argues for a serious study of historical context and the
composer's possible intentions, stating that such an approach would engender
changes made as a result of 'rethinking the boundaries between work and performance'
...Several issues are addressed, most notably the dilemma of whether to conduct
from the podium or the keyboard, awareness of the impact that recordings have
had on performance aesthetics, and the democratization of perfomers versus
the singular interpretation of the conductor-leader" - Joel Novarro,
19th-Century Music Review, vol. 2 no. 1