The San Francisco Conservatory of Music offers free concerts for the public almost every day of the week and you can get tickets by making reservations at their website (click here). On Saturday evening, I was drawn to an orchestral concert led by student conductors because one of the pieces was the wild, rarely performed 1992 Chamber Symphony of local composer John Adams. Along the way, I ran into Chenier Ng, one of the most dedicated music lovers in the world.
The concert began with Haydn's Symphony No. 59, nicknamed "The Fire Symphony," in a surprisingly vivid performance conducted by Donald Lee III, who brought passion, interesting dynamics, and a liveliness that is often absent when San Francisco's professional ensembles play the composer's music.
According to the program notes, Lee is a multi-hyphenate musician: pianist, conductor, and vocal accompanist. If he can conduct Haydn this well, he can probably do anything.
This was followed by Adams's Chamber Symphony conducted by Chih-Yao Chang from Taiwan in an astonishingly accomplished, kickass performance. There is a well-known anecdote Adams tells about the genesis of this work. He was studying the score of Schoenberg's Chamber Symphony at home while his 7-year-old son Sam was watching TV cartoons with their manic musical soundtracks, and the two merged in his mind like a surrealist Looney Tunes animation. He also notes that "Despite all the good humor, my Chamber Symphony turned out to be shockingly difficult to play." No kidding.
Young musicians are often quite brilliant with contemporary music that confounds their elders and this performance was a good example, a more exact and exciting version than I heard 10 years ago at the SF Symphony. Concertmaster Aleksy Aretsky (above) was superb in both the Haydn and this outing, and Diego Rodriguez (above, back left) miraculously made my least favorite instrument, the piccolo, sound varied and gorgeous. This was especially important because at times the three-movement symphony sounds like a concerto for piccolo and chamber orchestra.
Conductor Chih-Yao Chang kept all the competing musical threads and cross-cutting time signatures clear, even when the score sounds like it's about to be a car wreck. He's got a bright future. I didn't stay for the second half of the concert, which was Beethoven's Egmont Overture and Piano Concerto #1 because no matter how good the performance, it would have sounded like weak tea after the Chamber Symphony.
Sunday, April 06, 2025
Sunday, March 30, 2025
Cathedral City Tesla Protest
We went to the weekly Cathedral City Tesla protest today...
...and joined a group of about 300 people lined along the sidewalk of Perez Road, a huge boulevard with no legal parking...
...many with signage.
This was all taking place in front of the only Tesla showroom and service station in the Coachella Valley.
"Chinga Tu Maga" is my new favorite tagline/T-shirt.
Palm Springs real estate has become too expensive so most of the new gay immigrants are moving into neighboring Cathedral City,
The area is feeling very much like an oasis for people fleeing the oncoming fascist Gilead.
This Sunday's weekly protest featured counterprotestors across the street for the first time, with idiotic signage that included "TESLA OWNERS LIVES MATTER".
My friend Rob McCann, a Canadian who worked for NASA and gained American citizenship years ago, made an appearance.
And so did innumerable fellow citizens who are doing their civic duty by saying pubicly, "No, I protest."
...and joined a group of about 300 people lined along the sidewalk of Perez Road, a huge boulevard with no legal parking...
...many with signage.
This was all taking place in front of the only Tesla showroom and service station in the Coachella Valley.
"Chinga Tu Maga" is my new favorite tagline/T-shirt.
Palm Springs real estate has become too expensive so most of the new gay immigrants are moving into neighboring Cathedral City,
The area is feeling very much like an oasis for people fleeing the oncoming fascist Gilead.
This Sunday's weekly protest featured counterprotestors across the street for the first time, with idiotic signage that included "TESLA OWNERS LIVES MATTER".
My friend Rob McCann, a Canadian who worked for NASA and gained American citizenship years ago, made an appearance.
And so did innumerable fellow citizens who are doing their civic duty by saying pubicly, "No, I protest."
Thursday, March 20, 2025
The Great Yes, The Great No
The Great Yes, The Great No, William Kentridge's new multimedia mixture of actors, dancers, singers, instrumentalists, animated projections, films, masks, drawings and stagecraft, was presented by Cal Performances at UC Berkeley's Zellerbach Hall last weekend. (All production photos are by Monika Rittershaus.)
The loose, wandering narrative depicts a real-life surreal Atlantic Ocean voyage in 1941 from Marseille, France to the colonial Caribbean island of Martinique, with refugees fleeing the Nazis and the collaborationist government of Vichy France. For good measure, other historical figures joined the transatlantic voyage, with everyone from Frantz Fanon to Josephine Bonaparte making appearances. The major presiding spirit was the French Surrealist poet Suzanne Césaire (embodied here by Nancy Nkusi reciting her poetry) and her husband Aimé Césaire who had taken an earlier voyage back to their native island.
There was a panel discussion before Friday night's premiere with the South African artist William Kentridge who conceived and directed the two-hour spectacle with a small army of collaborators. He spoke of his influences, ranging from a Mayakovsky play that he'd forgotten and unconsciously reproduced to an a capella lament he heard at a South African funeral that struck him deeply.
There were so many unfamiliar references and digressions that I found it impossible to make much sense of the theatrical work, but it did not matter because there was so much to absorb and enjoy.
A few of my favorite things included the flat, black-and-white masks that were miraculously enlivened by the dancers Thulani Chauke and Teresa Phuti Mojela. In the photo above, they are twin representations of the Surrealist poet Andre Breton, who was actually on this voyage of the cargo ship Capitaine Paul-Lemerle. My favorite of the cartoonish historical figures come to life were Diego Rivera dancing daintily while Frida Kahlo swings a sledge hammer next to him, an apter symbol of their respective impact than is usually offered onstage.
I also loved the musical backbone of the evening, a seven-woman chorus with music composed by Nhlanhla Mahlangu, along with the animated supertitles that were wittily integrated into the extraordinary animated projections of archival photos, Kentridge's drawings, and surrealist films.
The entire cast was superb without exception.
A quartet of instrumentalists played incidental and accompanying music onstage, with Music Director and percussionist Tlale Makhene brilliantly driving the score along.
The narrative was not only about the transatlantic refugees from World War II France, but the underlying history of transatlantic voyages from Africa to the colonial sugar slave plantations of Martinique. Though not explicitly underlined, the parallels between the present-day fascist takeover of the United States and its own history of slave plantations were everywhere.
Cal Performances was one of the many commissioners of The Great Yes, The Great No, and it felt like a rare honor to experience this show on its worldwide tour.
The loose, wandering narrative depicts a real-life surreal Atlantic Ocean voyage in 1941 from Marseille, France to the colonial Caribbean island of Martinique, with refugees fleeing the Nazis and the collaborationist government of Vichy France. For good measure, other historical figures joined the transatlantic voyage, with everyone from Frantz Fanon to Josephine Bonaparte making appearances. The major presiding spirit was the French Surrealist poet Suzanne Césaire (embodied here by Nancy Nkusi reciting her poetry) and her husband Aimé Césaire who had taken an earlier voyage back to their native island.
There was a panel discussion before Friday night's premiere with the South African artist William Kentridge who conceived and directed the two-hour spectacle with a small army of collaborators. He spoke of his influences, ranging from a Mayakovsky play that he'd forgotten and unconsciously reproduced to an a capella lament he heard at a South African funeral that struck him deeply.
There were so many unfamiliar references and digressions that I found it impossible to make much sense of the theatrical work, but it did not matter because there was so much to absorb and enjoy.
A few of my favorite things included the flat, black-and-white masks that were miraculously enlivened by the dancers Thulani Chauke and Teresa Phuti Mojela. In the photo above, they are twin representations of the Surrealist poet Andre Breton, who was actually on this voyage of the cargo ship Capitaine Paul-Lemerle. My favorite of the cartoonish historical figures come to life were Diego Rivera dancing daintily while Frida Kahlo swings a sledge hammer next to him, an apter symbol of their respective impact than is usually offered onstage.
I also loved the musical backbone of the evening, a seven-woman chorus with music composed by Nhlanhla Mahlangu, along with the animated supertitles that were wittily integrated into the extraordinary animated projections of archival photos, Kentridge's drawings, and surrealist films.
The entire cast was superb without exception.
A quartet of instrumentalists played incidental and accompanying music onstage, with Music Director and percussionist Tlale Makhene brilliantly driving the score along.
The narrative was not only about the transatlantic refugees from World War II France, but the underlying history of transatlantic voyages from Africa to the colonial sugar slave plantations of Martinique. Though not explicitly underlined, the parallels between the present-day fascist takeover of the United States and its own history of slave plantations were everywhere.
Cal Performances was one of the many commissioners of The Great Yes, The Great No, and it felt like a rare honor to experience this show on its worldwide tour.
Thursday, March 13, 2025
Beautifying the Neighborhood
Last Saturday morning we woke up to a small tent city being constructed in the parking lot of a school building on McAllister Street.
San Francisco's Department of Public Works was sponsoring the event which was being billed online as the "Arbor Day Fair," although national Arbor Day is actually April 25th.
Volunteers and city workers were joined for neighborhood tree planting events and spread themselves throughout the Civic Center neighborhood.
I didn't join them but continued on to Hayes Street instead for the Saturday morning trash pickup in Hayes Valley which has turned into quite a lively scene.
After completing my civic duty, I stopped by the "eco-fair," which was charming.
There were bucket rides being offered to kids and their guardians on two towering cherry pickers.
In the back of the schoolyard...
...there was a tiny petting zoo with grass-eating goats.
If you volunteered in the morning, there was a box lunch as reward...
..along with free ice cream.
My favorite giveaway was a make-your-own wooden planter tent...
...with helpful city carpenters showing you how to assemble a square planter box...
...and other city workers helping you transplant live herbs.
It was one of the sweetest city-sponsored events ever.
San Francisco's Department of Public Works was sponsoring the event which was being billed online as the "Arbor Day Fair," although national Arbor Day is actually April 25th.
Volunteers and city workers were joined for neighborhood tree planting events and spread themselves throughout the Civic Center neighborhood.
I didn't join them but continued on to Hayes Street instead for the Saturday morning trash pickup in Hayes Valley which has turned into quite a lively scene.
After completing my civic duty, I stopped by the "eco-fair," which was charming.
There were bucket rides being offered to kids and their guardians on two towering cherry pickers.
In the back of the schoolyard...
...there was a tiny petting zoo with grass-eating goats.
If you volunteered in the morning, there was a box lunch as reward...
..along with free ice cream.
My favorite giveaway was a make-your-own wooden planter tent...
...with helpful city carpenters showing you how to assemble a square planter box...
...and other city workers helping you transplant live herbs.
It was one of the sweetest city-sponsored events ever.
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