(Hat tip: Sybille Werner.)
Who Was Carlos Kleiber?
Even if you know who he was, you will want to hear this terrific BBC profile, which includes commentary from prominent musical colleagues (including Plácido Domingo and Charles Barber) and critics. It’s hard to believe he’s been gone for five years. (Hat tip: Sybille Werner.)
Alicia de Larrocha, 1923-2009
Spanish news outlets report that Spanish pianist Alicia de Larrocha died earlier today in Barcelona at the age of 86. Although best known as a champion of the romantic repertoire of her native land, de Larrocha had a very broad repertoire.
Wilma Cozart Fine has died
Rudolf Bruil’s SoundFountain web site is reporting that Wilma Cozart Fine, the wife of Mercury Records’ renowned classical producer Bob Fine and herself a moving force in classical music recording, has died.
Mahler III – Gilbert / NYPhil @ Avery Fisher
My review of last evening’s New York Philharmonic concert (the first subscription program under their new music director, Alan Gilbert) is live at ClassicalSource.com.
Leon Kirchner, 1919-2009
Another giant of the American musical avant garde has died. The NY Times has posted a preliminary obituary. (HT: Daniel Felsenfeld, and Beth Levin on the obit)
Public Television’s Flagship Station Undermines Good Music
This evening I will be attending the post-gala opening concert of the New York Philharmonic’s “official” season (which I am reviewing for ClassicalSource.com).
In preparation for tonight’s concert, I decided to tune in last night’s broadcast of the Philharmonic’s opening gala on thirteen (WNET-HD, Channel 13 in New York City) via my Time Warner HD cable feed.
Am I the only person who found it infuriating that the video feed was a (poorly) upsampled standard-definition signal?
Worse yet, the audio quality was an embarrassment: radically compressed dynamic range, aggressive employment of limiters that introduced a “breathing effect,” and an ugly string timbre that bore no resemblance to Philharmonic.
But it came as no surprise. Last night’s botch job was typical of the poor quality thirteen has been foisting on viewers as “quality programming” for well over a decade.
Memo to PBS: if you’re going to broadcast or videotape a Lincoln Center event, at least spring for the gear to give us a real HD signal. And I’ll be the first to admit that Avery Fisher Hall is nightmare audio recording/broadcast venue, but there is NO excuse for crappy sound. I have not seen any Live from Lincoln Center events outside of New York City on a decent home theater system, so I can’t be certain as to which knob-twiddler(s) in the audio chain might be the culprit(s) — PBS’s remote team, thirteen, or Time Warner — but I would venture a guess that no one is innocent, but some are more guilty than others.
So here’s a little unsolicited advice for all concerned: fix it. And here’s some news for PBS and thirteen: music lovers DO have the brains to lower the volume before the music begins so that something resembling a realistic dynamic range eMerges from their speaker(s). Maybe you should send your broadcast producers and engineers to NHK in Japan or BR and WDR in Germany to see and hear televised classical music done right. Something has to be done, because the present status quo is not only an insult to your viewers but the music and artists.
Mary Allin Travers, 1936-2009
Sad news: folk singer and social activist Mary Travers died earlier today in Danbury. The New York Times has already posted an obituary filled with interesting quotes and comments from friends and musical associates.
Long overdue, well worth the wait
Violinist Rachel Barton Pine makes her New York recital debut
Rachel Barton Pine made her long overdue New York recital debut this evening at Symphony Space, in a program featuring works by Pisendel, Mendelssohn, Corigliano and Liszt with pianist Matthew Hagle. It was one of the finest recital programs I’ve seen in a very long time.
Verdi on the beach
The Inky‘s David Patrick Stearns reports on an unlikely performance of the Verdi Requiem in New Jersey. I’d add that the Great Auditorium in Ocean Grove also sports one of the most interesting and impressive sounding organs on the East Coast. (Hat tip: Elliott Forrest.)