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Tag: Carnegie Hall

  • Emily Dickinson, Set to New Music, Kills at Carnegie Hall

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    Perhaps a Carnegie Hall archivist has recorded how often an evening-long work of brand-new chamber music, performed in the big auditorium, has prompted a standing ovation, but I would guess almost never. I was afraid that Kevin Puts’s Emily — No Prisoner Be, for mezzo-soprano and string trio, would get swallowed up in the hall’s expanse. The sight of microphones increased my skepticism, because amplification can only help so much if the music is too small or the space too big. I didn’t need to worry: As soon as the first notes sounded, it became clear that Emily is both intimate and symphonic. And mezzo-soprano Joyce DiDonato, the star whose name alone was enough to fill the house on February 19, skipped back and forth across that expressive chasm with ease, accompanied by the string trio Time for Three.

    Puts’s cycle of two dozen Emily Dickinson songs, plus a couple of interludes, begins with “They Shut me Up in Prose,” a poem whose first four words evoke rage and resistance against a darkly tyrannical force.

    They shut me up in Prose —

    As when a little Girl

    They put me in the Closet —

    Because they liked me “still” —

    Stillness is imprisonment, but confinement is pointless against the immense, liberating force of Dickinson’s poetic mind. She has only to think it, and, “easy as a Star,” she can “look down upon Captivity — And laugh.” It’s a powerful statement of intellectual and artistic freedom, and Puts prepares it with a furious trembling of strings, like the buzzing bees that populate other Dickinson poems. DiDonato enters with a pop-song-worthy hook, and the players double as vocalists, surrounding the tune with a halo of close harmony. But it takes less than a minute for her voice, like the poet’s restless mind, to take flight and spin off into the heavens.

    The second song is an introvert’s anthem, “I Was the Slightest in the House,” and Puts sets it as a hushed reflection, almost a diary entry in musical form. DiDonato has one of the opera world’s great murmurs, a soft, warm filament of sound that stays perfectly clear down to the lowest reach of her register and the quietest pianissimo until it simply disappears. When this diva with a big personality, who makes her living lobbing arias to the upper balconies of an overscale opera house, utters the words “ I could not bear to live—aloud— / The Racket shamed me so—” you believe without hesitation that she is a lover of quietude.

    Those first two numbers stake out the territory for the rest of the work, which lasts about 75 minutes and lingers on many shades of human experience and musical reference: the Straussian exuberance of “I Dwell in Possibility,” the ravishing depressiveness of “I Felt a Funeral in My Brain,” the Sondheimian wryness of (and millinery references) of “I Tie My Hat – I Crease My Shawl.” That makes Emily sound like a derivative pastiche, though, and it’s not, because Puts’s prosody and melodic gift both keep it fresh.

    He has a knack for translating Dickinson’s rhythms into music. Her mixture of plain New England speech and jerky hesitations, of the vernacular and the gnomic, have made her abidingly popular with American composers, who have churned out thousands of settings. But those qualities rarely fit a composer’s style as well as they do Puts’s. His score slips back and forth between hymnlike simplicity and operatic virtuosity. It feels like you could learn to sing along, but you almost certainly can’t.

    If Dickinson has a fine collaborator in Puts, the composer has equal affinity with the performers. He wrote the role of Virginia Woolf in his opera The Hours for DiDonato, and the triple concerto Contact for Time for Three. Inevitably, their strengths and quirks seeped into the composer’s head so that the musicians helped shape the score instead of just carrying out its instructions.

    The director, Andrew Staples, placed the performers on a stage within a stage, a stylized version of Dickinson’s bedroom in Amherst, Massachusetts with sheer curtains billowing and lighting that traces the bright and darkling recesses of the soul. The production works, mostly because DiDonato and Time for Three all know how to use it, moving without awkwardness, bringing the audience closer to the music instead of creating a distracting barrier. For an encore, DiDonato conscripted the audience into singing the lilting refrain of the final song, “No Prisoner Be,” while the musicians gradually fell silent. This is your music, now, she was saying: Cherish it.

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    Justin Davidson

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  • Pasadena’s Ambassador Auditorium, ‘Carnegie Hall of the West,’ goes up for sale

    Pasadena’s Ambassador Auditorium, ‘Carnegie Hall of the West,’ goes up for sale

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    The storied Ambassador Auditorium in Pasadena, which was long considered one of the region’s top classical music venues, is for sale after being owned by a local church for the last two decades.

    Harvest Rock Church is asking $45 million for the 1,200-seat auditorium near the Old Pasadena district that has also hosted jazz greats including Ella Fitzgerald, Dave Brubeck and Dizzy Gillespie. It has been called “the Carnegie Hall of the West” by fans.

    The evangelical Christian Harvest Rock Church is based on the property and uses the auditorium for services. It also rents the venue to the Pasadena Symphony and the Colburn Orchestra as well as other performers that the church finds compatible with its religious mission.

    The church recently paid off its mortgage on the property, Pastor Che Ahn said, and decided to sell it to make a move to a bigger facility somewhere in the Los Angeles region.

    The lobby of the Ambassador Auditorium in Pasadena includes a chandelier composed of 100 custom bulbs and 1,390 crystals in three tiers of polished bronze.

    (Ambassador Foundation of Pasadena)

    “We’re hoping that someone will buy it to really restore it to the original purpose and intent of that building,” he said.

    The Ambassador Auditorium was intended to be a showplace for live performances when it opened in 1974. The Times called it “A new Taj Mahal for the arts.”

    It was also the centerpiece for Ambassador College, operated by the Worldwide Church of God on a 40-acre campus near the intersection of Colorado and Orange Grove boulevards that has been largely redeveloped in recent years.

    Harvest Rock Church and Maranatha High School bought a 13-acre portion of the campus site with five buildings including the auditorium from Worldwide Church of God in 2004 for an undisclosed amount. The auditorium controlled by Harvest Rock Church is assessed at $13.5 million, public records show.

    Ambassador College founder Herbert W. Armstrong was a televangelist who set out to call attention to his ministry by building a lavish auditorium where he could broadcast services and host high-profile nonreligious events, including an opening performance by the Vienna Symphony Orchestra on April 7, 1974.

    The auditorium made a big impression on local music aficionados, said Donna Perlmutter, who was a music critic at the Los Angeles Herald Examiner newspaper when it debuted.

    “We were, at the time, bowled over by the presence of it,” she said. “It was to compare with any marvelous auditorium in Europe.”

    That it had been created by a bombastic radio and television evangelist known for making dark end-times prophesies seemed unusual, she said.

    “It was almost comical to think of who it was who erected this magnificent place,” Perlmutter said of Armstrong. “It was such a weird juxtaposition.”

     The stage of the Ambassador Auditorium in Pasadena.

    Jazz greats who have performed in the 1,200-seat Ambassador Auditorium in Pasadena include Ella Fitzgerald, Dave Brubeck and Dizzy Gillespie.

    (Ambassador Foundation of Pasadena)

    The acoustics are “optimal,” she said. “It bears a bright, undistorted sound. No singer could want more.”

    The hall’s design by the architectural firm Daniel, Mann, Johnson & Mendenhall (DMJM) strived for a mid-century version of glamour, with a main lobby chandelier composed of 100 custom bulbs and 1,390 crystals in three tiers of polished bronze.

    Finishes include walls of Brazilian rosewood and rose onyx, African shedua wood railings and ceilings adorned with hand-rolled 24-carat gold leaf.

    The auditorium is set in a 500,000-gallon water pond that holds a 37-foot solid bronze egret sculpture designed by British sculptor David Wynne, who also famously made a bronze sculpture of the Beatles’ busts in 1964 and is said to have introduced them to Maharishi Mahesh Yogi.

    Potential buyers of the auditorium include the city of Pasadena, private investors, or a group of investors seeking “to acquire a landmark with profound historical significance,” said real estate agent Isidora Fridman of Compass, who has the listing with Lauren Rauschenberg. The property at 131 S. St. John Ave. will officially go on the market July 9, Compass said.

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    Roger Vincent

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  • North Side High School’s mariachi program honors its Hispanic roots through music

    North Side High School’s mariachi program honors its Hispanic roots through music

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    FORT WORTH (CBSNewsTexas.com) — What sometimes starts out as chaos, occasionally has a way of developing into perfect harmony.

    For more than 40 years, North Side High School’s mariachi ensembles have racked up countless awards and honors. And for the last 20 years, they’ve been under the direction of a man who had to learn mariachi music from the students he was teaching. 

    When Ramon Niño became the director of the mariachi program, Espuelas de Plata, at Fort Worth’s North Side High School, he’ll be the first to tell you that he might have been in a bit over his head. 

    “So, I was a trombone player. Like, I’m a jazz guy,” says Niño. “The only reason I teach mariachi now was because I got the job to teach marching band. And so, by the way, there’s mariachi tied to the job. And I just fell in love with the work ethic. And when I came, I knew nothing about mariachi. And the students were the ones that were teaching me about mariachi.” 

    nshs-mariachi2.jpg
    North Side High School FWISD Mariachi Program

    Fort Worth ISD


    He gradually taught himself how to play the trumpet, the violin and guitarron. His crash course in the genre would lead to his understanding and his ultimate immersion in the music. A blend of brass and a symphony of strings weave the rich melodic tapestry of Mexico’s history. Each song is reflective of the country’s western region, where the sound of mariachi was born. Lyrics tell the story of the people, traditions, and culture. It’s all performed with passion by his students while orchestrating life lessons that extend beyond their instruments. 

    “So, the music just happens,” says Niño. That’s why they’re here, because they want to play the music. So, what we’ve got to teach them is how to grow as a human being and how to be a positive person that impacts society in some way.” 

    What they’ve managed to create together is pure magic.  

    Espuelas de Plata is so popular that they often have performances scheduled seven days a week, and book events more than a year out. Not only are they well known in Fort Worth, they’ve performed outside of the state and even internationally. The group has been showered with accolades over the decades, but perhaps their biggest honor came in 2014 when they received an invitation to perform at Carnegie Hall in New York City. That was quickly followed by another thrill: an impromptu performance at Times Square. 

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    North Side High School FWISD Mariachi Program performs in Times Square in New York

    Fort Worth ISD


    “The police officers were like, ‘You have to have a permit to be able to perform at Times Square.’ So we said, ‘Okay.’ And he’s like, ‘But if you go across the street and I turn this way, I won’t know what’s going on.’ So that’s what we did. We did a 30 minute performance in Times Square, and he stood and watched over there the whole 30 minutes. When we were done, he came back and he stood in his post. So it was, you know, it was a great experience for the kids because, I mean, when are they going to perform in Times Square? It’s rare,” says Niño. 

    In 2019, they had an opportunity to share mariachi music, and their Mexican culture, when they performed in Austria, Switzerland and Germany. 

    “We were there for about ten days, which was awesome because we performed at Lake Zurich and we performed at Mirabell Gardens where they filmed The Sound of Music,” says Niño. “So we had to teach these kids, like, this is who Mozart is. We had the whole year to show them European music that we wouldn’t traditionally teach because it’s not mariachi.” 

    nshs-mariachi4.jpg
    North Side High School FWISD Mariachi Program

    Fort Worth ISD


    A performance half a world away, rooted in heritage close to his students, with the hope of engaging audiences everywhere to appreciate the art that is mariachi. 

    “Mariachi ensembles have to do everything, right? So it’s theater arts because they’re performing. It’s vocal, like choir, and it’s instrumental whether that’s trumpet, like in band, or violin in orchestra,” says Niño. “Appreciate what you hire when you hire a mariachi. Don’t just say, ‘Oh, it’s Hispanic Heritage. It’d be fun to have a mariachi playing in the background,’ because there’s a lot of time and effort that those students go into putting that presentation together. Like I said, students or professional.” 

    The mariachi students continue to honor their Hispanic roots  and show pride in their heritage with every note they play.

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  • DJ D-Nice on his career trajectory from Harlem to Hollywood

    DJ D-Nice on his career trajectory from Harlem to Hollywood

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    DJ D-Nice on his career trajectory from Harlem to Hollywood – CBS News


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    Derrick “D-Nice” Jones launched Club Quarantine on Instagram Live during the height of the pandemic. Now he’s hosting them in person at the historic Carnegie Hall in New York City. “CBS Mornings” sits down with DJ D-Nice to discuss his ascent to being one of the most well-known DJs.

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