Author Archives: Alan Rich

Going to Bed, Early and Often

The big guys had their Verdi last week: the Music Center‘s La Traviata ending its run (not a moment too soon!) at one end of I-405; Opera Pacific’s Rigoletto starting its shorter run (in happier estate) at the other. Midway … Continue reading

Posted in A Little Night Music | Comments Off on Going to Bed, Early and Often

Is There Sex After Bach?

Morimur is up there on the charts, the latest implausible release from ECM, one of the few remaining labels to turn implausibility into solid musical virtue — and perhaps into a few deutschemarks along the way. The title is something … Continue reading

Posted in A Little Night Music | Comments Off on Is There Sex After Bach?

Sweet Sound of Success

It‘s now 50 years since Elmer Bernstein composed his first Hollywood film score — a forgettable college-football number called Saturday’s Hero. Now pushing 80, he‘s still at it. Thus, the celebration of his work that begins tonight at the Los … Continue reading

Posted in A Little Night Music | Comments Off on Sweet Sound of Success

Five Not-So-Easy Pieces

The Philharmonic‘s presentation around Schoenberg’s Five Pieces for Orchestra was a distinguished event worthy of the music — as the treatment accorded the Piano Concerto three weeks before had not been. Bold to the point of insolence, gorgeously color-splashed, this … Continue reading

Posted in A Little Night Music | Comments Off on Five Not-So-Easy Pieces

SEATTLE’S RING

Land of strong lumberjacks and even stronger coffee, Seattle moves ever onward toward its unlikely transmogrification into the Bayreuth of the West.  In little more than a quarter-century, the city’s intrepid operagoers have had  three separate and distinct versions of  … Continue reading

Posted in Opera News | Comments Off on SEATTLE’S RING

The Jewish Gaucho

They’re still talking about it in Stuttgart — about the night, just over a year ago, when a capacity audience in that normally strait-laced metropolis went berserk for nearly half an hour at the world premiere of a 90-minute choral … Continue reading

Posted in A Little Night Music | Comments Off on The Jewish Gaucho

Metamorphoses

It will be interesting to see whether the efforts of our major cultural managements will succeed in turning Arnold Schoenberg into a media hero, as they did Igor Stravinsky last season. Schoenberg himself never made it, and the account of … Continue reading

Posted in A Little Night Music | Comments Off on Metamorphoses

A Sad Symphony With a Happy Ending

CLASSICAL MUSIC IS DEAD ONCE AGAIN, AND ITS CORPSE HAS never been livelier. The villains have been variously identified, and the saviors as well. Audiences dwindle. One faction says the defection has to do with too much worn-out, familiar repertory. … Continue reading

Posted in A Little Night Music | Comments Off on A Sad Symphony With a Happy Ending

A Contemporary Landmark

Pierre Boulez brought his Répons here for its first — and, so far, last — hearing in the spring of 1986. It took another 14 years for a recording of the work to appear, in Deutsche Grammophon’s 20/21 Series, which, … Continue reading

Posted in A Little Night Music | Comments Off on A Contemporary Landmark

Ten Who Care

MaryAnn Bonino‘s Chamber Music in Historic Sites brings in superb small entertainments from around the world — chamber music, early music, solo recitals — and plunks them down in enhancing architectural settings — churches, mansions, classic lobbies. You hear a … Continue reading

Posted in A Little Night Music | Comments Off on Ten Who Care