Sunday, December 25, 2022

2022 Recap (according to Youtube)

Once again, there will be no list of the best albums of the past year, because I haven't heard any of them (eventually I will get around to a megapost on the 2022 releases by "former #1's", i.e. albums by Yeah Yeah Yeahs, Moderat, Spiritualized, and Beach House.  Maybe if it's taken this long then I'll just hold off until the newest Orbital record is released sometime next year).

However, Youtube has helpfully assembled a year in review list so that I didn't have to.  I think it's a revealing and quite accurate representation of how I consume music-related content on Youtube.   In past years, when I listened mainly to contemporary releases, it was almost always through physical purchases or downloads, and not via streaming.  In that sense, this list is a uniquely modern look at my new normal, and highlights how much my listening habits have changed in the past three years.  


1.  Mahler Symphony #2 (live 1989, cond. Klaus Tennstedt)

It's no secret that Tennstedt could be hit and miss in the studio.  I joined the consensus after reviewing his LPO Mahler cycle, but every Tennstedt fan knows that his true strengths were live in concert.  Live, he was an incendiary Mahler conductor whose unbridled intensity and total commitment to the work has likely never been matched.  This 1989 recording is a prime example of this.  I have been meaning to review his live LPO Mahler box for months, but the task often feels too daunting, one that demands hours of uninterrupted listening.  These concerts were events, and I can never find a block of time to approach them as such.  


2.  Harry Styles, "As It Was"

I wrote a couple of posts about Harry Styles this year, I remain awed by his spectacular success and "As It Was" is a fantastic single.


3.  Shirley Bassey, "The Girl From Tiger Bay" (2009 Live at Electric Proms)

This song pops up on the radio from time to time, but until I sought it out on Youtube I had no clue that it was written by James Dean Bradfield of the Manic Street Preachers.  Once you know this you can't unhear all the clues, such as the guitar part that leads into the chorus.  The song itself is wonderful, and works both as Bradfield's love letter to Bassey, and as Bassey's very own "My Way".  

   

4.  Oasis, "Don't Look Back In Anger"

What better than Rick Beato's "What makes this song great?" breakdown to make me revisit (over and over again) Oasis' best ever song? 


5.  Daft Punk ft. Pharrell Williams and Stevie Wonder, "Get Lucky" (2014 Grammys)

One of my all time favourite clips, endlessly rewatchable for the indelible joy it radiates for each second of this legendary performance.  The broadcast captures six decades of music royalty partying in the audience without any pretense, united for a few brief moments by their love of one of the most format-smashing hits of recent times.  The performance takes in elements of Chic's "Le Freak" (oh yes, Nile Rodgers plays guitar here too!), Daft Punk's "Harder Better Faster Stronger", and Stevie Wonder's "Another Star", a veritable all-star mixtape condensed into five short minutes.   


6.  Moby, "Why Does My Heart Feel So Bad?"

Another song that fits a wide range of moods and situations, including the kids' bath time (works for me as downtempo spa music at least).  It's always interesting to ponder why exactly Moby got big when he did.  Grunge had long since expired as a force, and nu-metal had risen to fill the vacuum.  Unless you were into alternative-lite fare like Matchbox 20 or Cake, or ate up the horrible swing revival, it was a rough time to be a mainstream rock fan.  So people took to other genres with rock elements to get their fix (electronica, e.g. Chemical Brothers, Prodigy) or were drawn into lounge/exotic music/downtempo house (e.g. St. Germain -- you would not believe how ubiquitous "Tourist" was in coffee shops and dorm rooms unless you were there, a million other Cafe Del Mar and the like compilations).  Moby successfully bridged the gap between the two.  He was an outsider as far as the mainstream went, he'd reinvented himself (always makes for a good story), he had some cred as a rocker and as a former king of the underground, he seemed non-threatening, in short, he was a new type of popstar in an era when the mainstream was experiencing a great deal of turnover (rock and rock-related genres were phasing out, Britney Spears and boy band pop exploding, etc.)   


7.  Haydn Symphony #88, Vienna Philharmonic (cond. Leonard Bernstein)

I don't watch classical music concerts online (I'm usually listening while puttering around doing various things) but this clip demands your attention.  Where else can you see one of the all-time greats conducting a major orchestra with his face?  Meanwhile, I discovered the greatness of this, and many other Haydn symphonies this year.  


8.  Fleetwood Mac, "Gypsy"

It's been a rough few years for the Mac, first the departure/firing of Lindsay Buckingham, and then the deaths of Peter Green, Danny Kirwan, and Christine McVie.  My go-to video for FM-related solace is "Gypsy".  This video has entranced me since the age of nine, I was simply spellbound by the opening panned shot of the lace-covered room and Stevie Nicks performing the splits while gazing wistfully into a giant mirror, it's a goddess moment that makes me lose all sense of time and place even forty years later.  The song's metronomic pulse enhances the notion that the memories expressed in the lyrics exist in some kind of continuum, much like Zeppelin's "Kashmir", "Gypsy" seems to have no beginning and no end, it exists for infinite time before and after, we time-limited mortals merely tune into a brief stretch in the middle.  

   

9.  Don Henley, "The Boys of Summer"

As I noted in my September post about "As It Was", I would not have expected the ongoing 80's revival/pillorying to borrow heavily from Don Henley in 2022, and yet here we are.  


10.  Joni Mitchell, "Both Sides Now" (live at Newport Folk Festival)

I hope this performance isn't fading from collective memories, because it really was something incredibly special.  


11.  Nicole Pesce, "How To Play Happy Birthday like Beethoven, Chopin, Brahms, Bach, and Mozart"

Listen to enough classical music and you too will have Google recommending Victor Borge-inspired musical comedy videos.  

 

12.  Depeche Mode, "Insight"

I was certain that DM were finished after Fletch's sudden passing, but they'll be back next year with yet another album and world tour, continuing one of the most remarkable 40-year (and counting) success stories in music history.  I haven't listened to "Ultra" all the way through in years, on one hand it's their most homogeneous album, but on the other hand it features the relentless brutalism of "Barrel of a Gun", the unstoppably heartfelt "Home" (I have come around on this song over the years, I now rank it among DM's best ballads) and two of their strongest ever album tracks ("The Bottom Line" and "Insight").  

 

13.  Eddie Money, "Take Me Home Tonight"

Unfortunately my posting frequency has decreased in recent years, as I struggle to find the time to complete various projects (20 albums/20 years, the Eurovision winners) and post about other topics in general.  My timely posts are RIP posts far more often than not.  Ronnie Spector passed away in January and I missed the news, finding out about it a few weeks later.  Go read her memoir (published long before MeToo and Phil Spector's murder conviction, this didn't get the attention it deserved) and enjoy her mini-comeback in the 80's with Eddie Money.

   

14.  Brahms, "Variations on a Theme By Joseph Haydn", dir. Gustavo Dudamel

Yes, I love the piece (my favourite Brahms orchestral work) but clearly the algorithm has misconstrued my feelings about Dudamel.   This is hardly a great performance of the Haydn variations, notwithstanding the setting (Vienna's Musikverein) and the presence of  the Vienna Philharmonic.  Go listen to, I don't know, one of Furtwaengler's performances instead.      

Thursday, December 01, 2022

Christine McVie RIP

This is a crushing loss for music, and so sudden -- even Stevie Nicks, in a handwritten note posted to her Twitter account, said that it was only last weekend that she found out that McVie was sick.  

It goes without saying that Fleetwood Mac are one of the only bands in history that can boast three genius songwriters.  What's more, none of them played the George Harrison role, taking a back seat to their more famous bandmates.  The partnership between McVie, Nicks, and Buckingham couldn't have been more equal.  Considering the colossal sales and fame of the band, and the egos involved with sustaining that game, it's remarkable that this arrangement held steadfast as long as it did before people started storming out.  "Rumours" featured four songs by McVie, and three each by Nicks and Buckingham ("The Chain" is credited to the entire group).  Fleetwood Mac's 1988 Greatest Hits album featured three songs by Buckingham, five songs by Nicks, and eight by McVie.  That breakdown speaks to her strengths as a pop songwriter and her impact on the creative direction of the band.  

Once McVie left in the 90's, Fleetwood Mac toured the world many times over but they only made one additional album of all new material and came within an eyelash of imploding while recording it.  They always seemed like a happier band when McVie was involved.  Everyone liked her, everyone loved being around her.    

McVie's songs bear repeat listening (that is, listening to the same song or songs on repeat) more than either Buckingham or Nicks.  Buckingham is the perfectionist and the experimenter, frequently evolving, often hitting, but sometimes missing.  Nicks' songs carry an emotional heft that the others can't match, but they're always full of heavy shit that I'm not always in the mood for.  McVie's songs flow effortlessly, they exude an almost childlike wonder for the most beautiful things in the world.  The lyrics to "You Make Loving Fun" summarize her songwriting M.O. In popular song, love takes on many personas but pure, miraculous fun is hardly ever one of them.  McVie perfected it.  

"Hold Me" and "Everywhere" are my favourite McVie-penned singles, and it was nice the latter get its due in the recent Chevrolet ads.  The world might be full of problems, but for a scant thirty seconds, "Everywhere" comes across like the car karaoke anthem that people of many different ages and races can agree on.   

Tuesday, November 29, 2022

Daniel Vangarde

No matter how much you think you know, musical six degrees of separation never ceases to yield new surprises.  My mind blowing factoid of the week: Thomas Bangalter's (Daft Punk) father wrote the disco/yacht-pop anthem "Hands Up" by "Ottawan", a near ubiquitous North American 80's TV jingle thanks to a million unavoidable Club Med ads.  This was revealed in the Daft Punk Unchained documentary several years ago, but I never saw it.

Vangarde is a fascinating person, and receives his due in a recent Guardian profile about the man and a recently released retrospective of his 70's and 80's recordings.  He wrote protest songs (which were banned in France), international disco smashes with Ottawan, and took up the cause of royalty rights for Jewish composers who were stripped of their rights during the Nazi occupation years.  One can easily draw a line between his combative attitude toward corporate music industry behemoths and Daft Punk's similarly uncompromising attitude.  In his retirement, Vangarde currently lives as something of a recluse in South America, sharing another similarity with his son who successfully keeps a low profile and avoids appearing in public despite achieving fame at the highest echelons of the music industry.  

Daft Punk retained artistic control of their career from the mid-90's onward, which would be nearly impossible today in the era of pop albums curated by a small army of outside songwriters and producers.  It makes sense if Vangarde did in fact advise them not to settle for anything less than complete control of their work and image.  How did they get away with it?  Daft Punk came along at the ideal time, long before EDM became a buzzword and a billion dollar industry.  In the 90's, companies knew that "electronica" was on the rise but had no clue how to go about marketing it.  The usual A&R strategies wouldn't work with faceless artists who recorded in their home studios and didn't play traditional concerts. Industry types had to make it up on the fly, and engage with artists on a case by case basis.  The Prodigy were a visually arresting group who could make eye-catching music videos.  Chemical Brothers were nothing to look at, but could be promoted as rock crossover artists.  Daft Punk weren't "rock" in the least, but their music had a more underground, exotic quality to it that could make up for the fact that the band members wanted to remain in the shadows.  And they could afford to keep their heads down if Spike Jonze produced their buzzworthy videos.  

So the industry let them do what they want, likely believing that the band wouldn't last long enough or get big enough to earn serious money.  They probably didn't feel like they were signing away that much in terms of future earnings or control.  It's also important to remember that the electronic music scene in Paris was miniscule compared with the more famous hubs in the US and Britain.  What were the chances of a couple of reclusive French teenagers actually breaking out into something big?    

Wednesday, November 09, 2022

Harry Styles vs Robbie Williams

While watching clips of Harry Styles' remarkable 15-night residence at Madison Square Garden in September, I found myself wondering: why didn't this happen with Robbie?  

Their CV's couldn't be more similar.  Teenage superstars with that decade's biggest boy band.  Became the breakout solo star of the group with a series of incendiary singles, and a quick succession of albums, each one bigger than the last.  Live, they present a stripped down setup featuring the band, the singer, and not much else.  No dancers, elaborate stage decorations, or video screen distractions.  The shows are driven by the singers incredible charisma, and their rare and innate ability to seem larger than life while also forging a personal connection with everyone in the audience.

Robbie didn't, or couldn't break into the American market.  In the UK and Europe he was a superstar, one of the top two or three selling artists at his peak, setting records for fastest ticket sales for his concert tours.  He moved to the US.  It didn't help him break the market.  

Nobody books fifteen nights at MSG as a trial experiment.  They do it because the demand is there.  Except that this level of demand is virtually unprecedented.  And now he's doing it again on the west coast!  

During their prime, Take That's songs were unknown in North America.  I would read about them in the NME or Select, who weren't in the business of covering boy bands but Take That were too dominant of a cultural force to ignore.  Except that I had no way of hearing the songs.  The indie shops I frequented weren't importing UK boy band records.  The big chains weren't selling their records, not without regular airplay and live tours.  Only "Back For Good" got regular play, but the band had chosen to split up by that point.  When Robbie began his solo career, nobody in America knew who he was.  

You can't play down the role of social media and streaming services in helping to break Harry Styles.  One Direction were worldwide stars, even to audiences who had never watched the episodes of X-Factor that birthed them.  Downloading or streaming their music can be done instantly.  Styles was already a familiar name.  Twenty years ago, many people predicted the death of the monoculture.  They said a Michael Jackson type of megastar would never come around again, the music business was too fragmented.   There were so many disparate ways to discover music and such a massive proliferation of artists that we, as a culture, would never agree on anyone ever again.  The opposite has happened.  Megastars like Harry Styles, Adele, and Taylor Swift have never been bigger.  The echo chamber of social media can create a world famous artist in ways that the 80's generation of artists couldn't have dreamed of.      

Sunday, November 06, 2022

Mimi Parker RIP

I was dumbstruck this evening by the devastating news that Mimi Parker has died.  I hadn't heard about her cancer diagnosis, which she made public a little over half a year ago.  

I was lucky to see Low a few times, and it is a singular experience to watch a band play in front of a completely silent crowd.  The lightest brush of a snare drum, pluck of a guitar string, or deep breath between phrases could be easily heard.  Amidst such suspended tension, even a voice as gentle as Mimi's would cut through the air and chill your bones.  I recall some controversy around the release of "The Great Destroyer", some fans were upset that Mimi didn't have a solo performance.  I couldn't understand the complaints, because for me she is everywhere on that album, her voice together with Alan's form a special timbre that no other group could replicate. 

Over the last few years, and even against the expectations of many of their fans, Low hit a critical and artistic peak.  Mimi had been the angelic voice fronting the band's most tender moments, and there are too many to mention: "Two Step", "Lazer Beam", "In Metal".  On their last two albums, it turned out that she was equally talented at vocalizing the soundtrack to nihilistic chaos, technological confusion, and extreme political uncertainty.    

Tuesday, October 25, 2022

Charles Munch, "The Complete Recordings on Warner Classics"

This box covers two very different eras in Munch's career: pre-Boston, and post-Boston.  Of course, the general consensus is that his best recordings were made during his thirteen years in Boston, and who am I to argue with that.  But the main thing that attracted me to this box is the breadth of the repertoire.  The box regularly branches outside of the standard repertoire and features several then-contemporary French composers whose work has not been regularly recorded.

The first six discs are stereo recordings from the 1960's.  Munch's specialty, the Berlioz "Symphony Fantastique" was the premiere recording of the Orchestre de Paris.  This orchestra that was essentially created for Munch, sadly he passed away not long after its formation.  This version may not be his finest recording of the work, but it does not disappoint.  Munch is also excellent with Ravel, drawing energy and passion from works like the "Daphnis and Chloe Suite No. 2" and "Bolero" that many conductors fail to do.  His "Bolero" may come as a surprise to those who are accustomed to versions where the main job of the conductor is to beat time as steadily and inexorably as possible.    

I still don't "get" Roussel as a symphonist, but I discovered Dutilleux via this box and was instantly drawn to the strange atmospheres and timbres in his Symphony No. 2 and "Metaboles".

The final seven discs are mono recordings presented in variable, but generally decent sound.  There are many wartime recordings from Paris, providing some historical significance.  A triumphant Beethoven "Emperor" concerto, recorded the week after D-day in Paris, is a fascinating listen in this regard.  But these discs contain many concertos where the influence of the conductor is more obscured, all the more so because of the sound quality which can make it difficult to hear the details from the orchestra.  Fortunately, just about all of it is good.  Elsewhere, there are several works by 20th century composers (Delannoy, Halffter, Samazeuilh) that show Munch's talent as a promoter of contemporary works if nothing else.  

This isn't a set that can be easily digested in large chunks because it's all over the place in terms of styles, sound, and orchestral quality.  But as a meaningful chapter in Munch's legacy, containing many fine performances, it's an enjoyable and highly inspiring listen.      

Tuesday, September 20, 2022

Harry Styles, "As It Was"

In the last few years, a slew of Billboard Hot 100 chart records were broken that until recently would have been unthinkable.  Some of these new records are truly mind boggling.  For nearly twenty five years, Mariah Carey and Boyz II Men held the record for the most consecutive weeks at #1 with "One Sweet Day".  For two decades, nothing came close to matching it.  Who could possibly defeat the kings of slow jam R&B and the most successful female solo artist ever?  Destiny had seemingly taken over. But in 2017, Luis Fonzi's "Despacito" became the summer jam to end all summer jams and tied the record.  And two years later, the record was smashed by a complete unknown.  When "One Sweet Day" dominated the charts, Boyz II Men and Mariah Carey had twelve #1 hits between them, tens of millions in albums sales, and nearly unlimited promotional support behind them.  Lil Nas X was armed with a $20 beat and an obscure Nine Inch Nails sample.  If the CMA hadn't banned "Old Town Road" from the country charts, prompting a wave of free publicity and the remix with Billy Ray Cyrus, it probably comes nowhere close to topping the Hot 100 for nineteen weeks.  But it happened, and you'll never find a more unlikely megasuccess story in the history of pop.  

There are other ways to measure the success of a hit song.  The Hot 100's methodology has changed many times during its six decade history.  The 90's were a particularly confusing time.  To be considered for the Hot 100, a single had to exist as a physical product.  But since those were peak CD buying years, many artists didn't bother releasing physical singles, they simply "released" a "new" song to radio as a means to stoke their album sales.  The songs weren't new because they were readily available on the CD album, but the labels would simply signal the record stations to start playing track three instead of track six and voila, there was a "new" single.  Thus you had the strange conundrum of completely unavoidable 90's hits that didn't chart due to this bizarre technicality, at least until the rules were changed around the end of the decade.  

This is to say that prior to streaming and digital downloads, ranking chart hits by the number of radio plays was as good a metric as any, and remains an effective measure of a song's impact even today.  The record for the most weeks at number one on the "Radio Songs" chart (formerly the "Hot 100 Airplay" chart) used to be held by the Goo Goo Dolls' "Iris".  Ask anyone who lived through 1998 and they'll confirm that you couldn't go five minutes without hearing it.  It topped the airplay chart for an unthinkable eighteen consecutive weeks.  For the next twenty plus years, nothing approached this number.  Then in 2020, The Weeknd's "Blinding Lights" crushed just about every chart record imaginable.  Most weeks in the top five.  Most weeks in the top ten.  First song to remain in the top ten for an entire year.  Most weeks in the Hot 100.  And not least, most weeks atop the "Radio Songs" chart -- 26 weeks, or nearly 50% more than the ostensibly unbreakable record formerly held by the Goo Goo Dolls.  

Michael Jackson's "Bad" was a blockbuster album, all the more amazing considering it was the follow up to one of the most mythical pop music albums of all time.  Michael hit number one with a record five consecutive singles from "Bad" (later tied by Katy Perry's "Teenage Dream").  With nine singles released in all, it dominated the charts for two solid years.  And yet, those five number one songs spent just seven weeks cumulatively at the top of the charts.  Drake spent 29 weeks at number one with three songs in 2018.  It's simply an unprecedented time for chart records.  Add worldwide blockbusters like Ed Sheeran's "Shape of You" to the mix, and one could easily argue that five of the ten biggest hits ever have occurred just in the past half decade. This isn't all hyperbole, last year Billboard officially declared "Blinding Lights" as the biggest hit of all time

What else can possibly happen?  Well, let's take Harry Styles.  His song "As It Was" it now in its fourteenth non-consecutive week at number one, tied for fourth most all time.  But more remarkably, it set a record by hitting number one five times this year. What's more, each time it was knocked out of the top spot, it fell to number two and stayed there.  That makes a total of 23 consecutive weeks in the top two (another record), a near six month run of pure dominance. The song itself is remarkable too, and not only because its this decade's answer to Don Henley's "The Boys of Summer".  The propulsive, mechanical drumming, atmospheric keyboard in the foreground and subtle Fleetwood Mac-like guitar picking in the background, it's all there.  The song is ready to be digitally inserted into any roller rink movie scene from the 80's at your leisure. 
   
It's a wonderful song.  Just about all these new chartbusting songs are great.  This in itself feels novel.  The 90's were packed with awful number ones, the previously mentioned "One Sweet Day" is typical of sappy, tuneless R&B of the time that found success purely based on star power and vocal calisthenics.  What is happening?  Are we in a golden age of songwriting and producing?  I think we might be.  Music production has become a superstar endeavor unto itself, the Swedes and Americans who shaped the sounds of the late 90's and 00's have spawned a new generation of curious and creative disciples.  The artist-producer relationship feels more important and more symbiotic than ever.  

However, this recent article in The Ringer gives me pause.  The success of Kate Bush's "Running Up That Hill" has solidified an ongoing trend, where catalog music is rapidly growing at the expense of contemporary music. Songs might top the charts for multiple weeks but completely fail to become cultural touchstones and are forgotten a few years later.  Song and album sales are cratering, it's mostly about streaming now, which puts catalog artists on more of an equal footing.  Songs released yesterday and those released forty years ago are both one simple click away.  Does this mean that the charts are more top heavy in favour of the most popular artists?  That is, are there fewer contemporary artists competing for chart spots than before?  With less competition, it will be easier for a great song to dominate.  

Friday, September 16, 2022

Alex Ross, "Listen To This"

I have just discovered that I never wrote a proper review of Ross' "The Rest is Noise", although I alluded to the book's profound affect on me in posts like these from two years ago.

"The Rest Is Noise" was an instant classic upon release, you can easily find breathless praise for it in various corners of the internet, and somehow it took me ten years to get around to reading it.  This book was as close to a Pied Piper moment in music literature that I'm likely to experience in my lifetime.  

"Listen To This" is an enjoyable companion piece for those already enamored by Ross' writing.  Based mainly on long form pieces written mainly for the New Yorker over the years, Ross continues to make complex musical concepts accessible, all while focusing on the context behind the music and the personalities of those who made it.  The autobiographical first chapter, "Crossing the Border From Classical to Pop", provides the context behind the context.  The author grew up in a household steeped in classical music and nothing else.  He only became exposed to other genres of music (alternative, punk) during his college years, before drifting back to his first, true love once more as a writer for the New Yorker and other publications.  

I view the strengths of "The Rest Is Noise" through this lens.  The strongest chapters focus on explaining classical music and its culture to The Rest of Us.  "Inside the Marlboro Retreat" is a charming profile of this difficult to access breeding ground for America's finest young talent.  Part musical summer school, part rehearsal boot camp, Ross takes a deep dive into the environment that brings out the best in a performance artist.  Every page is packed with amusing anecdotes and wild personalities.  His essays/profiles of Schubert and Brahms closely examine the whys behind the development of their careers, while engaging in some mild psychoanalysis that illuminates more than criticizes.  

His profiles of contemporary non-classical artists were less successful.  Only in the Bjork profile did I feel that I learned something profound about the artist and their passion for pursuing musical inspiration.  Other profiles (Dylan, Radiohead, and "The Edges of Pop") come off as an outsider's view, importing musical descriptors from the classical world into the pop and rock worlds in an attempt to intellectualize the appreciation of their art.  On a somewhat unrelated note, I found it amusing how Ross interviews Dylan-ologists who analyze the minutiae in his lyrics and name drop academics who had nominated Dylan for a Nobel Prize.  The article was written in the late 90's, and the tone of the piece good naturedly plays along with these absurd proclamations.  All in good fun ... until, of course, Dylan really did win the Nobel Prize twenty years later.  

Ross is at his best as a historian, describing the evolution of a concept or style.  Equally well, he can take a seemingly well-known subject (like Brahms) and take the reader back to another, describing the real time trials and predicaments of the hero composer much like an epic balladeer would.  But sometimes the long form article comes off as merely that -- long.    

Tuesday, September 13, 2022

Herbert von Karajan, "Orchestral Spectaculars from Handel to Bartok" (Warner Classics)

Karajan's recorded legacy is massive, with more recordings than any reasonable human could possibly keep track of.  Box sets should simplify matters for consumers by concentrating more of the best music in one place, but there are so many Karajan sets (on multiple labels) that even collecting box sets is a daunting task.  No matter your feelings on Karajan the person or the musician, he's so ubiquitous as a recording artist -- even more than thirty years after his death -- that it's almost impossible to ignore or avoid his work.

This 13-CD set was culled from a larger 80-something CD Warner box, and represents an intriguing period in Karajan's career.  And based on the quality of the music represented here, he may have never been better.  Most of this material was recorded before he became entrenched in Berlin.  The repertoire contains a number of unusual gems that he never recorded again.  This is highlighted in the (far too brief) liner notes, in an essay that takes a subtle jab at Otto Klemperer, who became the director of the Philharmonia once Karajan started devoting most of his energies to his work in Berlin.  That is, whereas Karajan recorded a more varied selection of composers with the Philharmonia, Klemperer chose to narrow the orchestra's scope and focus on the "standard German repertoire".  Separated from the commercial intention of this essay (to hype the product you just purchased), the truth is a bit more complex.  Klemperer was also well known for playing contemporary music when he was younger.  It's true that he focused more on the standard German repertoire as he got older, but he was a master interpreter of that style and recorded countless reference recordings that entrance and fascinate even today.  Karajan, on the other hand, couldn't match Klemperer's talents in that repertoire even though he went back to the well far too often (how many Beethoven symphony recordings did he make, anyway?).  Karajan did stellar work outside of the Austro-German classics whose standards he was expected to uphold as the director in Berlin, but you have to dig a bit through his catalog to discover that.  Hence, this box.  

The first three discs are all Sibelius and they're uniformly outstanding.  Compared with many other highly regarded Sibelius conductors, Karajan ignores many of the varied dynamics and tempo changes.  Somehow it always works regardless.  He captured the raw emotion of Sibelius in a very unique way.  These Sibelius recordings, both in mono and stereo, make this box a keeper all by themselves.  

Over time I have been pleasantly surprised to discover how good Karajan was with opera intermezzi and overtures.  His disc of Rossini overture cooks, there certainly isn't a more fun disc in the set, although the Offenbach operetta works come close.  

The version of Debussy's "La Mer" is unquestionably a classic -- moody, dizzying, and grandiose in equal measures, expertly capturing the complex morphology of the work.  The two versions of Handel's "Water Music Suite" are also highlights.

Naturally there are a few misses.  Berlioz's "Symphony Fantastique" doesn't come close to nailing the manic, hallucinogenic energy toward the end.  He could have taken a pass on Czech music.  In Dvorak's "Symphony No. 9" and Smetana's "Vltava", Karajan misses the essence of the unfamiliar cultures being represented in the music.  This wasn't a general flaw -- his "Finlandia" is incredible (two versions on this set) and he was also great with Shostakovich (not featured on this set).  Perhaps there was something about Czech composers that he simply couldn't master.     

Friday, September 02, 2022

The LSO/Simon Rattle Mahler 2 at the BBC Proms -- did it live up to the hype?

The reviews coming out of this August 24 event were out of this world, with fans and critics rushing to proclaim it as one of the all time best performances of Mahler's 2nd symphony.  

With a clean 80-minute run time, this was one of the faster Mahler 2's.  That's usually a good thing with this work, because the undoing of many a Mahler 2 comes from the conductor trying to insert too much drama and sentimentality into the performance, often resulting in slow tempos that exhaust the players and the audience long before reaching the conclusion.  Dudamel conducted a very game Simon Bolivar Youth Orchestra in Mahler 2 during the 2011 Proms.  Although it brought down the house amongst the Dudamel superfans on that evening, the performance ran well over ninety minutes with several moments of dreadful stagnation, as noted by some commentators at the time.  Faster tempos can make for more "exciting" Mahler, but may downgrade the power of the symphony's most spiritual, emotional moments.  After all, this is a symphony of struggle, whose eventual resolution (we must die in order to live in order to get closer to G-d, and when we do so we all win) is the culmination of a hard fought battle whose outcome is in doubt until the very end (the interpretation of many, but certainly not all, conductors over the decades).  The faster the tempo, the quicker the struggle, and the "easier" it becomes, perhaps.  These are generalizations, but in the hands of a talented conductor almost anything is possible.  

Rattle's first movement funeral march trampled afoot more reminiscent of a rousing sports march rather than a solemn dirge-like march filled with uncertainty and dread.  By its end I managed to talk myself into believing in what Rattle was going for.  The movement was less of a mortality statement by a nervous and paranoid individual (Mahler), and more of an extended overture to a Hollywood blockbuster featuring G-d and Satan duking it out over a series of brimstone explosions and quick camera cuts.  Not my preferred interpretation perhaps, but certainly one I was willing to give a chance to.

The second and third movements were brisk, enjoyable, and thoroughly unsentimental in my view.  Just passing glimses at memories past, which is perfectly fine.  The "Urlicht" was beautifully sung, and indeed, the solo and choral singing were consistently stellar on the evening.  

The fifth and final movement was the symphony's undoing.  Rattle's strict adherence to tempo created an insistent, metronomic momentum that sapped the drama out of the music where it was needed most.  There are countless interesting moments in the finale that can be enhanced by the conductor through modifications in the mood and tempo.  By the first appearance of the "Aufersteh'n" from the chorus and the response from the orchestra, I started suspecting something nefarious was afoot, as if the insistent tempos were brought on by a curfew or a dinner reservation that nobody other than Simon Rattle was privy to.  

Many have made note of the fact that Rattle conducted without a score.  Mahler 2 is one of his signature pieces that helped grow his career in no small part.  Certainly he knows the work as well as anyone and is capable of getting by without a score.  Here I must ask -- why the fascination in conductors working without a score?  I can drive without a seatbelt, but why would I want to?  Why take the unnecessary risk?  Is it a macho thing?  What happens if the orchestra gets badly out of sync or if the conductor has a brain lapse?  Is this supposed to be akin to a soloist performing without sheet music in order to demonstrate their mastery over the material?  Because conducting is (should be) a completely different sort of performance skill compared to the job of a soloist.  My point is that when you conduct without a score, you must work more by feel and can't possibly recall all the miniscule details and adjustments that could be used to enhance the work in real time.  

Finally, the finale reached the last three minutes at which point the tempos ground to a halt and the symphony reached a monumental, cataclysmic conclusion, albeit one that felt stapled on to a completely different performance that had been delivered to that point. When Mahler 2 ends, more often than not, that the part that rings in the ears after the last note has sounded, and that singular feeling is what kept the RAH buzzing for minutes afterward. But let's not kid ourselves. This was not a great Maher 2, let alone one to be remembered for all times.  It was suitably thrilling in large chunks, and featured many heartstopping moments, but Rattle certainly could have done better.             

Thursday, August 11, 2022

"Clusterf**k: Woodstock '99"

I often find myself watching these sorts of documentaries and wondering who the intended audience is.  All the advertising and preview material portrays the festival as a disaster of epic proportions.  But that's not how it comes across watching the full two and a half hour, three part series.  If anything I believe it rehabilitates the reputation of the festival somewhat.  Was the world really waiting for that?  Had Michael Lang succeeded in holding the 50th anniversary Woodstock celebration as he had intended (before his funding fell through) it would have only lent credence to the idea that the sins of '99 had been forgiven. 

The first episode is a confused mess.  Lang and promoter John Scher likely wouldn't have agreed to appear in the series if it was an overly one-sided hatchet job.  On one hand their underlings push the idea of profit-hungry management and willful neglect of the needs of festival goers.  On the other hand there are plenty of videos of era-defining bands entertaining enormous, raucous crowds.  So which is it supposed to be?  An unmitigated trainwreck?  Or a festival with some organizational snafus (which festival doesn't have a few of those?) that had their finger on the pulse of young America and gave them exactly what they wanted?  It can't be both.  The final episode even has a twist ending -- the "ordinary fans" that have been interviewed throughout the series, presumably (we assume) to testify to the horribleness of the festival, all declare that they had the times of their lives despite it all.    

The ponderous array of mixed messages even forces me to defend Korn and Limp Bizkit -- two of the most intolerable bands of all time.  Korn's Jonathan Davis and Limp Bizkit's Fred Durst whip the audience into a manic frenzy and set off mosh pits for the ages.  Despite the vague mentions of violence and danger in regard to their on-stage behaviour and the reactions of the crowds, they were absolutely just doing their jobs by trying to give the best performances possible.  Limp Bizkit's manager makes precisely this point as well.  At various points, people in the documentary try to blame the singers, their fans, and the supposed unruliness of the nu-metal genre for certain uncomfortable moments of the festival.  For decades before and after Woodstock '99, there have been hard rock and metal festivals where the fans moshed violently but didn't try to tear apart the sound tower.  Blaming the genre is silly when there are so many organizational shortcomings from this festival staring you in the face.   

They had gotten lucky with Woodstock '94.  It was feted as a major cultural event, and key sets were replayed on PPV and music stations.  At the time, reports in the British music press were incredulous.  How were they not adequately prepared for the possibility of rain?  The Brits believed that the American organizers had been to Glastonbury and understood how to organize a festival of this size.  They didn't.  The British mags credited the American fans for being cheery and compliant despite the festival grounds turning into a giant mud pit.  Had this happened at Glastonbury, they wrote, there would have been a riot.    

Lee Rosenblatt, credited as the assistant site manager of the festival, consistently comes across as the voice of reason, warning the higher ups about potential disasters only to get shouted down each time.  MTV presenter Ananda Lewis is another crucial voice who speaks forcefully and eloquently about her experiences at the festival.  

The most interesting character in the whole drama is Michael Lang, for he symbolizes the slow transformation of the dewy eyed 60's flower power kids, first into the suburban Reagan voters of the 80's, and then into the out of touch gatekeepers of the culture in the mid and late-90's.  Yes, his work on the original Woodstock makes him a legend.  But his assumption that kids in the 90's were longing for a Woodstock of their own so that they could replicate the experiences of their parents is staggeringly wrong.  The boomer generation's iron grip on everything canonical in music was fading throughout the 90's, and their stubborn assertion that the best music was made in the 60's and 70's was no longer tolerated.  In my opinion, the kids in '99 were rebelling against the peace and love festival that they never wanted in the first place.  The fact that they were being price gouged while baking on an airfield tarmac was the fuel on the fire. Lang completely lives up to his OK boomer form by being completely oblivious to all this in '99 and today (he passed away a few months ago, shortly after filming the series).  

In my view, Lang was well aware of the problems at the festival.  He knew that contracting food vendor responsibilities to outside parties left the pricing completely out of his control.  He knew that using untrained security forces was potentially reckless.  The idealist hippie in him was convinced that it would all work out in the end.  The capitalist scumbag in him knew that without cutting corners, the festival couldn't maximize its earning potential. Were these two sides of his personality in equal and enduring conflict?  Or had he fully turned to the dark side and thought his counterculture cred would be enough to pull the wool over the doubters' eyes while he walked off with millions more in profit?  It's hard to say.        

Wednesday, July 27, 2022

Joni Mitchell's historic concert at Newport

This was truly the most feel good moment to happen in popular music since forever.  Joni Mitchell returned to the Newport Folk Festival for the first time in over fifty years, performed her first proper concert in nearly twenty years, and the world seemed to stop.  Take the time to watch even a few minutes of her set and feel all the uncertainty and chaos in the world around you melt away instantly.

This story is getting attention for all the right reasons. After hearing that she had suffered a brain aneurysm, I was resigned to the fact that Mitchell would never appear in public again, let alone perform music.  But then came the Kennedy Center honours, and the Grammys appearance, and finally this set at Newport which sprung out of a series of informal jams she'd been having at her home for the past few years.  She nearly died and had to relearn everything (walking, getting out of bed, next to those everyday tasks relearning the guitar seems rather trivial).  She had to regain her passion for singing.  She worked on it privately, with the support of her friends through their informal jam sessions, to the point where she felt good enough to appear on stage again.  Even then, it was uncertain what she'd be up to doing once they arrived at Newport.  

When I was growing up in the 80's, Joni Mitchell and Leonard Cohen were niche artists, even in Canada.  They were years past their 70's primes and widely respected, but not considered as part of an inner circle of all-time greats.  Rock criticism was dominated by admiration of the stadium-filling classic rock giants (Led Zep, The Who, The Rolling Stones).  Rock stars in the 80's were MTV-ready celebrities with a larger than life aura.  The era of the introspective singer-songwriter writing folksy melodies and confessional lyrics was a fading memory.  

It's been wonderful to see Joni Mitchell get the credit she's due over the past few years, with her albums now frequently mentioned among the best of all time.  The appearance at Newport was the best possible tribute to her: she was feted as an all time legend, treated as a queen seated in a luxurious throne-like chair, holding court in front of thousands of her followers who will never forget those moments they got to share with her. 

Thursday, July 14, 2022

The downfall of Ariel Pink

Armin Rosen's article on the rise and complete collapse of the career of Ariel pink is an exhaustive and exhausting read.  It's probably twice as long as it needs to be.  The avalanche of music insider detail will alienate most music fans, let alone the average Tablet reader.  The elephant in the room is the article's most glaring flaw: is it meant to evoke sympathy for Ariel Pink?  Is it an attempt to start rebuilding his legacy?  Do Rosen and Tablet believe that Ariel's side of the story has been misrepresented, and are providing him a forum (albeit a highly critical one) to fill a journalistic need?     

The Tucker Carlson interview mentioned in the article is a slobberfest of forced sympathy and manipulation, even by the standards of Fox News.  I have no doubt that TC had not heard of Ariel Pink the day before their meeting and has not thought about him for five minutes since, and yet most of the interview is Carlson practically weeping over the tragically unfair state of the man's career.  I will not link to the interview here, but you can easily find it.  Rosen's article is certainly not that.  But if there's one overarching narrative he presents to his readers, it's that Ariel Pink was and is a unique and even irreplaceable talent.  Rosen doesn't say that great art should be above politics.  However, he seems to spin a cautionary tale about being too quick to degrade great art.  History is full of great artists who fell out of favour because they didn't trade in the dominant politics of the day. 


I don't care one way or another about Ariel Pink.  I've never heard an album, and laughed off the term "chillwave" during the scant years when it was popular.  I recognize that Ariel Rosenberg was a problematic and controversal person even before Jan. 6 of last year.  But I don't see how anyone can defend the complete cancellation of a person and his livelihood based on his mere attendance at a protest.  He didn't storm the Capitol, didn't advocate for violence or insurrection, he just stood in place and listened to a speech.  By no measure can it be said that he committed a crime.  And yet R. Kelly was sentenced to jail time only a couple of weeks ago, after more than twenty years of second chances from critics and fans alike.


We could list off any number of artists who have been given free passes for decades: white, black, male, female.  It would only serve to prove that the line between who gets cancelled and who gets left alone is a fuzzy, even arbitrary one.   A musician might have disagreeable, or even odious opinions, and it is ultimately a personal decision whether to continue listening to them or not.  I struggle with these decisions too and don't pretend to have the answers, not when it comes to Morrissey, or Herbert von Karajan, or Brian Eno.  But I don't think cancellation or pressure politics is the answer either.     

Sunday, June 26, 2022

George Gershwin's "Porgy and Bess", recorded by Cleveland Orchestra/Lorin Maazel (1976)

Gershwin's compositions straddled many genres -- jazz, classical, pop -- and some of his music continues to defy categorization even today.  "Porgy and Bess" was intended as an opera and is still referred to as such, but simple labels should always be tossed aside when dealing with Gershwin's music.  "Porgy and Bess" is no more an opera than, say, "Rhapsody In Blue" is a piano concerto.  The labels conjure up strict classical forms and styles -- they obscure rather than describe the emotional essence of the music.  

I'm no opera expert, I'm not even an opera fan, and I would consider myself an unbiased modern listener when it comes to "Porgy and Bess".  For me, it strays frequently into the realm of musical theatre, mainly thanks to its most famous tunes ("Summertime", "Bess, You Is My Woman Now", "Ain't Necessarily So") which have become American songbook standards.  In other aspects, it is unquestionably an opera, such as the turbulent subject matter (with the story unfolding in a suitably epic style), or the vocal timbre of the lead characters.   People would callously argue whether Gershwin was a "serious" composer or simply a opportunist who knew how to cater to public whims.  These sorts of arguments have always been dumb.  A couple of generations later, such polarizing rhetoric would sound silly if one was speaking about, say, The Beatles, but on the other hand, discussions of "serious" artists "selling out" still persist.  Gershwin undoubtedly has a Midas touch, by some measures, he was the richest composer of all time.

A 1975 NYT article about this recording of "Porgy and Bess", the first ever stereo recording of the entire opera, offers a fascinating snapshot of the times.  The article notes that the recording could not have been made even a few years previously due to the charged political climate.  An opera that highlights the stereotypes of South Carolina blacks, with music and lyrics written by northern Jews based on a play and libretto by white southerners?  The work had come to be viewed as racist, and there's little doubt that in today's climate, it would have been cancelled altogether.  Fortunately the citizenry of 1975 were smarter than that, which is not to say that the recording was without controversy.  The cast speak openly about the lack of career opportunities for black performers, the lack of role models, and the racial homogeneity of opera goers.  Sadly, not enough progress has been made on those fronts in the past decades, and other sectors of the entertainment industry are hardly immune ("Oscars So White", for example).    

The full three-hour opera makes for a compelling listen. Its biggest flaw is the lack of truly star-making, transfixing performances, by this cast of mostly (then)-unknown artists.  McHenry Boatwright as Porgy is the clear highlight, with a voice and presence that strongly contrasts his character's physically feeble nature.  His desperate search for Bess in the final scenes is riveting, ending the opera on a wrenching emotional high.  Francois Clemmons dominates his scenes as Sportin' Life, displaying a natural, sleazy charisma that captures the essence of the character perfectly.  Maazel and the Cleveland Orchestra hold their own, although I'm hard pressed to understand exactly what kind of interpretative vision the conductor provided.  I feel that the opera should be, for lack of a better word, bigger.  The Houston Grand Opera recording from the same year -- a proper touring stage productions -- would be my next purchase.       

Thursday, June 16, 2022

Stereolab, Series En Direct volumes 1-7, live recordings 1993-2019

While he was alive, Romanian conductor Sergiu Celibidache refused to release studio or live recordings of his work, which is virtually unheard of for a major conductor. Following his death, his family recognized the demand for the conductor's work and took the decision to release some officially sanctioned live recordings through record label EMI Classics.  His son Serge justified the decision in an essay that was printed in the liner notes to these early releases (my copy comes from a recording of Schumann's 3rd and 4th symphonies, with Celibidache leading the Munich Philharmonic, an orchestra that he worked with for decades).  There is every reason to be cynical when reading the essay (i.e. there is every reason to assume they did it for the money, principles be damned) but I think he makes a number of well-reasoned and thought-provoking statements.    

The main idea is that live concerts are meant to be enjoyed in the moment, as a symbiotic experience between the musicians, audience, and the venue.   This experience is meant to be enjoyed once.   On the other hand, a recording can never be music, much like a photo of a deceased relative represents only a memory of that person.

I thought about this essay a lot while listening to a stellar archive of Stereolab live material, covering their entire career including their recent reunion (1993-2019).   The collection is easily accessible via the live music archive, Volume 1 appears here and can easily follow the links to hear all seven volumes.  I saw Stereolab play live four times, spanning most of their peak (1994, 1996, 1998, 2001).   As you'd expect from such a massive project, the sound quality of these recordings varies widely, but this rarely bothers me when it comes to collecting live recordings.  For me, the draw of the concert recording was to have a memory of the show or tour, or to hear what the band sounds like in a different creative setting.  Since gigs always outnumber studio recordings, this provides many more opportunities to do something creative, to fine tune the presentation of a song, and so on.   Does it replicate the experience of being in the club, arena, or stadium?  Of course not.   But even though the information on the recording is incomplete, the missing information can be filled in based on my own experience.  It's somewhat analogous to file or image compression, where the lost information can be partially reconstructed via algorithm during retrieval and playback.  I can hear these recordings and attempt to place myself there, see the reactions of the band members, feel the sound blasting through the speakers and washing over me.  Sometimes I prefer the grimy textures of audience recordings because they can capture the overpowering, muddy sound of many live venues, and give a better approximation of "being there" compared with cleaner soundboard recordings.  

With Stereolab's studio recordings, I always preferred the early years covering 1991-1994, from the early singles collected on the first "Switched On" compilation, through "Mars Audiac Quintet".  As a live band they peaked much later, but we'll get to that.  In the early recordings (Volume 1), we hear a band with a clear vision of what they want to do, with a fully formed melting pot of sounds cribbed from their idols.  Sometimes the playing is sloppy, the rhythms are not as taut as they should be, and the vocal harmonizing sounds woefully unpolished.  But the drive and power stands out in all the recordings from the first series, which covers 1993-1994.  

All successful and iconic bands come around at the perfect time, filling a specific niche with a sound and message that wouldn't have worked with a difference audience in a different era.  To their fans in the early to mid-90's (and of course I include myself in this grouping), Stereolab were cool because they had a better record collection than you, and you were largely helpless to do anything about it.  They namedropped Can, NEU, and other 70's Krautrock bands when they were virtually unknown quantities to most indie music fans.  Their music was unavailable unless you were lucky enough to get your hands on a bootleg CD pressing.  They talked about obscure French and Brazilian pop that seemed beguiling, exotic, and oh so mysterious -- and by the way, you had no hope of getting your hands on most of it.  

Their timing was perfect.  In the late 80's, nobody would have cared about anything so far out of left field.  But around 1990, the boomer grip on musical discourse was beginning to loosen.  Rock music of the 50's and 60's had been mined to death, collectors and hardcore fans were increasingly broadening their interests.  They looked toward other decades for inspiration (particularly the 70's), and sought out non-American, non-British bands in genres other than rock.  CD re-release and box set mania was at its peak, but plenty of great music remained unavailable on CD.  You had to be a vinyl collector, world traveler, and have good connections to unearth many lost and underappreciated treasures.  Stereolab and their influences arrived as a package deal.  They spoke about them constantly in interviews and proudly boasted of borrowing from NEU, Esquivel, and so on.  I bought the Can Anthology when it was released on CD in 1994, not only because I finally wanted to get my hands on music by this mythical German band but also based on Stereolab's indirect recommendation.  If Stereolab sounded like this other music, then I wanted to have that music too.  

By the latter half of the decade, things were different.  The flood of compilations and re-releases throughout the decade meant that almost anyone with enough money and patience could assemble an uber-cool music collection.  In 1999-2000, file sharing made the concept of a "lost" album nearly redundant.  Almost anything, no matter how obscure, could be accessed and downloaded from your desktop in minutes.  As for Stereolab, they were working with producers like John McEntire and Mouse on Mars, allowing them to reshape their sound in the studio.  Suddenly, it felt like they were chasing trends, rather than leading them.  The effortless cool that characterized their early records was slowly phased out.  The recordings sounded more polished, but also more sterile.  Fortunately, their evolution as a live band followed a different trajectory.  

Volume 2 covers 1995-1996 and incorporates a wider palate of sounds thanks to the "Music For the Amorphous Body Study Center" and "ETK" albums.  They could seamlessly vary from arty lounge pop to furious motorik improvisations. Epic versions of "Contact" and "Stomach Worm" are standouts.  The latter song was recorded in Washington, but I saw an even more mind blowing version played as the encore in Toronto just ten days earlier.  That show still stands out as one of the best three or so concerts I ever saw (shared credit goes to the opening band, Cornershop, who were very underrated as a live act IMO).  I thought I was a near completist for this era, but this volume contains two songs I had never heard of before, "Young Lungs" and "Cadriopo".  Stereolab could do no wrong during this era.  They were never animated on stage, but as a fan watching them, playing this music in this way looked deliciously fun.  The most precious find of all is a scorching version of "The Light That Will Cease To Fail" whose bursts of noise and drone gradually morph into, of all things, "Soup Groove #1", encompassing twenty seven preposterous, glorious minutes for the entire package.   

Volume 3 is the least interesting.  Electronic squiggles and odd noises appear everywhere and rarely mesh well with the music.  Presumably they were trying to stay ahead of the curve and expand their sound palate.  In principle, this could have provided almost limitless new directions for extended jams.  But the chemistry between the new and traditional instruments (including the vintage ones) rarely appeared.  Improvisational passages would check the contractually obligated boxes (since that's what the songs on the setlist mandated), even though there wasn't a cohesive idea about what to do with their time.      

Volume 4 focuses on the "Cobra and Phases Group" period, which was a study in contrasts between the overly slick, plastic-sounding easy listening pop of the album and the muscular, propulsively rhythmic jazz-funk with which they were killing it during their concerts.  After any long hiatus from this album, it's always entertaining to read the infamous 0/10 NME review from Johnny Cigarettes.  The language is crude (to say the least) and the point belaboured to the point that it undermines the review, but the sentiment absolutely encapsulates the opinions of many at the time.  Instead of borrowing sounds, transforming them, and owning them, Stereolab were now striking poses and hiding behind a wall of production sheen.  And I say that as a fan of the album.  One can't deny that it divided opinions at the time.  On stage, things were simpler -- they rocked.  The songs on the album erupted with infectious grooves that the studio versions lacked, and the early stuff ("French Disko", "Wow and Flutter", "The Seeming and the Meaning" sounded better than ever.  They'd been playing these songs long enough to iron out all the rough edges from the early years.  Stereolab were now a razor sharp, tightly synchronized unit, finally at a level that matched their motorik heroes.    

In Volume 5, Stereolab reached their peak as a live act.  Recorded in 2001-2 during the "Sound Dust" tours, this is the closest they ever got to replicating Can: metronomic drumming locked in a singular groove with the bass, rhythmic churning guitar becoming an additional percussion instrument, a perfect meshing of their two lead vocalists with the music.  The songs on "Sound Dust" (arguably their most underrated album) are captivating, otherworldly pop and each one seems to shift gears halfway through, like an album full of "A Day In the Life"s.  In concert, the band were completely up to the task of making these complex songs flow seamlessly from one extreme to another.  They ditched the frivolous electronics and achieved perfect synchronization, could break into a soothing French lullaby just as easily as they could rock out on a furious extended jam.  They never sounded this tight and professional, either before or since. 

Volume 6 spans 2004-2008 and everything sounds the same, but different.  The tragic death of Mary Hansen shook the band to its foundations.  Her contributions were not replaced, for instance, in these recordings, many of her vocal parts on the older songs are simply missing.  In addition, Tim Gane and Laetitia Sadier ended their relationship around the same time.  It's a minor miracle that Stereolab continued as a band at all.  They remained a solid, professional live act but there was a spark missing.  To my surprise, they found that spark in 2006 by touring the "Fab Four Suture" songs, which is an album I had never heard until hearing this live set.  This is as raw and grimy as Stereolab can get, each song is infused with a post-punk like energy unlike anything they had done before.  This material never entered into their regular live sets, and coupled with older rarities (e.g. "U.H.F. - MHP" from "The Groop Played Space Age Bachelor Pad Music", which was never played before this tour and hasn't been played since), it offers us a one-time alternative universe version of the band.  

Volume 7 is dedicated to the 2019 reunion.  They have slipped a tad, Laetitia Sadier's voice isn't quite what it used to be, and they play more tentatively.  At this point in their career, they don't need to take risks, they simply need to present the best possible version of themselves to older fans and newer fans who never had a chance to see them.  It doesn't detract from their legacy, but it doesn't add anything to it either.  

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"The CD will slowly kill one's spontaneity, indeed, every time it is played, it reduces the opportunity to participate in the event.  One hears the exact same development again and again, a fact which encourages a passive listening attitude"

I have written that the extended jams and improvisational moments are hit and miss, but the above quote reminds us that they were never meant for repeated home listening, they were spontaneous musical expressions meant to be enjoyed exclusively in the concert hall.  In their proper context they were thrilling and rarely excessive.  They were usually played at the end of a set packed with shorter, poppier songs.  As counterweights to the bulk of their songs, these epic jams gave the band and audience a chance to zone out and get lost in the music. Even the Mouse On Mars/electronic squiggle era made sense in their late 90's context.  These were musical experiments that were worth trying out. 

Is this seven volume set a fair representation of Stereolab?  I think so, although Serge Celibidache's quote gives me pause.  The complete set totals 232 tracks and about twenty hours worth of music.  The breadth of material is astonishing, covering dozens of deep cuts and miscellaneous tracks that weren't on their albums.  Stereolab were famous for being a record collector's dream, releasing many limited edition EP's, standalone singles, and tour singles (i.e. music sold at the merch booth at their concerts and nowhere else) and this collection of live tracks manages to cover just about every niche and dark corner of their career.  Sure, there are far too many versions of "Percolator", but who cares when there are so many other rare and wonderful tracks included.  The sheer volume of great material, spread over a couple of decades of incredibly varied creativity, is enough to offset an alleged loss of spontaneity through overfamiliarity.   

Friday, May 27, 2022

Andy Fletcher RIP

This feels like a turning point for the blog and possibly my music fandom.  It's the day I have to eulogize a member of my favourite ever band.  Every generation reaches the point where the bands you grew up with gradually fade from relevance, and then fade away forever.  

Tributes have been pouring in for the past two days, praising his contributions to the band.  But prior to this week, you probably had to be a die hard Depeche Mode fan (fortunately there are tens of millions of these) to appreciate what Fletch brought to the table.  He wasn't the singer, or the songwriter, or the lyricist, and wasn't much of a musician.  He wasn't the hidden hand who guided the band aesthetically or ideologically.  Watch the "101" documentary and you'll see shot after shot of a smiling Fletch, looking proud yet awkward in skin tight spandex, dancing behind his keyboard, surveying the crowd, not doing much of any importance.  In recent promo shots, Gahan and Gore still have rock star swagger to spare, whereas Fletch is the grumpy uncle who crashed the photo shoot.  

The best longform Depeche Mode article I ever read is a very famous two parter from the NME, written by Gavin Martin and published on September 18 and 25, 1993 during the Devotional tour.  It's the definitive document of DM's most debauched period.  Gahan's brush with death a few years later is cruelly foreshadowed.  A theme of the article is the open speculation that Gahan wouldn't make it through the tour (he did, and IIRC, didn't miss a single show).  Near the end, a DM insider speaks about the frontman's troubles, while flatly stating that "[Gahan] must know that if it wasn't for Martin there'd be no songs, if it wasn't for Alan the records wouldn't sound the way they do, and if it wasn't for Fletch there probably wouldn't be any money."  

That basically sums it up.  Fletch had settled into a manager type of role (although he hated the word and wouldn't use it to describe himself), handling a semi-infinite list of minute yet crucial details, not the least of which was keeping the peace between the band members.  He took a leave of absence from the band and sat out the Summer 1994 leg of the tour, but was otherwise a constant presence for over 40 years.  But look again at that quote.  Alan Wilder left the band and what happened?  They continued making great albums and toured even bigger stadiums.  Martin Gore's monopoly on the songwriting was later broken and the band still thrived, they still sounded exactly like Depeche Mode.  But without Fletch?  As of this writing, most observers are pessimistic about the band continuing.  He was the glue, the stabilizing presence.  He was the legitimizer, when he was around DM was a band and not an interlude between various solo projects.  

He was the steady hand through it all.  An unlikely teen idol in the 80's, steering the band through the troubled waters of the 90's as they reached the zenith of their coolness, and ensuring they stayed on as a commercial powerhouse well into the 21st century.  By all accounts he was a loyal friend with hardly a trace of a rock star ego, even though he'd toured the world many times over.  How many teen mag regulars from the 80's survived that decade, without ever breaking up, while remaining relevant, and without gloryhogging their way into a reunion tour years later when the 80's because cool again?  Depeche Mode's career was a black swan, and we'll never see the likes of it again.      

Tuesday, May 24, 2022

Colin Davis' Boston Symphony Orchestra Sibelius cycle

Long considered one of the very finest Sibelius symphony cycles, I recently picked this up and wanted to share my thoughts on it.  Until now, I owned only Symphony #2 on a single disc, and had heard #5 separately via streaming.  In both cases, I thought they were solid and very well played, but neither really moved me.  


Symphony #1.  This immediately summons thoughts of swirling winds and heavy snow, conjuring visions of cruel nature that usually don't appear until later in Sibelius' career.  Normally, this comes off as Sibelius' most fiery, romantic symphony, with frequent comparisons to Tschaikovsky.  Davis attempts to thematically connect this early symphony with later ones, and while he certainly succeeded, for me the music is sorely underplayed, with winds and horned suppressed and an over-reliance on (admittedly stunning) strings sonority.  Full points for the inspiration and execution, but very much lacking in excitement.


Symphony #2.  I can't fault the technical work by the orchestra here, but once again I find this to be much underplayed and lacking in excitement.  The first two movements are played relatively quickly, which is a good thing because nothing drives this symphony into dreadful tedium more than lagging tempos, particularly in the slow movement.   But the fourth movement stagnates out of the gate with a brutally slow tempo, and the horns fail to bring the piece to life near the end.  There is little sense of urgency or hard won triumph that usually concludes the piece.  Some might prefer to hear Sibelius 2 with its more patriotic aspects toned down (this is also true of Davis' very ho-hum "Finlandia"), but it's not for me.  


Symphony #3.  This is Sibelius'  most classical symphony, and in my view, the cheeriest and most  difficult to reconcile stylistically with the rest of the works in the cycle.  But Davis drags it into the swirling void and it actually works.  This is a hefty, weighty version that perfectly bridges the bombast of the second with the melancholy of the fourth.  A very pleasant surprise.


Symphony #4.  Considering the bleakness of the third, I was expected total devastation from Davis with the fourth.  Vanska would eventually get there with his Lahti cycle a couple of decades later.  Vanska understood how to pull out all the gnarly, gritty details in this symphony.  Davis' version, like everything in this cycle so far, is wonderfully played but a bit too polished for the mood the music demands, and for what I was expecting based on his interpretations to this point.   


Symphony #5.  The unique vibrato achieved by the BSO's brass section is supposedly an acquired taste. I found it shrill and distracting in the first movement, which takes forever to get rolling and is then rudely interrupted by the piercing tones of the brass.  Fortunately, things get much better from there.  The second movement is unsentimental, perfectly paced, and nicely balanced within the orchestra.  In the third movement, Davis drives the orchestra at a blistering tempo.  This is how Sibelius wrote it, but most conductors and orchestras don't try (or can't) sustain the pace.  It's a heart-pounding start to the finale and barely slows down leading into the swan theme.  Clearly Davis wants the entire finale to sound breathless almost until the end, and while overall it's quicker than I'd like, again I can't fault the vision and execution.    


Symphony #6.  Oddly enough, this comes off as the cheeriest symphony of the bunch, mainly because it's blazing fast, clocking at around 25 minutes whereas most conductors take around 30.  Instead of starting out light in the first movement and gradually slowing to a crawl as the symphony proceeds (with a respite in the third movement), Davis gradually accelerates as he goes.  The final movement is unexpectedly bouncy and light, with nary a touch of grimness even in the final minutes.  Much like the third symphony, Davis conceptualizes the work as a bridge between the sweeping grandiosity of the fifth and the taut efficiency of the seventh.  Davis' sixth comes across very much like a single movement piece with its uniformity in phrasing and tempo.  This symphony way overdelivered for me.  

A major reason why I became so attached to Sibelius' symphonies is their malleability.  The same work can be happy or sad, patriotic or grim, delicate or heavy, containing a menu of polar opposites that can expressed within the same piece of music.  There is no better justification for collecting multiple versions or cycles by the same composer, and Davis' version of the sixth is a perfect example of this.    


Symphony #7.  As I expected after hearing the sixth, this symphony flows consistently and energetically, and the momentum never lags.  I found it a bit lacking in dynamics range -- the highs are never too high and the lows never too low, the climaxes are a bit underplayed, and the softer parts aren't given enough room to breathe.  It's a strong effort but not in the upper tier of sevenths I've heard, although once more I can't fault the playing or the execution.


Overall, this is an inspired cycle, and even though each interpretation isn't to my taste, Davis' vision for each symphony is clearly on display.  He has a concept for how the cycle should evolve, sticks to it, and executes it flawlessly.  For comparison, Berglund's Bournemouth cycle is still my favourite, as it represents the apotheosis of these symphonies played in a wide range of styles by a large, overpowering orchestra.  The bulk of Davis' cycles is great, but lacks moments that send chills down my spine, something that Berglund does repeatedly.      

Wednesday, May 18, 2022

"Bohemian Rhapsody", dir. Bryan Singer, Dexter Fletcher

Many biopics are just an excuse to place the viewer in the moment.  Elements of great moviemaking such as character development and engaging dialogue are tossed by the wayside in favour of providing a big budget immersive "fly on the wall" experience for the viewing public.  "Bohemian Rhapsody" is all that and more.  Rami Malek's performance is electrifying and thoroughly believable, even though he has hardly any memorable scenes or lines in the entire movie.  Essentially he won the Oscar for being the best possible Freddie Mercury impersonator.

The first half of the movie is perfectly fine, if a bit simplistic.  Freddie is presented as a fairly run of the mill rebel who rejects everything that his parents stand for.  The truth is more complicated but it's the simplified Hollywood version, and that's OK.  His relationship with Mary Austin is beautifully explored and is by far the best thing about the movie.  Mike Myers makes an amusing cameo as an EMI executive, complete with the obligatory tongue-in-cheek "Wayne's World" reference.  The second half descends into every "Behind the Music" episode and cliche that you're ever seen, and frequently insults one's intelligence.  The most egregious scene is where Freddie brings Jim to meet his parents and brag about doing Live Aid.  The tears flow on camera and every running conflict in the movie is resolved in preposterous fashion in the space of a few minutes.  Freddie triumphantly declaring that he's doing good deeds and helping to heal the world (thus earning his father's acceptance) is simply grotesque in its arrogance considering the oft-cited criticism of Live Aid, i.e. that the real benefactors were the mega-rich musicians who got even richer thanks to the publicity they received from playing at the concert.  The movie goes out of its way to (unintentionally, I assume) prove those critics right, seeing as the Live Aid set is the climactic scene that the whole movie builds toward, and is firmly presented as Queen's finest moment.   

Wednesday, May 04, 2022

The CEO plays Chopin

An article on Bloomberg about a recently founded for-profit orchestra really rubbed me the wrong way.  It's a free advertisement masking as journalism, with absolutely no analysis or attempts to dig even slightly below the surface of its subjects.   

At first glance it all sounds very exciting.  In contrast to orchestras that survive thanks to arts grants and donations, all while struggling to retain their relevance in an exceedingly crowded entertainment market, here is an orchestra that is refreshingly run like a actual company, with stockholders and everything.  And they plan to turn a profit right from the start!  

How is it possible?  You have to read between the lines to get even a semblance of how it will work.  What do these people know that hundreds of top orchestras in the world have yet to figure out?  The JNO will offer a subscription-style membership service and a premium membership tier to enhance the fan experience.  That's a great way to bring in money, and is presented in the article as something remarkable and novel, but plenty of other orchestras also do that.  The key, I believe, comes from this line: "...operating an orchestra is relatively simple because most of the expenditures are labor costs."  So there you go, as much as they want to present themselves as fair employers paying out "millions of yen in annual remuneration depending on [the musicians'] contribution", the business model is simply to underpay the players compared to what they'd earn from a publicly funded orchestra.  

Presumably the musicians' could also supplement their income through the one-on-one or group tutorials that the JNO will offer its subscribers.  There may be some innovation there, but it could also be little more than a glorified Cameo for classical music fans.  Either way, the JNO will be sure to take its cut out of every appearance.     


Wednesday, April 27, 2022

Klaus Tennstedt's LPO Mahler cycle

My collection of Mahler recordings has stretched into the dozens, with multiple versions of each of his symphonies.  I found myself increasingly drawn to the work of Klaus Tennstedt, mainly based on the incendiary live versions that can be easily found on youtube and elsewhere.  Tennstedt was known as a master of the standard German repetoire, but there was a certain magic to be found when he conducted Mahler with the London Philharmonic.  The LPO was considered the third or maybe fourth best orchestra just in London, whereas Tennstedt, while great, had a lot of competition when it came to the German masterpieces he specialized in.  But the whole was better than the sum of the parts.  The synchronicity between orchestra and conductor was often something to behold, on any given night, this highly motivated group of performers could elevate themselves to being the greatest orchestra in the world playing the finest music ever composed.  

I have gradually been making my way through the entire set, some sixteen CD's worth.  Audiophile note: I bought this set through iTunes, so I listened on 320 kbps mp3's, with the exception of the 8th Symphony, which I have on CD.  


Symphony #1

A disappointing start.  The first movement is slow and tense, but comes across as too passive and underplayed for my taste.   The second movement is light and playful but fairly forgettable, and the third movement gets bogged down by its leisurely tempos and lack of momentum.  This reveals a problem that will recur multiple times during this cycle.  During the inner movements, which often don't build to huge, world-resolving climaxes, Tennstedt can get a bit lost in the plot.  But in his defense, this is a studio phenomenon that didn't happen during his live performances.  In front of an audience, Tennstedt would go all out and the music never lost its sense of purpose.  The fourth movement again drags, and although the final minutes are well played, the payoff can't redeem the symphony as a whole. 

 

Symphony #2 

The first movement snarls and growls, this is a truly heavy funeral march, and its brutally maudlin character is a quality that is lacking in many conductor's performances.  The tension is sustained wonderfully throughout the movement.  The second movement is delightful and again sticks closely to the script intended by Mahler, conjuring up youthful memories from long ago.  The third movement is playful but fairly nondescript, but serves as a setup for the glorious final two movements.  The finale runs nearly 35 minutes, one of the longer recorded finales in the Mahler catalog, but never drags or grows stagnant.  Tennstedt keeps the music flowing wonderfully -- extraordinarily difficult at such a slow tempo -- but builds unbearable tension even during the quieter moments.  In the hands of lesser conductors these quieter moments induce boredom and grind the symphony to a halt well before the finish.  Despite the long runtime, nothing is overwrought or exaggerated.  Tennstedt knows how to extract maximum emotion from nearly every moment.  In live performance, Tennstedt could be even more incendiary, but its easy to see why this was one of his signature pieces even from the studio recording.   


Symphony #3

The first movement is dark, schizophrenic, and masterfully intense.  This is followed by its near opposite, the light and lyrical minuetto of the second movement.  The third movement, the scherzando, is another triumph, a dreamlike gothic folk  number unfurling in slow motion.  The vocal movements then provide an oasis of calm leading up to the finale, particularly the hymn-like fifth movement.  The finale is almost unbearably tense, not as explosive as the live version from Minnesota that inspired me to finally buy this set, but riveting all the same.  Again, Tennstedt was more in his element performing this live, where he could have a complete emotional commitment to the music, staying constantly in the moment on account of the audience. He was a conductor who undoubtedly lost some of that focus while hammering things out for days in recorded setting.   


Symphony #4 

The first movement walks a careful and difficult balance between smooth and sentimental (in its first half), while flipping the switch to become rocky and unsettling in the second part.  The whole symphony kind of wavers between these extremes, which is strange for Tennstedt who usually carries a more consistent vision of Mahler's work.  It's as if he was undecided between two different takes on the music, or perhaps the consistency was broken between different recording sessions.   The third movement (Adagio) is beautifully played with a heart stopping final climax.  In all this symphony is a fine effort, although its two-faced nature did leave me feeling somewhat empty and confused.  


Symphony #5

Often cited as one of the great performances in this cycle, this is a dramatic, gripping account of the fifth.  I have a problematic relationship with this symphony, it's Mahler's busiest and longest (in terms of bars), and unfortunately I find myself exhausted by the end of the third movement unless it's a more flowing, lyrical reading such as Barbirolli's.  The first and last movements are explosive, but I found the third movement (scherzo) to be a bit meandering, and not as punchy or forceful as Tennstedt seems to be going for.  The fourth movement, the famous Adagietto is beautifully played, but too slow for my tastes, although many would disagree.  Overall this is a memorable account of the fifth, albeit a long and draining one, but again, that's my typical reaction to most versions of this symphony.


Symphony # 6 

Once again, Tennstedt nails the outer movements.  The first movement is everything you'd want -- bludgeoning, terrifying, the foreteller of impending doom.  The second movement (the Scherzo in Tennstedt's treatment) makes less of an impression, it's an extended bridge to the third movement but not much more.  The third movement (Andante) is simply gorgeous, among the very best I've heard.  In other versions, this is often the flat movement of the symphony for me, serving as a pause before the epic final movement.  With Tennstedt, it's the love theme for the doomed hero, like something out of a Hollywood tragedy.  

As for the final movement, the challenge for the conductor, in my view, is to maintain the momentum after the hammer blows.  He or she needs to smoothly, inexorably transition to the fateful conclusion, while avoiding the whiff of a huge anti-climax following the second hammer blow.  Tennstedt inverts this typical situation.  I found the passages leading to the hammer blows to be underplayed, leading to a searing final fifteen minutes that does not disappoint.    


Symphony #7 

Through the first two movements, this symphony was a big miss for me.  The first movement is too forced, too grandiose, like an extenstion of the 6th merely plugged into the Tennstedt formula.  It loses much of the offbeat kookiness that characterizes far better versions of this symphony.  The third movement, the scherzo, brings back some of the humour and nearly saves the symphony, and the fourth movement (Andante) is sympathetic, touching.  But the final movement, the Rondo Finale, once again plays it too straight, opting for more formulaic drama rather than madcap chaos. 


Symphony # 8 

I have never really connected with Mahler 8, which is less of a standard symphony than a drama set to music.  It's notoriously difficult to perform, with a million different things going on and the conductor trying to reign in the mayhem rather than truly shape the interpretation.  But undoubtedly, Tennstedt's version is the most effortless that I have heard.  This symphony trips up even the greatest Mahler conductors, and getting to the end can feel like a huge struggle, where the conductor forgets that they're dealing with a work of art and merely tries to maintain the orchestra's focus and will them to the finish.  Tennstedt makes it all sound easy.  This is hardly my favourite symphony but the quality of this performance can't be denied.


Symphony #9 

This performance is very understated throughout, and the shifts in mood seem to frequently confound Tennstedt.  The first movement starts out fiery, but then Tennstedt gets lost for about ten minutes in the middle.  This is a rare case in this cycle where the very slow tempo (run time of the first movement = 33 minutes) is a serious detriment.  The same can be said for the second movement, which begins energetically, only for the intensity to gradually trail off.  Tennstedt's slow, dramatic style doesn't fit the first three movements' schizophrenic struggle between the calm and the storm, which is most noticeable in the third movement.  The build to its climax should be frenetic, anxious, with the conductor instilling panic in the performance while not losing control of the orchestra.  Tennstedt solves this by simply taking things slow, the jaunty feel of the music doesn't pack the right emotional punch.  In the final movement (Adagio), the string sonority is too loose and sloppy.  The final minutes are meant to sound like the last gasps of life, but here the music simply trails off and vanishes with a benign whimper.  Soft climaxes were clearly not Tennstedt's strong suit.  


Symphony #10 (unfinished)

Tennstedt plays only the Adagio, but as was the case with the ninth, the sense of purpose is muddled without a towering climax as his destination.  


In all, this is clearly a set with its flaws, the biggest of which may be the fundamental notion that just about everyone's favourite Tennstedt will be from a live version rather than one of these studio versions.  Nevertheless, this cycle is well worth owning, the passion and inspiration that Tennstedt felt for the music is evident even during the weaker parts.       

Monday, March 28, 2022

Jeopardy Music Expert

Last year I paid almost no attention to new releases.  The only album I listened to multiple times was Low's "Hey What".  

This year I haven't heard a single new album.  Only two have caught my radar: Tears For Fears' "The Tipping Point" (a remarkable comeback story) and Beach House's "Once Twice Melody" (new double album by my favourite band of the past decade).  

Between two small kids at home who tend to wake up early, catching up on work in the evenings, and general exhaustion, I haven't made a new mix in over a year.  The mixes and podcasts will eventually return, because this thing called life is a long haul process, and this is the so-called diary that documents it.  I am hopelessly out of touch with all things techno, having long since given up my BPM Supreme membership and not finding the time to search new tracks and EP's from sites like Beatport.  

However, I'm more than happy to continue buying classical music on iTunes and scrolling through dusty CD bins.  Classical music is still where I find 90% of my musical inspiration these days.  Classical blogs and forums make up the bulk of my exposure to music crit. There is a parallel universe of great albums that I'm decades late in discovering -- who has time for new releases (even classical ones)?  I have no idea how fans find the time to hear 70 CD boxes of material (everything is boxed up relatively cheap it seems), although right now I am finding the time to sort through about 20 hours of live Stereolab recordings (stay tuned!) so perhaps the answer is staring me in the face.  

Music categories on Jeopardy usually center on 80's and 90's material, roughly coinciding with the age and knowledge expertise of most contestants, and I typically ace them.  Contemporary music clues pose a greater challenge.  I didn't know the Grammys had been postponed because of Omicron until I had to look it up while writing this post.  So this is my role these days.  Expert on easy music trivia on an otherwise very challenging trivia show.  In that world, I can still get away with looking like a music savant.  

I wish I had more to write about this days (and/or mixes to post) but freeing myself from any and all trends and buzz-worthy topics means I'm even more unencumbered and can deep dive into thirty years of Stereolab recordings (coming soon!) or Mahler cycles (yep!) without being concerned about its immediate (or long-term) relevance.  As always, I do it for me.