My review of Deutsche Grammophon's new issue, a previously unpublished recording of Rudolf Serkin playing Beethoven's Waldstein and Appassionata Sonatas, has been posted. Click here to read it.
Thursday, November 30, 2023
Saturday, November 25, 2023
Willful Dvořák and stunning Tchaikovsky with Inkinen and Hadelich at Severance
Saturday evening’s concert at Severance featured guest conductor Pietari Inkinen making his Cleveland Orchestra debut, along with returning violinist Augustin Hadelich.
The concert
opened with Dvořák’s Othello Overture, Op. 93. It’s not one of the composer’s well-known
works, despite the familiar subject matter of Shakespeare’s play. Composed in 1892,
it wasn’t performed in Cleveland until a century later – a noteworthy omission
for an orchestra that has long championed the unfamiliar. The chief problem is an overabundance of
ideas, intended to depict specific scenarios within the plot, which are
presented but not developed. I was left
with no desire to investigate this music more fully.
Tchaikovsky’s
Violin Concerto, Op. 35 is, of course, another matter. It’s a work which combines Tchaikovsky’s
knack for memorable tunes, great passion, a dramatic through-line, secure
architecture, and idiomatic writing which tests the limits of instrument and
instrumentalist. The composer was
assisted by his probable lover Iosif Kotek, a gifted violinist who advised the
composer on aspects of the violin part.
He was the initial dedicatee of the work until Tchaikovsky, cautious about his personal
reputation, switched the dedication to Leopold Auer – who was initially
uninterested in the piece. Eduard
Hanslick’s notoriously hostile review, in which he ranted that the music “stinks
to the ear” and that “the violin was not played but beaten black and blue” has
gone down as one of the most wrong-headed musical criticisms of all time. Soloist Hadelich is no stranger to
Cleveland. He
turned in a memorable performance of Dvořák’s Violin Concerto six years ago. Hadelich has everything needed for
Tchaikovsky: an immaculately superlative technique, a vocal – almost throaty –
tone, plenty of temperament, and the inherent taste to know just how much to
stretch a melody or push the dynamics. All
these gifts were put into the service of musical virtuosity and a bona-fide
masterpiece – no doubt the finest of Tchaikovsky’s four concertos. Hadelich was ably assisted by Inkinen and the
orchestra, but one felt this was mostly the soloist’s conception. A rousing ovation followed, and Hadelich
gifted the audience with an encore – the name of the work was not announced, but
it sounded like it was composed by Fritz Kreisler.
Still, the
concert was worth attending for the Tchaikovsky.
Wednesday, November 8, 2023
Ohio’s terrible politicians can’t keep it from moving forward
Yesterday, Ohio’s voters handed a decisive victory to
those who believe that individual humans should have the right to control their
own bodies.
Both Issue 1 (guaranteeing reproductive rights) and Issue 2 (legalizing Cannabis) passed with 57% voting in the affirmative. Doubtless most who voted “Yes” on Issue 1 voted the same on Issue 2; and there were some who split their vote. But the issues both passed by a substantial margin, in the face of misleading claims from the opposition that bordered on hysteria.
The anti-Issue 1 group even resorted to illegal tactics,
including placing their signs on polling center property, as shown in this
video I captured Tuesday morning.
Ohio Republicans from Governor Mike DeWine to Secretary
of State Frank LaRose (likely a candidate for Senate next year) to scandal-beleaguered
Lake County commissioner John Plecnik beat the drums against these issues. They lost.
Ohio’s Democratic and unaffiliated voters must now band
together to free Ohio from the iron-grip Republicans have inflicted upon our
state. DeWine is term-limited out. We must not allow LaRose to defeat Senator
Sherrod Brown in November. LaRose would
try to implement the same policies nationally as he was trying to do in
Ohio.
We can celebrate our victory for now. But the fight is not over, and it never will be.