Sunday, December 31, 2023

2023 in review

2023 was an active year which included adventures, challenges, and triumphs.

I continued with my quest for fitness and, although I still have a bit of a belly, my weight is at its lowest level since the late 1990s and my waist is six inches smaller than in 2020.   I've also become a bit more muscular although I have no desire to become overly pumped.  

Since 2020, my life has been increasingly centered at home, as I’ve been a remote worker since then.  Daniel and I celebrated 17 years as a couple and 15 years in our South Euclid home.  What we’ve learned in the last decade and a half is that the work on our 83-year-old house never ends.  This year we had new storm windows installed – the previous ones were probably about 50 years old and rattled whenever a large truck or music blasting car drove by.  Our primary reason for replacing the storm windows was for better protection from the extremes of hot and cold one encounters in our region.  It will take several more months before we can gauge the impact on our utility bills, but the reduction in street noise was immediately noticeable and most welcome.

A new storm window being installed.

The storm windows held up well against the massive storm that struck in August, which left us without electricity for 86 hours.    

No review of 2023 in Northeast Ohio is complete without the state’s voters resounding endorsement of Issues 1 and 2, which guaranteed reproductive rights and allowed recreational cannabis, respectively.  Although Issue 1 is a constitutional amendment, Issue 2 was a ballot issue and state Republicans have been trying to restrict its impact.  It will be interesting to see how Ohio voters react to political interference in 2024.    

Sadly, 2023 also saw the resurgence of the odious Donald Trump, to which I can only respond: Have the American people forgotten the non-stop issuance of virtual diarrhea during the four years he was in the White House?  Have they forgotten how badly he mishandled COVID?  How the economy suffered?  How the Federal deficit exploded?  How he enabled and even encouraged the most flagrant racism and even insurrection?  How many times must people hit their own heads with a hammer before they realize that they’d feel better if they stopped?  Sure, the last two years have had a few challenges, mostly due to the emergence from the COVID crisis and the revival of our supply lines.  The biggest challenge was inflation, which slowed throughout 2023.  The economy is strong, unemployment is low, and the Fed has indicated they are about to start cutting interest rates.  Life is not perfect, but it’s arguably better.  Even the problems at our Southern border are largely because America is the land of hope and opportunity – and it would be even better if right-wing obstructionists would just get out of the way.  

Cleveland’s Classical music scene has now fully recovered from COVID, and in some ways is even stronger than before 2020.  The Cleveland Orchestra continued with its savvy programming approach which included plenty of newer and unfamiliar older music alongside Classical favorites.  I went to too many concerts to go into detail here, but a highlight included Michael Sachs playing Wynton Marsalis’ new Concerto for Trumpet.   

Local business developments included the long overdue demolition of the Richmond Mall, to be replaced by Belle Oaks, a mixed-use development. 

Danny and I traveled to Palm Springs in the winter and New Mexico in the autumn, along with quick trips to Saugatuck in the spring and New England over Labor Day weekend.  The New Mexico trip was in part to scope out a potential winter home for when we retire, but the more I travel, the more I feel centered in Cleveland.  Life is so affordable here; everything we need – high culture, sports, cuisine, medical care – is within easy access; even the winters are becoming easier to manage.

Enjoying Maple Creemees in Vermont

I also made four solo trips: one trip to London which was, to be honest, not very enjoyable; and three trips to see family members from which I brought home happy memories.

In Florida with my niece and her son

With my sister and her husband.


This year also saw the continued evolution of a meaningful relationship with someone who had been in the periphery of my life until about two years ago.  We had some ups and downs in 2023, but the year ended on a high note and my friendship with this person has had a profound impact on my life 
 and I hope it has a positive impact on this person’s life.

On to 2024!









Thursday, December 28, 2023

My review of Cleveland Quartet - the Complete RCA Album Collection

 Amazon has published my latest review, of the Cleveland Quartet's complete RCA recordings - which includes a very fine performance of Beethoven's complete String Quartets.  Click here to read it




Monday, December 11, 2023

My review of Artur Rodziński's Cleveland Orchestra recordings

My review of Artur Rodziński & The Cleveland Orchestra - The Complete Columbia Album Collection has been published.  The 13CD set provides much musical food for thought for those interested in the history of The Cleveland Orchestra.  Click here to read the complete review.




Saturday, December 9, 2023

Anderson, Martinů, and Tchaikovsky at Severance

This weekend’s Cleveland Orchestra concerts at Severance Hall combined a US premiere, a local premiere, and a repertoire favorite for a most satisfying program.  The guest conductor was Semyon Bychkov.

The US Premiere was the Symphony No. 2, titled “Prague Panoramas,” by British composer Julian Anderson.  The work was not so much inspired by the city itself, which the composer didn’t visit until after the symphony was completed, but by a series of panoramic photographs taken by Josef Sudek.  The photos are of remarkable clarity, and so is Anderson’s comprehensive orchestration, which featured extensive percussion including a tuned Thai gong, ocean drum, vibraphone, marimba, and numerous types of bells – the latter a poignant reminder that during their occupation of Prague, the Nazis stripped the city of every bell they could find and sent them to Germany to be melted down for ammunition.  The work is more a series of textures and sonorities than a development of themes, and the composer’s approach is too cosmopolitan to confine the work’s inspiration to one city or nation.  It bears further hearing, particularly the central movement in which a desolate sensuality pervaded.  Bychkov, who premiered the symphony in London last year, led an assured, polished performance.  I've never seen Bychkov conduct before; it was a pleasure to observe how he conducted the orchestra and not the audience. 

Josef Sudek's panorama of Prague's Charles Bridge.

The Severance stage, 
showing the extensive orchestration for Anderson's Symphony.

Following intermission, conductor and orchestra were joined by duo pianists Katia and Marielle Labèque – the latter of whom is Bychkov’s wife – for Martinů’s Concerto for Two Pianos.  The work is dissimilar to other works in the genre.  Instead of contrasting passagework, the opening movement features the pianists doubling each other – a considerable challenge in coordination.  The central movement begins with some arresting runs on the pianos before settling into a narcoleptic spell – the sense of disorientation is enhanced by the fact that much of the piano part is written without bar lines.  The finale has an upbeat appeal, and the performance elicited an enthusiastic audience response.  The pianists offered an encore: a new rag-like work by Phillip Glass.

The Labèque sisters following the concerto.

What struck this listener most about Bychkov’s rendition of Tchaikovsky’s Romeo and Juliet Overture Fantasy was its musicality.  The conductor paid unusual attention to the lower levels of dynamics at the beginning – the little crescendos and decrescendos that bring music to life.  This was doubly effective as the fortissimos further into the piece seemed truly shocking.  Juliet’s theme was given an expansive, yet non-schmaltzy treatment.  Tchaikovsky revised the work over a decade’s time until he was satisfied with it.  It was a rare pleasure to hear the work played not as a well-worn warhorse, but as music worthy of respect.