Showing posts with label David Conte. Show all posts
Showing posts with label David Conte. Show all posts

Monday, December 8, 2025

SFCM Presents Two David Conte Compositions

Late yesterday afternoon I watched the latest livestream from the San Francisco Conservatory of Music (SFCM). The program consisted of two compositions by Composition Chair David Conte, one on either side of an intermission. The first half was a preview of his latest undertaking, a two-act opera with a libretto by Nicholas Giardini adapting the narrative of Charles Dickens’ novella, A Christmas Carol. The second was a suite based on music drawn from the first act of a projected two-act ballet setting Edgar Allan Poe’s tale, “The Masque of the Red Death.”

The performance of excerpts from A Christmas Carol with Brian Thorsett and Samuel Kidd singing the roles of Ebenezer Scrooge and Bob Cratchit, respectively

The opera excerpts began with the “Choral Prelude,” sung by the Nebula Consort prepared by Eric Choate. This was followed by three episodes, the first being the argument about Christmas between Ebenezer Scrooge (tenor Brian Thorsett) and Bob Cratchit (baritone Samuel Kidd). The second presented Scrooge’s confrontation with the ghost of Jacob Marley (bass Matt Boehler). Finally, Thorsett gave a solo performance of “Scrooge’s Credo.” The Dickens’ source has become so familiar that all of the vocal work was easily followed, even if it was not staged.

The suite was performed by the Bay Area Rainbow Symphony. In fact, it was one of the selections of the program they had performed the previous evening (Saturday, December 6), on which Conte’s suite was coupled by another suite by Claude Debussy (Petite Suite), with the entire program framed by familiar selections by Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky (the “Romeo and Juliet” Overture-Fantasy and excerpts from the Nutcracker ballet). The title of the Saturday program was Celebrating David Conte’s 70th birthday, and the occasion was the debut of Robert Mollicone as the new music director. Yesterday’s performance was basically a “replay” of the Conte selection.

The good news is that both of yesterday’s performances were engaging. However, that engagement was strong enough to overcome one of the worst livestream offerings from SFCM I have encountered. I should have been prepared for this, given my last livestream encounter this past September. On that occasion I wrote the following:

Sadly, the audio delivery could not have been weaker, meaning that I had to crank up the audio on my screen to the maximum level. Even then, there were passages that just did not come across, particularly in the quieter moments in the concluding selection, the “Concerto for Orchestra” by Witold Lutosławski.

Last night the vocalists managed to prevail, thanks to a thorough command of diction (not to mention listener familiarity with the narrative); but much of the instrumental content took it on the chin. A composer of Conte’s stature deserves better.

Friday, November 14, 2025

Choices for December 7, 2025

Having concluded last month with an article about two overlapping performances this coming December 6, I find myself with a similar overlap on the following afternoon. Two different programs will begin at 4 p.m. on Sunday, December 7. One will be the second installment of the Piano Portrait series presented by Noe Music, while the other will honor a major member of the San Francisco Conservatory of Music (SFCM) faculty. Specifics are as follows:

Poster design for Past, Present, and Future

Hume Concert Hall, SFCM: Past, Present, and Future is a special concert to honor David Conte, Chair of the SFCM Composition Department. There will be an exclusive preview of two scenes from his new opera A Christmas Carol, based on the novella by Charles Dickens. The program will also include the first suite extracted from his score for the ballet The Masque of the Red Death. This will be performed by Cyrus Ginwala conducting the Bay Areal Rainbow Symphony. The venue is located at 50 Oak Street, and there will be no charge for admission.

Noe Valley Ministry: Noe Music will present the second installment in its Piano Portraits series. The featured pianist will be Inon Barnatan. His program will be devoted entirely to Franz Schubert, with a performance of the D. 960 sonata in B-flat major filling the second half of the program. The program will begin with the first of the four impromptus collected in D. 935, composed in the key of F minor. The venue is located in Noe Valley at 1021 Sanchez Street. Reserved seating is sold out, but general admission tickets are available online from $15 to $45 on a first-come first-served basis.

Saturday, November 8, 2025

NCCO: A Sacred and Secular December

Artistic Director Valérie Sainte-Agathe conducting the San Francisco Girls Chorus

Next month the New Century Chamber Orchestra (NCCO), with Music Director Daniel Hope as Concertmaster, will join forces with the San Francisco Girls Chorus to present a program entitled In Winter’s Glow. When I wrote about this program in the season announcement, I called it a “holiday program;” but it would be more accurate to say that the selections will balance both the sacred and the secular. The former will consist of a set of traditional carols arranged by John Rutter, followed by William Billings’ choral composition “Bethlehem” and Benjamin Britten’s “A Wealden Trio: Christmas Song of the Women.” There will also be selections from Jake Heggie’s On the Road to Christmas.

The first half of the program will be devoted to three selections for string ensembles. These will be performed in reverse chronological order, beginning with Rutter’s 1973 Suite for Strings. This will be followed by Edward Elgar’s Opus 20, given the title “Serenade for String Orchestra.” Turning back the clock even further will be Antonio Vivaldi’s RV 580 concerto in B minor for four solo violins. Things will then turn back to the present with performance of “Northern Lights” by Norwegian composer Ola Gjeilo. The other secular offerings will be David Conte’s Two Winter Scenes and “Whispered and Revealed” by Nico Muhly.

The San Francisco performance of this program will take place on Saturday, December 13, beginning at 2 p.m. The venue will be St. Mark’s Lutheran Church, which is located on Cathedral Hill at 1111 O’Farrell Street, just west of the intersection with Franklin. Tickets may be purchased through a City Box Office Web page with prices between $35 and $80.

Sunday, September 28, 2025

SFCM Orchestra Off to a Disappointing Start

Last night I livestreamed the first performance of the season of the San Francisco Conservatory of Music (SFCM) Orchestra led by Edwin Outwater. As usual, the concert took place in the Caroline H. Hume Concert Hall. Sadly, the audio delivery could not have been weaker, meaning that I had to crank up the audio on my screen to the maximum level. Even then, there were passages that just did not come across, particularly in the quieter moments in the concluding selection, the “Concerto for Orchestra” by Witold Lutosławski.

The “core” of the program consisted of two familiar works by Claude Debussy. The intermission was preceded by “Ibéria,” the second of the three compositions collected in Images pour orchestre. Following the intermission, student conductor Chih-Yao Chang took the podium to lead the ensemble in “Prélude à l'après-midi d'un faune.” His performance was disciplined, and his engagement with the orchestra could not have been better. However, neither of the Debussy selections rose above the level of a dutiful account.

2010 photograph of David Conte (from his Wikipedia Web page)

Most disappointing was the opening selection of David Conte’s “Sinfonietta for Classical Orchestra.” This got the program off to an energetic start. However, it was clear that the video team was not really acquainted with the music. As a result, the account tended to reduce the overall experience as one of busy-work, where video direction informed by previous experience with the music (and, perhaps, a copy of the score) could have given the entire program the benefit of an energetic start.

Tuesday, September 23, 2025

SFCM Orchestra will Open Season with Conte

Edwin Outwater conducting the SFCM Orchestra in March of 2023 (from the SFCM event page for the concert being described)

Readers may recall that, about a month and a half ago, Pentatone celebrated composer David Conte’s 70th birthday with the release of the album whose full title is Intimate Voices: Chamber Music of David Conte. Conte is Composition Chair at the San Francisco Conservatory of Music (SFCM); and, this coming Saturday, the SFCM Orchestra will offer its own celebration by beginning the first concert of the season with Conte’s “Sinfonietta for Classical Orchestra.” As usual, the conductor will be Edwin Outwater.

Conte’s sinfonietta will be complemented at the conclusion of the program with the concerto for orchestra completed by Witold Lutosławski in 1954 (after about four years of effort). Between these “bookends” Outwater will conduct compositions by Claude Debussy on either side of the intermission. The first half of the program will conclude with “Ibéria,” the only multi-movement piece in the composer’s Images pour orchestre collection of three works, each inspired by a different European country. The intermission will then be followed by what is probably the most-performed of Debussy’s orchestral pieces, the “Prélude à l'après-midi d'un faune” (prelude to the afternoon of a faun). Student conductor  Chih-Yao Chang will take the podium for the performance of this work.

As of this writing, all tickets to the performance in the Caroline H. Hume Concert Hall at 50 Oak Street have been sold. The good news is that there will be a Vimeo livestream of the event. The Web page for this site has been created; but (obviously) the connection to the Concert Hall has not yet been activated. I plan to attend the performance through this site; and, in my past experiences, activation usually takes place about five or ten minutes prior to the beginning of the event.

Sunday, August 10, 2025

Pentatone to Celebrate Conte’s 70th Birthday

This coming Friday, Pentatone will release a new album whose full title is Intimate Voices: Chamber Music of David Conte. As is usually the case, Amazon.com has already created the Web page for pre-orders of the recording. Conte has received a moderate amount of attention on this site. He is, after all, “local talent,” teaching composition at the San Francisco Conservatory of Music. It was through the Conservatory that I first met him; and, while our exchanges have been relatively seldom, they have consistently been informative (at least from my point of view). I should also note, by way of disclaimer, that I have become familiar with several of the musicians performing Conte’s music on this new release.

David Conte (center) with Kevin Rivard (left) and Kevin Korth (right) (courtesy of PENTATONE)

The album concludes with Conte’s second piano trio, a four-movement composition performed by Samuel Vargas on violin, cellist Matthew Linamen, and Kevin Korth on piano. The four preceding works are all duos for piano with a different instrument. In “order of appearance,” these are as follows with the names of the performers corresponding to the instruments in the title:

  1. “Elegy for Violin and Piano” (Samuel Vargas and Kevin Korth)
  2. “Aria and Fugue for Cello and Piano” (Emil Miland and Miles Graber)
  3. “Sonata for French Horn and Piano” (Kevin Rivard and Kevin Korth)
  4. “Sonata for Clarinet and Piano” (Jerome Simas and Eric Zivian)

This is a decade’s worth of music, composed between 2014 and 2024. Conte was born on December 20, 1955, meaning that he will turn 70 at the end of this year. Following his graduate studies (master’s and doctoral) at Cornell University, he traveled to France where, between 1975 and 1978, he was one of the last students of Nadia Boulanger. As a result, he cultivated a rhetoric of lyricism in sharp contrast to the obsession with higher mathematics, which had invaded the efforts of those contemporary composers based in universities such as Columbia and Princeton.

What draws me to this album is Conte’s capacity to find just the right rhetorical devices for each of the instruments he selects for his compositions. This is far from a one-thing-after-another listening experience. The journey through the album is somewhat like opening the doors to a series of five different rooms. However, these are not the sinister room’s of Béla Bartók’s “Bluebeard’s Castle.” Rather, each room is graciously inviting in its own way. The attentive listener can enjoy the satisfaction of both lingering and then moving on to the next option!

Saturday, June 7, 2025

A British Account of Recent American Music

Cover of the Orchid Classics album being discussed (from the Presto Music Web page)

Last month, after about a week’s delay from the original plan, Orchid Classics released Midsummer Light. Michael Poll conducted the Royal Philharmonic Orchestra, but what piqued my attention was that all three of the composers on the album were American. The most familiar of these was Samuel Barber, the only composer no longer living. Violinist Jack Liebeck was the soloist in a performance of Barber’s Opus 14, his only concerto for violin and orchestra. The “overture” for this “program” was “Midsummer Music” by Byron Adams, born in 1955. The concluding “symphony” was the “Sinfonietta for Classical Orchestra” by Adams’ contemporary, David Conte.

Many readers probably know that Conte is based here in San Francisco, teaching composition at the San Francisco Conservatory of Music. Sadly, I have had few opportunities to experience his music in performance in spite of that proximity. In fact, it has been almost exactly a year since I last encountered a performance of his music when the San Francisco Gay Men’s Chorus performed the second movement from his “Elegy for Matthew Shepard” at Davies Symphony Hall.

As might be guessed, the “Sinfonietta” is more abstract with less of an “agenda.” The middle movement has the title “Elegy;” but Conte’s notes for the program book do not indicate any connection to his choral elegy. Rather, they dwell in his approaches to interplay among the different instrumental sonorities. As a result, “Sinfonietta” serves as a companion to Barber’s concerto, which also explores different sonorities to provide “context” for the violin soloist.

It is also worth noting that the booklet included in the album provides its own explanation for how the overall program was organized:

Midsummer Light brings together three works that explore lyrical expression within American modernism. Rooted in a neo-romantic tradition that nonetheless embraces 20th‑century harmonic innovation, formal clarity, and lyricism, these pieces stand in deliberate opposition to the hyper‑rationalism of mid‑century serialism and the stark minimalism that followed. These composers cultivate rich tonal palettes, transparent orchestration, and emotional directness that assert a distinctly American voice.

Those that read my account of last night’s performance of “Rewilding” by Gabriella Smith by the San Francisco Symphony may wonder if I am more comfortable in the last century than I am in the present. Granted, the two living composers on this album are old enough to have been Smith’s teachers. Nevertheless, I feel I have had a healthy share of music from the last few decades; and those experiences have balanced perfectly well in the context of the past century. Personally, I am just glad to have the opportunity to experience several contrasting generations of living composers!

Thursday, March 20, 2025

Plan for David Conte’s 2025 Faculty Artist Recital

Composer David Conte (from the Web page for the forthcoming recital of his compositions)

Almost exactly a year ago this site announced David Conte’s Faculty Artist Recital at the San Francisco Conservatory of Music. This year’s installment will begin with a world premiere followed by a retrospective account of solo piano music from the last quarter of the last century. The remaining two works on the program were composed in 2018 and 2023, respectively.

The program will begin with the world premiere. The San Francisco Girls Chorus will sing two a cappella settings of poems by Donald Jeffrey Hayes: “Threnody” and “Benediction.” They will be led by their Artistic Director Valérie Sainte-Agathe. This will be followed by the earliest work on the program, a three-movement sonatine for solo piano, composed between 1975 and 1978, which will be performed by Daniel Strebulaev.

In contrast to the Hayes poems, soprano Ellen Leslie will sing settings of three of the witty verses by Ogden Nash, completed in 2018. Her accompanist at the piano will be Kevin Korth. The program will continue with another vocal selection, “The Young Mother,” sung by bass-baritone Enrico Lagasca. He will be accompanied by the Friction Quartet, whose members are violinists Kevin Rogers and Otis Harriel, Mitso Floor on viola, and cellist Doug Machiz. Friction will then conclude the program with the second (Scherzo) movement from Conte’s third string quartet, which he completed last year.

Wednesday, June 19, 2024

SFGMC’s Love-Themed Program at Davies

Last night the San Francisco Gay Men’s Chorus (SFGMC) returned to Davies Symphony Hall to perform their third annual concert. A reduced ensemble of San Francisco Symphony performers was joined by pianist Danny Sullivan. The conductor was SFGMC Artistic Director Jacob Stensberg, also serving as Master of Ceremonies to introduce the works on the program, whose title was All We Need Is Love.

I was a bit surprised that the program did not include the selection with the name of the entire performance. However, there was so much rich content being performed that I could not quibble over such a minor factor. That diversity was reflected by the fact that only three of the composers on the program were familiar to me. Curiously, these were the first three selections on the program.

This began with the second movement from David Conte’s “Elegy for Matthew Shepard.” The text by John Stirling Walker reflected on the death of the 21-year old student at the University of Wyoming, who was beaten, tortured, and left to die for his sexual orientation. Text sheets were not included with the program, but the clarity of the vocal delivery could not have been better. (There were also American Sign Language interpreters at the front-right corner of the stage.) This was followed by the oldest work on the program, the cycle by Ralph Vaughan Williams entitled Five Mystical Songs. The last familiar composer was Michael Tilson Thomas (present for the occasion), whose “I’d Like to Learn” was given a choral arrangement by Nicolas Perez. In addition, the first half of the program concluded with the world premiere performance of “The Promise that Tomorrow Holds Today,” composed by Dominick DiOrio setting his own text.

The biggest surprise for me during the second half of the program was the discovery that “My Way,” best known by its 1969 recording by Frank Sinatra, was not an original tune. The music began as a ballad by French composer Jacques Revaux, who later reworked it with Claude François into “Comme d’habitude” (as usual), which made the top of the French pop chart in February of 1968. It was subsequently given an English version by Paul Anka with the title “My Way;” and the rest, as they say, is history. However, SFGMC turned back the clock to deliver a choral version of “Comme d’habitude” in an arrangement by Saunder Choi.

The members of The Lollipop Guild in an urban setting (from an SFGMC Web page)

The second half of the program also featured selections performed by two smaller ensembles of chorus members. The smaller of these was HomoPhonics, which presented “Elastic Heart,” the only work on the program with accompaniment from a beat box. Somewhat larger was The Lollipop Guild with Music Director Paul Saccone, which performed Aled Phillips’ arrangement of “Biblical,” a single recorded by Calum Scott that seems to have been composed by a committee.

The other high point of the second half was a partnership with the San Francisco Bay Area Theatre Company with semi-staged direction by Rodney Earl Jackson Jr. and choreography by Christine Chung. The music was “I, Too, Sing America,” composed by Othello Jefferson, whose own texts were combined with those of Langston Hughes. This was clearly the most elaborate undertaking of the evening, making the best of the limited space available for performance.

Taken as a whole, the program was an ambitious undertaking; but it was thoroughly engaging from beginning to end.

Tuesday, April 2, 2024

SFCM: David Conte’s Faculty Artist Series Recital

David Conte’s second piano trio performed by Samuel Vargas, Kevin Korth, and Matthew Linaman (screenshot from livestream of last night’s performance)

Last night in the Sol Joseph Recital Hall of the San Francisco Conservatory of Music (SFCM), composer David Conte presented his Faculty Artist Series Recital. The program began and concluded with duo and trio chamber music compositions for violin (Samuel Vargas), viola (Zoe Yost), and piano trio (Vargas performing with cellist Matthew Linaman and Kevin Korth on piano). Pianist Paja Cajic accompanied both of the preceding duo performances. Between the those two pieces were excerpts from music composed for staged productions. The first of these was a one-act ballet based on the novel Brokeback Mountain, completed last year. This was followed by an aria from East of Eden, composed in 2022 and orchestrated in 2024. Both were performed by the SFCM Chamber Ensemble, conducted by Conte and Joseph Marcheso, respectively.

I have to confess that neither of those excerpts had much of an impact on my listening experience. Neither seemed to rest on a firm rhetorical foundation, particularly if one tried to associate the music with its literary sources. This was particularly evident where John Steinbeck’s novel was concerned. This amounts to a twentieth-century perspective on the early chapters of Genesis in which the “Eden” is the rich agricultural terrain in the middle of the state of California. Performed without context, it was hard to appreciate the nature of the aria text that Christian Purcell sang.

The instrumental selections were far more satisfying. Indeed, there were narrative qualities in the piano trio that were easier to apprehend and impressively rich in diversity. I was also struck by how the Passacaglia movement of the trio reflected on its “Bach ancestry” by extending the series of variations with a concluding fugue. Where the duos were concerned, both Vargas and Yost clearly grasped the expressiveness of the music, making for engaging listening experiences. All three of those selections were decidedly memorable, and it may be that the music composed for the stage fares better in a more dramatic setting.

Sunday, March 17, 2024

David Conte to Begin April with Latest Showcase

Composer David Conte (photographer unknown, from Wikimedia Commons, licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 4.0 International license)

Prior to the previously reported last round of highlighted events for the spring semester at the San Francisco Conservatory of Music (SFCM), next month will begin with composer David Conte’s Faculty Artist Recital. The program will present some of his latest efforts, along with earlier selections, the earliest having been composed in 2004. The music will be performed by the SFCM Chamber Ensemble, conducted by Joseph Marcheso, along with pianists Paja Cajic and Kevin Korth, cellist Matthew Linamen, violinist Samuel Vargas, violist Zoe Yost, and bass-baritone Christian Pursell.

The Chamber Ensemble will perform excepts from Conte’s most recent work, a one-act ballet score based on the novel Brokeback Mountain. The excerpts will be the Prologue and first scene. He has also been working on an orchestration of his East of Eden opera; and Pursell will sing Cal’s aria with the Chamber Ensemble.

The other three selections on the program will be instrumental chamber music. The first of these will be the “Elegy” composed in 2014, performed by Vargas accompanied by Cajic. The remaining two works will occupy the second half of the program. The first of these will be the coupling of aria and fugue movements, composed in 2004, scored for viola (Yost) and piano (Cajic). The program will then conclude with Conte’s 2022 piano trio, his second. The performers will be Vargas, Linamen, and Korth.

This performance will take place at 7:30 p.m. on Monday, April 1. The venue will be the Sol Joseph Recital Hall, located on the lower floor of the SFCM building at 50 Oak Street, a short walk from the Van Ness Muni station. Tickets may be reserved from the event page for this concert. That Web page also includes a hyperlink for live-stream viewing (and listening).

Thursday, November 9, 2023

BARS Announces Program for California Festival

This past Sunday the Bay Area Rainbow Symphony (BARS) announced that it would be part of this month’s California Festival: A Celebration of New Music. More specifically, the orchestra will be the only LGBTQ organization participating in the Festival. The concert will be dedicated to the memory of the late Michael Morgan, the former Music Director of the Oakland Symphony, who had conducted BARS on three occasions.

Dawn Harms, Music Director of BARS

Before his death, Morgan had commissioned David Conte, Chair of the Composition Department at the San Francisco Conservatory of Music, to write a cello concerto to be performed by soloist Emil Miland. That concerto will be given its first performance as part of the coming BARS program. Following usual practices, the program will begin with an overture, the “Mountain Festival Overture,” composed by Seth Grosshandler.

On the other hand, the second half of the program will not present the usual symphony offering. Instead, it will consist of suites from two major ballets choreographed during the first half of the twentieth century. The first of these will be based on Aaron Copland’s music for “Billy the Kid;” and it will be followed by one of the three suites that Igor Stravinsky extracted from his score for “The Firebird.” As usual, the orchestra will be conducted by Music Director Dawn Harms.

The performance will take place in the Caroline H. Hume Concert Hall, which is in the 50 Oak Street building of the San Francisco Conservatory of Music. The concert will begin at 7:30 p.m. on Saturday, November 18. All tickets are being sold for between $10 and $40. They may be purchased online through a Tix event page, which includes a “map” showing which seats are currently available.

Wednesday, November 1, 2023

SFCS Brings World Premiere to Festival

Norwegian composer Ola Gjeilo (photograph by Anna-Julia Granberg, courtesy of Decca)

This month the San Francisco Choral Society (SFCS) will conclude its 2023 season with its contribution to the California Festival: A Celebration of New Music. The new music for this program, which will be led by Artistic Director Robert Geary, will be the world premiere of a commissioned composition. Brontë is a choral work in eight movements scored for four-part (SATB) chorus, strings, and piano. The texts are based on excerpts from poems by Emily Brontë, and the music was composed by Norwegian Ola Gjeilo. This will be the opening selection on the program.

It will be followed by other works inspired by poetry, John Corigliano’s “Fern Hill,” based on a poem by Dylan Thomas, and David Conte’s setting of Langston Hughes’ poem “I Dream a World.” The major work on the program will be Johannes Brahms’ Zigeunerlieder (gypsy songs), consisting of nineteenth-century settings of folk songs inspired by the Hungarian Romani tradition. Brahms’ Opus 103 consists of eleven of those songs, to which he added another four from his Opus 112b.

The San Francisco performance of this program will take place at Calvary Presbyterian Church on Sunday, November 19, beginning at 4 p.m. As many readers probably already know, the church is located in the Fillmore district at 2515 Fillmore Street, located on the northwest corner of Jackson Street. Tickets range in price from $37 to $53; and they may be purchased through a City Box Office Web page. Discounted tickets are available for seniors and students, and all tickets may also be purchased by calling 415-392-4400.

Tuesday, September 12, 2023

SFCM to Present Alumni Song Recital

Readers may recall that, a little over a month ago, this site announced the first performances of the San Francisco Conservatory of Music (SFCM) Orchestra and the New Music Ensemble as the “highlights” for this month. However, yesterday morning I learned of a program in the Alumni Recital series that will take place this coming Friday. More specifically, the program will be performed by the husband-and-wife couple of pianist Brian Fitzsousa and soprano Carolyn Bacon, both of whom are alumni. (“For the record,” as they say, Bacon’s range extends beyond the usual soprano boundaries.)

They have prepared an impressively eclectic program of songs by American composers. These will be arranged in five sets as follows:

1. Charles Strouse (1928), Stephen Schwartz, (1948) Rags: “Blame it on a Summer Night” 
2. David Conte (1955), Anne Sexton (1928) Sexton Songs: “Her Kind” 
3. Kurt Weill (1900), Langston Hughes (1901) Street Scene: “Lonely House” 
4. Conte, Sexton Songs: “Riding the Elevator into the Sky”
*** 
5. Aaron Copland (1900), Emily Dickinson (1830) Twelve Poems of Emily Dickinson: “The world feels dusty”
6. Copland, Dickinson Twelve Poems of Emily Dickinson: “Heart, we will forget him”
7. Carmel Dean, Edna St. Vincent Milay (1892) Renascence: “Time Does Not Bring Relief”
8. Copland, Dickinson Twelve Poems of Emily Dickinson: “When they come back”
9. Dean, Millay Renascence: “Elegy”
***
10. Tom Cippulo (1956), Lisel Mueller (1924) Of a Certain Age: Magnolia
11. Brian Fitzsousa (1992), William Butler Yeats (1865) “The Lake Isle of Innisfree”
12. Ned Rorem (1923), Paul Goodman (1911) “The Lordly Hudson”
13. Adam Guettel (1964) Myths and Hymns: “Migaratory V”
***
14. William Bolcom (1938), Arnold Weinstein (1940) Cabaret Songs: “Waitin”
15. Stephen Sondheim (1930) Company: “Someone is Waiting”
16. John Bucchino (1952) “Sweet Dreams”
***
17. Marc Blitzstein (1905) Juno: “I Wish it So”
18. Ricky Ian Gordon (1956), Dickinson “Will There Really Be a Morning”
19. Guettel The Light in the Piazza: “The Light in the Piazza”

This performance will be held in the Barbro Osher Recital Hall on the top floor of the SFCM Bowes Center at 200 Van Ness Avenue, on the southeast corner of Hayes Street. It will begin at 7:30 p.m. on this coming Friday, September 15. According to the event page, there will be no livestream. Those planning to attend should make reservations through the hyperlink on that page. There will be no charge for admission.

Tuesday, April 11, 2023

A Showcase of the Music of David Conte

Last night at the San Francisco Conservatory of Music, composer David Conte presented his Faculty Artist Series program surveying his recent works and concluding with a sonata that dates back to 1981. The concert took place in the Barbro Osher Recital Hall and was very effectively live-streamed. Conte compiled a diversity of genres, the most interesting (at least for me) being a four-movement partita for marimba and piano, completed last year.

Pianist Kevin Korth performing with Jonas Koh on marimba (screen shot from last night’s streamed performance)

Two students shared the marimba performance with Brandon Topolski playing the first two movements (“Prelude” and “Canon”) and Jonas Koh playing the conclusion (“Chorale Prelude” and “Gigue”). I have to confess that I was a bit skeptical about bringing a piano into the mix. However, I have heard Kevin Korth on many occasions performing with a wide variety of instrumentalists and vocalists; and he had clearly found just the right dynamic range to fit in with the marimba. Fortunately, the video stream provided an excellent view of the marimba players, allowing one to appreciate the extent of which performance is a matter of not only musicianship but also “whole body management” of the sort one is more likely to encounter in ballet and modern dance.

Korth also served as pianist for the premiere performance of Two Winter Scenes, settings of texts by Walter de la Mare and Adam Christensen sung by soprano Hailey Gutowski. The instrumentation also included a cello performed by Emil Miland. The other vocal offering was the opening selection, “Charm Me Asleep,” performed by the San Francisco Choral Artists led by their Music Director Magen Solomon but originally composed for the fifteenth anniversary of Chanticleer.

The “Elegy” movement from Conte’s second piano trio was performed by students: Ericsson Hatfield on violin, Kyle Stachnik on cello, and Oliver Moore on piano. The other pianist for the evening was Dale Tsang, who accompanied Jerome Simas in a performance of the second (Lento molto) movement of a clarinet sonata completed in 2019. At the conclusion of the program Korth and Tsang joined forces for the first two movements of the 1981 sonata for two pianos.

The result was a program that was relatively brief but engagingly imaginative for the breadth of resources required for the selections being performed.

Thursday, March 2, 2023

Music for Choir and String Coming to St. Mark’s

Members of the Sacred & Profane Chamber Chorus performing in St. Mark’s Lutheran Church (from the group’s new events Web page)

This is a last-minute announcement for a vocal ensemble previously unknown to me. The group is the Sacred & Profane Chamber Chorus, and this coming Saturday they will present a program entitled Considering This Moment: Music with Strings. The members of the Circadian String Quartet (violinists David Ryther and Monika Gruber, violist Omid Assadi, and cellist David Wishnia) will recruit fellow string players, such as violinist Michèle Walther of the Town Quartet, to provide the instrumental ensemble. The composers contributing to the program will be as follows:

  • Zanaida Robles: “No Fairytale Here” is a setting of writings by the African American suffragist Ida B. Wells that includes spoken voice.
  • David Conte: “September Sun” was composed as a memorial for the victims of the September 11 attacks.
  • Eric Whitacre: The title Three Hebrew Love Songs speaks for itself, and the music was scored for choir and string quartet.
  • Karin Rehnqvist: Day is here! is a collection of settings of texts by indigenous poets that suggest a response to a world that is struggling with a changing climate, all scored for choir, soloists, and strings.

The San Francisco performance of this program will take place at 8 p.m. this coming Saturday, March 4. The program is expected to last for 90 minutes. The venue will be St. Mark’s Lutheran Church, which is located at 1111 O’Farrell Street, just west of Franklin Street. General admission will be $28 with a $10 rate for students. Tickets may be purchased online through an Eventbrite Web page.

Wednesday, February 22, 2023

SFCA to Celebrate Both Sound and Silence

In about a month’s time San Francisco Choral Artists (SFCA) will present the next program in its 2022–2023 season. The title of the program is Sound and (not much) Silence. As can be seen below, its poster design presents a whole rest in the middle of a very active audio waveform:

Once again, the program will include world premiere performances of works by Composer-in-Residence Clark Evans and Composer-Not-in-Residence Caroline Mallonee. The more familiar composers will be (in alphabetical order) Johannes Brahms, William Byrd, Elliott Carter, David Conte, Fanny Mendelssohn, and Ralph Vaughan Williams. The repertoire will be equally diverse, including Hebrew psalms, German part songs, Renaissance motets, Ladino lullabies, thoughtful meditations, and a vigorous Zulu song of encouragement.

This program will be performed in San Francisco at 4 p.m. on Sunday, March 19. The venue will St. Mark’s Lutheran Church, located at 1111 O’Farrell Street, just west of the corner of Franklin Street. General admission at the door will be $35 with a $30 rate for seniors and $15 for those under the age of 30. However, SFCA has created a Web page that will enable advance reservation on a pay-what-you-will basis. Online ticket sales will close at 11 p.m. on Saturday, March 18.

The COVID policy for this event (which is, of course, subject to change) is as follows: “Proof of vaccination is not required to attend our concerts. We focus on spacing and masking to keep our audience and singers safe. Patrons are required to wear a well-fitted mask at performances. N95 masks will be available for those who need a mask or a mask upgrade. If you do not feel well, or feel that you are a transmission risk because of an exposure before a performance, please guard your health and the health of others by staying home. Refunds are gladly given in this circumstance.”

Sunday, February 13, 2022

David Conte to Present Four World Premieres

Composer David Conte (photographer unknown, from Wikimedia Commons, licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 4.0 International license)

Early next month composer David Conte will use his Faculty Artist Recital at the San Francisco Conservatory of Music (SFCM) to present a program featuring four world premiere performances. These works will be presented by an impressive roster of performers, all both dear friends and long-time colleagues of the composer. In the order of the program that has been prepared, the new works are as follows:

  1. A partita for violin and cello to be performed, respectively, by Kay Stern and Emil Miland
  2. A sonata for French horn and piano with pianist Kevin Korth accompanying Kevin Rivard
  3. An aria from the opera East of Eden to be sung by bass-baritone Christian Pursell, accompanied by Korth
  4. The composer’s second piano trio to be performed by the Lee Trio of violinist Lisa Lee, cellist Angela Lee, and pianist Melinda Lee Masur

In addition, soprano Marnie Breckenridge will revisit her performance of Sexton Songs, which she had recorded, in its chamber ensemble version, for Conte’s Everyone Sang album, released in June of 2018. For this recital Korth will provide her accompaniment.

This performance will take place at 7:30 p.m. on Monday, March 7. The venue will be the Sol Joseph Recital Hall, located on the lower floor of the SFCM building at 50 Oak Street, a short walk from the Van Ness Muni station. Tickets may be reserved from the event page for this concert. That Web page also includes a hyperlink for live-stream viewing (and listening).

Friday, October 15, 2021

Three Listening Opportunities for David Conte

Composer David Conte (photographer unknown, from Wikimedia Commons, licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 4.0 International license)

Between now and November 8, there will be three opportunities to listen to performances of music composed by David Conte. Conte is Chair of Composition on the Faculty of the San Francisco Conservatory of Music (SFCM). All three of the performances will be vocal recitals. There will be no charge for admission at any of the events. The two performances that will take place at SFCM will be live-streamed. To the best of my knowledge, the remaining concert will be “strictly physical.” Specifics are as follows:

Friday, October 22, 7:30 p.m., Barbo Osher Recital Hall, Bowes Center, SFCM: Conte’s cycle of four songs entitled Everyone Sang will be performed by baritone Matthew Worth, accompanied by pianist Kevin Korth.

Sunday, October 24, 5 p.m., The Episcopal Church of St. Mary the Virgin: The program for the October installment in the Candlelight Concert Series will begin with a performance of “In Paradisum,” the last of the three songs in Conte’s Requiem Songs collection. Soprano Ellen Leslie will be accompanied by harpist Douglas Roth and Eric Choate on organ. The church is located at 2325 Union Street at the southwest corner of Steiner Street in Cow Hollow. [updated 1/1, 5:35 p.m.: The following concert has been cancelled:

Monday, November 8, 7:30 p.m., Caroline H. Hume Concert Hall, SFCM: Brian Thorsett will present a program of three song cycles for tenor and chamber orchestra. The SFCM Chamber Orchestra will be conducted by Jeffrey Thomas. Conte’s selection will be his American Death Ballads collection of four songs.]

Sunday, March 17, 2019

BARS Program of American Discovery

Three of the offerings in last night’s Bay Area Rainbow Symphony (BARS) program, conducted by Music Director Dawn Harms in the Taube Atrium Theater, were by American composers. However, none of them get very much exposure in the concert hall; and one of them was all but unknown for about the last half-century. The program thus offered an opportunity to consider the history of American music from previously unconsidered perspectives.

The offering most likely to be familiar was a relatively brief composition by Aaron Copland based on music he had composed for the 1940 film version of Thornton Wilder’s play Our Town, directed by Sam Wood. Wilder had conceived the stage play as an appeal to the imagination, keeping sets and costuming to be barest possible minimum, allowing the words of the characters (including a Stage Director) to evoke images in the minds of each member of the audience. As might be guessed, the Hollywood “industry” did not buy into that minimality; but Copland conceived a score that appeals to the memory of anyone who has seen Out Town as Wilder originally conceived it.

To evoke my favorite quote from Buckminster Fuller, Copland could be a master at “making more and more with less and less.” Thematic material is stripped down to a bare minimum, recalling images of Wilder’s almost-empty stage more than the richly fleshed-out images developed under the supervision of Sol Lesser, the film’s producer. Harms knew exactly how to keep that minimality under control, making sure that even the most subtle of changes would be recognized. Dynamics were kept to an intense hush until the rise to a single thundering climax near the conclusion of the score. While Wood’s film gets very little exposure, this composition would not be out of place if played as an overture to a staging based on Wilder’s thorough text descriptions.

These days Copland’s name is seldom associated with such quietude. He is known more for bold and brash sonorities that reverberate with the American optimism that thrived through so much of the twentieth century. (Born in 1900 and living for 90 years, Copland experienced almost the entirety of that century.) San Francisco composer David Conte had the good fortune to study with both Copland and Copland’s best-known teacher, Nadia Boulanger. He was invited by conductor Neal Gittleman to compose an overture in honor of the centennial of Copland’s birth; and the result was “A Copland Portrait,” a title clearly chosen as a nod to Copland’s own “Lincoln Portrait.”

Conte’s overture could almost be taken as a Cook’s tour of Copland’s favorite idioms. Instrumentation is rich with winds, brass, and percussion; and even the timpani gets a crack at thematic motifs. The energy of the pacing is positively electric, easily triggering memories of Copland’s brash assertiveness in compositions such as “El Salón México” and scores for ballets such as “Rodeo” and “Billy the Kid.” Nevertheless, none of those triggers involve explicit appropriation: Conte developed his own thematic vocabulary to celebrate Copland without imitating him. “A Copland Portrait” served as the overture for the entire evening, thus providing the best possible contrast to that other side of Copland that was inspired by Wilder’s play.

The least known of the Americans on last night’s program was Florence Price. During her lifetime Price was a prodigious and imaginative composer, the first African-American woman to have her music played by a major orchestra. However, shortly after her death on June 3, 1953, she became all but forgotten for a good half-century. More recently her work has begun to emerge on recordings (one of which was discussed yesterday on this site); and the Oakland East Bay Symphony recently played her third symphony in C minor. Last night BARS devoted the second half of its program entirely to her first symphony in E minor.

For the record, I heard the phrase “just like Dvořák” twice last night before Harms raised her baton to conduct the symphony’s first movement. Price certainly knew more than a thing or two about Antonín Dvořák’s techniques as a symphonic composer, and one can appreciate that his may have been a light that guided her through her first major orchestral undertaking. Nevertheless, she developed her own thematic vocabulary and had no trouble drawing upon her source material as a “native,” rather than a “visitor.”

The first thing that will probably strike anyone reading the program page is that she abandoned the “Scherzo” label in favor of “Juba Dance.” This was her own “first-hand” account of the influences behind so many folk and jazz practices; and she had no trouble migrating those influences into a symphonic setting that never felt pedantically manipulated. Mind you, she seemed to have a particular love of gradual crescendo passages, resulting in much of that same “vast expanse” rhetoric that we now take as Copland’s bread and butter. However, the E minor symphony is definitely in Price’s own distinctive voice, and Harms knew exactly how to allow that voice to speak with all the clarity and rhetoric behind it.

The concerto selection for the evening, on the other hand, served to highlight a competition that Harms conceived with BARS support. The winner was the young guitarist Alan Holcomb; and he performed as soloist in Joaquín Rodrigo’s “Concierto de Aranjuez.” Composed in 1939, it became one of the most popular concert selections for guitar and orchestra by the second half of the twentieth century. (It also inspired the first track on the album that may well be the one most frequently associated with Miles Davis, Sketches of Spain.) Last night Harms led an account that not only featured Holcomb’s virtuoso capabilities but also highlighted the strikingly fresh approaches to instrumentation that distinguished Rodrigo in all of his orchestral compositions.

Taken as a whole, the program was a delightful celebration of the wide scope of orchestral expressiveness that the BARS musicians command, all presented in a setting that turned out to be a thoroughly engaging journey of discovery.