This is not to say that classical music does not need to change and evolve, or that Greg Sandow's ideas are not worth musicians pursuing -- only that one tires of the apocalypse. After all, at least since Monteverdi, musicians or critics have been declaring that the true art is dead. What strikes me when attending a performance that supposedly represents the salvation of classical music is that audiences do exactly what they do in the concert hall under normal circumstances: they listen in silence. That is what we are supposed to do with this music we love so much, give it all of our attention. The New Lights concert, offered every year (2011, 2010, 2009) by the participants in the National Orchestral Institute at the University of Maryland, provides the chance for performers to "explore unconventional performance practice, technology and other artistic disciplines." The latest installment, heard on Thursday night at the Clarice Smith Center, experimented with only the first one from that list, but it was another chance to appreciate some of the ways that musicians can be innovative. It is always good to experience something new, but if all concerts followed this kind of format, I would probably stop going to them.
Anne Midgette, National Orchestral Institute at Strathmore (The Washington Post, June 30) Andrew Lindemann Malone, 45-Minute Workout: National Orchestral Institute and Festival’s “New Lights” Chamber Concert (DMV Classical, July 1) |
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