Monday, 4 March 2013

A Very Short Concert

We went to hear a concert at MOMA, staged in association with the exhibit "Inventing Abstraction" and curated by David Lang of Bang On a Can.   I went because I wanted to hear a very rare Schoenberg piece "Herzgewächse" which I have never heard performed. The piece is scored for soprano, harmonium, celesta, and harp.  Unfortunately, Lang's idea of an interesting concert to connect with this exhibit was to perform the 4 minute Schoenberg piece and a 50 minute Morton Feldman piece for solo voice and pre-recorded voice.   What a ridiculous choice!  (A piece by someone like Webern would have been far more appropriate.)  I like Feldman (see elsewhere in this blog..), but I don't have the patience to sit through a solo vocal piece of that length.   Since the concert was at MOMA, I went to the galleries, and popped into the concert to hear the Schoenberg, and then left.   The Schoenberg was a huge disappointment, because all the instruments and voice were AMPLIFIED!  This ruined all the delicate balances, as the harmonium was overamplified.   I was really annoyed. In addition, Lang's long spoken introduction was idiotic.   Institutions such as MOMA should learn to treat music with a little more respect.


Update:  Be sure to read David Lang's comment.  I do regret calling his talk idiotic, what I should have said was that the talk was pitched more at the level of a high school audience than at what one would presume to be an artistically oriented and sophisticated New York audience.

1 comment:

  1. sorry you didn't have the patience for the feldman - it was a great performance and the singer daisy press got a standing ovation when it was all over.

    one quick thing to mention is that that space in the basement of MOMA is a movie theater, and not a concert hall. you pretty much have to amplify everything in there or you won't hear a thing.

    about my idiotic introduction. you clearly go to a lot of concerts, but that concert and talk were specifically designed for members of MOMA, who may not be as familiar with classical music as you are. I never pass up an opportunity to invite people to become music lovers, even if I have to simplify the invitation....

    best,

    david lang

    ReplyDelete