Here's an article I stumbled across on USA Today that addresses the issues
surrounding the merging of classical and popular forms with balance and a
refreshing lack of sophistry. That web site changes virtually every hour,
so I'm including the article below.
When pop meets classical
By David Patrick Stearns, USA TODAY
Any music lover emerging from a decade on a desert island could safely
assume the world is turning upside down.
Major pop and classical artists are switching places in ways few
would have guessed in the recent past. Samuel Barber's Adagio for
Strings is a British top-five hit in a dance-mix arrangement by
Madonna collaborator William Orbit. Pop artist Joe Jackson and jazz
pianist Chick Corea are writing concert works that are sizable and
laudable. Both the Berlin Philharmonic's Simon Rattle and the Chicago
Symphony Orchestra's Daniel Barenboim are recording Duke Ellington.
It's like a Leonard Bernstein fantasy come true. He always said the
gulf between high and low art is artificial; people should be able
to write a Top 40 hit one year, a symphony the next - as he did.
That makes perfect sense to Michael Kamen, the composer/arranger
who collaborated with Metallica on the hard-rock band's teaming with
the San Francisco Symphony last year but now is composing in a more
traditional mold. His first symphony, The New Moon in the Old Moon's
Arms, is being premiered and recorded Thursday through Saturday by
Washington's National Symphony Orchestra. Says Kamen, "It's the same
12 notes. Everything else is fashion and style."
However attractive the concept, it's hardly so simple.
Jackson's Symphony No. 1 (recorded on the Sony Classical label)
initially doesn't sound like a departure: The instrumentation is full
of reeds, Jackson's typical electronic keyboards, and pop rhythms
and harmonies. But its form dates to Beethoven.
Paul McCartney's two huge pieces, Liverpool Oratorio and Standing
Stone, are a departure. Written with musical secretaries because
McCartney doesn't read music, those works sound little like the pop
that made him famous.
In between are Billy Joel, whose charming, not-yet-recorded piano
solo works are a refinement of his songs and return to his classical
upbringing, and Elvis Costello, whose brainy rock 'n' roll easily
mutates into art songs for his latest singer of choice, Swedish opera
star Anne Sofie von Otter, and the more formal works heard on his
album The Juliet Letters. Who knows where Orbit's album Pieces in
a Modern Style will fit; the Feb. 8 release features dance arrangements
of less-than-foot-tapping works such as Beethoven's String Quartet
Op. 132 and John Cage's In a Landscape.
Kamen's case is what golfers would call a "chip shot." Thanks to a
versatility that allowed him to collaborate with Metallica (resulting
in the best-selling recording S&M) and score the film Mr. Holland's
Opus, Kamen's symphony was just another expression of the golden rule
he learned in his student years: "Every phrase is the inevitable
thing out of what came before."
And having known Kamen while both were students at the Juilliard
School of Music, National Symphony Orchestra music director Leonard
Slatkin was enthusiastic about commissioning him. "When you have
a gift, you should have as many outlets as possible," Slatkin says.
"And here you have a classically trained composer who has a lot to
say."
Musical crossovers in the other direction can look just as easy
but be twice as hard, as shown by singer Luciano Pavarotti's failed
attempts to sing pop. Therefore, Rattle made a point of working with
original Ellington band members, including Lena Horne, on his
forthcoming release to avoid any jazz-under-glass sterility.
That's also why Barenboim breathes an extra sigh of relief when
complimented on his new disc, Tribute to Ellington. Though his
interest in jazz grew out of a familiarity with tango in his native
Argentina, Barenboim really doesn't improvise: "I'm not a jazz
pianist. I don't pretend to be one. I play it in a way that I can
make a tribute to Ellington."
Both directions in this musical crisscrossing are driven by a
common factor: classical recording operations. While classical
standard-repertoire sales have fallen off, classical artists maintain
visibility by challenging their boundaries. Rattle recently recorded
the Bernstein Broadway show Wonderful Town. Russian violinist Gidon
Kremer has become a major exponent of tango.
The labels also welcome more ambitious projects by pop artists, who
are relieved not to contend with the higher sales expectations and
pressure for a hit single exerted by pop labels. And if they want
an orchestra, classical labels know right where to find one. Jackson
couldn't be happier with Sony Classical: "I don't care if it's called
Sony Bluegrass - if they're the people who want to work with me,
that's who I want to be with."
At the same time that today's pop-to-classical crossover artists
are evidencing more ambition than the rock bands of days past (Moody
Blues, Procol Harum, Deep Purple) that used an orchestra as a mere
backdrop, the idea of classical music itself is being revised. It
can be newer, more immediate and punchier, which is the philosophy
of Sony Classical president Peter Gelb, the unofficial godfather of
this movement.
Gelb, who has urged Titanic film composer James Horner to write
concert works, also persuaded concert composer John Corigliano to
write film music for The Red Violin, which is nominated for a Grammy.
"We're not only putting interesting combinations of artists together,"
Gelb says, "but we get music written and composed."
EMI doesn't just encourage McCartney's classical efforts - it
commissions them. "That Paul moves from songs into larger forms is
not so different from what songwriters did in the past," says EMI-Angel
general manager Gilbert Hetherwick. "At this point in his life, he
keeps pushing himself forward."
But all manner of artistic adjustments must be made. In writing
his symphony, Kamen missed the abandon of rock 'n' roll, which he
experienced in his student days as founder of the New York Rock 'n'
Roll Ensemble. He also had to clear his schedule: The symphony took
an entire year. That kind of time commitment is why jazz/classical
crossover figure Bobby McFerrin opted not to write a full-length work
for the San Francisco Opera, even though he was offered librettos by
Angels in America playwright Tony Kushner.
Better that than overstepping artistic bounds. Both Romulus Hunt,
a children's opera by Carly Simon, and Holy Blood and Crescent Moon
by Stewart Copeland, former drummer for The Police, were widely
regarded as major embarrassments.
Jackson was painfully aware of that potential in writing his symphony;
his decision to write it came slowly: "It has a lot to do with not
comparing myself to anyone else. If there's a reason it took so long
to do it, I was scared to be in competition with the giants of music.
At some point, I said to myself that I'm entitled."
With such genre-blurring comes marketing problems. The audience
crosses many age, economic and geographic boundaries; finding it can
require advertising budgets that devour profits. That's why Hetherwick
has become leery of one-off projects by label-hopping artists; those
who create a body of work can create long-term momentum.
The other problem is that stores refuse to stock a given release in
more places than one. Does Barenboim's Ellington belong in the jazz
section, where prospective buyers know Ellington but not Barenboim?
Will Kamen's symphony, which will be released on Decca, go in the
film-soundtrack section, where people know his name?
Both discs are more likely to be found in the classical section,
which could limit their discovery by a fringe, impulse-buying audience.
Internet buying helps solve such problems, Gelb says. But Kamen,
for instance, still will have to settle for a fraction of his usual
exposure.
He isn't overly perturbed: "It may be that Bach only reached 100
people in the church where he first played his cantatas, but every
day I play a little bit of Bach on piano, and hundreds of thousands
of others have had pleasure from those works. There's a longer shelf
life in making compositions that aren't songs."
A cross section of crossover hits
Here's a guide to recent genre-jumping works, encompassing
pop-to-classical, classical-to-jazz and jazz-to-classical crossovers:
Daniel Barenboim, Tribute to Ellington: Jazz musicians express their
personalities by the notes they play; classical musicians do so by
how they play them. Here, Ellington is treated to the glistening
tone and considered phrasing of concert pianist Barenboim, which may
seem a bit slick to Ellington fans but might provide a route into
this world for classical types.
Chick Corea, corea.concerto: Inspired by Mozart, Corea's Piano
Concerto No. 1 is full of elegant musical gestures within a happily
circumscribed range of expression, though it still sounds jazzy and
full of Corea's trademark effervescence. Spain for Sextet and
Orchestra is a colorful, captivating, engagingly sophisticated fantasy
on Corea's best-known composition, Spain.
Joe Jackson, Symphony No. 1: Though not as melodically attractive as
his best pop work, this is a genuine symphony wearing pop/jazz-orchestra
clothes, full of witty references to Beethoven and well-sustained
musical spans.
Paul McCartney, Working Classical: Though blessedly devoid of the
bombast of his past classical efforts, this series of miniatures
(some of which are instrumental transcriptions of his songs) has a
sameness that makes it fade into background music. Pleasant but
innocuous.
By David Patrick Stearns
(c) COPYRIGHT 2000 USA TODAY, a division of Gannett Co. Inc.
FYI, David Patrick Stearns is the claisscal music critic for USA Today, and
his most recent reviews can be read at:
http://www.usatoday.com/life/music/classic.htm
Dave
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http://www.classical.net/
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