Saturday, October 5, 2019

Violinist Anne-Sophie Mutter stops mid-concerto...

... as audience member starts filming

Violinist Anne-Sophie Mutter calls out smartphone use in concert
Violinist Anne-Sophie Mutter calls out smartphone use in concert. Picture: Getty
By Rosie Pentreath, ClassicFM London
17K
The smartphones that dominate our lives are becoming an increasing presence – and for many, a problem – at live music events. Does Anne-Sophie Mutter’s experience indicate that classical music is the latest frontier in our current ‘capture-the-moment’ madness?
Violinist Anne-Sophie Mutter was in the middle of performing Beethoven’s Violin Concerto last night when the glare of a smartphone stopped her mid-movement.
Mutter was performing the slow, middle movement of the concerto, when she suddenly stopped and confronted a member of the audience in the front row – because they had their phone out and were filming her performance.
The violinist used the pause in her playing to ask the audience member to stop recording and, during an exchange of apparently a few minutes, is reported to have said: “Either I will leave, or you will put away your phone and recording device.”
John Williams releases new album with violinist Anne-Sophie Mutter
The legendary film composer is collaborating with superstar violinist Anne-Sophie Mutter on a new album, featuring new arrangements of some of his most popular movie themes.
After the disruption, the audience member was escorted out of the concert hall. Mutter, and conductor Eun Sun Kim, began the slow movement of the concerto again.
Austin Larson was there, and has taken to social media to describe the incident.
Larson wrote in a Facebook post: “Respect the Art Form: Tonight in Cincinnati the CSO and our patrons were witness to a surreal mid-Beethoven violin concerto spectacle when soloist Anne-Sophie Mutter stopped cold halfway through the 2nd mvt to confront a millennial-looking audience member who was video recording the performance from the 2nd or 3rd row.
“When the offender had the gall to stand up(!) and talk back an argument ensued and was only defused when the CSO’s president got up from his seat to eject her from the hall before the 2nd mvt was replayed.
“Apologies Maestro Beethoven for the hideous desecration of your music and an extra apology on behalf of millennials for such a poor representation of our generation. Unbelievable!”
Several people have commented on the post, sharing their opinions of the incident – “unbelievable” writes one user – while also detailing similar incidents they’ve experienced in classical music:
“I walked out onstage for a solo performance in another country a few years back to the sight of over one hundred people holding up their phones to video my playing rather than really listening,” writes horn player Bill VerMeulen.
“I was shocked. Music is best live, period. Turn your phones off. Listen. Experience. Feel. Know.”
Anne-Sophie Mutter and Pablo Ferrández speak to Classic FM
The pair played Brahms' Double Concerto at Oxford's Sheldonian Theatre last week.
While smartphone intrusions remain relatively rare in live classical music concerts, they are an increasingly recognised problem in pop and rock gigs.
Back in June, pop sensation Billie Eilish used her Pyramid Stage spot to call out how people use their smartphones at gigs while suggesting they “live in the moment” rather than looking through their phone screens:
“All I ask is that we all try to live in the moment," the 17-year-old American singer said. “And a lot of the time I would say, ‘Put your phones away,’ but if you wanna film, that’s okay, just put it next to your face.”
She joined a long list of artists, including Guns N’ Roses, Jarvis Cocker, Alicia Keys, Kendrick Lamar and Adele, who have previously called out how smartphones are used at gigs.
While ringtones have been known to disrupt many a concert – here are four of the most noteworthy times captured on video, – ironically, we’ve so far managed to stay relatively at arms length of the smartphone, moment-capturing craze in classical music.
Last year, though, it was revealed that one in five teenagers claimed they would actually engage more with classical music if they could use their phones to capture moments and share them on social media during concerts.

Artist and orchestras have different approaches to phones in concerts, and that's fine. Classical music has a bright future in the age of 5G, live-streaming and instant messaging – we just hope for complete concertos alongside the Instagram sharing...

Thursday, September 26, 2019

A caricature artist has inserted Mr. Bean's face ...

... into great paintings and it’s just wonderful


Mr Bean by Rodney Pike
Mr Bean. Picture: Rodney Pike
By Kyle Macdonald, ClassicFM London
39K
Rowan Atkinson’s loveably hapless eccentric stars as the subject of the greatest works of art, from the Renaissance and beyond.
Over the last few years, artist and caricaturist Rodney Pike has taken on a substantial project, involving the entire history of art.
He has used all his skills in drawing and digital manipulation to painstakingly rework great paintings from the Renaissance to the 20th century. And you’ll be delighted to hear that he’s reimagined them to feature that star of small screen comedy, Mr Bean.
Here’s a tour of the magnificence, starring many of the iconic facial expressions of Rowan Atkinson’s most famous creation.
  1. John Singer Sargent’s Madame X

  2. An aristocratic Bean from Rembrant

  3. More Rembrandt

    Rowan Atkinson and that Olympic opening ceremony sketch
  4. Frank Cadogan Cowper’s ‘Vanity’ (with added Bean)

  5. Rembrandt’s Self Portrait

  6. If George Washington drove a yellow Mini

  7. Leonardo Da Vinci’s ‘Mona Lisa’

  8. Édouard Manet’s ‘Plum Brandy’

  9. Napoleon Beanaparte

  10. Gilbert Stuart Bean

10-year-old Emanne Beasha wows everynoe with a wonderful rendition of "Ebben"

Ravel: Shéhérazade - Radio Philharmonic Orchestra and mezzo-soprano Sash...

Debussy: Prélude à l'après-midi d'un faune - Radio Philharmonic Orchestr...

Thursday, September 12, 2019

This music meme is everywhere ...

...and it’s so wrong

Pop music meme
Pop music meme. Picture: Facebook
By Kyle Macdonald, ClassicFM London
Classical music versus pop? We've got some strong thoughts on this one...
In recent days a music meme has been widely shared on social media. It uses carrots and leaves to suggest a difference between ‘classical’ ‘pop’ music genres. The post on Facebook page Classical Music World Wide has now been shared over seven thousand times.
Memes are fun, and we don't usually take them too seriously (we promise). However, we had a few thoughts about this one.
The meme repurposes another meme, ‘Success’ is not always what you see', shared on 9gag and elsewhere a few years ago.

There is no classical music versus pop music

The history of classical music tells the story of blurred boundaries between classical forms and the popular music of the time. Gershwin and Stravinsky dived into jazz, Bach and Couperin composed suites in popular dance styles, and Chopin wrote salon music. Schubert based his Lieder on the music you'd usually have found in homes and salons.
And many composers of rock and pop explore things from the opposite direction: Billy Joel's piano music, Jonny Greenwood's film scores, or The Beach Boys’ pitch-perfect harmony and counterpoint are all good examples.
Styles, conventions and manners of composition may differ, but we reckon there’s no such thing as pure musical genres, in black and white with walls in between. Every boundary has been blurred so many times over the centuries, all one can say with any accuracy is: music is music.

‘Depth’ and ‘success’ in music is subjective and not technical

If you feel a piece of music has depth, richness, emotions, fascination, life or mystery, that’s one of the greatest feelings in the world. There’s not a formula for it, it’s what you feel, and like all experiences of art and creativity, it’s unique to you.
Musical complexity does not equal depth. It’s not the number of notes, it’s how those notes make you feel. And that’s true if it’s a mind-bending double fugue, an Ed Sheeran chord progression, or the two chord Adagio movement from Bach's Brandenburg Concerto No. 3.

Pop music can have huge musical depth

Check out an epic Lady Gaga key change that lands bang on the Golden Radio, the depth and character of Beyonce's voice, the compositional genius of Lennon/McCartney (we believe they were quite popular), and the use of tonal ambiguity in Ariana Grande's Thank you, NextPop music might often be intentionally catchy, sharable and digestible, but peel back a few layers and we think you’ll often find musical depth (and/or a big carrot).
And we're sure that both Franz Schubert and Lady Gaga will both confirm that a lot goes into a three minute song.

Classical music DOES have broad and immediate appeal

Classical music can reap powerful, immediate rewards, just as pop music does. Think the ‘Nessun Dorma‘ at the football world cup 1990, the climatic cadence of Mahler Symphony No. 2, the ear-worm that is Ravel’s Bolero, or that moment of Mozart in The Shawshank Redemption. Classical music’s carrot leaves can be very big too!

We don’t need to diminish other genres

We can all agree that classical music is awesome. But we don’t need to talk down any other style or musical experience to make that point. Let’s use our time celebrating the amazing things within classical music and its glorious blurred boundaries. It stands by itself just fine.
Oh, by the way, we fixed the meme:
Music meme
Music meme. Picture: Facebook