Lawrence Budmen Writer and Music ConsultantA native of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, Lawrence Budmen is a former cellist and teacher. He has attended hundreds of concert and opera performances around the globe. Mr. Budmen is a freelance writer and music consultant. He has written reviews for numerous publications including the South Florida Sun-Sentinel,
Miami Herald, Coral Gables Gazette, and ENV Magazine formerly known as Entertainment News & Views. Additionally, Mr. Budmen is Florida correspondent for the internet publication Music and Vision. He has also been program annotator for several concert series including Symphony of the Americas, Sunday Afternoons of Music and the new Boca Raton Philharmonic Symphonia. An archive of his reviews and commentaries on music can be found on this website.


As a freelance writer, Mr. Budmen is available to write program notes for concert series worldwide. He is also available for feature articles and reviews for newspapers, magazines, and on-line publications. He welcomes all comments and inquiries. LBudmen@msn.com.

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Amadeus Press


 

1. MUTI TO CHICAGO –
The recently announced appointment of Riccardo Muti as the next Music Director of the Chicago Symphony promises to commence a beautiful relationship. One of the world’s great conductors, Muti (at age 66) is in his prime. Long one of the world’s great orchestras, the Chicago Symphony is now an even more flexible, refined instrument than in its glorious past. 

Although best known for his work in opera (including a stormy two decade reign as Artistic Director of Milan’s La Scala), Muti has vast orchestral experience. His decade long tenure as Music Director of the Philadelphia Orchestra was noted for sumptuous concert versions of Italian operatic repertoire (featuring major international stars) and a wide ranging overview of contemporary music. The Muti-Philadelphia recordings still resonate with electrifying music making. Chicago has much to look forward to. Potentially, this is a dream combination of great conductor and world class orchestra.


2.
NEWS AND COMMENTARY 2008
SURPRISE APPOINTMENTS
– Two recent music director appointments by mid-level American orchestras are more than a little surprising. The Milwaukee Symphony is a solid, reliable ensemble, finely honed in the 1970’s and 80’s by the late Kenneth Schermerhorn, a superb orchestra builder. The subsequent music directorships of Zdenek Macal and Andreas Delfs have brought European authority and rising orchestral standards to the Wisconsin ensemble. Now the orchestra has pulled off a coup. The renowned Dutch conductor Edo DeWaart will assume the group’s helm in the 2009-2010 season. DeWaart put the Rotterdam Philharmonic on the musical map over three decades ago. He did much the same for Australia’s Sydney Symphony during the 1990’s. This flying Dutchman has also held the music directorships of the San Francisco Symphony, Minnesota Orchestra, and Netherlands Radio Philharmonic. In 2009 he becomes principal conductor of the Santa Fe Opera, concurrent with his on-going directorship of the Hong Kong Philharmonic. Indeed this conductor’s itinerary is really dizzying!

In an unusual move, the Milwaukee Symphony did not conduct a formal music director search. The orchestra’s management heard that DeWaart and his family had moved to a Milwaukee suburb. Informally they approached the conductor about a possible directorship. He had never led the orchestra or even heard it. Instead of a public concert, Milwaukee Symphony officials arranged for two days of private rehearsals during which DeWaart conducted works by Strauss and Elgar. Both conductor and musicians were impressed. DeWaart publicly stated that the Milwaukee Symphony was in better artistic shape than the San Francisco and Minnesota orchestras were when he first led them. (Credit is due the musically over emphatic but gifted Andreas Delfs for the orchestra’s good artistic health.) With a veteran conductor of DeWaart’s statue, this is the Milwaukee orchestra’s opportunity to break into America’s orchestral top tier.

Stranger still are recent developments at the Louisville Orchestra. Once known for its audacious championship of contemporary music, the orchestra has fallen on hard times with serious financial problems and a revolving door of music directorships. After a prolonged music director search and interim leadership from Raymond Leppard, the Louisville management decided to look to the past rather than the future. Jorge Mester, the orchestra’s music director in the 1970’s, was quietly reappointed to his old post. Mester, long a distinguished teacher of conducting at New York’s Julliard School, was not terribly popular during his previous directorship and was dismissed from his position for reasons that were never really clear. His return is a safe appointment and gives this troubled ensemble some time to plan for the future. Clearly bringing back a conductor of three decades ago (whose career has seen better days) is not the path to that future.

3. PETER LIEBERSON WINS 2007 GRAWEMEYER AWARD – The University of Louisville’s annual Grawemeyer Award for original musical composition has gone to Peter Lieberson for his Neruda Songs, a score that reflects the composer’s personal artistic journey and the tragic death of his wife – the mezzo-soprano Loraine Hunt-Lieberson. Lieberson is the son of the legendary record producer and executive Goddard Lieberson and the ballerina and actress Vera Zorina. Like many composers of his generation, Lieberson was, at first, attracted to atonality and serialism but tempered those stylistic gestures with more accessible lyricism. The Neruda cycle was the composer’s final token of love for his ailing wife who had fought a long battle with breast cancer. When Loraine Hunt Lieberson gave the premiere of the work with the Boston Symphony under James Levine in 2006 (and later performed the songs under Esa-Pekka Salonen and David Robertson), she knew that she did not have long to live. The sensuous, erotic lyricism of Lieberson’s setting of Pablo Neruda’s poetry has been widely acclaimed. Critic Norman Lebrecht proclaimed the score “the first great work of the 21st century.” The Grawemeyer prize is one of the most coveted and respected in the music world. Former winners include Gyorgy Ligeti, Pierre Boulez, Joan Tower, John Corigliano, Tan Dun, John Adams, and Thomas Ades. Peter Lieberson’s dreamy score joins a distinguished group of creative essays, many of which have joined the standard contemporary repertoire.


4. STEVEN HOUGH
– Some critics have called Steven Hough “the world’s greatest pianist.” He is certainly one of the most exciting artists on the contemporary music scene. Hough’s talents do not end there. In the past year, he has made impressive strides as a composer. Hough premiered two Mass settings at London’s Westminster Abbey and Westminster Cathedral. His Cello Concerto (The Loneliest Wilderness) was premiered by his friend Steven Isserlis with the Royal Liverpool Philharmonic Orchestra under Hough’s baton. Is a major conducting career far off? Hough has also written books and essays on music and Catholicism. Still, his pianistic brilliance continually astounds. In early December, 2007, Hough joined the Miami based New World Symphony (appropriately dubbed America’s Orchestral Academy) and conductor Mark Wigglesworth for Brahms’ Concerto No.1 in D minor. He gave the kind of demonstration of old fashioned; fire breathing keyboard virtuosity that has not been heard since the days of Vladimir Horowitz. He brought stormy grandeur to the opening Maestoso, tempered by an array of pianistic coloration that made the music sound new, as if experienced for the first time. In the Adagio, Hough’s phrasing elucidated the long arc of eloquence inherent in Brahms’ writing but rarely brought to fruition in performance. The fast tempo and remarkable accuracy and precision of Hough’s cascading arpeggios radiated joy and intense romantic fervor in the final Rondo. No matter what era the score Hough plays belongs to, he is the ultimate romantic. His Brahms was of the most incendiary variety. Maybe “world’s greatest pianist” is not an exaggeration after all!

Music News Continued >>

 

Aspen Santa Fe Ballet 
At Jacob's Pillow Dance Festival
Pickett/Galili/Forsythe/Elo (8/14/2008)
Passionately Breathtaking



Symphony of the Americas
Program Notes for 2008-2009 Season


Farewell American Performances of the Beaux Arts Trio at Tanglewood
Dvorak/Kurtag/Ravel (8/20/2008)
Schubert (8/21/2008)

Amernet String Quartet
Schubert/Dankner/Dvorak (8/26/2008)
Velvety Tones

 

Moments of Transcendence:
The 2007-2008 
South Florida Music Season

 


South Florida was certainly alive with the sound of music during the 2007-2008 season. More than once the level of music making went beyond technical excellence to embrace that rare moment of other worldly transcendence. Beyond such unique experiences, the growth of artistic activity in Boca Raton and Delray Beach was an encouraging sign of a robust cultural environment. Here is a subjective overview of the high points (and the inevitable low ones) of the past season.

BEST ORCHESTRAL PERFORMANCE – London’s Philharmonia Orchestra has always occupied an august place in Great Britain’s post World War II musical history. With its plush strings and mellow brasses leading the way, this superb ensemble shown resplendently in the high tech acoustics of Miami’s Arsht Center under the masterful baton of Christoph von Dohnanyi. Now in his late seventies, Dohnanyi is in his musical prime. He offered sweepingly lyrical Mendelssohn and grandly kaleidoscopic Mahler – the epitome of great conducting. 

Honorable Mention: The Russian National Orchestra, Moscow’s top virtuoso ensemble, offered velvety playing in a one night stand at the Arsht Center and a weeklong residency at Festival of the Arts Boca. Claus Peter Flor, a German dynamo, led a balletic, sweeping rendition of excerpts from Prokofiev’s Romeo and Juliet (an unusually generous selection, not just the most famous pieces) and a riveting, deeply moving account of Tchaikovsky’s Pathetique Symphony at the Miami concert. Flor is a major league, underrated maestro.

At its annual Miami residency the stalwart Cleveland Orchestra showcased Music Director Franz Welser-Most in patrician Mozart (the Symphony No.28), beguiling Debussy (Iberia), and Stravinsky, both classically elegant (Pulcinella) and lushly romantic (The Firebird). The gifted Austrian conductor also offered a wonderfully irreverent, post-modernist suite from contemporary British composer Thomas Ades’ opera Powder Her Face.

More >>


Sarasota Music Festival 2008
Carol Wincenc/Claude Frank/Joseph Silverstein/
Susan Starr/Clive Greensmith/John Perry/
James Buswell/Barbara Westphal 
(6/12, 13, 14/08)
An Eclectic Mix
 


Seraphic Fire
Music for Kings
Patrick Dupre Quigley
Handel/Mozart (5/16/2008)
 


Concert Association of Florida
Philharmonia Orchestra of London
Christoph Von Dohnanyi
Mendelssohn/Mahler (5/1/2008)


New World Symphony
Michael Tilson Thomas/Harald Horth/
Michael Werba/Rainier Honeck/
Tamas Varga/Rinnat Moriah
Schubert, Berg And The Lyricism Of Vienna
 (4-26, 27-08) 
New World Symphony Ends 
Min-Festival With a Jolt


New World Symphony
Michael Tilson Thomas
Seraphic Fire/University of Miami Frost Chorale Berg/Shubert
New World Symphony Offers 
Stunning Voyage To Vienna


New World Symphony
  Michael Tilson Thomas/Yefim Bronfman/
  Steven Jarvi
  Smetana/Rachmaninoff/Prokofiev  
  (4/12/2008)
  Yefim Bronfman On Piano Was
  Exquisite And Powerful
 


Miami International Piano Festival
  Master Series
  Konstantin Lifschitz/Kit Armstrong/
  Sijing Ye/Kemal Gekic/William Noll
  (3/30, 3/31, 4/1/08)
  Master Series Dazzles With Keyboard
  Virtuosity, Bach Marathon

 


New World Symphony
John Adams/Tracy Silverman (3/22/2008)
Adams Conducts New World Symphony In
 Radiant, High Energy Performance


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Updated September 30, 2008

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