Carnegie Hall, New York. Dress Circle (Seat GG108, $89).
Program
The Rock You Stand On (2024) by Adams (b. 1947).
Piano Concerto in F (1925) by Gershwin (1898-1937).
Selections from Romeo and Juliet, Op. 64 (1935-36) by Prokofiev (1891-1953).
The John Adams piece was composed as "a gift for Marin Alsop," whom the Playbill describes as having "long been an advocate for Adams." It is co-commissioned by the Philadelphia Orchestra and Carnegie Hall, and tonight's was its New York premiere. Since it was written in 2024, I assumed it has been performed elsewhere (per Wikipedia, October last year in Philadelphia, with Alsop conducting).
I have heard quite a few of Adams's pieces, but must admit I lack the vocabulary to describe what I hear, other than some semblance to Philip Glass's minimalist style. The Program annotator Thomas May has a large arsenal of words and phrases. A few examples (somewhat paraphrased): both connects across decades and suddenly swerves into new territory, compact, volatile, angular, quasi-Straussian; and there are many more scattered throughout the three pages in the Notes. In looking over this blog, I have used terms like monotonous (The Chairman Dances), forgettable (Naive and Sentimental Music), wasn't meant as a compliment (Tromba Lontana), and a disappointment (Nixon in China). The opera "The Death of Klinghoffer" stands out because of the controversy it generated, and the tragic storyline; I enjoyed it, but complained that "sentiments didn't come through" regarding Marilyn's final solo.
Guess what I thought of tonight's performance? I am writing this entry 2 days after the concert, and do not remember how I felt already. But I did take some notes right after the piece was played: series of jerky passages, some jazz thrown in, ends abruptly, and was audience hanging on or relieved that it's over. While written as a "gift" for Alsop (no idea what that means, or how it is different from dedication to), Adams stresses that the piece "... is not meant to suggest anything other than perhaps hinting at ... loyalty, determination, devotion."
A large orchestra was used for both the Adams piece and the Prokofiev suite. I counted 30 violins (16/14 split?), 12 violas, 10 cellos and 8 basses.
It's quite often when I see "Gershwin Piano Concerto" I would think Ravel. Ever since Yuja Wang "broke the code" on Ravel, I have come to enjoy the piece. Unfortunately I have not had the same breakthrough with the Gershwin concerto - and I had listened to Wang perform it. Tonight, unfortunately, didn't help in that quest.
I was seated in the last row of the Dress Circle (I moved one seat over to GG107 to get a clearer view of the stage), and the acoustics was incredibly weak tonight. Is it the seat, or the performance? The piano sounded so weak at times that I didn't know if was on if I hadn't been looking. That was especially true with the second movement. One interesting thing I saw was the trumpet sometimes had a sock (well, some cloth bag) on it to produce a softer sound that is not nasal when a regular mute is used. The third movement was a crowd pleaser. For encore Sumino performed a variation on Gershwin's "I've got rhythm.
Per the bio in the Playbill, Sumino has accumulated quite a bit of accolades over the years; he is all of 30 years old. This was my first encounter with him, that speaks to the huge number of world-class pianists today.
I heard "Selections from Romeo and Juliet" performed by the NJ Symphony a couple of months ago, and liked the innovation of interweaving music with spoken dialog. Tonight's performance had 14 movements excerpted from Prokofiev's work, and I found to my amazement that I could follow along. What was more amazing, however, was how much better the Philadelphia Orchestra sounded; and it pains me to say it wasn't just that Carnegie Hall acoustics is better than that of Count Basie's.
After Prokofiev's Romeo and Juliet. Time stamp 10:08 pm. The three pieces in the program add up to about 80 minutes, so it was frustrating for people on a tight schedule.
I went to this concert by myself as Anne had a class. I chose to walk from Penn Station to the venue, it took longer than I expected, and I found myself at my seat at around 7:55 pm. The concert didn't start until 8:12 pm, so I missed the 10:23 pm train by a couple of minutes. Indeed many people rushed out after the concert ended. This seems to be a constant problem with Carnegie Hall. It was after midnight that I got off the train.