David Geffen Hall, Lincoln Center, New York. Orchestra (Seat W109, $96).
the wealth of nations (2025) by Lang (b. 1957).
Artists
Fleur Barron, mezzo-soprano; Davone Tines, bass-baritone
New York Philharmonic Chorus, Malcolm J. Merriweather, director.
Starting in September, Dudamel, after a wait of several years (he was announced as the Music Director in February 2023), will become the actual Music Director of New York Philharmonic. Everything the organization does nowadays has been to play this up. The series renewal package I received in the mail recently has him prominently figured on the cover, ads about his Radio City Music Hall are plastered all over town (well, around the Lincoln Center area anyway), and - as far as I can tell - even the logo, now just New York Philharmonic in plain letters, has been changed to usher in the new era. And what is the new purple color that seems to have been adopted. Despite all that, I do look forward to seeing how the orchestra would change because of new music leadership.
Having said all that, I still find today's concert a bit puzzling when I was first found out about it. I haven't read the book by Adam Smith, and have no intention to read it; I do know it is about capitalism and its underlying principles. How does one turn that topic into a musical composition? It's like setting algebra or Riemannian geometry into music. Actually the abstraction behind mathematics may work better, in my opinion. Perhaps an economics or political science student will find much excitement in a tome extolling capitalism and free markets, most people would find the principles dry, whether they agree with them or not. That same indifference would carry over to the musical version of the book.
I had a dialog with Gemini AI and am quite impressed with how much it knows about this work. (To pass along the disclaimer: there may be mistakes in the results.)
First was whether Dudamel had a hand in getting this work commissioned. By all indications he did, although David Lang probably was working on this before Dudamel was named the Music Director (designate). Some of the libretto used sounded like a condensate of Smith's ideas, but Gemini insists that they are taken verbatim from the book. Gemini quoted a few examples, and I go along with it. Words by Frederick Douglas (a social reformer and abolitionist), Eugene Debs (socialist) and others were interwoven into the libretto to provide a counter-argument and balance. I didn't get the feeling Lang was trying to negate all of Smith's thinking, but the fact that the seventeenth movement, dedicated to the speech Debs made before he was sentenced, was the longest, speaks to where Lang leans in this spectrum. Dudamel has been quite adept at staying out of politics or policy, so I wonder whether he had much input into the messaging.
It is Lang himself who compares his work with probably the best known oratorio: Handel's Messiah. There is a "sinfony" and a "pifa" at the beginning and the middle, for instance. I am thankful for one major difference: the "wealth of nations" is much shorter at about 70 minutes. And what is all this "no capital letters" anyway? I have made similar remarks about other composers who try to name their works in an unusual way: pretentiousness is a poor look, especially if the product doesn't justify it.
I guess it's the same pretentiousness (chutzpah may be a better description) to think something like this can be pulled off. Ironically, I feel the music can stand on its own (not sure what libretto could be used, any Greek mythology would do). There are contrasts, climaxes, a nice melody here and there; and the orchestra, chorus, and soloists certainly produced a great sound. And if you are into minimalist music (Gemini calls Lang a post-minimalist) you may actually appreciate what's been achieved. With the words projected above the stage, however, you may end up scratching you head the whole 70 minutes, most of it anyway.
When I looked at the NY Phil webpage to find the Program Notes, I noticed that rush tickets would be available for today's performance. I was surprised that the pull of Dudamel and the novelty of the oratorio were not able to pull off a full house (altogether there are four performances). Indeed there were scattered empty seats in the auditorium this evening.