The hoopla surrounding the naming of a 40-year-old native New Yorker, Alan Gilbert, as the next music director of the New York Philharmonic has somewhat obscured the fact that its current conductor, Lorin Maazel, will retain his job until after the 2008-2009 season. Gilbert, who is chief conductor of the Royal Stockholm Philharmonic Orchestra, will next appear here in March 2008, according to the New York Phil’s newly released 2007-2008 season schedule.
Curious music lovers might meanwhile try a soon-to-be released CD of Gilbert conducting Mozart at the Santa Fe Chamber Music Festival on Koch International Classics. Live performances of Gilbert leading the Mahler Chamber Orchestra in works by Mahler and Mendelssohn have appeared; Gilbert has also shown a somewhat uneven interest in contemporary music, including a concerto for recorder by Swedish composer Daniel Börtz on BIS Records. All this suggests that Gilbert is still a talent-in-progress, who will be paid nothing near the reported $2,638,940, which a recent study documented as Maazel’s current annual salary.
Do New York concert-goers get enough bang for their buck? Next season’s finest musical events will surely be three concerts on April 3, 4, and 5, 2008, in which the British conductor Colin Davis leads one of America’s most profound pianists, Richard Goode, in Beethoven’s philosophical Fourth Piano Concerto. Davis, born in 1927, has produced a series of CD’s for the LSO Live label that ranks among the finest classical recordings (of anything) in recent years.
Among other soloists invited by the Philharmonic is the emotive Georgian violinist Lisa Batiashvili, whose EMI Recital CD of works by Bach, Brahms, and Schubert was a revelation. Batiashvili will perform Beethoven’s Violin Concerto with the Philharmonic this September 19, 20, and 21. Other parts of the Philharmonic schedule are sadly trite and predictable, none more than the September 18 season opener with the omnipresent Yo-Yo Ma playing the overexposed Dvořák Cello Concerto.
Then there are concert performances of Puccini’s “Tosca” on June 12, 14, 17, and 19, 2008 conducted by Maazel. A concert performance is most suited to a musical rarity that is almost never staged; the inescapable “Tosca” hardly qualifies. Likewise, when an admirable soloist is programmed—like the Norwegian pianist Leif Ove Andsnes playing Brahms’ Second Piano Concerto on January 17, 18, and 19, 2008—he is saddled with a conductor hardly reputed as a Brahmsian, Italy’s Riccardo Muti.
One of the two co-winners of the 2002 Maazel/Vilar Conductors’ Competition, the Chinese conductor Xian Zhang, will perform in November, but nowhere to be seen is the other superbly talented winner of the same competition, the Thai maestro Bundit Ungrangsee, a fine Mozartian on CD. Ungrangsee would himself have been a brilliant choice for music director.
Too many of the Phil’s concerts are centered around presumed “audience favorites,” like the grievously unidiomatic pianist Lang Lang, or Frenchman Pierre-Laurent Aimard, another merciless keyboard hammerer. When Maestro Gilbert takes over the Philharmonic’s helm, he might consider, as an urgent priority, hiring a new concert programmer.










Reaping what we have sown. Blago, Richardson, Hillary, Senator ‘Tombstone’ Burris, Princess Caroline, Senator Clown in MN, we have gotten just the government we deserve.
You can’t have a circus without a clown car.
Why anyone would give money to Hillary is beyond me…except if there really is a quid pro quo.
A quid pro quo? Once bought, the Clintons stay bought. Ask the oil sheiks and the Ron Burkles of the world.
Every circus needs a clown, that’s why we elected you.
Al Franken. Al Franken.
It’s becoming a bad joke, so it makes sense to have you.
Al Franken. Al Franken.
Caligula at least sent the whole horse, Minnesota just the back.
Al Franken. Al Franken.
Now excuse me while I vomit, I can taste it in my mouth.
Al Franken. Al Franken.
Well, when one has NO shame on any other issue, why would they be ashamed of protecting their own private fortune and go on to BEG FOR MONEY from fools who don’t have (in spades!) even a small fraction of the ill-gotten excess wealth of the Clintons??
Mark my words, obamination is on the VERY SAME path…..corruption, scandal, greed, self-worship, narcissism, and eventual MEGA-wealth……..
We have been betrayed by fools, and we will suffer the consequences of their hypnotized lunacy!!
I don’t know what is more pathetic, Hillary with no shame or the morons who will actually contribute.
Pundits across the political spectrum have taken to discussing her abject failure as if it were a career high point.
Abject failure?
HRC was caught off-guard–as just about everyone was–by the rock star cultism and caucus roughhousing of the Obama campaign, then battled back from the dead with remarkably muscular wins, only to lose by inches in the superdelegates showdown. That’s not abject failure.
I’m not crazy about HRC either, but she showed much stamina and courage in that home stretch. I’d much rather be looking at her as Pres-elect than Obama, whom I consider the least qualified, least accomplished president ever and from the two worst strands of American politics: radical populism and big city machine politics.