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November 2, 2005

Last PME Rehearsal in Cali

Hi there,
Last night PME had it's last rehearsal in prep for our Carnegie Hall debut. Sounds so grand, don't it? I took a few pics of the rehearsal. We seem awfully relaxed, no? Here we are listening to a recording of our Sunday performance. The pieces we sang are all part of our various programs in NY (selections from Meredith Monk, Barber Agnus Dei & the Martin Mass).

Very-Funny-Gene.jpgHere we are listening to get some insight into our performance before trying it on the big stage. I have to say, it was hard listening to the tape of the show. No matter how good a show is, the recording is always a bit of a let down. It's really almost too easy to pick apart the faults. Dick gave us a few pointers and in typical PME fashion we all gave our opinions, sometimes to excess. Ok, almost always to excess. But then that's what we do. I think in the end we still feel like we're ready (warts and all). A former member of Meredeth's ensemble was in attendance at the Sunday show and had lots of nice things to say. That's certainly encouraging.

More pics of the last rehearsal are posted here:
http://new.photos.yahoo.com/freemaneric@sbcglobal.net/album/576460762321382830

-Eric

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November 5, 2005

1st Day in NYC

NYC Superstar Arrival!.jpgWE MADE IT! Alyson and I are here in NYC and I'm writing this from our cool pad in the Village. We, of course, were good little boys and girls and got to the airport the prescribed 1.5hrs early. Of course we both breezed through all check-ins. I managed to alienate my singing buddies by taking pictures of them at 6:30am in the morning (which according Mr James Yorkston is just way too early). Alyson, on the other hand got to a SFO so early there was no one else at the gate for a full half hour. Finally a large pre-teen Ukranian orchestra showed up and all was well.

Seriously, the flights were a slam dunk. No problems.

The traffic into the city was pretty bad and the clock in the taxi was off so we all thought we were an hour late for our first rehearsal. I kinda freaked because we were still getting the keys from our landlady when I thought I was due at the hall. More on that later. Alyson will have to post that story. With the freak avoided I arrived at rehearsal tan rested and ready. I have a few picks of our pre-Zankel rehearsal, but we were not allowed to take any pics in the actual hall (BUMMER!)

The rehearsal was all well and good and I think we'll sound great tomorrow. Meredeth was there to welcome us and she said some really really nice things that made us all feel good. I only whish I could remember them . Maybe someone else in the group will remember and post them as a comment (pretty pretty please someone save me from my awful awful memory)

OMG It's For REAL.jpgThe coup de grais of course was that we all got Carnegie Hall back stage passes! That's going in the scrap book for sure.

Ok that's enough for tonight. I got recruited to make a statement to the PMErs about getting some sleep before the show and here I am writing at 2am. Must sleep now!

-Eric

You can all of today's pics here:
NYC 11-5-05

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November 6, 2005

Concert Day at Carnegie!

NYC Morning 5.jpgToday was amazing. So many things happened today that I almost don't know what to say. So I'll start with the beginning. A & I woke up early 'cause I had a 10am call at Carnegie. I'm sorry. I just had to write that. Self indulgent I know, but c'mon! How many times will I be able to say that? Don Kelly told me he was making calls from the green room before the show for the same reason. "Hi there, just calling from Carnegie waiting to go on. What's up with you?" I can understand.

NYC Morning 2.jpgWhere was I? Oh yeah. We're in a nice place in the Village and got a chance to walk around a bit in the morning before things got cooking. Had one of those famous NY Bagels. Me: Honda (Bagel/Cream Cheese) Alyson: Ferrari! (Bagel/Lox/CC/Capers). And boy did the deli man let me know it! Anyway. Nice calm before the storm.

The show was freakin' awesome. We went on first so we got to sit back and relax and enjoy the rest. That was nice. Meredeth is so sweet to us. Every time we saw her she went out of her way to tell us how happy she was to see us. After hours and hours of prep she still had a little sugar for little old pme. It truly warmed the cockles of my heart.

Dick Grant in Front of Poster.jpgFrankly, I think we nailed it. Everything was actually fun. After our Berlin experience I was a little nervous about pulling it off. But then right from the very beginning it was simply joyous. I think part of it was that we finally figured out our motivation. (that and lots and lots of practice). I have to say that Hocket was a particularly high point for me. It's a tune with just 6 of us on stage (scary: my heart was beating a mile a minute) that starts very fragile but grows to a big climax. Hearing the climactic chord ring though the house was exhilarating! The audience was caught a little off guard and started to clap before we were done. Oh well. It was awesome to get a reaction.

With our singing done it was time to enjoy the rest of the day. I finally got to hook up with A and we walked around a little. We tried to head for the park but there were all these people running around and we couldn't cross the street. I mean I heard NYC was crowded but this is ridiculous.

Anyway, we got back in time to hear the Bang on a Can Allstars, Alarm Will Sound and Bjork. All awesome. Did I mention Bjork? So moving. She sang a song called Gotham Lullaby with her harpist. I was unprepared for how moving it was. It's one thing to listen to her sing on a record in my living room. It's altogether another to be 10ft away while she pours it out. By the end I was in tears. Really. I was a wreck. For the next 15min I was crying at everything. It just suddenly seamed like everything everyone was saying was so emotionally charged.

Post Show Glow 11.jpgThe whole evening was simply insipring. I left with an even greater appreciaction of Monk and a gaggle of new ideas. I hope PME gets the opportunity to try some of her orchestrated stuff. We'll see what happens.

After that it was Dinner at Carmine's with the gang. Suffice it to say a good time was had by all. If you don't believe me, check out the pix. I think that's enough for tonight.

Still Riding High!
-E

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November 7, 2005

St Paul's Concert

Just a quicky today. I think Alyson's finally gonna post something. I can hardly wait to read it!
I posted a few more pics at the photo site: St Paul's...

Tomorrow is rehearsal for our Wednesday Wintergarden concert. I'm not sure, but I thought it might be on the radio (WNYC FM93.9). If it is I'll be sure to let y'all know.

-E
PS: All the photos are here: http://photos.yahoo.com/ph//my_photos

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November 9, 2005

Wintergarden Concert

Today was the final concert with Meredith Monk. We went to the MoMA and I saw my cousin Claire (albeit briefly). Alyson's working on a post right now so I don't want to give anything away. I just wanted to post a couple of pics here: MOMA to W... Ok, I also wanted to show off my picture with Jim and the woman of the hour.

And Oh yeah, the concert will be broadcast on WNYC's Newsounds show on Dec 7th.

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2 Men a Red Bag and Meredith Monk.jpg

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December 9, 2005

Radio Broadcast and a Grammy Nod!

Honestly. This has been a banner week for the Pacific Mozart Ensemble. I don't know what to talk about first.

onj-grammy.jpgGrammy Nod: 2 years ago PME went to Berlin to sing the Bernstein Mass for Kent Nagano with the DSO in the Berlin Philharmonie. It was an unbelievable experience, one that had profound affects on my singing and my general attitudes about performing. It's a long story, but that's what Blogs are for, right? Well, maybe some other time I'll go off about it. Anyway! The performance was recorded and released on Harmonia Mundi. We had joked about Grammy possibilities at the time, but frankly I just forgot about it. Today I get this in my email from our director, Lynne Morrow:
http://www.grammy.com/awards/grammy/48Awards.aspx
Follow the link and scroll waaay down to Category 99 and there we are! I can't believe I get to say this but here goes . . . It's really an honor just to be nominated. Wow that felt gooooooooooood!

Monk-Bleckmann.jpgRadio Broadcast: As if that wasn't enough, on Wednesday PME was part of a radio broadcast on WNYC in New York. John Scheafer recorded our Wintergarden concert and played it on his December 7 broadcast of the program "New Sounds." The audio from the broadcast is available at the WNYC site. It's worth a listen for the amazing piece "Facing North" that Meredith performed with Theo Bleckmann. I was totally blown away.
http://www.wnyc.org/shows/newsounds/episodes/12072005

On the the next thing: Last gig of the year is tomorrow night with Clockwork at the Cayuga Vault in Santa Cruz. We had a great show there last Spring (with the Idea of North). This time we're appearing with Ute Bonn. I'm really looking forward to heading back there. We even have a handful of new tunes!

Whew that's a lotta links! Gotta go.
-E

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January 30, 2006

The Mass that Keeps on a-Massing

You know what's cool about grammy nods? More press! First there was this great article on CNN: "A 'Mass' 35 Years Long" PME KPIX Rehearsal.jpg

Then KPIX decided to do a story on us for their Grammy night coverage. Tonight they came to film one o four rehearsals. Then they're gonna follow a couple of peemers around their dayjobs. Needless to say PME came out in droves tonight. I couldn't resist a chance to get a pic of the group in full force. That's 53 singers plus Dick and Kymry. Of course, now that we're all famous-like, we gotta be careful. You never know what the paparazzi will catch you doing . . .

Doug 1.jpgDoug 2.jpgDoug 5.jpgDoug 4.jpgDoug 3.jpg
Pacific Oh Doug I'm sorry I couldn't help it. If I fix your computer will you forgive me? -E

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February 20, 2006

Final Grammy Wrap-up

PME Gets the Gold!.jpgYou may recall me announcing about 400 times that the Bernstein Mass got nominated for a grammy. Ok, so we didn't win. Whatever. The group was so jazzed about the whole thing. We sent a huge entourage down to the ceremonies. Lynne and Dick returned to regale us with stories of the evening. Gene put together a slide show of the evening. All good fun!

Gene was our man on the scene, using his camera phone to take some pics that he then im'd to me on my phone so I could then email them to the group. It was all good fun:

Gene on the Scene.jpg"doot doot doot ... doot doot doot...
Dateline Burbank. Our intrepid reporter Dr Gene is on the scene for the 2006 Grammys Award Show! No cameras allowed inside but that doesn't stop this resourceful fellow! In an early morning communique we see a bleary-eyed Hern tanking up for a hard day's work of partying and basking. How will we get those images without a camera? Why he's got one of those new-fangled contraptions on his phone! Welcome to the aughts dear reader. As the info and images pour in we'll keep this conduit open for all the latest breaking news! Good morning and Good Luck!"

Ok, so I got a little dorky on the day, but dude it's the Grammys! I remember once when I was at Cal (you know, back in the dusty old 80s). The Cal Chamber Chorus was nominated for a grammy. I don't remember if they won but boy was I jealous! I was singing in the totally fun, but pretty fringe Perfect Fifth. I say fringe 'cause it was not an official Music Dept group, just a bunch of people who liked singing. Our director Tony Pasqua is one of the most influential people in my musical life. He probably doesn't even remember me, but I learned a ton singing for him in that group. He didn't know it at the time, but he was basically teaching me how to run a rehearsal. I took that training and put it to use in a ton of a cappella groups over the years. I heard recently that Tony's still banging around the bay area directing choirs. I hope we cross paths again.

Outside.jpgWow what a digression! Did I mention I met Gene at a P5 Audition? That's a great story for another time. Back to the freaking Grammys! There's more good stuff! For example, here's one of Gene's dipatches. Don't they look pretty? Ok that's a totally rhetorical question. Yes. Yes they do look pretty. Hell if I saw them coming down the street I'd invent some kind of award just so's I could give it to them!

A big bonus was some free publicity on local TV. The week before the show. KPIX filmed a rehearsal and followed a few Peemers around for a new piece. The piece aired the night of the grammys and is hopefully still on-line here. You have to wait about 5min but then there we are in all our glory. Super cool. You even get a brief shot of yours truly singing in our fabled pre-Berlin concert. (If I've related this story to you, you'll know that concert was full of false hubris that was summarily dispatched upon arrival in the German capitol.)

Ok I think that's it for this round of PME glorification. I hope there is round after round after round! Here's the rest of the pics. (be aware, there's none too many and they're mostly camera pics)

-E

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March 14, 2006

PME Sings for Brubeck

Just Dave.jpgThis year is the 25th Anniversary of The Pacific Mozart Ensemble. Our director put together an amazing program for the 25th Gala. We're going to sing Mozart's unfinished Mass in C Minor. Dick managed to get 3 composers that PME has worked with to contribute the missing movements! Cool, huh? Now look at the list of composers: Meredith Monk, David Lang and Dave Brubeck! Oh-yeah! The Lang and Brubeck are new works that PME will be premiering! Can it get more exciting? Well, what if Dave Brubeck stopped by rehearsal to see how his piece was going? Yike! Maybe a little too exciting!

Dick in Heaven.jpgSo last night Dave dropped by with his wife and producer to see how we're doing. To set the scene I have to mention that the piece is freakin' hard. It's got some really unforgiving passages that test the stamina of the group, some poly-tonal stuff that challenges our ear and goes really really high. The poor Sopranos are way in the top of their range for most of the piece. That said, there are some very cool moments and we worked really hard to get them right. Over the last week there have been 3 extra note rehearsals, a lot of woodshedding and a bit of handwringing.

Smiles All Around!.jpgThe result? See for yourself! Dave was very happy. There were some awesome moments when we'd hit a section and he'd throw back his head letting out a little whoop! Boy was that rewarding. Even the normally gruff Russell was appreciative. I believe he actually gave some praise to the Altos. Lynne was working her ass off but I think Dick was in heaven. It's one thing to meet a musical hero. It's another thing to actually work with said hero on their music. All in all it was a successful night (topped off with a little B-day cake for yours truly)
Last Minute Prep.jpg
Here are the pics from last night
-Eric

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September 27, 2006

PME's Collaborations

24 Members of PME to perform with Sufjan Stevens at Zellerbach Hall; Oct 10th and 11th, 2006


sufjan_and_militia_on_beach.jpgSufjan Stevens is currently touring in support of his recent release The Avalanche and the soon to be released Songs for Christmas. Audiences who attended the 2006 PME Jazz and Pops concert will remember the finale, our a cappella rendition of "C'mon, Feel the Illinoise," the title track of Stevens' most well known work.

On this tour Stevens has augmented his usual group of 'Illinoisemakers' with strings and horns, so why not a choir? 24 members of PME will provide vocal support for both nights of the Berkeley run. Both performances are sold out, but we've seen tickets available on craigslist.


Members of PME to perform with John Zorn at Hertz Hall; Nov 12th


zorn.jpgComposer and saxophonist John Zorn (b. 1953) has worked with a large number of experimental musicians, particularly in improvised works. He has been a central figure in NYC's downtown scene since 1975 and his experimental work with the bands Naked City and Masada earned him a large cult following.

The Cal Performances program on Nov. 12th features some of Zorn's most fascinating chamber music:

  • Zorn/Sortilege
  • Orphee
  • Sappho
  • Walpurgisnacht, Evocation of a Neophyte
  • fay ce que vouldras

Members of the Pacific Mozart Ensemble will perform Sappho and Evocation of a Neophyte with John Zorn's ensemble.

October 11, 2006

Tuesday Sufjan Stevens Show

Choir Sound Check 2.jpgI awake bleary-eyed to the realization that we participated in something incredible last night. There are so many aspects of this experience that I want to hold on to. I know my memory fades quicker than most. It makes me a little sad that I will not be able to remember every moment of yesterday. I guess that's one of the main reasons I write this blog. It started with the trip to NY last year. I'm finding that I go back and re-read entries all the time. It helps me to not forget the things that I've done that mean so much to me.

Like last night! On stage. With Sufjan Stevens. Part of the show. I mean really a part of the show. Part of the experience. There was always a concern in the back of my mind that we would be off in a corner, unheard over the din of 14 players. I mean think about it. These guys have been touring on this show for weeks now and have it pretty down. They didn't really need us. But here we are singing on every freakin song but one.

PME with Sufjan0011.jpgAside from the show itself, the best part of the day was a little rehearsal we had. It was just us and Sufjan in a little piano room in the basement of Zellerbach. At first I was sweating bullets. I lied and said it was from rushing around, but really it was nervousness plain and simple. Moment of truth time. We've been sharing charts and notes but this is the first time he hears what we actually sound like. We started with something easy. Actually, it was a chart I threw together just the day before! At 3pm on Monday I got an email from Lisa that they wanted us to sing on "He Woke Me Up Again." Yikes! Fortunately it's pretty simple so I threw together the chart for our rehearsal that night. So that's the first song we sang. As he we started singing I started to feel a little calmer. In the end it put everyone's mind at ease bing able to run the tunes. Also, the folks got to get a sense of him as a person, which totally relaxed them. After working with some very unapproachable types (like a certain symphony director we all know) it was great to realize we're just working with a fellow performer.

Oh yeah, I almost forgot. Sometime between rehearsal and sound check, Sufjan shows up with lyrics for another song! Man of Metropolis. We basically learned it at the sound check. Amazing. Folks were able to improvise harmonies on the 2nd and 3rd chorus and they sounded great! This choir came together so well yesterday. It almost makes me a little weepy to see how well they did. There were a few minutes in the rehearsal where we would come up upon entrances or cut offs that had plagued us in the past. Almost ever time the choir was perfect. I felt this great welling of pride each time it happened.

Ok, that's all for now. The real excuse for this post is to get "Day 1" pics up. My Yahoo photo's changed over night (necessitating that I re-format all the photo album links in all the posts in this blog. Awesome.) Now it's up and here are the pics.

Time to start gearing up for day 2. WUH-HOOOOOOOOOOO!!!!!!!

-E

October 17, 2006

PME Rocks with Sufjan. Again.

Sufjan with the Choir 2.jpgWhat can I say about this choir that I haven't said already. I'm so damned proud of them that I can hardly stand it. I reviewed the entries in this blog and I realize you must be tired of seeing me gush over their performance. I promise I'm not going to do that again. I'm not going to tell you about yet another time I got choked up. In order to stop repeating myself I will tell a little story about day #2.


Stuffing the Elevator full of Santas and Supermans!.jpg
We came into sound check pretty darned relaxed. The excitement of the 1st night was electric, but there's nothing like the confidence of day 2. That feeling that you know deep down that it's going to be great because it was great. Just last night. Smiles all around. Someone jokes, "so is there a new chart?" Ha ha ha. Everybody laughs. When Sufjan arrives he has a little stack of papers with dense notes. No new chart. but, There are 3 songs on which need new vocals. No joke. I must confess I felt a little something tighten up. I'm trying to imagine a PME concert season. I picture Dick or Lynne coming into the pre show rehearsal with 8 bars of music they want us to learn for that night. By rote.

Writing New Parts for Tallest Man.jpgBut I realize, hey wait a minute, is this the same choir that rocked the mic last night on a totally new song (Man of Metropolis) that they learned in sound check? What am I thinking. All systems go, baby! Turns out 3 tunes had codas that he felt needed some choir. Awesome. 2 of them are totally easy. Metropolis and Chicago. The choir learned a unison line and repeated it through the coda. No problem. Riiiiiight. They rock! (oh shoot, I think I'm breaking my first promise) The 3rd was Tallest Man. In that tune, after the choir finishes singing the tune goes out on a 5/8 6/8 jam. The party kinda goes on without us. So what do we do? We go over to the piano, make something up on the spot and the choir sings it. And they sound great! They are totally dialed into this music. Totally in sync with the motives and rhythms. Teaching those parts was one of the easiest things I've ever done with PME. It felt so great. Unfortunately we didn't use it. We sang something else instead. But who cares. Just the joy and ease of working with a group that is that on was a joy in and of itself. Of course the line we ended up singing was a total blast and we rocked it hard in the perf that night. Of course!

Anyway, that's just one part of what turned out to be yet another great day. Today folks have been cruising the web for reviews and blogs of the show. I haven't had time to read them all. But I did read one that got to me (there went promise #2) -- http://blogs.mercurynews.com/aei/2006/10/sufjan_stevens_.html

Some videos showed up on youtube today. So far just Jackson and Casimir Pulaski. I'm hoping and praying someone booted Majesty Snowbird or Tallest Man. Here's Jackson. (you can kinda see Peggy and Doug up over the top...)

"If I could do just one near-perfect thing I'd be happy"

Done.

-E

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November 2, 2006

John Zorn collaboration - it must be November

In November 2005, PME was invited to Carnegie Hall for a celebration of Meredith Monk's 40th anniversary as a composer/dancer/producer/dramatist. Among the participants, mostly avant garde New York musicians, was saxophonist John Zorn. Almost exactly one year later, members of PME will be performing with Zorn at UC Berkeley as part of the CalPerformances season.

In a way, this is a coincidence, since we got the call from CalPerformances, not Zorn. On the other hand, it is not a coincidence, because for over 25 years, through the guidance and chutzpah of Dick Grant, PME has established itself as the vocal ensemble of choice for new music and unusual theatrical ventures, which is why we have worked with John Adams, David Lang, Aurora Theatre, Dave Brubeck, Kent Nagano, and many others in addition to Meredith Monk - and now John Zorn.

When you need someone
To sing those notes
Who ya gonna call?
Chartbusters

The same week that we got the request from CalPerformances we learned that Zorn received a MacArthur Foundation 'genius' grant, just as Monk got one right after her first collaboration with PME several years ago. Apparently, it pays to work with us.

Here is a charming news report on Zorn's MacArthur award: "

(Well, the video link doesn't work anymore. For this we have Viacom, owner of Comedy Central, to thank. They have taken all their clips out of YouTube, thinking that they are losing money by letting us look at them.}

The concert will feature us in two works, Frammenti del Sappho and evocation of a neophyte and how the secerts of the black arts were revealed to her by the demon Baphomet. The lower case evocation title is deliberate - Zorn is either an e e cummings fan or a subtle iconoclast.

Sappho, a "minimalist motet" that speaks to the feminine, written in 2004, is for five women a cappella. It is quite compelling - a hymn to sensuality with powerful tight chord clusters and a demanding vocal range. The inclusion of an a cappella piece in a concert by a saxophonist reminds me of the time PME opened Berkeley Symphony's season with Lux Aeterna by Ligeti (16 voices, no instruments).

The other piece, evocation of a neophyte, was written last year, and this will be its West Coast premier. The ensemble consists of a soprano solo, contrabassoon, harp, percussion, and a chorus of 18. It is as atmospheric as the long title implies, based on the mystery of the Enocheon ritual (Enocheon is the language of witches). There are strangely luscious harmonies and intricate rhythms alternating with lyrical passages and a lot of eerie whispering in Latin.

The month of November has been good to us. Three years ago we were in Berlin recording and performing Bernstein's Mass with Nagano and the Deutsche Symphonie Orchester, which got us a Grammy nomination, and we immediately followed that with a production of the medieval Play of Daniel with Aurora Theatre in Berkeley. I can only guess what we'll be doing next November.


November 16, 2006

John Zorn - final rehearsals, the concert, and the reviews

On Sunday, Nov. 12, 2006, in Hertz Hall at the University of California, Berkeley, PME once again distinguished itself as a leading-edge vocal ensemble, pariticapting in the world premiere of John Zorn's Mysterium, a suite of six pieces dealing with various pagan rituals and legends. It took Zorn seven years to complete the composition, and each 'movement' has been performed before, but this was the first presentation of the entire work.Rehearsing-at-Jim-s-2.jpgEvocation-4.jpg

After squeezing ourselves into a couple of living rooms to learn the music during the previous month, we found the rehearsal space at St. Mark's Episcopal Church luxurious. We could stand up, spread out, and have our own music stands. The first session with conductor David Rosenboom of California Instute of the Arts was just for us singers, and we hoped our preparation was sufficient to meet the level of everyone's expectations. David was gracious, complementary, and such a clear director that the experience was a pleasure. Most of our concerns vanished at the first downbeat - not that we didn't have plenty of room for improvement, but we had confidence in each other.

Zorn-PME0044.JPGWhen Zorn showed up at our first rehearsal with the orchestra, he was wearing bright orange camouflage pants. I asked him where he might be trying to hide in such attire, and when he mentioned the fall color scheme, I decided he was a guerilla soldier from New England. He would also be invisible from the waist down while sitting and dining in a MacDonald's (TM). He wore those pants every day.

Evocation of a Neophyte had been a challenge to learn without the orchestra. It is somewhat atonal and rhythmically complex, so until we could hear the cues from the instruments we had to imagine (evoke!) the sonic environment. When the percussionists were setting up and testing their gear, several of us inserted ear plugs to protect us from all the decibels. We soon found our way in the texture, and once we were acclimated to the full ensemble, the only unknown was how the amplification of the voices would sound, since we did not have microphones at St. Mark's.

There is a particularly difficult passage in 7/8 time that is subdivided into rapid 16th notes (14 of them) in the pattern 5+5+4. The burden falls mainly on the three mezzo-sopranos, who spent many hours getting it right. We could see in the score that there is percussion playing together with the singers, so there was no margin for error in the timing. At the big moment of the first runthrough of this passage, we waited anxiously for Zorn's comments. All he said to the women was an enthusiastic "You're smokin'!" and proceeded to spend the rest of his time working with the percussionist.

Zorn 12nov060008.JPGFrammenti del Sappho is a much larger challenge vocally. It is a cappella, so there is no support from instruments and the singers are very exposed while navigating the extremes of their ranges, both high and low. Zorn achieves marvelous effects with piercing chord clusters contrasted with rich deep tones in widely spread sonorities. There are no words and no program notes, so although there is a context within the Mysterium concept and we do have some associations with the poet Sappho, we can only respond to this music on a non-verbal level.

After a single hearing of the Frammenti, Zorn was so pleased that he did not feel the need for any more rehearsal. It was ready for the big time. The women were almost disappointed not to get to spend more time on it, but it must have been gratifying nonetheless.

What-s-Going-on-in-Here-.jpgWe had our sound check and final dress the day of the concert. Without monitors, I could not tell anything about the balance of singers and orchestra. Zorn said it was fine, that even the whispered passages of Evocation were audible, and we did not have to use stage whispers to be heard. There was some panic over the fact that there was no harpsichord. Despite the presence of many such instruments in the building, we were not permitted to use them. Finally a PMEr got her father's harpsichord and the show went on.

Hertz Hall was about half full for the performance. This is remarkable, because avant-garde music is generally too unfamiliar and demanding to draw an audience of any size. One reviewer even considered this a packed house. Zorn gave a brief introduction and then proceeded to act as a stage hand, moving chairs and stands between pieces and then jumping back into the audience.

There are six movements in Mysterium. The first and last movements are for small-to-medium chamber orchestras. The others are small ensembles, each consisting of a single family of 'instruments'. There is a bass clarinet duet, a female vocal quintet, a string trio (violin, viola, and cello), and a solo piano. It is like a sandwich with multigrain bread on the outside and uniform layers of ingredients in the middle. Evocation of a Neophyte, the bottom slice of bread, conlcuded the concert, and we got a standing ovation. This was the final evidence of the success of our latest collaboration with outstanding musical figures.

Oh wait - I spoke too soon. The final evidence is the reviews. I will let them speak for themselves.

http://www.contracostatimes.com/mld/cctimes/entertainment/16007874.htm

http://www.sfcv.org/arts_revs/zorn_11_14_06.php

http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/c/a/2006/11/17/DDGQKMDPK21.DTL&hw=john+zorn&sn=001&sc=1000

Not enough photos for ya? See more at:

http://new.photos.yahoo.com/freemaneric@sbcglobal.net/album/576460762335122232

February 17, 2007

I Can't Belive We Did That...

Lost Music.jpgJust the other day I had one of those moments that come all too often in PME. Angie and I were working on something in Bryan's studio and we just started gabbing about some of the things we've done. I'm not going to go through the whole list, but just say we have done some very cool things. Why bring this up now? Well we're at it again. This time with our old pal Dave Brubeck. Yeah that's right. Dave Brubeck is our pal. (hmm..... oh whoops, I was just savoring that thought in 5/4 time and got distracted). The relationship was forged by Dick years ago before I even joined the group. Over that time we've performed with him a number of times and he even wrote a movement for our Mozart concert last year. Now we're in Bryan's studio recording one of his recent compositions.

Altos Intone.jpgI don't know all the details, but I do know that this project is very important to him. We get little notes now and then (ok, Dick, gets little notes and shares them with us). As I understand it, we are trying to get this thing recorded so he can shop it around for a full-fledged release. Frankly I could care less about that. I'm just loving the experience. There's a tight time crunch and the music is seriously non-trivial. That said, the quality of singers assembled and the sheer joy on Dicks face when it starts to come together are making the process itself a blast. I know that when we are done we'll have something we can be proud of, and I know Dave (he let's me call him that) will be pleased.

Bryan Directs Traffic.jpgSo far we're about half way through. We've had two sessions at Skyline in the big room. We're running a working experiment playing with the texture of the piece through selective doubling. That means ~25 singers are all jacked into the headphones. We sing through a section once, then sing along with the tracks we just made. That's a lot of singers singing and listening at the same time. Logistical nightmare you say? Well, I think it's only been a nightmare for the ones making it happen Johns Handywork.jpg(John soldering headphone boxes late into the night, Bryan listening to 25 different people ask for their own headphone mix). For the rest of us it's been easy peasy. The whole thing is paying off though. We got one of those notes from Dave last night. Dick sent him a rough mix of our first couple of pages and he loved it! Tomorrow we're back on and I can't wait.

For now here's a mess of pics from the 1st couple of days.

-Eric

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April 8, 2008

Members of the World Community

Wow. We just sang with Sweet Honey in the Rock. To a sold-out Zellerbach Hall (~ 2,000 people).

Sweet Honey.jpgSweet Honey in the Rock is a women's group (now in their 34th season!) that I first heard in college and have loved ever since, "raising her voice in hope, love, justice, peace, and resistance." They have the most amazing rich and beautiful sound; as a low alto I was always particularly impressed by the richness and range of their low voices. (A great intro to Sweet Honey is their 25th anniversary album; their new children's album was nominated for a Grammy last year.) I have been in a couple of groups that have sung some of their arrangements; we felt a distant kinship through singing their music. Well, Saturday night (April 5, 2008) it became an upfront-and-personal kinship.

Lynne and Carol.jpgOur wonderful director, Dr. Lynne Morrow, and PME have enjoyed working with Cal Performances. They invited her to work with Sweet Honey in the Rock for the performance of the West Coast premier of a choral work written by Sweet Honey, each member writing a movement, called Indaba. Indaba is "a Zulu word from South Africa meaning to bring together the right people…at the right time…to ask the right questions…in order to arrive at the right answers. It is an invitation to gather for the telling of our stories." The piece is a musical dialogue between youth and their elders, working on getting along and sharing their visions, ending with an invitation to the entire community to come together in a celebratory "Joy in the Morning".

OakArts Soloists.jpgFortunately for us, Lynne thought that the Pacific Mozart Ensemble was the right adult chorus for the job. The youth chorus was the Oakland School for the Arts (OSA) Youth Choir, composed of Vocal Emphasis high school students. What an amazing group of young women and men they are. In order to participate in the group, they have to maintain at least a 3.0 grade average. Check out their website and find out more about this amazing school (and check out their 'April Fool' newsletter link on their home page when you need a lift for the day!). They are total pros and were great fun to talk with; we are already planning to collaborate with them again.

Savannah - small.jpgWe also had several wonderful instrumentalists and percussionists playing with us, one of whom is 14-year old Savannah Harris playing drums. All I can say is, remember her name. She's a star.

There were several solos for both the youth and the adults throughout the work. Valerie sang the part of the Mother in Get Along (wow). Angie, Cindy, Kim, Alexis and I sang step-outs in "Vision for Tomorrow" (with Greg and John doing some vocal percussion). I had a total of 16 lines, 8 in the beginning and 8 in the end. Shouldn't be hard to memorize, right? The first 8 lines were the most difficult lines I have ever had to memorize! PME Soloists.jpgAnd I've memorized a lot of music in my time, in many different genres and languages. I just couldn't get those 8 lines to stick in the right order-I swear I've sung them at least 250 times. They'd stick for 2 hours and then be gone again. I made mnemonics for them, I wrote them down many many times, tried every trick. Fortunately I got them right at the performance-and of course since then I can't get them out of my head.

Through a series of twists and turns, a week before the concert I found out that I would be privileged to sing a lead-in solo in the last song of the piece, Joy in the Morning, a rousing gospel song written by Sweet Honey member Carol Maillard. It starts with a spoken prayer by an OSA student rapper -what a great job he did-followed by me singing the first verse with both choirs and Sweet Honey. WAY past the 'dream come true' place. WAY.

Lark n Carol.jpgDuring our first rehearsal, after the first run-through Carol whispered in my ear "sing it like this is the last time you'll ever get to sing it", and 'start it with complete intention'. What, she could hear the underlying sound of me quaking in my boots?? Sometimes as a performer it's really hard to shut down the 'little voices' inside your head- the ones that talk while you're singing, mind you-- 'sing this note higher, sing this one quieter, OMG, did I just make a mistake??" -- That keeps you from completely being present for the music. So I sang it again. I could tell she wasn't completely happy, so I went home and kept working on it.

Saturday night (April 5, 2008). Center stage with SWEET HONEY.Group Shot on Stage - small.jpgWe sing through the first 6 movements, and from my perspective it's going well. We get to Joy in the Morning. And just as Lynne lifts her baton, the sound system goes crazy. Whirring and LOUD feedback and pops all over the place. We don't move a muscle. Then I move away from the rapper to see if that helps. We wait for it to stop. The rapper starts the prayer; when he starts his microphone isn't turned on. I didn't even think about whether mine was on; I was working on being as present as I could. I start with "I woke up this morning, to a new day shining bright' with as much joy as I could bring-and the microphone is off. At least the first few rows of Zellerbach heard it…nothing to do but keep going, and fortunately the mic came on at the end of the first line. I gave it all I had and then right next to me Carol starts the next verse and just takes it home. I float (it felt like it anyway) back to the chorus for the end of the song.

Dr. Ysaye Barnwell then taught all of us a chant that comes from a people living in the rain forest, where they believe that the rain forest is God; they live inside God.

When we were saying 'goodbye' and 'thank you' to Sweet Honey at the end of the show, I mentioned that next week we would be singing Beethoven's Ninth. Carol's response was 'well now you can go sing it with a little more soul'.

From "Joy in the Morning" to "Ode to Joy".

Indaba.

-- Lark Coryell

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April 23, 2008

From "Joy to the Lord" to "Freude, schöner Götterfunken"--a week in PME

Downtime.jpgLast weekend on the cavernous Zellerbach Hall stage we closed our Sweet Honey in the Rock collaboration singing "Joy in the Morning," repeating "Joy to the Lord" dozens of times as the wonderful women of Sweet Honey moved to the music in front of us, urging on and urged on by the enthusiastic crowd. This weekend we will invoke the same word--Freude this time, again and again--as we join the Napa Valley Symphony to sing Beethoven's Ninth up in Yountville. The last week has catalyzed many reflections about the piece, its political baggage, and my uneasy relationship to it. This process is especially poignant to me as I contemplate that the day I began writing this, April 8th, would have been my father's 93rd birthday, and it is his experience that so strongly affected my own.

This will be my third opportunity to sing the 9th Symphony, and the second time I've actually sung it. The first chance was at Pomona College back in 1978, when the great Robert Shaw came and conducted with the Atlanta Symphony, and all the local college choirs joined to provide the chorus; I would miss that one when I was accepted to do a Study Abroad that semester. My old roommate summed up the experience--"Shaw heard us struggling with these lines and said, 'Beethoven didn't write this for mortals, he wrote it for gods! You must become gods!'"--at least that's what I recall from an aerogram he scribbled to me at Oxford. The next opportunity was in 1994, the first year I sang with PME, a true baptism of fire: Jeffrey Thomas asked for people to beef up his American Bach Soloists chorus, having put together an authentic-instruments band for the Ninth as a capper to the Berkeley Early Music Festival [Recently released on CD]. Everyone else had sung the Ninth multiple times before, and though I enjoyed the steep learning curve with no note-bashing, I don't remember having much time to ponder subtleties before we were recording and performing at First Congregational Church with a world-class group and the World's Loudest Timpanist.

The Ninth has always occupied an odd, even disturbing place in my musical world: my father was born in Breslau (then part of Germany) during the first World War, part of a very musical academic family that played string quartets, with impromptu musical soirees a focus of the their social life. My grandfather and my father played violin and viola, his older brother Otto, a fine cellist, studied composition with Hindemith among others, and my grandmother was a talented pianist. But she was technically Jewish: thus, as the Nazis consolidated their power, everyone would either die or emigrate. My grandfather succumbed to an aneurysm in 1935, at about the age I am now, having lost his academic post to a Party functionary, already clearly seeing the inevitable destruction of German culture and the co-opting of the remaining artists and musicians. Because my grandfather had served with distinction in the first war, Otto was still allowed to join the German Army, under a special rule: as my father bitterly put it, "he could become cannon fodder" and be killed in the Ukraine in 1942. The three remaining siblings and my Grossmutter all ended up in California--a scholar, a professor, a social worker and an artist--and I still have a huge stash of musty piano scores and sheet music waiting to be sorted and given away. Even from my mother's side I got a negative attitude about the Ninth--I think from her small-town Indiana perspective it evoked too many newsreels of goose-stepping troops and waving flags, as well as an undefined resentment of how a supposedly civilized culture could fall so far so fast.

Thus my earliest memories of hearing the Ninth are tainted by a strange sense of shame and ambivalence, by the knowledge that this sublime music had been co-opted to set the mood for gigantic and bombastic Nazi party functions. More broadly and tragically, every quality that my father saw as German--diligence, respect for hard work, creativity, discipline, intellect--was turned to serve evil rather than good. He did not just blame the Party, he blamed his old country as well, for becoming what one scholar has termed "Hitler's willing executioners," though after joining the American Army he helped bring some of those leaders to a form of justice as a translator before the Nuremberg tribunals.

Even as the soaring lines and poetry moved some deep part of me, I felt the shadow of this history, and recently I have been researching the specific ways in which the SS and the SA bent the Ode to Joy to their purposes despite Beethoven's distinctly non-Aryan physiognomy and heritage. Of course, the Nazis' perversion of music mirrored their cynical manipulation of language, from KdF, "Kraft durch Freude" (Strength through Joy, the name of the Nazi recreational-cultural movement), through the bitterly ironic "Arbeit macht frei" (work makes you free) that adorned the entrances to the camps of no return, where many relatives died for their Jewishness, or killed themselves to avoid being killed. Anyone who has seen Leni Riefenstahl's films like "Triumph of the Will" or "Olympiade" knows how frighteningly beautiful the Nazis' choreographed multimedia spectacles truly were--and how seductive their combination of music, movement, and message must have been to susceptible participants.

SHIR0129 edit-1.jpgLast Saturday as I watched Sweet Honey moving in front of me I could not help thinking that their dancing was "ecstatic" in the etymological sense of the word (from the Greek "extasis," meaning taken outside of themselves by this music). As I write this I realize that during the very semester I wasn't singing Beethoven with Shaw I was studying Renaissance Neoplatonism, and learning that this "ecstatic" potential was the very reason why Puritan religious leaders frowned on music: it opened a line to the soul that was beyond reason, too direct and therefore too dangerous to be deployed without careful constraints. With the suspension of reason, participants and listeners were susceptible to the infusion of ideas without conscious control--something we find laughable in the context of "Dirty Dancing" but menacing in the context of Nuremberg or Berlin.

Athletes sometimes know this feeling of "extasis" too, the "runner's high," the suffusion of feel-good chemicals produced by the body as it exercises at a sufficiently intense level: you are lifted up, you feel supernaturally strong, you sometimes get the sense that you are simultaneously outside of yourself looking in, and inhabiting your body in a way that doesn't happen in your everyday existence.

Rehearsing the Ninth this spring with Lynne has been an intensely athletic experience: more so than other choruses, we are trying to put across the words and the notes with greater clarity than audiences are used to getting in the customary wall-of-sound presentations. For the first time many of us are actually hearing some of the lines and words that otherwise get lost to poor diction. Even this aspect has brought its odd connections, as being "the German pronunciation guy" makes me self-conscious about my limits: thanks to a year in Germany when I was nine years old, and years of listening to my Dad and his relatives, my German is more by ear than by rule.

Practice with the Choir.jpgThe rehearsals are a great workout for both the vocal apparatus and the mind: Start with the difficulty of spitting out lines like "Ihr / stürzt-nie / der-Mil / li-onen" (do you bow down, you millions?) without letting Germanic consonant-clusters tangle you up. Add the sopranos' sustained high A's, toss in the preposterous alto and tenor lines written by a deaf man whose inner soundtrack still resounded with unrealized ideas, and don't forget the bass lines that mix marching-song bravado and gravity-defying series of high E's and F's as we seek God "über'm Sternenzelt" (above the star-canopy). But it is not enough to get to the notes and sustain them: just as demanding are the changes of dynamic force (crescendos, decrescendos, and sforzandos) that Lynne has been pushing us to honor and perfect, not content to do the usual Beethovenian full-volume blast-away. Recognizing this aerobic demand, we've "run the program" straight through far more times than any of us has in previous performances. While some rehearsal sessions addressed only small chunks and technical problems, taking apart particular measures or sections, we've had time to execute the whole piece at different tempo markings, even as fatigue takes its toll, exactly as an athlete has to run repeat-intervals and train under game conditions. I think the results will be stunning.

The connection between the physical and the spiritual has always been strong for me--and again I honor my father the classics professor by recognizing the common root of "respiration" and "inspiration," to breathe, to be suffused with something. In multiple senses, then, we are bringing a "spiritual" dimension to this familiar work, singing it with the rhythmic conviction and technical commitment that we brought to the Negro Spirituals last season. There's a line from the old movie "Chariots of Fire" that captures it best for me: before the Olympics the devout Scottish middle-distance runner says, "God meant for me to run, and when I run fast, I feel His pleasure." Robert Shaw was right: singing the Ninth well can take you, even fleetingly, to a plane beyond the mortal, and can connect us to something or someone long gone, as it has for me.

Working on the Ninth this spring--and placing it in the context of the Joy we experienced with Sweet Honey--has redeemed this piece of music in ways I did not expect, from the resonance of the words themselves, to the unexpected rhythmic and dynamic complexities, to the underlying architecture of the layers of instruments and voices. When everything is clicking, whether in rehearsal or performance, when everyone from seasoned veteran to newest member is giving the music their all, a chorus of voices becomes a conduit for some bigger magic, we feel a Pleasure, a Joy, a transcendent Freude, that takes us beyond ourselves to a world of love without oppression or pretension, a celebration of the uplifting and healing power of music. If we can communicate something of this pleasure to the audience, pass along this schöne Götterfunken (beautiful divine spark), then all our hard work will have truly succeeded.

John Stenzel
April 2008

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