Showing posts with label 20 Questions. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 20 Questions. Show all posts

Wednesday, October 29, 2008

20 Questions with...composer and violinist Mark O'Connor

Mark O’Connor is a composer and violinist whose fluency with both classical and American traditions has made him one of the most acclaimed figures in contemporary music. In October 2008, O’Connor began a year as the first Artist in Residence at the Herb Alpert School of Music at UCLA, and in November, gave a two-day residency at Philadelphia’s Curtis School of Music. O’Connor takes educating the next generation of musicians seriously – his annual String Camps provide hundreds of students with intensive training from O’Connor and some of the world's finest performers and teachers.  His Americana Symphony, “Variations on Appalachia Waltz,” was recently recorded by the Baltimore Symphony Orchestra, Marin Alsop conducting, and will be released March 10, 2009 by OMAC Records. 

1. A few works of classical music that you adore:  

Copland's 3rd Symphony. Beethoven's "Rasumovsky" string quartets

2. Classical music recordings that you treasure:

Heifetz: Beethoven & Brahms Concertos (Beethoven: Concerto for violin in D; Brahms: Violin Concerto in D Op77)

John Elliot Gardiner - 9 Symphonies by Ludwig Van Beethoven 

3. Favorite non-classical musicians and/or recordings: 

French jazz violinist Stephane Grappelli and Texas fiddling master Benny Thomasson – my mentors.

4.  Music that makes you cry - any genre:

A very interesting recording of Barber's Adagio by the New Zealand Symphony for its poignant vulnerability.

5.  Definitely underrated work(s) or composer(s):

Jennifer Higdon, Ken Fuchs and Kenji Bunch    

6.  Possibly overrated work(s) or composer (s):

Elliot Carter, Philip Glass

7.  Live music performance (s) you attended - any genre - that you'll never forget:  

Berlin Philharmonic playing Mahler at Carnegie. The first time I saw Stephane Grappelli play at Queen Elizabeth Hall, Vancouver, Canada  

8.  A few relatively recent films you love:

The Great Debaters; the French film, Manon

9.  A few films you consider classics:

American Beauty, because it depicts dysfunctional American families in suburbia.

Music Of The Heart featuring Meryl Streep captures the importance of music and music teachers in public school. I also like this movie because I did a cameo.

What the heck, The Patriot with Mel Gibson, mainly because I played the violin solo over the closing credits!  

10.  A few books that are important to you (and why): 

Disruptive Divas: Feminism, Identity and Popular Music. It clarified for me how to bring back emotional content in analyzing music.

The Melungeons - The Resurrection of a Proud People, because it helped me discover the possible missing link to the development of American fiddle music.

The Unanswered Question – Leonard Bernstein

11.  Thing(s) about yourself that you're most proud of:

Never listening to the people who told me "No, you can't do it.”   

12.  Thing(s) about yourself that you're embarrassed by: 

I had an odd condition in my childhood, a phobia of buttons.  

13.  Three things you can't live without: 

Music, Mexican food and Sadie

14.  When I want to get away from it all I...:

Visit 2,000-year-old Native American mineral springs.    

15.  People are surprised to find out that: 

I broke the world record in the skateboard high jump as a teenager.  

16.  My favorite cities are:

New York City, Savannah, Santa Fe and Seattle.

17. I have a secret crush on:

Tina Fey

18.  My most obvious guilty pleasure is: 

The Starbucks Soy Green Tea Latte  

19.  I'd really love to meet: 

Barack Obama

20.  I never understood why... 

Dvorak came to America and exclaimed that we have some great musical material here, but not very many classical composers in the U.S. got the memo.  But with my hopes for an American Classical music movement, that could change perhaps!  

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Compiled and edited by Albert Imperato.  For permission to post or print this interview write to aimperato@21cmediagroup.com


Monday, June 23, 2008

20 (Plus) Questions with...pianist David Greilsammer

The Jerusalem-born pianist David Greilsammer will be living with Mozart in Summer 2008, playing all 18 of the composer’s piano sonatas in an all-day marathon in Paris (July 5) and in six-concerts at the Verbier Festival in Switzerland (July 19 – 31).  He records exclusively for the naïve label, which will re-issue his acclaimed recording of Mozart’s three earliest piano concerts in July (France on July 8; Europe soon after; August or September in the US).  Admired for his innovative, sometimes startling recital programs, Greilsammer was named the “Revelation of the Year” at France’s “Victoires de la Musique Classique.”  His debut release for naïve, “fantasie_fantasme,” was named Record of the Year” by the London Times.  

Full disclosure:  David records for the Paris-based naive label, which is currently a client of 21C Media Group.

1. A few works of classical music that you adore: 

Mozart’s Magic Flute. Schubert’s C Major String Quintet. Debussy’s Pélléas et Melisande. Berg’s Violin Concerto. Ligeti’s Piano Concerto. 

 2.  Classical music recordings that you treasure:

Schubert- F Minor Fantasy for four hands played by Murray Perahia & Radu Lupu; Ravel- Piano Concerto in G played by Arturo Benedetti Michelangeli; Janacek String Quartets played by the Alban Berg Quartet; Schumann- Dichterliebe sung by Fritz Wunderlich

 3.  Favorite non-classical musicians and/or recordings:

Radiohead; Bjork, Keith Jarrett, Brad Meldhau, David Bowie, Caetano Veloso, Serge Gainsbourg, Stevie Wonder.

 4.  Music that makes you cry – any genre:

Berg’s Wozzeck, Puccini’s Madame Butterfly, Leonard Cohen’s “Hallelujah,” Tom Waits’ “Martha,” Astor Piazzolla’s “Adios Nonino”

 5.  Definitely underrated work(s) or composer (s):

All of Mozart’s early piano concertos, early piano sonatas, and early operas.

 6.  Possibly overrated work(s) or composer (s):

Beethoven’s “Emperor” Piano Concerto

 7.  Live music performance (s) you attended – any genre – that you’ll never forget: 

Keith Jarrett improvising at the piano/Carnegie Hall, New York; Leonard Bernstein conducting the Israel Philharmonic/Jerusalem; Rolling Stones/ Madison Square Garden, New York; Richard Goode playing Schumann at the Théatre des Champs Elysées, Paris.

 8.  A few relatively recent films you love:

City of God, Kill Bill 1 & 2; All About my Mother; The Lives of Others; There Will be Blood…and may I add a Broadway musical: Avenue Q!!!

 9.  A few films you consider classics: 

Mel Brook’s The Producers, Woody Allen’s Everything You Always Wanted to Know About Sex But Were Afraid to Ask, Billy Wilder’s Some Like it Hot, Carol Reed’s The Third Man, Milos Forman’s Amadeus.

10.  A few books that are important to you:

Isaac Bashevis Singer: The Slave; Mikhail Bulgakov: The Master and Margarita;

Albert Camus: The Stranger; Gabriel Garcia Marquez: Love in the Time of Cholera;

Paul Auster: Moon Palace; Lewis Carroll: Alice in Wonderland.

 11.  Thing(s) about yourself that you’re most proud of: 

1. Commissioning a new piece from a young composer and performing the world premiere of this work; 2. Being able to make the best Crème Brulée in the world.

 12.  Thing(s) about yourself that you’re embarrassed by:

The amount of chocolate I can eat in a single day.

 13.  Three things you can’t live without:

Art, Art, Art.

 14.  “When I want to get away from it all I…”

Go to Venice and stare at my favorite Titian painting for hours.

 15.  “People are surprised to find out that I…”

Served in the Israeli Army for a few years

 16.  “My favorite cities are…”

New York, Paris, Tel Aviv, Venice, Kyoto.

 17.  “I have a secret crush on…”

Madonna, but I haven’t told her yet. I’m waiting for her to first ask me to play in her next album.

 18.  “My most obvious guilty pleasure is…”

Discovering a beautiful piece of music that I had never heard before.

 19.  “I’d really love to meet…”

Duke Ellington, Marilyn Monroe, Frida Kahlo, J.S Bach, Quentin Tarantino.

 20.  “I never understood why…”

Arts and Culture receive so little support from countries and governments around the world. It should be a top priority, always.

 BONUS QUESTION:

 21.  Question you wish someone would ask you (and the answer to that question): 

 Q:  Who would be your dream partner for your next performance of Mozart’s two-piano concerto?

 A:  Keith Jarrett! And in the same dream, towards the end of the slow movement, we suddenly start improvising a long and beautiful jazz ballad together.

Compiled and edited by Albert Imperato.  For permission to post or print this interview write to aimperato@21cmediagroup.com.