Overture Magazine: 2017-2018 Season January-February 2018 | Page 38

RITE OF SPRING In 2016, Marsalis traveled to Germany for a concert with the Bayerische Staatsoper at the National Theatre in Munich. He then made his debut with the City Chamber Orchestra of Hong Kong, followed by a performance with the Malaysian Philharmonic Orchestra at the Petronas Towers in Kuala Lumpur. Marsalis’ original music for a revival of August Wilson’s Fences, garnered a Drama Desk Award for Outstanding Music in a Play and a Tony® nomination for Best Original Score Written for the Theater. Marsalis also provided music for The Mountaintop and served as musical curator for the 2014 revival of A Raisin in the Sun. His screen credits include writing original music for Mo’ Better Blues and acting in School Daze and Throw Momma from the Train. Marsalis formed the Marsalis Music label in 2002, which has documented his own music, talented new stars and older masters. He also shares his knowledge as an educator at Michigan State, San Francisco State and North Carolina Central universities and in conducting workshops in the U.S. and abroad. Marsalis has toured with Sting, collaborated with the Grateful Dead and Bruce Hornsby, served as musical director of The Tonight Show and hosted NPR’s Jazz Set. Together with Harry Connick, Jr. and New Orleans Habitat for Humanity, Marsalis conceived of and helped to realize The Musicians’ Village, a community that provides homes to the displaced families of musicians and other local residents affected by Hurricane Katrina. The Musicians’ Village includes the Ellis Marsalis Center for Music, a community center dedicated to preserving New Orleans’ musical legacy with spaces for performance, instruction and recording. Marsalis is the recipient of three Grammy® Awards and (together with his father and brothers) was designated as a Jazz Master by the National Endowment for the Arts. Branford Marsalis last appeared with the BSO in January 2003, performing works of Villa- Lobos and Fauré, Thomas Wilkins, conductor. 36 OV E R T U R E / BSOmusic.org About the Concert ABSTRACTIONS Anna Clyne Born in London, England, March 9, 1980; now living in Brooklyn, NY In May 2016, the Baltimore Symphony Orchestra celebrated its 100 th -anniversary season with an extraordinary collaboration between the dynamic young British- American composer Anna Clyne and the Baltimore Museum of Art. Inspired by five contemporary abstract works from the BMA and the private collection of Rheda Becker and Robert Meyerhoff, she created a beautiful new orchestral work for the BSO. Now Marin Alsop brings Abstractions back so that we can experience it more deeply. It is not surprising that Clyne should choose to write a musical work inspired by the visual arts, for that’s how she launches many of her compositions: not by experimenting on the piano, but instead by creating a collage painting for her studio wall, embodying visually what she wants her new piece to say sonically. “My passion is collaboration,” she explains. “Inspired by visual images and physical movement, my intention is to create music that complements and interacts with other art forms and that impacts performers and audiences alike.” Born in London, Clyne is currently living in the U.S., where for several season she served as the Chicago Symphony Orchestra’s Mead Composer-in-Residence; she has held similar posts with the Cabrillo Festival of Contemporary Music and with Orchestre National d’Ile de France. Her music is in huge demand by major orchestras in America and Europe and has been presented in such diverse concert locations as New York’s trendy Le Poisson Rouge and the establishment icon Carnegie Hall. Clyne describes Abstractions in her own words: “Abstractions is a suite of five movements inspired by five contrasting contemporary artworks from the Baltimore Museum of Art and from the private collection of Rheda Becker and Robert Meyerhoff, whom this music honors. ‘Marble Moon’ —inspired by Sara VanDerBeek’s Marble Moon (2015). ‘Auguries ’—inspired by Julie Mehretu’s Auguries (2010). ‘Seascape ’— inspired by Hiroshi Sugimoto’s Caribbean Sea, Jamaica (1980). ‘River ’—inspired by Ellsworth Kelly’s River II (2005). ‘Three’—inspired by Brice Marden’s 3 (1987– 88). “In drawing inspiration from these artworks, I have tried to capture the feelings or imagery that they evoke, the concept of the work or the process adopted by the artists. Such examples are the filtered blues, and the contrast between light falling on the earthy stone and the mysterious moon, that characterizes VanDerBeek’s Marble Moon; the long arching lines, compact energetic marks and dense shifting forms of a system on the verge of collapse in Mehretu’s Auguries; the serene horizon with rippled water in Sugimoto’s Caribbean Sea, Jamaica; the stark juxtaposition of the energetic black-and-white lines that enlarge Kelly’s brushstrokes in River II; and the lines that, inspired by Asian calligraphy and the structure of seashells, appear to dance in Marden’s 3. “Some common threads between the artworks are their use of limited color palettes, references to nature and the capturing of time as a current that flows —distilling and preserving it so that we can contemplate it as the viewer. I was also attracted to the structures of these works —for example, River II and Auguries, which at first sight could be seen as random and even chaotic, but are in fact created within a sense of order, which makes them feel both dynamic and structural. “Thank you to Marin Alsop and the Baltimore Symphony Orchestra for this wonderful opportunity to write music in honor of Rheda Becker and Robert Meyerhoff, and to Kristen Hileman, Senior Curator of Contemporary Art at the Baltimore Museum of Arts, for her generosity of time and knowledge.” Instrumentation: Three flutes including piccolo, three oboes including English horn, three clarinets including bass clarinet, three bassoons including a contrabassoon, four horns, three trumpets, t