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By Jacob Stockinger
It is a case of answered prayers.
The Ear very much wanted to hear the critically acclaimed recordings of late piano pieces by Brahms and Chopin nocturnes by the British pianist Sir Stephen Hough. But they were unavailable for streaming. (You can hear appeal excerpts from the release along with critical acclaim in the YouTube video at the bottom. Click on Watch on YouTube.)
So I was considering buying the expensive recordings in CD format.
Until Friday. Now I don’t have to worry or spend money. And neither do you if you use a streaming service.
For the first time in its history, Hyperion Records will start streaming its classical catalogue. This weekend streamed both of the Hough recordings.
That means consumers who use a streaming service such as Apple Music, Idagio, Spotify, Presto, Total and Amazon will finally have access to some terrific artists and outstanding recordings.
Specifically, Hyperion — the home to many fine and well-established artists (below) has been acquired by Universal Music Group and will be issued on Decca and Deutsche Grammophon labels.
Clockwise from top left are: Violinist Alina Ibragimova, pianist Andrey Gugin (who won the Sydney International Competition), pianist Angela Hewitt, pianist Stephen Hough, conductor Martyn Brabbins and cellist Steven Isserlis. (Image courtesy of Hyperion Records)
Hyperion was something of a longtime hold-out when it came to the streaming platform. However, as Hyperion’s managing director Simon Perry explains, times have changed for the privately owned, independent label.
“The world is moving very quickly towards a different way of accessing music,” he says. “This seems to be the way forward, as it’s what people want. It also became clear to us that we needed to make sure that our artists had representation on streaming platforms, so we decided it was time to get involved.”
The Ear is very big fan of Hough, who has performed with the Madison Symphony Orchestra several times and offered a master class at the UW-Madison.
He also relishes listening to Canadian pianist Angela Hewitt’s outstanding and prize-winning performances of Baroque keyboard works by Johann Sebastian Bach, Domenico Scarlatti, and François Couperin as well as her complete Beethoven and Ravel cycles. She has performed at the Wisconsin Union Theater.
Cellist Steven Isserlis has also performed at the Madison Symphony Orchestra and the Wisconsin Union Theater. And the prolific supervirtuoso pianist Marc-André Hamelin has performed Ravel and Richard Strauss with the symphony. (I particularly like his several volumes of piano sonatas by Haydn.)
One of my favorite string quartets — the Takács String Quartet, which has also performed at the Wisconsin Union Theater — will also have its catalogue of great quartets by Haydn, Mozart, Beethoven and Schubert available. Its new recording combines works by Dvorak and Samuel Coleridge-Taylor.
If you go to the Hyperion website (bel0w) and click on More, you can see an impressive lists of performers: https://www.hyperion-records.co.uk
The initial batch to be streamed will feature 200 releases and by spring of 2024 will gradually work its way through the entire Hyperion back catalogue of more than 2,000 recordings, off music from the 12th century to the 21 century, that date back to the label’s founding in 1980.
What do you think of Hyperion’s move to streaming?’
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By Jacob Stockinger
After more than 40 years of supporting the opera and voice programs at the University of Wisconsin-Madison’s Mead Witter School of Music, Opera Props will become Friends of University Opera. (Below is a recent poster and at bottom is YouTube video of the production of Puccini’s popular “La Bohème”).
The new organization will be jointly administered.
Here is the official announcement:
Exciting news!
Change is coming!
Opera Props is now Friends of University Opera!
Opera Props Board members, working for two years with the Mead Witter School of Music and the Wisconsin Foundation and Alumni Association, have laid the groundwork for a wonderful collaboration.
On July 1, Opera Props became Friends of University Opera!
The Friends group will continue to support the Voice and Opera program with newsletters and mailings, as well as hosting events to support our students, engage donors and encourage new audiences.
Friends will continue as advisors to Voice and Opera Faculty on use of funds for scholarships and production support.
This year we were able to award $35,000 in scholarships.
Cooperation with the Foundation will help us do even more!
Gifts to the University of Wisconsin Foundation will be designated for the Opera Program Fund (112625070).
Join, donate, show your support and meet the new singers at the Fall Showcase Concert ( in the beautiful Collins Recital Hall of the Hamel Music Center on campus.(Below are the participants of a past Fall Showcase concert at the First Unitarian Society in Madison)
Save the Date: Saturday, September 30, at 2 p.m.
A more detailed letter has been sent to the Opera Props mailing list under the signature of the current president Kathleen Harker. But The Ear cannot find the full version of it posted yet online at any website.
For more information about Opera Props, now Friends of University Opera, including past email newsletters, go to: https://www.uwoperaprops.org
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By Jacob Stockinger
The start of selling single tickets — rather than season subscriptions, which have been on sale since the spring — is coming up.
The Wisconsin Chamber Orchestra starts selling them on this coming Monday, July 31, and the Madison Symphony Orchestra starts on Saturday, Aug. 19, both through the Overture Center box office (below), which will also start selling single tickets to Overture Presents events this Friday, July 28. The Madison Opera starts selling single tickets in September.
Do the Madison Symphony Orchestra and other arts presenters discriminate against single people when it comes to selling single or subscription tickets? And if they do, is it legal or illegal?
It may sound paradoxical, but the question is especially relevant because of demographics — specifically, the increasing number of single seniors and the growing trend among young people to stay single and marry later. And it certainly violates the principles of equity and equality. It also seems to violate good fiscal sense and the financial well-being of a business that is usually first-come, first served. Plus seating at a concert would seem a form of legally protected public accommodation.
A CASE STUDY
A veteran concert-goer and reader of this blog recalls the following incident from last spring:
“I spontaneously decided I might go to the Madison Symphony Orchestra concert with “Carmina Burana’ and Florence Price (Symphony No. 3).
“I went to the website and saw a seat, one of a pair, in the orchestra section of Overture that looked good for $98. Plus, there was a $15 service fee.
“But when I selected that, I was told by the computer that it wasn’t for sale because it would leave the seat next to it empty.
“In other words, the MSO is doing so well that they can reject somebody buying a single ticket because they want to save the two tickets for a couple. So I just decided fuck it.
“It left me feeling that if I couldn’t easily buy the seat I wanted, why bother. There were other less ideal seats available.”
And so a $103 seat was lost to MSO’s revenue.
IS THE OVERTURE CENTER RESPONSIBLE?
To be fair, it might not be only the Madison Symphony Orchestra that is guilty of the practice.
The Ear heard from another reader who said a theater group in the Overture Center did the same thing. The reader could not remember details.
So it makes one curious to know if other resident groups in Overture — the Wisconsin Chamber Orchestra, the Madison Opera, Forward Theater, Children’s Theater of Madison, the Madison Ballet, Kanopy Dance and Li Chiao Ping Dance — do the same thing.
If so, then perhaps it is a policy of the Overture Center’s box office and the algorithm that its computer uses for selling tickets.
But that just shifts the discrimination, not corrects or prevents it.
SINGLISM
The practice of discriminating against single people — which may not be illegal but certainly seems unethical — has even been given a name: singlism.
Singlism can be compared to racism, sexism and ageism, to discrimination based on religion and sexual orientation or gender identity. But single people are not legally protected classes under federal law and in many states.
I think Overture and all its resident groups receive public funds from the Wisconsin Arts Board, Dane Arts (formerly Dane County Arts Commission) and the Madison Arts Commission.
It seems logical, then, to The Ear that some investigation by the city, county and state — perhaps the various Offices of Equal Opportunity — is in order and that some correction should be implemented immediately, given the upcoming sale of single tickets to single persons. At the very least, political leaders and government lawyers should weigh in on the ethics and legality of the issue.
Have you ever experienced similar discrimination?
Are you aware of others who have?
What do you think of the practice of refusing to sell certain tickets to a single person?
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By Jacob Stockinger
Looking for new recordings to sample?
Here are detailed reviews of Rachmaninoff symphonies by Yannick Nézet-Séguin; keyboard sonatas of C.P.E. Bach played by Keith Jarrett; and a Chinese violin concerto by Joshua Bell (below and in the YouTube video at the bottom).
In additions you can find reviews of music by Schubert plus an evaluation of the best wireless headphones for classical music.
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By Jacob Stockinger
Madison Opera’s popular and free annual “Opera in the Park” concert with the Madison Symphony Orchestra and the Madison Opera Chorus plus soloists under the baton of maestro John DeMain was rained out Saturday night due to unexpectedly severe weather and will NOT take place tonight.
Usually the concert — which draws tens of thousands of people — would be postponed to the next day, a Sunday — namely today.
But not this year.
It has been CANCELED until 2024.
Wondering why?
Here is the explanation from the Madison Opera:
“Due to an unexpected thunderstorm, we postponed Opera in the Park shortly before the program began. At that time, we thought we would be able to resume the program.
For the safety of everyone evolved, we then decided to cancel Opera in the Park altogether.
Unfortunately, we cannot perform today (Sunday) as we has passed the deadline to reschedule the concert.
It was amazing to see so many of you gathered in the park Saturday evening. We wish we could have shared this wonderful music and all of the artists’ hard work.
We look forward to seeing you in the Overture Center this fall and again in the park next year.
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By Jacob Stockinger
This year the annual Handel Aria Competition marks its 10th anniversary.
Founders Dean and Orange Schroeder write: “It’s interesting to note that the first-prize winners for the past three competitions have all been studying in the U.S., but were originally from the Philippines, England and Australia. We’ve truly become international in scope, with applications from around the world.”
The final round of this year’s competition will take place on Friday, Aug. 18, at 7:30 p.m. in the historic Grace Episcopal Church (below), 116 West Washington Ave. on the Capitol Square downtown. It will take place in-person and via live-streaming.
As usual, the singers will be accompanied by the outstanding local early music group Madison Bach Musicians (below), under founder, director, conductor and harpsichordist Trevor Stephenson.
Tickets are now available for both in-person attendance ($25) and live streaming (pay what you can afford — which The Ear thinks is an ideal and socially just way to allow access to the arts and to expand an audience). Details about ticket availability are on the very well organized, comprehensive and user-friendly website: https://handelariacompetition.org/
The website also offers detailed biographies of the contestants; repertoire that will be sung, much of which comes from “Messiah”; the jury members; past history; a live auction and fundraising; and an impressive downloadable program for the concert.
This year offers seven finalists (pictured below) selected from dozens of applicants around the world:
Clockwise, from upper left, they are:
• Cody Bowers, countertenor
• Olivia Doig, soprano
• Fran Daniel Laucerica, tenor
• Emily Donato, soprano
• Chea Young Kang, soprano
• Andrew Bearden Brown, tenor
• Matthew Reese, countertenor
The 2022 winners (below) were Joanne Evans, mezzo-soprano, first prize (center); Omar Najmi, tenor, second prize; and Emily Donato, soprano, third prize. Donato is returning this year for another try at the first prize.
(In the YouTube video at the bottom, you can hear past winner soprano Sarah Brailey singing in the 2015 competition. YouTube features performances from past competitors and competitions. Brailey has gone on to win a Grammy, become a guest faculty member at the University of Wisconsin-Madison’s Mead Witter School of Music; and the artistic director of the Handel Aria Competition.)
Here is a list of the opera and oratorio arias by Baroque composer George Frederick Handel that will be featured in the competition concert:
Emily Donato: “With ravish’d ears” from “Alexander’s Feast” and “Dunque i lacci d’un volto…Ah! Crudel” from “Rinaldo”
Olivia Doig: “Mean as he was…Author of peace” from “Saul” and “Il primo ardor” from “Ariodante”
Chea Kang: “Rejoice greatly” from “Messiah” and “O Numi!…Ma chi punir desio” from “Flavio”
Cody Bowers: “But who may abide” from “Messiah” and “Inumano fratel…stille amare” from “Tolomeo”
Matthew Reese: “Inumano fratel…stille amare” from “Tolomeo” and “O thou that tellest good tidings to Zion” from “Messiah”
Andrew Bearden Brown: “Comfort Ye…Every Valley” from “Messiah” and “Alla offesa…È un folle” from “Alcina”
Fran Daniel Laucerica: “Comfort Ye…Every Valley” from “Messiah” and “Un momento di contento” from “Alcina”
For more information and to directly contact the Handel Aria Competition write to PO Box 5554, Madison, WI 53705 or go the home website www.HandelAriaCompetition.org
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By Jacob Stockinger
The world-famous virtuoso pianist André Watts (below, in a photo from the Jacobs School of Music at Indiana University) has died. He was 77. The cause of death was prostate cancer.
Watts performed several times to critical and audience acclaim acclaim with the Madison Symphony Orchestra.
From the beginning of his career at 16 — his debut with the New York Philharmonic as a protege of Leonard Bernstein — Watts was known as an outstanding interpreter of the technically challenging music of Franz Liszt. (He performs the fiendishly difficult Paganini Etude “La Campanella” in the YouTube video at the bottom.)
Below are two stories about Watts’ passing.
Curiously and ironically, Watts seemed particularly shy when it came to speaking about his role in opening up the white world of Western classical music to performers of color, especially African-Americans. Yet he persistently encouraged the talents of those and other performers through his educational efforts.
Here is the official press release/obituary from the Jacobs School of Music at Indiana University, where he was a distinguished professor since 2004.
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By Jacob Stockinger
Lately, The Ear has been listening to the five piano concertos by Ludwig van Beethoven (below).
That, of course, is not counting the composer’s rarely performed piano transcription of his own violin concerto.
The five concertos are so different but so consistently great that they are always in demand for programming and always a pleasure to listen to as well, I imagine, to play.
Lately I have been sampling two new complete recordings that have received high praise from critics: one (below top) by the Chinese pianist Haochen Zhang, who won the Van Cliburn competition in 2009 and recorded his set, including a cadenza by him, with the Philadelphia Orchestra under conductor Nathalie Stutzmann; and the other, a complete live set (below bottom) by the American pianist Garrick Ohlsson, the winner of the 1970 Chopin competition, recently recorded at the Grand Teton Festival.
Both are fine recordings and well worth listening to.
They made me once again recalculate my personal ranking of the five piano concertos. I don’t mean a ranking by quality or which one is the best, but simply which individual concertos I prefer to listen to by frequency. Here is any order: 4, 3, 5 (Emperor), 1, and 2.
How would you rank these five masterworks?
There are so many excellent recordings of these glorious works. I have listened to individual concertos and complete sets by Claudio Arrau, Emanuel Ax, Alfred Brendel (who has recorded them three times), Maurizio Pollini, Mitsuko Uchida, Daniel Barenboim, Murray Perahia, Leif Ove Andnes, Glenn Gould, Arthur Rubinstein (who recorded them twice), Rudolf Serkin, Vladimir Ashkenazy, Jan Lisiecki, Rudolf Buchbinder, Krystian Zimerman, Yefim Bronfman; and on and on. It is hard to pick just one favorite and the idea of a “definitive” performance is impossible.
And truth be told, I generally turn to different performers for different concertos. Martha Argerich has not recorded all five but I love her performances of Piano Concertos 1, 2 and 3. I admire the late Nelson Freire in the Piano Concerto No. 5 (“Emperor”). And I am very moved by Krystian Zimerman’s playing of the inspired and unconventional middle movement of the Piano Concerto No. 4 in the YouTube video at the bottom.
But overall the most consistent sets I continue to like are classics by the late Leon Fleisher and Richard Goode, who completely understands and captures what is special about Beethoven, as he demonstrated in his pioneering complete set of Beethoven’s 32 piano sonatas.
How would you personally rank the Beethoven pianos concertos as your favorites by appeal and listenability?
Which pianist in Beethoven’s five piano concertos do you listen to and like the most often?
Is there a complete set you find irresistible and recommend to others? Or a particular recording of a particular concerto?
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By Jacob Stockinger
Gramophone Magazine, in the U.K, has named the best classical albums so far in 2023.
The Ear has only listened to a few of them. But so far he agrees with the choices. He too loves “The Handel Project” (below) — a solo piano recital with works by Handel and Brahms — by South Korean pianist Seong-Jo Cho, who won the Chopin Competition in 2015 and has released many noteworthy albums for Deutsche Grammophon since then. They include works by Chopin, Debussy, Mozart, Schubert, Berg and Liszt.
One does wonder if the British magazine tends to favor British composers and British record labels.
But you can decide for yourself.
One of the advantages of a streaming service — The Ear uses Apple Music and Apple Music Classical — is that once you pay your monthly fee, you have unlimited listening available. You can sample lots of these new — and often unusual — releases without having to buy them. Many are also featured on YouTube.
In addition, the story and capsule reviews have links to the full Gramophone reviews, which has background about some of the rarely recorded or performed composers.
PS: Note that in the last blog post, originally The Ear mistakenly said the first session of the First Unitarian Society summer sings for the public is on Tuesday, July 10. The correct day is MONDAY, JULY 10. The Ear apologizes for the error and any inconvenience.
PLEASE HELP THE EAR. IF YOU LIKE A CERTAIN BLOG POST, SPREAD THE WORD. FORWARD A LINK TO IT OR, SHARE IT or TAG IT (not just “Like” it) ON FACEBOOK. Performers can use the extra exposure to draw potential audience members to an event. And you might even attract new readers and subscribers to the blog.
By Jacob Stockinger
The 17th international Tchaikovsky Competition (*the official logo is below) was held in Moscow and St. Petersburg from June 19 to July 1, 2023.
As usual, Russian contestants completely dominated the various categories and various medal levels. No surprise there.
Contestants from the United Kingdom, the United States and France also took home medals.
But Asian musicians continued to demonstrate their competition-winning talents. Many came from China — but not from Taiwan, Japan, Taiwan and North Korea. Quite noticeable, however, were the many contestants and medal winners from non-communist South Korea.
You might recall that South Korean contestants also won the Van Cliburn Competition last year and the Cliburn Junior and Chopin competitions earlier this year.
Clearly, South Korea is doing something special that works when it comes to music education. Indeed, music education is Asia seems especially successful, as was discussed in a previous blog post:
For specific names of category winners with their placement and nationality, here are links:
And the official website for the competition has lots of blogs and vlogs (video blogs); biographies of the contestants; repertoire; details about the competition including four orchestras and conductors (including Valery Gergiev, who supports Vladimir Putin and the Russian war in Ukraine); venues and history; and a photo gallery.
If you would like to hear many recitals and concerts from various rounds of the competition and the Laureate Concerts in Moscow and St. Petersburg, just go to YouTube and type Tchaikovsky Competition 2023 in the search engine.
In honor of Van Cliburn, the 23-year-old American who unexpectedly won the first Tchaikovsky Competition in 1958 during the Cold War and found lifelong international acclaim, is this year’s gold medalist in the piano, Sergei Davydchenko from Russia.
He is playing the second and third movements of Tchaikovsky’s famous and popular Piano Concerto No. 1 in B-flat minor, Op. 23.