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Classical & More

TONIGHT: Opera on Tap at Blue Moon Tavern

Local divas celebrate the bar’s 78th anniversary with some of owner Gus’s favorite arias.

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Photo: courtesy Opera on Tap.

The last place you’d expect to see an opera diva is in a dingy dive bar that once served Hot Pockets. But that’s exactly the point of Opera on Tap, a national nonprofit trying to loosen the corset on highbrow art and bring those talented tenors to the corner pub. The Seattle branch celebrates Blue Moon Tavern’s 78th anniversary tonight with some of owner Gus’s favorite arias from Carmen, La bohème, Threepenny Opera, and a little Wagner (“so bring your swords and spears!”).

Megan Chenovick and Daniel Oakden (both of Inverse Opera) are slated to perform, along with Sarah Mattox (Seattle Opera), Rob McPherson, Ksenia Popova, Ryan Bede, Kim Giordano, and David McDade on the keys.

Opera on Tap
Apr 16 @ 8:30, $5 cover, 21+, Blue Moon Tavern

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Tags: Met Picks, Classical and More, Opera on Tap

Ticket Deals

Seattle Symphony Sale: $25 Orchestra Seats Until March 22

Select shows include Bluebeard’s Castle and Marvin Hamlisch’s American Songbook.

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Photo courtesy Ben VanHouten.

Marvin Hamlisch and the SSO cover the American Songbook this spring.

View Slideshow » Illustration:

Photo courtesy Ben VanHouten.

Marvin Hamlisch and the SSO cover the American Songbook this spring.

View Slideshow » Illustration:

Seattle Symphony performs Bluebeard’s Castle, with sets by Dale Chihuly, in 2007. Image courtesy chihuly.com.

Just got an email about this Seattle Symphony sale, and for some reason, I keep picturing conductor Ludovic Morlot holding orchestra tickets in one hand and a ShamWow in the other and shouting “We’re slashing prices!” with a French accent. I think I’m tired.

Anyway, all orchestra seats (usually $40–$80, roughly) have been marked down to $25 for these shows, now through March 22. Click on the links below or call 206-215-4747 to buy tickets.

The Count Basie Orchestra
Mar 30 & 31
It don’t mean a thing if it ain’t got that swing.

Beyond the Score: Tchaikovsky’s Fourth Symphony
Apr 15
The evening’s performance is preceded by a multimedia presentation on the symphony’s history, narrated by former KING-FM radio announcer Steve Reeder.

Myung-Whun Chung and the Seoul Philharmonic Orchestra
Apr 16
When he’s not conducting diplomacy through classical music, bringing North Korean and French orchestras together in concert, the renowned conductor leads South Korea’s oldest orchestra in Ravel’s Mother Goose Suite, Debussy’s La mer, and Stravinsky’s The Firebird Suite.

Hungarian Dances
May 4
Gypsy and “folk-inspired works” by Brahms, Ravel, Bartók, and more.

Bluebeard’s Castle
May 17 (only 100 tickets available)
A reprisal of SSO’s popular 2007 staging of Bartok’s one-act opera, with set design by glass artist Dale Chihuly. Former maestro Gerard Schwarz returns to conduct.

Marvin Hamlisch’s American Songbook
June 1
The EGOT winner (Emmy, Grammy, Oscar, Tony) leads the orchestra in Broadway tunes and jazz standards.

Jesús López-Cobos conducts Capriccio espagnol
June 7
Spanish-born Jesús López-Cobos recently finished a seven-year directorship at Teatro Real in Madrid and is the conductor emeritus of the Cincinnati Symphony Orchestra.

Morlot Conducts The Damnation of Faust
June 23
Joined by the Northwest Boychoir and the Seattle Symphony Chorale.

Disney in Concert: Magical Music from the Movies
June 30 at 2 & 7pm (only 100 tickets available)
The orchestra and four vocalists perform songs from The Little Mermaid, Beauty and the Beast, Aladdin, and The Lion King as scenes play out on the big screen.

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Tags: Seattle Symphony, Classical and More, Ticket Deal

The People's Diva

Opera on Tap: Tenors Do a Free Show Today at the Pink Door

Get there before 1pm for a seat and a panini.

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If you have yet to hear about Opera on Tap, a national nonprofit dedicated to bringing divas to the corner pub for low-key concerts, today’s a great day to check out the local branch. Pianist David McDade will back Marcus Shelton (tenor), Jadd Davis (tenor), and Danny Oakden (baritone) in a lunchtime show at The Pink Door in Pike Place Market. Performance starts at 1pm—there’s no cover, but you might get a dirty look if you don’t at least order a panini.

Opera on Tap
Mar 19 @ 1, The Pink Door, free

Scenes from Opera on Tap at Frenchie’s in Ypsilanti, Mich.

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Tags: Classical and More, Opera on Tap, Divas in Dive Bars

Classical & More

Video: Renée Fleming on How to Be a Diva

The world-class soprano visits Seattle this weekend. As a warmup, watch her give vocal tips to a nervous-looking college student.

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Photo: Courtesy Andrew Eccles

Renowned American soprano Renée Fleming, who joins conductor Ludovic Morlot and Seattle Symphony at Benaroya Hall this Friday, has long been considered “the people’s diva.” Sure, it seems a contradiction in terms—do divas like football and beer?—but just watch her conduct a master class for Harvard students in the video below. She’s warm, charming, and most shocking of all, self-deprecating. The diva can crack a joke. One of my favorite tips she offers: Only sing operas that end in tragedy. “I made the mistake of singing one happy-ending piece at the Met and I got complaints in the mail," she deadpans.

Her humility belies her star power—she’s practically the face of Metropolitan Opera—and her fiercely powerful range, both vocally and emotionally. She walks the walk, coaching students to add tension, passion, or anger to different phrases in their performance. “Otherwise, it’s just a song.”

For her upcoming Seattle concert, Fleming will reinforce her ’people’s diva’ image with a program that spans classical, rock, and indie music. The lineup jumps from Ravel’s Shéhérazade to Gounod’s ‘The Jewel Song,’ to Leonard Cohen’s ‘Hallelujah,’ Muse’s ‘Endlessly’ and Death Cab for Cutie’s ‘Soul Meets Body’ (the latter are selections from Fleming’s 2010 pop album, Dark Hope). Fleming has long been a fan of eclectic music that crosses genre lines, she told The Seattle Times; and even after singing 52 different opera roles, she’s mostly avoided the standards: the Verdi and Puccini heroines. Together with Morlot, another champion of blurred boundaries, Fleming could very well be rocking Benaroya Hall on Friday.

Renee Fleming with Ludovic Morlot and Seattle Symphony
Mar 16 @ 8, Benaroya Hall, tickets still available from $71–$180

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Tags: Seattle Symphony, Benaroya Hall, Classical and More, Ludovic Morlot, Renée Fleming

Classical

Seattle Symphony Announces New Season

Hum along if you’ve heard these before.

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When else are you going to break out your tux and tails?

The Seattle Symphony makes its announcements in style; conductor Ludovic Morlot lugged his whole group down to City Hall for a free concert this afternoon before releasing the 2012–2013 lineup. Fine, Ludo—we’re listening.

Morlot’s second season invites back some of the same big names that paid us a visit in his first; Joshua Bell, Itzhak Perlman, Emanuel Ax, and Hilary Hahn all return. But there’s new stuff, too, like revamped Rush Hour concerts—they’re now called Symphony Untuxed, and they’re followed by cocktail mingling with the musicians. Plus, there’s a new concertmaster, Alexander Velinzon, straight from the Boston Symphony Orchestra.

Find the whole lineup here; book a subscription by March 3 to be entered into a contest for a free Alaskan cruise. Icebergs aside, here’s the big news from the new season:

Joshua Bell is making an even bigger splash. The virtuoso violinist who rocked Benaroya a few weeks ago will return for the opening night gala on September 15, which features a program of George Gershwin, Aaron Copland, and Leonard Bernstein’s Symphonic Dances from West Side Story.

Sonic Evolution strikes again. Last year, brand-new compositions paid tribute to Jimi Hendrix and Kurt Cobain; this year’s October 26 event will have new stuff inspired by Alice in Chains, Blue Scholars, and Yes.

The Russians are coming. For two days in January, the symphony goes all Rachmaninov, all the time, playing his four piano concertos in Rach Fest. In May, Gerard Schwarz returns to conduct a Russian Spectacular series, featuring Tchaikovsky and a whole lot of Shostakovich (six pieces, to be exact). And don’t forget Rimsky-Korsakov’s Sheherazade, a haunting piece heard March 28–30.

There’s a funky new sound in town. For the Turangalîla Symphony by Messiaen in January, soloist Cynthia Millar plays the ondes martenot. It’s a kind of proto-electrical instrument that uses vacuum tubes to create an eerie wail.

Retro is in. The first of the Seattle Pops Series is the Cocktail Hour: Music from the Mad Men Era, with plenty of bossa nova; later Marvin Hamlisch conducts his own tunes from A Chorus Line and The Way We Were.

Symphony geeks should be satisfied, but will neophytes? Those who merely want to hear something they recognize—say, from a car commercial or a Bugs Bunny cartoon—can choose from mounds of blockbusters on the schedule: Vivaldi’s The Four Seasons, Beethoven’s Symphony No. 5, Mussorgsky’s Night on Bald Mountain, Mozart’s Eine kleine Nachtmusik, Rossini’s William Tell Overture, and Stravinsky’s The Firebird Suite.

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Tags: Seattle Symphony, Classical and More, 2011 Schedule

Classical & More

Lunch Break: Free Seattle Symphony Concert Today at City Hall

The show starts at 12:30.

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Photo: Courtesy Ben Vanhouten.

Take a long lunch today and head downtown to City Hall for the free Seattle Symphony community concert. Starting at 12:30, conductor Ludovic Morlot will lead the orchestra in Weber’s Overture to Der Freischütz and Beethoven’s Symphony no. 7 in A major, Op. 92. Following the performance, Morlot will introduce the lineup for the 2012-2013 season, which kicks off in September.

SSO Community Concert
Jan 25, 12:30-1:30, City Hall

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Tags: Seattle Symphony, Free Show, Classical and More, City Hall

Opera

The Vocal Stylings of Attila the Hun

He can sing, he can sack countries.

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Image courtesy Rozarii Lynch (foreground) / Yossi Zwecker and Israeli Opera (background)

John Relyea sings the title role in SO’s Attila.

We fancy the king of the Huns a bass-baritone—so John Relyea is well suited to lead the hordes as they sack Italy in Seattle Opera’s upcoming production of Verdi’s Attila. The Toronto native has already impressed local audiences as a tragicomic hero (Don in 2011’s Don Quixote) and a sadist (Bluebeard in 2009’s Bluebeard’s Castle); this year he’ll further test his talents as a conqueror (Attila) and a servant (Leporello in the Met’s Don Giovanni).

Seattle Opera’s Attila
McCaw Hall, Jan 14–28

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Tags: Opera, Classical and More, Seattle Opera, McCaw Hall

Classical and More

Five Things You Didn’t Know about Joshua Bell

The famed violinist is playing here next week. And he’s jealous of the Seahawks.

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We demand a Tiger Beat cover.

Photo by Marc Holm

Let’s start with what you probably already know: Joshua Bell is one of the world’s foremost violin soloists. He’ll bring his furious bow strokes, 1713 Stradivarius, and signature floppy haircut to the Seattle Symphony on January 10, where conductor Ludovic Morlot will lead him in Max Bruch’s Violin Concerto No. 1.

But here’s what you probably don’t know about classical music’s hottest pinup (just look at him!):

•He’s a YouTube star. In 2007, a Washington Post writer asked Bell to busk in a D.C. Metro station to see if anyone recognized him. Almost no one did (and he made only $32.17). The writer won a Pulitzer for his article, the video received 2.5 million hits, and Bell hasn’t lived it down. “What surprised me is how it got sent around virally,” Bell told us in a recent interview. “Every country I go to, I’m asked about that story.”

•It takes him a year of “dabbling” to learn a new piece. That’s with four to six hours a day of practice; Bell plays each concerto for about a month before returning it to his repertoire. As for the Bruch he’ll play here, it was dropped from his rotation for five years, but it’s still the piece he’s performed the most in his life. “When I came back to it, I completely fell in love with it again,” he said.

•He doesn’t like gimmicks. To get the youth audience to attend classical concerts, Bell says, it’s more about quality and timing than tunes you can hum. “Even if you’re doing midnight concert, I don’t think you have to mess up the music," he said. “You don’t have to put in the Star Wars theme.”

•January 10 is a big day for him. Not only will Bell be performing with the Seattle Symphony, but he’ll release two albums that day. One is a collection of French works, and the other a soundtrack to the upcoming Christian Bale flick, Flowers of War. For the latter, Bell pays homage to the Chinese violin style: “There’s use of vibrato that’s wide and quite distinctive, and sliding between notes,” he said. It’s similar to how he plays bluegrass: “I allow their style to creep into my style, but when it becomes copying [the pros], I can’t compete with them.”

•He’s a stereotypical dude. When asked how Seattle differs from New York City, Bell doesn’t compare Benaroya Hall to Lincoln Center. His view: “Well, the Seahawks are doing better than the Giants.”

Joshua Bell and the Seattle Symphony perform January 10 at Benaroya Hall.

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Tags: Seattle Symphony, Benaroya Hall, Classical and More

Classical News

Introducing the Eastside’s Newest Orchestra

Members of the defunct Bellevue Philharmonic have found a new outlet.

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The Bellevue Philharmonic played its final concert in July, bowing to financial strain after 43 years of concerts—but flutes will trill again this weekend under a different baton. The Seattle Times reported yesterday that several members of the Phil have joined the newly formed Candlelight Concerts Orchestra, which makes its debut December 15 with a holiday concert on Mercer Island. Western Washington orchestra director Arthur Shaw will conduct a program of seasonal Vivaldi, Haydn, and Corelli selections at Emmanuel Episcopal Church on Thursday night, followed by a concert at St. Margaret’s Episcopal Church in Bellevue on Saturday. The Times has the details.

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Tags: Bellevue, Mercer Island, Eastside, Classical and More

Classical and More

The Fine Fiddling of Joshua Bell

But would you stop if you heard him on the street?

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Joshua Bell, probably playing the devil for his soul in this shot.

Photo by Eric Kabik

Watch out for hyper-talented buskers, Tacoma. Joshua Bell, one of the most famous violinists in the world, is playing the Broadway Center for the Performing Arts on Wednesday night, and he’s known for more than his onstage performances. In 2007 he donned street clothes and played his $3.5 million Stradivarius in a Washington, DC Metro station, and almost no one noticed. (Though he did score $32.17 in tips, and the Washington Post article about the stunt won a Pulitzer. Not a total loss.)

Sure, Bell probably won’t be doing any secret busking on this trip—he flies in for a program with the Tacoma Philharmonic that’s tailored to his particular talents. Four violin sonatas are on tap: one each by Mendelssohn and Beethoven, Cesar Franck’s late-19th century Violin Sonata in A Major, and Eugene Ysaye’s 20th-century Ballade.

If allegro vivace doesn’t do it for you there are plenty of other reasons to catch Bell, either in Tacoma this week or with the Seattle Symphony on January 10. The hottie 43-year-old fiddler is known for his floppy, Bieber-like hair (watch it fly!), but also holds champion scores for the computer pinball game Crystal Caliburn and once paraglided into an outdoor concert.

Check out Bell’s DC busking below. Better than our local Pike Place musicians? It’s a close call, but Bell should probably keep his day job.

Violinist Joshua Bell plays Tacoma’s Broadway Center for the Performing Arts on Nov 9.

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Tags: Concert, Classical and More, Classical and More

Classical & More

The Sonic Evolution of Seattle Symphony

What’s that we hear? Chamber pop?

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Hey Marseilles

I knew it wasn’t going to be a typical night at the symphony when I saw the crowd. An army of Capitol Hill hipsters had taken Benaroya Hall, stopping only to retie their Converse and check their iPhones. There were as many pairs of jeans and boots as suits and hearing aides. Rumor had it Pearl Jam was in the audience. And for once, I wasn’t the youngest one there.

But what’s typical at the symphony these days, with new conductor Ludovic Morlot at the baton? Over a little more than a week, SSO was slated to host 10 drastically different concerts, including a performance of Star Trek anthems (“Sci-Fi at the Pops”), internationally renowned violinist Hilary Hahn, a Russian orchestra, Haydn’s Cello Concerto, and last night’s Sonic Evolution program of world premieres inspired by Jimi Hendrix, Quincy Jones, and Nirvana. It’s blissfully eccentric for someone who can’t tell the difference between Rachmaninov and Chopin— the kind of variety that draws the “enemy of the symphony” to orchestral music, as Morlot cheerfully noted in his opening remarks.

And considering the energetic fury with which the Seattle Symphony members opened last night, they were pretty excited, too. Vladimir Nikolaev’s The Sinewaveland: Homage to Jimi Hendrix was charged with frenetic glissandi, strings working together like Jimi’s whammy bar. Though the music itself didn’t mimic the guitar master’s chords, it was still exhilarating, conjuring an image of Hendrix atop Bald Mountain, lighting his guitar on fire.

The Cuong Vu Group performed its jazz-classical collaboration, a recognizable tribute to Quincy Jones called One, and the orchestra seemed to hit its stride with Bill Brittelle’s Obituary Birthday: A Requiem for Kurt Cobain. Kurt was only really a ghost in that song, but I eventually forgot I was listening for Nirvana because the music was so damn beautiful.

And then there was young Seattle chamber pop band Hey Marseilles, making their symphony debut wearing ties and worried grins. Their fans were vocal, clapping along to hit single “Rio,” but when the band was “backed” by the orchestra, the sound was richer. Like Hey Marseilles was infusing the orchestra with its nervous energy, and pros of the SSO were raising the chamber pop band to a new level. “We get astounding applause after every song,” lead singer Matt Bishop said, eyes wide. “We should do this more often.”

Yes, you should. These worlds aren’t mutually exclusive, and thankfully, Seattle Symphony has taken note.

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Tags: Seattle Symphony, Benaroya Hall, Classical and More, Hey Marseilles

Classical & More

Seattle Chamber Music Gets an Update

The new Seattle Modern Orchestra is out to demystify modern chamber music.

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Published January 2011. Like the kid sneaking cigarettes behind school, modern chamber music has the unfortunate reputation of being a little stinker. It’s atonal. It’s noise. There’s no melody, no harmony, no way to connect. But listen to composer Jeremy Jolley, co–artistic director of the new Seattle Modern Orchestra, half an hour and you’ll walk away thinking modern chamber music is simply…misunderstood.

“People are kind of afraid of contemporary music,” says the 33-year-old Frenchman, heavy on the accent. “They don’t want to have a bad time. They want to be comfortable.” But Iannis Xenakis’s Syrmos (1959)— one of three pieces SMO will play in tonight’s “Strictly Strings” show —isn’t comfortable, opening with 18 stringed instruments in glissandi. This chaotic bow sliding was part of Xenakis’s master plan, a request that his players “do violence” to their instruments. It even alienated avant-garde musicians.

“We have to tune our ears so it makes more sense,” Jolley explains. “If you’re expecting melodies and harmonies, you won’t find that. It doesn’t mean it’s not valid, not an important form of expression. You just have to understand where this is coming from.”

Continue reading about the Seattle Modern Orchestra in our January feature Atonement. Strictly Strings is tonight, January 28, at 8pm at Cornish College’s Poncho Hall. Tickets are $10-$20.

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Tags: Classical and More, Seattle Modern Orchestra, Cornish College of the Arts

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