- If a donor has donated once during the year, solicit them once and only once toward the end of the year for an additional. Make sure to thank them for the first donation.
- If a donor has donated twice, again, solicit at most once more. And thank them for both of those donations.
- If you're sending email to someone who has never donated, maybe think about why and whether sending multiple solicitations is going to work. Do you survey nondonors to see what they are thinking?
Lisa Hirsch's Classical Music Blog.
The iron tongue of midnight hath told twelve. Lovers, to bed; 'tis almost fairy time.
Berce mollement sur ton sein sublime
Ô puissante mer, l’enfant de Dindyme!
Sunday, December 31, 2023
A Suggestion to Non-Profit Organizations
Opera 2023
Over at Boulezian, Mark Berry has a summary of his operatic year, and after reading it, I decided to do one myself. In the process, I discovered that three operas never made it onto the list of operas I've seen, so, I'm particularly glad to have gone through this exercise. Here's what I saw in 2023, in alphabetical order by composer.
- Aa, van der, Blank Out
- Bates, The Revolution of Steve Jobs
- Britten, The Rape of Lucretia
- Davis, The Life and Times of Malcolm X (Met HD)
- Debussy, Pelléas et Mélisande (Two productions, superb in every way at LA Opera, a muddled production at Santa Fe)
- Dvořák, Rusalka
- Frank, El último sueño de Frida y Diego
- Giddens and Abel, Omar
- Martinez, Cruzar la Cara de la Luna
- Monteverdi, L'Orfeo
- Monteverdi, L'incoronazione di Poppea
- Moravec, The Shining
- Oh, The Emissary
- Puccini, Madama Butterfly
- Reagon and Reagon, Octavia Butler's The Parable of the Sower
- Saariaho, Adriana Mater
- Schoenberg, Erwartung
- Shearer, Prospero's Ghost
- Strauss, Die Frau ohne Schatten
- Stravinsky, The Nightingale
- Verdi, Il Trovatore
- Verdi, Falstaff
- Wagner, Die Fliegende Hollander
- Wagner, Lohengrin
- Wallen, Dido's Ghost
Thursday, December 28, 2023
Public Service Announcement: SFS/Salonen, Scriabin, Bartók Program
- Scriabin, Prometheus: The Poem of Fire (Jean-Yves Thibaudet, piano)
- Bartók, Duke Bluebeard's Castle (Gerald Finley, Michelle DeYoung)
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So, color me skeptical: this doesn't sound like a great idea: Smell-o-Vision, or maybe I mean Smell-O-Rama, was not a big hit at the movies. I had some questions about the performances for SFS: What information is being provided to existing and potential audience members about this program, because some attendeeswill have allergies to particular scents? And I asked whether the orchestra would provide refunds and exchanges to ticketholders unable to attend because of their allergies? SFS communications very kindly replied as follows: Information about the scent and lighting experience will be communicated with all ticketholders, including those who already purchased their tickets before this announcement. More information about the experience is available on sfsymphony.org/prometheus, and I’m including those details below. The dry-air scent diffusion system used in this performance does not create scent mist or droplet residue in the air (as a perfume would), reducing the risk of many health-related issues, including allergies. But we of course know there may be some people who have allergies or sensitivities, and we completely understand that this experience may not be for everyone. Our Patron Services team is on hand at (415) 864-6000 or patronservices@sfsymphony.org to help ticketholders who have questions, or who want to refund their tickets or exchange them for another program. If you have concerns about the scent diffusion part of the concert, there's always catching the broadcast (which you might also want to do in addition to seeing the program; I cannot get enough of Bluebeard, so). Here are the details: BROADCAST / ARCHIVED STREAM: A broadcast of these performances will air Sunday, March 24, at 7:00 pm on Classical KDFC 90.3 San Francisco, 104.9 San Jose, 89.9 Napa, and kdfc.com, where it will be available for on-demand streaming for 21 days following the broadcast. |
Monday, December 25, 2023
Sunday, December 24, 2023
More on Les Noces
Saturday, December 23, 2023
Speculation
I keep hoping that Matthew Shilvock will finally be able to stage his dream opera, which is Schoenberg's formidable Moses und Aron. As I mentioned a few years back, when he said this at a Wagner Society. meeting, there was an audible gasp in the room. The only staging in the US that I can recall offhand was at the Met, decades ago, with John Tomlinson.
- Wagner TBD, conducted by Eun Sun Kim. We know it won't be Lohengrin. Matthew Shilvock did promise us Parsifal at some point. Note that Kim is conducting Parsifal in Houston in January, 2024.
- Verdi TBD, conducted by Eun Sun Kim. Maybe next season we will get Ernani, which was cancelled owing to the pandemic. My personal hope is for I Vespri Siciliani / Les Vepres Sicilienne, which I've never seen. An interview Kim in the Lohengrin program mentions Simon Boccanegra, a favorite of mine.
- Puccini, La Boheme. At the opening night gala for 2022-23, Matthew Shilvock slipped in the news that Pene Pati would be singing Rodolfo here soon. Pati is singing Nemorino in 23-24, so maybe next year.
- Samson et Dalilah, Brandon Jovanovich as Samson. Given when I heard about this, maybe in 2023-24 or the season after. Obviously not in 2023-24, so maybe next season?
- Madame White Snake, by Zhou Long. A friend spotted "this will be done at SFO in 2023" in the composer's bio in a San Francisco Symphony program. I asked SFO about it and the response was "San Francisco Opera has not made any announcement about this." Well, I knew that, and would bet that the composer's agent broke the usual restrictions on premature announcements and also that various people at SFO are now banging the walls or have their heads in their hands. Note: not done at SFO in 2023. Some year in the future?
Operas from the canceled 2020-21 season that haven't been staged included Rigoletto, which will surely be back at some point; Der Zwerg, and The Handmaid's Tale. I hope the latter two are staged eventually. The Handmaid's Tale, sadly, goes well with one of the more eye-rolling messages of Die Frau ohne Schatten. Update, 12/23/23: The February, 2024, issue of Opera has, in its "We Hear That..." column the news that SFO will stage The Handmaid's Tale in the 2024-25 season. We'll know for sure in about five weeks, but...I think that news in this particular column is generallyleakedprovided by the companies in question.
Did I ever mention here who was sitting immediately in front of me at the Cal Performances staging of Michel van der Aa's Blank Out? None other than SFO music director Eun Sun Kim, general director Matthew Shilvock, and artistic administration Gregory Henkel. Blank Out was astonishing and I hope that they were on a scouting mission.
Update, 11/13/23: Given the success of Frida y Diego, Omar, and Dream of the Red Chamber, it wouldn't surprise me at all to see Madam White Snake, Florencia en el Amazonas, Fire Shut Up in My Bones, or Malcolm X on next year's schedule.
Please feel free to speculate in comments....or send me email!
Friday, December 22, 2023
Music Director Updates
I am sadly far behind in maintaining this. Here are some updates. I'm absolutely certain that I am missing some.
- Donald Runnicles leaves the Deutsche Oper Berlin at the end of 2025-26.
- Donald Runnicles takes up the Dresden Philharmonic at the beginning of 2025-26. He succeeds Marek Janowski.
- Christian Thielemann succeeds Daniel Barenboim at the Berlin State Opera.
- Daniele Gatti succeeds Christian Thielemann at the Dresden Staatskapelle in mid-2024. (Note: he lost a job earlier in this century owing to accusations of sexual misconduct.)
- Krzysztof Urbański becomes chief conductor of the Bern Symphony Orchestra at the beginning of the 2024-25 season.
- Eric Jacobsen is now music director of the Virginia Symphony.
- Long Yu is now the music director of the Shanghai Symphony.
- David Robertson appointed creative partner of Utah Opera / Utah Symphony, for three-year period starting in 2023-24.
- Kwame Ryan appointed music director of the Charlotte Symphony Orchestra as of the 2024-25 season.
- Philippe Auguin is conductor-in-residence of the Greek National Opera Stavros Niarchos Cultural Center.
- Giancarlo Guerrero to leave the Nashville Symphony at the end of the 2024-25 season.
- Gustavo Dudamel resigned from the Paris Opera after only two years.
Open positions:
- Paris Opera is currently without a music director.
- Nashville Symphony, when Giancarlo Guerrero leaves.
- Deutsche Oper Berlin, when Donald Runnicles leaves.
- Hallé Orchestra, when Mark Elder leaves.
- Rottedam Philharmonic, when Lahav Shani leaves.
- Los Angeles Philharmonic, as of 2026-27, when Gustavo Dudamel leaves for NY.
- Indianapolis Symphony, where Jun Märkel is artistic advisor.
- Sarasota Orchestra, following the death of Bramwell Tovey.
- Seattle Symphony, following Thomas Dausgaard's abrupt departure in January, 2022.
- Chicago Symphony Orchestra, where Riccardo Muti left at the end of 2022-23.
- Cincinnati Symphony Orchestra: open in 2024 when Louis Langree steps down.
- Hong Kong Philharmonic, when Jaap van Zweden leaves in 2024.
- Oakland Symphony, owing to the death of Michael Morgan in August, 2021.
- Teatro Regio Turin: Open now with departure of Gianandrea Noseda. The Teatro Regio has not named a new music director.
- Minnesota Opera: Michael Christie has left. MO has not named a new music director.
- Marin Symphony, at the end of 2022-23.
- Vienna Staatsoper, when Philippe Jordan leaves at the end of 2025.
- Osmo Vänskä
- Susanna Mälkki, who left the Helsinki Philharmonic at the end of 2022-23.
- MGT (apparently does not want a full-time job, as of early 2022)
- Miguel Harth-Bedoya (seems settled in at Baylor)
- Lionel Bringuier
- Sian Edwards
- Ingo Metzmacher
- Jac van Steen
- Mark Wigglesworth
- Peter Oundjian
- Ilan Volkov
- Aleksandr Markovic
- Lothar Koenigs
- Henrik Nanasi
- Philippe Jordan, eventually
- Update and correction: San Francisco Chamber Orchestra was unable to hire Cosette Justo Valdés. Instead, Jory Fankuchen, a violinist in the orchestra, has been named Principal Conductor and will lead this season's programs.
- Shanghai Symphony, with the appointment of Long Yu.
- Virginia Symphony, with the appointment of Eric Jacobsen.
- Bern Symphony, with the appointment of Krzysztof Urbański.
- Berlin State Opera, with the appointment of Christian Thielemann.
- Dresden Philharmonic, with the appointment of Donald Runnicles.
- New York Philharmonic, with the appointment of Gustavo Dudamel. Note that Jaap van Zweden leaves in 2024 and there will be a two-season gap until Dudamel arrives.
- Helsinki Philharmonic: Jukka-Pekka Saraste to succeed Susanna Mälkki.
- Staatskapelle Dresden, with the appointment of Daniele Gatti.
- Seoul Philharmonic appoints Jaap van Zweden.
- Royal Opera appoints Jakub Hrůša to succeed Antonio Pappano in September, 2025.
Wednesday, December 20, 2023
Congratulations and Happy Birthday to Gordon Getty!
At the conclusion of San Francisco Opera’s December 9 fall season final performance of The Elixir of Love, the Company honored composer and philanthropist Gordon Getty in an onstage ceremony. Standing amidst the cast of Donizetti’s opera, San Francisco Opera Dianne and Tad Taube General Director Matthew Shilvock presented Mr. Getty with the Company’s Spirit of the Opera award in recognition of extraordinary artistic excellence and philanthropic leadership.
Shilvock said: “Gordon Getty is one of the great champions of this art form and someone who has devoted his life to the creation, enrichment and vitality of opera in America. As a composer, he brings to our stages a beautiful lyricism borne out of a profound appreciation for the human voice. As a philanthropist, Mr. Getty, along with his wife, Ann, has quietly, humbly and with monumental impact, propelled forward arts companies not only in San Francisco and Los Angeles but across America and the world. And as a humanist, he has enriched the very fabric of our society, bringing together subject matters as disparate as music, biology, economics and viticulture into a holistic worldview that leaves one in awe at the staggering embrace he has of the interconnectedness of life.
“The Spirit of the Opera Award is given in recognition of lasting and profound support of this company and so it is my great honor to present Gordon Getty with the award with the heartfelt gratitude of this house and this community for the transformational impact he has had on this company and this art form in so many ways—as a composer, philanthropist, historian and as a carrier of the torch that keeps opera vital in our lives.”
Following the presentation, the performance’s conductor, Ramón Tebar, led the cast, Chorus, Orchestra and audience in a celebratory rendition of “Happy Birthday” to Mr. Getty, who turns 90 this month.
For more than four decades, Gordon Getty and his late wife, Ann, have been stalwart supporters of San Francisco Opera. Their generosity has enabled the Company to maintain its position among the art form’s leading institutions throughout the nation and world. Ann and Gordon Getty’s commitment to the Company has helped bring to the War Memorial Opera House stage the world premieres of many new works, including John Adams’ Girls of the Golden West, Bright Sheng and David Henry Hwang’sDream of the Red Chamber, Marco Tutino’s Two Women and Tobias Picker’s Dolores Claiborne along with bolstering the core repertoire with new productions of Strauss’ Der Rosenkavalier, Puccini’s La Bohème and Madama Butterfly, among others and epochal revivals including the 2018 presentations of Wagner’s Ring cycle.
Mr. Getty has been awarded the Gold Baton of the American Symphony Orchestra League, honored as an Outstanding American Composer at the John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts, received the European Culture Prize and was Legacy Honoree and Artist in Residence of the Young People’s Chorus of New York City. In 2020, he was named by OPERA America as one of the ten inaugural inductees for the Opera Hall of Fame, joining Dawn Upshaw, Grace Bumbry, David Gockley, Simon Estes and other luminaries. Getty’s life in music is the subject of the 2015 documentary There Will Be Music.
Scenes from Getty’s first opera, Plump Jack, had their 1984 premiere with the San Francisco Symphony under Michael Tilson Thomas. In December 2015, San Francisco Opera presented his opera Usher House as part of a double bill with the American premiere of Debussy’s La Chute de la Maison Usher (reconstructed and orchestrated by Robert Orledge), as both stage works were inspired by Edgar Allan Poe’s 1839 Gothic horror story, “The Fall of the House of Usher.” Getty’s major stage works also include The Canterville Ghost, which was presented by Leipzig Opera in 2015 and as part of a double bill with Usher House in Los Angeles and New York City, and Goodbye, Mr. Chips, an opera which had its premiere in cinematic form in 2021 at the Mill Valley Film Festival and has since been screened by New York City Opera, Opera Philadelphia’s Festival O22 and OPERA America. Getty’s operas, along with his other vocal, instrumental and orchestral works, are available on the Pentatone label.
San Francisco Opera’s Spirit of the Opera award was created in 1995 as a tribute to individuals whose devotion to the Company epitomizes a high level of commitment to advancing the success of San Francisco Opera and supporting the art form. Past recipients include Bob and Terri Ryan, Jeannik Méquet Littlefield, Joe Brucia, Patricia Yakutis, Diana Dollar Knowles, Harriet Quarre, Diane B. Wilsey, Maggie Wetzel, Barbara Jackson, Susan Anderson-Norby, Kary Schulman, Sylvia Lindsey, Louise Gund and Maria Manetti Shrem.
Update on MTT's Upcoming SFS Programs
2023 Retrospective
As usual, there won't be a list of best or favorite recordings of 2023, because I don't make any kind of attempt to keep track of new releases - there are so many - or listen to some percentage of them. But it's been an interesting year, for sure.
As you can see from the page where I link to all of my music writing, this year I wrote 25 reviews, covering 16 operas, six orchestra concerts (including one of the SFSoundBox concerts), three string quartet concerts, a concert of new and old vocal music by Trio Medieval, and Pan, a theater piece by Marcos Balter for solo flute and community chorus, brilliantly played by Claire Chase. One of those reviews covered four of Santa Fe Opera's five operas. Weirdly, my first and last reviews of the year were of works based on the story of Dido and Aeneas.
In addition to the reviews, I wrote two news articles for SFCV, one in collaboration with Janos Gereben, about comings and goings in San Francisco Symphony, plus profiles of conductor JoAnn Falletta and tenor Arturo Chácon-Cruz, and an article about the film Tár.
Next year, I'm hoping to branch out with the reviewing: more chamber music and solo programs, more orchestra concerts. I am extremely sorry that Opera News is no more; perhaps I will pitch successfully to Opera.
For me, the single worst thing to happen this year was the death of composer Kaija Saariaho, in June at only 70. There were many tears a few days later when San Francisco Symphony performed her second opera, Adriana Mater. There will be many more when her last opera, Innocence, is performed in June at San Francisco Opera.
It's pretty easy, looking back at 2023, to pick out the biggest musical lowlight: Christian Thielemann and the Vienna Philharmonic, of all things. Apparently the program the night before was a lot better, including what sounds like a splendid Strauss Alpine Symphony, and I can't comment on the last night, which included Bruckner, but holy moly, the Mendelssohn and Brahms program was the worst concert I have ever heard from such an illustrious conductor and orchestra.
The other big disappointment was Julia Wolfe's Her Story, which promised a lot and did not deliver. And while it's always good to hear Britten's War Requiem, last time around Semyon Bychkov conducted, and he was a lot better than Philippe Jordan.
The highlights of the year? Well, there were many!
- Esa-Pekka Salonen and the San Francisco Symphony. I liked almost every one of his concerts.The orchestra sounded awfully good for him and others, even with many, many substitutes in critical positions. I loved his Beethoven, his new clarinet concerto kínēma, which was on his first California Festival program, Gabriella Smith's mighty organ concerto Breathing Forests, and so much else.
- Die Frau ohne Schatten at San Francisco Opera. Donald Runnicles making magic with a strong cast.
- El último sueño de Frida y Diego, by Gabriela Lena Frank and Nilo Cruz. This wonderful new opera was a huge surprise, definitely my favorite among the new operas I heard this year.
- Rusalka at Santa Fe, a fabulous David Pountney production with great performances from Ailyn Pérez, James Creswell, and Raehann Bryce-Davis.
- Orfeo at Santa Fe, again, a great Yuval Sharon production with a terrific performance by Rolando Villazon in the title role and everyone else in the production.
- Pelléas et Melisande in Los Angeles; James Conlon conducted, magnificently, a fine McVicar production, with an explosive Golaud from Kyle Ketelsen and beautifully sung and acted performances by Will Liverman and Sydney Mancasola in the title roles.
- Osmo Vänskä's Sibelius at the LA Phil.
- Dalia Stasevska's Sibelius at SFS.
- Gabriel Kahane's emergency shelter intake form at SFS, on a program where Conrad Tao played Gershwin, brilliantly, as well.
- Falstaff at Opera San José. Yes, too too many fat jokes, but oh! what a lovely performance.
- Michel van der Aa's Blank Out, an opera with one character on video and the other live. A beautiful and moving work. I hope to hear more of his music in the future.
- Adriana Mater at SF Symphony.
- Pan, by Marcos Balter, performed by Claire Chase.
- JACK Quartet playing music of John Luther Adams.
- Thomas Conlin and the Vallejo Festival Orchestra in Sibelius. Some beautifully-sung songs and a fine 2nd Symphony made this a highlight, and it was particularly satisfying in the same week as the Thielemann/VPO program. Remember that there are treasures everywhere among the regional orchestras and opera companies.
- West Edge Opera's double bill of Stravinsky's Nightingale and Schoenberg's Erwartung, the latter featuring a knockout performance by Mary Evelyn Hangley.
- Gustavo Dudamel leaves the Paris Opera after only two seasons.
- Chad Smith leaves the LA Phil after many years, moving to Boston, where his former LA Phil colleague Gail Samuel lasted only 18 months as CEO.
- The CSO hasn't announced a new music director, despite the years of lead time Muti gave them and the plethora of talent.
- The Seattle Symphony hasn't announced a new music director nearly two years after Thomas Dausgaard's abrupt departure, possibly explained by the apparent administrative turmoil and a CEO, Krishna Thiagarajan, who seems difficult to work with.
Tuesday, December 19, 2023
Interviews with Robert Ward
Now there are two very good interviews with retiring San Francisco Symphony principal horn Robert Ward:
- Emily Wilson, SFCV
- Joshua Kosman, SF Chronicle
Sunday, December 17, 2023
Belated Museum Monday
Friday, December 15, 2023
Blomstedt Withdraws From SFS and Other Programs
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Friday Photo
Monday, December 04, 2023
Inquiring Minds Want to Know....
.....why the editors of the San Francisco Chronicle, The New Yorker, and San Francisco Classical Voice all think they know better than the composer how to style the title of a particular work?
- Those publications all styled Esa-Pekka Salonen's recent work for clarinet and strings as Kínēma.
- The San Francisco Symphony program note, Salonen's publisher's web site and the title page of the score style the work as kínēma. (I believe that it was italicized in the SFS program.)
- The SFS program page listing the works on the program capitalizes the K.
- Below is a screen shot from the publisher's web site.