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Annie Weatherwax Art

Wow, what an intense but wonderful concert week! But this blog post is about something else entirely...

This month, The Music Box (our JP rehearsal storefront) has been awash in a riot of color and character. Artist Annie Weatherwax has graced our walls with her work - larger-than-life portraits of faces that reflect a whole spectrum of emotions and expressions. Now we're returning the favor by setting up gallery hours on Saturdays where her art will be able to be viewed on its own - and purchased, should you get the urge!

Saturday, May 30, 1-5pm

Come by and chat with us and enjoy this beautiful work! http://www.annieweatherwax.com/

The picture is from First Thursday, a Jamaica Plain-based event featuring local art and hospitality all along Centre and South Street!

Weatherwax at First Thursdays

Legacy Program Notes

Kathryn Bacasmot authored these highly entertaining and thought-provoking program notes. Enjoy!


This is your shovel. The music is your earth. Dig in.

I know, I know. You’re looking at this and thinking, “these are the program notes? Where is the anecdotal story followed by interesting historical factoids, dates, and a roadmap to the music itself?” Don’t flip the page over. This is it. Welcome to A Far Cry program notes. Let’s talk “Legacy.” If you type the word “Legacy” into the search box on dictionary.com, the fifth definition reads: “of or pertaining to old or outdated computer hardware, software, or data that, while still functional, does not work well with up-to-date systems.” Is it heresy for me, a musicologist, to say I think of “classical” music when I read that description? Musicians inherit a legacy and are handed down history. Now would cease to be now if then or when did not exist. Without composers and performers it is a merely a series of archaic symbols, a cacophony of dots and lines, data that, while still functional, might be dead on a parchment pyre. Musical history is a delicate fabric of encounters easily unraveled. Warp & Weft. Teacher & student. Composer & performer(s). Choreographer & music. The meetings of minds, and in those meetings the inheritance is remixed and renewed. Data, still functional, in a karmic cycle of rebirth.

Isn’t it fascinating that so much invisible beauty is manufactured through such physical labor? The hand of a composer grips a pen that hovers over paper in anticipation of what will come next, or clicks the mouse on composition software. The body of the performer aches through hours of rehearsal, holding, caressing, cajoling, thrilling in exultation or trembling in defeat. Instruments are built and repaired, morph and stay the same, according to the sounds of the times and the materials and technologies available. Music is hardly a dead language. It’s alive in the physicality. Each person you see or hear on stage today is a part of the inheritance. Their fingers are fluent and fluid espousing old and new dialects of the language of sound. You, the audience, play an equally vital role. Your ears and minds are the stereos. If a tree falls in a forest, if a sound wave shoots through an empty hall, does anyone care?

Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart (1756-1791) had quite an ear attached to the side of his head. Legend (who occasionally goes by the name Dr. Charles Burney) tells us the young Mozart was responsible for writing down, and therefore preserving the legacy of, the famous Miserere by Gregorio Allegri (1582-1652), which was traditionally handed down only orally. Mozart was a bridge to the past and an agent for the future. His piano concertos are among the roots of the genre. Today we hear pianist Markus Schirmer put his interpretational brick down on the road that Mozart laid in Vienna, 1782.

Felix Mendelssohn (1809-1847). Talk about legacy. His aunt Sara Levy studied with W.F. Bach and was a patron of C.P.E. Bach (yes, sons of J.S. Bach). Additionally, one of Felix’s claims to fame was his 1829 “revival” of J.S. Bach’s St. Matthew Passion. With that ascension to the podium he effectively launched the widespread fame of Bach and an appreciation for regular performances of pieces by long dead composers (more of an oddity on a program in prior days when the new was all the rage). Today’s performance of Mendelssohn’s Sinfonia No. 8 in D major composed in 1822 features the next generation of musicians with New England Conservatory Preparatory students Andrew Dezmelyk and Meredith Treaster.

Igor Stravinsky (1882-1971). Well, he started with a “neo-classical” phase and then jutted off to a springtime rebirth of the old into a new dialect, didn’t he? His Concerto for Strings in D major from 1946 leads something of a double life. Today you hear it in its usual concert setting, but it moonlights as accompaniment to a dance. Choreographer Jerome Robbins (1918-1998) heard it and thought about female insects preying on their male counterparts and called it “The Cage.” Rather Kafkian. King of the Castle? Try Queen.

The “Rite of Spring” was a passage of a different kind - the kind that dared to go places that induced public fist fights (maybe Plato was on to something with that concern about music stirring up hot headedness after all?). Dissemble the data and it still functions. If you break the mirror and put it back together it reflects and refracts in an entirely new way.

Today you will hear something you have never heard before in your whole life. That’s something you can’t claim every Thursday of the week (well, unless you want to go all John Cage on me, but let’s not digress). Reiko Yamada’s New Shadows in the Raw Light of Darkness was inspired by and written for A Far Cry upon repeatedly listening to the ensemble awaken a new soul in old pieces. Like Georgia O’Keefe before her, Yamada was inspired by the stark landscape of the South West – Taos, New Mexico in Yamada’s case – during her 5-week residency at the Helene Wurlitzer Foundation. Out there the lines of the earth stretch and clash with the lines of the landscape, both natural and manmade. A collection of lines. A collection of individuals and friends. A collection of musicians weaving and sewing together the lines of music, the threads of sound. A fabric paying homage to the past, building upon the legacy, attaching new rungs on the ladder to the future and casting new shadows in the climb.

Data. Functional. Legacy is now and legacy is you.

Kathryn J Allwine Bacasmot a pianist/harpsichordist/musicologist and freelance writer. She received her Masters in Musicology at the New England Conservatory of Music with her thesis on Björk Guðmundsdóttir and aspects of the female experience in her fifth studio album, Medúlla. In addition she works for From the Top, a weekly radio and 8-time Daytime Emmy Award nominated television show featuring the nations most talented young classical musicians distributed on NPR and PBS.

A Far Cry on WGBH!

This morning I awoke from my fitful slumber to hear a familiar tune on the radio alarm. A Far Cry was playing Tchaikovsky's Serenade on WGBH! I listened to the whole thing and didn't even get a chance to shower before leaving for work at 8am. The program will be repeating at 10am, so from 10:28-11:00 they will play the entire Serenade from our Debut album! "Sweet"

You can check out today's schedule here. Hear it on the radio at 89.7 in Boston or online.

-Frank

Meredith Treaster

Meredith TreasterA Far Cry is pleased to announce that Meredith Treaster is a winner of our first Young Artist Competition. As a winner, Meredith will join the viola section of A Far Cry in concert later this month. Buy tickets to see Meredith at Jordan Hall!

Meredith Treaster, violist, is a student at the Walnut Hill School in Natick, Massachusetts. She has attended the Aspen Music Festival for several years on both violin and viola. Meredith has been the principal violist of the New Mexico All-State Symphony, the Aspen Concert Orchestra and the Youth Philharmonic Orchestra at New England Conservatory. As part of Walnut Hill’s annual gala, she performed Brahms Piano Quintet at Carnegie Hall last Spring. She currently studies viola with Michael Zaretsky of the Boston Symphony Orchestra. Meredith will be entering the Juilliard School this Fall as a student of Masao Kawasaki.

Andrew Dezmelyk

Andrew DezmelykA Far Cry is proud to announce that Andrew Dezmelyk, a violin student at the New England Conservatory Preparatory School, will be joining A Far Cry in concert later this month, as a winner of A Far Cry's Young Artist Competition. Buy tickets to see Andrew perform in Jordan Hall!
Fourteen-year-old violinist Andrew Dezmelyk is currently in his 4th year at New England Conservatory Preparatory School. He is a member of the Youth Symphony Orchestra, conducted by Steven Karidoyanes. He loves chamber music, and has played in a string quartet as well as in a unique duo with a harpist. He has also enjoyed playing in the 10:00 Baroque Chamber Orchestra with Aldo Abreu. So, when given the opportunity to play with A Far Cry, he quickly jumped at the chance.
He is very grateful to his teachers, Maciek and Jorunn Kaczmarek, for their patience and dedication.
A 9th grader, his favorite academic subjects are writing, geometry and advanced algebra.
When not practicing, he can be found trying his hand at composing. He creates stop-motion animation synchronized to music by his favorite composers, such as Dvorák, Prokofiev, Saint-Saëns, and Beethoven. He has been known to build extensive Rube Goldberg contraptions and draw comic strips. If there's snow on the ground, sledding is his forte.

Crier Dreams

An interesting side effect of spending a LOT of time with the same people, working towards a common goal, is that sooner or later, this finds its way into your dreams! Recently, I had two funny dreams about A Far Cry, and I thought I might go ahead and post them - partly just 'cause, and partly as an open challenge/invite to the other Criers to share any crazy dreams they might have had about the group here on the blog! I'm dreaming of a long list of wacky posts to come...Here goes!

DREAM NO. 1

I am walking through an extensive garden of romaine lettuce at midday, with Jesse and a Guest Crier. Jesse is explaining to the Guest Crier how soon our communal living compound will be complete, and what the timeline is for the group to move in. I realize that I hadn't known we were going to be living together ALL the time - maybe I missed that part of the meeting. But what the heck, I go with it. The three of us amble through the lettuce, talking about the inevitable pros and cons of such an enterprise when I realize that the No. 1 bus is coming around the far side of the garden and that I'm supposed to be catching it. I take my leave and book it over to the bus stop - at which point I wake up instantly!

DREAM NO. 2.

I find myself in a large blue undefined space, climbing a staircase, or maybe it's a ladder, that grows with me as I climb. The higher I get, the clearer my surroundings become, and eventually I realize that I'm not alone. In fact, various members of A Far Cry can be seen from this vantage point, each one moving up his or her own ladder. Margaret is particularly striking, holding a beautiful ballet pose at the top of her ladder, and from a nearby point, Frank is smiling and commenting on something or other. Every one of the Criers is doing something unique, but I don't remember if I actually saw the others, or if my dream just summarily informed me of that!

DEBUT to be released on April 30th!

debut cd coverWell, it's been a long time coming, since the 3 days we recorded this album in November of last year, and it's finally coming out! It really has been a labor of love in post production these last 3 months, from all the members in A Far Cry to our producers Terry King & Roger Tapping, but most especially without our esteemed colleague and engineer, Jesse Lewis, it just wouldn't have been possible. Our graphic designer extraordinaire, Leslie Jonas outdid herself once again by putting together a beautiful cover for the CD, which seems to portray us rather perfectly. The album will be available on CD to purchase on April 30th not only from this website, but also on CD Baby. Their website will also offer the album in the digital format in downloadable mp3s, along with on iTunes, Amazon & Instant Encore. Hopefully we'll always have a stack of CD's with us to sell at all of our future shows, and if you can't possibly wait until then, I suppose you can stop by at our space in Jamaica Plain to pick up a copy also (but please bring exact change). The works featured on the album are Osvaldo Golijov's Last Round (1996) for Double String Quartet & Bass, George Frideric Handel's G Minor Concerto Grosso, op.6 no.6, and Pyotr Il'yich Tchaikovsky's passionate Serenade for Strings in C Major, op.48. We really hope there will be something for everyone in this collection of tunes. Counting down the days!!

Florida Photos

Wow - what an incredible trip to the Florida Keys! The audiences were amazing, the hospitality was out-of-this-world, and our rental Priuses only used $20 of gas to go 500 miles. What a tour. Here are a few photos, mostly from a couple of educational concerts from Tuesday morning: Courtenay, Frank, Annie, and I played and spoke about music at the Marathon Middle/High School as well as the Elementary School, for a total of nearly 1,000 kids! Many thanks to Cindy Stong for coordinating the two educational concerts and to Edward Bouton (my grandfather!) for taking these great pictures. Click on the photo below to see the collection!

Frank was like the pied piper - when he started giving out horsehair, the kids came flocking! After the performance, Courtenay and Annie made some friends. Jesse made some friends, too. A Far Cry conducted by a teacher and hundreds of third through fifth graders! Morning performance for the entire Jr./Sr. High School Between performances, Annie, Jesse, Cindy, and Ed got lunch Most of A Far Cry and Guests poses for a picture - great memories!