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Subtraction Program Notes

Kathryn Bacasmot has once again provided us with great program notes. Thursday at the Gardner Museum should be quite an experience! This is your shovel. The music is your earth. Dig in.

John Cage (1912-1992) For all the innovation the world of music has experienced since 1952, nothing has come close to the watershed moment when 4’33” was first performed. The profundity of its statement regarding sound, listening, and the nature of music remain unmatched.

Providing contextual snapshots to the years leading up to 4’33”, the program today features two other works by John Cage, his String Quartet in Four Parts from 1950, and his Imaginary Landscape No. 4 for 12 Radios from 1951. Like light focusing down to a pinpoint, these pieces exhibit a kind of gathering of fuel for Cage’s ideological fire. One can hear a progression from restrained, quietly oscillating melodic lines, to the absence of melody in favor of partially controlled sound, to sound unfettered. With each step, by subtracting an element he added to our understanding—widening our conceptions.

By 1950, Cage had written his Sonatas and Interludes for prepared piano, as well as three (there would ultimately be five) Imaginary Landscape works. Those pieces all dealt with the manipulation of sound, either through inserting objects into the strings of a piano or through some electrical means; in other words, some outside element beyond simply a human performer and acoustic instrument. By contrast, it has been observed that the String Quartet in Four Parts also manipulates sound, but through altering the approach to the instruments themselves. For example, the performers are instructed to employ a light touch and no vibrato. As a result, the sound strikes the ear as both ancient and modern, often shrouded in shade, occasionally stabbed with an angular insertion of volume.

The entire work doesn’t deviate far from certain intervallic spans, and eschews overt tension-resolution/dissonance-consonance relationships. Increasingly interested in Eastern philosophy, Cage integrated into the music the concept of the seasons in Indian culture: creation (Spring), preservation (Summer), destruction (Fall), and quiescence (Winter), which are then reflected in each movement: Quietly Flowing Along (Summer), Slowly Rocking (Autumn), Nearly Stationary (Winter), and Quodlibet (Spring).

Imaginary Landscape No. 4 is the elimination of any formal instruments at all, and the sounds being controlled and manipulated by the performers are not self-generated, but rather ongoing—invisible waves that one simply turns on or turns off, turns up (foreground) or turns down (background), tunes in or tunes out. Each performance will be completely different. Even so, here the sound is still dictated by whatever any given radio wavelength is carrying. But, it is these ideas of tuning in or out of an invisible, ongoing performance that were given a test run here, to be fully realized in 4’33”.

"I responded immediately...not as objects, but as ways of seeing. I've said before that they were airports for shadows and for dust, but you could also say that they were mirrors of the air." This statement by Cage refers to the all white paintings of his friend, Robert Rauschenberg from 1951. The same year he visited Harvard University to stand in an anechoic chamber where he was greeted not by “silence,” but rather “heard two sounds, one high and one low”: his nervous system and his blood flow. These two events solidified in Cage’s mind that absence is just another type of presence, and emboldened him to write the piece that David Tutor premiered in Woodstock, New York, August 29, 1952: 4’33”.

Cage has said, “I love sounds, just as they are. And I have no need for them to be anything more than what they are. I don’t want them to be psychological...I just want it to be a sound.” He was interested in the idea of “interpenetration,” that sounds from the environment be accepted just as much as any notes organized on the page the old fashioned way (or, perhaps as Jonathan Kramer has put it, “The situations are the pieces”). There is a bit of old-fashioned organization here, too, as the work is divided into three movements, each given a specified length (the cumulative length is the work’s title).

4’33” effectively breaks down the 4th wall; there is no longer the illusion that the audience is passive whilst the performer is active. One could suggest that this points at another truth, so often forgotten in our entertainment obsessed culture—that we, too, are part of the performance at all times, whether it is Beethoven or Cage. We bring our histories and our emotions into the hall with us, and those are constantly at play, reacting and interacting with the music, whether it is organized on the page or simply mirroring the air.

Alfred Schnittke (1934-1998) :: Moz-Art à la Haydn A singularly defining feature of Alfred Schnittke’s oeuvre is his emphasis on “quotation of material of very diverse origins,” or, polystylism (polystyle, “many columns”). What makes Schnittke’s use of polystylism so unusual is the unapologetic forcefulness with which the technique is applied. Where another composer may quilt together disparate styles or quotes, Schnittke rips them out, glues them down, and writes on top of them. Sometimes the results are almost nothing short of bone chilling in their dramatic scope. But Schnittke was also a master humorist. Many times you may find yourself smiling out of shock at a sly moment, a coolly delivered, or a razor-sharp, witty turn. Moz-Art à la Haydn is a wink—but of the slightly unhinged variety that only Schnittke could deliver.

The work is based on the surviving bits of Mozart’s lost "pantomime music" K. 446, which was originally composed for the pre-Lenten carnival week of 1783 (though, you will almost certainly recognize a different, well-known, strain of Mozart also inserted). Schnittke also wove in theatrical elements: it begins in darkness, and ends in darkness. The “à la Haydn” is a nod to Haydn’s “Farewell” symphony—the musicians simply begin leaving the stage as the work concludes.

Franz Joseph Haydn (1732-1809) :: Symphony No. 45, “Farewell” Haydn had a way of making a point. Sometime around 1761, at age 29, he was hired by the Esterházy family as Vice-Kapellmeister to Ober-Kapellmeister Gregor Joseph Werner, who was elderly, and becoming increasingly burdened by the workload. Four years later, Werner wrote to their employer, Nicolaus I, Prince Esterházy, complaining (most likely falsely, perhaps motivated by some residual bitterness about becoming too elderly and unwell to excel in his work) that Haydn was “neglecting the instruments and musical archives and the supervision of the singers.” The Prince responded by scolding Haydn, and threw in an extra twist of the knife by adding more work to Haydn’s already full calendar: “Kapellmeister Haydn is urgently enjoined to apply himself to composition more zealously than heretofore, and especially to compose more pieces that one can play” for the baryton, the string instrument the Prince played—a type of viol. Haydn responded with 126 compositions for baryton.

As part of a summer season, Prince Nicolaus moved Haydn and many of the court musicians to his new castle, far out into the countryside (“reclaimed swampland”). The season, as it turned out, did not end with arrival of autumn. Instead, the Prince remained nearly a year—ten months. The musicians began to complain to Haydn about being stranded so far away from their families, and held in suspension from their personal responsibilities. In response, Haydn wrote his Symphony no. 45. It is called “Farewell” for the theatrical stunt woven into the work: as the piece concludes, the musicians begin to leave the stage one by one; a clever way of urging the Prince to let them return home (he got their drift, and did).

36 Hour Power Fundraiser!

Help AFC kick off our sixth season and first international tour with a challenge grant from the Boston Foundation's Giving Common Challenge!

The Boston Foundation has offered a challenge to Boston-area non-profits. For two days, we will run a campaign in the hopes of receiving matching funds from the Boston Foundation. The challenge will run Wednesday, October 10 and Thursday, October 11. We have two days to raise money. Your donations will help us continue to bring exciting, innovative programming to Boston audiences. Here's how you can help!

1) Visit our unique profile on the Giving Common's Website by clicking HERE!

2) Donate anywhere from $25-$5000 You can especially help us by donating at the following times: *Early Bird. Oct 10 8-10AM or Oct 11 8-10AM. $1,000 will be awarded to the first ten non-profits to receive 50 donors. *Lunch Time. Oct 10 noon to 1PM or Oct 11 noon to 1PM. $1,000 will be awarded to the first ten non-profits to receive 50 donors. *Happy Hour. Oct 10 6-8PM. $1,000 will be awarded to the first ten non-profits to receive 50 donors. *Power Hour: Oct 11 7-8PM. $1,000 will be awarded randomly to six non profits who receive donations.

In addition, the non--profits that raise the most money overall will be eligible to receive a $25,000 bonus from the Boston Foundation.

3) Watch every cent of your donation go directly to AFC for more amazing performances, educational, and community programs!

Dreams and Prayers - a Sneak Peak

Please enjoy a sneak-peak at this weekend's program notes, from our brilliant and poetic resident musicologist, Kathryn Allwine Bacasmot and fabulous and dynamic composer, Mehmet Ali Sanlıkol: This is your shovel. The music is your earth. Dig in.

To petition and aspire, when we wake and when we sleep, what bubbles up from the deepest wellsprings of the soul? Exploration, through languages visible and invisible, into the mystical—the “mysteries that transcend ordinary human knowledge”; sustaining intimacy with one’s spirit, facilitating renewal of one’s resolve, and imparting the ability to play by heart through our dreams and prayers.

Hildegard von Bingen (1098-1179) :: O ignis spiritus paracliti From the age of five, Hildegard von Bingen saw gloriously vivid visions, but it wasn’t until the age of forty-three that she began documenting them, and then channeling their ecstatic energy into music. By that time, Hildegard was abbess at the Benedictine monastery Disibodenberg, which had been her physical and spiritual home from the tender age of eight, when her family dedicated her to the service of the church.

The monastic life builds the rhythm of a day around the Divine Offices; daily services taking place at designated hours. Sequences (from the Latin, sequentia, “following”) were elaborations of spiritual texts sung between the Alleluia and Gospel. Originally, the last syllable of “Alleluia” was simply melodically prolonged, like a wordless ribbon extending, twisting, and trailing, in order to give more time for processions occurring during services. Eventually poetic text pertaining to the service was added with specific accompanying melodies, and sequences proliferated into the thousands (the Church subsequently trimmed things down into a handful of approved sequences, one of which, the Dies Irae, is well-known to many classical concert goers as the sequence occurring in the Requiem mass).

What is striking about this sequence, and indeed all of Hildegard’s music, is how elaborate it is in relation to most of the Gregorian chant being sung during her time—an early example of sheer artistic expression marrying form and function. Her music is often noted for the soaring lines, the intervallic leaps, and the melodic movement that is more angular than stepwise. The visions, which she experienced her whole life, were often centered around earthly elements of fire, water, and wind, and the texts to her compositions are preoccupied with expressing the spiritual with nature imagery—particularly the blazing light of flames, which is associated with the Holy Spirit.

O ignis spiritus paracliti, written to honor the Holy Spirit, begins with the following text:

O spirit of fire, bringer of comfort, Life of the life of every creature, You are holy, giving life to forms.

You are holy, anointing those perilously broken; you are holy, cleansing foul wounds.

O breath of holiness, O fire of love, O sweet savor in our breasts, infusing hearts with the scent of virtue.

Osvoldo Golijov (b.1960) :: Dreams and Prayers of Isaac the Blind Osvoldo Golijov is a composer whose music goes beyond borders of culture and style to meet a globalized world—roots spreading into intermingling branches. Following is his commentary on Dreams and Prayers of Isaac the Blind.

"Eight centuries ago Isaac The Blind, the great kabbalist rabbi of Provence, dictated a manuscript in which he asserted that all things and events in the universe are product of combinations of the Hebrew alphabet's letters: 'Their root is in a name, for the letters are like branches, which appear in the manner of flickering flames, mobile, and nevertheless linked to the coal'.

"Isaac's lifelong devotion to his art is as striking as that of string quartets and klezmer musicians. In their search for something that arises from tangible elements but transcends them, they are all reaching a state of communion.

"The movements of this work sound to me as if written in three of the different languages spoken by the Jewish people throughout our history. This somehow reflects the composition's epic nature. I hear the prelude and the first movement, the most ancient, in Arameic; the second movement is in Yiddish, the rich and fragile language of a long exile; the third movement and postlude are in sacred Hebrew.

"The prelude and the first movement simultaneously explore two prayers in different ways: The quartet plays the first part of the central prayer of the High Holidays, 'We will observe the mighty holiness of this day...', while the clarinet dreams the motifs from 'Our Father, Our King'. The second movement is based on 'The Old Klezmer Band', a traditional dance tune, which is surrounded here by contrasting manifestations of its own halo. The third movement was written before all the others. It is an instrumental version of K'Vakarat, a work that I wrote a few years ago for Kronos and Cantor Misha Alexandrovich. The meaning of the word klezmer: instrument of song, becomes clear when one hears David Krakauer's interpretation of the cantor's line. This movement, together with the postlude, bring to conclusion the prayer left open in the first movement: '...Thou pass and record, count and visit, every living soul, appointing the measure of every creature's life and decreeing its destiny'.

"But blindness is as important in this work as dreaming and praying. I had always the intuition that, in order to achieve the highest possible intensity in a performance, musicians should play, metaphorically speaking, 'blind'. That is why, I think, all legendary bards in cultures around the world, starting with Homer, are said to be blind. 'Blindness' is probably the secret of great string quartets, those who don't need their eyes to communicate among them, with the music, or the audience. My hommage to all of them and Isaac of Provence is this work for blind musicians, so they can play it by heart. Blindness, then, reminded me of how to compose music as it was in the beginning: An art that springs from and relies on our ability to sing and hear, with the power to build castles of sound in our memories."

Mehmet Ali Sanlıkol :: Vecd Vecd (wajd in Arabic) refers to being in a state of rapture or ecstasy. In Islamic mysticism Sufi dervishes would try to attain the state of vecd during their ceremonies in which music plays a central role. Since vecd is the essence of sufi ceremonies in this composition I have tried to capture the essence of several different kinds of Turkish sufi ceremonies. When doing this I refrained from incorporating the sophisticated modal characteristics (or the so-called “microtones”) of Turkish Sufi and Ottoman/Turkish classical music since this piece was being composed for a Western string orchestra. Instead, I decided to base the composition on zikir, the practice of singing repeated rhythmic phrases by Sufi dervishes. Typically, Turkish sufi ceremonies would feature one ostinato in a simpler meter and would speed this ostinato up throughout the course of 5 to 10 minutes, if not more. During the speeding up of the ostinato often a hafız (Koranic chanter) would improvise on top of the ostinato using devotional poetry. In this composition instead of using a single ostinato in a simple meter I used multiple rhythmic cycles ranging from 16 beats per measure to 4 beats per measure. The melodic phrases which develop throughout the piece replace improvisation and these phrases together with the ostinati resemble another kind of Turkish Sufi ceremony: the Sema ceremony of the Mevlevi (whirling) dervishes.

Ludwig van Beethoven (1770-1827) :: Heiliger Dankgesang, from Quartet op. 132 Beethoven’s “Holy Song of Thanks by a Convalescent to the Divinity, in the Lydian Mode” (Heiliger Dankgesang eines Genesenen an die Gottheit, in der lycischen Tonart) is the expansive middle movement of the String Quartet op. 132 (completed in 1825), part of the so-called “Galitzen Quartets” (including opp. 127 and 130) for their commission by Prince Nikolas Galitzen. Proportionally, it is nearly the length of the first two movements combined, and is twice as long as the two movements following. Structurally, it is divided into five distinct parts (perhaps a microcosmic reflection of the Quartet’s five total movements) alternating the three hymn-like “holy song of thanks” (Heiliger Dankgesang) sections with the shimmering melodic lightness of the two “feeling new strength” (Neue Kraft fühlend) sections, forming a set of double variations as each repeats with increasing elaboration. Emotionally, the overt purpose as a song of thanks likely refers to Beethoven’s recovery from an abdominal illness, and perhaps also (as suggested by Maynard Solomon) the general idea of the healing powers of music for a beleaguered spirit. After all, in times of celebration or distress, we inevitably turn to music. Framing our emotions, it gathers the invisible murmurings of our hearts for contemplation; facilitating release, strengthening our resolve, imbuing hope.

What immediately confronts the listener is an opening gesture that expands and contracts like a quiet breath, which is strikingly similar in shape to two other seminal works written within a year or two of each other that and crowned the last three years of the composer’s life: the Adagio from the Symphony no. 9, and the String Quartet op. 130. The Heiliger Dankgesang commences reverently in one of the old church modes, Lydian, which, according to Renaissance music theorist Zarlino, “...is a remedy for fatigue of the soul, and similarly for that of the body.” There is very little dissonance in the first iteration, lending to the floating, otherworldly quality of its sound. Then, with three declamatory unisons that take grasp the listener as if to say, “pay special attention here,” the work shifts in D Major for the first of the two Neue Kraft fühlend sections. Beethoven tends to use trills as a kind of asterisk noting an important shift, and here, the first violin trembles with the onset of joy. Each subsequent restatement of the Heiliger Dankgesang and Neue Kraft fühlend gain confidence, strength, and resolve: passion, via dissonance and resolution, is infused into the Heiliger Dankgesang, whilst the intervallic jumps and increasingly intricate weaving in and out of the two violin parts instills the second Neue Kraft fühlend with enhanced exuberance. Finally, the work concludes with stabbing sforzandos as if pledging to go forward with conviction and purpose buoyed by spiritual and physical renewal.

Cryin' All Summer Long


Cryin' All Summer Long!



2012 marks AFC's first summer on the road! We'll be performing at some of America's most exciting music festivals from June through August. Check out the schedule to see if we're coming your way!

Rockport Chamber Music Festival

SOLD OUT! A Far Cry in Rockport - with Andrés Cárdenes, violin, and David Deveau, piano June 14 2012 8pm Shalin Liu Performance Center - Rockport, MA

Osvaldo Golijov: Tenebrae Piazzola: Invierno and Otoño from The Four Seasons in Buenos Aires Vivaldi: Concerto for Violin, Op. 4, No. 11 in D Major from La Stravaganza Mozart: Piano Concerto No. 14 in E-flat, K. 449 Britten: Variations on a Theme by Frank Bridge

Ravinia Festival

A Far Cry in Chicagoland - with Jake Shimabukuro, ukulele July 1 2012 7pm Ravinia Park

Lully: Suite from “Le Bourgeois Gentilhomme” Special Collaboration with Jake Shimabukuro, ukulele Tchaikovsky: Serenade for Strings in C major, Op. 48 Parapaskero: Turceasca

River to River Festival

A Far Cry in New York City - with Oneohtrix Point Never & David Lang July 14 2012 7pm World Financial Center Winter Garden

David Lang: Darker Daniel Lopatin: Selections from his albums, Returnal and Replica

Music in the Meadow at the Trapp Family Lodge

A Far Cry in Vermont - featuring Kip Jones, violin/fiddle and Karl Doty, bass July 15 2012 7pm Trapp Family Lodge

(Contact the lodge directly for a special concert rate of $245 for an overnight stay after the concert!)

Lully: Suite from "Le Bourgeois Gentilhomme" Kip Jones: Double Concerto for Violin and Bass, "Three Views of a Mountain" Piazzolla: Two Tangos Beethoven: Quartet in F minor, op. 95 Perapaskero: Turceasca

Chautauqua Institution

A Far Cry in New York August 20 2012 4pm Elizabeth S Lenna Hall

Osvaldo Golijov: Last Round Mozart: Eine Kleine Nachtmusik Britten: Variations on a Theme by Frank Bridge

Kneisel Hall Chamber Music Festival

A Far Cry in Maine August 24 2012 7:30pm August 26 2012 4pm

Pärt: Fratres Osvaldo Golijov: Last Round Mozart: Eine Kleine Nachtmusik Britten: Variations on a Theme by Frank Bridge

Auction Items

Our Spring Soiree is coming up: Wednesday May 2 at 6pm, The St. Botolph Club at 199 Commonwealth Avenue, Boston. This evening is always a highlight of our year, with a private concert, drinks, hors d'oeurves, and a wide-ranging auction! Tempted? Get your tickets today! Announcing our 2012 Soiree auction items:

Music by Markus Enjoy the beautiful sounds of Austrian pianist Markus Schirmer. This package includes three CDs, plus a certificate for one forthcoming CD of Markus playing Mozart’s Piano Concerto in C Major with A Far Cry, recorded this past spring in Jordan Hall. Value: $60. Opening Bid: $25.

Bow Re-hairing Help the Criers get their bows re-haired! Each re-hairing costs approximately $70. This item is a multiple-person bidding item (meaning, each person pays for as many re-hairings as you wish). Value: $70 each. Opening bid: $70.

Isabella Stewart Gardner Friend Membership Become a member of the museum where A Far Cry is the Chamber Music Orchestra in Residence. This membership includes: unlimited free admission for two adults for one year (children are admitted for free), invitations to members-only exhibition previews and special events, special member prices and advance notice for concerts and lectures, invitation to New Member Tour, 10% discount at the museum store, Gift of the Gardner, in the new building. Value: $95. Opening Bid: $50.

Learn to Tweet Baffled by the world of tweeting? Need help navigating Facebook or other forms of electronic media? Crier Miki Sophia Cloud will step you through this world of social media. Learn what this means: nightafternight Me on @TheKnightsNYC + @oestreichj on @afarcrymusic + @kozinn on @neilrolnick = hippest @nytimesmusic round-up ever: http://nyti.ms/gXeTAM -- Steve Smith, The New York Times. Value: $100. Opening Bid: $50.

Choral Splendor One of Boston’s premiere choral groups, the Back Bay Chorale, is offering two tickets to one concert next season at Sanders Theater. Visit www.backbaychorale.org for concert schedule. Value: $100. Opening bid: $50.

Voice Lesson with Kristen Watson Highly acclaimed soprano Kristen Watson (who will be performing with A Far Cry next season!) offers one seventy-five-minute voice lesson for male or female voice. (Beginner level welcome.) Value: $110. Opening bid: $70.

Spend Christmas with Bach Join renowned Emmanuel Music for Bach’s Christmas Oratorio on Saturday, December 1, 2012, 7:30PM. Two first-tiered seats. Value: $150. Opening bid: 75.

Pie-A-Month Club Who has time to bake? Award-winning pie baker Margaret Darling, mother of award-winning violist/Crier Sarah Darling, will bake a total of six pies for you throughout the year, and a Crier will deliver them to your home. (Times to be determined). Value: $200. Opening bid: $100.

Spring (or Fall) Garden Clean-Up Experienced gardener Kelly Reed offers one day (4-5 hours) of spring or fall garden clean up. Offer includes: raking out beds, hoeing, trimming back plants, preparing for plantings. Kelly will supply all tools. Value: $250. Opening bid: $125.

Paddle Vermont Experienced canoe guide Jean Gerber will take you and a guest down one of Vermont’s scenic rivers. Spend the day paddling and eating a lovely picnic lunch along the banks of a river. Then spend the night at the historic and beautiful Norwich Inn in Norwich, VT. Visit www.norwichinn.com. (Mutually agreed upon time – May through October; canoe included). Value: $400. Opening bid: $200.

Vermont Winter Retreat for Two January 20 and 21, 2013. Join the Criers next January for a concert in Grafton, VT. Package includes concert tickets, one night’s stay in the quaint Grafton Inn and a one-day pass to Grafton Ponds Cross-country Ski Center. Visit www.graftonponds.com and www.graftoninnvermont.com. Value: $400. Opening bid: $200.

Can we Talk? Criers are in desperate need of a better way to communicate with each other while on the road. Please help us purchase a conference call machine that will allow everyone to call and video-chat into the office for meetings. Value: $400. Opening bid: $200.

Wow, Do We Need a Scanner! Please help us purchase a new scanner so we can more easily scan our music saving us hours of time. Value: $400. Opening bid: $200.

Block Island Summer—A Romantic Getaway for Two Stay in a beautiful condo, owned by David and Felice Silverman, on Block Island and enjoy this lovely island’s beaches and restaurants. Dates that condo is available: July 30 through August 10, 2012. Value for one week: $1300. Opening bid: $500.

Your Own Crier String Quartet You choose the time (up to two hours) and place (around the Boston area), and A Far Cry will provide a world-class string quartet plus a pre-concert lecture. This is a wonderful way to promote the Criers. Let your imagination run wild: what would YOU do with your own string quartet? Value: $1,400. Opening bid: $800.

Crying in Vienna Join the Criers for their European Debut. A Far Cry will play with powerhouse Austrian pianist Markus Schirmer on October 20, 2012 at one of the best halls in the world – Vienna’s Musikverein. Package includes: 2 tickets to the Musikverein concert, discount hotel package, dinner after the show with the Criers and your very own personal walking tour of Vienna with Crier Miki Sophia Cloud. Value: $1,800. Opening bid: $1,000.

Ecstatic Party Bus Sponsor a bus to the Big Apple on July 14, 2012 where Criers will be performing in the Ecstatic Music Festival in Central Park. Along with bus sponsorship, we invite you and a guest to ride the bus with the Criers, to join us for the concert, and to party with the gang after the concert. Value: $2,500. Opening bid: $1,000.

An Evening of Music and Food A group of Criers will come to your home (within reasonable driving distance of Boston) to play music and…yes…cook you dinner. Invite your friends and enjoy an informal evening of good music and good company. This is a wonderful way for you to introduce your friends to the Criers. Value: $3,000. Opening bid: $1,500.

Diary of an Intern - Episode #1

AFC is thrilled to announce the launch of our new internship program in partnership with New England Conservatory. Undergrad and grad students were invited to apply to be a crier this semester - doing everything from performing with the group to learning the ropes of how to run a non-profit musical organization. As part of the program, we've asked the interns to relay their insights about the experience. We hope you enjoy this first installment from Shaheen Lavie-Rouse!

Managing The Inevitable Surprise By Shaheen Lavie-Rouse, Cellist and A Far Cry Intern

I was in for a surprise. I knew it was coming. I had prepared, more than ever. But in some scenarios, no matter how much you’ve anticipated a surprise, no matter how much you try to cushion it, learn about it, or get ready for it, you’re still facing a big unknown. Playing in an orchestra, with no conductor, was the scenario I was facing last Friday morning. I was heading to A Far Cry’s first rehearsal, preparing for this weekend’s concerts at St. Johns Church and at Calderwood Hall in the Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum.

When I learned that I’m going to join A Far Cry for a concert, my first preparation was to see the group perform. As they were playing John Adams’ Shaker Loops, the last piece of the night, I was still busy keeping mental track of how they stuck together. How are they sharing a pulse, a beat, with no conductor to show it? Towards the final climax of the piece, I sensed the glue loosening. The beat was just slightly rushing. It was a subtle effect, like a negligible tectonic plate shift, only acknowledged by a neglected ticker in some U.S Geological Survey office. What I thought to be the first gaffe of the concert, a slight loss of control, slowly revealed itself as A Far Cry’s shining moment that night. The beat’s acceleration slowly revealed itself to be completely intentional. No one was losing control. It was an accelerando - a performance instruction written by the composer himself. The players were playing in unison: the 19 musicians were playing the exact same notes, exactly together, and accelerating at exactly the same, constant, steady pace. The group paced this acceleration together for over two minutes, into one final hoorah. A Far Cry’s sync reminded me of a New Yorker article I read about the Sympathetic Nervous System a couple years back. Some scientists speculate that a cryptic and yet-to-be understood facet of this system connects our brains to the brains of others neurologically. I was eagerly looking for a “Far Cry method” to keep the beat. Instead, I found out I’m in for a bigger challenge: tapping into some sort of subconscious, instinctive, brain-pulse as the beat evolves through a piece of music. No matter which practice methods I’d use to prepared for that, I knew to expect a surprise last Friday.

The thing about the unknown is, it doesn’t always turn out bad. As I finally played with A Far Cry, I remembered another part of the New Yorker article. The sympathetic nervous system isn’t something you consciously tap into. It’s just there, in the back of your mind, and there’s nothing you can do about it. The New Yorker mentioned this speculated brain network is in action when you imitate others’ yawns, or cringe if another human is in pain. Tapping into A Far Cry’s psychic beat was just as effortless and instinctive. As I breathed into my sound and started the opening notes of Schoenberg, I was relieved. This surprise couldn’t be better.

ECHOES - This Saturday in JP (Gardner already sold out!)

What a whirlwind the past few months have been over here at A Far Cry. Since January, we've opened the new wing of the Gardner Museum with Yo-Yo Ma, collaborated with head-banging rock bands at the Ecstatic Music Festival in New York City, performed a completely fresh program at Jordan Hall, enjoyed a residency in Rockport, gone on tour to Houston, Louisiana, and Memphis, and finally, recorded our upcoming Mozart Concertos album with wunderbar Austrian pianist, Markus Schirmer. Phew!

However, as we all learned in "The Wizard of Oz," once the tornado finally sets us down on terra firma, there really is no place like home. We could not be more thrilled to be back in Boston, and are celebrating by presenting a fabulous program inspired by the echoes we hear across generations of musicians, specifically, in the city of Vienna.

Johann Heinrich Schmelzer's epigrammatic "Fechtschule" or "Fencing School" (a ballet complete with a gentleman's duel) does battle with the next-generation, Mozart's gracious Piano Concerto no. 13 in C Major. Alban Berg's virtuosic and secretive "Lyric Suite" embodies 20th century angst and passion, while Arnold Schoenberg's "Suite for String Orchestra" reaches back to monuments of the musical past and re-imagines them under new terms. We are also absolutely thrilled to be featuring the fantastic Markus Schirmer as soloist on the Mozart Concerto. We want to give you, our home audience, a sneak peak of the collaboration we will be presenting across the pond this fall when we make our European Debut. For a listeners guide to this entire program by our fabulous musicologist in residence, Kathryn Bacasmot, simply click HERE.

**Important Note!** Though we will also be presenting this program on April 1st at the Gardner Museum, that concert is already SOLD OUT. Never fear! We will be playing the same intriguing program at our wonderfully intimate and cozy "home turf" at St. John's Church in Jamaica Plain on March 31st.

With love and music, The Criers

A Far Cry in Jamaica Plain March 31 2012, 4pm St. John's Episcopal Church, Jamaica Plain, MA BUY TICKETS

Schmelzer: Balletto a 4 "Fechtschule" in G Berg: Three Pieces from 'Lyric Suite' Mozart: Piano Concerto #13 in C featuring Markus Schirmer, piano Schoenberg: Suite for String Orchestra ________________________________________________________________________

Recent Press The Boston Globe on our recent collaboration with Yo-Yo Ma: "Chamber music of the highest caliber." The New York Times: "The orchestra brims with personality or, better yet, personalities... a sensational jam." The Boston Phoenix: "This orchestra could kick your band's ass."

Be Still Your Beating Heart

We hope you spent last night whisked away in the arms of an admirer and thinking of nothing else. However, in case you woke in the middle of the night, shuddering: "How can I sleep when I don't know what A Far Cry is up to?" never fear, darling. This one's for you.

JORDAN HALL SHOW! "HEARTBEATS" Yes, our next show will be in Jordan Hall, and will feature the power of the human heart - seat of empathy, fervent devotion, sentimental swooning, and strongest muscle in our body. Check out an emotionally rich program featuring John Adams' modern classic "Shaker Loops," Shostakovich's Quartet No. 8 (arranged for string orchestra), and a concerto for fiddle and bass by Kip Jones, featuring Kip and Crier bassist Karl Doty.

Here are the program notes by our fabulous resident musicoloist, Kathryn Bacasmot and composer Kip Jones:

Dmitri Shostakovich (1906-1975) :: Chamber Symphony, op. 110a Dmitri Shostakovich’s work gained unfettered interpretational freedom through the sequestering of its truthful origin. Secrets and whispers lie at the heart of his music. He kept no diary, save what he revealed in his scores. Suffering habitual manipulation at the hands of the government, he did what he needed to do in order to survive. Fear drove him to protect himself and his family and friends from bans on performances of his music, and public verbal lashings (such as the one he sustained during the Stalinist regime against his opera Lady Macbeth of the Mtsensk District). In some ways it could appear he was numb to his reality, agreeing to join the Communist Party, allowing himself to be paraded around on a visit to the United States as the prize of government sanctioned artists—the compliant jewel in the Party’s crown. But what would you do if the alternative option meant divorcing yourself from the country you love—your homeland? His non-verbal outlet was “...inner liberation, by means of the power of creative thought,” as David Fanning observed. The inner life of Shostakovich is so shrouded in mystery that even the book, Testimony by Solomon Vokov, that claims to be his memoirs has been questioned as to authenticity. Thus, the truth of his music lies far beyond our reach, because as Michael Mishra has wisely cautioned, “any answers, as obvious as some of them may appear to be, remain speculative.” Not surprisingly then, opinions regarding the String Quartet no. 8 run rampant, stretching across the board from extremely sentimental to blandly pragmatic. According to them he was either writing his own eulogy with suicide as the ultimate conclusion (a widely disclaimed theory, yet it has been suggested), simply throwing together a pastiche of past works that meant something to him at some time or another, or sending a concealed message regarding his true feelings of involvement with the Party. Where is the truth? We can start with what Shostakovich wrote in a letter Isaak Glickman, dated July 19, 1960, five days after finishing the Quartet (written between July 12-14) in Dresden during a research trip for Five Days, Five Nights, a film for which he was composing the score: Instead [of Five Days, Five Nights] I wrote this ideologically flawed quartet which is of no use to anybody. I started thinking that if some day I die, nobody is likely to write a work in memory of me, so I had better write one myself. The title page could carry the dedication: ‘To the memory of the composer of this quartet.’ He continued, armed with his typically sardonic sense of humor: It is a pseudo-tragic quartet, so much so that while I was composing it I shed the same amount of tears as I would have to pee after half-a-dozen beers. When I got home, I tried a couple of times to play it through, but always ended up in tears. This was of course a response not so much to the pseudo-tragedy as to my own wonder at its superlative unity of form. But here you may detect a touch of self glorification, which no doubt will soon pass and leave in its place the usual self-critical hangover. The “superlative unity of form” is a result of seamlessly weaving together quotes of his own material including the Symphony no. 1 (I. Largo), the Piano Trio no. 2 (II. Allegro molto), the Cello Concerto no. 1 (III. Allegretto), the revolutionary song Zamuchen tyazholoy nevoley (literally, “Tortured by grievous unfreedom”) and themes from Lady Macbeth of the Mtsensk District (IV. Largo), and a return to the Symphony no. 1 in the finale (V. Largo). Bonding them together are his initials D-S-C-H (the Germanized spelling with “Sch”) musically represented through the notes D, E-flat, C, B. Famously dedicated “To the Victims of Fascism and War,” the title was not written on the manuscript by the composer, nor did it appear in the first publication of the piece, though it eventually made its way into print. Rather, the composer reportedly uttered the phrase the week before its premiere during a discussion of the work. It stuck. Shostakovich biographer Ian MacDonald eloquently observed that the composer “Committed to producing an art of honesty in a culture of lies,” and had “long ago made the decision that what people thought of him was less important than ensuring they had the chance of being emotionally confronted by his music.” Perhaps that is the key to this controversial music. Shostakovich is telling us everything we need to know, and all we have to do is listen. Rudolf Barhsai arranged this version of the quartet expanded for string orchestra, “and approved by Shostakovich.” -Kathryn J Allwine Bacasmot

Kip Jones: Three Views of a Mountain - Concerto for Violin, Double Bass, and String Orchestra Three Views of a Mountain is a concerto in three movements, arranged fast-slow-fast, that highlights the common ground between the two most disparate members of the string instrument family. It opens with the soloists, together as a speeding train, dodging large blocks of harmony from the orchestra. The entire first movement is a study of permutations, twisting and manipulating its stark themes in an overt and simple way. For me, it is childlike anticipation. The second movement is based on a twenty-two beat clave, ticking away silently in the musicians’ minds underneath a folk song, played against its own skeleton; the effect is a many- layered, untrustworthy environment: fearing no evil but still, after all, walking through the valley of the shadow of death. Whereas the first movement is anxiety and expectation, this is the experience itself, skipping a beat every so often to remind the consciousness: This Is Really Happening. The third movement, to be symmetrical, is the hike down from the summit. Retrospect, not necessarily accurate, creates an emotional framework through which we understand and redefine past experience. It opens with the soloists, both pizzicato, commenting on a new theme played pianissimo by the violas. Back at the tempo of the opening, multiple metric puzzle-pieces are fit together to foreshadow the final hocketing relationship between the soloists and orchestra. Ultimately, our present self is hurled forward out of the past, against our will, contrary to the famous last sentence of The Great Gatsby. It’s a real joy to present this work with A Far Cry, whose integrity, dedication, and sound are a great inspiration to me. It’s another joy to perform it with Karl Doty, who in addition to being a superlative double-bassist is also a true friend. A hearty thank-you goes to both of them, as well as to you, listener, for your time and attention. -Kip Jones

John Adams (b. 1947) :: Shaker Loops Shaker Loops had two previous lives. In 1976 John Adams presented a work titled Wavemaker for three violins. He was absorbed by the principle of waveforms both “acoustical waves” and “even the formal structures, with their repeated patterns and periodic modulations.” Two years later, in 1978, Adams revisited Wavemaker in a version for string quartet that “crashed and burned” (in the composer’s words) at its premiere. Nevertheless, the obsession with waveforms persisted. Later that year the work was expanded further, and renamed as Shaker Loops, first for string septet (3 violins, 1 viola, 2 celli, 1 bass) and then eventually for string orchestra in 1983. Adams notes that the title is something of a double entendre, referring both to the physical manufacture of the sound, “’Shake’ in string-player parlance means to move the bow rapidly across the string, thus causing a tremolo, or fast buzzing sound,” and also to his personal memories of a New Hampshire childhood growing up by a disbanded Shaker colony. In his 2008 book, Hallelujah Junction, Adams recalls: “As a child I’d heard stories, probably exaggerated, of the ‘shaking’ ceremonies. ‘Shaker’ had originally been a term of mockery. In fact, these church members called themselves the United Society of Believers. But the image of their shaking dance caught my attentions. The idea of reaching a similar state of ecstatic revelation through music was certainly in my mind as I composed Shaker Loops.” The compositional style with which Adams is associated, Minimalism, provided the “loops” from “the era of tape music where small lengths of prerecorded tape attached end to end could repeat melodic or rhythmic figures ad infinitum.” In the preface to the score, Adams elaborates on the mechanics of the loops as well as the overall structure: The “loops” are melodic material assigned to the seven instruments, each of a different length and which, when heard together, result in a constantly shifting play among the parts. Thus, while one instrument might have a melody with a period of seven beats, another will be playing one with eleven while yet another will repeat its figure every thirteen beats, and so one. (This is most easily perceived if one counts the beats between the various plucked notes in Hymning Slews.) The four sections, although they meld together evenly, are really quite distinct, each being characterized by a particular style of string playing. The outside movements are devoted to “shaking,” the fast, tightly rhythmicized motion of the bow across the strings. The “slews” of Part II are slow, languid glissandi heard floating within an almost motionless pool of stationary sound (played senza vibrato). Part III is essentially melodic, with the cellos playing long, lyrical lines (which are nevertheless loops themselves) against a background of muted violins, an activity that gradually takes on speed and mass until it culminates in the wild push-pull section that is the emotional high point of the piece. The floating harmonics, a kind of disembodied ghost of the push-pull figures in Part III, signal the start of Part IV, a final dance of the bows across the strings that concludes with the four upper voices lightly rocking away on the natural overtones of their strings while the cellos and bass provide a quiet pedal point beneath. -KJAB