ICE Presents "George Lewis and Friends" by Doyle Armbrust

An eminent trombonist and composer, appearing on more than 140 recordings alongside the likes of John Zorn and Bill Frisell in addition to his solo work, trombonist George Lewis is also vice chair of the Department of Music at Columbia University. There, his advocacy on behalf of young composers is legend. “I see him as one of the bright lights of our time. [He’s] a huge supporter of other composers’ work, an unusual quality in a crowded and competitive field, and a kind of father figure for many,” says Claire Chase, founder of the International Contemporary Ensemble, which will perform Lewis’s work at the Museum of Contemporary Art.

Read More

Fall 2011 Classical Record Round-Up by Doyle Armbrust

London Philharmonic Orchestra
The 50 Greatest Pieces of Classical Music (X5 Music Group)

The expected fare—Tchaikovsky’s Swan Lake, Orff’s “Carmina Burana” and the rest—finds the London Philharmonic Orchestra buried in a bass-dominated mix and excessive reverb. While much of the playing is passable, as in Vivaldi’s “Spring (Allegro)” from Four Seasons, the lack of rhythmic flexibility nearly conjures an audible metronome click. “The 50 Greatest Pieces of Classical Music”? Lies! They are not. The LPO finds one measly post–World War II piece throughout the four-disc set, Stanley Myers’s “Cavatina” (famously used in The Deer Hunter), and the entire catalogs of Shostakovich, Berg and Bartók are inexplicably absent.

Read More

A.A. Bondy at Lincoln Hall by Doyle Armbrust

Entering the world of A.A. Bondy’s first two albums, 2007’s American Hearts and 2009’s When the Devil’s Loose, one pictures tin lawn chairs, a six-pack of Shiner Bock and a battered Airstream. The former Verbena frontman’s milieu is in fact far more immersive than the chapped vocals and slack guitar strumming of these records let on. On the new Believers, the tone shifts from Americana-infused balladry to something with a bit more polish.

Read More

Gidon Kremer - Edition Lockenhaus by Doyle Armbrust

Gidon Kremer made a few enemies with his recent indictment of the damaging culture of celebrity at the Verbier Festival. In a letter explaining his withdrawal from the Swiss event, Kremer declared the new breed of performers “quite EMPTY and artistically lost, chasing a hunger for recognition.” Embracing talent over marketability for his own roster, the violinist’s Lockenhaus Festival is a bolster to his argument. Luckily for those unable to attend the annual concerts in Austria, ECM New Series founder Manfred Eicher began capturing the superlative performances soon after the Lockenhaus’s inception in 1981. This essential five-disc box collects material recorded between 1981 and 1986.

Read More

Anna Thorvaldsdottir - Rhizoma by Doyle Armbrust

From string quartet Amiina to electronic conjurer Ben Frost, much of our favorite music has emerged from Iceland in recent years. The latest from the island, Anna Thorvaldsdottir’s debut, Rhízoma, plays like a field recording of the wrinkled crevasses of the cerebral cortex. Structured yet transcendent of bar lines, the scores wander introspectively through a vast spatial plane, as though pivoting the eyes back into the skull.

Read More

Renée Fleming - Interview by Doyle Armbrust

Renée Fleming has her work cut out for her. When she assumes the position of Lyric Opera’s creative consultant with the 2011/2012 season, she’ll address flagging audience interest, foster the NExT and young professionals initiatives, and curate the commission of a new opera in 2015, among many other responsibilities. To celebrate the launch of the collaboration, Fleming headlines “Stars of Lyric Opera at Millennium Park” on September 10. We caught up with the genial diva to ask her about the new gig.

Read More

Steve Reich - WTC 9/11 by Doyle Armbrust

Not since Lara St. John wore her violin as a bra on Bach Works for Violin has there been such a public kerfuffle over classical cover art as with Steve Reich’s latest, WTC 9/11 / Mallet Quartet / Dance Patterns. The image of the second plane hitting the towers was replaced after the uproar.

Read More

The Knights at Ravinia by Doyle Armbrust

Flying in just two days after appearing in Central Park’s Naumburg Bandshell, New York City’s Knights, not to be confused with the semiprofessional rugby team, return to Highland Park for a follow-up to their well-received Ravinia debut in 2010. When we last caught up with founders (and brothers) Colin and Eric Jacobsen at an impromptu Manhattan gathering of Juilliard grads, the evening was spent comparing old Beethoven solo-piano LPs. What was clear from that evening, and what is crystal from watching these talents perform, is that their verve for classical music exists just as enthusiastically offstage as on. No surprise then that the group counts Yo-Yo Ma as one of its advocates and collaborators, or that the brothers’ other project, Brooklyn Rider, is an NPR darling.

Read More

Reggie Watts at Mayne Stage by Doyle Armbrust

Watching Reggie Watts vocally stack up a track (not Fuck Shit Stack up a track, mind you), starting with the kick drum, moving through the hi-hat and on to the grinding bass, its clear why thumbs are kept off mobiles and blottoed bachelorettes remain silent throughout the Seattle-based comic’s sets. The brain can’t compute how that much improvisational beatboxing talent and that much funny fit into one lone body. Not even the B-side Nine Inch Nails playing through the PA pre-show could tamp down the exuberance of a full house at Mayne Stage Friday night, and Watts walked out for the 8 o’clock set to a welcoming barrage of cheers. Between musical numbers, Watts’ stand-up can be a bit like being cornered at Thanksgiving by an uncle with ADHD: “You know Keith, yeah, uh, Keith’s a little bit of an asshole. He’s got a tiny little asshole. I don’t know personally, but his doctor says...I did a cal-cu-fu-lation and if we use 2.3 less electricity, we can save the world.” Non-sequitors abound, landing in large part because the face beneath the gargantuan afro is so earnest. 

Read More

Michael Gordon - Timber by Doyle Armbrust

Music collectors are suckers for creative album packaging, and with Timber, composer Michael Gordon has a winner. It comes entombed in medium-density fiberboard, laser-etched with a starburst of 3-D planks. Thankfully, the Bang on a Can cofounder’s latest is as musically compelling as its mantel-ready wooden case.

Read More

Lollapalooza 2011: Cool Kids by Doyle Armbrust

Hey, Lolla: "Hands in the air even if your arms don't work!" In a lineup perennially short on metal and hip-hop, it's always refreshing to break up the ever-present post-this and electro-that with bona fide MCs whose crowd hyping doesn't come off like a cry of desperation (looking at you, Bloody Beetroots). Speaking of the Death Crew 77, gamers unfamiliar with Chicago's hometown rap duo may have come across the Cool Kids mashing it up with the Beetroots on Need for Speed: Nitro, or solo on any of a smattering of glossy, sport-themed cartridges…sorry, discs. For all the talk of Mikey Rocks and Chuck Inglish's facial-physical detachment in performance, there's no denying the pair's seamless verbal junctions, crimping together aw-HELL-no flows like: "She said I need me a baño / Cause you be sharp like the keys of a piano / She blowin' my candles like Feliz Cumpleaños."

Read More

Lollapalooza 2011: Manchester Orchestra by Doyle Armbrust

One can only hope that proponents of philoso-comedian Marc Maron (who did a stint at Mayne Stage this weekend)'s intensely addictive podcast were at the Google+ stage tonight for a similarly autobiographical experience. Manchester Orchestra founder and singer Andy Hull makes no bones about taking personal self-divulgence well beyond the limited worlds of Facebook (and Google+ for that matter), tearing out his heart, Mola Ram style, and condemning it on stage for whomever will listen.

Read More

Lollapalooza 2011: Ratatat by Doyle Armbrust

While threads of music tailor-made for network hospital dramas slipped between the branches enshrouding the Google+ stage from over at Budweiser, techs scrambled to disassemble the handbell choir...er, OK Go set to make way for the 8:45pm slot. NY riff-mongers Ratatat would not take the stage till 9pm, teasing the crowd with an occasional synth flourish to test the monitors, and leaving a beer-ed up crowd antsy for confirmation that its bypass of Muse would not be in vain.

Read More

Yo Yo Ma Plays Tchaikovsky at Ravinia by Doyle Armbrust

Traverse the halls of the music schools of Northwestern or DePaul and you will inevitably hear the tortured strains of Tchaikovsky’s tedious Variations on a Rococo Theme through the practice-room doors. Like the Lalo Violin Concerto (Symphonie Espagnole), the piece has a habit of bringing out the worst in performers as well as inspiring teachers to reach for the nearest bottle of Xanax.

Read More

Jacob Greenberg - Schumann and Busoni by Doyle Armbrust

Chicago audiences are accustomed to seeing Greenberg’s dome onstage at the MCA with the International Contemporary Ensemble. Yet Greenberg’s impressive keyboard prowess extends far beyond the labyrinths of a George Crumb score or the intricate weavings of Varèse. For his latest album, the Northwestern grad steps into the age of piano grandmasters Robert Schumann and Ferruccio Busoni for a more tonal exploration of interiors and exteriors.

Read More

Rush Hour Concerts: Series Cruises Onwards by Doyle Armbrust

The first things one notices when chatting with Deborah Sobol are her irrepressible love of music and a big-sisterly affection for those listening to it. It should come as no surprise then that the series she founded, Rush Hour Concerts, is the aural equivalent of a hug. Since 1999, Sobol has been welcoming the 9-to-5 crowd as well as pensioners and students into the Loop’s St. James Cathedral for 30 minutes of libations followed by 30 minutes of top-shelf performances by local and visiting artists. Brief, certainly, but a more alluring cool-down than a four-plus-hour opera to those who have marathoned through a day behind a desk.

Read More