EFTA00713796.pdf
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From: President
To: Jeffrey Epstein <[email protected]>
Subject: Re: asked my guys to follow the suggestion of lynne and ask peter davis, hence
Date: Tue, 26 Mar 2013 06:23:41 +0000
This is research?
This is a review from more than fifteen years ago. That concert was one of my first. Your guys did not talk to
Davis now who has seen and heard concerts recently. This is old old news from way back. It is merely a Google
search from New York magazine. Get something current from Davis.
Really... This program was long ago and I disagree with Davis on many things. Ask him about our full
production of Der Feme Klang three or so years ago.
If you want morgue reviews I can find you good ones too.
This is not fair and to quote Feuermann the great cellist if you do not get bad reviews you are not a great artist or
Berlioz who quipped that there was never a statue erected for a critic.
Sent from my iPhone
On Mar 25, 2013, at 6:26 PM, Jeffrey Epstein <[email protected]> wrote:
To anyone weary of standard concert fare, the American Symphony Orchestra programs always look
enticing. Ever since he became the orchestra's conductor and music director in 1992, Leon Botstein has been
uncovering a buried repertory that our more timid musical organizations avoid, and he is not above stretching a
point to put his discoveries into provocative thematic contexts.
The latest concert in Avery Fisher Hall was typical: Robert Fuchs's Symphony No. 3, Alexander Zemlinsky's
Symplzonische Gesiinge, Mahler's Ruckert Lieder; and Franz Schreker's "Nachtstiick" interlude from his opera
Der Ferne Kiang -- rare works, the Mahler songs excepted, that few audiences can have ever heard performed
live. All four composers were colleagues in turn-of-the-century Vienna (a noted pedagogue, Fuchs in fact
taught the other three), and Botstein brought them together in hopes that by showing us how they dealt with
1900fin de siecle angst, we might connect with their music and "so define our own place in history."
That's a lot to ask from any concert, and I can't say that I came away from this one much the wiser. Botstein,
who leads a second life as president of Bard College, sometimes seems to be substituting classroom ideals for
musical reality -- especially when he puts forth extravagant claims for neglected minor scores that may make
fascinating discussion topics but contain precious little musical interest. The Fuchs symphony is a case in point,
a pallid imitation of Brahms, already ten years in his grave when this dreary exercise was written in 1907; if
such works are still worth hearing at all, they should surely be sampled on reference recordings rather than in a
concert. Zemlinsky and Schreker had more individual voices, and both deserve careful reassessment, although I
wonder if they are well served by being exposed in an academic context that scarcely shows them at their best.
The performances were not very persuasive, either. Botstein shares a missionary's zeal for second-rate music
with Leopold Stokowski and Sir Thomas Beecham, but he lacks their technical and communicative skills to
make these scores sound better than they are.
ven at that, both the ASO and its conductor do seem to be more comfortable with each other than when they
first met seven years ago, and there is a real need for the sort of repertory freshening they so passionately
believe in. Next season's unusual fare looks typically tantalizing, on paper at least; let's hope that it translates
more successfully into sound.
EFTA00713796
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EFTA00713797
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