Friday 22 May 2020

UNIQUE VIRTUAL GARDEN TO HONOR LATE COMPOSER KRZYSTOF PENDERECKI, "MEMORY GAME" NOW LIVE

"Krzysztof Penderecki, Gdańsk, 2008" by
Akumiszcza licensed by CC BY 3.0
Warsaw's The Adam Mickiewicz Institute (AMI), a government-sponsored organization funded by Poland's Ministry of Culture and National Heritage has announced the upcoming launch of an uniquely interactive virtual garden - "Penderecki's Garden"  - which is set to attain "full bloom" on the anniversary of the late composer's birth, 23 November, 2020.

Unquestionably one of contemporary classical music's most iconic figures, the Dębica native - who gained international acclaim following the release of his 1960 hypertonal tribute to the victims at Hiroshima - perished late this past March at the age of 86 following an unspecified illness.

His most famous work, aptly titled "Threnody to the Victims of Hiroshima," was dedicated to those who perished or fell gravely injured during the second world war after an American B-29 bomber dropped the world's first ever detonated atomic bomb over the Japanese city, eviscerating much of its population on contact and wiping out 70 percent of the land's structures. The jarring, sonoristic work won the composer the prestigious Tribune Internationale des Compositeurs UNESCO the year of its premiere, in 1961. 

Many more accolades would follow Penderecki throughout his remaining years, including a two-time Pix Italia win, four Grammy Awards, a Wolf Prize in Arts, and a University of Louisville Grawemeyer Award for Music Composition - all of them serving as compliments to a highly successful reign on public airwaves and on the contemporary classical music collective conscience.


Above: Penderecki's magnum opus, Threnody for the Victims of Hiroshima, performed by the National Polish Radio Symphony Orchestra under Antoni Wit.

For those unfamiliar with the late maestro's oeuvre, a portion of the virtual garden - located in the gaming section - is now live. Dubbed "Music Memory," the interactive game allows the online visitor to match together sound bytes of separate works - some of them lesser known pieces - from the composer's catalogue raisonné, intentionally selected by site administrators in the hopes of immersing the casual Penderecki fan further inside his dizzying array of works. Successful matches win the online participant a longer sound file accompanied by opus identification.

The upcoming virtual garden, which may be previewed here, will feature media from participating musicians known to Penderecki whist he was alive, each of them specifically commissioned by AMI to compose music in honor of the composer, and in an effort to showcase famous Pole's incredible versatility as an artist.


Above: the Chor der Warschauer Nationalphilharmonie and Bamberger Symphoniker perform the stunning Lacrimosa from Penderecki's Polish Requiem, with the maestro himself at the helm. (Krakow, 15 June 1988)

Highlighting the genres and moods which inspired the maestro himself - from electronic and jazz, to film music and rock, and from the breathtakingly sublime to the horrifying and visceral, Penderecki's Garden promises to appease both classical connoisseur and newcomer alike.

  
Master of the avant-garde, Penderecki was known outside of classical music circles as the producer of thrills and
chills -  inducing waves of gooseflesh upon the skin of millions of film lovers across the globe. From Martin Scorsese's Shutter Island, to Stanley Kubrick's The Shining and William Peter Blatty's The Exorcist, delectably terrifying selections from the versatile composer's oeuvre have been frequently adapted for film, setting many a tense scene in some of Hollywood's most iconic horror classics. Above: Polymorphia (1961), used in The Exorcist (1963), and, on the right, The Dream of Jacob, 1974, used in The Shining (1980). Link: the Passacaglia - Allegro Moderato from Symphony No.3, used in Shutter Island.


Footnotes:
-Rose.

Wednesday 20 May 2020

TEATRO ALLA SCALA & GOOGLE ARTS AND CULTURE JOIN FORCES TO LAUNCH LARGEST ONLINE OPERA HOUSE ARCHIVE

Google's non-profit online platform, renowned for its ability to provide for the greater public accessibility to artwork in high resolution (a feat accomplished through its partnership with cultural organizations and participating artists around the world), has now made venturing into the hallowed halls of Milan's most prized theater a "reality" for those confined in quarantine or otherwise unable to visit the venue in the future.

Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart, sketch for an unknown composition | Library and archive of the Museo Teatrale alla Scala, Google Arts & Culture
Click on image to enlarge


Some 240,000 archival photographs, 16,000 documents and manuscripts - including a rare, "sketch for an unknown composition" authenticated by "Carlo" (Karl Thomas Mozart, son of the great Wolfgang Amadè) as being that of his father's have been scanned for the project. They join stunning 360° views of the theater and over 40 exhibits featuring wardrobe worn by some of the most beloved sopranos and tenors to have graced the stage at La Scala, in addition to numerous videos and articles detailing the history of each aspect of the venue, from the creation of backdrops and stage design to architecture, performance, and trivia.

Visit the impressive archive here.

-Rose.

THERE IS STILL TIME TO JOIN ERIC WHITACRE'S 6TH VIRTUAL CHOIR, "SING GENTLY" (UPDATED: LINKS, PREMIERE DATE ANNOUNCED)


American choral composer Eric Whitacre has announced the recording of the upcoming sixth installment of his critically acclaimed 'Virtual Choir' series is presently underway.

Given the title "Sing Gently," the Nevada native promises this project will be truly something special.
 

The new composition, which contemplates the power of 'togetherness,' comes at a unique time in modern global history, as the COVID-19 pandemic and nationwide quarantines have left millions isolated and struggling with mental health.
 

The sixth installment, dubbed 'VC6' for short, follows the same format as Whitacre's previous user-generated virtual choirs, bringing together singers from across the globe, who, often from the comfort of their own living rooms, record themselves singing an individual vocal part whilst listening to a prerecorded track through earphones. Rehearsals involve videos of Whitacre as the maestro himself, as he aids participants in keeping time.



The composer found his inspiration for the concept of a virtual choir after viewing online a video of a fan singing his 2000 choral work "Sleep." The fan had uploaded her rendition to the popular video sharing hub YouTube, and thus, the idea for a global collective was born.
 

Whitacre, moved by the fan's tribute, issued a request to his online fans to purchase Polyphony's recording, and upload videos of themselves singing along to the piece. As a result of that successful experiment, the gorgeous Lux Aurumque (heard above) was launched, becoming the first of Whitacre's Virtual Choirs (VC1). The number of participants in each succeeding installment have increased exponentially as videos of the global choirs, and word of their concept spread rapidly across social media (from 185 singers in the first virtual choir to over 8,000 singers - who at the time of recording, ranged in age from just 4 to 87 years - and who hailed from over 120 countries).
 

Describing the submissions thus far, the composer remarked,
"During the... rehearsal the other night I asked everyone in attendance to imagine themselves singing with one another, to sing with warmth and compassion as if we were all in the same large room together. I swear I could feel it happening through my tiny computer screen! I got all teary-eyed...many other singers wrote that they too had tears in their eyes as they sang. It was magical.

I think that strange sense of ‘togetherness’ we felt speaks to that part of the human spirit which we all share: a primal ache to find other members of our ‘family’, an ache to lift our voices as one and become part of something larger than ourselves."
As of May 18th, VC6 has amassed over 5,000 videos from 97 countries. There is still time to join the project - the deadline for submissions is slated for noon Friday, May 22, 2020 PST.

To participate now, email Eric at community@ericwhitacre.com, join the Virtual Choir Facebook Group, or simply create an account at https://virtualchoir6.com/

Vocal parts, instructional video and rehearsal footage may be found on Whitacre's Virtual Choir YouTube page.

UPDATE - 22 MAY, 2020, 12:00 PM PST: Submissions are now closed for Virtual Choir 6. Whitacre is reporting an astonishing 17,562 videos from 129 countries - a dramatic increase from last weekend's already impressive stats. Links to the premiere will be listed here on Unraveling Musical Myths and on the VC6 website once announced.

UPDATE - 18 JUNE, 2020, PREMIERE DATE ANNOUNCEMENT: VC6 is scheduled to premiere on Sunday July 19, 2020 at 10:30 a.m. PT on the Virtual Choir YouTube page (linked below). In addition, Whitacre has announced an "online afterparty" for the event on the YouTube channel at 11 a.m. PST.

Links:



-Rose.