Little Match Girl Passion.
What I like most about the An die Musik performance space in Baltimore is the low stage, which to me represents the basic spirit of the place. It’s no more than two feet high, and it extends wall-to-wall across the full forty-or-so foot width of the yellow room. There’s no curtain, for this stage is neither display-case nor pedestal. When I go to symphony halls or other elegant classical music spaces, I sometimes feel like an intruder in the courts of the the cultured. An die Musik is different: you don’t have to be high-class; you just have to like music.
Last night I went there to see a performance of David Lang’s Little Match Girl Passion, which was being performed as part of Judah Adashi’s thus-far excellent Evolution Music Series. It’s a choral work that on a first listen sounds to an untutored ear like something Arvo Pärt might have written. The piece is a retelling of Hans Christian Andersen’s short story in recitatives, interspersed with choruses inspired by Bach’s St. Matthew’s Passion. On the Carnegie Hall website (where, incidentally, you can stream a good recording of the piece), Lang describes why he chose the story of the match girl:
“What drew me to The Little Match Girl is that the strength of the story lies not in its plot but in the fact that all its parts—the horror and the beauty—are constantly suffused with their opposites. The girl’s bitter present is locked together with the sweetness of her past memories; her poverty is always suffused with her hopefulness. There is a kind of naive equilibrium between suffering and hope.”
I have a feeling that, had Lang not been so careful to maintain this equilibrium, this piece would have struck me as incredibly mawkish, as the story alone does. Yet the meditative interludes, especially “Have Mercy, My God” and “When it is Time for Me to Go,” gives the listener a relationship to the music than the reader couldn’t have with the text.
As for the performance, I thought all the singers were wonderful, but then again I haven’t spent much time listening to vocal performances. The mezzo-soprano gracefully handled the phrasing in the recitatives as the other musicians , and I noticed the tenor had an exquisite high range. Beyond that, I can’t judge. There was a deceptive simplicity to the staging. The musicians didn’t come to the stage as a group; they just kind of ambled up there in ones and twos, sat around for a minute or two, then stood up and started. They also played some sparse supplemental percussion. I’ve already described the effect An die Musik’s stage setup has on me; this sort of performance in this sort of space makes me feel like I’m watching highly skilled DIY indie musicians rather than Professional Classical Vocalists. (But of course these singers are in reality highly trained.)
The one sour thought I had during the oratorio had nothing to do with the music itself. In Baltimore, we’ve just settled into winter temperatures in the last week or so. Here I was, in a warm room full of music appreciators, listening to an artful evocation of a poor person suffering in the cold. Surely there is something wrong with this scene, and though I will try to ease my conscience by donating to a charitable organization this week, my conscience isn’t really the issue here.
Not having been there it’s hard to comment, except to say your write-up points out the importance of framing in setting your audiences expectations.Report
a choral work that on a first listen sounds to an untutored ear like something Arvo Pärt might have written.
Your notion of the “untutored ear” is rather demanding, I suspect.Report
A fair point! Let’s say “untutored relative to the rest of the audience,” which I’m pretty sure was at least a third conservatory students.Report
The sort of ambling entrance you describe is something usually meticulously rehearsed beforehand, in my not-too-extensive experiences with choral groups. When the effect we wanted in a Columbus, Ohio, group I sang with was to draw the audience in emotionally, we often did just this sort of randomized arrangement of bodies and voices.
Which is to say, you are precisely correct.
Living so close to Baltimore myself, I should really check this place out. Thanks for the review!Report
I was sitting in the very back, so I heard the music director conspiring with the staff to make sure they didn’t ruin the effect by doing the usual thing with the house lights.
I should have mentioned — An die Musik is not just a performance space; there’s also a record store on the first floor. So even if there’s no concert, you can still browse the selection of classical/jazz/world music and chat with the proprietor.Report
William, sounds heavenly! When I first saw the words, An die Musik, I immediately thought you must have been to a recital of Schubert Lieder—and An die Musik is one of the most gorgeous songs ever composed by this musical wonder of the universe. I’m not familiar with the music you heard tonight but after your excellent description, I certainly intend to. Your comparison of it to Pärt makes me even more curious and interested. And his Spiegel im Spiegel is forever mesmerizing—it draws you in and won’t let go until the very last note!
A piece of music that draws from the St. Matthew Passion and reminds you of Pärt, is something I must buy, forthwith! Thanks for the review.
p.s. Just picked up a great recording of Uchida performing Schubert’s D. 960 (his last piano sonata)—GET IT!! You’ll be delirious with joy–just a great, great recording.
p.p.s. Ever hear Richter’s recording of WTC? Bach, in his hands, can cause hallucinations of a dancing Sebastian dervish–worth checking out. See ya.Report
I’m glad that you enjoyed the performance space. What you don’t learn being in the audience is how An Die Musik does to not compensate their performers. I am a classical musician (in fact, I have performed with 3 of the singers that you saw), and I have performed at An Die Musik before . Although it is a nice performance space, I don’t think I’ll perform there again, because An Die, in my opinion, does not pay the musicians fairly. This is a shame, because it does a disservice to an already struggling classical music scene.Report