|
|
- NEWSLETTERS
- MOBILE APPS
-
ADD TIME NEWS
Music: Medea by Barber
A decade ago Samuel (Adagio for Strings) Barber wrote a piece of music for Dancer Martha Graham called Cave of the Heart. It dealt with a Medea-like woman whose consuming love turned to hate and revenge; the score followed the choreography closely in mood and motion. Last week Dimitri Mitropoulos and the Philharmonic-Symphony played Barber's recomposition of the same scenes, called Medea's Meditation and Dance of Vengeance. It turned out to be a meatier work for full symphony than as a dance accompaniment, with the same virtuesand the same faultsthat have made Barber, 45, one of the most-performed of contemporary American composers.
Among the virtues: a firm command of the orchestra, which produced a vividly mysterious opening figure on the xylophone, and two flutes that appear to bump and separate like a pair of slow-motion dancers. Chief fault: thematic aimlessness. After the promise of those opening bars, the next part of the brief score is limp and wearya routine expression of Medea's mother love.
Only when the heroine goes into her ''dance of vengeance" do things liven up again. At that point Conductor Mitropoulos took over the dancer's role for himself, shrugging one shoulder grotesquely to the syncopated piano rhythm, splaying the fingers of his left hand to the spastic tempos. The music got more conventional in texture as it got noisier, but ultimately, sheer noise was sufficient: as the last, clubbing chord thundered out, the Philharmonic's subscribers gasped, and then burst into applause.
Ahead for Composer Barber: a new opera, with a libretto written by his composer-friend, Gian-Carlo (Saint of Bleecker Street) Menotti.
Most Popular »
- Why Obama Has to Worry About Polls
- How Panera Bread Defies the Recession
- Israel vs. Hizballah: Drumbeats of War
- In Germany, a Disturbing Rise of Right-Wing Violence
- The Pentagon Prepares for a Missile Attack from 'Iran'
- Lindsey Graham: The Senate's New Republican Maverick
- The '00s: Goodbye (at Last) to the Decade from Hell
- A Pariah No More: Serbia Bids to Join the E.U.
- Domestic Terror Incidents Hit a Peak in 2009
- Sony's Robot-Cam: Partying Without a Photographer
- How Panera Bread Defies the Recession
- Rehabilitating Joseph Stalin
- In Germany, a Disturbing Rise of Right-Wing Violence
- Holland's Plan to Cut Traffic: A Tax on Every Kilometer Driven
- Lindsey Graham: The Senate's New Republican Maverick
- A Pariah No More: Serbia Bids to Join the E.U.
- In Cleveland, Worker Co-Ops Look to a Spanish Model
- Domestic Terror Incidents Hit a Peak in 2009
- New Job for Ex-Soviet Pilots: Arms Trafficking
- Tapping Into India's Growing Alcohol Market





RSS