Crosscut Tout: For music fans, a week of classical innovation across Seattle

A bold program of pioneering composers in Wallingford's music sanctuary; A pair of UW graduates make orchestra user-friendly; The Seattle Symphony unveils Morlot's inaugural season with a free performance.

Crosscut Tout: For music fans, a week of classical innovation across Seattle
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Thomas May

A bold program of pioneering composers in Wallingford's music  sanctuary; A pair of UW graduates make orchestra user-friendly; The  Seattle Symphony unveils Morlot's inaugural season with a free  performance.

This week brings two offerings that should be especially worthwhile for contemporary-music aficionados in Seattle. The mission of The Box Is Empty is “to engage new and seasoned audiences in the evolving ways we  interact with and experience sound, art, and music.” The ensemble was  launched just half a year ago, with a program devoted to the unfailingly  intriguing Dutch composer Louis Andriessen. On Thursday they present  their second concert at the Good Shepherd Center as part of the boldly  adventurous Wayward Music Series.

The  program will pair works by two innovative American composers: Steve Reich and David Lang.

Reich is  best-known for his pioneering work in Minimalism and has explored the  intersection between speech and music in fascinating ways. In Proverb (1995),  he uses one brief text by the  philosopher Ludwig Wittgenstein, at the  same time drawing on rhythmic  techniques from medieval music. In this  case, the uncannily fitting  text, repeated throughout the duration of  the piece, is “How small a thought it takes to fill a whole life” (taken  from Wittgenstein's  notebooks as published in Culture and Value.) The result is a mesmerizing slow-motion lyricism and overlapping pulsation.


Reich’s setting for three sopranos, two tenors, vibraphones, and  electric organs also sets the stage for the heart-rending simplicity of  Lang’s the little match  girl passion. Using  the barest flecks of tuned percussion to accompany a vocal quartet, Lang  also alludes to early music — commentary choruses from Bach’s St. Matthew Passion settings  and the spare beauty of Renaissance polyphony — to recount the famous  Hans Christian Andersen fairy tale about a young girl who slowly freezes  to death trying to sell matches on a  bitterly cold New Year's Eve.

Despite Lang’s austere minimalism, the stylized chamber drama of match girl’s  winter tale leaves a devastating emotional impression. There’s no  substitute for encountering it in live performance. “The suffering of  the little match girl has been substituted for Jesus’s,” writes the  composer, “elevating (I hope) her sorrow to a higher plane.” Although it  won the Pulitzer Prize for Music in 2008, only now (!) is this  remarkably moving composition receiving its Northwest premiere. Bravo to  The Box Is Empty for breaking the ice.

Meanwhile, Seattle Modern Orchestra, already into a second season, has been establishing itself as a user-friendly guide to classic  modernist landmarks. Artistic directors Julia Tai and Jeremy Jolley, who  cofounded the chamber ensemble while grad students at the University of  Washington, typically offer illuminating nuts-and-bolts introductions  to the pieces they perform. Their concerts this season are alternating  between the Good Shepherd Center and Cornish College’s Poncho Hall on  Capitol Hill, where this Friday’s program takes place.

Like a smartly curated art show, each program attempts to shed light  on different composers’ approaches to a given theme. Next up is Layers of Time,  which promises a focus on the way a piece is made to unfold through  time: specifically, through the use of “layering” of independent threads  that happen simultaneously.

The fancy word for this is “counterpoint.” Bach’s  art of combining such layers in pieces like the Brandenburg Concertos  represents a way that’s familiar to Western ears. But Seattle Modern  Orchestra will showcase three examples from the late 20th century that  explore alternatives to this kind of richly blended aural tapestry. SMO  compares their methods to geological strata, “where each layer was  formed in different time periods.”

If you take in Steve Reich’s Proverb the previous night, you can compare it to his earlier Eight Lines for chamber orchestra. Written in 1983 (a revision of his still earlier Octet), Eight Lines is a tour de force study in interlocking simultaneities.

Piece No. 2 for Orchestra, a work from near the end of  American maverick Conlon Nancarrow’s long career, should be a real  treat. It’s a rare orchestral piece by a composer especially known for  the hypercomplex rhythms of his studies for player piano. SMO will also  present Talea by French composer Gérard Grisey who died  prematurely in 1998. Grisey was a student of one of the 20th century's  most imaginative composers, Olivier Messiaen. Titled after a term from medieval music that refers to rhythmic structures, Talea plays on the paradox or mechanical processes that open up into freedom.

And what about new music from the Seattle Symphony? Stay  tuned on January 25 for the orchestra to make its official announcement  of the 2012-13 season under new music director Ludovic Morlot. We’ll  find out where he intends to lead their exploration of contemporary  orchestral music in the coming year.

And today (Wednesday, Jan. 25), you can sample Ludo’s work with the band  for free, though this time in a concert squarely focused on the  classics: At 12:30 p.m. at Seattle City Hall, they will perform a  program of Weber and Beethoven.

If you go: The Box Is Empty performs music by David Lang and Steve Reich at The Chapel at the Good Shepherd Center on Thursday, January 26, at 8  p.m. 4649 Sunnyside Ave. N, 4th floor, 206-789-1939. Tickets: $5-15  (cash only).

Seattle Modern Orchestra’s Layers of Time concert will be performed at PONCHO Concert Hall, Friday, January 27 at 8 p.m. 710 E. Roy St. Tickets: $10-20.

Seattle Symphony performs at City Hall, Wednesday, January 25, at 12:30 p.m. 600 Fourth Ave. Free.

Donation CTA