Saturday, April 25, 2026

Beginning of a New Tale of Biblical Subversion

 Priest #1: This is the greatest thing that's happened to us. 

Priest #2: The greatest thing?

#1: The greatest thing. 

#2: What's the greatest thing?

#1: The capture of the Torah. 

#2: Blasphemy!

#1: Do you really want to spend the rest of your life cleaning up the shit and blood of dead cows?

Friday, April 24, 2026

MTT

 By the time I heard MTT live, he was not what he was. My first time hearing him was in San Francisco, 2009. His technique was much more economical, his interpretations much more restrained. As my father, brother and I sat behind the stage, he did a varied program of an Ollie Knussen American premiere, Strauss's Four Last Songs with Deborah Voigt which we could barely hear, Medea's Vengeance Monologue from Barber's Antony and Cleopatra, and Beethoven's 4th. The Barber was easily the highlight, though, again we couldn't hear it, and the Beethoven was merely pleasant and barely memorable. I heard him twice again, in a merely pleasant Mahler Resurrection screwed up by the always uncommitted National Symphony, and a program at Carnegie that was built for MTT: Firebird, Stravinsky Violin Concerto with Kavakos, and the Rite of Spring. Only Sacre was any good, and it was merely good.

The MTT who played Le Sacre like Napoleon played war was gone. In its place was an 'old master' who was clearly a little past it, perhaps sick already, and generated little heat compared to the awe-inspiring virtuoso he once was.
MTT never quite found a way past the virtuosity of his earlier years. To be sure, MTT was a fascinating virtuoso, doing all kinds of interesting repertoire and combining Lenny's outsize rhythmic snap with a Fritz Reiner-like precision and (generally in MTT's case) score fidelity. He was always compared to Lenny, not without merit, but he was far more fastidious than Lenny. He was fundamentally a carry-over of the earlier Lenny, constantly taking tempos much faster than average but playing them with a precision and virtuosity that commanded awe.
MTT was never a failure the way many in his generation were, he was just a slight disappointment like Barenboim. He came up too early, he was promoted too much, and he never had a chance to develop out of the public eye. By his last fifteen years, he'd burned out slightly. He made the San Francisco Symphony, already a wonderful orchestra, into perhaps one of the top 3 in the country (LA, Pittsburgh IMneverHO), but once he did, he seemed content in his final years to sit on his laurels, and suddenly switched to a more traditional maestro: recording low energy, over-controlled performances of Beethoven and Schumann after a near-lifetime of performances that commanded astonishment.
Nothing was quite the same afterward. He occasionally summoned the old energy, but his podium manner grew restrained, the occasionally slow performances became the norm and without the explosive dynamic contrasts of yesteryear that animated even his slowest tempi, the delivery became mannered, the centripetal force that used to guide them to excitement was completely gone and ultra-nuance had taken its place. Sometimes MTT exhibited the same curiosity as before, but generally he seemed content to do much less.

By then, MTT had done so much that he'd cemented his place in history as one of the all-time great podium musicians, but he was not quite what he was. Let's remember the conductor he was until the late 2000's, one of the most gifted and exciting to ever pick up a baton, who did more for music with the smallest chamber of his heart than most conductors of his generation did with their whole brains.

Essentials:

Ives 4: [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xQBd1kCeij8...](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xQBd1kCeij8...) (if it's your thing, this is one of the greatest recordings ever made)
Appalachian Spring:
Optional: