An Interview with Matthew Peters

You made your start in the industry with a very eminent organisation- the Chicago Symphony. What can you tell us about your experience there?

Producing the Chicago Symphony radio broadcasts was an exhilarating experience due to both the pace of the job as well as the enormity of working with world-class artists. The pace of the job felt like driving at 90 miles and hour with no brakes because, unlike studio recording where the might be take after take after take of a difficult passage, we only recorded two live performances and then proceeded to edit those together. For the standard repertoire it was rarely an issue – the orchestra has played it hundreds of times, I would know the score really well, etc. However, the CSO often did a number of world premieres – and I wouldn’t have access to the score until the concert. It was sometimes nerve-wracking to sight-read a modern score of a piece I had never heard, and be able to mark it as if I had known the piece my whole life.

 

It was also humbling – as my job, based on the performances, was to make my editing recommendations to artists such as Daniel Barenboim, Yo-Yo Ma, Pierre Boulez, Zubin Mehta, etc. I was a bit star-struck at first, because these were the artists I listened to growing up and who inspired me to become a musician. However, I was supposed to speak to them as colleagues – which at 21 years old – took a bit of getting used to!

 


The ESO has a distinguished history of its own, but it’s a much smaller operation than the CSO. What appealed to you about working with this orchestra?

I was actually very aware of its history before I moved to the area – I have the Serenades for Strings album with Boughton on vinyl!

I hadn’t made the connection that the ESO was local to Worcester till the side-by-side performance of the Worcester Youth String Orchestra with ESO. It was at that concert – where I realised the orchestra’s artistic direction was not only about staying true to the standard string repertoire, but also strongly supporting modern music (English composers in particular) – and programming them side by side – that I became very interested in working with the orchestra.

I have been inspired by the projects of the past two years and cannot wait to be an intergral part of planning for the future.
 

 

What do you hope to accomplish here? Where would you like to see the orchestra in five years?

It is no secret that the ESO has had some troubles over the years – and that is nothing to be ashamed of. Orchestras, like people, have life cycles and go through prosperous times and also fall on hardships. The number of top-tier orchestras in the United States that have come close bankruptcy or have had strikes and/or lock-outs in the past 5-10 years is heartbreaking. However, when the whole organisation comes together as a team (players, directors, management, trustees), usually the orchestra survives and even comes out the other side stronger.

 

I think we are at a turning point and the ESO’s best days are still ahead. One of my first directives was to get all of the departments to start communicating better with each other, working together, and realising that the orchestra is above all of us. It is not about any single person, but all of us coming together that will elevate the orchestra to where is should be – and in five years time, I hope that will be nationally recognised as one of the top orchestras in the country, and through our recordings, also develop an international following that could lead to touring opportunities.

 

Can you tell us a bit about your background as a musician and how that’s informed your approach to orchestra management?

I started playing the cello when I was 8 years old at the Preucil School of Music in Iowa City, Iowa. For a relatively small town in the Midwest – Iowa City is a bit of a cultural haven – so I was lucky to play in 2 extremely good youth orchestras, played a lot of chamber music, studied theory and composition, and did a European tour. The University of Iowa also brought in top recitalists and touring orchestras so I was able to grow up listening to world-class musicians, that lead to me pushing myself to achieve as much as I could.

 

This actually has informed my orchestral management style in that I feel it is just as important to perform in smaller communities as it is the big, prestigious world stages. Naturally, I would love for the ESO to play Royal Albert Hall, Carnegie Hall, Sydney Opera House, etc… but by playing the smaller halls in more isolated communities, one never knows which child might be inspired so much by that one performance that it fuels them to strive for a life in the arts as well.
 

 

We understand you’re still very active as a music educator yourself. Can you tell us a bit about your teaching philosophy and what you see as the ESO’s role in supporting music education?

Yes – I am Head of Strings at the Elgar School of Music and I also teach cello in my own private studio as well as some peripetetic teaching for the County. My basic philosophy is that every child should have access to music tuition, should they want to play an instrument. This is not a unique philosophy, but one that is harder to sustain with government funding cuts and in many cases, parents’ cost of living going up but wages staying the same.

 

Something I would like to see more organisations adopt are workstudy programmes : reduced tuition in exchange for light work. My family was only able to afford all of our lessons (I have a brother and sister too) because the Preucil School offered us workstudy. I helped out in the office, I set up and cleared away after some classes, and when I was older, I actually helped lead the class and got my first introduction into teaching. Not only did the work study help me afford lessons, but I actually practised more because I was working for them.

 

I think the ESO is lucky to have the education team lead by Noriko Tsuzaki and James Topp. They tirelessly work to provide opportunities for children and are looking to expand our orchestral courses to more locations. I would like to see the ESO work more within schools, to help inspire children to take up instrument tuition – or at least come to concerts… and on the other end of the spectrum, would like to develop a young artists programme for talented students (perhaps 16-20 years old) that gives them the chance to play chamber music with ESO players and could even lead to a concerto performance.
 

 

We gather you’ve also worked a lot in non-classical musical styles. Can you tell us a bit about that?

I have always loved music in all genres, and while I was studying sound recording at McGill University, I had a chance to learn digital audio production. It gave me the tools to make my own music – and while sounding very different to classical – I approached it the same way. I was intrigued by motifs, varying articulations, dynamics, timbre – but I used different sources to “paint with sound”. I did a lot of work in experimental hip hop (I guess in the same way one can only describe Ravel’s La Valse as rather experimental for a waltz!), released several 12” singles and full albums, and performed in New York City (both in clubs and as sound designer for theatre projects) and many festivals in Europe. I also collaborated with jazz musicians, hiphop mc’s, percussionists, vocalists, and other producers in a way that felt like chamber music to me.

ESO Earns Classical Music Magazine “Premiere of the Year” for Second Year in a Row with John Joubert’s Jane Eyre

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For the second year in a row, the English Symphony Orchestra and Artistic Director Kenneth Woods have received the Classical Music Magazine Premiere of the Year nod for the Midlands. Following on the 2015 selection of the premiere of Donald Fraser’s orchestration of the Elgar Piano Quintet at the Elgar Hall in the final concert of the ESO’s 2015 Elgar Pilgrimage, Christopher Morley, longtime senior music critic of the Birmingham Post, has made the ESO’s performance of John Joubert’s opera Jane eyre his 2016 Premiere of the Year.

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The ESO’s Avie Records recording of last year’s Premiere of the Year went on to be a Classic FM CD of the Week and spent 8 weeks in the classical Top 20, all the more reason to look forward to the release of Jane Eyre on Somm Recordings in March 2017.

 

“…. Kenneth Woods conducting an on-its-toes English Symphony Orchestra and a totally committed cast of 12, among whom April Fredrick as Jane and David Stout as Rochester were simply outstanding…Joubert as a composer is unafraid to encompass the achievements of previous operatic greats…unleashing a wonderfully engaging well-structured language of his own…”

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CD of the Week- ESO, A portrait of Elgar

Click here to buy.

Reviews

‘Boughton elicits solid, brilliant, feeling performances … As these performances meld something of Boult’s propulsion and body with an approximation of Barbirolli’s swing, they might serve as the ideal introduction. This production stands strongly recommended.’ Fanfare

‘The Elegy, is given a wonderful degree of gravity without ever over-heating – one of the tenderest versions on disc. The lightweight Serenade for strings is phrased with delicacy. The Chanson de nuit and Chanson de matin are given in arrangements for string orchestra which work well.The set as a whole can be heartily commended to newcomers to Elgar’s music and they give a pretty comprehensive view of his orchestral works.’ Paul Corfield Godfrey, MusicWeb-International.com, August 2012

Elgar Portrait 1

 

Ullmann Chamber Symphony

The first concert of the new ESO Christ Church series begins with a performance of Viktor Ullmann’s Chamber Symphony. Learn more about Ullmann at the Music and the Holocaust website here, or at the Orel Foundation website here.

Viktor-Ullmann
Composer Viktor Ullmann

PROGAMME NOTE

Viktor Ullmann- String Quartet No. 3

(arr. for string orchestra by Kenneth Woods)

Viktor Ullmann’s String Quartet no. 3 was completed on January 18, 1943, in the final part of a career that began with him acknowledged as one of the great hopes of German musical life, and ended in his murder at the hands of racist fanatics.

In his early career, he studied and apprenticed under Schoenberg and Zemlinsky, and his early works, especially his Schoenberg Variations op 3a (1926), attracted attention throughout Europe. A passionate humanitarian with a deep interest in literature, culture and philosophy, Ullmann took a partial hiatus from composition to study the anthroposophical philosophy of Rudolf Steiner. In 1932 he and his second wife bought a bookshop in Stuttgart where they traded primarily in books on philosophy and humanism.  Only months after the purchase of the bookstore, Hitler seized power and the Ullmanns fled to Prague.

In 1933 he began work on his most significant piece to date, an opera that would eventually become “The Fall of the Antichrist,” a work he completed in 1935.  This masterpiece would be the crowning achievement of his pre-war years, and yet it was to be the events of World War II that would spur him on to his very greatest artistic accomplishments.

Ullmann was deported to the Theresienstadt ghetto outside Prague in 1942. He was one of a handful of extraordinary creative geniuses in the ghetto, including the composers Gideon Klein, Pavel Haas and Hans Krasa. Never a particularly prolific composer in his earlier years, Ullmann composed a stunning volume of work during the two years he was in Theresienstadt, including piano sonatas, chamber music and a second opera, “The Emperor of Atlantis.”

Just hours before being deported to Auschwitz on October 16, 1944 some friends convinced him to leave his compositions behind.  It is believed Viktor Ullmann was murdered in the gas chamber at Auschwitz on October 18, 1944.

‘For me Theresienstadt has been, and remains, an education in form. Previously, when one did not feel the weight and pressure of material life, because modern conveniences – those wonders of civilization – had dispelled them, it was easy to create beautiful forms. Here where matter has to be overcome through form even in daily life, where everything of an artistic nature is the very antithesis of one’s environment – here, true mastery lies in seeing, with Schiller, that the secret of the art-work lies in the eradication of matter through form: which is presumably, indeed, the mission of man altogether, not only of aesthetic man but also of ethical man.

“All that I would stress is that Theresienstadt has helped, not hindered, me in my musical work, that we certainly did not sit down by the waters of Babylon and weep, and that our desire for culture was matched by our desire for life; and I am convinced that all those who have striven, in life and in art, to wrest form from resistant matter will bear me out.’
            ~ Viktor Ullmann, 1944

(aus Goethe und Ghetto: „Theresienstadt war und ist für mich Schule der Form. Früher, wo man Wucht und Last des stofflichen Lebens nicht fühlte, weil der Komfort, diese Magie der Zivilisation, sie verdrängte, war es leicht, die schöne Form zu schaffen. Hier, wo man auch im täglichen Leben den Stoff durch die Form zu überwinden hat, wo alles Musische in vollem Gegensatz zur Umwelt steht: Hier ist die wahre Meisterschule… Ich habe in Theresienstadt ziemlich viel neue Musik geschrieben, meist um den Bedürfnissen und Wünschen von Dirigenten, Regisseuren, Pianisten, Sängern und damit den Bedürfnissen der Freizeitgestaltung des Ghettos zu genügen. Sie aufzuzählen scheint mir ebenso müßig wie etwa zu betonen, dass man in Theresienstadt nicht Klavier spielen konnte, solange es keine Instrumente gab. Auch der empfindliche Mangel an Notenpapier dürfte für kommende Geschlechter uninteressant sein. Zu betonen ist nur, dass ich in meiner musikalischen Arbeit durch Theresienstadt gefördert und nicht etwa gehemmt worden bin, dass wir keineswegs bloss klagend an Babylons Flüssen sassen und dass unser Kulturwille unserem Lebenswillen adäquat war; und ich bin überzeugt davon, dass alle, die bestrebt waren, in Leben und Kunst die Form dem widerstrebenden Stoffe abzuringen, mir Recht geben werden.“)

The Third Quartet can in many ways be seen as a culmination of Ullmann’s development as a composer. In it one finds an exemplary balance of rigor and passion, a compelling formal logic, and a wealth of beautiful melodic writing. Although the work unfolds in a single musical span, its form can easily be divided into a traditional four-movement structure where each of the four movements is linked by sophisticated motivic inter-relations.

The first movement, Allegro moderato is primarily lyrical in character and full of wonderfully luxurious harmonic writing, lightened at one point by a [omit- wonderfully] waltz-like melody. The second, Presto, is ferocious and violent in much the same way as the second movement of Shostakovich’s famous Eighth Quartet. If the first movement has introduced the protagonists of our story, then the second has brought us music fit for the vilest of villains. Before the third movement begins, Ullmann brings back a passionate and despairing reminiscence of the first movement- what was nostalgia in the first movement is now transformed into genuine despair. The third movement, Largo, is truly the work’s heart of darkness, beginning with a fugue of desolate and unrelenting intensity. The waltz theme of the first movement here returns full of sadness.

Like the Presto before it, the character of the Rondo Finale is overwhelmingly antagonistic, violent and often terrifying, and is built from a horrific manipulation of the theme of the first movement. However, just when all is despair, Ullmann brings back the music of the first movement in the shape in which we first encountered it, but nostalgia is now replaced by defiance and regret is replaced by passion. A voice of passionate resistance from within the walls of the concentration camp at midnight of humanity’s darkest hour? If ever any person wrote truly courageous music, it was surely Ullmann and this is surely that music.

c. 2004 by Kenneth Woods

 

 

COMPOSER’S NOTE ON THE STRUCTURE OF THE WORK

1. Exposition (the repeat should be observed)

2. Scherzo with Trio and abbreviated repeat

3. Development of the first subject

4.Largo(quasi fugue, with development of the secondary subject as an episode)

5. Rondo-Finale with Coda

V.U.

 

ARRANGER’S NOTE

I was introduced to Viktor Ullmann’s Third String Quartet while a student at the University of Cincinnati College-Conservatory of Music by my chamber music coach and mentor, Henry Meyer, the long-time second violinist of the La Salle String Quartet. Henry had been incredibly excited to learn of the work’s rediscovery, but by the time he was able to locate the score and parts, the La Salles, whose advocacy for the string quartets of the New Vienna School masters and the quartets of Zemlinsky would have made them ideal advocates for the Ullmann, had retired. “If I can’t play it, I would at least like to teach it,” he told us. We were deeply humbled and honoured by his suggestion. Henry knew all-too-well what Ullmann had faced in the camps. He himself had been interred in bothAuschwitz and Birkenau before escaping at the end of the War. I can remember coaching sessions on dazzling spring afternoons when Henry, always gregarious and witty when we worked together, would take off his jacket, exposing the serial number tattoo etched in his arm by the Nazis some fifty years earlier. The cognitive dissonance of those moments, in which shared joy in the exploration of a newly discovered masterpiece took place in the presence of visible reminders of historic horror, remains with me to this day.

I went on to perform the work often in my regular quartet, and to take it with me to many festivals. It remains a work I love to play. I began considering an arrangement of the piece for string orchestra almost as soon as I learned it. I had conducted Rudolf Barshai’s string orchestra transcriptions of Shostakovich’s Eighth and Tenth String Quartets, and Mahler’s adaptations of Beethoven’s “Serioso” Quartet and Schubert’s “Death and the Maiden,” and so I could easily imagine that the drama, violence and intensity of the Ullmann would work wonderfully with string orchestra. Likewise, Ullmann’s lyricism and coloristic genius come across equally as well in the expanded ensemble as in the original version.

Of course, the most creative aspect of such an arrangement is the creation of a double bass part. Mahler, for instance, was extremely discrete in where and how he used the double basses in his quartet transcriptions, but the art of the bass has come a long way since Mahler’s time. In making this arrangement, I was inspired by the capabilities of many of my bassist colleagues and friends, whose virtuosity concedes nothing to the finest violinists or pianists. This arrangement pre-supposes the bass player(s) will have an instrument capable of going down to a low C.

The arrangement was completed in 1999 and premiered by the Grande Ronde Symphony in February 2000.

As it rains in Worcester

It is 10 in the morning and it is dark and very wet outside, like a scene from a Scandinavian police procedural. It is about a mile’s walk from home to the Elgar School of Music and my shoes, socks and trousers are still very damp from the experience. To cheer myself on a very bleak walk in I thought about a couple of  contrasting, cheering events during the last week.

Made My Day

Yesterday, the library received a request from the “New Years Eve Choir” for 15 Vivaldi scores needed for rehearsal the following day. I rang the number on the request and found myself talking to Hilary Elgar. Now this was a bit of an oh-yeh for me because I remember singing at her house about a dozen years ago on NYE, invited by her sister Margaret RIP, and didn’t realise it was an annual event.

I explained about the situation with the library being abandoned by the county and Hilary said that, sadly, that was the way things were with classical music these days.

I invited her to the library to pick up the scores and showed her around. She was cheered, thrilled almost, by what she found. I told her that we did not plan to go gently, that we wanted to develop and grow the resource, to fight back. As she left said: “You know, this really has made my day!”

I offered to carry the scores to her car for her but she refused. “I do a lot of gardening, you know”.

Made my day, too.

Hoedown

ESO’s concert with Penelope’s Dance Studio at the Arttrix was a blazing highlight of the Christmas season. The orchestra played half the concert on the stage, half in the pit, sometimes accompanied by dance, sometimes not; conducted when necessary by Stephen Roberts (who had composed the music for a new ballet piece for the occasion).

It was an EVENT. The dancers, aged I would guess 5-25, were very disciplined and obviously loving the chance to dance with a band actually playing live.

The highlight of the highlight for me was Copland’s Hoe Down, something which the String Orchestra always play brilliantly. This time it was accompanied by a new ballet, performed by all 50 dancers, that was so perfect for the occasion that just thinking about it brought tears to my eyes that were warmer than the raindrops they displaced.

These are times of doubt for all Arts organisations but let no-one doubt that when ESO puts a show like this on they are bloody good at it!  The feedback we have been receiving ever since could not have been more in line with what we were hoping for – here is a glimpse:

I just wanted to say thank you to all of the musicians for a thoroughly enjoyable evening, Your performance was superb and the light-hearted humour really made it an entertaining and relaxed evening. Thank you also for the respect shown to the children, it was evident throughout the performance that this was mutual. My daughter considers this to be the most enjoyable and important performance she has ever participated in and I feel sure she is not alone in this thought. I have been to see a number of orchestras over the years, all of them excellent. The difference about Saturday was that this was more personal, not only did you make our children feel special, but the audience felt special too.

Quite! Just the kind of endorsements that we would be hoping for in a week leading up to the launching of plans for a possible Worcester Arts Quarter on the site of the old porcelain factory…