Thursday, May 01, 2025

May Day Protest in SF Civic Center

Various protest rallies and marches took place in San Francisco on May Day, and I walked to the one scheduled for 4PM in Civic Center Plaza, which was to be followed by a march down Market Street. There were lots of plainclothes police parked around the neighborhood but overall the law enforcement presence was deliberately low-key with no street closures in front of City Hall.
Upside down American flags of distress were omnipresent.
Various labor union groups were also represented although they were overshadowed by strident speakers ranting on a portable speaker system.
Some of the signage was profane...
...and delightfully homemade.
Of all the current protests in San Francisco against the oncoming of fascism, the weekly gatherings from 12 to 2 on Van Ness in front of the Tesla showroom are the most fun.
They even have free red, white and blue popsicles.
My favorite sight was on an adjoining lawn where a quartet were practicing a dance routine...
...in front of a sign reading "BE FABULOUS / BAN FASCISM".

Monday, April 21, 2025

San Francisco Rites of Spring

The rites of spring in San Francisco were in full flower on Sunday, starting with the annual Cherry Blossom Parade from Civic Center to Japantown.
Japanese-American firemen were representing...
...along with San Francisco County Sheriffs.
There were taiko drummers on a float...
...and junior drummers on the street...
...along with a gaudy collection of cars.
There weren't as many participants as usual this year...
...possibly because they instead attended the annual Easter Party in Dolores Park hosted by the Sisters of Perpetual Indulgence.
Everybody else in San Francisco seemed to be there on Sunday afternoon.
This is the celebration that begins with an Easter Bonnet Contest and ends with a Foxy Mary and Hunky Jesus Contest
Former winner Rockstar Jesus was accompanied by Bong Hit Jesus who was channeling San Francisco's annual 4/20 celebration, which happened to fall on Easter Sunday this year.
I met up with my friend Grant Wilson who hadn't attended a Sisters Easter in 30 years, back when the event was held in tiny Collingwood Park in the Castro neighborhood.
It has grown a bit larger since then.

Saturday, April 19, 2025

Northern Lights at SF Contemporary Music Players

Eric Dudley is a composer, conductor, vocalist, pianist, and for the last seven years the Artistic Director of the San Francisco Contemporary Music Players. Last Saturday at the top-floor Taube Auditorium in the Veterans Building he presented a program of modern Scandinavian music in music that he obviously loved.
The first work was Swedish composer Jesper Nordin's 2008 Surfaces scintillantes. I couldn't make heads or tails out of the ten-minute work for seven musicians, but the succession of sounds was interesting.
A slightly larger ensemble arrived for Finnish composer Kaija Saariaho's 1985 Lichtbogen for nine instruments and electronics, depicting the Northern Lights in sound. In an interesting appreciation at a defunct blog called Articulate Silences, tacet writes: "Although Saariaho would later explore even more mysterious sound-worlds in her larger scale orchestral works, Lichtbogen conjures a stunning array of iridescent, tactile textures with a relatively limited sound palette. The seductive mystique common to all of Saariaho’s music is ever-present throughout Lichtbogen: this music is dream-like and ephemeral, a spectral web of sound that is as evocative as it is elusive...Saariaho’s orchestration, as well as her subtle use of live electronics, perpetually blurs the lines between the individual instruments of the ensemble until they appear to melt into a single entity; independent voices are subsumed into the unified musical texture, coalescing into a sparkling cloud of sound."
After intermission, there was a commissioned piece by Swedish composer Mika Pelo, Working From a Postcard. He teaches up the road at UC Davis so was able to attend his own world premiere.
The ensemble was more or less the same as that of Saariaho and the work was a "remembering" of that 1980s classic while morphing into its own distinctive style.
The largest instrumental group, including bassoonist Jamael Smith above, assembled for the final piece, Finnish composer Magnus Lindberg's 2007 Jubilees.
It started out as a short birthday piano piece for Pierre Boulez's birthday in London in 2000, and then became a suite of six short movements in 2002, and Lindberg finally orchestrated it in 2007. My concert companion James Parr was in raptures at the end. "That music is so rich!"
The organization is to be congratulated for presenting such a challenging, interesting program. And even more congratulations are due Kevin Rogers, whose usual gig is as violinist for the brilliant Friction Quartet. It seems there was a last-minute cancellation by the viola player who was to perform in three of the works, so Kevin jumped from his violin chair in Surfaces scintillantes to the viola chair for the rest of the concert, which is some kind of genius versatility. The SF Contemporary Music Players have another concert scheduled for May 10 at the Brava Theater in the Mission, which is featuring contemporary Latin composers, and the Friction Quartet will start things off with a PRELUDE concert of Paul Mortilla's Paradiso: Rivers of Light. Click here for tickets.

Monday, April 14, 2025

Music of the Americas at the SF Symphony

The 68-year-old conductor Marin Alsop finally made her San Francisco Symphony debut on a subscription program last week that was dedicated to music from the Americas, North and South. It seemed a strange oversight that it took so long for Alsop to be invited to lead the orchestra, especially since she helmed the Cabrillo Music Festival in Santa Cruz for 25 years and has recently been conducting prestigious orchestras in Europe. (All concert photos except the one below are by Brandon Patoc.)
The opener was a lively 2018 piece called Antrópolis by Mexican composer Gabriela Ortiz channeling the music of dance halls in Mexico City, punctuated by long solos for the timpani. It was ten minutes of fun, and a more auténtico version of Copland's El Salon Mexico. (Photo by Michael Strickland of the wonderful Associate Concertmaster Wyatt Underhill shaking hands with Marin Alsop.)
This was followed by the Venezuelan pianist Gabriela Montero playing her own 2016 Piano Concerto No. 1, Latin. Montero's pianism and charisma were a constant delight through the 3-movement, 30-minute piece, but the longer first two movements meandered between the moody and the highly rhythmic. The concerto didn't quite cohere for me until the short final movement whose dance music sounded like it could be appended to Antrópolis.
My concert companion, Chris Enquist, was a serious fan-boy at age 74 of Montero and had become entranced by her piano improvisations based on suggestions from audience numbers. Impromptu musical improvisation was a staple of 19th century pianist-composers such as Mozart, Beethoven and Liszt, while in the 20th century it has become the bedrock province of jazz. In an interesting profile of Montero in the program book, she talks about undergoing a neurological exam at Johns Hopkins: "What they found was really amazing. When I improvise, what I call 'getting out of the way' means that a different part of my brain is activated--one which doesn't really have anything to do with music. My visual cortex goes crazy, and that's what I improvise with. It kind of explains something: when I was a little girl, I would say to my father 'I have two brains.' "
For Friday night's encore, after asking for a tune to improvise on, a pitch-perfect soprano voice from a nearby balcony sang the first few bars of Unchained Melody. Montero didn't recognize the tune so she asked for a few more bars which the gorgeous sounding voice provided, and then the pianist turned to the audience and asked if we knew the song. There was general assent since everybody had seen Patrick Swayze at the potter's wheel with Demi Moore in Ghost, so Montero picked out the tune and spun out a fascinating five minutes of variations. My concert companion Chris stood up at the end and shouted, "YOU ARE AMAZING!"
After intermission, it became apparent this concert could have been called Time For Timpani as easily as Music of the Americas. Both Ortiz and Montero used the instrument extensively, as did the second half of the program. It opened with Copland's 1943 Fanfare for the Common Man and Joan Tower's 1986 feminist response, Fanfare for the Uncommon Woman No. 1 (the first of a set of six), which was dedicated to Marin Alsop. Both scores use only brass and percussion, with timpanist Edward Stephan above getting quite a workout.
The final work was Samuel Barber's 1936 Symphony No. 1 which coincidentally began with a soft introduction on the timpani. It's an exuberant, young composer's piece, and Alsop did a great job with it. Incidentally, I realized afterwards that all the works on the program were written by either women or gay men, and the concert was conducted by a lesbian. The fact that this was not mentioned anywhere in the marketing or program notes was odd, either a step forward where it wasn't worthy of special mention, or a step backward where we just don't talk about that kind of stuff in this political climate. In any case, let me leave you with Ms. Alsop's quote when she was asked by the The Times about the 2022 movie Tár: "So many superficial aspects of Tár seemed to align with my own personal life. But once I saw it I was no longer concerned, I was offended: I was offended as a woman, I was offended as a conductor, I was offended as a lesbian.”