Northwest Reverb
Northwest Reverb - Reflections by James Bash and others about classical music in the Pacific Northwest and beyond - not written by A.I.
Tuesday, February 17, 2026
Today's Birthdays
Henri Vieuxtemps (1820-1881)
Sr. Edward German (1862-1936)
Leevi Madetoja (1887-1947)
Paul Fetler (1920-2018)
Ron Goodwin (1925-2003)
Fredrich Cerha (1926-2023)
Lee Hoiby (1926-2011)
Anner Bylsma (1944)
Karl Jenkins (1944)
and
Isabelle Eberhardt (1877-1904)
Ronald Knox (1888-1957)
Jack Gilbert (1925-2012)
Chaim Potok (1929-2002)
Ruth Rendell (1930-2015)
Mo Yan (1955)
From the New Music Box:
On February 17, 1927, a sold-out audience attends the world premiere of The King's Henchman. an opera with music by composer, music critic and future radio commentator Deems Taylor and libretto by poet Edna St. Villay Millay, at the Metropolitan Opera House in New York City. The New York Times review by Olin Downes on the front page the next morning hailed it as the "best American opera." The opera closed with a profit of $45,000 and ran for three consecutive seasons. It has not been revived since and has yet to be recorded commercially.
Monday, February 16, 2026
Today's Birthdays
Willem Kes (1856-1934)
Selim Palmgren (1878-1951)
Maria Korchinska (1895-1979)
Alec Wilder (1907-1980)
Sir Geraint Evans (1922-1992)
Eliahu Inbal (1936)
John Corigliano (1938)
Sigiswald Kuiljken (1944)
and
Nikolai Leskov (1831-1895)
Henry Brooks Adams (1838-1918)
Van Wyck Brooks (1886-1963)
Richard Ford (1944)
Sunday, February 15, 2026
Report from Banff International String Quartet Competition in Chamber Music magazine
Last summer I attended the Banff International String Quartet Competition and wrote an article about it for the winter issue of Chamber Music, the magazine published by Chamber Music America. You need to have a subscription unless it is put online in the future.
Today's Birthdays
Jean‑François Lesueur (1760-1837)
Friedrich Ernst Fesca (1789-1826)
Heinrich Engelhard Steinway (1797-1871)
Robert Fuchs (1847-1927)
Marcella Sembrich (1858-1935)
Walter Donaldson (1893-1947)
Georges Auric (1899-1983)
Harold Arlen (1905-1986)
Jean Langlais (1907-1991)
Norma Procter (1928-2017)
John Adams (1947)
Christopher Rouse (1949)
Kathryn Harries (1951)
Christian Lindberg (1958)
and
Galileo Galilei (1564-1642)
Jeremy Bentham (1748-1832)
Susan B. Anthony (1820-1906)
Alfred North Whitehead (1861-1947)
Art Spiegelman (1948)
Matt Groening (1954)
Saturday, February 14, 2026
Reviews of Portland Opera's La Boheme and Everest in Opera magazine
My reviews of La Boheme and Everest are in the March issue of Opera. You will need a subscription to Opera in order to read the reviews. Multnomah County library used to carry it as subscription, but I am not sure that they still do.
Today's Birthdays
Alexander Dargomizhsky (1813-1869)
Ignaz Friedman (1882-1948)
Jack Benny (1894-1974)
Wyn Morris (1929-2010)
Steven Mackey (1956)
Renée Fleming (1959)
and
Frederick Douglass (1814-1895)
Carl Bernstein (1944)
and
On this day in 1895, Oscar Wilde’s play The Importance of Being Earnest opened in London. He wrote the first draft in just 21 days, the fastest he’d ever written anything.
Friday, February 13, 2026
Rest in Peace Helmuth Rilling (1933-2026)
The great conductor Helmuth Rilling has passed. Especially renown for his work on Bach's music, Rilling co-founded the Oregon Bach Festival. As a member of the Portland Symphonic Choir, I got to sing with him when he led the Oregon Symphony in a performance of Haydn's "The Creation." That memorable performance featured Thomas Quasthoff. Here is a link to Rilling's obituary.
Today's Birthdays
Leopold Godowsky (1870-1938)
Feodor Chaliapin (1873-1938)
Tennessee Ernie Ford (1919-1991)
Eileen Farrell (1920-2002)
Yfrah Neaman (1923-2003)
Colin Matthews (1946)
Peter Gabriel (1950)
Raymond Wojcik (1957-2014)
Philippe Jaroussky (1978)
and
William Roughead (1870–1952)
Ricardo Güiraldes (1886-1927)
Grant Wood (1891-1942)
Georges Simenon (1903-1989)
Elaine Pagels (1943)
and from the Composers Datebook:
On this day in 1914, ASCAP (The American Society of Composers, Authors and Publishers) is formally organized in New York City, with composer Victor Herbert as its first director.
Thursday, February 12, 2026
Today's Birthdays
Jan Ladislav Dussek (1760-1812)
Roy Harris (1898-1979)
Franco Zeffirelli (1923-2019)
Mel Powell (1923-1998)
Paata Burchuladze (1951)
and
Abraham Lincoln (1809-1865)
Charles Darwin (1809-1882)
Max Beckmann (1884-1950)
Judy Bloom (1938)
And courtesy of the New Music Box:
On February 12, 1924 at New York's Aeolian Hall, self-named 'King of Jazz' Paul Whiteman presented An Experiment in Modern Music, a concert combining "high art" and "hot jazz." The concert featured newly commissioned works from Victor Herbert, Jerome Kern, Edward MacDowell, Irving Berlin, Ferde Grofé, and Rudolf Friml, but the highlight of the program was the world premiere performance of George Gershwin's Rhapsody in Blue.
Wednesday, February 11, 2026
Review of Newport Symphony concert featuring Rachel Barton Pine
Guest review by Joshua Lickteig
NEWPORT, Ore. — As crisp as the cool sunny sea of January’s 17th day this year in Newport, the only year-round symphony of Oregon’s coast played a program of works spanning the 20th century, in a chronology that progressed from impressionism to post-minimalism and looped back to the late Romantic. Unifying the thread, each work has clear roots in dance, even if at times more about the idea of dancing than act itself.
Falla’s folk-musical remnants of pre-urban life, Stravinsky’s sometimes wry polystylistic assemblage of former worlds from scraps of evidence, Adams’ meta-foxtrot depicting Mao and Madame Mao perhaps in a ballroom during the Cultural Revolution, and the brief motivic interlacings and lilts and waltz-like qualities of lyrical sections of Glazunov.
The night began with a light though pensive mood altogether as music director and conductor Adam Flatt addressed the audients of the 371-seat (Alice Silverman) proscenium theatre, nearly seven-eighths full. In his preconcert talk, Flatt (also director of Tuscaloosa Symphony Orchestra and Colorado Ballet), considered the early 1900s as discourse amongst composers, exploring the personal worlds, styles of life, and artistic methods of the era’s and its preceding ‘große Persönlichkeiten’, or big personalities. Onstage, the emerald-green chairs and purple-lit glow from behind white acoustic panels was giving ethereally to the room.
Rachel Barton Pine – acclaimed violinist known for dazzling performance across repertoires, who debuted with the Chicago Symphony at age 10 and became the first American and youngest gold medal winner of the International Johann Sebastian Bach Competition – joined the discussion with her instrument, a 1742 Guarneri del Gesù violin, which she jested one day would be called the ‘ex-Pine’ (it has illustrious history with virtuosos like Antonio Bazzini and Brahms’s protégé Marie Soldat and passed through the Wittgenstein family). She talked amiably with the concertgoers and noted, “I love variety. My favorite piece is whatever I’m playing that night.” About Concerto for Violin in A Minor, Op. 82 by Alexander Glazunov (b. 1865), the featured soloist shared, “It is a wild romp of lots of colorful instruments . . . Incredible lyrical writing.” Pine first learned the work at the age of fifteen and has recorded its performance with the Russian National Orchestra. She spoke about the overall flow of the piece, its micro-details of phrasing and the violin’s imitation of other instruments; also of a secondary theme that weaves through the opening and middle sections, while loose hints of cadenza seek their culmination in the finale’s accelerated and exhilarating conclusion. On the notorious finger-twisting solo passage, Pine mentioned it requires about as much practice as the rest of the concerto itself, and added, “There is no coincidence [the notes] are all in that rich dark [lowest] G-string.”
After the talk, Executive Director Dan Howard reminded the crowd of a baroque event, “Music On the Bayfront”, on Valentine’s Day (a Saturday), at Pacific Maritime Heritage Center, which will showcase harpsichord and period instruments, and the upcoming annual Gala March 28th. From the string section, in a get-to-know-the-orchestra moment, he introduced violinist Alistair Kok, who expressed appreciation for the arts community’s support and the fulfilling experience of working professionally with local and regional musicians.
Spanish Dance No. 1 from La vida Breve, which Flatt earlier called a ‘bonbon’, whirs by, and its derivations of fiery flamenco and ‘zapateado’ (footwork) with the castanets give a glimpse of (b. 1876) Manuel de Falla’s creative philosophy and patriotic aesthetic; he is known to have urged colleagues to reject the notion of ‘universal’ musical formulae (i.e. the ethos of pre-existing German canon).
Next, the orchestra exhibits Pulcinella: what Flatt voiced critics would call “a new postwar objectivism— dispensing with romantic notions of expressing the heart.” It was performed last by the NSO in mid-November 2008. Igor Stravinsky (b.1882) presents the matter of old music, not the manner — “almost a taxidermied animal ”— through discontinuity, irregularities, and sometimes angularities. Commissioned by impresario Sergei Diaghilev as a ballet (with Picasso designing costumes and sets), the 1920 work reimagines 18th-century music through a distinctly modern lens. To better suit for concert performance, Stravinsky revised it in 1947. Throughout the suite (I-VII) the orchestra embraced its moments of hilarity: rude sounds and clownishness punctuate sprightly string bass solos across many short movements. They unfolded the finale like an actual memory in the glimmer of winter frost, perhaps reaching back to folksongs and dances from Stravinsky’s childhood near the Polish-Ukrainian border. Utterances could be heard in the crowd lamenting the extant era’s continued power of myth.
Beyond intermission, the symphony brings a focused and scientific precision to The Chairman Dances, from the cutting-room floor of one of our most prominent living composers, John Adams’ (b. 1947) opera Nixon in China. The 13-minute concert piece differs in orchestration from the operatic setup. The entire work, as Flatt put it, belongs to the “so-called CNN operas”—works depicting modern historical events. This foxtrot is a surreal fantasy sequence from a presidential banquet, where Madame Mao hangs paper lanterns, changes into a tight cheongsam slit up the hip, and signals the orchestra to play before dancing alone. As Mao descends from his portrait to join her, days past are brought to their minds, and music plays on a gramophone. The NSO brilliantly conjured the wind-up and gradual slowdown of the contraption: the perceived music skips as the stylus gets stuck, and in the suspension of coherent sound, the sizzle with cymbal shimmers, pedal bass drum, and hi-hat snare are mechanical in quality yet awake. The whole percussion batterie—including triangle, glockenspiel, xylophone, vibraphone, crotales, bell tree, castanets, sandblocks, woodblocks, and timpani—functioned with excellence. An almost-hidden 9-foot Steinway Grand D tucked behind the harp anchored textures.
In Glazunov’s dramatic (and unpausing) concerto of wreathed themes the orchestra and soloist exchanged ideas smoothly and affectionately. Pine’s playing was spellbinding. For an encore, she offered Maud Powell’s 1919 violin transcription of the spiritual Nobody Knows the Trouble I've Seen, originally arranged by J. Rosamond Johnson. The pioneering American violinist Powell created this adaptation to support Johnson’s New York Music School Settlement for Colored People, featuring it in her final performances. Pine’s revival of this work honors Powell’s legacy.
Musicians met with listeners after the performance in the lobby, where refreshments & sandwiches were served, and Pine greeted and spoke with many. The 37th season continues its standard programming with “Listening for Shakespeare” March 21st-22nd.
Joshua D. Lickteig is an artist and engineer born near Milwaukee, Wisconsin. His latest books are Half Moon Day Sun (2021) and Ten Control Mills (2015), some poems from which appeared in Don Russell’s plays Dreams of Drowning (2022) and iTopia (2016). He lives in Portland, Oregon, and is an ongoing contributor to the Concordia News.
Today's Birthdays
Sir Alexander Gibson (1926-1995)
Michel Sénéchal (1927-2018)
Cristopher Dearnley (1930-2000)
Jerome Lowenthal (1932)
Gene Vincent (1935-1971)
Edith Mathis (1938-2025)
Alberto Lysy (1935-2009)
Christine Cairns (1959)
and
Thomas Edison (1847-1931)
Elizabeth Bisland (1861-1929)
Philip Dunne (1908-1992)
Joseph L. Mankiewicz (1909-1993)
Pico Iyer (1957)
and from the Composers Datebook:
On this day in 1841, was given the first documented American performance of Beethoven's Symphony No. 5 at the New York's Broadway Tabernacle, by the German Society of New York, Uri Corelli Hill conducting.