
BURNING BAYREUTH PRESENTS MELISSA DUNPHY’S “THE GONZALES CANTATA” AND JEFF MYERS’ “THE HUNGER ART”
Directed by Timothy Nelson, hailed by the New York Times as “the Future of Opera,” on April 17th, 7PM at the Fisher Center for the Performing Arts at Bard College, Annandale-On-Hudson, NY.
The new music series Burning Bayreuth debuts with two contemporary operas that exemplify its mission: to produce socially relevant works in an approachable format that invites audience response. For its first pe¬rformance, Burning Bayreuth presents The Hunger Art, a Kafka-based story that questions art’s potential to engage society at large. The performance then approaches this question through the “The Gonzales Cantata,” which uses opera as a vehicle to address the ambiguity of political crime in a post-Watergate era.
Under the direction of Timothy Nelson, the production will explore the loss of innocence of American culture between the end of the Second World War and Watergate through the perspective of the television. A giant television frame unifies the two productions, and the audience can watch the shifting between a media-saturated society's depiction of a man's fall, and the more human reality of that fall. It questions what artistic and ethical boundaries exist in the “post-modern” era.
About The Hunger Art:
With music by Jeff Myers and libretto by Royce Vavrek. In a twisted tale of art to the extreme, a couple starves themselves as the ultimate form of expressionism. As the wife becomes conflicted about her purpose and tempted by failure in the form of a rotten apple, the plot becomes intertwined with the biblical story of Adam and Eve.
About The Gonzales Cantata:
The Gonzales Cantata uses opera to confront the rampant abuses of power in the Federal Government. Every line is taken eithe¬¬r from the Senate Judiciary Hearings or Alberto Gonzales’ resignation speech, with dialogue painfully well suited to an opera buffa. Composed and compiled by Melissa Dunphy.
“Despite the inherent hilarity of an Opera about Alberto Gonzales, I spent all day obsessing about this, watching clips on line and listening to the music, and in my opinion it is both great… and moving.” Rachel Maddow, MSNBC
About Burning Bayreuth: Burning Bayreuth, founded by Noah S Weber, challenges artists to produce socially relevant works and encourage audiences to feel engaged in an immediate sense. By breaking away from concert hall conventions, it aims to create an inclusive atmosphere, where listeners are encouraged to react—laugh, cry, cough, throw things at us, we’re game. Concerts are presented free of charge and request direct donations to composers following performances as an evaluative measure of appreciation.
It also believes "Second Performances" are crucial to the creative process. Both of these works received premieres, but only through repeat performances can these composers have the ability to refine and perfect their works. This concert is designed to help set a new standard for the presentation of classical performance, to showcase emerging artists, and to help pave the way for sustainable careers in music.
Composer Jeff Myers writes music for acoustic instruments and voices. Though much of his work draws on an eclectic array of musical forms, all of his music has one thing in common: expressive intensity. Many of his works draw on preexisting musical works, styles and genres, as well as visual art and natural phenomena. Filipino kulintang music, works by M.C. Escher, overtone music and more recently, folk music and geographical narratives have all been sources for inspiration. His operatic collaboration with writer and filmmaker Royce Vavrek yielded the one-act opera The Hunger Art, based on Kafka’s Hunger Artist and the Adam and Eve story. Currently Myers is working on a new opera with writer Quincy Long and the American Lyric Theater based on the works of Edgar Allan Poe.
Composer Melissa Dunphy has composed in a wide range of styles and media, particularly in the realm of theatre. Her nationally acclaimed composition “The Gonzales Canata” was performed at the 2009 Philadelphia Fringe Festival, and received rave press and reviews from the Wall Street Journal, the Atlantic, Harper's Magazine, and MSNBC's Rachel Maddow. Melissa received her Bachelor of Music (summa cum laude, Pi Kappa Lambda) from West Chester University, where she was a recipient of the Harry Wilkinson Music Theory Scholarship, the Charles S. and Margherita Gangemi Memorial Scholarship for excellence in music theory and composition, and the Janice Weir Etshied '50 Scholarship for academic excellence. She is currently undertaking doctoral studies in composition at the University of Pennsylvania on a Benjamin Franklin Fellowship.
Director Timothy Nelson leads a new generation of young directors. Most recently he was honored as an awardee in the Opera Europa International Directing Prize. He is the Artistic Director of American Opera Theater, and the Canadian Operatic Arts Academy. Recently, Nelson directed “David et Jonathas” at the Brooklyn Academy of Music, a cabaret version of the Peter Brook “Carmen” of which the Baltimore Sun said Nelson “out-Brooked Brook,” Kurt Weill's "Songspiel" with two-time Grammy winner Sylvia McNair, and Philip Glass' “Hydrogen Jukebox” at Georegtown University as part of the 2009 presidential inauguration festivities. Upcoming projects include "The Lighthouse" with the National Reisopera, "The Ghosts of Versailles" with the Dutch National Opera Academy, and "Giulio Cesare" with Orchestra London. His work as a director and designer has been praised as at once "progressive" and "knowledgeable" - "propulsive" and "fluid". The New York Times calls his work “the future of opera” while the Baltimore Sun has called his productions “vivid, postmodern” with “striking stage pictures”, saying his work is “fresh, inventive, invigorating”.
Conductor and Artistic Director Noah S Weber has served as assistant conductor for the Center City Opera Theater, the Luzerne Music Center, the Gulf Coast Symphony and École d’Art Americaines de Fontainebleau. He has collaborated with Philippe Entremont, Allain Gaussin, and George Crumb, and his recording of Ying-Chen Kao's piece 530.623 won the 2005 International Masterworks Competition.
Project location: Red Hook, NY
Digital Copies of the libretti for both works will be emailed to you with synopses and composers' notes.
A recording of one of the original "Workshop" Performances. Please specify between the Gonzales Cantata or the Hunger Art
A tee-shirt with The Gonzales Cantata Logo - please specify size
A CD of the complete performance of the Gonzales Cantata and Hunger Art as recorded on 4.17.10.
Prime Seating in the Fisher Center's Sosnoff Theater. Two seats per donation. Please bring your receipt for access to this area.
A signed Piano-Vocal Score of either the Gonzales Cantata or Hunger Art with a recording of the piece from the. 4.17.10 Concert. Please specify which piece you would prefer.
George Crumbs "Madrigals" Book IV for Soprano, flute/pic/alto, Harp, Contrabass and Percussion. Original score. Unplayed/marked.
John Cage's "Aria" for any voice type. Read about it here Serves as either a guideline for a truly interpretive performance, or can be hung on a wall. Currently mounted in a large gold frame (not included - contact if interested in the frame as well)
Prime Seating in the Fisher Center's Sosnoff Theater and copies of both piano vocal scores, which may be picked up before the performance if so desired (please state if you would prefer the scores in advance).
First Edition of Aaron Copland's "Appalachian Spring" ballet. This copy was originally owned by Fritz Mahler, the nephew of the titan Gustav Mahler. Front signed by Fritz, stamped inside, and all of his notes are still in tact.
A copy of "Bernstein" by Joan Peyser, signed by Leonard Bernstein on July 21st, 1990, just months before his death.
New York, NY
The past few years of my research have all been dedicated to the purpose of realizing a self-sufficient concert series. It began with my work at Fontainebleau: I took several chamber music groups and had them rehearse in unconventional places (parking garages, outdoor markets, carousels, etc) around the village to raise awareness about our upcoming concerts. People initially thought we were peddling, but when it was explained to them that our only purpose was to offer them music in a new environment, crowds began to form. Between runs of pieces we would inform them about upcoming concerts. Yet while the attendance at the Festival’s concerts went up significantly, the audience was significantly less at ease. It was same music, with the same performers, yet the stifling effect of the concert hall changed the reception dramatically. This led me to begin a series of forums for composers, instrumentalists and visual artists to discuss their thoughts on the problems in the presentation of music.
When I returned to the United States I continued this work by attempting to create a musical program that responded to the article in the Washington Post about Joshua Bell playing in the DC Metro and being virtually unnoticed (see Pearls Before Breakfast by Gene Weingarten). Peabody’s unwillingness to take such a risk was very informative, and it offered me my first glimpse of an emblematic trend in classical institutions; specifically a general desire towards stasis, regardless of the changing environment.
My most recent work involved accompanying an orchestra to perform in the Eastern Correctional Facility, a maximum security penitentiary in New York. Prisons are some of the only places in this country where people are removed from the hyper-saturation of our culture (i.e. recordings, television, Muzak, etc.). Their overwhelmingly positive response was very exciting, as much of the music that had previously been unknown to them had probably been misconstrued as dull and irrelevant. Their reaction gave hope to the idea that the circumstances to its performance effect its reception, as opposed to the outdated nature of the music itself.