“It is impossible to find anyone in the world today who is young and not ill,” muses André Breton in Chiaki Kawamata’s novel Death Sentences. “Youth itself is a kind of disease.” There is in youth something that exerts a powerful hold on the imagination. Its freshness, its arrogance, its promise – all of these building a magnetic aura that exerts a powerful hold on our consciousness. Especially so when youth is bound to an artist wielding a mastery of technique that belies the tenderness of their years. One only has to think of the respective cults of, say, Mozart and Rimbaud for starters. Yet there is also the danger of this seduction operating like a disease, infecting otherwise perfectly reasonable, clear-minded people and turning them into adoring sycophants; unable to look past the glittering allure of youth and inspect the artist under the cold light of rational objectivity.
This problem is especially pervasive in classical music circles. Any chance to prove that this increasingly niche (and graying) market is still hip and young is unfailingly milked to the raw by press and marketing departments alike. The task of separating the hype from the artist’s body of work can become difficult.
Are we listening to the music? Or are we only listening to the reputation of its creator?
These were questions that arose time and again earlier this week during the Los Angeles Philharmonic’s Green Umbrella concert featuring the music of Nico Muhly. In the past few years, Muhly, who is just over 30 years old, has emerged as the great white hope of contemporary classical music. Ensembles the world over – most notably the arch-conservative Metropolitan Opera – have been vying for his compositions. His roots in both classical music and pop (he has collaborated with, among other musicians, Philip Glass and Björk) is a marketing team’s dream. He also boasts impressive “street cred” in the classical music world. Not only has Muhly earned much praise from the classical music press, but elder composers have also been unrestrained in their accolades. No less an established figure of American music than John Adams lent his official imprimatur by leading last Tuesday night’s program.
But the impression gained from actually listening to Muhly’s music went contrary to expectations – and the strident hype.
The program’s center of gravity was the composer’s 2007 concerto for electric violin and orchestra, Seeing is Believing. Seeing may indeed have been believing, but listening left quite a few doubts.
An arabesque-like figure on the electric violin (played by soloist Thomas Gould) which is then electronically looped initiates the composition. The placid mood of the start is rustled by chirping woodwinds (the composer refers to these figures as “insect music”), after which the concerto alternates between sections of meditation and scurrying propulsion. At its close it returns to the music of its opening bars, then fades out.