The question of whether music and musicians should or should not engage in political and social matters remains especially potent in the 21st century. Maestro Marin Alsop led the musicians of the Baltimore Symphony Orchestra at Carnegie Hall on Saturday evening in the New York première of Kevin Puts and James Bartolomeo’s audiovisual incarnation The City, which explored social justice in the industrial American city of Baltimore – torn apart and resurrected through solidarity – alongside a valiantly led execution of Mahler’s Fifth Symphony.
Influenced heavily by the death of Freddie Gray in police custody only a year ago, The City pivots on a fulcrum balancing peace and devastation. Pounded drum rhythms on either side of the stage introduced the first scenes which set the foundation of the city’s architectural identity as images of people emerged to give life to the streets. The images amassed a unifying audiovisual experience that was not necessarily narrative but evocative of a formulaic story arch (i.e. exposition—conflict—resolution).
Rendering acts of renewal and peace, still shots and moving images represented definitive qualities unique to Baltimore – crab fishing, Hampden holiday lights, John Waters and the Ravens. As the main conflict pierced through the city’s façade, images of the riots, demolition, and protest signaled the climb to the piece’s emotional zenith. A single pitch eradicated the video altogether and, in the words of Maestro Alsop, the music told that which words and images could not. The lingering pitch built into a cry of rage that again returned to the beating percussion motif.
As the visual aspect resurfaced, the weight of the aftermath proved to be the most poignant moment of the work. Depicting the protests and response from Baltimore citizens under the umbrella of the Black Lives Matter movement, the piece began to show how the community came together to demand social change and growth. Among the images of teamwork and renaissance were memories personal to the Baltimore Symphony Orchestra – images of an impromptu concert for peace and stills of the OrchKids program, which uses classical music to empower children through social change in Baltimore’s economically rigid areas. The piece ended with a looming sense of optimism, though it made a final return to the alluring drumbeat, as if only to shuffle the deck one more time.