Archive for the ‘Media’ Category


Arts 2012: Isthmus critics rate the year in Madison culture

Tuesday, January 1st, 2013

By John W. Barker
Originally published in Isthmus, 12/27/2012

Surveying a full year of Madison’s classical musical life is impossible in this small space. Best just to recall some memorable moments.

The Madison Symphony Orchestra had some outstanding soloists: violinists Augustin Hadelich in Prokofiev (January) and James Ehnes in Bartók (October), and pianist Garrick Ohlsson in Tchaikovsky (September). The orchestra itself blazed in Strauss’ massive Ein Heldenleben (March) and shone inspiringly in two great symphonies, Brahms’s Fourth (October) and Schubert’s Ninth (November).

The Wisconsin Chamber Orchestra impressively took on Beethoven’s Ninth Symphony (April). Call it the minor leagues, but Steve Kurr’s spunky Middleton Community Orchestra did itself proud with Holst (November), as well as works by Brahms and Mozart (May), the latter featuring local pianist Thomas Kasdorf.

After the novelty of Philip Glass’ Galileo Galilei (January), Madison Opera’s travesty of Rossini’s La Cenerentola (April) was redeemed by a superlative production of Verdi’s Un ballo in maschera (October). University Opera managed a high-quality Don Giovanni (March) but undercut a bravely able cast of student singers with a needlessly silly setting in Cherubini’s Medea (November).

The Madison Savoyards delivered The Pirates of Penzance (July), one of their best Gilbert and Sullivan presentations in years. Meanwhile, Codrut Birsan’s brave mini-productions with his Candid Concert Opera brought us some fine young Chicago singers.

The Pro Arte Quartet premiered new works composed for the ensemble, in celebrating a centennial. The feisty Ancora String Quartet did justice to quartets by Beethoven and Schumann (September). Previously, after offering Prokofiev’s First Quartet, it joined the Rhapsodie String Quartet for a rousing rendition of the youthful Mendelssohn’s dazzling Octet (May). The Bach Dancing and Dynamite Society’s June concerts featured intense performances of Tchaikovsky’s A-minor Piano Trio and Schubert’s C-major Quintet.

The Madison Early Music Festival, despite its 2012 theme of Colonial North American music, offered public concerts mainly of 19th-century folk music that proved highly popular (July).

The Wisconsin Baroque Ensemble and the Madison Bach Musicians continued to present programs of early music, admirably performed. And the amazingly versatile Jerry Hui, after premiering his own first opera, Wired for Love (January), organized his vocal-instrumental consort, Eliza’s Toyes, for several performances of a revealing program, “The Three Sch’s”: 17th-century music by Schütz, Scheidt and Schein (May and November).

On the Aisle: Isthmus Vocal Ensemble reflects on a decade of music

Tuesday, August 14th, 2012

By Lindsay Christians
Originally published on 77Square; August 5, 2012

The Isthmus Vocal Ensemble has been picking up a full program of challenging works and performing them with just two weeks’ rehearsal for more than 10 years now.

That doesn’t make it any less impressive when, as recently occurred, the ensemble strings together pieces in German, Latin and Hebrew, then adds Sanskrit, Pali and Avestan (the language of Zoroastrian scripture) just to keep things interesting.

Directed by Ohio-based conductor Scott MacPherson for a few weeks each summer, the Isthmus Vocal Ensemble concluded its two annual performances this past weekend: Friday, Aug. 3, at Luther Memorial Church on the UW-Madison campus, and Sunday, Aug. 5, at Covenant Presbyterian on the west side. (more…)

Classical music review: University of Wisconsin-Madison composer Jerry Hui’s new chamber opera “Wired for Love” is hardwired for success.

Tuesday, January 24th, 2012

By John W. Barker

I had to miss the official “world premiere” performance of the new comic opera “Wired for Love” by Jerry Hui (below) on Friday night, but I was able to catch the follow-up performance the next evening at Music Hall.

As readers of The Ear have already been informed, it is a one-act chamber opera, running about 70 minutes and is Hui’s dissertation project for his doctoral degree at the University of Wisconsin School of Music.  It calls for four singers, and a pit orchestra of nine players (a string quartet with flutes, oboe/English horn, clarinets, trombone, percussion and piano).

To recap previous information, it has a libretto written jointly by Hui with Lisa Kundrat (below). In rhymed verse, it traces the confrontation made to a Nigerian scammer, who uses a male alias on the Internet, by a British counter-scammer, who uses a female alias. The two electronic “dummies” begin to take on independent characters of their own, fall genuinely in love, betray their creators, and escape to independent existence. (more…)

Classical music review: Jerry Hui is the Steve Jobs of classical music in Madison

Tuesday, October 11th, 2011

By John W. Barker; originally posted on Well-Tempered Ear

We hear much these days about the need for enterprising young innovators, ready to start from scratch and create successful new ventures.

We have also been inundated by tributes to Steve Jobs (below), who started in a garage and built a unique and triumphant business empire before he died at 56 last week.

Perhaps music would not be the realm in which to seek or expect such dramatic personalities.  But it can be just such. In that perspective, I would like to nominate someone for designation as the Steve Jobs of Madison’s music scene. (more…)

Your help to produce a new opera needed!

Wednesday, July 27th, 2011
Wired for Love, my first comic opera (also my DMA dissertation), needs your help to get off the ground! We have a webpage for it (http://wiredforlove.jerryhui.com), and a Kickstarter project page that currently seeks your pledge. Let’s hope we can reach the goal of $6,500 to make this fun opera possible!

Check out our promotional video–with me is Jennifer Sams, who will play the role of Ethel Wormvarnish, the British anti-scammer’s online avatar who is supposed to be an underwear supermodel/exotic snake dancer.

(more…)

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