Pianist Christopher O’Riley Performs Radiohead and Nirvana

Pianist Christopher O’Riley wears many hats. Renowned for his interpretations of classical works by Ravel, Rachmaninoff, and Gershwin, O’Riley frequently tours as a piano soloist. But you may also know him as the host of NPR’s popular show From the Top, where he interviews talented young classical musicians. Or perhaps you’ve heard his piano arrangements of hits by Radiohead, Nirvana, and other legends of the rock world. O’Riley arranges classical music as well, tackling mighty orchestral masterpieces and paring them down for solo piano.

Pianist Christopher O'Riley (Photo: Wendy Lynch)
Pianist Christopher O’Riley (Photo: Wendy Lynch)

This week, O’Riley is in Seattle for two very different recitals at the University of Washington. The first of these, held last night at the intimate Meany Studio Theatre, featured O’Riley’s piano renditions of popular rock songs. Tonight’s concert on the Meany Hall mainstage is an all-classical program, including arrangements by Liszt and O’Riley himself.

Last night’s program was announced from the stage. O’Riley’s enthusiastic introductions for each piece made it clear that he’s very passionate about all the music he arranges. Bands represented included Radiohead, Nirvana, and Pink Floyd. O’Riley also performed songs by Portland singer-songwriter Elliott Smith and bassist Reid Anderson of jazz trio The Bad Plus. In addition, he slipped one of his own pieces into the program, a waltz composed as part of the score to an interactive e-book.

A self-proclaimed Radiohead fanatic, O’Riley has recorded two full-length albums of arrangements of the band’s songs. Much to the delight of last night’s crowd, nearly half of the songs O’Riley performed were by Thom Yorke and his crew, including two encores. These arrangements were the most exciting and engaging songs on the program. Most of them were from the 1997 release OK Computer, including a dazzling arrangement of the hit single “Paranoid Android”, which O’Riley dubbed as the band’s most orchestral song.

In general, Radiohead’s style lends itself well to arrangement. The band’s songs are a sea of colors and textures, pierced by Thom Yorke’s melodic crooning, which floats over the wash of sound. It’s very similar to orchestral music, where melodies are supported and enhanced by layers of symphonic sound.

O’Riley’s arrangements honor the orchestral aspects of Radiohead’s music. His renditions are are full of compositional motifs from the Romantic and Impressionist eras. Melodic chords chime out while arpeggios in the lower notes create a blurry texture — an effect reminiscent of Debussy. At times, O’Riley channels the great pianists Franz Liszt, especially during sections where the right hand pinky pings out the melody high up on the piano while the rest of the fingers are busy creating a lush accompaniment.

The concert struck an appealing balance between intense, raging anthems and slow, melancholic ballads. O’Riley’s version of Nirvana’s “Heart-Shaped Box” doesn’t quite muster the raw angst of the original, but he comes close, rendering Kurt Cobain’s guitar chorus as enormous smashing chords in the piano.

In contrast, ballads like Elliott Smith’s “True Love” and Gary Jules’ cover of “Mad World” (made famous by the film Donnie Darko) have a much simpler texture evocative of Chopin’s Preludes or Nocturnes, featuring a singing melodic line in the right hand supported by a chord-based accompaniment in the left. O’Reily’s arrangements steer clear of sentimentality and sappiness. They’re full of emotion, but not overwrought.

O’Riley’s at the top of a growing genre of performers who are re-imagining pop and rock hits in different musical styles. In the local scene, the Seattle Rock Orchestra produces tribute concerts that bring together guest vocalists and a full orchestra for arrangements of popular songs by the Beatles, Queen, Arcade Fire, and other bands. They’ll be performing the music of The Smashing Pumpkins next month.

Judging from the whoops of joy as O’Riley announced each song, last night’s crowd was full of Radiohead fans. A look around the room confirmed that the performance attracted a decidedly younger set than the typical audience at a classical piano recital. It was a treat to see O’Riley perform and discuss his arrangements in such an intimate space, though it seemed that the performance could have drawn a larger crowd with more marketing and a better-known venue. I’d love to see O’Riley return next season to play Radiohead for a huge theater full of fans.

If you’d like to catch Christopher O’Riley before he leaves Seattle, tickets are still available for his an all-classical program tonight at the University of Washington’s Meany Hall. The concert, part of the UW World Series, features works by Schubert, Schumann, Wagner, and Liszt, as well as O’Riley’s own transcription of Berlioz’s Symphonie Fantastique.

Kirkland’s Le Grand Bistro: French Cuisine, American Accent

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View of the marina from outside (Photo: MvB)

Le Grand Bistro Américain at Carillon Point (Photo: MvB)

View of the marina outside Kirkland's Le Grand Bistro Américain (Photo: MvB)

A glass of red, black-eyed-pea soup, and thou at Le Grand Bistro Américain(Photo: MvB)

The macaroni at Le Grand Bistro Américain(Photo: MvB)

Chicken liver mousse under a jelly of port wine at Le Grand Bistro Américain (Photo: MvB)

The deconstructed salade Niçoise at Le Grand Bistro Américain (Photo: MvB)

Chocolate pot de crème at Le Grand Bistro Américain (Photo: MvB)

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Last week I paid my first-ever toll, on an excursion to Kirkland for lunch at Le Grand Bistro Américain. I’d been waylaid by a Cornichon photo gallery, and had to get over to see the place for myself. I’m not the only one making a late discovery — Grand Bistro owner Ted Furst told me that 85 to 90 percent of his clientèle are Eastsiders, still.

Furst, who has a storied history in Seattle dining, knows his French cuisine; in earlier days a chef at Place Pigalle, he was also co-owner of Campagne. (More recently, as a consultant, he was involved in the birth of MOD Pizza.) But his inspiration for Le Grand Bistro, he told me, was the idea of a French steakhouse, something like L’Entrecote. As he looked at the old Cucina Cucina space at Carillon Point –its 10-burner range, its 140 seats  (90 on the patio), and marina views — a vision took hold: a sort of business-casual French lunch, with unfussy but cut-above dinners.

You sense the more relaxed (in the context of French dining) attitude right away, as you glance at the menu. There are plenty of French names, but the ingredients are in English, so you can tell what you’re getting without being restricted to le burger américain. Some menu items, too, could be classified as French dishes that haven’t been discovered yet, like the black-eyed-pea soup ($7) with pistou atop. Shredded ham hock adds to the chicken stock a salty-sweet boldness, with braised escarole leaves (reminiscent of the konbu in miso) to balance.

Thanks to Furst hosting the lunch, I was able to try a few more options than I’d normally fit in, but don’t take this as an official review — it’s more of a fact-finding tour. Because they knew I’d be writing about the visit, I won’t rave about the service, which was in fact excellent.

The chicken liver mousse ($6) is, I think, the mousse-iest chicken liver I’ve ever had — fluffy, light, airy. It comes with a tangy top layer of port wine gelée, and a side of pickled vegetables — I can imagine genteel fights breaking out over who gets the last of it. You can also order it as part of a charcuterie platter ($10) during happy hour, 3 to 6 p.m. daily, when you can also get oysters on the half shell, $1.25 each. That sort of reasonable pricing extends beyond happy hour — the small plates in general cluster in the $6 to $7 range, while entrées are in the low teens for lunch, higher teens for dinner.

The entrées are generously sized. A macaroni plate on special looks positively daunting, but it’s partly due to the size of the shells; tucked in amongst them are asparagus and smoked chicken, with roasted Roma tomatoes creating tart little explosions. Since it’s not submerged in cheese, it turns out not to be heavy at all.

The salade Niçoise ($15 at lunch) also commands the attention of the table. Any Francophile worth his or her sel will be drawn to it: poached albacore sits beside a towering green salad, dusted with flakes of parmesan and doused with a little too much dijon vinaigrette. (It’s worth asking them to go lightly.) Steamed green beans retain a crisp crunch, alongside roasted fingerling potatoes. The egg has a creamy yolk, just the far side of soft-boiled.

For dessert, I tried a little of the pot de crème (chocolate, with stewed cherries, $6), though they also have a dark chocolate cake and a dark chocolate mousse, along with the de rigueur crème brulée. And it didn’t seem right to leave without sampling some of the housemade ice cream, in this case, flavored with Creme d’Armagnac and plum.

In an age of culinary purity tests (so lovingly skewered by Portlandia’s mid-meal provenance visits to farms), it’s refreshing to sit down with Furst and learn that he’s not obsessive one way or the other. Where he thinks it matters, he sources from France (escargot, la moutarde). Cheeses are mostly French, with some locals mixed in. Your Croque Monsieur will have French ham. Fish will have been sustainably caught. But the lamb in your lamb burger is from New Zealand. The bun, by the way, is baked fresh daily along with the bread — they can’t imitate the classic French baguette, Furst admitted, with its crackly crust, but freshness still counts.

To reward Seattleites for taking the bridge, you get validated parking in the Carillon Point garage. Avoid rush hour, and the toll is probably a wash against paying for parking; besides, with traffic lighter on the bridge these days, it might be faster to visit Kirkland than another destination. I wouldn’t recommend Le Grand Bistro to French expatriates hungering for the taste of home — first of all, where is home? Paris, Lyon, Avignon, Nantes? — but if you’re tired of elbowing your neighboring table at Pichet, for instance, you might on occasion enjoy easing into an expanse of booth at the Bistro, with its view of the lake.

Le Grand Bistro sells wine by the pichet, as well, Furst told me, then added that he used to pair the pichet with the short glass that’s common in France, where wine is like consumed like a juice by many. (Trivia: Furst’s favorite region to visit in France: Provence.) His customers wanted stem ware, though, so that’s what you’ll see on your table — an extra effort at hospitality.

Eighth Blackbird Brings New Musical Sounds to Kirkland Performance Center

Kirkland’s been buzzing with exciting, edgy classical music offerings in recent months. In October, renowned composer Philip Glass paid a visit, presenting a recital at the Kirkland Performance Center (KPC). Last Tuesday, KPC scored another hit with a performance by Chicago-based contemporary music ensemble eighth blackbird. The Grammy-winning sextet is making waves internationally with their commitment to new music and emerging composers. Tuesday’s concert was the ensemble’s first solo performance in the Seattle area. Based on the enthusiastic response they received, it won’t be a surprise to see them drawing crowds at larger local venues in the future. Seattle, look out — is suburban Kirkland becoming a hot spot for avant-garde classical music in the Puget Sound region?

Eighth Blackbird (Photo: Luke Ratray)
Eighth Blackbird (Photo: Luke Ratray)

Founded in 1996, eighth blackbird brings together strings (violin/viola and cello), woodwinds (flute and clarinet), piano, and percussion in an exploration of the diverse contemporary soundscape. It’s amazing how many different sounds and rhythms these six musicians can produce! Though Tuesday’s concert drew upon material spanning the past thirty decades of classical music, sonic textures and rhythmic patterns were the common themes of the evening.

Nowhere were these themes more present than in the concert’s crowning achievement, a performance of Steve Reich’s Double Sextet, which occupied the entire second half of the program. Commissioned by eighth blackbird, the piece can either be performed by twelve musicians or by a sextet accompanying a recording of themselves. eighth blackbird opted for the latter approach, performing alongside a recording they made several years ago. The choice to play with a recording gave the performance a haunting effect, as if the ensemble was being shadowed by a phantom doppelgänger sextet.

The Double Sextet layers string and woodwind sounds over undulating harmonic and rhythmic patterns in the piano and percussion, creating a thick, densely-woven sonic blanket. Key changes are momentous, exciting events that pop the listener out of the current texture and into another. The momentum of the piece is driven by the constant action in the percussion and pianos, which move through cycles of arpeggios and chords. Pianist Lisa Kaplan and percussionist Matthew Duvall gave a dazzling performance, blending with the other members of the ensemble as well as the recorded piano and percussion parts. Some of the most exciting moments happened during deliberate tension between the recorded piano and live piano, especially when patterns shifted slightly out of alignment, creating a mesmerizing echo effect.

In contrast to the Double Sextet, which firmly establishes a pattern before making a monumental shift to the next, Andy Akiho’s erase hops from soundbite to soundbite. Composed in 2011, the piece is the winner of eighth blackbird’s composition competition, beating out a whopping 503 other entries. It’s easy to see why Akiho’s work was selected. In an era where extended techniques are now commonplace in classical music — piano strings are plucked, flute keys are tapped, and cellists drum out rhythms on the sides of their instruments — Akiho still manages to stretch our notions of how instruments can produce sound. erase is an artfully curated noise collage that mimics today’s sampled music, full of loops, scratches, beats, and snippets of melodies.

Watching eighth blackbird perform erase was both a sonic and visual delight. Akiho’s background as a percussionist is evident in the work, which emphasizes the percussive qualities of each instrument. As a result, the performance had a strong element of physical finesse, particularly Kaplan on the piano and Duvall on percussion. Many sections of the piece had Kaplan leaning inside the piano to pluck or tap rhythmic patterns on the strings. It was enthralling to watch Duvall jump between percussion instruments, using unconventional techniques to generate all sorts of unexpected beats and sounds. The vibraphone was played using a myriad of different methods, ranging from rapping the bars with a long piece of plastic tubing to snapping a rubber band attached to the side of the instrument.

In addition to their abilities as performers, the members of eighth blackbird are skilled arrangers as well. Their talent was on display at Tuesday’s concert in the form of two of Ligeti’s Études, arranged for the sextet from their original solo piano format. Arranged by Kaplan and flutist Tim Munro, the Études retain the technical virtuosity and brilliant colors of the originals, but add an entire new dimension of textures that even the piano’s enormous range simply can’t access. Munro and clarinetist Michael J. Maccaferri were joined by violinist Yvonne Lam and cellist Nicholas Photinos for a series of creeping glissandos that added an eerie quality to the haunting sixth Étude. The ethereal, mysterious quality of the arrangement was evocative of Ligeti’s Atmosphères, an orchestral work featured prominently in Stanley Kubrick’s film 2001: A Space Odyssey.

A trio of brief, quirky pieces rounded out Tuesday’s program. The concert began with the first movement of Derek Bermel’s Tied Shifts, a densely-layered work that the ensemble performed from memory. The musicians moved around the stage during the performance, clustering in groups of twos or threes to emphasize duet and trio sections in the score. In addition to Tied Shifts, eighth blackbird performed two pieces that featured the human voice. Philip Glass’ Knee Play 2 from the 1975 opera Einstein on the Beach juxtaposed Yvonne Lam’s solo violin against a layer of recited texts. Tom Johnson’s Counting Duets was a humorous series of number games for two voices, described by Kaplan as “Sesame Street on crack”.

The evening concluded with a post-concert Q&A session with the ensemble. The crowd, a diverse group of students, Kirkland locals, and contemporary music fans, peppered the musicians with questions, resulting in a lively conversation. It was the perfect way to end a musical evening that balanced challenging new repertoire, musical virtuosity, and light-hearted fun.

Performances like last Tuesday’s have the potential for wide appeal, stretching listeners’ ears while demonstrating that contemporary classical music can be exciting, playful, and decidedly not stuffy. Touring ensembles like eighth blackbird add an inspiring voice to the growing local community of musicians who are exploring new classical music and bringing contemporary sounds to new audiences. New music can pose a risk for classical music organizations, many of which opt to stick with the tried and true classics. eighth blackbird’s appearance at Kirkland Performance Center is a bold and encouraging step that I hope is a sign of more to come.

If you missed eighth blackbird’s concert last week, check out Douglas Detrick’s AnyWhen Ensemble, another outstanding group whose music blends jazz, classical, free improvisation, and folk. They’ll be performing at Cornish College of the Arts this Friday, February 1.

Ray’s Boathouse Reopens After Remarkable Renovations

rays-bar-640-2830Ray’s Boathouse was part of a past “Passport to Pleasure” article, though at the time I suggested that “even better is to go upstairs to the more casual Ray’s Café to try to score a table on the outdoor deck.” Included in that report was a photo of the popular Ray’s dish: sablefish in sake kasu.

It’s now two years later, and Ray’s Boathouse has changed, going from classic to contemporary. Most striking is the new 30-foot mahogany bar, with its focus on rum cocktails and a lineup of bar bites. Located right in the middle of the dining room, the bar seats 28 people and sports big views of Shilshole Bay.

Wayne Johnson (formerly of Andaluca) and Joe Ritchie (formerly of The Herbfarm, Cave B Inn, and Poppy) are the new chefs. They’ve updated some of Ray’s classic dishes (such as the sablefish) while adding new dishes as well. In addition, there’s a five-course tasting menu ($75, or $110 with optional wine pairings) that will change weekly.

Ray’s Boathouse reopens tonight after being closed since mid-October. I’m told that the renovation cost more than a half-million dollars. And with Ray’s Café next in line for updating, I look forward to what the future brings to one of Seattle’s favorite seafood spots.

Seattle’s Gun Buyback Program Nets 3 Street Sweeper Shotguns

(Photo: Goldy/The Stranger - used with permission)
(Photo: Goldy/The Stranger – used with permission)

The three Street Sweeper semiautomatic shotguns turned in to the Seattle Police Department during this past weekend’s gun buyback program offer a 12-gauge counterpoint to the strangely vocal chorus of naysayers that emerged prior to the event. It wouldn’t “work,” they said — the city would overpay for worthless, rusting, single-shot muskets. (For more like this, I direct you to the Seattle Times comments section.)

In fact, the Seattle Police Department‘s gun buyback event brought in 716 firearms, of which 348 were pistols and 364 were rifles. (Progress? 20 years ago, 95 percent of the guns handed in were handguns. Or not: This time, dozens of firearms handed in were assault weapons.)

Private citizens voluntarily stopped by to hand over their unwanted firearms for gift cards ranging from $100 to $200 (for assault weapons). The buyback was completely privately funded, through donors such as Amazon, Pete Carroll’s A Better Seattle, SEO Moz, UW Medical Center, and the Seattle Police Foundation. The average amount per firearm works about to $95.

The Street Sweepers looked brand new, said SPD’s Mark Jamieson. Because the gun buyback is a no-questions-asked program (at least four of the guns handed in were found to be stolen), he couldn’t say much about why three shotguns classified as “destructive devices” were floating around. The city made out like a bandit on the deal, because — if you can navigate the paperwork necessary to sell one legally — a Street Sweeper’s value is estimated at $1,000 to $1,500.

Made famous by Jack Nicholson’s Joker, the Cobray Street Sweeper is a variation of the South African Amsel Striker, a shotgun designed for riot control. Its revolving cylinder holds twelve 12-gauge rounds. The ATF decided it had “no sporting purpose,” though owners claim to have used it for decimating quail populations. The appearance of three of these restricted weapons at a gun buyback event — one appearing to have a shortened barrel illegal in Washington state — would indicate how porous “gun control” is.

The buyback exceeded the typical 100-guns-per-hour average rate over its roughly three hours of existence, keeping people waiting for over an hour in line. The city spent just over $68,000 of its approximately $80,000 on hand (some $118,000 has been donated thus far), opting to save some funds for a future event.

Gun advocates have seemingly been delighted by an unanticipated side effect of the city hosting a buyback event. “We had a gun bazaar break out on the streets of Seattle,” said an exercised Mayor McGinn at a press conference today. “It’s insane.” Guns were changing hands, he said, with no legal checks. As The Stranger‘s Goldy reports (note his photo of man using a scrawled cardboard sign to announce that he’s a “licensed gun dealer”):

It is perfectly legal to sell a gun for cash on a street corner with no waiting period and no background check. The sellers, whatever their intentions, had no idea whether they were selling to a collector, a dealer, a felon, or a dangerous schizophrenic. This is the so-called “gun show loophole” that Republicans refuse to close.

As if to underscore the theme of guns falling into the wrong hands, the Saturday gun buyback was followed on Sunday by a shooting in a popular Central District bar.