Tag Archives: festival

Crowds Arrive for Summer Chamber Music Festival

Laura Kaminsky

We are now midway through the second week of Seattle Chamber Music Society’s Summer Festival, and word is percolating as concertgoers are realizing it’s here and the concerts fall happily into the “not to be missed” category. (For tickets: call 206-283-8808 or purchase online. For information: email info@seattlechambermusic.org.)

Monday was pretty well sold out, and tonight’s (Wednesday’s) concert includes two great Schubert works, the Wanderer Fantasy in the opening recital, played by Jeewon Park, and the Death and the Maiden string quartet with some of the festival’s most thoughtful musicians, Augustin Hadelich and Nurit Bar-Josef, violins; violist Cynthia Phelps; and cellist Bion Tsang. There’s also Martinu and Kodaly as great contrast. Good programming!

Friday’s major interest is the premiere of Laura Kaminsky’s Horizon Line for oboe, bassoon and piano, composed on commission by the Society’s commissioning club and dedicated to retiring artistic director Toby Saks. Paintings with the same theme by Rebecca Allan, Kaminsky’s partner, will be on display and there is a concurrent exhibition of Allan’s work also titled Horizon Lines at Seattle Art Museum Gallery.

Kaminsky, who many will remember from her faculty years at Cornish College of the Arts between 1999 and 2004, will introduce her work with illustrations in the recital (with oboist Ben Hausmann, bassoonist Seth Krimsky, and pianist Craig Sheppard) and it will be performed in its entirety during the concert, along with works by Boccherini and Brahms.

This and the next three concerts include wind instruments, so if these are your bag, come now.

Concert days have traditionally been Monday, Wednesday, and Friday throughout the four weeks, but next week scheduling problems have meant rearrangement to Sunday, July 17th, then a gap until Friday the 22nd, and Saturday the 23rd. Sunday’s highlights include recital and concert works by Charles Ives, plus Beethoven’s Archduke Trio, a D’Indy quartet, and oh joy! Brahms’ Trio in A Minor for clarinet, cello and piano, with clarinetist Sean Osborn, cellist Godfried Hoogeveen (principal cellist of the Amsterdam Concertgebouw Orchestra), and pianist Jeremy Denk.

Orion Weiss (Photo: Henry Fair)

Musicians come and go during the festival, most here for a week or so, and Monday’s concert saw the last appearances this year of pianists Anna Polonsky and Orion Weiss (though Weiss will return for one concert at the festival’s eastside continuation in August). They’ve worked hard this past ten days, with Weiss playing in seven and Polonsky in six works, three of them in two-piano or four-hand pieces. Since they married shortly before last year’s festival, the two are doing more work together.

Monday’s recital heard Polonsky in four of Grieg’s Lyric Pieces.

They were widely varied, from the first Melody which left the listener thinking hearts, flowers and moonlight, Butterfly with frilly, flighty ripples and darts, a Waltz with surely some influence from Chopin, and To Spring, which burst with a sense of fresh life and greenery. Hard to say how these can exactly be reproduced in music, but Polonsky’s sensitive playing brought all these thoughts to the fore.

Weiss joined her for Schumann’s Bilder aus osten, Six Impromptus for Piano four hands, another delight to hear.

Not all of the concert works were as successful, but performances grew in stature as the performance went on. In Mozart’s Trio in G Major with Polonsky, violinist Stefan Jackiw and cellist Tsang, there never seemed to be the requisite chemistry between the three. The piano has the lion’s share here and Polonsky gave her part lightness and grace, but Jackiw had an unattractive surface shine to his playing which precluded depth and nuance, except when playing very softly where his musicianship came to the fore and the music seemed deeply felt. Tsang had less to do but is always a player worth hearing.

In the expressive performance of Schubert’s Trio in B-Flat major, however, with violinist Hadelich, violist Richard O’Neill and cellist Hoogeveen, there was all the difference in the world. From the first measures there was a sense that the players were on the same page.

The most satisfying moments of the concert came with the last two works, the Quartet for Strings by Debussy, his only one, and the Piano Quartet, Op. 13, by Richard Strauss, composed at age 20.

For Debussy, Hadelich, O’Neill and Hoogeveen were joined by violinist Joseph Lin, as they explored this fascinating work, so ahead of its time in 1893. It’s full of dissonance, even muddy harmonies at times, and Debussy uses every technique at his disposal to achieve an astonishing array of instrumental colors and qualities, including an extraordinary second movement which has extended passages of plucked strings.  The four musicians gave it a superb, gripping performance.

Strauss’s effort from only a year later looks backward, due no doubt to the influence of his domineering and conservative musician father. It’s still a remarkable piece from one so young, well worked out, but we have yet to hear what became the hallmarks of his later work. The influence of Brahms and Schumann are behind Strauss’s thinking here. Violinist Bar-Josef, violist Phelps, cellist Edward Arron, and Weiss gave it a full, passionate performance which made the most of his ideas.

Bumbershoot 2011: It’s the Festival Experience, Stupid?

Bumbershoot 2010 had a big lineup, but one thing it didn’t offer was record-breaking attendance. You might think it was the economy and the oft-discussed “high” ticket prices, but Bumbershoot’s economy tickets sold poorly. We’ll pause for a second to allow you time to boggle. Festival producers One Reel took that lesson to heart, and went back to the drawing board when programming 2011, which will run from September 3 through 5.

“Bumbershoot’s renewed approach to booking draws on the combined strength of the artists to create an experience that’s ripe for exploration—a reinvigorated philosophy that has also increased the number of musical acts from last year by approximately 20 performance slots, for a total number of 121 artists expected,” says Bumbershoot PR.

Last year’s admission-with-mainstage and admission-without-mainstage has been abandoned–there will be a single admission (in advance, as little as $35/day or $75 for a 3-day pass), and you’ll have to stand in line early for mainstage acts (now in Key Arena, rather than Memorial Stadium), as it’s first-come-first-served. For Sonics’ fan Macklemore, the Key will be a strange sort of homecoming.

One Reel is also publicizing SIFF-like “pathways,” mini-fests for people of certain musical persuasions, such as electronica (thanks to a collaboration with Decibel Festival, there’ll be all-night electronica in the Ex Hall for Bumbershoot After Dark), metal (curated by El Corazon’s Dana Sims), and jazz (selections by Matt Jorgensen, co-Artistic Director of the Ballard Jazz Festival).

Here’s the lineup so far, if you can’t be bothered clicking:

Saturday 9/3

Ray LaMontagne & the Pariah Dogs with Vusi Mahlasela / Minus the Bear / Mavis Staples / Little Dragon / Trombone Shorty & Orleans Avenue / STRFKR / Shabazz Palaces / Warpaint / MarchFourth Marching Band / Nortec Collective Presents: Bostich + Fussible / Eyehategod / Väsen / Champagne Champagne / Astronautalis / PS I Love You / Yuni in Taxco / Campfire Ok / Meklit Hadero / Caleb Klauder Country Band / Craft Spells / Valient Thorr / Jayme Stone: Room of Wonders / Pickwick / Red Fang / Scribes / Wagons / Shelby Earl / Free the Robots / Witchburn / Nice Nice / Kris Orlowski & The Passenger String Quartet / Emancipator / Tomten / Pezzner / LawnChair Generals / The Great Mundane / Natasha Kmeto / DJ Nordic Soul

Sunday 9/4

Wiz Khalifa with Macklemore & Ryan Lewis / Broken Social Scene with The Lonely Forest / The Kills / Butthole Surfers / Carbon Leaf / Leon Russell / Toro Y Moi / Anti-Flag / Das Racist / Vetiver / Jessica Lea Mayfield / Dam-Funk / Atari Teenage Riot / NoMeansNo / Tennis / Thee Oh Sees / Mad Rad / The Jim Jones Revue / School of Seven Bells / Joe Pug and the Hundred Mile Band / Davila 666 / AgesandAges / Wayne Horvitz Café Paloma Band / Kore Ionz / Sol / Whalebones / Allen Stone / Massy Ferguson / Tycho / Thomas Marriott’s Human Spirit / Kaylee Cole / Com Truise / HTRK / Lusine / Gail Pettis Quartet / Kasey Anderson and The Honkies / Shigeto / The Sight Below / DJ Justin Timbreline

Monday 9/5

Daryl Hall & John Oates with Fitz and The Tantrums / The Reverend Horton Heat / Over the Rhine / Phantogram / Grant Lee Buffalo / Urge Overkill / Charles Bradley / Vendetta Red / Sharon Van Etten / Dennis Coffey / Head Like a Kite / YACHT / Greensky Bluegrass / Quadron / Ian Moore and the Lossy Coils / Grand Hallway / You Am I / Sallie Ford & The Sound Outside / My Goodness / LAKE / Beat Connection / Purity Ring / Truckasaurus / Ravenna Woods / Curtains For You / Lemolo / SPLATINUM / Legendary Oaks / Mash Hall / The Horde and The Harem / 214 / WD4D / Ill Cosby / DJ Introcut

Please note that The Presidents of the United States of America are confirmed for the Mainstage with Brite Futures opening, date TBA.

SIFF: Midweek Dispatches

the SunBreak at SIFF 2011
We’re just under a week into SIFF, with almost three weeks of film festival to go! Be sure to check the SIFF updates page to see which films are already sold out or are selling fast. Individual tickets for most films cost $11 for the public and $9 for SIFF members. Matinees are a bit cheaper ($8/$7) and those who are more willing to commit can consider all sorts of passes still for sale as well as slightly discounted packs of tickets in bundles of 6 or 20.

Young Goethe comes to Everett for a party Thursday night at the Performing Arts Center.

With that in mind, let’s take a look at what SIFF films those of us at The SunBreak saw so far this week as well as the films that we’re most looking forward to seeing over the next couple days. Note that this week marks SIFF’s residency in Everett with a gala presentation of Young Goethe in Love on Thursday night ($25, includes party and film).

WHAT WE SAW:

Josh: My week included a trio of imperfect but interesting films that made use of science fiction premises as an excuse to play out thought experiments, with varying degrees of success. All three ditched (or couldn’t afford) flashy special effects, instead striking contemplatively moody tones, employing muted color palettes, and focusing tightly on a couple of characters.

I think that my favorite of the three was Womb, in which Eva Green’s rekindled romance with a childhood crush is cut tragically short. In whatever future they’re inhabiting on the stormy German shores, though, she has the option of gestating his clone and raising him as a son. The results are predictably creepy, but Hungarian director Benedek Fliegauf doesn’t lose sight of the dark humor potential in his exploration of the taboos at play. Reckless driving is also the catalyst for a moral quandary in Another Earth, in which the surprising appearance of our planet’s twin in the night sky both indirectly induces a tragic accident and serves as a long-shot for redemption. The ever-looming planet increasingly becomes a distraction from would have been an interesting and strongly-acted character study on how (not) to deal with post-prison life by inserting yourself into the survivor of the people you killed. While the main character is working through her issues with ever-questionable behavior, the absence of global terror about the clone Earth wreaking havoc with the tides, the potential for planetary destruction upon their collision, the challenges of interplanetary travel, and the motivations of our only recently desynchronized neighbor loomed. For those determined to see everything at this year’s SIFF with Ewan McGregor and Eva Green, there’s Perfect Sense (final screening today, 4:30 pm at the Egyptian). Set in approximately modern-day Glasgow but infused with dispassionate outside-of-time Galadrielesque narration, it charts the rocky romance between a chef and an epidemiologist who have the misfortune of finally finding each other just as the world’s population is losing its senses one violent episode at a time. That the population would greet the global loss of smell with a “life goes on” attitude was plausible, but as the other senses line up to make their exit without much intervention from the medical establishment it begins increasingly difficult to invest in the syrupy romance in a world where cyanide tablets would be a hot commodity.

Audrey: I liked all three sci-fi lite films (Another Earth, Perfect Sense, and Womb) more than Josh, but that’s due more to lowered expectations than anything else.  All three have a strong premise, and sometimes, that’s all it takes–based on a good starting idea alone, these films were granted a little more leeway with their use of allegory and/or “poetics.” Womb in particular imparted several important life lessons: don’t sleep with a dumb mousy girl if you’ve got a Eva Green as your MILF; teach your child/lover early on to love you and only you, but have some simple explanations/lies at the ready; and look both ways before stepping out into the street.

Josh: In less apocalyptic news, there’s the struggle of print newspapers to survive in bad economic conditions and increasing competition. In particular, with Page One: Inside the New York Times Andrew Rossi chose a particularly interesting year to profile the nation’s paper of record. Viewed mostly through the lens of the paper’s Media Desk, this loosely structured documentary begins at the approximate time that several newspapers across the country (including our own Seattle Post-Intelligencer) were closing down or ceasing print operations. From there, we watch as the Times contends with massive layoffs in its own newsroom, WikiLeaks bombshells, and the photo-op end of combat operations in Iraq. Although many staffers are profiled and plenty of talking heads pontificate, the primary narrative follows the cantankerous and charismatic David Carr as he contextualizes the paper’s relevance in the face of emerging trends in social media and investigates the collapse of another old media empire. (today, 7:00 pm @ Neptune; May 28, 11:00 am @ Egyptian; May 30, 3:30 pm @ Everett).

MvB: Honey (all showings past) immerses you in the sights and sounds of a young Turkish boy whose father is a wild beekeeper. It’s part of Semih Kaplanoglu’s “Yusuf” trilogy, and it’s amazing for its recreation of youth’s fascinations and half-understandings, but also a touching portrait of a father-son bond deepened by the father’s epilepsy and the Yusuf’s ferocious stutter. Its leisurely pace derives from the rural lives it chronicles.

Win/Win (May 30, 6:30 p.m. @ the Egyptian; June 1, 4:30 p.m. @ the Neptune; June 10, 7 p.m. @ Kirkland Perf. Ctr.) is filed under Black Comedy and Make Me Laugh, but I can’t say I smiled all that much. It’s mostly an affecting drama from the Netherlands about a young stock analyst with more than a hint of Asperger’s about him, who has a knack for picking winners on the fly. His rise within his firm, contrasted with the the financial sector meltdown and the cut-throat practices of his trade, eventually precipitates a nervous breakdown.

Josh: I also caught the last screening of Microphone, a jumbled hybrid between narrative and documentary that follows a guy who returns to New York to find his long-ago love leaving town. In his ships-in-the-night depression, he floats into the lives of underground bands, street artists, and skaters. Like his attempts to pull together a showcase for their unrecognized talents, the plot doesn’t really go far, but it’s still an interesting glimpse at the streets and attitudes of pre-revolution Egypt and its youth.

FOR YOUR CONSIDERATION:

Wednesday:

  • You Are Here If director Daniel Cockburn’s debut is as playful and wonderfully strange as his acclaimed video art and short film work, this surrealist feature film should make for a fun journey (9:30 p.m. @ Harvard Exit; tomorrow, 4:30 p.m. @ Harvard Exit)
  • Steam of Life Spend an hour and a half with men who use the sacred Finnish space of the sauna to spill their emotions. (4:30 p.m. @ SIFF Cinema; also May 26, 7 p.m. @ Egyptian, June 7, 6:30 p.m. @ Admiral)
  • Page One: Inside the New York Times As mentioned above, highly recommended for news junkies; media reporter and online wunderkind Brian Stelter is scheduled to attend tonight’s screening. (today, 7 p.m. @ Neptune; May 28, 11 a.m. @ Egyptian; May 30, 3:30 p.m. @ Everett)
  • If A Tree Falls uses archival footage and interviews to re-visit the Earth Liberation Front, their extreme actions (including against the University of Washington), and the government’s prosecution of them under domestic terrorism statues. (7 p.m. @ Harvard Exit; May 29, 6 p.m. @ Kirkland)
  • Natural Selection arrives in Seattle theaters with Rachel Harris as a Christian housewife hitting the road to track down her sperm-donating husband’s drug-addled ex-convict son. (7 p.m. @ the Egyptian; May 27, 4 p.m. @ the Egyptian)
  • Silent Souls MvB recommended this melancholic Russian road trip meditation on love, culture, and identity surrounding the funeral rituals of the Merjan for those who want to travel without leaving home. (7:00 p.m. @ Pacific Place; June 12, 6:15 p.m. @ Kirkland)
  • Outside the Law sounds like Once Upon a Time in America done Algerian–a really exciting prospect from this end. (9 p.m. @ the Admiral)
  • Apart Together in this family drama, lovers separated in 1947 by China’s civil war reunite and an invitation to relocate from Shanghai to Taiwan proves complicated. (9:30 p.m. @ SIFF Cinema)
Treatment, Sean Nelson's debut as co-director & writer, screens on Thursday.

Thursday:

  • Backyard a concert documentary set in, you guessed it, a Reykjavik backyard where pizza, pancakes, and a few flyers lead some of Iceland’s brightest talents. No Sigur Rós, but at least Mùm turns up. (4 p.m. @ Neptune; May 29, 8:30 p.m. @ Admiral)
  • Pinoy Sunday factory workers try to smuggle a shiny red couch from the street to their rooftop. (4:30 p.m. @ Pacific Place)
  • The Thief of Baghdad The 1924 Thief of Bagdad is an antiquated but pretty terrific 1924 adventure, and if the Re-Imagined graft of ELO songs to the film takes, this could be a kick and three-quarters. (7 p.m. @ Neptune)
  • Treatment Local superhero Sean Nelson (actor, musician, former flagpole sitter) makes his debut as a feature film screenwriter and co-director with this story or a clueless filmmaker, his long-suffering best friend, and their scheme to cast an A-list celebrity in their movie by following him into a posh rehab facility under false pretenses. (9:30 pm @ Egyptian; May 28, 11 a.m. @ Neptune)
  • Nuummioq Another shot at Greenland’s first narrative feature film. (9 p.m. @ the Admiral)
  • John Carpenter’s The Ward Tony deemed this locally-filmed horror “not half bad.” (9:30 p.m. @ the Neptune)

SIFF Pro-Tips, or How To Festival

the SunBreak at SIFF 2011

As you may have noticed by now, we’re almost a week into this year’s SIFF. So time to stop acting like a n00b. SIFF like a pro, courtesy of our time- and fest-tested tips:

  • Plan ahead. Check the SIFF website to see if guests will be at the screening for a Q&A, for timing and scheduling purposes, if not for celeb-watching. Check the festival updates page regularly for, y’know, updates, so you’ll have the heads up before a screening sells out.
  • Technology is your friend! SIFF hasn’t quite entered the 21st century and made schedules sharable via Facebook, but do what you can. Make use of the iSIFF app, the SIFFter, My SIFF, and the ability to email your personal festival schedule to friends.
  • Consider buying in bulk. Ticket packages cut down on service fees and are cheaper per ticket, especially if you’re a senior or student: $35 for 5 films ain’t bad.
  • Flying by the seat of your pants and getting into a film via the standby line is a complete crapshoot–don’t count on it for a popular film. But if a miracle does occur, those tickets are full price and cash only.
  • Head to a SIFF box office to get your tickets in advance and avoid an extra line at the venue for will call. If you must pick up tickets at will call, try to drop in between screenings and have them print all of your pre-ordered tickets at once.
  • If you’re particular about where you sit, there’s no such thing as arriving too early. Expect every screening to have a long line and a full house. Still, as long as you have a ticket, you’ll have a seat. If you’re a passholder, you can usually show up about 20 minutes in advance of the screening and still get a good seat. Ticketholders, try 30 min. All bets are off in the case of movies with big buzz. In that case, take whatever seat you can get, but just sit down already. There’s not going to be some magical super-seat in the theater if you scour the entire venue.
  • Be prepared with umbrella and light jacket. Bringing some snacks is acceptable, but don’t be That Guy who sneaks in a four-course meal.
  • Find your path of least resistance. For example, at the Egyptian, nearly everyone enters the theater and goes to the left. So break away from the herd and go to the right.
  • The Neptune is in the midst of a renovation by new owners Seattle Theater Group. As such, the seats in the re-raked balcony are brand new (but still tight on legroom). The floor, though, is all folding chairs on two flat levels. Some people have been avoiding the theater entirely, but if you’ve already got tickets to a Neptune screening, get there early to snag a seat in the front row of the raised orchestra section for the best shot at not having a head obscuring your subtitles. We’ve heard rumor that the good folks at Sundance have swooped in to save us by sending some of their spare seating our way (they’re pros), but the seats shouldn’t be arriving until this weekend at the earliest.
  • Bathrooms! (Ladies, I’m mostly speaking to you, unless you’re a dude at a dude-heavy midnight screening.) It’s a good rule of thumb that the further away the bathroom is, the shorter the line. So the third floor bathrooms at the Harvard Exit are much more likely to be free compared to those on the second floor. Another way to avoid the line is to either head straight to the restroom as soon as you get into the theater, or wait until the lights go down and the SIFF ads start. You’ve still got about 7 minutes of ads and trailer before the film begins.
  • Consider subtitles. If your film has them and you’re not fluent, find a seat with a clear view of the bottom of the screen. Aisle left or right is generally a good bet. The seats on the center aisle (exit row) at the Egyptian have tons of room to stretch your legs, but the raking (grading?) of the theater flattens out for the aisle, so you’re likely to have an obstructed view of the subtitles if anyone of average height or above average skull circumference sits in front of you.
  • If you’re on foot and trying to see multiple films in a row, the sweet spot is the Egyptian. It’s a walkable distance from both the Harvard Exit and Pacific Place. (The Neptune and SIFF Cinema leave you reliant on Seattle’s not always timely bus service.) The Egyptian is also right next to a Walgreen’s, if you need water, snacks, or eye drops after 12 hours of movie viewing.
  • Speaking of: Marination Mobile now has a permanent location just a block away from the Egyptian. Delicious alternative to popcorn if you need a nutrition break between a double feature, but allow plenty of time to contend with the massive popularity of Korean-Hawaiian inspired street food.
  • If you’d otherwise like to avoid consuming your weight in popcorn, the concession stand at Harvard Exit (and maybe other Landmarks) offers a bargain size combo, which is just enough for a light snack for one.
  • You can’t take it with you into the theater (Ed: technically), but beer is cheaper than soda (Ed: pop) at Pacific Place.
  • And of course: Your ticket stub or pass gets you a discount in the bar at SIFF Lounge at Boom Noodle.