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Creation & Conflict; 8 Days In June Festival Hopes To Challenge Conv

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  • Creation & Conflict; 8 Days In June Festival Hopes To Challenge Conv

    CREATION & CONFLICT; 8 DAYS IN JUNE FESTIVAL HOPES TO CHALLENGE CONVENTION
    by Ted Shaw, Windsor Star

    Windsor Star (Ontario)
    June 21, 2007 Thursday
    Final Edition

    When the Detroit Symphony Orchestra wanted to put together a festival
    of music that challenges the conventions of orchestral music, it
    looked north.

    Or south, actually, to Ontario.

    More specifically, the DSO asked Peter Oundjian, Toronto-born music
    director of the Toronto Symphony, and its own principal guest conductor
    and artistic adviser since last September, to assemble 8 Days in June,
    a bold, new arts festival that begins today at Orchestra Hall.

    The DSO also lured a Canadian radio personality Tom Allen, host of
    CBC's Music & Company, to act as creative consultant over several
    classical music announcers on Detroit radio.

    Far from a snub, it was a recognition of the close relationship
    between the two countries and the cities of Detroit and Toronto,
    Oundjian insists.

    "I think that since Detroit is north of Canada, it is Canada,"
    Oundjian said with a twinkle in his eye.

    The 52-year-old conductor said the ties binding us are tight.

    "Seriously, I think the fact that Detroit gets all the CBC stations
    has had a lot of impact over the years. They're always in touch with
    Canadian news and the Canadian arts scene."

    Since his appointment as the DSO's artistic adviser in the absence
    of retired director Neeme Jarvi, Oundjian has earned frequent-flyer
    points between Toronto and Windsor.

    "There's been a close connection going back to Gunther Herbig," he
    said. While Herbig was music director in Toronto in the early 1990s,
    following his tenure in Detroit, he continued to live in Bloomfield
    Hills, Mich.

    "It's an easy connection," Oundjian said. "I fly into Windsor to
    conduct in Detroit. It's an internal flight for me."

    The Canadian-born Oundjian, the youngest of five children of Armenian
    immigrants, still bears the British accent of his musical education in
    England. From the age of seven, he studied violin there and eventually
    attended the Royal College of Music. He also studied at the Juilliard
    School in New York with, among others, Itzhak Perlman.

    Oundjian was appointed music director of his hometown Toronto Symphony,
    succeeding Jussa Pekka Saraste, in 2003 and has contributed to turning
    that troubled operation around with some unconventional programming.

    A cousin of Monty Python original Eric Idle -- his mother and Idle's
    are sisters -- Oundjian will conduct the premiere in Toronto later
    this month of Idle's oratorio, Not The Messiah (He's a Very Naughty
    Boy), based on the film, Life of Brian.

    His challenge in Detroit, he said, is to push the envelope in a
    similar way.

    "The whole idea of the festival is to challenge convention,"
    he explained.

    So the classics of Beethoven and Stravinsky rub shoulders with jazz
    music by Wynton Marsalis and the Lincoln Center Jazz Orchestra, hip
    hop from Public Enemy's Chuck D, rock 'n' roll, and a 20th-century
    stage play with music, Stravinsky's A Soldier's Tale, recast by
    novelist Kurt Vonnegut.

    The Canadian connection extends to the participation in A Soldier's
    Tale by Colm Feore, his wife Donna Feore as director, and Stratford
    Festival actor Graham Abbey.

    "We understand we are messing with tradition to a certain degree,"
    Oundjian said. "But this festival is a great place for people who
    think the concert hall is dull to come and experience music in a
    different way."

    A classical music performance in the new millennium, Oundjian said,
    relies on what he calls "enhancements," the use of techniques common
    to other media, like cinema and theatre.

    "The audience comes conditioned to expect that," he said. "We've
    been getting messages from our audiences for years now that they are
    totally ready for enhancements."

    When he conducted the Shostakovich Symphony No. 11, The Year 1905,
    based on historical events in czarist Russia, the performance opened
    with a single shaft of light trained on him. When it ended, the hall
    was thrust into total darkness.

    "It was very ominous and very effective," he said. "It's a simple
    technique done in every theatre in the world. But you almost never
    see it in a concert hall."

    That performance will be duplicated during 8 Days in June.

    Each year, the festival will have a new theme. In its debut, the
    theme is Creation and Conflict.

    It's the perfect climate in which to depart from the norm, especially
    in programming classical music.

    "We start out with the Beethoven 5 (Symphony No. 5) and Stravinsky's
    Rite of Spring on the same program," Oundjian said. That concert is
    tonight at Orchestra Hall at 8:30 p.m.

    "You never see those works on the same program. But there's a very
    strong reason for it here. In the festival, we are looking at the
    start of three centuries -- the 19th, the 20th and the new millennium
    -- and taking a particular interest in the conflicts at the start of
    those epochs.

    "There were the Napoleonic Wars in Beethoven's time, the First World
    War and the Russian Revolution in Stravinsky's time, and our own era
    of post-9-11.

    "The Beethoven and the Stravinsky were absolutely central to two of
    those epochs, and it will be very instructive to see what music was
    produced out of the conflicts. These kinds of juxtapositions can
    provide new perspectives, new ideas."

    Another example is Vonnegut's rewrite of A Soldier's Tale (L'histoire
    du soldat), which transports Stravinsky's early-20th century stage work
    inhabited by magicians and fairies to the court-martial and execution
    of Second World War Pte. Edward Slovik, who was born in Detroit.

    Ultimately, Oundjian would like to see a new kind of audience attend
    8 Days in June.

    "If you're doing anything that is somewhat worthwhile," he said,
    "one of the ways you find that out is the criticism you receive. I
    don't think anyone has done anything that makes a strong statement
    without some kind of criticism.

    "We aren't doing anything truly outrageous. We're letting the material
    dictate how far we need to go. The Vonnegut-Stravinsky piece represents
    what the festival's all about.

    "It's a work not often performed, but transformed into something
    different and completely relevant to this city and these times."

    [email protected] or 519-255-5777, ext. 641

    8 DAYS IN JUNE HIGHLIGHTS

    All events take place at the Max M. Fisher Music Center and Orchestra
    Hall, 3711 Woodward Ave., Detroit. Tickets range from US$65 to $20,
    or $300 for the series pass. For more details and to order tickets,
    go to www.8daysinjune.com, or call 313-576-5111.

    - Tonight at 8:30 p.m., DSO performs Beethoven's Symphony No. 5 and
    Stravinsky's The Rite of Spring.

    - Friday at 8 p.m., trumpeter Wynton Marsalis leads the Lincoln Center
    Jazz Orchestra.

    - Saturday at 8 p.m., pianist Christopher O'Riley performs
    interpretations of the music of Radiohead.

    - Sunday at 5 p.m., a screening of the documentary Beethoven's Hair,
    plus performances of two sonatas.

    - Monday at 8 p.m., rapper Chuck D of Public Enemy discusses the
    hip-hop movement, followed by a poetry slam by Detroit writers.

    - Tuesday at 8 p.m., a DSO program of world music inspired by events
    of 9-11.

    - Wednesday at 8 p.m., Kurt Vonnegut's reworking of the Stravinsky
    work, A Soldier's Tale, starring F. Murray Abraham, Colm Feore and
    Graham Abbey.

    - Thursday at 6:30 p.m. and 8:30 p.m., DSO performs Shostakovich's
    Symphony No. 11, The Year 1905, and the String Quartet No. 8.
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