Thursday, July 23, 2020
Song of Myself
Song of Myself Oh, I was going to answer a bunch of questions today, but it turns out that somehow along the line I managed to answer them all in the comments. So go back and read the comments! Its like when your favorite networks try to convince you to watch reruns during the summer except you were watching Dancing With The Stars instead! Well except this one, from Wenhao Sun which Ive been meaning to answer for a while: Hey! Ive heard that Bartok Concerto for Orchestra is absolutely awesome I havent actually had the opportunity to hear it, but I suppose Ill go check it out. With regards to Beethoven, his late stuff is pretty awesome (with some weird stuff lol, Op.133 Grosse Fugue? I dont know at least I dont see the genius in that one yet). Anyway, how is the music department at MIT? Im a pretty avid classical violinist with a passion for chamber music, and Ive heard that MIT has a rather strong music department. Could you give me a little information on its orchestra and chamber music program (for composing as well, as thats always interested me)? Thanks! Wenhao Sun As far as late Beethoven goes, Id really like to get into him but havent had the chance yetIve heard some of his later piano sonatas sound remarkably like Joplin (Scott, not Janis), which just sounds awesome. The music program at MIT is actually quite strong, and one of the reasons I ended up coming to MIT over some other schools. My junior year of high school, I had the pleasure of singing under Dr. William Cutter in the Pennsylvania Region V chorus, and it was quite possibly one of the most informative and brilliant musical experiences Ive ever had. Although Im sure MITs music program doesnt rival that of any conservatory or even some larger liberal-arts type schools, it helped to know that a school as good as MIT at science and engineering had such great faculty working in their music department. Dr. Cutter also teaches at the Boston Conservatory and prepares the choirs for Boston Lyric Opera and the Boston Pops. Exactly how good is MITs music? Well, Ive performed in the Concert Choir, a large, 90-ish member free-for-all choir, and the Chamber Chorus, a 30-ish member more exclusive group focusing on smaller-scale works. While neither is the most technically proficient group Ive ever been in, Ive had the opportunity to perform a more diverse and challenging repertoire of music than I ever saw in high schoolin five semesters here, Ive performed, among other works, Mozarts Requiem, Stravinskys Mass, Bachs Magnificat, and Handels Messiahall with appropriate (and professional) symphonic accompaniment. My freshman year in Chamber Chorus, I had the unique opportunity of performing a work specifically commissioned for the groupLibby Larsens The Nothing That Is. The whole program can be found here. Check out the libretto here. Larsen may have gone a little too far in making the piece MIT-oriented. Among other influences, the piece is based on Indian cosmology, Apollo 13, Hamlet, Vatican II, New Math and the infinite summation 1 + 1 1 + 1 1 + 1 1 + No, really. There were breaks in the song where I was singing one plus one minus one plus for a minute straight, and theres a great crescendo where the choir chants, T minus zero zero zero zero zero nine, T minus zero zero zero zero eight all the way down to blastoff. Yes, that concert certainly was a unique experience to say nothing else. Oh! Im getting so excited about this concert now! In addition to the real, unreal, and indescribable Libby Larsen piece, we got to sing the twenty-minute long Copland piece In The Beginning, which starts off when God create the Heaven and Earth and doesnt finish up until Man became a living soul. I never even knew they wrote 20-minute long a capella choral works when I was in high school, and certainly had no idea that Id be singing one. That was probably the most challenging piece Ive ever sung. Oh, but beyond the realm of choir MIT has a bunch of official music groups you can find here, including a symphony, a wind ensemble, a jazz ensemble, and a Gamelan conducted by nationally-renowned musician Evan Ziporyn. As a member of the Chamber Music Society, one of my friends during his semester at MIT was coached in a string quartet by Pulitzer-Prize-winning composer John Harbison. Id say thats pretty cool. You can take any of the above ensembles as a class for six units of general elective credit, which, in my experience, is UTTERLY MEANINGLESS except for boosting your GPA. Hey, my A in choir made the difference between an x.84 and an x.86 for me last term, which is quite nice when MIT rounds your GPA to one decimal place. In addition to all these organizations, MIT has a bunch of student-run groups, including like six a capella groups, a concert band, a marching band, a Senegalese Drum Ensemble, and a guild of bellringers. Though Wenhao might not fit in so well in any of the above on violin (well, maybe Marching Band; were kind of desperate), the point is that whether you play cello or kazoo or pan pipes or oboe of love, theres probably an ensemble at MIT for you. Finally, one last thing to look at is the Emerson Scholarship. To get this, you audition (open to the entire community, from first-term freshman to nth-year grad students) in August on one or more pieces of your choosing. If successful, you can take weekly private lessons from any instructor of your choice in the Boston area and MIT will pay for half of it. Since there are a lot of really excellent teachers in the Boston area, this can turn out to be a great deal for you if youre committed to studying performance. And then there are music classes, too. You can go back and check out my experiences with 21M.302: Harmony and Counterpoint II over the past term. In addition to writing a Theme and Variations in the high classical style, I had to learn how to improvise on piano and do some crazy, crazy sight-singing exercises I wouldnt wish on my worst enemies. Beyond composition, MIT also has some excellent history of music classes, which Ive been told are unusually good for a school with no graduate music program. I took 21M.271: Symphony and Concerto last year. It starts at the invention of the symphony and ends at Eliot Carter, whom I still HATE, touching on pretty much every important composer in between. Professor Lindgren is fantastic, and going through basically all modern Western music in chronological order was tremendously helpful in broadening my own musical understanding. I highly recommend it to any MIT students, present or future, reading this entry. To concludeyes, Virginia, MIT has a music department. tomorrow: Sams adventures in Judaism!
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