Music: A Week in the Life of New York City

Creativity Is Risky: Free Speech in a Charlie Hebdo World is an interactive and multimedia magazine published at sallyodowd.com. It is a tribute to the French satirical magazine attacked by terrorists in January and a celebration of the universal human right to free expression. Please support writers and artists by commenting or sharing.

Introducing a group of young musicians at Carnegie Hall last week, Danny Glover made it clear that performer and listener alike were there to call for peace.

“Music tears down the walls of misunderstanding,” he said on the eve of the General Debate of the 70th Session of the United Nations General Assembly, which took place between September 28 and October 6.

Music is a unifying force, an art form that everyone understands regardless of language or country, said Glover, noting that more than 100 musicians from more than 70 countries were part of the International Youth Philharmonic Orchestra, created by the New York-based Turken Foundation. Even though many of them did not speak each other’s language, they would make perfect harmony under the guidance of conductor Jose Luis Gomez.

“We have many armed conflicts around the world…people are fleeing their homes and dying,” Glover said. “But the more contact with life, the more compassion for life around us.”

Echoing the thoughts of Pope Francis who had just completed his first visit to the U.S., Glover asked the audience to remember other people’s pain. “With young musicians from Iran to Israel to Russia, the philharmonic shows that peace can overcome.”

The musicians, aged 18 to 26, played a program by composers Shostakovich (Festive Overture), Mendelssohn (Violen Concerto) and Faruk Kanca (Turken Foundation Symphonic Suite of Voices of the World).

Much of the Suite of Voices contained suspenseful, heart-racing sounds serving as a metaphor for our perilous times. Notes echoed shrieking, feet sneaking around so as to hide, running, and clapping — so as to say, “Hurry Up!”

It was a strong message to the world’s leaders to act swiftly.

Music: An Emotional Sherpa, A Point of View

While foreign dignitaries grappled with world problems at the UN, business executives met on the other side of town for Advertising Week to discuss issues affecting their industry. Several themes echoed those being discussed at the city’s other humanitarian gatherings.

“Music is an emotional sherpa,” said Pandora CMO Simon Fleming-Wood during an hour-long session at the Times Center entitled. “Millennials listen to it four hours a day, and it is the most talked-about topic among them.”

He added: "Music provides a connective power not only to each other but to humanity.”

Spotify CMO Seth Farbman shared the stage with Fleming-Wood in a lively and candid exchange on their respective business models and growth plans for connecting the world via music. “Music is how you badge yourself,” said Spotify CMO Seth Farbman. “It gives you a voice and point of view.”

The World’s Most Important Campaign

A Friday afternoon session entitled, The World’s Most Important Campaign, served as Advertising Week’s grand finale and certainly came full circle.

Daniel Thomas, director of communications for the UN General Assembly; Jason Hall, CEO of of ad agency Mekanism; and other ad executives discussed a 15-year global campaign launching in January to support The 17 Global Goals for Sustainable Development. The campaign seeks to engage volunteers and organizations around the world to meet goals such as ending injustice and poverty, and providing universal access to clean water by 2030.

Offical Love Song To The Earth Lyric Video directed by Jerry Cope and Casey Culver produced by Jerry Cope & Toby Gad, Nature Cinematography by Louie Schwartzberg Featuring Vocal Performances by Paul McCartney, Jon Bon Jovi, Sheryl Crow, Fergie, Colbie Caillat, Natasha Bedingfield, Sean Paul, Leona Lewis, Johnny Rzeznik, Krewella,

The campaign features music as a battle cry for good. Love Song to the Earth, featuring Sir Paul McCartney, Jon Bon Jovi and UN Ambassador Angelique Kidjo “reminds us to take care of the things we love,” according to the UN website.

Co-writer Natasha Bedingfield said: “Many people turn a blind eye arguing that everything is ok environmentally. The song reminds us that having ownership of our world means taking care of it. With this song we wanted to talk about the environment in a way that would help people feel empowered to do something rather than be paralyzed by fear.”

Out of Brooklyn: Love Song to Free Expression

Likewise, an American-British-French team has come together around words, art and music to support Article 19 of the U.N. General Assembly’s Universal Declaration of Human Rights, which states:

“Everyone has the right to freedom of opinion and expression; this right includes freedom to hold opinions without interference and to seek, receive and impart information and ideas through any media and regardless of frontiers.”

Our support for this right is manifested in the e-magazine Creativity Is Risky: Free Speech in a Charlie Hebdo World as a tribute to the 11 French journalists murdered in January by two Al Qaeda terrorists for their political cartoons. The interactive and multimedia work also celebrates the fundamental right through the healing power of music.

Accompanying the magazine is a video featuring “Here With You” by Brooklyn resident and singer-songwriter Chaz Langley.

We hope you will enjoy and share it to support our Free Speech Movement.

As Glover said in closing the Carnegie Hall performance, “Leave this evening with our minds and hearts on global peace.”

Note: By Sally O'Dowd; originally published on sallyodowd.com

 

MasterVoices presents The Pirates of Penzance at New York City Center, Oct 15-16, 2015

  • The Pirates of Penzance (or The Slave of Duty)
  • By Arthur Sullivan and W.S. Gilbert
  • Featuring Deborah Voigt, Hunter Parrish, Phillip Boykin, Douglas Hodge, Julia Udine, Montego Glover, and Betsy Wolfe
  • Conducted and Directed by Ted Sperling with Orchestra of St. Luke's
  • October 15-16, 2015 at 8pm at New York City Center

***

MasterVoices kicks off the 2015-2016 season with The Pirates of Penzance; or, The Slave of Dutyon October 15-16, 2015 at 8pm at New York City Center, 131 W. 55th Street, New York City. Following the success of our 2012 Mikado at Carnegie Hall, MasterVoices' semi-staged presentation of The Pirates of Penzance will feature a cast of stars from the Broadway and opera worlds, along with Orchestra of St. Luke's performing Arthur Sullivan's original orchestrations under the direction of Artistic Director Ted Sperling. Single tickets are $30-$130 and are available at NYCityCenter.org.For more information visit: www.mastervoices.org/#citycenterseries.

The concert will feature Metropolitan Opera star Deborah Voigt, Hunter Parrish ("Weeds"; Godspell), Phillip Boykin (Tony Award Nominee, The Gershwins' Porgy and Bess), Douglas Hodge (Tony Award Winner, La Cages aux Folles;Showtime's "Penny Dreadful"), Julia Udine (ThePhantom of the Opera), Montego Glover (Tony Award Nominee, Memphis), and Betsy Wolfe (The Last Five Years). Choreography/Associate Direction by Gustavo Zajac, Set by David Korins, Lighting by Frances Aronson, and Sound by Scott Lehrer.

For tickets, visit NYCityCenter.org; and for more information, visit mastervoices.org. For a limited time, become a MasterVoices Member for 20% off tickets for The Pirates of Penzance and Dido and Aeneas at New York City Center. Visit http://www.mastervoices.org/city-center-series/ for more information.

MasterVoices' Gala, including pre-concert cocktails and dinner and a performance of The Pirates of Penzance is Thursday, October 15, 2015 at 5pm at Le Parker Meridien; concert at 8pm at New York City Center. For more information, call 646-202-9623.

 

Roger Rees

The Pirates of Penzance performances will be dedicated in loving memory to MasterVoices' Artistic Associate Roger Rees. Roger was a longtime colleague and friend, a relationship that began with his role as Narrator of Weber's Oberon under Maestro Bass at Carnegie Hall in 2002. That first project grew into a collaboration that explored the interplay of words and music in projects directed by Mr. Rees including "An Evening of Kurt Weill" with Bebe Neuwirth, Scott Joplin's Treemonisha, Bernstein and Lerner's A White House Cantata and Weill's The Firebrand of Florence among others. Mr. Rees was ever ready to lend his talents as auctioneer, actor and author whenever called upon. He was a Renaissance man with a heart of gold and will be sorely missed. We were privileged to know him and are honored to remember him with this dedication.

The 2015-2016 Season continues with:

  • The Life and Death(s) of Alan Turing

An Evening Exploring the Creation of a New American Opera by Justine F. Chen and David Simpatico

Presented by the American Lyric Theater

October 17, 2015 at 7pm at Merkin Concert Hall 

  • Mahler's Symphony No. 2

Conducted by Zubin Mehta, presented by the Israel Philharmonic Orchestra

November 5, 2015 at Carnegie Hall

  • Dido and Aeneas

By Henry Purcell and Nahum Tate

With a World Premiere companion work by Michael John LaChiusa

Featuring Kelli O'Hara and Victoria Clark

Conducted by Ted Sperling with Orchestra of St. Luke's

April 28, 2016 at 7pm at New York City Center

April 29, 2016 at 8pm at New York City Center

  • Mahler's Symphony No. 2

Conducted by Joshua Gersen, presented by the New York Youth Symphony

May 29, 2016 at Carnegie Hall

  • Bridges

The 2015-2016 season will conclude in June with a program featuring a World Premiere work composed by Marisa Michelson developed for the launch of MasterVoices' new community outreach program, "Bridges". The location and date of this program will be announced at a future date.