人妻少妇专区

人妻少妇专区

Rochester Review
November鈥揇ecember 2012
Vol. 75, No. 2

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Orchestrating Stravinsky Emil Kang 鈥90 spearheads a yearlong celebration of the composer鈥檚 infamous Rite of Spring. Interview by David Menconi
kangSOUNDS & FURY: Stravinsky (above) ignited a cultural firestorm in 1913 with the premiere of his dissonant ballet, Rite of Spring. Emil Kang 鈥90, executive director of the arts at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, has organized a centennial celebration of the now canonical work. (Photo: Getty Images)

Emil Kang 鈥90 has always thought big, but 鈥淭he Rite of Spring at One Hundred鈥 would still be a huge undertaking by anyone鈥檚 standards.

Orchestrated by Kang, who鈥檚 the first executive director of the arts at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, it鈥檚 a 15-show performing arts series commemorating the century anniversary of the masterwork by Russian-born composer Igor Stravinsky that was dissonant enough to cause a riot during its performance debut but is now part of the 20th-century musical canon.

The series runs through the 2012鈥13 academic year. Among the artists premiering commissioned multimedia works are choreographer Bill T. Jones, cellist Yo-Yo Ma, pianist Vijay Iyer and puppeteer Basil Twist. It鈥檚 quite a gambit for Kang, who majored in economics at Rochester before embarking on a career that would take him to administrative leadership positions at the Detroit and Seattle symphonies. He arrived at North Carolina in 2005. In May, President Barack Obama nominated Kang to the National Council on the Arts, a group that advises the chair of the National Endowment for the Arts.

What did you think of The Rite of Spring the first time you heard it?

Actually, I thought it was the most obnoxious piece of music ever. It was at Avery Fisher Hall in New York, and I was in the fifth grade. I was wearing my plaid polyester jacket and clip-on tie, expecting Mozart, and it was nothing like I expected. That response has stayed with me forever.

You鈥檝e obviously come around on it.

Obviously. It鈥檚 an incredibly important piece of modern music. Talk to classical, pop, jazz musicians, and they鈥檒l probably rank it among the top five of the 20th century. It still sounds new to me, even today, which I think is the mark of something truly great鈥攖hat you can hear it 20 times over and still get something new out of it. It鈥檚 not something you put on headphones and listen to on your iPhone. It鈥檚 something that has to be experienced live.

Why did people react so viscerally to the piece in 1913?

As humans, we like being able to predict the next note. We expect resolution. Stravinsky wanted to turn that on its head where you couldn鈥檛 predict anything, from the beginning notes of the opening bassoon solo. The whole piece is a series of unexpected moments, in terms of what people knew about ballet and classical music. That鈥檚 at the heart of what鈥檚 fascinating about this. I think we all spend too much time trying to figure things out. For some reason, everything has to be tidy鈥攕omething you keep in a box or hang on the wall. What Stravinsky did in 1913 was to blow that up, and here we are revisiting it 100 years later.

What sort of interpretations are the artists in the series doing?

We asked the artists to use Rite of Spring as a metaphor rather than play it note for note. This gives artists opportunities to reflect on an incredibly important moment in art, politics, culture, and sociology, through their own eyes and ears and hands. There are obvious nods to the past, but we hope it leapfrogs into the future.

How does the series fit in with your overall mission as an arts presenter?

We鈥檙e trying to get people to see and hear things in different ways. I teach a freshman seminar, so I鈥檓 always talking with students about the distinction between what we like and what鈥檚 good. It鈥檚 a lifelong journey to teach people to value quality and excellence, even if they don鈥檛 understand it. Otherwise, all anyone wants to hear is what they already know. That鈥檚 a slippery slope, where you end up knowing fewer and fewer things. That鈥檚 not a world I want to live in. With anything, there are pressures. But as my yoga teacher says, 鈥淔ind your edge.鈥 That鈥檚 what I try to do, even if my wife accuses me of taking a free-fall off the edge on purpose.


For more on 鈥淭he Rite of Spring at One Hundred,鈥 visit . David Menconi is music critic at the Raleigh (N.C.) News & Observer.