2010 Grammy Award Nominee

“Omnivorous eclecticism… Metropolis provides crisp, energetic support throughout.”

(New York Times)

 
 

 
 

About the Album

Released January 26, 2010 on Naxos American Classics

Avner Dorman’s Mandolin Concerto received a classical nomination in the 53rd Annual Grammy Awards for Avi Avital (soloist) and Andrew Cyr (conductor) with Metropolis Ensemble.

Avner Dorman's Concertos is Metropolis Ensemble's first studio album, produced by Grammy-winning producer David Frost and released on NAXOS American Classics.

The album includes the complete chamber orchestra concerti of Avner Dorman (as presented in the Fall 2007 Metropolis concert, On Record), and features Avi Avital on mandolin, Mindy Kaufman on piccolo flute, Eliran Avni on piano, and Metropolis Ensemble players under the direction of Artistic Director Andrew Cyr.

The diverse concertos presented here combine the excitement and spontaneity associated with jazz, rock or ethnic music within an engaging neo-baroque idiom. Dorman writes: “I have always loved baroque music…the clear rhythms, the strong reliance on the bass, and the extreme contrasts.”

 

 

Recent Reviews

 
 

 

“This is an important milestone for the mandolin. My hope that this incredible exposure will make them madly fall in love with this instrument.”

Avi Avital, Soloist

Avi Avital received a Grammy nomination for Mandolin Concerto on this album, which composer Avner Dorman wrote especially for him. Since then, he has gone on to become an international sensation and recording six studio albums to date.

 

“I have always loved baroque music. Even as a young child, I found baroque very exciting and closer to the music of our day: clear rhythms and reliance on bass.”

Avner Dorman, Composer

Avner Dorman is “a fresh, young voice, worth following” (Gramophone) and with Concertos, “he lets his neo-Baroquery run wild” (New York Times). Today, his music continues to bring unique timbres and colors to major orchestras who champion his work.

 

“Bringing something to life… to bring a lot of new music to the attention of people, and to have them respond and be interested and like it, is very satisfying.”

David Frost, Producer

Metropolis collaborated with David Frost on Concertos, which was one of five albums he produced in 2010 that garnered him a “Classical Producer of the Year” Grammy award. Over the years, David has received twenty Grammys, including one for his work on our 2013 studio album, Timo Andres’ Home Stretch.

 
 

 

WATCH: “On Record” concert from October 2007 at Angel Orensanz Center

Project In-Depth

The diverse concertos presented here combine the excitement and spontaneity associated with jazz, rock or ethnic music within an engaging neo-baroque idiom. Dorman writes: “I have always loved baroque music…the clear rhythms, the strong reliance on the bass, and the extreme contrasts.”

  • Mandolin Concerto (2006); Avi Avital, mandolin

    1. Adagio religioso - Allegro - Andante - Presto - Adagio - Andante

    2. Allegro

    3. Meno mosso - Adagio

    Piccolo Concerto (2001); Mindy Kaufman, piccolo • Eliran Avni, piano

    1. Allegro - groovy, serious, and dramatic

    2. Adagio cantabile

    3. Presto

    Concerto Grosso (2003); Arnaud Sussmann, violin; Lily Francis, violin; Eric Nowlin, viola; Michal Korman, cello; Aya Hamada, harpsichord

    1. Adagio - Allegro dramatico - Adagio

    2. Presto

    3. Adagio

    Piano Concerto in A (1995); Eliran Avni, piano

    1. Allegro

    2. Andante

    3. Presto

    • Avi Avital, mandolin

    • Mindy Kaufman, piccolo flute

    • Eliran Avni, piano

    • Arnaud Sussmann, violin

    • Lily Francis, violin

    • Eric Nowlin, viola

    • Michal Korman, cello

    • Aya Hamada, harpsichord

    • Kyle Armbrust, viola

    • David Auerbach, viola

    • Maurycy Banaszek, viola

    • Rachel Calin, bass

    • Sharon Cohen, violin

    • Song-le Do, cello

    • Lily Francis, violin

    • Noah Geller, violin

    • Frank Huang, violin

    • Michal Korman, cello

    • Yvonne Lam, violin

    • Amy Lee, violin

    • Earl Lee, cello

    • Jessica Lee, viola

    • Wayne Lin, violin

    • Eric Nowlin, viola

    • Gal Nyska, cello

    • Anne Rabbat, violin

    • Arnaud Sussmann, violin (concertmaster)

    • Andrew Wan, violin

  • I have always loved baroque music. Even as a young child, when I did not care much for classical or romantic styles, I found baroque very exciting and closer to the music of our day. In retrospect, I guess it was the clear rhythms, the strong reliance on the bass, and the extreme contrasts that made this music appeal to me. I’d like to thank the soloists, Metropolis Ensemble, conductor Andrew Cyr, producer David Frost and Naxos for recording these four neo-baroque concertos for the first time.

    One of my favorite things as a composer is to discover and explore new instruments. When Avi Avital approached me to write Mandolin Concerto (2006), my acquaintance with the mandolin was fairly limited. As I got to know the instrument better, I discovered its diverse sonic and expressive possibilities.

    Mandolin Concerto’s main conflicts are between sound and silence and between motion and stasis. What inspired me to deal with these opposites is the mandolin’s most basic technique—the tremolo, which is the rapid repetition of notes. The tremolo embodies both motion and stasis. The rapid movement provides momentum, while the pitches remain the same. Mandolin Concerto employs numerous extended techniques in the soloist and ensemble parts. The most obvious one is the detuning of the mandolin at the end of the piece. Another example is the use of pizzicati harmonics in the mandolin while the orchestra holds high harmonic clusters at the end of the first part of the composition.

    The concerto can be divided into three main sections. The first part is slow and meditative. The tremolo and silences accumulate energy which is released in occasional, fast, kinetic outbursts. The main motifs of the entire concerto are introduced, all of which are based on the minor and major second. The second part is fast and dance-like and alludes to Middle Eastern music. It accumulates energy leading to a culmination at its end. The tremolo of the opening part is transformed into a relentless repetition in the bass—like a heartbeat. This part is constructed much like a Baroque concerto and pays homage to Bach’s violin concertos. The third part is a recapitulation of the opening. After the energy is depleted, all that is left is to delve deeper into the meditation of the opening and concentrate on a pure melody and an underlying heartbeat.

    Piccolo Concerto (2001) consists of three movements—fast, slow, and fast. The musical material is drawn from diverse genres: Baroque and Classical music, Ethnic music, Jazz, and Popular music.

    Baroque and Classical: Throughout the work, there are several fugues and canons, characteristic of Baroque music. The first movement is based on the classical sonata form. I also use many sequential patterns and other clichés of 18th century music juxtaposed in unusual polytonal textures.

    Ethnic: To my ears, the piccolo’s bottom octave sounds very similar to Middle Eastern shepherd’s flutes. In the second movement, especially, I emphasize this similarity by using characteristic modes of Middle Eastern music, as well as common styles of ornamentation from the region. Another reference to my home region is the imitation of the sounds of desert winds and of the Mediterranean Sea in the second part of the second movement.

    Jazz and Popular music: From the very first notes of the concerto, the juxtaposition of a steady beat in the bass with syncopations in the upper parts serves as a key compositional technique. Frequently, the classical and ethnic motifs are accompanied by short repetitive patterns. This simple device leads to complex polyrhythms. In certain sections of the piece, these repetitive rhythms together with the basso continuo lines emulate modern drum-machines. Also, in some sections, the soloist’s part is supposed to sound as if improvised, although every note is written out accurately in the score.

    In 2002 conductor Aviv Ron asked me to write a concerto for his orchestra for a series dedicated to Baroque concertos. He wanted the piece to allude to the music of Handel and Vivaldi (and not Bach), and I gladly accepted the challenge and composed Concerto Grosso (2003).

    I used the opening theme of Handel’s Concerto Grosso, Op. 6, No. 4 as my main motif and Vivaldi’s signature virtuosic patterns as the rhythmic driving force. Concerto Grosso can be described as a “minimalist” take on Baroque music, influenced by composers such as Górecki, Pärt, and Glass, and stretching their techniques to new extremes. The soloists are comprised of a string quartet and harpsichord. Like a traditional concerto grosso, they serve as both soloists and as leaders for the large ensemble. Structurally, the piece has three large sections—(i) slow, (ii) fast, and (iii) slow. The opening slow section is interrupted twice by outbursts of energy, and the middle fast section gives way to a static exploration of sound toward its culmination.

    I composed Piano Concerto in A (1995) at the age of nineteen. I heard a recording of Bach’s keyboard Concerto in A major on the radio (performed on piano and strings) and found the bright sound of the violins doubling the piano’s top line very exciting. Immediately, I improvised the opening tutti of my Piano Concerto in A. This was the first time I wrote a neo-baroque piece. I found the challenge of doing something new while keeping the transparency and directness of an older style very appealing. I got even more ecstatic when I realized that using the idea of Baroque figured bass enabled me easily to integrate jazz, pop and rock elements into the music. Even though the concerto is dedicated to Vivaldi, one can also find in it allusions to Nina Simone, The Police, The Cure, Stravinsky, and of course, to Bach. Throughout the composition, the soloist borrows patterns that are idiomatic to the string instruments of the orchestra and transforms them into keyboard patterns.

    The piece is in three movements: fast-slow-fast. The first and third movements use the tutti-solo convention of the Baroque era. The second is a song without words.

    —Avner Dorman, composer

  • This recording has been made possible in part through funding provided by The Arkin Family Foundation, Suki Sandler, Jill and Steve Lampe, Crosswicks Foundation, Mikhail Iliev, The Elitzer Family Fund, Penny and Claudio Pincus, Allyson and Trip Samson.

    Recorded at SUNY Purchase, New York, USA, on 12th and 13th October, 2007.

    • Producer: David Frost

    • Engineer: Richard King

    • Assistant engineer: Rob Kilenski

    • Editors: David Frost and Amandine Pras

    • Publisher: G. Schirmer, Inc.

    • Booklet notes: Avner Dorman

    • Cover art: Joe Fig

    Special thanks to Kristin Lancino, Peggy Monastra, Katy Tucker, Peter Herb, Glenn Schoenfeld, Britton Matthews, and J.J. Sherman.

 

 

Avner Dorman

Composer

A graduate of the Juilliard School, where he earned a Doctorate in Composition, and a protégé of John Corigliano and Zubin Mehta, award-winning Avner Dorman is emerging as one of the leading composers of his generation. His music has been championed by many of the world’s finest conductors. A native of Israel now living in the United States, Dorman draws on a variety of cultural and historical influences in composing, resulting in music that affects an emotional impact while exploring new territories. More »

 

 

Meet the Artists

 

 

CD Launch Concert

February 1, 2010 / 7:30pm / Former Tower Records

Metropolis hosted a free concert and artist meet-and-greet for the release of Avner Dorman’s Concertos at the former Tower Records on Broadway, sponsored by No Longer Empty. This event was part of Never Can Say Goodbye, a trans-media art exhibition that recreated a fantasy version of the legendary store, complete with record bins, album covers, cash registers, and music posters.

 

 

Grammy Nomination Party

December 16, 2010 / 7pm / Le Poisson Rouge

Metropolis celebrated our Grammy nomination for Avner Dorman’s Concertos with a free concert including Avi Avital’s solo performance from “Mandolin Concerto” and toasts for Avi Avital, Andrew Cyr, and David Frost. Presented by (le) Poisson Rouge, NAXOS, America-Israel Cultural Foundation, NYC House Concerts, Who's In My Fund?, and Metropolis.