Dec 11th 2019

Reed Tetzloff interview: “Let loose and fling the music”

by Michael Johnson

Michael Johnson is a music critic with particular interest in piano. 

Johnson worked as a reporter and editor in New York, Moscow, Paris and London over his journalism career. He covered European technology for Business Week for five years, and served nine years as chief editor of International Management magazine and was chief editor of the French technology weekly 01 Informatique. He also spent four years as Moscow correspondent of The Associated Press. He is the author of five books.

Michael Johnson is based in Bordeaux. Besides English and French he is also fluent in Russian.

You can order Michael Johnson's most recent book, a bilingual book, French and English, with drawings by Johnson:

“Portraitures and caricatures:  Conductors, Pianist, Composers”

 here.

 

The young tousle-haired pianist from the distant Minnesota, Reed Tetzloff, is building a performance career in the U.S. and Europe by steering a course through rare repertoire that is both challenging and attractive for the listener.

He has created a stir with his Concord Sonata by Charles Ives, a piece that he says must be played “totally unbridled – it cannot be played any other way”. When he programs it, he adds, he has “no choice but to let loose and fling the music out into the atmosphere, come what may”.  

In this video he captures the mystery and the magic of the Ives masterpiece.

Tetzloff’s most recent CD, “Sounds of Transcendence” (CME International) includes the piano sonata A. 85 by the American Charles Tomlinson Griffes, fresh and exciting music expertly articulated by the young American. In his well-informed liner notes he describes Griffes’ music as “feverish, expressionistic and disturbing”. It is also highly appealing in today’s modern context, some hundred years after it was composed.

The CD contains a coherent program that descends from Griffes to five pieces by Scriabin, ending in a sensitive treatment of César Franck’s Prelude, Choral et Fugue, (FVW 21)

Tetzloff was a semifinalist in the XV International Tchaikovsky Competition in 2015, and he has now built a busy career on that achievement. He went on to win prizes at competitions in Beijing, Cincinnati, Cleveland and New York among others.

In our email question-and-answer discussion he explains his priorities as a musician and his attraction to a wide range of repertoire.

Tetloff
Reed Tetzloff

 

'Q. Which of your teachers have had the greatest influence on you?  

A. I have been fortunate to work with dedicated and inspiring teachers, notably Pavlina Dokovska, the Piano Department Chair at the Mannes College of Music, the Manhattan conservatory where I studied from 2010 to 2016, earning my bachelor’s and master’s degrees in piano performance.  

Q. Aren’t you from the American Midwest?

A. Yes, I worked with Paul Wirth for eight years in my home town near Minneapolis, starting at the age of ten.  He and Mme. Dokovska had a holistic approach and cared for me far beyond the piano. That really informed my thinking about what it means to live life as an artist all of the time, not only in front of the instrument.

Q. Are there other teachers important to your development?

A. I was blessed with several other professors at Mannes: studying Schenkerian Analysis with Carl Schachter, music history and a Bach-intensive course with Fred Fehleisen, twentieth-century theory with Joel Lester, and fortepiano and historical performance with Audrey Axinn, among others. And there were so many others --  Eteri Andjaparidze, Richard Goode, Jerome Rose, Victor Rosenbaum, and Vladimir Valjarević. They all impacted me greatly.  Recently, the pianist and writer Beth Levin has been a mentor and an inspiration.

Q. So many pianists suffer from narrow musical training. You seem to have a broader background.

A.  Yes, what I received there was the sense of an endless quest for understanding the great music literature. I always had the feeling of exploring music on the deepest level and yet always sensing that there is a vista of greater understanding just out of my grasp.  

Q. For example?

A. One of many experiences that sticks out was the day I heard Robert Cuckson (chair of the Techniques of Music department at Mannes) discuss Schenkerian graphs of the Adagio from Bruckner’s Sixth Symphony.  I walked in thinking I was quite familiar with the piece, and walked out feeling I had actually known nothing about it!  I fear that as time goes on, institutions may lose sight of the value of this kind of study, but I feel extremely fortunate to have benefited from it."

Q. Where does contemporary music fit in among your interests? Do you have contact with living composers?

I have some contact with living composers, and have greatly enjoyed working with Lowell Liebermann, for example.  I have also frequently performed certain works by contemporary American composers including Elliott Carter, Conlon Nancarrow, Frederic Rzewski, and Aaron Jay Kernis. I am happy to program contemporary works that are well-crafted, interesting on a musical and psychological level, and that relate well to the rest of the program.

Q. Your new CD introduces the little-known Charles Tomlinson Griffes. Do you plan further exploration of his work?

A. To some extent, yes, but the sad thing is that much of his potential was cut short with his death in 1920 at the age of 35 from influenza, during the terrible pandemic.  The sonata, certainly his most significant piano work, was written very soon before he died.  He took a new and fascinating direction with this piece, and would have written so much more incredible music as he matured. It’s especially bittersweet to imagine the piano concerto he might have composed.  

Q. Wasn’t he productive right up to this sonata?

A. Of course. Prior to the sonata, he was writing extremely vibrant, often exotic music in a post-Wagnerian style, which I’ve represented on my CD by including the solo piano version of the Pleasure Dome.  The revised orchestral version of this piece may be Griffes’ most popular work.  He was a remarkably colorful orchestrator and I hope my performance hinted at some that.  

Q. And his earlier compositions?

A. He wrote short tone-poems for solo piano.  One of these is “The White Peacock”, which is still occasionally played.  These pieces are mostly written in a quasi-impressionistic style, and they earned him comparisons to Debussy and Scriabin.  I suppose that further exploration of Griffes would take me in this direction.

 Q. Do you delve into the world of 20th century music in general ?

A. Yes, beyond Griffes I’m very interested in early 20th century music in general.  It was such a rich period, with everyone spinning off in countless directions as they reacted to Wagner and the end of the Romantic era.  Griffes -- an American trained in Berlin -- is one of many examples that fascinate me.

Q. Are the three composers on your CD chosen to please the public or to please yourself?

A. I think it is some of both. I realize that some of my choices are not “popular repertoire” or typical audience-pleasers but I would not be satisfied with the program if I did not feel that it communicated a valuable message to the listener. 

Q. Message? What do you mean? The turbulence seems to calm down pleasantly with the César Franck Prélude at the end…

A. Yes, I constructed a kind of “plot,” in fact: from a lot of psychologically turbulent music in Griffes and Scriabin to the hard-earned, major-key purification which comes only in the final pages of the Franck.  

Q. Can you describe this journey?

A. The Griffes and Scriabin are also harmonically unsettled, based on strange and unique combinations of tones, neither major nor minor, with the sense of exploring esoteric worlds through an esoteric musical language. Franck’s writing is so extremely chromatic and Wagnerian.  It is a very dark and solemn work, full of deeply Catholic symbolism of the crucifixion.  Franck keeps the outcome in doubt and ratchets up the tension to a terrifying climax with all of the themes ringing out simultaneously -- and only after that can the music finally turn to B major and win its victory over death. 

Q. It must be exhausting to perform live

A. Yes, when I do, I’m always totally spent by the end, like I’ve finished an arduous journey.  I hope that this album gives the listener some of that feeling as well.

Q. Outside of the CD, I have found your interpretation of the Charles Ives “Concord Sonata” to be impressive. Does this piece have special significance for you?

A. Indeed. It is one of those pieces that grabbed me and changed who I am as a musician and as a person -- it clarified many things that I want to achieve in everything that I play.  

Q. It’s a wild piece of music, isn’t it?

A. Yes, it requires a state of utmost freedom -- totally unbridled. It can’t be played any other way.  As soon as one starts trying to execute the score literally, it’s game over.  Parts of it are basically unplayable as written, anyway, and Ives suggested that the score was a jumping-off point -- perhaps as if he didn’t want it always taken literally.

Q. What did this piece do to you as an artist? 

A. First, Ives demands spiritual participation, that the performer become his own character in his world (and the world of Emerson, Hawthorne, the Alcotts, and Thoreau).  In any case, as I worked on the piece, I felt like it was drawing expressive reserves out of me that I didn’t know I possessed.  I had no choice but to let loose and fling the music out into the atmosphere, come what may.  

Q. How do you make sense of it for the untrained listener?

The great challenge, both pianistically and mentally, is in drawing out the lyricism from such a thorny score: it is truly a beautiful, melodic, and deeply moving work.  Ives’ music has an unmistakeable “truth” to it. He didn’t care about rules or what anyone thought of him.  He was a red-blooded, baseball-loving boy from Connecticut who loved campfire songs and big band music, and who loved to sit down at the piano and muse on the eternal questions of life.  That’s what a good performance of this piece should sound like, as if the pianist has been sitting in the wings reading Emerson’s essays, and then walks onstage in an exalted fervor and this  music erupts out of the piano.

Q. You sometimes  play this “thorny” music from memory – quite a feat.

A. Yes, I felt that I had to start playing it from memory to have the best chance of capturing these qualities.  Of course, it can be intimidating to play from memory a 50-minute piece in Ives’ musical language, but I told myself that there’s no such thing as “getting lost” when one is creating the music on the spot.


Q. What are your career aims? Solo recitals? Ensemble playing?

A. I have been mainly focused on solo playing to this point, and will continue that -- I always love the thrill of playing a solo recital or as a concerto soloist with orchestra.  However, this year the cellist Alexis Pia Gerlach and I formed a duo and will be performing together frequently going forward.  Working with her has been revelatory -- I love chamber music but had had less-than-inspiring experiences playing in chamber groups.  When I began playing with Alexis it was apparent that we were enhancing one another’s musicianship, crafting an interpretation together like iron sharpening iron. I have also had very inspiring experiences performing with the bass-baritone Mark S. Doss - I collaborated with him in his American recital tours in 2018 and 2019. In addition to being a world-class voice, he is the consummate dramatist: the way that he rhetorically communicates the meaning of a text always gives me much to think about and apply to everything I play.

 

END

 

 

 

 


This article is brought to you by the author who owns the copyright to the text.

Should you want to support the author’s creative work you can use the PayPal “Donate” button below.

Your donation is a transaction between you and the author. The proceeds go directly to the author’s PayPal account in full less PayPal’s commission.

Facts & Arts neither receives information about you, nor of your donation, nor does Facts & Arts receive a commission.

Facts & Arts does not pay the author, nor takes paid by the author, for the posting of the author's material on Facts & Arts. Facts & Arts finances its operations by selling advertising space.

 

 

Browse articles by author

More Music Reviews

Sep 8th 2019
Extract: "David Fray looked surprisingly alert when he arrived for a 7:30 a.m. breakfast interview at a comfortable inn outside of La Roque d’Anthéron in the south of France. We had both been at a midnight dinner following his performance at the famous piano festival. I left the dinner early with a colleague but he stayed till 3:00 chatting and laughing with the violinist he had just performed with, his friend Renaud Capuçon. Their Bach sonatas and a Bach piano concerto were the highlights of the evening. Over breakfast (David ate a bowl of chocolate-flavored cereal sweetened with ample spoonfuls of Nutella) we indulged a few minutes of smalltalk, then got down to business. He responded lucidly in French to some heavy questioning. He only stumbled once, at the end, when I asked him,  “What does music really mean to you?” His reply, ”That’s a big subject for so early in the morning!” But he continued searching for the words, and he found them."
Aug 31st 2019
François-Frédéric Guy was just finishing his 20th performance at the piano festival of La Roque d’Anthéron in the south of France. The 2,200-seat outdoor amphitheater was almost full as Guy displayed his love of Beethoven –playing two of his greatest sonatas, No. 16 and No. 26 (“Les Adieux”). After intermission, Guy took his place at the Steinway grand again and rattled the audience with the stormy opening bars of the Hammerklavier sonata. It was like a thunderclap, as Beethoven intended. The audience sat up straight and listened in stunned silence. There were more surprises to come. Guy’s first encore was the little bagatelle “Letter for Elise”. A titter ran through the amphitheater. Was he joking? He looked out over the crowd and smiled back. A few bars into the piece, total silence descended once again on the crowd as Guy brought out the depth and beauty of little “Elise”. Everyone thought they knew this piece by heart. They were wrong. No one had heard it quite like this. Huge applause erupted a few seconds after the last note. Several spectators near me wiped away tears from their eyes.
Aug 3rd 2019
Combining “telepathic improvisation” plus original instrumentation, two adventurous Australian musicians have just launched a digital album of 12 new pieces brimming with sounds never quite captured before in recordings. The pianist plays two expanded keyboards simultaneously while his partner meets his ideas on an 18th century cello. The result is a marriage of the new and the old with echoes ranging from Bach to Arvo Part. 
Jul 20th 2019
Extract --- Question: What is your view of stage antics of ambitious pianists – the swoons and hair-flicks (Khatia Buniatishvili), the miniskirts and six-inch heels (Yuja Wang), the eye makeup and winks to the audience (Lang Lang)? --- Answer: It’s all show-biz. All three of those pianists, though, really CAN play (though in varying degrees of success in varying repertoire). No matter how short Yuja Wang’s vestigial swath of skirt becomes, no matter how vertiginous her high heels, she knows her way around the ivories (I especially like her Prokofiev), and I think she makes music more fun for a wide variety of listeners. If she couldn’t play, all the short skirts in Christendom couldn’t save her career. Same goes with the emoting of Buniatishvili, and, of course, most of all, the ultimate showman, Mr. Lang, the classical world’s answer to Liberace.  
Jun 9th 2019
Australian pianist Shaun Hern Lee, 16, took first prize on Saturday in the final round of the Cliburn International Junior Piano Competition following 12 days of eliminations and associated activities in Dallas, Texas.
May 25th 2019
  In a rare combination of artistic talents, pianist Jack Kohl offers seven erudite essays on great classical music compositions and his favorite readings, merging both to make an exciting volume of fresh ideas. Bone over Ivory: Essays from a Standing Pianist (Pauktaug Press, New York) puts on display Kohl’s background as a classical pianist and his lifelong obsession with Ralph Waldo Emerson. Along the way, we encounter Gershwin, Fitzgerald, Thoreau, Dickens, Beeethoven and Master Yoda of Star Wars fame, among others.
May 9th 2019
"On the day before he was to play his marathon concerts, Maestro Buchbinder sat down with me in the 'Teddy Bar' of the Grand Théâtre de Provence to discuss his love for Beethoven. He was relaxed and cheerful and spoke freely......An edited transcript of our conversation follows."
May 6th 2019
One of the more exciting piano experiences of recent years is the development of a 108-key grand piano in Australia, built by Stuart and Sons and expanded with additional octaves at bass and treble extremes. The sound is new and audiences who have witnessed it tend to erupt in standing ovations.  If you don’t live in southern Australia, you probably will not hear it in all its glory but it’s worth a detour. I have recently had the privilege of listening to a high-definition recording, at 96 KHz, to be exact, of the inaugural concert performed a few months ago. The effect of the expanded keyboard, known as the Big Beleura, is stunning to mind and body. I sat with a friend in his music room in Bordeaux, listening for an hour, flabbergasted.
Apr 16th 2019
It’s heresy to say this, I know, but the great masterpieces of the 19th century piano composed by Liszt, Schumann, Schubert and Beethoven sometimes leave me exhausted. The complex structure and concentrated emotion, the moods, the arpeggios and stunning fingerwork demand an effort to reach true appreciation.  And so when I first heard the new CD “Musiques de Silence”  -- interwoven selections of Frederico Mompou, matched with Maurice Ravel, Erik Satie, Henri Dutilleux, Frederic Chopin, Toru Takemitsu, Claude Debussy, Enrique Granados and early Alexander Scriabin – I felt a surge of relief. (Eloquentia EL1857).  The repertoire is selected and beautifully braided together by the rising young French pianist Guillaume Coppola. 
Mar 1st 2019
The lingering resonances and extreme bass and treble notes are new to the piano world and the premiere audience knew it, rising at the end for a standing ovation. This was the recent premiere of Big Beleura, a 108-key grand piano built by the prestigious Stuart and Sons firm, the only practicing piano maker left in Australia. Some say the piano world will never be the same.  "It's important," explains the designer-developer of the instrument, Wayne Stuart of Tumut, not far from Canberra, "to realize that we perceive sound not only through our ears but all of our body."  That’s how Big Beleura gets to you. 
Dec 12th 2018
The work ethic among young piano students in China shows no sign of abating as their tiny fingers fly up and down the keyboard ten or twelve hours a day. Competitions are welcoming the new Asian talent and European concert halls are filled with admiring fans.  Some of us don’t quite know what to make of it.  It’s not all about Lang Lang, Yuja Wang or Yundi Li. Potential new superstars are emerging every year. Brace yourself for more in the years ahead. Some 20 million young Chinese are said to be practicing madly as our European and American kids diddle mindlessly with their smart phones and iPads. 
Nov 28th 2018
French pianist Bertrand Chamayou [in the drawing by the author, Michael Johnson] plunges into major composers one by one, reading works by and about them, traveling to their favorite haunts, and absorbing their art almost into his blood.  As he told me in an interview, he tries to immerse himself in the era of the composition, and to think of it as “new” for its time. In the past ten years he has done this with Liszt, Ravel and Saint-Saëns. 
Sep 24th 2018
The rich culture of the proud and ancient Basque people is sadly underexposed outside their homeland, a remote bi-national region where Southwest France meets northern Spain. Their language, Euskara, is a world in a bubble with no relationship to other living languages. Most outside interest in recent decades has sprung from the sometimes-violent Basque independence movement. Basque music, however, does travel well across cultures, and is worth a detour. The French sisters Katia and Marielle Labèque, born in Bayonne, grew up with Basque melodies and lyrics in their ears. Now an established two-piano duo, their new CD (KML Recordings) Amoria” groups14 disparate pieces of Basque music they researched over several years. It is a departure from their usual classical repertoire.
Sep 11th 2018
I know several professional pianists who will admit under pressure that they find their work ultimately unsatisfying. Not because of the crowded marketplace, the dreary practice rooms, the clapped-out pianos or too many exhausting tours. No, they are tired of something more basic — the endless repetition of notes penned by someone else. True artists seek self-expression, artistic adventure. They feel the urge to “own” their work. But written music places strict limits on all but the most marginal departures from notation. Some musicians eventually realize they are mere messengers whose teachers steer them relentlessly back to the page. This may explain why so many pianists and other professional musicians also paint.
Sep 7th 2018
With a large cast, full orchestra, and incredible jazz-inflected music, “Porgy and Bess” stands alone as the one American opera that is recognized around the world. Written by George Gershwin and premiered in 1935 on Broadway, it had to wait until mid-1980s to become a standard of the operatic repertoire. The jazz idiom that Gershwin used was surely one of the reasons that “Porgy and Bess” was adopted slowly by the operatic world. But another roadblock was the story, which told about the love between a crippled beggar, Porgy, and a drug-addicted woman, Bess, who live in an impoverished African-American community in the South.
Sep 5th 2018
Frederic Chopin left detailed markings of tempo, dynamics, phrasing, pedaling, even some fingerings, for his 21 Nocturnes to guide interpreters. Yet no two versions – and there are dozens of them -- are anything like the same. The essence of playing Chopin today is deciding how far to veer, how sharply to swerve, from the master’s ideas today without losing sight of his artistic intentions. The player must ask, “When does Chopin cease to be Chopin?” Now comes the rising French pianist François Dumont with a stunning new version that sets him apart (Aevea Classics). PICTURE: Dumont by Johnson.
Sep 5th 2018
Princeton University in the United States is best known for its big thinkers, top scientists and heavyweight historians but now is embarking on a determined effort to make a splash in the arts. Princeton’s new Lewis Center of the Arts is going about it in the most American manner, with millions of dollars upfront investment and a business plan to attract young talent into its music program. Nothing is left to chance. This fall, a new crop of music students have full access to 48 freshly minted Steinway pianos, a large enough stock to attract global attention among pianophiles.
Jul 19th 2018
San Francisco Opera’s revival of its Ring Cycle got off to a rousing start with a top notch performance of “Das Rheingold” at the War Memorial Opera House on June12. The production featured outstanding performances from top to bottom by an exceptional cast and new video projections that were even better than the ones used back in 2011.......
Mar 26th 2018

Johann Sebastian Bach’s B Minor Mass, performed at Symphony Hall on Friday (March 23) and again on Sunday (March 25), was delivered in impressive Baroque style by the Handel+Haydn Society orchestra and chorus.