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Austin360 blogs > Austin Arts: Seeing Things > Archives > 2009 > June > 29

Monday, June 29, 2009

Review: Chamber Music Fest, Weekend One

Cool.

It’s how the Austin Chamber Music Festival unfolded its first weekend with a trio of eclectic concerts: Modern classical guitar, a string quartet’s Grammy Award-winning riff on jazz great John Coltrane and the indie stylings of the genre-busting Tin Hat Trio.

Friday, the Brasil Guitar Duo — a concert co-sponsored by the Austin Classical Guitar Society — made an impressive, virtuosic program seem effortless in front of a full house at Northwest Hills United Methodist Church. With extraordinary technique rising young international starts Joao Luiz and Douglas Lora moved fluently from Bach (with Luiz’s arrangements) to Castelnuovo-Tedesco’s to Lora’s own sparkling compositions. Drama came with Gismonti’s “Don Quixote,” an alluring rich composition from the contemporary Brazilian composer.

Saturday night at UT’s Bates Recital Hall, the festival shifted mood. The Turtle Island String Quartet won a Grammy for their CD “A Love Supreme: The Legacy of John Coltrane.” And no wonder. The quartet’s inspired interpretations of a wide range of jazz repertoire - Coltrane, yes, but also Chick Corea and Stanley Clarke — proved the foursome has not only the courage but the soul and the chops to channel the jazz legacy with freshness and authenticity. No schmaltzy pops stylings here — these are jazz musicians. And the improvisational finesse of David Balakrishnan, Mark Summer, Mads Tolling and Jeremy Kittel percolated with complexity and originality.

Sunday night, the Chamber Music Festival boldly went to a venue no chamber music group has been before — the Continental Club. About 200 people filled the storied South Congress Avenue rock club to hear Tin Hat Trio, the San Francisco-based group that blends blues, jazz, tango, classical and little cabaret into its own blend. Theirs is the kind of genre-defying music that signals the direction younger musicians are taking chamber music - blending it seamlessly with other genres and busting out of the formal concert hall. Tin Hat Trio made a bold but much welcome (and needed) choice for inclusion on a chamber music festival program.

You have to wonder when the last time people were handed a program when they walked into the Continental Club. And when was the last time the Austin Chamber Music Center music crowd ordered drinks during a concert? Both were refreshing sights.

However blame it on the current wilting heat wave or perhaps some awkward technical sound problems, but Tin Hat Trio didn’t quite deliver much energy Sunday. Ethereal to point of being atmospheric, they skittered around the music more than they seemed to arrive with it. The unusual combination of colors from the combo guitar, a soulful violin and an assortment of clarinets intrigued, but felt more like a tease than a show.

The Austin Chamber Music Festival continues through July 11. See www.austinchambermusic.org for more information.

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‘The Lining of Forgetting’ at the Austin Museum of Art | Austin Chamber Music Festival reviews and updates |Follow @artsinaustin on Twitter

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Missed ‘Considering the Creative Ecology?’ It’s now online

Did you miss Andrew Taylor’s thoughtful public talk last week? Well, you can tune in online.

The arts management scholar and consultant was in town last week courtesy of Austin Circle of Theaters for two days of talks with the members of theater community producing new works. The talks are a preliminary step towards a planning grant potentially funded by the Mellon Foundation for a long-term new works theater development.

Taylor’s talk at the Carver Museum was courtesy Create Austin, the cultural arts plan initiated by the city’s Cultural Arts Division/Economic Growth & Redevelopment Services Office.

One of Taylor most trenchant observations about Austin? That we get bogged down in analyzing process and policy and politics. A little ‘just do it’ could go along way in jump-starting the arts in Austin and taking it to the next level.

Taylor has posted slides and audio from his public presentation — Click here for “Considering the Creative Ecology.”

He also answered some questions for us which you can read here and here.

And don’t forget Taylor’s insightful blog, the Artful Manager.

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