Los Angeles Times

Ode to parks is a multimedia wonder

St. Louis Symphony plays Messiaen’s ‘ Des Canyons aux Étoiles …’ elegantly.

- MARK SWED MUSIC CRITIC mark.swed@latimes.com

The dot dot dot that Olivier Messiaen placed at the end of the title for his monument to Utah’s national parks, “Des Canyons aux Étoiles …” (“From the Canyons to the Stars …”), clearly implies something beyond. Knowing the French composer’s consummate devoutness, that should be way beyond.

His 95- minute, 12- section chamber music masterpiec­e from 1974 begins in the desert, dwells on Bryce Canyon and ends in Zion National Park, a stand- in for “the celestial city.” For Messiaen, music vibrantly, even gaudily and erotically, embraced the physical only then to transcend it.

The ellipsis in the title can also insinuate the possibilit­ies of different environmen­ts for the music. Thirty years ago, with the composer present, Kent Nagano conducted members of the Los Angeles Chamber Orchestra in a performanc­e at the Ojai Music Festival in which music and nature fused. The bird calls in Messiaen’s score miraculous­ly summoned so many of the real things that Libbey Bowl felt like a scene out of Alfred Hitchcock’s “The Birds.” In 2008, Esa- Pekka Salonen led members of the Los Angeles Philharmon­ic in a Walt Disney Concert Hall performanc­e in which the immediacy of Messiaen’s sound was so vivid that it became downright hallucinat­ory.

A compelling, beautifull­y phrased and elegantly proportion­ed multimedia performanc­e in Disney Hall on Tuesday night by members of the St. Louis Symphony conducted by its music director, David Robertson, was more specific. The performers were guests for the Los Angeles Philharmon­ic’s Green Umbrella contempora­ry music series. The additional media were Deborah O’Grady’s scenes from Utah’s parks, projected on a large screen behind the players.

Before the performanc­e, Robertson spoke of this as a kind of pilgrim’s progress, something the Santa Monica native experience­d in visits to Utah with his grandfathe­r, a mineral geologist. Messiaen’s music, he said, is so uncannily descriptiv­e that after about an hour, it can become over- satiating. A sense of place, some grounding, can help.

O’Grady’s qualificat­ions are unique. She is a nature photograph­er who happens to be a trained composer, the wife of a composer ( John Adams) and the mother of a composer ( Samuel Adams). She knows how to merge music with moving image and how to stay out of the way of music.

It may not be possible for any photograph­er to avoid romanticiz­ing Bryce Canyon, and she presents it as the place of astonishin­g beauty that it surely is. But she is also careful to remind us that our national parks are not as they were in 1972, when Messiaen made his mystically tinged trip. The composer described a setting of blissful peace and solitude. Today, he would be surrounded by tourists and warned about threats to our natural environmen­t.

But there is also the environmen­t of Messiaen’s music. Adding visuals is a complicate­d psychoacou­stic business. The temptation is hardly new. But as media becomes more advanced, they can have an increasing­ly large, and still little understood, affect on shaping how we hear.

In this case, the grand shots of famous Bryce sites, the starry sky ( too washed out by the lights on the stage to be effective), the street scenes cleverly and carefully intercut with the music were not what worked best. Messiaen, with his gloriously wild orchestrat­ion — wind machines, all kinds of percussion, starry- eyed solo horn — was a master of stimulatin­g the imaginatio­n. He had the gift of awe and the gift of the specific, as best demonstrat­ed by his ability to brilliantl­y use a solo piano as a stand- in for wood thrush, babbler, monarch f lycatcher, robin and other birds. When he described red- orange rocks in sound, I envisioned my redorange rocks. Seeing the real thing can confuse the issue.

O’Grady’s successes were elsewhere. The ninth movement is a piano solo devoted to the mockingbir­d. No birds were seen. The first half was simply a lushly green tree seemingly still but with barely perceptibl­e changes in color. ( O’Grady worked with a video crew.) For the second part, the camera swirled around the tree.

The excellent pianist Peter Henderson did the rest. We knew the birds were there. We heard them. We sensed them. We might even have felt we understood their language as their music was made into something intelligib­le to humans. They were our birds, not those in pictures.

Robertson’s performanc­e was so impressive that there were other times when I might have been tempted to close my eyes. He found God in the complexity of Messiaen’s details, and he found natural wonder in Messiaen’s divinity. The members of the St. Louis Symphony could have been mistaken for a world- class new music ensemble.

Now these “Canyons” will move on in peculiar fashion. Gustavo Dudamel will conduct members of the Los Angeles Philharmon­ic in the score, with O’Grady’s visuals, at the Barbican Centre in London next month on the orchestra’s European tour. Apparently that project came about after St. Louis had already been booked for Disney.

 ?? Brian van der Brug ?? THE ST. LOUIS SYMPHONY
plays at Disney Hall as images appear on screen.
Brian van der Brug THE ST. LOUIS SYMPHONY plays at Disney Hall as images appear on screen.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States