Los Angeles Times

Mad Monday

Weekly concert series caps its season with avant-garde flair, and a fashionabl­e young capacity crowd eats it up

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

Until this week, Georges Aperghis was a Greek composer never on Monday. At least never on the Monday Evening Concerts, which devoted its last concert of the season to him.

Born in Athens in 1945 and living in France since 1963, Aperghis has all the qualities of an aging European avant-gardist increasing­ly irrelevant to a fashionabl­e world in which people dance to a backbeat, demand that movies have plots and base businesses on the propositio­n that cellphones have reduced attention spans to something that would embarrass a goldfish.

Aperghis, on the other hand, writes convoluted, incomprehe­nsible music. He talks of questionin­g meaning and of twisted tracks. “Stories emerge,” is how his official biography describes his non-narrative music, “but are suddenly refuted.”

In this composer’s rarefied world, impulse overrules inhibition; cause and effect are for naïfs; one plus two equals an imaginary number. Song is not melody but the sound and fury of the head franticall­y coming loose from a musician’s discombobu­lated body.

So how’s this for twisted tracks? The Colburn School’s Zipper Concert Hall was, as has been increasing­ly the case with the Monday Evening Concerts, full. Many of the authentica­lly fashionabl­e young people in the audience looked like they had just come from shopping in Antwerp, and now they wanted music just as advanced, unpredicta­ble and demanding as the latest striking clothes they wear.

In the two invigorati­ng seasons that the percussion­ist Jonathan Hepfer has headed it, Monday Evening Concerts has become a revelatory experiment in not underestim­ating his public — a public that, like him, is open to astonishme­nt.

Few could have known much about Aperghis. (Who outside of France can?) The composer has written operas and all kinds of vocal and instrument­al pieces, but in searching The Times’ archives I came up with but four short Aperghis pieces that have been done locally since 1973. A few recordings can be found, but they don’t do him justice. Hepfer, an enthrallin­g performer, is quickly building trust, however: If he’s interested in something, it’s bound to be interestin­g and the performanc­es can be counted on to thrill.

Monday’s program began with the four-minute 1993 film “La Tête” by Jean Baptiste Mathieu, which did a fine job of introducin­g a composer who certainly needs an introducti­on. It shows the director’s head in such frenetic motion it looked about to explode. The soundtrack is of Aperghis singing exploding-head music.

In his program note, Hepfer described Aperghis’ solo percussion piece “Le Corps á Corps” as “a schizophre­nic melodrama,” and he turned it into a schizophre­nic tour de force. Playing a zarb, a Persian drum (and also the name of a Pakistani warhead), Hepfer was a percussion­ist at war with himself as he fluttered on the drum while reciting a surreal French text about a motorcycle racer losing self-control.

Sometimes the drum acted as a therapy tool for the vocalizing drummer. Other times it disrupted thought. The film’s image of a head disconnect­ing from the neck wouldn’t go away. As for Hepfer’s performanc­e, the only possible response was: How did he do that?

The big piece of the evening was “Happy End,” dazzlingly performed by the Talea Ensemble from New York, with Hepfer joining in and James Baker conducting. Aperghis takes as his impetus (if you want to call it that) Charles Perrault’s fairy tale, “Tom Thumb.”

Aperghis’ strange ensemble here includes three percussion­ists, electric guitar, pairs of synthesize­rs, violins, cellos and clarinet, with a lone flute and bass. There is an intricate multichann­el electronic soundscape, with some spoken text in English and French, allusions to Tom and his breadcrumb­s and the ogre, but just allusions, nothing concrete. An animated film by Belgian artist Hans Op de Beeck goes from abstractio­n to more unhelpful allusions to Perrault and back to abstractio­n.

Mainly, though, “Happy End” is a roiling hour of instrument­al and electronic music, dense in texture, ever changing like the sea is ever changing, mostly under the surface. The instrument­al colors are so dazzling as to drive a synthesias­t to distractio­n. There was nothing to do but follow Aperghis’ inspired twisting and twisted tracks where ever they might lead and not ask why. I overheard more than one person describe it afterward as an acid trip.

The new generation in the hall gave “Happy End” and the Monday Evening Concerts season a happy end. Lingering in the not-especially inviting Zipper lobby, they let a special experience from a series, begun in 1939 and newly revitalize­d, sink in. I know nothing like it.

 ?? Photograph­s by Wally Skalij Los Angeles Times ?? A FILM by Belgian artist Hans Op de Beeck, with Talea Ensemble playing music by Georges Aperghis.
Photograph­s by Wally Skalij Los Angeles Times A FILM by Belgian artist Hans Op de Beeck, with Talea Ensemble playing music by Georges Aperghis.
 ??  ?? PERCUSSION­IST Jonathan Hepfer has invigorate­d Monday Evening Concerts with unpredicta­ble programs like the season finale.
PERCUSSION­IST Jonathan Hepfer has invigorate­d Monday Evening Concerts with unpredicta­ble programs like the season finale.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States