Philharmonia in Louisville

This weekend Philharmonia Fantastique: The Making of the Orchestra will be heading to Louisville where it will be performed by The Louisville Orchestra and conducted by Teddy Abrams.

The Louisville Orchestra will perform a family matinee as well as an evening concert which will feature an immersive programme alongside Philharmonia Fantastique. Mason will be attending both performances and will host a late-night after show party as DJ Masonic.

Performances:

Family Concert Saturday, November 12th 11:00am

Evening Concert Saturday, November 12th 7:30pm

Philharmonia Fantastique: Available Now on Apple TV and Apple Music

“Today is the day a magical Sprite is born on Apple!  We’re thrilled to announce today’s release of Philharmonia Fantastique: The Making of the Orchestra on Apple TV and Apple Music.This animated film began five years ago with the idea to create a new guide to the orchestra using 21st century storytelling.  Born in the opening minutes of the film, our Sprite soon explores the instruments of the orchestra to see how they work.  The film’s initial focus on instruments as masterpieces of interactive technology soon gives way to the broader theme of ‘unity from diversity.’  No artistic medium better demonstrates how a huge number of people can transcend their differences to work together as one. So turn the sound system up, kick back, and take a journey inside the beating heart of the orchestra. ” – Mason Bates

Interviews with Gramophone and KALW

Ahead of the Philharmonia Fantastique film release on Apple TV and Apple Music on November 4th 2022, Mason joined Martin Cullingford from Gramophone to explore the inspiration and process behind the work.

Mason: “We wanted to keep [the work] undidactic and fun.. looking up to pieces by Maurice Raval that use vivid orchestration to conjure the world of the young but has serious intentions. The education world becomes a space we can go to, and we want this film to be a gateway

Martin: “It’s a wonderful work and a really beautiful film. I really hope that it opens many ears and minds to the orchestra and what it sounds like and what it can be.”

Listen to the full podcast on Gramophone Podcasts.

Mason also joined David Latulippe from KALW earlier this week on their ‘On the Arts’ podcast where they discussed Philharmonia Fantastique and the exploration of the instruments of the orchestra.

David: “This [work] is completely wordless. This is a really unique way, just using music and animation, to have people experience the magic of the incredible instrument that is the orchestra.

Mason: “When John Williams saw it, I think it was one of the things that he really appreciated. It explains things about the orchestra in a purely musical and visual fashion without having to call in sentences that might not be accessible for everyone.”

Listen to the full podcast on KAWL.

The film will be released on Apple TV and Apple Music on November 4th 2022 and the soundtrack is available to stream on Sony Classical.

Mercury Soul Kicks Off 22-23 Season With Exclusive Event @ The Battery SF

Mercury Soul makes its Battery debut for a one-night-only performance of Classical/Electronic hybrid beats featuring DJ Masonic (Mason Bates) alongside lounge beats mixed by Hillel Cool J interspersed with popup classical performances by Byron Hogan (cello), Gail Hernández Rosa (violin), Daniel Turkos (bass), and Sebastien Quintero (Theorbo).

Limited tickets are available via Red Curtain Addicts.

Mercury Soul April 2022 Guru Khals

Philharmonia Fantastique to be released on Apple TV and Apple Music on November 4

On Friday, November 4, 2022, Platoon releases the new animated film for composer Mason BatesPhilharmonia Fantastique: The Making of the Orchestra, a 25-minute concerto for orchestra and animated film described by John Williams as “the biggest step forward since Fantasia itself. A truly magnificent achievement.” The film is directed by seven-time Academy Award-winning sound designer Gary Rydstrom (Titanic) and features the work of Jim Capobianco (Ratatouille, Mary Poppins Returns). It will be available to rent or purchase in 4K and surround sound on the Apple TV app and to stream on Apple Music. The film, celebrating Bates’ unique and magical style intersecting music and technology, features a soundtrack performed by the Chicago Symphony Orchestra conducted by Edwin Outwater.

Described by the San Diego Union Tribune as “a composition that might give these two war horses [Prokofiev’s Peter and the Wolf or Britten’s The Young Person’s Guide to the Orchestra] a run for their money,” Bates’ Philharmonia Fantastique portrays the four families of the orchestra, each with their own unique sound worlds and musical motifs: the slinky, sophisticated noir-jazz of the woodwinds; the lush romanticism of the strings; the aggressive techno-fanfares of the brass; and the percussion section “drum circle” in all its versatility. Ultimately the work’s message is one of unity: the diverse instruments of the orchestra are most powerful when working together as one giant instrument.

Guided by a magical Sprite, who serves as the audience’s guide through the orchestra and even inside the instruments themselves, the film blends traditional and modern animation styles as well as live-action filming, created over nearly a year by multi-Oscar and BAFTA-winning sound designer Gary Rydstrom, of LucasFilm and Skywalker Sound, and Oscar-nominated Hollywood animator, Jim Capobianco. The Sprite interacts with the conductor and on-stage musicians alike, connecting stage and screen to create a compelling guide to the orchestra that engagingly illustrates the intricacies of how instruments work individually and collectively to produce such a huge range of sound. To look inside instruments, the team used high-definition special effects cameras, including probe lenses, to peer inside a violin, flute, and up close to brass valves. The film also features sound design built from the key clicks of woodwinds, taps on the body of string instruments, and vintage analogue synthesizers.

“Music itself has always been a marriage of technology and art,” says Gary Rydstrom. “In Philharmonia Fantastique, we use both new and old technologies to explore how music comes together, how radically different sounds and techniques converge into the full sound of an orchestra.”

The music of Philharmonia Fantastique ventures beyond the bounds of classical to bring in elements of jazz and techno and was co-commissioned by the Chicago Symphony Orchestra, San Francisco Symphony, Pittsburgh Symphony Orchestra, Dallas Symphony Orchestra, National Symphony Orchestra, and American Youth Symphony. The soundtrack was released on Sony Classical on April 22, 2022, recorded by the Chicago Symphony Orchestra conducted by Edwin Outwater at Orchestra Hall, Symphony Center in Chicago from February 9-13, 2021.

Following premieres this year with the Chicago Symphony Orchestra, National Symphony Orchestra, San Francisco Symphony, and San Diego Symphony, the fall and spring feature live North American performances of Philharmonia Fantastique with the Oklahoma City Philharmonic (Oct. 16), The Louisville Orchestra (Nov. 12), Nashville Symphony (Jan. 21 ‘23), Kansas City Symphony (Jan. 29), New West Symphony (Mar. 4-5), The Cleveland Orchestra (Apr. 2), Utah Symphony (Apr. 11), and Vancouver Symphony Orchestra (Apr. 30). The European premiere will take place at London’s Southbank Centre on April 16, 2023 with the Aurora Orchestra, and the work will then tour internationally.

“Creating a new ‘guide to the orchestra’ was an incredibly inspiring and challenging project,” says Mason Bates. “How can we showcase the magical wonders of the orchestra in a fresh way? For me, the way was the concept of ‘how they work:’ how brass valves slice air, how strings resonate when creating harmonics, how woodwinds make music with clicking keys. When an orchestra plays, the integration of so much engineering into one giant instrument is a real model of ‘unity from diversity.’ All these different materials and technologies – and people – syncing together to make beautiful music is a real model for how we should all behave as people.”

Film Credits:
Music by Mason Bates
Directed by Gary Rydstrom
Written by Mason Bates & Gary Rydstrom
Animation direction by Jim Capobianco
Produced by Alex D. da Silva & Mason Bates
Executive producers Jody Allen, Rocky Collins, Ruth Johnston & Mary Pat Buerkle
Performed by the Chicago Symphony Orchestra
Conducted by Edwin Outwater

Commissioning orchestras: Chicago Symphony Orchestra, Dallas Symphony Orchestra, National Symphony Orchestra, Pittsburgh Symphony Orchestra, San Francisco Symphony, and the American Youth Symphony

Piano Concerto on the Digital Stage

The world premiere of Mason’s Piano Concerto, performed by The Philadelphia Orchestra and Daniil Trifonov and conducted by Yannick Nézet-Séguin returns to The Philadelphia Orchestra’s Digital Stage until October 19 11pm ET. Also featured will be Gershwin’s iconic Rhapsody in Blue with pianist Aaron Diehl.

For more information and tickets visit The Philadelphia Orchestra website.

Philharmonia Fantastique European Premiere

In April 2023, Mason’s Philharmonia Fantastique: The Making of the Orchestra will be heading to Europe for the first time. The Aurora Orchestra will perform the European premiere under the baton of Nicholas Collon, with two performances at The Southbank Centre on Sunday April 16, 2022.

For more information visit the Southbank Center website.

Piano Concerto Spanish premiere

Last weekend, The National Orchestra of Spain and virtuoso pianist Daniil Trifonov gave the Spanish premiere of Mason’s Piano Concerto.

What is evident is that this musician knows how to write very well for orchestra, according to the great Riccardo Muti, who has also conducted works by Bates. It was evident that in this premiere Heras-Casado had in mind all the compositional springs of the American musician and demonstrated in an overwhelming way how to use his technique, impetus and proactivity as a director putting it at the service of a complex and changing score in each one of his movements, in such a way that all the emotion present in it reached the public.

The premiere of this work, which lasted just under 30 minutes, but with a deep emotional depth, was greatly applauded by the public that almost completely filled the National Auditorium, forcing Trifonov to leave five times, although the expected tip was not granted.”

Read the full review on Codalario’s website.

Whalesong Embarks on a UK Tour with BBC Family Prom

In 2023, the BBC Orchestras and the Ulster Orchestra will embark on a UK tour of the BBC Family Prom: Ocean Adventure. The program will include Mason’s new commission Whalesong which celebrates the majesty and power of the earth’s largest animal and blends whale song with a symphonic narrative about a lone whale.

The world premiere of Whalesong, was performed at the BBC Proms at the Royal Albert Hall on July 23, 2022 and is dedicated to Sir David Attenborough in admiration for his lifelong efforts to help us better understand the natural world.

The prom will visit venues in Northampton, Glasgow, Saffron Walden, Belfast, Derry-Londonderry, Blackburn and Sheffield with further venues to be announced. In addition to Whalesong, the program will feature composers such as Eleanor Alberga, Dani Howard, Georg Philipp Telemann, Maurice Ravel, Edward Elgar and Benjamin Britten. A special medley of well-known BBC Children’s Television theme tunes arranged by Daniel Whibley and another new work – Dolphin Dance by Dominque Le Gendre, inspired by the sea life of St. Lucia – complete the program.

For more information and tickets visit the BBC Proms website.

Interviews with Libération and France Classique

Ahead of the French premiere of Mason’s piano concerto on September 16, 2022, Mason joined Eric Dahan from Libération to talk about his current works, his inspirations for writing and the upcoming premiere.

The first movement of this concerto is inspired by baroque music. The second, more romantic, it expresses the duality of the soloist and the orchestra who do not play together, which references to the Covid epidemic which has isolated us. In the last movement, we find elements of jazz and techno, especially in the treatment of rhythm and percussion because there are no electronics in this work. By techno, I mean a textural, almost industrial effect obtained by the high frequencies of the percussion, because I agree with the fact that repetition of measures in four beats is boring. For me, in music, only expressiveness counts.”

Read the full article with subscription on the Libération website.

Mason also spoke with Thomas Vergracht on France Musique last weekend for their Crossroads of Creation segment to discuss more about the Piano Concerto, pianist, Daniil Trifonov, and upcoming performances of the work in Europe this year.

Listen to the full interview on France Musique.

L’Orchestre Philharmonique de Radio France and virtuoso pianist, Daniil Trifonov, will give the European premiere of Mason’s Piano Concerto on Friday September 16th under the baton of Mikko Franck. The premiere will also be broadcast live on France Musique at 8pm CEST.

Upcoming performance dates:

Orchestre Philharmonique de Radio France

Friday September 16, 2022

The Spanish National Orchestra

Friday October 7, 2022

Saturday October 8, 2022

Sunday October 9, 2022

Rotterdam Philharmonic Orchestra

Friday October 14, 2022