Randall Goosby, a young violinist from San Diego, has an angelic debut at the Hollywood Bowl and a summer album of extraordinary grace.
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[Essential Arts] PRESENTED BY La Mirada Theatre* For a young musician making a debut, the Hollywood Bowl can be the scariest stage on the planet, and the most desirable. Everything is amplified, from the sound to the giant video screens to the size of the whole place. Iâm classical music critic Mark Swed, this weekâs ringer for Carolina A. Miranda on Essential Arts, and Iâll start by sharing something special at the Bowl. A new name to remember A young violinist from San Diego recently made his Bowl debut with Gustavo Dudamel and the Los Angeles Philharmonic. At first glance Randall Goosby could be yet another of the savvy, showy young soloists on the make. Born Randall Mitsuo Goosby in 1996 to a Black father and Korean mother, he has grown up with highly marketable good looks and a chic style suitable for the cover of fashion magazines. Flashiness gets you everywhere in classical music. It always has. Yet Goosby plays like an angel with nothing to prove. A cool, calm, collected angel. His tone appears to be small. He applies a minimum of intoxicating vibrato. He does nothing to raise the temperature in the room. Thus far he has steered clear of high-volume repertory show pieces. His focus has been on Black composers, for which he advocates with erudite modesty. [Randall Goosby performing with the Los Angeles Philharmonic at the Hollywood Bowl.]
Randall Goosby performing with the Los Angeles Philharmonic at the Hollywood Bowl. (Gina Ferazzi/Los Angeles Times) At the Bowl he chose a little-known violin concerto by Mozartâs mixed-race contemporary, Joseph Bologne, Chevalier de Saint-Georges. A colorful showman, Bologne was as famed for his fencing as for his violin virtuosity. The concerto is fairly conventional 18th century stuff with just enough potential to dazzle the French court. Goosby avoided all exaggeration. Unless the amplification fooled us, and I donât think it did, he made little attempt to stand out, instead approaching the orchestra with the intimacy of a chamber musician. The slow movement was infused with an imperturbable serenity, perhaps the single most elusive state to achieve in the Hollywood Bowl. He skipped so daringly lightly over the jocular last movement that his solos could barely be grasped; they were gone in a flash. Those same rare qualities can be found on âRoots,â Goosbyâs debut album released this summer. It, too, is is all but devoid of showmanship. He plays solo blues with an extraordinary grace. The serenity is everywhere, but particularly in the middle movement, âMother and Child,â of William Grant Stillâs Suite for Violin and Piano and Coleridge-Taylorâs version of âDeep Riverâ that speaks volumes at a very low, understated volume. Goosby includes in his âfocusâ Gershwin and Dvorák. Their application to Black music in their work can sound like appropriation to modern ears, but Goosby explains in his booklet notes (and youâve got to break down and buy the CD rather than stream): For their time, they demonstrated a meaningful generosity of spirt in their advocacy of the essential contribution of Black composers to American music. An intriguing different test lies ahead for Goosby. In October he will tackle Brahms Violin Concerto with the Pasadena Symphony in Ambassador Auditorium. A little bird has whispered that Goosby will also be a soloist with Los Angeles Chamber Orchestra in the spring, but the cagey orchestra has yet to announce its new season. Now Iâll turn over the newsletter to Craig Nakano, deputy editor of The Timesâ Entertainment and Arts team, who will run down the rest of the weekâs culture news. ADVERTISEMENT BY La Mirada Theatre
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Intermission is Ending! La Mirada Theatre's Season of Celebration is On [Sale Now!]( Explore our 2021/22 lineup of events today. End of advertisement The vaccination M-word Itâs âmandate,â and as Times staff writer Jessica Gelt reports, more L.A. arts groups are deciding itâs not so bad. The L.A. Phil joined a growing list of companies requiring proof of vaccination for entry to shows â [no exemptions](. ["Hamilton" star Javier Munoz photographed in street clothes in 2016 at Richard Rodgers Theatre in New York.]
âHamiltonâ actor Javier Munoz has a thoughtful contribution to the vaccination mandate debate. (Walter McBride/Getty Images) Itâs a move that Times theater critic Charles McNulty wholeheartedly [endorses](. In a column calling for all stage performers to be vaccinated, McNulty invoked the late Isaac Asimovâs line about âthe false notion that democracy means that âmy ignorance is just as good as your knowledge.ââ Writes our critic: âEven in the face of a common mortal coronavirus enemy, our citizenry has fallen back into the usual partisan camps or taken refuge in an American individualism that isnât so much rugged as selfish and stupid.â Zing. Whatâs on the line For a taste of what weâd lose in a Delta-triggered shutdown, one need only look toward the Hollywood Bowl. Mark Swed reports that Dudamel has been on fire with the L.A. Phil, and the recent appearance by cello phenom Sheku Kanneh-Mason was a potent demonstration of talent and [star power](. Are we willing to lose all this again over readily available shots and some masks? [Cellist Sheku Kanneh-Mason performs at the Hollywood Bowl with Gustavo Dudamel and the L.A. Phil behind him. ]
Cellist Sheku Kanneh-Mason in his Hollywood Bowl debut and L.A. Phil conductor Gustavo Dudamel, both in fine form. (Jason Armond/Los Angeles Times) As if the point needed underscoring, Swed recounts another recent transcendent performance: Laurel Irene [simply astounded]( in the Long Beach Opera production of Kate Soperâs âVoices From the Killing Jar.â Enjoying this newsletter? Consider subscribing to the Los Angeles Times Your support helps us deliver the news that matters most. [Become a subscriber.]( ADVERTISEMENT
Go, and go now It does seem surreal to be contemplating shutdown again when the arts scene is delivering gem after pandemic-delayed gem. Times columnist Carolina Miranda pays [a studio visit]( to April Bey, whose exhibition at the California African American Museum â the artistâs first solo museum show in Los Angeles â is âan exuberant, sense-tingling journey.â CAAM Executive Director Cameron Shaw tells Miranda: âAprilâs vision is a world where all Black people are loved and accepted and where they are free to express themselves and where their pleasure is not policed. And that is an important vision right now.â [Artist April Bey, in a dotted blue robe, stands before paintings in her studio.]
L.A. artist April Bey photographed in her downtown studio. (Christina House / Los Angeles Times) Times critic Christopher Knight dives into the camp world of Laguna Beachâs Pageant of the Masters and [finds gold](. A gilded female model based on an 1840s Antoine-Louis Barye bronze is just one of the startling subjects in Matthew Rolstonâs fabulously weird photography at the Laguna Art Museum. Knight says check it out. More for your calendar The Timesâ mega fall arts preview lands soon, but in the meantime details of the season ahead are trickling out. The Hammer Museum, Center for the Art of Performance at UCLA and Museum of Contemporary Art [announced dates]( for the L.A. premiere (Oct. 14) and ticket on-sale date (Sept. 17) of âSun & Sea,â the climate-crisis-themed opera that had the 2019 Venice Biennale buzzing. Staff writer Deborah Vankin will follow up her news story this week with a feature next week on the behind-the-scenes partnership thatâs bringing a global hit to DTLA. The stage also is being set for [âHead Over Heels,â]( the musical comedy featuring the hits of the Go-Goâs. Staff writer Ashley Lee talks with Pasadena Playhouse producing artistic director Danny Feldman about the reconfiguration of the theater for the show, including the creation of a standing-room area for audience members to dance. Fire up the Go-Goâs playlist and get âVacation"-ing starting Nov. 9. In the meantime, listings coordinator Matt Cooper has his rundown of the [weekendâs most promising offerings]( which include the return of âHamiltonâ to the Hollywood Pantages and âThe Sound of Musicâ sing-along to the Bowl. A âStar Trekâ legend The article that drew the most readers this week was Makeda Easterâs deep dive into the life of [Nichelle Nichols]( and the protracted battle over the care of the âStar Trekâ actor, who is battling dementia as well as a precarious financial state. One stark takeaway: the extent to which such a barrier-breaking icon of Hollywood is facing the same daunting realities as so many older Americans and their families. [Illustration of Nichelle Nichols]
Nichelle Nichols (Stat The Artist a.k.a. Teddy Phillips)
In other news The National Endowment for the Humanities announced [$28.4 million in grants]( for 239 projects across the country. California recipients included the Japanese American National Museum and UCLA. Artist Chuck Close [died]( of undisclosed causes Thursday in Oceanside, N.Y. Los Angeles artist Kaari Upson died of breast cancer Wednesday night, according to the gallery Sprüth Magers, which represented Upson. The American Institute of Architects Los Angeles chapter named winners of its [restaurant design awards](. Survived the finale of âThe White Lotusâ but canât get the HBO limited seriesâ music out of your head? Catch up with Meredith Blakeâs interview with the composer, the âgenial, decidedly chillâ Cristobal Tapia de Veer, who personally voiced the [unsettling the squawks and shrieks]( you hear. Film critic Justin Chang scores the opening line of the week in his review of Dash Shawâs [imaginative animated feature]( ââCryptozooâ has, in more than one sense, the horniest opening scene of any movie this year: It begins with a star-gazing hippie couple making love in a forest and ends with one of them getting gored by a unicorn.â Afghanistan is in chaos, COVID-19 is surging, Californiaâs governor is facing recall, and yet itâs the [renewed question of who will host âJeopardyâ]( thatâs setting the internet afire. And last but not least ... Check out the rehearsal photos, including vintage Liza, Chita and Patti, in this [Playbill photo gallery](. Hereâs hoping for a diminished Delta, for rehearsals that carry on and for curtains to rise, at long last, on a new season. ADVERTISEMENT
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