Showing posts with label Nicholas Buc. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Nicholas Buc. Show all posts

Tuesday, January 02, 2018

Review: Family Fun with DreamWorks in Concert

This article originally appeared at 88.1 KDHX, where Chuck Lavazzi is the senior performing arts critic.

Nicholas Buc
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For two decades now, DreamWorks Animation has been very shrewd about producing animated movies that appeal to both kids and adults, with plenty of fast, colorful 3-D action mixed with sophisticated humor and sly parodies of pop culture. It has also engaged some of Hollywood's leading composers to write scores for its hit films.

This weekend (December 29 and 30, 2017), the St. Louis Symphony Orchestra presented DreamWorks in Concert, a program of suites from some of the company's most popular animated features, synched with film clips on the big screen suspended above the orchestra. The selection of movie excerpts was varied and perfectly paced, and the music was a delight.

The evening got off to a lively start with scenes from a dozen or so films (I quickly lost count) set to music from How to Train Your Dragon by John Powell, Mr. Peabody and Sherman by the prolific Danny Elfman, Over the Hedge by Rupert Gregson-Williams, and Sinbad: Legend of the Seven Seas by his older brother Harry. Fun stuff, and musically varied enough to provide a real workout for the band, under the baton of guest conductor Nicholas Buc.

A few words about Mr. Buc might be in order here. A graduate of New York University and a recipient of the Elmer Bernstein award for film scoring, he has written for film and TV world-wide and has conducted a number of "in concert" film programs, including Pixar in Concert, Raiders of the Lost Arc, and Back to the Future. That experience clearly showed in the precision and authority of his conducting Friday night.

As is often the case with these film events, the orchestra was huge, including six horns, four trumpets, four trombones, and tuba, along with a good complement of strings, a massive percussion battery, and three keyboard players (two on synthesizers and one on piano). There was also a classical guitarist who did a brilliant job with the Flamenco-style riffs in Henry Jackman's "dance fight" sequence from Puss and Boots.

The percussion section was kept quite busy throughout the evening, by the way, but their most impressive work came early on, in the elaborate training sequence from the John Powell/Hans Zimmer score for Kung Fu Panda.

There were many striking musical moments in the program. I loved concertmaster David Halen's solo Ginormica Suite from Mr. Jackman's Monsters vs. Aliens score, for example, as well as the comical xylophone-based "perpetual motion" music that opened the selections from How to Train Your Dragon in the second half of the concert.

I do wish the orchestra hadn't been amplified, though. I can see why you might need to put a mic in front of the guitarist, but for the rest of the ensemble it hardly seemed necessary and added a layer of distortion and aural mud.

Back during the golden age of animation--basically the 1930s through early 1950s--it was taken for granted that the audience for it would mostly be adults. In the 1960s, though, animation came to be seen as mostly "kid stuff," and it wasn't until companies like DreamWorks and Pixar began producing more sophisticated fare that we finally came full circle and began treating 'toons as something for the whole family. If Friday night's audience was any indication, DreamWorks in Concert is a true all ages show. There were plenty of kids, of course, but also their parents, young folks with no children, and plenty of us boomers as well. I wish the crowd at Powell Hall had been larger, though. This was a quintessentially family friendly show and it's a pity more families didn't get to see it.

Saturday, December 23, 2017

Symphony Preview: Fast away the old year passes

This article originally appeared at 88.1 KDHX, where Chuck Lavazzi is the senior performing arts critic.

Conductor Nicholas Buc
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The week between Christmas and New Year's Eve is often a quiet one in Lake Woebegon, but the St. Louis Symphony Orchestra has a couple of big events coming up for the final weekend of 2017 nevertheless.

Friday and Saturday, December 29 and 30, 7 pm: DreamWorks Animation in Concert -- DreamWorks Animation is the animated film division of DreamWorks Studios, which was originally founded in 1994 by Steven Spielberg along with former Disney executive Jeffrey Katzenberg and recording industry mogul David Geffen. The DreamWorks Animation division of has been in the forefront of the digital animation revolution for nearly two decades now, with hits like Shrek, Kung Fu Panda, and Puss in Boots, to name only a few. The company has been very shrewd about producing animated movies that appeal to both kids and adults, with plenty of fast, colorful 3-D action mixed with sophisticated humor and sly parodies of pop culture. It has also engaged some of Hollywood's leading composers to write scores for its hit films.

DreamWorks Animation in Concert features music by, among others, Alexandre Desplat, Danny Elfman, Alan Silvestri, and Hans Zimmer. The concert features music from Mr. Peabody and Sherman, How to Train Your Dragon, Rise of the Guardians, Monsters vs. Aliens, and many other DreamWorks hits, with clips from the movies on the big screen to accompany the music. It's a kind of big, post-Christmas gift box for lovers of animation and film music.

Conducting the orchestra is composer and multi-instrumentalist Nicholas Buc. A graduate of New York University and a recipient of the Elmer Bernstein award for film scoring, Mr. Buc written for film and TV world-wide and has conducted a number of "in concert" film programs, including Pixar in Concert, Raiders of the Lost Arc, and Back to the Future.

David Robertson
Sunday, December 31, 7:30 pm: BMO Private Bank New Year's Eve Celebration - David Robertson conducts the orchestra for the last time as SLSO Music Director in the annual New Year's Eve gala. The SLSO web site promises "an enchanting evening full of magical music and unforgettable surprises." And by "surprises" they mean "the concert program" because that is, in fact, a secret that won't be revealed until the music starts.

Still, we can make educated guesses based on previous years. Expect lots of good humor, both from the music and from Mr. Robertson, who can be a very funny guy when he gets his hands on a microphone. In 2012, for example, the orchestra did Morton Gould's "Tap Dance Concerto" and featured some good-natured sing-alongs with the audience. Dance music has, in fact, been a major part of the New Year's concerts. And waltzes are always associated with New Year's Eve in any case.

The concert is immensely popular and is, in fact, sold out as this is being written. But don't despair! In 2015 St. Louis Public Radio began broadcasting the concert live and will do so again this year, starting with pre-concert conversations at 7 pm.