Milwaukee Repertory Theater Opens Their Main Stage with Steel Magnolias!

I have never seen this play before and I hadn’t seen either of the movies, so I only had a vague idea of what to expect. Of course there would be 1980s era Southern dialect and atmosphere and I expected the one liners and overall humor…but I wasn’t quite ready for the drama and heartbreak. And after doing a bit of background on this today, I also didn’t realize that this is actually based on a true story from playwright Robert Harling’s life and the death of his sister. Thankfully, he was able to make art and reach out to us in his sorrow.

While waiting for curtain, we get to peruse Collette Pollard’s incredible set of Truvy’s beauty salon. Thankfully the script lets us know where we are because I was wondering how someone could successfully run a salon out of doors in Louisiana…but we are looking into Truvy’s place uninhibited by the walls of the car port her husband enclosed so she could support them! And we can sit and wonder how the Rep found all of the correct hair dryers and stylist stations and such as well. But this set design makes perfect sense and utilizes the Rep’s thrust stage to perfection, giving the characters space to work and the audience the sense of time and place of the story.

Photo by Michael Brosilow and courtesy of the Milwaukee Repertory Theater

One other thing that does not inhibit our enjoyment of the play is the male characters! They only live here through the stories and conversation of the six women who inhabit the salon. So the focus is more salient to our story…and even for those who know the movie and enjoyed it…the stage play will be a new experience to enjoy and savor.

Photo by Michael Brosilow and courtesy of the Milwaukee Repertory Theater

We are quickly introduced to all of the characters and the initial focus is on Shelby, the bride to be, and the customer of the day. So there’s a lot of joy here and a lot of conversation that brings out the personalities of all six women pretty quickly and we get to know the salon’s dynamic! Little do we expect there are little clues here as to the drama that is about to unfold behind the humor and how the mood will change…but the relationships strengthen and hold the women together. But Shelby will come back into focus again…and given that focus, Phoebe Gonzalez plays our Shelby to perfection as she grows and becomes aware of her own wants and needs and the focus on her own life. A very poignant and skilled transition.

And don’t forget Rebecca Hirota as Truvy Jones, who runs the salon, takes a risk on a new stylist (Annelle played by Maeve Moynihan), and provides the common ground for the disparate characters who are her customers. Ms. Hirota has clearly taken to this role as if it were originally her own!

And M’Lynn is Shelby’s mother and in the early going you don’t really expect her to step out or step up from the initial impression we catch in the early going. But she does and as the situation takes its turns for the worse, she finds a new strength and resolve and oh my goodness, Janet Ulrich Brooks reaches for those peaks of emotion and helps us deal with our grief through her efforts to deal with hers!

Photo by Michael Brosilow and courtesy of the Milwaukee Repertory Theater

And of course we have Ouiser played by Meg Thalken, who is the perfect curmudgeon and foil who has simply been in a bad mood for forty years! And Tami Workentin as Clairee, a recent widow who brings some ‘class’ and ‘refinement’ to the mix…and of course football! And the tentative Annelle, Maeve Moynihan, who develops into Truvy’s right hand and a forward and determined individual after being reborn in her religion. The perfect characters to round out our cast and crew in 1980s Louisiana.

So, even if you have seen the movie, seeing this play live in the Quadracci Theater will be a new and special treat that shouldn’t be missed! These women will tell you a funny and moving story live and in person!

Photo by Michael Brosilow and courtesy of the Milwaukee Repertory Theater

The Velvet Underground Documentary And Related Ramblings

I wasn’t intending to write about Todd Haynes documentary, The Velvet Underground. But after wondering how I should see it (there was never any doubt that I in fact needed to see it), I finally left my cocoon and last night. I went to watch it in the theater. And I am happy that I did. I had a number of discussions on line about whether I should do the theater or play it pandemic safe and watch it at home on a computer with headphones. My default at home since I don’t own a television. Some people suggested that it didn’t make any difference since the sound was muddy, etc. I beg to differ and that’s in part where we are going today…but there will also be a zig down a frontage road later too.

This is a perfect movie. No, not a perfect movie like Citizen Kane or Lawrence of Arabia. Those are movies and this is a documentary. This is a perfect movie. It covered the period to a T. We are carefully introduced to all of the major players and heard their voices and saw them in action. There are a lot of historical video and film clips from the period and from Andy Warhol’s vault. I had seen some and loved seeing them again. And of course I have never seen some and would never have the opportunity if not for Mr. Haynes film. He provided the history and stayed in line with the time line and told the story complete, warts and all.

I am sorry that I hadn’t gone to see it earlier because I am interested in seeing it again but it moves on now so maybe I will follow up with streaming.

But here is why this needs to be seen in the theater. There are minutes and minutes of side by side video or side by side photo to video or video within video that wouldn’t be as mesmerizing as it was on the big screen. There was a warning before the film started about flashing effects that might cause issues for some…and there were…but oh my gosh was it true to the period.

And the sound: well as someone who grew up with this music, it wasn’t muddy at all. It sounds just like I remember it. And yes it isn’t up to contemporary standards but it was what it was. And yes some of the live bits and demo stuff were a bit less than optimal but again to a musician of the period, that was the limitation of the equipment that was available. And we need to keep in mind that the VU wasn’t selling thousands of records and making their record companies rich. So they weren’t getting access to the best recording gear. They actually were lucky to get recorded and released (and at one point Lou Reed admits that Andy Warhol’s name had something to do with that).

And a bit more about the sound. In the theater with a multi-speaker system it seemed like it was more than simple stereo….which is what I’d get at home. So that was really an amazing experience as well. But one thing to quibble with: TURN IT UP! And yes, because the Velvet Underground is meant to be heard at ‘volume’ but there were a few people being interviewed who are a bit soft spoken, particularly John Cale, and I didn’t always catch everything he said.

Now down that frontage road(s):

When I was in art school in the late 1960s, I shared a class with a painter and during studio periods he would bring in the VU to play while we worked. That was my first reference to them but I wasn’t enamored of them because I was working on art. But at the end of the year, he suggested that we spend the summer heading off to New York City and trying to get to Warhol’s Factory. I was too timid and too poor to give it a go. I needed to work that summer to pay the next year’s tuition. I don’t know if he went or not, he didn’t come back in the fall and I never saw him again. So who knows?

Then I went off to the University of Wisconsin – Milwaukee for my junior and senior years. And because of the move, my last blues band split up. And through a mutual friend I met a singer who was putting together a band and he needed a bass player. Now he’d seen me play in the blues band so he knew I was capable. So my audition was to put on his leather motorcycle jacket, sunglasses, and sneer. I apparently passed and was offered the gig. He said the band was going to play Velvet Underground and Stooges material. So I knew the VU but not the Stooges…but figured what the heck…I needed a gig! The band was Death.

So how does this relate to the movie? The band was heavily reliant on the Velvet songs Sister Ray and Waiting for the Man for our basic sound. We used the bones of these songs to build up a drone that propelled the songs and allowed for the soloists to improvise in between the vocals. We never really talked about it , we just did it. But in the movie there is a great deal made around the drone underlying the music in the VU’s early years with John Cale. I heard it then but never thought about it…we apparently just felt it. And this was the first band that I played in that openly improvised. And apparently the White Light/White Heat album was improvised. I had always joked that I thought much of it was one long song and the producer had cut it into tracks. But the looseness of the album would obviously result if the band was improvising the things they were working on.

Death is the only band in my music history where I am still in touch with the other surviving members. That music solidified the group in ways unexpected. We have gotten together from time to time and trade taunts on social media. Interesting to me at least.

But this wasn’t always Eden and the lead guitarist and I got tossed at some point when other musicians who were closer friends of our band mates became available and had an interest in joining. So he and I formed our own group called Doggs that with two exceptions was a pure Velvet Underground cover band…but instead of improvisations we stuck closer to the recorded versions of the songs but tailored our sound to the Velvet’s Live At Max’s Kansas City album. We didn’t last long and only played out twice, both times opening for Death. LOL!

So the Velvet Underground was instrumental in my development as a musician. I learned to play a lot of their songs as both a bass player and a vocalist/rhythm player. They had a major influence on what I listened to later in life and I still pop them in the CD player in my studio or car today. And I play them as loud as my tinnitus will tolerate!

So Todd Haynes documentary The Velvet Underground is the perfect movie. It perfectly treats the music and the time. I can feel it in every moment the film flickered on screen. I remember and relived every song from my ears to my soul. I walked out of the theater into a cool dark fall evening feeling 50 years younger and lighter in my step.

So if you are an aficionado of the Velvet Underground, this is a don’t miss event. If you are a music nerd, you will enjoy this film a great deal. But if you are casual music enthusiast or a person of a certain age (from THIS century) you may be like the young lady leaving ahead of me who was asking her companion, ” did you like that”?

Side bar: a real review can be found here by long time Milwaukee Music Writer David Luhrssen!

Milwaukee Symphony Orchestra Holds ‘A Grand Opening’ With Opening!

This past weekend (October 1 through October 3 2021), the Milwaukee Symphony orchestra opened their 2021/22 season, held a grand opening of their new performance space, the Bradley Symphony Center, and featured a commissioned work, Opening!

So I have two responses to offer today, one on the program and one on the facility. So here’s my take on the program (and music director/conductor Ken-David Masur did a marvelous job putting this opening concert together).

It was wonderful to be back in person in front of a live symphony orchestra. Something that was sorely missed in my life. But the world class (and that’s not just local boy bias) didn’t disappoint with their opening weekend performance. I attended the Sunday October 3rd matinee, the first matinee I’d attended in years but there wasn’t a thing missing. And the orchestra level seating was nearly full!!!

Now as mentioned above, the symphony had commissioned a piece by American composer, Eric Nathan, and he named the piece Opening. So appropriately MSO opened the concert with…Opening! This piece is a joy to ears who enjoy 20th Century classical music. Just a bit of ensemble work, individual solo work, some playful dissonance, and a seeming variation in tempo….plus of course attention holding dynamics. Not unheard of but a bit unusual, Opening features solo instruments distributed around the hall. This provides for some very engaging call and response intervals and solos that used the very lively timbre of the hall effectively. It didn’t work as well when the entire symphony came into play and the solo instruments got a bit lost in the mix…and I was only five seats away from one of the violinists. The notes say “this piece was itself a willful act of hope”. And that emotion was evident as the orchestra played through…and again from the notes: “Opening begins with reverence and closes in celebration”. A much appreciated start for the season!

And then the MSO follows up with the North American premier of James B Wilson‘s Green Fuse. This 10 minute piece for strings is the perfect bookend for Opening. Composed in 2017 by the British born composer, this piece makes use of all of the voices available in a string orchestra. Again we have dynamics, slow to more rapid tempos, solo voices vs. ensemble playing, and just a bit of 20th Century minimalism a bit reminiscent of Steve Reich’s work. Particular interest toward the end when the violins trade voice, timbre, and rhythmic counterpoint with the cellos and basses. I hope that this is programmed again in the near future.

And then we have the piece that most of us were in the hall to hear: George Gershwin’s Rhapsody in Blue. And to show this rhapsody off properly, Mr. Masur invited Aaron Diehl to perform the piano portion. And oh my goodness, Mr. Diehl provided a far more jazzy rendition than that we are accustomed to…something akin to what I would think Mr. Gershwin intended when he wrote it…and it was simply wonderful! It almost seems like it was purely written with Mr. Diehl in mind. It certainly sparked a renewed interest the piece for me and let me hear it with ‘new ears’. Bravo Mr. Diehl and Mr. Masur!!!

Then after intermission, Mr. Diehl returns with Duke Ellington’s New World A-Comin‘. A bit of a surprise in the program but a perfect vehicle for Mr. Diehl and a engaging foil for Rhapsody in Blue.

Editor’s Note October 8, 2021: I was totally remiss in not mentioning Mr. Diehl’s absolutely delightful solo encore of Duke Ellington’s “Single Petal of a Rose”. What an incredibly delightful piece that brought out another side of Mr. Ellington and just clearly displayed Mr. Diehl’s mastery of the piano! (thanks to MARIE HOLTYN and AL BARTOSIK at MSO for providing this information)

And then the highlight for me! Igor Stravinsky’s Suite from The Firebird, 1919 Version). My favorite composer of all time…this piece was just perfectly conducted and played. I went home a very happy camper.

Now…some comments on the symphony’s new home.

It is absolutely beautiful. The art deco features from the original 1930 Warner’s movie palace have been retained and restored. I didn’t have time to explore on Sunday but will make time on my next visit or two.

And the sound is incredible. The Marcus Center certainly favored loud orchestral playing and the Bradley Symphony Center matches it note for note (take the pun anyway you are too…LOL). But the slower tempo and quieter passages at the Bradley are so much clearer and refined and they carry very very well. I was very impressed with that. A major improvement over the way the Marcus treats soft quiet passages.

What I didn’t like was: because the hall expressed the orchestra so incredibly well, the piano got lost at times when playing with the orchestra as opposed to when it is the featured voice. And sometimes more than lost, almost invisible. And with someone as emotional as Mr. Diehl, that was too bad.

Even after having moved the back wall out into 2nd Street by 35 feet, the stage seems shallow and moving the grand piano on and off stage seemed like a bigger chore than in the past.

And the stage seems higher. I had season tickets at the Marcus in row N of the orchestra and was high enough to see into the orchestra a bit. I like to watch the woodwinds because my son is a flute/piccolo player (not with the MSO). But sitting in row Q at the Bradley I found my eyes were at knee level with the cellos. That’s just me and isn’t actually a knock of the hall…I will get tickets further back in the future…so I have to adjust my viewing preferences and ticket selection to suit my whims.

And I picked up my tickets at will call. The MSO may want to rethink the assignment of the three ticket windows just inside the front doors. The today and future windows were less busy but they are the center booth and inner booth while will call was the first one inside. That resulted in that line snaking out onto the sidewalk at their busiest time before the concert.

I didn’t renew my subscription for this season…partly out of anxiety…partly out of concern for how the pandemic will play out this fall and winter…so as I select concerts to attend I can get more familiar with the facility, traffic flow, etc. And I am looking forward to my next visit!!!

Welcome back Ken-David Masur and the exquisite Milwaukee Symphony Orchestra!