Overture Magazine 2013-2014 September-October 2013 | Page 6

{ tempo in n e w s o f {In the n o t e S pi r i t} On Scheherazade and other transcendent moments C. Fraser Smith WYPR-FM One night several years ago, sitting in Row D, Seat 103 at the Joseph Meyerhoff Symphony Hall, I heard Scheherazade for the first time. Actually, I had heard the piece many times. But for some reason on this night I heard the melodies with every sensory portal open, every emotional receptor embracing the sound. If it wasn’t the music of the spheres, it was as close as I may get to that experience in this life. And there was more to the moment.            It led to some not so magical thinking: Music like this could be an antidote to meanness and ill feeling—even violence. A big leap? Maybe, but isn’t this idea at the heart of the hopedfor connection between the arts and real life? We believe in this connection. We believe that music and painting and sculpture and literature improve the quality of life. We have to imagine we are making the world safe for the next Rimsky-Korsakov or Debussy or a Jay-Z or Piaf—or you and me? So whatever thoughts may follow your transcendent moments of BSO listening, you may want to have them as often as possible. It’s not a remote possibility when your orchestra is the BSO. I come with high expectations. I’m never disappointed. The quality—a reflection of professionalism and love of music at least as high as mine—is the guarantee. Even if the program is not entirely to my liking, I love the idea of an orchestra willing 4 O v ertur e | to stretch and experiment. It’s that arts thing again: I may not love the “Man-Woman” statue in front of Baltimore’s Penn Station (actually I do like it), but I do love the idea that our city welcomes the artist’s vision. A year or so ago, I stood in the middle of the Meyerhoff for a rehearsal of the Orch-Kids Nation, now the anthem of this program’s very own ode to joy. Commissioned by Maestra Marin Alsop, that short piece is based on the testimony of the kids themselves. I was there recording it for WYPR’s “The Signal.” A bonus for me, as it turns out: I have a CD to be played when the mood demands. In July, I heard Concertmaster Jonathan Carney and a Baroque-sized orchestra play two of Vivaldi’s Four Seasons, “Summer” and “Winter.” Carney led with his usual precision and flare. Another all-time session for me. We are, of course, blessed here in Baltimore to have such quality players. They are the ones who give us moments of incandescent brilliance. For 80 to 100 of us doing something so well and so uplifting is a phenomenon of human striving. It is the definition of symphony. Except for the brilliance, I have no idea why things come into alignment for me so on any given evening. You can’t know when that moment is coming for you. So you just have to be there. C. Fraser Smith is senior news analyst for WYPR-FM. He is a member of the BSO’s Governing Members. www. bsomusic .org