I the music var ■ The Eugene Symphony explores the passing life during its ‘Death and Transfiguration’ performance By Sara Jarrett Oregon Daily Emerald Death rang in the ears of the liv * ing as the stench of charred flesh * wafted along the streets while bodies burned. Screams of sorrow echoed throughout. Cholera clutched the livelihood of Paris in the spring of 1832, tak ing no mercy. Survivors of the plague would never be the same. In response to the surrounding tragedy, German composer Franz Liszt sought consolation in his music. It yvas then that “Totentanz for Piano and Orchestra,” was cre ated. This work, hailed as “the most powerful of all works for pi ano and orchestra for its originali ty of idea and form, for the beauty, depth and power of theme,” ac cording to a Hult Center release statement, is composed of a set of variations on the Gregorian chant melody Dies Irae, the dance of death. This moving work is a favoi ite of Dean Kramer, an associate pro fessor of piano at the University of Oregon School of Music. He w; 1 act as a guest solo pianist with th ? Eugene Symphony durin tonight’s performance of “Der To tentanz,” under the invitation of Miguel Harth-Bedoya, the Eugene Symphony’s musical director and conductor. Kramer is especially intrigued by this work because of the oft misunderstood depth of Liszt’s character. “The thing that freaked his con temporaries out,” Kramer said, “was the complexity of his person ality.” Liszt has been described as a de monic virtuoso with a heavy ori entation toward God, Kramer said. This juxtaposition may also be why Liszt’s works are often left out of modern performances. He re mains, for the most part, an ob scure artist. “I decry the lack of initiative of pianists, much greater than I, who do not bring “Der Totentanz” to [the listeners],” Kramer said. “So many obscure works [from differ ent artists] deserve to be heard.” One idea Kramer has for the fu ture, he said, is a performance dedicated to works by composers and musicians he feels are bril liant, but have yet to become well known. “I don’t see myself as a scholar,” he said. “I just want to bring mu sic to life because I think I under stand it more [than a lot of peo ple].” Kramer’s stint with the Eugene Symphony tonight, “is a wonder ful opportunity for me to interact with the community,”, he said. “Not only on music, but on ideas Associate professor of piano Dean Kramer is a guest solo pianist for tonight’s Eugene Symphony performance. Scott Barnett Emerald of the 19th and 20th centuries.” The passing of human life has always inspired artists. “The program doesn’t deal with the tragedy of death,” Harth Bedoya said Wednesday after noon, during a lecture demonstra tion at the Hult Center, “but portrays a particular moment that we all will have to think about... I just couldn’t stay away from this topic.” The planning of this perform ance, just days before Halloween, wasn’t a complete coincidence, Hult Center marketing director Pa tricia Cusick said. “Death & Transfiguration” was originally planned for February, but “when the flowers pop up you don’t want to talk about death,” Cusick said. She said her job is to be in tune with people’s sensibili ties. The entire 1999-2000 season ti tled “Let Your Spirit Soar,” speaks to a particular human issue or theme, she said. Subsequently, the concert titled “Love” is now scheduled for February. Essentially, the bigger planning issue for Harth-Bedoya has been to plan the last season of the millen nium to look at various human is sues throughout history, Cusick said, without focusing only on classical music. “Above all, [Harth-Bedoya] is a humanist. He loves music as ex pression of a human theme,” she noted. Symphony listeners tonight will first hear orchestral excerpts of Wagner’s epic opera “Tristan und Isolde.” This Romeo/Juliet type story is “not really what is important [though]”, Harth-Bedoya said. The piece is about “dying in the most sublime situation, next to the person you love,” he expanded. “Tristan und Isolde” also portrays what Wagner was personally struggling with at the time. “The person and music is so closely linked [between Wagner and Tristan], that it’s not just a sto ry ... It’s a diary page ... What’s still so compelling about 19th-cen tury music is that they wrote their hearts out,” Kramer said. The Prelude and Liebestod will be the only parts of the piece per formed tonight, and the words will be omitted. “It’ll probably be the most con densed Wagner you’ll ever get,” Kramer said. Ending the performance will be Richard Strauss’ “Death and Transfiguration,” which will leave the audience on not necessarily a lighter note but a higher one. The music takes the listener on a jour ney through a man’s last hours. He starts thinking about what his life was, but at the same point he realizes he doesn’t want to go yet. He keeps this struggle of re membering more and hoping for more, Harth-Bedoya said. Finally, when the moment of death comes, the music suddenly becomes much happier, as if the man be gins “building a beautiful new life.” “Death and Transfiguration” will be performed in the Silva Concert Hall at the Hult Center for the Performing Arts tonight at 8 p.m. Tickets are $12 to $36; $10 for students and youth. Come eat with the Blue Hen today. 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